Philanthropy Report • Fiscal Year 2022

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COLLEGE OF THE ATLANTIC Philanthropy Report | Fiscal Year 2022

BOARD OF TRUSTEES 2022

TRUSTEE OFFICERS

Beth Gardiner, Chair, London, UK

Marthann Samek, Vice Chair, New York, NY

Hank Schmelzer, Vice Chair, Somesville, ME

Ronald E. Beard, Secretary, Bar Harbor, ME

Barclay Corbus, Treasurer, San Francisco, CA

TRUSTEE MEMBERS

Cynthia Baker, Washington, DC

Timothy Bass, Washington, DC

Michael Boland ’94, Bar Harbor, ME

Joyce Cacho, Washington, DC

Alyne Cistone, Mount Desert, ME

Sarah Currie-Halpern, Boulder, CO

Heather Richards Evans, Wilmington, DE

Marie Griffith, St. Louis, MO

Cookie Horner, Bar Harbor, ME

Nicholas Lapham, Washington, DC

Casey Mallinckrodt, Hartford, CT

Anthony Mazlish, Chevy Chase, MD

Chandreyee Mitra ’01, Aurora, IL

Roland Reynolds, Alexandria, VA

Nadia Rosenthal, Bar Harbor, ME

Laura McGiffert Slover, Washington, DC

Laura Z. Stone, New York, NY

Steve Sullens, New York, NY

Claudia Turnbull, Greenwich, CT

LIFE TRUSTEES

Samuel M. Hamill, Jr., Princeton, NJ

John N. Kelly, Yarmouth, ME

William V.P. Newlin, Washington, DC

John Reeves, Bar Harbor, ME

TRUSTEES EMERITI

David Hackett Fischer, Wayland, MA

William G. Foulke, Jr., Bedford, NY

Amy Yeager Geier, Hobe Sound, FL

George B.E. Hambleton, Charleston, SC

Elizabeth D. Hodder, Cambridge, MA

Philip B. Kunhardt III ’77, Waccabuc, NY

Jay McNally ’84, Bar Harbor, ME

Philip S.J. Moriarty, Hinsdale, IL

Phyllis Anina Moriarty, Chestnut Hill, MA

Cathy Ramsdell ’78, Portland, ME

Hamilton Robinson, Jr., New York, NY

William N. Thorndike, Boston, MA

John Wilmerding, New York, NY

EX OFFICIO

Darron Collins ’92, President, Bar Harbor, ME

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Front cover photo by Adrian Lyne ’23
OPENING LETTER 2 REPORT ON THE ENDOWMENT AND INVESTMENTS 3 YEAR IN REVIEW 4 AN UNPARALLELED INVESTMENT 6 ENDOWED CHAIRS 7 Anne T. and Robert M. Bass Chair in Earth Systems and Geoscience 7 Richard J. Borden Chair in Humanities 9 Rachel Carson Chair in Human Ecology 10 T.A. Cox Chair in Studio Arts 11 William H. Drury, Jr. Chair in Evolution, Natural History, and Ecology and W.H. Drury Research Fund 12 Charles Eliot Chair in Ecological Planning, Policy, and Design 14 Andrew S. Griffiths Chair for the Dean of Administration 15 David Hales Director of Sustainability Fund 16 Steven K. Katona Chair in Marine Studies 17 McNally Family Chair in Philosophy and Human Ecology 19 Elizabeth Battles Newlin Chair in Botany 20 Partridge Chair in Food and Sustainable Agriculture Systems 22 Lalage and Steven Rales Chair in Chemistry 24 Emily and Mitchell Rales Chair in Ecology 25 David Rockefeller Family Chair and T.A. Cox Fund in Ecosystem Management and Protection 26 Sharpe-McNally Chair in Green and Socially Responsible Business 28 Lisa Stewart Chair in Literature and Women’s Studies 29 Allan Stone Chair in the Visual Arts 30 Cody van Heerden Chair in Economics and Quantitative Social Sciences 31 Kim M. Wentworth Chair in Environmental Studies 32 James Russell Wiggins Chair in Government and Polity and Philip Geyelin Fund for Government and Polity 33 Joanne Woodward and Paul Newman Chair in the Performing Arts 35 ENDOWED SCHOLARSHIPS 37 ENDOWED FUNDS 44 Cox Protectorate Fund 44 Barbarina M. and Aaron J. Heyerdahl Beech Hill Farm Endowment Fund 45 Kathryn Davis Fund for Global and Civic Engagement 46 Robert P. and Arlene Kogod Visiting Artist Fund 48 Peggy Rockefeller Farms Endowment Fund 49 Fund for Maine Islands 50 McCormick Library Director Fund 51 Doug Rose GIS Enhancement Fund 52 Diana Davis Spencer Hatchery Fund 53 Thomas and Mary Hall Book Fund 54 R. Amory Thorndike Memorial Fund 55 Elizabeth Thorndike Senior Class Book Fund 56 Waterfront Director Fund 57 General Unrestricted Endowment 58 Writing for the Future Fund 59 Physical Plant Funds 60 SUPPORTERS 62 Year After Year 62 Alumnx Leadership Circle 64 Black Fly Society 68 Northern Lights Society 71 coa.edu/support1 TABLE
CONTENTS
OF

Dear friends,

In September 2021, at the beginning of College of the Atlantic’s 50th academic year, roughly 100 incoming students split up into fi ve sections of COA’s only required course: The Human Ecology Core Course. Among other texts, each student read Robin Wall Kimmerer’s Braiding Sweetgrass. This fall, I decided to catch up with last year’s students and finally read this book.

In Braiding Sweetgrass, Kimmerer encourages us to develop a culture of reciprocity, where gifts are given, and in return, we give back. To the land, to the people, to the plants, animals, and creatures with whom we share this planet. This giving, receiving, and giving again creates a cycle of life that deepens and enriches through acts of reciprocity. Simple, elegant, powerful.

At College of the Atlantic, gifts are foundational to our community and our success. Donors like you give to COA, and in reciprocity, COA’s students and alumnx give back to the world through the knowledge, skills, and talents they developed at COA, thanks to your generosity.

This report is filled with accounts from faculty, staff, and students of how they are transforming the gifts you have given into gifts that create a better world. As I pulled these reports together I was struck by how many faculty chairs, scholarships, and funds were given by people who are no longer living, yet through investing and carefully stewarding their gifts, and drawing only a small portion of the earnings, their generosity supports students in perpetuity.

So whether you are a member of the Northern Lights Society (planned giving), our Black Fly Society (recurring donors), the Champlain Society ($1,500+), Alumnx Leadership Circle ($500+), or just made your first donation, I hope you enjoy this report and take pride in what you have given to COA and ultimately our world. We are certainly grateful!

Sincerely,

GIVING AT A GLANCE

$17.4M OVERALL GIVING AND PLEDGES

2,744 GIFTS

1,419 DONORS

22% ALUMNX PARTICIPATION

We are showered every day with gifts, but they are not meant for us to keep. Their life is in their movement, the inhale and the exhale of our shared breath. Our work and our joy is to pass along the gift and to trust that what we put out into the universe will always come back.
— Robin Wall Kimmerer, Braiding Sweetgrass
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REPORT ON THE ENDOWMENT AND INVESTMENTS

Bear Paul, Administrative Dean and CFO

On the heels of very strong performance by the endowment funds over the course of fiscal year 2021 (yielding one-year returns of 28.9%), the first six months of 2022 gave back much of those earned gains. The one-year return on endowed funds for the period ending June 30, 2022 finished at -16.8%. The threeand fi ve-year returns came back at 2.8% and 4.9% respectively.

Though global asset markets struggled, contributions from the Broad Reach Capital Campaign continued to arrive and new funds within the endowment continued to mature. At the close of

the 2022 fiscal year (June 30, 2022), the COA endowment stood at roughly $69.7 million. Though this was significantly below the closing mark of FY21 at $82.6 million, it was nearly $8 million above the closing mark for FY20 ($62 million).

In aggregate, the two-year period beginning June 30, 2020 and ending June 30, 2022 saw the COA endowment grow by roughly 12.4%. This was in spite of one of the worst first six-month periods of asset market performances in the past 50 years.

The COVID-19 pandemic has posed waves of challenges to the college over the past two plus years. This recent market turbulence is yet another wave for the community to navigate. The generosity of our supporters has buoyed the college through these challenges and will help us chart a course to calmer waters moving forward. Our annual endowment draw represents a

vital source of funding for program operations, equating to roughly $8,200 in annual revenue per student for the 2021-2022 academic year. The following pages include reports of the many funds within the endowment and how they support the fulfillment of the mission of the college.

$20M $0
FY00 FY05 FY10 FY15 FY20
$40M $60M $80M $100M
GLOBAL EQUITIES MARKETABLE ALTERNATIVES FIXED INCOME TYPE OF INVESTMENT % OF HOLDINGS GLOBAL PUBLIC EQUITIES 62.9% 0.6% 22.9% 12.8% 0.9% 100% 1 YEAR RETURN -23.7%-17.0% -5.6% 0.2% -16.8% -11.9% 3 YEAR RETURN 2.3%5.2% 0.0% 0.5% 2.8% 5.3% 5 YEAR RETURN 5.2%5.8% 1.1% 0.5% 4.9% 5.9% PRIVATE INVESTMENTS MARKETABLE ALTERNATIVES FIXED INCOME CASH & CASH EQUIVALENT TOTAL BENCHMARK PRIVATE INVESTMENTS CASH& CASH EQUIVALENT coa.edu/support3

JULY: Chefs, farmers, writers, policy experts, entrepreneurs, and activists joined COA for the fifth annual Summer Institute: Good Food and Food Fights.

SEPTEMBER: Alum Craig Kesselheim ’76 of COA’s first incoming class welcomed the college’s 50th incoming class during convocation and officially opened the Davis Center for Human Ecology, a new 30,000-square-foot academic center. He was joined by the center’s architects Susan T. Rodriguez and Tim Lock as well as COA governance moderator Olivia Paruk ’24 and President Darron Collins ’92.

YEAR IN REVIEW 2021

NOVEMBER: The Davis Center for Human Ecology was highlighted in the annual colleges and universities issue of Architectural Record, alongside six other innovative designs from around the world.

COA was awarded first place in a three-way-tie with the University of Puget Sound and Maine’s Bowdoin College for the highest undergraduate voting rate in the nation, according to the results of the ALL IN Campus Democracy Challenge. A total of 85.1 percent of all eligible undergraduate students at COA voted in the fall 2020 election, nearly 20 points higher than the national average.

07 09 11 08 10 12
AUGUST: April Nugent joined COA as the new Farm Manager of College of the Atlantic Peggy Rockefeller Farm. Green and Socially Responsible Business.
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DECEMBER: College of the Atlantic was the #1 zero-waste campus in the country, according to a new ranking from the Post Landfill Action Network.

FEBRUARY: A challenge grant from Walter Robinson, Casey Mallinckrodt, and Mary K Eliot inspired 630 donors to contribute $193,013 during the 24-Hour Challenge, the highest fundraising total in the history of the challenge.

APRIL: Students Taibatou Adamou ’22 and Aniruddha Jaydeokar ’23 were awarded $10,000 for their Projects for Peace project, Empower Women Entrepreneurs for Peace in Niger, which will support a group of small business owners in Niamey.

JUNE: Alumnx Weekend capped off the 50th academic year with a celebration of Millard Dority’s 52-year career at COA, a Founders Roundtable, and a weekend full of activities.

Ornithologist and conservationist Eleanor Gnam ’23 received the prestigious Barry Goldwater Scholarship.

2022 05 06
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The Davis United World College Scholars Program

An unparalleled investment in COA

Darron Collins ’92, President

Three generations of the Davis family have made extraordinary, transformational gifts to College of the Atlantic. Throughout this report you will read about programs like the Expeditionary Fund, buildings like the Davis Center for Human Ecology, and a new student residence that will house 46 students for the coming academic year—all thanks to the generosity of the Davises.

But the program that stands above all, and has without a doubt had the single largest impact on COA in the

past quarter century, is the Davis United World College (UWC) Scholar Program. Founders Shelby Davis and Phil Geier began the program in 2000 with a single idea:

If you could bring thousands of talented students from every corner of the globe to US colleges and universities…you could create international understanding and change the world.

DAVIS UWC

80 DAVIS SCHOLARS CURRENTLY ENROLLED

39 COUNTRIES REPRESENTED BY CURRENT DAVIS SCHOLARS

COA was one of just five pilot colleges to enroll Davis Scholars in the year’s first program (2000) and has never looked back. Davis Scholars have enriched COA and the study of human ecology in profound ways, have reshaped the college’s curriculum, and have helped make COA a global institution here on Mount Desert Island. Thank you Shelby, Gale, and the entire Davis family—you’ve helped COA reach new heights, and from these high places our students can see and build a better world.

$32.6M TOTAL SCHOLARSHIP FUNDING FOR DAVIS SCHOLARS SINCE THE PROGRAM BEGAN IN 2000

23% OF COA STUDENTS ARE DAVIS SCHOLARS

257 COA GRADUATES ARE DAVIS SCHOLARS

22 YEARS THAT DAVIS SCHOLARS HAVE ATTENDED COA

Shelby Davis and Phil Geier, co-founders of the Davis UWC Scholars Program, with COA President Darron Collins and some current Davis UWC Scholars
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ENDOWED CHAIRS

Anne T. and Robert M. Bass Chair in Earth Systems and Geoscience

Chairholder: Sarah Hall, PhD

The Bass Chair funds a range of field and lab-based opportunities. During the 2021-2022 academic year, I taught a total of 60 students and mentored 14 student advisees. Highlights included a float trip down the Penobscot River, a field trip to North Woods Ways, community water quality outreach projects, and student presentations at regional conferences.

I served as campus representative for the EcoLeague and Goldwater Fellowship, and organized senior project presentations for trustees with Jodi Baker. With students and local collaborators, I continued work with partners at Acadia National Park (ANP), Friends of Acadia, and the Mount Desert Island Biological Laboratory (MDIBL) on local/regional water quality research projects. Externally, I served in my final year as president of the Geological Society of Maine and as a Cooperating Curator of the Hudson Museum at the University of Maine.

Courses I taught during the 2021-2022 year included Geology of MDI, Rocks and Minerals, Climate and Weather, and Watersheds. In Watersheds, students learned to monitor watersheds and streams in ANP. They also assisted with a research project to document the impacts of intense precipitation events. We enjoyed an

informative and exciting fl oat trip down the Penobscot River along with Ken Cline’s Hydropolitics class, and other river experts and stakeholders.

In the winter, I co-taught Topics in Research: Geoscience and Geochemistry with Reuben Hudson. In this writing-focused course, students focused on an ongoing research project throughout the term—analyzing, visualizing, and interpreting data in collaboration with students and other researchers. Their work culminated in a draft scientific manuscript that may be submitted for publication.

Research and outreach continued to be an important part of my work in FY22. This was the final year of a three-year National Institute of Health grant with collaborators at MDIBL that supports research and student training in regional groundwater quality, hydrology, and public health. See more about this project at coa.edu/shall/geoscience.

Work-study students Isidora Muñoz Segovia ’22 and Jennifer McNamara ’23 assisted with water sample collecting, curricular resource creation, and outreach to local schools. Four students

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Anne and Bob Bass established this endowed chair in 2011 as part of the Life Changing, World Changing Capital Campaign.

conducted extended independent study sub-projects which they presented at regional meetings. From this work they have offered free water testing to local residents, identified new spatial and temporal characteristics of local well water chemistry, and considered the effectiveness of different well filters.

Students Hallie Arno ’22, Ben Capuano ’23, Adam Feher ’23, Mustafa Khorzam ’25, Lenka Slamova ’24, and Ludwin Moran Sosa ’24 presented their findings at the Maine Sustainability and Water Conference in Augusta (April 2022) and/or the Geological Society of Maine (April 2022).

The Breakneck Brook Watershed beaver dam rupture and corresponding flood/debris flow inspired a rapid proposal to map and study the event during late summer of 2021, which continued into the following academic year. First-year student Joshua Harkness ’25 assisted in research project design and mapping efforts in the fall followed by data analysis and written interpretation within the Topics in Research course. Students in

Watersheds followed-up with additional field work, data analysis, and interpretations. We plan to present our findings to ANP personnel in fall 2022.

Two other Topics in Research students, Mustafa Khorzam ’25 and Raheem Khadour ’25, analyzed data from sediment cores collected from Little Long Pond and Great Duck Island. Both completed manuscripts articulating the paleoecology and paleoclimate history of this coastal region of Maine.

Beginning Fund Balance $2,826,773 Net Return on Investments (462,075) Contributions 0 Less Allocations/Withdrawals (102,000) Ending Fund Balance $2,262,698 8coa.edu/support

Richard J. Borden Chair in Humanities

Chairholder: Bonnie Tai, EdD

My courses last year supported the first-year experience, the Human Studies resource area, and Educational Studies, which included a program for students interested in teaching elementary school students, secondary English Language Arts, Life Sciences, Social Studies, or K-12 Visual Arts.

In the fall, I taught a section of the Human Ecology Core Course in collaboration with six colleagues. My section included all of the participants in COA’s College Opportunity and Access program, as well as other first-generation college students and several international students. This program facilitates cohort-building for those students who are underrepresented in higher education and at COA. My module introduced students to some history and philosophy of human ecology; engaged questions we have about the nature of mind, compassion, and self-other relationships; and applied conceptual tools and frameworks to two current, interdependent, national and global phenomena—structural racism and climate change.

Understanding and Managing Group Dynamics served students who are interested in teaching in schools, community health programs, or outdoor adventure education, and those who are interested in facilitating community decision-making processes, such as in municipal planning, transforming food systems, and organizational governance. Curriculum Design and Assessment is a required course for secondary education candidates, and also attracts students who wish to design curriculum for community education and senior projects. These courses engage students in questions such as “What is the nature of mind, and how do we study it?” “How do we embrace and effectively navigate the tensions and paradoxes inherent in groups?” And “What does

it look like when a learner understands a concept in the way an expert would, beyond parroting a definition or explanation?”

I also co-directed two senior projects: Isabel Messerschmidt ’22’s “The Meditation Labyrinth” and Levi Curtis ’22’s “A Guide on SelfAdvocacy and Self-Care for Students with Disabilities.” The former included research on contemplative practices, guided meditations, and labyrinth design; the writing, audio production, and online publishing of guided meditations facilitating compassionate relationships with self, others, and the natural environment; and the design and construction of a labyrinth on the COA campus. The latter included research on student, parent, educator, and expert perspectives on adolescents’ experiences of their disabilities and effective practices for managing disabilities resulting in an online guide consisting of five chapters and appendices on disabilities, ableism, self-care, self-advocacy, and intersectionality. This guide addressed adolescents directly on ways they can make sense of their experiences within the larger context of disability activism; effectively communicate with family, friends, teachers, and caregivers; and track and monitor symptoms.

COA trustees and alumnx established this chair in 2011 to honor long-time COA professor and academic dean, Richard J. Borden.

Together with COA alumnx Abby Plummer MPhil ’16, Sarah Kearsley MPhil ’16, and Beth Heidemann ’91, I co-authored “Trust: Foundation to Passion-Drive, Student-Activist, and

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Community-Engaged Learning,” which will be published as a chapter in C. Schlein and S. Crump (eds.), Active and Engaging Classrooms: A Practical Exploration, forthcoming from Information Age Publishing.

Funds from the Borden Chair allowed me to participate in the Center for the Contemplative Mind in Society’s 2022 summer session on “Contemplative Pedagogy.”

For details about my work as Associate Dean for Learning and Teaching and Co-Director of Educational Studies, please refer to my annual reports on the second year of a Davis Education

Foundation grant, the College Opportunity and Access Program, and the Educational Studies program.

Rachel Carson Chair in Human Ecology

Chairholder: Suzanne Morse, PhD

In Silent Spring, Rachel Carson took us back to another “road less traveled” over 60 years ago with such skill and urgency. Yet we are still zooming down the superhighway of high input agriculture with minor tweaks here and there. The 2022 Vegetable Yearbook Guide speaks of the challenges of high fertilizer and “crop protection” prices due to the war in Ukraine, and suggests to use less, “but not too much less,” or their margin of profitability may be entirely lost. In this year of ongoing hunger, pandemic, and war, I have returned to the question of the gap between what we know and what we do, as we move forward in our shared future trajectory.

Between 1998–2007, many donors contributed to the establishment of this chair honoring the renowned marine biologist, conservationist, and author of SilentSpring.

Courses taught in the academic year 2021-2022 covered the following themes: farming systems analysis in agroecology, the exploration of seed as the foundation for food security and food sovereignty, the preservation and transformation of food stuffs with the power of microbes, and how to produce a wide array of vegetables and fruits with a focus on maintaining and building soil fertility. In addition, 18 students and I dove deeply into the question of how flowering plants—which are comprised solely of leaves, stems, roots, and meristems—can look so different from each other. We started with the variation in the morphologies of seeds and ended the term with our noses buried in lilacs and apple blossoms.

I also co-taught independent studies with Rich Borden on medicine

and myth, and with Anna Davis and David Levinson on organic food production. I also advised two senior projects focused on sustainable agriculture in the Yucatán and Laos.

During the year, I was a member of the Campus Planning and Building Committee, the Landscape Subcommittee, and the Farming and Food Systems Working Group. Together with other faculty, we organized a teach-in at the onset of the conflict in Ukraine. Much of my summer work was invested in organizing and maintaining the Community Organic Garden, participating in the job search for the new manager of Peggy Rockefeller Farms, and contributing to the COA Summer Institute with a focus on food.

I continue to be on the board of the Native Gardens of Blue Hill, volunteer for Maine Organic Gardeners and Farmers Association, and to advise graduate students at the Norwegian University of Life Sciences. It is with deepest gratitude I thank the funders who support the Rachel Carson chair in memory of her enduring wisdom and insight. The primary expenditures for this year covered herbarium expenses, conference costs for students and faculty, the purchase of equipment and books, greenhouse maintenance, and travel expenses.

Beginning Fund Balance $1,609,915 Net Return on Investments (262,215) Contributions
Less Allocations/Withdrawals (64,000) Ending Fund Balance $1,283,700
0
Beginning Fund Balance $2,035,402 Net Return on Investments (331,524) Contributions 0 Less Allocations/Withdrawals (81,000) Ending Fund Balance $1,622,879 10coa.edu/support

T.A. Cox Chair in Studio Arts

Chairholder: Nancy Andrews, MFA

Thank you, Mr. Cox and friends, for the honor and pleasure of serving as the T.A. Cox Chair in Studio Arts for year two!

Last fall, I taught two courses that I teach every year:

• Making Art: Effort, Resilience, Persistence —an advanced course bringing together student artists from various disciplines to spend the term developing their own body of artwork while learning about being an artist after college. Students had virtual visits with professional artists and those who support artists through curation and arts administration in museums, foundations, and the like.

• 4-D Studio —a studio class in which students create digital videos, sound art and performance art, all based on themes of time. The course hosts faculty guests who discuss readings and ideas about time and literature (Karen Waldron), time and biology and time and philosophy (Heather Lakey), and time and geology (Sarah Hall).

Ashley Bryan puppets (gifted to the college by the Ashley Bryan Center). The film was a project that Ashley was unable to complete before his death, and the students and I used the script and storyboard that Ashley created to shoot the footage which is being edited now.

In the winter, I taught Animation 1, a course exploring animation as a form of creative expression, experimentation, and personal vision. Various techniques were applied, including drawing, claymation, and under-the-camera collage. This course was followed by Animation 2 in the spring, adding skills in rotoscoping, keying, lip syncing and digital composting, and independent project development. In the spring I also taught Art of the Puppet that featured Frogtown Mountain Puppeteers Erik Torbeck ’94 and his brother, Brian Torbeck. Later in the term, we shot a film using the

After over two years in production, The Bloody Room is finished and premiered July 9, 2022 at the Maine International Film Festival. I was an Artist in Residence (remotely) at The Film/Video Residency Program of the Wexner Center, where I supervised the edit. The project was shaped and shot with our fearless team: Pietro Cascia ’22, Leta Diethelm ’20, Gaby Gordon-Fox ’22, Leelou Gordon-Fox ’21, Camden Hunt ’22, Aniruddha Jaydeokar ’23, Sophie Joyce ’22, Simone E. Le Page ’23, Abby Jo Morris ’21, Anna Parsons ’23, Gwen Shope ’21, Danylo Shuvalov ’22, Goya van den Berg ’21, Thule van den Dam ’20, W. W. Disal Lahiru ’22, and Hannah Williams ’23. All were part of the horror film course I taught with Jodi Baker during winter 2020. To this illustrious group we added Ben Nimkin ’08 as a sound recordist. Animation production and music production followed in spring 2020 and fall of 2021.

After more than a year in production, I completed an album with Baltimore recording artist, Linda Smith. It was mixed and coproduced by COA alum and staff member, Zach Soares ’00. A Passing Cloud will be available in early 2023 in vinyl and digitaldownload by indie labels Gertrude and Grapefruit.

I was a visiting artist at HewnOaks for 10 days in late June/early July 2022, and a film I created with Jennifer Reeder, I Like Tomorrow, showed at festivals in 2021–22.

I began chairing the Painting and Drawing faculty search in May 2022, along with esteemed colleagues and students, and look forward to a successful search and bringing on a new faculty member in fall 2023.

This endowed chair was established by COA trustee Tom Cox and the hundreds of friends, family members, and trustees who gave to the chair after Tom passed away in 2019. Beginning Fund Balance $1,609,209

Return on Investments (269,676)

0

Allocations/Withdrawals (16,000) Ending Fund Balance $1,323,533

Contributions
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Net
Less

William H. Drury, Jr. Chair in Evolution, Natural History, and Ecology

2021-22 was a very busy year in terms of both teaching and research. In the autumn, Ken Cline and I co-taught The Great West Course for the third time. The 11 students who signed up for this “monster course” met us in Sacramento, California. We then proceeded by van, foot, and river raft over 7,000 miles from California to Sonora, México, visiting numerous national parks, monuments, and other protected lands along the way. High

points included three days rafting the San Juan River, and getting an exclusive, in-depth tour of the border wall in Arizona.

In the winter, I taught Ecology, Advanced Ornithology, and History of Natural History. In the spring, I taught Biology: Form and Function to 36 first-year students, as well as Conservation Biology —seven courses in all. I also sponsored one senior project and an independent study.

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The Great West Course 2021

W.H. Drury Research Fund

The main focus of my research was once again on Great Duck Island, and in supporting students with their immediate fi eld needs and how to prepare and present their work in professional settings. We had a crew of eight students split between Great Duck and Mount Desert Rock, censusing gulls, petrels, and guillemots, and examining fl edging success in the gulls on both islands. Students from this and last year submitted (and were accepted) for presentations at the Northeast Natural History Conference in Albany, New York. I organized a session at the meeting and presented a paper, “Changes in Nest-Site Selection in a Maine Herring Gull Colony: The View from Great Duck.”

The entire islands crew have submitted papers to either The Waterbird Society’s annual conference in Corpus Christie, Texas or the Association of Field Ornithologists in Massachusetts. I am also a co-author on a paper of the importance of natural history to ecology that has been accepted by the journal Waterbirds.

The 2022 season on Great Duck (funded by the Drury Research Fund) was extremely successful. We extended gull studies to Mount Desert Rock, and a record number of herring gulls were color banded to assist our analysis of their dispersal and survival patterns. In addition, Eleanor Gnam ’23, as part of her senior project, repeated Folger and Wayne’s petrel survey from the 1980s, assessing more than 500 10x10 meter plots for nesting birds. This is the most intensive petrel survey since the establishment of the Alice Eno Field Research Station on Great Duck Island. In spite of the hard work, students were reluctant to leave either island, with some remaining in place through much of August. We were very concerned about the rise of the avian infl uenza virus, which has decimated seabird colonies in Europe and Canada. Happily, after a few mortalities, deaths on Great

Duck Island and Mount Desert Rock leveled off. Specimens were collected for subsequent analysis. As always, I am deeply grateful to the donors who make our work possible, the students who do the hard work, and our captain and crew who keep us safe on the water and act as our bridge to the islands.

This endowed chair and research fund were established in honor of the eminent ecologist and former research director of the Massachusetts Audubon Society who died in 1992. Bill lectured on evolutionary biology and ecology at Harvard University for over 20 years before joining the COA faculty in 1976.

Beginning Fund Balance $1,906,072

Net Return on Investments (310,455)

Contributions 250

Less Allocations/Withdrawals (76,000)

Ending Fund Balance $1,519,866

W.H. DRURY RESEARCH FUND

Beginning Fund Balance $402,200

Net Return on Investments (65,513)

Contributions 0

Less Allocations/Withdrawals (16,000)

Ending Fund Balance $320,687

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WILLIAM H. DRURY, JR. CHAIR Left: Herring gull. Right: Great Duck Island team

Dan and Polly Pierce established this endowed chair in 2000. Dan Pierce was a COA trustee, grandson of landscape architect Charles Eliot, and great grandson of Harvard President Charles William Eliot.

Charles Eliot Chair in Ecological Planning, Policy, and Design

Submitted by: Shawn Keeley, Dean of Institutional Advancement

At the end of the 2020-21 academic year, Isabel Mancinelli, COA’s first Charles Eliot Chair of Ecological Planning, Policy and Design, retired after a remarkable 31-year tenure as a COA faculty member. The college is currently searching for the next chairholder and faculty member who will carry ecological planning, policy, and design forward.

Beginning Fund Balance $2,381,816

Net Return on Investments (391,239)

Contributions 120

Less Allocations/Withdrawals (95,000)

Ending Fund Balance $1,895,696

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For her senior project, Lauren Brady ’21 designed an ADA compliant landscape design for the entry to the George B. Dorr Museum of Natural History. The project was funded by several donors in honor of Isabel Mancinelli’s 31-year tenure as a faculty member and chairholder of the Charles Eliot Chair in Ecological Planning, Policy, and Design. Construction was completed by alumnus Devin Connor ’12.

Andrew S. Griffiths Chair for the Dean of Administration

Chairholder: Bear Paul, Administrative Dean and CFO

Some of the more exciting developments over the course of the 2021-2022 academic year were the acquisition of 14 new housing units in the town of Bar Harbor, 12 of which will house COA students and two of which will house faculty or staff. Further, I worked to support the process of fi nishing the Mount Desert Center in Northeast Harbor and served on the committee collaborating to build the new dormitory on campus.

Beyond the issue of housing, I have partnered with David Gibson, the COA director of energy, to transition the school off the use of fossil fuels as quickly as possible. COA has a stated goal of being fossil fuel free by 2030. Over the course of the 2021-2022 academic year, COA moved 12 of the newly purchased off-campus units away from the use of fossil fuels. Additionally, the primary residences at both farms (Peggy Rockefeller and Beech Hill) were transitioned off the use of fossil fuels, as were a number of on-campus buildings (Studios 5 & 6, Peach House, Cottage House, and Davis Carriage House).

I continue to chair the Personnel Committee and lead the

The Andrew S. Griffi ths Chair was one of nine chairs created during the Broad Reach Capital Campaign. The endowed fund was established in 2018 by COA’s board of trustees to honor Andrew “Andy” S. Griffi ths, the college’s long-serving and wellrespected administrative dean who served for more than 15 years

budget-setting process. Additionally, examining the condition of campus buildings and developing a facilities condition analysis has come into focus for the offi ce, as has supporting the IT department in refreshing the information infrastructure here at the college.

The 2021-2022 academic year was busy one, and the 20222023 academic year promises to be so as well.

Beginning Fund Balance $585,102

Net Return on Investments (100,311) Contributions

18,251

Less Allocations/Withdrawals (8,000)

Ending Fund Balance $495,043

Solar panels at Peggy Rockefeller Farms
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David Hales Director of Sustainability Fund

Staff Supervisor: David Gibson, LEED AP BD+C, CEM, Director of Energy

My first year at COA has been an exciting one. In 2021, COA purchased 12 units of new off-campus student housing. I lined up contractors to air seal, insulate, repair electrical and ventilation problems, and install air source heat pumps and heat pump water heaters in all of them. By March 2022, we had completely transitioned these buildings off fossil fuels.

Peggy and Henry Sharpe established this fund in honor of COA’s fi fth president, David Hales, upon his retirement. Hales led environmental policy and sustainability programs for the US Agency for International Development, and was the fi rst American to serve as chair of the World Heritage Convention.

We also installed air source heat pumps or heat pump water heaters in several campus buildings, which significantly reduced—or in some cases eliminated—fossil fuels for heating. To further improve hot water efficiency, we installed low-flow (1.5 gallon per minute) showerheads in all the on-campus and off-campus housing. These showerheads should save at least 200,000 gallons of water each year, plus all the energy needed to heat that water! Most of these showerheads were installed by students.

On the farms, we sealed, insulated, and installed heat pumps and a heat pump water heater at 171 Beech Hill Road and the Peggy Rockefeller farmhouse, transitioning both houses off fossil fuels. After completion of these improvements, farm manager April Nugent said to me, “This is the fi rst time the house has been comfortable!”

In the fall, I co-taught the Physics and Mathematics of Sustainable Energy with Dave Feldman, where I led most of the hands-on lab activities. In the winter, I led a course called Green Building Through the Lens of LEED, to introduce students to the US Green Building Council’s Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design standards. I wrote a successful grant proposal to the Maine Space Grant Consortium, which provided $15,000 toward tools and equipment for my spring Building Science and Energy Auditing class. This allowed us to purchase blower doors, infrared cameras, a duct leakage tester, and equipment for combustion safety analysis, all of which was used to teach students how to conduct home energy audits of buildings on campus.

In June 2022, I received a $20,000 donation to purchase a

cellulose insulation blower, box trailer, and various tools and equipment to implement energy efficiency improvements on campus. I will use this equipment for my fall 2023 course, Practicum in Sustainable Energy, in which students will learn how to install vapor barriers, and air seal and insulate buildings on campus. I am hopeful that we can install vapor barriers in the basements and crawl spaces in The Turrets, Seafox, Witchcliff, and the Kathryn W. Davis Center for International & Regional Studies, which will block ground moisture from getting into the buildings.

We are also organizing a workshop as part of the class, in which the campus community will help to build insulating window inserts for all the single-pane windows on campus.

We are participating in a pilot program with Efficiency Maine to install a commercial split-system heat pump water heating system in Blair Tyson dormitory. Efficiency Maine has funded more than half of the cost of this project, including the engineering design.

We signed a contract with ReVision Energy to source electricity generated from a local solar farm for the next 20 years, and have lined up a consultant to help assess and develop plans for transitioning the larger buildings on campus away from fossil fuels. There is still a lot to be done, but it all starts with a good plan.

Beginning Fund Balance $903,858 Net Return on Investments (147,209) Contributions
Less Allocations/Withdrawals (36,000) Ending Fund Balance $720,648 16coa.edu/support
0

Steven K. Katona Chair in Marine Studies

Chairholder: Sean Todd, PhD

2021 represented our fifth year of investigation into changes in Gulf of Maine whale feeding behavior using Mount Desert Rock (MDR) Edward McC. Blair Marine Research Station as our base of operations. This year we returned to full marine operations, including work at MDR and work aboard M/V Osprey and R/V Borealis. While local whale sightings were scant—a result we believe to be because of the very phenomenon we are investigating—we had good success crossing the Canadian border and working in the Bay of Fundy. We also hosted a German television crew who captured our work in high definition, which was later broadcast on German public television.

Mount Desert Rock was reopened and hosted a number of students who had to postpone their plans the previous year due to the pandemic. A total of 16 students worked at the field station last year, tackling projects that incorporated marine mammalogy, biological oceanography, intertidal science, film, literary writing, illustration, and marine bird ecology. This work yielded three senior projects, as well as a fourth in progress. Three of the 16 took on leadership roles, helping to run the field station.

During the 2020-21 academic year, in addition to directing Allied Whale and overseeing operations at MDR, I also worked on the Islands Committee, the Graduate Committee, and on a successful search committee for a new faculty member in psychology. I assisted with various admissions functions, chaired a successful search committee for a new staff member at Allied Whale, and began chairing a taskforce examining the Yucatán Program.

Over the academic year, I taught a total of 87 students in fi ve classes, one tutorial, and two independent studies.

Classes taught included Marine Mammal Biology, Advanced Studies in Marine Mammalogy, Soundscape (team-taught with Nancy Andrews), Introduction to Statistics and Research Design (team-taught with Susan Letcher), Polar Ecology and Exploration, and Introduction to Oceanography. I also supervised three senior projects. I had an advisee roster of 26 students, including one graduate student. I very much enjoyed returning to an in-person experience versus the remote model used during the pandemic.

COA trustees, hundreds of alumnx, and friends of the college established this endowed chair in 2007 to honor COA’s fourth president and founding faculty member.

Along with two other staff members of Allied Whale, I co-authored two papers:

• Haverkamp, H., Chang, H-Y., Newcomb, E., Doughty, L., Walk, D, Todd, S., Seton, R., Jones, L., and Cammen, K. (in press). A retrospective socio-ecological analysis of pinniped strandings in the Gulf of Maine. Marine Mammal Science.

• Jones, L. J., Stephenson, T. A., Zoidis, A. M. and Todd, S. (in press). Drone Observations of a Mother and Calf Humpback Whale (Megaptera novaeangliae) Pair Synchronous Feeding in the Bay of Fundy, Canada. Journal of Aquatic Mammals.

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Edward McC. Blair Marine Research Station on Mount Desert Rock

Over the course of the year, I also presented to local schools and libraries, and conducted many interviews with the press. In part this was spurred by my work as part of a newly-formed consortium of concerned Maine scientists and citizens raising awareness for the plight of the highly endangered North Atlantic right whale in Maine waters.

Katona Chair funds were used to fund operational costs at MDR, research equipment for Allied Whale, virtual attendance for myself and nine students at the Right Whale Consortium, and to provide salaries for teaching assistants.

Over the course of the year, I successfully raised $160,000 in

grant funds for Allied Whale research and Marine Mammal Stranding Response Program activities.

Beginning Fund Balance $2,572,651 Net Return on Investments (419,058) Contributions 0 Less Allocations/Withdrawals (102,000) Ending Fund Balance $2,051,593
College of the Atlantic felt like a natural continuation of my education and life after Tanzania and United World College of the Atlantic in Wales. COA offered me the opportunity to explore my academic interests, meet like-minded students and educators, and an overall college experience that is different from the mainstream.
DIANA KOMBE ’06
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Left: Osprey. Right: North Atlantic right whale

McNally Family Chair in Philosophy and Human Ecology

The 2021-2022 academic year was energizing and enriching, despite the ongoing challenges of the COVID-19 pandemic. In the fall, I joined the Human Ecology Core Course to teach a section on philosophy and emotions. I enjoyed collaborating with six of my colleagues and discussing human ecology with the incoming class. I renewed and revised three courses: Humans, Nature, and Philosophy; Animals and Ethics; and Philosophies of Good and Evil In the spring I offered a new course, Buddhist Philosophies, which generated excellent discussions on the concepts of impermanence, non-self, death, and compassion. Overall, I taught a total of 65 students, I read 10 human ecology essays, I directed three independent studies, and I mentored 13 advisees. I directed one senior project on the topic of faith, art, and the tarot, and one project on philosophy, sailing vessels, and voyages.

I am a strong advocate for COA’s participatory governance structure because it facilitates valuable learning opportunities and it encourages community dialogue. In addition to my work with Steering, I served on the search committee for the faculty position in Ecological Planning, Policy, and Design, and I helped to conduct a comprehensive faculty review. This past summer, I joined the Coffee and Conversation series to interview Chase Morrill ’00 about his popular reality TV show, Maine Cabin Masters. Finally, I continued work with the library committee and I offered a faculty perspective for the Fall Fly-In event.

To support COA’s commitment to interdisciplinary education, I collaborated with a number of my colleagues over the school year. I joined Nancy Andrews’ course, 4D Studio, to discuss philosophical concepts of time. Carrie Graham delivered a lecture on insect ethics in Animals and Ethics, and Bonnie Tai visited Buddhist Philosophies to provide an overview of meditation practices and theories. I also invited several members of the Mount Desert Island community to campus. For example, Laura Neal, who runs the True Nature Zen Sangha on MDI, visited Buddhist Philosophies to discuss Zen practices, such as koans.

Along with several of my colleagues, I attended the fall conference, Calming Anxious Brains: Teaching and Treating Students with Anxiety, Trauma, Depression, and Academic Learning Loss. I continue to take advantage of online learning opportunities by attending webinars and lectures hosted by the American Philosophical Association. Inspired by discussions with students in Philosophies of Good and Evil, I am currently working on a journal length manuscript on Simone de Beauvoir, regret, and ethical decision-making. I want to express deep gratitude to the McNally family for endowing this chair and supporting the role of philosophy at COA.

In addition to teaching, I assumed a number of administrative service roles. For example, I served as co-chair of the Steering Committee alongside Ken Cline. The spring was a busy term for governance! COA passed The Landscape Policy and revised the Discarded Resource and Material Management Policy. The Steering Committee also facilitated a number of All College Meetings on important topics such as the DEI strategic plan, the operational budget, and the construction of new student housing.

Beginning Fund Balance $1,052,603 Net Return on Investments (180,718) Contributions 40,173 Less Allocations/Withdrawals (13,000) Ending Fund Balance $899,059
Jay McNally ’84 established this endowed chair in 2019 as part of the Broad Reach Capital Campaign.
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Heather Lakey’s class beneath the Copper Beech tree outside of The Turrets

Elizabeth Battles Newlin Chair in Botany

Chairholder: Susan Letcher, PhD

ecologically informed design to create and protect habitats that support biodiversity in human-modified landscapes.

Two of Elizabeth Battles

Newlin’s children, Lucy Bell Sellers and her husband Peter, and Bill Newlin and his wife Louisa (née Foulke)

Newlin established this chair in 1996 as part of the college’s Silver Anniversary Campaign.

This academic year brought a welcome return to the classroom, though masked; it was wonderful to be learning together instead of staring at little squares on Zoom. In the fall, I adapted Economic Botany from an online to an in-person course. I also taught Biology: Form and Function, an introductory class in organismal biology that is typically team-taught by a botanist and a zoologist. Due to pandemic-related schedule changes, I was the only faculty member available to teach the course in fall, so I polished up my very rusty knowledge of animal anatomy and physiology, as well as inviting zoologist friends for guest lectures whenever I could. In the winter, Sean Todd and I teamed up again to offer Introduction to Statistics and Research Design. As we’ve done in the past, he covered most of the theory and I offered an introduction to R programming. In the spring, I taught Sheep to Shawl, a human ecological investigation of sheep, wool, and fiber arts that is also a transdisciplinary inquiry into pedagogy and epistemology. I advised three senior projects and one independent study, serving a total of 95 students.

My first graduate student, Robert Haskell MPhil ’22, successfully defended his thesis in the spring of 2022. Robert’s work brings together art and ecology, exploring how sculptors can use

In service to the college, I co-chaired the Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Oversight, Accountability, and Resource Team (DEI-OAR) with Catherine Preston-Schreck. As specified in the Phase I DEI Strategic Plan adopted by ACM last year, we worked to coordinate DEI efforts on campus and produce a Phase II strategic plan. The team facilitated numerous community-wide meetings, including four ACMs and 14 listening sessions, as well as meeting with all of the people and groups tasked with specific items in the Phase I DEI Strategic Plan. We synthesized all of this input into concrete recommendations for making COA a more diverse, equitable, and inclusive institution. I also continued to serve on Review and Appeals, helping ensure that students could meet their graduation requirements despite pandemic disruptions.

In service to the broader scientific community, I was on the editorial board of the journal Plant Ecology and Diversity until DEI-OAR commitments forced me to step down in March. I continue to serve in the European Science Foundation’s College of Expert Reviewers. In June, I traveled to Costa Rica as a visiting faculty member on a graduate course in tropical field ecology offered by the Organization for Tropical Studies.

Thanks to collaborations with research groups across the globe, I was a co-author on four papers published this year. With Dr. Yi Ding’s group at the Chinese Academy of Forestry, I published a report on habitat specialization in tree species during 10 years of forest succession on Hainan Island (Forest Ecology and

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Sheep grazing at Peggy Rockefeller Farms

Management). With the 2ndFOR Consortium, an international group of researchers who study how tropical forests recover from major disturbances, I published three high-impact synthesis papers: a study of how tree functional traits recover during succession (PNAS), a multidimensional investigation of how quickly forest attributes recover (Science), and a comparison of the floristic diversity of young secondary forests across Neotropical bioregions (Science Advances).

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People tend to draw lines between different subjects. COA is a place where we’re able to erase those boundaries.
KANDI GREY ’25
Beginning Fund Balance $1,427,989 Net Return on Investments (232,544) Contributions 1,477 Less Allocations/Withdrawals (57,000) Ending Fund Balance $1,138,445

Partridge Chair in Food and Sustainable Agriculture Systems

Despite the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, in the 2021-2022 academic year, I was happy to return to in-person teaching. In Transforming Food Systems, we developed theories of change to address pressing challenges in our local and global food systems. A highlight of the course was a visit from a Food Corps services member who came to discuss the problems with Maine’s school food programs. In Social Science Research Methods, guests joined us bi-weekly to present their research and expose students to the numerous methods used by social scientists. In the winter, I co-taught Farm Animal Management with April Nugent, the manager of Peggy Rockefeller Farms. We taught the course entirely outdoors, giving students first-hand knowledge of the hard work of raising animals in Maine’s cold climate. In US Farm & Food Policy, we explored the complex legal and policy issues facing farmers and tracked current issues like the discovery of PFAS on Maine farms. In the spring, the highlight of Bees & Society was a pollination workshop for the second graders at Trenton Elementary School, facilitated entirely by COA students. COA students led the children in a pollination game (involving lots of running on the playground) and helped them paint nest blocks for native pollinators. In total, I taught 78 students in five courses, advised 25 students, directed eight independent studies and five senior projects, served on one MPhil committee, and served as a reader for five human ecology essays.

This chair was established in 2008 through the generosity of Polly Guth, a long-term supporter of COA and Beech Hill Farm, and the Partridge Foundation.

After a two-year hiatus due to the pandemic, we were thrilled to bring back COA’s annual Farm Day at Peggy Rockefeller Farms. The event included a meal featuring COA-grown meat and produce, a concert, and farm tours. Farm Day drew the biggest crowd to date, introducing more than 150 students to COA’s farms and the opportunities associated with them.

A rockstar team of students helped me coordinate the Food & Farming Workshop Series, including Helen Poertner ’23, Tanvi Ravi Koushik ’23, Madi Person ’24, Emily Fetter ’24, and Shreya Vinodh ’23. We hosted nine workshops throughout the year serving more than 170 people, on topics ranging from seed saving and carpentry to pasture management and mushroom

inoculation. We also coordinated a nightly lamb watch at Peggy Rockefeller Farms from mid-January through the end of February. With the help of the work-study crew, we introduced a “Community Fridge” on campus that encourages community members to take what they need and give when they can. At COA’s apiary, we managed five colonies and re-introduced honeybees to the observation hive at the George B. Dorr Museum of Natural History.

I continued to participate in the MDI Food Access Project, a collaboration between Open Table MDI, College of the Atlantic, Beech Hill Farm, Share the Harvest, The Bar Harbor Food Pantry, Healthy Acadia’s Gleaning Initiative, and Island Connections. This summer, two students—Zachary Aiken ’24 and Darcy Kerr ’24—interned with the project, and helped glean and prepare food to feed our community. The generosity of the Partridge Chair fund made it possible to purchase supplies, pay guest speakers, fund research and internships, maintain the apiary, and more. I am deeply grateful!

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Beginning Fund Balance $4,958,635 Net Return on Investments (807,695) Contributions 0 Less Allocations/Withdrawals (197,000) Ending Fund Balance $3,953,940

I was drawn to COA by the school’s emphasis on sustainability and conservation. For me, it was an opportunity to explore new and different things while experiencing life on a campus that had a high degree of sustainability practices in both the academic program as well as daily campus life.

KHADEEJA NASEEM ’10

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Students sample fresh-pressed apple cider at the annual Cider Celebration at Beech Hill Farm

Lalage and Steven Rales Chair in Chemistry

Chairholder: Reuben Hudson, PhD

Chemistry made COA an exciting place to be during the academic year of 2021-2022. As a relatively new faculty member, I am just starting to loop around to some of the classes I taught in previous years. The familiar topics allowed me to expand class sizes for some of my higherdemand courses including Chemistry, Biology of Food & Drink, and the Organic Chemistry sequence. I also co-taught a new advanced scientific writing course with Sarah Hall, focusing on geochemistry.

Lalage and Steven Rales established this endowed chair in 2020, as part of the Broad Reach Capital Campaign.

The allocation from the Guthrie Chemistry Fund was used as institutional matching funds (for the purchase of lab supplies) for a $25,000 Faculty Seed Grant from the Maine Space Grant Consortium. We also had support from the American Chemical Society ($70,000), and the Davis Educational Foundation ($10,000).

Our small research group is starting to gain more of an international profile. Thiago Altair joined our lab on a 1-year fellowship from his home institution in São Paulo, Brazil. Thiago is spearheading a collaboration between COA and researchers in Brazil, Japan, Germany, and the UK. We’re delighted that Thiago chose COA to carry out his research activities in conjunction with our undergraduate students.

Beginning Fund Balance $348,309

Net Return on Investments (94,681) Contributions 200,000

Less Allocations/Withdrawals (2,000)

Ending Fund Balance $451,628

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Chemistry and Biology of Food & Drink

Emily and Mitchell Rales Chair in Ecology

This year, my work focused on intertidal ecology in downeast Maine, with both an introductory marine biology class (24 students) and an advanced marine ecology class (15 students). Students worked on a variety of projects, learned local species, and collected data with multiple collaborators. More broadly, my seniors worked on whales, corals, the marine environment, and people. I have always loved advising students and had 21 advisees over the last year.

The long-term health of Frenchman Bay was a concern this year, with a very large proposed salmon aquaculture lease under consideration. As chair of the Bar Harbor Marine Resources Committee (BHMRC), I wrote a summary of the problems with the lease for the Bar Harbor Town Council, and helped the college cosign a letter criticizing the potential lease. That lease proposal is not moving forward, but it is unclear if it will become a zombie project and rise again from the dead.

Most of my active research with students involves clam and crab populations in local mudflats. I applied for and received a grant from the Maine Shellfish Restoration and Resilience Fund that funds two COA student research assistants this summer for work on shellfish populations, local clamming practices, and pollution closures for the BHMRC. I’ve also been active in state discussions on the co-management structure of the clam fishery.

I continue to research in Acadia National Park, studying clam population biology and predation and in tidepools, looking at historical changes in algal species. In addition, I joined Hannah Webber from the Schoodic Institute as a science advisor for a community-driven assessment of the ecology of Otter Cove and potential remediation solutions.

I also work with several regional partnerships and state groups, at times representing the college. These include the Downeast Fisheries Partnership, the Downeast Conservation Network, and the Maine Climate Council Coastal and Marine Working Group.

Finally, this year was my last year as the director of the graduate program at the college. I have now turned over that role to Reuben Hudson. I continue to be the liaison with both Mount Desert Island Biological Laboratory and The Jackson Laboratory as part of my responsibilities as principal investigator in the Maine INBRE grant at COA. This past year we had three students doing summer internships at Jackson Lab and we are on track to have nine students this fall. I have also continued to work with the Advancement Office to fund internships for COA students more broadly, and was happy to see that we were able to renew our internship grant from the Seth Sprague Family Charitable Foundation, and along with Reuben Hudson administered Maine Space Grant Consortium funding for student science research projects. Funding student independent work, including internships, is an area I will be focusing on over the next two years.

Beginning Fund
Net Return on Investments
Contributions 503,486 Less Allocations/Withdrawals (2,000) Ending Fund Balance $726,422
Balance $335,429
(110,493)
Mitch and Emily Rales established this endowed chair in 2020 as part of the Broach Reach Capital Campaign.
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Students conducting a local census of the invasive European green crab (Carcinus maenas)

David Rockefeller Family Chair and T.A. Cox Fund in Ecosystem Management and Protection

Chairholder: Kenneth S. Cline, JD

CLASSES

In fall, I returned to the west with John Anderson and 11 advanced conservation students to study the management, ecology, and culture of western public lands and wilderness. The Great West Course is an integrated set of classes that immersed students in the current issues facing America’s public lands. Unprecedented ecological changes due to climate change coupled with serious political upheaval made this an unparalleled learning opportunity. Through interactions with land managers, scientists, ranchers, wilderness advocates, antigovernment activists, recreation professionals, educators,

David

and tribal people, we sought to understand the changes, attitudes, and confl icts that are embroiling the west. Using immersive learning opportunities such as volunteering in national parks, running desert rivers, and bearing witness to the US-Mexican border wall, the class confronted students with the “wicked problems” facing land managers. The combination of the boundless curiosity and enthusiasm of the students and the generosity of the people who we met along the way produced a rich tapestry of ideas, emotions, and learning.

Back on campus in the winter and spring, I taught Native American Law, a conservation history class, and my international water policy course. In response to student interest, I also designed a new course—the Community-based Climate Solutions Lab. This project-based course worked with the Town of Bar Harbor and local climate organizations to address climate change at the local level. Climate expert and COA alum Laura Berry ’17 co-taught this course (supported by Rockefeller Chair funds). Laura’s technical knowledge, climate planning

Rockefeller established this endowed chair in 2010. Tom Cox, a COA trustee and friend of David and Peggy Rockefeller, established the fund that supports the work of the chair.
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The Great West Course 2021

background, and expertise supported the student group projects. I also directed 10 senior projects and several independent studies related to the Rockefeller Chair. These projects focused on land trusts, public lands, wildlife conservation, animal welfare, and river conservation and restoration.

CONSERVATION ADVOCACY AND RESEARCH

I continued my research and conservation advocacy work with national, local, and international conservation organizations. Much of my work focused on transforming the national Sierra Club’s efforts to collaborate with Native peoples on conservation in the US. As part of this work, I co-organized a major Sierra Club virtual conference focused on the role of Native peoples in land protection. This conference centered the voices of Native peoples and tribal activists and had approximately 100 participants.

NATIONAL PARK WORK

I continued to build the Acadia National Park (ANP)-COA partnership. With support from a Davis Conservation Foundation grant, we were able to place a COA Acadia Scholar intern with ANP for the summer. A new page on the college’s website promotes the unique relationship between ANP and COA, and features successful student collaborations with the park. See coa. edu/academics/research-creative-work/acadia-national-park. I continue to serve as a Secretary of the Interior appointee on the congressionally-authorized Acadia National Park Advisory Commission and also on the board of directors for Schoodic Institute at Acadia National Park.

T.A. COX FUND Beginning Fund Balance $382,582 Net Return on Investments (63,607) Contributions 0 Less Allocations/Withdrawals (7,000) Ending Fund Balance $311,975 DAVID ROCKEFELLER FAMILY CHAIR Beginning Fund Balance $1,773,663 Net Return on Investments (288,986) Contributions 0 Less Allocations/Withdrawals (70,000) Ending Fund Balance $1,414,677 coa.edu/support27
Students from the Community-based Climate Solutions Lab present in the Town of Bar Harbor council chamber.

Sharpe-McNally Chair in Green and Socially Responsible Business

Chairholder: Jay Friedlander

The Sustainable Business Program remained active during this unusual year. All of my classes were taught in person with a hybrid option.

In the fall, I taught Business and Nonprofit Basics. In this introductory course, students merge theory and practice by extending course concepts into a series of practicums. Class discussion is combined with one- to two-week projects focused on essential business concepts such as creativity, marketing, and financial leverage.

Launching a New Venture took place in winter term, with students shaping venture ideas into opportunities over the course of the term. Student enterprises ranged from community solar to radically local fine dining to fair trade tea, amongst other projects. Students also got to test a prototype of Profit Decoder™, a new web app I’m developing that provides profitability analysis, and allows users to scenario plan without having to understand accounting.

Winter term also included Failure, which I co-taught with Jodi Baker, taking on a topic that often evokes angst and discomfort, and can be paralyzing for many. In this course, students engaged with and explored the dimensions of failure across disciplines, mediums, and industries. Students tracked their progress on a class blog and reflected on talks from artists, performers, scientists, and designers, as well as past students.

This spring, students in the Diana Davis Spencer Hatchery (detailed in the Diana Davis Spencer Hatchery Fund report) developed and refined enterprises in elemental pottery, indie music and art, hospitality, educational tourism, photography, grocery, and fair-trade tea. Approximately 65 people from around the world attended the live Hatchery Expo over Zoom, where students presented overviews of their work at the end of the term.

Several students had notable accomplishments as well:

• Taibatou Bintou Adamou Garba ’22’s Hatchery company

Findi Sahel was selected as a semi-finalist in The Draper

Competition for Collegiate Women Entrepreneurs, a prestigious national competition hosted by Smith College. In April 2022, they competed with their pitch for their startup that brings Nigerien specialty tea products to customers in the United States.

• Mauro José Ramírez Azofeifa ’23 was selected for participation in the Clinton Global Initiative University Class of 2022, and will be advancing his work to promote environmental education and mitigate pollution and water scarcity in Palmichal, Costa Rica.

• Patrick Caron ’23 and Taibatou Bintou Adamou Garba ’22’s Hatchery company Move Free, a consciously crafted outdoor activewear company, was selected as one of 24 companies to participate in the 2022 Maine Center for Entrepreneurs’ “Top Gun” business training program. Move Free also pitched at a Maine entrepreneur showcase event.

Internationally, I remained active in the academic and business community. I was a lead organizer for the Arctic Opportunity Explorers competition, which challenges students to use the UN Sustainable Development Goals to solve problems in the Arctic. Entries included 58 students from 24 universities and seven countries, and it used my sustainable business model, the Abundance Cycle, as one of its organizing frameworks.

Locally, I held several workshops and participated in groups fostering entrepreneurship in Maine. Sustainable Business Program Manager Kerri Sands ’02 and I were active participants in the Downeast Innovation Network, and in conjunction with Mount Desert 365, we facilitated the Mount Desert Business Boot Camp. Drawing enterprises from across MDI and welcoming mentors from across the state, this event culminates in a livestreamed pitch competition at Neighborhood House in Northeast Harbor.

Beginning Fund Balance $2,806,366 Net Return on Investments (457,037) Contributions 0 Less Allocations/Withdrawals (112,000) Ending Fund Balance $2,237,329 28coa.edu/support
Henry and Peggy Sharpe initiated the funding of this chair and Jay McNally ’84 completed its endowment in 2004.

Lisa Stewart Chair in Literature and Women’s Studies

The year 2021-2022 was one in which I focused on using literature to broaden and deepen understanding of key experiences and historical elements that mark particular identities. In Contemporary Women’s Novels, we read fiction from around the world and explicitly not from the United States, with the aim of considering whether or not there was even such a thing as “woman’s experience” or a “woman’s novel”, and what the implications were of comparing narratives across cultures. Several novels from Africa revealed the challenges of postcolonial gender identities and how entangled those were with matters of class and race; novels from Europe featured questions of gender fluidity; novels from the Middle East focused on emerging feminisms and the realities of war.

Each student read an additional contemporary (post 2000) novel of their own choosing and shared knowledge of that novel and its narrative elements with the rest of the class as we returned to the question of whether narratives are gendered and if so, how. At the same time, I taught a college seminar based in US literary history and its human ecology. City/Country: US Literary Landscapes 18601920 involved substantial work on writing and met the college’s writing requirement, while the fiction read covered endemic and formative US issues of race, ethnicity, religion, gender, region, and class. Students were able to see how much insight literary history could provide them into contemporary issues, as well as to discover fictional treasures from before their time.

Winter term 2022 featured my commitment to a new course, Contemporary Black Writers, that examined a selection of both male and female authors from Africa and its diaspora. In this course

as well, issues of gender, race, and class were prominent, along with questions of the effects of colonialism, not only historically, but in terms of changing and innovative artistic traditions. I also returned to Literature, Science, Spirituality, a class that traces the western literary representation of science in such a way as to highlight assumptions about gender, race, nation, and class, and how they have affected ideas of scientific truth. It was a rewarding and challenging teaching year, working within the constraints of the pandemic, and a pleasure to be back in the physical classroom with students.

During the year I also sponsored and was involved with several senior projects in the Women’s Studies area: an examination of narrative and quilting in the African-American tradition, a study of women and water entitled “Fluidities,” and an exploration of Maine landscapes through the human ecology of clay that featured experimentation with the region’s Presumpscot clay. All three senior projects, as well as the others I advised on, showed deep sensitivity to how gender, race, and class identities interact with deep environmental sensitivities and knowledge.

Beginning Fund Balance $1,854,451

Net Return on Investments (302,027)

Contributions 0

Less Allocations/Withdrawals (74,000)

Ending Fund Balance $1,478,423

William P. Stewart established this endowed chair in 2012 in memory of his daughter, Lisa Stewart Target. Lisa was a remarkably personable, intelligent, and accomplished woman who started Bowen Asia, a successful investment fi rm in Hong Kong, specializing in the Asian economy. She spoke fi ve languages and lived all over the world. Her three children attended COA’s Summer Field Studies program. coa.edu/support29

Clare Stone established this chair in memory of her husband Allan Stone in 2006. Allan was celebrated for his visionary eye which incorporated an eclectic approach and early advocacy of pivotal artists of the 20th century and beyond. Alongside being a leading authority on Abstract Expression, he gave Wayne Thiebaud his fi rst New York show and represented him for over 40 years. He was a passionate collector of anything that appealed to his eye including Willem De Kooning, Franz Kline, Arshile Gorky, John Graham, Joseph Cornell, John Chamberlain, and many less known artists. In addition to modern masterworks and contemporary art, Allan collected tribal and folk art, Americana and important decorative arts, industrial design, furniture, and Bugattis.

Allan Stone Chair in the Visual Arts

Chairholder: Catherine Clinger, PhD

During the month that bridged the summer into the fall term of 2021, I hosted Okwui Okpokwasili, her partner and collaborator Peter Born, and their daughter Umechi as the COA Kippy Stroud Resident Artists for 2021. Their visit was valuable for those who attended Okwui’s event during a misty September evening, a ‘slow walk’ on the east side of Turrets. Okwui led 45 individuals down the slope towards the bay. Three of our students worked closely with the artist to document video ‘sketches’ on the coast. Throughout the year, I worked with members of the board of the Marion Boulton “Kippy” Stroud Foundation to design a new program to expand the Artist Residency model beyond its initial three-year period.

In addition to this work, during my sabbatical, I traveled to Vermont to stay at the home and studios of Wolf Kahn and Emily Mason at the invitation

of a friend. I spent time in New York, in archives, collections, in attendance with colleagues at exhibitions of Philip Guston, Alice Neel, Wong Ping, Ed Atkins, and alone immersed in Louise Bourgeois art and writing in Freud’s Daughter at the Jewish Museum. I began a cycle of oil on paper studies of fire behavior, informed by the many hours spent around burning circles with friends and family.

My teaching concentrated on core courses that I offer in the print and drawing studios. Spring 2021 brought the joyful return of one of my hallmark studios here, Drawing Mineral and Botanical Matter in the Forest of Maine after the pandemic hiatus. The class read works by Barry Lopez, A. S. Byatt, Su Shi, Helen Macdonald, Wangari Maathai, Jean-Luc Nancy, and others while learning to see while they draw. The printmaking studio was hopping during the winter and spring terms. Nati Rijo De Leon ’23 assisted me in all matters of relief and intaglio, producing their own excellent work as well. I had the pleasure of supervising the senior project of Gaby Gordon-Fox ’22, which included ceramic work, chine-collé etchings, and a handcrafted series of pamphlets. Gaby has been invited to work at the Frans Masereel Centrum in Kasterlee, Belgium in winter 2022—a wonderful reflection on the strength of nuanced work in the studio.

Beginning Fund Balance $2,443,512 Net Return on Investments (405,189) Contributions 34,883 Less Allocations/Withdrawals (91,000) Ending Fund Balance $1,982,206 30coa.edu/support

Cody van Heerden Chair in Economics and Quantitative Social Sciences

Chairholder: Davis Taylor, PhD

Along with teaching and advising, my professional work over the past year focused on two major efforts: assisting the nascent Bar Harbor Student Housing Cooperative (BHSHC), and returning to México, to conduct research both on recent economic development trends of the Yucatán Peninsula and on the economics of the henequen fiber industry.

to solidify their financing, find a suitable property, and educate the COA community about the benefits of housing cooperatives.

David and Robin Reis, along with dozens of COA trustees, staff and faculty, established this endowed fund in 2019. Cody van Heerden, MPhil ’17, was a trustee who passed away in 2018 at the age of 58 after a short battle with ALS.

Cooperation and cooperatives are a major focus of my research and policy work, so I was very excited when a group of students became interested in addressing the lack of affordable rental housing on Mount Desert Island by starting up a student housing cooperative. Many of the dozen-or-so students involved in the effort have taken (or are taking) my Economics of Cooperation, Networks, and Trust course, and it was thrilling to see concepts and practices from that course being expanded upon and put into action by students. The students led the way on this project, however, and I remained largely in the background, advising and encouraging as needed. The group presented their ideas for a student housing cooperative to the COA Board of Trustees at the fall 2021 meeting, and became incorporated as the nonprofit BHSHC in 2022. The group was very successful at initially lining up financing for real estate purchases, and came very close to buying property in May 2022, and they continue their efforts

Having taken students for trimester-long experiences in Yucatán on four separate occasions, used Yucatecan agriculture as a case study for a publication in Ecological Economics, and used professional development funds to travel to the region on several other occasions, I am no stranger to the Yucatán Peninsula, and all of these experiences have been particularly vital in shaping my teaching on economic development. But somehow, 10 years had passed since my last trip to the Yucatán, and I felt it was time to return. In addition to assessing and evaluating the continuing evolution of economic development in Yucatán and Quintana Roo, I also decided to take a closer look at the economic history of the henequen fiber industry that boomed around Mérida around the turn of the 20th century, as my previous work on the peninsula had focused on contemporary environmental and economic sustainability. This was a very productive activity, as the industry is a poignant case study of monopsony, the development of institutional structures (such as debt peonage) in the interest of extremely harsh labor exploitation, and elite resistance to revolutionary change. I’ve subsequently incorporated or enriched these concepts in several of my courses. One can read about these things in books (and I certainly did that), but there is no substitute for being on the ground, at the fields and haciendas and factories where these things happened, and I am extremely grateful for the Cody van Heerden Chair in Economics and Quantitative Social Science in supporting these endeavors.

Beginning Fund Balance $954,714 Net Return on Investments (176,396) Contributions 101,941 Less Allocations/Withdrawals (11,000) Ending Fund Balance $869,259
Yucatán, México
coa.edu/support31

Kim M. Wentworth Chair in Environmental Studies

Chairholder: Stephen Ressel, PhD

During the 2021-22 academic year, I undertook the following projects in the areas of teaching, community service to the college, research, and scholarly work: Working closely with Anne Kozak, I reconfigured my long-running course Ecology: Natural History as a writingfocused college seminar course for first-year students, which included team-teaching this revised offering with Anne. The goal was to meld handson field instruction in regional ecology with proficient writing to foster effective science communication. We both felt that our pedagogical approach in this course resonated strongly with students based on their progress throughout the term and end-of-term course evaluations.

Kim and Finn Wentworth established this endowed chair in 2019 as part of the Broad Reach Capital Campaign. When establishing the chair, Kim said “We need to inspire and equip future generations to be able to improve some of the conditions we face. We want to address the legacy issue: we, the baby boomers, may have recognized some of the problems early on, but we didn’t do enough.”

In addition to my regular duties on the Academic Affairs Committee and the Museum Committee, I agreed to serve on a task force commissioned by Academic Affairs to examine past policies and practices associated with the college’s expeditionary programming. As part of my participation in this process, I joined NAFSA: Association of International Educators in order to use national standards as a benchmark for any future recommendations from the taskforce.

Over the last academic year, I supervised two senior projects on amphibians with different foci that represented partnerships between COA and Acadia National Park (ANP). A senior project by Emma Damm ’22 quantified the migratory patterns of spring breeding amphibians across a park-owned road, the first ever study of this nature conducted in the park. Her findings will inform future management strategies by ANP to mitigate amphibian road kill on park roads. In conjunction with this senior project, I served as consultant and reader for an ANP grant proposal, “Assess Amphibian Road Mortality and Develop Management

A second senior project, by Jasper White ’22, continued work associated with my ongoing study of salt tolerance in a coastal population of salamanders. With encouragement from ANP Wildlife Biologist Bik Wheeler ’09, Jasper implemented a new system of tagging salamanders which allows for the tracking of individuals of this species during and between breeding seasons. His efforts in uniquely marking over 200 salamanders represents a new phase of fieldwork that broadens the range of hypotheses that can be tested on this population.

Lastly, I was co-author with Charney, N. D., J. A. Tunstad, G. Lattig, and W. Reason on “Ambystoma maculatum: predation. Herpetological Review 53:274-275,” a natural history note published in 2022 that described predation on spotted salamanders by barred owls. I also was commissioned by the editors of the new edition of Maine Amphibians and Reptiles to write revised species accounts for two native anurans, Hyla versicolor (gray treefrog) and Pseudacris crucifer (spring peeper) for an upcoming publication. Finally, I submitted a manuscript titled “Coastal Saline Pools as Breeding Habitat for spotted salamanders (Ambystoma maculatum)” to Northeastern Naturalist, which I co-authored with seven students who enrolled in Applied Amphibian Biology during the 2021 spring term.

Beginning Fund Balance $1,153,601

Net Return on Investments (199,754)

Contributions 270,000

Less Allocations/Withdrawals (26,000)

Ending Fund Balance $1,197,847

Response in Acadia National Park,” submitted to the Regional Block Allocation SCC.
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Hyla versicolor

James Russell Wiggins Chair and Philip Geyelin Fund for Government and Polity

This past academic year started off with a bang in October of 2021 when COA got the results back from its participation in the national NSLVE study of student voting participation. This was the first year we had taken part in the program, and we were floored to hear that COA had tied with two other schools for the highest undergraduate voting percentage rate in the nation. An astounding 85.1% of voter-eligible COA students voted in the fall 2020 election! That is nearly 20 points higher than the national average. It also marks a 14-point increase over COA’s voting rate in the previous 2016 presidential election. While I personally cannot take credit for any of these accomplishments, they absolutely would not be possible without the support that the Wiggins Chair and the Geyelin Fund have brought to the college. Because of the generous donations from our supporters, we have been able to fund dedicated nonpartisan voter education and engagement events throughout the fall, as well as a robust “Get Out The Vote” (GOTV) plan on election day.

The Wiggins Chair honors the memory of former COA trustee James Russell Wiggins, one of the most respected and infl uential fi gures in American journalism. His career spanned three-quarters of a century, including 20 years as editor of the WashingtonPost. After his retirement, he was nominated by President Lyndon Johnson to serve as US Ambassador to the United Nations. Over the course of his fi nal three decades, he was owner and editor of the Ellsworth American.

To be honest, I don’t expect we will be able to maintain that high level for every election going forward, especially in nonpresidential years. However, my hope is that in the coming years we will be able to use the data we receive to help inform a broader series of initiatives, both in and out of the classroom, that promote student civic engagement in a variety of forms and modalities, beyond just the electoral realm. But being top in the nation was also pretty cool.

My course offerings as the Wiggins Chair were somewhat pared back a bit this year due to administrative obligations in

my role as associate dean for academic affairs. The lingering challenges of the pandemic, combined with the impacts of a series of retirements among the academic staff, meant that a few of us were temporarily taking on additional administrative duties. Despite this, I was truly excited to once again offer the Cold War History sequence (Early Years and Later Years) in fall and spring. These courses had been delayed several times due to pandemic-related space constraints, and there was a great

Another former trustee, Philip L. Geyelin, initiated the idea of the Wiggins Chair and led the fundraising campaign to create it. At the time of Phil’s death, COA wanted to honor the renowned WashingtonPost senior editor and Pulitzer Prize-winning author and extend the project by creating this fund to support programs in government, international affairs, and politics coa.edu/support33

deal of built-up student interest in both. Unsurprisingly, both the fall and spring classes had some of the highest student enrollment numbers I have seen since I began teaching them here at COA. However, I don’t think the interest in the class was due solely to pent up demand from pandemic delays. It was also clear to me that a great deal of that interest in Cold War history came from students who wanted to make connections with events transpiring in Europe today, and especially the ongoing

Russian invasion of Ukraine. Those unfolding events gave the Later Years class, especially as we discussed the fi nal days of the Soviet Union, a timely resonance that I don’t think had always been there for students in previous iterations. My hope is that the students this spring came away with a much deeper understanding of the historical context and how it sets the stage for the events we witness today.

PHILIP GEYELIN FUND Beginning Fund Balance $247,801 Net Return on Investments (40,344) Contributions 0 Less Allocations/Withdrawals (10,000) Ending Fund Balance $197,458
Beginning Fund Balance $1,940,859 Net Return on Investments (317,067) Contributions 0 Less Allocations/Withdrawals (80,000) Ending Fund Balance $1,543,793
I left COA with the courage to think on my own terms, and also the tools to do so. I realized much later that COA had trained me to be an independent thinker. The thing I appreciate most is that it didn’t just tell me to be bold and present my views, it trained me to do so based on evidence and sound reasoning. It also left this door open for doubt, which has never really closed, and which I fi nd particularly healthy.
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MIHNEA TANASESCU ’06

and Paul Newman

Chair in the Performing Arts

Chairholder: Jodi Baker

It’s great to have the world spinning once again. In 2021-2022 I was fi nally able to travel a little, continuing research into contemporary performance methods, sharing experience and strategies with peers and honing my own physical training practice in the effort to more effectively serve

my students. I taught both foundational and advanced level coursework (for the most part, face-to-face), in collaboration with guest artists, alumnx, and other COA faculty. I also contributed to the governance and function of the college, reconnected with community alliances, and created a real live production for real live people in real time. I never thought that would feel like such a huge deal—but this year it did.

This past year I taught two distinct sections of Movement Training, Advanced Actor Training, and a class I cocreated and co-taught with Jay Friedlander called Failure. Investigating personal, cultural, and socio-economic notions of failure with students made vividly clear how radically the shared discourse has shifted in recent years.

Several anonymous donors established this endowed faculty chair in 2019 as part of the Broad Reach Capital Campaign, in honor of the renowned actors Joanne Woodward and Paul Newman, whose daughter, Nell Newman, graduated from COA in 1987.

Guest speakers included the poet and National Book Award winner Martín Espada; artist/writer Ashley Yang-Thompson; Scientifi c Director of The Jackson Laboratory and COA trustee Nadia Rosenthal; designer and co-founder of Thinknado, John Bielenberg; CEO of Big Box Farms, Jordan Motzkin ’10; and performing artist/activist Isabel Shaida ’19. In the spring, we

Joanne Woodward
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Jonathan Henderson (faculty member in music) and the student-led band, Crooked Teeth, rehearsing pre-show music for One Flea Spare, spring 2022

produced and presented a full-length play— One Flea Spare by Naomi Wallace. The show was collectively created and was the fi rst live theater experience at COA in quite a while. It was performed by Liv Soter ’23, Nati Rijo De Leon ’23, Anna Parsons ’23, Alya Kiiashko ’25, and Camden Hunt ’22. Molly Pifko ’22 served as lead dramaturg.

Beyond teaching: I served as academic advisor to 12 students, directed several senior projects, reviewed a handful of human ecology essays, and helped students prepare for internships, graduate school applications, and job interviews. Sarah Hall and I prepared a select group of seniors to present projects to the board of trustees in the spring. I served on the Academic Affairs Committee, a hiring search, a comprehensive review, and assisted Catherine Clinger in managing the logistics for the 2021 Stroud Resident Artist, Okwui Okpokwasili. I have been teaching Okpokwasili’s work for some time and it was a real honor to have her on campus for those few weeks. I completed a second intensive workshop with SITI Company (NYC), continuing an ongoing investigation of Suzuki and Viewpoints training as practical tools for human ecological

study. I also attended the Association of Performing Arts Professionals annual conference, which proved useful in better understanding the impacts of recent global events on regional and national theater.

All this work was made possible by Woodward and Newman Chair funds, the Davis Educational Foundation, and several other intersecting and generous endowments that fuel art and learning at COA. I remain incredibly grateful for the exceptional teaching and learning opportunities these funds provide.

The type of education that you get here forces you to constantly be questioning the things that you’re learning and relating them to other things in your life and in your educational journey. And that’s something that I really value because it means that you’re never taking anything for granted. Your views are constantly open to changing and to growing. And that means that you yourself are open to changing and growing.
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PHILÉAS DAZELEY--GAIST ’23
Beginning Fund Balance $1,041,501 Net Return on Investments (187,046) Contributions 100,000 Less Allocations/Withdrawals (35,000) Ending Fund Balance $919,455

ENDOWED SCHOLARSHIPS

Brooke and Vincent Astor Scholarship

This scholarship was created in 2012 through a generous bequest from Mrs. Brooke Astor to COA, as well as gifts from the Vincent Astor Foundation. It is awarded to Maine students with financial need.

RECIPIENTS: Gabrielle Peñalver Dumas ’23 (Peaks Island, ME), Isabella Pols ’24 (Brunswick, ME), Megan Waters ’23 (Starks, ME)

BEGINNING BALANCE: $1,130,471

ENDING BALANCE: $901,358

Christina and William Baker Scholarship

Family and friends of Christina ‘Tina’ Baker established this fund in 2013 in memory of Tina. After the passing of Tina’s husband, William ‘Bill’ Baker in 2021, the family added Bill to the scholarship name and amended the criteria. This four-year scholarship is awarded to students with financial need with a preference towards first-generation and BIPOC (Black, Indigenous, people of color) students.

RECIPIENT: Ruby DeWilde ’25 (Portland, OR)

BEGINNING BALANCE: $68,890

ENDING BALANCE: $89,840

Sidney and Hazel Demott Bahrt Scholarship

The scholarship was created in 2008 through a bequest from Sidney and Hazel Bahrt to COA. The four-year scholarship is awarded to a Washington Academy graduate from Pembroke. Depending on COA’s enrollment, the scholarship may also be awarded to other students from Washington Academy or from the greater Washington County community.

RECIPIENTS: Sage Bagley ’23 (East Machias, ME), Levi Curtis ’23 (Princeton, ME), Maggie Hood ’22 (Perry, ME)

BEGINNING BALANCE: $1,106,729

Bright Horizons Scholarship

ENDING BALANCE: $866,111

The Bright Horizons Scholarship was established by Bar Harbor Bank and Trust as part of the Life Changing, World Changing Capital Campaign. The scholarship is awarded to local Maine students who are graduates of high schools located in Hancock and Washington Counties.

RECIPIENT: Hope Rankin ’25 (Bucksport, ME)

BEGINNING BALANCE: $184,155

Alida Camp Scholarship

ENDING BALANCE: $145,478

This scholarship was created in 2018 by David Milliken as part of an effort to honor family, friends, and public figures and the characteristics David admires in them. This scholarship supports a student working in fields of related interest to the individual honored by the

Gabrielle Penalver Dumas ’23
Isabella Pols ’24 Sage Bagley ’23
coa.edu/support37
Maggie Hood ’22

scholarship. Characteristics and interests that speak to the honoree include: oceans, community, craft, sailing, humor, integrity.

RECIPIENT: Sil Kiewiet de Jonge ’23 (Monnickendam, Netherlands)

BEGINNING BALANCE: $136,289

Rachel Carson Scholarship

ENDING BALANCE: $109,866

This scholarship was created in 2018 by David Milliken as part of an effort to honor family, friends, and public figures and the characteristics David admires in them. This scholarship supports a student working in fields of related interest to the individual honored by the scholarship. Characteristics and interests that speak to the honoree include: investigation, deep deeing, dot connecting, exposing of toxins in environment, and revealing the destruction of nature and natural habitats.

RECIPIENT: Isi Muñoz Segovia ’22 (Madrid, Spain)

BEGINNING BALANCE: $136,289

ENDING BALANCE: $109,866

Rebecca Clark Memorial Scholarship in Marine Sciences

The scholarship was established in 2004 in memory of Rebecca Clark, a COA graduate who lost her life in the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami in Thailand. The fund was started with a lead gift from trustee Edward McC. Blair and support from many friends and family of Rebecca. The scholarship is awarded to a rising junior or senior, exemplary in dedication, enthusiasm, passion and scholarship, in the field of marine science and/or marine conservation.

RECIPIENT: Kiernan Crough ’22 (Greenfield, MA)

BEGINNING BALANCE: $123,666

Christensen Scholarship

ENDING BALANCE: $449,227

This scholarship was created in 2005 with a gift from the Christensen Fund. It is awarded to students with financial need, with a preference towards international students.

RECIPIENT: Lenka Slamova ’24 (Říčany, Czech Republic)

BEGINNING BALANCE: $402,534

ENDING BALANCE: $320,969

Richard Slaton Davis and Norah Deakin Davis Scholarship

This scholarship was created in 2004 by Norah Deakin Davis, the widow of Richard S. Davis (Dick), a founding faculty member who passed away at the age of 41 in 1982. Mrs. Davis’s pledge spurred additional gifts from friends and former students of Dick. Recipients are outstanding students in the contemplative, aesthetic, and philosophical aspects of human ecology that Dick loved.

RECIPIENT: Odin Gage ’24 (Thorndike, ME), Philéas Dazeley-Gaist ’23 (Nantes, France)

BEGINNING BALANCE: $169,306

ENDING BALANCE: $134,763

Lenka Slamova ’24 Sil Kiewiet de Jonge ’23 Kiernan Crough ’22
38coa.edu/support
Anna Bradford ’23

THE DREIER SCHOLARSHIPS

BEGINNING BALANCE: $47,419

John C. Dreier Scholarship

ENDING BALANCE: $37,711

The scholarship was created in 2006 by the children and friends of John and Louisa Dreier. It is given to a junior who has shown leadership in building community spirit both on campus and in the college’s surrounding communities.

RECIPIENT: Anna Bradford ’23 (Jay, ME)

Louisa R. Dreier Scholarship

The scholarship was created in 2006 by the children and friends of John and Louisa Dreier. The scholarship is given to a junior who embodies the spirit of joy in the arts.

RECIPIENT: Halei Trowbridge ’23 (Fulton, CA)

Samuel and Mary Kathryn Eliot Scholarship

The scholarship was established by COA’s trustees to honor Sam Eliot as he retired from COA after 11 years as vice president. Mary Kathryn served as fundraising assistant to COA’s first president and designed the college’s iconic logo. It is awarded to Maine students with financial need.

RECIPIENT: Ella Giroux ’25 (Vassalboro, ME)

BEGINNING BALANCE: $192,369

Anne Franchetti Scholarship

ENDING BALANCE: $159,817

This scholarship was created in 2018 by David Milliken as part of an effort to honor family, friends, and public figures and the characteristics David admires in them. This scholarship supports a student working in fields of related interest to the individual honored by the scholarship. Characteristics and interests that speak to the honoree include: study of oceans, making, chemistry, medicine, curiosity, dowsing, whimsy, laughter, global thinking, ceramics.

RECIPIENT: Raheem Khadour ’25 (Syria)

BEGINNING BALANCE: $136,289

General Scholarship

ENDING BALANCE: $109,866

The General Scholarship Fund was established in 1984. The fund contains gifts given by hundreds of friends in every amount for unrestricted student scholarships. We continue to accept donations for this important endowment. There are many students who receive aid from this fund. here are a few:

RECIPIENTS: Lucy Cheeley ’25 (Cold Spring, MN), Noelle Stringer ’25 (Coatesville, PA), Ellie Gabrielson ’25 (Monteverde, Costa Rica), Savannah

Averitt ’25 (Nellysford, VA)

BEGINNING BALANCE: $1,315,941

ENDING BALANCE: $1,106,526

Jennifer McNamara ’23 Halei Trowbridge ’23 Raheem Khadour ’25
coa.edu/support39
Noelle Stringer ’25

Craig Greene Memorial Scholarship

This scholarship was created to honor the late Craig William Greene, former Elizabeth Battles Newlin Professor in Botany. It is awarded to two rising juniors or seniors who have excelled in botany and general biology classes, and who share Craig’s passion for the world of flora.

RECIPIENT: Jennifer McNamara ’23 (Bernard, ME), Lundy Stowe ’22 (Groveland, CA)

BEGINNING BALANCE: $117,298

Hartzog-Kauffmann Scholarship

ENDING BALANCE: $93,246

This award honors both George B. Hartzog and John M. Kauffmann. Kauffmann, who passed away in 2014, was a former COA trustee, and retired to MDI after a long career at the National Park Service, most notably in Alaska where he helped define the boundaries of the Gates of the Arctic National Park. George Hartzog, head of the National Park Service from 1964–1972, was a hero of John’s and revered by many for the way he managed the agency and defended the NPS during his tenure. It is awarded to students who have an interest in the management and protection of ecosystems—especially wilderness and rivers.

RECIPIENTS: Johnny Robinson ’22 (Cotuit, MA), Adaline Huckins ’22 (Hancock, MI)

BEGINNING BALANCE: $524,314

August Heckscher Scholarship

ENDING BALANCE: $418,902

The scholarship was created in 1997 through gifts from friends and family of August Heckscher, an artist, author and public servant whose life and work encompassed many of the values and principles underlying the study of human ecology. It is typically awarded to two students, preferably juniors, with preference for those whose work focuses on public lands, government, or the arts. This year there was only one recipient.

RECIPIENTS: Hannah Gower-Fox ’24 (Brecon, United Kingdom)

BEGINNING BALANCE: $216,704

Justine Hooper Scholarship

ENDING BALANCE: $173,308

This scholarship was created in 2018 by David Milliken as part of an effort to honor family, friends, and public figures and the characteristics David admires in them. This scholarship supports a student working in fields of related interest to the individual honored by the scholarship. Characteristics and interests that speak to the honoree include: islands, love of nature, texture, art, awareness, sensitivity, intuition.

RECIPIENTS: Rosie Chater ’25 (Pony, MT)

BEGINNING BALANCE: $136,289

ENDING BALANCE: $109,866

Louise H. and David S. Ingalls Scholarship for International Students

This scholarship was created in 2018 with a gift from the Louise H. & David S. Ingalls Foundation. It is awarded to students with financial need, with a preference towards international students.

RECIPIENTS: Malek Hinnawi ’25 (Palestine/Syria)

BEGINNING BALANCE: $108,572

ENDING BALANCE: $88,524

Rosie Chater ’25 Lundy Stowe ’22 Johnny Robinson ’22 Hannah Gower-Fox ’24
40coa.edu/support

MAINE COMMUNITY FOUNDATION HELD SCHOLARSHIPS

Edward G. Kaelber Scholarship for Maine Students of Outstanding Promise

COA and the Maine Community Foundation created the Edward G. Kaelber Scholarship for Maine Students of Outstanding Promise to honor Ed Kaelber for his leadership and for his contributions in the fields of education and community development. The scholarship provides opportunities for Maine students who possess the potential for the kind of boldness, commitment, and leadership personified by Ed Kaelber, and who will use their skills and talents to impact their communities in equally significant ways.

RECIPIENT: Conrad Kortemeier ’26

Alice Blum Yoakum Scholarship

This scholarship was created in 1996 by former trustee Robert Blum, honoring his daughter Alice. It is awarded to students who plan to actively work for biodiversity and especially for the preservation of underwater species in various parts of the world.

RECIPIENT: Bailey Tausen ’23 (Taneytown, MD)

MAINE STUDENT SCHOLARSHIP FUND

The Maine Student Scholarship Fund is an endowment created through generous gifts to the COA Silver Anniversary Campaign from the organizations listed below.

BEGINNING BALANCE: $991,466

Betterment Scholarship

ENDING BALANCE: $791,760

This scholarship was created in 1995 through a gift from the Betterment Fund, and supports students from Bethel, Oxford County, and the State of Maine, in that order of priority.

RECIPIENTS: Eva McMillan ’23 (Rangeley, ME)

H. King and Jean Cummings Scholarship

The scholarship was established with a gift from the H. King & Jean Cummings Charitable Trust. Mr. Cummings led his family’s business, Guilford Industries, a textile manufacturer in Guilford, Maine. He later served as CEO of Sugarloaf ski area and played decisive roles in the founding of Carrabassett Valley Academy and Maine Community Foundation. The scholarship is awarded to students from western Maine.

RECIPIENT: Cheyanne Goroshin ’24 (Sumner, ME)

Kenduskeag Scholarship

This scholarship was created in 1995 with two gifts from Dead River Company and the Kenduskeag Foundation. It is awarded to Maine students with financial need.

RECIPIENT: Hayden Platteter ’24 (Phippsburg, ME)

Eva McMillan ’23 Malek Hinnawi ’25 Cheyanne Goroshin ’24 Hayden Platteter ’24
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Phoebe and Gerrish Milliken Scholarship

This scholarship was created in 2018 by David Milliken as part of an effort to honor family, friends, and public figures and the characteristics David admires in them. This scholarship supports a student working in fields of related interest to the individuals honored by the scholarship. Characteristics and interests that speak to the honorees include: birding and preservation of wild habitat, service, loyalty, care, attention to detail.

RECIPIENT: Levi Sheridan ’24 (Lansing, MI)

BEGINNING BALANCE: $147,803

Barbara Piel Scholarship

ENDING BALANCE: $124,367

The scholarship was created in 2004 through a bequest from Barbara Piel to College of the Atlantic. She was a great friend of the college, deeply interested in the natural world and inspired by “the intense individuality of students and staff” at COA. This annual scholarship is awarded to students with financial need.

RECIPIENT: Maddy Stevens ’23 (Kent, CT)

BEGINNING BALANCE: $625,511

ENDING BALANCE: $498,648

Eleanor T. and Samuel J. Rosenfeld Scholarship

The scholarship was created in 2000 by Eleanor T. and Samuel J. Rosenfeld. This annual scholarship is awarded to students with financial need.

RECIPIENT: Sarah Ottinger ’25 (Colfax, WI)

BEGINNING BALANCE: $17,036

Maurine P. and Robert Rothschild Graduate Scholarship Award

ENDING BALANCE: $13,311

This scholarship was created in 1997 with a gift to the Silver Anniversary Endowment Campaign by Trustee Maurine P. Rothschild and her husband Robert Rothschild. The scholarship is awarded to qualified graduate students with preference given to those pursuing work in the education field.

RECIPIENTS: Zeya Lorio ’22 (Blue Hill, ME)

BEGINNING BALANCE: $346,739

ENDING BALANCE: $276,300

Michael and Rose Russo Scholarship

The scholarship was created in 2013 through a gift made by Jay McNally ’84 to honor his maternal grandparents. This four-year scholarship provides financial assistance to a highachieving student who is a great fit with the mission of COA and would otherwise not be able to attend.

RECIPIENT: Iris Gillingham ’22 (Livingston Manor, NY)

BEGINNING BALANCE: $860,212

ENDING BALANCE: $686,914

Charles and Katharine Savage Scholarship

This scholarship was created in 2018 by David Milliken as part of an effort to honor family,

Maddy Stevens ’23 Bailey Tausen ’23 Sarah Ottinger ’25 Iris Gillingham ’22
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friends, and public figures and the characteristics David admires in them. This scholarship supports a student working in fields of related interest to the individuals honored by the scholarship. Characteristics and interests that speak to the honorees include: Love of wood, landscapes and gardens, books, art, music, lifelong love of learning, letters, winter structure of plants, compassion and empathy, love and leadership in community.

RECIPIENT: Jennifer McNamara ’23 (Bernard, ME)

BEGINNING BALANCE: $136,289

Donald Straus Scholarship

ENDING BALANCE: $109,866

This scholarship was created in 2008 with a gift from Donald and Beth Straus. It is awarded to a rising junior or senior who shows promise in working for cultural change, collaboration, in the field of human relations and/or leadership.

RECIPIENT: Isi Muñoz Segovia ’22 (Madrid, Spain), Sadie Cooley ’22 (Santa Fe, NM)

BEGINNING BALANCE: $284,817

ENDING BALANCE: $227,376

Joan and Dixon Stroud Scholarship

This scholarship was created in 2018 by David Milliken as part of an effort to honor family, friends, and public figures and the characteristics David admires in them. This scholarship supports a student working in fields of related interest to the individuals honored by the scholarship. Characteristics that speak to the honorees include: community, care, beauty, water, aesthetics, respect for the past, belief in the future.

RECIPIENT: Maggie Denison ’23 (Schaghticoke, NY)

BEGINNING BALANCE: $136,289

ENDING BALANCE: $109,866

NEW SCHOLARSHIP FUNDS

Through COA’s Broad Reach Capital Campaign that concluded in 2020, a number of donors established new scholarships and funds.

Future philanthropy reports will report on the income generated, the fund criteria, and the names of the students who receive scholarships from these endowed funds. These new scholarships and funds include those listed here.

• Nancy Aronson Scholarship

• Judith Blank and Steve Alsup Scholarship

• The Lynn Boulger Young Writers Scholarship

• Roc and Helen McGregor Caivano Scholarship

• Helen Caldicott Scholarship

• Heather Richards Evans Scholarship

• Robert H. Rubin Scholarship

• Larry Lutchmansingh Scholarship

• John McKee Scholarship

• Pamelia Markwood Neff Scholarship

Maggie Denison ’23 Isi Muñoz Segovia ’22
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ENDOWED FUNDS

Cox Protectorate Fund

Staff Supervisor: Darron Collins ’92, President

Over the years, the Cox Protectorate has provided opportunities for students in a number of geology, natural history, science, and land use courses to study this landscape, its wildlife, and history. During the spring of 2022, the Conservation Biology course taught by John Anderson, William H. Drury Jr. Chair in

The Cox Protectorate is a 101-acre tract of undeveloped property near the center of Mount Desert Island that was donated to COA by former trustee Tom Cox in 2010, along with a fund to tend the property. The property encompasses Mill Brook, part of the headwaters of Northeast Creek. The Protectorate has walking trails for recreation, but is mainly used for an array of interdisciplinary courses, projects, and research, including annual surveys by students in COA’s WildlifeEcology class.

For several years, students have used the M/V Osprey’s drone to map the Cox Protectorate, gathering high-quality imaging of tree types by foliage to help interpret abundance and composition as well as the hydrology of the landscape.

Evolution, Natural History, and Ecology, took a series of field trips to the site and conducted a literature review of past work at the Protectorate, including assessment of the ecological significance of the land and the property’s covenants. The class ended the term with a debate on whether or not a portion of the property could or should be used for faculty or staff housing.

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Beginning
Net
Contributions
Less
Ending
Fund Balance $147,563
Return on Investments (24,330)
0
Allocations/Withdrawals (4,000)
Fund Balance $119,233

Barbarina M. and Aaron J. Heyerdahl Beech Hill Farm Endowment Fund

Farm Co-Managers

Fiscal year 2022 was another successful and productive year at Beech Hill Farm. Throughout the growing season, we grew and sold about 100,000 pounds of certified organic vegetables, and grossed over $750,000 through sales in our farmstand, wholesale accounts, and Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) program. As our increased vegetable production and farmstand sales finally outgrew our existing infrastructure, we began design and work on a farmstand addition and renovation. The updated and expanded farmstand will include an additional 440 square feet of retail space and 120 square feet of walk-in cooler space. The entire building will be insulated and outfitted with heat pumps, allowing for an extended sales season, and improved produce management during the hot summer months. In order to expand food production during the shoulder seasons and over the winter, we purchased a new 1,000 square foot greenhouse, which will be built later this year.

Access Project, which work to address food insecurity on MDI.

We employed over 20 work-study students in the spring and fall, and 14 staff members for our summer season—many of whom were COA students or graduates. As part of COA’s Food and Farming Workshop Series, we hosted a workshop for students on crop planning and greenhouse seedling production. Alongside Rachel Carson Chair in Human Ecology Suzanne Morse, we supervised independent studies of a group of three students who together explored the fundamentals of organic farm management. In September, we hosted the 2021 Farm Day, which featured excellent food from the Blair Dining Hall, farm tours, tabling, and extraordinary music from The Soul Benders.

We continued to expand our food access outreach by working with community partners. We supplied nearly two tons of surplus produce to Hancock County community members working with Healthy Acadia’s Gleaning Initiative. We provided the Bar Harbor Food Pantry with thousands of pounds of produce with help from the Mainers Feeding Mainers grant from the Good Shepherd Food Bank and from funds raised by Share The Harvest, our student-run food access program. Through Share The Harvest programs, we provided free produce to low-income residents of Mount Desert Island, as well as 50% discounts in the farmstand to all SNAP and WIC users through our “Double your Dollar Program”. We continued to partner with OpenTable MDI and the MDI Food

We continue to work towards building soil health and fertility through improved management practices. In 2021, we purchased quick-attach tractor forks, silage tarps, and sandbags so we could prepare fields without the use of plowing or heavy tillage. This method decreases soil compaction and disturbance, increases organic matter, and reduces erosion and the use of fossil fuels. We invested in a Billy Goat brush cutter to introduce living mulch aisles into our crop management plan, which adds organic matter to the fields, reduces erosion, and eliminates the use of plastic landscape fabric. We have continued to trial multiple reduced tillage and no tillage cropping methods with significant success. We plan to continue integrating reduced tillage into our field management to continue to build the health and fertility of our soils.

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Barbara M. Heyerdahl ’88 and Aaron J. Heyerhdahl ’87 established this endowed fund in 1999 when they donated Beech Hill Farm to COA.
Beginning Fund Balance $113,811 Net Return on Investments (18,611) Contributions
Less Allocations/Withdrawals (4,000) Ending Fund Balance $91,200
0
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coa.edu/support47 Beginning Fund Balance $3,156,312 Net Return on Investments (514,987) Contributions 0 Less Allocations/Withdrawals (120,000) Ending Fund Balance $2,521,326

Robert P. and Arlene Kogod Visiting Artist Fund

Faculty Supervisor: Ken Hill, PhD, Provost

The following courses offered by visiting instructors this academic year were made possible through income from this fund.

Rob and Arlene Kogod established this endowed fund 20 years ago to create opportunities to bring talented artists to COA at a time when the college did not have a robust art faculty. COA has grown since then and has professors in the performing arts, painting and drawing, fi lmmaking, graphic arts and design, music, landscape design, art history, and printmaking. Today, the Kogod Fund is used to enhance our offerings through lecturers and visiting faculty who offer courses in things like photography, ceramics, and cinema. The fund also supports art supplies and equipment, travel, professional development, and student opportunities that otherwise would not be possible.

World Percussion (2 sections)

MICHAEL BENNETT

Cinematic Visions from Marginalized Peoples

History of Filmmaking II (1946-Present)

COLIN CAPERS ’95, MPHIL ’09

The History of Making Prints

ANNIKA LOUISE EARLEY ’14

Fundamentals of Sculpting: Sculpting the Head

FRANCE HILBERT

Critical Making and New Media Art

QURAN KARRIEM

Architecture in the Expanded Field

TIMOTHY LOCK

Our Band Could Be Your Life: Music, Art, Zines 1975-2015

DANIEL MAHONEY

Ceramics I

Intermediate Ceramics

ROCKY MANN

Performance & Ecology: What can theater do?

Native American Drama

Graphic Attack: Advanced Graphic Design Studio II

KHRISTIÁN MENDÉZ AGUIRRE ’15

Beginning Contemporary Dance Technique

Sourcing the Body: Experiential Anatomy

DANI ROBBINS

Documentary Video Studio

MATTHEW SHAW ’11

Audio Production and Engineering

ZACH SOARES ’00

Kinetic Sculpture Introduction

HANNAH TARDIE

Introduction to Photography

History of Photography

Intermediate Projects in Photography

JOSH WINER ’91

Income from the Kogod Fund also allowed COA to construct a new recording studio and band practice space, purchase a new computer system and software for the recording studio, and to pay teaching assistants for the following courses:

Animation

Ceramics

COA Gallery Assistant

Documentary Video

4-D Design

Graphic Design Studio Illustration Movement Training World Percussion

Beginning Fund Balance

$1,852,997

Net Return on Investments (304,561)

Contributions 0

Less Allocations/Withdrawals (73,000)

Ending Fund Balance $1,475,437

Samba band
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Peggy Rockefeller Farms Endowment Fund

Staff Supervisor: April Nugent, Farm Manager

Through the 2022 season, the Rockefeller Endowment supported the position of new Farm Manager April Nugent and ongoing facilities operations. The farm’s livestock program expanded this season to add heritage breed pigs to Peggy Rockefeller Farms (PRF). The farm continued to manage its other livestock enterprises at a slightly increased scale of production. The beef herd expanded and transitioned to Red Devon cattle. These animals will be utilized as breeding stock to increase production and on-farm education opportunities in future seasons. Sheep production ran about 70 animals at peak and additional genetics were brought in. The farm upgraded to running a Katahdin hair sheep fl ock as well as Romney cross fl ock both for dual production. One hundred egg laying hens and 500 broilers (meat chickens) were produced this season. The farm aims to double egg production in 2023 and keep all its production hens in mobile layer coops so they can be better utilized as part of our grazing rotation.The farm’s half-acre vegetable plot, a small orchard of apple trees, and fi fty acres of pasture/hay land were maintained at their previous scale.

Numerous students were able to engage via the work-study program, summer internships, on farm workshops, class visits, and placed-based farm courses. In the winter term of 2022, April co-taught a farm animal management course at PRF with Partridge Chair in Food and Sustainable Agriculture Systems

Kourtney Collum. Several classes engaged with the farm this season including: Human Ecology Core Course, Ornithology, Bees and Society, Agroecology, Landscape Drawing, Sheep to Shawl, and

Sustainable Energy. Community interactions have continued with numerous school groups and organizations engaging in educational farm tours to learn more about Peggy Rockefeller Farms and COA.

Highlights of 2022 productions included the development of a meat Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) program available to residents of MDI and Hancock county. Twenty-eight families were served this season. The production of 900 lbs of lamb, 1600+ lbs of pork, 2000 lbs of chicken, 1200 lbs of beef, 80+ lbs of garlic, and various miscellaneous crop sales. PRF partnered with COA’s on-campus community fridge program to donate 150+ lbs of meat and numerous crops to the COA community. The farm’s breeding programs produced 26 piglets, 32 lambs, and one calf this season. Animal breeding, on-farm educational opportunities, and community.

Beginning Fund Balance $1,585,551

Net Return on Investments (258,263) Contributions 0

Less Allocations/Withdrawals (63,000)

Ending Fund Balance $1,264,288

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David Rockefeller established the Peggy Rockefeller Farms (PRF) endowment in 2011 by donating the Carmen and DeLaittre Farms, which were combined to form the current PRF, to the college and supporting its operations with a generous endowed gift. Left: Cows grazing at Peggy Rockefeller Farms. Right: PRF summer crew

Fund for Maine Islands

The Fund for Maine Islands continues to provide critical support for course work, mentoring, internships, and community engagement as it moves into its eighth year. This partnership with the Island Institute has built a strong central focus on courses, field work opportunities, and community-based research, all around the theme of storytelling. As we approach our 10-year anniversary, the partners are discussing how to elevate questions about the ways that island and remote coastal communities have navigated and will navigate the cumulative changes wrought by climate change, shifting community dynamics, and the dynamics of the fisheries upon which they rely.

The Island Institute and College of the Atlantic launched this partnership in 2014 to seek solutions to sustain island and coastal ecosystems. Funded by a $2M challenge grant from the Partridge Foundation and the support of many other donors who helped secure the match, the fund addresses four areas of critical concern for Gulf of Maine residents: agriculture and food, energy, education, and adaption to climate change.

Natalie Springuel ’91 from Maine Sea Grant, Galen Koch of the First Coasts, and Molly Graham, an independent contractor, have done the lion’s share of work in our integrated initiative, “Mapping Ocean Stories,” in which students record, transcribe and exhibit the stories of our local communities. A student-led (online and in-person) sound walk in Eastport was a huge success with very positive community feedback. A podcast series from Galen Koch called Up from the Sea has been rolling out and has involved students as interns and production assistants. This is an exciting

new element of our public outreach. Ongoing work transcribing and making public oral histories through the new digital archive Maine Sound and Story (launched with support from this fund) has gained momentum and made more voices more widely available to communities. Student interns participating in that project have made major contributions with their sheer diligence in transforming archival materials to make them accessible for the community.

Exhibit design, radio work, recording oral histories, and audio production skills are building a skills base that we hope will serve our local communities in the coming years. The professional experience gained by students has led to work as an Island Fellow through the Island Institute for one recent graduate. Building that pipeline is a core shared goal.

Finally, the Fund for Maine Islands launched a new initiative, the Frenchmen Bay Oral History Project, which is capturing the ecological knowledge of local fishers. COA alum Camden Hunt ’22 has led the initial stages of this emergent program.

We are excited about all that we have accomplished, and encourage everyone to stay tuned because we are launching Mapping Ocean Stories as an integrated three-credit “monster course” next year, if all goes according to plan

Beginning Fund Balance $2,481,000 Net Return on Investments (404,411) Contributions 1,000 Less Allocations/Withdrawals (98,000) Ending Fund Balance $1,979,588
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McCormick Library Director Fund

Staff Supervisor: Jane Hultberg, MLS, Library Director

There are three key areas to the library: information resources and services, the College Archives and Special Collections, and audiovisual (AV) equipment and services. The year started on an exciting note with the return of the library to its pre-pandemic configuration. Once the students returned, we found that our interactions with our work-study students as well as our patrons were much improved due to our restored arrangement. Library usage was definitely up from the previous year, but still noticeably less than normal. We attribute much of this to fallout from the pandemic and a desire to study where masks were not required.

The librarians were excited to have met one-on-one for 20-30 minutes of personalized instruction about the library’s resources with each incoming student as part of one of the Human Ecology Core Course modules. In addition, two faculty required students to have one-on-one visits with a librarian for completion of an assignment. The librarians also visited seven classes during the year to provide in-class instruction.

This year we had more than 40 work-study students. Two returning students were trained to catalog, one returned as an interlibrary loan assistant, and others helped produce a newsletter. Some helped with events or graphic design needs, five were trained in AV, and others helped in the archives, organizing the news clippings collection, the Human Ecology Essay collection, and digitizing materials from a variety of collections.

Some specific projects addressed this past year include cataloging and reorganizing our audio collection. Working with Jonathan Henderson, our new music faculty, our cataloger refined a recording classification system, and edited or assigned call numbers to our

CDs, LPs, and cassettes. We received another large donation of books on North American Indigenous peoples, which we have been reviewing and cataloging. The Higgins Foundation once again provided financial support for our juvenile book collection. Our associate director led a review and update of our Children’s Collection development policy with input from a committee that included students, faculty, and staff. Librarians assessed some of the periodical collection and withdrew 1,334 pounds of materials.

We worked on building community through events, exhibits, and displays. We reinstituted our new student Open House, brought back Live Music for Studying, and Pi(e) Night. Students exhibited class projects, and the library served as a venue for senior project and independent study displays and presentations. New book displays were installed weekly by our work-study students.

Library staff supported the COA community this past year by serving on committees, serving as directors for independent studies and senior projects, and by teaching a class. We engaged in professional activities outside the college as well.

We look forward to a busy year ahead and all it will bring.

Beginning Fund Balance $770,735

Net Return on Investments (125,475)

Contributions 0

Less Allocations/Withdrawals (31,000)

Ending Fund Balance $614,260

Nancy Hoskinson McCormick, widow of Charles Deering McCormick established this endowed fund through the Chauncey & Marion Deering McCormick Foundation in 1996. Thorndike Library
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Doug Rose GIS Enhancement Fund

Staff Supervisor:

Gordon Longsworth ’90, Director of the Geographic Information Systems (GIS) Lab

This was a conservative year of spending from the Doug Rose GIS Enhancement Fund due to the pandemic and other limitations. The fund was used to pay half of the Pix4D.com drone image processing cloud service as in previous years. The use of Pix4D continues to grow as more faculty, staff, and students use drones for mapping purposes. Any remaining balance from last year will carry over.

Along with Pix4D, there were two other purchases this year.

to use. The Mavic Mini has been used in the GIS class, where students were trained and each given the opportunity to fly the drone. The class used the drone to take aerial photos of the new Davis Center for Human Ecology and then converted the imagery using Pix4D.com into an orthomosaic aerial map and 3D scene.

A Hewlett-Packard 6230 inkjet printer was purchased for general use in the GIS Lab. Students will not be charged for most printing needs.

Family and friends of Doug Rose established this fund in 1994. Doug, a COA student in the 1990s and avid climber, died climbing Great Head when the weather turned. This fund supports the purchase of software and equipment, as well as student attendance at conferences related to Geographic Information Systems.

A second DJI Mavic Mini drone was purchased, which cost about $500. It was purchased with the remaining money from a generous additional gift of $1,000 given last year by Karen Rose. The Mavic Mini drone weighs under 250 grams, and therefore does not require any special training and is not limited by FAA regulations.

The Mavic Mini is an excellent training and small projects drone. It is safe, easy to fly, and easy to train students how

We hope the 2022-2023 academic year provides more opportunities for students to use the Mavic Mini drones and the fund for travel, training, equipment and special purposes .

Links to Pix4D data models:

• CHE orthomosaic: https://bit.ly/cheortho1

• CHE 3D scene: https://bit.ly/che3d1

$56,400 Net Return on Investments (9,218) Contributions
Less Allocations/Withdrawals (2,000) Ending Fund Balance $45,182
Beginning Fund Balance
0
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Screenshot of Pix4D data model

Diana Davis Spencer Hatchery Fund

Faculty Supervisor: Jay Friedlander, Sharpe-McNally Chair in Green and Socially Responsible Business

While the vast majority of collegiate venture incubators & accelerators are co-curricular, forcing students to choose between their interests and education, the Hatchery removes these barriers, aligning education and individual passion by providing students with a full term of academic credit. Sustainable Business Program Manager Kerri Sands ’02 and I manage the program, and have built a bespoke curriculum so that any student at COA can develop their ideas and be fully immersed in the entrepreneurial experience. Students selected for the Hatchery:

• perform a series of increasingly high-fidelity prototypes over 10 weeks

• learn essential business skills necessary for success in any enterprise

• receive guidance from mentors and professionals in prototyping, branding, social media, legal, and accounting

• have access to office space and up to $5,000 in seed funding

In the 2021-22 academic year, the Hatchery was taught in a hybrid format with students both in the classroom and on Zoom. We were primarily in person this year and it was a real delight to host most of our guest mentors in person.

Eight Hatchery participants pursued a wide range of enterprises, reflecting the diverse interests of COA students. Many of the students had already been developing their ventures across a range of classes and years at COA. Enterprises included:

• Sophia Eliana—merging music and art, spreading joy, and bringing people together

• Findi Sahel—boosting income for Nigerien women through Nigerien fair-trade tea made from West African plants and herbs

• Eleanor White Ceramic—producing ceramics incorporating local elements from wood-fired and hand-dug clay to seashell glazes

• Betula House—providing affordable hostel accommodations on MDI

• LOCOMOTIVE—capturing the sound of this generation by collaboratively producing and promoting indie music

• GreenTico – connecting students from around the world to

the authentic Costa Rica and creating experiences that benefit visitors and the local community

• Gigi Bee Photography— bringing out clients’ authentic self through portrait photography

in 2015. The Diana Davis Spencer Hatchery provides eligible students academic credit, professional services, and access to seed funding to develop a sustainable for-profit or nonprofit business.

• Sawyer’s Market— reestablishing a local grocery store that had closed after serving Southwest Harbor for 70 years

Hatchery students learned sustainable enterprise fundamentals, developed numerous prototypes, experimented with new products and sales channels, solicited meaningful feedback from customers, wrote operations manuals, developed growth strategies, and ultimately came to see themselves as professionals offering products and services of value. At the end of the 10-week term, students, families, and supporters from around the world attended the live Hatchery Expo over Zoom, where students presented overviews of their work.

The Diana Davis Spencer Hatchery’s educational model continues to be of interest to organizations both inside and outside academia. I was interviewed and presented the Hatchery model at conferences,

The Diana Davis Spencer Foundation endowed COA’s venture incubator
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workshops, and meetings in the United States, Colombia, France, and Australia. The program was highlighted for how it merges academic credit with students’ interests to elevate learning and provide entrepreneurs with the skills they need to succeed.

The Hatchery has also had an impact locally. I am an advisor to Camden High School, where they have launched a similar program, and the Mount Desert Business Boot Camp (based on the Hatchery curriculum) has helped 18 local entrepreneurs transform their businesses and rejuvenate the local economy. Kerri Sands ’02 represented COA and the Hatchery as a preliminary judge in a capstone competition for Manomet’s 2022 class of U360 Business

Sustainability interns. Finally, we are also an active participant in the Downeast Innovation Network, a region-wide effort to understand and improve our entrepreneurial ecosystem.

Thomas and Mary Hall Book Fund

This fund was established in 1986 with the purpose of helping Thorndike Library build a collection of science and history of science books. The fund grew further when, upon Thomas Hall’s death in 1990, the Hall family requested that donations be directed to this fund. Each year, selections are made based on requests, class needs, and academic as well as general interest. Here is a sampling of this year’s selections.

Mammalogy: Adaptation, Diversity, Ecology, 5th edition by George A. Feldhamer et al. (2020)

The Seed Garden: The Art and Practice of Seed Saving by Micaela Colley et al. (2015)

The Rise and Reign of the Mammals: a New History, from the Shadow of the Dinosaurs to Us by Steve Brusatte (2022)

Wildlife Habitat Management, 2nd edition by Brenda C. McComb (2021)

The Accidental Ecosystem: People and Wildlife in American Cities by Peter S. Alagona (2022)

Modeling Infectious Diseases in Humans and Animals by Matt J. Keeling & Pejman Rohani (2007)

Pandas for Everyone: Python Data Analysis by Daniel Chen (2017)

Chaos and Dynamical Systems by David Feldman (2019)

Wildflowers of Maine Islands by Glen H. Mittelhauser (2021)

The Book of Eels: Our Enduring Fascination with the Most Mysterious Creature in the Natural World by Patrik Svensson (2021)

Beyond Global Warming: How Numerical Models Revealed the Secrets of Climate Change by Syukuro Manabe & Anthony J. Broccoli (2020)

Urban Lichens: A Field Guide for Northeastern North America by Jessica L. Allen (2021)

Diving Physiology of Marine Mammals and Seabirds by Paul J. Ponganis (2016)

Wild Urban Plants of the Northeast: A Field Guide by Peter Del Tredici (2020)

The Art of Data Science by Roger Peng (2016)

Ecological Complexity and Agroecology by John Vandermeer & Ivette Perfecto (2018)

Marine Mammal Physiology by Michael A. Castellini & Jo-Ann Mellish (2015)

Einstein’s Fridge: How the Difference Between Hot and Cold Explains the Universe by Paul Sen (2021)

Sedges of the Northern Forest: A Photographic Guide by Jerry Jenkins (2019)

Restoration Agriculture by Mark Shepard (2013)

Swimming in Circles: Aquaculture and the End of Wild Oceans by Paul Molyneaux (2007)

Wildland Recreation: Ecology and Management, 3rd edition by William E. Hammitt et al. (2015)

The Ocean Sunfishes by Tierney M. Thys (2020)

We Are All Whalers: The Plight of Whales and Our Responsibility by Michael J. Moore (2021)

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Beginning Fund Balance $2,308,384 Net Return on Investments (375,963) Contributions 0 Less Allocations/Withdrawals (92,000) Ending Fund Balance $1,840,421

R. Amory Thorndike Memorial Fund

This fund was established in 1979 in memory of long-time supporter and friend, R. Amory Thorndike. College of the Atlantic’s library was subsequently named for Mr. Thorndike and his wife Elizabeth. The purpose of this fund is to strengthen and enlarge the college’s library collection materials in the fields of the arts and humanities. This year’s selections include:

The Apology by Eve Ensler (2019)

Maryanne Amacher: Selected Writings and Interviews by Maryanne Amacher (2021)

Unstable Ground: Climate Change, Conflict, and Genocide by Alex Alvarez (2017)

Merchants of Truth: The Business of News and the Fight for Facts by Jill Abramson (2019)

Others of My Kind: Transatlantic Transgender Histories by Alex Bakker et al. (2020)

This Is Not a Border: Reportage & Reflection from the Palestine Festival of Literature by J.M. Coetze et al. (2017)

User Friendly: How the Hidden Rules of Design Are Changing the Way We Live, Work, and Play by Cliff Kuang & Robert Fabricant (2019)

History of Information Graphics by Sandra Rendgen (2019)

W.E.B. Du Bois’s Data Portraits: Visualizing Black America by The W.E.B. Du Bois Center at the University of Massachusetts (2018)

Fashion Cookbook by Angela Luna (2021)

The Right to Sex: Feminism in the Twenty-First Century by Amia Srinivasan (2021)

Design Justice: CommunityLed Practices to Build the Worlds We Need by Sasha Costanza-Chock (2020)

The Sublimity of Document: Cinema as Diorama by Scott MacDonald (2019)

Black Ink: Literary Legends on the Peril, Power, and Pleasure of Reading and Writing by Stephanie Stokes Oliver, ed. (2018)

Emergent Strategy: Shaping Change, Changing Worlds by Adrienne Maree Brown (2017)

The Anti-Racist Writing Workshop: How To Decolonize the Creative Classroom by Felicia Rose Chavez (2021)

Photography: A Cultural History by Mary Warner Marien (2021)

Dear Maine: The Trials and Triumphs of Maine’s 21st Century Immigrants by Reza Jalali & Morgan Rielly (2021)

The Poetry of Derek Walcott 1948-2013 by Derek Walcott, Glyn Maxwell, ed. (2017)

Consumed: The Need for Collective Change: Colonialism, Climate Change, and Consumerism by Aja Barber (2021)

The Fabric of Civilization: How Textiles Made the World by Virginia Postrel (2021)

One Flea Spare by Naomi Wallace (2021)

Grey Bees by Andrey Kurkov (Author), Boris Dralyuk (Translator) (2022)

Dancing in Odessa by Ilya Kaminsky (2004)

Postcolonial Banter by Suhaiymah Manzoor-Khan (2019)

Food Fix: How to Save Our Health, Our Economy, Our Communities, and Our Planet--One Bite at a Time by Dr. Mark Hyman MD (2020)

From the Ground Up: Local Efforts to Create Resilient Cities by Alison Sant (2022)

How Civil Wars Start: And How to Stop Them by Barbara F. Walter (2022)

Rethinking Disability: A Disability Studies Approach to Inclusive Practices, 2nd edition by Jan W. Valle & David J. Connor (2019)

Music and Globalization: Critical Encounters by Bob W. White, ed. (2011)

TOTAL COMBINED FUNDING FOR THE THOMAS AND MARY HALL BOOK FUND AND THE R. AMORY THORNDIKE MEMORIAL FUND:

coa.edu/support55
Beginning Fund Balance $712,427 Net Return on Investments (116,094) Contributions 0 Less Allocations/Withdrawals (28,000) Ending Fund Balance $568,334

Elizabeth Thorndike Senior Class Book Fund

In 2001, Thorndike family members started a fund in honor of Betty Thorndike, for whom Thorndike library is partly named. Each year this fund pays for the Thorndike “Senior Books,” which are selected by the graduating class for inclusion in the library’s collection. In 2015, the family made an additional contribution to the fund to support library resources. This year, the additional monies helped support our subscription to Credo Reference, which provides access to hundreds of online reference books. Below is this year’s selection of books by the seniors.

Meanwhile, Elsewhere: Science Fiction and Fantasy from Transgender Writers by Cat Fitzpatrick (2021)

“…a large, strange, and devastatingly touching anthology of science fiction and fantasy from transgender authors was released onto the world. When its original publisher went out of business, the book fell out of print, and LittlePuss Press is now pleased to bring this title back to life…” —Bookshop.org

Librarians with Spines! Information Agitators in an Age of Stagnation by Max Macias and Yago S. Cura (eds) (2017)

“[This book] defines a new era of librarianship and calls us to look at how the LIS profession, pedagogy and philosophy and its relation to our changing social and political climate, yield an urgency for transformation.” —Lettycia Terrones, Bilingual Outreach Librarian

Nox by Anne Carson (2010)

“Nox is an epitaph in the form of a book…a handmade book Anne Carson wrote and created after the death of her brother… Carson pasted old letters, family photos, collages and sketches on pages. The poems…were added to this illustrated ‘book’ creating a visual and reading experience so amazing as to open up our concept of poetry.” —Bookshop.org

Queer Phenomenology: Orientations, Objects by Sara Ahmed (2006)

“In this groundbreaking work, Sara Ahmed demonstrates how queer studies can put phenomenology to productive use. Focusing on the ‘orientation’ aspect of ‘sexual orientation’ and the ‘orient’ in ‘orientalism,’ Ahmed examines what it means for bodies to be situated in space and time. [This book] points queer theory in bold new directions.” —Amazon.com

Cooking as Though You Might Cook Again by Danny Licht (2021)

“Literary Nonfiction. Cooking. Licht’s lyrical recipes turn our attention away from strict measurements and towards the sights and smells of our own pantries, our own fridges, and our own imaginations. A new book that feels oddly like a familiar classic.” —Bookshop.org

Rain: A Natural & Cultural History by Cynthia Barnett (2016)

“…rain begins four billion years ago with the torrents that filled the oceans, and builds to the storms of climate change. It weaves together science—the true shape of a raindrop, the mysteries of frog and fish rains—with the human story of our ambition to control rain.” —Bookshop.org

Exile and Pride: Disability, Queerness, and Liberation by Eli Clare (2015)

“Eli Clare’s revelatory writing about his experiences as a white disabled genderqueer activist/writer established him as one of the leading writers on the intersections of queerness and disability and permanently changed the landscape of disability politics and queer liberation” —Bookshop.org

The Seed Keeper by Diane Wilson (2021) “Weaving together the voices of four indelible women, The Seed Keeper is a beautifully told story of reawakening, of remembering our original relationship to the seeds and, through them, to our ancestors.” —Bookshop.org

The Song of Achilles by Madeline Miller (2012)

“At once a scholar’s homage to The Iliad and a startlingly original work of art by an incredibly talented new novelist. Madeline Miller has given us her own fresh take on the Trojan war and its heroes. The result is a book I could not put down” —Ann Patchett

Reasons She Goes to the Woods by Deborah Kay Davies (2015)

“Pearl can be very, very good. More often she is very, very bad. But she’s just a child, a mystery to all who know her…Told in vignettes across Pearl’s childhood years, Reasons She Goes to the Woods is a nervy but lyrical novel about a normal girl growing up, doing the normal things little girls do.” —Amazon.com

56coa.edu/support

Waterfront Director Fund

Staff Supervisor: Toby Stephenson ’98, Waterfront Director

This past year we were without our research vessel, the M/V Osprey, due to a mooring failure in October 2021. In a rather violent storm, she broke from her mooring and was blown onto the rocks of Bar Island, where she suffered significant damage, though all repairable. She was on a temporary mooring at the time while she waited to be hauled for the season. To further complicate the situation, Wesmac Boats was not able to squeeze her into a workbay until mid-April, and given their low employment numbers, she has been slow to completion. I know I could have put her into a different yard for much faster repairs but, as we spent a significant amount of money to purchase her because of her manufacturer and quality, I believe the best repairs for the damage inflicted were only possible by the yard that built her. It has been a frustrating process, but the best choice in the long run.

in and did a fine job bringing her back to a lovely state. I am grateful to the highly dedicated crew of students, staff, and faculty who continued this work into the spring and summer.

On July 13, Rebecca was transported to Hinckley where we prepared her for launch, which occurred on July 30. She has proven to be a wonderful boat that sails like a dream and easily inspires our students. She has already taken many of our community members out in the bay and beyond since her launching late July. While I consider her an experiment, she has become a fond muse for many, and I hope you will all have an opportunity to enjoy her ease on the water. More to come!

An anonymous donor established this endowed fund with a gift of $1.25 million during the Broad Reach Capital Campaign to maximize the educational potential of our offshore islands— Mount Desert Rock and Great Duck Island—and the coast itself. The gift endowed our waterfront director’s position, allowing the college to improve access to the Gulf of Maine and enable more faculty members, students, and visitors to use these remarkable assets to their full potential.

The absence of Osprey created a large void in our work schedule that was easily filled with the restoration of Rebecca, the Seguin 44-foot sailboat that was donated to us in 2020.

Rebecca was built in 1984 and all of her systems (bilge pumps, fresh water, house wiring, engine wiring, batteries and cables, fuel lines and filters, and navigation system—GPS, radar, depth, wind) were all from that era, and required either repair or complete replacement. Her hull and topsides were also in very rough condition with extensive crazing (spiderweb cracks) on all surfaces. These were all gouged, filled, sanded, and repainted. Her decks and hatches were also in rough condition so the Human Ecology Core Course, led by COA President Darron Collins, dug

We were all sad to see the departure of Diver Ed and his operation last year, but given the circumstances, it was understandable. He was dismayed by the state of the bottom-ecology of Frenchman Bay by draggers and ocean warming, and after nearly 20 years of full boat trips in the same small area, he wanted a change. Fortunately for us, the commute and operations proved unworkable and he returned this June. It was a delight to have him on the docks again!

Gaelen Hall ’21 began working as my relief captain this summer and continues to work with me running trips and training students with seamanship and sailing skills through the fall. I look forward to his assistance.

Beginning Fund Balance $1,612,170

Net Return on Investments (264,746) Contributions 2,754

Less Allocations/Withdrawals (52,000)

Fund Balance $1,298,178

Ending
MALEK HINNAWI ’25
coa.edu/support57
Rebecca

I was looking for a small liberal arts college where I would be able to balance academic rigor, freedom to explore multiple interests, and the opportunity to be part of a closeknit community. I was particularly attracted to COA’s commitment to putting students in charge of discovering their own interests while providing the right mix of professional guidance and independence.

General Unrestricted Endowment

The general unrestricted endowment consists of gifts to the college which the trustees have designated to be part of the endowment. The normal 4.8% drawdown rate is applied and allocated to the general operations of the college. If needed, special allocations can be made with board approval.

Beginning Fund Balance $4,719,026 Net Return on Investments (772,027) Contributions 1,477 Less Allocations/Withdrawals (182,000) Ending Fund Balance $3,766,476
58coa.edu/support
MUKHTAR AMIN ’04

Writing for the Future Fund

Faculty Supervisor: Anne Kozak

At the start of the 2021-2022 academic year, the Writing Center moved into the old GIS lab on the first floor of the Arts and Sciences building, a space that was much bigger than our previous space on the third floor. Now that we are more centrally located, it is much easier for students to drop in to get help. We reinvigorated the space by repainting the walls and, using both donated furniture and some that we ordered, we redesigned the Writing Center so that it would have two separate tutoring stations, a casual group meeting area with sofas and a chalkboard, and we turned the small office into a private group meeting space with a large table.

Anne Kozak, Blake Cass, Karen Waldron, and Palak Taneja worked on setting up the bridge plan for Anne’s retirement. Part of that involved reviewing the courses that we had offered in the past and designating which courses would be taught over the next year. We brought in a new visiting professor to teach Writing Seminar I and another visiting professor to teach college seminars. Additionally, we worked to separate the responsibilities of the Writing Program from the Writing Center. As a function of the Writing Program, the Writing Center will continue to serve an essential role in helping students. Over the next year, Karen will serve as interim director of the Writing Program and Blake will serve as acting director of the Writing Center.

One of the Writing Center’s responsibilities is to ensure that students with accommodations receive notes for classes. Using feedback from notetakers and note recipients, Blake worked to improve the note-taking process. He worked with a tutor to develop a workshop that all future notetakers will participate in to ensure they know how to take proper notes. He hired two students who will serve next year as “Notes Czars.” Their primary responsibility will be to monitor the notes that are uploaded to Google folders to ensure that they are submitted promptly and that the quality of the notes meets expectations. He also hired several full-time notetakers from the incoming class as an experiment to see if that can be a

useful model. We intend to send those full-time notetakers into classes they already take (if notes have been requested for them) and into activity-based classes that would benefit from an external notetaker such as dance classes, the content of which would make it hard for an internal notetaker attending that class to take notes and participate at the same time.

Former COA Trustee, Walter Robinson contributed the lead gift in 2018 during the Broad Reach Capital Campaign to establish this endowed fund, which provides faculty support in composition and technical writing, expands COA’s writing tutor program, and institutes new methods of communication to ensure COA students are prepared for today’s labor market.

The Writing Center has also changed our hiring practice for tutors. Instead of picking first-year students without any college writing experience, we have shifted to hiring returning students who have proven their ability to write across a range of disciplines. Working from recommendations of both tutors and faculty, Blake spent part of the spring term interviewing prospective tutors and hired 13 returning students to train as tutors for the next year.

In honor of Anne’s commitment to the college’s Writing Program, President Darron Collins announced that the Writing Center would be renamed The Anne Kozak Center for Writing Excellence. We also established an annual tutor award called the Anne Kozak Bread and Butter Award. The award gets part of its name from an example Anne often deployed to teach about correct comma usage.

Net
Contributions
Less
Beginning Fund Balance $952,719
Return on Investments (160,603)
10,081
Allocations/Withdrawals (13,000) Ending Fund Balance $789,198
coa.edu/support59

Physical Plant Funds

ETHEL H. BLUM GALLERY

The Ethel H. Blum Gallery was dedicated in 1993 to Ethel H. Blum (1900–1991), an accomplished watercolorist who studied at the Art Students League and the Brooklyn Museum Art School, and exhibited widely in her lifetime. A longtime summer resident of MDI, she took special pleasure in painting Maine coast views.

BREWER-GOWER-SAWYER-GARBER FUND

This fund supports campus grounds improvements and was created by founding trustees Les Brewer and Father James Gower, as well as local businessmen Charles Sawyer and Michael J. Garber.

KATHRYN W. DAVIS CENTER BUILDING AND GROUNDS FUND

Created by gifts from the Shelby Cullom Davis Foundation in support of the maintenance and upkeep of the Davis Center and grounds. The Kathryn W. Davis Center for International & Regional Studies is currently used for faculty and staff offices, classes, and a meeting place for COA’s international population. The Davis Carriage House is a rustic addition to student housing. The Kathryn W. Davis Residence Village is the newest and greenest housing complex.

60coa.edu/support
Beginning Fund Balance $361,166 Net Return on Investments (58,879) Contributions 0 Less Allocations/Withdrawals (14,000) Ending Fund Balance $288,286
Beginning Fund Balance $686,540 Net Return on Investments (111,873) Contributions 0 Less Allocations/Withdrawals (27,000) Ending Fund Balance $547,667
Beginning Fund Balance $364,354 Net Return on Investments (61,630) Contributions 0 Less Allocations/Withdrawals 0 Ending Fund Balance $302,724

THOMAS S. GATES, JR. COMMUNITY CENTER

Gates is regularly used for lectures, theatrical productions, music and dance performances, and large meetings or workshops. The hall has a stage with optional podium, seating on the main floor and balcony, a lighting and sound booth, and digital projector with screen.

THORNDIKE LIBRARY/KAELBER HALL

Thorndike Library was named in honor of Robert Amory Thorndike (1900–1972) and his wife Elizabeth (1908–1992) in recognition of their support and contributions to COA. Kaelber Hall, named for founding president Ed Kaelber, is the large natural-shingled building located in the center of campus. It overlooks the water, and houses the Thorndike Library, the Blair Dining Hall (Take-A-Break) and kitchen, and the Admission Office.

THE TURRETS

The Turrets was designed for John J. Emery of New York in 1893 by Bruce Price, designer of Québec’s famous Château Frontenac. In 1975, it was placed on the National Register of Historic Places, and is still one of the most important examples of cottage-era architecture in Maine. The Turrets currently houses classrooms and administrative and faculty offi ces.

coa.edu/support61
Take-A-Break
Beginning Fund Balance $86,133 Net Return on Investments (14,093) Contributions 0 Less Allocations/Withdrawals (3,000) Ending Fund Balance $69,040
Beginning Fund Balance $607,293 Net Return on Investments (98,940) Contributions 0 Less Allocations/Withdrawals (24,000) Ending Fund Balance $484,353
Beginning Fund Balance $407,463 Net Return on Investments (66,403) Contributions (16,000) Less Allocations/Withdrawals 0 Ending Fund Balance $325,060

FY22 SUPPORTERS

PRESIDENT’S CIRCLE

$25,000+

Anonymous (2)

Anne T. & Robert M. Bass

Antoinette & Benjamin Brewster

Kate & Andrew Davis

Gale & Shelby Davis

Estate of Larry Duffy

Heather Richards Evans

Beth & Will Gardiner

Anne & Jim Green

Meredith & Dane Jensen

Arlene & Bob Kogod

Scott MacKenzie & Jerry Cruz

Jacomien Mars

Rebecca & Steve Milliken

Abby Moffat

Craig Neff

Louisa & Bill Newlin

Linda & Eliot Paine

Daniel Pierce, Jr. Family

Emily & Mitch Rales

Lalage & Steve Rales

Robin & David Reis

Walter M. Robinson III

Abby Rowe & Emma Brodeur

Valerie & John Rowe

Martie & Ed Samek

Lucy Bell Sellers

Peggy & Henry* Sharpe, Jr.

Diana Davis Spencer

Clare Stone

Greg Stone ’82

Allison & Steve Sullens

Genie & Will Thorndike, Jr.

Claudia & Carey Turnbull

*Deceased

Carol & Ken Weg

Kim & Finn Wentworth, Jr.

FOUNDER

$10,000-24,999

Anonymous (2)

Nancy & Edgar Aronson

Mary Dohna ’80 & Wells Bacon ’80

Becky Bartovics

Mia & Timothy Bass

Joanie & Jamie Blaine

Sarah Currie-Halpern & Jon Halpern

Mary K. Eliot

Wendy & Bill Foulke, Jr.

Amy & Phil Geier

Sam Hamill, Jr.

Sonja Johanson ’95 & Richard Gordet

Gardiner & Nicholas Lapham

Casey Mallinckrodt

Anna Maynard

Jay McNally ’84

Toby Ritterhoff & David Oldach

Susie & Bob Peck

Marguerite Pitts

Catherine Baker-Pitts & Will Pitts III

Frances Pollitt ’77 & Frank E. Briber III

Kathy & George Putnam III

Bambi Putnam

Roxana & Tony Robinson, Jr.

Barbara & Steven Rockefeller

Cynthia E. Livingston & Hank L.P. Schmelzer

Jamie S. Somes

Nonie & John Sullivan, Jr.

Christopher Toomey

YEAR AFTER YEAR

35+ YEARS

Bar Harbor Bank & Trust

Barbara B. & Charles P. Burton II

Helen Caivano ’80

First National Bank

Nina ’78 & Jonathan ’78 Gormley

Julie MacLeod Hayes ’78

Cathy Johnson ’74

Margaret & Philip B. Kunhardt III ’77

Phoebe Milliken*

Meta & Benjie Neilson

Louisa & Bill Newlin

Linda & Eliot Paine

Cathy L. Ramsdell ’78

Gail* & John Reeves

Lucy Bell Sellers

Alice N. Wellman

30–34 YEARS Anonymous (2)

Anne T. & Robert M. Bass

PATHFINDER

$5,000-9,999

Anonymous (1)

Cynthia Baker & Jonathan Zeitler

Sandi Read & Ron Beard

Jeannie & Henry Becton, Jr.

Allison & Avery Bourke III

Elizabeth Hodder Corbus & Clay Corbus

Sydney Davis

Chandler & Oliver Evans

Rena Zurn & Spencer Fulweiler, Jr.

Wendy C. Gamble

Georgia Hadler

Charlotte Hanson

Lynn & Jeff Horowitz

Ali & Steve Kassels

Sally Anne Kellogg

Serena & Paul Kusserow

Sydie Lansing

Pamy Manice

Linda & Clem McGillicuddy

Betsy & Nelson Mead, Jr.

Nancy Milliken

Irene Driscoll & Lincoln Millstein

Heather & George Mitchell

Elisabeth Higgins Null*

Cathy Orme

Barbara Robinson

Susan & David Rockefeller, Jr.

Amy Falls & Hartley Rogers

Ellen Seh (’75)

Jeri Presser & Charlie Seitz III

Margie & John Grace Shethar

Joss Tennille

Christiaan van Heerden ’09 & Family

John Wilmerding

Alice Blum Yoakum

DISCOVERER

$2,500-4,999

Anonymous (2)

Deirdre Swords & Michael Boland ’94

Jean & Ordway Burden

Judith Burger-Gossart

Linda K. Carman

Sheila Cusack & Gerard Caron

Mary Ann & Harry Charlston

Ruth M. Colket

Susan Ferrante-Collier & John Collier

Karen & Darron Collins ’92

Sally Crock

Verena & Rod Cushman

Adam Dau ’01

Beth Rendeiro & Steven DePaul

Ellen & Bill Dohmen

Peggy Dulany

Cindy & Phil Eichenholz

Laura Ellis

Deb Evans ’82 & Ron Schaaf

Neva Goodwin

Carolyn & Chris Groobey

Eileen & Paul Growald

Louise Hartwell

Cookie & Bill Horner

Peter Hunt & Family

Yardly & Scott Jenkins

Leslie Jones ’91

Susan Lerner & Steven Katona

Arthur Keller & Mark Gauthier

Denise Garone & Stuart Kogod

Linda & Philip Lader

Joan MacCracken & Robert Holmberg

Deb & Bob Milotte, Jr.

Phyllis Anina Moriarty

Meta & Benjie Neilson

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

John Biderman ’77

Sarah Corson & Dick Atlee

Sally Crock

Verena & Rod Cushman

Lisa Damtoft ’79

Norah Davis

Cynthia Fischer ’80

Barbara & Dick Fox

Jackson Gillman ’78

Neva Goodwin

Katherine Hazard ’76

Kate Russell Henry & Eric Henry (’74)

Kass Hogan ’81

Betsey Holtzmann & Abe Noyes

Laura & Michael Kaiser ’85

Susan Lerner & Steven Katona

Sally Anne Kellogg

Betsy & John Kelly

Arlene & Bob Kogod

S. Lee Kohrman

Anne Kozak

Suzanne Durrell & Scott McIsaac (’78)

Jay McNally ’84

Phyllis Anina Moriarty

Sandra Nowicki

Elisabeth Higgins Null*

Bruce Phillips ’78

Susan & David Rockefeller, Jr.

Hilda K. Roderick

Ellen Seh (’75)

Peggy & Henry* Sharpe, Jr.

62coa.edu/support
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Dorie Stolley ’88 Elena Tuhy-Walters ’90 & Carl Walters II John Viele (’81) Ben Walters ’81 John Wilmerding Jane Winchell ’82 Sue Woehrlin ’80 Alice Blum Yoakum 25–29 YEARS Anonymous (4) Murray Abramsky Mary Dohna ’80 & Wells Bacon ’80 Bruce Bender ’76 Elizabeth & Edward Blair Sofi a & Peter* Blanchard Rebecca Buyers ’81 Donna Gold & Bill Carpenter Katherine Kaufer Christoffel Ruth M. Colket Marcia L. Dworak David Emerson ’81 Julie Erb ’83 Wendy & Bill Foulke, Jr. Susan Freed ’80 Eileen & Paul Growald Peggy & Mike Gumpert Diana & George Hambleton Sam Hamill, Jr. Loie Hayes ’79 Mary J. Heffernon Barbara Hilli Lisa ’80 & Bob ’79 Holley Sherry Huber* Lyn Hurwich ’80 Sue Inches ’79 Maggie & Jack Kelley III Craig Kesselheim ’76 Rosalind Rolland & Scott Kraus ’77 Jennifer Starr & Eugene Lesser ’78 Roberta & Ralph Longsworth Casey Mallinckrodt Sarah McDaniel ’93 Bill McDowell ’80 Linda & Clem McGillicuddy Clifton McPherson III ’84 Jane & Bob Meade Linzee Weld & Peter Milliken (’76) Karla Tegzes & Peter Moon ’90 Rick Moss ’79 Marie Nolf Jennifer Waldron & Benoni Outerbridge ’84 Susan & Robert Pennington Carol ’93 & Jacob ’93 Null Julia & Brooke Parish Judith S. Perkins Bruce Phillips ’78 Tina Rathborne Gail* & John Reeves Diana & Roland Reynolds Megan & Christopher Scott Carol Dean Silverman & Family Sandy Stone Joanie Thorndike Mary Kay Long & Dennis Unites Kathy Vignos Paddy Wade Lisa & Paul Welch J. Michael Williamson Sydney & Jonathan Winthrop EXPLORER $1,500-2,499 Anonymous (8) Christina Baker Kline & David Kline Dolores & Mark Bamford Barbara Tennent & Steven Barkan Emily Beck & Geof Young Ann & Fred Benson Sofia & Peter* Blanchard Lynn Boulger & Tim Garrity Sharon & Bruce Bradley Alan Brewer Brenda Brodie Bing & Nat Brown Amanda Bunker (née Walker) ’98 Jane & Charles Burger Charles Butt Rebecca Buyers ’81 coa.edu/support63

ALUMNX LEADERSHIP CIRCLE

Alumnx gifts are critical to College of the Atlantic. The Alumnx Leadership Circle honors the generosity and philanthropic leadership of alumnx who give $500 or more to COA.

Anonymous (5)

Heather Albert-Knopp ’99

Elizabeth Rousek Ayers ’95

Mary Dohna ’80 & Wells Bacon ’80

John Biderman ’77

Lisa Bjerke ’13 MPhil ’16

Deirdre Swords & Michael Boland ’94

Amanda Bunker (née Walker) ’98

Lisa Burton ’83 & Christopher Vincenty (’83)

Rebecca Buyers ’81

Helen Caivano ’80

Diana Cohn ’85 & Craig Merrilees

Pancho Cole ’81

Karen & Darron Collins ’92

Adam Dau ’01

David Emerson ’81

Richard Emmons ’92

Deb Evans ’82 & Ron Schaaf

Joanne Rodgers Foster ’85

Allison Fundis ’03 & Stein Servick ’05

June LaCombe (’75) & Bill Ginn ’74

Nina ’78 & Jonathan ’78 Gormley

Caitlyn Harvey ’02

Peter Heller ’85

Lisa ’80 & Bob ’79 Holley

Sue Inches ’79

Missy & Bill Janes (’71)

Sonja Johanson ’95 & Richard Gordet

Leslie Jones ’91

Brianne Jordan ’02

Jennifer Judd-McGee (’92)

Shawn ’00 & Sarah ’05 Keeley

Michael Keller ’09

Rosalind Rolland & Scott Kraus ’77

Margaret & Philip B. Kunhardt III ’77

Francesca Preston & Doug Lerch ’03

Jennifer Starr & Eugene Lesser ’78

Suzanne Durrell & Scott McIsaac (’78)

Jay McNally ’84

Clifton McPherson III ’84

Linzee Weld & Peter Milliken (’76)

Karla Tegzes & Peter Moon ’90

Sarah ’02 & Chase ’00 Morrill

Jacob ’93 & Carol ’93 Null / John W. and Clara C. Higgins Foundation

Carmelina Procaccini & Steven Oransky ’79

Bruce Phillips ’78

Frances Pollitt ’77 & Frank E. Briber III

Andrea Roberto ’92 & Michael Stevens ’94

Ryan Robison ’18

Taj Schottland ’10

Michael Stevens ’94

Pamela Stone ’87

Greg Stone ’82

Elena Tuhy-Walters ’90 & Carl Walters II

Christiaan van Heerden ’09 & Family

Rich Van Kampen (’13)

Luciana Pandolfi ’98 & Luke Wagner ’99

David Winship ’77

Erin ’04 & Mike ’01 Zwirko

Thomas D. Cahill III

Helen Caivano ’80

Gail & Ham Clark III

Joan Claybrook

Donna & Peter Cordova

Kerri & Rodger Dowdell III

Donna & Bill Eacho III

Richard Emmons ’92

Ben Emory

Peg Emple

Helen Dickey Fitz & David G. Fitz / Helen Dickey and David G. Fitz Charitable Fund

John Goodman

Susan Dowling & Andrew Griffiths

Nancy & Bill Grove

Diana & George Hambleton

Mimi & Neil Houghton

Sherry Huber*

Ayn & Steve Hunt

Maggie & Jack Kelley III

Betsy & John Kelly

Susan & John Klein

Susan & Keith Kroeger

Margaret & Philip B. Kunhardt III ’77

Rebecca & Michael Lambert

Burks B. Lapham

Courtney Lederer & Mark Thierfelder

Francesca Preston & Doug Lerch ’03

Roberta & Ralph Longsworth

Babette & Peter Loring

James Lowenstein

Carol & Rick Malone

Suzanne & Grant McCullagh

Judy McGeorge

Jane & Bob Meade

Charles H. Merriman III

Meredith & Phil Moriarty

Kathryn & Tom Nelson

Carmelina Procaccini & Steven Oransky ’79

Kristin & Jeremy Osborn

Carey Pickard III & Christopher Howard

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

Judith S. Perkins

Daniel Pierce, Jr. Family

Frances Pollitt ’77 & Frank E. Briber III

Patricia & Ronnie Rogers

Barbara Sassaman ’78

Meg Scheid ’85

Jane & Dennis Shubert

Lynne & Mike Staggs ’96

Clare Stone

Joanie Thorndike

Jo Todrank ’76 & Giora Heth

Paddy Wade

Loretta & Tom Witt

20–24 YEARS

Anonymous (3)

Acadia Corporation

Irene S. Alie

Bernie Alie ’84

Judy Allen

Elizabeth Rousek Ayers ’95

Jeffrey Baker ’77

Barbara Tennent &

Steven Barkan

Jill Barlow-Kelley & Bob Kelley

Sandi Read & Ron Beard

Paul Boothby ’88

Teisha A.W. Broetzman ’88

Jen Hughes & Ken Cline

John Dandy (’84)

Kelly, MPhil ’97 & George Dickson

Estate of Larry Duffy

Donna & Bill Eacho III

Carol Emmons

Ben Emory

Joan Feely ’79

Thomas A. Fisher ’77

Galyn’s Galley

Garden Club of Mount Desert

Katie & Steve George

Matt Gerald ’83

June LaCombe (’75) & Bill Ginn ’74

Megan Godfrey ’77

Jill & Sheldon Goldthwait, Jr.

Abigail Goodyear ’81 & John Allgood

Marie & John Gower

Bo Greene

Linda Gregory ’89

Mary (Nelson) Griffin ’97

Margaret Hoffman ’97

Cookie & Bill Horner

Peter Hunt & Family

Anna Hurwitz ’84

Missy & Bill Janes (’71)

64coa.edu/support

Barbara & Charles Pierce, Jr.

Lisa & Jay Pierrepont

Kitty* & Dick Pierson

Sheila Sonne Pulling

Celian Putnam

Sandy Wilcox & Jack Russell

Deborah & John Schafer

Frances & Tim Sellers

Jane & Dennis Shubert

Laura McGiffert Slover & Bill Slover

Laura & Rob Stone

Caren Sturges

Patricia Sullivan

Lucy Hodder & Robert Thomson

Laura Stanton & Kim Tomlinson

Daphne & Andrew Trotter

Luciana Pandolfi ’98 & Luke Wagner ’99

Helen & Paul Weaver

Margaret Woolley & Gerard Vasisko

Carol Woolman & Richard Bullock*

$100-1,499

Anonymous (42)

Jane & Abass Alavi

Sharon Knopp & Enoch Albert

Eben Albert ’03

Heather Albert-Knopp ’99

Jane Alexander

Bernie Alie ’84

Judy Allen

Samuel Allen ’16

Diane & Alan Amendt

Heather & Richard Ames

Elly & Sandy Andrews III

Andrea Angera

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Traci & Lance Astbury

Shlomit Auciello ’17

Elizabeth Rousek Ayers ’95

Patty Bacon

Emily & Peter Baillos

Jeffrey Baker ’77

Nicki & Christopher Ball

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Natalie Barnett ’11

Sarah Barrett ’08

Julie Barth ’92

Terrie Cunliffe Beamer & Wesley Beamer

Felicia Bellows

Robin ’80 & Paul ’79 Beltramini

Evan Bender ’04

Bruce Bender ’76

Ann Berenfield

Glen Berkowitz ’82

Marie & Gerald Berlin

Robert Hunt Berry

Geena Berry ’10

Sara Faull ’98 & Eugenio Bertin ’97

Deodonne ’06 & Ranjan ’04 Bhattarai

Anne Oldach & William Bickley

John Biderman ’77

Hunter Bischoff ’21

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Joanna Bombadil

Paul Boothby ’88

Patricia Honea-Fleming & Richard Borden

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Mount Dessert Bakery

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Alan Cohen

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Abigail Conrad

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Norah Davis

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Heather Dawson

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Leslie Jones ’91

Steve King ’80

Aleda Koehn

Joan & Ted Koffman

Burks B. Lapham

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Maine Coast Sea Vegetables

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Millard Dority

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YEAR AFTER YEAR

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Anonymous (8)

Heather Albert-Knopp ’99

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Applegate ’76

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Glen Berkowitz ’82

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Charles Butt

coa.edu/support65

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Bo Greene

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••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Barbara Carter Melinda ’00 & Ellen Casey-Magleby Erin Chalmers ’00 Taj Chibnik ’95 Cynthia Chisholm ’86 Katherine Clark ’91 Dianne Clendaniel & Steve Redgate Janis Coates Pamela Cobb Heuberger ’83 Diana Cohn ’85 & Craig Merrilees Pancho Cole ’81 Karen & Darron Collins ’92 Jennifer ’93 & Kevin ’93 Crandall Lucinda & Fred (’75) Davis Gale & Shelby Davis Nicole d’Avis ’02 Rose (’88) & Steve ’80 Demers Robert DeSimone Holly Devaul ’84 Catherine Devlin ’93 Ellen & Bill Dohmen Millard Dority Marilyn Downs ’77 Diane Dworkin ’89 Mary K. Eliot Catherine Elk ’82 Deb Evans ’82 & Ron Schaaf Bernard Fuller Furbush-Roberts Printing Co, Inc Carla Ganiel Beth & Will Gardiner Amy & Phil Geier Nadine Gerdts (’76) & Steve Lacker Tree Goulet ’78 Susan Dowling & Andrew Griffiths Atsuko Watabe ’93 & Bruce Hazam ’92 Peter Heller ’85 Gail Henderson-King ’82 Ingrid & Ken Hill Jane Hultberg Margaret & Peter Jeffery ’84 Sonja Johanson ’95 & Richard Gordet Nancy & Bucky Kales Michael Kattner ’95 Sarah ’05 & Shawn ’00 Keeley Arthur Keller & Mark Gauthier Barbara & Steven Kiel Joanne & Richard Fuerst Bernard Fuller Linda Fuller & Jeffrey Seeley Jill Gardner Helen Geils Katie & Steve George Gigi Georges Matt Gerald ’83 Nadine Gerdts (’76) & Steve Lacker Janine Gillott June LaCombe (’75) & Bill Ginn ’74 Annika Maia Ginsberg ’99
66coa.edu/support
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BLACK FLY SOCIETY

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Anonymous (7)

Shirley Ailes

Eben Albert ’03

Heather AlbertKnopp ’99

Samuel Allen ’16

Emily Argo ’10

Jessica Arseneau ’18 & Roman Bina ’16

D. Gay Atkinson II

Shlomit Auciello ’17

John Avila (’92)

Cathy Bacon

Natalie Barnett ’11

Sandi Read & Ron Beard

Jaime (Duval) Beranek ’00

Deodonne ’06 & Ranjan ’04 Bhattarai

Lisa Bjerke ’13 MPhil ’16

Ellen Brandt

Lydia ’05 & Foy Brown

Deborah Bruns-Thomas

Melinda ’00 & Ellen

Casey-Magleby

Erin Chalmers ’00

Taj Chibnik ’95

Cynthia Chisholm ’86

Jen Hughes & Ken Cline

Pancho Cole ’81

Sarah Colletti ’10 & Kyle McMillan

Heidi Conner

Matthew Corum ’03

Jill ’83 & Ben ’84

Cowie-Haskell

Marily CrewsNelson

Gideon Bezalel Culman ’02

Kara ’96 & Matt ’98 Daul, and Family

Jessie Davis ’00 & Dan Bookham

Cerissa Desrosiers ’00

Holly Devaul ’84

Marilyn Downs ’77

Jennifer Dussault ’02

Samuel Edmonds ’05

Nathan Emley

Adrian Fernandez ’15

Robert Finn ’92

Susan Freed ’80

Rena Zurn & Spencer Fulweiler, Jr.

Carla Ganiel

Helen Geils

June LaCombe (’75) & Bill Ginn ’74

Annika Maia Ginsberg ’99

Marie Malin ’01 & Wing Goodale MPhil ’01

Nina ’78 & Jonathan ’78 Gormley

Carla Seddio & Michael Hamilton

Kelly Harris ’12

Nicholas Harris ’12

Ed Haynsworth III ’98

Rayanna Higley

Juliet Hodge ’95

Noah Hodgetts ’10

Margaret Hoffman ’97

Russ Holway

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Lyn Hurwich ’80

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Sarah ’05 & Shawn ’00

Keeley

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Kiernan

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Jessie Greenbaum ’89 & Phil Lichtenstein ’92

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John Twiss

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Shamsher Virk ’07

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Shiva Polefka ’01

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Nishi Rajakaruna ’94

Cathy L. Ramsdell ’78

Robin & David Ray (’81)

Lisa & Keith Reed

Graham Reeder ’13

Elisabeth Reynolds & Max Senter

Jason Rich ’96

Joanne & Wayne Rickert

Louise Riemer & William Locke

Sandy & Jim Righter

Andrea Roberto ’92 & Michael Stevens ’94

Jared I. Roberts

Ryan Robison ’18

Liane Dorsey & Gregory Robison

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David Winship ’77

Judy & Lou Zawislak

10–14 YEARS

Anonymous (10)

Barbara Dole Acosta (’77)

Adirondack Foundation -

Evergreen Fund

Robin Glaser & Howard Altmann

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Bar Harbor Whale Watch Co.

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Janet Biondi ’81

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Charles B. Sweatt Foundation

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Catherine Clinger

Laura Cohn ’88

Dru Colbert & Nancy Andrews

Sarah Colletti ’10 & Kyle McMillan

Jill ’83 & Ben ’84 Cowie-Haskell

Tom Crikelair

Adam Dau ’01

68coa.edu/support

Wendy & Laurance Rockefeller, Jr.

Susie Rodriguez & Charles Lowrey

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Derren Rosbach ’95

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Lisa Kay Rosenthal ’09

Stephen Roth

Gordon Rowe

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Deanna Russell

Marcie Ryan ’01

Theresa McNamara & Don Saccente

CedarBough T. Saeji ’93

DeWitt Sage, Jr. Carol & Bill Sanford

Sardo Sardinsky ’84

Jodi Sargent MPhil ’06 & Family

Philip Sasse

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Elizabeth Scanlan

Ruth Calvin Scharf

Anais Tomezsko ’04 & Noah Scher ’04

Taj Schottland ’10

Janet Schuman

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Allison Fundis ’03 & Stein Servick ’05

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Kate Sheely ’07

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Stephen* & Roberta Smith

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Carolyn Snell ’06

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Laura Starr ’84

Henry Steinberg ’06

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Dorie Stolley ’88

Pamela Stone ’87

Silvija Strikis

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Meg Trau-Serrano ’12

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Jane Winchell ’82

David Winship ’77

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Anna Wlodarczyk ’04

Sue Woehrlin ’80

Lynne Wolitzer

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Jane Wright

Cathleen Wyman

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Sara Yasner ’95 & John Mahoney

Michael Youdelman ’95

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David Young

Susan Young

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Jessie Davis ’00 & Dan Bookham

Davis Conservation Foundation

Davis Educational Foundation

Davis Projects for Peace

Davis United World College

Scholars Program

John Deans ’07

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Beth Rendeiro & Steven DePaul

Cerissa Desrosiers ’00

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Samuel Edmonds ’05

Peter W. Emmet ’92

Casey Jones & Bill Faller

Sugar & Nat Fenton

Marie & John Fitzgerald

Joanne Rodgers Foster ’85

Annie Guppy & David Zachow

Judy & Lou Zawislak

Libby & Aaron Zweig

Erin ’04 & Mike ’01 Zwirko

Amanda Zych ’06

GIFTS IN KIND

Ashley Bryan Center

Mary Reath & John Gummere

Maude & John March, Jr. ’76

Anny Seavey

Barbara Stolley

Jan & Barbara Swartwout

ORGANIZATIONS AND FOUNDATIONS

Anonymous (1)

Acadia Corporation

Acadia Yacht Management

Adirondack FoundationEvergreen Fund

AmazonSmile

American Endowment Foundation

Amy Falls and Hartley Rogers Foundation

Artemis Gallery

Ayco Charitable Foundation

Bains Family Foundation

Bar Harbor Bank & Trust

Bar Harbor Whale Watch Co.

The Timothy R. Bass Family Foundation

Paul Bechtner Foundation

Becton Family Foundation

Bell & Anderson, LLC

BNY Mellon Charitable Gift Fund

Boston Family Office

The Florence V. Burden Foundation at the recommendation of Foundation

Directors Ordway and Jean Burden

Captain Planet Foundation

The Casco Foundation at Spinnaker Trust

Charles B. Sweatt Foundation

YEAR AFTER YEAR

Bruce Friedman ’82

Joanne & Richard Fuerst

Marina Garland ’12

Annika Maia Ginsberg ’99

Ben Goldberg ’90

Gerda Paumgarten & Lawrence Goldfarb

Nina Goldman & Douglas Legg

Jaki Erdoes ’80 & Terry Good ’80

Marie Malin ’01 & Wing Goodale MPhil ’01

Diane Gordon

Emma Rearick ’08 & Jay Guarneri ’06

Louise Hartwell

Ed Haynsworth III ’98

Juliet Hodge ’95

Noah Hodgetts ’10

Russ Holway

Lynn & Jeff Horowitz

Kathryn Hunninen ’03 & Jose Luis Sagastegui

James Deering Danielson Foundation

Cheryl A. Johnson (’80)

Brianne Jordan ’02

Jennifer Judd-McGee (’92)

Ali & Steve Kassels

Michael

Greg Koehlert
Kozak
Keith
Keller ’09
’96 Paul
’86 Susan &
Kroeger
coa.edu/support69

Colket Family Foundation

Community Foundation of Jackson Hole

Community Foundation of South GA., Inc.

Cromwell Harbor Supporting Foundation, Inc.

Dabones Studios Limited

Dandy Solar Electric

James Deering Danielson Foundation

The Shelby and Gale Davis Charitable Fund

Shelby Cullom Davis Charitable Fund Inc.

Davis Conservation Foundation

Davis Educational Foundation

Davis Projects for Peace

Davis United World College Scholars Program

The Dayton Foundation

The Eacho Family Foundation

The Susan and Roberth Nathane, Jr Charitable Fund at East Bay Community Foundation

The Elm Grove Foundation

The Endeavor Foundation

The Chandler B. and Oliver A. Evans Foundation

Everance Foundation

Exelon Foundation

Fidelity Foundation

First National Bank

The FJC Fdn of Philanthropic Funds

Fore River Foundation

The Fourth Corner Foundation

Furbush-Roberts Printing Co, Inc

Galyn’s Galley

Garden Club of Mount Desert

Google LLC

Growald Climate Fund

John W. and Clara C. Higgins Foundation

Institute of Museum and Library Services

J.P. Morgan Charitable Giving Fund

Jewish Communal Fund

Jewish Community Foundation

The Howard Johnson Foundation

The Janet Stone Jones Foundation

JPMorgan Chase Foundation

K Street Coaching

James and Sally Anne Kellogg Fund at The Chicago Community Foundation

Robert and Arlene Kogod Family Foundation

Machias Savings Bank

Maine Beer Co LLC

Maine Coast Sea Vegetables

Maine Community Foundation

Maine Outdoor Heritage Fund

The Nelson Mead Fund

The Gerrish H. Milliken Foundation

National Center for Research Resources, NIH

National Christian Foundation

National Philanthropic Trust (NPT-UK)

Nautilus Foundation Incorporated

Newtmont Foundation

Northern Trust

Onion Foundation

Pole-to-Pole Conservation (PTPC)

Prairie-Music

Renaissance Charitable Foundation, Inc.

Rockefeller Philanthropy Advisors

Cornelia Cogswell Rossi Foundation

Rowe Family Foundation

Sanofi

Sidney Stern Memorial Trust

The Sims/Maes Foundation, Inc

The Diana Davis Spencer Foundation

The Seth Sprague Educational and Charitable Foundation

Marion Boulton “Kippy” Stroud Foundation

Charles B. Sweatt Foundation

The Synergy Foundation

TG Dunn Plumbing

YEAR AFTER YEAR

Robin Kuehn ’10

Philip Bradish Kunhardt IV ’11

Heather Lakey ’00, MPhil ’05

Virginie Lavallee-Picard ’07 & Alexander Fletcher ’07

Lizzie Leone ’93

Daniel Lindner, Jr. ’11

Neith Little ’09

Laura Casey ’01 & Benjamin Lord ’99

Wendell* & Reba Luke

Blaise Maccarrone ’01

Caroline Pryor & David MacDonald

Kate & Ben Macko ’01

David Mahoney ’86

Maine Beer Co LLC

Carol & Rick Malone

Chloe Marr-Fuller ’00

Lauren McKean ’83

Megan McOsker ’90

Deb & Bob Milotte, Jr.

Heather & George Mitchell

Truist (SunTrust)

Turnbull Family Foundation Inc.

Uplands Family Foundation

Valley Charitable Trust

WaterStone

Rosalie J. Coe Weir Foundation

The WELWE Foundation

The Widgeon Point Charitable Foundation

Witham Family Charitable Fund

Yaverland Foundation

GIFTS OF TIME AND TALENT

Luis Aguierre-Torres

Abdullahi Ahmed

Rebecca Aubrey ’96

Jen Baroletti

Lynn Bean-Ingram

Rachel Beckwith

John Bielenberg

Johannah Blackman

Cindy Brotzman

Richard Burbank

Ben Chesler

Evan Coleman

Melissa Conte

Rich Csenge

Kristy Cunnane

Meggie Curtis ’19

Jane Disney

Pam Dunphy

Amanda Dyer

Tim Erickson

Martín Espada

Mary Fallon

Mark Fincher

Rhonda Fortin

Billie Jean Guerrero

Anna Goldman ’07

Liz Graves

Jenny Gumm

Chloe Hankin ’20

Lynn Hanna

Adrienne Hanson

Kayla Hartwell ’07

Steve Haynes

Stephanie Hendrix

Brian Henkel

Grace Hilmer

Charlie Johnson

Surya Karki ’16

Julie Keblinsky

Nanne Kennedy

Craig Kesselheim ’76

Dave Korn

Etta Kralovec

Dayana Krawchuk

Clark Lawrence ’92

Cora Lewicki ’10

Tim Lock

Neak Loucks

Hannah Lust

Martin Mackey

Alan Mainwaring

Margaret Maiorana ’15

Heather Manchester

Brooks McCutchen ’84

Emma McDowell

Julie Meltzer

Khristián Mendéz Aguirre ’15

Michelle Merica

Kate Meyer

Hannah Mondrach

Jordan Motzkin ’11

Laura Muller

JC Mutchler

Susan Newborn ’90

Eli Nixon ’99

Jim Nizamoff

Aoife O’Brien ’05

Matthew O’Malia

Leah Olson

Heidi Omlor

Steve Parmenter

Jan Paul

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

Chandreyee Mitra ’01 & Eric Shuman

Phyllis & Larry Mobraaten

Kevin Monahan

Suzanne Morse & Noreen Hogan ’91

Diane Blum & Bud Motzkin

Bethany Murray ’03

Sarah Neilson ’09

Carmelina Procaccini & Steven Oransky ’79

Ned Ormsby ’91

Melissa ’91 & Peter Ossanna

Andrea & Jon Pactor

Susan B. Parker

Anne Patterson ’80

Susie & Bob Peck

Barbara & Charles Pierce, Jr.

Lisa & Jay Pierrepont

Drake ’03 & Finn ’02 Pillsbury

Jane & Keith ’80 Prairie

Kenneth Punnett ’84

Robin & David Ray (’81)

Graham Reeder ’13

Jason Rich ’96

Andrea Roberto ’92 & Michael Stevens ’94

Amy Falls & Hartley Rogers

Elizabeth-Anne Ronk ’11

Eric Roos ’87

Mary Ropp ’09

Lisa Kay Rosenthal ’09

Abby Rowe & Emma Brodeur

Estate of Robert H. Rubin

70coa.edu/support

NORTHERN LIGHTS SOCIETY

The Northern Lights Society is an association for individuals who have made planned gifts to benefit COA. These gifts include bequests, charitable gift annuities, and gifts of life insurance, to name a few.

If you have

included COA in your estate plans but do not see your name listed, please contact the

Anonymous (2) Sandi Read & Ron Beard Emily Beck & Geof Young Ann & Fred Benson Lynn Boulger & Tim Garrity Ker Cleary ’84 Norah Davis Fran Day Mary K. Eliot Donna & Gordon Erikson, Jr. Judith & David Hackett Fischer Wendy & Bill Foulke, Jr. Barbara McLeod & David Hales Diana & George Hambleton Sam Hamill, Jr. Jan & George E. Hartman Tomoko & Masanobu Ikemiya Sue Inches ’79 Betsy & John Kelly Margaret & Philip B. Kunhardt III ’77 Jeanene & Duncan MacKinnon Kristie & John MacKinnon Marcy MacKinnon Sarah McDaniel ’93 Meredith & Phil Moriarty Rick Moss ’79 Susan Tieger & Ralph Nurnberger Linda & Eliot Paine Helen Porter Roxana & Tony Robinson, Jr. Steve Ross Cynthia E. Livingston & Hank L.P. Schmelzer Stu Summer ’82 Ingrid Sunzenauer
Advancement Office
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Jessica Glynn ’06 & Santiago Salinas ’05 Martie & Ed Samek Pat & Roger Samuel Jodi Sargent MPhil ’06 & Family Taj Schottland ’10 Kirsten Schwarz ’00 Amy & Ryder Scott ’97 Frances & Tim Sellers Kate Sheely ’07 Helena Shilomboleni ’09 Carolyn Snell ’06 Nancy ’81 & Peter ’81 Stevick Greg Stone ’82 Cathy Straka ’82 Nonie & John Sullivan, Jr. Timothea Sutton-Antonucci ’94 & Neal Antonucci ’95 Anne Swann ’86 Douglas Sward ’96 Jasmine Tanguay ’98 Julia Walker Thomas ’08 Krista Thorsell ’10 Laura Stanton & Kim Tomlinson Meg Trau-Serrano ’12 Caitlin Unites ’03 Kathy Vignos Shamsher Virk ’07 Luciana Pandolfi ’98 & Luke Wagner ’99 Gail Wartell Carol & Ken Weg Pamela Wellner ’84 & Eugene Dickey (’86) Amy Wesolowski ’10 Peter Williams ’93 Carol Woolman & Richard Bullock* Erin ’04 & Mike ’01 Zwirko Valerie Peacock (’98) Ruth Poland Destiny Powell ’20 Liz Rabasca Angie Reed Juana Rodriguez Nadia Rosenthal Julia Ambagis Rowe MPhil ’02 Nick Runco Michael Schwemm Isabel Shaida ’19 Donna Short Jasmine Smith ’09 Korah Soll Jenny Staroska Janis Steele ’86 Dan Stillman Kevin Sutherland Rhonda Tate Alan Titus Jason Todd Joseph Tracy Gemma Venuti ’18 Peter Wayne ’83 Zoe Weil Alex Wild Kevin Wilson Rebecca Woods Beth Woolfolk Janice Wright Ania Wright ’20 Ron Wrobel Lawson Wulsin Ashley Yang-Thompson Justin Zdunczyk coa.edu/support71
already
to inform us of your gift intentions.

The Champlain Society, College of the Atlantic’s premier giving society, was created in 1988 to give appropriate recognition to those special friends who contribute at the highest levels to the Annual Fund.

The importance of annual giving is critical to the stability and ongoing operations of the college.

Such support advances the college’s mission, ensures academic excellence, provides financial aid where needed, and enhances the maintenance and stewardship of the campus.

For more information on becoming a member of the Champlain Society, please contact Shawn Keeley at 207-801-5620, or visit coa.edu/tcs

72coa.edu/support

COLLEGE OF THE ATLANTIC VISION

The faculty, students, trustees, staff, and alumnx of College of the Atlantic envision a world where people value creativity, intellectual achievement, and the diversity of nature and human cultures. With respect and compassion, individuals will construct meaningful lives for themselves, gain appreciation for the relationships among all forms of life, and safeguard the heritage of future generations.

COLLEGE OF THE ATLANTIC MISSION

College of the Atlantic enriches the liberal arts tradition through a distinctive educational philosophy—human ecology. A human ecological perspective integrates knowledge from all academic disciplines and from personal experience to investigate—and ultimately improve—the relationships between human beings and our social and natural communities. The human ecological perspective guides all aspects of education, research, activism, and interactions among the college’s students, faculty, staff, and trustees. The College of the Atlantic community encourages, prepares, and expects students to gain expertise, breadth, values, and practical experience necessary to achieve individual fulfillment and to help solve problems that challenge communities everywhere.

COA ADVANCEMENT COMMITTEE

Cynthia Baker, chair

Michael Boland ’94

Beth Gardiner

Amy Geier

George Hambleton

Lissa Hodder

Cookie Horner

Casey Mallinckrodt

Tony Mazlish

Jay McNally ’84

Martie Samek

Laura Stone

Shawn Keeley ’00, dean of institutional advancement (staff)

COA INVESTMENT COMMITTEE

Steve Sullens, chair

Clay Corbus

Jay McNally ’84

Hank Schmelzer

Gifford Combs (advisory member)

Brooke Parish (advisory member)

Bear Paul, administrative dean and CFO (staff)

Missy Cook, controller (staff)

COA ADVANCEMENT OFFICE

If this book has inspired you to learn more about possible investment opportunities, please let us know. Contact College of the Atlantic’s Advancement Office at 207.801.5620. You can also learn more about College of the Atlantic’s endowment needs and make a gift online.

coa.edu/giving

105 Eden Street Bar Harbor, ME 04609
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