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SaliSalissburybury MAGAZINE

“While we are celebrating the Campaign today, we are especially excited about tomorrow.” - Headmaster Chisholm Chandler

FALL/WINTER 2014 Board of Trustees

Executive Committee Michael S. Sylvester ’59, P’85, Chairman Richard D. Field ’59, Vice-Chair Richard E. Riegel III ’84, Vice-Chair T. Williams Roberts III ’83, Treasurer William Schweitzer P’04, Secretary Chisholm S. Chandler ’11 (Hon.), P’17, Headmaster

Board Members Daniel M. Cain P’15 Christopher C. Callahan ’83, P’15 Lisa Callahan P’04, ’08, ’09 John W. Childs ’59 (Hon.) Donna Corbat P’07 Nathaniel B. Day ’56 James W. Gerard ’79 Peter Gross ’01* Ashley Harrington P’13 Adelaide H. Harris P’07 G. Anne Harris Thomas M. Joyce P’13 Campbell Langdon ’79 David Leavy ’88 Charles Lynch ’86 Dana Macy P’14 ...... Thomas D. Rutherfoord, Jr. P’08 Amanda D. Rutledge P ’80, ’84 Salisbury School instills in boys a vibrant J. Wood Rutter ’98 (Hon.) J. Anton Schiffenhaus ’48 enthusiasm for learning and the self-confidence Lee B. Spencer P’09 needed for intellectual, physical, and spiritual James P. Townsend P’10 development. Built on essential core values, the Marita K. Wong P’15 School’s unique culture promotes brotherhood, *ex-officio creativity, empathy, humility, integrity, leadership

and respect. Salisbury graduates men of Trustees Emeriti and promise who are prepared to meet the John G. Brim ’64 challenges of and adulthood and to make a Dr. Richard S. Childs, Jr. ’63 difference in an entrepreneurial, technological and Barron G. Collier II ’70 cosmopolitan world. H. Crosby Foster II ’57 Sir Eddie Kulukundis, OBE ’50 Herbert A. May III ’83, P’12 J. Richard Munro P’88, ’90 Edward C.A. Wachtmeister ’67, P’95, ’98 Rev. Edwin M. Ward Anthony C. Woodruff ’01 (Hon.) P’89 FALL/WINTER 2014 SALISBURY MAGAZINE

Headmaster Chisholm S. Chandler ’11 (Hon.), P’17

Editor Danielle D. Sinclair

Designer Julie Hammill, Hammill Design

Writers and Contributors Susan Auchincloss, Dutch Barhydt, Chisholm Chandler ‘11 (Hon.), P’17, Peter Gross ‘01, Xander Jones, Duncan Morris ‘15, Jennifer Siff, Salisbury celebrates the conclusion of its historic For The Boyscapital campaign. Procter Smith, Tote Smith, Lisa Wojcik, and Julie Zahn

Copy Editor Julie Morrow For The Boys Humility 60 Class Notes Coordinator Celebration 17 A fall 2014 chapel talk and Tulika Verma More than 1,150 gathered for four student profile of School President celebrations – Reunion Weekend, Spring Duncan Morris '15. Class Notes Editor Family Weekend, Trustees Weekend and Julie Zahn the conclusion of our historic capital Annual Report 83 Director of Development campaign, which raised a record $108 An accounting of the generosity of Dutch Barhydt million dollars. the Salisbury community throughout the 2013-2014 fiscal year. The “Salisbury Magazine” is produced Graduation 40 by the Office of Communications Honoring the academic and extracurricular for alumni, parents and friends of the School. Letters and comments achievements of the Class of 2014 and are welcome. Please send inquiries featuring speeches by Class President Blake Departments: and comments to: Director of Owens '14 and Retiring Senior Master Ralph Communications, Salisbury School, Menconi '84 (Hon.). Around the Quad 2 251 Canaan Road, Salisbury, CT 06068, e-mail to [email protected], Gatherings 34 or telephone 860-435-5791. Wise Words About Alumni & Development News 12 Succeeding on the Hilltop 56 Student Profile 61 Salisbury School 251 Canaan Road Members of the Class of 2014 offer Crimson Knight Athletics 36 Salisbury, CT 06068 advice and reflect upon their time Class Notes 63 860-435-5700 at Salisbury. In Memoriam 82 www.salisburyschool.org

Salisbury School admits students of any race, color, nationality, or ethnicity to all the rights, privileges, programs, and activities generally accorded to students at the School. Salisbury School does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, nationality, or ethnicity in the administration of its educational, admission, scholarship and loan, or athletic policies and other school administered programs. AROUND THE QUAD

I Headmaster’s Message J

“In this world of ours, it’s sometimes hard to tell the shadows from the light. But if you lead with your heart, it will shine right through the dark like a northern star to show you what is true. You’ll never lose, if only you lead with your heart.”

— The Canadian Tenors

An excerpt from the Headmaster Chisholm Chandler's opening day of school chapel address, September 9, 2014.

Now, some of you are sitting in the chapel this dear friend gave you the advice that I am sharing today, morning for the very first time, and some are here for to listen to your heart, to lead with your heart. Or maybe their second, third or fourth years. Have any of these someone made it even more simplistic for you, perhaps thoughts crossed your minds this morning or in the when you were a young boy. Be kind. Be authentic. Be time since you arrived on campus? How do I make the proud of whom you are and from where you are. Be most out of my time on this Hilltop? How do I fully humble. Be honest. Do these things and your life will be take advantage of this opportunity? I am so hopeful, filled with happiness and fulfillment. but where does my path to success begin? What’s the Finally, someday, when you are much older, you will secret ingredient? (That’s a shout-out to “Kung-Fu look back on your experience at Salisbury, as alumni Panda,” my kids’ favorite character.) I think it all boils often do, and you will reflect on the true meaning of the down to a simple idea. It’s in the words of that song I experience. And, what you will remember most fondly quoted a moment ago. are the relationships you had with your mentors. This is Lead with your heart. an interesting, pivotal time in your young lives, and we What does that mean, lead with your heart? Let all need wise counsel to make the right choices. Great me tell you what I think it means. One of the traits mentors shelter you when you find yourself in a storm. that makes Salisbury School an amazing place to Trust me when I tell you that your mentors – a great learn and to grow is that academic success is not so teacher or coach or advisor or dorm parent – he or she much contingent on raw natural intellectual ability, will make all the difference. But, you have to open your but more so on qualities such as curiosity, diligence, heart to a mentor. You have to trust them. You have to grit, perseverance and resilience. At Salisbury, it is not believe in them and their care. It’s our hearts that enable necessarily the smartest guy who succeeds beyond us to believe in others. To trust wholly and fully. To seek expectation, but the boy who combines intellectual sound advice and deep, meaningful friendship. If you prowess with resolute determination. A boy who are willing to believe in this unique spirit of Salisbury, if displays those qualities in his academic work will you are willing to open your heart to all that is here, you achieve handsomely. Trust me on this. A boy who will not only succeed, but you will flourish. That is our displays those qualities is thought of as “having promise. In this spirit, I offer the following: heart.” You’ve heard the saying, “the kid is all heart.” It O God, our heavenly father, raise up in our hearts indicates an uncommon will to achieve. So, lead with noble and true ideals, and give us the strength never to your heart in and outside the classroom. betray them. However, my hope is that you are not just seeking Good luck on this first day of school. Bring positive academic success in your life on the Hilltop. Citizenship, energy to everything you do. And remember always to peer relations, friendships and other important pieces stick together … as brothers. of a life here are contingent on making good decisions, on choosing wisely, and on being true to yourself and to others. Maybe your parents, or your grandparents, or a

2 SALISBURY MAGAZINE Fall/Winter 2014 AROUND THE QUAD

Cross-Curricular Project Launches New Currency on Campus Alumnus Peter Weeks ’68 Brings the Bard to Life for Salisbury Boys

Peter Weeks ’68 visited the Hilltop in April 2014 to present his passion for and life’s work in Shake- speare. He came to campus to present his arti- facts, primary documents and various multimedia materials to third, fourth and sixth form English A year-long investigation by a cross-disciplinary classes who had recently examined notable classics including “Henry IV,” “Hamlet,” “Romeo and team of students and faculty has resulted in the fall Juliet,” “The Merchant of Venice,” and “Macbeth.” 2014 introduction of the “Bury Buck.” The currency Peter’s presentations placed Shakespeare’s works in is now legal tender at the two places money has the context of the times in which he lived. Draw- value on the Hilltop: The Armory school store and the ing parallels between Elizabethan and the 21st Century, he showed how contemporary and student snack bar at Belin Lodge. relevant these works remain today. As a Salisbury student from 1965-1968, Peter Following excitement over the concept of BitCoin last year, students revered English teacher William Reifsnyder. Of Mr. of 2013-2014 Advanced Placement Microeconomics engaged in regular Reifsnyder, Peter recalls, “He taught Shakespeare debate over the past, present and future roles of traditional currency masterfully. We would read scenes of Shakespeare in the world economy. Fueled as well by the local success of the so- in class, each student taking a part, and later discuss called BerkShares in western Massachusetts, students were challenged in-depth the and themes he was develop- by Instructor in Economics and Mathematics Tote Smith to develop ing. I remember the days Mr. Reifsnyder would Salisbury’s own currency system as an educational tool, but also as a take the class to the A/V room in the basement of functional currency on campus. Teams of young economists surveyed the Chapel where we would listen to LPs of the student and faculty members to gauge demand for a captive currency, we were studying. This would be my first interviewed operational leaders of the School to resolve circulation, security introduction to hearing performers like Laurence and accounting issues, and most importantly discovered the talents of Olivier, John Gielgud, the Redgraves, and many young artists from Erika Crofut’s Studio Art course. The economists other famous English actors. Hearing the plays “hired” the artists to design the front and back of two denominations, with performed, Shakespeare’s language, which seemed specifications as to themes, size limitations and features. Instructor in Art so difficult and strange, became comprehensible Erika Crofut commented, “My students felt the life of real illustrators in and relevant.” this project – being accountable to a client’s vision and timetable while Peter has generously donated the Weeks Shake- also infusing their own design and style. Every bill was unique.” A panel of speare Collection, which contains more than 200 students in the economics class chose the final art: The $1BB design was books, many from the 17th and 18th Century, to awarded to Angelo Tilahun ’14 and the $5BB design was awarded jointly the Phinny Library. Of special note, Peter Phinny to Nathaneal Matlack ’15 and Graham Turner ’15. The name “Bury ’68, the family namesake of the library, was Peter Buck” was decided by a vote of the community. Weeks’ classmate. Like all young currencies, the Bury Buck’s value is pegged to the U.S. Peter is the benefactor of the English Depart- Dollar: one for one. It is conceivable that one day the Buck will have ment’s Reifsnyder Prize. a floating value, providing endless hands-on learning opportunities for Salisbury’s young economists, mathematicians and entrepreneurs.

Fall/Winter 2014 SALISBURY MAGAZINE 3 AROUND THE QUAD

Salisbury Welcomes David Leavy ’88 Joins New Faculty to the Hilltop Board of Trustees Salisbury School is pleased to introduce the Salisbury is thrilled to announce the appointment of latest additions to our faculty. the newest member of the Board of Trustees.

David Leavy leads global communications and market- 1 Will Brown ing strategy for Discovery Learning Center Instructor B.A. College Communications, overseeing the company’s centralized 1 2 Kirsten Durbrow corporate communications Learning Center Instructor and marketing functions. B.A. Wheaton College (MA) Since joining Discovery in 2000, David has overseen communications and 3 Kati Frisina 2 strategy for some of Discovery’s most significant Director of the transactions, including the company’s 2008 debut Rudd Learning Center as a publicly traded company and the announce- B.S. Towson University ments of Discovery’s joint ventures with Oprah M. Ed. Simmons College 3 Winfrey, Hasbro and Sony/IMAX. In addition, he 4 Eliott Grover spearheaded the development of the company’s Instructor in English and ’Discovery Impact’ corporate social responsibility Learning Center Instructor programs, which leverage the power of Discovery’s B.A. Georgetown University 4 brands, businesses and employees to give back to the world through global volunteerism. 5 Becky Lachaine Under David’s leadership, Discovery’s Corporate Instructor in Mathematics Communications and Corporate Affairs teams have B.S. Fairfield University 5 been recognized with a number of awards, includ- ing ’Large Corporate Communications Team of the 6 Kirby Livingston Year’ from “PRWeek” and ’CSR Volunteer Initiative Instructor in English B.A. Oberlin College of the Year’ from “PR News.” 6 Prior to joining Discovery, David served as senior 7 Albert Nascimento director of public affairs and chief spokesman for Instructor in English the National Security Council and deputy white B.A. Middlebury College house press secretary for foreign affairs. In that 7 position, David handled all press issues relating to 8 Aaron Parisi foreign policy and chaired the Interagency Public Instructor in Mathematics Affairs Working Group that coordinated the Clinton B.S. Hartwick College administration’s long range strategic messaging on 8 international policy. David developed the commu- 9 Billy Schweitzer nications strategies for NATO’s military in Learning Center Instructor Kosovo, the state visit of Chinese President Jiang B.A. Trinity College Zemin, U.S. military action in , and 10 Jennifer Smith 9 Sudan, as well as the Senate’s ratification of the Learning Center Instructor Chemical Weapons Convention. B.A. William Smith College David previously served as assistant press secre- M.B.A. University of tary at the State Department and the Massachusetts 10 Press Office. He is a graduate of Colby College and a member of the Cum Laude Society at Salisbury. He and wife Katherine reside in Potomac, MD. Full profiles and contact information for all faculty members are available on-line at: H www.salisburyschool.org/faculty-directory

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New Academic Offerings in 2014-2015

Salisbury’s rich departmental course offerings are carefully designed to teach students to write and read well, and to think independently as they hone the ability to apply the learning skills essential to achieving their full potential. As a school, we are constantly looking to offer fresh perspectives and stimulating coursework to our boys. We are pleased to add the following new classes to our academic catalog:

English History Foundations in Language and Literature America and the Cold War (Sixth Form) The Writer’s Journey American Studies Mathematics From Literature to Film (Fifth and Sixth Forms) Applications and Industry: Introduction to Accounting/ Banned Books (Fifth and Sixth Forms) Introduction to Finance/Introduction to Operations Research Fathers and Sons Literature (Fifth and Sixth Forms) Probability and Statistics The Black Experience in American Literature (Fifth and Sixth Forms) Topics in Discrete Mathematics Meet the Muse (Fifth and Sixth Forms) Multivariable Calculus Family Drama and Dysfunction Literature (Fifth and Sixth Forms) AP Computer Science Creative Writing (Fifth and Sixth Forms) Sherman Alexie Literature (Fifth and Sixth Forms) Philosophy and Religion Public Speaking (Fifth and Sixth Forms) “In the Beginning:” An Introduction to the Hebrew Bible British Introduction to the New Testament More Than a Game: Sports and Our Changing World Becoming Whole Dystopian Abrahamic Relationships American Protest Literature Philosophy of Love The Dark Side of Shakespeare Moral Problems of Today Argumentative and Persuasive Writing Modes of Written Expression For more information on our academic program, visit: Literature of Survival www.salisburyschool.org/academics Journalism H Shakespeare’s Venice The Postmodern Rich Man, Poor Man: Social Class in Literature Contemporary Short Fiction

Fall/Winter 2014 SALISBURY MAGAZINE 5 AROUND THE QUAD

Tina Gomez P’10 Brian Proper

2014 Magiera Award

At the School’s opening chapel of the 2014-2015 school year, The Magiera Award was presented to two beloved and deserving staff members. As he called College Office Assistant Tina Gomez P’10 About The Magiera Award to the front of the chapel to be recognized by the school U community, Headmaster Chandler noted, “The first recipient Michael Rosenfeld, principal of Salisbury’s is a wonderful lady who is beginning her 15th year at award-winning architectural firm OMR Salisbury School. She loves you boys dearly, and you adore Associates, established The Magiera Award, an endowed fund, to award a cash gift each her too. She is kind-hearted, always helpful, and a truly great year to a member (or members) of Salisbury’s friend to so many. Bobby Wynne describes her as the glue of staff who have provided exceptional service the College Office … the person who keeps it all together.” to the School during the preceding year. The second recipient, Maintenance Technician Brian This award is given annually at the School’s opening Chapel service, when members of Proper, is in his 11th year at Salisbury. Of Brian, the Salisbury’s faculty and staff are introduced to Headmaster noted, “Many of you probably have not had the Salisbury student body. the chance to get to know him. That is because he is always In establishing this award, Michael has asked going a hundred miles an hour outside your classroom that in addition to being recognized for their windows working with a weed wacker or a mower. He’s exceptional service, the recipients of this award also demonstrate those characteristics up working before most of us have opened our eyes each that Salisbury’s Business Manager John morning. He also can make grass grow on a rock! He’s that Magiera P’96 demonstrates: collegiality, good. Our maintenance guys do a superb job. They don’t collaboration and respect for others. maintain this beautiful campus, they cultivate it. They This award, recognizing members of Salisbury’s staff, along with those awards enhance it. Each and every one of them, and Brian Proper that recognize Salisbury’s faculty, together leads the pack. Brian displays a profound and uncommon honor the hardworking men and women who sense of duty and responsibility to us all. We are so support the boys on the Hilltop. fortunate to have him on our team.” Congratulations to both of these worthy recipients. Thank you for your loyalty and dedication to Salisbury.

6 SALISBURY MAGAZINE Fall/Winter 2014 AROUND THE QUAD

Pictured (L to R): Headmaster Chisholm Chandler, Whitaker Hagerman, Ryan Nizolek, Student Government Vice President Ryan Phelps ’15 and Student Government President Duncan Morris ’15

Shattering the Silence

On October 3, 2014, Salisbury School was pleased to welcome two former members of the Univer- sity of Virginia’s Men’s and Women’s Lacrosse Teams, Ryan Nizolek and Whitaker Hagerman, as chapel speakers. Each shared personal reflections of the 2010 tragedy surrounding their dear friend and team- U mate, Yeardley Love. Love, a fellow UVA classmate of Nizolek and Hagerman, lost her life to relation- “It was a truly ship violence at the hands of her ex-boyfriend just two weeks shy of their graduation. While Hagerman uplifting and and Nizolek were shaken deeply by Yeardley’s death, their speeches did not focus on the sadness sur- rounding the issue, but rather the many lessons learned. Their goal was to encourage our boys not only touching story to support their friends, but also to have the courage to stand up in defense of what is right. that demonstrated how Of the presentations, students said: domestic violence not “It was a true privilege to listen to the words of Whitaker Hagerman and Ryan Nizolek who only affects the victim, but shared the tragic story Yeardley Love through their experiences. Being a student-athlete myself, ultimately everyone.” it truly puts a new perspective on what I take for granted and on my own accountability. What I took away from the provocative speeches was that we must be critically loyal to our loved ones. — Salisbury student When something can be done to make right, we must not hesitate to make an uncomfortable decision, especially regarding domestic violence. The two speakers could not have portrayed their stories and in a more suitable way. It is people like Whitaker and Ryan who provide us Salisbury boys with the most valuable lessons in our community.” “Last week in chapel the school had the opportunity to hear from Ms. Hagerman about her experience with domestic violence. It was a truly uplifting and touching story that demonstrated how domestic violence not only affects the victim, but ultimately everyone. Mr. Nizolek shared his experiences of the same domestic violence case but from a different perspective; one which the people often closest to it might not even see it. Both gave heartening and inspiring talks that opened the eyes of us students to this epidemic.” Salisbury is pursuing a partnership with the One Love Foundation in order to raise awareness of domestic violence in “shattering the silence.” In addition, members of the Salisbury community were encouraged to sport purple ribbons throughout October, domestic violence awareness month.

To view video taken during this chapel event, visit: .com/SalisburyKnights

Fall/Winter 2014 SALISBURY MAGAZINE 7 AROUND THE QUAD

Cast and crew members celebrate receiving the “Most Fearless” Award at the 2014 Halo Awards for their production of “The Burnt Part Boys.”

U Cast and Crew of “The Burnt Part Boys” Receive Halo Award The Halo Awards Dramatic Society Recognized for Second Straight Year were founded in 2003 by the Seven Angels Theatre Company Members of the Salisbury School Dramatic Society traveled to a packed Palace Theatre in to recognize excellence in Waterbury, CT, last May for the 11th annual Seven Angels Halo Awards Ceremony, and, for the dramatic arts among the second straight year, brought a trophy back to the Hilltop. Salisbury, which joined the Connecticut high schools. organization of over 50 Connecticut high schools last year, was recognized before a wildly enthusiastic of more than 1,200 with the award for “Most Fearless Musical Production,” last winter’s “The Burnt Part Boys.” In presenting this year’s awards, Seven Angels Theatre Founder and Head Semina DeLaurentis noted that the “Most Fearless” category had been deliberately moved to the end of the event, right before “Best Drama” and “Best Musical,” the two biggest awards, to give the category greater prominence in the ceremony. She went on to explain that the Halo Awards Committee had created the category “Most Fearless” to encourage schools to take more risks in choosing their productions: to deal with difficult or controversial subjects, to tackle little-known shows, to challenge the resources of their program. “The Burnt Part Boys” portrayal of the economically

8 SALISBURY MAGAZINE Fall/Winter 2014 AROUND THE QUAD

oppressed lives of coal miners and the notoriously unsafe conditions of mine shafts made Salisbury’s production an ideal candidate for the category. As one of the smallest member-schools in Halo, which includes many public high schools of well over 1,000 students, Salisbury also impressed the judges with the remarkable scale and technical scope of the production – a tribute to the many students who worked behind the scenes and in the booth to mount the “The Burnt Part Boys.” Salisbury was also nominated in the category “Best Ensemble Cast” for the Dramatic Society’s fall production of “Almost, Maine.” Salisbury won the award in this category at last year’s Halos for “.” Over the past two years, Salisbury’s Dramatic Society has received a total of ten nominations. In the course of the evening, Denny Bui ’14, vice president of the Dramatic Society, was also called to the stage with students from other high schools, all of whom were recognized as “Gypsy of the Year” – a tradition drawn from Broadway – for the special contributions they had made to their school dramatic programs. Bui had been nominated by his peers in the Dramatic Society to receive this special recognition for those who may not appear in starring roles but who contribute in other significant ways, on and off the stage, to the success of their schools’ drama programs. The Halo Awards were founded in 2003 by the Seven Angels Theatre Company to recognize excellence in the dramatic arts among Connecticut high schools. Starting with an initial membership of seven schools, the organization has steadily As one of the smallest grown to over fifty schools from around the state. member-schools in Halo, Other independent schools in Halo include The which includes many public Gunnery, Miss Porter’s School, Suffield Academy, and Woodhall School. high schools of well over 1,000 students, Salisbury also impressed the judges with the remarkable scale and technical scope of the production – a tribute to the many students who worked behind the scenes and in the booth to mount the “The Burnt Part Boys.”

“The Burnt Part Boys” photos by William Berkowitz ’16

Fall/Winter 2014 SALISBURY MAGAZINE 9 AROUND THE QUAD

2014-2015 Student Leaders

Student Government Vice President Ryan Phelps ’15 and President Duncan Morris ’15

Salisbury School is extremely proud of numerous boys who serve the School in a variety of leadership roles. These talented, energetic, and spirited student leaders are vital in providing important programs and services to the campus community.

Student Government Dormitory Prefects Peer Leaders Big Brothers Nico Ader ’16 Trent Carpenter ’15 President: Duncan Morris ’15 Trent Carpenter ’15 Harrison Cole ’16 Charles Coccia ’15 Vice President: Ryan Phelps ’15 Chuk Chun Chiu ’15 Charles Cross ’15 Harrison Cole ’16 Scott Clough ’15 Neil Howland ’16 Teddy Gray ’15 Sixth Form Representatives: Charles Coccia ’15 Liam Lane ’16 Andrew Guanci ’15 Charles Cross Spencer Daniel ’15 Tim Pumphret ’16 Colby Hall ’15 Luke Smith Matt Dugan ’15 Charlie Ryan ’16 Sam Lancto ’15 Armstel Edevbie ’15 Torrance Smith ’16 Ethan Marshall ’15 Fifth Form Representatives: Ethan Feldman ’15 Kai Storrs ’15 Nick McCabe ’15 Nate Carter Boone Givens ’15 John Sutor ’16 Duncan Morris ’15 Jake Hescock Alex Gonzalez ’15 George Tavlarios ’16 Kyler Murray ’15 Quincy Gregg ’15 Huy Tran ’16 Ryan Phelps ’15 Fourth Form Representatives: Andrew Guanci ’15 Ivan Yu ’16 Max Segalla ’15 Peter Fousek Ian Harrington ’15 Kevin Yuan ’16 Ray Seebeck ’15 Will Tortorella Colin Kane ’15 Jack Speranzini ’16 Sam Keehn ’15 Faculty Advisor: Nick Sweet ’16 Third Form Representatives: Sam Lancto ’15 Michael Bienkowski Will Thomas ’15 Orlando Ashford Robin Lin ’15 Adrian Wong ’15 Charlie Rote David Maaghul ’15 Louis Mason ’15 Faculty Advisor: Faculty Advisor: Nick McCabe ’15 Meg Allen Jennifer Siff Duncan Morris ’15 Ryan Phelps ’15 Ray Rousseau ’15 Ray Seebeck ’15 Lucas Smith ’15 Will Thomas ’15 Graham Turner ’15 Bryce Womack ’15 Adrian Wong ’15

Faculty Advisors: Xander Jones & Jennifer Siff

For further information on the wide variety of leadership opportunities offered through ex- H tracurricular activities and clubs, visit: salisburyschool.org/leadership-opportunities

10 SALISBURY MAGAZINE Fall/Winter 2014 AROUND THE QUAD

The Romans came out victorious at this first of many competitions!

Salisbury Societies Competition Commences

Salisbury is excited to introduce the Sarum Societies to the Hilltop. Students and faculty represent one of four societies – Normans, Romans, Saxons, and Vikings – whose names draw upon our school history, as former inhabitants of Old Sarum.

The societies are each rich with diversity, which allows for showcasing various interests and talents resulting in exciting and healthy compe- tition. The legacy component allows relatives to represent the same society, and ensures that their family legacy will live on with that society as the family tradition of attending Salisbury continues. The societies kicked-off the initiative with Orientation Day, where the teams battled in events such as ultimate frisbee, dodgeball, building a cardboard boat, volleyball, name games and others. The day culmi- nated with a spirited relay race involving both the need for physical and intellectual skills. Moving beyond orientation, students and faculty have the ongoing objective of earning points for their society in a number of ways including academic success, giving chapel talks, participating in our on campus blood drives and many more. The year will conclude with an all-school Society Day in which the students and faculty will battle in competitions ranging from academic, athletic, artistic and be- yond. The victors will have their society name inscribed on the coveted Sarum Cup for the community to admire.

Fall/Winter 2014 SALISBURY MAGAZINE 11 ALUMNI & DEVELOPMENT NEWS

Greetings from the Salisbury Alumni Association

Dear Alumni Brothers,

As Salisbury celebrates its 114th check www.salisburyschool.org/alumni-events often. Thank anniversary this year, I am reminded about you to those who have hosted or made it out to a Salisbury the School’s rich tradition in honor and School event. I look forward to seeing you again this year and brotherhood as well as the loyal leadership to meeting new alumni brothers. that continues to do a remarkable job in If you have not done so already, I strongly encourage you to securing the future of Sarum. If you are interested in being download the Salisbury Alumni Networking app. This app has part of the leadership of the School, the Alumni Office given alumni all over the world the opportunity to reach out continues to look for class agents. To learn more about this with fellow Sarum brothers. For more information about the key position, please contact Julie Zahn, director of alumni app and how you can join, see the ad on the inside back cover relations, at 860-435-5775 or [email protected]. of this magazine. More than 500 alumni have joined already! Save the Date – Reunion Weekend is on May 1-3, 2015. Remember, it is very important that the School has The School is excited to welcome back all alumni whether your updated contact information so please provide it at you are celebrating a milestone reunion (those ending in your convenience. Visit www.salisburyschool.org/update- 0s and 5s) or not. Please remember that while Salisbury information to do so! is hosting reunion while school is in session, on campus Thank you to those who have already made a gift or pledge housing is not available. If you are in the great Class of 1965 to the 2014-2015 Annual Fund. Our $2,000,000 goal in and celebrating your 50th reunion, please reach out to Tulika 2013-2014 was ambitious and we did it. You are making a Verma at 860-435-5740 or [email protected] for huge difference in the lives of the boys and those who teach, hotel information. All other years, please contact Julie Zahn coach and mentor them and they will all be forever grateful. at 860-435-5775 or [email protected]. The Alumni Office has a wonderful year of events Sincerely, including numerous regional events, young alumni and Asia Peter Gross ’01 receptions as well as networking events to name a few. For President more information about these events, I encourage you to

A Reason to Celebrate! THE

In 2008, Salisbury School set a long term goal to achieve a $2,000,000 Annual Fund. In the final year of theFor The Boys Campaign, the School is happy to report that this FUND remarkable goal was achieved. The Salisbury Annual Fund provides more than 10% of the operating budget. Salisbury This year, the name “The Salisbury Fund” is making a debut benefits from strong philanthropic support from trustees, and is the School’s way to recognize annual giving. The Salisbury alumni, parents, grandparents, and friends, and the School is Fund reflects our community’s collective strength and belief in indeed fortunate to have so many people invested in its future. our mission while continuing to promote honor and loyalty. Annual gifts are targeted where they have the largest impact Annual participation at every level is appreciated by the boys and on our students and our faculty which includes professional the faculty who teach, coach and mentor them. Thank you to all development, technology and financial assistance. the donors who made this goal a reality!

12 SALISBURY MAGAZINE Fall/Winter 2014 ALUMNI & DEVELOPMENT NEWS

The 2014 Development Team: Back (L to R): Lisa Miller, assistant to the director of development and leadership giving coordinator; Dutch Barhydt, director of development; Cherrie Collins, director of parent programs; Julie Zahn, director of alumni relations; Lisa Wojcik, development information services and research coordinator; Andrew Graham ’97, director of leadership giving; Danielle Sinclair, director of communications; Front (L to R): Susan Auchincloss, director of The Salisbury Fund, Susan Touponse, Salisbury Fund and gift coordinator; and Tulika Verma, alumni and parent coordinator.

Development Office Receives National Recognition

Salisbury’s Development Office has been awarded a 2014 Judging Criteria Educational Fundraising Award by CASE (Council for Advancement An expert panel of volunteer judges selected winners based on a number of factors, including: and Support of Education), an honor given to superior programs at educational institutions across the country. • Pattern of growth in total support The School was selected to receive an “Overall Fundraising (or adjusted total support if appropriate) Improvement” Award based on judges’ analysis of three years of • Evaluation of what contributed to the total support figure fundraising data as supplied to the Voluntary Support of Education • Overall breadth in program areas Survey (VSE). • Pattern of growth in each program area In selecting “Overall Fundraising Improvement” winners, judges • Pattern of donor growth among alumni donors and other individual donors use the factors to find significant program growth across the three • Impact of the 12 largest gifts on total support years of data. Institutions are evaluated within appropriate peer • Total support in relation to the alumni base groups, using different size and type classifications. • Type of institution

Gifts of Appreciated Stock Support Sarum and Provide Great Tax Advantages to the Donor

Supporting Salisbury School has never been easier and potentially more rewarding for a donor. Thanks to a historically robust stock market, there is a simple way to make your mark at Salisbury and receive significant, additional tax advantages. While gifts of cash have always provided donors who itemize a tax deduction, gifts of stock will provide a tax deduction and more. It is this simple: when you make a gift of appreciated stock to Salisbury, you will receive a tax deduction for the full market value of the stock plus you will not pay any capital gains tax that you ordinarily would by simply selling the stock and holding the proceeds. Since many stocks have appreciated significantly, now is the ideal time to review your portfolio to see if it makes sense to turn your appreciated stock into a gift to Salisbury. This may allow you to generously support a priority at Salisbury that is especially meaning- ful to you. As always, please consult your financial advisor.

For further information about Dutch Barhydt, director of development, at [email protected] Salisbury’s priorities and giving Andrew Graham, director of leadership giving, at [email protected] opportunities, please contact: Susan Auchincloss, director of The Salisbury Fund, at [email protected] Cherrie Collins, director of parent programs, at [email protected]

Fall/Winter 2014 SALISBURY MAGAZINE 13 ALUMNI & DEVELOPMENT NEWS

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Fall Golf Classic 2014 1. Orlando Ashford P’18, Robert Gurman P’17 and Director of Admissions Peter Gilbert P’17; 2. Chris Davenport ’96, Danny Gomez ’96, Stu Graham ’96 More than 100 alumni, parents and friends gathered in late September on and Brent Francoline ’96; 3. Matt Fitzgerald ’90, the links at The Country Club of Fairfield. Following a delicious barbeque Bill Harris ’76, P’07, Headmaster Chandler ’11 (Hon.), P’17 and Sam Sammis ’56; 4. Director of Leadership lunch at the club, golfers participated in chipping and putting contests before Giving Andrew Graham ’97 watches as Ed Madden heading out onto the course for an afternoon of friendly competition. Prizes P’90, ’93 goes for a putt; 5. Michael Cuozzo ’13 with Director of Parent Programs Cherrie Collins. were awarded at a cocktail reception where guests generously bid on numerous silent auction and raffle items. This one-day event raised $50,000 to provide deserving young men the opportunity to attend Salisbury School by way of the Peter A. Fitzgerald ’93 Scholarship and the Freedom Fund Scholarship.

Congratulations Low Gross: Jim Panczykowski ’00, Ed Detmer, John Wallace and Peter Schuller 2nd Gross: Mike Driscoll ’08, Dennis Driscoll ’10, Brooks Ross ’08 and Athletic Director Tim Sinclair ’91 to the following Low Net: Noah Merksamer ’09, Jacob Repokis ’06, Dean of Faculty Rhonan Mokriski ’90 and Wells Ross ’05 golfers on their 2nd Net: Chris Ventrella, Mike Brown, Matt Roberts and Ted Gianetti 3rd Net: Dicky Riegel ’84, TR, Charles Spofford ’84, Chris Morley ’78 and Brad Root ’84 achievements! 4th Net: Briggs Forelli ’82, P’14, Chris Bean ’86, Mike Lieder ’82 and Barry Durfee ’84 Closest to the Hole: Business Manager John Magiera P’96 Longest Drive (Women): Constance Littlefield Longest Drive (Men): Barry Durfee ’84 Putting Contest: Assistant Headmaster Bobby Wynne Chipping Contest: Will Bassett

14 SALISBURY MAGAZINE Fall/Winter 2014 ALUMNI & DEVELOPMENT NEWS

Thank you to our generous supporters who make this event a success each and every year!

GOLD SPONSORS: GIFT IN KIND AND AUCTION/RAFFLE DONORS: Douglas Elliman Commercial 52 Main McCarthy Family P’12 (Peter Gross ’01, TR AARON Environmental Sam Meek ’02 and Jim Gross P’01, ’99) Airstream2Go – Dicky Riegel ’84, TR Mizza’s of Lakeville Lindell Fuels, Inc. Aon - Tim McCaffrey ’96 OMR Architects Michael Sylvester ’59, P’85, Arethusa Farm Dairy, LLC. North River Outfitters - Jason Indelicato ’98 Chairman of the Board of Trustees Orlando Ashford P’18 Peter Becks Village Store Lisa and Tom Joyce P’13, TR At Home in the Country Precision Gear, Inc. – Briggs Forelli ’82, P’14 Townsend Energy Services, LLC — Barrington Brewery Progressive Paving and Construction Jim Townsend P’10, TR Bell Electrical Contractors Quality Printing, Co. Belter Builders, LLC Horace Seely-Brown ’59 PUTTING CONTEST SPONSOR: BGC Partners Salisbury Bank York Capital Management Advisors, L.P. Black Rabbit Restaurant Salisbury Wines Bradford Portraits Salmon Falls Winery - Andrew Bevan ’94 HOLE IN ONE SPONSOR: Caligari Hardware Marylou Salvati P’17 Lime Rock Drivers Club Joseph Cassin P’94 Horace Seeley-Brown ’59 Ashley Cole P’13, ’16 Segalla’s Turnkey Housing – Bob Segalla TEE SPONSORS: Kevin Coleman ’87 P’15, P’17 Airstream2Go — Dicky Riegel ’84, TR Country Bistro Select Sports Bags Aon — tim McCaffrey’96 Crystal Rock Michael Siladi ’09 Belter Builders, LLC David di Belardino ’01 Smathers and Branson BGC Partners Deano’s Pizza Michael Sylvester ’59, P’85, Douglas Elliman Commerical — Peter di Bonaventura P’14 Chairman of the Board of Trustees Peter Gross ’01, TR and Domaney’s Discount Liquors TEC Control Systems, Inc. Jim Gross P’01, ’99 Douglas Elliman Commercial - The Boat House Energi, Inc. — Brian McCarthy P’12 Peter Gross ’01, TR and Jim Gross P’01, ’99 The White Hart Inn Horace Seeley-Brown ’59 Elizabeth’s Fine Jewelry The Woodland Lindell Fuels, Inc. Energi, Inc. — Brian McCarthy P’12 Three Stallion — Sam Sammis ’56 Michael Sylvester ’59, P’85, Fairfield Inn and Suites Toqueville Chairman of the Board of Trustees Fire Equipment Headquarters, Inc. Townsend Energy Services, LLC — North River Outfitters — Ghi Sigh Service Jim Townsend P’10, TR Jason Indelicato ’98 Great Barrington Pizza United Construction and Engineering OMR Architects Harney and Sons Tea W.B. Mason Company, Inc. Precision Gear, Inc. — Phyllis Hansell P’10 Forrest West ’09 Briggs Forelli ’82, P’14 The Interlaken Inn William Perotti & Sons, Inc. Salisbury Bank John Michael Associates, Inc. York Capital Management Advisors, L.P. Segalla’s Turney Housing — Lisa and Tom Joyce P’13, TR Bob Segalla P’15, ’17 Lime Rock Drivers Club TEC Control Systems, INc. Lime Rock Park Tocqueville Lindell Fuels, Inc. Lisa and Tom Joyce P’13, TR Holly and Don Little P’16 Townsend Energy Services, LLC — Kris Loomis ’92 Jim Townsend P’10, TR Jaime MacDonald ’07 United Construction and Engineering Manolo Blahnik William Perotti & Sons, Inc.

SAVE THE DATE!

The 5th annual Fall Golf Classic is scheduled for

MONDAY, OCTOBER 5, 2015

at The Country Club of Fairfield (CT).

Fall/Winter 2014 SALISBURY MAGAZINE 15 ALUMNI & DEVELOPMENT NEWS

The Round Table Society: The Development Office Announces a New Way of Recognizing Donor Loyalty to Salisbury School

Beginning in 2014-2015, The Round Table Society Members of the Round Table Society will recognizes committed donors whose annual gifts serve be sent a card each year recognizing their years as the foundation for Salisbury’s growth. of consecutive giving. We will highlight these Gifts of any amount given for five or more consecutive donors within the 2014-2015 Annual consecutive fiscal years count toward membership Report as follows: and will be recognized. Membership is maintained as long as gifts are made to Salisbury every fiscal year Levels of 5 years Sarum Guard (July 1 to June 30) without interruption. Collectively, Consecutive 6-10 years Sarum Knight annual gifts influence the School’s ability to meet new 11–25 years Sarum Crusader Giving opportunities and emerging needs while also honoring 25+ years Sarum Duke the timeless tradition of giving to Salisbury.

Thank you for making Salisbury an annual priority! Visit salisburyschool.org/make-a-gift to make your contribution today!

16 SALISBURY MAGAZINE Fall/Winter 2014 FOR THE BOYS CELEBRATION WEEKEND

Photos by Jennifer Fiereck, John LaPerch, Danielle Sinclair and Brian Wilcox

What a spectacular weekend it was on the Hilltop! More than 1,150 alumni, parents, students, faculty and staff, and friends came together on campus May 9-11, 2014, for a momentous gala affair, For The Boys Celebration Weekend.

This historic gathering, the largest in School’s history, was designed to celebrate the wrap-up of the For The Boys Campaign and included four celebrations – Reunion Weekend (all classes), Spring Family Weekend, Trustees Weekend and an historic campaign finale announcement – combined into one extraordinary weekend. The jam-packed schedule of activities offered many wonderful experiences for guests of all ages to enjoy. Read on for highlights of the weekend festivities.

Fall/Winter 2014 SALISBURY MAGAZINE 17 DEDICATION OF DEFENDER

The Salisbury community gathered by the Curtis Boathouse Friday afternoon to remember and to celebrate the life of Stephen J. Meszkat ’02 by dedicating Defender, a Vespoli eight-man shell, gener- ously given in memory of a son by his family and friends. Head Crew Coach Tote Smith and Headmaster Chandler talked about Stephen’s life and Rev. Kirk Hall ’90 blessed and dedicated the vessel. Stephen’s classmate and fellow oarsman Elliot Hovey ’02 fondly recalled times he and Stephen shared on the Hilltop. The Meszkat family was presented with a one-of-a-kind piece of stained glass artwork, designed and crafted by OARS (Organization for Assistance of Rowing at Salisbury) President Martin Rambusch P’14, in honor of this heartfelt dedication. At the conclusion of the ceremony and at Coach Smith’s command, several members of the Crew lifted both Defender and the Stephen J. Meszkat Jr. (the first Vespoli 8 donated in 2012 by the Meszkat family) off of their stands, placed them in the water, entered the boats and glided peacefully across the tranquil waters of Lake Washinee. It was a somber yet uplifting way to remember this loyal Sarum Brother.

Above: Members of the crew with Defender (left) and Stephen J. Meszkat Jr. (right). Below: Head Crew Coach Tote Smith presents the Meszkat family with an original piece of artwork created by Martin Rambusch P’14.

18 SALISBURY MAGAZINE Fall/Winter 2014 Reception for Retiring Senior Master Ralph Menconi

Serre Murphy ’84 presents the senior master with gifts from the Class of 1984. Ralph Menconi poses with with the Class of 1984, which inducted him as an honorary member.

Members of the Salisbury community wished retiring Senior before it. In addition, Serre Murphy ’84 presented Ralph with Master Ralph Menconi well at this celebration of his 42 years a diploma and announced that the Class of 1984 has inducted of service to the School, “the end of an era,” as Headmaster the senior master as an honorary member. Guests congratulated Chandler noted. Several gifts were given to Ralph includ- and wished this revered English and economics instructor well ing a photograph of the Hilltop campus that he called home immediately following the presentations while enjoying a selec- throughout the years and a Class of 2014 graduation tie to tion of wonderful refreshments from Harney Teas provided by commemorate Ralph’s service to the Class of 2014 and the 42 Brigitte Harney P’03, ’05, ’10 and her son Alex ’10.

50th Reunion Dinner Members of the Class of 1964 enjoyed a special evening with each other on Friday night. Headmaster Chandler and Director of Alumni Relations Julie Zahn inducted these Pictured: The men of the Class of 1964 celebrated in grand style gentlemen into the Half Century Club. As a token of their during this historic weekend. membership, attendees received a custom Salisbury tie, the same one which the Class of 2014 wore at graduation, thus connecting the two classes for years to come.

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WALL OF HONOR INDUCTION

Individuals and families who have supported Salisbury at the highest levels of philanthropy were welcomed to Salisbury's Wall of Honor. “The five individuals and their families have placed enor- mous trust and confidence in Salisbury by their gifts, and each fam- ily’s story is powerful. Some are joyful, others are stories of dutiful giving over many years, and others reflect the love of Salisbury sons who will be with us always in spirit,” noted Headmaster Chandler. 3 Members of the Salisbury community added to the Wall of Honor this past May include: David Seguin Junker, Robert J. Kle- berg, Jr. and Helen C. Kleberg Foundation, Sir Eddie Kulukundis O.B.E., The Whitridge Family and George W. Young. Following the induction ceremony, alumni and parents enjoyed cocktails in the Class of 1998 Room and the Tremaine Gallery.

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1. Art Roth P’09, Tony Cadwalader ’82 and Michael Roth ’09; 2. Chairman of the Board of Trustees Michael Sylvester ’59, P’85 and Headmaster Chisholm Chandler with Wall of Honor inductees George ’08, Trina and Fred Whitridge P’05, ’08; 3. Trustee Emeritus Dick Munro P’88, ’90, Matthew Feldman P’14 and Director of Leadership Giving Andrew Graham ’97; 4. Bill Brobston ’69, P’14 and wife Barbara Bunch with Director of Alumni Relations Julie Zahn; 5. Tracy Chandler P’17 with Trustee Ashley Harrington P’13.

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20 SALISBURY MAGAZINE Fall/Winter 2014 Welcome Clambake and Cookout

Alumni, parents, students and friends dined on a delicious buffet din- ner under a tent festively decorated for the all-school gathering. Student musicians gave an extraordinary performance before guests headed across the street for the evening festivities.

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1. Tony Hoag ’57, GP’15 proudly posed with grandson Graham Turner ’15, daughter Cynthia Turner P’15 and wife Margaret; 2. Max Segalla ’15 and parents Bob and Jennifer Segalla P’15, ’17; 3. Anthony and Jaren Epps ’16; 4. Nicholas Sweet ’16 with father Richard; 5. The Jazz Ensemble showcased our talented student musicians to alumni, parents and friends. 4

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Fall/Winter 2014 SALISBURY MAGAZINE 21 CELEBRATION WEEKEND KICK-OFF AT WACHTMEISTER and GARDNER FIELDS

For The Boys Celebration Weekend officially started with the varsity lacrosse under the lights for all and refreshments and live music by Advanced Phunk under a special alumni and parent tent. Later in the evening, a spectacular fireworks display lit up the skies over Gardner Field and guests danced to the offerings of roots-rock and folk favorite, The Jason Spooner Band.

1. A fabulous fireworks display provided a festive to the weekend celebration; 2. Marguerite Dresser P’16 with son Henry ’16; 3. John Guay ’09, Tucker Garfield ’09, Stefan Merriam ’09 and Danny Biega ’09; 4. Trustees David Leavy ’88 and Charlie Lynch ’86; 5. Hotchy Kiene ’94, Dan Son ’94, Matthew Tucker ’94, Scott Duncan ’94 and Alec Raday ’94.

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6 George Baker '96, T.J. Markey '05 and Dan Curtis '06; 7 Cheryl, Matthew '14, Adam '09 and David Kelsey; 8 Nate Carter '16 with parents David and Cheryl; 9 Chisholm '11 (Hon.) and Tracy Chandler P'17; 10 Students, alumni and parents show their Crimson Knight pride.

Fall/Winter 2014 SALISBURY MAGAZINE 23 The Jim Bates ’48 Run/Walk

Friends and family of Jim Bates ’48 were joined by more than 30 alumni, parents, students, faculty and friends on Saturday morning for the running of the Jim Bates ’48 run/walk. Science Instructor David Dodge took first place with an impres- sive time of 14:48. The first student to cross the finish line – and second overall – was Nick McCabe ’15 with a time of 17:08. Dan Curtis ’06 placed first in the alumni division – and fourth overal – with a time of 17:14, while Peter Daniel P’15 placed first in the par- ent division – and seventh overall – with an equally impressive time of 18:25. Instructor in Science and College Advisor Jamie Phinney placed first in the women’s division with a time of 20:58. And Jack Gottsegen had an extraordinary showing in the children’s division with a first place time – and eighth overall – of 19:35. Thanks goes to Michel Bienkowski, instructor in science and

head cross country coach, for helping to organize this race as we Members of the Bates Family: Jim Bates ’75, P’04, Dan Bliss, Sarah Bates with remembered the many contributions of husband, father, grandfa- husband Jason Dorn, Jody Bates Bliss, and Christina and Jonny Bates ’04 ther, teacher, coach, friend and mentor, Jim Bates. Below: A large group of alumni, parents, students, faculty and friends gathered for the annual run/walk.

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HONORING Former Faculty Member and Coach Bob Gardner P’70

Former Science Instructor Bob Gardner, beloved by hundreds of alumni for both his teaching and coaching, was recognized at a special gathering held in his honor to celebrate the establishment of the Bob Gardner Teaching Fel- lowship for the Sciences. “We often refer to faculty as ’difference makers,’” an- nounced Headmaster Chandler. “Men and women who dedicate their lives to the mission of Salisbury School. Bob was one of those difference makers. He faithfully served the School from 1952-1989, providing inspiration to more than 2000 students.” Throughout his 37 years on the Hilltop, Bob duties included chair on the Science Department, head football coach, head baseball 2 coach and director of summer school admissions. To date, over $300,000 has been raised in honor of this Salisbury . Henry Blair ’61, whose contribution was the lead gift in establishing the Gardner Fellowship, offered kind and inspiring remarks to his mentor and friend. Henry, a scientist and entrepreneur, is the founder of the Genzyme 4 Corportation and, later, Dyax. Bob offered humble closing remarks, commenting, “I believe it was a Bow- doin president who once said, ’You can have marble buildings, but if the teach- ing is wooden, it is the students who suffer.’ It is fellowships such as this that will allow Salisbury students to enjoy the very best teaching available…Salisbury will always be a part of me, and thankfully because of the generosity of Henry and many others, my name will continue to be a part of this School.” 3

The Bob Gardner Endowed Teaching Fellowship in the Sciences allows 1. Former Athletic Director Morgan Schafer (left) and wife Sandra Salisbury to attract and retain excellent teaching faculty. To support the pose with Bob Gardner and former Math Instructor Kiau Loi Gardner Fellowship, please contact Director of Development Dutch Barhydt (right). 2. Henry Blair ’61, Bob Gardner P’70 and Headmaster Chan- dler watch as Andrew Graham ’97, director of leadership giving, ([email protected]/860-435-5704) or Director of Leadership presents Bob with a framed list of teaching fellowship contribu- Giving Andrew Graham ’97 ([email protected]/860-435-5706). tors to date. 3. Instructor in Science Toby Ayer (standing on desk) conducts a physics experiment with Hank Wong ’14 for students, alumni and parents. 4. Henry Blair ’61

Fall/Winter 2014 SALISBURY MAGAZINE 25 Leadership Convocation with Eric Greitens

Navy SEAL, Rhodes Scholar, Draper Richard Fellow, Founder of “The Mission Continues” and best-selling author Eric Greitens was the featured keynote speaker at the weekend Leadership Convocation. Hailing from , Eric attended public schools and graduated from Duke Unversity, where he was selected as a Rhodes and Truman Scholar. He attended the , where he earned his Master’s degree and a Ph.D. Eric’s book of photographs and essays, “Strength All-School Meeting and and Compassion,” grew from his humanitarian work. Award Presentation He served as a volunteer in many of the world’s most impoverished and war-stricken countries including On Saturday morning, Headmaster Chandler presented Rwanda, Cambodia and Bosnia. alumnus Bryan Anthony ’64 with a special “That’s a Knight” He also served as a Navy SEAL officer Award for his longtime commitment to Salisbury. Bryan has and was deployed four times during the global war on made donations to the Annual Fund each and every year since terrorism. He has been recognized by the military with his graduation in 1964 – never missing a single one! “His numerous awards, including the Combat Action Rib- incredible generosity, each year, for a half century has touched bon, the , and the Bronze Star. each one of us,” announced the Headmaster. (For more on the In 2007, Eric used his combat pay from Iraq to start “That’s a Knight” Award, visit salisburyschool.org/that’s-a-knight) The Mission Continues, where he currently serves as President of the Alumni Association Peter Gross ’01 bestowed CEO. This organization challenges veterans to serve the Loyalty and Honor Awards. Open to all classes who have and inspire in communities across America. In 2013, not yet celebrated their 50th reunion, one award is given for Eric was named one of “TIME Magazine’s 100 Most total dollars raised and the other measures alumni participation Influential People.” in the Annual Fund. The Class of 1984 earned praise for total Eric’s best-selling book, “The Heart and the Fist: financial commitments and the Class of 2001 achieved the top The Education of a Humanitarian, The Making of a spot for alumni participation. Navy SEAL” shares his story of extraordinary leadership and service both as a humanitarian and warrior. He Pictured above: President of the Alumni Association Peter Gross ’01 presents the Loyalty and Honor Awards. Below: Bryan Anthony ’64 used the book, which was read by several English and becomes the first alumni recipient of the “That’s a Knight Award.” history classes at the School, as the basis for his inspir- ing lecture to our alumni, parents, students, faculty and staff and friends.

26 SALISBURY MAGAZINE Fall/Winter 2014 Sean Bowler ’02 (Hon.) / Kyle Miller ’01 Memorial Alumni Lacrosse Game

Alumni and parents came together to pay tribute to lives of former faculty member and lacrosse coach Sean Bowler ’02 (Hon.) and Kyle Miller ’01 while also celebrating the 10th anniversary of the 2004 Western New England Championship Lacrosse Team. Following the game, the dedication of a tree in Kyle’s memory was held. Former teammates and coaches shared favorite memories of the former Crimson Knight, who passed away in June 2013 after a long, courageous battle with cancer. Headmaster Chandler and Mike Bowler, father of Sean.

George Beavers III ’48, P'82 Bench Dedication

A bench at the Crimson Knight Picnic Area on Lake Washinee was dedicated in memory of loyal alumnus George Beavers III ’48, P’82. Remarks delivered by the headmaster, school chaplain, class- mate Dick Gillespie and son George Beavers IV ’82 allowed friends to fondly reminisce about the long- time class agent who will be sorely missed by many.

George Beavers ’82 and Dick Gillespie ’48 shared memories of George.

Fall/Winter 2014 SALISBURY MAGAZINE 27 Campaign Finale Cocktail Reception and Gala Dinner

The culmination of this celebratory weekend was the gala dinner. Alumni, parents and friends mingled on the Flood Athletic Center terrace as well as in the Class of 2009 Champi- onship Lounge. A scrumptious dinner buffet was served in The Class of 1959 Hockey Arena on Rudd Rink, which had been exquisitely transformed for this magical evening. 4 After the Gospel Choir led guests in singing the Sarum Hymn and School Chaplain Kirk Hall ’90 gave the evening’s blessing, Director of Development Dutch Barhydt officially kicked-off the festivities by welcoming guests to the historic evening. Webb Campbell ’14 delivered a heartfelt address as a representative of the student body.

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1. Webb Campbell ’14 with parents Ben and Karyn Campbell P’14; 2. Harney & Sons Teas graciously created a special blend as a favor for the campaign gala dinner. 3. Barbie Riegel P’84, GP'13 with son Dicky Riegel ’84, TR; 4. George Beavers ’82, former Director of Studies Susan DeMelle P’89, and Morgan Hertzan ’94; 5. Charlie Isen ’14 with parents Robert and Patty; 6. Peter Clifford ’74 with wife Sarah and family; 7. Nat ’56 and Lucy Day with Dan and Suzanne Cross P’15

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8. Tom Nicholson '64 and wife Cathy; 9. The Gilbert family: Mother Maureen and Max '17 with grandmother Mary Reardon and father Andrew; 10. von Finck '16 with parents Caroline and Gerhard; 11. Hal Bogardus '49 with Caroline and Jack Patten '49; 12. Joyce Schmitz with John Brooks '64 and wife Susan; 13. Eben MacNeille '94, Scott Duncan '94, Alec Raday '94 and Alex Ressi DiCervia '94; 14. The Wilcox family: Steven, Ben '15 and Nancy.

Fall/Winter 2014 SALISBURY MAGAZINE 29 Campaign Finale Cocktail Reception and Gala Dinner continued

The Presentation of Leadership Awards

“It is often said that a school is great because of its people,” The Headmaster’s Award opened Headmaster Chandler during the dinner presentation. This award celebrates an alumnus who has distinguished himself since “In Salisbury’s case this is especially true. It begins with the leaving the Hilltop and has endeavored to give back to Salisbury through students and their families who love them enough to let them his volunteer leadership. go and spend time on our Hilltop. It is the dedicated group of Noted Headmaster Chandler, “Since graduating from Salisbury thirty men and women who teach, coach and mentor our boys and years ago, this alumnus has not only endeavored to give back to Salisbury the men and women who take such splendid care of the boys through his volunteer leadership, he has set a standard as both an alumni in the dining hall, the dorms and around our safe and beauti- volunteer and as a parent volunteer. Wearing two hats simultaneously, ful campus. It is also those alumni and parents who, in addi- this loyal son of Sarum has spent his spare time calling both his class- tion to their own busy lives, volunteer to help us sustain our mates from the Class of 1984 and his fellow parents in the fourth form, mission. To all of these wonderful people, I offer our thanks.” inviting them to a deeper association with Sarum, and yes, asking them Following the acknowledgement of alumni and parent for their support!” volunteers in attendance, the headmaster went on to award “It is important to know that this gentleman is part of a three genera- the two highest volunteer leadership honors that the School tion Salisbury family. His father, William Bartlett, graduated in 1954, one awards, The Headmaster’s Award and the Salisbury Medal. son, Hugh, graduated in 2013, and another son, Will, is a member of the Class of 2016. This truly is a family affair, for his wife, Caroline, is no stranger at Salisbury parent and alumni events. “It gives me great please to award the 2014 Headmaster’s Award to Courtney J. Bartlett, Class of 1984.”

30 SALISBURY MAGAZINE Fall/Winter 2014 The Salisbury Medal Salisbury’s highest award is the Salisbury Medal, which is awarded annually to the man or woman whose loyalty and honor, service and devotion have perpetuated the goals and ideals of the School. “This year, we are honoring a Sarum son who has shared his volunteer leadership in many different ways, beginning with his own class, and then extending to his service to the Board of Trustees, as Chair of the Development Committee, Chair of the Committee on Trustees and as a member of the Board’s Executive Committee,” revealed the headmaster. “In these various roles, this leader not only perpetuated the goals of the school, he often set them, and then helped fulfill them. His leadership as Development Committee Chair during the historic For the Boys Campaign helped lead us all to this celebration tonight.” “While knowing this gentleman makes us all stand up taller and straighter, no one stands taller in the Salisbury commu- nity than this year’s Salisbury Medal winner, Dicky Riegel, from the Class of 1984.”

Fall/Winter 2014 SALISBURY MAGAZINE 31 AN HISTORIC MOMENT IN HILLTOP HISTORY

(L to R): Director of Development Dutch Barhydt, Webb Campbell ’14, Headmaster Chisholm Chandler, Board Chairman Michael Sylvester ’59, P’85, and Chair of the Development Committee Dicky Riegel’ 84, TR

At the completion of the awards presentations, growing excite- At this historic conclusion, confetti cannons erupted next ment filled the room. Board Chairman Michael S. Sylvester ’59, to the stage while Fleetwood Mac’s infamous hit, “Don’t Stop P’85 thanked everyone who helped make the special moment (Thinking About Tomorrow)” played over the sound system. possible – the more than 5,000 donors who made the School a The true celebration could now begin! Alumni and parents re- priority by supporting the For The Boys Campaign. He noted, “I joiced at the exciting news by heading into the basketball courts am humbled and thrilled that together we all have climbed this for desserts and dancing late into the evening. mountain, and now I can say it publically for the very first time, we have gone over the top!” He then asked the headmaster to report on the campaign num- bers to date. “Our goal was to secure from all sources – annual giving, leadership giving and deferred giving, $105,000,000,” de- clared Headmaster Chandler. “I am very pleased to report to the community that through May 10, 2014, we have raised a total of $107,353,698. This is extraordinary and historic, and each gift, regardless of size, is a commitment to Salisbury’s future. As head- master, I pledge that we will not rest on this amazing achievement that you have all made possible. Rather, we will honor your gen- erosity, as we honor our boys and the men and women who teach them, by using this moment as a means to grow even stronger for the generations yet to come to the Hilltop. While we are celebrat- ing the great work we have accomplished together today, we are so excited about tomorrow.”

32 SALISBURY MAGAZINE Fall/Winter 2014 Senator John McCain Sends SURPRISE Congratulatory Message TO ADD TO THE FESTIVE EVENING

Through a special connection with John and Linda Tavlarios P’16, FOR THE BOYS the School was honored that Senator John McCain, known for his CAMPAIGN NOW COMPLETE: character, leadership, and a deep belief in core values, sent a video congratulating Salisbury on its remarkable For The Boys campaign. SALISBURY SCHOOL RAISES A RECORD Said Senator McCain, “Salisbury’s solid reputation is known through- out the United States and around the world…your dedication to $108,477,083 character-based, all-boys boarding school education continues to be important in today’s fast-paced world…Congratulations on the highly successful conclusion of the For The Boys Campaign.” To As a community, Salisbury embraced the recently completed, ambitious campaign, and as a community, view the senator’s announcement in full, visit: salisburyschool.org/ exceeded the $105,000,000 goal by raising for-the-boys-finale $108,477,083 in gifts and pledges. New records were established in annual giving, leadership giving and deferred giving. More importantly, these generous gifts provide critical opportunities to our students and those who teach, coach and mentor them.

Since the inception of this campaign, more than 5,000 donors – our alumni, parents, faculty and staff, and friends – have supported the School’s mission and helped Salisbury:

n Raise The Salisbury Fund from $1,400,000 in 2008 to $2,089,129 in 2014, and raise The Salisbury Fund in six of the last seven years.

n Create seven (7) new Endowed Scholarships

n Create ten (10) new Endowed Funds

n Create four (4) new Endowed Teaching Fellowships

n Improve Salisbury through an ambitious Sixth Form Gift Program including:

Class of 2008 – Entrance to the Flood Athletic Center

Class of 2009 – Championship Lounge in the Flood Athletic Center

Class of 2010 – Wachtmeister Field Stadium Seating

Class of 2011 – Endowed Teaching Fellowship

Class of 2012 – Restoration & Renovation of Main Front Entrance

Class of 2013 - Global Classroom and Video “I pledge that we will not rest on this Conferencing Center amazing achievement that you have all Class of 2014 – North Dorm Restoration and Renovation made possible. Rather, we will honor your This is a tremendous list of accomplishments that together we generosity, as we honor our boys and the have made possible for the boys and for the men and women who teach them. On behalf of them, and all of us, thank you! men and women who teach them, by using this moment as a means to grow even To view a video of the For The Boys Campaign finale announcement, visit: stronger for the generations yet to come salisburyschool.org/for-the-boys/for-the-boys-finale Full details of this historic campaign will be featured in a special to the Hilltop.” – HEADMASTER Chisholm Chandler For The Boys Campaign Report coming soon!

Fall/Winter 2014 SALISBURY MAGAZINE 33 GATHERINGS

Alumni MOB Luncheon

April 8, 2014 • Host: Doreen Sanderson P'11

Front: Joanie Shoykhet P’11; Back: Maeve Shagrue P’12, Carla Edson P’13 , Doreen Sanderson P’11, Ashley Harrington P’13, Kay Booth P’11, Betsy Donovan-Nolan P’13, Elyse Brodie P’09, ’12, Director of Parent Programs Cherrie Collins, Alice Spencer P’09 and Kay Garner P’10

New York City Speakers Series

April 17, 2014 • HOST: George Baker '96

John Coleman ’77, Pat Gatling and Pierre duPont ’78 Bob Bell ’63, George Baker ’96, Michael Sylvester ’59, P’85, Lockwood Sloane '88 and Steve Farrelly ’88

Director of Development Dutch Barhydt, Guest Speaker Paul Teddy Callahan ’09, Headmaster Chisholm Chandler ’11 (Hon.), P’17, Assaiante and Carolyn McCall Dan Curtis ’06, David Wang ’10 and Eric Seitz ’09

34 SALISBURY MAGAZINE Fall/Winter 2014 GATHERINGS

Fishers Island

August 7, 2014 • Hosts: Teddy and Ashley Harrington P’13, TR

Tony Tremaine ’66 and Ashley Harrington P’13, TR Ned Harvey P’07 and George Hebard ’61 Norma Bartol and Woody Collins P’93, ’97

Gina Campbell GP'14, Barbie Riegel P’84, GP’13, Blandy Coty P’14 and Brooks Robinson ’13, Nick Coty ’14 and Ryan Castle ’14 Ashley Harrington P’13

David Harrington ’81, P’15 and Dicky Riegel ’84, TR Muffy Barhydt GP’16, Barbie Riegel P’84, GP’13, Ashley Harrington P’13 and Dean of Studies Hilary Barhydt

Fall/Winter 2014 SALISBURY MAGAZINE 35 CRIMSON KNIGHT ATHLETICS

Three-Peat for Varsity Baseball

In one of their best-played games of the 2014 season, Salisbury bested Berkshire 17-0 on May 18 to take home their third consecu- tive Western New England Prep Baseball League (WNEPBL) title. After Austin DeCarr ’14 struck out the final batter of the game, the team piled onto each other at midfield and then doused Head Coach John Toffey with the traditional Gatorade bath. It was a culmination of a season’s worth of hard work and dedication to the game of baseball that allowed the Knights to success- fully defend their crown. Noted Coach Toffey, “The varsity baseball team enjoyed a tremendously successful 2014 spring season finishing with a 21-0 league record and a third consecutive western New England title. Additionally, the 2014 team was invited to play in the perfect game high school invitational. Competing against teams throughout the country Salisbury advanced to the championship game. A total of eight boys are continuing their playing careers in college and two were drafted by the Yankees in June. I couldn’t be prouder of the boys!” Since 2010 the Varsity Baseball Team has won the WNEBL Championship four times.

Find out more about our Varsity Baseball Team here: H www.salisburyschool.org/varsity-baseball

MOBILE ALERTS Simply visit your favorite team’s page (example: Varsity Hockey) and hit the blue “alert” button. From here you will be prompted FOR YOUR FAVORITE to set your preferences.

CRIMSON KNIGHT TEAMS These alerts provide: n Reminders about upcoming games n Information on cancellations, postponements or time changes Can’t make it to the game? n Updates on scores and results Don’t be left out of the loop! It’s easy to stay in touch with the Crimson Knights! Contact the Communications Office at [email protected] should you need assistance.

36 SALISBURY MAGAZINE Fall/Winter 2014 CRIMSON KNIGHT ATHLETICS

Austin DeCarr ’14

Yankees Draft Two Crimson Knights Will Toffey '14

Right-hand pitcher Austin DeCarr ’14 was se- lected by the New York Yankees in the third round, the 91st overall pick of the 2014 MLB Draft. Base- ball America had ranked Austin 68th overall and 2nd in the state of Connecticut. His fastball had reached 97 mph during the Crimson Knights 2014 season which brought a lot of attention to this 6'3", 218 lb. pitcher’s game. Austin had committed to play at Clemson this year, but elected instead to sign with the Yankees. Ranked #353 overall and #4 in the state of Con- necticut by Baseball America, Will Toffey ’14 was selected by the Yankees in the 23rd round. Will was named 2013 and 2014 New England Prep Base- ball Player of the Year and was a WNEPL All Star 2012 – 2014. He was also a member of the Varsity Hockey Team; he served as co-captain in 2014 and won hockey championships in 2013 and 2014. This 6'2", 195 lb. infielder is currently a freshman at Vanderbilt University.

Fall/Winter 2014 SALISBURY MAGAZINE 37 CRIMSON KNIGHT ATHLETICS

Kudos To … Ty Thompson ’10, who capped his Brian Gibbons ’07, who played at UAlbany lacrosse career by earning a center for the Penguins in place on the All-American East Second the 2014 Stanley Cup Finals. Prior to Team. This was his second year with turning professional, Brian played for all – conference recognition after being four seasons at Boston College. On one of the top shooters in the league. July 4, 2014, Brian left the Penguins He scored in every game for UAlbany organization as a free agent and signed this year, including five – goal perfor- a one-year, two way contract with the mances against Syracuse Columbus Blue Jackets. and UMass and five points against UMBC. UAlbany played in the 2014 NCAA Tournament.

High Point University Senior Garrett Swaim ’10, who was an All – Atlantic © Harvard Athletic Communications (Gil Talbot) Sun Second Team selection in 2014.

its first since 2006. The team ended the season with its highest national ranking in program history at #11.

Dylan Brodie ’12 and John Hib- bard ’13, members of the Hobart Col- lege second varsity eight, who earned a Bronze Medal at the ECAC National Lacrosse defenseman Ryan Ham- Rowing Championships. Brodie Merrill ’01 (above), who won ilton ’13 (above), a sophomore at Williams College, who was named All gold at the World Lacrosse Champion- Stetson Infielder Patrick Mazeika – NESCAC First Team, New England ships in July. This was the third champion- ’12, who was named to the Capital One Intercollegiate Lacrosse Association ship for Canada, who also won in 1978 Academic All – District IV First Team. He (NEILA) Second Team, and earned the and 2006. boasts a 3.56 GPA in Sports Management. Eastern College Athletic Conference (ECAC) Division III New England Mens’s Lacrosse Team Second Team All – Star Honors. Competing in all 17 contests, Ryan was a key player on the Ephs’ defense this season. He recorded 16 caused turnovers and collected 21 ground balls.

Midfielder Brian O’Toole ’10 (above © Clarkson Creative right), who helped Harvard’s men’s University men’s lacrosse lacrosse team win its first Ivy League team senior goalkeeper Jamie Faus ’10 Championship since 1990, with a 5-1 (above), for his First Team All-Big East conference record. With this regular recognition. UD captured the Big East season title, the Crimson earned the Championship, where Jamie earned right to host the Ivy League Tourna- ment, where it advanced to the final All-Tournament Team honors, and Tommy D’Antonio ’14 (above), a free for the second time in program history. made it to the Final Four in National safety who earned a spot on the Liberty The feat helped earn Harvard an at- Championship. League’s Weekly Honor Roll on Septem- large berth to the NCAA tournament,

38 SALISBURY MAGAZINE Fall/Winter 2014 CRIMSON KNIGHT ATHLETICS

ber 22. Tommy led the Hobart defense Senior Wing Gunnar Hughes ’11, with a career – high six tackles, all solo, who will captain the 2014-2015 St. against the Curry Colonels. Lawrence University men’s hockey team. Gunnar scored five goals and Come by the had 13 assists last season and has played in 109 career games with 16 Flood Athletic Center goals and 35 assists for 51 points. He has five career game-winning goals this winter to see your for the Saints. favorite Crimson Knight Two players from the Varsity Football 2010 Championship Team team in action! served as team captains this fall at their colleges…Jay Fabien ’11 at Wesleyan University and Jake Mauro www.salisburyschool.org/athletics—calendar ’11 at Monmouth University. Michael O’Leary ’16 (above), who represented Canada on the White Should you have news to share with the Roster at the 2014 World Under-17 Athletic Department, please forward it to [email protected]. Hockey Challenge in Sarnia, Ont. Michael’s former Salisbury roommate, Griffin Luce ’16, competed as a mem- ber of the U.S. U17 National Team.

Bucknell junior Ryan Frazier (right), who has been elected a team captain for the 2014 – 2015 basket- ball season. He averaged 4.2 points per game in 2013 – 2014 and had 10 against Kent State and Boston University. A management major, Ryan is also an active member of the Bucknell Bison Leadership Academy and has been a member of the Patriot League Academic Honor Roll.

Be sure to visit the “Athletic News” page of the website for the latest updates about alumni college athletes and those playing for professional teams.

www.salisburyschool.org/athletic-news

Fall/Winter 2014 SALISBURY MAGAZINE 39 40 SALISBURY MAGAZINE Fall/Winter 2014 Graduation

Photos by John LaPerch, Danielle Sinclair and Brian Wilcox

Seniors enjoyed their final days on the Hilltop throughout the May 29-30 graduation festivities. Highlights included the Sixth Form vs. the Faculty Softball Game (the boys won!), honoring academic and extracurricular achievements at the Class of 2014 Awards Ceremony, posing on the Carl Williams Terrace for the class photo, and worshiping with family and friends in Langdon Chapel at the baccalaureate service. But perhaps the best, and certainly most bittersweet, moment was watching these boys march into the Quadrangle one final time as a class. The pure joy and pride on their faces were priceless!

Fall/Winter 2014 SALISBURY MAGAZINE 41 GRADUATION

Just prior to handing showing great promise. Big Nick from Toronto; Texas and Washington State; out diplomas, the the west coast (minus all the hair, of and from Denver to Boston. We even headmaster addressed course) and three little brothers named got an angel from South named the soon-to-be graduates. Will, Rex, and Joey joined in. Still, Jesus. What a crew, this Class of 2014. there is a reason why the adjective “You all have made this a very special “It has a long time since we sophomoric is used at times in a not-so time at Salisbury. You have worked began this journey together. Do you flattering way. Let’s just say you needed hard to make us a family. And you have remember sitting together in the chapel a little more seasoning. made your mark in many important on the first day of your third form year. “The fall of 2012 brought us 24 ways. Trust that the light in the cupola Can you remember that far back? Can additional Knights for our proverbial that sits atop of Main will shine you remember what it felt like? Roundtable, from Baker to Wong. brightly throughout your lives and will “Twenty-nine of you were there … Add two guys named Robinson. Twin lead you back to the Hilltop in the from Appleby to Wong. Hamden, CT, brothers named Smith. A K.J. and a years to come. to Beijing, China, and so many places T.J. A talented bunch they were … “As each of you moves on to the next in between. Throw in two guys named seeking to use their last two years chapter of your education and life, we Harrison, Angelo from Namibia, and a of secondary school to shape their trust that you always remember that brash young kid named Rudi from the future. Trusting Salisbury was the Salisbury boys are gentlemen, first and Main Line, and we were off and running! place to do this. You all fit in well. The foremost. Until your last breath on this “This class already had some spunk. brotherhood piece makes that happen earth, you are a Salisbury gentleman. What a joy it has been to watch you grow! naturally and easily. Come one, come “Thank you for your love, your hard “There were some interesting room- all. But by the fall of 2012, we could work, your partnership, your humor, mate combos that first year. And nightly tell this class was going to be great in your patience, and your exemplary wrestling in the common room in Ward many respects. character. Congratulations!” was a constant source of fun and intrigue. “And finally, this past September, “The next fall, 25 new stalwarts 22 new boys arrived to make this class joined the class. You were bigger and whole. And you came from all over – “stronger, and the Class of 2014 was From Bangkok to Madrid; Chicago and 42 SALISBURY MAGAZINE Fall/Winter 2014 Retiring Senior Master and excel. To make those around you better, Instructor in English and Economics happier and safer. Ralph Menconi ’84 (Hon.) gave the “We expect you to live your life well; commencement address and School To make a difference in all that you President Blake Owens ’14 delivered do. Take special care of your family and Look to your left remarks on behalf of the Class of 2014. friends. You’ll find that there is nothing and to your right Several distinguished service awards more precious on this earth than family were also presented. and friends. while you still have After awarding the diplomas “Now, do me one last favor. the chance. Lock and personally congratulating each “Look to your left and to your right graduate, the headmaster gave a few while you still have the chance. Lock arms with your final words of advice as follows. arms with your mates. Memorize the mates. Memorize faces of your classmates. Youthful and “Gentlemen, it is finally time to spry. Confident. Excited about the the faces of your bid farewell. possibilities that lie ahead. Look deep classmates. Youthful “For weeks, you have been waiting into the faces of your dearest friends. to get out of here! To put this Hilltop Your brothers. It might be some time and spry. Confident. in your rearview mirror. Well, that before you see then again. Time moves Excited about the time has finally come. And, it is indeed quickly. Take a final glance around. time for you to leave us. The real truth “There is an old Scottish proverb possibilities that lie is you have outgrown this place. This I rather like. It goes like this: “Some ahead. Look deep nest finally has become too small and people come into our lives and quickly cramped. And you all need is to test go. Others stay awhile, make footprints into the faces of your you wings. The wings that we have on our hearts, and we are never, ever dearest friends. Your helped develop in you. the same. “Your parents and teachers have “May the brotherhood you have been brothers. It might be played a huge role in making today a part of here live forever in your heart. some time before reality. Your friends, too. You have been Remember always that you are Salisbury you see them again. given so much by so many. men. You came to us as boys, but boys “Remember what you have heard in you are no longer. ’A band of brothers.’ Time moves quickly. the chapel so often, To whom much is Sarum brothers. Take one final glance given, much is expected. “Godspeed, men. I love you guys!” “Armed with that diploma and the around. core values etched in your soul, you To view or purchase photos from now fly out into the world to make the ceremony, visit: good. To love. To care. To inspire. To http://salisburyschool.smugmug.com – Headmaster Chandler

Fall/Winter 2014 SALISBURY MAGAZINE 43 GRADUATION

Commencement Address by Senior Master Ralph Menconi ’84 (Hon.)

Introduction by Chisholm S. Chandler ’11 (Hon.), P’17, Headmaster

“It is a great honor to introduce It is an honor today’s graduation speaker. Ralph Menconi is truly a remarkable man and we are blessed to know him as a friend to be up here today. and colleague.

“Forty-three years ago, he answered the call to come to this hilltop to teach English. Salisbury was I was a little nostalgic and wistful last evening when we heard that the in dire need of a bright, young mind to serve and sixth form parents have nearly completed raising the funds to refurbish inspire the boys. That was the summer of 1971. North Dorm up here to my left. “In the 43 years since, Salisbury has been blessed I say nostalgic because I lived there in my early days at Salisbury and with your incredible talents and uncommon dedication. Truth be told, it is not the raw number remember its medieval charm of gloomy hallways and primitive plumbing of years of service that is so stunning. Rather, it is that greeted a new teacher just arriving on campus in September 1971. the richness of his service, the versatility he has The headmaster at that time, Ed Ward, said that I could choose either demonstrated, and the impact that he has had on South Dorm or North as the first arrival that fall, and I chose North hundreds of students and faculty colleagues. because of its large room and better view. “Mr. Menconi has served in so many key roles in I say “wistful” because I wonder how it would be if I came back in support of the boys and the School including lead- ing both English and Economics Departments as the fall of 2015 to see how your gifts will have changed the place for the chairman; serving as the first and only holder of better. Thank you on behalf of new, young teachers and students who the James A. Carter Chair for the Senior Master; will enjoy North’s future charms. working as the School’s archivist (1990-2001); as a When I was asked by Mr. Chandler in the spring to give the graduation member and secretary of the Cum Laude Society; as a dorm parent for 35 years in North Dormitory address, at first I thought I might spend some time mentioning how (1971-1975) and in Priestman Cottage (1975-2004); Graduation has changed over the years I have been here. Then I realized that as a founder coach of the vaunted paddle tennis wouldn’t be very interesting because it actually hasn’t changed that much. It’s team (1981-2006); as an important historian for the a very traditional ceremony, full of energy and emotion and good feeling, School, guiding “The Pillar” as advisor, editor and photographer (1978-2010); and, finally, in perhaps that has occurred in this nearly every time in my career. one of your most influential roles, as a champion In 1988, we started here, but had to decamp in disarray to the “old of Salisbury Summer School, for which you served gym,” named the Myers Gym, mid-way through because of a sudden as a faculty member for more than 30 years and as rain shower. That was a bit chaotic as you can imagine. the director from 2003-2012. Then 16 years later in 2004, it rained all day and we held Graduation in the “It takes a very special person to give, as you have, hot and stuffy sports dome. After that, we have gathered here in the Quad so thoughtfully and so loyally for what is, in reality, a lifetime. What a gift to us all. under a great elm tree that eventually succumbed and left us in the sun. The only other difference that I can recall is that Graduation used to “Perhaps one of your most endearing qualities is your humility, making you a true Salisbury man. be called Anniversary Day, a name that puzzled me for years and I’m glad You are unheralded and happy to duck the praise we changed it. you deserve, preferring to lead a quiet and unas- Last weekend, it dawned on me what a challenge it would be to speak- suming life of service to others. For 43 years, you ing to so many different groups at the same time today: Current students have sought to make us a better school commu- nity. You have endeavored to help boys grow into and graduates, parents and family, and faculty colleagues with distin- accomplished and successful young men. You are guished trustees, each of whom has varied impressions and feelings about an incredible human being, and this community is these ceremonies on the last day of the school year. forever in your debt. By “current students” I am referring to the fifth formers that lined “As he ascends to the podium, please join me in the procession as it wound its way from the chapel to the Quadrangle. recognizing today’s graduation speaker, Senior I have to believe that they are thinking ahead to their own graduation Master Mr. Ralph Menconi.” ceremony one year from now, and how much lies ahead for each of them to accomplish before that day arrives. continued on page 46

44 SALISBURY MAGAZINE Fall/Winter 2014 Fall/Winter 2014 SALISBURY MAGAZINE 45 Don’t worry, guys in the back, your public school system, the same level of getting an education. day will come and it will come faster of energy, enthusiasm and dedication Yet besides skills in reading, writing, than you can ever imagine. I don’t to students and finding solutions to math, languages, the sciences, you expect that I’ll be here one year from challenges are found in our faculty at should also have learned to handle today, but you will, and you’ll be sitting Salisbury, where, as you may know, setbacks as well as embrace success. up front just as charged up as today’s only a small number have decided to During your time here there have been seniors are. pursue other paths as this year ends, in disappointments – grades that didn’t Parents and family members, it must line with the trend that the Education meet your expectations, team or club be that you are feeling great pride today Department reported. rosters that you didn’t make, college as your sons, or grandsons or brothers We have seen at Salisbury an impres- acceptances that didn’t come through. have come to the successful comple- sive number of new courses, teaching When things don’t cut the way you tion of study on what I like to call styles and experimental programs that want them to, that’s when you show “this verdant hilltop.” Maybe you are show, while our school may be small by what you are made of. That’s when you also feeling a tinge of regret when you some standards, and somewhat isolated show strength of character. realize that you probably won’t be back from major centers of culture and As you heard in chapel a few weeks here very often, and if you do return, it learning, that same level of innovation ago, there is one, or maybe more than will be for another reason than to watch and imagination can emanate from the one teacher, advisor, coach, or dorm your son play in a game and go out to Wachtmeister-Bates Math and Science proctor whom you owe a lot to, for dinner, or to meet his teachers. Building or Centennial Hall, or the inspiring you, for helping you when And then there is another large group Ruger Arts Center or Seifert Theater as you were in trouble, for setting you on a here, my faculty colleagues, who may be from bigger institutions. possible career path. looking not only with a bit of wonder Now, to the Graduating Class of 2014, Graduates, at some point soon, either and even amazement as well as pride, at there has to be a great deal of pride in as we say good bye today or in future the results of their years of hard work what you’ve done, and anticipation as you contacts, be sure to let that teacher with the graduating sixth formers. look ahead. But this is the last and final know of his or her importance to you In a piece written by Roosevelt that I time the whole class will gather together, while you were here. read during the past winter, he referred and there is sadness in doing anything for There is nothing more gratifying for to teaching as “one of the five learned the last time. a teacher to hear than that he or she has professions,” along with law, medicine, the Look around you and see not only made a lasting difference in the lives of ministry and military leadership. your close friends whom you are probably individual students. All five of these professions, wrote Mr. sitting next with, but be conscious of all When the time comes for you to Roosevelt, are devoted to the public good the members of your class who are shar- make a choice of a career, whether it’s and benefit, rather than just earning a living. ing these moments with you. one of those five learned professions That is the decision all of our You have made some deep that I talked about earlier or something own teachers at Salisbury as well as friendships during your years at this else, I want you to remember the advice educators across the U.S. have made for school which will endure for years. At of a very smart man, a former physics their lives: to work for the public good Reunion Weekends, I am always struck teacher at Salisbury, Bob Gardner who and benefit. with how many Salisbury graduates was here a few weeks ago. The much acclaimed poet, have remained close for years after they In his own informal way, Bob told a playwright, actress, and human rights have moved on from here. This will physics class, “Whatever you decide to do icon Maya Angelou, who died this happen with you, too. with your life, make sure it’s something week, always said that her role as a With a friend you feel a special com- that you like doing because you’re going to teacher was most meaningful to her. patibility, and a freedom to communicate be doing it for a long time…” A headline in “The and understand that does not exist with I said at the beginning that I had Journal” caught my eye last April. It others. “He is my friend” is a powerful many different groups to speak to read: “YOUNG TEACHERS STICK statement, wrote another U.S. President, today. I had a few words for the fifth AROUND.” The article reported on Jimmy Carter in one of his books. formers out back, then something for “A new generation of teachers who love As you, the graduates of 2014 leave the parents, even more for the faculty, their profession, and have chosen to Salisbury, you are taking with you a and more to come for the seniors who stay in teaching during one of the most body of knowledge and skills that will are graduating. tumultuous periods of U.S. education.” benefit you in whatever you do with Yet there is one group I haven’t men- Although this story focused on the your life. This is one of the basic goals tioned. It’s actually not a group by any

46 SALISBURY MAGAZINE Fall/Winter 2014 definition but it’s one person only: Me and with an honorary class membership, my connections to the Class of 2014. and by a Dramatics Society prize in Because I was away from school for my name, a school holiday, and other most of the winter and spring getting my celebrations on and off campus for house on the Cape ready, doing eldercare which I am truly grateful. for my 92 year-old mother, and also I saw an interview with Derek Jeter in getting more involved with several non- the “Cape Cod Times” back at the start profit organizations that I am working of the season, and the headline read as with, I did not get to know all members follows: “JETER: YOU CAN’T DO of the graduating class equally well. THIS FOREVER.” When Derek said But what I do know from my contact “you” I could see him pointing at me with this class is a series of “Bests,” at least as well as referring to himself. We both for me: figured out when the time was right to My sixth form English class on move on to something else before we detective and mystery literature was the are too old to enjoy it. best elective class I have had in years, and Before I close, I want to share with In his own informal I really missed them while I was away. you some notes I have from a talk by way, Bob told Adam Baughman ’14 had the best Carl Williams, a longtime math teacher grade ever on my fall term exam in and ski coach at Salisbury. Carl passed a physics class, economics, getting 100, and I think away a couple of years ago and the terrace “Whatever you School President Blake Owen ’14 had overlooking the valley is named for him. an almost equal score when he took the When he was seriously ill, I visited decide to do with class last year. Carl and we talked about “the five your life, make As you heard me say up here senses,” not the usual hearing, seeing, yesterday, Alec Grant ’14 was the best tasting, etc., but five othersenses that are sure it’s something president I have worked with in the actually life skills that I will pass along that you like doing history of the Student Investment Club. to you now. because you’re going And my only sixth form advisee, Have a sense of humor – laugh at Premanan Chaisina ’14, known as Yong, yourself before you laugh at others. to be doing it for a had the best score and won the Physics Have a sense of excitement – see Bowl, a national test in that subject. long time… new places, meet new people, keep And, by the way, that was the best on learning. Graduation processional march this morning than I can remember in years. Have a sense of enthusiasm for all Good job! you do – don’t hold back. Now I’ve never been known Have a sense of responsibility – particularly as a sports guy, but there is learn from both your successes and one sports hero that I have begun to feel your failures. some common connections with: That Have a sense of involvement – don’t is someone you all probably know, Derek have “nothing to do,” never let your- Jeter, the longtime Yankees shortstop. self be bored. Derek, like me, spent most of his And last, you need a “little bit of professional career working for the same luck,” as the song goes. Be at the organization because he wanted to and right place at the right time. found great satisfaction there. He loves the New York Yankees, just as I feel the As you start the next phase of your same way about this school. life after Salisbury, I wish all of you in Derek has had a series of send-offs and the Class of 2014 that good luck! cheering crowds at each stadium they go to, just as I’ve had sort of long goodbye Thank you and goodbye Salisbury! here at Salisbury in the last month. I’ve been honored by the alumni

Fall/Winter 2014 SALISBURY MAGAZINE 47 GRADUATION

48 SALISBURY MAGAZINE Fall/Winter 2014 Student Address by School President Blake Owens ’14

Good morning. As Gabriel Conroy from James I believe our purpose … is to find a Joyce’s “Dubliners” would put it, I have purpose. Throughout the course of our been asked to “perform a very pleasing lives, we ought to strive to cement our task but a task for which I am afraid place in society. Gentlemen, it starts my poor powers as a speaker are all too now. We are on the brink of adulthood inadequate” (“The Dead”). and it’s time to step up. No longer will I would like to dedicate this speech we be known by what our parents do to my grandfather, the toughest man or by what our families did. It is time I have ever met. He suffered from a to forge our own identities. It is time to stroke several years ago, and has just let the world know who the Salisbury recently endured three more. And he School Class of 2014 is. When I look could still, without a doubt, kick my out at the Class of 2014, I see future ass. I’m actually not sure if I’m allowed engineers, doctors, businessmen, and to say that, so I apologize. much more … you will all be integral I would like to tell you that I have parts of the global community. We all been preparing for this moment all have the potential to make a difference, year; but, in truth, I only first start- it may be a small impact or it may be ing thinking about it during one of one thing consists of … consistence. a large impact. Either way, any bit of my AP tests a few weeks ago. After I And it’s that we’re all battling fear” (21 positive influence is a step in the right finished a section early, I proceeded Pilots, “Car Radio”). But … what is it direction for society. So, my fellow to write a rough draft directly on the exactly that we fear? Loneliness? Rejec- graduates, I will tell you that “there are exam booklet. I initially struggled with tion? Our loss of freedom? Of identity? 7,164,000,000 “people on this planet, the topic of this speech, but after some Personally, as I hinted at earlier, I fear and we [should] have the audacity to deep contemplation, I realized the topic inadequacy. I fear that I will never think we matter” (Watsky, “Tiny Glow- was lying right before me. We have live up to my expectations as a son, a ing Screens, pt. 2”). Because we … we been blessed with the all-encompassing grandson, a brother, a scholar, a friend. are Salisbury gentlemen. power of thought; it is what sets us However, I can say that we all have a When I sat by grandfather’s hospital apart from all other creatures. If I common fear, and that is the fear of liv- bed last month, he gave me a few words cannot captivate you on this spring ing a life without purpose. At the end of advice; “Always say you’re sorry, even morning, my one wish is to leave you of the road, we all want to look back if it’s not your fault,” and “never be all in thought, because it is truly one of and see that we lived a life worth living. afraid to say I love you.” And at that our unique, defining abilities as human “There are 7,164,000,000 people point in time I saw something that I beings. Nearly every night this year, on this planet, and most of us have the thought would never happen … I saw I found myself stuck in thought as I audacity to think we matter” (Watsky, my grandfather cry. Mind you this is would lie in bed at night. On average, “Tiny Glowing Screens, pt. 2”). So, the same man who would get into a it would take me three, four or five and what is it that breaks us from this per- fight with someone if they so much as sometimes even up to six hours to fall petual state of being that we call daily gave him the wrong look or honked asleep. As I would lie there, motionless, life? Simply put, what is our purpose at him at a stop sign. He was known staring at the ceiling, “I would ponder here on this earth? To be honest, I do by our family friends as the “Mal- of something terrifying. I found that not know … heck I don’t think any boro Man,” not only for his smoking over the course of our human existence, of us truly know. All I can say is that habits but for his calm, cool and tough

Fall/Winter 2014 SALISBURY MAGAZINE 49 GRADUATION

demeanor. This man literally embodies the idea of what it more. We have proven that we are resilient. We have braved means to be tough. But … at this moment of weakness, even the mightiest of challenges, namely: Mr. Russell’s rigorous AP a man such as my grandfather succumbed to the realization U.S. History class; outrageously extended sit down meals for that he had left stones unturned. He said he wants to spend athletic awards; Mr. Chamberlain’s mind-numbing AP Calcu- more time with my grandmother and less time building his lus tests; and, of course, who could forget Mr. Procter Smith’s precious cars. In broader terms, he wants to enjoy the re- notoriously lengthy, albeit entertaining, school meeting mainder of his life by righting all of his wrongs. As I sat there announcements, in subzero weather. So, on this day of great weeping by his side as he experienced this epiphany, I, too, accomplishment, let us look back at our time at Salisbury. Let shared this moment of realization. Who knows how much us remember the strangers you once met, who are now the longer my grandfather has? Who knows how much longer brothers sitting beside you. Let us remember our teachers, any of us have? With that in mind, we must live every day to our advisors, and all of those who shed light upon our paths the fullest. We must ensure that the ones we hold dearest to and gave us guidance. But … also let us look forward into the our hearts know that we love them. And, like my grandfather future, with the knowledge we have acquired from this institu- said, we should say sorry even if it’s not our fault. If swal- tion, to ensure that we all live a life worth living. lowing your pride and saying sorry saves a relationship or a In conclusion, I’d like to leave you with a quote from the friendship, then so be it. After all, life is the most fleeting of man himself, an urban philosopher just before our time, Tupac entities, so precious and so extraordinarily fragile. Shakur; “My mama used to tell me: ’If you can’t find some- I’m sure most of you are questioning the interconnected- thin’ to live for, you best find somethin’ to die for.” Gentle- ness of this speech or its relationship to graduation. But like I men, find your purpose, whatever it may be, and leave no said before, I want you all to think … to reflect on your lives. stones unturned. We did it boys. It is our day. Carpe Diem. Especially the Class of 2014, we have time on our side. We may be young, but have endured years of Saturday classes, no girls, a strict dress code, nightly study hall and much, much

50 SALISBURY MAGAZINE Fall/Winter 2014 Awards First Scholar of the Sixth Form Jack Ward DEPARTMENTAL DISTINCTIONS

Arts Connor O’Hara Mathematics Adam Baughman Evan Smith Avery Baker Blake Owens Premanan Chaisena Duncan Jones Mitchell Smith Angelo Tilahun William Shaw Siyang Chen Rudolf Laveran Henry Thornton Jonathan Spaan Quan Do Thomas Lindsay Angelo Tilahun Dramatic Arts Jack Ward Dong Hyun Kim Mackenzie Morrison John Vantine Aidan Appleby Hank Wong Seung Hyun Kim Connor O’Hara Jesus Velazco Jack Brobston Joseph McGlone Evan Smith Dayuan Wang Hieu Duc Bui Entrepreneurial Mackenzie Morrison Mitchell Smith Jack Ward John Di Caro Studies Andrew Murnane William Toffey Hank Wong Seung Hyun Kim Ryan Castle Blake Owens Ziyan Liu Matthew Kelsey Duc Pham Science World Languages Joseph McGlone Nacho Sanchez Avery Baker Dong Hyun Kim Visual Arts Evan Smith Premanan Chaisena Nicholas Kurty Ryan Castle History Mitchell Smith Quan Do Joseph McGlone John Shaw Derek Barach Zimo Tao Dimitrios Floros Taylor Ogan Zimo Tao Dimitri Floros Jack Ward Koji Gormezano Neil Robinson Koji Gormezano Hank Wong Dong Hyun Kim English Matthew Kelsey Harrison Luce Adam Baughman Dong Hyun Kim Music Eric Macy Premanan Chaisena Joseph McGlone Joseph McGlone Joseph McGlone Quan Do Andrew Murname Jared Mintzlaff Harrison Luce Blake Owens Philosophy Mackenzie Morrison Joseph McGlone Neil Robinson & Religion Nacho Sanchez Jared Mintzlaff William Shaw Aidan Appleby John Shaw Mackenzie Morrison Avery Baker William Shaw

Fall/Winter 2014 SALISBURY MAGAZINE 51 GRADUATION

COURSE AWARDS MULTIPLE COURSE AWARDS “Awarded by departments and their teachers to sixth formers who have excelled in individual courses throughout the academic year.” Adian Appleby Jared Mintzlaff Philosophy & Religion Sixth Form English and Physics Art Science and Cognitive Neuroscience Pottery & Sculpture AP Environmental Science Jack Ward Duncan Jones William Shaw Avery Baker The Novel as History, AP Jazz Ensemble and Chemistry and Physics Studio Forest Science Philosophy & Religion John Shaw Steven Ross Angelo Tilahun Rudolf Laveran Joseph McGlone Woodworking Geology AP Microeconomics, Sixth Form William Montgomerie Denzel Knight English, Modern China and Jonathan Clark AP Physics Rock Ensemble William Toffey Premanan Chaisena

English World Languages English Department Prize French III Honors for Excellence in Writing Mackenzie Morrison Blake Owens AP French V Neil Robinson History AP Latin Civil Rights Rudolf Laveran accepts the Leland Rhodes ’86 Fellowship Award Dong Hyun Kim Henry di Bonaventura Mandarin I MAJOR ACADEMIC AWARDS Modern China Jesus Velazco Brian Lee John DiCaro The Josephine Bauman Rudd Prize 20th Century Global Issues Awarded to: Webb Campbell and Ziyan Liu Mandarin III Harrison Luce Rex Rubin Given in memory of Josephine Bauman Rudd, English and Reading teacher (1947-1972), and awarded to that sixth former Mandarin IV Mathematics who, during his time at Salisbury, has shown the greatest improve- Seung Hyun Kim AP BC Calculus ment in English composition. Taylor Ogan Quan Hoang Do Spanish III Honors The Harold Corbin Prize AP Statistics Minh Hoang Nguyen Awarded to: Mackenzie Morrison and Henry Thornton Andrew Murnane Spanish IV Honors Given in memory of Harold Corbin, master of English and Ziyan Liu founder of the Salisbury Summer School, this prize is awarded to Music that sixth former who has demonstrated the greatest devotion to Jazz History intellectual growth in both writing and thought and a zealous love Mason Koppens for learning the mysteries of life through literature.

The Jones Art Prize Awarded to: Avery Baker Given in memory of G. Lewis Jones, father of Andrew C.L. Jones ’74 and awarded to that sixth former who by vote of the Arts faculty has done the most to foster and enrich the Arts at Salisbury.

52 SALISBURY MAGAZINE Fall/Winter 2014 The Helene K. Bracken Economics Prize Awarded to: Webb Campbell Given through the generosity of the late Helene K. Bracken in honor of David Carter, Class of 1994, for excellence in the study of Economics.

The Reifsnyder Prize Awarded to: Joseph McGlone Given through the generosity of Peter Weeks ’68, in memory of William A. Reifsnyder, English teacher of Shakespearean studies from 1966 to 1971, awarded to that sixth former who, during his Salisbury career, best demonstrates through The Richard Fromberg Award is presented to Jesus Velazco writing, recitation, and research an appreciation for the works of William Shakespeare.

Extra-curricular Prizes

The James H. Bates Public Speaking Prize Awarded to: Charles Isen Awarded to the boy who displays the best public speaking skills, this prize is given in honor of James H. Bates, Class of 1948. As a student, Jim was secretary and president of the Leland Rhodes ’86 Fellowship Award recipient Daniel Cone Advocates, the School’s public speaking honor society, in 1947 and 1948 respectively. He was voted first orator, the School’s The Colin Conroy ’95 Outstanding Actor Award top public speaker in his senior year. For over 45 years, Jim Awarded to: Ziyan Liu used, among his many talents, his speaking skills to enhance Given in memory of Colin Conroy to the member of the the school and enrich the lives of countless young men as an graduating class who has demonstrated the best ability. alumnus, trustee and faculty member. The Pillar Prize The Lawrence Music Prize Awarded to: Premanan Chaisena Awarded to: Joseph McGlone Awarded to that student who has contributed the most to the This prize is awarded in memory of Louise Harkness Lawrence design and publication of the Yearbook. (1956-1973), sister of Robert L. Lawrence ’71 and James Perry Lawrence ’73. Lisa shared all too briefly her love of music and Student Investment Club her infectious joy and spirit. Awarded to: Alec Grant Formed in 2011 to provide a means of preparation for the The Key Society Award business world. Awarded to: Daniel Cone and Taylor Ogan

This prize is awarded to that student who has led and orga- Red Cross Blood Drive Volunteers nized the Key Society during the academic year. Scholarships Awarded to: Aidan Appleby and Henry Thornton As part of the Red Cross’s “Bob’s High School Heroes Scholarship The Drama Prize Program,” Salisbury School is lauded for coming in second place Awarded to: Jack Brobston for participation in the state of Connecticut. Furthermore, two Awarded each year to the member of the Salisbury community sixth formers have won $1,000 scholarships for outstanding who has shown the strongest interest and talent in dramatics. leadership and commitment to the American Red Cross blood program and hospital patients in need.

Fall/Winter 2014 SALISBURY MAGAZINE 53 GRADUATION

Major Athletic Awards The Garrison Miller Crimson Knight Award played in at least two varsity sports, and who, by his enthusi- Awarded to: Harrison Feldman asm, sense of humor, and hard work, has inspired others on Given in memory of Garrison Miller, Class of 1977, and the team to greater effort. awarded to that member or members of the Sixth Form who through his spirit, energy and sportsmanship has supported The Frank Garfield Award the entire Salisbury School Athletic Department. Awarded to: William Montgomerie Given in honor of Frank Garfield, Salisbury’s athletic trainer The Matthew B. Corkery Athletic Award and friend from 1972 to 1989, and awarded by vote of the Awarded to: Ryan Castle, Daniel Cone, Scott Hovey, Brian varsity coaches to that student who has overcome injury and Lee, Joseph McGlone and John Shaw come back to contribute to the athletic program. Given to those sixth formers who have made a significant contribution at the varsity level for all three seasons of their The Robert Gardner Athletic Award final year at Salisbury School. Awarded to: John Shaw Given in honor of Robert Gardner, science teacher and coach The Joseph A. Sartori Award from 1952 to 1989, and awarded by the varsity coaches to Awarded to: Scott Hovey that student who has shown the most satisfactory develop- Given in memory of Joseph Sartori, and awarded by vote ment as an athlete during his years at Salisbury. of the varsity coaches to that student who best exemplifies Salisbury sportsmanship and cooperation. Richard T. Flood, Jr. Athletic Award Awarded to: William Toffey Andy Rutledge Athletic Award Awarded by vote of the varsity coaches to that sixth former Awarded to: Harrison Luce and Mackenzie Morrison who has shown himself to be the best all-around athlete in Given in memory of Andy Rutledge ’80, and awarded by his class. vote of the Athletic Council to that sixth former who has

Leadership and Service Awards

The Richard Fromberg Award The Rev. Edwin M. Ward Prize Awarded to: Jesus Velazco Awarded to: Joseph McGlone In honor of Richard Fromberg, Class of 1984, this award is Established by the faculty in 1990, is awarded by vote of the determined by vote of the faculty to a sixth former who has faculty to that student who exemplifies the spirit of quiet and overcome extraordinary adversity. dedicated service to others which characterized Salisbury’s fourth Headmaster, the Rev. Edwin Ward (1965-1981). The Leland Rhodes ’86 Fellowship Award Awarded to: Daniel Cone and Rudolf Laveran The Crosby Medal Given by the Rhodes family in memory of their son, Leland, Awarded to: Scott Hovey of the Class of 1986. Leland’s love of the outdoors was Given in memory of Robert Southgate Browne Crosby by exemplary, and this award is for “character that transcends Arthur N. Sewell, is awarded by vote of the Fifth and Sixth many recognized standards.” Forms to that sixth former who has rendered the greatest service to the School.

54 SALISBURY MAGAZINE Fall/Winter 2014 Faculty and Staff

Milestones Five Years Wayne Hurlbut Tony Fraenkel Scott Kelley Christopher Palmer Wilton Vargas-Valencia Keith Hudak Carlos Sierra Edgar Giffenig Robert Klippel

Ten Years Danielle Sinclair Wayne Farrington Brian Proper Michael Brown

Fifteen Years John Mahoney

Twenty-Five Years Shirley Moyer Crosby Medal and Founder’s Medal recipient Scott Hovey

Retiring Faculty Members

The School gratefully ac- The Quaile Medal knowledged Linda Ryan, Awarded to: Webb Campbell our dedicated director of the Rudd Learning Given in memory of founding Headmaster and his wife, the Rev. Dr. and Mrs. Center, who retired after George E. Quaile (1901-1934), and second Headmaster, Rev. Emerson B. 20 years of teaching at Quaile, is awarded by vote of the faculty to that member of the graduating class Salisbury. Linda, we will miss you dearly! who has shown the most satisfactory development during his Salisbury years.

Senior Master Ralph The Founder’s Medal Menconi retired after a Awarded to: Scott Hovey remarkable 43 years of teaching on the Hilltop. Established by Salisbury’s founding Headmaster, the Rev. Dr. George E. Quaile, Along with J.C. Myers and is awarded by vote of the faculty to that student who has rendered the (46 years), Ralph’s greatest service to the School in leadership and loyalty. years of service ranks at the very top of in the

114-year history of the School. See page The Headmaster’s Medal 44 for Ralph’s remarks as this year’s Awarded to: Jack Ward commencement speaker. Presented to the first scholar of the Sixth Form.

Fall/Winter 2014 SALISBURY MAGAZINE 55 GRADUATION

About Succeeding on the Hilltop

Editor’s note: In the final weeks before graduation, I asked the sixth formers to reflect upon their time at Salisbury and pass on advice they would give to current wiseand new students. Belowwords are the responses a few classmates chose to share.

Take time when making connections Take advantage of everything Salisbury with other students here; these are life- has to offer. You’d be surprised how

long friendships that you are making. many doors it can open. – Matt Rote ’14

– Scott Hovey ’14

Always send an e-mail asking for an Be yourself; everyone else is already extension between 4:30 a.m. and 6:00 taken. And, it isn’t as hard to study as it a.m. When a teacher sees an e-mail is to be stupid. – Taylor Ogan ’14 from that time period they are more likely to be sympathetic and grant the When you say, “I will just do that extension.” – Henry Thornton ’14 the day before the due date” about homework, you are going to have a Don’t be quick to judge and try bad time. – Quan Do ’14 something new every year. Your time here at Salisbury is short and precious; Enjoy your time on the Hilltop, you don’t let it slip by. – Angelo Tilahun ’14 won’t miss it until you realize you are

leaving it behind. – Nick Rambusch ’14

56 SALISBURY MAGAZINE Fall/Winter 2014 Fall/Winter 2014 SALISBURY MAGAZINE 57 GRADUATION

58 SALISBURY MAGAZINE Fall/Winter 2014 Class of 2014 College Matriculation Kyle Adams University of Richmond Kenneth Lee Marist University Felix Allard PG Year – Northwood School Jake Levine University of Delaware Aiden Appleby University of Thomas Lindsay Penn State University Avery Baker Queens University Thomas Liu University of -Davis Elden Baker University of New Haven Harrison Luce Hobart College Derek Barach Mercyhurst University Eric Macy Southern Methodist University Adam Baughman Gray MacDermid Southern Methodist University Austin Bradley Hobart College Liam McDonald Texas Christian University Jack Brobston State University Joseph McGlone Hieu Duc Bui Rochester Institute of Technology Jared Mintzlaff Loyola University Webb Campbell St. Lawrence University Wills Montgomerie University of Connecticut Paul Campbell Clemson University Mackenzie Morrison University of Ottawa Ryan Castle St. Lawrence University Andrew Murnane University of Premanan Chaiosena University of Colorado-Boulder Moto Nakajima Boston University Siyang Chen Purdue University Roberto Valdes Jack Clark St. Lawrence University Sanchez-Navarro Hobart College Nicholas Cominos University of Alabama Zachary Neary Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts Daniel Cone Lynchburg College Minh Nguyen Trinity College – Dublin, Ireland Nicolas Coty St. Lawrence University Connor O’Hara Bucknell University Thomas D’Antonio Hobart College Taylor Ogan Trinity College Mitchell Datz Gap Year Blake Owens University of California – Austin DeCarr Clemson University Jhonny Perez Ithaca College Henry diBonaventura University of the South Duc Pham University of Denver John DiCaro University of Nicholas Rambusch George Washington University Samuel Dingba Quinnipiac University Samuel Rice Fairfield University Quan Do University of Denver Jacob Richards University of Harrison Feldman St. Lawrence University Isaiah Robinson Connecticut College Dimitrios Floros Marist University Neil Robinson Gap Year Matthew Forelli St. Lawrence University Steven Ross Rollins College Colin Giblin University of Maryland Matthew Rote Santa Clara University Koji Gormanzano Colby College Rex Rubin Union College Alec Grant Villanova University Ignacio Sanchez Universidad Carlos III de Madrid Justin Guterding John Schob Manhattan College Dayne Herron University of New Hampshire John Shaw Villanova University Dylan Holze Wesleyan University William Shaw Trinity College Scott Hovey University of Massachusetts-Amherst Evan Smith Yale University Dominic Intrieri University of Southern California Mitchell Smith Yale University Charles Isen St. Lawrence University Samuel Soule Occidental College Duncan Jones Furman University Jonathan Spaan Hobart College Matt Jones University of Denver Zimo Tao Trinity College Matthew Kelsey University of St. Andrew’s Liam Thomas Acadia University Dong Hyun Kim University of California-Berkeley Henry Thornton Sewanee: The University of the South Seung Hyun Kim Syracuse University Angelo Tilahun Bentley University Denzel Knight Wagner University William Toffey Vanderbilt University Mason Koppens Northeastern University John Vantine Elon University Nicholas Kurty University of Florida-Gulf Coast Jesus Velazco Colgate University Jacob Lamb University of Richmond Dayuan Wang Michigan State University Rudy Laveran Texas Christian University Jack Ward USMA- West Point Kyle Leary Elon University Stephan White Michael LeBlanc University of Rhode Island Patrick Whittinghill High Point University Brian Lee Dickinson College William Wong University of Wisconsin

Fall/Winter 2014 SALISBURY MAGAZINE 59 STUDENT PROFILE

Humility

by Duncan Morris ’15, Student Government President, as presented at the September 16, 2014 Chapel Service

Well we made it, we’re all back here – ready as ever to start and overvalue what they are not.” From a leadership standpoint, I the year and get back into the swing of things here on the believe that humility is one of the most Hilltop. For those of you whom I may not have had the chance necessary traits for success. There has to meet yet, my name is Duncan Morris, and I’m here to talk been a great amount of research done looking into the success of some of for a little bit about the year we have ahead of us. America’s largest corporations, in par- ticular the leaders on top of these busi- nesses. These leaders shield themselves from the spotlight, pushing the focus For all of us who have made our way upcoming year deserve recognition in away from themselves and toward the back to the Hilltop this fall, we know … their own right, because they are going betterment of the company as a whole. we know just how grateful we are to be to be the ones we look to for guidance They create incredible results while here. For all you newcomers, it’s time to and assistance in every aspect of life paying no attention to what is thought open up – it’s time to start buying into here, away at school. of them. They are described as mod- everything Salisbury has to offer, because The purpose of my standing up here est. David Packard, the co-founder of it is the relationships we create and the today does not lay in the need to recog- Hewlett-Packard, is quoted saying “You bonds that we form that truly define our nize what our school has to offer, because shouldn’t gloat about anything you’ve experience on the Hilltop long after we if we didn’t see what it had to offer, none done; you ought to keep going and find leave. Our advisors are here to connect of us would be here right now. I’m here something better to do with your time.” and engage with us in life both in and to share some of my thoughts and knowl- There are numerous other quotes out out of the classroom, and believe me edge about the word humility. there, but they all seem to share one they are more than capable of fulfill- Humility, our word for the year, is a common – these people don’t ing that role. Our faculty at Salisbury word which tends to either be loved or care one bit about what others think. are here for two reasons; the first being hated – rarely seen in a neutral light. All they care about is getting better – that they are eager to make a difference Humility, or being humble, is defined bettering their products, the way their in each of our lives, and that they are as modesty, not believing that you are company is run – just making any type passionate about what they do with all superior to others. A common miscon- of forward progress no matter what it of our brothers here on the Hilltop. The ception is that humility is synonymous may be. They are aware that the thing second is because they each bring their with lack of self-confidence or timidity, that defines who they are, is that they own unique set of skills and talents to however this is far from true. Humility never accept inadequacy – they neglect the table, so that they may cater to each is the realization of ones’ self, with the to accept things for what they are, and every one of us as individuals. proud acceptance of both what we are, they are focused on improving life not Building on top of the faculty, we’ve and what we aren’t. Malcolm S. Forbes, simply for themselves, but for others. got one of the best line-ups of student the publisher of “Forbes Magazine” hits It was St. Augustine who put it, “The leaders I’ve seen in my time here. Our the nail on the head when he says, “Too sufficiency of my merit is to know that prefects and peer leaders alike for the many people undervalue what they are, my merit is not sufficient.”

60 SALISBURY MAGAZINE Fall/Winter 2014 STUDENT PROFILE

Now how does this translate into life here on the Hilltop? It’s simple. We all Duncan Morris need to make a point to be more humble CHEVY CHASE, MD not simply because it’ll make us look Sixth Former better individually, but for the better- ment of the School. It will elevate our community to a higher level of maturity, distinguishing the Salisbury gentlemen which we produce even more from the What are some of the classes schools which surround us. This matu- you are taking this year? rity will stem from the quiet confidence AP Calculus AB, AP and intriguing restraint which will push Microeconomics, Spanish V, others to work to learn more about us. Honors English VI, Physics & an The less people speak of their greatness, Entrepreneurial Studies independent the more we think of it. There is no study project running a school- need to sell ourselves, promote ourselves, funded business. nor talk about why people should like us – the most interesting people are What do you like best about living on campus? those who are reserved yet involved at Living in a dorm is just like living with all of your best friends, and the same time. It is far more impressive what’s cool is how you can be with them constantly – you don’t have when others discover your good qualities to worry about the fun ending because somebody has to go home! without your help. I mentioned before how humility What have been some of your favorite and modesty share many parallels, and activities outside of the classroom? are nearly synonymous with each other. When we have home sporting events, particularly in the winter, Modesty can be defined as “The art of there is no better place to be than the athletic center. Nothing beats encouraging people to find out for them- the atmosphere of an important hockey game, because when the selves how wonderful you are.” Humble team needs support, the student body never lets them down! people are modest. Modest about their accomplishments, about their lives, and What are some of your favorite clubs even about their aspirations. These or extracurricular activities? people hold their past experiences close to their hearts, and give credit to how what I’ve been a part of Student Government the past two years, and I they have endured defines who they are wouldn’t trade the experience for anything. While working my way today. However, they rarely make a point up the ranks and establishing a presence within the community, I to bring it up. It isn’t just because they was able to be “in the loop” with all sorts of different things going make a point withhold it, but because on around campus. The Student Council tends to be underrated that isn’t how their minds work. Mod- at most schools, however it’s incredible how much freedom and est, humble people focus on the present. responsibility it has at Salisbury; we’re able to really make things They do this because they know that happen. However, it’s up to the students to put things into action. what they do here and now is precisely linked to what occurs down the road – in the future. Humble people are focused What has been the most rewarding aspect on growth – evolving not to a set point, of your Salisbury experience? but for the sake of doing it, because in I would say that the most rewarding aspect is knowing I am doing their minds there is nothing more power- things myself, the thought that I am maturing. Thriving on your ful than knowledge and experience. own, and knowing that you are doing well is the most satisfying It was Edward Frederick Halifax (one feeling. Nobody can say your parents helped you through; you did of the most respected British politicians it all on your own.

continued on page 62

Fall/Winter 2014 SALISBURY MAGAZINE 61 STUDENT PROFILE

Duncan Morris ’15, an avid photographer, took this amazing picture of the Chapel. Upon uploading it to the School’s Facebook page, it soon became one of the “most-liked” posts of all time.

of the 1930s) who is quoted saying, Churchill put it, “The greatest lesson in creating the future history of Salisbury “True merit, like a river, the deeper it is, life is to know that even fools are right School, and if recognizing this isn’t the less noise it makes.” This rings true sometimes.” humbling, then I don’t know what is. in our world today in many instances. Humility is not at all a lack of Walking in true humility means we Think about the wealthiest people – the self-confidence or a shyness to expose know who we are, what we stand for, most respected leaders in our society. oneself. It is purely a state of being and where we’ve come from. As Steve Men at the top are those with the habit content, being satisfied enough by what Smith once said, “Humility is at the of getting to the bottom, putting in you accomplish so that you do not equilibrium of ego. When we’re on consistently hard work. The higher these yearn for acceptance and aim to satisfy center, we manage our ego rather than people such as Bill Gates and Steve Jobs others before yourself. It isn’t thinking it managing us.” (before he passed away) rise, the less they less of yourself in the slightest, but just I believe we can be a humble commu- brag. In fact, these may be some of the thinking of yourself less – taking others nity. To do this I’m asking you all- my most humble people we see today. into consideration when you make a peers, classmates and mentors alike, to When we become less focused on decision and being open and accepting remember not the words I’ve shared with what we’re thinking and what we of their input. Ernest Hemmingway you this morning, but the feelings you’ve have going on inside our own heads, contributes that “There is nothing felt. Don’t forget the thoughts and ideas the possibilities are limitless. We can noble in being superior to your fellow that have popped into your head, put think about what we want anytime, so man; true nobility is being superior to an emphasis on them. Make a point to whenever we’re faced with the oppor- your former self.” be silent at times, and allow others to be tunity to hear another point of view, We are such a small, minute part in the limelight. I assure you, you will from a different person or group, it’s of something so much bigger than we not be looked down upon. And lastly, imperative that we capitalize on the can even begin to fathom. Everything though we may not see the value in it opportunity. We can open up our we see around is here because of those right away, I want each of us to make a mind to all new perspectives and ways who have come before us. This school point in the coming days to simply utter of looking at things we never would has evolved and grown over the past the words, “You’re right.” Not only will have imagined before. We move from 100 years, with all of the traditions this make us appear more humble, but it pushing our own ideas to allowing the which we know so well coming from will lower the pedestal from which we all acceptance of new ones, and from seek- the work of a single person and an idea. tend to find ourselves on time and time ing approval of our creations to seeking What we do here today could very well again. We must always keep in mind that enlightenment from others. I see more become a part of Salisbury, and earn a “Pride is concerned with who is right. It respectful conversations, where we take spot within the school for hundreds of is humility that is concerned with what the time to listen to others and simply years to come. We should give thanks is right.” give each and every person the time of to those who have shaped this school day which they deserve. As Winston into what we know and love. We are

62 SALISBURY MAGAZINE Fall/Winter 2014 CLASS NOTES

Faculty & Staff Notes

Chris Adamson, former director of college advising, and wife Lisie welcomed a baby girl, Lenora Breeze, into their family on May 19. Leonora joins brothers Luke, Grady and Everet. Chris is currently direc- tor of football operations at Viewpoint School in Calabasas, CA.

Mike Zahn coaching soccer in South Africa.

AT total. When not hiking the AT in his Instructor in History and Assistant The week after graduation a small group free time, Bill is an ultra-marathoner.s free Varsity Soccer Coach Mike Zahn spent two of faculty and staff embarked on a three— time, Bill is an ultra-marathoner. weeks traveling throughout South Africa day trip to the ”High Peaks” of the Adiron- visiting over ten schools and coaching over dack Mountains and successfully climbed 300 student-athletes and soccer coaches Mt. Marcy, the highest mountain in the as a guest of two non-profit organizations, Adirondacks and the highest mountain in Soccer Unites (Millerton, NY) and The New York state. Shown below on the sum- Dreamfields Project (Johannesburg, South mit are: Director of Development Dutch Africa). When he was not coaching, Mike Barhydt; Instructor in Art Roger McKee was visiting with student-athletes and ’72 who organized the trip; Summer School coaches and handed out new soccer kits Instructor Gwen Curtis; Instructor in to six different teams. The student kits Science Mike Bienkowski; Instructor in included a uniform, cleats, socks and shin Science Douglas Weisman and Instructor pads and the coaches’ kits included hurdles, in Science Toby Ayer. Former staff member ladders, bibs, cones, balls and manuals. Dan Meade, who was on the trip, was not in the photograph. Athletic Director Tim Sinclair ’91 and Bill Boyer standing on the summit of Director of Communications Danielle Mt. Washington in August. Sinclair recently visited with former math

Bill Boyer, director of buildings, grounds and security, spent part of his summer hiking sections of the Appalachian Trail, adding many miles to his AT total. When not hiking the AT in hi Bill Boyer, Salisbury’s director of buildings, grounds and security, standing on the summit of Mt. Washington in August. Bill spent part of his summer hiking sections of the Ap- Back row: Leslie Olsen, Danielle Sinclair and Tim Sinclair; Front Row: Micah Olsen, palachian Trail, adding many miles to his Maggie Olsen, Eli Olsen, Rileigh Olsen, Chelsea Sinclair and Cate Sinclair.

Fall/Winter 2014 SALISBURY MAGAZINE 63 CLASS NOTES

a banter exchanging personal details. Upon hearing that we are from Salisbury, CT, his rejoinder was a big surprise. He said he was at Salisbury for a year, 1977, but did not graduate. He remembers Ted Childs very well, particularly his guidance; and he credits Salisbury for the best education he ever had despite a one-year stay. For the second time, we called on Li Zhang ’86 in September, the first being in 2005 also on a trip west. We arrived at his house for dinner an hour late after fighting Seattle traffic and Phillip Murphy ‘77 and Kiau Loi stopping several times to check with him for directions. He was the first and only therapeutic to say the least and a lot of fun ASSIST student from Beijing, China. Both as well. Although home now, our hearts are Li and his wife work for Microsoft. Theirs is not here, still hankering after the carefree a happy household with two boys excel- life on the road. Two encounters with ling in academics and exemplary in many John Toffey and Jessica Wells Moody Salisbury connections: one of the small- other respects, very attentive and focused world nature and one planned. In Idaho, on conversations throughout our visit. instructor and director of student activities after stopping for lunch at a restaurant in They topped our wonderful reunion with Micah Olsen and his wife, former learning Pocatello, we dropped in at a coffee shop a scrumptious meal all cooked by them, center instructor Leslie Olsen, at the OP to have cappuccino. The owner, Phillip featuring two of my favorite dishes. Ranch in . Micah currently serves Murphy, was a friendly guy, and we started as the director of admissions services at Gillette College and Leslie is a teacher at Buffalo High School. The Olsens worked at Salisbury from 1994 to 1998. Congratulations to Associate Director of Admissions John Toffey and Jessica Wells Moody, who were married in their home- town on Cape Cod on June 20, 2014. Kiau Loi, former instructor in math- ematics, sends in this update: “This summer my wife and I had itchy feet again and embarked on a cross-country trip for six weeks driving as far as Orcas Island in the Puget Sound, tenting and visiting with friends and relatives along the way. The experience of seeing this beautiful land and reconnecting with friends was very (L to R) Shao Li, Andrew, Kiau and Jo Loi, Aaron and Li Zhang ‘86

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64 SALISBURY MAGAZINE Fall/Winter 2014 CLASS NOTES

Class Notes 1932 funds for the long-term maintenance of the Trust in Connecticut were all on the Hilltop! memorial. Our class was also represented In addition, a personal note was received Bill Brobston (father of Bill ‘69 and at Reunion Weekend with George Young from Herb McGrew: “Alas, we can’t make grandfather of Jack ‘14), our oldest living being remembered at the Wall of Honor it. If I can make it in five years I swear we’ll alumnus, looking great at 101! Dedication and The Jim Bates ’48 Family be there for the 70th!” Cheers, J.P. Fun Walk/Run.” 1940 Walt Bradford writes, “Really not 1950 Class Agent: Gil Erskine much to report since the last report but Class Agent: Rusty Peacock Gil Erskine stopped by the Hilltop in here goes anyway. My wife Maureen is still Rusty Peacock writes in, “Our class June to hike on the “Gil Erskine ’40 Cross in the memory unit due to the fact she has of ’50 will celebrate our 65th reunion at Country Trail.” He is doing well and con- Alzheimer’s. Fortunately, she is in the same Salisbury Friday, May 1—Sunday May 3, tinues to hike for his church. complex as me so that makes it easy for 2015. I am planning to be there for all of me to visit her, which I do several times a the Saturday festivities and making a plea 1941 week. For me, living alone is not an easy that as many of our classmates as possible Class Agent: Tim Tyler way of life, but I am doing my best to will also attend. Let’s put on a good show Tim Tyler writes in, “No news from keep busy. My term on the Board was over at a great school. Attending or not, please Jim or Val, and I hope they are doing well. last month so now I am looking for things contact me and tell me about your past There is a beautiful summer here in Colo- to occupy my time. I am pretty well back and present life. My philosophy is that life rado with plenty of moisture.” to normal after my stroke, but I do still begins at eighty and I am enjoying every have some problems with my equilibrium. minute of it. Email me at rustybird@ 1942 What really bothers me is driving long tampabay.rr.com, phone me at 727-378- Class Agent Needed distances, thus my infrequent visits to the (To learn more about this volunteer 5301, or cell phone at 352-232-5300, or opportunity, please contact Julie Zahn at Hilltop. I really do miss it." write to Rusty Peacock, 18108 Tendring [email protected] or 860-435-5775) Court, Hudson, FL 34667. At age 82 I 1949 am widowed but have a lovely relationship 1943 Class Agents: Merwin Haskel and Jack Patten and enjoy life. Two of my sons now live in Class Agent: Dick Westcott Jack Patten writes in, “Our 65th has Florida, though more than 100 miles away, come and gone! Merwin Haskel, former and the third son remains on 1944 Yale football great and Marine, with his with his two sons. I retired nearly 24 years Class Agent: Ken Wood wife Jill. Hal Bogardus, planning a move ago to soak up the warmth and pleasant life full-time to Texas. Michelle and George of Florida, just 45 miles north of Tampa, 1945 McKinney, who has been honored by the where I see a lot of Lightning hockey games Class Agent Needed F.A.A. for his 1st class research in the Avia- and visit Busch Gardens for concerts. Hope (To learn more about this volunteer tion World. Helen and Bill Garrison, who to see you all at Salisbury next year. Get in opportunity, please contact Julie Zahn at [email protected] or 860-435-5775) is still active in his family business in New touch with me and we can post your life in York City and president of his local Land the newsletter.” 1946 Class Agent Needed (To learn more about this volunteer opportunity, please contact Julie Zahn at [email protected] or 860-435-5775)

1947 Class Agent: David Sautter

1948 Class Agents: Walt Bradford and Dick Gillespie Dick Gillespie writes: “On May 11, the George Beavers Memorial Bench was dedicated. The response to the fundrais- ing by our classmates was outstanding. We exceeded our original goal by a substantial amount enabling us to include the planting of a tree beside the bench and providing The Class of 1949: Hal Bogardus, George McKinney, Merwin Haskel and Jack Patten.

Fall/Winter 2014 SALISBURY MAGAZINE 65 CLASS NOTES

1951 Kilimanjaro with the sons of Idi Amin and for winter vacations with their families. Class Agent: Stan Pinover Julius Nyerene. Jim had convinced their We have four grandchildren ages 15, 13, sons, Jaffar Amin and Madaraka Nyerene, 5 and 4, all of whom are sailors with the Stan writes, “I am pleased that I was able to reconcile the bitterness stemming from exception of the one granddaughter who to catch up with Phil Annibali a couple the bloody war between Uganda and is not only a gifted Opti sailor but an ac- of days ago. He and his wife, Mary, have Tanzania in 1978. Charlie writes, “Imagine complished horseman (or is it horse lady?). shifted their primary home to: 112 North sitting with a world famous architect to The oldest will be attending Saint George’s Beach Road, Hobe Sound, FL 33455. Tel: view the film of a world famous producer, in Newport this fall and the others will be 772 546-2356. They still maintain their both members of the Class of ’54.” here in Easton at the Country School in home in Lake Forest, IL, for use in the Stu Williamson and his wife, Joan, Easton, MD. Life on the farm on Leed’s summer. Both Phil and Mary are fighting are back from a hiking tour walking the Creek across from St. Michael’s has been some health issues. They are both on the cumbia way and coast to coast in England. wonderful and if anyone finds themselves mend and hopefully by the time the fall is- Hi Woodhouse and Helen took a on the Eastern Shore of Maryland, please sue is sent out, they will have recovered. We September river cruise on the Danube from send up a signal. We have plenty of room had the chance to remember our Salisbury Bucharest to Budapest with a stay in Prague and sufficient water depth at the dock.” days. It was fun catching up. This past July, at the end. Sam Sammis writes in, “Jinny and I are Laurie and I had the pleasure of attend- very busy running the Three Stallion Inn ing a great wedding of a Yale classmates and Green Mountain Stock Farm real estate daughter with Jane and Rich Haskel. 1955 Class Agent Needed project in Randolph, VT. Dave Gaston, They both looked great although I want to (To learn more about this volunteer Tom Sawyer, Rod Tilt and I are all having check out with Rich’s barber his “full and opportunity, please contact Julie Zahn at great fun together here. We’d love to have natural” hair. of the groom [email protected] or 860-435-5775) any classmates come to visit. You can go was Ned Stebbins, Salisbury School Class online to our websites – www.threestal- of ’73, son of our Classmate, Jim Stebbins. 1956 lioninn.com and www.greenmountain- Sure is a small world. With that news, I Class Agent: Sam Sammis stockfarm.com.” called Jim Stebbins about running into his Charles F. Benson (Chuck) reports that Rod Tilt writes, “Our oldest grand- son. Jim is doing well but is having some th as his 76 year is becoming history, his daughter, Olivia, is off to boarding school problems with his legs and is using a cane. Swan 47 continues to be as competitive near London to study English literature and His has decreased his involvement in the th as the owner having scratched out a 4 in history. Louis, our only grandson, has been Westminster Dog Show at Madison Square class at this year’s Newport/Bermuda Race. at ski racing school on Mt. Hood and has Garden. When the winter time comes he The boat can be found at the Bitter End just returned from a vigorous racing camp moves to his winter home in Santa Barbara, Yacht Club on Virgin Gorda, so if anyone in Zermatt, Switzerland. Our youngest CA. Kim Brown continues to be our class sees BANDANA on a mooring, feel free to granddaughter, Marilen, at 18 months, is “email king” with many good insights on give a shout. “My wife Caroline and I are both literally and figuratively running the the world as well as some great jokes. I send blessed with two wonderful sons who are show at home in Charleston, SC.” him a few also. Keep them coming Kim. partners in the real estate firm of Benson Have a happy and healthy fall and winter. and Mangold, and the two young men Please keep in touch as I am always seeking sail as watch captains on the boat when news to share with our classmates.” we are racing together with using the boat 1952 Class Agent Needed (To learn more about this volunteer opportunity, please contact Julie Zahn at [email protected] or 860-435-5775)

1953 Class Agent: Ralph McDermid

1954 Class Agent: Hilary Woodhouse Hilary sent in these updates from his classmates: Charlie Langdon writes that Jim Becket invited him and Peter Bohlin to attend the screening of Jim’s film, “Sons of Africa" at the Seattle International Film Festival last May. Jim wrote, produced and appeared in the movie in which Jim climbs Mount Hilary Woodhouse ’54

66 SALISBURY MAGAZINE Fall/Winter 2014 CLASS NOTES

taking joy and pride in his many grand- children. He suggests three of them will be candidates for a Salisbury education in the future. I enjoy visiting with him and his wife Hood when they are in Sarasota for a part of the winter. Wally Johnson is a busy guy just now giving his daughter Erin a glorious wedding in Springfield, MA. Ed Johnson, one of our political writers, is keeping his journalism close to home, com- munity projects and issues as opposed to the morass of national politics. Ron Glenn greatly appreciated reading “The Heart and the Fist” by Eric Greitens, the author who spoke at our 55th reunion. He is sending it on to good friend Rear Admiral Mark Buzby and then to his son. Still a great Tony Hoag ’57 and Nat Day ’56 read. He and Nancy are still loving their time in Provo and Weber, UT, where golf 1957 graduation, the feeling only deepens of and fishing reign supreme. Lucius Carroll Class Agent: Tony Hoag and Brad Ketchum what a privilege we enjoyed being part of is a study in courageous optimism – just the Sarum community. Such a mesmerizing back from a three-month convalescence 1958 thrill it was to walk the halls and gape at from a stroke, he almost immediately went Class Agent: Don Burkett the landscape and to feel the pulse of the back to the hospital for more surgery. Our current community this past spring, to thoughts are with you, Lu. Dave Maxwell, Alden Jenks writes: “As I am largely catch just a glimpse of the School’s great who knows a little about backaches, is still retired (somewhat involuntarily) from the vitality. Our class continues to play a part. on the job, working and mixing it with a Conservatory of Music, I can Thanks to Mike Sylvester and Dick Field, well-tuned golf game. Dr. Fred Holmes, devote more time to composing music (and currently leading the Board, for the past formally retired, has dedicated the last raising vegetables and getting my son into gifts of Jim Dresser and Ed Glassmeyer couple years to an innovative, nationally college). I was recently interviewed by the and George Maxwell and Dick Altman. recognized medical treatment program Conservatory archivist (https://my.sfcm. A few notes from others in our class; Gary to help addicted teens, inspiring them by edu/web/sfcm/alden-jenks) and it brought Newman is living in, immersed in and going around the country showing the to mind teacher that Salisbury understandably consumed by the Israeli/ challenging film, “The Hungry Heart.” hired to teach me and I know not who Gaza horrific . Living in a war zone He collected his data from teens’ stories else. Anyway, I did a little research — the day after day is beyond the imagination of in and around St. Albans, VT, which Fred internet is amazing! — and found him, many of us. While hardly sufficient in itself, says looks so much like Salisbury, CT. alive and well, in Santa Fe. Does anyone I want him to know we are all thinking of Thank you Fred. Good to hear from Dave else remember Paul Wolfe? Anyway, having him and hoping for a successful outcome. Veeder. He has just finished up two terms begotten late a son, Jesse, only now are we Seeley-Brown is enjoying a ton of golf and on his condo board grappling with count- getting him into a college (University of Puget Sound). Here he is, being soloist with his school orchestra: https://www.youtube. com/watch?v=9vZ1OIsd2so. My own work can be seen on YouTube and at www. aldenjenks.com." Don Burkett writes: “We were devas- tated to learn of the passing of our friend and classmate Tom Hawley this spring. I had dinner with Tom and his sister, Linda, last November in . I knew Tom since we were five years old. We will miss you, Tiger!“

1959 Class Agent: Steve Parker Steve Parker sends in these notes: “From the vantage point of some 55 years since Class of 1959: Jim Dresser and Steve Parker

Fall/Winter 2014 SALISBURY MAGAZINE 67 CLASS NOTES

Alabama. I look at it from time to time and He spent much of his career working for reflect on “Hughie” and how little he really the state of Connecticut, and had devel- changed from the years we were together oped a very skilled hand at making maple at Salisbury. I guess that is one of the most syrup at his place in Vermont. He was meaningful experiences of our reunions – kind enough to send me several bottles. to see the men who came from the boys Although we only saw him occasionally at in whom George Langdon believed. How reunions I always felt that any of us could right he was!” renew our conversation with Paul instantly. Howard Baldwin: “Real sad about He will be missed by all of us. Godspeed that. He and I would bump into each Paul Hughes, a good man.” other from time to time on Hartford Paul Davies “Paul was a terrific guy. when we lived there. Very nice, decent fel- Such a delight to see and hear him at the low who always was glad to see you. Don’t 50th. He was so proud of his maple syrup Gary Newman ’59 remember any sports stories but I do seem adventure. With a big smile, he said, “now to remember he wore a pair of wooden when you guys run out call or come by for shoes from time to time. My friend Henri some more.” Doing something for your less issues while Renata, his wife is senior will help me on that one. Deepest sympa- friends is special...thank you Paul for some- warden of St. James Episcopal Church in thies to his family. Best to all.” thing sweet from such a sweet guy.” Woonsocket, RI. Dave takes care of build- John Tyers: “At Salisbury, I think for ing and grounds there. God bless them.” many of us athletics was where a lot of our 1961 Gary Newman sends in this note and bonds were formed. And in the events Class Agents: Tom Collins, Jack Foley picture: “A picture of me with an old friend where we were together as a team in com- and George Hebard who now lives in San Francisco and was petition with another team was were these George Hebard, Tom Collins and Jack visiting here about a half a year ago. We bonds were cemented. Paul (“Hughie” as Foley report: We traveled to Salisbury this were standing on the Mount of Olives he was known to many of us) and I were the spring to attend the gathering honoring with the Old City of Jerusalem spread out right tackle and guard respectively on Salis- Bob Gardner and the successful launch behind us. Beyond the Old City you can bury’s football team. And as such, we worked of the Bob Gardner Endowed Teaching see part of modern West Jerusalem.” closely together. Bob Gardner in those days Fellowship. Henry Blair, whose key gift liked to pull the guard and let the tackle, launched the Fund, spoke of his recollec- 1960 Hughie, handle the rushing defense, while a tion of Bob’s teaching. Henry attributed his Class Agent: Nick Von Baillou speedy back following me, swept quickly to interest in the sciences and later business In honor of Paul Hughes, who passed the outside. It worked except at Westmin- success to these early learning experiences. away in April (please see “In Memoriam” ster, a game Paul and I would not forget Bob was presented with a plaque which for his obituary) his classmates sent in these but, back to the Millbrook game. After a listed the initial contributors to the Fund. memories of him through Class Agent Nico. particularly bruising play, for good yardage We are proud to note that the Class of Nico von Baillou: “After losing Hutch as I remember, I came back to the huddle 1961 had the greatest representation by far. last year, I reflect with great affection and – one of those sweeps I mentioned – and George Hebard completed the sadness on the recent passing of “Hughie,” Paul had his hand over his bloody mouth. I portion of the Appalachian Trail this sum- whom I know from football where he asked him if he was alright. He said he was, mer and has only a 100 mile portion of worked like a Turk on the line to please except he thought maybe he lost a tooth, spit Maine to finish his traverse of the 2000 Bob Gardner, always with the same in- out the tooth —right there on the Millbrook mile “AT.” George works out daily, often nocent enthusiasm he brought to all his field—and that was that, on to the next carrying a 40 pound pack. (Tom and Jack enterprises. He once got mad at me and play. He played the rest of the game, never do not exercise quite so much.) George we had a brief fistfight after which we were complained and we won. At the post game and Jack had dinner with Susie and Harry fast friends again. He lived above me in “tea,” as we crammed doughnuts and hot Ferguson on Fishers Island in July. They Lake House for fifth form, and I seem to chocolate in our mouths, Paul took a sip summer in the historic Ferguson house in remember he participated in a number of of hot chocolate and spit it out, some folks which Harry grew up and maintain a home the student committees on which I also commented. Paul (embarrassed, Paul would in Mystic, CT. The FI house is interesting served with great amusement. At our last get red in the face when embarrassed) simply in that it was built and rebuilt many times, reunion, you all may remember he was in said he’d forgotten he’s lost a tooth but that still retaining timbers dating from the a cast for a broken arm after a fall off his the hot cocoa had reminded him. I knew 1700s. Harry, a retired insurance executive bike. He was in fabulous shape as a devoted Paul to be a quiet, unassuming, gentle guy, and lawyer, continues to volunteer his legal cyclist, and loved Connecticut and its scen- strong of purpose and very, very decent. I talents to charitable organizations. ery. He remained youthful and upbeat on know he will be sorely missed. I salute him Jim Leonard reports that he continues all occasions I got to see him. It was a joy and the memory of a very good guy.” to enjoy his one-person law practice in to get a sample of his maple syrup, which John Olson: “Very sad to hear of Paul’s Lancaster, PA. He does, however, find time was his proud product of his own trees. I passing. He was a kind and gentle soul. for recreation and particularly enjoys travel. saved the bottle out of affection and it sits Never had a bad word to say about anyone. Recent trips include Greece, Croatia and a cheerfully on a shelf in my farmhouse in cruise on the Rhine. He has three children

68 SALISBURY MAGAZINE Fall/Winter 2014 CLASS NOTES

and enjoys visits from his five grandchil- dren. He observed that he had enjoyed our 50th and looks forward to getting together for the 55th. We will be calling classmates for the next notes column and will hopefully have great- er success when we are not trying to track down classmates in the middle of the sum- mer. We are pleased, however, that John Levin has written a piece for this column, which is reproduced here. Thanks, John. John Levin: “I’ve lived for the last 40-odd in San Francisco’s Mission District, the last 20 years with my wife, Paula Braveman, who is a professor at UCSF. We have a house off the Valencia Corridor, which is ground zero for social media hipsters The Class of 1964: Back row (L to R): John Brooks, Roy Thilly, Tom Nicholson, Bryan prowling for the next big app or the very Anthony, Joe Emmons and Jay Eddy; Front row (L to R): Barclay Cooke, John Schmitz least, the ultimate artisanal dining experi- and Robert Gott. ence. Our three daughters, their husbands and five grandsons live in the East Bay. It thought it would be more fun that way and own terms, doing the things I want to do is lovely having them close by. Weekend an opportunity to get the reader involved. for myself and with the people I am closest afternoons when we get together I feel like Please visit me on my website: STYoung. to: my wife, my son and my extended fam- I stepped in the middle of my own Nor- com to say hello! Should you wish, books ily. Exercise, better diet, mindfulness/yoga, man Rockwell Cover. For most of my life can be purchased on Amazon.com under my garden, my banjo, a radio show, and I’ve worked as a professional writer, first Humor and Entertainment. Great holiday travel adventures are all priorities!” Nick for newspapers and magazines and later for gift; plus it will help aid in my retirement! plans to attend our 50th. the film industry. I also co-wrote a novel, Got to laugh!! Best to all, The Pear.” Jim Dickerson reports, “In May, shortly “The Great Divide” with Frank Robinson. after I retired after 41 years in banking, The last 10 years I’ve been writing theatri- 1963 Mary and I visited with Peter Brower at cal plays. Black Apollo Press is planning Class Agent: Virgil Shutze the Yacht Club on Hilton to publish three of them as a book next Head. Peter was competing in a sailing spring. Currently I’m working on an adap- 1964 event. He is still active with his tation of Steinbeck’s “In Dubious Battle.” Class Agent: John Moorhead practice and loves living on Spring Island SC. He also looks forward to our 50th next 1962 1965 year as well”. Class Agents: Peter Barnett and Class Agents: Peter Brower, Jim Dickerson Peter Brower writes, “In addition to get- Pompey Delafield and Jeff Lozier ting together with Leila and Jeff Lozier (Leila Stan Young writes, “I hope this note Jim Dickerson sends in these updates: officiated at my daughter Abigail’s wedding finds each of my classmates well and happy The Class of 1965 is preparing for last November), and Jim and Mary Dick- as we move forward in our lives. When our 50th Reunion on May 1-2-3, 2015. erson, I met up with Mike Rafferty earlier retiring about a year and one-half ago, I Numerous classmates have been in touch this summer in Palm Beach, where he is still faced a dilemma, what to do with the rest with each other confirming attendance. brokering yachts for Camper & Nicholson. of my life. I enjoyed writing so here was We recently heard from Nick Duke who He will be at the 50th. We were comparing my time to do so. Mrs. Rudd is probably wrote, “My big update/news is that after retirement opportunities. If he had stuck with rolling over in her grave now learning almost 30 years, I finally, officially retired Larry Ellison he would be retired; my retire- that this grade D student has written a from my position as director of corporate ment plan is death. I do love what I’m doing book; Pulitzer Prize, probably not. My & foundation relations at the University of though, and I am taking a lot more time off, book, “A View (as seen) by a Toilet Seat” Virginia on August 1. It’s been a stressful sailing more and spending more time with is a collection of unique free verse writ- several months leading up to the final date, my kids, their ventures and their children. I ings using personification as my chosen but I’m leaving knowing that things I have look forward to our 50th.” vehicle to enter the literary world. I bring done here over the years have really made Through the efforts of Jeff Lozier and life and voice to the inanimate by having a difference. I will miss my colleagues but others we have located some classmates that each come off the page to tell the reader a certainly not the day-to-day grind with we had not been in touch with, including story; many times with humor. They are meetings, deadlines, complex proposals to two members of the second form, Dave original writings offering an escape from big foundations, business travel, etc. My Swartz and Gordon Kendall. We also the obvious. Oh yes, for those of you who father died on April 30 and that really located Bill Clark and Ted Strange. Ted are wondering, I leave the toilet seat “UP” tipped the scales as far as my thinking that recently retired from Wells Fargo. We hope to the reader to write his or her own story, I want to live out the rest of my life on my they all attend our 50th next May.

Fall/Winter 2014 SALISBURY MAGAZINE 69 CLASS NOTES

1968 Class Agents: Bob Gunther and Ian McCurdy Ian McCurdy writes “I am still a college professor teaching Naval architecture at SUNY Maritime College, Ft. Schuyler.” 1969 Class Agent Needed (To learn more about this volunteer opportunity, please contact Julie Zahn at [email protected] or 860-435-5775)

1970 Class Agents: Chris Janelli and David Koncz Dr. Ralph L. Quinones, professor of business law & marketing at Loyola Marymount University, Los Angeles, CA, is the 2014 recipient of the President’s Fred Tibbits '65 and family Fred Tibbitts’s daughter Toeng Wat Fritz B. Burns Distinguished Teaching Award. The Burns Teaching Award is the highest academic honor at LMU. Only 22 1966 demographic. I wasn’t looking for a six- professors have received the award in the Class Agents: Mel Campbell and John Tyler pack of abs; I just wanted my life back. In University’s 100 + year history. In his 28 Tom Kleeman writes, “Dear Class the end I decided if I couldn’t find the right years as an educator at LMU, Ralph has of 1966, As you probably know, after a workout I would create it. Thus was born been identified as “Professor of the Year” long and circuitous route, I became an “The Doctors Workout.” Our program is 20 times. Thirteen of those awards have orthopedic spine surgeon and founder of comprised of three separate levels for every been at the college level or higher and have the New Hampshire Neurospine Institute. age and fitness level. We have specifically spanned the last four decades. Ralph will What you don’t know is that along with my targeted an older demographic focusing also be the recipient of the “Teacher Eddy wife Anne, I began a new program last year not only on cardio and strength training Award” in 2015. The Westchester-LAX called MDFitness, the doctor’s workout. but also balance exercise (an increasing Chamber of Commerce in Los Angeles What you also don’t know is that I am a problem in the aging baby boomers). The bestows this honor on the top educators in cancer survivor. I remember how weak and exercises are easy to follow and can be the community. The Eddy Awards are gen- debilitated I felt after undergoing a major done in the comfort of one’s own home. erally regarded as the “Teaching Oscars.” A surgery for my prostate cancer and the All that’s needed is some space and a pair member of the Class of 1970 sent in these recovery that followed. I tried several popu- of light hand weights. With the help of thoughts about this distinguished classmate lar workout programs but discovered that my wife Anne, I have become dedicated to … “From the day Brother Ralph entered they were targeted for a younger, healthier the use of exercise as a means of maintain- Salisbury, he was always in the top of our ing quality of life during the aging process class. Ralph was a friend of every member while preventing or aiding in the treatment of our class. He had a legendary drive of many common illnesses such as diabetes, and intellect. Ralph could have returned hypertension, obesity, and cancer through to NYC where he was born and without the use of exercise and nutrition. It is my doubt could have pursued anything in life goal to impact the healthcare of the country and been enormously successful. Ralph by teaching people to embrace healthy took a totally different path to California habits such as exercise and nutrition and and dedicated his life work to helping and improve their quality of life and health educating young people. I know I speak for as they age. But don’t worry; I have not the Class of 1970 when I say, “Well done become a religious fanatic, just a healthier Brother Ralph. Through your distinguished Baby Boomer.” career you have brought honor to both our class and to Salisbury School, and in the 1967 process have exemplified what it means to Class Agent Needed live up to the school motto .” (To learn more about this volunteer opportunity, please contact Julie Zahn at Chris Janelli writes that he and Bronson [email protected] or 860-435-5775) Trevor have gone to the dogs … literally. Chris is now a director for The Simon Foundation, Inc. and the executive director for the Center for Canine Behavior Stud- Tom Kleeman ’66

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ies (www.centerforcaninebehaviorstudies. org). Chris and Bronson, along with CT congressional candidate Mark Greenberg, are the founding partners for another (under development) canine-owner program named Dogs for Life. Renowned animal behaviorist Dr. Nicholas H. Dodman, BVMS, DVA, DACVA, DACVB of Tufts University is also part of these new ventures. Steve Switzer and his wife Ruthanne Donahue Switzer welcomed their first grandchild, Noa Rose Bodzin, on April 16, 2014. She weighed 6lb 9oz. Noa’s parents, Adam Bodzin and Julia Switzer, live in Santa Monica, CA. Adam is a fellow in the transplant surgery program at UCLA and Julia is a practicing OB/GYN in the UCLA hospital system. One benefit from this arrangement is that Steve gets the chance to see Sarum brothers in California! The Harney Family: Michael ’73, P’03, ’05, ’10, wife Brigitte P’03, ’05, ’10, son Alex ’03 and father John P’72, ’73, ’74, ’86, GP’03, ’05, ’10 (Sadly, John passed away in June 2014). 1971 Class Agent Needed (To learn more about this volunteer filiated Emergency Medicine Residency living out on Long Island, and spending a opportunity, please contact Julie Zahn at Weekly Didactic Lectures. lot of his free time surfing. Have to give a [email protected] or 860-435-5775) special mention also to Wicks who drove 1974 all the way from Virginia, arriving just in 1972 Class Agents: Peter Clifford, Knut Rostad time for dinner. Thanks for making the big Class Agent: Ollie Scholle and Jeff Wheeler effort! I very much enjoyed getting out on Peter Clifford writes, “We had a fan- the tennis court with Tim, George, Dun- 1973 tastic turnout for our 40th! In attendance can, and Dave. Tim and George showed Class Agent Needed was Dave Bohonnon, Jim Lansbury, Tim us all again why they were the School’s (To learn more about this volunteer opportunity, please contact Julie Zahn at Heekin, Josh Hart, Duncan McClelland, doubles champions with their still – perfect [email protected] or 860-435-5775) Sean Jessurun, John Drayton, Andy form and awesome ground strokes, while Congratulations to LeGrand Redfield, Reid, Graham Kilvert, George Garivaltis, I displayed my amazing gams in fashion- president of Asset Management Group, Mike Cronin, Jeff Wheeler, Wicks Stires, defying shorts. Thanks to everyone who Inc., who was invited to speak for the Peter Clifford and a special appearance by showed up. It was a wonderful weekend!” fourth consecutive year at the Beth Israel Ray Kotright. Wow, it was great to see Ray Deaconess Medical Center Harvard Af- after so many years. He is a sound engineer, 1975 Class Agent: Jim Bates

1976 Class Agents: Bill Bushing and Steve Garfield Bill Bushing sent in these updates from his classmates: Keith Kasper: “I was very surprised to run into Hoppy Barringer ’77 at a mutual friend’s dinner party this weekend. Last I had seen Hoppy was at UVM in the spring of 1978 when he was kind enough to take me and a friend in and feed us as we fol- lowed the tour that spring. Turns out we both teach at UVM now.” Tom Brown: “Cheers to all. Atop the Swilcan Bridge on the 18th at the one & only St. Andrew’s Old Course accompanied The Class of 1974: Front row (L to R): David Bohonon, Sean Jessurun, Peter Clifford, Jeff by my first, eldest unmarried lad Collin, Wheeler, Graham Kalvert and Tim Heekin; Back Row (L to R): George Garivaltis, Joshua Hart, who’s poised to graduate university this Andy Reid, Mike Cronin, Duncan McClellan, Ray Kotright, John Drayton, and Jim Lansbury. fall. ‘Tis truly a grand way to spend qual-

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to hear good news from all of you and spe- coming up on two years working with cial gratitude to Bill for his tireless efforts. FirstRain, a San Mateo based big data web Off to Costa Rica in October! analytics company. We are growing rapidly Bill Calfee writes, “We are currently in and adding people all the time so it has Hiva Oa, an island in the Marquesas group been a great experience. The average age at of French Polynesia. Our passage here from a typical software start-up is about 27 so Galapagos was a remarkable 18 days. We there are times when I feel like a chaperone. were planning on 25 to 30 days at sea for It is particularly amusing to compare tastes the 3,000 mile trip and someone suggested in music with some of the 20-something Tom Brown ’76 and son Collin at that there was current at the equator… well consultants in our New York office. I St. Andrew’s in Scotland there was! So, I feel like I am in the movies am working hard to school them on the with some of the anchorages we have been “important” 70s groups, however—Dave ity together afore he embarks on his life’s in. We hope to sail in the next couple days Mason, Traffic, Marshall Tucker...hello? journey. My advice to any golf-a-holic 500 miles SW to the Atolls of the Tuamo- One of them recently could not name a who hasn’t ventured over the pond to the tus … then to Tahiti where we will leave single member of the Beatles! OMG! After motherland of the game—do it before you the boat for the winter (cyclone season). house hunting for the last six months, my regret not doing it! It’s p-e-r-f-e-c-t!” We are thinking of going to Portland, OR fiancée Wendy and I closed on a house in Bill Harris sends in this picture of he … Anyone have any contacts there? Kind Southport, CT, in May. It is close to both and son Will ’07 and writes, “Just returned of weird to not have any roots anywhere Fairfield and Westport, CT, so there are from a day of fishing the East Ranga River … and good. I will be traveling to the east lots of great restaurants, beaches, parks and coast to see my Mom in VT, who turns places to bike ride nearby. When we are 99 in September (go Mom!) and do some not planning house projects or furniture business in NY and NC. If any of you need shopping we are spending our weekends a push to go off and do something crazy, let traveling to places like Watch Hill, RI, me know. Is there a reunion between Dec 1 Madison and Stonington, CT, to see wed- and May 1? For more on our thoughts and ding venues. No date yet but likely May or some photos go to our blog, noted below. June. I look forward to seeing ALL of you Bill, Lara and Isobel Calfee, sv.sunrise167@ on the hill for our next reunion! gmail.com, US: 802-870-0964 leave a Will ’07 and Bill Harris ’76, P’07 message, Blog: http://www.sailblogs.com/ 1977 member/beherenowii.” Class Agents: John Coleman and in Iceland and winding down with a few Bill Bushing: “Hi, everyone. Things Sandy Middendorf cocktails. Will went on to Hobart from have been very busy for me lately. I am Salisbury and is currently working for Al- lianz in Chicago. It was nice to have time with my son as it becomes less the older we get! Say hi to all the ‘76ers and hope to catch up with a few soon.” Rob LeRoy: “I too embarked on a golfing trip to hallowed St. Andrews last year but got lost in and wound up on Mt. Kilimanjaro! As a result, I can report that air, food, sleep and personal hygiene are all vastly overrated. I can also report that the view from the top, when it’s clear, is breathtaking and Africa, in general, is a must see. After the mountain, I spent five days in a range rover watching critters (the native fauna) through binoculars and three days on the beach in Zanzibar. All in all a memorable experience. Living in Revere, MA, I was pretty much eye-to-eye with a tornado last week! Looking out my front picture window it appeared as if my house was on the bottom of a river but there was, miraculously, no damage. Didn’t lose so much as a tomato or eggplant from the back yard. Finally, it is, as always, great Rob LeRoy ’76 on an African adventure

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1978 Class Agents: Chris Bushing Chris Bushing sends in these notes: Rob Bucklin and Susan Bucklin are in Raleigh, NC. Their Hungarian Kuvasz just started showing and won three points toward her championship. Rob Cox is still a for Envoy (American Eagle) and living in Florida. Would love to hear from other classmates. As for himself, Chris Bushing notes, “Life is busy for us in Hingham, MA. We had a wonderful trip to Spain last fall where we visited Barcelona, Madrid, Seville and Toledo for 10 days. This winter we spent some time skiing and snowshoeing in Bea- ver Creek, CO, where my daughter Ashley The Class of 1979: Jamie Lineberger, Campbell Langdon and Kevin Cowley was fearless on the slopes and wants to go back again next year (oh no … I fear I have created a ski-bum in the making!). This 1980 contemporary paintings. “The opening summer we will be in NYC for a week, up Class Agents: Greg Cutler, Mark Hess, Jamie was hugely successful with most pieces sold. to Acadia National Park for a few days and Robinson and Ed Swibold It’s no surprise to me as Tom’s new work then out to Nantucket for our annual sum- Congratulations to Gautam (Gary) is really outstanding,” reported classmate mer vacation. Ashley is growing up fast and Parikh on the publication of his new book and opening attendee Dicky Riegel. All taking to tennis, paddle tennis, golf, swim- “The Handbook of Indian Securities.” of Tom’s art can been seen on the artist’s ming, skiing and now biking (like father like website at www.charlesthomasoneil.com. daughter). My wife Soon-Ae and I will be 1981 Gordon Sharp-Bolster writes, “Ireland celebrating our 10th wedding anniversary Class Agents: Chris Gorycki, Nick Lieder, Bill was recently graced by Woody Rutter ’98 Pollard, Scott Root and Ted Sheridan this year up in Quechee, VT, and inviting (Hon.) at my ancestral home, Glenlohane, the entire wedding party up for another this July. He would not share his secret celebration which should be a blast. My 1982 vitamin intake but my parents and I swear brother Bill ’76 is engaged and planning his Class Agents: Jerry Bates and Ted Smith he hasn’t changed one bit since I was at wedding which we are very much looking Salisbury! We shared stories and updated forward to.” 1983 each other on everything including the fact Class Agent: Duncan Kennedy that he has won awards at The Concours d’Elegance with his antique cars. We also 1984 run our very own vintage event called Class Agents: Clay Baldwin, Brad Root and Glenlohane Vintage and you can see photos Charles Spofford on our B&B website, www.glenlohane. Fresh from its 30th reunion last spring com, where we are a member of the rather on the Hilltop, the Class of 1984 had prestigious The Hidden Ireland. Woody another reason to celebrate—the opening was particularly interested to learn that of classmate Tom O’Neil’s major, single- Glenlohane was built by my family in 1741 artist show at the Howard Scott Gallery on and as the seventh generation, I am work- West 20th Street in New York City. The ing closely with George Beavers ’82 and show is the latest exhibition of Tom’s recent the founder of Elite Motorcycle Adventures in California to offer weeklong tours in vintage E-type Jags, Porsches and high per- formance BMW motorcycles. He enjoyed hearing that George and I are closer friends now even than when we were at Sarum and, from opposite sides of the world, we are working together to offer perhaps the Chris Bushing ’78 skiing in Beaver Creek, CO, with wife Soon-Ae and daughter Ashley. most exotic and historical travel oppor- tunity for the vintage auto and motor- cycle enthusiast in Ireland and perhaps in 1979 Europe. The British press was only just here Class Agent: Jamie Lineberger Tom O’Neil ’84 and Dicky Riegel ’84

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Benjy Ward ’89 and Davis Martin ’89

NYC. He is returning to the east coast after The Class of 1984: Front Row (L to R): Peter Ruttledge, Jeff Prior, David Hood, Serre Murphy, Tim Woolworth and Courty Bartlett; Back Row (L to R): Brad Root, Jamie Peva, working at USC. Mike DeFeo, Charles Spofford, Tony Richards, Sam Moffett, Clay Baldwin, Peter Plumb, Walter Stokes, Dicky Riegel and Ralph Menconi (Hon.). 1989 Class Agent: Davis Martin Davis Martin and Benjy Ward were covering us so stay tuned for the story in 1986 sorry to miss the 25th reunion on the writing, Woody! Class Agents: Hank Alexandre and Reed Johnston Hilltop, but found time to get together and toast their classmates from Chicago’s own 1985 Charlie Owen stopped by the Hilltop in Goose Island Brewery this past June. Benjy Class Agents: Barry Durfee, Steve Godwin, June to say hello. Charlie was in town for TJ Johnson, Jim Mullen and Bob Zabel and his fiancé Mandy recently moved to John Harney’s funeral. Chicago from Shanghai. Benjy continues to James Mullen reports, “This year work as the firm—wide design director for 1987 Gensler, a global design firm. Davis and is exciting; I am still working for the Class Agent: Smith Kennedy Florida State legislature and have recently his wife Stacy still reside in St. Louis, MO, partnered up as an analyst with the newly where he works as director of stadium sales 1988 for Anheuser-Busch. launched Transworld Business Advisors Class Agents: Ian Findlay and Matt Taylor of Buffalo, Inc., the dynamic business Congratulations to James Simon, who concept and sales advisors. The territo- 1990 recently accepted the position of director of Class Agents: Gerritt Graham and rial office for my contact will be the Erie advancement at The Browning School in Chris Hefter County, NY area. Also I am heading back to school! I am starting this fall at Florida Gulf Coast University for a Masters in Public Administration.”

Gordon Sharp—Bolster ’84 The Class of 1989: Jeremy Birdsall and Charlie Melvin

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1991 Josh Mandel recently met up with Indi- Class Agents: Brady Knight and ana Colts Outside Linebacker Bjoern Wer- Ross McKenzie ner ’10 in Berlin, . Josh, currently coaching with Berlin Adler (an American football club in Germany and one which Bjoern was associated with), played for the European Championship game on July 19. Ross Molloy writes, “It has been a great run for CBS Sports covering the U.S. Open for the past 47 years and I have enjoyed working this special event with the tre- mendously talented men and women over the years. It was fun to take in this year’s Former faculty member John Knight Men’s Final with my wife Kim and my Michael, son of Ted Auch ’95 with Chris Wiedenmayer ’92 great friend and former Salisbury doubles partner under tennis coach Kiau Loi, Andy a grip on me that I cannot break—I’m on 1992 McCreath, in from Calgary. A little weird my eighth contract here and have about 52 Class Agents: Kris Loomis and without Novak, Rafa, Roger or Andy in the months of ice time under my belt.” Sasha Tcherevkoff final, but we enjoyed getting together under Chris Brislin writes, “I caught up with John Knight (former faculty member the lights at Arthur Ashe for our last U.S. Matt Magiera and his wife Jose for dinner from 1989-1990) wrote in, “There I was, Open on CBS.” in Bristol, RI, in July. So nice to have Matt a brand new resident of Colorado and a and Jose back in New England after a good first-time attendee at the Beaver Creek 1995 amount of time away.” Ocktoberfest, when I saw a familiar face Class Agent: Chris Grinda and asked, “Are you Chris Wiedenmayer?” Proud grandparents, Skip and Lynne Sure enough it was Chris and his family. Auch P’95 sent in a photo of their handsome Not sure how I remembered him 13 years grandson, Michael Leaf Auch, son of Julia after I last saw him, but the Sarum spirit and Ted Auch born on November 4, 2013. runs deep. We agreed that Class of ‘92 notes in the magazine are so weak that this 1996 one probably should get sent in.” Class Agents: Chris Brislin, Holt Haynsworth and Tim McCaffrey 1993 Pedro Salom reached out to faculty Class Agent: Mike Anastasio member Hugh Cheney and reported, “I Congratulations to Eoin O’Riordan and am still working for the U.S. Antarctic Program, currently deployed to McMurdo his wife Jamie, on the birth of their baby, L to R: Charlotte Brislin, Henry Brislin, Matt Emmet Byrne, born April 9. for the austral winter. This continent has Magiera ’96, Jose Magiera, Lindsay Brislin and Chris Brislin ’96.

Josh Mandel ’94 and Bjoern Werner ’10

1994 Class Agents: Andrew Gates, Josh Mandel and Alec Raday Andrew Gates has recently joined Houlihan Lawrence, exclusive affiliate of Christie’s International Real Estate in Millbrook, NY, as the associate real estate The Class of 1994: Front Row (L to R): Dana Guilbert, George Oliphant, Alec Raday and broker. Congratulations Andrew! Morgan Hertzan; Back Row (L to R): Hotchy Kiene, Alex Ressi diCervia, Scott Duncan, Eben MacNeille, Ramzi Essaid and Dan Son.

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1999 Class Agents: David Friedman and David Greiner Oliver Janney writes, “I got to catch up with fellow ’99 grad Matt Chen while in Portland on business.”

Carter Bevan ’97 Matt Chen ’99 and Oliver Janney ’99 Scott Cullen writes, “Just had another ad- dition to the Cullen family. Riley Faith Cul- len joins sisters Felicia, Sydney, Molly Grace, Charley Cayden and brother Scott. The 2000 Class Agents: Gunnar Heinrich and chances of Salisbury seeing numerous Cul- Jim Panczykowski len boys are growing slimmer. I have been promoted to production operations manager at Everglades Boats and currently run a 2001 Class Agents: Will Faison, Pete Gross, production team of about 150 employees, Jim Keogh, Dave Sandals, Cris Sigovitch building the best luxury fishing boats money and Parker Young can buy. I hope to get to the Hilltop some- Fred Beck ’97 with wife Susannah Dave Sandals sends in this update: “My time soon. I’m going to have to charter a and daughter Ilse. wife Eliza and I wanted to introduce our bus to get the whole clan there.” 5-month old daughter, Mia Rose Sandals, 1998 who was born on 3/3/14. I also wanted to 1997 pass along this photo of Mia and 6 month Class Agent: Fred Beck Class Agents: Drew Caprio and Jason Indelicato old Clark Sigovitch, son of Sarah and Cris Fred Beck sends in this great news Drew Caprio is married with two chil- Sigovitch ’01.” … “Susannah and I welcomed Ilse Rose dren; his wife graduated from St. Lawrence. Phil Meers and his wife Therese recently Beck on April 16 at 10:41p.m. in San Fran- He lives in Reston, VA, and works in invited the Rt. Honourable Theresa May, cisco, CA. She weighed in at a robust 10 lbs. finance for BMW. Her Majesty’s Principal Secretary of State 14oz. This picture was taken a week after she was born and includes our dog, Bogey.” Turney Hall’s first book, “An Eagle Soars: One Man’s Journey to Baldness,” was recently published by Post Hill Press.

Carroll Cavanagh ’97 and his bride Jacey Wilkins were married by former Salisbury chaplain, Rev. Stephen Parker ’59, on June The Class of 1999: Jamie Taradash, David Friedman, David Greiner, 28, 2014 in Pennsylvania. and Richard Land

76 SALISBURY MAGAZINE Fall/Winter 2014 CLASS NOTES

me with a backstory that was realistic and convincing. They concocted a Pulitzer- worthy backstory that convinced Kate that we absolutely had to go up to Salisbury, from Virginia, on a specific day and get there at a specific time. The fact that it was in March, when campus would be empty, made the need for a strong backstory all the more important. That said, it all worked Clark Sigovitch, son of Cris Sigovitch ’01, and Mia Sandals, daughter of Dave Sandals ’01 out, and we got up to campus and trudged through the snow until we made it just outside the Chapel, where I fondly recall Paxton Ramsdell ’03 and fiancé Kate Donlon staring out the window at the mountains as a student. I asked, and she even said yes. We walked around campus a bit, had lunch 2003 in town, and an overall had a great day. We Class Agent: Winter Mead are getting married in June on Peaks Island Paxton Ramsdell reports, “My now in Maine, and couldn’t be happier. Special fiancé Kate Donlon and I met at Ham- thanks to Tim and Rhonan for making it ilton College and began dating after we all possible.” graduated. As our relationship became more serious, Kate always told me that she 2004 wanted me to propose somewhere that was Class Agents: Ted Ahrens, Travis Clark and important to me. I gave a lot of thought Cary Wasserman Mia and Shaw Sandals, children of into where and when I might propose, Dave Sandals ’01 Upon his retirement as class agent, Ned and the one place that kept coming up in Corkery wrote in, “I just want to thank my mind was Salisbury. I attribute where you, the Class of 2004. It’s been the best 10 for the Home Department (for the UK), I am now to my time at Salisbury, and as years being your class agent. I also would to speak at the Harvard Kennedy School’s I looked to the future I thought it would to thank Tom and Ted, you guys are the Institute of Politics. She spoke on national be a fitting place to propose. The planning best. I could not have not have done it security and civil liberties following the process took a bit of work. Kate is working without you guys—love you guys so much. dramatic events in the Middle East and towards her Ph.D. in clinical psychology, I would like to thank, Julie Zahn, Dutch touched upon the upcoming Scottish so I needed to work around her academic Barhydt, Chisholm Chandler and my dad, Referendum. Both Phil Meers and Theresa schedule and make sure that she was able to Matt Corkery. Salisbury School is my home May are members of Leander Club. Phil get away from her research for a few days. and it will always be my home; we’ve got Meers was also a featured alumnus of the So I called in the heavy artillery – Rhonan the best athletic teams. Go Knights!” University of St. Andrew’s. Mokriski ’90 (dean of faculty) and Tim Sinclair ’91 (director of athletics) – to help 2002 Class Agents: Toby Atkins, Bryan Bendjy and Colin Griggs Toby Atkins sent in this adorable picture of William Nazar de Jaucourt’s and wife Hallie’s son Charles.

The Class of 2004: Travis Clark, Cary Wasserman, Colin Keough, Jonny Bates, Matt Crum, Ned Corkery (Hon.), Ted Ahrens, Derek Cohen and Michael Sargeant.

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2005 campaigns. In 2012, I moved to Montana Class Agents: Caddy Brooks, Blake to work on a U.S. Senate campaign and Hollinger, Justin HoShue, Andrew O’Donnell ultimately wound up in Washington, D.C. and Wells Ross working for Montana Congressman Steve Blake Hollinger: “On July 22, I got Daines. That boss is currently running engaged to Stephanie Miguel, from for Senate, so I left D.C. for the Big Sky Toronto, Canada, while trespassing on the state again to work on his campaign and lawn of Clifford’s Tower in York, England. am headquartered in Bozeman. Montana In addition, I have just accepted a position living has been great—winter was filled as the assistant director of admissions at St. with skiing and summer is filled with Anselm’s Abbey School in D.C.” hiking, camping and fishing. In short, I Nick Sciubba: “I will be getting mar- cannot complain about life since leaving ried on October 12 to Mariette Moore in the Hilltop. If anyone wants to make a trip Asheville, NC.” west, sounds like you have options between First Lady Michelle Obama participated CO and MT.” in Concordia’s Selfie competition with Matt Swift ’06 at the White House. Matt Gus Jenkins: “I have been living in New co-founded Concordia, an organization York since graduating from Roanoke Col- that hosts a global summit every year in lege in 2012. Tried for a while to get a job New York, with Salisbury graduate Nicholas at the NBA, NFL, and some other sports Logothetis ’06. – related companies. I’m currently working at Lexington Partners, a private equity firm 2007 in the Investor Relations group. Would Class Agents: Luke Esselen and love to hear from and see some of you Patrick Powers guys. Hope all is well and congrats to Tim for getting married, pretty wild stuff.” 2008 Emmett Manning: “Recently moved to Class Agent: Alex Holder Boston and am working at a nice little soft- Alex Holder: “Since graduating school ware manufacturing startup called Mack- from Lehigh University, I tried my hand eyRMS. Can’t say I did too much traveling at real estate with the Corcoran Group. other than going to Cape on the weekends, Though I still hold my license, I now that about sums up my travels. If anyone work as a production assistant at MacGuf- is in the area let me know as I’m always fin Films in SoHo, NYC. My company around. Also plan on visiting San Francisco produces television food commercials and pretty soon, so Whitey get your name in at print advertisements, but ideally I would Olympic C.C. or even San Fran G.C.” Brad Werntz ’06 and wife Virginia like to work in marketing associated with Michael Driscoll: “After graduating at their wedding. sports. I still go to many concerts and from Adelphi University in 2012, I worked sporting events in the city, and am always for Fox Business Network for 14 months. down to Carpe the D with any Sarum My second day there, I ran into fellow 2006 Brothers if they are around the NYC area.” Sarum Brother Matt Swift ’06. I enjoyed Class Agent: Brad Werntz Tim Weiss: “After graduating from my time at Fox Business Network, and Congratulations to Weston Hatfield, Colorado College, I went and worked in got to meet some pretty cool people such who has recently accepted a place at Merrill Namibia for a non-profit, Elephant Energy, as Michelle Wie, of , Lynch in their Financial Advisory Training that deals in solar energy, for about seven and Mark Cuban. My Instagram is full of Program. months. I then moved to Nassau, Bahamas, these pictures. I just started working for Brad Werntz: “I just married Virginia and taught music at Lyford Cay Interna- Cox Media Group in New York City where Faulkner Byron, now Virginia Faulkner tional School. I did that for close to two I am a sales assistant. If anybody in the Werntz. She is the daughter of Jeff Byron years and now I am back in Colorado. I NYC area wants to get out and play some ’73. We were married in Princeton, NJ actually got married a few weeks ago to a golf, let me know.” (where we met and both went to college), girl I met at CC! Now I’m getting my MBA Sean White: “I’m working in marketing on July 26. In attendance were Jamie from CU Boulder, so I’ll be in school here in San Francisco. Since graduating from O’Donnell ’03, Andrew O’Donnell ’05, for a couple of years. It has been a whirl- Dickinson, I tried my hand at baseball Sandra O’Donnell (former board member, wind few years and I’m glad to have landed … and failed. I worked for the USGA for mom of Jamie and Andrew), Will Arland back in CO; it is a good spot for me.” about a year in the Hamptons and now have ’06, Ben Arland ’08, Elliot Hovey ’02 and Spenser Merwin: “Since graduating settled out here. Spenser Merwin, I’m most Jeff Byron ’73—all from Sarum. Will and from Colby College, I have been working definitely going to make a trip up there, just Andrew were both groomsman.” in public affairs and on various political have to figure out when. Hope to see more

78 SALISBURY MAGAZINE Fall/Winter 2014 IN MEMORIAM

on the high seas working on private yachts. Most recently I am the Bosun on the M/Y Blue Moon, a 200 ft. Feadship (look it up, it’s pretty awesome!). Been traveling from the Caribbean and now in the Great Lakes. Next year’s plan is Alaska! Hope to see some brothers soon!” Ian Burkland: “After graduating from Rollins College in 2012 with an Interna- tional Business degree, I took 6 months to travel through Spain and South Africa. I now live in Pittsburgh working for a startup market research & data-mining technology company called CivicScience. If anyone is in the area or looking to network in the market research, advertising, or PR space please get in touch.” The Class of 2009: Front Row (L to R): Stefan Merriman, Tucker Garfield, Danny Biega, Thomas Rutherfoord recently graduated John Guay, Riley Hansen and Reid Johnson; Back Row (L to R): Michael Roth, Hank from Richmond University, the American Couzens, Will Casertano, Chad Berger, Chase Richey, Adam Kelsey, Connor Rice, Francis Drolet, Kamron Sharif-Zadeh and Matt Wynne. International University in London. He received a B.A. in Business Administration with a concentration in Finance, earning of you guys out on the Best Coast soon!” have a couch in the DuPont Circle area to First Honors, and received distinction on his Jonathan Kostakopoulos: “I graduated crash on. My cell is 703216-2187 if anyone senior thesis, “Can Technical Analysis Beat from University. I worked on two ever needs anything.” the Market?” Congratulations Thomas! political campaigns last year in NYC: John Bo Hershey: “I graduated from Trinity Catsimatidis’ mayoral campaign and David in May of 2012. That summer I moved to 2009 Garland’s City Council campaign. After Shanghai, China, where I taught at a Chi- Class Agents: John Guay, Stefan Merriam that, I got a job at Red Apple Group doing nese boarding school. What an experience and Zach Robins PR, which I am still doing. As much as I that was! Room checks and lights out every love it there, I am currently looking for a night. I spent two years at the school teach- 2010 new job in advertising. If any of you are in ing history. During that time I travelled Class Agent: Chris Hansell NYC, hit me up.” around Asia going to , Cambodia, Phil Brady: “After graduating from Rol- Thailand, , Philippines, etc. I had so 2011 lins in 2012, I moved in with Connor Bell much fun. Now I am looking to stay in one Class Agents: Gabe Antoni and and went to work as a tenant representation place. Right now I am in the New York area Chris Garibaldi broker in commercial real estate for Savills but I am looking to move to D.C. Let me Congratulations to Ben Schlegel! Ben’s Studley in the Washington D.C. region. know if you are in either place.” independent study on the impact of frack- Life is as good as can be, all things consid- Charles Salzer: “Since graduating from ing on employment in Pennsylvania was ered. If anyone is ever in D.C. they will Franklin and Marshall College, I have been

Above and left: Thomas Rutherfoord ’08 and parents Jean and Thomas Rutherfoord P’08, TR in Istanbul

Fall/Winter 2014 SALISBURY MAGAZINE 79 CLASS NOTES

Dylan Brodie ’12, Bobby Feeney ’12 and Bobby Feeney ‘12 rowing for George Washington University John Hibbard ’13.

selected for presentation at the Steinmetz team continued success. Eric Jasinski: Had a great first year at Symposium. Ben was awarded a paid re- Wesleyan College. He enjoyed just focusing search fellowship in the Economics Depart- on his academics, but misses a lot of the ment at Union College this past summer. faculty on the Hilltop, and gives a special He worked with his professor on a topic shout out to Tim Sinclair. in education and wrote a paper which was Jake Hand: Sends his regards saying, presented to the faculty/administration this “I’m living the dream in BC and doing well fall. Ben will be doing an honors thesis in and missing the boys.” We wish him luck economics during his senior year. in the upcoming season. Jason Kalinowski wants his fellow 2012 brothers to know that he interned in New Class Agent: Nico Falla York City for the summer. He will be Patrick Mazeika ’12 and Alex Tuccio returning to Cedar Rapids, USHL team, ’12 played high school baseball together in the fall, for one more season, until he but in college they were on opposite sides departs for UNH the following fall. of the diamond! They enjoyed dinner after the Siena vs. Stetson baseball game in Sadiq Olanrewaju ’13 at the gravesite of March 2014. F. Scott Fitzgerald with the last words of his Magnum Opus, The Great Gatsby, 2013 chiseled in stone. Class Agents: Tai Chaiamarit, Leon Cummings, Elliot Gudis, Jake Harrington, Jonathon Mahoney, Daniel Murphy and lenges to come. Sadiq Olanrewaju Liam McDermott: “I miss all the great REUNION Jonathon Mahoney sent in these up- guys from my class. Working valet and con- dates from his classmates: struction. Playing my last year of juniors in Gather on the Hilltop Ryley MacEachern: Sends his best Boston for the Islanders.” with your Sarum brothers from Stoney Brook. He says “Nah but John Hibbard: Sends his best to all at Reunion Weekend, doing great! Got surgery but will be back of the boys back on the Hilltop. He had May 1-3, 2015. in February” and misses the boys from the a great first year up at Hobart, and had a Hilltop. Everyone should watch for Ryley great season rowing on the varsity program. Everyone is invited back and this upcoming season. He also said jokingly, “I broke my back milestone years (classes ending in Ryan Segalla: Finished his first year twice so life is excellent.” 0s and 5s) will be highlighted. For at UConn and had a great time playing Bryan Platt: Sends his good wishes from more information, call the Alumni hockey. He scored his first collegiate goal junior hockey to friends and family on the Office at 860-435-5740 or visit back in January. School has also gone well Hilltop. He also misses all of the boys on salisburyschool.org/reunion-2015 for him, and he looks forward to the chal- the hockey team, and wishes the current

80 SALISBURY MAGAZINE Fall/Winter 2014 CLASS NOTES

Cam Murray, who has been doing well since leaving the Hilltop, said, “Hope all is We want to hear from you! well boys; school’s good, living the d3 life- If you have news to share, please send it, and we’ll use it in Class Notes. style. Cherish the relationships you build on the Hilltop because it comes to an end before you know it.” Guidelines: Aaron Titcomb did very well this sum- Include all relevant information, such as your class year. mer. He trained up at Merrimack and took classes. He says it felt good to be back in • Please type or print clearly. school after a year off. He misses friends • We encourage you to send photographs (high resolution preferred) from the Hilltop, but keeps in touch. He’s • E-mail: [email protected] ready for a good year. He also has done a • Fax: 860-435-5750, attention: Salisbury Magazine great job emboding the image of a Knight. • Mail: Salisbury Magazine Editor, Salisbury School, Mark Hamilton sent his best from U 251 Canaan Road, Salisbury, CT 06068 Maine. He came off shoulder surgery stron- ger than ever, and is ready for a breakout hockey season this year. He misses the boys from the Hilltop, but always strives to be a Knight where ever he is. Name Class year Spouse’s name 2014 Street address Class Agents: Matt Rote, Taylor Ogan and Will Shaw City State Zip

Home phone Work phone

E-mail address

General News (attach additional sheets as necessary)

Birth/Adoption Announcement

Sam Rice ’14 in Sitka, AK, on a ten-week Mother’s name commercial salmon fishing trip. Father’s name Class year

Daughter/Son

Child’s name (first/middle/last)

Names and ages of other children in family

Date of birth Place of birth

Marriage Announcement

Name Class year

Spouse’s name (first/maiden/current last name)

Date of marriage

City and state where you were married

Class Notes are compiled by the School and class agents. Please note that submitted material is not individually verified and may be edited. Our next class note deadline is February 20, 2015.

Fall/Winter 2014 SALISBURY MAGAZINE 81 IN MEMORIAM

In Memoriam Salisbury School wishes to express its sincere condolences to all family and friends of the deceased.

1958 and Leadership Program. Paul pursued his 1983 Tom Hawley zeal for the outdoors with his maple syrup David Freed Tom passed away May 3, 2014 fol- production business, Hughes Maple Syrup. It is with great sadness that the Alumni Of- lowing complications from Parkinson’s He was an influential member of the Con- fice has learned of the passing of David Freed. disease. Tom was born in Portland, OR, necticut cycling community, organizing and grew up in Tenafly, NJ. He graduated fund raising rides and area events. Besides from Fairleigh Dickinson University. In his wife Diana, he leaves a son, Dudley J. Former Faculty Member Hughes, and his wife Laura Burtness; a 1964, he was commissioned a U.S. Navy and Emeritus Trustee Ensign in Newport, RI. After commis- daughter, Laura Cattabriga and her hus- sioning, he married Martha Westcott. As band Alberto; two grandchildren, Daniele a surface-line naval officer, Tom served and Alessandro Cattabriga; a brother, as a chief engineer on several destroyers. Arthur M. Hughes; and , Sarah In 1970-1971 he served in Vietnam and Carr and Emily Page. earned a Bronze Star. He was subsequently promoted to Executive Officer (XO) of the 1978 USS Southerland DD743. After complet- Edward Dwight ing other duty stations, he retired from Edward Dwight of Richmond, VA, and the Navy after 23 years of service, in San formerly High Point, NC, died on May 12, Diego. He then earned an MBA and taught 2014. He was raised in Demarest, NJ, and attended the University of North Caro- Info technology at local colleges until 1997. Jeffrey Walker P’71 In retirement, he resumed his life-long love lina at Chapel Hill, where he majored in It is with great sadness that we of art and painting. He was also active in journalism and lettered on the tennis team. report the passing of one of Salisbury PSWA, carving and painting ducks and Edward will be remembered for his gentle School’s finest gentlemen, Jeffrey birds. For 10 years he was a senior volun- and kind spirit, his dry and funny sense of Walker, on April 8, 2014. Jeff served teer for the California Fish and Game. He humor and his economy of words. Edward the School as a teacher from 1946- is survived by his wife, Martha and three loved his family and friends, and the special 1968. He then was an active member sons, Thomas, Stephen and Jonathan, and places where they gathered in Maine, Geor- of the Board of Trustees until 1976 eight grandchildren. gia and Bermuda. He had a special love for the family dogs. Edward was intelligent, when he became an Emeritus Trustee. Jeff joined the Salisbury faculty 1960 persevering and loyal. He is remembered for his remarkable perseverance through in the spring of 1946 and began Paul Hughes teaching French and coaching crew. Paul M. Hughes passed away July 18, decades of battling anxiety and depres- sion. A tennis professional in High Point, He was a former student of George 2014, as the result of an accident. Born in Langdon’s at Pomfret, and after at- Norwalk, CT, he was raised in Rochester, Edward leaves behind treasured friendships that were fostered through shared work and tending Yale and serving as a Naval NY. His professional career was in commer- Officer, Jeff rejoined his mentor cial lending, first with the former First Na- a love for the game. His sense of fairness and integrity in the midst of competition and began a distinguished career as tional City Bank and the New Britain Bank a teacher, coach, and administra- & Trust before joining the Connecticut were an example to all who were on the court with him. Edward was admired by his tor. Jeff also served as the School’s Department of Economic Development. business manager, and after leaving As commercial lender for the Development friends and family for his Christian faith as an active member of St. Mary’s Episcopal the School to pursue other business Authority, he helped business to grow and interests, he stewarded the Board as expand in Connecticut. After retiring, Paul Church in High Point and at Hope Church in Richmond. Edward was dearly loved chairman from 1972-1976. turned his focus and enthusiasm toward a He is survived by his wife Doris, variety of projects. He founded a non-profit and will be sorely missed by his family and friends. He is survived by his mother, a son, two daughters, four step- that encouraged urban teens to consider children, and many grandchildren. entrepreneurship as a career goal. Recently, JaneDwight; sister and brother-in-law, Jodie and Jack Stevenson; and brother and Stepson Theodore “Ted” Pomeroy is Paul worked for the Middlesex County a member of the Class of 1971. Chamber of Commerce where he passion- sister-in-law, David and Elisabeth Dwight. ately served as a small business specialist, as an administrator for the Middlesex County Revitalization Commission and, over the last 17 years, as a counseling resource and The “In Memoriam” section is compiled from national listings and notices from family members and friends of alumni. It includes only the deaths reported to us since the guest speaker for the Side Street to Main previous issue of the Salisbury Magazine. Please send information to: Alumni Office, Street Minority Business Development Salisbury School, 251 Canaan Road, Salisbury, CT 06068 or [email protected].

82 SALISBURY MAGAZINE Fall/Winter 2014 ANNUAL REPORT

From the Chair of the Development Committee, Board of Trustees

It is with a deep sense of gratitude that I write project is completed (it will be part of a larger restoration of to report on Salisbury’s philanthropic results for all three floors of the North Wing), the North Dorm will have the fiscal year 2013-2014, which coincided with 17 fully refurbished student rooms, as well as fully refurbished the conclusion of the For The Boys Campaign. bathroom facilities and a faculty apartment. To commemorate When I wrote this letter last year, I referred this successful undertaking, a permanent plaque with the name of to Salisbury’s mission as “clearly focused and each member of the Class of 2014 will be placed in North. articulated,” and shared your confidence that Altogether, Salisbury raised $8,906,777 in gifts and pledges these qualities, along with many others, would propel Sarum to last year, a wonderful capstone to the For The Boys Campaign, new heights. Today, I am happy to report that your confidence was and a total that put Salisbury over the top in the school’s largest very well placed and I hope that you take justifiable pride in your fundraising campaign ever. generosity that made these results possible. The For The Boys Campaign officially concluded on June For the sixth time in seven years, Salisbury’s Annual Fund set 30, 2014. Our ambitious goal of $105,000,000 in gifts and a new record. This time, the goal was a significant “stretch” goal, pledges to support annual, leadership and planned giving established at the beginning of the For The Boys Campaign, represented the largest fundraising goal, by far, ever undertaken of $2,000,000 in unrestricted annual giving for the fiscal by Salisbury. Salisbury’s alumni, parents, faculty, staff and year 2013-2014. I am pleased to report that Salisbury raised friends fully embraced this historic campaign by raising a total of $2,089,129 for the year a 10.9% increase over the previous $108,477,083 in gifts and pledges. This is a very powerful and year. While it is gratifying to set such a substantial new meaningful commitment shared by thousands of donors who have record, and to have grown the Annual Fund so significantly invested in Salisbury’s mission. During this campaign, a number year after year, the real benefit is much more tangible. The of milestones were reached and made possible by you, including: unrestricted Annual Fund is a key component of Salisbury’s budget along with tuition, and allows the school to fully cover n Raising the Salisbury Annual Fund (now The Salisbury key operating expenses: financial aid, faculty salaries and Fund) from $1,400,000 in 2008 to $2,089,129 in 2014 benefits, food, heating oil, transportation to athletic contests and achieving increases in the Salisbury Fund in six of the and so much more. Our goal this year, and years ahead, is to last seven years. sustain a $2,000,000 plus Annual Fund so that we can continue n Creating seven (7) new Endowed Scholarships providing these opportunities at the appropriate levels. As we n Creating ten (10) new Endowed Funds move into the fiscal year 2014-2015, be on the lookout for the newly branded Annual Fund, which will be known as “The n Creating four (4) new Endowed Teaching Fellowships Salisbury Fund.” As always, the Annual Fund, now known as n Improving Salisbury through an ambitious Sixth Form The Salisbury Fund, will be supported by alumni, parents and Gift Program including: friends of our school. Class of 2008 – Entrance to the Flood Athletic Center The Class of 2014 Sixth Form Gift continued a great Salisbury Class of 2009 – Championship Lounge in the Flood Athletic Center tradition. Each year, for over twenty years, the parents of our Class of 2010 – Wachtmeister Field Stadium Seating graduating sixth formers have come together to support a Class of 2011 – Endowed Teaching Fellowship significant capital or endowment priority project identified Class of 2012 – Restoration of Main’s Front Entrance by the Board of Trustees. These projects are large in scope and Class of 2013 – Global Classroom and Video Conferencing Center permanently improve the School for generations to come. It is Class of 2014 – North Dorm Restoration and Renovation also a way for each class to make a very visible mark on the life of the School for generations to come. Under the leadership of Words cannot begin to express the importance of this level Dana and Eric Macy P’14,TR and Patty and Robert Isen P’14 of care and investment in our school. To each and every donor, and a very enthusiastic Sixth Form Gift Committee, $701,648 in thank you. gifts and pledges was raised toward the restoration and renovation As a Board, we have committed to the phrase “No valleys, of North Dormitory in the historic Main Building. When this only peaks.” With an ambitious strategic plan for the years

continued on next page

Fall/Winter 2014 SALISBURY MAGAZINE 83 ANNUAL REPORT

ahead, we recognize that we must continue to reach out to alumni, parents and friends, inviting each person who holds Salisbury in their hearts to remain involved, committed and supportive. We must remain among the peaks, so that we can support Salisbury’s mission in an increasingly challenging world, and especially so that we can support the boys and the men and women who teach, coach and mentor them. On behalf of Salisbury’s Board, I thank you for all that you have done to advance Salisbury to this special moment in our history. Take a moment, and please feel a sense of pride in being a part of a very special mission. Then, please join us as we move forward, always among the peaks, to ensure Salisbury’s future.

Very Sincerely,

Richard Riegel ’84, Trustee Chair, Development Committee

2013-2014 Summary of Gifts

ANNUAL FUND Alumni/Trustees/Emeritus Trustees/Former Trustees $ 1,070,046 Current Parents $ 431,000 Faculty/Staff $ 7,520 Parents of Alumni, Grandparents, Friends, Former Faculty & Staff, and Current Students $ 240,288 Foundations, Other Organizations and Matching Gift Corporations $ 365,125 Total Unrestricted $ 2,113,979 Restricted Current Use $ 268,919 TOTAL ANNUAL FUND $ 2,382,898

CAPITAL / ENDOWMENT Sixth Form Gift $ 701,648 Capital / Endowment $ 4,933,163 TOTAL CAPITAL / ENDOWMENT $ 5,634,811

OTHER Planned Gifts Created $ 40,820 Annual Fund Continuing Pledges for Future Years $ 811,930 TOTAL OTHER $ 852,750

TOTAL NEW GIFTS AND PLEDGES 2013-2014 $8,870,459

*= Deceased (Hon.) = Honorary Class Member Italics = Esse Quam Videri Society Member †= Consecutive Givers to the Annual Fund (Last four years) • = New Esse Quam Videri Society Member Bold = Class and Reunion Agents, Salisbury Alumni Association Volunteer and February Face-Off Captains ‡ = PA Leadership (Parents Association, Sixth Form Gift Committee and Parents Fund Committee)

84 SALISBURY MAGAZINE Fall/Winter 2014 ANNUAL REPORT

Giving Societies Includes gifts received to all funds during 2013-2014.

The Founders Society Dr. and Mrs. George J. Magovern, Jr. † Mr. and Mrs. Thomas H. Nicholson ’64 • † The Founders Society gratefully recognizes all Mr. and Mrs. Michael R. Mauro † Mr. Erik A. Olson ’92 † donors whose total giving is $50,000 and more Mr. George L. Maxwell ’59 Mr. and Mrs. John E. Olson ’60 † to Salisbury. Mr. and Mrs. Mark S. Maymar † Mr. and Mrs. John W. Patten ’49 † Mr. and Mrs. T. Williams Roberts III ’83 † Ms. Polly L. Judson and Mr. Joseph P. Powers † Anonymous † Mr. Robert S. Rousseau Mr. Xin Jiu Qu and Mrs. Yao Sang Mr. Andrew S. Baur Mr. and Mrs. James E. Rutledge † Mr. Andre Rahadian Mr. Henry E. Blair Mr. Peter F. Tauck ’75 Mr. and Mrs. Robert K. Ramos † Mr. and Mrs. Daniel M. Cain Mr. and Mrs. J. Mark Veenis Mr. and Mrs. Damon Risucci ‡ Mr. John W. Childs † Mrs. Dorothy R. Walker Mr. and Mrs. John M. Rote ‡ Mr. Nathaniel B. Day † Mr. Anthony C. Woodruff ’01 (Hon.) † Mr. and Mrs. William H. Schweitzer, Sr. † Mr. Richard D. Field † Mr. and Mrs. John P. Tavlarios ‡ Mr. and Mrs. David T. Harrington † Mr. and Mrs. James P. Townsend † Ms. G. Anne Harris and Mr. Seth M. Milliken † The Sarum Society Mr. Jeffrey P. Walker * † Mr. William O. Hiltz † The Sarum Society gratefully recognizes all Mrs. Joan W. Wheeler * † Mrs. Chi-Yun Hsu donors whose total giving is $10,000-$24,999 Mr. and Mrs. Robert R. Isen, Esq. ‡ to Salisbury. Mr. and Mrs. J. G. Kenan III † The Hilltop Society Mr. Dongwoo Lee and Mrs. Ahyun Kim Anonymous † The Hilltop Society gratefully recognizes all Mr. Kyungwon Lee and Mrs. Yunsook Nam Mr. Andrew W. Adams donors whose total giving is $7,500-$9,999 Mr. Charles R. Lynch † Mr. and Mrs. John D. Alexander, Jr. ’72 to Salisbury. Mr. and Mrs. Eric Macy, Sr. † ‡ Mr. and Mrs. Michael Baughman Mr. and Mrs. Stephen J. Meszkat Mr. and Mrs. Mortimer Berkowitz III Mr. Phillip A. Clough Mr. Richard E. Riegel III † Mr. and Mrs. Daniel H. Callahan † Mr. Hayden D. Davis III ’79 Mr. and Mrs. Arthur J. Roth † Dr. Richard S. Childs, Jr. ’63 † Mr. William K. Ris and Ms. Nancy Dorn Mr. Michael C. E. Roth † Mr. and Mrs. Barron G. Collier II ’70 Mr. and Mrs. Phillip C. Long † Mr. and Mrs. Thomas D. Rutherfoord, Jr. † Mr. and Mrs. Michael L. Corbat Mrs. John F. Maher † Mr. and Mrs. Lee B. Spencer, Jr. † Mr. and Mrs. James F. Dickerson ’65 Mr. Michael S. Sylvester † Mr. and Mrs. John T. Dillon † Mr. and Mrs. Jackson T. Wong Mr. and Mrs. John D. Dugan The Quaile Society Mr. Feng-Te Yu and Ms. Shu-Ling Chuang Mr. and Mrs. M. Briggs Forelli ’82 † ‡ The Quaile Society gratefully recognizes all Mr. Eugene M. Zuckert * Mr. and Mrs. James W. Gerard V ’79 † donors whose total giving is $5,000-$7,499 Dr. Glen Gormezano and Dr. L. Masae Kawamura to Salisbury. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas M. Graham, Jr. The Crimson Society Mr. and Mrs. James R. Gross Anonymous † The Crimson Society gratefully recognizes all Mr. and Mrs. Peter D. Gross ’01 † Mr. and Mrs. J. Hunter Atkins † donors whose total giving is $25,000-$49,999 Mr. and Mrs. Mark E. Gudis Mr. and Mrs. Dutch Barhydt † to Salisbury. Mr. and Mrs. George Whiting Hebard, Jr. ’61 † Mr. and Mrs. James R. Billingsley † Mr. and Mrs. Timothy J. Heekin ’74 Mr. and Mrs. Walter C. Bradford ’48 † Mr. and Mrs. John G. Brim ’64 † Mr. and Mrs. James R. Lamb † Mr. and Mrs. Richard M. Cahn ‡ Mr. Yi-Tung Chen and Mrs. Jui-Cheng Huang ‡ Ms. Samantha Chen and Mr. and Mrs. Christopher C. Callahan ’83 Mr. and Mrs. Bradford S. Dimeo ’80 † Mr. Campbell B. Langdon ’79 † Mr. Zuping Cai and Mrs. Xinli Chen Mr. and Mrs. Matthew Feldman † ‡ Dr. and Mrs. Rudolf L. Laveran † ‡ Mr. and Mrs. Philip L. Calhoun ’58 Ms. Nina von Steuben and Mr. Michael J. Gans ’81 Mr. and Mrs. David C. Leavy ’88 † Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Campbell † ‡ Mr. Stuart E. Graham III ’96 † Mr. Yun Lee and Mrs. Sook Jung Kwon Mr. and Mrs. Joseph M. Cassin ’94 Mr. and Mrs. William R. Harris, Jr. ’76 † Mr. and Mrs. Michael W. Malafronte ’92 Mr. and Mrs. Chisholm Chandler ’11 (Hon.) † ‡ Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Intrieri Mr. David McCargo III ’60 † Mr. and Mrs. Jason Chiu Mr. and Mrs. Thomas M. Joyce † Mr. and Mrs. Ralph G. McDermid ’81 † Mr. and Mrs. Jonathan B. Clark, Sr. † ‡ Mr. and Mrs. Thomas B. Ketchum † Mr. and Mrs. Peter Merriam † Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Cohen Mr. and Mrs. James E. Long † Mr. Quentin Meyer ’65 † Mr. and Mrs. Atwood Collins III † Mr. and Mrs. Bruce M. Montgomerie † ‡

*= Deceased (Hon.) = Honorary Class Member Italics = Esse Quam Videri Society Member †= Consecutive Givers to the Annual Fund (Last four years) • = New Esse Quam Videri Society Member Bold = Class and Reunion Agents, Salisbury Alumni Association Volunteer and February Face-Off Captains ‡ = PA Leadership (Parents Association, Sixth Form Gift Committee and Parents Fund Committee)

Fall/Winter 2014 SALISBURY MAGAZINE 85 ANNUAL REPORT

Mr. and Mrs. Dion Cominos ‡ Mr. and Mrs. Richard Mellish II The Cupola Society Mr. and Mrs. Gardner Cowles III ’55 Mr. and Mrs. Donald Meltzer The Cupola Society gratefully recognizes all Mr. and Mrs. Jeremiah E. Cunningham Ms. Nina K. Merrill † ‡ donors whose total giving is $2,500-$4,999 Mrs. Carolyn B. D’Alessandro † Mr. George P. Mills ’65 to Salisbury. Ms. Aili di Bonaventura † Mr. and Mrs. Franklin Montross IV † Mr. and Mrs. Frederick A. Dick ’67 † Mr. and Mrs. Edmund O. Noel ’71 † Anonymous Mr. and Mrs. Charles Dubow Mr. and Mrs. Thomas S. Noneman † Mr. Edward Allen and Ms. Amanda Miller ’92 † Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Feeney, Jr. ’83 † Mr. and Mrs. Hirohisa Okada Mr. Timothy W. Allison-Hatch Mr. and Mrs. Matthew Forelli Mr. Jang J. Park ’00 Mr. and Mrs. Herbert M. Altman ’57 † Mr. and Mrs. John S. Gates, Jr. † Dr. and Mrs. Young-rok Park Mr. Richard M. Altman ’59 † Mr. and Mrs. Andrew M. Graham ’97 † Mr. and Mrs. Donaldson Ross ‡ Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Bailey, Jr. † Mr. and Mrs. Gerritt T. Graham ’90 Mr. and Mrs. D. Richard Rowland Mr. and Mrs. George F. Baker IV ’96 † Mr. and Mrs. David F. Haddow ’71 † Mr. and Mrs. Peter L. Rutledge ’84 † Mr. and Mrs. David W. Barnard ’61 † Mr. and Mrs. Edward A. Harrington † Mr. J. Wood Rutter ’98 (Hon.) † Mr. and Mrs. Courtney Bartlett ’84 † ‡ Ms. Laura H. Harris † Mr. Michael R. Salzer † Ms. Helen Bertles ‡ Mr. and Mrs. Craig Henrich Mr. and Mrs. Michael T. Schlegel † Mr. Andreas Boye ’00 † Mr. and Mrs. Hilleary C. Hoskinson Mr. and Mrs. Charles C. Smith Mr. and Mrs. William C. Bush Ms. Li-Wen Huang Mr. and Mrs. Charles M. Spofford ’84 Mr. and Mrs. Anthony J. Castle ‡ Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Miles Kass † Mr. Roberto Valdes and Mr. Hing Yip Chiu and Mrs. Yin Ha Ho Mr. Jeffrey L. Keyton and Mrs. Stacy L. Drummond Mrs. Barbara Sanchez-Navarro Mr. Ji Hoon Chun and Mrs. Mi-Lan Kim Mr. Michael Kluchman and Ms. Marguerite Dresser Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey W. Wheeler ’74 † Mr. and Mrs. Andrew J. Colao Mr. Chan Lee and Mrs. Shin Ja Kim Mr. and Mrs. Thomas B. Wheeler III ’73 Mr. and Mrs. Daniel C. Cross Mr. George J. Magovern III ’05 Mr. Lei Zheng and Mrs. Guangxia Xin Dr. and Mrs. Peter Daniel Mr. and Mrs. Robert Marston Mr. Dennis T. D’Antonio Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Matlack Mr. and Mrs. Thomas W. David † Mr. and Mrs. John McDonald † Mr. and Mrs. Michael R. Eckel ’77

Alumni Reunion Giving Alumni Participation 2013 REUNION GIVING CAMPAIGN Classes with more than 10 members with greatest participation Class Reunion Donation Participation ’44 70 63% $5,713 Class Donation Participation ’49 65 54% $13,814 ’50 75% $2,175 ’54 60 13% $750 ’48 63% $7,240 ’59 55 41% $389,320 ’49 54% $14,364 ’64 50 50% $13,875 ’61 52% $248,782 ’69 45 21% $10,986 ’66 52% $16,675 ’74 40 30% $15,499 ’64 50% $38,875 ’79 35 32% $35,204 ’52 47% $1,750 ’84 30 26% $190,670 ’47 45% $3,950 ’89 25 19% $26,675 ’01 42% $42,962 ’94 20 16% $7,890 ’59 41% $1,151,256 ’99 15 16% $8,415 ’55 40% $5,475 ’04 10 32% $3,245 ’09 5 20% $22,888

*= Deceased (Hon.) = Honorary Class Member Italics = Esse Quam Videri Society Member †= Consecutive Givers to the Annual Fund (Last four years) • = New Esse Quam Videri Society Member Bold = Class and Reunion Agents, Salisbury Alumni Association Volunteer and February Face-Off Captains ‡ = PA Leadership (Parents Association, Sixth Form Gift Committee and Parents Fund Committee)

86 SALISBURY MAGAZINE Fall/Winter 2014 ANNUAL REPORT

Mr. Hiram W. Emery III ’89 † The Pillar Society Mr. and Mrs. Joseph C. M. Hall ’77 Dr. and Mrs. Robert J. Feeney † The Pillar Society gratefully recognizes all Mr. and Mrs. John S. Hamilton ’80 Mr. and Mrs. H. Peter Findlay † donors whose total giving is $1,000-$2,499 Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Hershey III Mr. and Mrs. Jackson W. Foley, Jr. ’61 † to Salisbury. Mr. and Mrs. Donald Hewat † Mr. and Mrs. David E. Friedman ’99 † Mr. and Mrs. Landon Hilliard III † Mr. Frank Gabor and Ms. Anna Korniczky Mr. and Mrs. DeWitt L. Alexandre, Jr. ’67 † Mr. Eavenson S. Horter ’97 Mr. Thomas W. Grant, Jr. ’92 Mr. Pierre-Paul Allard and Mrs. Lucie Deziel ‡ Mr. and Mrs. Neal S. Hovey Mr. and Mrs. David J. Greiner ’99 † Mr. and Mrs. Michael Anderson Mr. and Mrs. George G. Huntoon II ’62 Mr. Jaekyung Hahm and Mrs. Jehee Chang Mr. and Mrs. J. Bryan Anthony ’64 † Mr. Jason F. Indelicato ’98 † Mr. and Mrs. Crawford M. Hamilton ’78 † Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas J. Appleby † Mr. and Mrs. Doug Jones Mr. and Mrs. David F. Harris, Jr. ’64 † Mr. and Mrs. V. Kelley Armour † Mr. Henri Pell Junod, Jr. Mr. Roger Ip and Mrs. Teresa Lo Mr. and Mrs. Bradley J. R. Baker Mr. Wonsang Kang Mrs. Camille Jayne Dr. and Mrs. Peter S. Barnett ’62 Mr. and Mrs. David Kelsey † Mr. and Mrs. Peter Keehn Mrs. Ellen I. Bates † Mr. and Mrs. Eric L. Kemer ’77 Mr. and Mrs. John L. Kemmerer III ’66 † Mr. and Mrs. Michael S. Battey † ‡ Mr. and Mrs. Duncan R. Kennedy ’83 Ms. Evangeline Lai Mr. and Mrs. David P. Belardino ’01 Mr. Richard H. Kiene III ’94 † Mr. Edward J. Latessa Mr. and Mrs. Stephen T. Belter Mr. and Mrs. Christopher A. Kostanecki ’82 Mr. and Mrs. Zachary E. Lauckhardt ’97 Mr. and Mrs. Stanford Brainerd † Mr. and Mrs. Timothy P. Kurty ‡ Mr. Jared Lilienstein and Mrs. Patricia Guinn Mrs. Barbara Bunch and Mr. William Brobston ’69 Mr. and Mrs. James E. Lansbury ’74 † Mr. and Mrs. Mark R. Lindsay ‡ Mr. and Mrs. Melvin H. Campbell, Jr. ’66 Mr. and Mrs. James P. Lawrence, Jr. ’73 Mrs. Teresa L. H. Lo Mr. and Mrs. Fenton D. Carey III † Mr. and Mrs. James R. Leonard, Jr. ’61 Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Lockyer ‡ Mr. and Mrs. Gregg K. Carpenter † Mr. and Mrs. Wei Liu Mr. Steven C. Lunau, Jr. ’03 † Mr. Christopher B. Clark, Jr. ’89 † Mrs. Leila Jane Percy and Mr. Jeffrey Lozier ’65 † Mr. Geoffrey R. Lynch ’87 † Mr. Christopher W. Clark ’92 Mr. and Mrs. Scott Luce Mr. and Mrs. John McMahon, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. James T. Clark, Jr. ’04 Ms. Anne MacDonald † Mr. Winter Mead III ’03 Mr. and Mrs. Peter G. Clifford ’74 † Ms. Helen Gilbane Macdonald † Mr. and Mrs. Gregory P. Merrill ’44 † Dr. Craig Coccia and Dr. Kellie Holmstrom Mr. James A. Macdonald ’07 † Mr. Stephen R. Meyers Mr. and Mrs. George L. Cole † ‡ Mr. Eben M. MacNeille ’94 Mr. and Mrs. William R. Morris III Mr. and Mrs. Francis J. Conley Mr. David V. Madden ’90 Mr. and Mrs. John S. B. Oler, Sr. ’73 Mr. Jonathan T. Connors ’98 † Mr. and Mrs. John K. Magiera † Ms. Carla Owens Ms. Blandy Coty † ‡ Mr. and Mrs. Robert G. Manice ’72 † Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence R. Pugh ’51 Mr. and Mrs. Millard Cox III Mr. Michael J. Mauro ’11 Mr. and Mrs. Chris A. Rallis ’71 † Mr. and Mrs. Brewster M. Crosby ’88 † Mr. and Mrs. Herbert A. May III ’83 † Mr. and Mrs. Adrian W. Reed Mr. and Mrs. J. Brian Danforth ’91 Mr. and Mrs. Brian McCarthy † Mr. and Mrs. Nathaniel Reed Mr. Philip di Belardino Mr. and Mrs. Sean M. McCooey † Mr. and Mrs. Robert B. Richards, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Joe DiCaro Mr. and Mrs. Arlington B. McCrum III ’80 † Mr. and Mrs. Joseph W. Saunders Mrs. Sheila Wyckoff-Dickey and Mr. and Mrs. Jonathan I. McEvoy ’98 † Mr. and Mrs. Laurence C. Schiffenhaus ’47 † Mr. Charles D. Dickey ’67 † Mr. Robert L. W. McGraw Mr. and Mrs. J. Christopher Schoen ‡ Mr. and Mrs. John Dotson Mr. Mr. and Mrs. Scott M. Shaw † Mr. James van Dresser and Ms. Laura Carlson ’59 † Mr. and Mrs. Andrew M. Messina ’85 Dr. Taeshik Shim and Ms. Keunhwa Shin Mr. and Mrs. Michael J. Driscoll, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Metz ’90 † Mr. and Mrs. Richard Soule, Jr. Ms. Kimberly Ellis Mr. and Mrs. C. Hayes Miller ’75 Mr. and Mrs. William G. Stoops, Jr. ’81 † Dr. Heejong Eun and Dr. Heejung Kim Mr. and Mrs. Daniel P. Miller ’50 Dr. and Mrs. Leonard S. Teye-Botchway † Mr. and Mrs. Richard A. Ferguson Mrs. Patricia C. Miller Mr. and Mrs. Frederic W. Thomas, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Ian A. Findlay ’88 † Mr. and Mrs. Daniel M. Monahan Mr. and Mrs. Paul A. Thomas Mr. and Mrs. Edward T. Finneran III † Mr. and Mrs. Mark M. Montgelas Dr. and Mrs. William Vantine ‡ Mr. and Mrs. William J. Fitzgerald † Mr. and Mrs. Peter C. Morse † Mr. Jeffrey L. Walker Mr. and Mrs. Richard T. Flood, Jr. ’03 (Hon.) † Mr. and Mrs. Douglass S. Munro ’88 Mr. Jacob Walthour and The Honorable Mr. William A. Fordyce Mr. and Mrs. J. Richard Munro Shawndya Simpson-Walthour Mr. and Mrs. Daniel M. Fox ’92 † Mr. and Mrs. McCleane K. Munro ’90 Dr. Margaret Wiff and Mr. Hugh W. Whipple ’72 † Mr. and Mrs. Philip G. Franklin Mr. and Mrs. William Murnane Mr. Sung Ouk Yoon Mr. and Mrs. William G. Garrison ’49 † Mrs. Mary Barrett and Mr. Steven Noneman ’86 † Mr. and Mrs. Peter W. Getsinger Mr. James Orrell and Mr. Marshall Ginn ’81 † Mr. and Mrs. Ambrose W. Givens, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. J. Denis O’Toole Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Glenn ’59 † Mr. and Mrs. Ralph W. Overfield ’48 † Mr. and Mrs. Robert D. Gott ’64 † Ms. Linda Peters Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Grossman Mr. and Mrs. James C. Peva ’84

*= Deceased (Hon.) = Honorary Class Member Italics = Esse Quam Videri Society Member †= Consecutive Givers to the Annual Fund (Last four years) • = New Esse Quam Videri Society Member Bold = Class and Reunion Agents, Salisbury Alumni Association Volunteer and February Face-Off Captains ‡ = PA Leadership (Parents Association, Sixth Form Gift Committee and Parents Fund Committee)

Fall/Winter 2014 SALISBURY MAGAZINE 87 ANNUAL REPORT

Dr. Leonora B. Phillips and Dr. Thomas W. Phillips † 1959 Society Ms. Dorothy Poole and Mr. Thomas Block ’72 † Mr. and Mrs. Johnson T. Platt ’53 The 1959 Society gratefully recognizes Dr. and Mrs. Troy A. Blodgett ’86 Mr. and Mrs. C. Chandler Pohl ’60 † all donors whose total giving is $1-$999 Mr. and Mrs. John R. H. Blum Mr. and Mrs. William R. Pollard ’81 † to Salisbury. Mr. Richard L. Blum III ’77 Mr. and Mrs. Theodore S. Proxmire ’66 † Mr. and Mrs. John L. Blundin † Mr. Mark Pumphret Anonymous Mr. and Mrs. Christopher Bodnar Mr. and Mrs. Nicolas I. Quintana † Mr. and Mrs. Robert Adams Dr. and Mrs. E. Hal Bogardus ’49 † Mr. and Mrs. Harry Radovich Mr. and Mrs. Ralph W. Adler Mr. Gordon J. Boozer ’85 † Mr. and Mrs. Timothy G. Reed ’83 † Mr. and Mrs. Andrew C. Agor ’92 Mr. and Mrs. Thomas S. Bostwick ’95 Mr. Timothy M. Rees ’02 † Mr. and Mrs. Andrew R. Ahrens ’73 † Mr. Hudson A. Bova ’05 Mr. and Mrs. W. Mason Rees, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Theodore R. Ahrens ’04 † Mr. Frederick S. Bowditch ’75 Mrs. Corrine V. Reichert † Mr. Anthony D. Alexandre ’00 Mr. and Mrs. William F. Boyer † Mr. and Mrs. Bruce A. Reid, Jr. ’74 Mr. and Mrs. Douglas B. Allen ’53 † Mr. and Mrs. Gavin Brackenridge ’63 † Mr. Jacob R. Repokis ’06 Mr. Kevin C. Allen ’11 Mr. and Mrs. Guy D. Bradford Mr. and Mrs. Charles L. Ritchie, Jr. Ms. Margaret Allen Mr. Turner C. Bradford ’94 Mr. and Mrs. Thomas M. Ritchie, Jr. † Mr. and Mrs. Mark S. Allen † Mr. and Mrs. Bruce E. Bradley ’63 † Mr. and Mrs. Bradley B. Root ’84 † Mr. Leland Alper Ms. Joanne Bradley Mr. and Mrs. Jack L. Rubin † ‡ Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas Ames ’64 Mr. and Mrs. Samuel A. Bradley ’89 † Mr. and Mrs. Peter G. Russo † Mr. Gabriel J. Antoni ’11 Mr. Philip H. Brady ’08 Mr. and Mrs. Jesse F. Sammis III ’56 Mr. John R. Aronson ’01 Ms. Lélee Brandt and Mr. Anthony Francoline Mr. Allen E. Schaefer ’66 † Mr. and Mrs. Edgar S. Auchincloss Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Breckinridge ’47 † Mr. and Mrs. Richard J. Schmeelk Mr. and Mrs. Tobias Ayer † Mr. and Mrs. Allan Bredenfoerder Ms. Jeanne Marie Carmody and Mr. and Mrs. Edward L. Babington, Jr. ’83 Mr. Sayre B. Brennan ’03 Mr. Donald C. Schnackel ’68 † Mr. Jeffrey C. Back ’08 Dr. Lindsay A. Brislin and Mr. Max R. Seigle ’96 † Mr. and Mrs. Peter J. Baiocco ’01 Mr. Christopher J. Brislin ’96 † Mr. Charles Simonds and Mr. and Mrs. Brent Barbato ’02 Mr. Dylan M. Brodie ’12 Ms. Deirdre Lally-Simonds ’89 Mrs. Martha W. Barhydt Mr. Jackson S. Brodie ’09 Mr. and Mrs. Erik P. Sletteland ’74 Mr. and Mrs. Craig P. Barre Dr. and Mrs. Jonathan D. Brodie † Mr. and Mrs. David W. Smith Mr. Jack C. Barre ’11 Mr. and Mrs. Douglas A. Brooks Mr. and Mrs. Gerry Smith Mr. and Mrs. Peter D. Barrett ’88 Mr. and Mrs. John W. Brooks ’64 † Mr. and Mrs. Michael Spaan Mr. Alexander R. Bartell ’08 Mr. William T. S. Brooks ’13 Mr. and Mrs. Kevin F. Sullivan Mr. Hugh H. Bartlett ’13 Ms. Jane Beddall and Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Thilly ’64 Mr. and Mrs. James T. Bates Mr. Christopher Brown ’93 (Hon.) † Mr. John Thornton and Ms. V. Larkin Martin Mr. and Mrs. James M. Bates ’75 † Mr. Edward C. M. Brown ’01 † Mr. and Mrs. Tyler E. Thors ’85 † Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Bates ’82 † Dr. and Mrs. Hugh A. Brown ’64 † Mr. and Mrs. Rodman K. Tilt, Jr. ’56 † Mr. and Mrs. Jonathan M. Bates ’04 † Mr. Michael Brown Dr. Stephen Townes and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Battaglia † Mr. Nicholas W. Brown ’79 Ms. Lynn Kesterson-Townes ’70 Mr. Kyle S. Beatty ’08 † Mr. Russell P. Bruno ’08 Mr. Quang Tran and Mrs. Ha Thi Tran Mr. George Beavers IV ’82 Mr. Andrew B. Brunson ’12 Mr. Douglas Tudor Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Beck III ’97 † Mr. and Mrs. Howard W. Brush Mr. John L. Tyler ’41 Mr. Shayne A. Begin ’08 Mr. Matthew B. Bryden ’81 † Mr. Alexander F. H. van Nievelt ’80 Mr. and Mrs. Frank M. Bell, Jr. † Mr. and Mrs. David A. Bubacy Mr. and Mrs. Edward C. A. Wachtmeister ’67 † Mr. Bryan T. Bendjy ’02 † Mr. James L. Buckley Ms. Sandra D. Walker Mr. Chad G. Berger ’10 Mr. and Mrs. William E. Buehner † The Reverend and Mrs. Edwin M. Ward † Ms. Mary Jane Berrien Mr. and Mrs. Adam Bunce Mr. and Mrs. Thomas C. Weatherill ’44 Mrs. Bonnie Blodgett Bethea † Mr. Coty J. Burgess ’09 † Mr. and Mrs. Eugene E. Weymouth, Jr. ’84 † Mr. and Mrs. Carl A. Biddulph ’55 † Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth J. Burgess, Jr. † Mr. and Mrs. Stephan White, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. Sergei Bilcheck Mr. Ian T. Burkland ’08 † Mr. and Mrs. Walter D. Wick ’73 Mr. and Mrs. Arthur S. Binley III ’57 Mr. and Mrs. William S. Burkland † Mr. and Mrs. Timothy A. Wike ’85 † Mr. and Mrs. Richard Binswanger † The Reverend Dr. and Mrs. R. Craig Burlington Mr. and Mrs. Steven Wilcox Mr. Dave Bird Mr. and Mrs. Yerbury G. Burnham ’46 † Mr. and Mrs. Thomas M. Wynne † The Reverend and Mrs. James A. Birdsall Ms. Hilary Burrall † Mr. and Mrs. Robert P. Zabel, Jr. ’85 Mr. and Mrs. Jeremy L. Birdsall ’89 Mr. and Mrs. Christopher C. Bushing ’78 Mr. and Mrs. Michael Zimm Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence F. Bissell ’76 Mr. F. William Bushing III ’76 Mr. and Mrs. Joel S. Black ’56 † Ms. Nancy S. Bushnell Mr. James W. Blauvelt ’72 † Ms. Cynthia F. Buster † Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Bliss † Mr. James E. Byron, Jr. ’73 †

*= Deceased (Hon.) = Honorary Class Member Italics = Esse Quam Videri Society Member †= Consecutive Givers to the Annual Fund (Last four years) • = New Esse Quam Videri Society Member Bold = Class and Reunion Agents, Salisbury Alumni Association Volunteer and February Face-Off Captains ‡ = PA Leadership (Parents Association, Sixth Form Gift Committee and Parents Fund Committee)

88 SALISBURY MAGAZINE Fall/Winter 2014 ANNUAL REPORT

Mr. Steven Cabrera ’09 Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Cheney ’95 (Hon.) † Mr. Brian L. Corbat ’07 Mr. Mateo Cadavid ’11 Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Cherney The Reverend John R. Corbiere Mr. Anthony J. D. Cadwalader ’82 † Mr. and Mrs. Douglas K. Childs ’73 † Mrs. Ann Corkery ’13 (Hon.) * Mr. and Mrs. C. John Calder III † Dr. and Mrs. James E. Childs ’69 † Mr. Matthew B. Corkery † Mr. Charles W. Callahan ’04 † Mr. James W. Childs ’07 Mr. Ned Corkery ’04 (Hon.) † Mr. Alan J. Campbell Mr. and Mrs. James F. Clark, Jr. † Mr. Matthew D. Cosby ’96 Mr. and Mrs. Will Y. Campbell ’88 Mr. and Mrs. Peter P. Clark ’61 † Mr. Jonathan Coulombe and Mr. Alejandro S. Canet ’07 Mr. and Mrs. Reginald F. Clark Mrs. Jessie Parker Coulombe Mr. and Mrs. Michael P. Cantele ’84 Mr. and Mrs. James B. Clarke ’63 † Mr. and Mrs. James R. Coulter, Esq. ’48 Mr. Nicolas R. Cantone ’05 Mr. John W. Clippinger ’12 Mr. and Mrs. Kevin C. Cowley ’79 Mr. and Mrs. Joseph M. Caprio Ms. Patricia Clough Mr. and Mrs. Edward L. Coyle Mr. John N. Carey Mr. Hunter Q. Coe ’10 Ms. Erika Crofut Mr. John P. Carey ’13 Mr. Lawlor K. Coe ’12 Mr. William H. Cronin, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. David Carter † Mr. and Mrs. Mark W. Coe † Mr. and Mrs. William H. Cronin III ’66 † Mr. and Mrs. Drew J. Casertano † Mr. Alexander L. Cole ’13 Dr. Alberta Crum Mr. William H. Casertano ’09 † Ms. Barbara C. Coleman Mr. Matthew C. Crum ’04 Ms. Mari Saegusa and Mr. Jesse Casman ’85 Mr. and Mrs. Kevin C. Coleman ’87 † Mr. Jeremiah J. Cunningham ’06 Mr. Tyler H. Cassell ’06 † Mr. and Mrs. John K. Colgate III ’91 † Mr. and Mrs. Michael F. Cuozzo Mr. Carroll J. Cavanagh III ’97 † Mr. and Mrs. Chellis Collins † Mr. Michael R. Cuozzo ’13 Mr. and Mrs. Mark H. Chafee Mr. Dwight M. Collins ’97 Mr. and Mrs. Richard I. Curtis ’91 (Hon.) † Mr. and Mrs. Larry L. Chamberlin † Mr. and Mrs. Thomas H. Collins ’61 † Mr. Kerry Dakin ’87 Mr. and Mrs. John R. Chandler, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. David O. Cone Lt. and Mrs. James B. Dalton, Jr. † Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth B. Chase ’60 Mr. Alfred F. Cooke III ’55 † Ms. Susan Daly-Rouse and Mr. Charles Rouse † Mr. and Mrs. O. Stuart Chase † Mr. Barclay Cooke, Jr. ’64 Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Datz Ms. Martha McInerney-Chen and Mr. and Mrs. Thomas R. Coolidge Mr. Thomas W. David, Jr. ’05 Dr. Aloysius J. Chen Mr. and Mrs. Bruce D. Cooper ’65 † Mr. G. Vietor Davis, Jr. ’67 †

*= Deceased (Hon.) = Honorary Class Member Italics = Esse Quam Videri Society Member †= Consecutive Givers to the Annual Fund (Last four years) • = New Esse Quam Videri Society Member Bold = Class and Reunion Agents, Salisbury Alumni Association Volunteer and February Face-Off Captains ‡ = PA Leadership (Parents Association, Sixth Form Gift Committee and Parents Fund Committee)

Fall/Winter 2014 SALISBURY MAGAZINE 89 ANNUAL REPORT

Mrs. Helen Davis Mr. Andrew F. Dunlevy ’07 Mr. J. K. Foster Mr. and Mrs. Millard C. Davis ’48 Mr. and Mrs. Frank M. Dunlevy Mr. John Fousek Mr. Michael B. Dayton ’01 Mr. and Mrs. Pierre S. duPont V ’78 Mr. and Mrs. William H. Fowlie III ’61 Mr. Luke M. de Visscher ’11 Mr. William B. Dyke Mr. and Mrs. Scott S. Fox ’95 † Mr. Patrick M. N. de Visscher ’05 Mr. and Mrs. Kevin N. Eggleston Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Fraenkel Mr. and Mrs. Preston F. Death ’95 † Mr. and Mrs. Joseph D. Emmons ’64 † Mrs. Constance C. Frazier Mr. Joseph R. deBart III ’08 Mr. and Mrs. Richard E. Enright, Jr. ’49 Mr. Chase K. Freeman ’11 Mr. and Mrs. Doug DeCarr Mr. and Mrs. Gregory S. Erdmann ’83 † Mr. Kyle S. Freeman ’13 Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence H. Delafield ’62 Mr. and Mrs. John F. Erdmann III ’81 Mr. and Mrs. Jacob E. Fricker III ’67 Mr. and Mrs. David G. DeLuca, Sr. Mr. Louis G. Erskine, Jr. ’40 † Mr. and Mrs. Robert Friedlander ’50 † Mr. and Mrs. Walter DeMelle, Jr. † Mr. and Mrs. Ronald G. Erskine ’44 † Dr. Daniel Frisch Mr. Frederick B. Dent Mr. Luke M. Esselen ’07 Mrs. Elaine P. Frost † Mr. Andrew T. DeSalvo † Mr. and Mrs. Donald A. Eurich ’72 Ms. Louise P. Gara Ms. Emily Devey † Mr. and Mrs. Maxwell F. Eveleth † Mr. and Mrs. Robert Gardner Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence H. DeVoe ’85 Mr. and Mrs. Preston Everdell ’66 † Mr. and Mrs. Stephen V. Gardner, Jr. ’71 Mr. Kenneth G. Dewey ’92 Mr. and Mrs. Theodore T. Everitt, Jr. ’48 Mr. John Garibaldi and Ms. Patricia Ewing † Mr. and Mrs. Peter J. di Bonaventura † Mr. William A. Faison ’01 † Mr. and Mrs. George J. Garivaltis ’74 Mr. and Mrs. Willard D. Dickerson, Jr. ’70 † Mr. Brian Farrell Mr. and Mrs. William R. Gay ’79 † Dr. and Mrs. David F. Dineen Ms. Catherine Clayton and Mr. and Mrs. Gregory Georgiades Dr. Peter Doelger and Dr. Nancy Trout ’77 † Mr. Stephen R. Farrelly ’88 Mr. and Mrs. Randall B. Gerber ’81 Mr. and Mrs. Jerome H. Doolittle Mr. and Mrs. J. Bradley Faus Mr. Michael B. Gershon ’04 Mr. Matthew N. Doolittle ’86 † Mr. James T. Faus ’10 Mr. and Mrs. John D. Gibbs Mr. and Mrs. Kelley P. Doran ’85 † Mr. Robert J. Feeney III ’12 Mr. and Mrs. Kevin Giblin Mr. Avery L. Draper ’95 Mr. and Mrs. Mouncey Ferguson Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Giffenig † Mr. and Mrs. John W. Drayton, Jr. ’74 Mr. Charles R. Findlay ’06 Mr. and Mrs. Donald S. Gifford ’82 Mr. Michael J. Driscoll, Jr. ’08 † Col. and Mrs. George W. Findlay USAF (Ret.) ’63 Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Gilbert ‡ Mr. and Mrs. Jean Drouin Mr. and Mrs. Edward H. Fitch IV ’67 † Mr. and Mrs. Peter B. Gilbert † Mrs. Carmela Drummond Ms. Jacqueline Fitzpatrick Mr. and Mrs. Richard R. Gillespie ’48 † Mrs. Priscilla du Pont Mr. and Mrs. Tim Fitzpatrick ’79 Mr. and Mrs. Seamus M. Gilson † Mr. Richard L. Duchossois Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas Floros Ms. Jennifer Givens Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Epps Mr. and Mrs. George E. Forsen ’52 Mr. and Mrs. Field L. Glover CFRE ’88 Mr. Nicholas R. Duke, Sr. ’65 † Mr. and Mrs. Christopher A. Forster † Mr. and Mrs. Timothy Goggins

*= Deceased (Hon.) = Honorary Class Member Italics = Esse Quam Videri Society Member †= Consecutive Givers to the Annual Fund (Last four years) • = New Esse Quam Videri Society Member Bold = Class and Reunion Agents, Salisbury Alumni Association Volunteer and February Face-Off Captains ‡ = PA Leadership (Parents Association, Sixth Form Gift Committee and Parents Fund Committee)

90 SALISBURY MAGAZINE Fall/Winter 2014 ANNUAL REPORT

Mr. and Mrs. Jorge D. Gomez ’96 Ms. Joan Havens and Mr. Wallace Ragen Mr. Matthew M. Jacobs ’04 Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Gomez † Mrs. Christine Santini-Haviland and Mr. Chris P. Janelli ’70 Mr. Wesley T. Gomez ’10 Mr. Paul E. Haviland ’73 Mr. and Mrs. Frederick G. Jarvis ’48 † Mr. and Mrs. Jesus Gonzalez Mr. and Mrs. W. Wood Haynes ’60 Mr. Augustus G. Jenkins ’08 Ms. Mary Jean C. Goodfellow Mr. Holt B. Haynsworth ’96 Mr. and Mrs. James P. Jenkins † Mr. and Mrs. J. G. Goodnow ’81 Ms. Heather Hein Mr. and Mrs. Thomas P. Jessup † Mr. and Mrs. Laurence H. Goodyear ’85 † Mr. and Mrs. Andrew D. Hemingway ’72 Mr. and Mrs. Christopher C. Jeter ’85 † Mr. Christopher S. Gordon ’03 Mr. and Mrs. Henry L. Heminway ’52 † Mr. Antonio Jimenez Mr. Jeremy L. Gordon ’86 † Mr. and Mrs. Maxson B. Hence ’84 Mr. Brett John Mr. and Mrs. Christopher A. Gorycki ’81 † Mr. and Mrs. Michael J. Henesey, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. D. David Johnson II Mr. Albert Gottesman † Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Hewitt, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. Edward R. Johnson ’59 † Mr. and Mrs. Jonathan P. Gottsegen † Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey D. Hibbard Dr. and Mrs. Gordon C. Johnson Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas C. Gould ’86 Mr. Christopher J. Higbie ’07 Mr. Keith A. Johnson ’65 Ms. Gloria L. Gourley Mr. Robert F. Hill ’64 † Mr. and Mrs. Pierrepont Johnson, Jr. ’55 Mr. Kevin P. Grady ’00 † Mr. and Mrs. Christopher P. Hinchey † Mr. Reid B. Johnson ’09 Mr. Geoffrey M. Grant ’13 Mr. and Mrs. Anthony P. Hoag ’57 † Mr. and Mrs. Walter V. Johnson ’59 † Mr. Roy T. Grant Mr. Robert H. Hoenk Mr. Alexander W. Jones † Mr. Douglas A. Graves Mr. and Mrs. Charles R. Hoeveler ’63 Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Jones ’62 Mrs. Jeanne M. Graves Mr. and Mrs. J. David Hoeveler, Jr. ’61 Mr. and Mrs. Harris Jones III † Mr. and Mrs. Robert D. Green Mr. and Mrs. William H. Holden, Jr. ’48 † Mr. and Mrs. Jeremiah Jones † Mr. and Mrs. William F. Grey ’65 † Mr. Alexander S. Holder ’08 Mr. and Mrs. William J. Jordan † Mr. Calvin L. Griffin ’99 Mr. Robert B. Hollinger III ’05 Mr. and Mrs. Cary R. Jubinville Dr. and Mrs. Robert E. Griffin † Mr. and Mrs. Keith M. Holmes † Mr. Robert M. Jubinville ’09 Mr. Colin R. Griggs ’02 † Ms. Lisa Holze Mr. Gregory J. Kaczmarski ’04 Mr. Christopher F. Grinda ’95 † Mr. and Mrs. George A. Horkan III ’76 † Mr. Justin K. Kane ’94 Mr. William B. Grogan, Jr. Mr. Douglas M. Horner, Jr. ’05 Mr. and Mrs. John Kann Mr. and Mrs. Gary W. Gross † Mr. and Mrs. Douglas M. Horner Mr. and Mrs. Christopher Karachale Mr. and Mrs. John A. Guanci Mr. Justin D. HoShue ’05 Mr. and Mrs. Keith J. Kasper ’76 † Mr. John P. Guay ’09 Mr. Willet V. H. Hossfeld ’02 Dr. and Mrs. Kent T. Kay Mr. Elliot C. Gudis ’13 Mr. and Mrs. Winchester Hotchkiss Mrs. Shirley Kearns † Mr. and Mrs. Stephen D. Guest ’71 † Mrs. Sally Hough Mr. Daniel R. Kellams † Mr. Andrew M. E. Guild ’04 Ms. Alison Hoversten † Mrs. Katharine G. Kellogg Mr. and Mrs. Edward M. Guild, Jr. Mr. Philip E. Hoversten † Mr. Reynaldo Kelly ’07 Mr. and Mrs. Elliott W. Gumaer, Jr. † Mr. and Mrs. Charles F. Hovey, Jr. † Mr. Adam D. Kelsey ’09 Mr. Stephen F. Gundernatch Mr. Elliot M. Hovey ’02 † Dr. and Mrs. Richard A. Kemp Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Guterding Mr. and Mrs. C. De Forest Howland III ’78 ‡ Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Kenney ’50 † Mr. and Mrs. Charles T. Haddad † Mr. and Mrs. George A. Hubbard ’66 † Mr. Colin A. Keogh ’04 Mr. and Mrs. David H. Haffenreffer ’57 † Mr. and Mrs. Keith Hudak Mr. and Mrs. James D. Keogh ’01 † Mr. David S. Hagerman † Mr. and Mrs. Nathaniel Huggins III ’50 † Mr. Benjamin D. Ketchum ’07 Mrs. Judith Hajec † Mr. and Mrs. George S. Hughes, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Bradford W. Ketchum, Jr. ’57 † The Reverend and Mrs. Joseph K. Hall IV ’90 Mr. Gunnar A. Hughes ’11 Mr. and Mrs. Simeon R. Ketchum ’96 † Mr. and Mrs. Lewis R. M. Hall ’47 † Mr. Paul T. Hughes, Jr. ’01 Mr. and Mrs. W. Wesselink Keur ’63 † Mr. and Mrs. Robert T. Hall IV ’97 Mr. and Mrs. Derick L. Hulme ’48 Mr. and Mrs. Graham M. Kilvert ’74 Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Halsell III † Mrs. Phelps Hunter Mr. Jung Bum Kim ’03 Mrs. Barbara B. Hamlin † Ms. Dolores Gutierrez-Huntoon and Mrs. Kathryn C. Kiner-Freeman Mr. F. Eldridge Hammond ’73 † Mr. Michael G. Huntoon ’65 † Mr. and Mrs. Christopher J. Kittredge ’80 Mr. and Mrs. Kevin F. Hampe † Mr. and Mrs. John P. Hurley, Jr. Dr. and Ms. Alexander S. Kloman ’76 † Mr. and Mrs. Robert F. Handy ’50 † Mr. and Mrs. James L. Hussey, Jr. † Mr. Christopher C. Kohn ’07 Mr. H. T. Harlow ’99 Mrs. Kate Hutchinson Mr. and Mrs. Ernesto Kohn Mr. Alexander A. Harney ’03 Ms. Jurie C. Hwang Ms. Angela Koich Mr. and Ms. Michael L. Harney ’73 Mr. John M. Hyde Ms. Robyn Koppens Mr. Jake Harrington ’13 Mr. and Mrs. James Hyman † Mr. and Mrs. Chinam C. Kry ’92 † Mr. William R. Harris III ’07 † Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Ide † Mrs. John Lucien Kuhn Mr. Daniel W. Harty ’97 Mr. and Mrs. David Iles Mr. and Mrs. Joseph P. Lamb Mr. and Mrs. Merwin R. Haskel, Jr. ’49 † Mr. Daniel Ingoglia and Ms. Nora Dwyer Mrs. Mary Lamb Mr. and Mrs. Richard W. Haskel ’51 † Mr. and Mrs. Thomas N. Iovino Mr. and Mrs. Seamus S. Lamb ’96 Mr. Kevin M. Hathway ’01 Mr. and Mrs. J. Kirkman Jackson ’59 Mr. Clark K. Lambo ’13

*= Deceased (Hon.) = Honorary Class Member Italics = Esse Quam Videri Society Member †= Consecutive Givers to the Annual Fund (Last four years) • = New Esse Quam Videri Society Member Bold = Class and Reunion Agents, Salisbury Alumni Association Volunteer and February Face-Off Captains ‡ = PA Leadership (Parents Association, Sixth Form Gift Committee and Parents Fund Committee)

Fall/Winter 2014 SALISBURY MAGAZINE 91 ANNUAL REPORT

Mrs. Eileen Lambo Mr. and Mrs. Louis Matlack Mr. and Mrs. J. Patrick Moran, Jr. ’91 † Mr. John A. N. Lamont, Sr. † Mr. Graham O. Mattison ’91 Mr. Christopher J. Morley ’78 Mr. and Mrs. Carl P. Lane-Lopez Mr. Joshua D. Mattison ’95 Mr. and Mrs. William F. Morrill Mr. and Mrs. Peter J. Langlois Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Mattson † Mr. and Mrs. Cooper H. Morris ’71 Mrs. Rose K. Lansbury † Mr. and Mrs. Thomas C. Mavis ’84 Mr. Kevin P. Morris ’11 Mr. Stephen J. Lasner ’78 † Mr. Herbert A. May IV ’12 Mr. Leland F. Morris ’05 Ms. Kathleen E. Lavrentios Mr. Jeffrey J. May and Dr. Mary B. O’Neill ‡ Mr. and Mrs. Mills L. Morrison, Jr. ’92 † Mr. and Mrs. Edward B. Lawton ’86 Mr. and Mrs. Joseph W. Mazeika † Mr. and Mrs. Eric R. Morrow ’69 Ms. Carol Lazarus † Mr. Vito J. Mazzarino ’96 Mr. Joseph J. Morsman Mr. and Mrs. John Leary †‡ Mr. and Mrs. Stuart W. McAllister ’81 Mr. Marcel Ruben P. Mosblech ’89 Mrs. Helen V. Lebens † Mr. and Mrs. Arthur McCabe Ms. Silvia Mueller Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Lee Mr. Matthew E. McCaffrey ’01 Mr. and Mrs. Mark T. Mulvoy ’92 † Mr. and Mrs. Robert M. Leonard Mr. and Mrs. Timothy McCaffrey ’96 Mr. and Mrs. James P. Munton Mr. and Mrs. Harmon Levine Mr. and Mrs. Edward J. McCarthy Mr. and Mrs. Ian B. Murphy ’92 Mr. Robert A. Levinson ’72 Mr. and Mrs. Duncan McClelland ’74 Mr. Ryan M. Murphy ’01 † Mr. and Mrs. Harry B. Lewis ’45 † Mr. Edward P. McClenahan ’95 Mr. and Mrs. Serre L. Murphy ’84 Mr. and Mrs. Felix LiDonni Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. McClenahan, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Mark Murray Mr. and Mrs. Michael Lieder ’82 † Mr. and Mrs. Ian A. McCurdy ’68 † Cmdr. Charles W. Nation, Jr. ’65 † Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas Lieder ’81 Mr. Ralph M. McDermid ’53 Mr. and Mrs. Christopher Neary Ms. Joan Limongello † Mrs. Danielle Mailer and Mr. Peter McEachern † Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Neville Mr. Thomas J. Limongello ’95 Mr. and Mrs. Peter C. McEvoy Mr. and Mrs. Blake T. Newton III Mr. and Mrs. Thomas C. ’69 † Dr. and Mrs. Charles T. McHugh † Mr. Thin Nguyen and Mrs. Huong Le Mr. and Mrs. James E. Lineberger Mr. and Mrs. David C. McHugh ’94 Mr. Hien Nguyen Gia and Mrs. Ha Pham Thi Cam Mr. and Mrs. James E. Lineberger, Jr. ’79 † Mr. Thomas R. McHugh ’01 Mr. Robert A. Nigro Mr. Michael D. Lionetti ’02 † Mr. and Mrs. John P. McKay, Jr. ’66 Mr. and Mrs. Peter C. Nilsen ’56 † Mr. and Mrs. Donald V. Little, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Roger W. McKee ’72 † Mr. and Mrs. Charles F. Oat † Mrs. Donald Little Mr. and Mrs. David H. McKillop, Jr. ’77 Mr. and Mrs. David O’Brien ‡ Mr. Jeremy C. Little ’01 Mr. and Mrs. George C. McKinney ’49 † Mr. John P. O’Connor ’12 Mr. and Mrs. W. Geoffrey Little Mr. Andrew J. McLachlan ’03 Mr. and Mrs. Robert O’Connor † Mr. James E. Long, Jr. ’01 Mr. Michael R. McLeod ’99 † Mr. and Mrs. Timothy O’Connor † Mr. Kristopher S. Loomis ’92 Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. McMillan † Mr. Robert J. O’Donnell ’03 Mr. and Mrs. Stuart R. Loomis † Mr. and Mrs. Andrew McNabb Mr. Taylor L. Ogan ’14 † Dr. Caleb Loring IV ’89 Ms. E. Lynn Meehan Mr. and Mrs. William J. O’Hara Mr. and Mrs. Christopher M. Lowenstein ’88 Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Meehan † Mr. John S. B. Oler, Jr. ’12 Mr. and Mrs. Francis H. Ludington III ’68 Mr. Alexander M. Meek ’03 Mr. Erik Olsen ’02 Mr. and Mrs. Garrett S. Lunden ’02 † Mr. Samuel W. Meek IV ’02 Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Olsen Mr. Yu Kun Luo † Mr. Hugh Philip Meers ’01 Mr. and Mrs. Charles T. O’Neil ’84 Mr. and Mrs. Peter C. Luquer ’52 Mr. Hans-Joerg Meili † Mr. and Mrs. Francis S. O’Neill Mr. and Mrs. Henry Luzzi Mr. and Mrs. John F. Melvin † Ms. Maryanne O’Neill Mr. and Mrs. C. Bruton Lynch ’79 † Mr. Ralph J. Menconi ’84 (Hon.) Mr. and Mrs. Michael S. O’Neill ’85 Mr. Peter H. Lynch ’04 † Mr. and Mrs. Martin J. Merksamer † Mr. William C. G. Ortel II ’07 Mr. Angus L. Macdonald Mr. Chase E. Merrill ’17 Mr. Hubert G. Osteen III ’09 Mr. and Mrs. Barton L. Mackey, Jr. ’79 Mr. William B. Metz, Jr. ’09 Mr. Aaron J. Oster II ’99 Mr. and Mrs. Morris W. Macleod ’88 † Mr. and Mrs. Alexander H. Middendorf ’77 † Mr. John Brendan O’Toole ’07 † Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Macleod † Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas J. Miesen ’98 Mr. Joshua J. Ott ’79 Mr. Timothy R. Madden ’93 Mr. and Mrs. Glenn A. Millar ’64 Mr. and Mrs. Christopher G. Overbye ’86 † Mr. Matthew Magiera ’96 Mr. Kyle D. Miller ’01 * Mr. and Mrs. Charles K. Owen ’86 † Mr. and Mrs. Paolo Maglio Mr. and Mrs. David C. Miller Mr. Robert S. Pakan ’05 Dr. and Mrs. Yale R. Magrass Mr. and Mrs. Terence Miller † Mr. and Mrs. Lansing R. Palmer, Jr. ’85 † Ms. Joan M. Maher † Mr. and Mrs. William C. Miller IV † Mr. James M. Panczykowski ’00 † Mr. and Mrs. John Mahoney, Jr. † Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey Mintzlaff Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Pape ’50 † Mr. and Mrs. Thomas L. Maker ’49 † Mr. and Mrs. James F. Mokriski Mr. and Mrs. Joseph A. Pappalardo Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth S. Marran ’88 † Mr. and Mrs. Rhonan Mokriski ’90 † The Reverend and Mrs. Stephen D. Parker, Jr. ’59 † Dr. Mark Marshall and Mr. and Mrs. Michael R. Molloy ’94 † Mr. and Mrs. Henry B. Peltz ’90 Mrs. Silloo Peters-Marshall †‡ Mr. Theodore D. Moore ’89 Ms. Chris Hegedus and Ms. Dorothy M. Martin Mr. W. Dallon Moore, Jr. ’55 † Mr. Donn A. Pennebaker ’43 Mr. and Mrs. Francis E. Martin III ’80 Mr. John H. Moorhead ’64 † Mr. and Mrs. Jason Pennella

*= Deceased (Hon.) = Honorary Class Member Italics = Esse Quam Videri Society Member †= Consecutive Givers to the Annual Fund (Last four years) • = New Esse Quam Videri Society Member Bold = Class and Reunion Agents, Salisbury Alumni Association Volunteer and February Face-Off Captains ‡ = PA Leadership (Parents Association, Sixth Form Gift Committee and Parents Fund Committee)

92 SALISBURY MAGAZINE Fall/Winter 2014 ANNUAL REPORT

Mr. and Mrs. H. Bradley Peterson ’90 Mr. and Mrs. Peter Raifstanger Mr. and Mrs. Richard D. Rippe Mr. and Mrs. Christopher Phelps † Mr. Roy R. Raizen ’48 † Mr. and Mrs. Ezra H. Ripple V ’92 † Mrs. Barbara B. Phillips † Mr. and Mrs. Martin V. Rambusch †‡ Mr. and Mrs. Howard H. Roberts † Mr. and Mrs. Brian Phinney Mr. Christopher M. Ramos ’12 Mr. Zachary R. Robins ’09 Mr. Peter T. Phinny ’68 Mr. Chadwick P. Ramsdell ’03 † Mr. and Mrs. F. Brooks Robinson, Jr. † Mr. James Duncan S. Pindar ’07 Mr. and Mrs. Curtis G. Rand † Mr. Edmund P. Rogers III † Mr. and Mrs. Stan Pinover ’51 Mr. George C. Rand ’99 Mr. and Mrs. Gennaro A. Romano III † Mr. Keith M. Pinter ’65 † Lt. Col. and Mrs. Stephen J. Ratcliffe (Ret.) ’61 Mr. Wallace T. Ronald ’95 Mr. Henry C. Pitney ’76 † Mr. and Mrs. William F. Reardon, Jr. † Mr. and Mrs. Gregory H. Rooney ’89 † Mr. Adam J. Platt ’11 Mr. Donald W. Reed ’13 Mr. and Mrs. J. Carter Rose ’93 Mr. and Mrs. Alexander Podmaniczky † Mr. William F. Reed, Jr. † Mr. and Mrs. Martin J. Rose II Mr. and Mrs. Christopher L. Pope ’65 Mr. William S. Reed ’00 Ms. Eileen Fox and Mr. Henry Rosler Mr. and Mrs. Philip C. Potter, Jr. † Mr. John J. Reichert IV ’03 Mr. Matthew F. Rosler ’01 Mr. Patrick J. Powers ’07 † Mr. Alexander R. Reid ’07 Mr. Judson B. A. Ross ’08 Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Powers Mr. Peter L. Reid † Mr. Llewellyn G. Ross ’52 † Mr. William K. Powers ’11 Mr. David H. Renner ’09 Mr. Llewellyn G. Ross III ’05 † Mr. and Mrs. Victor O. Prall ’66 † Mr. and Mrs. Fred H. Renner III Ms. Joan Baldwin and Dr. Geoffrey Rossano † Major and Mrs. Osmond W. Priaulx ’44 † Mr. Garner M. Resch ’05 Mrs. Helen S. Ruisi Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Price, Jr. ’52 Mr. and Mrs. Michael F. Resch † Ms. Rita A. Delgado and Mr. Jeff Ruskin † Mr. Stuart W. Prindle ’07 Mr. and Mrs. Alexander V. Ressi DiCervia ’94 Mr. Christopher Russell and Mrs. Merrilee Mardon Mr. Jeffrey T. Prior ’84 Mr. and Mrs. Thomas A. Reynolds ’52 Mr. Talcott H. Russell II ’50 Mr. and Mrs. Schuyler J. Proctor † Mr. and Mrs. Frederick L. Rhodes † Mr. Brandon M. Russo ’10 Mr. and Mrs. David R. Pruett Mr. and Mrs. Brent Rice The Reverend and Mrs. Terrence W. Ryan † Mr. and Mrs. Samuel W. Pugsley ’04 Mr. Jonathon C. Richards ’11 † Mr. and Mrs. Francis Ryan Dr. and Mrs. Kenneth W. Purdy, Jr. ’48 † Mr. and Mrs. Stewart G. Richards † Mrs. Rosemary Ryan Mr. Tyler K. Quinn ’05 Mr. Samuel A. Richter ’11 Mr. and Mrs. John Ryerson III ’77 † Mr. Andres D. Quintana ’04 Mr. and Mrs. Gordon M. Ridgway ’76 Mr. and Mrs. Peter C. Saliba ’85 Mr. and Mrs. Warren K. Racusin Mrs. Katherine G. Ridgway Mr. Luke R. Salscheider ’04 Mr. Zachary Racusin ’12 Mr. and Mrs. Charles C. Rieger, Jr. † Ms. Debi B. Salzer † Mr. Alexander T. Raday ’94 Mr. and Mrs. Thomas P. Rimsa Mr. Santiago D. J. Sanchez ’06 Mr. and Mrs. Kevin J. Raday † Mr. Vincent R. Rinaldi III ’03 Mr. David R. Sandals ’01 †

*= Deceased (Hon.) = Honorary Class Member Italics = Esse Quam Videri Society Member †= Consecutive Givers to the Annual Fund (Last four years) • = New Esse Quam Videri Society Member Bold = Class and Reunion Agents, Salisbury Alumni Association Volunteer and February Face-Off Captains ‡ = PA Leadership (Parents Association, Sixth Form Gift Committee and Parents Fund Committee)

Fall/Winter 2014 SALISBURY MAGAZINE 93 ANNUAL REPORT

Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas T. Sant Foster ’60 Mr. and Mrs. Robert S. Segalla, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. J. Douglas Sinclair † Mr. Michael D. Sargent, Jr. ’04 Mr. Barton E. Seifert ’03 Mr. and Mrs. Timothy E. Sinclair ’91 † Mr. and Mrs. Michael D. Sargent, Sr. † Mr. Christopher M. Shaker ’99 Mr. David Singer Dr. and Mrs. Clarence T. Sasaki † Mr. Thomas M. Shane and Mr. and Mrs. Curtis G. Singmaster ’97 Reverend Nancy Lindell Sautter and Ms. Orawan Jittapinitmat The Reverend and Mrs. Peter W. Sipple † Mr. David J. Sautter ’47 † Mr. and Mrs. Alexander A. Shaw II Mr. and Mrs. John A. Sivright, Jr. † Mrs. Kathryn Sawyer-Vilter and Mr. Nicholas A. Shaw ’13 Mr. and Mrs. John Skok ’85 † Mr. Thomas P. Sawyer ’89 † Ms. Nina Shaw † Mr. Terence Charles D. Skyrm ’96 Mr. and Mrs. Raymond M. Scahill Ms. Lisa Sheble † Mr. and Mrs. Robert N. Sloan † Mr. and Mrs. Morgan Schafer Mr. Edward B. Sheridan ’81 † Mr. and Mrs. Archibald A. Smith IV ’96 Mr. and Mrs. W. Gerow Schick, Jr. ’57 † Mr. and Mrs. Charles L. Sherman IV ’53 † Mr. Charles S. Smith III ’76 † Mr. and Mrs. Mark K. Schmidt ’76 † Mr. and Mrs. Dennis P. Shortelle Mr. and Mrs. Christopher Smith Mr. and Mrs. John J. Schob Mr. Jeremy Shoykhet ’11 † Mrs. Kathleen Tener Smith Mr. and Mrs. Oliver C. Scholle ’72 Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Shoykhet † Ms. Laura Smith † Mr. Benjamin R. Schopp ’04 Mr. Virgil C. Shutze, Jr. ’63 Mrs. Leigh B. Smith Mr. Jörg Schwarz ’82 Mr. and Mrs. Jonathan Siff Mr. Leighton K. Smith III ’05 Mr. Nicholas Sciubba ’05 Mr. Cris P. Sigovitch ’01 Mr. Luke E. T. Smith ’96 Mr. and Mrs. Timothy S. Scott ’53 † Mr. Michael A. Siladi ’09 Mrs. Mimi Smith † Captain William J. Scott Mr. and Mrs. Roger S. Silverstein † Mr. and Mrs. Peyton R. Smith ’68 † Mr. Matthew G. Seager ’02 † Mr. Will N. Silverstein ’97 Mr. and Mrs. Procter Smith III † Mr. Robert Seass Mr. and Mrs. James Simboli † Ms. Bonnie Smithers Mr. John Seebeck ’82 Mr. Samuel H. Simmons † Mr. Austin P. Smyth ’11 Mr. and Mrs. Horace Seely-Brown III ’59 Mr. Thomas A. Simmons ’04 Mr. and Mrs. John E. Snellman, Sr. † Mrs. Julia C. Segalla Mr. James E. Simon ’88 † Mr. John E. Snellman, Jr. ’08 Mr. Mark D. Segalla ’73 Mr. William S. Simpson ’63 Mr. and Mrs. James E. Solberg

*= Deceased (Hon.) = Honorary Class Member Italics = Esse Quam Videri Society Member †= Consecutive Givers to the Annual Fund (Last four years) • = New Esse Quam Videri Society Member Bold = Class and Reunion Agents, Salisbury Alumni Association Volunteer and February Face-Off Captains ‡ = PA Leadership (Parents Association, Sixth Form Gift Committee and Parents Fund Committee)

94 SALISBURY MAGAZINE Fall/Winter 2014 ANNUAL REPORT

Mr. and Mrs. William Solberg Mr. Michael Trunzo Mr. Edward H. Whalen ’02 Mr. and Mrs. Peter P. Sowles ’75 † Mr. and Mrs. Alexander Tschursin ’75 Mr. and Mrs. Alexander B. Wheeler, Jr. ’66 † Mr. David S. Spalding ’80 † Mr. and Mrs. Frederick A. Tucker, Jr. † Mr. and Mrs. Ernest C. Whitbeck III Mr. and Mrs. John C. Speh, Jr. ’65 † Mr. and Mrs. Charles F. Tunnicliff † Mr. and Mrs. David W. White † Mr. William B. Spencer ’09 Mr. and Mrs. Lincoln H. Turner Mr. Justin D. White ’98 † Mr. and Mrs. Nathan A. Spooner ’92 Mr. and Mrs. Winslow G. Tuttle ’50 † Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence D. White Mr. and Mrs. Howard C. Springer Mr. and Mrs. John L. Tyler, Jr. ’66 Mr. Nicholas D. White ’01 † Mr. and Mrs. Orson L. St. John, Jr. † Mr. Robert Typermass ’60 † Dr. and Mrs. William E. White ’70 The Honorable and Mrs. Herbert J. Stern † Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J. Uhl Mr. and Mrs. H. Cutler Whitman IV ’81 Mr. and Mrs. Hardie M. Stevens ’84 † Mr. Hiram Upson, Westminster ’50 Mr. and Mrs. Charles P. Whittemore Mr. and Mrs. Prescott D. Stewart ’89 † Mrs. Barbara Uzielli Mr. and Mrs. John R. Whitton, Jr. ’47 † Mr. and Mrs. Robert B. Stewart ’56 † Mr. Justin C. Vagliano Mr. James O. Wight ’00 Mr. and Mrs. Scott Stirling Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Valen Mr. and Mrs. Valleau Wilkie, Jr. ’41 † Mrs. Alice E. Stokes † Mr. and Mrs. Charles R. Van Anden, Jr. ’45 Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Will Ms. Mary M. Stokes Mr. and Mrs. John Van Der Tuin † Ms. Alice B. Williams Mr. and Mrs. Cooper B. Stuart † Mr. and Mrs. Michael B. Van Winkle ’64 † Mr. and Mrs. Andrew M. Williams ’88 † Mr. Cooper B. Stuart, Jr. ’05 Mr. Willard R. Vanvoorhees ’70 † Mr. and Mrs. Beverly R. Williams Mr. and Mrs. Austin P. Sullivan, Jr. † Mr. Nishan P. Vartanian ’94 Mr. and Mrs. Gordon T. Williams ’85 Mr. Phillip T. Summers ’97 Mr. and Mrs. Andrew S. Veasey ’77 Mr. and Mrs. R. David Williams ’67 † Dr. and Mrs. Roland S. Summers † Mr. Tucker M. Veenis ’00 † Mr. and Mrs. H. Stuart Williamson ’54 † Mr. Ryan T. Supple ’00 Mr. Nathan Venditta Mr. D. Randall Wilmot ’79 Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Sutor IV Ms. Tulika Verma and Mr. Charles Hirsch Mr. and Mrs. Gunnar P. Wilmot † Mr. and Mrs. David C. Swann † Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Vernali † Mr. and Mrs. Hy Winik † Mr. and Mrs. Richard Sweet ‡ Mr. Joseph P. Versino ’01 Dr. and Mrs. Jeffrey C. Wint Mr. and Mrs. Richard E. Swibold † Mr. George P. Vietor ’06 Mr. Edward F. Winthrop ’05 Mr. Matthew A. Swift ’06 Mr. Daniel B. Vigneron ’79 Mr. and Mrs. George H. Witter ’79 Mr. Andrew Q. Sylvester ’02 Mr. Malcolm B. Vilas III ’62 † Mrs. Lisa B. Wojcik Ms. Ann C.M. Tait Ms. Joanne L. Vining Mr. and Mrs. Marshall L. Wolf ’46 The Reverend Charles W. Tait Mr. and Mrs. Brian J. Vogt ’82 † Dr. Stuart Wong and Dr. Elizabeth Gore Mr. James M. Taradash ’99 Mr. and Mrs. Gerhard von Finck Mr. and Mrs. Christopher W. Wood ’70 † Mr. Gabriel J. Tash ’02 † Dr. and Mrs. Siegfried Vossieg Mr. Daniel T. Wood ’01 Mrs. Susan S. Tash Mr. Carl Edward A. Wachtmeister ’98 Mr. Frederick L. Wood ’67 † Mr. and Mrs. Crane M. Taylor ’72 † Mr. and Mrs. Erik C. R. Wachtmeister ’95 Mr. and Mrs. Peter Wood Mr. and Mrs. Peter B. Taylor ’60 Mr. and Mrs. William J. Waldron Mr. and Mrs. Hilary G. Woodhouse ’54 † Mr. and Mrs. Walter C. Teagle III Mr. and Mrs. Cuyler Walker, Esq. Mr. and Mrs. Albert J. Wright III ’45 † Mr. Lyman M. Terni ’00 Mr. and Mrs. Graham M. Walker Ms. Judith Wyer Mr. and Mrs. Philip Terni † Mr. David Wang ’10 † Mr. Nicholas F. Wyman ’01 Mr. and Mrs. Donald W. Thomas ’50 † Mr. and Mrs. Charles F. L. Ward ’86 Mr. and Mrs. Robert D. Wynne Mr. and Mrs. Frederic W. Thomas, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. Gordon R. Warner ’70 Mr. and Mrs. Raymond A. Yost ’55 Mr. James K. Thompson ’80 Mr. Cary R. Wasserman ’04 Mr. and Mrs. Parker E. Young ’01 † Mr. Mark M. Thompson ’85 Mr. and Mrs. Lucas E. Watson ’90 Mr. and Mrs. Thomas H. Young III † Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Thompson † Mr. Peter C. Watts ’99 † Mr. and Mrs. Michael T. Zahn The Reverend and Mrs. Robert H. Thompson Mr. and Mrs. Cornelius B. Waud ’58 † Mr. Sean W. Zak ’04 Mr. and Mrs. Timothy W. Thompson ’63 † Mr. and Mrs. George S. Weaver, Jr. ’52 † Mr. and Mrs. Michael Zara, Jr. ’66 Mr. and Mrs. George A. Thornton IV ’81 † Mr. and Mrs. Peter Q. Weeks ’68 Mr. and Mrs. Peter H. Zecher Mr. Henry D. Tiffany III † Mr. and Mrs. Homer E. Weidlich, Jr. ’62 † Mr. and Mrs. Keith Zelazny ‡ Mr. and Mrs. Christopher R. Tillson, Jr. ’99 Mr. Jeffrey D. Weinstein ’74 † Ms. Li Shao and Mr. Li Zhang ’86 † Mr. and Mrs. Kurt P. Tinius † Mr. Joshua D. Weinstein ’11 † Mr. William A. Ziegler † Mr. and Mrs. Wesley R. Tinker III ’53 † Ms. Kathleen D. Weinstein Dr. and Mrs. Jack M. Zimmerman ’44 † Mr. Tat Tironsakkul ’17 Mr. and Mrs. David A. Weintraub ’98 † Mr. Andrew K. Zinkand ’07 Mr. and Mrs. John J. Toffey V Mr. William H. Weintraub † Mr. and Mrs. John J. Toffey VI Mr. James M. Weir ’98 † Mr. and Mrs. Alphonse J. Tortorella ‡ Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Weisman Mrs. Susan Touponse Mr. and Mrs. Alexander Welles ’63 Mr. and Mrs. Bronson Trevor, Jr. ’70 Mr. and Mrs. Pieter A. Wernink ’86 Mr. Christopher J. Truini ’12 Mr. Bradley P. Werntz ’06 Mr. and Mrs. Joseph J. Truini, Jr. † Mr. and Mrs. Richard P. Westcott ’43

*= Deceased (Hon.) = Honorary Class Member Italics = Esse Quam Videri Society Member †= Consecutive Givers to the Annual Fund (Last four years) • = New Esse Quam Videri Society Member Bold = Class and Reunion Agents, Salisbury Alumni Association Volunteer and February Face-Off Captains ‡ = PA Leadership (Parents Association, Sixth Form Gift Committee and Parents Fund Committee)

Fall/Winter 2014 SALISBURY MAGAZINE 95 ANNUAL REPORT

Esse Quam Videri Society

Alumni and friends are making a substantial commitment to the School by including Salisbury in their estate plans. Charitable gift annuities, remainder and lead trusts, life insurance, retirement plans and bequests have and will transform Salisbury immeasurably in the years to come. The School is thankful to all those who have become members of the Esse Quam Videri Society and have chosen to leave their legacy on the Hilltop.

Anonymous † Mr. Richard B. Fuller ’64 * The Rev. Dr. George E. Quaile * Mr. Douglas B. Allen ’53 † Mr. Michael J. Garvey, Jr. ’48 * Mr. and Mrs. Richard E. Riegel III ’84 † Mr. J. Bryan Anthony ’64 † General James W. Gerard II ’34 * Mr. Daniel S. Riker, Jr. ’39 * Mr. William E. Appleyard ’53 * Mr. James W. Gerard V ’79 † Mr. William B. Ruger, Sr. ’36 * Mr. Dutch Barhydt † Mr. and Mrs. Mark E. Gudis Mr. and Mrs. James E. Rutledge † Mr. David W. Barnard † Mr. David H. Haffenreffer ’57 † Mr. J. Wood Rutter ’98 (Hon.) † Mr. and Mrs. Peter S. Barnett ’62 Mr. Donald B. Hajec ’56 * Mr. Jesse F. Sammis III ’56 Mr. William W. Bartlett ’54 * Mr. Lewis R. M. Hall ’47 † Mr. and Mrs. Joseph W. Saunders Mr. Jim H. Bates ’48 * Mr. David F. Harris ’37 * Mr. Joseph A. Schiffenhaus ’48 Mr. Andrew N. Baur * Mrs. Jane M. Harris * Mr. Laurence C. Schiffenhaus ’47 † Mr. George Beavers III ’48 * Mr. Thomas L. Harris ’45 * Mr. and Mrs. Christoph H. Schmidt The Rev. Dr. Charles A. Bevan, Jr. * Mrs. Yasuko Harris * Mr. Alan J. Schmitz * Mr. David R. Blossom ’28 * Mr. John E. Herlitz ’60 * Mr. Miles P. H. Seifert ’53 * Mr. Gordon J. Boozer ’85 † Mr. Peter A. Highman ’42 * Mr. Charles L. Sherman IV ’53 † Mr. Morley C. Boyd * Mr. Landon Hilliard III † Mr. Virgil C. Shutze, Jr. ’63 Mrs. Helene K. Bracken * Mr. Eric C. Hudson ’80 Mr. James E. Simon ’88 † Mr. and Mrs. Walter C. Bradford ’48 † Mr. Bradford W. Jayne Mr. and Mrs. John A. Sivright, Jr. † Mr. John G. Brim ’64 † Mr. David Seguin Junker ’35 * Mr. Joseph S. Skobba * Mr. Donald W. Burkett ’58 Mr. Henri P. Junod, Jr. Mrs. Sonia P. Somerville Mr. Edmund S. Carr * Mr. Henri P. Junod 1918 * Mr. David S. Spalding ’80 † Dr. and Mrs. James Carter Mr. George P. Kendall ’47 * Mr. Ellsworth M. Statler ’31 * Mr. Keith E. Cassell Mr. Edward M. King ’53 Mr. Patrick J. Stern ’66 * Mr. Edward C. Childs ’93 Mr. Brady C. Knight ’91 Mr. Prescott D. Stewart ’89 † Mr. John W. Childs ’59 (Hon.) † Sir Eddie Kulukundis O.B.E. ’50 Mr. Robert B. Stewart ’56 † Dr. Richard S. Childs, Jr. ’63 † Mr. Charles S. Langdon Mr. John W. Stokes II * Mr. C. Robert Clausen ’43 * Mrs. Elizabeth H. Lawrence * Mr. Walter H. Stokes ’84 Mr. Atwood Collins III † Mr. David C. Leavy ’88 † Mr. Michael S. Sylvester ’59 † Mr. Charles N. Cresap * Mr. Sidney Mathews ’28 * Mr. William G. Thompson ’45 * Mrs. Carolyn B. D’Alessandro † Mr. Ralph J. Menconi ’84 (Hon.) Mr. Frederick M. Tibbitts, Jr. ’65 Mr. William G. Daniels ’72 † Mr. Quentin Meyer ’65 † Mr. Rodman K. Tilt, Jr. † Mr. Edwin C. Davies ’53 * Mr. Daniel P. Miller ’50 Mr. Wesley R. Tinker III ’53 † Mr. and Mrs. Jeremy S. Davis ’52 * Mr. Michael Moore ’58 * Mr. Bronson Trevor, Jr. ’70 Mr. Nathaniel B. Day ’56 † Mr. and Mrs. J. Richard Munro Mr. Robert H. Trowbridge, Jr. ’51 Mr. James F. Dickerson ’65 Mr. Thomas H. Nicholson ’64 • † Mr. John L. Tyler ’41 Mr. Charles D. Dickey III ’67 † Ms. Maura Nicholson De Visscher Mr. and Mrs. Edward C. A. Wachtmeister ’67 † Mr. John T. Dillon † Mr. William F. Nolker ’39 * Mr. Jeffrey P. Walker * † Mr. James Van B. Dresser ’59 † Mr. Joseph F. Park, Jr. ’57 * Mrs. Sophie P. Walker * Mr. Peter T. Earle ’51 * Mrs. Adelaide Parker * Mr. Richard P. Westcott ’43 Mr. John M. Emmett ’53 Col. James G. Parker ’30 * Mr. Hugh W. Whipple ’72 † Mr. L. Gillespie Erskine, Jr. ’40 † Mr. John W. Patten ’49 † Mrs. Katharine B. Whipple * Mr. William R. Fearey ’42 * Mrs. Mary M. Perkins * Ms. Eleanor Hubbard White Mrs. Marian M. Ferguson * Mr. James M. Phillips ’88 * Mr. John R. Whitton, Jr. ’47 † Mr. Richard D. Field ’59 † Mr. Peter T. Phinny ’68 Mr. Anthony C. Woodruff ’01 (Hon.) † Mrs. Elizabeth W. Firuski * The Honorable Robert H. Phinny * Mr. George W. Young ’48 * Mr. Richard T. Flood, Sr. * Mrs. Sally G. Phinny Dr. Jack M. Zimmerman ’44 † Mr. John J. Flynn, Jr. ’79 Mr. C. Chandler Pohl ’60 † Mr. Eugene M. Zuckert ’29 * Mr. Jackson W. Foley, Jr. ’61 † Mr. John H. Priestman * Mr. And Mrs. H. Crosby Foster II ’57 The Reverend Ernest B. Pugh ’31 *

*= Deceased (Hon.) = Honorary Class Member Italics = Esse Quam Videri Society Member †= Consecutive Givers to the Annual Fund (Last four years) • = New Esse Quam Videri Society Member Bold = Class and Reunion Agents, Salisbury Alumni Association Volunteer and February Face-Off Captains ‡ = PA Leadership (Parents Association, Sixth Form Gift Committee and Parents Fund Committee)

96 SALISBURY MAGAZINE Fall/Winter 2014 ANNUAL REPORT

Giving by Class

CLASS OF 1929 Mr. Laurence C. Schiffenhaus † CLASS OF 1952 CLASS OF 1957 Annual : $11,998 Mr. John R. Whitton, Jr. † Annual: $1,750 Annual: $4,350 Capital/Endowment: $70,000 Overall Participation: 47% Capital/Endowment: $100 Mr. Eugene M. Zuckert * CLASS OF 1948 Mr. George E. Forsen Overall Participation: 33% Annual: $6,815 Mr. Henry L. Heminway † Mr. Herbert M. Altman † CLASS OF 1940 Capital/Endowment: $425 Mr. Peter C. Luquer Mr. Arthur S. Binley III Annual: $150 Overall Participation: 63% Mr. Robert H. Price, Jr. Mr. David H. Haffenreffer † Overall Participation: 33% Mr. Walter C. Bradford † Mr. Thomas A. Reynolds Mr. Anthony P. Hoag † Mr. Louis G. Erskine, Jr. † Mr. James R. Coulter Mr. Llewellyn G. Ross † Mr. Bradford W. Ketchum, Jr. † Mr. Millard C. Davis Mr. George S. Weaver, Jr. † Mr. W. Gerow Schick, Jr. † CLASS OF 1941 Mr. Theodore T. Everitt, Jr. Annual: $1,250 Mr. Richard R. Gillespie † CLASS OF 1953 CLASS OF 1958 Overall Participation: 67% Mr. William H. Holden, Jr. † Annual: $1,925 Annual: $500 Mr. John L. Tyler Mr. Derick L. Hulme Capital/Endowment: $1,000 Capital/Endowment: $5,000 Mr. Valleau Wilkie, Jr. † Mr. Frederick G. Jarvis † Overall Participation: 35% Overall Participation: 13% Mr. Ralph W. Overfield † Mr. Douglas B. Allen † Mr. Philip L. Calhoun CLASS OF 1943 Dr. Kenneth W. Purdy, Jr. † Mr. Ralph M. McDermid Mr. Cornelius B. Waud † Annual: $525 Mr. Roy R. Raizen † Mr. Johnson T. Platt Overall Participation: 67% Mr. Timothy S. Scott † 55th Reunion Mr. Donn A. Pennebaker CLASS OF 1959 65th Reunion Mr. Charles L. Sherman IV † Mr. Richard P. Westcott Annual: $389,320 CLASS OF 1949 Mr. Wesley R. Tinker III † Capital/Endowment: $761,936 Annual: $13,814 70th Reunion Overall Participation: 41% Capital/Endowment: $550 60th Reunion CLASS OF 1944 Mr. Richard M. Altman † Overall Participation: 54% CLASS OF 1954 Annual: $5,713 Dr. E. Hal Bogardus † Annual: $750 Mr. John W. Childs (Hon.) † Overall Participation: 63% Mr. Richard E. Enright, Jr. Capital/Endowment: $100 Mr. James van B. Dresser † Mr. Ronald G. Erskine † Mr. William G. Garrison † Overall Participation: 13% Mr. Richard D. Field † Mr. Gregory P. Merrill † Mr. Merwin R. Haskel, Jr. † Mr. Hugh S. Williamson † Mr. Edward F. Glassmeyer † Major Osmond W. Priaulx † Mr. Thomas L. Maker † Mr. Hilary G. Woodhouse † Mr. Ronald Glenn † Mr. Thomas C. Weatherill Mr. George C. McKinney † Mr. J. Kirkman Jackson Dr. Jack M. Zimmerman † Mr. John W. Patten † CLASS OF 1955 Mr. Edward R. Johnson † Annual: $5,475 Mr. Walter V. Johnson † CLASS OF 1945 CLASS OF 1950 Overall Participation: 40% Mr. George L. Maxwell Annual: $400 Annual: $1,175 Mr. Carl A. Biddulph † The Reverend Stephen D. Overall Participation: 43% Capital/Endowment: $1,000 Mr. Alfred F. Cooke III † Parker, Jr. † Mr. Harry B. Lewis † Overall Participation: 75% Mr. Gardner Cowles III Mr. Horace Seely-Brown III Mr. Charles R. Van Anden, Jr. Mr. Robert Friedlander † Mr. Pierrepont Johnson, Jr. Mr. Michael S. Sylvester † Mr. Albert J. Wright III † Mr. Robert F. Handy † Mr. W. Dallon Moore, Jr. † Mr. Nathaniel Huggins III † Mr. Raymond A. Yost CLASS OF 1960 CLASS OF 1946 Mr. Robert W. Kenney † Annual: $22,213 Annual: $175 Mr. Daniel P. Miller CLASS OF 1956 Capital/Endowment: $10,097 Overall Participation: 40% Mr. Robert H. Pape † Annual: $54,650 Overall Participation: 35% Mr. Yerbury G. Burnham † Mr. Talcott H. Russell II Overall Participation: 30% Mr. Kenneth B. Chase Mr. Marshall L. Wolf Mr. Donald W. Thomas † Mr. Joel S. Black † Mr. W. Wood Haynes Mr. Winslow G. Tuttle † Mr. Nathaniel B. Day † Mr. David McCargo III † CLASS OF 1947 Mr. Peter C. Nilsen † Mr. John E. Olson † Annual: $3,950 Mr. Jesse F. Sammis III Mr. C. Chandler Pohl † Overall Participation: 45% CLASS OF 1951 Mr. Robert B. Stewart † Mr. Nicholas T. Sant Foster Mr. Robert H. Breckinridge † Annual: $4,200 Mr. Rodman K. Tilt, Jr. † Mr. Peter B. Taylor Mr. Lewis R. M. Hall † Overall Participation: 30% Mr. Richard W. Haskel † Mr. Robert Typermass † Mr. David J. Sautter † Mr. Stan Pinover Mr. Lawrence R. Pugh

*= Deceased (Hon.) = Honorary Class Member Italics = Esse Quam Videri Society Member †= Consecutive Givers to the Annual Fund (Last four years) • = New Esse Quam Videri Society Member Bold = Class and Reunion Agents, Salisbury Alumni Association Volunteer and February Face-Off Captains ‡ = PA Leadership (Parents Association, Sixth Form Gift Committee and Parents Fund Committee)

Fall/Winter 2014 SALISBURY MAGAZINE 97 ANNUAL REPORT

CLASS OF 1961 Mr. Barclay Cooke, Jr. Mr. Edward H. Fitch IV † CLASS OF 1972 Annual: $17,700 Mr. Joseph D. Emmons † Mr. Jacob E. Fricker III Annual: $29,090 Capital/Endowment: $231,082 Mr. Robert D. Gott † Mr. Edward C. A. Wachtmeister † Capital/Endowment: $200 Overall Participation: 52% Mr. David F. Harris, Jr. † Mr. R. David Williams † Overall Participation: 34% Mr. David W. Barnard † Mr. Robert F. Hill † Mr. Frederick L. Wood † Mr. John D. Alexander, Jr. Mr. Henry E. Blair Mr. Glenn A. Millar Mr. James W. Blauvelt † Mr. Peter P. Clark † Mr. John H. Moorhead † CLASS OF 1968 Mr. Thomas C. Block † Mr. Thomas H. Collins † Mr. Thomas H. Nicholson • † Annual: $2,950 Mr. William G. Daniels † Mr. Jackson W. Foley, Jr. † Mr. J. L. Thilly Overall Participation: 19% Mr. Donald A. Eurich Mr. William H. Fowlie III Mr. Michael B. Van Winkle † Mr. Francis H. Ludington III Mr. Andrew D. Hemingway Mr. George Whiting Hebard, Jr. † Mr. Ian A. McCurdy † Mr. Robert A. Levinson Mr. J. David Hoeveler, Jr. CLASS OF 1965 Mr. Peter T. Phinny Mr. Robert G. Manice † Mr. Chester W. Kitchings, Jr. † Annual: $18,725 Mr. Donald C. Schnackel † Mr. Roger W. McKee † Mr. James R. Leonard, Jr. Capital/Endowment: $5,000 Mr. Peyton R. Smith † Mr. Oliver C. Scholle Mr. Brewster B. Perkins Overall Participation: 33% Mr. Peter Q. Weeks Mr. Crane M. Taylor † Lt. Col. Stephen J. Ratcliffe (Ret.) Mr. Bruce D. Cooper † Mr. Hugh W. Whipple † Mr. James F. Dickerson 45th Reunion CLASS OF 1962 Mr. Nicholas R. Duke, Sr. † CLASS OF 1969 CLASS OF 1973 Annual: $3,400 Mr. William F. Grey † Annual: $10,986 Annual: $4,450 Overall Participation: 24% Mr. Michael G. Huntoon † Capital/Endowment: $151,000 Capital/Endowment: $20,192 Dr. Peter S. Barnett Mr. Keith A. Johnson Overall Participation: 21% Overall Participation: 26% Mr. Lawrence H. Delafield Mr. Jeffrey W. Lozier † Mr. William A. Brobston, Jr. Mr. Andrew R. Ahrens † Mr. George G. Huntoon II Mr. Quentin Meyer † Dr. James E. Childs † Mr. James E. Byron, Jr. † Mr. Charles W. Jones Mr. George P. Mills Mr. William O. Hiltz † Mr. Douglas K. Childs † Mr. Malcolm B. Vilas III † Cmdr. Charles W. Nation, Jr. † Mr. Thomas C. Lincoln † Mr. F. Eldridge Hammond † Mr. Homer E. Weidlich, Jr. † Mr. Keith M. Pinter † Mr. Eric R. Morrow Mr. Michael L. Harney Mr. Christopher L. Pope Mr. Paul E. Haviland CLASS OF 1963 Mr. John C. Speh, Jr. † CLASS OF 1970 Mr. James P. Lawrence, Jr. Annual: $1,275 Annual: $22,300 Mr. John S. B. Oler, Sr. Capital/Endowment: $10,200 Capital/Endowment: $25 CLASS OF 1966 Mr. Benjamin B. Rauch † Overall Participation: 37% Overall Participation: 23% Annual: $16,675 Mr. Mark D. Segalla Mr. Gavin Brackenridge † Mr. Barron G. Collier II Overall Participation: 52% Mr. Thomas B. Wheeler III Mr. Willard D. Dickerson, Jr. † Mr. Bruce E. Bradley † Mr. Melvin H. Campbell, Jr. Mr. Walter D. Wick Mr. Chris P. Janelli Dr. Richard S. Childs, Jr. † Mr. William H. Cronin III † Dr. Stephen A. Townes Mr. James B. Clarke † Mr. Preston Everdell † 40th Reunion Mr. Bronson Trevor, Jr. Col. George W. Findlay USAF Mr. George A. Hubbard † CLASS OF 1974 (Ret.) Mr. Willard R. Vanvoorhees † Mr. John L. Kemmerer III † Annual: $15,499 Mr. Charles R. Hoeveler Mr. Gordon R. Warner Mr. John P. McKay, Jr. Capital/Endowment: $14,842 Mr. W. Wesselink Keur † Dr. William E. White Overall Participation: 30% Mr. Victor O. Prall † Mr. Virgil C. Shutze, Jr. Mr. Christopher W. Wood † Mr. Peter G. Clifford † Mr. Theodore S. Proxmire † Mr. William S. Simpson Mr. John W. Drayton, Jr. Mr. Allen E. Schaefer † Mr. Timothy W. Thompson † CLASS OF 1971 Mr. George J. Garivaltis Mr. Burton G. Tremaine III Mr. Alexander Welles Annual: $8,000 Mr. Joshua F. Hart † Mr. John L. Tyler, Jr. Capital/Endowment: $6,950 Mr. Timothy J. Heekin Mr. Alexander B. Wheeler, Jr. † 50th Reunion Overall Participation: 16% Mr. Graham M. Kilvert Mr. Michael Zara, Jr. CLASS OF 1964 Mr. Stephen V. Gardner, Jr. Mr. James E. Lansbury † Annual: $13,875 Mr. Stephen D. Guest † Mr. Duncan McClelland CLASS OF 1967 Capital/Endowment: $25,000 Mr. David F. Haddow † Mr. Bruce A. Reid, Jr. Annual: $8,925 Overall Participation: 50% Mr. Cooper H. Morris Overall Participation: 31% Mr. Erik P. Sletteland Mr. Nicholas Ames Mr. Edmund O. Noel † Mr. DeWitt L. Alexandre, Jr. † Mr. Jeffrey D. Weinstein † Mr. John B. Anthony † Mr. Chris A. Rallis † Mr. G. Vietor Davis, Jr. † Mr. Jeffrey W. Wheeler † Mr. John G. Brim † Mr. Frederick A. Dick † Mr. John W. Brooks † Mr. Charles D. Dickey III † Dr. Hugh A. Brown †

*= Deceased (Hon.)= Honorary Class Member Italics = Esse Quam Videri Society Member †= Consecutive Givers to the Annual Fund (Last four years) Bold = Class and Reunion Agents and Salisbury Alumni Association Volunteer • = New Esse Quam Videri Society Member ‡ = PA Leadership (Parents Association, Sixth Form Gift Committee and Parents Fund Committee)

98 SALISBURY MAGAZINE Fall/Winter 2014 ANNUAL REPORT

CLASS OF 1975 CLASS OF 1977 35th Reunion Mr. Francis E. Martin III Annual: $2,400 Annual: $3,155 CLASS OF 1979 Mr. Arlington B. McCrum III † Capital/Endowment: $26,570 Capital/Endowment: $4,200 Annual: $35,204 Mr. David S. Spalding † Overall Participation: 15% Overall Participation: 23% Capital/Endowment: $10,000 Mr. James K. Thompson Mr. James M. Bates † Mr. Richard L. Blum III Overall Participation: 32% Mr. Alexander F. H. van Nievelt Mr. Frederick S. Bowditch Dr. Peter J. Doelger † Mr. Nicholas W. Brown Mr. Kevin C. Cowley Mr. C. Hayes Miller Mr. Michael R. Eckel CLASS OF 1981 Mr. Hayden D. Davis III Mr. Peter P. Sowles † Mr. Joseph C. M. Hall Annual: $20,888 Mr. Peter F. Tauck Mr. Eric L. Kemer Mr. Timothy R. Fitzpatrick Capital/Endowment: $85,180 Mr. Alexander Tschursin Mr. David H. McKillop, Jr. Mr. William R. Gay † Overall Participation: 30% Mr. Alexander H. Middendorf † Mr. James W. Gerard V † Mr. Matthew B. Bryden † CLASS OF 1976 Mr. John Ryerson III † Mr. Campbell B. Langdon † Mr. John F. Erdmann III Annual: $11,655 Mr. Andrew S. Veasey Mr. James E. Lineberger, Jr. † Mr. Michael J. Gans Capital/Endowment: $25,600 Mr. C. Bruton Lynch † Mr. Randall B. Gerber Overall Participation: 25% CLASS OF 1978 Mr. Barton L. Mackey, Jr. Mr. J. G. Goodnow Mr. Lawrence F. Bissell Annual: $3,502 Mr. Joshua J. Ott Mr. Christopher A. Gorycki † Mr. F. William Bushing III Overall Participation: 12% Mr. Daniel B. Vigneron Mr. David T. Harrington † Mr. William R. Harris, Jr. † Mr. Christopher C. Bushing Mr. D. Randall Wilmot Mr. Nicholas Lieder Mr. George A. Horkan III † Mr. Pierre S. duPont V Mr. George H. Witter Mr. Stuart W. McAllister Mr. Keith J. Kasper † Mr. Crawford M. Hamilton † Mr. Ralph G. McDermid † Dr. Alexander S. Kloman † Mr. C. De Forest Howland III ‡ CLASS OF 1980 Mr. James M. Orrell † Mr. Henry C. Pitney † Mr. Stephen J. Lasner † Annual: $4,054 Mr. William R. Pollard † Mr. Gordon M. Ridgway Mr. Christopher J. Morley Capital/Endowment: $26,000 Mr. Edward B. Sheridan † Mr. Mark K. Schmidt † Overall Participation: 16% Mr. William G. Stoops, Jr. † Mr. Bradford S. Dimeo † Mr. Charles S. Smith III † Mr. George A. Thornton IV † Mr. John S. Hamilton Mr. H. Cutler Whitman IV Mr. Christopher J. Kittredge

*= Deceased (Hon.)= Honorary Class Member Italics = Esse Quam Videri Society Member †= Consecutive Givers to the Annual Fund (Last four years) Bold = Class and Reunion Agents and Salisbury Alumni Association Volunteer • = New Esse Quam Videri Society Member ‡ = PA Leadership (Parents Association, Sixth Form Gift Committee and Parents Fund Committee)

Fall/Winter 2014 SALISBURY MAGAZINE 99 ANNUAL REPORT

CLASS OF 1982 Mr. Lawrence H. DeVoe Mr. Morris W. Macleod † Mr. Christopher W. Clark Annual: $4,448 Mr. Kelley P. Doran † Mr. Kenneth S. Marran † Mr. Kenneth G. Dewey Capital/Endowment: $10,750 Mr. Laurence H. Goodyear † Mr. Douglass S. Munro Mr. Daniel M. Fox † Overall Participation: 18% Mr. Christopher C. Jeter † Mr. James E. Simon † Mr. Thomas W. Grant, Jr. Mr. Jonathan S. Bates † Mr. Palmer R. Lansing † Mr. Andrew M. Williams † Mr. Chinam C. Kry † Mr. George Beavers IV Mr. Andrew M. Messina Mr. Kristopher S. Loomis Mr. Anthony J. D. Cadwalader † Mr. Michael S. O’Neill 25th Reunion Mr. Michael W. Malafronte Mr. Matthew B. Forelli † ‡ Mr. Lansing R. Palmer, Jr. † CLASS OF 1989 Mr. Mills L. Morrison, Jr. † Mr. Donald S. Gifford Mr. Peter C. Saliba Annual: $26,675 Mr. Mark T. Mulvoy † Mr. Christopher A. Kostanecki Mr. John S. Skok † Overall Participation: 19% Mr. Ian B. Murphy Mr. Michael Lieder † Mr. Mark M. Thompson Mr. Jeremy L. Birdsall Mr. Erik A. Olson † Mr. Jörg Schwarz Mr. Tyler E. Thors † Mr. Samuel A. Bradley † Mr. Ezra H. Ripple V † Mr. John Seebeck Mr. Timothy A. Wike † Mr. Christopher B. Clark, Jr. † Mr. Nathan A. Spooner Mr. Brian J. Vogt † Mr. Gordon T. Williams Mr. Hiram W. Emery III † Mr. Robert P. Zabel, Jr. Dr. Caleb Loring IV CLASS OF 1993 CLASS OF 1983 Mr. Theodore D. Moore Annual: $100 Annual: $41,100 CLASS OF 1986 Mr. Marcel Ruben P. Mosblech Overall Participation: 3% Capital/Endowment: $5,833 Annual: $30,470 Mr. Gregory H. Rooney † Mr. Christopher W. Brown (Hon.) † Overall Participation: 12% Capital/Endowment: $350,595 Mr. Thomas P. Sawyer, Jr. † Mr. Timothy R. Madden Mr. Edward L. Babington, Jr. Overall Participation: 27% Mr. Charles R. Simonds, Jr. Mr. J. Carter Rose Mr. Christopher C. Callahan Mr. Andrew S. Baur Mr. Prescott D. Stewart † Mr. Gregory S. Erdmann † Dr. Troy A. Blodgett Mr. Anthony C. Woodruff, Jr. 20th Reunion Mr. Robert J. Feeney, Jr. † Mr. Matthew N. Doolittle † CLASS OF 1994 Mr. Duncan R. Kennedy Mr. Jeremy L. Gordon † CLASS OF 1990 Annual: $7,890 Mr. Herbert A. May III † Mr. Nicholas C. Gould Annual: $6,350 Overall Participation: 16% Mr. Timothy G. Reed † Mr. Edward B. Lawton Capital/Endowment: $5,000 Mr. Turner C. Bradford Mr. T. Williams Roberts III † Mr. Charles R. Lynch † Overall Participation: 15% Mr. Joseph M. Cassin Mr. Steven T. Noneman † Mr. Gerritt T. Graham Mr. Justin K. Kane 30th Reunion Mr. Christopher G. Overbye † The Reverend Joseph K. Hall IV Mr. Richard H. Kiene III † CLASS OF 1984 Mr. Charles K. Owen † Mr. David V. Madden Mr. Eben M. MacNeille Annual: $190,670 Mr. Charles F. L. Ward Mr. Robert H. Metz † Mr. David C. McHugh Capital/Endowment: $5,000 Mr. Pieter A. Wernink Mr. Rhonan Mokriski † Mr. Michael R. Molloy † Overall Participation: 26% Mr. McCleane K. Munro Mr. Alexander T. Raday Mr. Courtney Bartlett † ‡ Mr. Li Zhang † Mr. Henry B. Peltz Mr. Alexander V. Ressi DiCervia Mr. Michael P. Cantele Mr. H. Bradley Peterson Mr. Nishan P. Vartanian Mr. Maxson B. Hence CLASS OF 1987 Annual: $2,900 Mr. Lucas E. Watson Mr. Thomas C. Mavis Overall Participation: 6% CLASS OF 1995 Mr. Ralph J. Menconi (Hon.) Mr. Kevin C. Coleman † CLASS OF 1991 Annual: $2,340 Mr. Serre L. Murphy Mr. Kerry Dakin Annual: $1,959 Overall Participation: 20% Mr. Charles T. O’Neil Overall Participation: 11% Mr. Geoffrey R. Lynch † Mr. Thomas S. Bostwick Mr. James C. Peva Mr. John K. Colgate III † Mr. Hugh Cheney (Hon.) † Mr. Jeffrey T. Prior Mr. Richard I. Curtis (Hon.) † CLASS OF 1988 Mr. Preston F. Death † Mr. Richard E. Riegel III † Mr. J. Brian Danforth Annual: $17,558 Mr. Avery L. Draper Mr. Bradley B. Root † Capital/Endowment: $7,000 Mr. Graham O. Mattison Mr. Scott S. Fox † Mr. Peter L. Rutledge † Overall Participation: 22% Mr. J. Patrick Moran, Jr. † Mr. Christopher F. Grinda † Mr. Charles M. Spofford Mr. Peter D. Barrett Mr. Timothy E. Sinclair † Mr. Thomas J. Limongello Mr. Hardie M. Stevens † Mr. Will Y. Campbell Mr. Joshua D. Mattison Mr. Eugene E. Weymouth, Jr. † Mr. Brewster M. Crosby † CLASS OF 1992 Mr. Edward P. McClenahan Mr. Stephen R. R. Farrelly Annual: $31,500 Mr. Wallace T. Ronald CLASS OF 1985 Capital/Endowment: $10,000 Mr. Ian A. Findlay † Mr. Erik C. R. Wachtmeister Annual: $8,244 Overall Participation: 22% Mr. Field L. Glover CFRE Overall Participation: 35% Mr. Andrew C. Agor Mr. David C. Leavy † Mr. Gordon J. Boozer † Mr. Edward A. Allen † Mr. Christopher M. Lowenstein Mr. Jesse S. Casman

*= Deceased (Hon.)= Honorary Class Member Italics = Esse Quam Videri Society Member †= Consecutive Givers to the Annual Fund (Last four years) Bold = Class and Reunion Agents and Salisbury Alumni Association Volunteer • = New Esse Quam Videri Society Member ‡ = PA Leadership (Parents Association, Sixth Form Gift Committee and Parents Fund Committee)

100 SALISBURY MAGAZINE Fall/Winter 2014 ANNUAL REPORT

CLASS OF 1996 Mr. Will N. Silverstein Mr. Christopher R. Tillson, Jr. Mr. James D. Keogh † Annual: $29,910 Mr. Curtis G. Singmaster Mr. Peter C. Watts † Mr. Jeremy C. Little Overall Participation: 21% Mr. Phillip T. Summers Mr. James E. Long, Jr. Mr. Christopher J. Brislin † CLASS OF 2000 Mr. Matthew E. McCaffrey Mr. Matthew D. Cosby CLASS OF 1998 Annual: $10,000 Mr. Thomas R. McHugh Mr. Jorge D. Gomez Annual: $11,150 Overall Participation: 14% Mr. Hugh Philip Meers Mr. Stuart E. Graham III † Overall Participation: 20% Mr. Anthony D. Alexandre Mr. Kyle D. Miller * Mr. Holt B. Haynsworth Mr. Jonathan T. Connors † Mr. Andreas Boye † Mr. Ryan M. Murphy † Mr. Simeon R. Ketchum † Mr. Jason F. Indelicato † Mr. Kevin P. Grady † Mr. Matthew F. Rosler Mr. Seamus S. Lamb Mr. Jonathan I. McEvoy † Mr. James M. Panczykowski † Mr. David R. Sandals † Mr. Matthew Magiera Mr. Nicholas J. Miesen Mr. Jang J. Park Mr. Cris P. Sigovitch Mr. Vito J. Mazzarino Mr. J. Wood Rutter (Hon.) † Mr. William S. Reed Mr. Joseph P. Versino Mr. Timothy McCaffrey Mr. Carl Edward A. Wachtmeister Mr. Ryan T. Supple Mr. Nicholas D. White † Mr. Max R. Seigle † Mr. David A. Weintraub † Mr. Lyman M. Terni Mr. Daniel T. Wood Mr. Terence Charles D. Skyrm Mr. James M. Weir † Mr. Tucker M. Veenis † Mr. Anthony C. Woodruff (Hon.) † Mr. Archibald A. Smith IV Mr. Justin D. White † Mr. James O. Wight Mr. Nicholas F. Wyman Mr. Luke E. T. Smith Mr. Parker E. Young † 15th Reunion CLASS OF 2001 CLASS OF 1997 CLASS OF 1999 Annual: $32,962 CLASS OF 2002 Annual: $8,415 Annual: $5,374 Capital/Endowment: $10,000 Annual: $3,325 Overall Participation: 16% Capital/Endwowment: $5,020 Overall Participation: 42% Capital/Endowment: $250 Overall Participation: 15% Mr. David E. Friedman † Mr. John R. Aronson Overall Participation: 18% Mr. Frederick Beck III † Mr. David J. Greiner † Mr. Peter J. Baiocco Mr. Brent M. Barbato Mr. Carroll J. Cavanagh III † Mr. Calvin L. Griffin Mr. David P. Belardino Mr. Bryan T. Bendjy † Mr. Dwight M. Collins Mr. H. T. Harlow Mr. Edward C. M. Brown † Mr. Colin R. Griggs † Mr. Andrew M. Graham † Mr. Michael R. McLeod † Mr. Michael B. Dayton Mr. Willet V. H. Hossfeld Mr. Robert T. Hall IV Mr. Aaron J. Oster II Mr. William A. Faison † Mr. Elliot M. Hovey † Mr. Daniel W. Harty Mr. George C. Rand Mr. Peter D. Gross † Mr. Michael D. Lionetti † Mr. Eavenson S. Horter Mr. Christopher M. Shaker Mr. Kevin M. Hathway Mr. Garrett S. Lunden † Mr. Zachary E. Lauckhardt Mr. James M. Taradash Mr. Paul T. Hughes, Jr.

*= Deceased (Hon.)= Honorary Class Member Italics = Esse Quam Videri Society Member †= Consecutive Givers to the Annual Fund (Last four years) Bold = Class and Reunion Agents and Salisbury Alumni Association Volunteer • = New Esse Quam Videri Society Member ‡ = PA Leadership (Parents Association, Sixth Form Gift Committee and Parents Fund Committee)

Fall/Winter 2014 SALISBURY MAGAZINE 101 ANNUAL REPORT

Mr. Samuel W. Meek IV CLASS OF 2005 Mr. Stuart W. Prindle CLASS OF 2011 Mr. Erik Olsen Annual: $7,299 Mr. Alexander R. Reid Annual: $7,310 Mr. Timothy M. Rees † Overall Participation: 22% Mr. Andrew K. Zinkand Overall Participation: 18% Mr. Matthew G. Seager † Mr. Hudson A. Bova Mr. Kevin C. Allen Mr. Andrew Q. Sylvester Mr. Nicolas R. Cantone CLASS OF 2008 Mr. Gabriel J. Antoni Mr. Gabriel J. Tash † Mr. Thomas W. David, Jr. Annual: $1,790 Mr. Jack C. Barre Mr. Edward H. Whalen Mr. Patrick M. N. de Visscher Overall Participation: 14% Mr. Mateo Cadavid Mr. Robert B. Hollinger III Mr. Jeffrey C. Back Mr. Chisholm Chandler (Hon.) † ‡ CLASS OF 2003 Mr. Douglas M. Horner, Jr. Mr. Alexander R. Bartell Mr. Luke M. de Visscher Annual: $5,460 Mr. Justin D. HoShue Mr. Kyle S. Beatty † Mr. Chase K. Freeman Capital/Endowment: $4,500 Mr. George J. Magovern III Mr. Shayne A. Begin Mr. Gunnar A. Hughes Overall Participation: 21% Mr. Leland F. Morris Mr. Philip H. Brady Mr. Michael J. Mauro Mr. Sayre B. Brennan Mr. Robert S. Pakan Mr. Russell P. Bruno Mr. Kevin P. Morris Mr. Richard T. Flood, Jr. (Hon.) † Mr. Tyler K. Quinn Mr. Ian T. Burkland † Mr. Adam J. Platt Mr. Christopher S. Gordon Mr. Garner M. Resch Mr. Joseph R. deBart III Mr. William K. Powers Mr. Alexander A. Harney Mr. Llewellyn G. Ross III † Mr. Michael J. Driscoll, Jr. † Mr. Jonathon C. Richards † Mr. Jung Bum Kim Mr. Nicholas Sciubba Mr. Alexander S. Holder Mr. Samuel A. Richter Mr. Steven C. Lunau, Jr. † Mr. Leighton K. Smith III Mr. Augustus G. Jenkins Mr. Jeremy Shoykhet † Mr. Andrew J. McLachlan Mr. Cooper B. Stuart, Jr. Mr. Judson B. A. Ross Mr. Austin P. Smyth Mr. Winter Mead III Mr. Edward F. Winthrop Mr. John E. Snellman, Jr. Mr. Joshua D. Weinstein † Mr. Alexander M. Meek Mr. Robert J. O’Donnell CLASS OF 2006 5th Reunion CLASS OF 2012 Mr. Chadwick P. Ramsdell † Annual: $12,821 CLASS OF 2009 Annual: $1,832 Mr. John J. Reichert IV Overall Participation: 13% Annual: $22,888 Overall Participation: 12% Mr. Vincent R. Rinaldi III Mr. Tyler H. Cassell † Capital/Endowment: $50,000 Mr. Dylan M. Brodie Mr. Barton E. Seifert Mr. John M. Couzens, Jr. † Overall Participation: 21% Mr. Andrew B. Brunson Mr. Jeremiah J. Cunningham Mr. Jackson S. Brodie Mr. John W. Clippinger Mr. Coty J. Burgess † 10th Reunion Mr. Charles R. Findlay Mr. Lawlor K. Coe CLASS OF 2004 Mr. Jacob R. Repokis Mr. Steven Cabrera Mr. Robert J. Feeney III Annual: $3,245 Mr. Santiago D. J. Sanchez Mr. William H. Casertano † Mr. Herbert A. May IV Capital/Endowment: $200 Mr. Matthew A. Swift Mr. Henry P. Couzens Mr. John P. O’Connor Overall Participation: 32% Mr. George P. Vietor Mr. John P. Guay Mr. John S. B. Oler, Jr. Mr. Theodore R. Ahrens † Mr. Bradley P. Werntz Mr. Reid B. Johnson Mr. Zachary Racusin Mr. Jonathan M. Bates † Mr. Robert M. Jubinville Mr. Christopher M. Ramos Mr. Charles W. Callahan † CLASS OF 2007 Mr. Adam D. Kelsey Mr. Christopher J. Truini Mr. James T. Clark, Jr. Annual: $3,700 Mr. William B. Metz, Jr. Mr. Ned Corkery (Hon.) † Overall Participation: 22% Mr. Hubert G. Osteen III CLASS OF 2013 Mr. Matthew C. Crum Mr. Alejandro S. Canet Mr. David H. Renner Annual: $1,010 Mr. Michael B. Gershon Mr. James W. Childs Mr. Zachary R. Robins Overall Participation: 13% Mr. Andrew M. E. Guild Mr. Brian L. Corbat Mr. Michael C. E. Roth † Mr. Hugh H. Bartlett Mr. Matthew M. Jacobs Mr. Andrew F. Dunlevy Mr. Michael A. Siladi Mr. William T. S. Brooks Mr. Gregory J. Kaczmarski Mr. Luke M. Esselen Mr. William B. Spencer Mr. John P. Carey Mr. Colin A. Keogh Mr. William R. Harris III † Mr. Alexander L. Cole Mr. Peter H. Lynch † Mr. Christopher J. Higbie CLASS OF 2010 Mr. Michael R. Cuozzo Mr. Samuel W. Pugsley Mr. Reynaldo Kelly Annual: $1,415 Mr. Kyle S. Freeman Mr. Andres D. Quintana Mr. Benjamin D. Ketchum Overall Participation: 7% Mr. Geoffrey M. Grant Mr. Luke R. Salscheider Mr. Christopher C. Kohn Mr. Chad G. Berger Mr. Elliot C. Gudis Mr. Michael D. Sargent, Jr. Mr. James A. Macdonald † Mr. Hunter Q. Coe Mr. Jake Harrington Mr. Benjamin R. Schopp Mr. William C. G. Ortel II Mr. James T. Faus Mr. Clark K. Lambo Mr. Thomas A. Simmons Mr. John Brendan O’Toole † Mr. Wesley T. Gomez Mr. Donald W. Reed Mr. Cary R. Wasserman Mr. James Duncan S. Pindar Mr. Brandon M. Russo Mr. Nicholas A. Shaw Mr. Sean W. Zak Mr. Patrick J. Powers † Mr. David Wang †

*= Deceased (Hon.)= Honorary Class Member Italics = Esse Quam Videri Society Member †= Consecutive Givers to the Annual Fund (Last four years) Bold = Class and Reunion Agents and Salisbury Alumni Association Volunteer • = New Esse Quam Videri Society Member ‡ = PA Leadership (Parents Association, Sixth Form Gift Committee and Parents Fund Committee)

102 SALISBURY MAGAZINE Fall/Winter 2014 ANNUAL REPORT

Parent Giving Details regarding sixth form parent giving can be found on page 104.

2015 PARENT GIVING Mr. and Mrs. Frederic W. Thomas, Jr. ‡ Mr. and Mrs. Damon Risucci Total Giving: $580,145 Mr. Quang Tran and Mrs. Ha Thi Tran Mr. and Mrs. Francis Ryan Annual Giving: $419,164 Mr. and Mrs. Lincoln H. Turner Mr. and Mrs. Charles C. Smith Capital/Endowment: $159,981 Mr. and Mrs. Cuyler Walker, Esq. Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Sutor IV Overall Participation: 63% Mr. and Mrs. Steven Wilcox Mr. and Mrs. Richard Sweet Mr. and Mrs. Jackson T. Wong Mr. and Mrs. John P. Tavlarios Mr. and Mrs. Richard M. Cahn Mr. Sung Ouk Yoon Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J. Uhl Mr. and Mrs. Daniel M. Cain Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Valen Mr. and Mrs. Christopher C. Callahan ’83 2016 PARENT GIVING Mr. and Mrs. Gerhard von Finck Mr. and Mrs. Gregg K. Carpenter † Total Giving: $206,995 Mr. Feng-Te Yu and Ms. Shu-Ling Chuang Mr. Yi-Tung Chen and Mrs. Jui-Cheng Huang Annual Giving: $155,811 Mr. and Mrs. Michael Zimm Mr. Hing Yip Chiu and Mrs. Yin Ha Ho Capital/Endowment: $51,185 Mr. and Mrs. Jason Chiu Overall Participation: 48% 2017 PARENT GIVING Mr. Ji Hoon Chun and Mrs. Mi-Lan Kim Total Giving: $57,121 Mr. Phillip A. Clough Mr. and Mrs. Courtney Bartlett ’84 † ‡ Annual Giving: $51,852 Dr. Craig Coccia and Dr. Kellie Holmstrom Mr. and Mrs. Mortimer Berkowitz III Capital/Endowment: $5,270 Mr. and Mrs. Andrew J. Colao Mr. and Mrs. Sergei Bilcheck Overall Participation: 67% Mr. and Mrs. Daniel C. Cross Mr. and Mrs. David Carter † Mr. and Mrs. Michael Anderson Dr. and Mrs. Peter Daniel Mr. and Mrs. George L. Cole † ‡ Mr. and Mrs. Michael S. Battey † Mr. and Mrs. John D. Dugan Mr. and Mrs. Francis J. Conley Ms. Helen Bertles Dr. Heejong Eun and Dr. Heejung Kim Mr. and Mrs. David G. DeLuca, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. William C. Bush Mr. and Mrs. Ambrose W. Givens, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. John Dotson Mr. Zuping Cai and Mrs. Xinli Chen Ms. Jennifer Givens Mr. and Mrs. Jean Drouin Mr. and Mrs. Chisholm Chandler (Hon.) ’11 † Mr. and Mrs. Jesus Gonzalez Mrs. Priscilla du Pont Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Cohen Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Grossman Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Epps Dr. Alberta Crum Mr. and Mrs. John A. Guanci Mr. and Mrs. Timothy Goggins Ms. Kimberly Ellis Mr. Jaekyung Hahm and Mrs. Jehee Chang Mr. and Mrs. Craig Henrich Mr. John Fousek Mr. and Mrs. David T. Harrington ’81 † Mr. and Mrs. C. De Forest Howland III ’78 ‡ Mr. Frank Gabor and Ms. Anna Korniczky Mr. and Mrs. Michael J. Henesey, Sr. Ms. Li-Wen Huang Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Gilbert ‡ Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Hewitt, Sr. Mr. Roger Ip and Mrs. Teresa Lo Mr. and Mrs. Peter B. Gilbert † Mr. and Mrs. Hilleary C. Hoskinson Mr. Wonsang Kang Mr. and Mrs. John Kann Mrs. Chi-Yun Hsu Mr. Jeffrey L. Keyton and Ms. Nina K. Merrill † ‡ Mr. Daniel Ingoglia and Ms. Nora Dwyer Mrs. Stacy L. Drummond Mr. Stephen R. Meyers Mr. and Mrs. Peter Keehn Mr. Michael Kluchman and Mr. and Mrs. Mark Murray Dr. Mark Marshall and Ms. Marguerite Dresser Mr. and Mrs. Hirohisa Okada Mrs. Silloo Peters-Marshall † Ms. Evangeline Lai Mr. and Mrs. J. Christopher Schoen Mr. and Mrs. Robert Marston Mr. Edward J. Latessa Mr. and Mrs. Robert S. Segalla, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Matlack Mr. Dongwoo Lee and Mrs. Ahyun Kim Mr. Thomas M. Shane and Mr. Jeffrey J. May and Dr. Mary B. O’Neill Mr. Yun Lee and Mrs. Sook Jung Kwon Ms. Orawan Jittapinitmat Mr. and Mrs. Arthur McCabe Mr. Jared Lilienstein and Mrs. Patricia Guinn Dr. Taeshik Shim and Ms. Keunhwa Shin Mr. and Mrs. Edward J. McCarthy Mr. and Mrs. Donald V. Little, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Alphonse J. Tortorella ‡ Mr. and Mrs. William R. Morris III Mrs. Teresa L. H. Lo Mr. Jacob Walthour and The Honorable Mr. and Mrs. Christopher Phelps † Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Lockyer ‡ Shawndya Simpson-Walthour Mr. and Mrs. Harry Radovich Mr. and Mrs. Scott Luce Dr. and Mrs. Jeffrey C. Wint Mr. Robert S. Rousseau Mr. and Mrs. Andrew McNabb Mr. and Mrs. Keith Zelazny ‡ Mr. and Mrs. John Seebeck ’82 Mr. and Mrs. Donald Meltzer Mr. Lei Zheng and Mrs. Guangxia Xin Mr. and Mrs. Robert S. Segalla, Jr. Mr. Mark Pumphret Mr. and Mrs. David W. Smith Mr. Xinjiu Qu and Mrs. Yao Song Mr. and Mrs. Scott Stirling Mr. Andre Rahadian Dr. and Mrs. Leonard S. Teye-Botchway † Mr. and Mrs. Adrian W. Reed

*= Deceased (Hon.)= Honorary Class Member Italics = Esse Quam Videri Society Member †= Consecutive Givers to the Annual Fund (Last four years) Bold = Class and Reunion Agents and Salisbury Alumni Association Volunteer • = New Esse Quam Videri Society Member ‡ = PA Leadership (Parents Association, Sixth Form Gift Committee and Parents Fund Committee)

Fall/Winter 2014 SALISBURY MAGAZINE 103 ANNUAL REPORT

Class of 2014 Sixth Form Gift

Main Building, North exterior elevation

Every year parents of each graduating class come together and generously contribute to the Sixth Form Fund (which consists of donations made to the Sixth Form Gift, the Annual Fund and other endowed projects) in honor of their sons’ experiences at Salisbury. This year’s Sixth Form Gift, the campaign for which was announced at Parents Weekend, was the restoration and preservation of North Dormitory. By supporting the renovation of North, the Class of 2014 sixth form parents will dramatically improve Salisbury by providing updated and upgraded residential facilities for future generations of Salisbury boys and faculty members. We are pleased to announce that the committee raised $701,648 overall, with 73% participation. All contributions counted Following the Class of 2014 Awards Ceremony, Sixth Form Gift Chairs Dana and Eric Macy P’14 (center) toward the For The Boys Campaign. Salisbury and Robert and Patty Isen P’14 (right) presented Headmaster Chandler with the Class of 2014 gift. is grateful to co-chairs Patty and Robert Isen P’14 and Trustees Dana and Eric Macy P’14 for their leadership. Sixth Form Gift Committee P’14, ’17, Claire and Bruce Montgomerie P’14 members included Karyn and Ben Campbell and Jill and Bill Vantine P’14. P’14, Blandy Coty P’14, Jennifer and Briggs Thank you to all of the parents of the Class Forelli ’82, P’14, Nancy and Tim Kurty P’14, of 2014 for their loyal commitment to the Harriet and Rudolf Laveran P’14, Nina Merrill Salisbury School community.

*= Deceased (Hon.)= Honorary Class Member Italics = Esse Quam Videri Society Member †= Consecutive Givers to the Annual Fund (Last four years) Bold = Class and Reunion Agents • = New Esse Quam Videri Society Member ‡ = PA Leadership (Parents Association, Sixth Form Gift Committee and Parents Fund Committee)

104 SALISBURY MAGAZINE Fall/Winter 2014 ANNUAL REPORT

Sixth Form Gift Fund Overall Giving: $701,648

Sixth Form Gift: $469,955 (Class of 2014) Annual Fund Giving: $37,519 Other Projects: $231,693 Overall Participation: 73%

Main Building, North Dormitory

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Adams Mr. and Mrs. Neal S. Hovey Mr. and Mrs. Donaldson Ross ‡ Mr. Pierre-Paul Allard and Mrs. Lucie Deziel Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Intrieri Mr. and Mrs. John M. Rote ‡ Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas J. Appleby † Mr. and Mrs. Robert R. Isen, Esq. ‡ Mr. and Mrs. Jack L. Rubin † ‡ Mr. and Mrs. Bradley J. R. Baker Mr. and Mrs. Doug Jones Mr. and Mrs. John J. Schob Mr. and Mrs. James T. Bates Mr. and Mrs. Harris Jones III † Mr. and Mrs. Alexander A. Shaw II Mr. and Mrs. Michael Baughman Mr. and Mrs. David Kelsey † Mr. and Mrs. Scott M. Shaw † Ms. Joanne Bradley Ms. Robyn Koppens Mr. and Mrs. Gerry Smith Mrs. Barbara Bunch and Mr. William Brobston ’69 Mr. and Mrs. Timothy P. Kurty ‡ Mr. and Mrs. Richard Soule, Jr. Mr. Alan J. Campbell Mr. and Mrs. Joseph P. Lamb Mr. and Mrs. Michael Spaan Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Campbell † ‡ Dr. and Mrs. Rudolf L. Laveran † ‡ Mr. and Mrs. Paul A. Thomas Mr. and Mrs. Anthony J. Castle Mr. and Mrs. John Leary † ‡ Mr. John Thornton and Ms. V. Larkin Martin Mr. and Mrs. Jonathan B. Clark, Sr. † Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Lee Mr. and Mrs. John J. Toffey Mr. and Mrs. Dion Cominos Mr. Kyungwon Lee and Mrs. Yunsook Nam Mr. Roberto Valdes and Mr. and Mrs. David O. Cone Mr. and Mrs. Harmon Levine Mrs. Barbara Sanchez-Navarro Ms. Blandy Coty † ‡ Mr. and Mrs. Mark R. Lindsay ‡ Dr. and Mrs. William Vantine ‡ Mr. Dennis T. D’Antonio Mr. and Mrs. Wei Liu Ms. Joanne L. Vining Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Datz Mr. and Mrs. Scott Luce Mr. and Mrs. Stephan White, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. Doug DeCarr Mr. and Mrs. Eric Macy, Sr. ‡ Ms. Alice B. Williams Ms. Aili di Bonaventura † Mr. and Mrs. Ralph G. McDermid ’81 † Dr. Stuart Wong and Dr. Elizabeth Gore Mr. and Mrs. Peter J. di Bonaventura † Ms. Nina K. Merrill † ‡ Mr. and Mrs. Joe DiCaro Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey Mintzlaff Mr. William K. Ris and Ms. Nancy Dorn Mr. and Mrs. Bruce M. Montgomerie † ‡ Mr. and Mrs. Matthew Feldman † ‡ Mr. and Mrs. William Murnane Ms. Jacqueline Fitzpatrick Mr. and Mrs. Christopher Neary Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas Floros Mr. Hien Nguyen Gia and Mrs. Ha Pham Thi Cam Mr. and Mrs. M. Briggs Forelli ’82 † ‡ Mr. and Mrs. David O’Brien Mr. and Mrs. Kevin Giblin Mr. and Mrs. William J. O’Hara Dr. Glen Gormezano and Dr. L. Masae Kawamura Ms. Carla Owens Mr. Roy T. Grant Mr. and Mrs. Martin V. Rambusch † ‡ Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Guterding Mr. and Mrs. Brent Rice Ms. Lisa Holze Mr. and Mrs. Robert B. Richards, Jr.

*= Deceased (Hon.) = Honorary Class Member Italics = Esse Quam Videri Society Member †= Consecutive Givers to the Annual Fund (Last four years) • = New Esse Quam Videri Society Member Bold = Class and Reunion Agents, Salisbury Alumni Association Volunteer and February Face-Off Captains ‡ = PA Leadership (Parents Association, Sixth Form Gift Committee and Parents Fund Committee)

Fall/Winter 2014 SALISBURY MAGAZINE 105 ANNUAL REPORT

Parents of Alumni, Trustees, Former Trustees, Grandparents, Friends, Former Faculty & Staff, and Current Students

Mr. and Mrs. Christopher C. Callahan ’83 Mr. and Mrs. Frank M. Dunlevy Total Giving: $5,475,826 Mr. and Mrs. Daniel H. Callahan † Mr. William B. Dyke Annual Giving: $1,554,455 Mr. and Mrs. Joseph M. Caprio Mr. and Mrs. Kevin N. Eggleston Capital/Endowment Giving: $3,881,844 Mr. and Mrs. Fenton D. Carey III † Mr. and Mrs. Maxwell F. Eveleth † Mr. John N. Carey Mr. and Mrs. J. Bradley Faus Mr. and Mrs. Drew J. Casertano † Dr. and Mrs. Robert J. Feeney † Anonymous Mr. and Mrs. Mark H. Chafee Mr. and Mrs. Mouncey Ferguson Mr. Andrew W. Adams Mr. and Mrs. Larry L. Chamberlin † Mr. and Mrs. Richard A. Ferguson Mr. and Mrs. Ralph W. Adler Mr. and Mrs. John R. Chandler, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Richard D. Field ’59 † Mr. and Mrs. Mark S. Allen † Mr. and Mrs. O. Stuart Chase † Mr. and Mrs. H. Peter Findlay † Mr. Timothy W. Allison-Hatch Ms. Martha McInerney-Chen and Mr. and Mrs. Edward T. Finneran III † Mr. Leland Alper Dr. Aloysius J. Chen Mr. and Mrs. William J. Fitzgerald † Mr. and Mrs. V. Kelley Armour † Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Cheney ’95 (Hon.) † Mr. William A. Fordyce Mr. and Mrs. J. Hunter Atkins † Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Cherney Mr. and Mrs. Matthew Forelli, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Bailey, Jr. † Mr. John W. Childs ’59 (Hon.) † Mr. and Mrs. Christopher A. Forster † Mrs. Martha W. Barhydt Dr. Richard S. Childs, Jr. ’63 † Mr. J. K. Foster Mr. and Mrs. Craig P. Barre Mr. and Mrs. James F. Clark, Jr. † Mr. and Mrs. Philip G. Franklin Mrs. Ellen I. Bates † Mr. and Mrs. Reginald F. Clark Mrs. Constance C. Frazier Mr. and Mrs. Robert Battaglia † Ms. Patricia Clough Dr. Daniel Frisch Mr. and Mrs. Frank M. Bell, Jr. † Mr. and Mrs. Mark W. Coe † Mrs. Elaine P. Frost † Mr. and Mrs. Stephen T. Belter Ms. Barbara C. Coleman Ms. Louise P. Gara Ms. Mary Jane Berrien Mr. and Mrs. Barron G. Collier II ’70 Mr. and Mrs. Robert Gardner Mrs. Bonnie Blodgett Bethea † Mr. and Mrs. Atwood Collins III † Mr. John Garibaldi and Ms. Patricia Ewing † Mr. and Mrs. James R. Billingsley † Mr. and Mrs. Thomas R. Coolidge Mr. and Mrs. John S. Gates, Jr. † Mr. and Mrs. Richard Binswanger † Mr. and Mrs. Michael L. Corbat Mr. and Mrs. Gregory Georgiades Mr. Dave Bird The Reverend John R. Corbiere Mr. and Mrs. James W. Gerard V ’79 † The Reverend and Mrs. James A. Birdsall Mrs. Ann Corkery * Mr. and Mrs. Peter W. Getsinger Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Bliss † Mr. and Mrs. Millard Cox III Mr. and Mrs. John D. Gibbs Mr. and Mrs. John R. H. Blum Mr. and Mrs. Edward L. Coyle Mr. and Mrs. Seamus M. Gilson † Mr. and Mrs. John L. Blundin † Ms. Erika Crofut Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Gomez † Mr. and Mrs. William F. Boyer † Mr. William H. Cronin, Jr. Ms. Mary Jean C. Goodfellow Mr. and Mrs. Guy D. Bradford Mr. and Mrs. Jeremiah E. Cunningham Mr. Albert Gottesman † Mr. and Mrs. Stanford Brainerd † Mr. and Mrs. Michael F. Cuozzo Mr. and Mrs. Thomas M. Graham, Jr. Ms. Lélee Brandt and Mr. Anthony Francoline Mr. and Mrs. Richard I. Curtis ’91 (Hon.) † Mr. Douglas A. Graves Mr. and Mrs. Allan Bredenfoerder Mrs. Carolyn B. D’Alessandro † Mrs. Jeanne M. Graves Mr. and Mrs. John G. Brim ’64 † Lt. and Mrs. James B. Dalton, Jr. † Dr. and Mrs. Robert E. Griffin † Dr. and Mrs. Jonathan D. Brodie † Ms. Susan Daly-Rouse and Mr. Charles Rouse † Mr. William B. Grogan, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Douglas A. Brooks Mr. and Mrs. Thomas W. David † Mr. and Mrs. Gary W. Gross † Mr. Christopher Brown and Ms. Jane Beddall ’93 † Mrs. Helen Davis Mr. and Mrs. James R. Gross Mr. and Mrs. Howard W. Brush Mr. and Mrs. Nathaniel B. Day ’56 † Mr. and Mrs. Peter D. Gross ’01 † Mr. and Mrs. David A. Bubacy Mr. and Mrs. Walter DeMelle, Jr. † Mr. and Mrs. Mark E. Gudis Mr. James L. Buckley Mr. Frederick B. Dent Mr. and Mrs. Edward M. Guild, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. William E. Buehner † Mr. Andrew T. DeSalvo † Mr. and Mrs. Elliott W. Gumaer, Jr. † Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth J. Burgess, Jr. † Mr. Philip di Belardino Mr. Stephen F. Gundernatch Mr. and Mrs. William S. Burkland † Mr. and Mrs. John T. Dillon † Mr. and Mrs. Charles T. Haddad † The Reverend Dr. and Mrs. R. Craig Burlington Dr. and Mrs. David F. Dineen Mr. David S. Hagerman † Ms. Hilary Burrall † Mr. and Mrs. Jerome H. Doolittle Mrs. Judith Hajec † Ms. Nancy S. Bushnell Mr. and Mrs. Michael J. Driscoll, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Halsell III † Ms. Cynthia F. Buster † Mrs. Carmela Drummond Mrs. Barbara B. Hamlin † Mr. and Mrs. Daniel M. Cain Mr. and Mrs. Charles Dubow Mr. and Mrs. Kevin F. Hampe † Mr. and Mrs. C. John Calder III † Mr. Richard L. Duchossois Mr. and Mrs. Edward A. Harrington †

*= Deceased (Hon.) = Honorary Class Member Italics = Esse Quam Videri Society Member †= Consecutive Givers to the Annual Fund (Last four years) • = New Esse Quam Videri Society Member Bold = Class and Reunion Agents, Salisbury Alumni Association Volunteer and February Face-Off Captains ‡ = PA Leadership (Parents Association, Sixth Form Gift Committee and Parents Fund Committee)

106 SALISBURY MAGAZINE Fall/Winter 2014 ANNUAL REPORT

Mr. and Mrs. William R. Harris, Jr. † Mr. and Mrs. Carl P. Lane-Lopez Mr. and Mrs. Stephen J. Meszkat Ms. G. Anne Harris and Mr. Seth M. Milliken † Ms. Samantha Chen and Mrs. Patricia C. Miller Ms. Laura H. Harris † Mr. Campbell B. Langdon ’79 † Mr. and Mrs. William C. Miller IV † Mr. and Mrs. Merwin R. Haskel, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Peter J. Langlois Mr. and Mrs. James F. Mokriski Ms. Joan Havens and Mr. Wallace Ragen Mrs. Rose K. Lansbury † Mr. and Mrs. Daniel M. Monahan Ms. Heather Hein Ms. Kathleen E. Lavrentios Mr. and Mrs. Mark M. Montgelas Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Hershey III Ms. Carol Lazarus † Mr. and Mrs. Franklin Montross IV † Mr. and Mrs. Donald Hewat † Mrs. Helen V. Lebens † Mr. and Mrs. William F. Morrill Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey D. Hibbard Mr. Chan Lee and Mrs. Shin Ja Kim Mr. and Mrs. Peter C. Morse † Mr. and Mrs. Landon Hilliard III † Mr. and Mrs. Robert M. Leonard Mr. Joseph J. Morsman Mr. and Mrs. Christopher P. Hinchey † Mr. and Mrs. Felix LiDonni Ms. Silvia Mueller Mr. Robert H. Hoenk Ms. Joan Limongello † Mr. and Mrs. J. Richard Munro Mr. and Mrs. Keith M. Holmes † Mr. and Mrs. James E. Lineberger Mr. and Mrs. James P. Munton Mr. and Mrs. Douglas M. Horner Mrs. Donald Little Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Neville Mr. and Mrs. Winchester Hotchkiss Mr. and Mrs. W. Geoffrey Little Mr. and Mrs. Blake T. Newton III Mrs. Sally Hough Mr. and Mrs. James E. Long † Mr. Thin Nguyen and Mrs. Huong Le Ms. Alison Hoversten † Mr. and Mrs. Phillip C. Long † Mr. Robert A. Nigro Mr. Philip E. Hoversten † Mr. and Mrs. Stuart R. Loomis † Mr. and Mrs. Thomas S. Noneman † Mr. and Mrs. Charles F. Hovey, Jr. † Mr. and Mrs. Henry Luzzi Mr. and Mrs. Charles F. Oat † Mr. and Mrs. George S. Hughes, Jr. Dr. Elizabeth Lynch and Mr. and Mrs. Robert O’Connor † Mrs. Phelps Hunter Mr. Charles R. Lynch ’86 † Mr. and Mrs. Timothy O’Connor † Mr. and Mrs. John P. Hurley, Jr. Mr. Angus L. Macdonald Mr. Taylor L. Ogan ’14 † Mr. and Mrs. James L. Hussey, Jr. † Ms. Anne MacDonald † Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Olsen Mrs. Kate Hutchinson Ms. Helen Gilbane Macdonald † Mr. and Mrs. Francis S. O’Neill Ms. Jurie C. Hwang Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Macleod † Ms. Maryanne O’Neill Mr. John M. Hyde Mr. and Mrs. John K. Magiera † Mr. and Mrs. J. Denis O’Toole Mr. and Mrs. James Hyman † Mr. and Mrs. Paolo Maglio Mr. and Mrs. Joseph A. Pappalardo Mr. and Mrs. David Iles Dr. and Mrs. George J. Magovern, Jr. † Dr. and Mrs. Young-rok Park Mr. and Mrs. Thomas N. Iovino Dr. and Mrs. Yale R. Magrass Ms. Linda Peters Mrs. Camille Jayne Ms. Joan M. Maher † Mrs. Barbara B. Phillips † Mr. and Mrs. James P. Jenkins † Mrs. John F. Maher † Dr. Leonora B. Phillips and Mr. and Mrs. Thomas P. Jessup † Mr. and Mrs. John Mahoney, Jr. † Dr. Thomas W. Phillips † Mr. Antonio Jimenez Ms. Dorothy M. Martin Mr. and Mrs. Alexander Podmaniczky † Mr. Brett John Mr. and Mrs. Louis Matlack Mr. and Mrs. Philip C. Potter, Jr. † Mr. and Mrs. D. David Johnson II Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Mattson † Ms. Polly L. Judson and Mr. Joseph P. Powers † Dr. and Mrs. Gordon C. Johnson Mr. and Mrs. Michael R. Mauro † Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Powers Mr. and Mrs. Jeremiah Jones † Mr. and Mrs. Herbert A. May III ’83 † Mr. and Mrs. Schuyler J. Proctor † Mr. and Mrs. William J. Jordan † Mr. and Mrs. Mark S. Maymar † Mr. and Mrs. David R. Pruett Mr. and Mrs. Thomas M. Joyce † Mr. and Mrs. Joseph W. Mazeika † Mr. and Mrs. Nicolas I. Quintana † Mr. and Mrs. Cary R. Jubinville Mr. and Mrs. Brian McCarthy † Mr. and Mrs. Warren K. Racusin Mr. Henri Pell Junod, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. McClenahan, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Kevin J. Raday † Mr. and Mrs. Christopher Karachale Mr. and Mrs. Sean M. McCooey † Mr. and Mrs. Robert K. Ramos † Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Miles Kass † Mr. and Mrs. John McDonald † Mr. and Mrs. Curtis G. Rand † Dr. and Mrs. Kent T. Kay Mr. and Mrs. Peter C. McEvoy Mr. and Mrs. William F. Reardon, Jr. † Mrs. Shirley Kearns † Mr. Robert L. W. McGraw Mr. and Mrs. Nathaniel Reed Mr. Daniel R. Kellams † Dr. and Mrs. Charles T. McHugh † Mr. William F. Reed, Jr. † Mrs. Katharine G. Kellogg Mr. and Mrs. John McMahon, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. W. Mason Rees, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Richard A. Kemp Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. McMillan † Mrs. Corrine V. Reichert † Mr. and Mrs. J. G. Kenan III † Ms. E. Lynn Meehan Mr. Peter L. Reid † Mr. and Mrs. Thomas B. Ketchum † Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Meehan † Mr. and Mrs. Fred H. Renner III Mrs. Kathryn C. Kiner-Freeman Mr. Hans-Joerg Meili † Mr. and Mrs. Michael F. Resch † Mr. and Mrs. Ernesto Kohn Mr. and Mrs. Richard Mellish II Mr. and Mrs. Frederick L. Rhodes † Mrs. John Lucien Kuhn Mr. and Mrs. John F. Melvin † Mr. and Mrs. Stewart G. Richards † Mr. and Mrs. James R. Lamb † Mr. and Mrs. Martin J. Merksamer † Mrs. Katherine G. Ridgway Mrs. Mary Lamb Mr. and Mrs. Peter Merriam † Mr. and Mrs. Richard E. Riegel III ’84 † Mrs. Eileen Lambo Mr. Chase E. Merrill ’17 Mr. and Mrs. Charles C. Rieger, Jr. † Mr. John A. N. Lamont, Sr. † Mr. Robert Merrill Mr. and Mrs. Thomas P. Rimsa

*= Deceased (Hon.) = Honorary Class Member Italics = Esse Quam Videri Society Member †= Consecutive Givers to the Annual Fund (Last four years) • = New Esse Quam Videri Society Member Bold = Class and Reunion Agents, Salisbury Alumni Association Volunteer and February Face-Off Captains ‡ = PA Leadership (Parents Association, Sixth Form Gift Committee and Parents Fund Committee)

Fall/Winter 2014 SALISBURY MAGAZINE 107 ANNUAL REPORT

Mr. and Mrs. Richard D. Rippe Mr. and Mrs. Austin P. Sullivan, Jr. † Mr. and Mrs. Charles L. Ritchie, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Kevin F. Sullivan Mr. and Mrs. Thomas M. Ritchie, Jr. † Dr. and Mrs. Roland S. Summers † Mr. and Mrs. Howard H. Roberts † Mr. and Mrs. David C. Swann † Mr. and Mrs. T. Williams Roberts III ’83 † Mr. and Mrs. Richard E. Swibold † Mr. and Mrs. F. Brooks Robinson, Jr. † Mr. and Mrs. Michael S. Sylvester ’59 † Mr. Edmund P. Rogers III † Ms. Ann C.M. Tait Mr. and Mrs. Gennaro A. Romano III † The Reverend Charles W. Tait Mr. and Mrs. Martin J. Rose II Mrs. Susan S. Tash Ms. Eileen Fox and Mr. Henry Rosler Mr. and Mrs. Walter C. Teagle III Mr. and Mrs. Arthur J. Roth † Mr. and Mrs. Philip Terni † Mr. and Mrs. D. Richard Rowland Mr. and Mrs. Frederic W. Thomas, Sr. Mrs. Helen S. Ruisi The Reverend and Mrs. Robert H. Thompson Mr. and Mrs. Peter G. Russo † Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Thompson † Mr. and Mrs. Thomas D. Rutherfoord, Jr. † Mr. Henry D. Tiffany III † Mr. and Mrs. James E. Rutledge † Mr. and Mrs. Kurt P. Tinius † Mr. J. Wood Rutter ’98 (Hon.) † Mr. Tat Tironsakkul ’17 Mrs. Rosemary Ryan Mr. and Mrs. James P. Townsend † Ms. Debi B. Salzer † Mr. and Mrs. Joseph J. Truini, Jr. † Mr. Michael R. Salzer † Mr. Michael Trunzo Mr. and Mrs. Michael D. Sargent, Sr. † Mr. and Mrs. Frederick A. Tucker, Jr. † Dr. and Mrs. Clarence T. Sasaki † Mr. Douglas Tudor Mr. and Mrs. Joseph W. Saunders Mr. and Mrs. Charles F. Tunnicliff † Mr. and Mrs. Raymond M. Scahill Mr. Hiram Upson, Westminster ’50 Mr. and Mrs. Morgan Schafer Mrs. Barbara Uzielli Mr. and Mrs. Michael T. Schlegel † Mr. and Mrs. John Van Der Tuin † Mr. and Mrs. Richard J. Schmeelk Mr. and Mrs. J. Mark Veenis Mr. and Mrs. William H. Schweitzer, Sr. † Dr. and Mrs. Siegfried Vossieg Captain William J. Scott Mr. and Mrs. Edward C. A. Wachtmeister ’67 † Mr. Robert Seass Mr. and Mrs. William J. Waldron Mrs. Julia C. Segalla Mrs. Dorothy R. Walker Mr. Thomas M. Shane Mr. and Mrs. Graham M. Walker Ms. Nina Shaw † Mr. Jeffrey P. Walker * † Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Shoykhet † Mr. Jeffrey L. Walker Mr. and Mrs. Roger S. Silverstein † Ms. Sandra D. Walker Mr. Samuel H. Simmons † The Reverend and Mrs. Edwin M. Ward † Dr. and Mrs. J. Douglas Sinclair † Ms. Kathleen D. Weinstein Mr. David Singer Mr. William H. Weintraub † The Reverend and Mrs. Peter W. Sipple † Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Weisman Mr. and Mrs. John A. Sivright, Jr. † Mrs. Joan W. Wheeler * † Mr. and Mrs. Robert N. Sloan † Mr. and Mrs. Ernest C. Whitbeck III Mrs. Kathleen Tener Smith Mr. and Mrs. David W. White † Mrs. Leigh B. Smith Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence D. White Mrs. Mimi Smith † Mr. and Mrs. Charles P. Whittemore Mr. and Mrs. Procter Smith III † Mr. and Mrs. Beverly R. Williams Ms. Bonnie Smithers Mr. and Mrs. Gunnar P. Wilmot † Mr. and Mrs. John E. Snellman, Sr. † Mr. and Mrs. Hy Winik † Mr. and Mrs. James E. Solberg Mr. and Mrs. Jackson T. Wong Mr. and Mrs. William Solberg Mr. Anthony C. Woodruff ’01 (Hon.) † Mr. and Mrs. Lee B. Spencer, Jr. † Mr. and Mrs. Thomas M. Wynne † Mr. and Mrs. Howard C. Springer Mr. and Mrs. Thomas H. Young III † Mr. and Mrs. Orson L. St. John, Jr. † Mr. and Mrs. Peter H. Zecher The Honorable Herbert J. Stern and Mr. William A. Ziegler † Mrs. Marsha K. Stern † Mrs. Alice E. Stokes † Ms. Mary M. Stokes Mr. and Mrs. Cooper B. Stuart †

*= Deceased (Hon.) = Honorary Class Member Italics = Esse Quam Videri Society Member †= Consecutive Givers to the Annual Fund (Last four years) • = New Esse Quam Videri Society Member Bold = Class and Reunion Agents, Salisbury Alumni Association Volunteer and February Face-Off Captains ‡ = PA Leadership (Parents Association, Sixth Form Gift Committee and Parents Fund Committee)

108 SALISBURY MAGAZINE Fall/Winter 2014 ANNUAL REPORT

Endowed Funds At the end of the 2014 fiscal year, Salisbury’s endowment has 98 permanently endowed funds totaling $57,515,141 including new gifts of $1,174,359.

+ = Gifts were made to fund in 2013-2014.

Abbruzzese Fund for Entrepreneurial Studies J. Wood Rutter Scholarship Alexander Whitridge Sabbatical Account + Jeffrey P. Walker Scholarship + Andrew J. Rutledge ‘80 Scholarship + Joan and John E. Herlitz ‘60 Endowed Memorial Scholarship Ann Corkery Eandowed Scholarship Fund + John and Barbara Pogue Scholarship Baur Lynch Faculty Travel Fund + John Houghton Harris Memorial Scholarship Bernecker Chair for History John K. Magiera Award Bob Gardner Endowed Teaching Fellowship + John S. Morris ‘84 Endowed Scholarship Fund + Centennial Book Fund Kleberg Environmental Science Centennial Campaign for Endowment Leland C. Rhodes ‘86 Forestry + Charles Hayden Foundation Scholarship Lynch Family Endowed Teaching Fellowship + Childs Entrepreneurial Studies Program + Malafronte Family Endowed Scholarship Fund Class of 1948 Maurice Firuski Memorial Scholarship + Markey Family Scholarship Class of 1953 George D. Langdon Scholarship Mary Reynolds Babcock Foundation Scholarship Class of 1953 Tom Dorsey Scholarship Merwin R. Haskel Scholarship + Class of 1956 Gift - Faculty Fund Michael Morgan Nields ‘91 Scholarship Class of 1957 George and Anne Langdon Fund Patrick J. Stern ‘66 Scholarship Class of 1965 George and Anne Langdon Scholarship + Performing Arts Class of 1992 Gift - Scholarship Fund Peter A. Fitzgerald ‘93 Endowed Scholarship Fund + Class of 1993 Gift - Scholarship Fund Ralph MacAllister Ingersoll Scholarship Class of 1998 Gift - Lecture Hall Reverend Stephen D. Parker, Jr. Class of 1959 Chaplaincy Chair Class of 2003 Faculty Endowment Fund Richard B. Fuller ‘64 Endowed Music Fund Class of 2009 Gift - Championship Lounge Roy R. Raizen ‘48 Scholarship Class of 2011 Gift - Endowed Teaching Fellowship + Rutherfoord Family Endowed Teaching Fellowship Daniel P. Miller Scholarship + Salisbury Freedom Fund Scholarship + David Anderson Carter ‘94 Scholarship + Sally G. and Robert H. Phinny Scholarship David Charlton Perkins ‘33 Fellowship Scholarship-Board Designated Endowment + DeWitt Wallace Reader’s Digest Scholarship Fund Sean Bowler ‘02 (Hon.) Scholarship Dr. Richard S. Childs, Jr. ‘63 Chair for Excellence in Teaching Tauck Endowment Fund + Drew E. O’Connell Family Scholarships Thomas M. Ritchie, III ‘83 Scholarship + E.E. Ford Faculty Initiative Fund Unrestricted Endowment + Edwin C. Tappert Scholarship Wachtmeister Family Endowed Fund for the Headmaster’s Chair Elizabeth Jenks Dresser Day Student Scholarship at Salisbury School Ellsworth Morgan Statler ‘31 Scholarship Walter B. Billingsley Memorial Fund + Endowed Crew Fund + Walter C. Bradford ‘48 Family Scholarship Endowed Language Fund in Support of Mandarin Chinese + William G. Thompson ‘45 Endowed Scholarship Endowed Scholarship + William P. Reeves Scholarship Fund Eugene M. Zuckert ‘29 Scholarship William R. Kenan Jr. Faculty Endowment Fund Foxhollow Scholarship Francoise and William Bartlett ‘54 Endowed Scholarship Frank S. and Carolyn B. D’Alessandro Endowed Scholarship + George L. Maxwell ‘59 Scholars Program + Gordon S. Reid Scholarship Harold H. Corbin Jr. Summer School Scholarship + Harvey Childs Scholarship Fund Helen S. Maher Faculty Chair for the Arts + Helen S. Maher Teaching Fellowship for the Arts Henri Pell Junod Class of ‘17 Endowed Scholarship +

*= Deceased (Hon.) = Honorary Class Member Italics = Esse Quam Videri Society Member †= Consecutive Givers to the Annual Fund (Last four years) • = New Esse Quam Videri Society Member Bold = Class and Reunion Agents, Salisbury Alumni Association Volunteer and February Face-Off Captains ‡ = PA Leadership (Parents Association, Sixth Form Gift Committee and Parents Fund Committee)

Fall/Winter 2014 SALISBURY MAGAZINE 109 ANNUAL REPORT

Honorary and Memorial Gifts

In Memory of William Appleyard ’53 In Memory of A. Carl Helmholz In Memory of Alexander (Caldy) Whitridge ’05 Mr. Johnson T. Platt ’53 Mr. and Mrs. Arthur J. Roth Mr. Timothy W. Allison-Hatch Mr. Michael C. E. Roth ’09 Mr. Patrick M. N. de Visscher ’05 In Memory of Jim Bates ’48 and The San Francisco Foundation Mr. George J. Magovern III ’05 In Honor of Ted Wachtmeister ’67 Mr. Leland F. Morris ’05 Mr. Carl Edward A. Wachtmeister ’98 In Memory of Dave Lebens ’65 Mr. Llewellyn G. Ross III ’05 Mr. Michael Graves Huntoon ’65 Mr. Nicholas Sciubba ’05 In Memory of George Beavers III ’48 Mr. Jeffrey W. Lozier ’65 Mr. and Mrs Dutch Barhydt In Memory of Carl Williams Mr. Walter C. Bradford ’48 In Memory of Stephen J Meszkat ’02 Mr. Jörg Schwarz ’82 Mr. James R. Coulter Esq. ’48 Mr. Robert H. Hoenk The Reverend Charles W. Tait Mr. Millard C. Davis ’48 Mr. and Mrs. Stephen J. Meszkat Mr. William H. Holden, Jr. ’48 In Honor of Ted Ahrens ’04, Xander Jones and Mr. Derick L. Hulme ’48 In Memory of Kyle Miller ’01 Tom Simmons ’04 Mrs. Phelps Hunter Mr. Peter J. Baiocca ’01 Mr. Ned Corkery ’04 Ms. Dorothy M. Martin Mr. and Mrs. Dutch Barhydt Mr. Ralph W. Overfield ’48 Mr. Thomas R. McHugh ’01 In Honor of Chisholm Chandler ’11 (Hon.), P’17 Mr. Roy R. Raizen ’48 Mr. and Mrs. John R. Chandler, Jr. Ms. Mary M. Stokes In Memory of L. Garrison Miller, Jr. ’77 Mr. and Mrs. Thomas B. Ketchum Mrs. Patricia C. Miller In Memory of Sean Bowler ’02 In Honor of the Class of 2003, 10th Reunion Mr. Michael D. Sargent, Jr. ’04 In Memory of John Spencer Morris ’84 Mr. Winter Mead III ’03 Ms. Heather Hein In Memory of Sean Bowler ’02, In Honor of the Class of 2013 Ann Corkery ’13 (Hon.) and In Memory of Mick Simmons Mr. Matthew B. Corkery - on Behalf of Caldy Whitridge ’05 Mrs. Barbara B. Hamlin Mrs. Ann Corkery ’13 (Hon.) * Mr. Charles W. Callahan ’04 In Memory of Jeffrey P. Walker In Honor of Gil Erskine ’40 In Memory of Colin Maher Conroy ’95 Berkshire Taconic Community Foundation, Inc. Mr. and Mrs. Dutch Barhydt Ms. Joan M. Maher Mr. and Mrs. John R. H. Blum Mr. James L. Buckley In Honor of the February Face-off Captains In Memory of Adrian and Emerline Corbiere Mr. John N. Carey Mr. and Mrs. Dutch Barhydt The Reverend John R. Corbiere Mr. and Mrs. Thomas R. Coolidge Mr. Frederick B. Dent In Honor of Edward F. Glassmeyer ’59 In Memory of Ann Corkery ’13 (Hon.) Ms. Louise P. Gara Anonymous Mr. and Mrs. Dutch Barhydt Mr. Stephen F. Gundernatch Mr. James T. Clark, Jr. ’04 Mr. David F. Haddow ’71 In Honor of Reverend Kirk Hall ’90 Mr. Matthew B. Corkery Dr. and Mrs. Gordon C. Johnson Mr. and Mrs. C. De Forest Howland III ’78 Dr. and Mrs. Peter Daniel Mrs. Katharine G. Kellogg Mr. and Mrs. Peter B. Gilbert Mr. Cooper H. Morris ’71 In Honor of Haskel Family Mr. and Mrs. Francis S. O’Neill Mr. and Mrs. James P. Munton Mr. Steven C. Lunau, Jr. ’03 Mr. Jacob R. Repokis ’06 Mr. Gordon M. Ridgway ’76 Mr. John Toffey VI Mrs. Katherine G. Ridgway In Honor of Richard W. Haskel’s ’51 Birthday Mr. and Mrs. Charles L. Ritchie Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Merwin R. Haskel, Jr. ’49 In Memory of Kevin J. Dimeo ’09 Sally and J. Michael Ritchie Mr. Philip H. Brady ’08 The Reverend and Mrs. Peter W. Sipple In Honor of Richard and Jane Haskel’s 50th Staritch Foundation Inc. Wedding Anniversary In Memory of E.E. Frost, Jr. ’47 Mrs. Dorothy R. Walker Mr. and Mrs. Merwin R. Haskel, Jr. ’49 Mrs. Elaine P. Frost Mr. Jeffrey L. Walker Ms. Sandra D. Walker In Honor of Matthew Jones ’14 In Memory of Cedric Goddard ’90 Mr. and Mrs. Charles P. Whittemore Mr. and Mrs. Doug Jones Ms. Joan C. Havens

*= Deceased (Hon.) = Honorary Class Member Italics = Esse Quam Videri Society Member †= Consecutive Givers to the Annual Fund (Last four years) • = New Esse Quam Videri Society Member Bold = Class and Reunion Agents, Salisbury Alumni Association Volunteer and February Face-Off Captains ‡ = PA Leadership (Parents Association, Sixth Form Gift Committee and Parents Fund Committee)

110 SALISBURY MAGAZINE Fall/Winter 2014 ANNUAL REPORT

Faculty and Staff Giving

In Honor of Tyler Lenczuk ’04 Mr. Richard L. Duchossois Ms. Margaret Allen Mr. and Mrs. Curtis G. Rand † Mr. and Mrs. Edgar S. Auchincloss Dr. Geoffrey Rossano and Ms. Joan Baldwin † In Honor of Chris and Kim Phelps Mr. and Mrs. Tobias Ayer † Mr. Jeff Ruskin and Ms. Rita A. Delgado † Mr. and Mrs. John D. Dugan Mr. and Mrs. Brent M. Barbato ’02 Mr. Christopher Russell and Mrs. Merrilee Mardon

In Honor of John A. Reichert ’87 Mr. and Mrs. Dutch Barhydt † The Reverend and Mrs. Terrence W. Ryan † Mrs. Corrine V. Reichert Mr. and Mrs. Christopher Bodnar Ms. Lisa Sheble † Mr. and Mrs. William F. Boyer † Mr. and Mrs. Dennis P. Shortelle In Honor of Leland Rhodes ’86 Mr. Michael Brown Mr. and Mrs. Jonathan Siff Mr. and Mrs. Frederick L. Rhodes Mr. and Mrs. Adam Bunce Mr. and Mrs. James Simboli † Mr. and Mrs. Chisholm Chandler ’11 (Hon.) † Mr. Samuel H. Simmons † In Honor of Michael C. E. Roth’s ’09 Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Cheney ’95 (Hon.) † Mr. and Mrs. Timothy E. Sinclair ’91 † Graduation from Pepperdine Univeristy Mr. and Mrs. Chellis Collins † Mr. and Mrs. Christopher Smith Mr. and Mrs. Howard C. Springer Mr. Matthew B. Corkery † Mr. and Mrs. Procter Smith III † Mr. Ned Corkery ’04 (Hon.) † Mr. John Toffey VI In Honor of Jeff Ruskin Mr. Jonathan Coulombe and Mrs. Susan Touponse Mr. and Mrs. Thomas P. Rimsa Mrs. Jessie Parker Coulombe Mr. Justin C. Vagliano

In Honor of Charles E. Ryan ’16 Ms. Erika Crofut Mr. Nathan Venditta Mrs. Rosemary Ryan Mr. and Mrs. Richard I. Curtis ’91 (Hon.) † Ms. Tulika Verma and Mr. Charles Hirsch Ms. Emily Devey † Mr. and Mrs. Joe Vernali † In Honor of Laura and Procter Smith Mr. Brian Farrell Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Weisman and the Salisbury School Theater Program Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Fraenkel Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Will Mr. Christopher J. Truini ’12 Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Giffenig † Mrs. Lisa Wojcik Mr. and Mrs. Joseph J. Truini, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Peter B. Gilbert † Mr. and Mrs. Peter Wood Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Gomez † Ms. Judith Wyer In Honor of John N. Sutor ’16 Mr. and Mrs. Jonathan P. Gottsegen † Mr. and Mrs. Robert D. Wynne Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Sutor IV Ms. Gloria L. Gourley Mr. and Mrs. Michael Zahn Mr. and Mrs. Andrew M. Graham ’97 † In Honor of Michael S. Sylvester ’59 Mr. and Mrs. Robert D. Green Mr. Andrew Q. Sylvester ’02 Mr. and Mrs. Keith Hudak

In Honor of all Tom Jessup’s Former Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Ide † Colleagues Still at Salisbury and Mr. Alexander W. Jones † in Memory of Those Who Have Passed On Ms. Angela Koich Mr. and Mrs. Thomas P. Jessup Mr. and Mrs. Carl P. Lane-Lopez Mr. and Mrs. John Leary † ‡ In Honor of the Salisbury School Varsity Mr. Yu Kun Luo † Hockey Team Mr. and Mrs. John K. Magiera † Berkshire Taconic Community Dr. Mark Marshall and Foundation, Inc. Mrs. Silloo Peters-Marshall † Black Rock Foundation Fund Mr. Peter McEachern and Mrs. Danielle Mailer † Mr. Robert L. W. McGraw Mr. and Mrs. Roger W. McKee ’72 †

In Honor of Douglas Weisman Mr. Ralph J. Menconi ’84 (Hon.) Mr. and Mrs. Jackson T. Wong Mr. and Mrs. David C. Miller Mr. and Mrs. Terence Miller † In Honor of Sam Woodruff’s ’89 25th Reunion Mr. and Mrs. Rhonan Mokriski ’90 † Mr. Anthony C. Woodruff, Jr. ’89 Mr. and Mrs. Jason Pennella Mr. and Mrs. Anthony C. Woodruff ’01 Mr. and Mrs. Christopher Phelps † Mr. and Mrs. Brian Phinney In Honor of Bobby Wynne and Sam Simmons Mr. and Mrs. Peter Raifstanger Mr. and Mrs. Jeremiah E. Cunningham

*= Deceased (Hon.) = Honorary Class Member Italics = Esse Quam Videri Society Member †= Consecutive Givers to the Annual Fund (Last four years) • = New Esse Quam Videri Society Member Bold = Class and Reunion Agents, Salisbury Alumni Association Volunteer and February Face-Off Captains ‡ = PA Leadership (Parents Association, Sixth Form Gift Committee and Parents Fund Committee)

Fall/Winter 2014 SALISBURY MAGAZINE 111 ANNUAL REPORT

Foundations, Corporations and Corporate Matching Gifts

Foundations The Winston-Salem Foundation † Crystal Rock Wyoming Philanthropic Trust, Inc. Deano’s Pizza Anonymous † Dick Flood Educational Services † Allyn’s Creek Foundation, Inc. Matching Gift Organizations Domaney’s Discount Liquor Anschutz Family Foundation † ◊ Unintentionally Omitted from 2012-2013 Annual Report E. Caligari and Son The Arthur D. Dana Foundation † Elizabeth’s Fine Jewelry Arthur Dubow Foundation AARP Foundation † Equal Exchange Berkshire Taconic Community Foundation, Inc. † Aetna Foundation † Fidelity Charitable Gift Fund † The Boathouse Foundation AIG GHI Sign Service The Boston Foundation American Express Foundation † Haffenreffer Family Fund † Cahn Family Foundation Archer Daniels Midland Company † Ingalls & Snyder LLC Cain Brothers Foundation Bank of America Corporation † Interlaken Inn Charles S. Raizen Foundation, Inc. † Carolyn Foundation Jim Mokriski Sales & Marketing The Deane A. and John D. Gilliam Foundation † ChevronTexaco Corporation † John & Weezie Gates Charitable Trust The Donnelley Foundation † Cornerstone Real Estate Advisors, LLC. Lindell Fuels, Inc. E. A. & Kaye Durham Foundation Eaton Vance Investment Managers Mizza’s Restaurant and Pizza Emily Hall Tremaine Foundation, Inc. † Gannett Welsh & Kotler, LLC ◊ National Philanthropic Trust Fairfield Foundation GE Foundation National Refrigeration Service Group Fiduciary Trust Company International General Reinsurance Corporation The New York Community Trust † The Findlay Family Foundation † Global Reinsurance Corp. of America Palace Theatre The Frederic C. Hamilton Family Foundation † Hampton , Inc. † Pershing † The Gardner Cowles III Charitable Foundation JP Morgan Chase Foundation † Peter Becks Village Store † Gladys and Roland Harriman Foundation Laird Norton Company, LLC † Preferred Display, Inc. Henry E. Niles Foundation, Inc. † McKesson Foundation, Inc. Progressive Paving and Construction LLC The Henry L. & Grace Doherty Merck Company Foundation † Quality Printing Company, Inc. † Charitable Foundation † Merrill Lynch - Bank of America † Robinson Leech Real Estate † Jack & Sylvia Altman Foundation, Inc † Microsoft Corporation Rockefeller Philanthropy Advisors † James W. Thornton Family Foundation † Morgan Stanley Smith Barney Salisbury Bank & Trust Company The John F. Maher Family Foundation † Myriad Communications, Inc. Salisbury Boat Club The Joseph R. and Mercedes McMicking Nomura America Foundation † Salisbury Garden Center, LLC Foundation Northwestern Mutual Foundation The San Francisco Foundation The Kemmerer Family Foundation Raytheon Company Saperstein’s The Lucy Foundation † The Seymour H. Knox Foundation, Inc. The Schwab Fund for Charitable Giving † Malfer Foundation † Silicon Valley Community Foundation Select Sports Bags The Nancy and Maurice Lazarus Fund † Sun Trust Foundation † Smathers & Branson LLC The Nigro Family Foundation The Taproot Fund SmugMug, Inc. † Northern Lights Foundation TE Connectivity Matching Gift Program Snellman Construction Olcott and Lucy Smith Foundation † The Thomas and William Gilbane Foundation † Stearns Charitable Trust Plante Moran Trust Wells Fargo † TEC Control Systems, Inc. The Pittsburgh Foundation † Torrington Sash & Door Works Porter and Lauren Collins Foundation Other Organizations United Construction & Engineering, Inc. The Rallis Richner Foundation, Inc. † United Way of the Bay Area The Richard & Priscilla Schmeelk Foundation † 241 Water Street, LLC Vanguard Charitable Endowment Program † Ronald P. and Susan E. Lynch Foundation † 4 Park Fitness Corp Weg and Myers, P.C. The Salmon Foundation, Inc. † 52 Main West Street Wine and Spirits The Schiffenhaus Foundation, Inc. † All-Met Lacrosse William Perotti & Sons, Inc. The Spray Foundation † Arethusa Farm Dairy The Woodland Staritch Foundation Inc. At Home In The Country Sumner Gerard Foundation † Bell Electrical Contractors Thomas Rutherfoord Foundation Black Rabbit The Thompson Family Foundation, Inc. Bobcat of Connecticut The Walter C. Teagle III and Bostwick Capital, LLC. Janet D. Teagle Foundation The Brim Fund † The Warrington Foundation † Bruce M. Montgomerie Consulting Whitehall Foundation, Inc. † Country Bistro

*= Deceased (Hon.) = Honorary Class Member Italics = Esse Quam Videri Society Member †= Consecutive Givers to the Annual Fund (Last four years) • = New Esse Quam Videri Society Member Bold = Class and Reunion Agents, Salisbury Alumni Association Volunteer and February Face-Off Captains ‡ = PA Leadership (Parents Association, Sixth Form Gift Committee and Parents Fund Committee)

112 SALISBURY MAGAZINE Fall/Winter 2014 Q. When Does 1=2?

A. When you double your gift to Salisbury through your employer’s matching gift program.

Step 1: Visit salisburyschool.org/ways-to-give and use the searchable database to find out if your employer matches gifts.

Step 2: Give to Salisbury! Any recent donation may be eligible, or give today at salisburyschool.org/make-a-gift

Step 3: Follow the instructions at salisburyschool.org/ways-to-give to double or even triple your gift to Salisbury School.

In just a few minutes, you can double your impact on Salisbury boys!

Questions? Contact Susan Auchincloss, director of the The Salisbury Fund, at 860-435-5784 or [email protected].

CONNECT WITH YOUr SARUM BROTHERS

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No matter where you live or how busy your Features of this alumni-only app include: schedule is, you will be able to connect with • Alumni directory searchable by name, other alums and keep up-to-date with the class year, college, industry or company latest Salisbury School and alumni news. • Integration with LinkedIn • Alumni events calendar Download the app by scanning • Facebook, , and SmugMug this QR code with your mobile device or visit our Web site: Supported Devices: iPhone, iPad, Android

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JOIN US FOR AN UPCOMING EVENT!

December 4 Old Boys’ Night (NYC) 11 Current Parent Holiday Reception (New Rochelle, NY)

January 15 MOB Luncheon (Larchmont, NY) 15-16 Board of Trustees Meeting 16-17 Fifth Form College Symposium 24 Alumni Hockey Game

May 1-3 Reunion Weekend & Spring Family Weekend 29 Graduation

Additional spring events are being planned in Florida, Texas, Chicago and Los Angeles. For more information about these and other Salisbury School gatherings, please visit our website: www.salisburyschool.org