DATASCAPE

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KAY HOPKINS

ART CRUMM

SHANE FOSTER

MARK LUCE

MARY LOU PAGANO

BILL FRANK DAVID CRAMER CAN DIG IT

86 CLASS PHOTOS

NOT JUST FOR THE BIRDS

JARROD ROARK

BRUCE DICKERSON

ANNE HYVRARD

ANGELA GULDIN

MALLORY HILVITZ LILLI LACKEY

PRETENDERS 426 NEW SEATS

ARTS

LINDSAY ZIMMERMAN MARK ADAMS

DIANE MOHR BOB KOHLER

THE DROWSY CHAPERONE

AARON KETCHELL CAROLINE KILL

EBAN SCHACHTER TECH DESK

B

B-LINE

ZEN GARDEN

SCHOOL HOUSE ROCK LIVE! JR.

THE TAMING OF THE SHREW

SENIOR LOUNGE

CHEF SHAWN

GREG GRIFFETH

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VICKI MERRIOTT ANNE RUTTER

SPORTS

CLASS OF 2011

GAVIN WOOD

CHUCK PAYNE MIDDLE SCHOOL BOTTLE ROCKETS

HIDEKO SCHACKMANN

AGATHON STUDENT POPULATION: 645

SCIENCE FAIR

SCOTT DANIEL

MARY PEREZ-KORINKO SCOTT HILL BPA

SARAH NOULLES

ROTH BROTHERS CIRCLE

TODD RACE COACH STELTING

MONA

BIG AND BRAVE!

BUSINESS OFFICE

PUB HUB

NURSE BONNEY DEVELOPMENT OFFICE

LINDA COLLIER

TREE DAY

GRANDPARENTS’ DAY

BANG! BANG!

MERCY ME!



Have you ever wondered what contrived, ostentatious word could describe the Class of 2011? What sentence or phrase could sum up the combined potential of 45 seniors? Good. Neither have we. But have you ever wondered how many mints the average upper schooler consumes per semester? Which snack is the most popular at the bookstore? How third grade lockers compare to those of the seniors, or how many motivational posters are in the Middle School? Now we’re talking. Data lovers, this book is for you. Those who need to visualize, synthesize, see the school through analytical eyes. Or maybe just those artists among us who see pictures and graphs, lines and colors, when the rest of us simply see monochromatic numbers and figures, letters and statistics. This book was made by a collaboration of these creators. In its pages, the Barstow essence unfolds as engaging maps and infographics create personalized, detailed spreads. So go on, thinkers. Read it. We dare you. Turn the page, rev up your brain, and experience Datascape.


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Barstow’s Built Environment This collage of panoramas documents and highlights an element of Barstow often overlooked: its physical structure. From the immense volume of the varsity gym to the intimate setting of the senior lounge, Barstow’s built environment offers a wide

range of spatial experiences that encompass the school’s many functions. Yet, despite the building’s attempt to create dynamic spaces where learning can flourish, “the function of a space does not exist a priori, but exists when we act within the space.”*

These photos represent spaces with “probabilities of function,” with their true purpose and significance determined by the students and teachers who occupy and act within each environment. *Lebbeus Woods, OneFiveFour


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Dedication Mark Luce

“right?” • incisive • kundera • socks • is Doug sweater vest • Witty • rothko • very devil’s advocate • eat the fish • “right on” tim gunn • spongebob • sassy • demon bird

best buds Mr. Roark, Mr. Luce, and Dr. Cramer share a laugh at a meeting.

JAWS Mr. Luce threatens to chomp sophomores if they dare to use passive voice.

Good Morning...!

twinsies Mr. Luce matches senior David White’s impeccable style, complete with buttoned polo, khakis, and white socks.

a day in the life... Mr. Luce takes a break from editing research papers.

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Facing a roomful of students, Mr. Luce crosses his feet to reveal the blue skull socks hiding beneath his leather shoes. A black EnerGel Liquid Gel Ink Rollerball pen rests on the table before him. He removes his square-rimmed glasses, runs a hand through his messy hair, replaces the glasses, and begins: “Well, what I would contend...” From the slightly intimidating image he presents to incoming sophomores to the understanding role model he becomes to juniors and seniors, Mr. Luce commands his classroom beginning on day one. Behind his professor-like appearance lies a cartoon-loving, Converse-wearing kid, allowing him to easily identify with his students and to share

their daily woes and thrills. Senior Taylor Phillips comments, “He just gets it. He tells us when we’re wrong, supports us when we’re right, and reassures us when we’re met with adversity. We respect his intellect and admire his innate coolness. We strive to impress him with our best work but never feel intimidated or patronized by his feedback. Mr. Luce’s classroom exists as a bona fide community.” Mr. Luce has the unique ability to involve all his students — whether they naturally love or hate English — in lively literary analyses and debates. Under and upperclassmen alike admire and enjoy Mr. Luce’s relaxed and endearing personality and his engaging teaching style.



Appreciation Vicki Merriott

Motherly • creative • sympathetic colored pens • prepared • sunshiny dedicated • good listener • kind mints • industrious • responsible

MINT CONSUMPTION (FIRST Semester)

36 376 13,536

Bags with mints per Bag means mints consumed

Number of Mints Consumed per average upper schooler:

64.766

secretarial duties Mrs. Merriott responds to important parent phone calls. administrative discussion Mrs. Merriott chats with Mr. Griffeth in their joint office.

A Jill of All Trades

our multitasking mama Mrs. Merriott removes debris from the freshman hallway.

the bookkeeper Mrs. Merriott reviews the day’s attendance.

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At 7:15 each morning, Mrs. Merriott can be found patrolling the halls, pausing to pounce on overturned rugs, deftly sweep stray leaves back through the doorways, or offer a smile and warm greeting to each student she passes. Mrs. Merriott has fully devoted herself to meeting the needs and desires of Barstow’s students. Senior Alexis Crowley says, “Mrs. Merriott is hard-working and really loves what she does. She thoroughly enjoys being around the students and is welcoming to anybody who comes into her office. She just has a friendly personality that people can look up to.” When not performing the numerous tasks explicitly required by her job, she spends her little free

time decorating the Community Hall for dances, scrubbing each locker over the summer, and preparing the school for special events. Her image has become directly associated with mints, as the glass jar in her office is always stocked with Wint-O-Green Lifesavers. She owns any supply a student could possibly need, from plastic silverware and birthday napkins to boxes of Halloween decorations, and she holds the keys to otherwise unanswerable questions about the minutiae of scheduling, attendance, and other Upper School affairs. Students truly appreciate Mrs. Merriott’s bottomless mint jar, kindhearted attitude, and dedication to our school.


salisbury steak • friendly • deuces receptive • chicken tenders • Chill four square • polite • basketball bosco sticks • approachable • funny

Appreciation Shawn Wilson FOUR SQUARE, CHEF SHAWN-STYLE: Players must stand outside the corners of their squares.

Kill shots achieved through massive amounts of lateral spin.

preparations Chef Shawn gets the cafeteria ready for the first lunch period.

go with the flow Chef Shawn shows off his laidback attitude. Potato Peeler Chef Shawn prepares to fry potatoes for Upper School lunch.

Culinary King Chef Shawn keeps everyone energized with his enthusiastic demeanor and amazing meals. He prepares lunch for 645 students and 109 faculty members every day and puts enormous effort into each meal. Chef Shawn tries to create a healthy balance of the nutritious and the delicious. He is extremely receptive to the students’ culinary requests, and he even provides special meals for those with specific dietary

needs. Chef Shawn and the other kitchen employees always concoct tasty appetizers and treats for school events like Varsity Nights, the annual Traditions Supper, and awards ceremonies. From preparing appetizing lunches to infusing the cafeteria with his warm energy and genial attitude, Chef Shawn has become an integral and beloved member of the Barstow community. number crunching Chef Shawn reviews food orders in his office.

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STATE LINE

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BARSTOW

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Geography plays a major role in the formation of perceptions, conceptions, and assumptions as one applies experiences and understandings from the home environment to the outside world. This tendency to extrapolate would create a false impression of the true world if humans existed solely within their own bubbles, never interacting with those from different geographical spheres. But this is not the case with the Class of 2011. Among the 45 students who make up the senior class, differences — often drastic — can be seen in home environments, whether social or physical, present or past. However, all seniors are unified by a common

geographical center: The Barstow School. The roots of the senior class stretch far and wide, from 10 miles north to 15 miles south, 20 miles east to 17 miles west. Although a large percentage of the senior population is concentrated around Barstow, the geographical differences are substantial enough to create a community where students hold and share different outlooks based on their home environments. This diversity, paired with the fact that many students travel to different states or even different countries during their breaks, creates valuable understanding and awareness among the seniors.


Seniors

peace and harmony Brad Jarvis practices guitar while relaxing in the renovated Senior Lounge.

mastermind Jordan Scott, designer of the lounge wall artwork, sits atop the table he painted.

Good Vibes By kaya legrand mad science Brooke Kawamoto and Jonathan Rosa finish their glowing bacteria lab in AP Biology.

orange giants David White’s standard orange polo matches the giant pumpkin he won in a charity raffle.

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The Saturday after school began, paint fumes and techno beats flowed through Barstow’s empty hallways. Eager to assume their role as leaders of the school and to assert their authority, a group of seniors gathered over the weekend to paint the Senior Lounge. Rather than simply cover last year’s faded walls with a new white coat they collaborated to paint designs in bright greens, blues, purples, and yellows. Senior Jordan Scott led the artistic endeavor: “As soon as we presented the idea of remodeling the Senior Lounge to our class, we resolved to have

it primed by the next weekend. We conquered the daunting task of painting the entire lounge in one morning, and everyone was extremely satisfied with the results.” This design group’s drive and cooperation applies to the entire Class of 2011; their leadership in Spofford and sports, musicals and Monday assemblies has motivated the whole Upper School. As Mr. Griffeth told the seniors during one of their first class meetings, “There’s a really positive vibe in the school right now, and it’s because of you guys.”


P PK K 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

Class Size

45 Male

Female

Language Distribution

spanish

ready to retreat A group of seniors poses in the hallway before leaving for Harvesters, the first stop on their retreat.

French

chinese Japanese

other

collaborative criticism Ilana Bodker and Shannon Fleming edit each other’s stories in Creative Writing.

artistic design Cynthia Scott sketches shirt designs for Advanced Drawing and Painting.

araBic German heBreW hindi indonesian italian korean portUGUese




Austin Lee Abitz P PK K 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

Cera • Jim Halpert • pilot • robotics bro Tech Wizard • White shoes • honda cr-z PIMP MY RIDE • HAIR GEL • theater lights magic Wallet • help desk • Kuh-nig-its

“You can make a throne of bayonets, but you can’t sit on it for long.” - Boris Yeltsin

“Forget about the consequences of failure. Failure is only a temporary change in direction to set you straight for your next success.” - Denis Waitley

“Engineers like to solve problems. If there are no problems handily available they will create their own problems.” - Scott Adams

“Obstacles are what you see when you take your eyes off of your goal.” - Henry Ford

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“If opportunity doesn’t knock, build a door.” - Milton Berle


Lamya HishamMohammed Al Douri P PK K 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

Sunny • pretty eyes • Brilliant Artist soccer • stylish • red camero • graceful introspective • kind • gentle • sensitive determined • visionary • knows her mind

“You know, some people think that dandelions are weeds, but, you know, I always think, who the hell decided tulips were so great?” - Peter Griffin, Family Guy

“This is a grenade-free zone.” - Mike “The Situation,” Jersey Shore

“Oh, this is almost as intense as that time I forgot how to sit down!” - Peter Griffin, Family Guy

“Believe it or not, I can actually draw.” - Jean Michel Basquiat

“To be awake is to be alive.” - Henry David Thoreau


Akshay Almelkar P PK K 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

intelligent • gandhi • B-Line Editor goalie • finger drums • superstitious dedicated • lucky eraser • patient Human Calculator • joules • focused

“Any intelligent fool can make things bigger, more complex, and more violent. It takes a touch of genius — and a lot of courage — to move in the opposite direction.” - Albert Einstein “What’s the most resilient parasite? An idea. A single idea from the human mind can build cities. An idea can transform the world and rewrite all the rules.” - Dominic Cobb, Inception

“Education is an ornament in prosperity and a refuge in adversity.” - Aristotle

“Don’t worry about the world ending today. It’s already tomorrow in Australia.” - Charles M. Schultz

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Jordyn Marie Archie P PK K 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

dancer • super cute • stylish • sweet writer • soft spoken • conscientious good with kids • independent • vivacious sassy • confident • Creative • Kind

“Our deepest fear is not that we are inadequate. Our deepest fear is that we are powerful beyond measure. It is our light, not our darkness that most frightens us. We ask ourselves, who am I to be brilliant, gorgeous, talented, fabulous? Actually, who are you not to be?” - Marianne Williamson “If you don’t like something, change it. If you can’t change it, change your attitude.” - Maya Angelou

“Strength and dignity are her clothing, and she smiles at the future.” - Proverbs 31:25

“…And when you get the choice to sit it out or dance, I hope you dance.“ - Lee Ann Womack, “I Hope You Dance”


Erin Nicole Bax P PK K 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

SILLY • aTHLETIC • hilarious • sarcastic photographer • cross country • guitar soccer • B-Line • sassy • Converse hard-working • infectious laugh • pez

“You know what’s a funny word? Pickleweasel!” - Kelso, That ’70s Show

“And you’re singin’ the songs thinkin’ this is the life And you wake up in the morning and your head feels twice the size Where you gonna go? Where you gonna go? Where you gonna sleep tonight?” - Amy MacDonald, “This Is the Life”

“Do what you feel in your heart to be right — for you’ll be criticized anyway.” - Eleanor Roosevelt

“Slow down everyone You’re moving too fast.” - Jack Johnson, “Inaudible Melodies”

“We may run, walk, stumble, drive, or fly, but let us never lose sight of the reason for the journey, or miss a chance to see a rainbow on the way.” - Gloria Gaither

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“I have loved the stars too fondly to be fearful of the night.” - Galileo Galilei


Ilana Suzanne Bodker P PK K 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

PANDAS • creative writing • sensitive soulful • dry sense of humor • observant witty • thoughtful • quiet • pretty hair country music • loves theater • dancer

“I’m through accepting limits ‘cause someone says they’re so. Some things I cannot change But ‘til I try, I’ll never know!” - “Defying Gravity,” Wicked

“Do what you can, with what you have, where you are.” - Theodore Roosevelt “What lies behind us and what lies before us are tiny matters compared to what lies within us.” - Ralph Waldo Emerson

“Wherever you go, go with all your heart.” - Confucius


Zoë Gabriella Brunell P PK K 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

tiny • ninja • adorable • sharp • quiet red mini cooper • shank • insightful clever • Wise • beautiful hair • petite independent • precious • mischievous

“Humility is the solid foundation of all virtues.” - Confucius “The final mystery is oneself.” - Oscar Wilde “None of us is as smart as all of us.” - Japanese Proverb “Sanity is a cozy lie.” - Susan Sontag

“When at a loss how to go on, in speaking, cough.” - Greek Proverb “Every survival kit should include a sense of humor.” - Anonymous “Named must your fear be before banish it you can.” - Yoda

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Ronald William Caspers II P PK K 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

pun master • hysterical • sweetheart soccer • bicyclist • loyal • snowboarding fun-loving • eagle Scout • trustworthy easygoing • honest • dedicated • clever

“It always rains on tents. Rainstorms will travel thousands of miles, against prevailing winds for the opportunity to rain on a tent.” - Dave Barry

“Every artist was first an amateur.” - Ralph Waldo Emerson

“Promise me you’ll always remember: You’re braver than you believe, and stronger than you seem, and smarter than you think.” - Christopher Robin, Winnie the Pooh “Everybody has to be able to participate in a future that they want to live for.” - Dean Kamen

“To me, it’s about getting better every time and doing the best I can no matter where I am.” - Shaun White


Robert Choi P PK K 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

Philosophical • Roberto • Mustang stealthy • Buddhist • funny • polite talented • Wonderful Hair • penguin suit artistic • slide-loving pig • fashionable

“If you want to have a dream, you should sleep.” - Joshua Won “The only difference between me and a madman is that I’m not mad.” - Salvador Dalí

“The faster you go, the shorter you are.” - Albert Einstein

學而時習之 不亦說乎 - Confucius 24

연탄재 함부로 발로 차지 마라 너는 누구에게 한 번이라도 뜨거운 사람이었느냐 - 안도현

“What we think, we become.” - Buddha


Alexis Lanyce Harbour Crowley P PK K 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

Energetic • athletic • tennis • considerate British • basketball • leader • singers kind-hearted • soccer goalie • conscientious spirited • outgoing • intense • Spofford

“If you don’t know where you are going, you might wind up someplace else.” - Yogi Berra “2pt yellow border on photos.” - Name of Speaker

“Like everybody, and trust no one.” - Lauren Conrad

“The best way to guarantee a loss is to quit.” - Morgan Freeman

“Anyone who thinks my story is anywhere near over is sadly mistaken.” - Donald Trump

“Be more concerned with your character than your reputation, because your character is what you really are, while your reputation is merely what others think you are.” - John Wooden


Benjamin Alan Denzer P PK K 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

architect • involved • influential • Mao gandhi • batman • bad speller • visionary tape sculptures • blue minivan • nerf guns vuvuzelas • slow clap • charismatic

“The secret impresses no one. The trick you use it for is everything.” - Alfred Borden, The Prestige

“Don’t never underestimate the power o’ bull****, Inspector.” - Alan Moore, From Hell

“Tender.” - T.J. Detweiler, Recess

“Sim Sim Sala Bim.” - Hadji, Jonny Quest

“I believe in equality for everyone, except reporters and photographers.” - Mohandas Gandhi

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Olivia Maureen Derman P PK K 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

photographer • MUSIC • trivia • liberal passionate • vibrant • intuitive • goofy musical theater • loving • perceptive creative • loves hello kitty • youthful

“Learn from yesterday, live for today, hope for tomorrow. The important thing is not to stop questioning.” - Albert Einstein

“Follow your inner moonlight; don’t hide the madness.” - Allen Ginsberg

“Art is the most intense mode of individualism that the world has known.” - Oscar Wilde

“Do what you love. Know your own bone; gnaw at it, bury it, unearth it, and gnaw it still.” - Henry David Thoreau

“I guess we are who we are for a lot of reasons. And maybe we’ll never know most of them. But even if we don’t have the power to choose where we come from, we can still choose where we go from there.” - Stephen Chbosky, The Perks of Being a Wallflower


Michael Andrew Driscoll P PK K 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

environmentalist • the man • Reflective intelligent • lute • wise • the gatekeeper clever • radio voice • musician • insightful vegetarian • peaceful • goofy • poetic

“Surely all God’s people, however serious or savage, great or small, like to play. Whales and elephants, dancing, humming gnats, and invisibly small mischievous microbes all are warm with divine radium and must have lots of fun in them.” - John Muir

“Do you consider yourself a homebody?” - Uncle Terry

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“Dude, I’m never washing these jeans. I’ll come back and they’ll have those Brazilian beans ingrained in them.” - Kevin Woods

“I wish you were a pile of dirt.” - Cynthia Scott


Jordan Scott Eckley P PK K 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

azure Eyes • Baseball Stud • athletic selfless • pleasant • dependable • wop gracious • superman • abercrombie • kicks beatboxer • gentleman • funny voices

“If a tie is like kissing your sister, losing is like kissing your grandmother with her teeth out.” - George Brett

“This game is really crazy. Nobody can understand it, and there are a lot of things that happen that you can’t control.” - Albert Pujols

“Wherever you go, go with all your heart.” - Confucius

“‘For I know the plans I have for you,’ declares the Lord. ‘Plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future.’” - Jeremiah 29:11


Paul Thomas Edelman P PK K 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

Knowledge bowl fiend • handshakes history buff • cool as a cucumber monotone • wry • intelligent • trivia witty • sneaky smile • sarcastic • droll

“Today, I consider myself the luckiest man on the face of the Earth.” - Lou Gehrig

“History is a set of lies agreed upon.” - Napoleon Bonaparte

“Everything is changing. People are taking their comedians seriously and the politicians as a joke” - Will Rogers

“Veni, Vidi, Vici.” - Julius Caesar

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“For a thousand years, men will still say, ‘This was their finest hour.’” - Winston Churchill


Shannon Rose Fleming P PK K 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

quirky • sock Monkeys • random • Artist thorns • Fringe • Alternative Baking Club Window Jumping • Liberty Beans • Val Kilmer Stanley • Shmowzow • sweetheart • accents

“I’m not going to do my math homework. Look at these unsolved problems. Here’s a number in mortal combat with another. One of them is going to get subtracted. But why? What will be left of him? If I answered these, it would kill the suspense. It would resolve the conflict and turn intriguing possibilities into boring old facts.” - Calvin, Calvin and Hobbes “If you are allergic to a thing, it is best not to put that thing in your mouth, particularly if that thing is cats.” - Lemony Snickett, The Wide Window

“Real corn makes it special.” - General Skarr, The Grim Adventures of Bill and Mandy “Your head smells like a puppy.” - Gir, Invader Zim “I try never to wear my own clothes, I pretend I’m someone else.” - David Byrne


Chloe Meredith Foster P PK K 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

Fostah • Volleyball star • Australian Tall • Clever • sarah palin • Ramen zut! • brea-fist • imaginative • sly injury-prone • skilled storyteller

“Somewhere along the way I just forgot what I wanted to do with my life, and then I found Ramen.” - Abby, The Ramen Girl

“But ‘redheads’ aren’t a race, Jonah.” - Doug, Summer Heights High

“Have I gone too far?” - Kathy Griffin

“You’re only as tall as your heart will let you be And you’re only as small as the world will make you seem When the going gets rough and you feel like you may fall Just look on the brightside.” - Christofer Drew, “On The Brightside”

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“The man who smiles when things go wrong has thought of someone to blame it on.” - Robert Bloch


Matthew Franklin Grossman Golden P PK K 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

Politics Club • Emanuel Cleaver • focused debate • dedicated • VOcal • opinionated tenacious • involved • funny • engaged matty-g • finance • incisive • determined

“If you want to know what a man’s like, take a good look at how he treats his inferiors, not his equals.” “It is our choices that show what we truly are, far more than our abilities.” - Joanne Kathleen Rowling

“There’s not a liberal America and a conservative America — there’s the United States of America.” - Barack Obama

“Be nice to nerds. Chances are you’ll end up working for one.” - Bill Gates

“It took a lot of blood, sweat, and tears to get where we are today, but we have just begun. Today we begin in earnest the work of making sure that the world we leave our children is just a little bit better than the one we inhabit today.” - Barack Obama

“Life is not fair; get used to it.” - Bill Gates


Harrison James Grey Hetler P PK K 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

Gentle soul • Dashing • Disney • friendly always Smiling • creative • cross country actor • endearing • understanding open-minded • enthusiastic • optimistic

“All your dreams can come true if you have the courage to pursue them.” - Walt Disney

“The secret of life is honesty and fair dealing. If you can fake that, you’ve got it made.” - Groucho Marx

“Against the assault of laughter nothing can stand.” - Mark Twain

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“Are you tired, run down, listless? Do you poop out at parties? Are you unpopular? Well, are you? The answer to all your problems is in this little ol’ bottle, Vitameatavegamin.” - Lucy Ricardo, I Love Lucy

“Those are my principles, and if you don’t like them... well, I have others.” - Groucho Marx


Frederik Heuser P PK K 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

German • fabulous hair • dj maangØman Bicycle kick • winter sports • sweetheart modern • Freddy • SOCCER KING • “What?” techno music • multilingual • ich liebe dich

“If you don't know where you are going, you will probably end up somewhere else.” - Dr. Laurence J. Peter

“Manche Arbeiten muß man Dutzende Male verschieben, bevor man sie endgüeltig vergißt.” - Unbekannter Autor

“The rules of soccer are very simple, basically it is this: if it moves, kick it. If it doesn’t move, kick it until it does.” - Phil Woosnam

“Everything is possible, except for skiing through revolving doors.” - Unknown

“Kids today, all they talk about is big air. I say, stay on the mountain, that’s where the action is. If you want big air, pull my finger.” - Smooth Johnson


Samantha Joan Hoober-Burkhart P PK K 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

coloring books • Spanish • effervescent amigos • long hair • friendly • dynamic loves foreign languages • quirky • skeptical goofy • great hugger • Mexico • mirthful

“We’re all kinds of fabulous.” – Lena Hoober-Burkhardt and Jayden Ziegler

“Jeff Trent: So what if we do develop this Solanite bomb? We’d be even a stronger nation than now. Eros: Stronger. You see? You see? Your stupid minds! Stupid! Stupid!” - Plan 9 From Outer Space

“Happiness is only real when shared.” - Christopher McCandless, Into the Wild

“Am I… ginger?” – The Doctor, Doctor Who

“That bird is extraterrestrial. It comes from outer space. From some godforsaken antimatter galaxy millions and millions of light years from the Earth. No other explanation is possible.” - The Scientist, The Giant Claw

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Adriane Alexus House P PK K 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

loves kids • energetic • volleyball helpful • spirited • considerate • sassy friendly • great laugh • compassionate outgoing • tender-hearted • cooperative

“Invention, my dear friends, is 93% perspiration, 6% electricity, 4% evaporation, and 2% butterscotch ripple.” - Willy Wonka, Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory

“Look at life through the windshield, not the rear-view mirror.” - Byrd Baggett

“At the age of six I wanted to be a cook. At seven I wanted to be Napoleon. And my ambition has been growing steadily ever since.” - Salvador Dalí

“Tell me and I’ll forget; show me and I may remember; involve me and I’ll understand.” - Chinese Proverb “It’s not that I’m lazy, it’s that I just don’t care.” - Peter Gibbons, Office Space


Bradford Gerard Jarvis P PK K 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

thinker • poetic soul • generous • funny Looks like an action hero • loves music Italian Stallion • Third eye blind • guitar genuine • great smile • considerate

“Art allows people a way to dream their way out of their struggle.” - Russell Simmons

“Now more than ever we need to talk to each other, to listen to each other and understand how we see the world, and cinema is the best medium for doing this.” - Martin Scorsese

“The critics have been harsh all the way through my career but it doesn’t affect me.” - Guy Ritchie

“It takes 20 years to build a reputation and five minutes to ruin it. If you think about that, you’ll do things differently.” - Warren Buffett

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Alexander Clayton Johnson P PK K 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

wayside waifs • Horse RIDER • cheeks locker stereo • Hard worker • farm barbershop quartet • Cross Country CELTIC CLUB • animal lover • humble

“The more that you read, the more things you will know. The more that you learn, the more places you’ll go.” - Dr. Seuss

“I’ll catch you on the flip side.” - Rocco

“Your pencils are creating a health hazard. I could fall and pierce an organ.” - Dwight Schrute

“Something inside of me just said, ‘Hey, wait a minute, I want to beat him,’ and I just took off.” - Steve Prefontaine


Brooke Marie Mioko Kawamoto P PK K 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

dinosaurs • loves ice cream • soccer captain witty • cute • cross country • silly bandz Brookodon • creative • considerate • sweet thoughtful • jelly • gorgeous smile

“The past, I think, has helped me appreciate the present — and I don’t want to spoil any of it by fretting about the future.” - Audrey Hepburn

“Rule #76: No excuses. Play like a champion!” - Jeremy Grey, Wedding Crashers

“Rex: Sorry about the way I acted. I was a real animal. Elsa: We all have regrets, Rex. Woog: Tell me about it. The things I’ve stepped on...” - We’re Back! A Dinosaur’s Story “Hokey religions and ancient weapons are no match for a good blaster by your side, kid.” - Han Solo, Star Wars: Episode IV — A New Hope “The best teacher is experience and not through someone’s distorted point of view.” - Jack Kerouac

40


David Perry Kessler P PK K 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

Tech desk • Rabbi • hard worker • man paycheck • wise • fro • cross country llama • Yogurtini • good listener • loyal introspective • merr-tastic • hilarious

“A superior man is modest in his speech, but exceeds in his actions.” - Confucius

“For myself I am an optimist — it does not seem to be much use being anything else.” - Winston Churchill

“Be neither silly, nor cunning, but wise.” - Benjamin Franklin

“Reality must take precedence over public relations, for nature cannot be fooled.” - Richard Feynman

“The secret of success in life is for a man to be ready for his opportunity when it comes.” – Benjamin Disraeli “Men argue, nature acts.” - Voltaire

“Never say, ‘oops.’ Always say, ‘Ah, interesting.‘” - Anonymous


Melanie Carron Kulick P PK K 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

bubbly • dancer • stylish • movie quotes ticklish • genuine • giggly • loves music avid reader • tough • spunky • loyal TV guru • sincere • loving • adorable

“When life gives you lemons, make applesauce.” - Angelica, The Rugrats

“Gonna make my move Gonna make it stay Gonna make it last Nevermind the past Living for today.“ - Weezer, “Glorious Day”

“That’s Ren and Stimpy. They’re way existential.“ - Cher, Clueless

“For attractive lips, speak words of kindness, For lovely eyes, seek out the good in people, For a slim figure, share your food with the hungry. For beautiful hair, let a child run their fingers through it once a day, For poise, walk with the knowledge that you never walk alone.” - Audrey Hepburn

“Cause all you really need are a few good friends.” - The Format, “The First Single”

42

“Gonzo: Stop the presses! News Editor: Why? What happened? Gonzo: I don’t know. I just always wanted to say that.” - The Great Muppet Caper


Kaya Jordan LeGrand P PK K 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

observant • dedicated runner • energetic aware • child at heart • giving • brilliant piano goddess • vegetarian • insightful honest • curly hair • involved • driven

“Con los ojos interiores abiertos podemos encontrar una belleza imensa oculta en los detalles.” - Sign in Costa Rica “We live on a mote of dust suspended in a sunbeam.” - Carl Sagan “Please slow it down There’s a secret magic past world That you only notice when you’re looking back at it And all I wanna do is turn around I’m going down to sleep on the bottom of the ocean ‘Cause I couldn’t let go when the water hit the setting sun” - Rocky Votolato, “White Daisy Passing”

“…the world at my feet, the world through the window, is an illuminated manuscript whose leaves the wind takes, one by one, whose painted illuminations and halting words draw me, one by one, and I am dazzled in days and lost.” - Annie Dillard, Holy the Firm

“In these bodies we will live, In these bodies we will die. Where you invest your love, You invest your life.” - Mumford & Sons, “Awake My Soul”


Scott Andrew McMeekin P PK K 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

tall • ers champion • basketball • loud singer • muffin • Funny • outgoing • nike volleyball fan • goofy • sweet baby ray tangential comments • beautiful blue eyes

“But even if you should suffer for what is right, you are blessed. ‘Do not fear what they fear; do not be frightened. Take courage.’” - 1 Peter 3:14

“You’re my assistant. You’re supposed to back me up and go get me juiceboxes whenever I want. Now go get me a juicebox!” - Phil Weston, Kicking and Screaming

“Whenever I’m about to do something, I think, ‘Would an idiot do that?’ And if they would, I do not do that thing.” - Dwight Schrute, The Office

“Ask me to play, I’ll play. Ask me to shoot, I’ll shoot. Ask me to pass, I’ll pass. Ask me to steal, block out, sacrifice, lead dominate. Anything. But it’s not what you ask of me. It’s what I ask of myself.” - LeBron James

44

“Bears. Beets. Battlestar Galactica.” - Jim Halpert, The Office


Alexandra Frances Mirabile P PK K 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

pretty • sassy • volleyball • photogenic artistic • clever • Constable • loyal sporty • trop sno • brea-fist • Italian injury-prone • bronze • mischievous

“And you’re singin’ the songs thinkin’ this is the life And you wake up in the morning and your head feels twice the size Where you gonna go? Where you gonna go? Where you gonna sleep tonight?” - Amy MacDonald, “This Is the Life”

“All I know is when I move away My heart will stay in this Midwestern state.” - Nevershoutnever!, “I Just Laugh”

“Can ca buia al pia no.”

“Live like you’re at the bottom, even when you’re at the top.” - Jonas Brothers

“Truly great friends are hard to find, difficult to leave, and impossible to forget.” - G. Randolf “Remember, always give your best. Never get discouraged. Never be petty. Always remember, others may hate you. But those who hate you don’t win unless you hate them. And then you destroy yourself.” - Richard M. Nixon


Matt Eric Molos P PK K 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

Comedic • LaidBack • Hip-Hop • Beats The Golden Child • m.m. • Gucci • tupac hEADPHONES • Turtle • Jeep • miami heat future music mogul • mr. goodcents

“I wasn’t satisfied just to earn a good living. I was looking to make a statement.” - Donald Trump “Reality is wrong. Dreams are for real.” - Tupac Shakur “Pressure is something you feel when you don’t know what the hell you’re doing.” - Peyton Manning

46

“I’m a trackstar running through life, chasing my dream.” - Curtis “50 Cent” Jackson


John Henry Morrow IV P PK K 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

Baseball • b-line • Uncle • soccer captain Tuxedos • Precious • opinionated • Athletic Tom cruise • cancun • articulate • mature Charming • military history buff • tom

“Be strong and courageous. Do not be afraid or terrified because of them, for the Lord your God goes with you; he will never leave you nor forsake you.” - Deuteronomy 31:6 “Dream as if you’ll live forever, live as if you’ll die today.” - James Dean

“Truly great friends are hard to find, difficult to leave, and impossible to forget.” - G. Randolf

“People ask me what I do in winter when there’s no baseball. I’ll tell you what I do. I stare out the window and wait for spring.” - Rogers Hornsby


Taylor Kay Phillips P PK K 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

theatre nerd • Witty • vocal • TIP STORIES Knowledge bowl • b-line editor • Tina fey multi-talented • Sharp • psy-sic • Actress basketball • slam poetry • playwright

“I regard the theatre as the greatest of all art forms, the most immediate way in which a human being can share with another the sense of what it is to be a human being.” - Oscar Wilde

“I like to crack jokes now and then, but that’s only because I struggle with math.” - Tina Fey “I am an echo of the eternal cry of ‘Let There Be.’” - Children of Eden, “Let There Be” “If you want to view paradise, Simply look around and view it. Anything you want to, do it. Wanna change the world? There’s nothing to it.” - Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory, “Pure Imagination”

48

“Only thing to do is jump over the moon.” - RENT, “Over the Moon”


Jonathan Joseph Rosa P PK K 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

yankees superfan • supportive • reliable Sarcastic • baseball Guru • considerate jeter • Cuba • ku fan • always smiling Jack johnson • peaceful • Positive

“I have the greatest job in the world. Only one person can have it. You have shortstops on other teams — I’m not knocking other teams — but there’s only one shortstop on the Yankees.” - Derek Jeter

“I want to thank the Good Lord for making me a Yankee.” - Joe DiMaggio

“I see great things in baseball. It’s our game — the American game. It will take our people out-of-doors, fill them with oxygen, and give them a larger physical stoicism. Tend to relieve us from being a nervous, dyspeptic set. Repair these losses, and be a blessing to us.” - Walt Whitman


Cynthia Kathleen Stith Scott P PK K 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

vegetarian • passionate • artist • aware poet • environmentalist • considerate • tea pretty handwriting • animal rights activist beautiful speaking voice • silly • feminist

“When logic and proportion Have fallen sloppy dead And the White Knight is talking backwards And the Red Queen's ‘off with her head!’ Remember what the dormouse said: ‘Feed your head, feed your head, feed your head’” - Jefferson Airplane, “White Rabbit”

“I know not with what weapons World War III will be fought, but World War IV will be fought with sticks and stones.” - Albert Einstein “Russell: You, Aaron, are what it’s all about. You’re real. Your room is real. Your friends are real. Real, man, real. You know? Real. You’re more important than all the silly machinery. Silly machinery. And you know it! In eleven years it’s going to be 1984, man. Think about that! Aaron: Wanna see me feed a mouse to my snake? Russell: Yes.” - Almost Famous

50

“Oh! Look at that sky. I could drive into forever with that sky. I could drive to Alaska with that sky.” - Michael Driscoll “Hey there Mrs. Lovely Moon, You're lonely and you're blue. It's kind of strange the way you change, But then again we all do, too.” - Devendra Banhardt, “Little Yellow Spider”


Jordan Thomas Scott P PK K 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

artsy • guitar • sweet • tennis • funny goofy • always has gum • guitar hero expert Soccer • Senior lounge • snowboarding fruit snacks • passionate • sensitive

“For the strength of the Pack is the Wolf, and the strength of the Wolf is the Pack.” - Rudyard Kipling

“Music gives a soul to the universe, wings to the mind, flight to the imagination, and life to everything.” - Plato

“One is not born into the world to do everything, but to do something.” - Henry David Thoreau

“Life is not measured by the number of breaths we take, but by the moments that take our breath away.” - George Carlin

“You must be the change you wish to see in the world.” - Mohandas Gandhi


Jacob Parker Shreeve P PK K 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

youthful • snowball fights • energetic fun-loving • bathrobe • balloons • Biology speed reader • frolics through halls bubba gump • contortionist • sprightly

“Be who you are and say what you feel, because those who mind don’t matter and those who matter don’t mind.” - Dr. Seuss

“Live as if you were to die tomorrow. Learn as if you were to live forever.“ - Mohandas Gandhi “It takes courage to grow up and become who you really are.” - e.e. cummings “Our greatest glory is not in never falling, but in rising every time we fall.” - Confucius “The ancestor of every action is a thought.” - Ralph Waldo Emerson

52


Hanh Duc Tranton Jr. P PK K 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

Junior • video games • sarcastiC • inventive “it’s a trap!” • MOVIE BUFF • killer smile california • SANDMAN • “don’t be that guy” Scarlett Johansson • superb comic timing

“Everybody has a secret world inside of them. All of the people in the whole world, I mean everybody. No matter how boring and dull they are on the outside, inside them they’ve all got unimaginable, magnificent, wonderful, stupid, amazing worlds. Not just one world. Hundreds of them. Thousands maybe.” - Neil Gaiman, The Sandman “Happiness is the smell of a new car. It’s freedom from fear. It’s a billboard on the side of the road that screams reassurance that whatever you are doing is okay. You are okay.” - Don Draper, Mad Men

“We’re grown-ups now, and it’s our turn to decide what that means.” - Randall Munroe

“Nobody in life gets exactly what they thought they were going to get. But if you work really hard and you’re kind, amazing things will happen.” - Conan O’Brien


Annabella Marie Waldrop P PK K 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

japan • safety queen • the Decemberists Alternative baking club • singer • fringe pretty smile • Paint Fights • HomeMade Pizza Mix Tapes • photography • Drive-Thru toys

“The most important kind of freedom is to be what you really are. You trade in your reality for a role… You give up your ability to feel, and in exchange, put on a mask.” - Jim Morrison

“Sometimes, if you stand on the bottom rail of a bridge and lean over to watch the river slipping slowly away beneath you, you will suddenly know everything there is to be known.” - Winnie the Pooh

“You can’t help respecting anybody who can spell TUESDAY, even if he doesn’t spell it right; but spelling isn’t everything. There are days when spelling Tuesday simply doesn’t count.” - Winnie the Pooh “Children, your performance was miserable. Your parents will all receive phone calls instructing them to love you less now.” - Ms. Bitters, Invader Zim

“Adults are just obsolete children and the hell with them.” - Dr. Seuss

54


Lindsay Kempf Warning P PK K 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

Polite • Outstanding • sassy • frisbee Hard-Working • pretty hair • volleyball Refugees • motivated • flashcards • kind composed • basement zoo • amenable

“All your dreams can come true if you have the courage to pursue them.” - Walt Disney

“Live as if you were to die tomorrow. Learn as if you were to live forever.” - Mohandas Gandhi

“Family faces are magic mirrors. Looking at people who belong to us, we see the past, present, and future.” - Gail Lumet Buckley

“Be true to your work, your word, and your friend.” - Henry David Thoreau

“A day without laughter is a day wasted.” - Charlie Chaplin


David Allen White P PK K 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

twin • artist • Knowledge Bowl • bumblebee Mythology know-it-All • Tall Socks • actor Honor Council president • golden locks briefcase • Polos • brilliant • De Chirico

“The leaves turn black when they have learned how to fly so does the day but in the wind of the first hours of darkness sudden joy sent from an unknown tree I have not deserved you” - W. S. Merwin

“Each, alike, in youth rehearses Gentle strains and tender verses; Ever wandering far from home, Mindless of the days to come (Such as aged Winter brings Trembling on his icy wings), Both alike at last we die; Thou art starved, and so am I!” - Walter Harte

“wild(at our first) beasts uttered human words — our second coming made stones sing like birds — but o the star hushed silence which our third’s” - e. e. cummings

“And perhaps beyond those shrouded swells another man did walk with another child on the dead gray sands. Slept but a sea apart on another beach among the bitter ashes of the world or stood in their rags lost to the same indifferent sun.” - Cormac McCarthy, The Road

56

“No llores porque ya se terminó, sonríe porque sucedió.” - Gabriel García Márquez


Kathleen Suzanne White P PK K 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

Twin • Softball • Ku Super fan • robotics Cross Country Runner • Knowledge Bowl curious • Skier • robotics • sports trivia gangsta prius • loves smelling shoes

“My religion is very simple. My religion is kindness.” - Dalai Lama

“One’s destination is never a place, but rather a new way of seeing things.” - Henry Miller

“If the world was perfect, it wouldn’t be.” - Yogi Berra

“All journeys have secret destinations of which the traveler is unaware.” - Martin Buber

“A line is a dot that went for a walk.” - Paul Klee

“Life is one fool thing after another whereas love is two fool things after each other.” - Oscar Wilde

“Life is what happens while you’re busy making other plans.” - John Lennon


Caroline Francess Wieland P PK K 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

sweet caroline • big blue eyes • Golfer mature • dedicated • composed • chipmunk great with kids • Goblin • kind-hearted artistic • Gentle • photographer • patient

“You’re only given a little spark of madness. You mustn’t lose it.” - Robin Williams

“What you find in your mind is what you put there. Put good things in there.” - Ron Rathbun

“Clear eyes, full hearts, can’t lose.” - Friday Night Lights

“Luck is what happens when preparation meets opportunity.” - Darrell K. Royal

“Let’s not go through our lives without just dying to be alive.” - Hanson, “Dying To Be Alive”

58

“When you have exhausted all possibilities, remember this — you haven’t.” - Thomas Edison


Daniel Gargallo Woodhams P PK K 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

unrestrained • Spanish • exuberant • BTVN ASIAN-AMERICAN club • matador • energetic history buff • Wolf in Sheep’s Clothing Yoda • “I have a question, Dr. Ketchell.”

“Life is so short, Fall in love, dear maiden, While your lips are still red, And before you are cold, For there will be no tomorrow.” - Isamu Yoshii, “Gondola no Uta”

“Some may never live, but the crazy never die.” - Hunter S. Thompson

“Man is not made for defeat. A man can be destroyed but not defeated.” - Ernest Hemingway

“I want you always to remember me. Will you remember that I existed, and that I stood next to you here like this?” - Haruki Murakami, Norwegian Wood

“I will write peace on your wings and you will fly all over the world.” - Sadako Sasaki


Kevin Alexander Woods P PK K 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

bella napoli • DJ Jungle Bunk • Paraguay Language aficionado • Soccer • French club cultural • Loves music • dancer • mellow PelÉ • enthusiastic • focused • surfer

“My son, forget not my teaching, keep in mind my commands; For many days, and years of life, and peace, will they bring you. Let not kindness and fidelity leave you; bind them around your neck; Then will you win favor and good esteem before God and man.” - Proverbs 3:1-4

“E quando eu perguntei Ouvi você dizer Que eu era tudo O que você sempre quis Mesmo triste eu tava feliz E acabei acreditando Em ilusões...” - Marisa Monte

60

“Change will not come if we wait for some other person or some other time. We are the ones we’ve been waiting for. We are the change that we seek.” - Barack Obama

“Le travail éloigne de nous trois grands maux: l’ennui, le vice et le besoin.” - Voltaire “A good traveler has no fixed plans, and is not intent on arriving.” - Lao Tzu


Senior Retreat

September 2, 2010

Inspection Danny Woodhams checks a box of strawberries for mold.

zombie attack Grey Hetler and Junior Tranton team up against the undead.

Strawberries and Skee Ball

Next! Alex Mirabile brings a new flat to her group’s table for examination.

By Kaya LeGrand

The smell of produce pervaded the air as the Class of 2011 entered the Harvesters warehouse to begin the service-filled morning of their Senior Retreat. After dividing into groups, the seniors began picking out spoiled produce items to prepare the food for delivery. Rotten strawberries flew into trashcans, bagged potatoes piled into crates, and clean tomatoes stacked up in cartons as the students worked. After lunch at a Japanese steakhouse, the seniors competed in mini golf, Skee-Ball, and motorcycle racing at Cool Crest Arcade. They returned to Barstow with arcade prizes in their pockets, the scent of moldy strawberries fresh in their minds, and memories of a fun day with classmates.

on par Frederik Heuser looks on as John Morrow aims for a hole-in-one.

1 LB Per Box

8 BoxeS Per FLat

Ricochet Akshay Almelkar dominates in air hockey.

6 FLatS Per LeVeL


ADAMS AUDITORIUM

KOHLER

COLLIER

GULDIN

PAGANO

KETCHELL

FOUR SQUARE

CRAMER SENIOR LOUNGE LUCE

COMMONS

HYVRARD FRANK

PAYNE ROARK

BOOK STORE

ZEN GARDEN

PROFE PK CRUMM

LIBRARY MEETING ROOM

ZIMMERMAN ROBOTICS

CAFETERIA MUSIC ROOM

PUB HUB KILL

TECH DESK

ART ROOM VARSITY GYM

US Student Distribution October 26, 2010 Flex 11:25AM - 11:40AM

BROOKFIELD GYM


STATE LINE ROAD

Upper School

SENIORS NUMBER OF STUDENTS 15 10 5 1

JUNIORS Barstow’s organic growth — the adding, remodeling, and reclassifying of space — has created a maze-like layout that confounds visitors but supplies idiosyncratic locations for Upper School students. These niches of individuality have been claimed by each grade. The freshmen, for example, have not quite discovered their place in the school. Most settle in the freshman hallway, trapped in the physical and behavioral space between Middle and Upper School. Sophomores have claimed new territory: the cramped passage leading to Ms. Zimmerman’s room, now nicknamed “Party Cove.” Lining the secluded hallway, they expertly impede traffic to the men’s restroom and engage in shenanigans with limited

consequence. Juniors congregate in the library, the closest open space to their lockers and one of the only areas large enough to accommodate their massive class size and even larger personality. After having navigated the Upper School for three years, the seniors spread themselves around Barstow. Many relax in the Senior Lounge or do homework in Mr. Adams’s alcove. Active upperclassmen rush outside to play four square, while language aficionados gather in Profe PK’s room for a Spanish Club meeting. The Commons is a truly common space: no one grade holds claim to the area. Instead, grades merge, ideas and experiences are shared, and collaborative education takes place.

SOPHOMORES

FRESHMEN


Upper School

ni hao! Juniors Joseph Chilen and Paul Vedros collaborate in Chinese class.

TRAVEL IN PACKS Freshmen Ali Loftin, Kelsey Thorp, and Will Pursell roam the hallways.

New and Improved By melissa Martin WEIRD SCIENCE Senior Erin Bax and junior Brandon Bachar take notes in Biology.

¡MUY BIEN! Junior Kate Schuller and senior Kathleen White advertise Spanish Club at the Club Fair.

64

Shiny new wood floors illuminated by gentle lighting and accented by warm paint colors now adorn the hallowed halls of our institution in an effort to match the esteem of the students. The Barstow population enjoyed the transformations every day, providing a glimpse into the promising future of an expanding community. Junior Paul Vedros expressed his feelings about the new appearance: “I feel like the renovations give Barstow a look that really lives up to the school’s standards. The wood floors in particular create an atmosphere

that feels more like home; however, I sometimes miss jumping on the black squares.” These cosmetic enhancements contributed to the needs of the perpetually developing Upper School. Additionally, an influx of new students helped diversify the population. Freshman Glenn Lane stated, “The new Barstow students have brought interesting and insightful new views to the freshman class.” Overall, the new additions in both the student population and the school’s structure made for a valuable and unique Upper School experience.


P PK K 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

Size

209 Male

Female

New Students

Renovations

12,000 Square Feet of New Flooring

8,000 Square Feet of New Ceiling

1,600 Hours of Labor

75

Gallons of Paint

Teen Spirit Seniors Kevin Woods and Jordan Eckley energize the first pep assembly with an ear-splitting vuvuzuela cry.

14 New Lockers

TEAMWORK A motley crew of sophomores and juniors kicks back in the Upper School library.

A MATHEMATICAL OPERA Ms. Pagano’s class takes a break from the thrilling world of Pre-Calculus.


Juniors

Gamer Ignacio Robinson gives a double thumbs up while playing World of Warcraft.

Study to the beat Alex Dockhorn, Sarah Driks, and Cassidy Rudman begin homework after their morning dance team practice.

Falling into Place By kate sims problem solver Jeremy Terman works out physics problems in Mr. Adams’s office.

b-line time Katie Anderson and Molly O’Connor fold and staple B-Line issues.

66

Eleven years ago, 17 five-year-olds enthusiastically played games and put puzzles together in their Kindergarten class. Jumping ahead to 2010, these juniors approached problems in AP Calculus and Honors Physics with that same eagerness. Although the class recognized the seriousness and importance of studies in the junior year, they kept in mind their humor and games from Kindergarten. The Class of 2012 understood how to joke around and have a great time, while simultaneously bringing forth a mature approach in order to create balance. Cassidy Rudman

says, “I am proud to be a part of this junior class because I can get along with every single person in the grade. Everyone is interested in different activities, but as a group we are funny, fun-loving, and get along well.” The eleventh graders interlock like pieces of a puzzle. Each individual’s background, skill set, and interests comprise their unique part in the complete picture. The final product includes the foundation students brought to the school as well as the characteristics they developed during their junior year.


P PK K 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

Class Size

63 Male

Female

Birthdays one student Jan FeB mar aPr may Jun Jul auG sePt oCt nov deC

Chinese Class Changwoo Lim, Paul Vedros, Chase Thorp, Joseph Chilen, Sabrina Weng, and Jared Wright prepare for a test.

Manly love Bobby Deffenbaugh and Chase Coble share the love in the library during free period.

library friends Grace Halsey and Samantha Barnett hang out in the library during break.


68

Rana Aliani

Katherine Anderson

Shahzad Aslam

Ned Babbott

Brandon Bachar

Sree Balusu

Joseph Chilen

Chase Coble

Aidan Coyle

Cole Dattel

Robert Deffenbaugh

Mackenzie Devins

Christopher Frye

Tyler Gerson

Miles Goscha

Robert Grabowsky

Aaron Greenbaum

Gabe Greenbaum

Farkhanda Khan

Zachary Kiegerl

Claire Kim

Irene Lee

Kexin Li

Changwoo Lim

Jesse Miller

Molly O’Connor

Taylor Peavey

Sarah Pourakbar

Rian Ray

Ignacio Robinson

Taylor Schwartz

Kate Sims

Amelia Switz

Jeremy Terman

Chase Thorp

Shweta Vadlamani


Class of

Samantha Barnett

Leah Barngrover

Andrea Blatt

Lawrence Brown

Leslie Bruce

2012 STUDENT PARTICIPATION ONE STUDENT BASEBALL BASKETBALL CHEER DANCE

Alexandra Dockhorn

Sarah Driks

Joseph Duffy

Alexa Dusselier

Blake Exposito

GOLF SOCCER SOFTBALL SWIMMING TENNIS TRACK VOLLEYBALL

Allison Hall

Grace Halsey

Jesse Howitt

Jonah Jaax

Madison Jack

MUSICIANS

XC

DEBATE MUSICAL PLAY

7 ROBOTICS SINGERS

Melissa Martin

Jeffrey Martini

Rebecca Marvin

Conor McMann

6

AGATHON B-LINE BTVN

2

YB

KNOWLEDGE BOWL SCIENCE BOWL

Cassidy Rudman

Diana Russ

Mohaned Salah

Kathryn Schuller

2

1

1

Paul Vedros

Annie Rose Watkins

Sabrina Weng

Jared Wright

1


Sophomores

calc Vs. Afro Deko Ricketts shows his expert skills during Ms. Pagano’s class.

three musketeeers Katie Sloan, Marie-Louise Fourie, and Ellen Krause enjoy flex time.

Smarter than the Average Bear By farwa haideri In the Zone Xye Inzauro diligently studies for a chemistry test.

Hardly working Chris Kang relaxes in the Commons during a free period.

70

With the addition of nine new students and more demanding classes, this year’s sophomore class has bonded to become a family. They have matured from childish freshman into sophisticated young adults who chemistry teacher Mr. Crumm thinks are “smarter than the average bear.” Newcomer Amy Baek said, “We are a bunch of crazy people who sure know how to have fun!” As the grade increased in size, its diversity became prominent. The course load this year became more arduous with the addition of AP World History. Combined with Honors Chemistry,

the new AP option kept schedules loaded. Though it proved to be quite a handful, the Class of 2013 seemed to overcome the challenge. Mr. Crumm believes that “another name for Chemistry is struggle, but success is the goal, and this year’s sophomores definitely kept up.” Mrs. Guldin, teaching AP World History for the first time, said, “The sophomores’ eagerness to attempt so rigorous a course so early in their Upper School experiences reflects both their maturity and sincere desire to grow as intellectuals.”


P PK K 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

Class Size

49 Male

Female

Favorite Song

“Telephone” Lady Gaga

“Like a G6” Far East Movement

“Teenage Dream” Katy Perry

“Take It Off” Ke$ha

fanhood A group of sophomores enjoys an unusually warm November afternoon at the boys’ Sectionals soccer game. “Mine” Taylor Swift

“Home” Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeros

Math stars Sonia Larbi, Jessica Schneider, and Nora Lloyd work out problems during Pre-Calculus.

Study Buddies Bilal Hameed and Ellen Babbott work efficiently during their free period.

Other


72

Ellen Babbott

Amy Baek

Victoria Ball

Morgan Barbagallo

Sohil Bhagat

Anna Bradley

Lauren Estes

Gabrielle Fenaroli

William Fleming

Marie-Louise Fourie

Jordan Grabber

Ashley Gratwick

Bilal Hameed

Jesse Hester

Sofie Heuser

Xye Inzauro

William Kanan

Chris Kang

Ellen Krause

Saeju Kwon

Sonia Larbi

Daria LeGrand

Joseph Lenart III

Nora Lloyd

Braden Neihart

Michael O’Brien

Darah Pourakbar

Deko Ricketts

Jacob Roberts

Harrison Rosenthal

Kathryn Sloan

Lindsey Smith

Emily Snow

Christopher Sokoloff

YoungHwa Son

Judson Woods


Class of

Max Cantu-Lima

Brennan DePew

2013

Aaron Dupuis

STUDENT PARTICIPATION ONE STUDENT BASEBALL BASKETBALL CHEER DANCE

Grace Guthrie

GOLF

Farwa Haideri

SOCCER SOFTBALL SWIMMING

MUSICIANS TENNIS TRACK 9

Michael Kessler

VOLLEYBALL XC

Austin Krause 4

DEBATE MUSICAL PLAY

2 ROBOTICS SINGERS

Bryan Lundgren

Alex McDonald

1 AGATHON B-LINE BTVN

1 YB

Jessica Schneider

Adam Singer

Susie Xu

Waqar Zuberi


Freshmen

enlightenment Jeanne Brown and Emily Thompson study in the freshman hall.

YELL LEADERS Logan Kane, Merek Holzrichter, Trevor Wright, and Tommy Dunn cheer for Barstow at a pep assembly.

The Young and Resourceful By Sydney Reed MIEDOSO Cole Childers looks through the Spanish dictionary to write his scary story.

GOOFING OFF Devin Newsome makes faces during study hall.

74

This year’s freshman class is a lively bunch, full of different personalities that add to the Upper School as a whole. Freshman English teacher Ms. Zimmerman described the grade as “a group full of critical thinkers who think they are funny and show an admirable skepticism of authority.” These involved ninth graders created Badminton Club, Arts and Creative Writing Club, LAMB Club, which helps an orphanage in Africa, and Microbiology Club. Microbiology Club was created to make the school a cleaner

place. Members of this group swabbed various locations in the school such as the cafeteria and classrooms in order to find the bacteria that cause students to become sick. Freshman class VicePresident Jasmine Walton said, “The main purpose of this club is to promote awareness of germs and bacteria in the school, and we get to do fun experiments.” The awareness, responsibility, and motivation of the freshman class brought a postitive fresh energy to the Upper School.


P PK K 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

Class Size

52 Male

Female

New Students

Kansas

Missouri

FRANÇAIS Drew Bierwirth, Alexx Graham, and Iqraz Nanji listen attentively to Madame Coventry in French class.

BUDDY SYSTEM Nicole Robinson and Alyssa West wander through the hallways together.

MATH ATTACK Tessia Phillips and Hannah Lentell study in the library.


76

Alex Acuff

Namira Ali

Noland Ammon

Austin Bachar

Drew Bierwirth

Jeanne Brown

Natalie Dockhorn

Thomas Dunn

Armand Edalati

Seth Farrar

Alena Frye

Jay Gillen

Merek Holzrichter

Maria Ioudenitch

Logan Kane

Justine Laberthe

Glenn Lane

Lissa Leibson

Ethan Lopez

Iqraz Nanji

Devin Newsome

Camille O’Leary

Joseph Penn

Tessia Phillips

Nick Russ

Claire Shafran

Bianca Shurn

Cameron Simon

Libby Smith

Taylor Smith

Madeleine Tadros

Emily Thompson

Kelsey Thorp

Jasmine Walton

Alyssa West

Trevor Wright


Class of

Colby Childers

Skylar Devins

2014 STUDENT PARTICIPATION

Iris Dew

ONE STUDENT BASEBALL BASKETBALL CHEER DANCE GOLF

Annie Grabowsky

Alexx Graham

Ben Gutman

SOCCER SOFTBALL

MUSICIANS

SWIMMING TENNIS TRACK

7 VOLLEYBALL XC

Hannah Lentell

Isabel Lloyd

Ali Loftin

3

DEBATE MUSICAL PLAY

2 ROBOTICS SINGERS

William Pursell

Sydney Reed

Nicole Robinson

AGATHON 1 BTVN YB

Ryan Sparks

Sam Stewart

Arsam Yazdani

Han Bit Yoon


Total Posters

135

45

Motivational

37 Art

19 Maps

25 Quotes

51

Informational

You Can

Do It!

Categories Can Overlap


Middle School

Malleable Middle School minds are inundated daily by an army of posters. From John B. Sparks’s “Histomap” to motivational images of “Integrity” and “Character,” the walls of the Middle School serve to educate and influence. Graphical representations of Middle School curriculum, posters soak into the educational subconscious, their

symbols and ideologies becoming part of the academic environment. Whether motivational, factual, inspirational, quotable, or simply beautiful, these posters serve as connective tissue, common ground for all Middle School students. Fixed in position, each poster is viewed constantly by a rotating schedule of wandering

eyes. As students root themselves within the familiarity of their classrooms, these posters become their possessions, automatically associated with warm sentiments for the learning environment — ownership through intimate knowledge gleaned from days of exploring one’s educational surroundings.


Middle School

MATH CLASS Seventh grader Sarah Elyachar works on her tablet computer.

SMILE, EVERYONE! Mrs. Holmes’s seventh graders gear up and prepare to learn how to test water quality. BOSTON, MA Sarah Epsten reads April Morning, studying the American Revolution before the eighth grade Boston trip.

WHAT ARE YOU LOOKING AT? Seventh grader Jackson Taylor pauses his work for a photo.

80

Middle School Madness By Camille O’Leary

Middle School marks, for many students, the first foray into the adult world. New responsibilities and freedoms abound. Rather than simply having information presented to them, students are encouraged to discuss the class material. The annual Middle School musical allows theatrical students to perform for their peers. Barstow’s unique 1:1 laptop program challenges Middle School students with a newfound sense of responsibility

while at the same time opening new horizons. Laptop software such as FirstClass gives students a new way to communicate with their instructors. Projects in PowerPoint and Windows Movie Maker add an extra dimension to presentations. A wireless Internet connection makes research faster. Middle School, with its plethora of opportunities, provides a jumpingoff point for later experiences in the adult world.


P PK K 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

Size

156 Male

Female

8th Grade

7th Grade

6th Grade

OM NOM NOM Sixth graders Jonathan Felton, Larsen Griffeth, and Matthew Bruce enjoy burgers and fries at lunch.

HORSING AROUND Sixth graders Saahith Gondi, Spencer Walz, and Eli Pearce chat on the way to class.

brainpower Eighth graders Kieran McMann, Mesha Bisarya, and Steven Ketchmark collaborate in class.


Eighth

Tablets Mahroosa Haideri and Andrew Lloyd enjoy having laptops to use in class.

Cupcake break Tired from sightseeing all day, eighth graders enjoy tasty treat in a Boston park.

use your Noodle Michelle Martin stands by an enormous macaroni noodle in Boston.

Break Time Taryn Blankenship enjoys reading peacefully outside.

82

Silly Bondz By shahzad aslam

Eighth grade represents a transitional year at Barstow: the final stage of Middle School and a precursor to Upper School. In this pivotal year, students are expected to hone the academic skills they have amassed through previous grades in preparation for their freshman year. Additionally, eighth graders are revered as “the leaders of the middle school,” as Taryn Blankenship expressed. This year’s class is a particularly astute bunch with an interest in theater. English and Writer’s Workshop teacher

Mrs. Harper noted that “they know all the Glee songs,” and Michelle Martin added that “we’re probably the ‘Gleekiest’ grade at Barstow.” However, no statement better summarizes the Class of 2015 than Becky Reilly’s: “We’re kind of like a box of Silly Bandz. Some are big and some are small. Some are sparkly and some are plain. We all have different messages or stories or shapes. And even though there are a lot of us, we all go really well together!”


P PK K 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

Class Size

58 Male

Female

FAVORITE TYPE OF SILLY BAND aNimalS

CharaCTerS

leTTerS

SporTS

MilkMaids Lauren Sandness, Ana McMullen, and Emily Milakovic savor their chocolate milk at lunch.

muSiC

oTher

English Class John Marvin, Megan Pickard, and Hillary Pierson read during Mrs. Harper’s class.

Boston harbor Megan Sloan, Kieran McMann, Tina Weng, and Grant Zahorsky enjoy the Massachusetts scenery.


84

Benjamin Abbas

Eliana Abbas

Faiza Aslam

Tai Barber-Gumbs

Nicolas Battaglia

Mesha Bisarya

Danielle DePriest

David DePriest

Payal Desai

Jonah Elyachar

Sarah Epsten

Bailey Fisli

Stephanie Hamann

Abraham Hermes

Brett Hill

Christopher Hoffman

Shahryar Jafri

True Kershenbaum

Andrew Lloyd

Kathryn Lundgren

Cullen MacInerney

Michelle Martin

John Marvin

Kieran McMann

Mitchell Mueller

Caitlyn Payne

Megan Pickard

Hillary Pierson

Becky Reilly

Samantha Rock

Preston Schwartz

Megan Sloan

Rachana Tadakamalla

Sunkeerth Tummala

Max Waldrop

Tina Weng


Class of

Taryn Blankenship

Zachary Bruennig

Eoghan Coyle

Nathan Daniel

2015 Favorite Boston Activity

Danielle Fleming

Lauren Fox

Tyler Gratwick

Mahroosa Haideri

Daniel Kessler

Steven Ketchmark

Claire Lednicky

Jason Lednicky

Ana McMullen

Emily Milakovic

Elizabeth Mixon

Mason Morse

David Ronning

Madison Rudman

Lauren Sandness

Paula Sayago

Richard Woods

Grant Zahorsky


Seventh

Dig Pink Tieg Brown, Emily Tranin, and Abby Krause support Upper School volleyball.

Helping Heifer Grace Dockhorn and Tripp Walsworth help to repair a fence at Heifer.

Heifer International By VICTORIA BALL

The Twins Logan Ball and Shea Rush pose after an eventful soccer game.

Mad for Science Margaret Kanan shows off a test tube during science class.

86

The Class of 2016 had a year full of adventure and life-changing escapades. The Heifer International field trip was just one of many challenging experiences they faced together. The seventh graders headed down to Arkansas where they spent three days living in environments that tested their physical strengths. The class was divided and sent into different countries, social classes, and environments, such as city slums or Thai huts. Each group obtained an animal and a certain amount of food; the difficulty began when they did not get the luxury of common needs, raising awareness

about poverty. Seventh grader Mitchell Pickard said, “I learned that there are a lot of people less fortunate than I am.” The students also had to prepare their own meals and serve them to their fellow villages. Certain members of the group were given a water balloon baby for which they took full responsibility. If the baby “died,” the group would spend the next four hours mourning the loss. English teacher Mrs. Finn thought that the trip helped the class to “find out more about who they are.” Though the class was initially shy, their self-discovery continued throughout the year.


P PK K 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

Class Size

52 Male

Female

Favorite TV Genre

Reality TV

Sports

Drama

Writer’s workshop Lili Tucker, Avery Loftin, and Anirudh Vadlamani work together during writing class. Cartoon

Comedy

Other

Girl Power Bailey Childers, Claire Finn, Madeline Vasquez, and Lauren Bernard prepare a skit for English.

Mr. Mom Mrs. Finn, Jared Gillen, and Ryan Olson support Thomas McConahay’s water balloon baby.


88

Logan Ball

Elizabeth Baughman

Lauren Bernard

Tieg Brown

Jonathan Butch

Bailey Childers

Olivia Dugan

Arya Edalati

Sarah Elyachar

Claire Finn

Jared Gillen

Jackson Goscha

Margaret Kanan

Chloe Ketchmark

Abigayle Krause

Katelin Kushnir

Shanley Lenart

Avery Loftin

Sophia Mauro

Thomas McConahay

Ramelle Mueller

Rebecca Myers

Ryan Olson

Joe Petty

Caroline Rock

Andie Round

Shea Rush

Cole Shafran

Adam Shemitz

Jackson Taylor

Lili Tucker

Anirudh Vadlamani

Madeline Vasquez

Ivor Vinsant

Elizabeth Vore

Tripp Walsworth


Class of

John Churay

Tiffany Dattel

2016

Grace Dockhorn

HEIFER INTERNATIONAL TRIP Rules

Tour Dinner Skits

Katherine Grabowsky

Collin Hawley

Savanna Hubbard

Sleeping

Breakfast Shivani Lokre

Lisa Maeda

Rachel Mathews

Team Building

Lunch Mitchell Pickard

Kennedy Price

Village Assignments

Emily Reed

Appalachia

Disabled

Guatemala

Pregnant

Refugees

Thailand (Big)

Thailand (Little)

Urban Slums

Zambia

Breakfast Chores Build Fence Isabel Thomas

Emily Tranin

Clean Porta Potties

Feed Animals

Cook Breakfast

Gather Firewood

Gary Whittaker

Sarah Xu

Wash Dishes

Gift Shop

Home


Sixth

smoothie queens Grace Hermes and Kennedy Dockhorn enjoy smoothies during break.

soccer studs A group of students plays soccer during free time.

New Responsibilities cave dweller Jonathan Felton works in the Cave during Art Fundamentals.

Twins Libby Rohr and Whitney Estes don matching black shirts and necklaces.

90

By Lauren Estes

The Class of 2017 is one of the most diverse, caring, and polite classes the Middle School has ever seen. Science teacher David Beier said, “They are truly just a community of kids who really care about each other,” and he complimented the hard-working students on their ability to laugh at themselves. The responsibilities entrusted to the sixth graders upon their entrance into Middle School include independence, navigating a new section of the building, and following a new schedule. Despite these expectations, they adjusted

seamlessly, managing to retain their warm energy and motivation. Geography teacher Jennifer Padberg said, “They really make teaching fun.” The sixth graders’ constant desire to learn seems to be the impetus driving the class. Harper Truog noted, “It is strange to be the youngest again,” while Austin Zollars commented that “the independence is great!” Overall, the sixth grade class continually impressed their teachers with an enthusiastic attitude and clever sense of humor.


P PK K 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

Class Size

46 Male

Female

New Students

Which character from Percy

Jackson and the Olympians would you be?

Percy

Annabeth

Fancy Faces Amelia Smith and Emily Gustafson show off their self-portraits during Mrs. Hilvitz’s art class. Grover

making mischief A group of boys conspires in the sixth grade hallway.

caution! Grace McGowan, Madison Wieseler, Mary-Margaret Sims, and Grace Harkins warn those approaching.


92

Dalal Abdulkarim

Soumya Avva

Matthew Bagby

Jacob Bamesberger

Jonathan Benson

Morgan Boeh

Joshua Dunn

James Egan

Elizabeth Ellis

Ethan Ellis

Whitney Estes

Jonathan Felton

Larsen Griffeth

Anthony Grimmett

Emily Gustafson

Grace Harkins

Zuhair Hawa

Grace Hermes

Nikhil Kuppuswamy

Elizabeth Leach

Katherine McCreight

Grace McGowan

Eli Pearce

Libby Rohr

Lauren Shotts

Mary-Margaret Sims

Amelia Smith

Sarah Stack

Michael Terman

Jaelan Trapp

Aris Vinsant

Spencer Walz

Alex Wang

Madison Wieseler

Connor Williams

Saum Yazdani


Class of

Siblings

Matthew Bruce

2017

Kennedy Dockhorn

ONLY

YOUNGEST

OLDEST

Favorite Gym Game

Eye Color

Saahith Gondi

Henry Goscha

JAIL BALL

DODGEBALL

Dominant Hand CALIFORNIA ELIMINATION Cierra Kane

Stephanie Krutz MAT BALL

CAPTURE THE FLAG

LEFT Fletcher Scott

Harper Truog

Austin Zollars

BOTH

RIGHT

OTHER

Data Taken from Sixth Grade Class Surveys


soCial stuDies

soCial stuDies

language

abC

of the week language arts reaDing language arts

me

.?,!:�

language fantasY

abC

realitY

abC writing

P

PK math

K math

1 math

the quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog. math

+ how many beans?

123

sun

123

123 + sCienCe

Curriculum Overview of Topics Covered in Grades P-5 The Lower School curriculum aims to develop proficiency in all areas while emphasizing student engagement through interactive learning. Students build their language arts abilities by creating a strong foundation from which to further develop analytical reading and writing skills in higher grades. Math studies begin with patterns and worksheets, eventually culminating with multiplication, division, and beginning algebraic

concepts to build general conceptual and problem-solving skills. In Science, students delve into units such as Insects, The Human Body, and Magnetism and Electricity. Social Studies begins a journey toward awareness, extending students’ understanding of their immediate environment to an appreciation of community and international cultures, including those of Japan, Mexico, and India.

mon tue weD thu fri sat

$

sCienCe


Lower School soCial stuDies

soCial stuDies

language arts

language arts

language arts

reaDing

reaDing

reaDing

soCial stuDies $

soCial stuDies

resPeCt KinDness aCCePtanCe honestY resPonsibilitY

language arts reaDing

rePort Plot mooD tone imagerY CharaCter language

VoCab sPelling

VoCab sPelling

writing

writing

3

2

historiCal fiCtion realistiC fiCtion nonfiCtion mYsteries fantasY biograPhies

VoCab

Cursive

writing

4

5

writing

mon tue weD

math

math

+ -

+ -

X

X /

/ 12

9

12 3

9

6

math

math

1,000,000,000.000

+ -

X /

X / 1/6

$

1/4 = .25

3 6

+ -

%

1/6

$ 1,000.00

$

50/50

cm & in

sCienCe

sCienCe

sCienCe

sCienCe

+ -

fooD

h2o

Core Curriculum Information from barstowschool.org


Lower School

b-ball buddies Finn Truog, Alexey Ayzin, and Bijan Shirazi play basketball at aftercare.

mini mathematicians Fourth graders Breanna Higginson, Eric Kushnir, and Stella Kahl work together during math class.

Building Blocks By aaron dupuis

Piece of pi Third grader Alise David enjoys a relaxing day of class filling out Halloween-themed math worksheets.

puzzle master Preschooler Atra Biria solves a color puzzle.

96

On the surface, it may appear that the aim of Barstow’s Lower School program is to prepare young boys and girls for the work and responsibilities expected of them in Middle and Upper School. This goal, however, is only short-term. In truth, the projects, subjects, and experiences in which Lower School students participate on a daily basis serve to prepare them not just for future grade levels, but for real life as young adults. The Lower School acts as a workshop of sorts where teachers and administrators help to round out students’ abilities and intellects until they move on to higher grades. There, the students themselves begin to shape and form their identities

and personalities. While one might argue that elementary classes mean very little in the grand scheme of things, without a sturdy foundation in subjects such as Language Arts and Math, the trials and tribulations of academic life could not be as easily overcome. In addition, the rules regarding kindness and proper etiquette provide students with a strong social education which will benefit them for years to come. Even recess serves a purpose by encouraging a love for physical activities such as climbing and running. If Middle School and Upper School are the sprinkles and cherry on top, then Lower School is the Neapolitan ice cream beneath.


P PK K 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

Size

277 Male

Female

5th Grade

4th Grade

3rd Grade

2nd Grade

1st Grade

Working man Kindergartener Alexander Franklin works on his art project as classmate Delaney McMahon observes.

Kindergarten

Pre-K

Preschool

lift off Third graders Alexander Norman and John Oldroyd spend a brisk fall day on the playground.

Three Amigos First graders Kyle Brannon, Ishan Panpaliya, and Kuyper Kendall complete group worksheets.


Fifth

product of patience Richard Bray waits for instructions on his math project.

¡estudiantes buenos! Miles Lindgren and Bryce Sturgis work on a Spanish project.

Young Leaders By Jordan Grabber palling around NaYoung Kwon and Melissa Rosenthal sit together during class.

math presentation Ethan Gilworth stays organized while working on a project.

98

The Class of 2018 is a unique bunch. “They are the tightest knit group I have seen in my five years of teaching,” said Megan Culver, fifth grade Social Studies and Science teacher. One highlight of the year was the bridge unit, where students learned about engineering and advertisement skills. Students created their own building companies and constructed toothpick bridges. According to NaYoung Kwon, “the best part was crashing the bridges in the end to see how

much weight they could handle.” In the next section, the fifth graders studied economics and learned about running businesses. Outside of the classroom, the Class of 2018 balanced work with play. Fifth grader Nicole Dreiling said her favorite memories of the year were “playing soccer with everyone outside.” The students began the year prepared to take on the challenges of fifth grade and emerged as a cohesive group of young adults.


P PK K 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

Class Size

35 Male

Female

Kansas

Missouri

bnb, inc. Bradley Frye and Nicole Dreiling show off their toothpick masterpiece.

teamwork? Francesca Mauro and Michael Babbott look on in horror as Maya Magie cuts a piece of their bridge.

just being silly Emma Knopik and Yasmeen Mir unwind after class.


100

Michael Babbott

Michael Boeh

Richard Bray

Ryan Dooley

Ethan Doskey

Nicole Dreiling

Elise Finn

Christian Franklin

Bradley Frye

Ethan Gilworth

Olivia Hill

Remy Jacobs

Emma Knopik

NaYoung Kwon

Miles Lindgren

Nicholas Lynch

Maya Magie

Francesca Mauro

Yasmeen Mir

Joshua Mixon

Ryan Mohamadi

Daniel Moore

Megan Nalamachu

Jesse Payne

Melissa Rosenthal

Bijan Shirazi

Matthew Shrader

Grayson Spidle

Bryce Sturgis

Audun Sundeen

Bianca Tucker

Kevin Vo

Claudia Vore

Kate Walsworth

Olivia Withers-Marney


Class of

engineer

pro basketball player

pilot

car designer, engineer

photographer

veterinarian

interior designer

c.e.o. of a major company

pro tennis player

author

cook

teacher

marine biologist

artist, archeologist, mom

pro baseball player

architect, car racer, photographer

veterinarian, singer, actress

dog hotel owner, actress, dancer

architect, singer, actress, guitar player, dancer

engineer

doctor, tae-kwon-do master

engineer

doctor, author

artist, teacher

lawyer

pro football player

business person

doctor

engineer

historian

ghost tracker

comic writer

singer, actress

teacher

destination truth person

2018

WHAT DO YOU WANT TO BE WHEN YOU GROW UP? As the fifth graders complete their final year of Lower School, they explore fields of study and possible career paths. Though some have developed specific goals, many are still considering multiple fields. The Class of 2018’s varied future career choices — from marine biologist to ghost tracker — reflect the grade’s diversity and creativity.


Fourth

PRActice MAKES PERFECT Kristin Tingle works to perfect her math skills.

Concentration and Participation Jesse Paxton, Eric Kushnir, and Nikita Joshi listen intently to their teacher.

Outstanding Inventors By Madeleine Tadros

COOL CAT Alexey Ayzin shows off his humor during center time.

Reflection Julia Butch journals during writing class.

102

The Class of 2019 received many fun and exciting opportunities in their fourth grade year, beginning with their first chance to switch rooms and teachers each hour. The caring, supportive, and athletic group also took several field trips, including one to Jefferson City, Missouri. After a long bus ride, they spent the day visiting the capital’s landmarks, like the House of Representatives, the Supreme Court, and the governor’s mansion. The trip allowed the students to see their unit on checks and balances put into practice. Their studies also included a focus on science as they entered projects

in the invention fair. Each student thought of a problem that they experienced in everyday life and created an invention to solve it. All the projects were displayed at Barstow’s science fair, and 10 proceeded to the Greater Kansas City Science and Engineering Fair in March. Writing and Science teacher Ms. Miller commented that the invention fair is always “one of the students’ favorite parts of fourth grade.” The fourth grade year gave this class the opportunity to take huge strides in learning and development while having fun along the way.


P PK K 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

Class Size

50 Male

Female

extracurricular

aCTIvITIes

sPOrTs

THE EXCITEMENT OF RECESS A group of fourth grade girls has a blast running around the playground on a sunny day. MUsIC & THeaTer

BOy/gIrl sCOUTs

CHess arT

brainstorming Jordan Herwig thinks of ideas for his science fair project.

rivalry Jillian Blackman and Ashley Decker hold a friendly competition in the game “Spell Down!”

OTHer


104

Brooklynn Arment

Alexey Ayzin

McKenna Bamesberger

Jens Benson

Jesse Berlin

Jillian Blackman

Kate Clore

Kennedy Cross

Luke Daniel

Ashley Decker

Saketh Dendi

Tyler Durwood

Jordan Harrison

Lucy Hart

Jordan Herwig

Breanna Higginson

Darian Howard

Nikita Joshi

Eric Kushnir

Ethan Kushnir

Shaunak Lokre

Luke Lopatofsky

Alexander McCreight

Audrey Munce

Bridget Orji

Surbhee Patil

Jesse Paxton

Claire Perez-Korinko

Zoe Rein

Tyler Sabapathy

Camille Shafran

Lauren Shore

Jackson Singleton

Max Sullivan

Lily Sykora

Hannah Tadros


Class of

Zoe Brous

Julia Butch

Aidan Egan

Jillian Gillen

Stella Kahl

Humza Khan

2019

Adrian Castaner

SWAPPING SPACES For the first time, the fourth graders had the experience of switching classes every hour. Each week, they spent different amounts of time in rooms throughout the school. Though the new schedule took some adjustment, it prepared them for convoluted schedules in years to come.

Cole Griffeth

0 mins

Gregory Norman

Luke Oldroyd

John Scott

Rohit Sengupta

Kristin Tingle

Hannah Warren

Minutes per Week

450 mins


Third

king of the jungle Ryan Vo surveys the playground from above.

little rascals Cayden Williams, Ryan Lang, Ian Heitmann, and Mason Phillips play together at recess.

hanging out Aliyah Ashby flaunts her gymnastics skills during recess.

Busy bee Madilyn Veatch takes a break from work and smiles for the camera.

106

Gotta Catch ’Em All By Annie grabowsky

When they aren’t trading Pokémon cards or playing soccer, the Class of 2020 can be found learning about economics. Their math classes this year included lessons on opportunity cost, specialization, and the art of producing and consuming. The students also focused on science and history, visiting Earthworks and an 1850s schoolhouse to add relevance to their studies. Social Studies teacher Mrs. Carson described the third graders as an

“athletic, competitive, creative, and dramatic” group, enthusiastic about starting a new year despite drastic changes from second grade: they received lockers, binders, and a rotating schedule for the first time. Aiden Jacobs’s favorite things about third grade are recess and field trips, while Benjamin Martinez enjoys having lockers for the first time. The combination of responsibility and fun set the third graders on a path for a wellrounded future.


P PK K 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

Class Size

33 Male

Female

Third Grade Lockers

Senior Lockers

FEEL THE BURN The third grade girls goof around with Coach White while playing six base in gym class.

Barstow’s next top model A group of girls strikes funny poses after performing a song and dance.

TRICK-OR-TREAT Christopher Moore works diligently on a Halloween worksheet.


108

Yaser Abdulkarim

Aliyah Ashby

Natasha Bisarya

Louis Christifano

Alise David

Sam Dockhorn

Alexander Hanshaw

Jack Hanson

Ian Heitmann

Kari Holzrichter

Carly Howard

Aiden Jacobs

Ryan Lang

Hope Leathers

John Lubianetsky

Miles Luce

Benjamin Martinez

Sean Mathews

Christopher Moore

Madeline Murphy

Alexander Norman

John Oldroyd

Mason Phillips

Theodor Popescu

McColm Pursell

Anna Rohr

Samuel Singleton

Grant Stinson

Jia Tucker

Madilyn Veatch

Ryan Vo

Sally Vo

Cayden Williams


Class of

2020

Magritte’s Eye Inspired by René Magritte’s The False Mirror, third graders focused their art studio on exploring how Surrealism can challenge the viewer’s perception of reality through elements of surprise and dreamlike depictions. Students used mirrors to draw their own eyes at a large scale, and then chose a surreal idea to represent in the iris of their eyes. They

then used tempera paint and a basic knowledge of color theory to create their images. Once completed, each third grader took a turn talking about his or her painting in front of the class. The students enjoyed thinking critically and discussing each other’s work while making personal connections through their aestheticallycaptivating artwork.


Second

veggie math Alexandria Demps works on a vegetable-themed math assignment.

butterfly boy Marc Matula poses with a monarch at the Haskell-Baker Wetlands.

Metamorphosis By sofie heuser entomologists Madison Elkins and Diana Hisle enjoy their butterfly tagging field trip.

The Thinker Caleb Chang ponders a worksheet on cardinal directions.

110

Every year, Barstow’s second grade class goes on a butterflytagging field trip with the Monarch Watch tagging program. Through participating in this program and educating others about monarchs and the conservation issues associated with the species, the second graders helped achieve the tagging program’s goal: to ensure the perpetuation of the monarch migration in eastern North America. They also went to Pendleton’s Bio-Villa in Lawrence, Kansas where they walked among butterflies in a natural garden. Students could get “eye-to-eye

with a butterfly” as they observed the marvelous creatures feeding on nectar from garden flowers. They echoed the transitory and curious nature of the butterflies by later touring the Shatto Milk Factory and other Kansas City landmarks. Although the majority of the students thought the transition from first to second grade would be difficult, they mimicked their butterfly friends and easily metamorphosed into responsible lower schoolers, now capable of meeting any challenges that lie ahead.


P PK K 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

Class Size

43 Male

Female

Haskell-Baker Wetlands Trip

640 Acres

catch and release Mark Lopatofsky, Mia Sabapathy, Alisha Castaner, and Kelly Knief prepare to catch butterflies.

20-25 Butterflies Tagged

insect whisperer Lily Bash reaches to gently touch a monarch butterfly.

Hay Ride The second grade class takes a hay ride during their field trip.


112

Ben Anderson

Evan Andracsek

Lauren Andrews

Connor Arment

Saketh Balmoori

Henry Bash

Madison Browning

Alisha Castaner

Caleb Chang

Declan Coyle

Alexandria Demps

Lexi Dixon

Nathan Francis

Brendan Gailliaert

Jack Georgie

Drew Gilworth

Grant Harkins

Abby Hart

Sage Holmes

Susanna King

Kelly Knief

Andrei Kolobrodov

Tara Lentell

Mark Lopatofsky

Emersen MacKenzie

Marc Matula

Brooklyn McDonald

Lauren McDougald

Gavin Passanisi

Mia Sabapathy

Arul Sethi

Ainsley Sullivan

Jacqueline Tingle

Finn Truog

Noah Waldman

Riley Weaver


Class of

Lily Bash

2021

Phoebe Brous

Madison Elkins

Diana Hisle

Jonah Lynch

Jed Scott

Self-Portraits

Sean Wyckoff

The second grade self portraits are a motley collection of greens, reds, and blues. These carefully-crafted depictions created a beautiful collage of faces along the walls of the Lower School. From the realistic effigies to the wilder and more imaginative renditions, each portrait reflects the unique personalities of the Class of 2021.


First

Architects Vineeth Mothe and Walker Phillips build a house out of blocks.

Bingo Time Isabel Herrera and Anthony Fincher call out Bingo numbers for the class. whirlwind Laurel Elsberry and friends enjoy the tire swing.

They Add Up By alex johnson

freeze tag Elijah Kushnir pauses for a breather during recess.

114

The Class of 2022 jumped into their academic year head first. This year marks the start of conceptual math. With limited numerical knowledge, the students set out to develop their addition and subtraction skills with numbers up to 20. With this year’s diverse group of first graders, learning becomes exciting and fun; the students’ favorite activity was “Hot Pencils,” or timed math worksheets. The first graders’

motivation stemmed from their enjoyment of creative learning activities, such as Number Bingo. Outside of academics, first graders began to gain social independence as they embarked on the quest to build a stable foundation of confidence. Even when the students are not together, they still manage to keep their bonds tightly knit.


P PK K 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

Class Size

35 Male

Female

Favorite Color

budding writer Mrs. Rudkin looks on as Lorelai Culver reads her composition to the class.

Solve ‘Em! A group of first graders works on problem solving worksheets.

Actors Jordin MacKenzie, Rahi Patel, Sophia Yagan and Carter Michaelis read a play.


116

Kyle Brannon

Adella Castaner

Lorelei Culver

Isabella Dezeeuw

Ryan Durig

Laurel Elsberry

Anthony Fincher

Samantha Georgie

Grayson Gore

Brolan Griffeth

Isabel Herrera

Dylan Kandt

Kuyper Kendall

Elijah Kushnir

Carly Lindgren

Chad Luetje

Jordin MacKenzie

Grayson Martin

Carter Michaelis

Vineeth Mothe

Julia Norman

Ishan Panpaliya

Kalisa Patel

Rahi Patel

Emmett Pearce

Walker Phillips

Claire Redick

Jordan Rein

Michael Singleton

Sophia Totta

Jeannette Townsend

Ethan Walz

Rosemary Warren

Luke Whitfill

Sophia Yagan


Class of

french fries

Spinach

CArrots

Broccoli

Cake

sushi

White Meat

pizza

cheeseburger

broccoli

Muffins

hot dog

Hot Dog

pizza

Taco

candycorn

hot dog

spaghetti

macaroni and cheese

orange

chocolate

macaroni and cheese

chicken

watermelon

cheeseburger

pizza

salmon

chocolate

corn

apple

spaghetti

chinese food

chinese food

grilled cheese

spaghetti

2022 WHAT IS YOUR FAVORITE FOOD?

Despite the thrill surrounding art class and recess, lunch still stands out as an exciting part of every first grader’s day. Whether at school or at home, first graders have strong preferences when it comes to food. The Class of 2022 proved to have diverse tastes, with their favorite foods ranging from full meals to desserts and snacks.


Kindergarten

Classroom fun Delaney McMahon works on a fall-themed worksheet.

primary colors Logan Mulligan diligently studies his shapes and colors.

Blooming Kinder-Garden By Daria LeGrand Monkeying around Alex David plays with Arjun Joshi’s hair.

Insects and Aliens Geordie Waldman displays his thumbprint artwork.

118

This year’s Kindergarten class is full of spirited, enthusiastic students who were excited to have fun while learning. Highlights of the year included traditional Kindergarten activities such as the Japanese Feast, Senior Buddy Days, and the apple orchard field trip. At the apple orchard, each student picked four apples, went on a hay ride, played with kittens, observed a bee habitat, and crawled through a hay tunnel. Kindergartener Quinn Luce was concerned that “the boy bees didn’t have stingers. It wasn’t

fair!” Quinn’s classmate Gabriel Kuti enjoyed the hay tunnel, which he described as “big hay with a tunnel inside. It was really funny ‘cause it got in our hair.” Kindergarten studies focus on rhyming and poetry, reading and writing, rudimentary math, science experiments, and leadership. Through their cultural exploration, field trips, and base in academic subjects, the Class of 2023 blossomed socially, emotionally, and academically throughout the year.


P PK K 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

Class Size

38 Male

Female

Favorite Movie

BOY TIME Andrew Lang, Devarshi Desai, Evan Doskey, and Sean Holland goof around in Ms. Ramsey’s class.

otHer

MATH STAR Sophie Brous colors a pattern worksheet.

circle time A Kindergarten class sits around the circle to receive instructions from Mrs. Beatty.


120

James Andrews

Thomas Andrews

Sina Asheghalishahi

Sarena Biria

Elizabeth Blackman

Sophie Brous

Tyler Carlgren

Ahna Chang

Samuel Christifano

Alex David

Devarshi Desai

Evan Doskey

Olivia Hawley

Charles Hisle

Ryan Holland

Sean Holland

Solomon Holmes

Alanna Johnson

Arjun Joshi

Lucy Knopik

Ian Koepp

Tanner Kuchar

Gabriel Kuti

Andrew Lang

Abigail Lopatofsky

Quinn Luce

Alexander Maret

Aysha Mazza

Delaney McMahon

Logan Mulligan

Alexandra Pursell

Aishi Sethi

Stefanie Shemitz

Marlena Smith

Tatum Veatch

Geordie Waldman


Class of

2023

Daniel Bryan

Senior Buddies

Alexander Franklin

na

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A

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Th me o s As ma An s h A dre e El iza S gh nd w be are alis rew s th na ha s So Bla Bi hi ph ck ria ma Da ie Ty niel Brou n ler Br s Sam A Car yan uel hna C lgren Chr h is ang Ale tifano x Dev ars David Evan hi Desa Alex i Dos ande r Fra key n klin Olivia Ha Charle wley s Hisle Ryan Ho lland Sean Holla nd Solomon Holmes Alanna Johnson Arjun Joshi Lucy Knopik Ian Koepp char er Tann Ku Kuti Gabriel ang L w e Andr ky f o at s e il Lop uc L n Abiga n Qui aret er M zza d n a Alex sha Ma on h Ay n cMa y M ulliga ll e n e a M Del ogan Purs hi t L Se dra xan ishi mitz e l A e h A Sh mit nie na S atch a f e Ve an rle St Ma tum aldm Ta e W di or Ge

Si

ri ou lkar e A lm ie ya y A rch m a A La ksh yn x er A ord Ba dk J rin Bo ell rs E na run spe Ila ĂŤ B d Ca oi Zo nal t Ch ley Ro ber Crow nzer Ro exis in De n Al njam erma ll Be via D risco Oli hael D kley Mic dan Ec an Jor Edelm ming l Pau non Fle n Sha Foster e Chlo ew Golden t t a M h tler e Grey H Heuser Frederik rkhardt Hoober-Bu Samantha Adriane House Bradford Jarvis Alexander Johnson Brooke Kawamoto David Kessler Melanie Ku lick Kaya Le Grand Scott M Alexa cMeekin n Matt dra Mirab ile Joh Molos n Tay Morrow l Jon or Phil Cyn athan lips Jo thia S Rosa cot Ja rdan t Ha cob S Scott n h h An T ree Li nab rant ve Da ndsa ella on K vid y W Wa Ca athl Wh arn ldro D ro ee ite ing p Ke ani line n W vi el W h n W i ite W oo ela oo d nd ds ha m s

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At the beginning of the year, each Kindergartener is partnered with a senior to do art projects, play outside, and form lasting friendships. The seniors serve as role models, while the Kindergarteners help the older students forget their studies and lose themselves in a game of tag.


Pre-Kindergarten

dress up David Guldin and Ansley Ross dress up in Spiderman gear and a cowgirl hat.

Happy faces Cyrus Shaikh and Daniel John link arms while playing.

balancing act Kyanne Carlgren balances a beanbag on her head during music class.

masterpiece William Fitzgerald shows off his artwork.

122

Powerful Pre-K By daria legrand

For the Class of 2024, independent learning began at the age of four: the pre-Kindergarten curriculum this year was based on the interest of the students. Pre-K students participated in a music program, Mother’s Day Tea, Father’s Day festivities, reading, and arts and crafts. In January, “Funky Mama,” a local mom who writes original rock-and-roll music for kids, entertained the preschool, pre-K, and Kindergarten students with an interactive concert. In addition to these fun activities,

this year’s pre-Kindergarten classes chose specific topics of interest to focus on each semester. Parents and experts in areas of study enhanced each unit by visiting Barstow and interacting with the students. Mrs. Love was excited by the enthusiasm of her students and their interest in varied topics. Through determining studies based on interest, the pre-Kindergarteners were exposed to many different learning opportunities and experiences.


P PK K 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

Class Size

27 Male

Female

Favorite Animal

drop everything and read Olivia Laws, Ansley Ross, Avery Weaver, and Milani Bandera read and play together.

classroom craziness Pre-K students show their goofy side.

fruit kebabs Taylor Lacy and Will Jenkins eat apples off wooden spears during snack time.


124

Aiden Aguirre

Milani Bandera

Kyanne Carlgren

Aryan Chaudhary

Fanon Cross

Pierce Farinelli

Nicholas Fincher

William Fitzgerald

David Guldin

Sean Hart

Jack Hellebusch

Will Jenkins

Daniel John

Isabell Kuti

Taylor Lacy

Aidan Lawlor

Olivia Laws

Connor Lucido

Phoebe Martin

Tyler McNeive

Joseph Miniace

Sidney Passanisi

Ansley Ross

Gracie Seiffert

Cyrus Shaikh

Paranjay Sharma

Avery Weaver


Backpacks An assortment of colors and designs explodes from the cubbies in the pre-Kindergarten rooms. Some backpacks are patterned and pastel, while others depict superheroes or TV characters. Each bag reflects the personality of its owner, allowing for freedom of expression at an early age.

Class of

2024


Preschool

Playing with Shapes The preschoolers learn about shapes with Mrs. Neill.

Milking the Cow While at the pumpkin patch, the preschoolers learn how to milk a cow.

Jack-o-Lantern Jaunt By Lauren Estes Movement Nicholas Johnson laughs as he dances along to “The Shapes Song.”

cubby Buddies Mia Butler and Alex Wolf prepare for naptime.

126

Each year, the preschool class heads out to a local pumpkin patch, Johnson Family Farms, to hunt for pumpkins to bring home. This is the first of many field trips that they will embark on during their experience at Barstow. On this trip, however, their parents and siblings come along to join the fun at the farm. Pumpkins become a subject in the classroom for art projects, plant study, and Halloween fun. Weather, colors, shapes, and animals are the focus of their work in class, but with work comes plenty of play. Mrs. Neill has made it her goal to ensure

the preschoolers are learning in a fun and encouraging environment. Songs about shapes, animals, and colors are Atra Biria’s favorite activities because her teachers encourage the students to add their own dance moves to the actions. Mrs. Brod said, “Another focus for the preschool curriculum is following directions, and this year’s class has students who are great listeners.” The preschoolers’ adorable smiles and charms will continue to enchant their teachers as they begin their journey through Lower School.


P PK K 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

Class Size

16 Male

Female

Favorite Color

Favorite Bug

Adventure at the Pumpkin Patch Before picking out their own pumpkins, the preschoolers gather for a class photo.

Mini Pumpkins Simone Brown, Atra Biria, Chase Mulligan, and Mia Butler display their pumpkins from the field trip.

Itsy Bitsy Spider Preschoolers dance and sing along to The Itsy Bitsy Spider during Music and Movement.


128

Atra Biria

Simone Brown

Mia Butler

Sydney Georgie

Elina Goldstein

Abigail Hill

Alexis Johnson

Nicholas Johnson

Karoline Kendall

Julia Luetje

Chase Mulligan

Skylar Nussbeck

David Prier

Ava Seematter

Anthony Totta

Alex Wolf


Class of

2025

The Land of Nod Naptime is essential to the preschool experience. At this tender age, the term “safety blanket� still holds a literal meaning. Students use a variety of objects, including soft blankets, fluffy pillows, and stuffed animals, to help them catch some ZZZs in the middle of a busy day.


2010

2000

1990

1980

1970

1960

UPPER SCHOOL MIDDLE SCHOOL LOWER SCHOOL ADMINISTRATOR STAFF MS + US LS + MS US + STAFF LS + MS + US BARSTOW STUDENT

ADAMS ATWOOD-BLAINE BARTOW BEATTY BEIER BRADLEY BROD L BROWN S BROWN BUCKNER BYRNE CAMMISANO CARSON CLARKE COLLIER COVENTRY CRAMER CROCKETT-BUNCH CRUMM CULVER DANIEL DICKERSON ENYEART EPSTEN FAIRBURN FINN P FOSTER S FOSTER FOX FRANK FULLBRIGHT GABLER GREEN GRIFFETH GULDIN HARPER HELLEBUSCH HERDLISKA HILL HILVITZ HOFSTRA HOLMES HOPKINS HUPPE HYVRARD JOHNSON JONES KEITH KETCHELL KILL KILPATRICK KNOPIK KOHLER LACKEY


LAWRENCE LEHR LEMAY-KINNEY LESH LITTOOY LOIDOLT LOVE LUCE LUDWIG-BONNEY LYNN MARSH MENDENHALL MERRIOTT MILLER MITCHELL MOHR MOMBELLO MORAN NAGY NEIGHBORS NEILL NELSON NEWSOME NOULLES O’BRIEN 0’TOOLE OPPENHEIMER PADBERG PAGANO PAYNE PEREZ-KORINKO POORE PRESKO RACE RAMSEY ROARK ROPER RUDKIN RUSS RUTTER SCHACHTER SCHACKMANN SCHAFER STELTING THOMAS THOMPSON TOWNSEND VAN BUSKIRK VASQUEZ WHITE WILSON WOOD YOUNG YOUNT ZIMMERMAN

Faculty & Staff

Tenure Since Mr. Crumm arrived at Barstow in 1970, the building has undergone a series of 10 physical transformations. Yet as material changes come to Barstow, a central group of teachers remains constant. Like the school’s front façade and main areas, this established group instills a sense

of consistency and stability. Just as additions to a building are incorporated into the whole, new teachers influence Barstow and its faculty. As time passes, these teachers amalgamate into the school’s core, their metaphorical additions becoming permanent pieces of the foundation. Despite

this relation between teachers and the inanimate building, Barstow faculty members — whether new or old — and the effects they have on our community far outlast the school’s ever-shifting physical structure.


Faculty & Staff

can you hear me now? Mr. Kohler receives a call on his banana phone.

Dance, Dance Sophomore Aaron Dupuis and Mr. Roark do the “Ornithopter” dance from Not Just for the Birds during the Club Fair.

A Motley Band Of Hooligans By Kate Sims ARTiste New art teacher Mrs. Lackey takes a break from a ceramics class.

RAWR! Coach Huppe cradles his son, dressed in a dragon costume for Halloween.

132

Barstow’s highly respected staff and faculty do not simply dispense education; they provide students with encouragement, reliability, dedication, and advice, creating a strong support system within the Barstow community. Teachers easily relate to the students, forming close scholastic and personal relationships that transcend age differences. Upper School students frequently stop by the classrooms of their beloved Middle School teachers for advice or simply to have a conversation, and Lower School teachers often keep in touch with

students they taught years earlier. Faculty members capture the students’ attention with hands-on activities to keep classrooms lively. Teachers of all divisions engage students in creative projects like building a rainforest in second grade science class, constructing models of colonial villages in eighth grade History, or crafting ornaments through chemical reaction in Chemistry. With such an enthusiastic and accommodating body of teachers, the learning environment and family atmosphere at Barstow continually evolve and strengthen.


Size

109 Male

Female

Admin

Staff

US + Staff

US

MS + US

MS

A Smack of Jellyfish Middle School English teachers Mrs. Finn and Mrs. Knopik campaign to “save the jellyfish!”

LS + MS

LS

LS + MS + US

MADAM LIBRARIAN Ms. Hopkins kindly reminds students to return their library books.

weekly preparations Kindergarten teachers Mrs. Vasquez and Mrs. Ramsey review paperwork together.


Faculty & Staff What did you want to be as a child?

31%

of faculty and staff members reached their childhood goal of becoming a teacher. The others wanted to be: “Older” Mark Adams “A computer programmer or aquaman” Aaron Atwood-Blaine

Shane Foster

Judith Yount

Kate Bradley

Greg Griffeth

Head of School 3 Years

Associate Head of School, Head of LS 18 Years

Head of MS 9 Years

Head of US 3 Years

Natalie Brod

Linda Brown

Susan Brown

Brad Buckner

Preschool Assistant 15 Years

Second Grade 5 Years

Second Grade 18 Years

First Grade 1 Year

Laurence Coventry

David Cramer

Kellye Crockett-Bunch

Art Crumm

LS, MS, & US World Languages 7 Years

Academic Dean, US Mathematics 6 Years

Director of Admissions & Marketing 3 Years

Science Department Chair, US Chemistry 40 Years

Ann Fairburn

Kelly Finn

Polly Foster

Joe Fox

Robotics Coach 4 Years

MS English & Writer’s Workshop 2 Years

College and Athletic Assistant 3 Years

Fifth Grade 1 Year

“Not a teacher!” Laurence Coventry “Happy” David Cramer “A Forest Ranger” Shane Foster “An Adult” William Frank “A Vet” Greg Griffeth “A Horticulturist” Susan Harper “An Archeologist” Scott Hill “A Mermaid” Mallory Hilvitz “A Paleontologist” Sarah Hofstra “A Supreme Court Justice” Kay Hopkins “A ZooKeeper” Aaron Ketchell “An explorer” Sarah Knopik “paid to read and a professional skateboarder” Mark Luce “Depended upon the week!” Tom O’Brien “A Rock star” Chuck Payne “A Carcharodon Carcharias” Jarrod Roark “Tall and cool” Eban Schachter

134


Highest Level of Education:

High School

Associate’s

Bachelor’s

Master’s

Ph.D

Mark Adams

Aaron Atwood-Blaine

Liz Bartow

Linda Beatty

David Beier

US Physics & Computer Science 28 Years

LS Technology Coordinator 8 Years

Dean of MS & US, US Ethics & Spanish 15 Years

Kindergarten 14 Years

MS Science 6 Years

Julie Byrne

Antoinette Cammisano

Monica Carson

Kathy Clarke

Linda Collier

Early Childhood Music & Movement 6 Years

School Counselor 1 Year

Third Grade 5 Years

Pre-Kindergarten Assistant 16 Years

MS & US Debate 7 Years

Megan Culver

Scott Daniel

Bruce Dickerson

Barb Enyeart

Ginny Epsten

Fifth Grade 5 Years

Director of Technology, US Science 22 Years

Director of MS & US Music 3 Years

Admission Coordinator 6 Years

Assistant Director of Admissions 4 Years

William Frank

Julie Fullbright

Fritz Gabler

Sarah Green

US Mathematics & Economics 25 Years

MS Staff Administrator 3 Years

PE Department Chair, LS & MS PE 23 Years

LS Staff Administrator 1 Year


Faculty & Staff

Angela Guldin

Susan Harper

Shannon Hellebusch

Marsha Herdliska

Scott Hill

US History & Spanish 9 Years

MS English and Writer’s Workshop 12 Years

Pre-Kindergarten 1 Year

Business Office Manager 14 Years

Director of College Counseling, Senior Dean 11 Years

Mallory Hilvitz

Sarah Hofstra

Sarah Holmes

Kay Hopkins

Scott Huppe

Fine & Performing Arts Dept. Chair, MS & US Art 16 Years

Third Grade 6 Years

MS Science 4 Years

MS & US Librarian, MS Geography 3 Years

LS & MS Physical Education 10 Years

Anne Hyvrard

Ron Johnson

Libby Jones

Charlotte Keith

Aaron Ketchell

World Languages Dept. Chair, MS & US French 13 Years

Help Desk Technician 1 Year

Fifth Grade 1 Year

MS Mathematics 6 Years

History Department Chair, US History 4 Years

Caroline Kill

Sheila Kilpatrick

Sarah Knopik

US Biology 2 Years

Third Grade 10 Years

MS English and Writer’s Workshop 5 Years

GO GREEN! Mrs. Rudkin coordinates her green pen with her outfit.

136


Upper School Coiffures Whether long or short, comfortable or stylish, haircuts define and are defined by a teacher’s persona. Prompted by a controversy surrounding the acceptability of the Mohawk hairstyle, this exploration into Upper School faculty members’ hairstyles serves as a filter, removing all save hair and glasses. The silhouettes are compact abstracts, allowing for exploration into how a haircut expresses the personality, quirks, and tone of its owner.

Mark Adams Liz Bartow Linda Collier Laurence Coventry David Cramer Art Crumm Scott Daniel Bruce Dickerson William Frank Greg Griffeth Angela Guldin Scott Hill Mallory Hilvitz Kay Hopkins Anne Hyvrard Aaron Ketchell Caroline Kill Bob Kohler Lilli Lackey Mark Luce Vicki Merriott Mona Neighbors Sarah Noulles Mary Lou Pagano Chuck Payne Mary Perez-Korinko Todd Race Jarrod Roark Hideko Schackmann Lindsay Zimmerman


Faculty & Staff

Bob Kohler

Lilli Lackey

Debbie Lawrence

Visual & Performing Arts, Freshman Dean 6 Years

MS & US Art 1 Year

Controller 4 Years

Kerri Lesh

Stephanie Littooy

Jeriann Loidolt

LS Spanish 2 Years

First Grade 2 Years

Asst. Dir. of Summer Prgms. & Extended Care 1 Year

Gay Lee Ludwig-Bonney

Jessica Lynn

Penny Marsh

Director of Health Services 5 Years

LS Art 1 Year

Tutorial Services 6 Years

Laura Mombello

Bridget Moran

Sue Nagy

Development Staff Administrator 1 Year

LS Art 1 Year

MS Math 13 Years

The Gambler AND the Rambler Mr. Frank and Dr. Ketchell relax during their weekly faculty meeting.

Georgia-Bound Mr. Griffeth contemplates his Barstow legacy.

HELPING HAND Fifth grade teacher Mrs. Culver helps student Emma Knopik with her work.

138


Residency:

KS

MO

Carolyne Lehr

Prissy LeMay-Kinney

Business Manager 4 Years

Fourth Grade 1 Year

Danica Love

Mark Luce

Pre-Kindergarten 2 Years

English Dept. Chair, US English & Art History 9 Years

Scott Mendenhall

Vicki Merriott

Lindsay Miller

Kristi Mitchell

Diane Mohr

Athletic Trainer 2 Years

US Staff Administrator 3 Years

Fourth Grade 4 Years

LS Music 16 Years

Accompanist 17 Years

Mona Neighbors

Anellen Neill

Todd Nelson

Don Newsome

Sarah Noulles

Bookstore Manager 8 Years

Preschool 27 Years

Assistant Head of LS 3 Years

Director of Facilities 3 Years

MS & US Spanish 1 Year

old school Ms. Pagano and Mrs. Kill rekindle their former studentteacher relationship, now as colleagues.


Faculty & Staff

140

Tom O’Brien

Barbie O’Toole

Pat Oppenheimer

Jennifer Padberg

Mary Lou Pagano

MS History 4 Years

LS Librarian 5 Years

Director of Development 3 Years

MS Geography & Spanish 5 Years

Mathematics Dept. Chair, US Mathematics 25 Years

Reina Poore

Mark Presko

Todd Race

Lauren Ramsey

Jarrod Roark

Dir. of Summer Prgms., LS Stu. Services, & Ext. Care 5 Years

Network Manager 4 Years

Director of Publications 3 Years

Kindergarten 1 Year

US English, Junior Dean 5 Years

Anne Rutter

Eban Schachter

Hideko Schackmann

Jennifer Schafer

Don Stelting

Receptionist & Registrar 6 Years

Help Desk Manager 8 Years

US Japanese 13 Years

MS English & Writer’s Workshop 4 Years

Athletic Director 16 Years

Diane Van Buskirk

Kimberly Vasquez

Jane White

Shawn Wilson

Gavin Wood

Pre-Kindergarten Assistant 3 Years

Kindergarten 15 Years

LS & MS Physical Education 17 Years

Food Service Director 4 Years

MS & US Science & Mathematics 1 Year


Average Commute: 18.57 minutes

Chuck Payne

Mary Perez-Korinko

US Chinese & History 3 Years

US Spanish 5 Years

lesson plans Fourth grade teachers Ms. Miller and Ms. LeMay-Kinney collaborate at a faculty meeting.

Mindy Roper

Joannie Rudkin

Anne Russ

Fourth Grade 10 Years

First Grade 11 Years

Alumni and Development Officer 5 Years

Marti Thomas

Brooke Thompson

Heather Townsend

Human Resources Specialist 1 Year

Second Grade 3 Years

Communications and Events Coordinator 5 Years

Shirley Young

Lindsay Zimmerman

Assistant to Head of School 7 Years

US English & Ethics, Sophomore Dean 6 Years

ONE MAN SYMPHONY Mr. Payne brings his whistling talents to a Chinese class.

bonding Mrs. Guldin helps sophomore Xye Inzauro with history homework.


Quantity Sold 700 600 500 400

SUPPLIES

300 200 100

700 600 500 400

DRINKS

300 200 100

700 600 500 400

CHIPS

300 200 100

700 600 500 400

SNACKS

300 200 100

August

September

BARSTOW PENCILS

October

November

December

SPECIAL K PROTEIN BAR

FILE FOLDERS

SNACKIMALS

MECHANICAL PENCILS

ROBERT’S GOURMET SNACKS

PENS

CHEDDAR BUNNIES

PLANNERS

NUTRIGRAIN BAR

LOCKS

WALKERS SHORTBREAD

MINUTE MAID JUICE

MARIA CHER’S WALL ST. TREATS

POWERADE

SNYDER’S PRETZELS

PRETZEL PETE

VITAMIN WATER

SOUTH BEACH BAR

SMART WATER

LESSER EVIL SNACKS

DASANI WATER

PLANTERS PEANUTS

V8 DEEP RIVER CHIPS KETTLE CHIPS PITA CHIPS

TREND LINES CONNECT POINTS AT THE END OF EACH MONTH THAT DENOTE MONTHLY TOTALS. SEMESTER BEGAN 8/19/10 & ENDED 12/15/10.


Student Life 4 3 2 1

100 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10

60 50 40 30 20 10

August

September

October

PERFORMING ARTS EVENTS

ATHLETIC COMPETITIONS

ADMISSION EVENTS

KCMO AVERAGE TEMP HIGH-LOW RANGE

HONOR COUNCIL MEETINGS

Exploration of data allows trends to be exposed and presented. Here, a collection of data from the first semester ­­— number of bookstore items sold, select school events, athletic competitions, and area temperature ­­— is illustrated through small multiples: each graph shares an X scale, and many have the same Y scale. From this use of visual congruity, patterns and correlations between seemingly unrelated data sets can be seen and potential causations examined.

For example, could an increase in pencil sales, admissions, and performing arts events have any effect on the decrease in Honor Council meetings during October and November? Most likely not, since the pencil sales were spurred by the Middle School math competition, and most school events naturally occur in the middle of the semester. But the possibility remains, however slim, that these seemingly disjoint events are linked. A correlation also appears between Kettle Chip

November

#

December

COLLEGE REP VISITS

sales and the number of college representative visits. Could all college reps share a passion for the salty crunch of a Kettle Chip? Upon further inspection, a lack of availability of the Deep River Chips most likely gave Kettle Chips their surge in popularity. Yet these unexplored potential connections excite and embolden, leading to the exploration of data in the hope of discovering unknown causations.


Student Life

LOYAL FANS Tess and Taylor Phillips, Jonah Jaax, and Brandon Bachar watch an intense home soccer game.

PLEASE SIR, I WANT SOME MORE Sixth graders Elizabeth Leach, Matthew Bruce, and Joshua Dunn negotiate at the Middle School ice cream social.

144

ENVIRO-TASTIC Senior Jacob Shreeve and junior Bobby Deffenbaugh test the pH of a local stream during a science field trip.


SISTER, SISTER Jeanne and Tieg Brown greet each other at a Pep Assembly.

YEE-HAW! Kindergartener Ahna Chang takes a pony for a spin at the Fall Festival. A GHOULISH GAIT Fifth grader Ethan Gilworth participates in the Halloween procession.

Modern Family By MELISSA MARTIN

For at least seven hours a day, five days a week, students disconnect from their families. Often, these hours spent at Barstow far exceed the minimum length of a school day, leading to the sacrifice of entire evenings and precious sleep cycles to accomplish what cannot fit into eight class periods. This time commitment requires students to develop a niche, to find activities that truly engage and

excite them. One’s peers become major factors in these experiences. Whether during AP Calc classes, Celtic Club meetings, basketball practices, or Spofford visits, close-knit academic, athletic, and social families form. Students who once merely coexisted develop supportive relationships. These precious bonds ease the chaos of everyday school life.

PROSE pose Sophomore Bilal Hameed and junior Lawrence Brown chill in the library.


Student Travels

Edinburgh FRINGE — PAGE 148

KC FRINGE — PAGE 148

ILANA BODKER SAMANTHA HOOBER-BURKHARDT

I traveled to Colima, Mexico through the Experiment in International Living Program for five weeks last summer. There I lived with a family and volunteered at a “casa hogar.” Every day I played with the kids, organized supplies, and helped improve the buildings. My love of Spanish drew me to the program, along with the opportunity to venture somewhere new and experience a different culture.

For eight weeks last summer, I lived in Oaxaca, Mexico. Through community service opportunities, I helped integrate newly arriving technology into the local culture and planted over 100 trees. I chose to travel with AMIGOS de las Americas because I love world travel, foreign languages, and different cultures. KAYA LEGRAND

KEVIN WOODS

Last summer, I received a scholarship to travel to Peru with People to People International. We helped build a playground for a jungle community, hiked the 20.5-mile Lares Trek, delivered school supplies to children in a mountain school, and visited the Sacred Valley, Machu Picchu, Cusco, and Lima. This opportunity allowed me to explore Peruvian culture, conquer the Andes, and do community service projects.

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In the summer of 2010, I went to Paraguarí, Paraguay with AMIGOS. My village was called Tapytanguá. There I spoke both Spanish and Guaraní, an Indian language. While in Paraguay, I lived with a host family and an American partner. Together, we facilitated community growth projects, built latrines, developed cultural awareness, and held daily summer camps for the elementary students.


5 Continents     12 Countries     10 Time Zones

LILY JOHNSTON

DANNY WOODHAMS

ZOË BRUNELL From September 1st to May 26th, I stayed in Rennes, France through the School Year Abroad Program. I chose to go because it was something out of the ordinary. I also adore the French language and thought there would be nothing better than to spend a year of high school immersed in French culture. I lived with a host family who looked after and cared for me as their own daughter for those wonderful months.

JAPAN TRIP — PAGE 152

Last summer, the Kansas City JapanAmerica Society selected me to be one of four student ambassadors to our sister city, Kurashiki. There I lived with different host families for about a month. In that time, I got to see the beauty of Kurashiki and Okayama Prefecture. I also met several important civil figures, including Mayor Ito. Aside from that, I got to meet people my own age, make friends, and experience Japanese culture as a local.

I stayed in Beijing, China for three weeks over the summer with Lifeworks International. There I worked with the organization China Little Flower. I’ve always wanted to visit China, and the work China Little Flower does for physically and mentally handicapped orphans is inspiring.

VIETNAM/CAMBODIA — PAGE 150

AUSTRALIA/NEW ZEALAND — PAGE 151

Globetrotter. Voyager. Jet-setter. Traveler. No matter the moniker, Barstow students understand the value of venturing abroad and experiencing other cultures. Their tracks this year stretched over 47,000 miles around the world, nearly two times the circumference of the Earth. With theatrical, cultural, and humanitarian pursuits, Barstow’s group and individual travelers made their marks across the map.


Not Just for the Birds SCene

Song

ClaSSroom

flying iS for The BirdS

i wonder why

muSeum enTranCe iCaruS

leonardo da vinCi

orniThopTer

george Cayley

The right Stuff Not Just for the Birds performers pose for a cast photo at the theater in Crown Center.

wrighT BroTherS

we need eaCh oTher in The end

CharleS lindBergh

women aviaTorS i won’T leT Them Keep me off The ground

Good morning, mr. henley! Senior Ben Denzer and sophomore Grace Guthrie impersonate an eccentric inventor and his unfortunate assistant.

paSSenger plane planeS TaKe you There and BaCK home SpaCe we Can maKe iT

ClaSSroom

wonder (repriSe)

noT JuST for The BirdS

orniThopTer (repriSe)

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Highland Cows and Rural Towns Sophomore Ellen Babbott puts the moves on Hamish the Highland Cow during the cast’s excursion into rural Scotland.

Calming the Storm Senior Shannon Fleming attempts to contain the spontaneous musical number that has burst out in her classroom.


KC Performances: July 26, 28, 30, 31, 2010 Fall Festival Performance: September 11, 2010 Edinburgh Performances: August 9-12, 2010

edinBurgh

london

KanSaS CiTy

“Feast Your Eyes on This!” Junior Ned Babbott, portraying Leonardo da Vinci, presents his latest invention, the ornithopter, to the royal court.

A Leap Across the Pond By Aaron DuPuis

After performing Not Just for the Birds at the Kansas City Fringe Festival, a collection of Barstow’s finest actors and actresses set out on a transatlantic journey to the land of haggis and bagpipes. Their musical, written by KC playwright Ry Kincaid, follows the adventures of two students reporting on the history of flight. During the cast’s stay in the UK, they attended numerous shows including an improv musical, Billy Elliot, and a performance by the YouTube celebrity Bo Burnham. However, one show stood out: Sector 17. This post-apocalyptic musical boasted a cast with impressive vocal abilities, which inspired the Not Just for the Birds troupe.

The two casts became close over the duration of the trip and showed their support by attending each other’s shows and through an impromptu performance of “Ornithopter” by the Sector 17 cast. While sightseeing and attending shows played a major role in the trip, a significant amount of time was allotted for rehearsals and performances, including a promotional parade and a showcase on the bustling Royal Mile. Though the promise that the experience would “change their lives” was originally met with skepticism by the students, there can be no doubt that those negative thoughts have long since been put to rest.

A Spot of tea Diana Russ enjoys a welldeserved refreshment after working in the sound booth.

Disco Should’ve Died Senior Austin Abitz dons a flashy, if outdated, get-up at a store in Scotland.


May 26-June 6, 2010

Vietnam/Cambodia

AVID READERS Vietnamese students enjoy the books that Barstow donated.

temple tourists Barstow travelers rest after participating in a scavenger hunt through Angkor Wat with Cambodian students.

Monks on Motorbikes By Kaya LeGrand

PUMPING WATER A group of the Barstow students tries out the well they funded.

conical hats Juniors Alex Dockhorn and Sarah Driks float down the Mekong River Delta.

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After raising $2250 to donate mobile libraries to schools in Vietnam and wells to villages in Cambodia, eight students embarked upon a humanitarian tour of Southeast Asia chaperoned by English teacher Ms. Zimmerman. In Vietnam, they learned to expertly navigate frenetic traffic, sweating through 110+ degree heat on their visits to the country’s prominent sights. In Hoi An, a river town in the middle of Vietnam, the travelers biked from school to school, delivering their donated book boxes to third grade students. The group then traveled to Siem Reap, Cambodia to meet with the founders of Journeys Within Our Community (JWOC), an organization that works to improve living conditions in Southeast Asian communities. The students toured temples with Cambodian students taking English

classes with JWOC, visited their donated wells and attended one of JWOC’s conversation classes. From the wild, humid streets of Hanoi to the impoverished slums of Siem Reap, the trip provided the students with an amazing, eyeopening experience. 2010 graduate Jessica Sanders reflected, “It was a very rewarding experience. It was cool being able to connect with the kids we met, even though our lives couldn’t be more different than theirs, to see the effects of our efforts, and to learn how easy it is to make such a huge impact on somebody else’s life.” The travelers got a taste of Southeast Asia, learned about the tumultuous histories of both Vietnam and Cambodia, and, most importantly, forged connections with foreign students and countries through their contributions to philanthropic organizations.


Australia/New Zealand

July 13-25, 2010

smell the roses Mrs. Knopik pauses to sniff flowers in Rotorua, New Zealand.

Sydney Opera House The travelers visit the Sydney Harbor Bridge and the famous Opera House. FANCY HEADWEAR The boys try on knit hats in Cairns after touring the rainforest.

Land Down Under By sydney reed

Over the summer, a group of students and teachers from Barstow and other schools took a 13 day-long trip to Australia and New Zealand. They visited Sydney, Auckland, Rotorua, and Cairns, stopping at many amazing sites along the way. One of the highlights was seeing the largest coral reef in the world, the Great Barrier Reef on Australia’s northeastern coast. While snorkeling, they saw “sharks, sea turtles, and clams that were as big as barrels,” said faculty chaperone

Mrs. Knopik. They also visited a large sheep farm called the Agrodome in Rotorua, New Zealand where they learned about sheep and wool production. Senior Ronnie Caspers said, “It was fun to travel with a group of really close friends. The coolest thing we did was downhill luge in New Zealand.” The students and teachers participated in adventurous tourist activities while simultaneously immersing themselves in the cultures of Australia and New Zealand.

STINKY CHEESE The group poses for a picture after a visit to a cheese factory.


Amaki Visit/Japan Trip Sister Cities KCMO

39˚06’35’’n 94˚35’19’’W

318 sq mi

482,299 ppl 12 9

3 6

PM Today

Kurashiki

34˚35’n 133˚46’E

WELCOME TO AMERICA! Jesse Howitt and Irene Lee watch Shouji Okada give his science presentation. 136.95 sq mi

473,392 ppl 12 9

3 6

AM Tomorrow

sound waves Naoyuki Sunami walks the Barstow students through his physics presentation.

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Smile! An Amaki student flashes a peace sign.


Barstow To Japan: May 27-June 6, 2010 Amaki To USA: September 19-27, 2010

DUEL Senior Bella Waldrop faces off against a member of Amaki’s Kendo club.

日 本 へようこそ! The students and teachers who visited Japan pose in front of a store in Kyoto.

Cultural Exchange By Camille O’Leary

For the fifth year in a row, the Amaki High School of Kurashiki, Japan affirmed its partnership with Barstow. Annually, Japanese students travel across the Pacific to visit Kansas City. This year, they sampled barbecue, visited The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, and built vehicles to participate in Barstow’s CO2 Car Races. In exchange, Barstow students traveled to Kurashiki over the summer, where they trekked to local temples, learned to cook Japanese cuisine, and participated in classes with the Amaki high schoolers. Barstow and Amaki students worked together to understand each other’s cultures over the course of a week. Some cultural elements that Americans

take for granted startled the newcomers: “I learned many many things! For example, food, classes, subjects, life, and kind people! I was surprised by the sound of your school’s bell!” e-mailed Yuki Kanemitsu following the trip. The Amaki visit culminated in the farewell ceremony held in the gymnasium. The Japanese students made short speeches thanking their new friends and sang their school’s anthem. In return, the Barstow Singers performed a Japanese rap, followed by “Standards High.” “I’d like to go again if I have a chance,” said Naoyuki Sunami. His opinion was echoed by other students from the Land of the Rising Sun.

Academic EXCHANGE 2010 graduate Jo Heun Lee attends classes in Japan.

BUDDING SCIENTIST Shiori Hori shows off her project on ultraviolet radiation.


Fall Festival

BY THE NUMBERS

400-500 Attendees

6,500

Game Tickets Sold

80

Upper School Volunteers

400

Meals Served

GIDDY UP Second grader Lauren Andrews observes the festivities while enjoying a pony ride.

SPLASH PITCH Third grader McColm Pursell aims for the dunk tank.

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WANTED Junior Cole Dattel takes fourth grader Tyler Durwood to the jailhouse.


September 11, 2010

THE CLIMB First graders Walker Phillips and Kuyper Kendall wait in line for the inflatable obstacle course.

RISING STARS Sophomores Will Fleming, Aaron Dupuis, and Bilal Hameed sing their own rendition of Taylor Swift’s “Love Story.”

SPIN MASTER Junior Annie Rose Watkins works the spin art station.

Cowboys and Sheriffs and Outlaws, Oh My! By Sydney Reed

With a western theme, this year’s Fall Festival was full of cowboys, sheriffs, and plenty of fun activities for kids. The festival featured all the classic attractions, like the inflatable slides, bounce house, face painting, and hair spraying. New this year were the pony rides and karaoke, and the jail was brought back from previous festivals. Sophomore Farwa Haideri said that her “favorite part was the

karaoke, especially when Aaron, Bilal, and Will sang ‘Love Story.’” The jail was also a popular activity; if you paid a sheriff two tickets, they would arrest a person of your choice and take them to the jailhouse. Once behind bars, the prisoner had to pay two tickets to get released. With this year’s additions and exciting theme, the Fall Festival was a wonderful trip to the Wild West.

S.O.S. Sophomore Chris Kang tries to escape from the jailhouse.


Fall Dance

Bromance A group of juniors gathers to admire senior Jordan Eckley’s belly dancer costume.

DYNAMIC DUO Seniors Jordyn Archie and Brad Jarvis take a break from the dance floor.

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PUMPIN’ PLAYLIST Senior Kathleen White, juniors Becky Marvin and Kate Schuller, and sophomore Daria LeGrand enjoy the blasting music.


September 25, 2010

newbies Sydney Reed and Alena Frye enjoy their first high school dance.

CLUB CAN’T HANDLE ME Upper School students dance the night away in the gym.

It’s a Party in The Barstow School! By Annie Grabowsky

This year, instead of attending the traditional Halloween Dance, Barstow upper schoolers enjoyed a new Fall Dance. A DJ was brought from outside of school, and her decorations gave the gym a club-like atmosphere. According to freshman Tess Phillips, “The setup was supa-dupa fly. There was a lot of mingling between upper and underclassmen.” The dance was organized by Kariessentes and was intended to give students an opportunity to bond with each other early in the year. The dance achieved this goal, providing fun for all and the chance for students of different grades to form relationships.

FUNNY FACES Seniors Ben Denzer and Kaya LeGrand chill in the ultra-cool lounge.

FooD

GROOVIN’ Senior Scott McMeekin busts a move on the dance floor.


Grandparents’ Day

INTRIGUING INTERVIEW Second grader Riley Weaver interviews her grandmother about her favorite activities.

POETRY RECITAL Second grader Tara Lentell’s grandparents read their granddaughter’s wonderful writing creations.

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collaboration Pre-Kindergartner Sean Hart helps his friends put together a Halloween puzzle as they await their grandparents’ arrival.


October 1, 2010

650 Grandparents Attended

CRAZY CARDS Fourth grader Breanna Higginson and her special guest put a twist on a classic game of cards.

BLAST FROM THE PAST Fifth grader Nicholas Lynch’s grandmother tells stories from her childhood.

Sharing Their School Days By Madeleine Tadros

Early in the morning of October 1, the Lower School gathered in the auditorium to perform a concert for their grandparents. The students rotated around the room, each class presenting a song as they reached the stage. After singing, the grades shared some of the highlights of their year. “The program was wonderful,” and the grandparents were “the first to use the new, comfortable seats in the auditorium,” according to one grandmother who attended the performance. Afterward, the special guests proceeded to their grandchildren’s classrooms

BACK TO SCHOOL Fifth grader Nicole Dreiling shows her grandfather how to complete his assignment.

where they completed games and activities, exploring the everyday lives and projects of their students. Many grandparents were interviewed by their grandchildren about what life was like when they were young. Second grader Tara Lentell’s grandmother commented, “It’s my 13th year at Grandparents’ Day, and I’ve enjoyed it every year.” Complete with refreshments in the hallways, Grandparents’ Day proved a special and memorable event for all. BOARD GAME INTRODUCTION Kindergartner Thomas Andrews and his grandfather play a board game where they answer questions about themselves.


AMERICAN LADY

EMPEROR

SuPERINTENDANT

TRIX

THE DROWSY CHAPERONE

Stage

JANET VAN DE GRAAFF

Direction of Principal Characters

ALDOLPHO

GANGSTERS

KITTY

FELDZIEG

GEORGE

ROBERT MARTIN

uNDERLING

MRS. TOTTENDALE

Song

MAN IN CHAIR

The Drowsy Chaperone

OVERTuRE FANCY DRESS

COLD FEETS

WEDDING BELLS

CAST PHOTO The cast and crew of The Drowsy Chaperone pose for a cast photo after a successful dress rehearsal.

SHOW OFF

AS WE STuMBLE ALONG

ALDOLPHO

ACCIDENT WAITING TO HAPPEN TOLEDO SuRPRISE

NIGHTINGALE

BRIDE’S LAMENT

LOVE IS ALWAYS LOVELY

WEDDING BELLS I DO, I DO IN THE SKY

FINALE uLTIMO

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DRAMA KING Senior David White bids farewell to the audience.


October 21 – 23, 2010

ADMIT 1

662 Tickets Sold

NEWLYWEDS Sophomores Harrison Rosenthal and Daria LeGrand live happily ever after as Robert Martin and Janet Van de Graaff.

bake it up Cast members perform the Act One finale, “Toledo Surprise.”

Mix-Ups, Mayhem, and a Gay Wedding By Daria LeGrand

This year, Upper School thespians performed The Drowsy Chaperone, a Tony Award-winning musical that left the Barstow community in hysterics. Bob Martin and Don McKellar’s clever script entertained audiences, while the score by Lisa Lambert and Greg Morrison added lighthearted merriment to the musical. The plot centers around a die-hard musical fan, portrayed by senior David White, who plays his favorite record, The Drowsy Chaperone, for the audience. The musical springs to life in his living room with characters including a celebrity bride, a dapper groom, pastry chefs, a self-proclaimed “lover of beautiful ladies,” and The Drowsy

Chaperone herself. Hilarity ensues as the audience is transported to the glamorous world of the 1920s. Students involved in the musical rehearsed every day after school for six weeks. Although it was difficult to balance rehearsals with schoolwork, sports, and other activities, the experience was ultimately rewarding for the performers, directors, and audiences. Freshman actress Isabel Lloyd said, “My mom liked the show so much that she sings the songs at home...but she makes up her own words.” Overall, the musical was a huge hit in the Barstow community and provided a fun way for students to get involved in the arts.

BEST MAN Sophomore Aaron Dupuis gets into character during “Cold Feets” as the best man, George.

“WHAAAAAT??” Junior Annie Rose Watkins and senior Ben Denzer interact as The Drowsy Chaperone and Aldolpho.


Halloween Most Popular Costumes

Candy Given During Parade

50 PIECES PER BAG

Attack of the clones Kindergarteners Tyler Carlgren and Ian Koepp travel through the circle drive during the parade.

Out of This World Kindergarten NASA astronaut Gabriel Kuti enjoys some space water during Mrs. Beatty’s Halloween party.

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Crouching tiger, Hidden Editors Senior ninjas Kaya LeGrand and Ben Denzer stealthily attack yearbook spreads.


October 29, 2010

Crazy Characters Fourth grade boys transform into scary monsters and deep-sea explorers.

Ruling the lower school A group of fifth grade girls enjoys their last Halloween Parade.

Barstow Says Boo! By LAUREN ESTES

The Halloween Parade has become one of Barstow’s most anticipated traditions. Disney princesses, superheroes, witches, and cowboys marched through the hallways, showing off their costumes to parents and older students. “The parade is really fun, especially because we got to lead it. We will definitely miss it next year!” agreed fifth graders Bianca Tucker and Kate Walsworth. The festive atmosphere in the Upper School echoed the aura of the Lower School. Excitement filled the air as the parade headed towards the senior hallway, decorated

especially for Halloween. Clad in costumes of all kinds, seniors handed out candy to the Lower School students. Freshman English teacher Ms. Zimmerman commented, “The parade is always cute, but my favorite memory of this year was when senior Kaya LeGrand jumped into my room with her ninja sword.” Halloween creates an amazing bond between the the Upper, Middle, and Lower School, as students of all grades share a soft spot for this spooky holiday.

Law Enforcement First grade sheriffs Brolan Griffeth and Dylan Kandt patrol the Halloween Parade.

Marky mark and the Funky Bunch Seniors Brooke Kawamoto and Melanie Kulick express their inner funk.


Winter Formal ARRIVAL TIME

8:00

8:30

9:00

9:30

10:00

NUMBER OF STUDENTS 15 10

JAZZY JUNIORS Kate Sims, Rana Aliani, Katie Anderson, and Andrea Blatt arrive dressed to impress.

5 1

SENIORS JUNIORS SOPHOMORES FRESHMEN

TAKIN’ A CHILL Lawrence Brown, Mo Salah, Jesse Howitt, and Susan Xu rest from the intense dancing.

164

SNACK BREAK Seniors Zoë Brunell and Ilana Bodker fuel up for more festivities.


December 4, 2010

BABY, IT’S COLD OUTSIDE Samantha Barnett and Harrison Rosenthal keep warm.

WINTER WONDERLAND Students feel the rhythm of the Cha-Cha Slide.

Eat Maangøs, Get Bunk

WINTER FRESH FROSH Freshmen Jeanne Brown and Annie Grabowsky enjoy the dance.

By Victoria Ball

The transformation of the Community Hall into a snowy haven by Mrs. Merriott and The Student Council made this year’s Winter Formal unforgettable. As an extra safety measure, random students were chosen to take alcohol tests for the first time, which ensured a safe, worry-free environment. As a reward for cooperating with the policy, one student’s name was drawn to win a $50 iTunes gift card. Seniors Kevin Woods and Frederik Heuser, a.k.a. DJs Jungle Bunk and Maangøman,

kept the party pumping with an eclectic mix of pop and techno music. To further spice up the entertainment, senior Junior Tranton arrived in a skin-tight green body suit. The dance floor always remained occupied, in large part due to the overflowing energy of the attendees. Freshman StuCo representative Kelsey Thorp noted, “The music was awesome, and the decorations were amazing.” The students left the dance with memories of a lively, bunk-filled evening.

the green man cometh Junior Tranton takes an unorthodox approach to Winter Formal attire.


Ski Trip Frederik’s Run Saturday, January 8, 2011 1:04-1:05 PM A pictorial timeline of senior Frederik Heuser’s snowboard run, captured by senior Ronnie Caspers’s helmet camera.

ReBoot Senior Ronnie Caspers prepares to begin a difficult snowboard run.

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snowy scene Annie Grabowsky, Jessica Schneider, Lindsey Smith, and Diana Russ take a break before descending the slopes.


January 6-9, 2011

happy skis Senior Robert Choi glides down the mountain, this year without injury.

SKI IN STYLE Senior Alex Mirabile, sophomore Gabbi Fenaroli, and seniors Lindsay Warning and Erin Bax rock multicolored ski jackets.

top of the world Senior Ben Denzer and juniors Mackenzie Devins and Melissa Martin celebrate the sunshine.

Hit the Slopes By melissa martin

Everything is bigger in... Colorado? Well, it is in Vail, anyway. Boasting over 5,000 acres of skiable terrain, the massive mountain allowed 38 Barstow adventurers to scatter across the glittering snow and claim the resort as their own. For two days, boarders and skiers alike swamped the terrain park and the rugged back bowls, not to mention the expansive front side. Delicious dinners awaited the weary students in Vail Village nightly, with intense games of Apples to

Apples to follow back in the condo. On the second day, many piled into inner tubes, ready to race down the slopes of Adventure Peak at blazing speeds. Senior Ronnie Caspers applauded the trip, “The snow was clean, the slopes were great, and company was fantastic!” Despite a few injuries (including a mild concussion, broken wrist, and torn ACL), Barstow’s ski bums enjoyed the winter wonders that Vail had to offer.

Panda posse Seniors Alex Johnson and Danny Woodhams and junior Miles Goscha get ready for their final run.


Schoolhouse Rock Live! Jr. Total # of Students # of Students who Participated in the Musical

Sixth

Seventh

Eighth

LADIES’ MAN Surrounded by lovely dancers, eighth grader Jonah Elyachar sings about conjunctions.

THE MELTING POT The large body of performers in Schoolhouse Rock Live! Jr. poses for a cast photo.

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ON CAPITOL HILL Sixth grader Nikhil Kuppuswamy is “just a bill.”


January 21–23, 2010

ADMIT 1

833 Tickets Sold

magic number Eighth grader Mitchell Mueller rocks the stage with his guitar solo.

WANTED Eighth graders Mahroosa Haideri and Mesha Bisarya portray bandits on the run.

Conjunction Junction, What’s Your Function? by Farwa haideri

This year’s Middle School musical, Schoolhouse Rock Live! Jr., was a theatrical sensation. The cast worked from November to the middle of January in order to perform their dance moves and dialogue with precision. Not only did this musical provide numerous singing and dancing opportunities for soloists, but it also served as an educational experience, featuring songs about conjunctions, nouns, outer space, and body circulation. Director Mr. Kohler and musical director Mr. Dickerson praised the students’

hard work and dedication to the production. A snowstorm postponed opening night from Thursday to Friday, and the middle schoolers also performed matinees on Saturday and Sunday. The cast hosted a special performance for the Lower School as well. Seventh grader Lili Tucker said, “I really liked the musical this year. It was well-organized, so we executed the numbers perfectly. My favorite song was ‘Unpack Your Adjectives.’ I’ll definitely be back on stage next year!”

patriotic refrain Sixth grader Elizabeth Leach and eighth grader Michelle Martin recite the Preamble.

THE ENTERTAINER Seventh grader Shea Rush steals the show as Rocky.


An Adult Evening of Shel Silverstein

PARK BENCH REBEL Senior Shannon Fleming obsesses over freshman Will Pursell’s unspoken request.

PHILLIPS’s FIFTEEN Members of the Pretenders’ production of An Adult Evening of Shel Silverstein take a cast photo after their dress rehearsal.

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DADDY ISSUES Freshman Tess Phillips and junior Jonah Jaxx argue about the morality of receiving a dead pony for one’s birthday.


March 7 & 9, 2011

THE TRAVELING SALESMAN Senior Junior Tranton and junior Andrea Blatt have a communication failure in “No Soliciting.”

always read THE FINE PRINT Senior Grey Hetler gives freshman Ali Loftin a crash course in the ins and outs of contractual loopholes in “Wash and Dry.”

There Go the Biscuits...

IT’S AN INSTITUTION Senior Taylor Phillips and sophomore Aaron Dupuis face off as troubled spouses.

By Aaron Dupuis

Senior Taylor Phillips, this year’s Pretenders Club president, explored many options for the annual student-run production. As is often the case, inspiration knocked when the future director was least concerned with finding it: during the Fringe Festival in Edinburgh, Scotland. While attending a performance of An Adult Evening of Shel Silverstein, Taylor became determined to direct her own side-splitting, heart-tugging production of the quirky series of skits. With the help of fellow directors David White

and Grey Hetler, Taylor crafted the show to fit the cast of young, yet talented, actors. The performers explored the show’s dark comedy and themes of misunderstanding, the unknown, relationships, and human reaction to the witholding of information. After weeks of grueling rehearsals and weatherinduced rescheduling, the show finally opened to the Barstow community on March 7 to tremendous applause. NO SKRONKING Senior Danny Woodhams warns junior Ned Babbott of the dangers of succumbing to bad habits.


Homecoming

represent (the lollipop guild) Lower schoolers cheer for the faculty basketball team at the pep assembly.

sittin’ courtside Senior Homecoming Court representatives Erin Bax and Melanie Kulick enjoy the boys’ basketball game.

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their highnesses Ben Denzer and Kaya LeGrand pose after being crowned Homecoming King and Queen.


Game: February 18, 2011 Dance: February 19, 2011

She shoots... A Maranatha player unsuccessfully blocks Taylor Phillips’s shot.

strength in numbers The seniors join the freshman ranks to help them win tug-of-war.

‘Stow Spirit By dARIA LEGRAND AND FARWA HAIDERI

Every February, excitement about Spirit Week and the Homecoming events begins to simmer within the school. This year, students enjoyed dressing up in crazy outfits for Pajama, Nerd, Harry Potter, Decades, and Class Color Days during Spirit Week. At the end of the week, a school-wide pep assembly pumped up students for the highly anticipated weekend. For the first time in 12 years, the faculty triumphed in their annual basketball game against the seniors. Another pep assembly tradition, the tug-of-war games between grade levels, ended in a victory for the freshmen. Later that evening, students decked out in green, black, and white to support Barstow at the Homecoming basketball games. The boys’ JV, girls’ varsity, and boys’ varsity teams all won against the Maranatha Eagles. The Knight

Starz and the cheerleaders performed special Homecoming routines to boost morale and team spirit. At halftime of the boys’ varsity game, representatives from each grade level were honored on the Homecoming Court. Seniors Ben Denzer and Kaya LeGrand were crowned King and Queen by 1988 royal couple Joel Brous and Susan Bernstein Luetje. On Saturday night, Upper School students enjoyed the culmination of the week’s festivities — the Homecoming dance. Barstow students rocked out to electrifying techno music provided by DJ Jungle Bunk at Hallbrook Country Club. Sophomore Ellen Babbott commented, “The atmosphere was great, the lemonade was delicious, and the music was awesome!” School spirit and student energy reached an all-time high during this eventful week.

royal treason Ben Denzer tries to slit the throat of seditious court members.

dunk shot Senior Scott McMeekin thrills the crowd with his signature dunk.


Yearbook ancestry

B 100 2009-2010

Controlled Chaos 2008-2009

The Adventures of... 2007-2008

2010-2011 Weathercock staff

Sigma 2006-2007

Diffusion 2005-2006

Pentaeditorium The junior yearbookers create a pact to work together to create the best yearbook next year.

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THE EDITORS Seniors Ben Denzer, Kaya LeGrand, and Alex Johnson review yearbook spreads.


say yes to RECESS Freshman and sophomore staff members mingle on the playground.

Mints, Spreads, and a Little J.B.

spunky sophomores Daria LeGrand, Farwa Haideri, and Tori Ball look through photos to use on their spreads.

By shahzad aslam

After spending countless hours crafting and editing spreads in the PubHub, the editors of this year’s Weathercock have accomplished their goal for the book: to create and develop an intriguing theme that effectively captures the experiences they and their classmates have shared at Barstow. The staff was able to put this yearbook together with a clear vision and occasional outside help. Mr. Roark, the previous yearbook adviser, taught staff members the essential skills required to create a successful book. Co-Executive Editors Ben Denzer

and Kaya LeGrand employed the knowledge they had acquired over their previous three years on staff, combining original ideas with hard work and dedication to create one of the most innovative yearbooks in Barstow’s history. New adviser Mr. Race supported the staff throughout the year with his leadership and infinite design knowledge, helping to work through problems that inevitably arose. Finally, because the staff is so closely knit, all yearbookers easily worked together and complemented each other’s talents.

resident Artist Sophomore Sofie Heuser sketches portraits of Barstow faculty members.


B-Line

all in this together The 2010‑2011 B-Line staff members show off their sweatshirts.

SPREAD SCHEMING Sophomore Joe Lenart participates in a group dicussion to plan his next B-Line page.

Digital Age Love at first fight Co-Executive Editors Akshay Almelkar and Taylor Phillips work to publish their last issue.

reparo! Senior John Morrow, dressed as Harry Potter for Spirit Week, casts a spell to correct mistakes in an article.

Editorial Eye Senior Akshay Almelkar keeps a watchful eye over B-Line juniors.

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By jordan grabber

B-Line prides itself on being a collection of independent writers who express their opinions freely and eloquently. “B-Line is an opportunity to broach cultural and school events,” said sophomore staff member Susie Xu. With a larger staff and frequent online content, production accelerated and article topics became more diverse. This efficiency allowed B-Line to include student polls and other attention-grabbing features. With an added “Would You Rather?” section, all students had the opportunity to voice their opinions on topics from the ongoing Pirates vs. Ninjas debate to the more academic Spelling vs. Vocab Test question. Although new content was added, B-Line continued their traditional political, social, and school-related columns.

Issue 1 This year’s first B-Line issue included features on tax cuts, America’s impact on the planet, current rebellious celebrities, the Tea Party, and a headlining Facebook parody spread.

Issue 2 The lead story in this issue dealt with education in America, but the paper also included articles about censorship, food in America, AP exams, smart phones, and Barstow’s winter sports. Issue 3 This special issue contained a sevenpage feature honoring Mr. Crumm’s 40-year tenure at Barstow. The articles detailed his history at the school and world events that have influenced his life.


Agathon

submission sifters Juniors Aidan Coyle and Shweta Vadlamani read a Lower School holiday poem.

After HOURS Co-Executive Editors Melissa Martin and Taylor Schwartz get pumped about the cover for the print Agathon during a weekend meeting.

Pushing Boundaries By Jordan grabber

Agathon, one of the oldest organizations at Barstow, was among the first publications to break new ground by going electronic. The online Agathon displayed the creative talents of Barstow students and faculty members in an aestheticallypleasing collection of photographs, stories, and other forms of art. A print issue was also distributed at the end of the year. Sophomore Grace Guthrie described the Agathon as “a melting pot of art where students can express themselves.” Co-Executive Editors Melissa Martin and Taylor Schwartz led this year’s staff in their creation of the digital and print magazine.

Fresh Ideas Freshman Camille O’Leary arranges photos and text on her spread.

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senior spreads Seniors collaborate to finish designing a page.


BTVN

8 Episodes 11 Reporters

powered by Coffee Junior Changwoo Lim edits raw footage.

BTVN 5.5 This January BTVN episode included stories about the library, the sophomore research paper, different types of video games, and DJ Jungle Bunk.

Television Transformation By Sofie Heuser the master Senior Danny Woodhams teaches sophomores Judson Woods and Michael O’Brien post-production techniques.

Idea Flow Freshman Drew Bierwirth creates a list of interesting interview topics.

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The Barstow Television Network instituted major reforms this year. The most significant was the transformation of the traditional news desk to a more open and casual format modeled after a Japanese program that senior Danny Woodhams watched last summer. Danny quotes, “This transformation gives us more versatility and provides so many potential routes for the future of the show.” The reporters experienced some technological problems at the beginning of the year, but after converting from tape to digital

HD, the process of making each episode became easier. Every month, BTVN releases a new installment to the Barstow community. This school year, the network produced a total of eight episodes. Although Upper School teacher and theatre director Mr. Kohler supervises BTVN, the episodes are edited, directed, and created entirely by students on the BTVN crew.


Robotics

Kansas City Competition: March 10-12, 2011 Minneapolis Competition: March 30-April 3, 2011

kuh-nig-its The 2010-2011 Robotics team takes a group photo.

Rolling along Senior Ronnie Caspers and freshman Nick Russ realign the wheels. detail Work Senior Austin Abitz reseeds the motor cables before a test run.

Domo Arigato, Mr. Roboto By Sofie Heuser

This year’s FIRST Robotics Competition Game required the robotics team to build a bot capable of gathering and sorting geometric inflatables shaped like the FIRST logo. The Barstow team completed construction by adding a final touch to their robot: the Pole Climbing Minibot. The first microbot to climb a pole at the end of the game received extra points. After working on this project for the entire six-week build season, the team’s Minibot could reach the top of a pole in 3.4 seconds. Robotics team member Aaron Dupuis reflected, “This year was successful because we

trained two new programmers. Extra senior members gave a lot of help, and we had more people on the build team than ever before.” Come springtime, the team placed second in Kansas City, reached quarterfinals in Minnesota, and received imagery awards at both competitions. Senior Austin Abitz was also selected to be on the FIRST Dean’s List, a designation received by only two individuals per regional competition. New and old dedicated team members contributed to the overall efficiency and quality of this year’s robotics program.

drill, baby, drill Sophomore Grace Guthrie breaks out the power tools.

Show-Off Senior Bella Waldrop poses with several of the new Kuh-Nig-Its buttons.


5 Competitions

Knowledge Bowl

BREAK TIME Taylor Phillips and Paul Edelman prepare for their last round.

conference dominance The conference tournament ends in a win for the team.

They Got the Memo By Farwa haideri DOUBlE TROUBLE Seniors David White and Taylor Phillips mean business.

THE CHAMPS Grey Hetler, David White, and Kathleen White celebrate their win.

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Meeting at 7:30 A.M. every Tuesday and Friday takes dedication. This year’s hardworking Knowledge Bowl team, whose members are perpetually searching for recruits, displayed the discipline necessary to succeed in competitions. During their practices, with the aid of adviser Mrs. Padberg, varsity participants — seniors Paul Edelman, Grey Hetler, Taylor Phillips, David White, and Kathleen White, junior Becky Marvin, and sophomore Judson Woods — prepared for competition by asking

each other past tournament questions. Subjects included History, Literature, Science, and Math. Members of the varsity team focused on one or two subjects to become “experts” in that field. The first Knowledge Bowl competition was at the beginning of December, where Barstow beat 12 teams to win the tournament. After taking first place at State last year, this year’s Knowledge Bowl team was on the right track for another triumphant season.


Science Bowl

A Team: 7-0 B Team: 5-0

58% Correct 53% Correct

MOvin’ Up A Team mentally prepares for the final round.

Quick on the Draw Juniors Brandon Bachar and Aidan Coyle race to solve a problem.

SWEET VICTORY B Team members display their third place plaque.

Fastest Buzzers in the State By Ben Denzer

At 7:45 on a Saturday morning, 10 Barstow students gathered at Rockhurst University. A game of ERS awakened and prepared the originally half-asleep students for the intensely fun competition to come: the 2011 Missouri State Science Bowl. With a strong turnout, the students were divided into two teams: A Team, captained by senior Akshay Almelkar, and B Team, captained by senior Ben Denzer. The secret to the teams’ success lay in their balanced compositions. With specialists in Physics, Chemistry, Biology, and Earth Science on each team, answers were well-distributed among teammates. Prior to competition, the 80 percent rookie B Team

had doubts about their “bowling” abilities, and simply intended to have as much fun as possible, regardless of their score. However, after a strong first round, the team discovered their potential and proceeded to win all five rounds, coming away with a third place plaque. The A Team, composed entirely of veteran bowlers, plowed through their competition to win all five of the preliminary rounds. With a high ratio of questions answered correctly to questions asked, the team entered the final round of the competition. There, they beat Liberty’s A Team to become Missouri State Grand Champions, earning a paid trip to Washington, DC to compete in the National Competition.

battle stare Seniors Ben Denzer and Michael Driscoll intimidate the competition.

Group Hug Mr. Crumm celebrates with A Team after their triumph.


14 Tournaments

US Debate

50 Awards

TONGUE TWISTERS Junior Jared Wright spreads before a tournament.

NOT JUST BEGINNERS’ LUCK Freshmen Trevor Wright, Tommy Dunn, Namira Ali, and Austin Bachar earned several trophies at the Park Hill Tournament.

The Great Debaters By Camille O’Leary

CLEAN PLATE FOR DEBATE Juniors Conor McMann and Aidan Coyle dominated with a 5-1 Qualifier at the KCKCC TOC event.

GIRL POWER Sophomores Sonia Larbi and Jessica Schneider brought home awards from the Ohio Valley Debates.

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Barstow’s prestigious debate team, led by veteran coach Ms. Collier, once again had a successful year. Debate rewards its members with skills in persuasion, research, and communication, abilities that can be developed for use later in life. Specifically, team members practice policy debate, where two teams of two debaters perform timed, researched speeches back and forth to argue for or against a topic. Policy debate rewards fast talking, quick thinking, and careful research. This year’s team, led by President Jared Wright and Vice‑President Conor McMann, attended tournaments everywhere

from Las Vegas to Nashville. The group had a particularly successful run at the Westside Warrior Invitational in Omaha, Nebraska, where three teams reached the elimination rounds and the novice team achieved its first closeout. At the end of the debate season, juniors Molly O’Connor and Jared Wright were invited to the Tournament of Champions, a competition that selects only the top 68 teams from across the country. With the majority of members planning to return next year, the debate team is set to triumph at future tournaments.


MS Debate

30 Awards

4 Tournaments

golden boys Eighth graders David DePriest and Preston Schwartz display their awards.

ALL-STAR LINEUP The winners at Pembroke Hill show off their hardware.

The Next Generation By Camille O’Leary

Middle School Debate, a course offered to seventh and eighth graders, prepares young debaters to compete in higher level tournaments, leading them down a road that can continue all the way through college. Debate combines important skills such as organization and public speaking with the thrill of competition. Ms. Collier, who has been coaching

debate teams since 1986, led the team to victory at several local and national tournaments, including those at Pembroke Hill and Lincoln College Preparatory.

VICTORY IS SWEET Eighth graders Bailey Fisli and Emily Milakovic took home several medals from Lincoln College Preperatory.


MS Speech

3 Tournaments

APPLAUSE-worthy Speech members encourage their classmates as they perform.

2010-2011 SPEECH This year’s unique group of Middle School speakers was comprised entirely of eighth graders.

Speakers of the House By Madeleine Tadros fine-tuning Tina Weng perfects the enunciation in her speech piece.

TOURNAMENT-BOUND The speakers listen as Mr. Kohler prepares them for their first competition.

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Middle School Speech, a year-long course that prepares students for individual competition at forensic tournaments, faced many changes this year. However, the talented and eager team was up for the challenge. According to speech instructor Mr. Kohler, the “extremely energetic” group, composed solely of eighth graders, worked hard to prepare for their tournaments. In 2011, the tournament rules and categories saw several additions and changes. The rules for Improv were altered, forcing experienced speakers to learn new ways to fulfill the

category’s requirements. Along with these modifications, an entirely new category was added: Declamation. Declamation requires speakers to memorize, prepare, and deliver a famous historical speech. On April 30, Barstow hosted its own speech tournament. All of this year’s speech participants thought the class was a great learning experience. Eighth grader Mesha Bisarya said, “The class was really fun, and it helped us to improve our speech skills and self-confidence.”


Service Learning

MANAGiNG THE DRAWS Faiza Aslam organizes the bracket for the Middle School badminton tournament to benefit Haiti.

SUNSHINE & SMILES The Spofford group flocks to the grassy field after their visit.

From Local to Global By Daria LeGrand and Farwa Haideri

Barstow encourages participation in volunteer projects beginning in Lower School. This year, each Lower School student created and auctioned a clay pot to benefit the Harvesters Empty Bowls fundraiser. Community service continues in Middle School with the seventh grade’s annual global awareness trip to Arkansas through Heifer International. The cast of this year’s Middle School musical led a board game drive for Gordon Parks, and several students organized a badminton tournament to raise money for a birthing home in Haiti. Service becomes a central aspect of Upper School life as students participate in ongoing projects with Spofford

Home, Pennies for Patients, Operation Breakthrough, and the Red Cross. Spofford Club visited the home monthly and organized the annual Variety Show, while junior Sree Balusu spearheaded a Pennies for Patients drive to benefit the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society. Junior Jeremy Terman promoted a food and clothing drive for Operation Breakthrough, and juniors Kate Sims and Shweta Vadlamani managed a blood drive for the Red Cross. Overall, the Barstow community focused on promoting consciousness of local and global need while providing their service to humanitarian organizations.

SPIDERMAN Sophomore Farwa Haideri paints a boy’s face at Spofford.

WATER Testing Junior Lawrence Brown checks for pollutants in Tomahawk Creek.


Service Learning

ALTRUISM Junior Taylor Schwartz markets Blood:Water Mission at the club fair.

BROWSING Eighth grader Sarah Epsten finds out what L.A.M.B. has to offer.

ROCKET BOOSTER Senior Ben Denzer helps a Spofford child reach the zipline.

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Upper School Blood Drive Juniors Kate Sims and Shweta Vadlamani led a blood drive at Barstow to benefit the Red Cross.

Pennies for Patients Junior Sree Balusu organized this year's Pennies for Patients drive, a fundraiser to benefit the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society.

Blood:Water Mission This non-profit organization aids those without access to clean water in sub-Saharan Africa. Members spoke to the Barstow seventh graders and to Leawood Middle School about their cause. Co-presidents Sarah Pourakbar and Taylor Schwartz met twice a month to plan future activities and fundraisers. The rest of the group was involved in the execution of those activities.

Spofford A group of Upper School students visited Spofford Home one Sunday per month to play with the kids. Members planned the games, snacks, and schedule for each event. The Spofford Club met Thursdays during lunch to discuss upcoming visits. In April, the club hosted the annual Spofford Variety Show. Students of all ages participated in the show, contributing their talents to benefit Spofford.

L.A.M.B. Freshman Libby Smith led L.A.M.B. — Let A Miracle Begin. 10 club members met once a month to raise money for orphans in Africa. Their main fundraiser was a pumpkin raffle. Students purchased tickets, and the chosen names got to bring home the prizes — three gigantic pumpkins.

Operation Breakthrough On a sunny November morning, students joined Jeremy Terman as he spearheaded a drive for Operation Breakthrough. NBC and Fox 4 News visited the students at a local Hy-Vee to spotlight the fundraiser. 1,750 pounds of food and $500 went to the organization, which provides support to impoverished children and their families. Jeremy also led an Upper School drive where advisories competed to gather the most items.

Stream Team This organization devoted itself to keeping Kansas City's waterways clean. Members tested water quality in tributaries of the Blue River that run through Leawood Park and reported their findings to the Missouri Department of Conservation. In the fall, the Environmental Science class took measurements, and in the spring, the freshmen returned to the park to reassess the water quality.


Middle School Badminton Tournament Eighth grader Kathryn Lundgren organized a Middle School badminton tournament to benefit Maison de Naissance, a birthing center in Haiti for women who do not have enough money to pay for hospital care. The event raised $611 for the center.

Gordon Parks Tutoring Student Council lent Gordon Parks Elementary School a helping hand this school year. Faculty sponsor Mrs. Nagy noted, “It was our first time bringing a group to Gordon Parks, so we were very excited to see the interactions between the students and the life lessons our students gave and received.” StuCo reps served as math, science and English tutors for Gordon Parks students on Friday afternoons.

Heifer International Early this year, seventh graders embarked on a journey to the Heifer Ranch in Perryville, Arkansas. Upon arrival, students participated in teambuilding activities and demonstrations designed to broaden their awareness of the causes of world hunger. The simulations included planning and cooking a meal, transporting potable water, and sleeping in typical village huts. After returning from the twoday excursion, the seventh graders reflected on their experiences and discussed how to improve the lives of others.

Pennies for Peace Eighth graders Faiza Aslam, Kathryn Lundgren, and Becky Reilly oversaw a fundraiser called Pennies for Peace, which raised $385 for children’s education in Pakistan and Afghanistan. Faiza commented, “It was a great learning experience, and it was amazing to be able to help people with just pennies.”

Ronald McDonald House Sixth grader Whitney Estes started a costume drive in the Middle School to benefit the Ronald McDonald House, which serves as a home away from home for families with hospitalized children. Whitney said, “I felt really great about how much we collected and who we were benefitting.” They gathered a total of eight full costumes, along with many spooky accessories.

Schoolhouse Rock Live! Jr. Participants in the Middle School musical played dual roles; not only did they entertain and teach their audience, but they also collaborated with Gordon Parks Elementary School. Middle schoolers collected money and educational toys for the charter school. After their Barstow run, the thespians took the show to Gordon Parks for an unforgettable production. The middle schoolers contended that this was their best and most rewarding performance.

water babies Juniors Amelia Switz and Samantha Barnett partake in Stream Team.

ROBOTICS outreach Senior Austin Abitz discusses technology with kids at the Whatsoever Community Center.

CAMPFIRE SONG Seventh graders Ramelle Mueller, Rachel Mathews, and Andie Round cook up a meal at Heifer International.


US Clubs types of US CLubs

Barstow Organizations

Culture

Performing

Service Learning

jingle bells The Glee Club rehearses for their holiday caroling performance.

Sports

Misc

cookie monster Alternative Baking Club concocted this oreo/chocolate chip cookie mash-up at one of their February meetings.

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BUZZER BEATERS Senior Akshay Almelkar and junior Conor McMann team up for the penultimate round of the Science Bowl tournament.


fluffy fresh Sophomores Darah Pourakbar and Braden Neihart attend an FCA meeting.

sweet SERENADERS The Barbershop Club sings its rendition of “America the Beautiful.”

Finding a Niche

CIRCLE OF REST The Agathon staff breaks in the Zen Garden after a prolific afternoon.

By Madeleine Tadros

The Barstow Upper School generously allows students to create clubs tailored to their specific interests. This year, upper schoolers established a potpourri of clubs that diversified and brightened student life. Official clubs, or those that turned in forms and recruited faculty sponsors, ranged from volunteer organizations to more unconventional associations, like Alternative Baking Club and Celtic Club. Student Council

strongly encouraged all founders to incorporate community service into their club’s activities, furthering Barstow’s commitment to service learning. Freshman Iris Dew commented, “The clubs at Barstow are a great opportunity to pursue many interests.” Students thoroughly enjoyed having the chance to help the community while expressing their passions, all under the umbrella of a schoolsanctioned extracurricular activity.

EXPERT STRATAGEM Freshmen Ethan Lopez, Namira Ali, and Arsam Yazdani form an argument for debate.


US Clubs

CHOW TIME Alternative Baking Club creates delectable peppermint treats.

SINGIN’ OLD SCHOOL Barbershop Club harmonizes on their latest tune.

birdie buddies The founders of Badminton Club advertise their organization.

Alternative Baking Club (ABC) Much as an upstart group of renegades may declare their independence from a larger state, ABC, led by seniors Shannon Fleming and Bella Waldrop, rejected the standards and expectations of conventional culinary arts. Replacing traditional recipes and procedures with educated guesses and whimsy, these brave pioneers concocted increasingly odd confections every Saturday. Despite an unstable and somewhat small member base, the club enjoyed strong meeting attendance and baked delicious eatables.

Badminton Club Ambitious freshmen Namira Ali and Iqraz Nanji founded this club to introduce Barstow to the fun badminton has to offer. As a service learning aspect of the organization, tournaments raised money for Partnership Walk, a charity committed to reducing global poverty. Badminton Club invited everyone to learn about the enjoyment and competition of the sport while helping those less fortunate in the process.

Barbershop Club Under the guidance of Mr. Dickerson, the Barbershop Club promoted musical development through the study and singing of Barbershop music. This uniquely American music style originated from the same roots as gospel, spirituals, and R&B. tree huggers Seniors Cynthia Scott and Michael Driscoll lead a BOE meeting.

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Barstow Brio The conductor raises his baton, students place their bows on their strings, and the first chord vibrates through the air. This is Barstow Brio. Musicians in this classical strings group, led by Upper School music director Mr. Dickerson, aimed to improve their instrumental skills. Featuring such talented members as juniors Claire Kim, Sree Balusu, and Irene Lee and freshman Hailey Yoon, the group met Fridays after school to practice for special events, including the Spring Concert.

Barstow Improv Group (BIG) The Barstow Improv Group met Thursdays after school in Dr. Cramer's room where members puttered around and played improv games. These activities aimed to improve participants’ acting, presentation skills, and ability to think on their feet. BIG aspired to show off their mighty improvisational powers in a Barstow performance.

Barstow Organization for the Environment (BOE) Members of the Barstow Organization for the Environment, previously known as Earth Club, dedicated themselves to improving the environment both within and beyond Barstow. Co-presidents Michael Driscoll and Cynthia Scott led the club's primary project: instituting a proper, sustainable school recycling program.


Barstow Hospitality Guides New Barstow students understand the complicated decision making that accompanies choosing a high school. Juniors Sree Balusu and Leslie Bruce formed this coalition in order to facilitate that process. The ambassadors shared their personal experiences at Barstow and gave visiting students tours of the school.

Celtic Club This new club was founded by senior Alex Johnson and sophomore Alex McDonald. Every Tuesday, the group discussed Irish heritage and music and their relation to social trends. The club celebrated major Irish Holidays, like St. Patrick's Day, Samhain (the Celtic New Year that strongly influenced Halloween), and All Saints' Day. Additionally, Celtic Club attended two concerts: The Elders and The Dropkick Murphys.

FCA The Fellowship of Christian Athletes met Thursday mornings at Starbucks and Fridays during TTT. While enjoying coffee and doughnuts, club members discussed global dilemmas and moral issues in the realm of sports. “Robert Bayles, or Skip as we know him, really did a great job leading our discussions on Thursdays. The way he remembered Bible verses off the top of his head was unreal!” said senior and copresident Jordan Eckley. Topics such as sportsmanship, substance abuse, and other high school scenarios often outlasted the discussion time frame.

FCA gave student athletes a place to ask questions without fear of ridicule or embarrassment. This group has been a long-standing club at Barstow and will continue for years to come, thanks to the dedicated sophomore and freshman members.

French Club This year, multilingual senior Kevin Woods organized meetings and events as president of French Club. At monthly meetings, members discussed French culture, listened to international music, and feasted upon scrumptious French food. As a special treat for Barstow French students, French Club held a traditional crêpe lunch to celebrate La Chandeleur, a holiday also known as Candlemas.

Glee Club Inspired by the hit TV show Glee, junior Kate Schuller and sophomore Daria LeGrand banded together to create Glee Club. The club provided the opportunity for upper schoolers to perform a repertoire of songs in the show choir style. As the club’s faculty adviser, Lower School music teacher Ms. Mitchell guided the singers through weekly rehearsals and performances. Glee Club caroled at assisted living homes in the Kansas City area, performed at a Lower School Friday Forum, and sang in the Spofford Variety Show.

THESPIAN tomfoolery The camera stumps members of Barstow Improv Group.

luck o’ the irish Celtic Club displays a poster and tickets from The Elders concert.

SUNNY DISPOSITIONS FCA is all smiles after a morning meeting.

¡QUÉ SABROSO! Students munch on tasty chips and salsa during Spanish Club.


Clubs Honor Council Each year, the Barstow population elects a body of students to the Honor Council in order to protect and uphold the Honor Code. The council’s primary duty lies in hearing honor violation cases brought to the council by the administration. The council formulates a recommendation for each case, which is then presented to the administration for consideration. These recommendations seek to rectify situations and provide learning opportunities for the students involved. The president of this year’s Honor Council was senior David White.

Kariessentes Liz Bartow and Ginny Epsten directed this group of hospitable Upper School student ambassadors. These individuals represented Barstow to visiting students. They discussed their Barstow experiences and fielded questions from prospective families at open house events, helped new upper schoolers during registration in the fall, and led students through the school on visit days.

let it snow The Glee Club sets out to carol over Winter Break.

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National Honor Society In its inaugural year at Barstow, the National Honor Society consisted of seven seniors. As the year began, these members discovered that NHS is not only a distinction of academic and extracurricular achievement, but also a commitment to support the school and local community. To uphold this responsibility, NHS members organized and ran a Spofford event, and some mentored Barstow middle schoolers on a weekly basis.

People to People Juniors Samantha Barnett and Diana Russ took the initiative to establish a Barstow People to People Student Chapter. Student Chapters promote People to People's core value: Peace through Understanding. As members, students raised money for their chapter, organized fundraisers and service activities, and raised cultural awareness within their community.

Pep Club Responsible for spirit days, shirts promoting school pride, and Homecoming themes, Pep Club brought together opinions of the student body to create a unified, spirited environment in the Upper School. Pep Club president junior Taylor Peavey was pleased with the club members’ enthusiasm and willingness to share their opinions. With the success of the athletic teams and the enthusiasm of Pep Club, the Knights’ pride ran deep.

Singers Talented vocalists in ninth through twelfth grades participated in the Barstow Singers, a mixed choir. Led by Mr. Dickerson, the Singers performed at the Winter Concert, the Spring Concert, and other events throughout the year. The Singers attended the Crossroads Choir Festival, where they performed in a concert with students from other schools in the area. In addition, individuals and groups were selected to participate in honors, regional, and state choirs.

Spanish Club ¿Cuál es el club más divertido en Barstow? Spanish Club, of course! A group of passionate Spanish students congregated weekly in Profe PK's room to play intense games of Bananagrams, watch videos en español, listen to LatinAmerican music, and scarf down delicious ethnic dishes. Students also discussed service opportunities, all while speaking the language they love.

Student Council Every Tuesday during lunch, two Student Council representatives from each grade gathered in the Library Meeting Room to discuss school issues. Led by President Ben Denzer, Vice President Akshay Almelkar, and Secretary/Treasurer Kaya LeGrand, the Student Council worked to plan dances, respond to student complaints or suggestions, and deal with problems such as excessive noise in the library.


MS/LS Clubs Middle School Chat-n-Chew Led by librarian Ms. Hopkins, this Middle School book discussion group convened in the Library Meeting Room several times per year. Students read the same novel and discussed it over pizza, soda, and dessert provided by the BPA. Generally, twenty Middle School students participated in each informal meal and discourse.

French Club Mrs. Coventry invited all French students to partake in this baguettefilled club. Students learned about French culture through many handson activities such as games, music, and crafts. In addition, participants enjoyed delicious ethnic cuisine.

Math Club Devoted Math Club students met Tuesday afternoons and Friday mornings to work on questions from previous math contests. Middle School math teacher Mrs. Keith helped explain any problems that students couldn’t solve. Participants prepared for upcoming competitions and learned faster and easier ways to complete math problems. Students brought food and drinks for the meetings and received extra credit for their attendance.

Student Council Middle School Student Council representatives assembled weekly to discuss school issues and plan events, including ice cream socials,

special dress days, and the Spring Dance. Students also presented academic issues involving homework load and scheduling of tests to the faculty at meetings. At the beginning of their term, each rep attended a leadership training session designed to help them better understand the skills required in leading their advisory discussions.

Lower School Fifth Grade Math Club Fifth Grade Math Club had two major purposes: in the first semester, advisor and Lower School teacher Mr. Fox stressed participation and fun during meetings, which occurred every other Wednesday. When the second semester rolled around, participants shifted into a more competitive mode; they met weekly at 7:30 A.M. and focused on competition preparation. Math Club was always well-attended, and students concentrated on everything from lateral thinking puzzles to Math Olympiad questions.

Student Council 27 representatives from third, fourth, and fifth grades united every Wednesday after school. Homerooms held elections after first semester to vote in new reps who developed leadership skills and learned how to give speeches. StuCo hosted Friday Forum, a monthly event for the Lower School. This “news show” spotlighted different grades and what transpired in Lower School. Additionally, students actively planned special dress days and organized community service projects.

math madness Middle schoolers focus during the Barstow math competition.

Fourth Grade Math Club Fourth Grade Math Club met bright and early every Wednesday at 7:30 A.M. Students munched on doughnuts while playing a buzz-in game similar to Jeopardy. The team entered three different contests in the area and demonstrated how challenging math problems can be fun, especially when solved as a team.

BRAIN POWER Fifth grader Bijan Shirazi attends Math Club on a Wednesday morning.


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rookies to enhance their skills. The small size of the Upper School also allows students to join sports they have never tried before. Athletes further their physical and mental education by removing themselves

from their comfort zones, learning and honing new abilities in an enjoyable setting where team unity builds friendships that would otherwise not develop.


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defensive game Freshman Cole Childers steals the ball as junior Gabe Greenbaum defends.

quadruple Digits Senior Taylor Phillips claims her spot in Barstow sports history by sinking her 1000th point in varsity basketball.

Athletic Friendships By aaron Dupuis

FINAL STRETCH Senior Erin Bax overtakes other runners as she races toward the finish.

GREEN HORNS Freshmen Kelsey Thorp and Emily Thompson tee up for their first year of Upper School golf.

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The Barstow community already functions as a large, supportive family on a day-to-day basis. However, the bonds that exist between students grow stronger as athletes play on the school’s many sports teams. In basketball, tennis, or any other sport, the cameraderie developed between players can grow to become the strongest of friendships, which may not have come about without involvement in a sport. Each of these teams acts as a third family, complementary to those of biological and educational roots, and allows upperclassmen and underclassmen to intermingle and become close through the pursuit of common goals. The teams’ strengths certainly showed

during this year’s sports seasons. Highlights included the boys’ basketball team placing first in the Archie Tournament, the girls’ cross country team earning their third consecutive Conference title, the boys’ soccer team reaching the Class 1 quarterfinals, the girls’ doubles tennis team placing third at State, and several senior athlete signings. Each athletic team was largely successful in making its mark on Barstow depsite the hardships of training and hectic schedules. These burdens were shouldered through the team relationships that were built, and this support system led to success both on and off the field.


Fall Participants Upper School

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Winter Participants Upper School

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quick feet Sophomore Jake Roberts dribbles and fakes his way through the defensive line.

Middle School

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BEAuties and Brains Junior “nerd” Andrea Blatt battles the “popular” dancers in a Knight Starz routine.

PRECISION SWING Junior Kate Sims takes aim and prepares to slam the ball back over the net.


Boys’ Soccer

EYE ON THE BALL Varsity goalie senior Akshay Almelkar defends his net.

HUDDLE up The varsity team devises a strategy before their district game.

Beats and Cleats By Shahzad Aslam and Miles Goscha

PAULY V Junior Paul Vedros plays aggresive defense against Bishop Miege.

WATER BREAK Senior Frederik Heuser quenches his thirst after a long half.

198

Whether techno music plays in the locker room before practice, on the bus before a game, or any other time during the soccer season, the correlation between the pump-up beats and the soccer team is undeniable. Energized by electric rhythms and vuvuzela wails, the varsity boys started their season with a tough match against Shawnee Mission North and proceeded to crush Cameron 11-2. With ups and downs along the way, the varsity team ended with a record of 11-13. Although this team was smaller than in the past, the athletes’ dedication, skill, and finesse enabled them to achieve success unseen in recent years. Additionally, their

victory over Cameron landed varsity coach Scott Huppe his 100th win at Barstow. With the momentum from this huge win, the Knights easily advanced through the conference and district tournaments to face their longtime rival, Pembroke Hill. Although they suffered a tough loss against Pembroke, the team took solace in reaching State Quarterfinals. With “JV for Life” captain Ronnie Caspers at the helm, the JV team also had a stunning year. They beat Maranatha, St. Pius X, and Grandview to end with a positive 8-6-1 record. The success of the 2010-2011 boys’ varsity and JV teams set a new standard for years to come.


VARSITY: 11-13-0 JV: 8-6-1

VaRSiTy SoCCeR

VARSITY Coaches: Scott Huppe, Nick Golden, Carlos McFields. Captains: Miles Goscha, Frederik Heuser, John Morrow. Team: Will Fleming, Kevin Woods, Jordan Scott, Bobby Deffenbaugh, Ronnie Caspers, Cole Dattel, Conor McMann, Joe Chilen, Jake Roberts, Chris Kang, Aaron Greenbaum, Akshay Almelkar, Cameron Simon, Chris Frye, Gabe Greenbaum.

JV Coaches: Nick Golden, Carlos McFields. Captains: Ronnie Caspers, Jared Wright. Team: Mo Salah, Bobby Grabowsky, Will Kanan, Judson Woods, Changwoo Lim, Ignacio Robinson, Trevor Wright, Max Cantu-Lima, Braden Neihart, Jeff Martini, Aaron Greenbaum, Cameron Simon, Shahzad Aslam, Paul Vedros, Will Pursell.

OFFENSIVE STRIKE Junior Joseph Chilen drives past a confused goalie.

home away

Win loss

S.m. north Cameron

1-2 11-2

maryville platte County maranatha

1-2 2-1 2-0

Smithville St. pius X principia Whitfield alta Vista

0-3 0-2 0-1 0-4 2-1

new Covenant

6-0

Camdenton Van horn pembroke Blue Valley SW leBlond St. paul lutheran Bishop miege Sacred heart Renaissance

2-3 1-2 0-5 0-2 2-4 1-0 0-1 2-1 10-0

Summit Christian KC lutheran St. paul lutheran pembroke

2-1 4-1 2-1 0-5

Shot on Goal Goal

data Unavailable data Unavailable

THE TANK Junior Jeffrey Martini prepares to launch the ball up the field while senior Ronnie Caspers defends.


Volleyball

competitive MINDSET Senior Chloe Foster prepares to hit a powerful spike.

spike! Barstow players block a shot from the St. Mary’s girls. Laugh it off Seniors Alex Mirabile and Chloe Foster let off steam between points.

Ahhh... Team! By Lauren Estes

defensive stance Sophomore Emily Snow gets into the proper position.

200

This year’s volleyball team combined philanthropy with athletics to build a meaningful season. In October, the girls hosted a Dig Pink tournament, where Barstow and the opposing team wore pink uniforms to raise awareness of and funds for breast cancer prevention. Throughout the season, the team pushed themselves to reach new heights against their most challenging opponent: the Summit Christian team. “It was great for us to be pushed to our limits against Summit Christian. It made us stronger as a team and made the wins that much more memorable,”

said senior Adriane House. Many members of the team agreed that they became a tight-knit group during the course of the season. Their assistant coach, Brooke Thompson, reflected, “My favorite memory from this year is the connections the girls made during their extremely successful season. The surprise baby shower they threw for me was truly memorable.” After a great season, the volleyball team sent senior captain Chloe Foster to Pittsburg State University to play collegiate volleyball. The girls look forward to next year, but will miss their valuable seniors.


11-7-4

matches each match is Best of 5 games

VARSITY Coach: Shane Foster. Assistant Coach: Brooke Thompson. Captains: Chloe Foster, Alex Mirabile. Team: Adriane House, Lindsay Warning, Hannah Lentell, Tessia Phillips, Lindsey Smith, Bianca Shurn, Emily Snow, Amelia Switz, Ashley Gratwick, Natalie Dockhorn.

% of games Won

% of games Lost

kc christian

sherwood

summit christian

Butler

Butler

summit christian

renaissance Academy

Lone Jack

christ preparatory

saint pius

sherwood

Windsor

maranatha

summit christian

university Academy kc christian Adrian kc Lutheran cass-midway van horn Archie st. mary’s

Bump It! Senior Lindsay Warning keeps her eye on the ball.

pre-game spirit The team breaks their huddle before the Dig Pink game.

Shake on it Hannah Lentell and Emily Snow do a classic volleyball handshake after scoring a point.

Good Luck pep talk Coach Foster offers last minute advice before a game.


Girls’ Tennis awkward stretching Chocolate lips flirting waiters peachwave • Katy perry Driving the van drink breaks

DOUBS 4 LIFE The beloved Crowderson duo embraces after their last match.

DYNAMIC DUO Junior Kate Sims and freshman Alena Frye captured third place at State.

Super Smash Sisters By kate sims

Fast Forehand Junior Becky Marvin smashes a winner over the net.

JUNIOR PRIDE Rana Aliani and Alex Dockhorn take a break from their matches.

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This year’s young tennis team flourished throughout another successful season. The efforts of both varsity and JV produced a winning 9-4 record. Most notably, the varsity team dominated over 4A and 5A schools in the Guilfoil Tournament, bringing home the gold. The JV team brought home their first tournament plaque by placing third in the Northland Invitational. Junior Grace Halsey went all the way to the finals before dropping the match in a close tiebreaker. Districts brought another round of success for the girls. Freshman

Madeleine Tadros, junior Alexis Crowley, and sophomore Farwa Haideri finished 1-1 in districts play, while sophomore Lauren Estes finished 2-1. Junior Kate Sims and freshman Alena Frye roared back from behind with a strong threeset win over Notre Dame de Sion to become District Champions. Finishing the season strong, the dominant doubles duo took their momentum from Districts to finish third at the state tournament. Such a successful season was possible under the leadership of head coach Tom O’Brien and new assistant coach Brendan Kenny.


9-4-0

total

Grain Valley

aquinas

maranatha

Pembroke hill

% of Games Won % of Games Lost

Lee's Summit North

St. teresa's

O'hara

Notre Dame de Sion

John Burroughs

Parkway South

Columbia rock Bridge

US TENNIS Coach: Tom O’Brien. Assistant Coach: Brendan Kenny. Captains: Alexis Crowley, Kate Sims. Team: Lauren Estes, Katie Anderson, Alex Dockhorn, Annie Grabowsky, Becky Marvin, Madeleine Tadros, Justine Laberthe, Rana Aliani, Lissa Leibson, Namira Ali, Grace Halsey, Susie Xu, Emily Thompson, Iris Dew, Farwa Haideri, Melissa Martin, Alena Frye, Jessica Schneider, Kelsey Thorp, Jesse Howitt (not pictured).

Bishop miege

regular Varsity Season matches

anderson Crowley estes Frye haideri Sims tadros Crowley/haideri estes/tadros Sims/Frye

THREE PEAS IN A POD Freshman girls enjoy learning the ways of the team.

READY FOR BATTLE The team leaves their pre-match huddle before hitting the courts at Lee’s Summit North.

small frye Freshman Alena Frye battles back to beat Pembroke Hill.


Cross Country frank massey • wheee dinosaurs • anteaters empty the tank • troll what the actual...? • bali awkward clap • marquee whattado young bunny? carl • d-freezy • bzzt

pink power The girls’ cross country team displays their shirts at the district meet.

No Speed Limit By Kaya LeGrand strength of the pack The girls’ team starts a race together.

sophomore stud Deko Ricketts stalks his competition at the district meet.

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The 2010 boys’ cross country season saw a wave of seven incoming runners to build upon last year’s two-person team. Unfortunately, the team lost two members when senior Alex Johnson and freshman Sam Stewart both were injured. Alex and Sam continued to attend practice as team managers until they healed. Coach David Franz led the runners through their tough practices and meets, helping them to improve their times throughout the fall. Sophomore Deko Ricketts set a new Barstow 5k record of 16:24 at the Joplin Southern Stampede. As Barstow’s only male runner at State, Deko placed 19th in a competitive field, earning him All-State honors. The girls’ cross country team recuperated after a rough 2009 season to win four of their

first six meets. The team also earned their third consecutive Conference title, with seniors Kaya LeGrand and Brooke Kawamoto, sophomore Ellen Babbott, and junior Mackenzie Devins placing first through fourth. Though the group narrowly missed qualifying for State as a team, they did well individually. Kaya retained her title as District Champion, while Brooke and Ellen earned All-District honors. At the state meet, Kaya was All-State in 18th place, Brooke placed 36th, and Ellen placed 38th. Coach Franz commented, “It was a hugely successful year for cross country. Each day, the runners were determined to better themselves. Due to their commitment and work ethic, the bar has been set at a high level. Running has made its long-awaited comeback at Barstow!”


mins

ready to run The boys relax before racing at Districts.

ellen Babbott erin Bax mackenzie devins allison hall Brooke Kawamoto Kaya LeGrand Kathleen white

x

Noland ammon Ned Babbott Jay Gillen Grey hetler alex Johnson david Kessler alex mcdonald deko ricketts Sam Stewart

mental strength Sophomore Alex McDonald pushes himself.

State

district

conference

cass-midway

prairie view††

Joplin

drexel

x

oak Grove

varsity girls Coach: David Franz. Team: Mackenzie Devins, Kathleen White, Brooke Kawamoto, Erin Bax, Ellen Babbott, Kaya LeGrand, Allison Hall (not pictured).

Girls Boys † 2 mile †† Girls 4k x fell in hole x Barstow record (16:24)

cass-midway†

varsity boys Coach: David Franz. Team: David Kessler, Ned Babbott, Jay Gillen, Deko Ricketts, Grey Hetler, Noland Ammon, Sam Stewart, Alex McDonald, Alex Johnson.

Lines connect 5k races

40 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10

Strong Finish Senior Brooke Kawamoto sprints to the finish line.


Boys’ Swimming

10 Meets

Varsity Coach: Bob Worland. Captain: Danny Woodhams. Team: Ben Denzer, Cole Dattel, Glenn Lane, Harrison Rosenthal, Austin Bachar.

FIGHTERS! Freshmen Glenn Lane and Austin Bachar, sophomore Harrison Rosenthal, and senior Danny Woodhams show their spirit during a meet.

Breakfast of Champions By ben denzer

blazing backstroke Senior Ben Denzer pushes toward the finish.

breather Seniors Danny Woodhams and Ben Denzer recoup after a medley relay.

206

This year’s boys’ swim team was a group of misfits. With only one year-round swimmer among the six boys, the group was united by a common goal to get fit and have a blast, regardless of how they finished in meets. Unanimously, the highlight of each swimmer’s season was coach Bob Worland. A veteran swimmer himself, Coach Worland would have competed in the 1980 Olympics had President Carter not boycotted them. Coach Worland brought a knowledgeable yet laidback approach to practices. Completely dedicated to his athletes, he used the pool as a tool to instill confidence and

determination within each swimmer. Pushing the athletes to their physical limits while still ensuring they enjoyed the sport, Coach Worland made each 6:00 A.M. practice memorable. After these pre-dawn practices, many swimmers made a tradition out of getting a large orange juice and an Egg McMuffin at the nearby “Mickey D’s.” Although practices and meets left the swimmers sore, the boys were satisfied to know that their muscles were growing stronger, and that they had spent a pleasant hour working hard early in the morning with a group of close friends.


Girls’ Golf

13 Tournaments

FEELING CHIPPER Freshman Emily Thompson aims her wedge at the pin.

Varsity Coach: Joe Taylor. Captain: Caroline Wieland. Team: Emily Thompson, Kelsey Thorp, Alexa Dusselier.

Swinging Toward Success

STATE-bound The golf team takes a pre-State photo on the marquee.

By Annie grabowsky

Under the leadership of coach Joe Taylor, the girls’ golf team had a successful 2010 season. At the Orrick Invitational, senior Caroline Wieland and junior Alexa Dusselier teamed up to win the best ball event. The team took first place at the district tournament, with Caroline, Alexa, freshman Emily Thompson, and Kelsey placing third, fourth, 12th, and 17th respectively. Among many victories, the team’s most notable

was going to the state tournament for the first time in Barstow girls’ golf history. Although, according to Emily, “the hardest course to play was State,” the girls finished in eighth place, with Caroline placing in the top 20 individually for the third consecutive year. Through many triumphs at their tournaments, the girls’ golf team had a great year with a strong finish at State.

Practice makes perfect Freshman Kelsey Thorp tests the greens.


Boys’ Varsity Basketball sha-boo-yah • ditto B-deezy • chicanery Spit-beard • fire hazard tsst tsst tsst Tsst whisper-yell • pit bull

CONFERENCE The Knights huddle with Coach Thomas to discuss team tactics.

Hard in the Paint Junior Lawrence Brown flies over the opposing team to make a shot.

All We Do Is Win... By CHASE harrison coble

HE’S GOT UPS Junior Lawrence Brown captures the ball to make a slam dunk.

Passing Lane Senior Jordan Eckley looks for an opening in the defense.

208

With two new coaches in one year and an arguably much harder schedule, the varsity boys’ basketball team faced challenges from day one. Along with these changes, four of the five starters from the 2009-2010 season left for college, making success an even more daunting task. Yet the Knights came to their first practice with unremitting determination, hope, and belief in teamwork. The team’s new coach, Billy Thomas, recognized these assets and

firmly promoted ideas of discipline and pride. With a combination of these two aspects, the Knights realized the success they hoped to attain. Midseason, the Knights accomplished something no other Barstow basketball team had by winnning the Archie Tournament. Senior and captain Scott McMeekin commented, “I was really pleased to see the effort the younger guys on the team put forth. I really think we won the championship because we work so well as a team.”


19-6-0

VARSITY Coach: Billy Thomas. Assistant Coaches: Bertram Caruthers, Joe Fox. Captains: Lawrence Brown, Jordan Eckley, Scott McMeekin. Team: Jonah Jaax, Bobby Deffenbaugh, Nick Russ, Alex Acuff, Devin Newsome, Jeremy Terman, Judson Woods, Cole Childers, Joey Penn, Gabe Greenbaum, Jay Gillen (not pictured).

In the Zone Senior Scott McMeekin and junior Bobby Deffenbaugh mentally prepare before an intense game.

outside the arc Freshman Cole Childers shoots a threepointer.

AgGressive Offense Devin Newsome uses his speed to get the ball down the court.

PlayMakers Captains Lawrence Brown and Scott McMeekin decide the next play.


Girls’ Varsity Basketball gobs • tribal warriors stay true to your medieval brothers 555-hott • cocoa puffs gotta get the cinnamon hot and dangerous

FANCY FOOTWORK Freshman Tess Phillips maneuvers her way around an opponent.

DEFENSE Senior Alexis Crowley tries to steal the ball from a Maranatha Lady Eagle.

Fighting Females By Sydney reed rebound Freshman Bianca Shurn reaches to block a shot.

CHECK IT OUT The team pauses to watch a shot during warm up.

210

This year’s girls’ varsity basketball team proved a force to be reckoned with, earning multiple wins throughout the season. The team was comprised of girls from each grade, and they used their various levels of experience to work together as a powerful team. Freshman Bianca Shurn described the team as “one big family. Everything we did was for each other.” Under the leadership of their new coach, Gary Newsome,

the team improved their defensive skills and teamwork. The Phillips sisters, senior Taylor and freshman Tess, proved to be an amazing duo. Tess commented, “It’s like we read each other’s minds,” and combined, the sisters scored many of the team’s points. With this type of connection between athletes, the Lady Knights formed a strong, cohesive team and powered through a challenging season.


8-15-0

VARSITY Coach: Gary Newsome. Captains: Alexis Crowley, Taylor Phillips. Team: Caroline Wieland, Tess Phillips, Gabbi Fenaroli, Nora Lloyd, Grace Halsey, Bianca Shurn, Allison Hall, Sabrina Weng.

GO TIME Coach Newsome discusses game plans with the team.

SWISH Senior Taylor Phillips shoots a free throw.

watch your elbows Senior Caroline Wieland keeps the ball away from a St. James defender.

POWER UP The team huddles to make the final touches to their winning strategy before a game.


5-8-0

Boys’ JV Basketball

OPEN pass Freshman Alex Acuff passes the ball to freshman Merek Holzrichter.

JV Coach: Bertram Caruthers. Assistant Coach: Joe Fox. Captains: Jonah Jaax, Jeremy Terman (not pictured), Judson Woods. Team: Jay Gillen, Nick Russ, Alex Acuff, Trevor Wright, Merek Holzrichter, Joey Penn, Noland Ammon, Logan Kane (not pictured).

Dynamic Development By annie grabowsky

iron curtain Junior Jonah Jaax aggressively guards a Maranatha player.

break! The team huddles to discuss plans for a strong finish.

212

With six new freshmen, the boys’ JV basketball team worked hard to enhance their game throughout the season. Comprised of freshmen, sophomores, and juniors, the team members meshed well together. Some were more experienced than others, but with informative practices, everyone achieved a better grasp of the game. They improved with each practice, and as freshman Noland Ammon noted, “The coaches were enthusiastic and loved to push us hard.” Coach Caruthers and Assistant Coach Fox were motivated to create a great, successful team, and the players all strived to reach that goal. Despite some tough losses early in the season, the JV team developed

later in the year, building their team cohesion and playing skills. Many athletes entered the season uncomfortable handling the ball and unable to shoot, but the entire team left with a greater understanding of how to play and succeed in basketball. The players look forward to the next season, where they can continue to work hard and improve their abilities. Coach Fox said, “Although young and developing, the JV had some bright spots with aggressive point guard play and timely shooting from the wing spots. Rather than get pushed around, the Barstow boys started imposing their will and carving out space under the basket.”


Girls’ Swimming

6 Meets

chilling poolside Juniors and sophomores regroup after a relay.

Varsity Coach: Bob Worland. Team: Lindsey Smith, Amelia Switz, Andrea Blatt, Alex Dockhorn, Isabel Lloyd, Hannah Lentell, Annie Grabowsky, Sam Barnett, Natalie Dockhorn, Ashley Gratwick, Ilana Bodker, Annie Rose Watkins, Sydney Reed (not pictured).

Splish Splash By annie grabowsky

The second year of the Barstow girls’ swim team turned out to be an enjoyable season. Freshman Isabel Lloyd said her favorite part was “going to the meets, chilling with the girls, and just hanging out,” while senior Ilana Bodker thought the best aspect was “team bonding and having the opportunity to swim in the winter.” With girls ranging from freshmen to seniors, all the team members interacted and got to know each other. Coach Worland “made swimming a blast,” according to freshman Natalie Dockhorn. Out of the water, Junior Amelia Switz hosted a swim team sleepover where the girls played Wii, chatted, watched movies, and had dance contests on Just Dance.

In MemoriAm COACH BOB WORLAND (1961-2011)

With his endearing attitude and perpetual tan, Coach Worland led the girls’ and boys’ swim teams through fun, yet challenging practices. He coached beginning and experienced swimmers alike, keeping the environment spirited, friendly, and enjoyably competitive. He was a fantastic coach and a sincere, kindhearted man, and he was beloved by all his team members. Coach Worland truly will be missed by his swimmers and Barstow’s athletic department.

TEAM WARMTH Juniors Amelia Switz and Andrea Blatt model their new swim parkas.

WE ARE FAMILY The girls take a break from a tiring swim meet.


Knight Starz bonnie • make it poppy HIT IT, MAESTRO • lift do do • oh, THERE SHE IS PRETTY BOY SWAG • tori peepers • perfecticitus CREEPY YAWN • tie-dye

NASTY BOYS The girls perform their hip hop routine at the Miss Kansas Festival.

Knight Starz Coach: Mackenzi Schurz. Captain: Melanie Kulick. Officers: Jordyn Archie, Andrea Blatt. Team: Sarah Driks, Cassidy Rudman, Alex Dockhorn, Ellen Babbott, Victoria Ball, Morgan Barbagallo, Natalie Dockhorn, Daria LeGrand, Jessica Schneider.

Freaknasty By Daria LeGrand

BABY IMMA STAR Senior Jordyn Archie entertains the crowd at a home game.

LEADERS OF THE PACK Captain Melanie Kulick and officers Jordyn Archie and Andrea Blatt pose outside of Barstow.

214

The 2010-2011 season was a busy and exciting time for the Knight Starz dance team. Led by coach Mackenzi Schurz, captain Melanie Kulick, and officers Jordyn Archie and Andrea Blatt, the dancers practiced throughout the school year to perfect routines for competitions and other performances. The Knight Starz attended four competitions this year: the Fort Osage Classic in Independence, the Miss Kansas Drill Team Festival in Olathe, the Lee’s Summit North Dance Invitational, and the Missouri State Drill Team Competition in St. Louis. The team received awards

for their routines at each of these competitions, including second place in Hip Hop and Pom at the Fort Osage Classic. At the Miss Kansas Drill Team Festival, they earned Sweepstakes, Shining Star, Technique and Execution, Polish and Precision, and Choreography awards. Finally, at State, the team placed second in Hip Hop and fifth in Pom. The season culminated with the annual Spring Show, a presentation for the Barstow community of the routines the Knight Starz performed during the year. Overall, the Knight Starz had a successful and fulfilling season.


4 Competitions

trophies Fort Osage 2nd Place Pom

2nd Place Hip Hop

Miss kansas Judges Award for polish and precision pom

CAN’T BE TAMED Juniors Andrea Blatt and Cassidy Rudman bring the sass in their contemporary jazz routine at a basketball game.

daria legrand solo winner

Judges Award for choreography hip hop

Sweepstakes award

Judges Award for technique and execution contemporary jazz

shining star award

lee’s summit north 2nd Place Hip hop

3rd Place contemporary jazz

4th Place Pom

missouri State competition

SWEET KICKS The Knight Starz get ready to bust a move at the fall Pep Assembly.

defy gravity Sophomore Daria LeGrand performs a solo.

FLOWER POWER Sophomores Ellen Babbott and Victoria Ball rehearse at the Lee’s Summit North Invitational.

2nd Place 1a hip hop

5th Place 1a pom

santa babies The Knight Starz show off their pearly whites during their holiday routine.


Cheerleading One more Time • pickles “I wanna be an avatar!” i’M BURnING YOUR RETiNA! Pixie Sticks • Batman Grudge door • sassy

if you’re happy... Junior Rian Ray cheers on the varsity basketball team.

We are the knights Freshman Kelsey Thorp and sophomore Jordan Grabber spread Barstow spirit during a beach-themed home game.

We’ve Got Spirit, How ‘Bout You? By Jordan Grabber

B-H-S Sophomore Saeju Kwon energizes the basketball fans.

spirited sophomores Sophomore girls smile in the Senior Circle.

216

This year’s cheer squad, led by coach Courtney Pullen and captains Lauren Estes, Taylor Peavey, and Jordan Grabber, competed in two competitions: Regionals and State. The regional competition was held at Lee’s Summit North on July 22. The squad placed fourth in the 3A small division, which qualified them for State. As the smallest group in their division, the team was pleased with the results. “The team dedicated their summer to hard work, and we pushed

ourselves to hit stunts and better our routine. We are really proud of all our hard work,“ described sophomore Lauren Estes. At the state competition, held at the Hearnes Center in Columbia, Missouri on November 21, the team placed tenth out of 22 teams. After competition season ended, the girls focused on bringing cheer to each basketball game and spirit to every pep assembly. Home or away, win or loss, the squad was always there for the basketball team, trucking all the way.


State routine aerial VieW of tHe BarStoW CHeerleaderS’ State routine

lauren estes Jordan Grabber ali loftin taylor peavey libby Smith kelsey thorp

Start

VARSITY Coach: Courtney Pullen. Captains: Lauren Estes, Jordan Grabber, Taylor Peavey. Team: Emily Thompson, Libby Smith, Rian Ray, Emily Snow, Saeju Kwon, Kelsey Thorp, Ali Loftin.

Photo op The cheerleaders take a final picture before leaving for State.

GO, FIGHT, WIN Kelsey Thorp performs the fight song.

Here we go! Junior Taylor Peavey and the squad pump up the crowd after a quarter.

finiSH

Classic Cheerleading The squad follows tradition by posing for an annual Barstow cheer photo in front of the school.


MS Boys’ Soccer

A Team: 3-2-1 B Team: 3-2-1

BALL SAVES THE BALL Seventh grader Logan Ball defends the goal. A Team Coach: Mark Murray. Team: Eoghan Coyle, Andrew Lloyd, Shea Rush, Benjamin Abbas, Max Waldrop, Brett Hill, Matthew Bagby, Richard Woods, Matthew Bruce, Michael Terman, Jackson Goscha, Jonathan Butch, Steven Ketchmark, Henry Goscha, Logan Ball, Jonathan Felton, Eli Pearce, Connor Williams.

two on three Sixth graders Larsen Griffeth and Henry Goscha show great teamwork.

B Team Coach: Mark Murray. Team: Avery Loftin, John Marvin, Shea Rush, Max Waldrop, Thomas McConahay, Austin Zollars, Matthew Bagby, Matthew Bruce, Michael Terman, Christopher Hoffman, Cullen MacInerney, Larsen Griffeth, Henry Goscha, Logan Ball, Jonathan Felton, Eli Pearce, Saum Yazdani.

He Kicks, He Scores! By Victoria ball

HEAD IN THE GAME Eighth grader Max Waldrop decisively throws the ball.

218

This year’s Middle School boys’ soccer teams saw many fresh faces. Head coach Mark Murray, who proudly led the pack of anxious young players, was able to teach the boys the importance of focus. By the end of the season, he saw an improvement in all of his players as they showed off their new strategies and cool tricks. Both A and B Teams had great

seasons: each team won three games and lost two. Many players rotated between teams, which made it easier for both groups to bond. B Team was scheduled to play Pembroke Hill twice and won both games. This year’s soccer season ended in triumph as the boys showed their new and improved skills on the field.


MS Cross Country

5 Meets

Endurance Builders A group of girls completes a long run together.

MS Cross Country Coach: Sarah Holmes. Team: Tiffany Dattel, Olivia Dugan, Kieran McMann, Danielle Fleming, Sarah Xu, Whitney Estes, Tripp Walsworth, Abe Hermes, Eli Pearce, Stephanie Hamann, Cierra Kane, Margaret Kanan.

Racing to Victory By Madeleine tadros

After working hard all year, the Middle School cross country team had an incredibly promising season. The small but exceptional team strove toward excellence and encouraged each other along the way. Some of the main goals of the season included working on pacing throughout a course and building stamina. Self-motivation was an important principal as well, for the runners learned that perseverance in tough situations creates positive results. Eighth grader Stephanie Hamann described how it was exciting to “work hard and see how it paid off in the end.” Everyone improved throughout the

season, and seventh grader Tripp Walsworth had an exciting meet at the Lone Jack Invitational where he placed first. While the team developed focus and discipline, they also knew how to have a good time on runs to Peachwave and fun bus rides. Their coach, Middle School science teacher Mrs. Holmes, found them to be just like a “group of friends” who always gave their best effort. The athletes finished their last meet as better and more capable runners than they once were, demonstrating the dramatic strides they made during the season.

Musclemen Seventh graders Shea Rush and Tripp Walsworth show off the strength that powers their success.

dedication Seventh grader Olivia Dugan runs year-round to prepare for the cross country season.


MS Volleyball aHHH, Team! • lemon pie uno, dos, tres, say what, say what, ace!

NO “I” IN TEAM B Team Green players show their spirit to pump themselves up for a win.

Serve It Up By farwa haideri REACH FOR THE STARS Eighth grader Ana McMullen prepares for a killer serve.

FLEXIBility The girls win a game with the help of eighth grader Madison Rudman’s powerful serve.

220

In Middle School, volleyball was one of the most anticipated sports of the fall season. The number of girls that tried out for the team this year was unprecedented. The girls were split into four teams: A Team, B Team Green, B Team White, and the sixth grade team. Under Coach Tracy Wiesehan, the sixth graders had a total of three wins and six losses. Coach Wiesehan stated that “this class has a lot of talent, so it will certainly be interesting to see where they end up.” B Team Green made it all the way to Semifinals, finishing off their season with seven wins and just three losses. The first semifinal match was against Pembroke, and despite a weak beginning, the girls finished strong to win the game. Though they lost in the final match before

the championships, the ladies demonstrated true teamwork and dedication to their sport. B Team White ended the season with two wins and four losses. Though the players’ technique sometimes needed improvement, their teamwork and persistence made for a great year. A Team, composed of seventh and eighth graders, won six games and lost only two with Coach Valerie Sanders’s guidance. Coach Sanders complimented the team on the home opener against KC Christian: “It was truly a team effort; everyone contributed to this win. They were moving and communicating on the court, and it was a thrilling game to watch.” Overall, the players improved their individual skills and finished their season as stronger athletes.


A Team: 6-2-0 B White: 2-4-0

B Green: 7-3-0 Sixth: 3-6-0

A Team Coach: Valerie Sanders. Team: Ana McMullen, Megan Sloan, Samantha Rock, Tina Weng, Caroline Rock, Madison Rudman, Shanley Lenart, Madeline Vasquez, Chloe Ketchmark.

B Green Coaches: Jake and Joy Isaacs. Team: Lauren Fox, Andie Round, Rachel Mathews, Caitlyn Payne, Grace Dockhorn, Mahroosa Haideri, Abigayle Krause, Rachana Tadakamalla, Emily Milakovic (not pictured).

B White Coaches: Jake and Joy Isaacs. Team: Isabel Thomas, Ramelle Mueller, Mesha Bisarya, Rebecca Myers, Katelin Kushnir. Not pictured: Tieg Brown, Savannah Hubbard, Kennedy Price, Emily Tranin.

Sixth Coach: Tracy Wiesehan. Team: Madison Wieseler, Mary Margaret Sims, Elizabeth Leach, Emily Gustafon, Soumya Avva, Kennedy Dockhorn, Amelia Smith, Grace Harkins, Harper Truog, Morgan Boeh (not pictured).

ATHLETIC INSPIRATION All four teams head to Lawrence to watch a college women’s volleyball match at KU.

ROCK CHALK Seventh graders Caroline Rock, Chloe Ketchmark, and Madeline Vasquez enjoy the KU game.


MS Boys’ Basketball Bumble Swarm • Maze Anthony Likes to dougie hot butter popcorn

MASTER PASSER Eighth grader Andrew Lloyd skillfully passes the ball to his teammate.

GET’CHA HEAD IN THE GAME The sixth grade team congregates for a pre-game pep talk.

Shooting for the Stars By Madeleine Tadros

ROCK THE BLOCK Sixth grader Jonathan Butch blocks the other team’s pass.

THE WINNING SHOT Seventh grader Shea Rush shoots a free throw that could change the game.

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With a strong group of players, the Middle School boys’ basketball program reached its goal to have a successful season. Participants were put onto one of three teams: A Team, B Team, or the sixth grade team. The sixth grade team boasted diverse talent levels. Some players were just starting to learn the sport, while others had been playing for years. With a winning record, the team did incredibly well against some of the best teams in the league, earning themselves a high seed in the end-of-theseason tournament. Coach Joe Fox noted, “The league was filled with solid players and quality teams, but the sixth graders were up to

the challenge.” B Team lost some difficult games, but continued to improve throughout the season while working on new offensive and defensive formations. Coach Kyle Hart said that the players’ “hard work and improvement showed each time they took the floor.’’ Despite many player injuries, A Team finished with a strong record and the second best defense in the league, only giving up 33.2 points per game on average. All players on the three teams worked hard to have a great season and, as Coach Chris Sanders commented, “left every ounce of effort on the court.”


A Team: 7-4-0 B Team: 0-8-0

Sixth: 5-2-0

A TEAM Coach: Chris Sanders. Team: Mason Morse, Andrew Lloyd, Daniel Kessler, Brett Hill, Ivor Vinsant, Tripp Walsworth, Steven Ketchmark, Jared Gillen, Richard Woods, Shea Rush (not pictured).

THE HUDDLE The sixth grade team talks between quarters.

B TEAM Coach: Kyle Hart. Team: Jonathan Butch, Shahryar Jafri, Cullen MacInerney, Tyler Gratwick, Thomas McConahay, Eoghan Coyle. Not pictured: Collin Hawley, Abe Hermes, Mitchell Pickard, Preston Schwartz.

SIXTH Coach: Joe Fox. Team: Ethan Ellis, Matthew Bruce, Spencer Walz, Michael Terman, Matthew Bagby, Anthony Grimmett, Eli Pearce, Jonathan Felton, Connor Williams, Jacob Bamesberger, Aris Vinsant, Saahith Gondi.

CLOCKWORK Eighth grader Eoghan Coyle and the rest of his team look to score before time runs out.

RUN DOWN THE REBOUND The sixth grade players practice their shots before a game.


MS Girls’ Basketball

REFUEL A Team takes a water break before going in to dominate on their home court.

BONDING BALLERS The young Knights motivate themselves before their games begin. dribbling dynamo Seventh grader Abigayle Krause hustles down the court.

Slam Dunk! By farwa haideri

fateful FREE THROW Eighth grader Stephanie Hamann practices her free throws before a game.

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A fresh batch of coaches gave the Middle School girls’ basketball teams a facelift in the 2010‑2011 season. This new energy revitalized the teams’ game strategies, ensuring success. Each player practiced with diligence and consistency, and their dedication showed both on and off the court. A Team ended the season with a 6-6 record, while B Team won three games and lost four. The sixth graders, newly introduced to Middle School sports, ended their season with victory, boasting a winning record of six games and only four losses. A Team coach

Jamie Duncan, B Team coach Lauren Lindstadt, and sixth grade coach Larry Rousselo praised the girls after each game, encouraging team spirit and sportsmanship. Eighth grader Michelle Martin said, “Basketball this year was the best experience in all of Middle School. The coaches couldn’t be beat, and we were able to use all three years of experience to play to the best of our abilities.”


A Team: 6-6-0 B Team: 3-4-0

Sixth: 6-4-0

A TEAM Coach: Jamie Duncan. Team: Kieran McMann, Olivia Dugan, Eliana Abbas, Megan Sloan, Lauren Fox, Abigayle Krause, Michelle Martin, Payal Desai, Stephanie Hamann.

D IT UP True Kershenbaum and Katherine Grabowsky prepare themselves for a free throw rebound.

B TEAM Coach: Lauren Lindstadt. Team: Faiza Aslam, Katherine Grabowsky, Margaret Kanan, Grace Dockhorn, True Kershenbaum, Lauren Bernard, Claire Finn, Sarah Elyachar, Elizabeth Vore. Not pictured: Emily Milakovic, Becky Reilly, Andie Round.

SIXTH Coach: Larry Rousselo. Team: Mary Margaret Sims, Elizabeth Ellis, Elizabeth Leach, Kennedy Dockhorn, Whitney Estes, Cierra Kane, Katherine McCreight, Amelia Smith.

READY TO DOMINATE The sassy sixth graders show off their individual styles.


Will Bubble Visualization of Wills. Text size corresponds to frequency of use.


Ads & Wills


Dear Erin, It is hard to believe that thirteen years have come and gone so quickly. (Don’t Blink) It was only yesterday when mom carried you into Kindergarten, your legs wrapped firmly around her waist not wanting to go. But you did, and your life and ours were never the same! (Don’t Blink) While that day not so long ago seemed a bit scary, this next step may seem so too. Rest assured that your experiences, hard work and dedication will serve you well as you go onto college and beyond. Erin, we are so proud of you and your accomplishments; from academics to athletics to personal growth, it has been fun watching you grow. Whatever path you choose in life, we know that you will succeed. We love you and wish you the best that life has to offer. (Don’t Blink) Life goes by faster than you think!

Mom and Dad

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Congratulations, Ilana You were born with a creative and inquisitive mind, and we have enjoyed watching you grow into a thoughtful young adult. Your future is very bright. Dream big, strive to reach your goals, and don’t forget to have fun along the way. Your life journey will be a great adventure.

Love, Mom, Dad, Mallory, and Ellie

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Congratulations Ronnie Thank you for brightening our lives and the lives of everyone around you. We are so very proud of you.

We Love You, Mom, Dad, Alexandra 230


ie

Ee l-y

He rm y Sq ui rm y Fr ed Ge or ge

Di eg o

Cr ick et

an Be n

St ep h

Su e

Pa u

l

Benjamin Alan Denzer

September 9, 1992

kind creative eccentric clever stubborn focused infuriating goofy

May life’s adventures continue to be fulfilling, exciting and happy! With love, Mom, Dad, Stephanie (and Diego)

kindergarten

senior year

To infinity and beyond!


“I hear and I forget I see and I remember I do and I understand” - Confucius

“An artist’s only concern is to shoot for some kind of perfection, and on his own terms, not anyone else’s.” - J.D. Salinger

Olivia,

Your entrance into our lives brought great joy, sparkling blue-green eyes, black curls and a personality that could only encourage us to become better individuals and parents. You have grown into an honest, kind, thoughtful young woman whose determination will always remain an inspiration to us. We are very proud of you and know you will accomplish all your dreams.

We love you (Infinity +1)

Mom and Dad “Everything has its beauty, but not everyone sees it” - Confucius

…You’ve only just begun to live White lace and promises A lick for luck And you’re on your way… Love, Angel, Einstein, and Ginger “Live as if you were to die tomorrow.

“To be able under all circumstances to practice five things constitutes perfect virtue; these five things are:

Learn as if you were to live forever.” - Gandhi

- Gravity - Generosity of Soul - Sincerity - Earnestness - and Kindness” - Confucius

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Congratulations, Michael Michael, “Do not go where the path may lead; go instead where there is no path and leave a trail.� Ralph Waldo Emerson

As you seek to forge a trail through the world, we wish you the fulfilment that results from living with meaning and purpose and happiness of using your talents.

With Love, Mom and Dad


Jordan It is pretty amazing that you stuck to your goal and achieved your dream of playing college baseball.We are all excited for you and look forward to watching you play at Rockhurst University next year. More important than that GREAT accomplishment, you learned a valuable lesson about life and how important it is to set goals and not to look back. You worked hard, stayed focused on your dreams, and were positive no matter what curve ball life threw you. You have worked hard at Barstow and your grades are fantastic. Your athletic achievements are impressive, but more than all that we are truly proud of your decision to strive to become a young “Man of Character.� As years pass, you will find that is truly what living life here on earth is all about.

Love, Mom, Dad, Luke, Mark and Kelle, Kristin and Kelley

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Matthew, Words cannot express how much we love you, and how proud we are of all that you have accomplished, both in and out of school. Equally, we are proud of the man you are becoming. You are bright and determined and compassionate, with a wonderful sense of humor and a great perspective on the world around you. You have everything you need to succeed in life, and we’re looking forward to coming along for the ride.

Love,

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Mom, Dad, Grandma, and Karin


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We are, of course, so very proud of your many accomplishments. But, it is your resilience, strength of character, and kindness that make you so special. Enjoy the adventure ahead. With love - Mom, Dad, and Grandma


Brooke, We are so proud of the many accomplishments you have achieved. As you go on to the next chapter of your life, dare to be great, but stay committed to who you are. We love you, especially your big heart and your willingness to share this with those who touch your life. Mom, Dad and Nick

Brooke, You are such a beautiful, smart, talented young lady with a bright future ahead of you. I am so blessed to be your older sister. Cali Rae Turner once said, "The best thing about having a sister was that I always had a friend," and I could not agree more. I can always count on you to be there for me, and as you go off to college, remember I am here for you, as your sister and your friend.

Brooke, It may be needless to say how many memories and experiences you and I have shared over the years. And in the process, you have truly become one of my best friends. I’m sure your future will be as bright as our past has been. I love you. Stay sassy, Alex

Love, Jewel Brooke, I know I am august, I do not trouble my spirit to vindicate itself or be understood, I see that the elementary laws never apologize, I reckon I behave no prouder than the level I plant my house by after all. I exist as I am, that is enough. If no other in the world be aware I sit content, And if each and all be aware I sit content. --Walt Whitman, from “Song of Myself” Brooke: Sit content in who you are. Trouble yourself not to be understood. If others notice, that is good. If others do not notice, that, too, is good.

It’s been remarkable to see you grow from an annoying little middle schooler to an edgy, soon-to-be colleger. Thanks for all your help with awk sauce, much appreciated. Best of luck with everything. Lovingly, Corey

Jarrod Roark 239



Scott, We all are proud of you for your distinguished accomplishments, and we love you very much. We wish you continued success and a productive, but fun, college career. Remember Psalms 23. - Grandma and Grandpa Penner, Aunt Sherry, Uncle Marv, Aunt Barbara, Michael, Danielle, Steven, Emily, Sizzle, and Mom. Mom will miss you more than you will ever know, and you have provided more of life than she ever believed possible.

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Congratulations Taylor!

Remember your first day at Barstow, back in the trailer . . . how mad you were when we made you wear that hat and carry those daisies to Ms. Murphy? And remember how that didn’t really happen, but we just wanted to use this cute picture of you since it’s been sitting in a drawer for 12 years? Congratulations on keeping your sense of humor through all the stuff that happened and the stuff that didn’t. We’re crazy proud of you!

Love, Your Family

Taylor, When I told our parents I wanted to place an ad to honor your graduation, they reminded me, as they always do, that inside jokes are rude and inconsiderate. You know what I said?

the meal-pass guy

Love, Tess 245


Jonathan, you are and always have been an inspiration to us. You make us so proud! Love, Mom, Dad, and AC

You’ve come a long way, baby!

“Baseball is my life.” - Jonathan Rosa

“My goal in life is to be as good a person as my dog already thinks I am.” - Anonymous

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“Don’t let what you cannot do interfere with what you can.” - John Wooden

“My heroes, my dreams, and my future lie in Yankee Stadium.” - Derek Jeter

“People seldom notice your clothes if you wear a big smile.” - Anonymous

“The secret of achievement is to hold a picture of a successful outcome in mind.” - Henry David Thoreau


“Try not to become a man of success, but a man of value.” - Albert Einstein

Jordan, You have been a joy and blessing to us since the day you were born. We are so excited to see what the future holds for you. Love, Mom and Dad

“I hope your dreams take you to the corners of your smiles, to the highest of your hopes, to the windows of your opportunities, and to the most special places your heart has ever known.” - Anonymous


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DANNY’S

TACOS CAIR

ANAPJ

NYAND

RIFLEDD

ROGENO

“I was halfway across America at the dividing line between the East of my youth and the West of my future” - KAJC OKCAREU We love you! Dad, Mom & Monica 250


We’ve been blessed to have you as part of our family and to watch you grow to become the young man you are today. We are excited to see where your talents will take you. Love Mom, Dad, Jenny and Gandolf “Patience, persistence and perspiration make an unbeatable combination for success.” - Napoleon Hill

Akshay, Not sure how the years went past, You grew up too fast Wish I could make the moments long last… Far away you are going to be on your own, Do not feel you are ever alone I will always be by your side… Follow your dreams and make a difference, For the world is waiting with patience. Son, you are surely one-of-a-kind, My greatest joy and my great pride!!! Love, Mom


Congratulations, Paul! We are so proud of you and all your accomplishments, especially on the Barstow Knowledge Bowl Team.

All Our Love, Dad, Mom, and Jake

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Brad, Your entire family is so very proud of you. Thank you Brad for being the person you are; you’re kind, you have a wonderful thoughtful nature, your smile brightens any room, and your love for others is an inspiration for others. Brad, you are so appreciated by all who know you, especially your family. You are deeply loved by your parents, your brothers, Huxley, and anyone who really gets to know you. I know Rudy is in dog heaven missing you. Congratulations with all our love, Dad, Mom, Erik, Alec, TJ, Joe and Huxley

Congratulations, Melanie We are so proud of you!

You will always be our baby. Love you, Mom, Dad, Robert & Marc 253


“We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence, therefore, is not an act but a habit. ”

ARISTOLE

Chloe,

We are very proud of you and will miss your jokes, laughter, and the smell of Ramen Noodles. We know you will be a great success as you start your new adventures, and you will make a great “Gorilla.”

Dad, Mom and Minka

Congratulations Alexis! We are so proud of you! Love, Mom, Jack, and Devin

Taylor, We are two nobodies in Missouri; secondary characters in this big world. But who says two teenagers and a keyboard can’t make a success story? With our speedboat and vegetable medley, we may just become a part of a part of it all—nine people’s favorite thing. Just remember that you’ve got a story to tell, and someone who will always be here to help you fight off the vampires.

Love, Derek 254


Wills Austin Abitz After 8 years of attending Barstow, I will the following in no particular order... Ben D: See you in another life, brother. Lost has brought us some great moments, let’s just hope we don’t run into any out of place polar bears. John M: Chiefs! We will look back and remember this as the year we became a team again. Thanks for helping me out on Economics as well. Scott M: Nothing gets the crowd going quite like a dunk from Scott. You’ve been great, and always remember what the great Jim Halpert once said: Bears, Beets, Battlestar Galactica. Jonathan R: Karen Filippelli said it best: “Call of Duty!” I’ll see ya soon. Kathleen W: I’m glad to see you pursue engineering; you’re no longer just cleaning the tabletop. Looking forward to Allen Fieldhouse. Akshay A: Someday we will caravan Forrest Gump style, just wait. You’ve got a long bright future, I hope college treats you well. Alex J: I have so much respect for you, between your farm and your technological achievements, well done. Ronnie C: Making robots since 2004. We’ve had some great seasons and I hope our last is the best one yet. I’m sorry you had to meet Patrick. Lamya A: Salted fried pickles from bww, have fun at the art institute, congrats on the scholarship. David K: Eighth grade, chess competition, learned to spin a pencil. I’m glad we were able to bring it to Barstow, we’ve definitely left a footprint somewhere. David W: The only advice I have for you, please unbutton the top button for college. Don’t be that guy. Jesse M: “You say bye to one as you say hi to another.” Thanks again for the KSU tickets. Ellen B: Sup girl. Grace G: Yo girl. Xye/Aaron D: I give you the combination to the robotics room, may the team live long and prosper. Tess P: “Any woman worth her salt has a sandwich kit in her bag, ready to go, at all times.” Scotland was great, thanks again for everything. Mom & Dad: Hope my education was worth that sports car you never got to have, sorry about that. The Technology Department: I’m glad to have been a part of Barstow’s finest tech team. I hope I can leave behind more than just the mug; you have taught me more than I could imagine. The Rest of Barstow: We only part to meet again. Lamya Al Douri Jordyn: We have been besties since freshman year. I love the jokes we have that make hardly any sense. I’m sure we will have more fun to come when we graduate. Adriane: Our friendship is very unique, but I know you will always have my back no matter what. Kate Schuller: You are one of the coolest Juniors I know. Everything you say is freaking hilarious and you’re always singing these songs I’ve never heard of. Best video of the year was “Bangs: Take You to Da Movies.” Soccer season with Wolfie was a lot of fun, I’m glad I decided to do it this year. Tori: Your laugh explains it all. Mel: I’m glad we got to become friends this year, you’re pretty awesome.

Working in aftercare is always ridiculous, but fun. Brad: One of my best guy friends at this school. You’re awesome and shall be missed, but we can always come back and dig up your iron man that we buried. Austin: Summer was amazing. Brittany and I enjoyed our fun adventures. You blasting your rap music with your expensive fancy speakers will not be forgotten. Akshay Almelkar A. Abitz: A projector, two screens, and eight hours of Call of Duty. That is one night I’ll remember for quite some time. Also, now that I think about it, Double A Battery Brothers was never really a good name. We definitely should have come up with something better. E. Bax: Cozy hugs, last minute B-Line covers, and sleeping during the Econ movie. Fun times. R. Caspers: Are you positive? Was Coulomb cool enough for you? No matter how hard anybody tries, they will never possess your uncanny ability to make puns. Please don’t stop in college. B. Denzer: I’ve thoroughly enjoyed trying to avoid your C4 traps, your rocket launchers, and your friendly fire. And then there were all those movies like Piranha 3D and Kiss Kiss Bang Bang that I would not have watched without your thoughtful guidance (sorry I slept through some of them). But I’ve really enjoyed these past four years of high school, and I think your friendship has been a big part of that. You really forced me to come out of my shell and blossom like a butterfly (I will definitely miss all your crazy metaphors). I hope you continue to enjoy Papa John’s Spinach Alfredo pizza, perhaps with some delicious homemade strawberry lemonade. And don’t forget, “It’s alright son.” K. LeGrand: Ho-pe! Did you know that Hopi means “willow” or “wise child” in Hopi Indian? (That was a direct quote from your Facebook post on my wall. I would not have the wisdom to decipher Hopi Indian). But you do possess a lot of wisdom (especially about foreign cultures), and I’m sure you’ll have many great adventures in various far-off places. P.S. We dominated at the Badminton Tournament. J. Morrow: We had some good column fights in B-Line all three years. And although I didn’t admit it, you did win at times (especially during senior year). Oh, and thanks for letting me borrow those Econ notes. T. Phillips: B-Line was definitely tough senior year, but we made it through. I will miss your article re-writes, your administration battles, and your opinion pieces. Have fun in college! J. Rosa: Puppy! How’s that juice treating you? But in all seriousness, these past four years have been great. The Call of Duty sleepovers, the iPhone games in B-Line, the Boys State Newspaper, playing catch in the gym, the list goes on and on. Thank you for the countless memories, and I apologize for all the times I tricked you/ made you mad. It’s just so much fun. I hope you have an awesome time in college. P.S. Jay Leno is better than Conan O’Brien. But not

really. Jimmy Fallon is the best. P.P.S. I will you some strawberry lemonade. J. Scott: I really enjoyed all those crazy ping pong matches we had. Except for the time I rammed into the giant pole in your basement. That was not fun. And thanks for making Calc a lot more enjoyable. I hope you have a great time at Northwestern. J. Tranton: I remember the game wars we had on Facebook with Bubble Spinner, Tower Stack, and Extreme Cars. Fun, but also a huge waste of time. L. Warning: I still remember sixth hour sophomore year; the family portraits, the intense Super Mario Wars battles, and of course, ’Merica. Thank you for so many wonderful memories, and I will definitely miss your sense of humor and your gullible-ness next year. Tell me if I need to make some changes to your Call of Duty game, and also let me know if Boys State happens to Jonathan. Oh, and watch out for those goblins! D. White: I will you the game of monopoly. Also, your college essay about polos was amazing. Jordyn Archie Let’s do this. Adriane: I am limited to a certain amount of words with this will and if I said all I needed to about you, I would take up the yearbook. So…I will sum it up. I love you! One of my first friends here at Barstow, you know we have that understanding. You are wonderfully and beautifully made; don’t let anyone tell you otherwise. Our friendship doesn’t stop here. Lamya: Girl, the most artistic, creative, and stylish person I know. I have so much confidence that you will do damage at KCAI. Come see me at school please! Melanie: Dance Team. We live it. We love it. We hate it. Mer. Our Love-Hate Relationship. The people who never go anywhere, ever. Self-explanatory. Brad: I appreciate you, like…a lot, dance team partner! Bianca: You’re adorable! I’m upset you decided to come when I’m leaving. Andrea: You are more awesome than you think. I’m telling you! Sarah: I will you dance team, take good care of her. Ellen: You are a star. Keep shining! Dance Team: The most tired, sleepy, peppy, intelligent, stylish, and sassy team at Barstow. You know it. Just…Bonnie-like. Barstow: Much love. Keep it real, Thanks! - Jordyn Archie Erin Bax 2013: Ellen: You might actually be a soph but you’re always gonna be my little freshie. I will you the phrase “what it do young money,” all the cross country memories (Wendy’s hats, the dinner-place timer), my GEICO piggy and octopus impressions, and back massages. Katie: I will you my ability to say whatever I want to Huppe without getting in trouble. 2012: Chase(y): I will you Sailor-J; a new babysitter; Expendables tickets; my storytelling abilities; Trop-Sno; tie-dying skills; the song Daps and Pounds; Prom 2010; the phrases “I think it’s time for you guys to go to bed,” “It feels like deer and smiley faces running through a meadow,” “GPS relocating,”

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“I was in my boxers…,” “Scooby-Dooby Boo,” “It’s massaging my head;” the word hamhanded; stops in Migliazzo; Alex’s pool; the drawing with a heart on a flower…or a flower on a heart; and tissues for more of my crying incidents. I’ll miss you and your ridiculous stories/expressions next year. Come visit whenever. Love you! Brandon: I will you more Chinese/physics/chemistry/biology tests and homework, a new lab partner, and every Archaic Rap Meme. Towards the aperture towards the barrier. Rams: I will you all the baller-aucity in the world, pink crocs, a Volcom hat, PINK sweats, and half of Wendy (Kaya gets the other half). You talk too much, but I love it. I’ll miss ya Rams. 2011: Melanie: I will you sophomore summer (because I don’t want it), the word rooster, Warped Tour tickets, $4 water, my Sublime obsession, IHOP dates, new woodchips for your front lawn, my suppressed memories from your house, finals studying tips, Nutella crepes, Taylor Momsen’s voice, more mix-CDs, The 8 Days of Hanukkah song, No Pigeons, Crash Kings, and a recording of me singing along to songs in your car. Caroline (Cheshy/Twin/Srimp/Crilv/Geez): I will you Weezy and his jams, China g-tips yo, a dead cat, a dead fish, birthday dog, the phrases “eyo-eyo ey-bapa deyo” and “Weezy F and the F is for Frank,” the horse pee+scamper memory, Cocaine Rats, muppets, Glozell, whale nibbles/nail wibbles, the Little Lad *elegant*, the words juhj and rubber baskets (translation: flabbergasted), our stolen frosted animal crackers, Drake’s awful raps, literally (not figuratively), goblins, Kenneth and Dr. Sketch, BWW, the song “what the hook gon’ be,” and Land of Paws visits. LYLAC. In the words of Stu: keep your srimp claw strong. Alex M: I will you Track 04; The Spot; IHOP adventures with Sir Jimmy; seats at Town Center (so we can people-watch); more peeing mishaps; coconut cakes from Jasper’s; 7 orders of cinnamon twists; car slumber-parties; late-night Taco Bell and McDonalds; Prom 2010; the High School Musical soundtrack; tie-dying supplies; the keys to your pool; the JoBros; tenting supplies (groceries included); fine wine; a big bruise on your arm; endless carwashes (sorry); fewer trips to Dairy Queen; my skiing abilities; Christofer Drew; my left-side parted hair (it would be in the middle without your guidance); the Jonah Hill look-alike at Weezer; The Guide to Escaping Mosh Pits; invented words; Expendables tickets/memories; my 5th grade Neopets account; VIP passes to the Beaumont; prank calls with Jasp; the name DJ Alex; flashlights to lead the way through dark parks; sketchy house-parties; Deli-Select turkey; new purple sheets; mini pizzas/pepperonis; the phrases “I’m 92 and a half,” “I think he’s gonna bomb the crowd,” “uh, she got dropped,” “I was gonna do my podcast, but then…,” “I would let you guys come to my house but…,” “hella b******,” “Ollibelle” (translation: all of Bell’s), “rooster,” “DMH;” forgetfulness on the Barstow playground; my FarmVille crops, Kenneth and Dr. Sketch; concerts; and of course, too many close calls. I have some of the craziest, funniest, and best memories with you, and I know there’ll be plenty more. I love you always Al! Lindsay: I will you cleaning

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supplies for my house, tone chimes, unfinished papers (“you’re a homey’s best friend”), MY LEG, dumpster diving memories at Harvesters, catch phrase, late-night vid chats, and the phrase “And I said run it…” Chloe: I will you all the notes and pictures we’ve given Jonathan, Ramen, mints, a Mexi ‘stache and poncho, the phrases “dats weeeird” and “I think God just texted me,” Land of Paws visits, the heater from History class, camping supplies, The 8 Days of Hanukkah song, Jonah Takalua, Mr. G, Celine, eagle eyes, and my text: “do grasshoppers have…” Scott: I will you my peanut butter and turkey sandwiches, a plate of Christmas cookies, more Story Times with Erin, the phrase “Leaf, Petal, Flower,” and an elevator so you won’t have to carry me. John: I will you the phrase “do you like apples,” our physics-class drawings and hand signals, a wheelchair for the next time I get a blister, and our econ mnemonics. Please will me Nana! Ben: I will you Melina. Jordan S (Jobin): I will you Nevershoutnever trips, the phrases “who wants cookies” and “Ugh, you’re so convincing,” more guitar jam sessions, the memories of me falling into the foldable chair, camping supplies, and the word yegabegunja. Ronnie: I will you the camel face (originally the posah face), the phrase “who wants cookies,” and my inability to free step. Jordan E: I will you my Weezy-rapping talents, camping memories, the phrase “giiirl,” and all the food I don’t eat. Kaya: I will you the other half of Wendy (and all his phrases: *GRASS*spread eagle*Bax*); pretty skies; our weird dreams; XC pep talks; the phrases “wait, is it vibrating,” “gazelles in the garden,” and “whatta do young bunny;” Arnold; our holly sprig; a coaching position; and upside-down bus rides. Brad: I will you more guitar jam sessions, a futon to make guests more comfortable in your closet, Third Eye Blind, the phrases “English homework” and “chicks,” Taco Bell runs, Avatar the Last Airbender, and more garageparties. Matt M: I will you all my Weezy songs. Akshay: I will you the seat next to me in all of my classes next year. Freddy: I will you the phrases “pop da lock with my SlimJim,” “guess what…nothin,” “say something not smart and not funny;” the ChugLife videos, and my free step dance moves. Jonathan: I will you more inappropriate notes/drawings; Vampire Weekend; Local Natives; fun.; more Story Times with Erin; the phrases “the spider ran away because his parents were coke addicts,” “she sleeps in a nest like baby Jesus,” “so there’s 2 pairs of twins, that’s 4 children,” and “I’ve only seen it on cops;” prank calls/drivethrus; Alex’s and my card-game cheating skills; and a voice recording of SQUISHY SQUISHY. Steph: I will you a series of weird YouTube videos, from Glozell’s Nads-testing to the dog standing on a turtle. Thanks for all the college advice! Mom&Dad: I will you both the book Text Messaging for Dummies; you really need it. Thanks for starting my car in the mornings, getting me Starbucks, coming to all my games/ meets, and supporting all of my decisions. I truly appreciate everything you do for me—I love you! And Barstow: I leave you with the wise words of Fez: opportunity does not knock, and then ring the doorbell, and then knock

again, and then leave a note that says, “sorry, I missed you,” and then call you on the phone. Alexis Crowley I, Alexis Crowley, will the following: Frosh: NA: BTVN, stupid noises, stealing my phone, random advice. I’ll miss you! CC: Talks in T-Scott’s office, why does he always want to hold my hand? I’ll seriously miss you! ND: Frosh buddy! Wendys, Singers, finding phones. Love you! AF: Other Frosh buddy! You’re the only asian pics, seeing the real side of TOB, small but mighty! Love you! DN: Your father...need I say more. I’ll miss you! TP: Stud, chip it out, cuteness, popping backs. I’m so happy we got to play basketball together! BS: Spongebob, posting up, B, sass. Love you! JP: Had to save my favorite for last! BTVN, Joeeey, long talks, keeping me sane, scrimmages, high fives. Thanks for being such a great friend! I’ll miss you! Soph: GF: Gabbs! Chippy, hugs, goblins, hysterical laughs. Love you! GG: Hey Goalie Twin! LE: Little sis! TOB, van rides, abuse, meeting the Estes fam. Love you! Juniors: KA: DUBS PARTNER! Tournaments, fat lips, Dale, hits to parts of the body, saving me in prob/stat, HiHat and Starbucks runs. I’ll miss you so much! LB: Number twin! Enviro, big hugs, basketball! Love you! AD: Enviro, Mrs. Kill, sassy/fat guinea pigs, sushi, laughs, complaints, Mona, baking cakes in the morning, only eating icing. I will miss you so much! Stay in touch! AH: I’ll miss your XXL jersey in basketball! KS: Singers, Pres/VP tag-team, Wolfie, movie nights, trips to Nebraska, Chris Pine, meeting the Schuller fam, Bob and Ann. I love you so much! You’re seriously one of my best friends. I’ll miss you! KS: Simsy! TOB, Teenage Dream, State, tie-dye, co-captains, van rides, Ke$ha, GaGa, Olive Garden, photo shoots, scavenger hunt champs, Nikki and Dan. Gotta love the parents! Love you! SW: Favorite Mexican! I love your sassy comments. Basketball+Chinese have been amazing with you! Seniors: EB: Thank you for saving my butt so many times in soccer over the past seasons. I’m really going to miss soccer with you! RC: You make my day everyday! I’ll miss you! BD: I loved our Spofford collaboration! CF: I’ll miss you and your Sarah Palin obsession! Good luck with volleyball! FH: Freddie! You’re such a talented soccer player and I’m so happy we became such good friends! I’ll miss you! AH: I have so many memories with you I can’t say them all. I love you! BK: Brookie! State, Huppe, helipad runs, bagels. I’ll miss you! KL: Hey running stud! I’m really going to miss you! You’re so adorable + I love you! AM: Playing soccer with you was awesome! Have fun next year! TP: Wheels, Coach P, family van rides, Ke$ha, track workouts, hot and dangerous, 8-6-4-2s, apparel. I’ll miss our time on basketball and in school together! JS: I’ve seriously loved going to school with you! You’re absolutely hilarious and I’ve enjoyed our time together! LW: School’s been so much fun with you, especially Prom Committee! You had the BEST ideas! I’ll miss you next year! CW: 4 math classes (Pags especially), 6th hour APUSH, running magical places, Gary, chiseled goddesses, Coach P, baby Will, family,


the van, swinging elbows, track workouts, hey gurl, SKIN LUBE! I love you and I’m going to miss everything about school and basketball with you! DW: I’ll miss BTVN with you! KW: GET BUNK! JE: Ok, where to begin. You’re seriously my best friend! I’ve loved going to school with you and I’m going to miss you so much! I’ve enjoyed our talks and I’ll always be here for you if you ever need me! Stay in touch! I’ll miss you! Teachers: SF: Thank you for making my last 3 years of high school so memorable! GG: Thanks for a great 3 years! Good luck with everything down in Georgia! MA: MADAMS! I’ll miss our baseball talks and your championship rings. DC: ProbStat was tough, but you taught me so much and I fully enjoyed being in your class. AC: I love your will for teaching! I’ll miss you next year! BD: Thank you so much for teaching me everything and more about music! I’ve loved being in Singers for the past 3 years! WF: 4 person Calc class! SH: Thank you for helping me survive through the college process. I don’t know what I would’ve done without you. Huppe: Hey Hupps! State, Drivers-Ed, daily convos, Camdenton, Vincent, leaving you. Thanks for a great 4 years! I’ll miss you a lot! AK: D-KETCH! 6th hr APUSH/8th hr Gov…That’s all. CK: Thanks for making Enviro fun! I’ll miss you! BK: I’ve enjoyed taking a class with you for the past 6 years. Speech + BTVN have been amazing! I’ll never forget our laughs and talks! ML: Glad to know my Fight Club soap bar will always have a special spot on your desk! VM: I enjoyed our lengthy conversations and the mints! KM: Mrs. Mitchell’s Towering Tourists…and Danny! DM: Thank you so much for putting up with us in Singers! Mona: I’ll miss dropping by EVERY DAY to see you and chat! Love you! Coach O’Brien: Thank you so much for coaching me in tennis these past 4 years! I had so much fun! I‘ll be back to visit! MP: I’ll never forget your math classes! CP: Ni hao! Thank you so much for putting up with our class for the past 3 years + teaching me a lot! JR: J-Roark! English has been absolutely amazing with you! Thank you for writing my letters of rec! You’re hilarious and I’ll miss you next year! Stelting: Thanks for making my high school athletic career awesome! LZ: Zimm! I’ll never forget English with you! I had so much fun this year! I’ll miss you! SH: Mama Harper! I have no idea how I’m going to be able to survive the college experience without your guiding hand. Thank you for always listening to me. I’m going to miss you more than anything! I’m so happy we’re so close and that I can always count on you to listen whenever I need someone. I know we’ll stay in touch! Love you! To the rest of the Barstow community: I’ll miss you all. See ya! Ben Denzer Barstow: You’ve been good to me. Thanks. Olivia Derman Mom & Dad: I don’t know how you’ve been able to put up with me throughout the stresses of high school, but I can’t thank you enough. Mom, I don’t know what I would have done without your guidance and constant support. I’ve learned to view the world in a completely

different way because of you. Dad, thank you for always being who you are. Thank you for sticking by me and my choices, even when I make silly mistakes. I love you both so much. Seniors: Bella: I’ll never look at plastic drink swords ever again without laughing. Surprise raving during spring finals freshman year was way too sassy. Kevin: Thank you for introducing me to some of your bunk-tastic music. I will be forever bunk. Everyone else: Ellen Babbott and Tori Ball: Thank you for making chemistry hilarious. ‘JASON DERULER.’ Teachers: Thank you for everything you’ve done to make high school a little less like ‘Mean Girls.’ The past four years of my life here at Barstow have been a fun ride… a Hawaiian roller coaster ride, that is. Stay classy, Barstow. – Olivia Derman Jordan Eckley I love you all! I’m gonna miss all of you next year. You guys have made my high school years sooo much fun and memorable. If anyone is down by the plaza, hit me up and come by Rockhurst. If you have any free time in the spring next year, definitely come see a Rock U. baseball game. Shannon Fleming Will: To you I leave the following, http://www. homeschoolclassifieds.com/show_group. asp?which=17469, you can keep your preschoolers. I’m going to miss our late night talks and semi-dangerous escapades. Keep being you. Danielle: I leave you a promise to get you that painting for your room… or I suppose it’s my old room, but anyway, I love you and all our conversations, even though they were corrupting you. Sensei!! Bella: I’m not sure if I can leave you anything, since we’re both leaving… but have fun in college, and wherever our colleges are, the Left Sisters publishing company/underground lab/underundergound bakery will come to be one day. Aaron: I leave you my share of ABC. Take care of it, and hopefully have more successful meetings. I’m going to miss you, you’re probably my best guy friend (besides Will), and it’s been fun abducting you from your house. Tess: To you, I leave the ability to dial numbers on rotary phones through thoughts of circus peanuts. You’re so much fun, I’m glad we got to know each other more during Fringe. Ellen B: Love me in your sweater all night long (clap clap). I’m going to miss you and your nifty dance moves. I leave you the following link, http:// anniegroves.files.wordpress.com/2007/12/ img_3480.jpg Grace: I’ve been having some car troubles lately, so I was wondering if I could leave you my car to fix? I’m going to miss you and your mustaches. Zoë: chao cibai (bai bai bai bai bai bai bai) I’m going to miss all the crazy stuff we did in chinese class, namely our award-winning film, Lizards Like Soap. Have fun at college, we have to keep in touch. Sam: Have fun in college Sam, these years have been fun, and I’m going to miss your baking skills. Would you be willing to hide in my trunk and feed me free fudge and other sweets? I will pay you in plastic combs and trips to the bathroom. Ilana: ADVENTURE TIME http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_XdP6Lp2ceqY/

TIbbOZ9ulpI/AAAAAAAAbFc/mu6AlAcRn8U/ s400/4969372428_811ea07152_o.jpg. Have fun in college, I’m going to miss all those mysterious pandas on Mr. Roark’s board. Chloe Foster I, Chloe Foster, will the following: Caroline: “I know way too many people here right now that I didn’t know last year…”. Land of Paws adventures. Sassy Christmas jingles. José the Bandito. Chicken Tenders and Honey Mustard. Brea-Fist. Grey’s Anatomy. Obama. “All I want for Christmas” Wheafve. Nappy. Erin: 1st Hour history buddy. Jonathan’s secret love letter. 8 Days of Chanukah. “1/2 yes little green ones”-Cha-Cha. Yahtzee! Cat noise. Carlos the Bandito. Owls. iTunes Visualizer. Claaasic. Voicemails. Special Goddess. Brea-Fist. Big Booty number 1. The Strokes. Obama. “You don’t know my life!” Land of Paws adventures. Nappy wheafve. Number 1 furniture store! Lindsay: Frejeneganda. Professional FB stalker/Jack Johnson lifesaver/ADD monitor. “Always straddle the crevasse.” Narwhals. “I didn’t like the bus!” Kountry Korner Kafe. Chicken Tenders and Honey Mustard. Trucker Hat. Malibu Islands. Brea-Fist. Photo Booth photo shoots. Minnesota FaiGitas. Grey’s Anatomy. Obama. Sass Free Zone! Nappilicious. Alex M: Injury buddy. Lola. Ramen noodle cupcakes. Mini-Purrs! “Helloooooooooooo!” Co-Captain. Exploding 4th of July poppers. Strewnge. 3OH!3. Wheow! Brea-Fist! Border Patrol. Trainer Scott Massage. Pitt State torture camp. Coach Tool’s sass-camp. Temper Trap Camping serenade. Obama. Penguin onesie. Chicken Tenders and Honey Mustard. Number 1 furniture store! Jonathan: Hotdogs. Summer Heights High. All of the copies of the special letter Erin and I wrote you in history class. Don’t have too many excitement quivers in college Mr. G. Ninja Toad vs. the snake. Birds/ Sassy man pictures/Winston the rat in your locker. Secret notes in your walker. Melanie: Abada-Jew. 15 minutes till 12:45. Music Twin. Bianca: What up G. Teach me how to dougie. Austin: 6th hour family. Call of Duty Teacher. Jordan S: Camping Buddy. Number 1 furniture store! Thanks for letting me steal your speakers all the time. Jordan E: WOP. BreaFist. Big Booty number 2. Signing buddy. “Your arm feels like a cute baby seal.” “Girrrl! My SOUP!” Champs! Rafael. Ronnie: Camel Face. Donkey call. Scott: Sorry for leaving you in weight training. Matthew Golden I, Matthew FRANKLIN GROSSMAN Golden, will the following: Class of 2011: Jacob “Parker” Shreeve (JAKE): You are 1 of my BFFs & as such mean the world 2 me!!! You have always ALWAYS been a great friend to me, even when I haven’t always reciprocated! I’m sorry & your willingness to forgive means the world to me!!! =) Brad Jarvis: Thanks for being cool and helping me along on my journey through middle and high school! I couldn’t have done it without you! I wish we had hung out more but w/e, at least we got the time we did 2 share! John Henry Morrow IV & Jared Wright: Thanks for always giving me pushback on my political views. Even when

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we disagreed, I want you to know that I was always thankful for the spirited (sometimes heated ;) ) debate. I will miss it in the future. Jonathan Rosa: Thank you for being an inspiration and reminding me that “we are never alone as we travel on our own, unique journey” every day!!! Shazi Aslam: Thanks for brightening up my days with your dropdead Colbert-like impressions. Also, thanks for teaching and reminding me not to take myself too seriously. Brooke K: Thanks for propelling me on the journey towards becoming the man I am today, and will be tomorrow! Good luck! Kev (DJ Jungle Bunk): STAY BUNK BRO, STAY BUNK!!! Paul: Thanks for being chill. MD & Cinda: Hey Guys - Although we have talked since we first met, our friendship has truly blossomed this year. Although I wish we could have been closer sooner, I am soo glad and thankful for the time we have shared! Thanks for introducing me to prosperos and continuing to encourage me to reach for the stars and step outside my comfort zone!!!!!! Izzy, Jordan G, Sky, Mackenzie, Miles, many others: Even though we didn’t end up knowing each other as well as I would have liked, I enjoyed the time I did spend with each and every one of you! Good Luck in HS, and in Life!!! Hopefully we will keep in touch! :) Kaya: I’m going to miss your kindness, cuteness, sweetness, genuine personality, cheerfulness, and energy! You, Ben, Jon Rosa, and many others made each day at school a pleasure, and brightened up the darkest ones! Now, the goodies: Class of 2012: BiG Sree: I will to you The Politics Club. Thanks for taking the initiative with me to continue the club’s speaker series. Even though nothing came out of it (at the time of my writing this), I have learned valuable lessons from my time as president of The Politics Club, not least of all, lessons in leadership. I hope you learn valuable life lessons also, and furthermore that you leave the club stronger than I have!!! I really mean it!!! You have tradition and hard work in your hands, and in your heart!!! Class of 2013: Waqar “Zublueberry” Zuberi: I loved getting to know you as I have! Thanks for being my debate partner! I will miss the Youtube videos and such with you!!! Especially, PHILLIP!!!!!! !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 2 Every1 Else... Sorry if you weren’t personally mentioned! If anyone wants to stay in touch with me, feel free to (holla @ me): kyop1111@gmail.com Adriane House Jordyn: College is soon ahead and I can only hope that we continue to have some great adventures together such as: crazy WalMart trips, Olive Garden outings, and skating. Lamya: The four years at Barstow have always been fun and crazy with u there. Keep up with ur art because it truly is amazing. Alexis: I’ve had a great four years with u at Barstow. I hope that those great times will continue with many laughs and smiles. Mel: Town Center trips were fun. Thanks for sharing them with me. Danny: I enjoyed our pretend relationship. It always made me laugh. Have fun in college. Andrea: High school is almost over, and I’m glad I got to spend some of it with u. Thanks for always being so nice and sweet. Ur a great person

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and I know I’ll be seeing u more in the future. Rian: Photography was always fun, and all the crazy inside jokes. Lauren: Best math buddy ever! Ali: Bear suit was amazing, enough said. Bianca: Morning work was fun with u. Enjoy high school! Glenn: Focus on what’s ahead. Be yourself and have fun with high school. Jeanne: We had our rough name times, but overall this year was fun hanging out with u. Enjoy the next three years, they will go by fast. Merek: I enjoyed our times in art. Thanks for being so silly. Good luck with baseball. Hilvitz: Thanks for teaching me many lessons about art and life. I will always remember the things you taught me. Lackey: Sorry for the way things started this year. Thank you for sticking with me and helping me enjoy ceramics. Profe PK: Thanks for sticking with me in Spanish. I know it hasn’t been easy, but you taught me to really enjoy Spanish. Alex Johnson I, Alexander Clayton Johnson, after spending 68,040,000 seconds at The Barstow School, do hereby will the following things to the stated individuals upon my graduation from The Barstow School on the twenty-third day of May in the two thousand and eleventh year: Teachers: Not at any time did you ever cease to amaze me. Rain or shine, you kept loading on homework and throwing test after test at me, always asking for more or giving me something to metamorphose. Well, I learned what you were teaching, and yes, you are right, school does suck. Well, maybe that is not the lesson you meant to insinuate, but at some point or another we all hit the wall, where all we could think is that school sucks. But don’t fear, your lessons held more meaning than that, they kept me in touch and allowed me think of the world in a more edumacated decorum. I will utilize them goodly. But really, thank you, your lessons will always be remembered. Freshmen: Jay Gillen: You have the best stories, whether they are real or about anteaters, they keep me entertained. Sam Stewart: Boot Buddies. Without us, what would Cross Country have been like? Will Pursell: Keep on singing, barbershop has been fun. Sophomores: Alex McDonald: I leave you with the most, you must keep Celtic Club alive. It should not be too hard. I am only asking for perfection within the club. Braden Neihart: I leave you with a rock solid slap in the chest. Dirty Harry: You need to LOOSEN UP a bit more, but you’re awesome nonetheless. Aaron Dupuis: Well you managed to get a free hit on me, but no hard feelings. Juniors: Jesse Miller: I don’t think you ever did any work at the Help Desk. So, you’re welcome. Jonah Jaax: Acting and Improv were fun, I think we could improv anything. Seniors: Austin Abitz: Quik-Trip runs were very fun, along with financial food. Akshay Almelkar: You should have joined the help desk, you could have been a great translator. Ben Denzer: We have known each other forever, we made amazing movies and watched each other grow up. No matter what the task you were there to help, Thanks. David Kessler: PUT DOWN THE COFFEE AND STEP AWAY FROM THE CAFFEINE, AND NO ONE WILL BE HURT. Kaya LeGrand: Run like

hell. David White: I don’t know how, but that top button of your shirt never got unbuttoned. Way to stay strong. Danny Woodhams: Don’t get prego. Kaya LeGrand I, Kaya LeGrand, wish to acknowledge the following people, many of whom have affected my life beyond belief: 2011: Akshay: I will you the IHMP Club, “Can you draw it on the board?”, the penny game, a better badminton partner, & F-me. You’re hilarious, adorable, & brilliant. BenDen: Hey, Mr. Sneaky. I will you rocks to throw at trains, the ability to play “Hallelujah,” tiny things, truth or truth questions, maps, history studying, bug bites, “but um…”, sketchy parks, car conversations, & spelling skills. Thank you for being a part of my life since preschool. I’ll miss you, Ben. Brookodon: I will you dinosaurs, GRASS, Trashin’ the Camp, vase vomit, PB&J, twin power, & Batman/Toy Story socks. You got me through The Year of Wendy, & I’ve loved running with you. I am not a troll. Cynthia: Cinda, my oldest friend. I will you tea, peanut butter to knead & squeeze, a hippopotamus with noodles on his back, your old diary that I took, Bobby & Robby LeScott, & Alfie (for Elfie, of course). I’ll miss being absolutely crazy with you. You’ve always been so passionate about what you believe in, & I truly admire you for that. You’ll do great things. David W: I will you all the obscure facts I know, whether you want to hear them or not, along with a touch of sass, some poetry, & de Chirico. Never doubt yourself. You’re one of the coolest people I know. Erin: BAX! Whattado, young bunny? I will you Pez, pretty skies, freshman XC, JB, holly sprigs, gazelles, Peter, Arnold, upside down bus rides, & my window spit. Watch out for the sneaky... Juánaton: I give you jelly beans, Rock Band parties, mentas (para mí), unbroken walking equipment (liar), sports quizzes, & eternal apologies for my forgetfulness. You’ve always been so supportive. Thank you for that. Keep entertaining me with your texts. I expect to hear from you at least once a day. Junior: I will you impeccable comic timing & infinite movie wisdom. Oh, wait… Kathleen: You shoesmelling, KU-cheering, foot lover… I leave you all my shoes & socks (no matter how gross), every bit of KU gear I will ever own, & our junior year post-lunch routine. Lindsay: Just one thing: Mama, there’s a gorilla pounding on the window! Melanie: You giggly girl. I will you The Decemberists and Josh Ritter. Lasagna. Caucus. Taylor: From one HSLP to another, I bequeath to you Holocaust games, permission to plait my hair, Blue Koi womandates/KB sleepovers, whipped cream pancakes, HE, muffin tops (I get the butts), pens to chew on, Friend Bryan, kisses (thank you), BFsF, & an everlasting bosom friend/brag buddy. Don’t doubt yourself. You can be Tina Fey. Go for it. PSY-. All seniors: I’ve loved being with you guys my entire life, & I’ll miss you all so much. Thanks for being the best classmates ever. 2012: Becky: Beckyyyy! I will you all the math knowledge I have, most of which came from you in the first place. Conor: I will back to you all the math/physics help you’ve given me. You’re so entertaining… & smart & funny


& crazy & good at debating. I’ll miss you! Kate Schuller: Homie. I give you Luke. Mackenzie: I will you Bali, a great last XC season, & all the sweetness you’ve given to me. I’ll miss you! Melissa: Agathon, Yearbook, advisory, & music buddy… I leave you great music, Marcel the Shell, & something to repay everything you’ve baked for me. You’re a wonderful, brilliant, talented, dedicated person. Best of luck with senior year. I will miss your baking SO much. (And I guess I’ll miss you too. =P) Ned: Bye, Neddy. 2013: Aaron: Hey, music buddy! You’re going to come sing to me in California, right? Thanks for all your work in YB. You’re a great writer, singer, & person. Alex McD: I will you Lux Aeterna, running tights, and lightbulbs for man training. Deko: Deko, you are a STUD RUNNER. Keep it up… you’re going to be even more of a beast as a junior & senior. It’s been fun to run with you! E-Babz: I’ll miss your crazy so much. I will you back massages, Bali, your insane laugh, & the ability to run in sync. Good luck with the rest of high school! Jessica S: We’re like sisters. 2014: Annie: I will you more hilarious, adorable enthusiasm. You brightened my mood every day in YB. Ali & Tess: Katali. ROAAARRR!! Elephants. Best buddies ever. Camille: Thank you for always having your YB assignments done on time. You’re an excellent & creative writer, & I’m excited to see what you’ll do in future years! MadTad: Thank you for always getting your work done in YB. You’re certainly one of the most reliable staff members! Keep it up. Sydney: You are probably the most hardworking, involved freshman I’ve ever known… I love the motivation! Thanks for all the great work in YB. Teachers: Ms. Zimmerman: Without you, I wouldn’t be me. I unconditionally appreciate & respect you. Thank you for everything. I owe my high school years to you. Mr. Luce: Thank you for forcing me to step outside my comfort zone. I’ll miss seeing “v. good,” double checkmarks, & exclamation points on my papers. I really appreciate all you’ve taught me. Mr. Roark: Backmasking, Little Mermaid songs, velociraptor imitations… YB was never dull. Oh, & English was fun too. I’ve always appreciated your constant enthusiasm & love for literature/teaching. Profe: ¿Vas a darme tarea en la universidad? Creo que sí… siempre hay tarea. Pero en serio, gracias por cultivar mi interés en español. Siga “obsticulating” y creando palabras en ingles. Es una lengua estúpido. Mr. Adams: I’ve said it before, but I would hate you if I didn’t like you so much! Thanks for being an extremely helpful, reasonable physics teacher, even when I was an obnoxious physics student. I’ve really enjoyed being in your class. T-Race: Thanks for obsessing with me. I will you consistency, grammar, (that’s an Oxford comma – screw AP!) and fonts. Dr. Cramer: You can’t swing a dead cat in stats without hitting a bell curve. Mrs. Beatty: Thank you for being a wonderful kindergarten teacher & for supporting me throughout the rest of my Barstow career. Family: Daria (Dur): I’ll miss you a ton, bud. I will you BGON in my room, playing baby, doing backs, Mochi-Yo/Peachwave nights, Jump!, & unintentional offensive comments. Thanks for all the “how to be a girl” counseling. Makes

me question whether I’m actually the older sibling. Good luck with the rest of high school. Be good, be careful, & be smart. I love you! Mom: Thank you for 1) laundry, 2) always keeping track of my schedule, 3) organizing my life, 4) college visits, & 5) being a wonderful mom. I will you the phrase “That makes me queeeaaasssyy…”, Kevin, PEACHES!, triangles, & Fly Like a G6. I really can’t list everything you’ve done for me throughout my life. You’ve been SO supportive of all my endeavors. I hope you know how much I appreciate you, love you, & will miss you in college. Dad: Thank you for 1) being my chauffeur when Mom was gone, 2) maintaining sanity when the family went crazy, 3) delicious food, 4) reading Mr. Popper’s Penguins & My Father’s Dragon to us, & 5) being a pretty awesome dad. You’re Rock LeGrand, g**d*****! Other: XC Team: Keep it strong for me, guys. Run hard. Have fun. Let it all hang out. Coach White: Since kindergarten, you’ve provided me with outstanding support & enthusiasm. Thanks for always believing in my running skills. David Franz: Davie, these past 3 seasons have been totes perf. I’m really glad I got to have you as a coach. Thank you so much for everything! Barstow: Appreciate the time you have here. Don’t get caught up in the details. Just enjoy it. Scott McMeekin I will: Bobby “B-Deezy” Deffenbaugh: everything pertaining to awesomeness. Chase Coble: some joke-telling skills. Chris Frye: you are just a great neighbor and I wanted to put you in here. Cole Dattel: I love that Halloween pig suit. Conor McMann: Gossip Girl reruns. Devvvvviinnn NNNeewwwsome: my freshman buddy, I just want to tell you, you are a great guy and just try your best at basketball cause nobody can stop you. Gabe “G” Greenbaum: Candy. Jake Roberts: it’s cool you have an STA girlfriend. Jared “big red” Wright: you are pretty nice. Jeremy Terman: silence. Judson Woods: a thinking cap. Lawrence “L-Train” Brown: I just hope you do really well your senior year and defeat the enemies in your way. Alex Mirabile I, Alexandra F. Mirabile, will the following: Caroline W: Liney, Curl, CW…it doesn’t matter what I call you; I will miss you so much. I can’t believe we’ve survived 15 years at the Stow. It wouldn’t have been possible without choco.p.mc, our giant bows, solarium and being tanorexic, forev, starbucks, studying for finals...not, elegant, obams, oyy, plague, crevs, our crusty crust lips, being my mom, little lad dance, Dr. Sketch, Kenneth Road, rich and rare, physics class, term ID’s, search for the best chicken tenders, volup hair, breakfast at ingredient, birtday dog, crying way too much for our own good and your amazing taste in ghetto music. I am truly proud to share my middle name with you. Texas here we come! Don’t hurt ‘em. Lindsay W: We have been friends since kindergarten! I will never forget our trip to Chicago, your basement, the poop in your geometry book, our Jonas obsession, your fb stalking skills, your horrible ability to lie, midgets, and chicken tenders. Thanks for

driving me all those times especially to 3oh3… yeah I thought I knew where I was going hah... bou juice and your trucker hat, thanks for cleaning up after everyone! Just so you know I will forever hold the embarrassing pictures of you over your head. Chloe F: You are probably the funniest person I have ever met. I’m so glad we became friends; frankly my high school experience wouldn’t have been the same without you continuously teasing Lindsay or listening to one of your new accents. Setting for you on the volleyball court was an honor and quite the joke when my 5’3” stance stood next to you, a 6’3” Gorilla. One day when you are a famous Olympic athlete I can’t wait to say I played with you! I will definitely be coming to watch you play and say hi to Ib! Jordan S: yegabegunja! you’re so indie…your guitar skills will always amaze me. Can’t forget our nevershoutnever trips and attempts at “camping”…oh yeah and kush face hah Ronnie C: “who wants cookies!” I just wanted to let you know that my mom’s toe is good to go and fully healed *attempts to camel face* John M: Just making sure you know I don’t actually hate you! No matter how much you don’t like it you will forever be John Moron… Jonathan R: By the time you read this I will have probably already played you in another game of imagine, beaten you, and most likely cheated. Next time Jenny Craig calls you don’t be worried, it’s probably just a glitch in my prank calling. I hope you remember all the times in florida, breaking every rule possible. I hope I didn’t tease you too much over the years…anyways, thanks for always putting up with me! Scott M: It’s hard to think you used to be sweet little innocent Scotty. Thanks for the fun times at your house, stay chill Jordan E: birtday, birtday, birtday…am I saying it right yet? “my souuuppp!!” Brad J: my fellow Guido, we had lots of good times, have fun at Miami and don’t cause too much trouble. Melanie K: Thanks for letting me be a fellow jew a few times. Passover dinner at the Kulicks’ is something I’ll cherish. Also let’s not forget our infamous ways of studying for finals! Matty G: I hope your talents take you far. Kathleen W: My future sister in-law. David W: You will always be my husband. Deep down I know you love me just as much as I love you! Ben D: Thanks for always supporting my love for Constable! Chase C: I know you hate it but I have to say it once more…Chasie Chase! I will miss you so much. I don’t know what I’m going to do without you mocking me everyday. I will always tease you about the expendables concert and no matter what, you will always owe me for that night. Our numerous trips to trop sno will never leave my memory, especially the night the lady explained her drawing making it sound incredible only to discover it was a simple sketch of a heart and flower. The stories you tell blow my mind and keep me laughing…Dan’s Mom’s Range Rover is by far the best. Sorry I’m always so paranoid about everything haha. Don’t hesitate to call me next year! I’ll still have advice to give you and will most likely still be right about it. There will always be room in my dorm for you to visit, so please do! Lastly, I hope you have all of the fun I had wished to have my senior year. You deserve it! Erin Bax:

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I hope you realize how hard this was to write. You are my best friend and no matter what you have been there for me. I know we would have our occasional fights, which poor Lindsay usually witnessed, but those fights are what kept our friendship going. We have traveled the map together, and the idea of being in different cities next year makes me sick. You are my giamatti and always will be. I will never forget the trips we took, the concerts we attended, and the times we had. Sorry for my stupidity over the years, I hope you realize I will still be calling you to edit my papers in the future. These next things are words and phrases that define our friendship in no specific order… annual finals scream, Camelback mountain, not knowing how to use commas, trop sno, peeing in my ear, summer of 2009, CPK, Scoobydooby boo, peeing our pants, tye-dying, boy scouts, Funghis, wolf hat, gnocchi vodka sauce, Kelly M, yield on green, Christofer Drew, Peace sign tattoos, Jonas, subtle, vomiting, nutella, DJ Alex, fountains, Tommy Keenan, unicorns, ham-handed, black toe, cookie dough, m.i.g., The Beaumont, g-walking, pictures of the sky, depends, my leg, puke on my car…and chase’s arm, pinecones, kcmo po, track 4, and silly and billy. You will always be my best friend. I love you!!...sanasa, sanasa, sanasa-sa, SANASA!! Peace and Blessings Barstow, it’s been real. John Morrow So, here we are Barstow. After thirteen years I have 2,000 free characters (with spaces) to write my will. Yeah, like that’s gonna work. So looks like I’m gonna have to scoop some cash out of my wallet (thanks Molly) because you guys are all worth it. Although there’s definitely been some rough times I can safely say that I’ve loved every year, and feel like I’m leaving my family. Alright, let’s get to it. I, John Morrow, will the following — Ronnie: I will you an endless supply of camel faces, my history knowledge, troll face, speed on the soccer field, punny puns, crazy colored shoes, and my awesome nerf gun…yeah right, get your own. You and Jordan have been my best friends for a long time. Thanks for the laughs and all the nights we threw down our xbox controllers trying to get through Halo on Legendary. I know both of you are gonna tear it up in college. Jordan S: I will you long boards, LED drumsticks, all my video games (because you’re so much better at them than I…thanks Barstow English), graphic T’s, organization, nacho libre masks, lime green soccer cleats, and the best sense of humor. Like Ronnie you’ve become my best friend. Thanks for letting me come over to your house all the time, and putting up with my ignorance of 4chan. Good luck at Northwestern, keep in touch broseidon. J-Smooth: I will you all of my red sox gear (you know you want it), my Mickey Mantle ball…NOT, Nicaragua, Fever Pitch, and anti-jump meds. You are the happiest, nicest person I know. Always keep that leather on your hand and those laces under your fingers kid. Akshay: I will you stamina, goalie gloves… that don’t have holes, Slumdog Millionaire, and all my math talent (because you need it). For real, you’re a great friend and a hilarious guy. I’m so stoked you got into Wharton man,

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we’ll be in contact…future business partners. I feel it. I’ll miss you Akbar. Molly: I will you my baman utility belt, my banana costume (keep it), my ability to actually catch a fly ball and slide without getting hurt (I had to), comma usage, closet space, clothes, my superior iPod, Mario Kart, scary movies, NINJA, poop, dinosaur noise, and one final time….look, a creature from the outside. Ohhhhhhh. Man we’ve had our ups and downs haven’t we? You’ve taught me so much about myself, and I hope I’ve done the same for you. Thanks for teaching me some fashion, I know I was stubborn. Thanks for everything you’ve been for me; I don’t regret any of it. Kill it next year without me…and since we live within .8 miles of each other I know we’ll be in touch for a long time. Taylor: I will you poetry, basketball, theatRE, socks, straws, journals, doggie deodorant, Tyler HansBRO, and dance skills. Thanks for all the conversations and advice, you’re like my fourth sister. Just keep your black sole shoes off the gym, and have a great time in college! Katie: I will you piderman, this random speed limit sign I found, pirates, peach wave, tennis, debate, sassy writing, and augmented pep. Thanks for putting up with me, and being the mediator between Molly and me. You’re a great friend and a great person. Keep it real breh. Freddy & Kevin: I will you two words — GET BUNK. You two made all the terrible Barstow dances amazing. Have a great time in college. Jordan E: I will you man talks, Zac Brown Band, baseball, middle school basketball, Oakley’s, lanyards, drifting, my COD skills, and Halloween costumes. Dude, I’m so proud you’re playing ball at Rockhurst, keep your determination bro it’s gonna take you far. Keep that elbow up and those hips closed. Erin & Alex: I will you guys NeverShoutNever, Blink concert, SASS, Slightly Stoopid, and all the greatest music in the world. I want to thank you guys for all the years we’ve spent together, and all the healthy sass you’ve provided me. — John “TOM” Morrow Taylor Phillips Having spent a dozen years of my life walking these hallowed albeit linoleum halls, I, Taylor Kay Phillips, will the following memories and thoughts to the following phenomenal human beings. Class of 2011: Austin: You will always be my television soulmate. I will you NERDS, BAZINGA, the race card (don’t take it!). Akshay: I will you a happy marriage (to me), prom invitations in Hindi, B-Line everything, innuendos of all sorts, blackberries, and my 3 on the AP Calc test. If you ever do come to your senses and propose, the answer will always be yes yes a thousand times yes. Erin: You’ve saved my butt in B-Line more times than I can count. *Hand raise + irrelevant question/statement.* Zoe: You’ll always be my ziggle. Love, Route 66. Ronaldo: I hope the next string of maudlin sentiment isn’t too much of a neo-conservative justification of capitalism for you. I will you birthday dates, hugs, studying for finals, hiding in the euro closet, last minute euro projects… all the other things that happened to us that I can’t think of right now. CLICHÉ ALERT – You’re a bona fide kindred spirit with the purest soul I think I’ve

ever encountered. You walk through life with a combination of optimism, humor, and kindness that astounds and comforts those around you — not to mention you’re brilliant. END CLICHÉ. I love you with all my heart. Wheels: Coach K, Coach P, and Coach Newsome. 8642s, Saturday practices, that STUPID song, pawing — basketball would not have been the same without you — You rock girl. Benjamin: Oh, my loving jewish husband. I will you all 5 of our children, pensive bus rides in Boston, BFF dates to good, bad, and horrible movies, minivan escapades, honeymoon pictures on the Fringe trip, Evilus Mostus and Ricky Martinez, the Tate giftshop, quickchanges, hair and makeup in every show. You’re inspiring and amazing, I love you, kid. Always will. It doesn’t change a thing, but even so — after 12 years, it’s nice to know. Jonathan: Tess would write a better will than me. Oh my goodnase, leakage, Theatre of the Imagination, Mr. Phillips master of all that is good in the universe, everything that ever happens in Bio labs. I can’t wait to read your articles in Sports Illustrated some day. Cynthia: For once, I’m going to risk it (not sneak it). Tree confetti, costume parties, chocolate milk, Theatre of the Imagination, car wrecks, chair-top political debates in Mr. Denney’s class, Middle School speech. Good luck in everything you aspire to do — you don’t need it. Jordan: Finals study parties, pingpong with spatulas, singing instead of crying, Shirley temples. Having you in my life these past 12 years has been amazing — maybe we’ll end up at NW together! Love. Paul: You’re disgusting. I won make someone uncomfortable day and you know it. Hi Paul. Love you Paul. Grey: Ah, first boyfriend, Winthrop, Theatre of the Imagination, Persephone, desperately seeking each other out at your father’s art shows when we’re bored, and the fact that I NEVER know how to spell Grey/Gray. You’re meant to be a Disney imagineer… I expect fast passes to all of my favorite attractions. Freddy: FREDDY! Est-cequ’on a fait le crime? Junior: I feel comfortable saying that I will go to college with much deeper cinematic knowledge thanks to you. I will you a long and happy future with David at your side. You are one of my favorite people and all the laughs you’ve given the world — from coming onstage in that woman’s robe in YCTIWY, to Erroneous in Forum, to Paravaccini — will pepper my life with humor for years to come. Lindsay: I would give you my teeth — but you took them already. David: I like your collars, your buttoned buttons, your pancreas, you’re the A to my Q — our memories at Roundtable, Theatre of the Imagination, Euro (suck it), Art History (I still remember that you want to date Marie Curie), being deferred from Yale buddies (too soon?) — I will you a long and happy marriage to Junior — or whoever your hot wife might later be. You’re brilliant and beautiful and I’m lucky to have known you when. Kevin: I want to BUNK your brains out. Ing: Holy smokes — check out this bobcat, R-ES-P-E-C-T, Marsh along the river, Stay Alive, “There’s a tooth in my burger”, can I get a classic?, Marsh to Ing, D-rizz, K-Knop, the day I cried when you tore your ACL, practices at Calvary with no air-conditioning, “You be


smokin’ in the church?”, Little Coach P on your shoulder, Good talk, status updates, “It’s your time to shine, Marsh,” “Well that was unexpected,” leaving Bline to get me lattes, Oh Ing, I could go on and on and write a song about it. I love you #14 #50 or #21 — I love you Puma or Knight or Stram — I love you present or absent from Bline — No one will ever have my back like you. John Henry: “I learned it from cheerleading”, “you can’t wear those shoes in the gym, they’ll mess up the floor”, reading each other’s minds in middle school, “Winging” euro projects, finals studying parties in Jordan’s basement, all the inappropriate things we talked about at said parties, watching Braveheart on the phone at 2 in the morning, Lord of the Rings, Saving Private Ryan, how much you hate my dog, the differences between a tux and a suit, singing Man of LaMancha with your dad, that time you taught me what dogfights were. You’re truly my brother in every sense of the word (except the biological one). *fist bump* Kaya: -SIC. Ayak, Libby, Isabel, “the youngest,” oh the games we would play, rubbing dirt on our faces, HE, our spy adventures, going to Harvard together, “no no no,” all your female role models, how you let me turn in my senior page late, and my will, and probably something else, mandated womandates, Kung-fu parties with Mr.’s Adams and Frank (I love you my sweet), Broccoli at Blue Koi, “You are a WRECK,” “I was supposed to have this breakdown yesterday, but I didn’t’ have time,” “We are a really nice school — BUT WHO GIVES A CRAP,” when you used to call me Tyler, you just texted me asking for my will — I’m almost done I promise. Bedtime routines, kissing Kevin Kunkleman — VERY torture, candle covenant “I found something.” You are my best friend (you know). Class of 2012: Molly: You’re a layout goddess. I wish you many delicious things with raspberries in them. Taylor S: The footbridge. That’s all. Becky: It is never permissible to drive on the shoulder. Um, that’s not French, the Knowledge bowl baby scandal, did you get the memo?, white chocolate mochas, your cute little laugh when you think I’m being stupid and you don’t want me to notice (I notice) — I adore you. Allison: T.I. found me, too (shhh don’t tell). Sabrina: See you at Yale 2 — provided there’s a venue. Jeremy: shhhhhhhhhhh. Jonah: “One time, I went outside and it was cold,” strawberries, MST3K, Glass Trap, Jeopardy marathons, every clichéd Roundtable piece about petty girl issues, I want chicken fingers, all my friends are dead, I’ve heard it both ways, Mike Posner, baked beaners, “she knows how to spell my name,” “Come Kate, sit on me!” I’m so glad I got to know you better these past few years. I will always be the Gus to your Shawn. Class of 2013: Will F: Stay away from my parents. Aaron: “I wonder why,” ornithopter, “WHY DID YOU FALL OFF THE BOX,” all of our other Scotland adventures. Trident Layers. I’m sorry you hate playing Jeopardy. I would do an imitation of your cute faces and mannerisms but I can’t. I’m glad you gave musical theatre a try — because you’re really good. Gabbi: “minty fresh,” your laugh, Papa Fenaroli, Saturday mornings — ugh, Ma lil Gobs!, you rock girl. Nora: B-Line, B-ball or anything in

between — you’re awesome and I love the new attitude that’s come out of you this year. Class of 2014: Nat: CD pending. Noland: Love. Hannah: You’re so freaking outstanding, Freshman buddy — I can’t wait to come to some Vball games in the future. Libby: Other Freshman buddy, you too, are awesome — I’m so glad I got to see you rock your pom poms at so many games. Good luck in high school. Jay: I’m taking you to college with me. Will Pursell: you are the glue that holds my pretender’s life together. I’m taking you to college with me as well and we can be divas together — deal? Also, I am the ONLY one who knows how to pronounce your name. B: I will you gravy. It’s all gravy — so… I don’t think I need to will you anything else. Midge: We have a “the usual” at Starbucks and Einstein. Life goal achieved. Fist bump. Explosion. Fist bump. I love you, kid. I will you my cupcakes. To the rest of Barstow: You are in a special place. Do not take this experience for granted. Ask questions. Laugh. Cry (I know I did). It will be over before you know it. Only thing to do is jump over the moon. Jonathan Rosa When I found out I was moving to Florida after sixth grade, I went home and cried. But somehow I knew I’d be back. I wasn’t sure how, but I knew it. When the news came that I was moving back to Kansas, there wasn’t a happier person on this planet. And it’s all because of the Barstow community. There’s a reason why I was so excited about coming back here; we truly are one big family. I am so grateful for the way everyone at Barstow has accepted me. I’ve made lifelong friends and lasting memories that will live with me forever. Class of ’11: Ben: I will you all the butter mints in the world, so that we don’t have to steal them from school dances. I also will you a superman cape, so you no longer have to use a bed sheet. You are an amazing friend, even if I constantly made fun of how big your head is. We’ve had some amazing memories and hopefully many more to come. Who knows, maybe a sequel to Holy Grail is in the works. Akshay: I will you a strong connection for your Playstation. I’m so glad you found your way to the Barstow community. You are a genuinely nice guy, despite that one word you always called me…you know what I’m talking about. While we may have never been able to connect on Playstation, I expect to hear from you every day in the years to come. Oh, and don’t forget to have your mom send me some of her strawberry lemonade! Studmuffin. Kaya: I don’t even know where to begin. Well for the sake of Mrs. Merriott’s wallet and the smell of my locker, I will you a yearlong supply of Life Saver mints. I also will you 36 hours of free time, because if anyone needs it, it’s you. Oh, and I will you a sense of timing, so that you never forget a Royals game again or buy tickets at the last minute. You have always been there for me whenever I’ve needed you, and I really appreciate that. If there is someone I can count on, it’s you. I can’t wait to hear all the good things you’re doing at Pomona next year and I know they’re going to love having you as a runner. Yo Sabo. Lindsay: Or shall I say “Coach.” Thanks for putting up with my

daily rants about life. I don’t think I would have made it through high school without your wise words. Erin: Whatitdo? You are the sweetest. Seriously. I will never forget the night when you shared the life story of Henry the spider. Thanks to you, I now know how cats reproduce. I see many concerts in our future. Austin: I will you a new laptop, so that if we are in any classes together next year, I don’t have to listen to the constant THUMP of your pencil spinning failures. Brooke: I mean really, we were the best lab partners ever. Whoever your lab partners are next year, make sure you instill the requirements of our lab group: have fun, laugh, and go at your own pace. Who needs a procedure anyway? Melanie: At least there were a solid two Yankee fans at Barstow. David W: Keep blasting the Jay-Z and don’t be afraid to pop off that top button! Scott: You are one of the nicest people I know. You always go out of your way to help me whenever I need it. I’m so happy you’re going to KU next year. Thanks for all the dunks you dedicated to me. Also, you’re tall. Jordan E: My man. I love watching you do your thing on the baseball field. You’re going to go far, bud. Can’t wait to see you rock the new uniform at Rockhurst next year. I’m so glad you came back to Barstow! They are not only getting a great ballplayer, but an even better person. Oh, and I still need you to sign a ball for me, so if you’re reading this, please remind me. I want it signed in the sweet spot. Danny: I’m so glad I got to be your shadow buddy back in fifth grade because “you both speak Spanish.” Having you in classes made them so much more entertaining. I always look forward to what tomorrow’s class will bring. Paul: I will you a new e-mail address because paulnotforku@yahoo.com isn’t going to cut it. David K: I will you a pet chinchilla and a llama. Ilana: ‘Ello mate! Ronnie: My cheeks hurt from laughing at your jokes. Robert: Yes, I ate your baby. I’m sorry. Alex M: I hope to have many more trips to Florida, with prank calls, of course. This time I’ll try not to pee my pants from laughing. John: Tom Cruise. Best of luck next year! I wish every baseball player showed the same passion you do. You’re a great leader. Taylor: No one will ever cut potatoes like you do, that’s for sure. Kathleen: Rock Chalk! Jordan S: I will you a new culde-sac to repair the damage from when my dad skateboarded right into it. Freddy: What? Gotcha! Chloe: I will you hotdogs. Class of ’12: Brandon B: I will you clothing that is not black and free periods for your schedule next year. Melissa: I will you pretzel M&Ms, an iPod to replace your Zune nonsense, every episode of Ghost Adventures, and a date with Zak Bagans. Shweta: I will you coffee, a pink batmobile, and knowledge of classic American films (Free Willy, Seabiscuit…). Outreflexed. Gabe G: Ian Kinsler. Cassidy: Dah! Class of ’13: Ellen and Grace: BASEBALL. Jake R: You’re a stud. Keep working hard on the B-Line, and I hope to see you on the baseball field next year. I still hate professional soccer. Will K: Tomahawk. Class of ’14: Ben G: You are the lone freshman in my will, so you should feel special. You should also feel special because you are my freshman-senior buddy. Take care of that iPhone screen — you never know when

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it will break! To my family: A.C., Mom, and Dad: Thanks for all that you have done for me! I really don’t know what I’d do without you guys. - Jonathan Rosa Cynthia Scott To MD: I will my heart and everlasting friendship. I will new explorations, tangible and metaphysical. I will afternoons in coffee shops and evening drives on the loop. I will secrets, games, and babsolute billiness. To MK: I will “my last words,” smörgåsbords, and cherry pjs. To KL: I will Bobby, Robby, Elfie, and Alfie. To KW: I will foreign films and a hundred new interests. To DW: I will relationship advice, boundaries, and anime. Pour Mlle: Je laisse ma reconnaissance pour un point de vue d’une culture étrangé. To Dr.K: I will a goat. To Mr.R: I will cautionary tales. To Ms.Z: I will the continued strength to fight all too necessary battles (and to inspire others to do the same). To Mr.P: I will the continued happiness that comes out in your whistled tunes. To Mr.L: I will the realization that it’s not bad to live. To Mrs.H: I will hope for a schedule next year that allows a bit of room to breathe. To The Barstow School: I will 15 more years worth of teachers willing to nurture the critical mind. Sincerely, Cynthia. Bella Waldrop I, Annabella Marie Waldrop, will the following things to the following people: Ellen: So I opened this can of tuna and all of these kittens started crawling in through the light fixtures. I panicked and put them in a box then taped it up. There are a few air holes so they will be good for a couple of hours. Take care of them. Grace: Let it be known in all of the land that I am the superior archer. Good luck with robotics next year, remember to show those freshmen who’s boss with daily beatings. Also, can you fix my car? Ilana: You are the only person who I will buy clothes with. It’s true. I leave you the promise of more shopping, and so much more dancing. Max: Good luck. Remember not to take anything too seriously. Here are some directions. 1. Head east on 122nd St (449 ft) 2. Keep left at the fork (92 ft) 3. Turn left at Pawnee Lane (417 ft) 4. Continue onto 121st Terrace (0.2 mi) 5. Turn right at Mission Road (0.3 mi) 6. Turn left at W 119th St (0.2 mi) 7. Take the 1st right onto Tomahawk Creek Pkwy (1.3 mi) 8. Continue onto Mission Rd (3.7 mi) 9. Turn left at 83rd St 10. Destination will be on the right (2.0 mi). Also, I’ve never gotten in trouble for breaking curfew and I doubt you will either. Shannon: So here’s the plan, man. The Plan: start a bakery that is a cover for an underground publishing company. You know the rest. Sam: Being the first true friend I made at this school there is only one thing I have to say, I hope that we never have to play another round of golf again. Let there be many more days and nights of Rock Band and stop motion photography. Tess: That t-shirt that I wrote ‘Random University’ on, Aaron, and my The Princess Diaries movie soundtrack. Xye: No, you cannot borrow my phone. Go help Grace with those beatings. Zoe: We must continue to trade books and invent new sports, and hopefully combine the two and see it in

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the Olympics some day. Aaron: I can’t put into words how great of a friend you are. I’m absolutely going to miss the adventures that Shannon, you, and I had. Being the most loyal member, and a most loyal friend, you definitely deserve it. I leave you my half of Alternative Baking Club. Lindsay Warning I, Lindsay Warning, will the following: A.Mirabile: So many good memories, from Chicago in 2nd grade to Florida going into our senior year. Without you I would not have been exposed to the Sims, obsessed with the Jonas Brothers (specifically Kevin Jonas), I most likely would not be attending “legit” concerts, and lastly I would not own a snuggie/ warm fuzzy purple blanket (which, by the way, gives sleep a whole new meaning). Whenever you need to do some geometry, feel free to use my book as long as the information is not on the poop crusted page, still gets me to this day. Not sure how I would have made it through Spanish class and the fun and exciting breadboards in “physics” without you! I hope you find your dream midget one day. I will miss you so much next year! E.Bax: Use proper MLA formatting when quoting: “Jim you’re a homie’s best friend.” I love when you randomly yell “MY LEG” at Royals games. Who would have guessed that turning a picture upside down of an owl being watered with a hose and saying “oh now he’s in a pickle” would be hysterically funny. Well, the list goes on of the hilarious things you do. Weezy would be non-existent in my life if you hadn’t played his music all the time and randomly rapped his lyrics, word for word. Impressive. Keep it up! I will miss you and your crazy actions like no other! Oh, and I said run it… C.Wieland: I enjoyed the countless number of baseball games we went to, not to mention our endless creeping. We made it through all the dreadful ACTs together along with the classes. I’m thankful that you always make sure my stalking is up to date! You better keep yourself caught up on TV shows while in college so we can talk about them. And remember, when you need instant floss you can always use a $20 bill! Going to miss all of this! C.Foster: To this day, I still can never tell when you are telling the truth. I am going to miss your daily lies and amazing accents. Your drawing skills really improved during history class. I expect you to make me beautiful drawings and send them to me. I have a feeling one-day you will be the owner of Ramen Noodles. Katina Kicks Kangaroos! Have fun dominating at volleyball! J.Rosa: iChat buddy! I appreciate you for always putting up with my nonsense rambling and absurd thoughts. Please keep me updated on your current love obsession. Do you need to poop? P.S.: I’m hungry. I’m bored. I’m looking horrible. B.Denzer: When asked what a refugee is, I am glad I will know the answer... A type of monkey right? A.Almelkar: What was our Spanish homework again? You were always there to help me on my homework. Who knows what I will do next year without your assistance. You always put a smile on my face! x 193834. I win! A.Abitz: 6th hour free period made our friendship blossom!

D.White: Keep rocking the polos and the tap dancing! S.McMeekin: Basketball dunker! R.Caspers: You’re such a cute camel! Keep the camel face strong. J.Scott: I am glad you let me style your hair when you wore the knit hat. Think you could really start a new trend. F.Heuser and K.Woods: DJs! Bunk. J.Morrow: Thanks for teaching me to do the pencil spin trick! J.Eckley: Big Booty! Great times of studying for finals with Snuggles and car rides over to Kansas! Michael Bublé = love. Good luck with baseball! M.Golden: Keep it real. Make sure to update your Facebook statuses frequently. Don’t forget, we live in “Merica.” M. Kulick: SLOTAT, MIOBI, PLL. Thank you ABC Family. T.Phillips: Glad you finally can enjoy a variation of food with that new tooth. I hope for the best for you and your tooth! K.LeGrand: Watch out for gorillas pounding on your window. Make sure to come back to enjoy “Paaaappys” pizza while roller-skating in the basement (that’s all that needs to be said.). Ice Ice Baby. C.Coble: Thanks for introducing me to “Bou” juice! B.Bachar: The Event is truly amazing, regardless of what people say on the fan page. And you better start wearing purple tennis gear! G.Fenaroli: Domo arigato. To the rest of the Barstow community: It’s been a memorable 13 years. Mom and Dad: Thank you for doing everything that you do! You always helped me through the tough times and taught me to never give up. Love you lots! Kathleen White Class of 2011: I feel lucky to have been with such an amazing group. Kaya: I can’t believe this is finally it! I am so grateful for all of the adventures we have had together. I am going to miss you so much, so you better come and visit me at KU! David: It’s been a pleasure. I’m taking the car. Ben: High school would not have been the same without all of your jokes. I attribute many of my high school experiences to you. I will you nerf darts. Grey: We are spotlight titans! Musical tech and theater would not have been the same without you. Jonathan: I will miss our morning discussions about KU basketball. I look forward to watching KU games with you in Allen Fieldhouse! Junior: I hope you continue your bromance with David. Brooke: Thanks for being the best Bio lab partner! I will you the horniest dinosaur ever: cosmoceratops. Taylor: Knowledge Bowl State Champions! I wish you the best in everything you do. I will you a buzzer. Akshay: You are a ninja at life. Austin: I will you awkward sexual comments. Jacob: You will rule the world someday. Zoe, Sam, Ilana, Robert, Shannon, Bella: You guys were always awesome. Kevin: You are the King of dabbling. I will you bunkness. Not that you need it. Alex M: I give you my permission to marry David. Lindsay and Chloe: You’re invited to David and Alex’s wedding. Paul: Happy Birthday! I will you enthusiasm. Mackenzie: You were such a pleasant surprise when you came to Barstow and I am going to miss seeing your smiling face. I hope to see you up at KU next year! Stay cool! Kate: My homie! I will you my gangsta prius in exchange for a taco. Just kidding! I hope you visit me in Lawrence next year! Melissa: We will always have skiing ninja


pineapples. Becky: Beeeecky! Did you get the memo? Knowledge Bowl State Champions! You got a haircut! Brandon: I will you what I willed Austin, awkward sexual comments. Allison: I’m sorry I have to say this, but Brooke won the rap-off. Ned: I will always remember you as Ned the Narwhal. Daria: You are a star. I wish you the best in all of your endeavors. Ellen B: I will miss your obnoxious laugh. Xye and Grace: Stay sassy you two! Harrison: I will you mints. Lots of them. Skylar: My freshman buddy! Good luck with the rest of high school! Izzy: It was great getting to know you this year. Just think: only three more years to go! It will feel like an eternity. Trust me. Jay: You are hilarious! I will you anteaters and perfectly fluffed hair. XC Team: It has been a pleasure to run with everyone. Let it all hang out! Softball Team: It has been wonderful to play with you girls. I wish I could have been a part of the team longer. Zim: I am going to miss being your seat warmer and chilling in your room. Thanks for just being there and being awesome. Crumm: I am going miss being your TA! My chemistry goggles will be the first thing I pack for college. Kill: I always understood your Biology geekiness. I will you high tech animations. Hilvitz: I will miss your bright personality everyday. Harper: I will miss your infectious laughter. Barstow: Peace Out! Caroline Wieland I, Caroline Wieland, will the following memories: 2011: EB: What the hook gon’ be? Ayo I will miss your random hilarious noises, faces, and phrases more than you can ever know. Geeza, broad siding, syrup got me slow and all of our Wayne quotes, frosted animal cracker hijackers, are you guys sisters? You remind me of the Cheshire cat…. Toe-talontarian, rubber baskets, pups, HOLY MOLY THE SKY LOOKS BEAUTIFUL, what’s with all the dots…..? yo check yo ears got some muppets up in em, nail wibble, when I was a little lad, later on the menjay, keep the srimp claw strong. If I don’t stop now, there’s no telling how long this will could be. But know that I love you and next year won’t be the same without seeing you to make me laugh! RC: You never fail to brighten my day. You always know how to make me laugh and in return, I will always be there for your stories no one else seems to hear. I could say a million things about you and our hilarious moments but I’ll leave it at I love you and know there is no one cooler than you. AC: Where to start. Possibly the 4 years of slaving we’ve endured together? We’ve suffered, won, lost and everything in between. I’m so glad you were always there with me! Workouts will never be the same without you! JE: Your dance steps with forever be untouched. Glad you finally found your way back to Barstow! CF: I will start with saying, I know way too many people here right now that I didn’t know last year…. It feels like the last few years we’ve been everywhere and back but I just can’t remember it all. On that note, I will miss Land of Paws with you, admiring your masterpieces (that someday I know will be at the Louvre) and your wonderful accents. Make me proud like you always do playing volleyball! I’m so glad you came to Barstow! MK: A few

of our traditions: the plaza library, korma sutra, obsession with hanson, listening to edgy nostalgic music, all of our tv shows, murrays and movie nights. Basically, I will end this by saying how much I love you and I couldn’t of made it through the past few years without you!! We will be KFL! Just ‘cause we graduate from school, so high in the gene pool… we’re finally leaving town! AM: Highlight of my life= Kenneth Road and the Woodstock games: Hey ladies need some directions? Frisbee golf and dead ends. Rugrats Live with you at age 4, getting our claws out with the fierce B, june bug hair accessories at tropsno, DON’T FORGET YOUR TERM IDs!!!!, and tanning like its keeping us alive. We’ve had so many hilarious times I can’t possibly list them all. I love you and am so happy that we’ve spent the last 15 years together and at least 4 more in Texas! SM: You’re a lot taller than you were when we were 3, chillin in preschool together. It will be so weird not seeing you everyday! Best of luck with everything and stay in touch! TP: MARSH! I went down to the river and was wondering if I could get a little R-E-S-P-E-C-T up in here. I’ve loved playing bball with you the past 11 years and am so glad we were Pumas together. I love you and will miss your overly mushy yet completely sarcastic attitude! JS: Jscott. SO much to say about our gobliny lives. From bonding in Kindergarten to golfing to going to the farm to going to France to now-we’ve had so many quality times. Thank you for always being there! LW: MIOBI, SLOTAT, PLL, ACT. Thought I’d start out with a few acronyms that have defined our lives. Studying together (with a pharmacy close at hand), 54th street, greasy grass (both the true incident and the actual place), oye, fun sizers, and eyecare associates. Know that I love you, and our tv shows are golden—don’t let anyone tell you differently. 2012: AD: Sprankles! We’ve been through so much the past few years. Our infamous hill, Heralds’s grapes, Dean and Deluca, being bffs with Shaun and Kyle and hating everyone else, furbies (both turf and caterpillar), driving the CAT to school, breaking emergency lights, the weathercock van, room service, throwing my shoes off the hotel balcony, and chippin it out till everyone wants to kill us. Lawlz at you always being in a group with the rare golfer. Golf would absolutely not be the same without you. I’m so glad you came back and played this year. Just remember, you only have to play at Shirkey a few more times and you’re done. Make me proud! I love you! Keep in mind. The claw is our master, and he decides who stays and who goes. CT: Best of luck with golf, come play in Texas with me! SW: Through all the suicidal times, I made it. So let me be an inspiration for you to fight through one more year. I’m so glad you’ve played the past 3 years. You’re hilarious and bitter. And I love it and I love you. Stay strong you little Mexican, you. 2013: GF: Gabrielle Fenaroli. Just thinking about writing this is scary. I’m so glad you moseyed over to the ‘Stow. I don’t know what I would do with your hilarious laugh and adorable personality to cheer me up everyday. Orgato, huggy puppy, Operation Xmas gift, I think I just got a concussion, 23, 24, 25, Christmas music, esbianca, chipmunks,

goblins, witchcraft, smell this handkerchief, foulers club, my skin lube is poppin, goat supplements, tablespoons and teaspoons, and tuberzzz. You’re like my little sister and I love you more than you could imagine! Visit me lots next year!! 2014: TP: Oh. You prancey huh? You complete me. Basketball would be so boring without you to spice it up. CHISLED GODDESSES. 39 sets of 255. nbd. I love you! BS:TEACH ME HOW TO DOUGIE… no like for real, I someday hope to master the dougie just like you have. You are the fiercest person I know—NEVER let that change. I love you and will always be obsessed with you (in a noncreepy way, obviously)! ET & KT: My baby goblins. Keep the golf team strong without me. I trust you to chip and gob it out and keep my legacy alive. I’m so glad you two played this year and made it possible for us all to go to state. I couldn’t think of a better way to end my senior year. I love you both and good luck with the rest of high school! It goes fast so enjoy it! Danny Woodhams AD: Under the wide and starry sky, dig my grave and lay me lie. AlexMc: Cthulhu fhagtn. Sree: Don’t take things so seriously, and don’t change who you are for anybody else. JH: J-Buddies 4Ever. SF: I buried the body under the bridge. BN: Yes. HR: I will pay my dues when you deliver the ivory. JW: Nobody will ever know our sins. Mr. Luce: Is this your homework? Mr. Roark: Should the law be after you, my Tokyo office will welcome you, under the identity of “Mr. Remus Trappers” (Octavio will give you your passport). Kaya: Raisins, come out come out wherever you are. JT: It’s actually from a cat (delicacy in some countries). LZ: You are my sunshine (Smiley Face Emoticon). Dr. Cramer: Tell your dark secrets to a mute priest. BAD: Wink wink nudge nudge. BF + KH: Name your Ethiopian baby “Daniel.” Dr. K: Your beard is the apple of my eye. BE + PV: You are my Barstow successors. SA: I learned a lot from you, I hope you learned something worthwhile from me. Jonah: You found my jacket. Adriane: Stop messing with my meds and make me a pizza roll! Will: Day Man OOOah. ES: Best of luck with life, love and happiness. Lauren: I know you watch me. DW: Yo soy Padre Martinez. KatWhite: Your brother will know nothing. PK: Escándalo. Chris Kang: Tell tales of my greatness to the women of your nation. Robert Choi: I have committed no war crimes. C-Lim: Your name would be a good energy drink title. KW: We did it. CS: Send me a picture. MD: I leave the bodies with nothing but an origami figure in one hand and an orchid on the chest, and I do it because I’m bored. Guldin: I miss you already (Sad Face Emoticon). BK: You taught me more in the last 4 years than I could have learned anywhere else. MO’Brien: Good luck with BTVN, tell me how it all goes. Everybody else: I profess innocence. I can only hope that history will absolve me.

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Index Seniors Austin Abitz – 14, 15, 16, 149, 179, 187 Lamya Al Douri – 14, 15, 17, 65 Akshay Almelkar – 14, 15, 18, 61, 173, 176, 179, 181, 188, 198, 199, 251 Jordyn Archie – 5, 14, 15, 19, 156, 214, 252 Erin Bax – 13, 14, 15, 20, 64, 167, 172, 176, 196, 204, 205 Ilana Bodker – 13, 14, 15, 21, 146, 160, 164, 176, 213 Zoë Brunell – 14, 15, 22, 147, 164 Ronald Caspers – 13, 14, 15, 23, 151, 166, 173, 179, 199 Robert Choi – 14, 15, 24, 167, 189, 190 Alexis Crowley – 13, 14, 15, 25, 173, 185, 202, 203, 210, 211 Ben Denzer – 14, 15, 26, 148, 157, 160, 161, 162, 167, 172, 173, 174, 175, 181, 185, 186, 189, 206 Olivia Derman – 5, 14, 15, 27, 232 Michael Driscoll – 14, 15, 28, 181, 190, 233 Jordan Eckley – 5, 13, 14, 15, 29, 65, 156, 173, 208, 209, 234 Paul Edelman – 14, 15, 30, 180, 252 Shannon Fleming – 13, 14, 15, 31, 148, 160, 170, 190, 191, 235 Chloe Foster – 13, 14, 15, 32, 200, 201 Matthew Golden – 14, 15, 33 Grey Hetler – 14, 15, 34, 61, 160, 170, 171, 179, 180, 205 Frederik Heuser – 13, 14, 15, 35, 61, 166, 173, 179, 198, 199 Samantha Hoober-Burkhardt – 14, 15, 36, 146 Adriane House – 5, 14, 15, 37, 201 Bradford Jarvis – 12, 14, 15, 38, 156, 253 Alexander Johnson – 14, 15, 39, 167, 174, 175, 189, 190, 191, 205 Brooke Kawamoto – 12, 14, 15, 40, 163, 204, 205 David Kessler – 14, 15, 31, 205 Melanie Kulick – 14, 15, 42, 163, 172, 214, 253 Kaya LeGrand – 14, 15, 43, 146, 150, 157, 162, 172, 174, 175, 177, 185, 189, 191, 192, 204, 205, 240 Scott McMeekin – 14, 15, 44, 157, 173, 208, 209, 241 Alexandra Mirabile – 13, 14, 15, 45, 61, 167, 200, 201 Matt Molos – 14, 15, 46 John Morrow – 13, 14, 15, 47, 176, 198, 199 Taylor Phillips – 13, 14, 15, 48, 144, 148, 171, 173, 176, 180, 191, 196, 210, 211 Jonathan Rosa – 12, 14, 15, 49, 176, 185, 246 Cynthia Scott – 13, 14, 15, 50, 190 Jordan Scott – 12, 13, 14, 15, 51, 151, 199, 247 Jacob Shreeve – 14, 15, 52, 144, 160 Junior Tranton – 14, 15, 53, 61, 160, 165, 170, 171

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Annabella Waldrop – 14, 15, 54, 148, 152, 179, 190, 191 Lindsay Warning – 13, 14, 15, 55, 167, 200, 201 David White – 6, 12, 14, 15, 56, 170, 177, 180, 185, 189 Kathleen White – 13, 14, 15, 57, 64, 156, 160, 173, 177, 180, 185, 189, 191, 204, 205 Caroline Wieland – 13, 14, 15, 58, 176, 196, 207, 210, 211 Daniel Woodhams – 14, 15, 59, 61, 147, 150, 167, 170, 171, 173, 178, 179, 206, 250 Kevin Woods – 14, 15, 60, 65, 146, 198, 199 Juniors Rana Aliani – 68, 164, 176, 203 Katherine Anderson – 65, 66, 68, 164, 176, 202, 203 Shahzad Aslam – 68, 174, 199 Ned Babbott – 68, 148, 149, 170, 171, 191, 192, 205 Brandon Bachar – 64, 68, 144, 181 Sree Balusu – 68, 176, 181 Samantha Barnett – 67, 69, 148, 160, 165, 187, 189, 192, 213 Leah Barngrover – 65, 69, 170 Andrea Blatt – 69, 160, 164, 170, 171, 188, 197, 213, 214, 215 Lawrence Brown – 65, 69, 145, 156, 164, 185, 208, 209 Leslie Bruce – 69, 160, 176 Joseph Chilen – 64, 67, 68, 199 Chase Coble – 67, 68, 174, 175 Aidan Coyle – 68, 160, 177, 181, 182, 189 Cole Dattel – 65, 68, 154, 198, 199, 206 Robert Deffenbaugh – 65, 67, 68, 144, 156, 199, 209 Mackenzie Devins – 65, 68, 167, 185, 204, 205 Alexandra Dockhorn – 66, 69, 150, 203, 213, 214 Sarah Driks – 66, 69, 150, 185, 214, 215 Joseph Duffy – 69, 191 Alexa Dusselier – 69, 207 Blake Exposito – 69, 176 Christopher Frye – 68, 185, 199 Tyler Gerson – 68, 156 Miles Goscha – 68, 167, 174, 185, 199 Robert Grabowsky – 68, 150, 199 Aaron Greenbaum – 68, 199 Gabe Greenbaum – 68, 156, 196, 199, 209 Allison Hall – 69, 204, 211 Grace Halsey – 67, 69, 203, 210, 211 Jesse Howitt – 69, 152, 153, 164 Jonah Jaax – 65, 69, 144, 160, 170, 191, 209, 212 Madison Jack – 65, 69 Lily Johnston – 147 Farkhanda Khan – 68 Zachary Kiegerl – 68 Claire Kim – 68, 181 Irene Lee – 68, 152, 153 Kexin Li – 68 Changwoo Lim – 67, 68, 178, 199 Melissa Martin – 69, 167, 174, 175, 176, 185, 189, 203 Jeffrey Martini – 69, 199

Rebecca Marvin – 69, 156, 176, 180, 181, 202, 203 Conor McMann – 69, 181, 182, 188, 199 Jesse Miller – 68, 156 Molly O’Connor – 66, 68, 176 Taylor Peavey – 68, 217 Sarah Pourakbar – 68, 176, 191 Rian Ray – 68, 148, 160, 216, 217 Ignacio Robinson – 66, 68, 199 Cassidy Rudman – 66, 69, 214, 215 Diana Russ – 69, 148, 149, 160, 166 Mohaned Salah – 65, 69, 164, 199 Kathryn Schuller – 64, 65, 69, 156, 185, 188, 192 Taylor Schwartz – 68, 170, 177, 186, 189 Kate Sims – 68, 164, 174, 175, 197, 202, 203 Amelia Switz – 68, 187, 201, 213 Jeremy Terman – 66, 68, 208, 209 Chase Thorp – 67, 68, 156 Shweta Vadlamani – 68, 176, 177, 189 Paul Vedros – 64, 67, 69, 198, 199 Annie Rose Watkins – 69, 148, 155, 160, 161, 191, 213 Sabrina Weng – 67, 69, 176, 211 Jared Wright – 67, 69, 182, 199 Sophomores Ellen Babbott – 65, 71, 72, 148, 204, 205, 214, 215 Amy Baek – 72 Victoria Ball – 71, 72, 174, 175, 214, 215 Morgan Barbagallo – 71, 72, 214, 215 Sohil Bhagat – 65, 72 Anna Bradley – 72 Max Cantu-Lima – 73, 191, 199 Brennan DePew – 73, 179, 191 Aaron Dupuis – 71, 73, 132, 148, 155, 160, 161, 170, 171, 174, 179, 190, 191 Lauren Estes – 72, 174, 191, 203, 216, 217 Gabrielle Fenaroli – 72, 167, 210, 211 William Fleming – 72, 155, 199 Marie-Louise Fourie – 70, 72 Jordan Grabber – 71, 72, 174, 175, 216, 217 Ashley Gratwick – 71, 72, 201, 213 Grace Guthrie – 71, 73, 148, 179 Farwa Haideri – 71, 73, 174, 175, 185, 203 Bilal Hameed – 65, 71, 72, 145, 155 Jesse Hester – 72, 179, 191 Sofie Heuser – 72, 175 Xye Inzauro – 70, 72, 179 William Kanan – 72, 191, 199 Chris Kang – 70, 72, 155, 199 Michael Kessler – 73, 191 Austin Krause – 70, 73 Ellen Krause – 72 Saeju Kwon – 72, 216, 217 Sonia Larbi – 65, 71, 72, 182 Daria LeGrand – 71, 72, 156, 160, 161, 175, 185, 192, 214, 215 Joseph Lenart – 65, 72, 176 Nora Lloyd – 65, 71, 72, 176, 185, 211 Bryan Lundgren – 73 Alex McDonald – 73, 191, 205 Braden Neihart – 72, 189, 191, 199

Michael O’Brien – 72, 160, 178 Darah Pourakbar – 65, 72, 189, 191 Deko Ricketts – 65, 70, 71, 73, 204, 205 Jacob Roberts – 72, 176, 197, 199 Harrison Rosenthal – 5, 72, 160, 161, 165, 189, 190, 206 Jessica Schneider – 65, 71, 73, 166, 182, 203, 214 Adam Singer – 73 Lexi Shealy – 191 Kathryn Sloan – 70, 72 Lindsey Smith – 72, 160, 166, 201, 213 Emily Snow – 65, 71, 72, 200, 201, 216, 217 Christopher Sokoloff – 65, 72, 191 YoungHwa Son – 72 Judson Woods – 72, 150, 178, 191, 199, 208, 209, 212 Susie Xu – 71, 73, 164, 176, 203 Waqar Zuberi – 73, 191 Freshmen Alex Acuff – 76, 191, 209, 212 Namira Ali – 76, 182, 189, 190, 203 Noland Ammon – 76, 205, 212 Austin Bachar – 76, 181, 182, 206 Drew Bierwirth – 75, 76, 160, 178 Jeanne Brown – 74, 76, 145, 165 Colby Childers – 74, 77, 196, 208, 209 Skylar Devins – 77, 185 Iris Dew – 77, 203 Natalie Dockhorn – 76, 148, 201, 213, 214 Thomas Dunn – 74, 76, 183 Armand Edalati – 71, 76 Seth Farrar – 76 Alena Frye – 76, 157, 185, 202, 203 Jay Gillen – 76, 160, 205, 209, 212 Annie Grabowsky – 77, 165, 175, 203, 213 Alexx Graham – 75, 77, 160, 179 Ben Gutman – 77 Merek Holzrichter – 74, 76, 212 Maria Ioudenitch – 76 Logan Kane – 74, 76 Justine Laberthe – 76, 203 Glenn Lane – 76, 179, 191, 206 Lissa Leibson – 76, 203 Hannah Lentell – 75, 77, 200, 201, 213 Isabel Lloyd – 77, 160, 179, 188, 213 Ali Loftin – 64, 77, 170, 216, 217 Ethan Lopez – 76, 160, 179, 189 Iqraz Nanji – 75, 76, 160, 189, 190 Devin Newsome – 74, 76, 191, 209 Camille O’Leary – 76, 153, 160, 174, 175, 177, 179, 189 Joseph Penn – 76, 191, 209, 212 Tessia Phillips – 75, 76, 144, 148, 160, 170, 201, 210, 211 William Pursell – 4, 64, 77, 160, 170, 189, 190, 191, 199 Sydney Reed – 77, 157, 174, 175, 185, 188, 192 Nicole Robinson – 75, 77 Nick Russ – 76, 179, 209, 212 Claire Shafran – 76 Bianca Shurn – 76, 179, 196, 201, 210, 211 Cameron Simon – 76, 173, 199 Libby Smith – 76, 217 Taylor Smith – 76 Ryan Sparks – 77 Sam Stewart – 77, 205


Madeleine Tadros – 76, 175, 203 Emily Thompson – 74, 76, 196, 203, 207, 217 Kelsey Thorp – 4, 64, 76, 191, 192, 196, 203, 207, 216, 217 Jasmine Walton – 76, 188 Alyssa West – 75, 76 Trevor Wright – 74, 76, 182, 199, 212 Arsam Yazdani – 77, 189 Han Bit Yoon – 77, 190

Preston Schwartz – 82, 84, 168, 183 Megan Sloan – 83, 84, 168, 184, 221, 224, 225 Rachana Tadakamalla – 84, 168, 220, 221 Sunkeerth Tummala – 84 Max Waldrop – 82, 84, 218 Tina Weng – 83, 84, 168, 184, 221 Richard Woods – 85, 218, 223 Grant Zahorsky – 82, 83, 85

Eighth Grade Benjamin Abbas – 84, 218 Eliana Abbas – 84, 224, 225 Faiza Aslam – 84, 184, 185, 225 Tai Barber-Gumbs – 84, 168 Nicolas Battaglia – 82, 84 Mesha Bisarya – 81, 84, 168, 169, 184, 221 Taryn Blankenship – 82, 85 Zachary Bruennig – 85, 168 Eoghan Coyle – 85, 168, 218, 223 Nathan Daniel – 85 Danielle DePriest – 84, 184 David DePreiest – 84, 183 Payal Desai – 84, 224, 225 Jonah Elyachar – 84, 168 Sarah Epsten – 80, 84, 168, 186 Bailey Fisli – 84, 183 Danielle Fleming – 85, 168, 184, 219 Lauren Fox – 85, 168, 184, 220, 221, 224, 225 Tyler Gratwick – 85, 223 Mahroosa Haideri – 82, 85, 168, 169, 184, 220, 221 Stephanie Hamann – 84, 183, 219, 224, 225 Abraham Hermes – 84, 91, 219 Brett Hill – 84, 218, 223 Christopher Hoffman – 82, 84, 184, 218 Shahryar Jafri – 82, 84, 223 True Kershenbaum – 84, 225 Daniel Kessler – 85, 223 Steven Ketchmark – 81, 85, 218, 223 Claire Lednicky – 85, 168 Jason Lednicky – 82, 85, 168, Andrew Lloyd – 82, 84, 218, 222, 223 Kathryn Lundgren – 84 Cullen MacInerney – 82, 84, 168, 218, 223 Michelle Martin – 82, 84, 168, 169, 225 John Marvin – 83, 84, 193, 218 Kieran McMann – 81, 83, 84, 168, 184, 219, 224, 225 Ana McMullen – 83, 85, 220, 221 Emily Milakovic – 82, 83, 85, 168, 183, 220, 221 Elizabeth Mixon – 85 Mason Morse – 85, 223 Mitchell Mueller – 82, 84, 168, 169 Caitlyn Payne – 84, 168, 184, 220, 221 Megan Pickard – 83, 84 Hillary Pierson – 82, 83, 84 Becky Reilly – 84, 168 Samantha Rock – 84, 183, 221 David Ronning – 82, 85 Madison Rudman – 85, 220, 221 Lauren Sandness – 83, 85, 184 Paula Sayago – 85

Seventh Grade Logan Ball – 86, 88, 218 Elizabeth Baughman – 88 Lauren Bernard – 87, 88, 224, 225 Tieg Brown – 86, 88, 145 Jonathan Butch – 80, 88, 218, 222, 223 Bailey Childers – 87, 88 John Churay – 89 Tiffany Dattel – 89, 219 Grace Dockhorn – 80, 86, 89, 220, 221, 225 Olivia Dugan – 88, 219, 225 Arya Edalati – 88 Sarah Elyachar – 80, 88, 225 Claire Finn – 87, 88, 225 Jared Gillen – 87, 88, 223 Jackson Goscha – 88, 218 Katherine Grabowsky – 89, 225 Collin Hawley – 89 Savanna Hubbard – 89 Margaret Kanan – 86, 88, 219, 225 Chloe Ketchmark – 80, 88, 221 Abigayle Krause – 86, 88, 220, 221, 224, 225 Katelin Kushnir – 88, 168, 221 Shanley Lenart – 88, 221 Avery Loftin – 87, 88, 218 Shivani Lokre – 89 Lisa Maeda – 89 Rachel Mathews – 89, 187, 220, 221 Sophia Mauro – 88 Thomas McConahay – 87, 88, 168, 218, 223 Ramelle Mueller – 88, 168, 183, 187, 221 Rebecca Myers – 88, 168, 221 Ryan Olson – 87, 88 Joe Petty – 88 Mitchell Pickard – 89, 168 Kennedy Price – 89 Emily Reed – 89 Caroline Rock – 88 , 220, 221 Andie Round – 80, 88, 187, 221 Shea Rush – 80, 86, 88, 168, 169, 218, 222 Cole Shafran – 88 Adam Shemitz – 88 Jackson Taylor – 80, 88 Isabel Thomas – 89, 183, 221 Emily Tranin – 86, 89 Lili Tucker – 87, 88, 168 Anirudh Vadlamani – 87, 88 Madeline Vasquez – 87, 88, 168, 221 Ivor Vinsant – 88, 223 Elizabeth Vore – 88, 225 Tripp Walsworth – 86, 88, 168, 219, 223 Gary Whittaker – 89 Sarah Xu – 89, 219

Sixth Grade Dalal Abdulkarim – 92 Soumya Avva – 92, 221 Matthew Bagby – 90, 92, 218, 223 Jacob Bamesberger – 91, 92, 223 Jonathan Benson – 92 Morgan Boeh – 92, 221 Matthew Bruce – 81, 91, 93, 144, 218, 223 Kennedy Dockhorn – 90, 93, 168, 221, 225 Joshua Dunn – 90, 92, 144 James Egan – 90, 91, 92 Elizabeth Ellis – 90, 92, 225 Ethan Ellis – 92, 168, 222, 223 Whitney Estes – 90, 92, 168, 219, 225 Jonathan Felton – 81, 90, 92, 218, 223 Saahith Gondi – 81, 93, 223 Henry Goscha – 93, 218 Larsen Griffeth – 81, 92, 218 Anthony Grimmett – 92, 223 Emily Gustafson – 91, 92, 168, 221 Grace Harkins – 91, 92, 168, 221 Zuhair Hawa – 90, 92, 196 Grace Hermes – 90, 92 Cierra Kane – 93, 219, 225 Stephanie Krutz – 93 Nikhil Kuppuswamy – 92, 168 Elizabeth Leach – 92, 144, 168, 169, 221, 225 Katherine McCreight – 92, 225 Grace McGowan – 91, 92 Eli Pearce – 81, 92, 168, 218, 219, 222, 223 Libby Rohr – 90, 92, 168 Fletcher Scott – 90, 93, 168 Lauren Shotts- 92 Mary Margaret Sims – 91, 92, 168, 221, 225 Amelia Smith – 91, 92, 221, 225 Sarah Stack – 92, 168 Michael Terman – 91, 92, 218, 223 Jaelan Trapp – 92 Harper Truog – 93, 168, 221 Aris Vinsant – 92, 223 Spencer Walz – 81, 91, 92, 168, 222, 223 Alex Wang – 92 Madison Wieseler – 91, 92, 221 Connor Williams – 92, 218, 223 Saum Yazdani – 90, 92, 218 Austin Zollars – 90, 93, 218 Fifth Grade Michael Babbott – 99, 100 Michael Boeh – 100 Richard Bray – 98, 100 Ryan Dooley – 100 Ethan Doskey – 100 Nicole Dreiling – 99, 100, 159 Elise Finn – 100 Christian Franklin – 100 Bradley Frye – 99, 100 Ethan Gilworth – 98, 100, 145 Olivia Hill – 100, 163 Remy Jacobs – 100 Emma Knopik – 99, 100, 138 NaYoung Kwon – 98, 100, 163 Miles Lindgren – 98, 100 Nicholas Lynch – 100, 159 Maya Magie – 99, 100, 163 Francesca Mauro – 99, 100 Yasmeen Mir – 99, 100 Joshua Mixon – 100, 168 Ryan Mohamadi – 100

Daniel Moore – 100 Megan Nalamachu – 100 Jesse Payne – 100 Melissa Rosenthal – 98, 100 Bijan Shirazi – 96, 100, 196 Matthew Shrader – 100 Grayson Spidle – 100 Bryce Sturgis – 98, 100 Audun Sundeen – 100 Bianca Tucker – 100, 163 Kevin Vo – 100 Claudia Vore – 100, 163 Kate Walsworth – 100, 163 Olivia Withers-Marney – 100 Fourth Grade Brooklynn Arment – 103, 104 Alexey Ayzin – 96, 102, 104, 172 McKenna Bamesberger – 104 Jens Benson – 104, 163 Jesse Berlin – 104, 172 Jillian Blackman – 103, 104 Zoe Brous – 105 Julia Butch -102, 105 Adrian Castaner – 105 Kate Clore – 104 Kennedy Cross – 103, 104 Luke Daniel – 104, 172 Ashley Decker – 103, 104 Saketh Dendi – 104 Tyler Durwood – 104, 154 Aidan Egan – 105 Jillian Gillen – 103, 105 Cole Griffeth – 105, 172 Jordan Harrison – 104 Lucy Hart – 104 Jordan Herwig – 103, 104, 172 Breanna Higginson – 96, 104, 159 Darian Howard – 104 Nikita Joshi – 102, 104 Stella Kahl – 96, 103, 105 Humza Khan – 105 Eric Kushnir – 96, 104 Ethan Kushnir – 102, 104 Shaunak Lokre – 104 Luke Lopatofsky – 104 Alexander McCreight – 104 Audrey Munce – 104 Gregory Norman – 105 Luke Oldroyd – 105 Bridget Orji – 103, 104 Surbhee Patil – 104 Jesse Paxton – 102, 104 Claire Perez-Korinko – 104 Zoe Rein – 104 Tyler Sabapathy – 104 John Scott – 105 Rohit Sengupta – 105, 172 Camille Shafran – 103, 104 Lauren Shore – 104 Jackson Singleton – 104 Max Sullivan – 104 Lily Sykora – 104 Hannah Tadros – 104 Kristin Tingle – 102, 105 Hannah Warren – 105 Third Grade Yaser Abdulkarim – 108 Aliyah Ashby – 106, 107, 108 Natasha Bisarya – 107, 108 Louis Christifano – 108 Alise David – 96, 107, 108 Sam Dockhorn – 108 Alexander Hanshaw, 108 Jack Hanson – 108 Ian Heitmann – 106, 108

265


Kari Holzrichter – 107, 108 Carly Howard – 107, 108 Aiden Jacobs – 108 Ryan Lang – 106, 108 Hope Leathers – 107, 108 John Lubianetsky – 108 Miles Luce – 108 Benjamin Martinez – 108 Sean Mathews – 108 Christopher Moore – 107, 108 Madeline Murphy – 107, 108 Alexander Norman – 97, 108 John Oldroyd – 97, 108 Mason Phillips – 106, 108 Theodor Popescu – 108 McColm Pursell – 108, 154 Anna Rohr – 107, 108 Samuel Singleton – 108 Grant Stinson – 108 Jia Tucker – 107, 108 Madilyn Veatch – 106, 107, 108 Ryan Vo – 106, 108 Sally Vo – 107, 108 Cayden Williams – 106, 108 Second Grade Ben Anderson – 112 Evan Andracsek – 112 Lauren Andrews – 112, 154 Connor Arment – 112 Saketh Balmoori – 112 Henry Bash – 112 Lily Bash – 111, 113 Phoebe Brous – 113 Madison Browning – 112 Alisha Castaner – 111, 112 Caleb Chang – 110, 112 Declan Coyle – 112 Alexandria Demps – 110, 111, 112 Lexi Dixon – 112 Madison Elkins – 110, 113 Nathan Francis – 112 Brendan Gailliaert – 112 Jack Georgie – 112 Drew Gilworth – 112 Grant Harkins – 112 Abby Hart – 112 Diana Hisle – 110, 113 Sage Holmes – 112 Susanna King – 112 Kelly Knief – 111, 112 Andrei Kolobrodov – 112 Tara Lentell – 112 Mark Lopatofsky – 111, 112 Jonah Lynch – 111, 112 Emersen MacKenzie – 112 Marc Matula – 110, 112 Brooklyn McDonald – 112 Lauren McDougald – 112 Gavin Passanisi – 112 Mia Sabapathy – 111, 112 Jed Scott – 113 Arul Sethi – 112 Ainsley Sullivan – 112 Jacqueline Tingle – 112 Finn Truog – 96, 112 Noah Waldman – 112 Riley Weaver – 112, 158 Sean Wyckoff – 113 First Grade Kyle Brannon – 97, 116 Adella Castaner – 116 Lorelei Culver – 115, 116 Isabella Dezeeuw – 116 Ryan Durig – 116 Laurel Elsberry – 114, 116

266

Anthony Fincher – 114, 116 Samantha Georgie – 116 Grayson Gore – 115, 116 Brolan Griffeth – 116, 163 Isabel Herrera – 114, 116 Dylan Kandt – 116, 163 Kuyper Kendall – 97, 116, 155 Elijah Kushnir – 114, 116 Carly Lindgren – 116 Chad Luetje – 116 Jordin MacKenzie – 115, 116 Grayson Martin – 116 Carter Michaelis – 115, 116 Vineeth Mothe – 114, 116 Julia Norman – 115, 116 Ishan Panpaliya – 97, 116 Kalisa Patel – 116 Rahi Patel – 115, 116 Emmett Pearce – 116 Walker Phillips – 114, 116, 155 Claire Redick – 115, 116 Jordan Rein – 116 Michael Singleton – 116 Sophia Totta – 116 Jeanette Townsend – 115, 116 Ethan Walz – 115, 116 Rosemary Warren – 116 Luke Whitfill – 116 Sophia Yagan – 115, 116 Kindergarten James Andrews – 119, 120 Thomas Andrews – 120, 159 Sina Asheghaleshahi – 120 Sarena Biria – 120 Elizabeth Blackman – 120 Sophie Brous – 119, 120 Daniel Bryan – 119, 121 Tyler Carlgren – 120, 162 Ahna Chang – 120, 145 Samuel Christifano – 120 Alex David – 118, 120 Devarshi Desai – 119, 120 Evan Doskey – 119, 120 Alexander Franklin – 97, 121 Olivia Hawley – 120 Charles Hisle – 120 Ryan Holland – 120, 121 Sean Holland – 119, 120 Solomon Holmes – 120 Alanna Johnson – 120 Arjun Joshi – 118, 120 Lucy Knopik – 120 Ian Koepp – 120, 162 Tanner Kuchar – 120 Gabriel Kuti – 120, 162 Andrew Lang – 119, 120 Abigail Lopatofsky – 120 Quinn Luce – 120 Alexander Maret – 120 Aysha Mazza – 120 Delaney McMahon – 97, 118, 120 Logan Mulligan – 118, 120 Alexandra Pursell – 120 Aishi Sethi – 119, 120, 121 Stefanie Shemitz – 120 Marlena Smith – 119, 120, 121 Tatum Veatch – 120 Geordie Waldman – 118, 120 Pre-Kindergarten Aiden Aguirre – 123, 124 Milani Bandera – 123, 124 Kyanne Carlgren – 122, 124 Aryan Chaudhary – 124 Fanon Cross – 124 Pierce Farinelli – 124

Nicholas Fincher – 124 William Fitzgerald – 122, 124 David Guldin – 122, 124 Sean Hart – 124, 158 Jack Hellebusch – 123, 124 Will Jenkins – 123, 124 Daniel John – 122, 124 Isabell Kuti – 124 Taylor Lacy – 123, 124 Aidan Lawlor – 123, 124 Olivia Laws – 123, 124 Connor Lucido – 124 Phoebe Martin – 124 Tyler McNeive – 124 Joseph Miniace – 123, 124 Sidney Passanisi – 124 Ansley Ross – 122, 123, 124, 158 Gracie Seiffert – 123, 124 Cyrus Shaikh – 122, 124 Paranjay Sharma – 124 Avery Weaver – 123, 124 Preschool Atra Biria – 96, 126, 127, 128 Simone Brown – 127, 128 Mia Butler – 126, 127, 128 Sydney Georgie – 127, 128 Elina Goldstein – 127, 128 Abigail Hill – 127, 128 Alexis Johnson – 127, 128 Nicholas Johnson – 126, 128 Karoline Kendall – 128 Julia Luetje – 127, 128 Chase Mulligan – 126, 127, 128 Skylar Nussbeck – 127, 128 David Prier – 127, 128 Ava Seematter – 127, 128 Anthony Totta – 127, 128 Alex Wolf – 126, 127, 128 Faculty Mark Adams – 135, 181 Aaron Atwood-Blaine – 135 Liz Bartow – 135 Linda Beatty – 135 David Beier – 135, 153 Kate Bradley Natalie Brod – 133 Linda Brown – 134 Susan Brown – 134 Brad Buckner – 134, 141 Julie Byrne – 135 Antoinette Cammisano – 135 Monica Carson – 135 Kathy Clarke – 135 Linda Collier – 135 Laurence Coventry – 134 David Cramer – 6, 134 Kellye Crockett-Bunch – 134 Art Crumm – 4, 134, 181 Megan Culver – 135, 138 Scott Daniel – 135 Bruce Dickerson – 135 Barb Enyeart – 135 Ginny Epsten – 135 Ann Fairburn – 134, 179 Kelly Finn – 87, 133 Polly Foster – 134 Shane Foster – 134, 201 Joe Fox – 134, 209, 222, 223 William Frank – 135, 138 Julie Fullbright – 135 Fritz Gabler – 135 Sarah Green – 135 Greg Griffeth – 134, 138 Angela Guldin – 136, 141 Susan Harper – 4, 136

Shannon Hellebusch – 136 Marsha Herdliska – 136 Scott Hill – 136 Mallory Hilvitz – 136 Sarah Hofstra – 136 Sarah Holmes – 136 Kay Hopkins – 133 Scott Huppe – 132, 199 Anne Hyvrard – 136, 151 Ron Johnson – 136 Libby Jones – 136 Charlotte Keith – 5, 136, 153 Aaron Ketchell – 136, 138 Caroline Kill – 4, 136, 139 Sheila Kilpatrick – 136 Sarah Knopik – 133, 151 Bob Kohler – 132 Lilli Lackey – 132 Debbie Lawrence – 138 Carolyne Lehr – 139 Prissy LeMay-Kinney – 139, 141 Kerri Lesh – 138 Stephanie Littooy – 138 Jeriann Loidolt – 138 Danica Love – 139 Mark Luce – 6, 7, 139 Gay Lee Ludwig-Bonney – 138 Jessica Lynn – 138 Penny Marsh – 138 Scott Mendenhall – 139 Vicki Merriott – 8, 139 Lindsay Miller – 139, 141 Kristi Mitchell – 139, 192 Diane Mohr – 139 Laura Mombello – 138 Bridget Moran – 138 Sue Nagy – 138 Mona Neighbors – 139 Anellen Neill – 126 Todd Nelson – 139 Don Newsome – 139 Sarah Noulles – 139 Tom O’Brien – 140, 203 Barbie O’Toole – 140 Pat Oppenheimer – 140 Jennifer Padberg – 140 Mary Lou Pagano – 65, 139, 140 Chuck Payne – 141 Mary Perez-Korinko – 141 Reina Poore – 140 Mark Presko – 140 Todd Race – 140, 174 Lauren Ramsey – 133, 140 Jarrod Roark – 6, 132, 140 Mindy Roper – 141 Joannie Rudkin – 115, 136, 141 Anne Russ – 141 Anne Rutter – 140 Eban Schachter – 140, 179 Hideko Schackmann – 140 Jennifer Schafer – 140 Don Stelting – 140 Marti Thomas – 141 Brooke Thompson – 141, 201 Heather Townsend – 141 Diane Van Buskirk – 140 Kimberly Vasquez – 133, 140 Jane White – 140 Shawn Wilson – 9, 140 Gavin Wood – 140, 179 Shirley Young – 141 Lindsay Zimmerman – 141, 150 Judith Yount – 134


To ThE 2010/2011 YB STAFF Alex — You’ve been our savior in the choppy, uncharted waters of technology-land. Thank you for all your technological help and dedication to the yearbook.

Annie — Your comments brightened our darkest days. Thank you for your perpetual enthusiasm toward the yearbook… and lay off the Bieber fever.

Shazi — Your Photoshop skills are unmatched. Thanks for making all those photos perfect. We appreciate your dedication to photo quality and to the book itself.

Camille — You are a fantastic writer. Thanks for always having your quality work done on time and for energizing the staff with your illustrations and dances.

Chase — Ignore all the times Kaya got mad at you for not doing your work. When you did take photos or make spreads, they turned out wonderfully. Keep being “that guy.” Miles — You, Miles Goscha, have been invaluable in the creation of this yearbook. Your lovely photos add excitement to the book. Thank you for spending hours on those panoramas. Melissa — You win the staff caption title contest, without a doubt. Thank you for consistently getting excellent articles written and beautiful spreads created. We really appreciate your solid work… and delicious baking on YB breakfast days. Kate — Thanks for helping keep Chase under control while always producing quality spreads. You are the glue that keeps the juniors together and productive. Tori, Farwa, and Daria — The Terrific Trio. You three started to work together magically toward the end of the year, whipping out articles, spreads, and constant entertainment like a welloiled machine. Keep up that cooperation. It will serve you well. Aaron — The quality of your articles and layouts always makes up for the occasional lateness. Thank you for all the fantastic writing, spreads, and music. Lauren and Jordan — You two are basically inseparable. Combined, you made some great pages. Thanks for all the hard work! Sofie — You’ve been deemed eternal ruler of the yearbook iPod. Thanks for lending us your drawing skills.

Sydney — Thanks for getting your spreads done on time; we really appreciate that. You never hesitated to ask questions and made some swell spreads. Keep up the good work next year! MadTad — You are YB’s silent but deadly workhorse, and you created some close-to-perfect spreads and articles. Thank you for actually following Kaya’s list of grammar guidelines and, like the other freshmen, getting your work done on time. T-Race — We couldn't have done it without you. As clichéd as that sounds, it's true. Without your vast design, typography, grammar, and photography knowledge, we would have been lost in a frenzied, vengeful sea of inconsistency. While we were initially nervous about having a new adviser this year, we grew to tolerate — and even like — you. We truly appreciate all you've done to help us make this book, and we've enjoyed getting to know you this year. John Kelley — Thank you for being so willing to accommodate our many needs this year and making sure everything was done correctly. We appreciate your dedication to helping us create a great book. Staff — It's been a blast. Thank you ALL for your incredible help this year. Your work and attitudes have been outstanding since the beginning. Despite the occasional stressful period, we had a relatively smooth year because of you guys. Thanks. Love, BD and Boss Lady

Colophon Co-ExECutivE Editors Ben Denzer Kaya LeGrand AssistAnt ExECutivE Editor Alex Johnson HEAd dEsignEr Ben Denzer LAyout Editors Shahzad Aslam Melissa Martin Kate Sims PHoto Editors Chase Coble Miles Gosha stAff Tori Ball Aaron Dupuis Lauren Estes Jordan Grabber Annie Grabowsky Farwa Haideri Sofie Heuser Daria LeGrand Camille O'Leary Sydney Reed Madeleine Tadros AdvisEr Todd Race

fonts Interstate Font Family Century Gothic Regular

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