2014 Camp Kiniya Spirit

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THE

SPIRIT

2014



THE SPIRIT 2014

PUBLISHED ONCE EACH YEAR FOR THE GIRLS & LEADERS OF CAMP KINIYA


THE 2014 CAMP KINIYA LEADERS


THE SPIRIT 2014 CONTENTS DEDICATION STAFF ATHLETICS WATERFRONT OUTDOORS ARTS SPIRITUAL AWARDS JUNIORS SENIORS GALLERY ROSTER

#4 #6 # 10 # 18 # 24 # 36 # 52 # 63 # 68 # 76 # 88 # 100 SPIRIT STAFF EDITOR | Brendan “Lefty” Loughman CHIEF PHOTOGRAPHER | Elaine Ezerins CONTRIUBUTING PHOTOGRAPHERS

Sara Nelson, Mia Jager, Marnie McDonagh, Kat Nelson, Chloe Potash, Meagan Oliver, Ibby Maruca, Mollie Farnham, Lefty

Special Thanks This book would not be possible without the hard work from our Chief Photographer, Elaine Ezerins. The photos you took this past summer were amazing and I hope the 2014 Spirit shows just that. Also a big yoha to Kat and Marnie for the help along the way. -15877


DEDICATION A

#20203 MARY PIAZZA

As we approach the end of our ninth season partnered with our brothers at Camp Dudley, there is no better time to look back on our history at Kiniya than now. There are few people at Camp today who have as much family history at Kiniya as those who have been part of the Dudley family over the past 130 years. There is one person in particular whose family history goes back to the late 1960’s. Camper #20203, Mary Piazza, grew up hearing all about Kiniya from her many family members who had attended and is now celebrating her 11th summer at Camp. Mary continues to carry on the legacy that her family has at Kiniya and does so in such a wonderful way. Mary hails from Bethlehem, Pennsylvania and makes the seven hour trek north each summer to be with her Kiniya family. Her mother, Julia Joyce Piazza, and two aunts, Celia Joyce Manriquez and Lucy Joyce, all attended Kiniya as campers. Both Celia and Lucy, and Mary’s uncle Tim, later returned to Kiniya on staff. Mary finally had the opportunity to join the Kiniya family in 2004 as a camper with her two cousins, #20183 Sarah Manriquez and #20179 Jazmin Lewis. During Mary’s many years at Kiniya, she lived in cabins 11, 12, Ark, Lower Loft, Hernandos, Meadowside, Van Buren and Casbah. Over the years, Mary has been a camper, Aide, JL, Chapel Coordinator, and Leader. Before becoming a leader, Mary would beg her parents each and every year to let her stay full season. Much to her disappointment, she had a long wait before she was able to experience the joy of spending a full 8 weeks at Kiniya. In 2010, Mary served as a full season leader for the first time and would be one of our strongest leaders moving forward for the next 4 years.

In 2012 and 2013, Mary led the Junior Division as D-Head with #20297 Assistant DHead and dear friend, Chloe Potash. Today in her 11th summer, Mary has transitioned successfully into a staff role serving as an active member of our waterfront team and Special Events Coordinator living with her fellow staff in Burt the Yurt. During Mary’s tenure as DHead the Junior Division campers experienced some very exciting special events. Her dedication and enthusiasm was palpable in the planning and execution of extravaganzas, council rings, and daily life at Camp. The Juniors of 2012 and 2013 enjoyed Happy Unbirthday Ganza and Superhero ganzas, and Ridiculous Epic and Vacation Ganza under Mary’s leadership. Mary could regularly be found wearing eccentric costumes and racing about to ensure a smooth delivery of her well thought out plans and ideas. Her ability to provide an excellent experience for each camper and build relationships with each person on campus has been truly admirable. A natural leader, Mary put a lot of thought into how she could best serve Kiniya as a staff member this summer before the application process even began. She is an honest, dependable and optimistic person whose presence would well serve any department area at Kiniya. Recognizing her passion for waterskiing, she expressed the desire to help rebuild a program that needed to be strengthened. She has always loved being on the water and always had a gift working with campers who are learning skills for the first time. Furthermore, Mary made

MARY WOULD BEG HER PARENTS EACH AND EVERY YEAR TO LET HER STAY FULL 4

THE SPIRIT | 2014


the transition from leader to staff seamlessly. She has set a wonderful example for others who will inevitably make this same transition in years to come. In the spring of this year, when asked to choose three words that describe what we value most at Camp, Mary responded with ‘leadership, character, and identity’. She wrote, ‘All three of these words are valued and members of the community of all ages are encouraged to work on and develop in these areas.’ Mary continued on to describe what each area meant to her and in doing so described many of the things that we value about her. Mary is a team player and can take the lead when necessary. She is focused on doing the right thing and helping others. She is always pushing herself to grow and is always encouraging others to love themselves as they are. Mary has been a valued member of the Kiniya community since 2004. Her passion and dedication to Kiniya is unrivaled and for that we would like to dedicate the 2014 Spirit to #20203, Mary Piazza.

MARY IS A TEAM PLAYER AND CAN TAKE THE LEAD WHEN NECESSARY

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KINIYA STAFF 2014

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Director | Marnie McDonagh

Leadership Development | Kat Nelson

Mollie Farnham | Outdoor Education Director

Kitchen | Gail Coleman - Food Service Director Angelika Antal, Jadwiga Baran, Anett Szilagyi, Kaye Douglas, Csilla Tovari, Dora Ernhardt

Facilities | Mike D’Amico - Facilities Director, Angie Hill - Asst. Facilities Director Levente Nagy, Dorian Samboni, Gavin Wallace, Pete Nash, Nixon Samboni, Boglarka Cser, Vivien Eckert

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Office Manager | Newt Young

Nurses | Jean Stowell, Dee Smith, Mary Kate Shanahan (EMT)

Arts | Meagan Oliver, Lisa Barnes, Olivia Thompson - Bessett, Meredith Habermann, Chloe Potash, Mia Jager, Jodine Rigg, Saoirse Cunniffe, Giulia Campana, Lucy Cross, Laurie Himmel

Photographer/Videographer | Elaine Ezerins Athletics | Kissy Rowley, Kelly Slater, Rio Darlaston, Sara Nelson, Sasha Fisher

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Waterfront | Will Small, George Payne, Alison Coyle, Dana Bradley, Alex Foster, Olly Harvey, Mary Piazza, Megan Bradley

Outdoors | Outdoor Education Director - Mollie Farnham, Kaylee Litch, Catherine Butler, Paul Brown, Lizzie Bogosian, Grace Hagerty, Danielle Berg, Sierra Smith

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ATHLETICS

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WATERFRONT

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OUTDOORS

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SPIRITUAL

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CHAPEL SPEAKERS

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Joan Miller

#14002 Jenn Gillis

#12664 Ted Smith

#23222 Donna Granfors

#23752 JB Loveland

#19976 Holly Kennedy

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CHAPEL TALKS

Outdoor Education Director #22406 Mollie Farnham

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Good morning everyone. This is my very first chapel talk. I have had such a great first week at camp, and this is yet another exciting new “first” for me. After much deliberation on what to say to you I finally came to a theme that is very, very important to me. Adventure! One of my first memories was asking my mom if I could take my little brother on a picnic. I think I was 5 or 6 (which made him 3 or 4). My mom said “sure!”, and set us up with a little basket full of snacks to head out the back door with. Now I grew up in the country, with a large back yard and garden, and I think she assumed we just meant to go out to the garden and hang out there. I had other plans. I remember crossing the road, being absolutely sure to look both ways for cars while holding my brothers hand. I remember walking down into our neighbors field, talking all the time with my brother telling him all sorts of stories about where we were going. I could see a nice little nook at the end of the field which looked like the spot for our picnic. We were almost there when I remember hearing my mother calling, and looking back she was a small spot at the end of our driveway way back at the top of our neighbors field. I waved and smiled. She came running. Needless to say, she was NOT happy with me. But I think it was then, as we walked back across those huge fields, my mom smiling with relief, me chatting her ear off about the things we had seen on our way and how I had kept us totally safe, that we both realized that I was someone who loved to explore, and adventures great and small were going to be in my future. Since then I have sought out adventures of all sorts, but have been especially drawn to ones in wilder places, where the “other than human life” is thriving. All of these adventures have made me stronger, wiser, and more aware of myself. I have sought to spend time outside in diverse

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landscapes because that made the adventures so different: hiking alone in desert-like land of the Grand Canyon, backpacking and ridking with girls through higher mountain pines at camp S in the Rocky Mountains, living on the Carribean coast in Belize City, CA, and on the mountainous ocean in Alaska. Beyond beautiful landscapes, I have met some truly magical people on my adventures, and they weave themselves into my stories and life in ways that are unforgettable. I am so lucky to have known them. But for all glamorous stories of adventure in exotic places, interestingly, all that time going “outside” seems to have most valuably resulted in me getting to know myself better on the “inside”. I have only grown more curious and interested in how things work, live, play. I didn’t mean for that to happen. It simply did as I followed my passion for adventure. And sometimes it wasn’t easy. I have to admit, there were times when my adventures were lonely, were physically uncomfortable, or when I’ve had to say goodbye to people I care for deeply and know I won’t likely see again. But in all of this, adventure has taught me to live with an open heart. Not just to other people, but to the world at large, and to new experiences. I hope you too can find such an experience through adventures great and small. What might your adventures look like? How might they change your awareness of yourself, your character, your sense of what you can accomplish? I encourage you all to embrace adventures in the woods, even when they aren’t immediately comfortable, or don’t seem like a big deal. You never know what you might later realize you stumbled upon, both in good stories and inside yourself. I would like to close with one of my favorite poems, which for me is a prayer.

MOLLIE FARNHAM


THE SUMMER DAY by Mary Oliver

Who made the world? Who made the swan, and the black bear? Who made the grasshopper? This grasshopper, I meanthe one who has flung herself out of the grass, the one who is eating sugar out of my hand, who is moving her jaws back and forth instead of up and downwho is gazing around with her enormous and complicated eyes. Now she lifts her pale forearms and thoroughly washes her face. Now she snaps her wings open, and floats away. I don’t know exactly what a prayer is. I do know how to pay attention, how to fall down into the grass, how to kneel down in the grass, how to be idle and blessed, how to stroll through the fields, which is what I have been doing all day. Tell me, what else should I have done? Doesn’t everything die at last, and too soon? Tell me, what is it you plan to do with your one wild and precious life? I hope this for you all, and especially our Sr. Hikers today: A real adventure, one where your curiosity and passions are stirred, where you overcome many things and one where an adventure gets you asking “what will I do with my one wild and precious life?”

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CHAPEL TALKS O

#12664 TED SMITH

One of my favorite quotes comes from a French author, Antoine de St. Exupéry who wrote a book called Le Petit Prince, the Little Prince, who says, “L’essentiel est invisible aux yeux.” Which literally means: “The essential is invisible to the eyes.” A looser translation says: “You cannot see or touch the most important things in life.” You cannot touch love, or peace, or happiness, or your spirit. You cannot touch the idea of putting the other fellow first. Those things in your heart and mind that make up your true self, are far more important than what you wear, how you look, or what kind of cell phone you own. I want to tell a story about Martial Arts. Do you know what that is? Martial Arts are a collection of combat sports where people compete against one another in judo, tae kwon do or wrestling. Depending on how good you are, you earn a different color belt that goes around your white martial arts uniform. (show belt). A black belt is the best, is the highest ranking a martial artist can get. A red or green belt might be like your High Five Award as a first or second year camper at Kiniya. The black belt would be like a Kiwi Disk —the top award for someone who has put a lot if time into one particular place. And in Martial Arts, there is a spiritual side, too, and students have a Master who is in charge. Kind of like Marnie, or maybe like your Kiwi Disk mentor: the master in charge of your spiritual side. So here is the story: A young martial artist is kneeling before the Master in a ceremony to receive her hard-earned black belt. After

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years and years of constant training, the student has finally reached the top achievement in the sport, the black belt. With the student kneeling before her, the Master says: “Before granting the belt, you must pass one more test.” “I am ready,” responds the student, expecting perhaps one final round of fighting, but rather than more physical combat, the Master says: “You must answer the final question: Imagine—all these years of training, and being surprised with one final test—the student was shocked, but she thought she was ready for anything. So the Master asks: “What is the essential, the true meaning of the black belt?” Remember as I said earlier, you cannot touch the essential things. The student quickly responds: “The black belt is the end of my journey, a well-deserved reward for all of my hard work.” The Master is not satisfied and waits for more until finally she speaks. “You are not yet ready for the black belt. Return in one year.” Imagine all that hard work, and no black belt! Disappointed, the student continues to work on her judo, but she has learned to also work on her heart and mind. A year later, the student kneels in front of the Master who again asks: “What is the essential meaning of the black belt?” This time the student responds: “The black belt is a symbol of distinction and the highest achievement in our art.” The Master says nothing for many minutes, waiting. Again, she is not satisfied. Finally, she speaks.

TED SMITH


“You are still not ready for the black belt. Return in one year.” A year later, after more work on her judo but again her heart and mind, the student kneels once again in front of the Master. And again the Master asks: “What is the essential meaning of the black belt?” Remember, the essential is invisible to the eyes. This time, the student responds: “The black belt represents the beginning - the start of a never-ending journey of work, and the pursuit of a higher standard.” The student finishes by saying: “And now it is my duty to share what I have learned.” The Master smiles and says “Yes. You are now ready to receive the black belt and begin your work.” How does this relate to you sitting here in front of me? Let’s say that you are about to receive your High Five Award this week, because you’ve been a good camper for this session. Some of you are even more like the black belt student—two days ago, you received your Kiwi Disk for four years of being a good Kiniya camper. And you may think that is the end of your Kiniya journey, for this summer, or forever. But let’s consider Marnie as the Master, and when she gives you those awards, she might ask you, “what is the essential meaning of the High Five Award, or the Kiwi Disk? Or even just your Kiniya experience--What is the essential meaning of it?”

Think about it now--How would you answer? Would you reply as the young martial arts student first did: “The end of my journey? And as a well deserved reward for my hard work?” If you did, Marnie or your Kiwi Disk mentor would tell you that is not good enough and that you need to return in one year. In your next year back, you’d return to Marnie, seeking your award. And Marnie would ask you, “What is the essential meaning of your Kiniya experience and your Kiniya award?” So I ask you today, with one week left in camp in the summer of 2014: can you figure out the essential meaning of your Kiniya experience? The black belt student finally figured it out when she said: “The black belt represents the beginning - the start of a never-ending journey of work, and the pursuit of a higher standard,” says the student. But don’t forget that the student continued: “Now it is my duty to share what I have learned.” Your Kiniya experience, and hopefully your High Five Award or your Kiwi Disk, represent the beginning - the start of that never-ending journey, and the pursuit of a higher standard. And it will be your duty to share what you have learned. So how can you share what you have learned with your friends and family?

TED SMITH

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BRING KINIYA HOME WITH YOU

The theme of this week is “growth.” When I first heard that, I wondered, why is “growth” the theme for the final week rather than the first week?

But growth is a funny word, isn’t it? Are your leaders asking you to get taller in the last week of camp? Of course not. Your leaders are asking you to grow in the essential ways, in your heart and in your mind. The essential things in life are not black belts, or the actual Kiwi Disk, but rather the journey you take in earning those awards, and more importantly, what you do with them after you have received them. So grow this week in your heart and mind. Try a new activity. Go meet someone you have not met yet. Get up on stage; try to go one level higher on the ropes course; or simply go up to someone and say something nice about her. But grow somehow. Grow, expand, push yourself to a higher standard in your heart and in your mind. But I caution you. Sometimes, simply doing new things is not enough. Sometimes, the greatest growth in a person happens when you are not trying to do anything at all but be yourself. Sometimes, the greatest growth in a person occurs when you simply accept yourself for who you are. Or, like I heard from the cabin yesterday at the ropes course, “You do you.” What a wonderfully simple quote to live by: You do you. Be yourself. Isn’t Kiniya the perfect place to be yourself? It is easy to put the other fellow first when everyone else is. It is easy to dress in funny clothes, sing songs, have dance parties, chant and cheer like maniacs at every meal? Or to simply put the drama and craziness of the real world aside for four weeks and cherish the people around you?

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So here is my final question to you all, from the youngest junior villagers to the Kiwi Disk girls to the leaders and staff: Why would you stop growing in these ways when the camp season ends. Everything I just mentioned—meeting someone or trying something new, saying something nice—is easy to do here, but isn’t it easy to do at home, too? The question is: can you bring Kiniya home with you? If you have been your true self here, why would that change at home? Can you let this week, this session, be the beginning, rather than the end, of the Kiniya experience and share it when you leave? This, too, may be easier than you think. If you accept yourself for who you are and continue to behave at home the same way you act here, you are sharing what you have learned. You are showing others that being yourself is the most essential thing you can be or do. That putting the other fellow first is more important than anything. You are showing them that the essential things in life, you cannot see or touch. It is your heart and mind that matter more than anything. Let us join together in a closing prayer of reflection: Give us strength to take this Kiniya experience, our awards, our black belts and Kiwi Disks, to take our growth home with us, and let it be the beginning - the start of a never-ending journey of work, and the pursuit of a higher standard. And when we return home, it will be our duty to share what we have learned.

TED SMITH


3/6 WEEK AWARD JUNIOR PIN

JUNIOR EMBLEM

SENIOR STAR

SENIOR FLAG

Jane Workman Lois Griffin Eve Balseiro Rose Bransford Maya Standard

Zoe Art Olivia Coutre Caroline Findlay Helena Loomis Annie Oatman Jamie Brusco Jessie Dolby Ella Dudley Anne Hagerty Anna Huller Jenny Loomis Kylie Manganello Grace McGlynn Claudia Rivera Allison Schuldt

Emily McCann Sophia Soka Malin Phelan Rachel Storey

Lydia Churchill Lydia Groves Caleigh Ryan Ellie Storey Ana Tessier Caroline Tornquist Gretchen Willmuth Chelsea McPheron Annie Mollman Caroline Scanlan

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2014 KIWIS

Alexandra Betz Margot Butler Quinn Butler Emma Caffry Lydia Churchill Lilly Cianciolo Sam Clark Callie Clifford Danika Clifford Elizabeth Deegan Sophia Franco Lois Griffin

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Maggie Hanley Ashleigh Henderson Mary Hermes Katey Howlett Caroline Hurdman Becca Interdonati Alice Jacquemont Maggie Jenkins Caroline Johnson Halle Johnson Paige Johnson Julia Low

Kylie Manganello Avena Manske Chelsea McPheron Annie Mollman Margo Muccia Megan O’Neill Allie O’Keeffe Olive Oski Cady Pirtle Lexy Powell Charlotte Reeves Chandler Ryan

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Caroline Scanlan Abby Scharges Allison Schuldt Hannah Schwoebel Natalie Shmerler Silvia Sicheri Will Small Sydney Soka Liza Stone Jean Stowell Georgia Swank Ana Tessier

Molly Thomann Abbey Thomas Olivia ThompsonBessett Caroline Tornquist Annie Verbeck Maia Vota Kate Whitman Newt Young


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JUNIOR LETTER Dear Junior Village, I hope this year’s spirit finds you happy, well, and dreaming of the summer 2015! Each year when I receive the spirit I am overjoyed to get another little piece of summer back into my life and I hope you all take the time to enjoy it and reflect on what a wonderful and magical summer we shared together last year. As we approach the New Year, I find myself reflecting on the amazing summer we were all lucky enough to be a part of. From each morning walking up to the golden bell, to goofy Tuesday nights at Junior Council Ring, to the enthusiasm shared on the field during Team Competition, to spontaneous Extravaganzas, each and every day was absolutely incredible. The community built in Junior Village was unbelievable and from the Triangle all the way to Bungalow I was constantly impressed with the enthusiasm, teamwork, and infectious camp spirit shown by each camper. I hope the lessons you learned from camp this summer and our beloved camp motto, “The Other Fellow First” are still involved in your day to day lives. As we get busy within the school year, let this motto merge it into your everyday life in the little ways; making a friendship bracelet for a friend, saying thank you to loved ones, or writing letters to your camp big/little sisters! This summer was truly unbelievable and it wouldn’t have been anywhere near as awesome without the wonderful group of young women in Junior Division. Wishing all of you a wonderful year ahead and hope to see each of your smiling faces back on the shores of Lake Champlain for yet another amazing summer at Camp Dudley at Kiniya! Much love and above all remember… YOU DO YOU Hanna McPheron #20444

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CADY

#20444 Hanna McPheron (DIVISION HEAD), UC Santa Cruz ‘16

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1. Hanna McPheron (L) 2. Brynn McKeown 3. Evelyn Hidy 4. Grace McManus 5. Elizabeth Gardiner 6. Elizabeth Bonner 7. Isabel Boodell 8. Molly Caffry 9. Hannah Donahue 10. Malin Phelan 11. Olivia Prouty 12. Ashleigh Henderson (A) 13. Annie Canning (AL)

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1. Emma Griffin (JL) 2. Fayth Ingram 3. Ava Galaburda 4. Ashley Wetty 5. Carolina Harr 6. Aurelia Bolton 7. Kate MacKenzie 8. Hanna McPheron (L) 9. Charlotte Edwards 10. Paige Johnston 11. Leah Eshete 12. Beaven Rutter 13. Lara Cazemajou (A)

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VANNEMAN #20859 Elizabeth Longo, Providence College ‘17

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1. Hannah Tracey 2. Jasmine Taylor 3. Emma Leibowitz 4. Caroline McCarthy 5. Maddy Walker 6. Abby Barnett 7. Claudia Larrison 8. Courtney Peterson 9. Kendyl Brower 10. Ella Brock 11. Zoe McPheron (AL) 12. Elizabeth Longo (L) 13. Callie Clifford (A)

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1. Katie Johnson 2. Ellie Frisch 3. Bridget Robinson 4. Grayson Elder (A) 5. Elizabeth Longo (L) 6. Lauren Lehnert 7. Emily McCann 8. Jenna Ryan 9. Sophie Edwards 10. Zoe McPheron (AL) 11. Isabella Partilo 12. Rose Whelan 13. Sophie Galaburda

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PINECREST #20135 Phoebe Quayle, Adelphi University ‘17

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1. Anne Wylly Willmott 2. Emma Muccia 3. Andrea Scott 4. Paige Turcotte 5. Kenzie McIntyre 6. Charlotte Harwood 7. Zwena Killikelly 8. Alex Kuroda 9. Ellie McManus 10. Chrissy Pastore 11. Rachel Storey 12. Greta Poler (AL) 13. Phoebe Quayle (L) 14. Emma Spinale (A)

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1. Shannon Bartlett (AL) 2. Caroline Pirtle 3. Kate Carls 4. Alice Lloyd 5. Chloe Rose 6. Clara Chaplin 7. Claire Osmond 8. Phoebe Quayle (L) 9. Olive Oski 10. Ari Phillips 11. Julia Keeton 12. Sophia Soka 13. Paige Storrier (A)

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CASBAH

#20466 Emily Goodwin (ASSISTANT D-HEAD), Saint Michael’s College ‘15

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1. Shannon Bartlett (AL) 2. Brigid Dolan (A) 3. Emily Goodwin (L) 4. Maddy Liberi 5. Elsa Schmidt 6. Lainey Bechta 7. Lulu Clark 8. Lilly Miller 9. Ella Boodell 10. Annie O’Shea 11. Grace Ferrelli 12. Grace Mangel 13. Logan Samuel 14. Oriana Carey

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1. Valeria D’Virgilio 2. Sophie Reusswig 3. Ellie Pirtle 4. Abby Osmond 5. Meghan Subak 6. Molly Bob Lazarus (A) 7. Emily Goodwin (L) 8. Annie Vernon (AL) 9. Ellie Banbury 10. Dillan Aysseh 11. Desjonae Quinones 12. Charlie Simpson 13. Sophie Guettel

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RIVERSIDE #20412 Claire Lynch, Boston College ‘18

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1. Paige Johnson (JL) 2. Maeve Phelan 3. Amiah Jacques 4. Emma Scanlan 5. Anna Kopfler 6. Olivia Bransford 7. Amelia Srebnik 8. Claire Lynch (L)

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1. Claire Lynch (L) 2. Megan McSherry (AL) 3. Isabel Evans 4. Augusta Williamson 5. Regan Sandoval 6. Alexia Cazemajou 7. Shay Newman 8. Kendra Elliott

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MEADOWSIDE #20425 Megan Sudduth, Colby Sawyer College ‘18

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LAKESIDE

#20371 Clara Dannemann, Franklin & Marshall College ‘17

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1. Ainsley McKeown 2. Fiona Degen 3. Annette Stephens 4. Cece Lloyd 5. Eve Balseiro 6. Clara Dannemann (L) 7. Julia Brophy 8. Bethany Frith 9. Miranda Dils (AL) 10. Katie Moore 11. Graylin Gogolak 12. PJ Dowd 13. Autumn Costley 14. Tori Ulin (A)

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1. Keziah Hoyt (A) 2. Heather O’Hern 3. Jane Workman 4. Leah Caputo 5. Halle Johnson 6. Kelly Raymond 7. Brianna Caraballo 8. Miranda Dils (AL) 9. Kaya Moody 10. Aubrey White 11. Lila Shieh 12. Julia Morrissey 13. Lizzie Schwartz 14. Clara Dannemann (L)

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SENIOR LETTER Dear Senior Village, I hope this letter finds you happy, healthy and looking forward to the summer of 2015! As we embark on the beginning of a new year, I hope you all get a chance to reflect on 2014. This past year has been filled with much to be thankful for; between us, we have experienced many successes and, undoubtedly, some difficult moments where we found ourselves wishing we back at camp doing the “Senior Leg”. As I look back on my own personal experiences this year, our summer together was truly a highlight! With the line-up of incredible Extravaganzas, silly (and often messy) Council Rings, spirited Team Competition games and exciting new Majors, the summer of 2014 was an absolute blast! But, what made this summer the best one yet was you! I would like to thank each one of you for sharing your enthusiasm, kindness and laughter with Senior Division and our entire community during you time on the shores of Lake Champlain. I’m sure that you have all found a way to fit “The Other Fellow First” into your lives at home, but in case you find it fading (we are all guilty every once and a while), let The Spirit be your reminder. I am truly humbled to have been the Senior Division Head for such a fantastic group of young women! Wishing each one of you a new year filled with great friends, new challenges, many triumphs and, of course, another fantastic summer at Camp Dudley at Kiniya! All my love and Senior pride, Caroline Delaney #20113

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HERNANDOS

#20535 Giulia Campana, Rice University ‘16 / Nicole Henkner, Leibniz Universitat Hannover

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1. Riley Seelert 2. Grace McGlynn 3. Dalton Reilly 4. Avery McCloskey 5. Reid Dodson 6. Allison Schuldt 7. Danika Clifford 8. Erin Hogan (AL) 9. Giulia Campana (L)

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1. Chloe Chace 2. Natalie Shmerler 3. Shea Brennan 4. Lila Derryberry 5. Zoe Art 6. Giulia Campana (L) 7. Nicole Henkner (L) 8. Morgan Rice (A) 9. Erykah Murray (JL) 10. Mary Hermes

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LOOKOUT #20415 Mallory Sudduth, Norwich University ‘17

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1. Annie Vernon (AL) 2. Kylie Manganello 3. Kailee Brower 4. Erin Long 5. Nicole Stetsyuk 6. Miki Howson 7. Mallory Sudduth (L)

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1. Emani Stevenson 2. Elizabeth Deegan 3. Jax Wessels 4. Char Getz 5. Annie Oatman 6. Allie O’Keeffe 7. Michelle Dimitri (AL) 8. Mallory Sudduth (L)

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SCHMIDT #20410 Elena Licursi, Connecticut College ‘17

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Caroline Johnson 2. Sofie Refojo 3. Julia Low 4. Sarah Miller 5. Emma Caffry 6. Lila Janski 7. Anna Huller 8. Abbey Thomas 9. Tay Michael 10. Mackenzie Timbel (AL) 11. Elena Licursi (L) 12. Megan Martelle (A)

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1. Helena Loomis 2. Katey Howlett 3. Zoe Cook 4. Maia Vota 5. Olivia Coutre 6. Emily Malis 7. Libby O’Hara (A) 8. Mackenzie Howe (AL) 9. Elena Licursi (L) 10. Blythe Chace 11. Eleanor Alix 12. Amanda Service 13. Liza Stone

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MCKEOWN #20317 Mimi McCann, High Point University ‘17

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1. Amber Peoples 2. Cece Cronin 3. Sydney Zoehrer 4. Lila Childs 5. Jenna Washington 6. Gigi Brusco 7. Sophia Franco 8. Catie Flynn 9. Margot Muccia 10. Ellie Schwoebel (AL) 11. Mimi McCann (L) 12. Laura Kuruvilla 13. Ally Perrin (JL)

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1. Hayley Cirenza 2. Qi Mei Schmidt 3. Morgan Robinson 4. Maddy Slattery 5. Sophie Small 6. Caroline Findlay 7. Merritt Davie (A) 8. Katherine Oatman 9. Abby Scharges 10. Caroline Hurdman 11. Kaileigh Jackson 12. Morgan Johnston (JL) 13. Mimi McCann (L)

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COYNE

#20113 Caroline Delaney (DIVISION HEAD), Wake Forest University ‘15

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1. Kristy Pagnani 2. Annie Hagerty 3. Kate Whitman 4. Jacqueline McKeown 5. Maggie Jenkins 6. Lauren Bisceglia 7. Margot Butler (A) 8. Caroline Delaney (L) 9. Mia Lambo (AL) 10. Rianna Skomorovsky 11. Morghan Walker 12. Harley Frechette 13. Grace Ryan 14. Maddie Hanley

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1. Kat McSherry (A) 2. Rosie Kilby 3. Troi Chambers 4. Kate Benzian 5. Felicity Whelan 6. Anna Kennedy 7. Caroline Delaney (L) 8. Maggie Hanley 9. Silvia Sicheri 10. Emma Putney 11. Audrey Rudd 12. Lillian Shaw 13. Cady Pirtle 14. Maddie Seibold (AL)

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VAN BUREN #20108 Eliza Davis, Princeton University ‘17

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1. Kate Huller (AL) 2. Senara Mendez 3. Sarah Hayes 4. Jenny Loomis 5. Jessie Dolby 6. Charlotte Fitzsimmons 7. Eliza Davis (L) 8. Francis Freeman-Moore 9. Annie Bystrom 10. Winslow Bullard 11. Sophie Eldridge 12. Kelsey Moum (A)

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1. Eliza Davis (L) 2. Sydney Soka 3. Sarah Hayes 4. Emily Reusswig 5. Avena Manske 6. Mahala Marshall-Rutter 7. Annie Probert 8. Dasha Olin 9. Bayley Storrier 10. Grace Flanagan 11. Damini Frey 12. Alaina Cohen (JL)

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ARK

#20278 Kelsey Goodwin (ASSISTANT D-HEAD), Wheaton College ‘16

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1. Chandler Ryan (JL) 2. Kelsey Goodwin (L) 3. Sara Gillis (AL) 4. Hadley Sager 5. Drew Balfour 6. Claudia Rivera 7. Lilly Cianciolo 8. Seanie Clark 9. Georgie Swank 10. Emma Butler 11. Ella Dudley 12. Page Freeman 13. Arden Grant

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1. Ella Tessier-Lavigne (JL) 2. Charlotte Maclaury 3. Jaida Atkins 4. Rachel Scheff 5. Ann Morgan Jacobi 6. Anika Rabenhorst 7. Alex Betz 8. Kelsey Goodwin (L) 9. Josie de Anda 10. Catherine Laylin 11. Alva Nadermann 12. Caleigh Ryan 13. Ellie Storey 14. Libbie Warner (AL)

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LOWER LOFT #22372 Megan O’Neil, Florida International University ‘16

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1. Amanda Perry 2. Vicky Smith-Parker 3. Jamie Brusco 4. Taylor Gough 5. Annie Verbeck 6. Sarah Thomann (AL) 7. Celia Garrett (JL) 8. Tori Dew 9. Abby Wiseman 10. Ali Ulin 11. Gretchen Willmuth 12. Emmeline Flagg 13. Megan O’Neill

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1. Pippa Kula (JL) 2. Sarah Thomann (AL) 3. Lydia Groves 4. Caroline Tornquist 5. Gretchen Willmuth 6. Ana Tessier 7. Megan O’Neill (L) 8. Sarah Heilmann 9. Lydia Churchill 10. Becca Interdonati 11. Olivia White 12. Reilly Cirenza 13. Ibby Maruca

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UPPER LOFT #20222 Courtney Granfors, Penn State University ‘17

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1. Courtney Granfors (L) 2. Maggie Dolan (JL) 3. Abby Thompson (AL) 4. Kate McClearn 5. Annie Mollman 6. Ellie Miller 7. Charlotte Childs 8. Caroline Scanlan 9. Isabella Carr 10. Chelsea McPheron 11. Margaret Griffin 12. Sammy Clark 13. Hannah Schwoebel

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1. Canoli Giovannoli 2. Josie Cook 3. Tessa Kuhn 4. Margaret Griffin 5. Ellie Whelan 6. Maddie Johnston 7. Fiona Maruca 8. Molly Thomann 9. Lauren Carlson 10. Alice Jacquemont 11. Eva Wertimer (JL) 12. Courtney Granfors (L)

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05446 MORNING DIPS KIWI DISCS SAYYYYY

HEY!

KINIYA

RISE AND SHINE

MEET GIRLS TAPS OUT IN THE PINES

CROSS MANY MILES SEE THE SMILES TO WATERSKI RIDING WOO! WHITE & BLUE FOREVER TRUE

DUDLEY AT KINIYA


05446 MORNING DIPS KIWI DISCS SAYYYYY

HEY!

KINIYA

RISE AND SHINE

MEET GIRLS TAPS OUT IN THE PINES

CROSS MANY MILES SEE THE SMILES TO WATERSKI RIDING WOO! WHITE & BLUE FOREVER TRUE

DUDLEY AT KINIYA


CAMP KINIYA

05446


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