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Class Notes Class Notes

Class of 1955

Henry Hopkins and wife Nancy enjoy spending the cold months on Jupiter Island in Florida. Nothing better for old bones than warm weather. He shares, “Hard to believe it will be 68 years since our class graduated. Since last year, I have been in contact with the following classmates and am pleased to report that all are well and enjoying life: Taylor Brown, Mike Furlong, Jim Garrett, Bill Hardy, Molly Mundy Hathaway, Corbin Marr, Rick Ober, Ned Sullivan, “T” Tall, Butch West, Michael Yaggy, and Barbara Yeager. Enjoying my service on the Calvert Board. I can say without any doubt that the School is as strong as it has ever been. It was when we were there, and it is today, an exceedingly well run School that delivers an exceptional education to its young students.”

Mac Passano writes, “The Fall of 2022 introduced four personal milestones for me! Sixty-seven years from our Calvert School graduation! The beginning of my eighth decade! My oldest granddaughter, Emma McDonnell, is a freshman at Connecticut College! My youngest granddaughter, Callie Meech, is beginning kindergarten! What lies ahead? A whole new world of achievement and opportunity together!!”

Rick Ober and Ned Sullivan went skiing at Snowmass, Aspen, Colorado on February 3, 2023. Rick was out there on a Trenton, NJ, Ski Club trip as part of the Eastern Pennsylvania Ski Council Winter Carnival.

Ned Sullivan has lived in Aspen, CO, for many years and continues to ski, mountain bike, SCUBA dive, etc. Here is his photo taken during the recent X Games. He is claiming to have won the (spurious) title of world champion all-around senior skier at this year's X Games. Ned is traveling to Maui in summer 2023 with his nephew, Benjamin Robinson ’89, his great nephews, and sister Nancy Sullivan ’65.

Class of 1956

Lee Walker still lives in Oxford and reports having the best weather, except for summer when she goes north to Maine and Vermont to avoid humidity and see friends. Lee drives to California and stays a few months for reunions from when she lived in San Francisco, Marin and Sonoma from 1991 to 2016. She volunteers at a feed store with her dog in Kenwood and mostly helps out with customers and plants. She reports that her return home this trip will be in July. Lee’s eldest son turned 50 and invited her to join his family on a cruise on the MSC Divina. She hopes to be around for a reunion, and says, “Hello out there!”

Class of 1958

Michael Ewing reports, “No mountain climbing, but maybe a camel in Morocco this October. No marathons, but I did shoot my age last week playing golf. Care to hear more? No published books, but tried my best reading one of Bert Keidel’s books on the Chinese economy. All my children and grandchildren left Baltimore for Colorado and New York, so Bambi and I moved to Florida, but we keep a house in Baltimore so we can go to Orioles games and Faidley’s.”

Neal Harris recently retired to New London, New Hampshire, after teaching Economics at Babson College in Wellesley, Massachusetts, for 40 years. He and Ann (Carroll) have two sons who live nearby, and four grandchildren who are thankfully not yet teenagers. They spend winters in Sanibel and enjoy bee-keeping, traveling, skiing, hiking and biking. They’ve enjoyed getting together with Tee and Carol Winstead and Steve Mason and Rikki in Naples on their trips south. “We are both healthy and productive in our later 70s and send our best wishes to all!”

Class of 1957

Kitty Santos Harrison continues to teach clinical medicine to interns and residents at Johns Hopkins. She is not seeing patients due to COVID. Kitty has two grandchildren, ages 16 and 15, so she is teaching a lot of driving!

Lisa Purnell Raffetto writes, “The Raffettos are well at ages 80 and 78. Children [are well] too at ages 40 and 45.” Lisa is still working with the help of two assistants. They rescued an 8-year-old Vizsla who was raised in a barn and used for breeding, so they are teaching him about house and table manners and he is listening and happy to please, and so appreciative of his new environment.

Bert Keidel writes, “I have had a life full of many blessings, most importantly the communities that have enfolded me in their lives: Extended family, churches, neighbors, colleagues and professional circles. A special blessing as I age is my daughter, now a sophomore in college, who both encourages me and straightens me out when I need it – frequently. I currently enjoy semi-retirement, teaching about China’s economy at George Washington University and engaging in the policy debates and processes now so intense and fraught here in D.C. I am active in my local United Methodist church, part of its racial justice cohort study group, and in training for something called St. Stephen’s Ministry, a supplementary outreach program to extend what our pastors have time for assisting members of the congregation experiencing life crises. For the past five years I have enjoyed hosting a twice-monthly book group reading off-center theology books. Many such interrelated strands of thought interest me. For most of my life I have been behind the eight ball, getting to various milestones but getting there very late. I didn’t get my doctorate until ten years out of college (taught languages in Taiwan and math in East Baltimore, plus seven years getting my dissertation done, after one-and-a-half years of field work in Korea). Even then, I didn’t get my first real job at a university for two more years due to a postdoc in Japan. After that it has been a slew of jack-ofall-trade jobs in universities, think tanks, international agencies and the US Treasury Department – all working on China’s economy. I married late, age 47, and saw the birth of my only child ten years later, at 57. I finally saw publication last year after a 12-year writing project, of China’s Economic Challenge, but my Singapore publisher priced it out of anybody’s reasonable reach, so that is pretty much a failure, and of course a disappointment. I am also disappointed not to be able to attend our Calvert reunion. I am taking my daughter, Savi, to Korea and Japan in the only niche available between her last exam and the start of her summer job. I’m giving a talk on China at the think tank where I did my field work and introducing Savi to the wonderful extended Korean family I lived with for a year and a half. While on that side of the world I also want to briefly show her Japan. I’ll be sorry to miss seeing so many of you. But living in D.C., a short ride from Baltimore, I started joining Calvert classmates for monthly lunches last year and will continue this summer when many are back from Florida. At the same time, Savi challenged me to train up to run the Thanksgiving “Turkey Trot” 10K fundraiser for a local high school this year. I’m up to 5 miles so far, heading for 6.2. That and some bad tennis will be my cardio tasks if they don’t kill me. Have a wonderful reunion, and stay in touch, please!”

Bob Locke and his wife Sherry moved from their house in Ruxton for almost 40 years to Roland Park Place in January 2022. He reports that the move has had a very positive influence on their quality of life, “The people are fascinating, and you get very well taken care of. What’s not to like?”

Susan Anderson Mason says she has absolutely nothing juicy to report! But she lives in gratitude for moderately good health, many friendships, multiple groups (bridge clubs, a book club, local Duke alumni organization, church choir and handbells), lots of volunteer opportunities, and scads of educational and social activities. She is actually looking forward to summer when things will slow down, but it’s really nice to say “yes” to activities that you couldn’t do while you were working. Susan is a widow (five years) and now lives in a retirement community. When COVID hit, she was fortunate to be there and never felt isolated. There were always smiling eyes behind those masks. Now that we are “footloose and fancy free,” Susan is blessed to be out and about and busy as ever. She has two sons and a daughter in the area with fabulous spouses and four grandchildren, one of them graduating college and another high school. “I must have blinked!” Susan remarried in 2001, and Graham brought three daughters and six grandchildren into the mix. Now there are five (plus another on the way) great-grandchildren. Susan wishes that they lived closer. “I love giving and getting hugs! Have a very happy and healthy 2023! We can still party like it’s 1999!”

Betsy Rumford Thwaite writes that this past year has been so enjoyable as she and her husband Charlie watch their seven grandchildren between 8 and 14 grow up. The grandchildren keep them busy carpooling and attending sports activities. Several times a year, Emily and Robert Farmer and their four (Emily Carole, Robert, John William, and Mary Beatrix) from the Raleigh area, see Betsy and Charlie, and Libby and Clayton Browne and their three (Clark, Charlie, and Martha Rose) from Birmingham at their family coastal home near St. Simon's Island, GA, for crabbing, fishing, boating, visiting with old friends, and fun! April 1 marked their tenth year in beautiful Birmingham near the Brownes! Betsy also keeps up with old Atlanta friends as Charlie's poker group of 48 years takes them back there once a month where the guys gather for “conservative cards” while the wives have a separate dinner together and catch up.

Daisy Nelson White and her husband Charles now live in Charleston, SC, right on Nowell Creek, and they love being there. They recently returned from two months in New Zealand, which gave them an interesting perspective on our country, “In short, they think we are bonkers! Our politics, especially and the fact that we just can’t agree on pretty much anything.” Daisy and Charles are now headed for Scotland, where they’ve had friends tell them they think the U.S. should really be five or six different countries that each decides their own heads of state and laws, etc. “I am all for it. May run on that platform next election cycle! Think of it: We could be a sort of EU in which New England, the South, the Midwest, the Rockies, the Southwest, the Northwest, and of course the countries of Texas and California, etc. could co-exist (somewhat) without having to agree on much.” Besides working with their own company, White Ridgely Associates, supporting organizations in developing leadership skills, emotional intelligence, and communication, Daisy also supports Polaris Tech Charter School, where she is a co-founder and on the board. She and Charles play lots of golf and read and paint and binge-watch Netflix/Prime/HBO and mostly laugh! “Let’s stay in touch! I’d truly love to hear from all of you.”

Tee Winstead ’58 and his wife Carol live in Baltimore and Naples, FL, “doing what ‘old’ people are supposed to be doing.” They are blessed to have their immediate family living in Baltimore, including two sons, Trey ’87 and Peter ’90, Peter’s wonderful wife, Betsey, and their three boys, all of whom currently attend Calvert. Tee spends lots of time with the boys, the oldest of whom, Jax ’23, graduated from the Eighth Grade this spring. He and Carol spend a couple of weeks every August with the family at Squam Lake in New Hampshire, a family tradition they have continued for over fifty years. “What a pretty part of the world,” he shared. “We love the cry of the loons as evening sets in. We have enjoyed traveling with friends to various places, mostly in Europe.” Tee enjoys quarterly lunches with Calvert classmates living in the Baltimore/Washington area. He writes, “If any of our classmates have not visited the Calvert campus in a while, they should take the opportunity as the architecture of the School and surrounding community is exquisite, very European looking.”

Class of 1960

Anne Love Hall writes, “Hi to all classmates from so long ago! I have not forgotten you or our amazing times at Calvert: gym drills, arts and crafts, kickball, operettas and plays, assemblies with banners, writing and illustrating ‘books,’ music class, lunches with spaghetti and M&Ms for dessert, Mr. Brown, Miss Mooney, Miss Potts and on and on. I now live with my husband of 51 years in Santa Barbara and Jackson Hole, Wyoming. Our two girls are university professors at UVA and University of Iowa. Love to somehow see any of you. Warm wishes!”

Elizabeth McCleary Primrose-Smith reports that she is doing really well despite over eight years of treatment for ovarian cancer. She’s beaten most statistics for survival for the disease and is getting great care at University of California at San Diego Medical Center. Elizabeth lives in a small town called Fallbrook about an hour north of San Diego. It's very rural with lots of avocado and citrus orchards, and she enjoys the quiet and space. Elizabeth has one daughter, who just turned 51, and two grandchildren. One is a sophomore at University of Tampa studying marine science, and the other is a freshman in high school and is an excellent baseball player. “Time has flown by but I still remember vividly my days at Calvert. It was such a challenging and enriching environment in which to grow up. If I lived in Baltimore, I would have sent all my family members there for school! There is not a school out here that is even close to the academics and preparation for higher education that Calvert provided me. I am looking forward to my next reunion in 2025.”

Class of 1963

Richard Jones writes, “Twenty months into retirement, I sometimes grumble that my existence is now actuarial, but meaningful things still happen, so things are looking up. I travel and spend time with my three children and seven grandchildren. To learn more about myself, I remain open to new ideas when with others, try to avoid the illusion of oversimplification, and practice articulating problems that I cannot solve.”

Class of 1964

Bruce Beehler ’64 is completing a new book, Birds of North America: A Photographic Atlas, for Johns Hopkins University Press. Publication date: April 2024. His daughter Cary is completing a master’s degree in Russian and Eastern European Studies at Yale. Bruce’s daughter, Grace, will make him a grandfather in August.

Class of 1965

Nancy Sullivan is traveling to Maui during summer 2023 with her nephew, Benjamin Robinson ’89 , her great nephews, and her brother Ned Sullivan ’55 .

Class of 1970

Holly Ballard Kreutter ’70 and her husband are happily living in Old Town Alexandria. Holly works part time in a neuropsychiatric clinic and does volunteer work to help migrants who have been dropped off in Washington, D.C. They also enjoy their five grandchildren, two of whom are in California, two in Florida, and one in D.C.

Class of 1973

Wendy Chapin Albert ’73 wrote about her excitement for her 50th reunion. “A weekend to cherish! We are very excited to be celebrating at Kingsley ’73 and Tom Mooney’s home, the location of our Class Graduation Party in 1973! Tolly ’72 and I are busy with our horses, taking care of our old house, and enjoying time with our daughters and son in-law. I love to garden, photograph flowers, ski, ride and walk with our dog. Tolly is busy at Chapin Davis helping clients manage assets and create financial freedom. In his free time, he loves golf and his race horses.”

MD, and has two children who are graduating from college. She and her husband like to do plant-based cooking, native gardening, and sailboat racing.

Class of 1976

Kelly Finney and wife Vanessa live in Maryland. Their daughter Rebecca ’09 lives and works in Charlotte, NC. Their son Scott ’11 is also in North Carolina, where he finished his first year of law school at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. Daughter Eva ’16 just completed her junior year at Middlebury College, where she plays squash. Kelly shared a photo with Eva sporting their Calvert gear at the Middlebury squash courts. Kelly writes, “This is our salute to Mary Alice Lears and the Calvert Squash program past, present and future.” Fun fact: The hat Kelly is wearing in the photo was given to him by former Head Master Edward Brown in 1992 when Kelly started working at Calvert (Development Office 1992 – 1997). He’s kept it these many years and still wears it.

Beatrice Matkovic Mowry celebrated her 40th anniversary at the National Air and Space Museum, Smithsonian Institution last year! She is chair of the Exhibit Design Department. The Museum is undergoing a massive building renovation so Beatrice and her team are consequently redoing all of the exhibitions. Beatrice is married and living in Annapolis,

Jamey Hebb lives in Sparks with his teenage sons, doing his best to keep them both “between the lines,” which is no small feat! Daughter Lucy ’06 lives in Denver with her dog, Hooch, and works in advertising. Jamey continues working as a digital marketing and e-commerce consultant in addition to writing his first novel, which he hopes to finish by year end. He also continues to serve on the Alumni Board at Calvert, and genuinely enjoys the opportunity to give back. Jamey writes, “It’s hard to believe we’re each on the verge of blowing out 60 candles and are closing in on 50 years since our Calvert graduation - the years sure do fly by!”

Class of 1982

Alexandra Bailliere is an artist living in Mill Valley, CA, with a studio in Sausalito. Her work is represented by Hang Art gallery in San Francisco. She also teaches painting at the College of Marin. She has been living in the San Francisco Bay Area for almost 30 years and considers herself a Californian now since she’s lived there longer than anywhere else. Her husband, Allan Treadwell, is an internist practicing at the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF). They have three sons: one is a sophomore at San Francisco University High School, and the older two are both at Colorado College (one freshman, one junior).

Tim Burdette and wife Lloyd are celebrating 25 years this August. They have two kids who both graduated from Calvert. Will ’15 recently graduated from Colorado College, and Helen ’17 is a sophomore at Eckerd College in St. Petersburg, FL. They spend most of the summers in Biddeford Pool, ME, and at least a month out West each year for skiing. He and Lloyd live adjacent to Lake Roland as empty nesters with their black lab. Tim enjoys investing and volunteering at St. Paul’s School and at church.

Charlie Constable and wife Katie have been happily married for 23 years and going strong! They recently took an educational trip to Israel with a group of leaders from Baltimore, San Francisco, and Honolulu. It was without a doubt the most enlightening travel experience they have had, and they are so glad we went. Charlie shares that there are many things to be grateful for these days, starting with his kids George ’18 and Tavi ’21 . George just finished his first year at University of Virginia where he is pursuing a business track and playing club tennis. Tavi just completed her sophomore year at McDonogh and will spend the bulk of her summer working on Nantucket before she takes a service trip to Costa Rica, where she will volunteer with a group of students who are helping with the local turtle habitat. In February 2022, Charlie hit his 20-year work anniversary with Brown Advisory, where he currently run the firm’s private client business. He writes, “I love the business and am so appreciative for the many people I’ve met and worked with along the way.”

Tori Dukehart Eversmann ’82 is getting her daily vitamin D living in West Palm Beach, Florida, with her husband, Matt, and their two black labs and a diva feline. Their daughter, Molly, attends NC State, where she went to play volleyball and now has transitioned into running road races. She is considering law school to become a sports agent. Tori has an organic garden, loves the beach, enjoys spin classes, and is getting certified to be a spiritual healer with the aim to help athletes who are transitioning away from their sport because of injury or age or whatever reason. Matt writes a series of books with James Patterson on noble professions such as soldiers, nurses, police, and soon teachers and Medal of Honor recipients. Tori shares that they are so blessed and would love to say hi to anyone from our class when they are in SoFlo.

Piper Hebb Finnell has two sons in college and her 16-year-old daughter is still in high school. She works as a fitness instructor at a few local gyms in the area.

Kelly Linaweaver French lives in Jackson Hole, where she and her husband Dave have now lived for over 30 years. They have two boys, Max (19) and Alex (17). Max just completed his freshman year at Clemson, enjoying big-time college sports and the warm southern weather along with his classes in the Business School. Alex is finishing up his junior year in high school and is busy with the lacrosse, hockey, and golf teams. Kelly still runs her curbside recycling business, which she started back in 1994, and Dave owns a small woodworking business.

Chip Linehan has been in Philadelphia for the past 10 years and is busy trying to keep up with his 14-year-old son Cormac and 12-year-old daughter May. Chip is co-CEO and co-founder at Building 21, a nonprofit in education trying to reimagine how to connect traditionally underserved high school students to the futures they deserve.

Frank Martien and his wife Laura celebrated their silver wedding anniversary last summer. They have two sons (ages 22 and 16), the older of whom is graduating from Williams and will join the Peace Corps in Montenegro. Frank is still in Annapolis and enjoying plenty of sailing/sailboat racing. He started his own strategy consulting firm in 2020 and has enjoyed the professional independence this brings.

Ashley Shultz Smith returned from many years on the West Coast to Maryland in 2016. Her three horses and she made the cross-country trip to be together again with her grandmother. Much to Ashley’s dismay, she could not move in with her grandmother though Ashley did take a horse to visit! The horses and Ashley engage in Equine Guided Coaching in Phoenix, Maryland, providing therapeutic and educational experiences to children and adults of all ages. Ashley recently had a visit from Kelly Linaweaver French, who kindly unloaded a truck full of hay for Ashley as her arm was injured, and who still writes witty poetry in anapestic tetrameter. Last February, Ashley caught up with Alexandra Bailliere and her mother at a fun “Galentine’s” lunch. Alexandra is making Mrs. Keeney proud with her amazing painting career. Emily Gardner Baratta and Ashley had their annual reunion at the Hunt Cup, and Ashley reports that Emily defies time and looks exactly the same as she did in 12-A. Ashley has also caught glimpses of Elizabeth Mumford, C.P. Pitts, Charlie Constable, and Jonathan Clark here in Maryland, and Calvert friends always put a smile on Ashley’s face.

John Webster ’82 and wife Nicole have remained in West Towson and are soon to be “empty nesters” when their youngest, Ridgely ’18 leaves for High Point University in the fall. Susannah ’16 has one more year at the University of Tampa, where she is majoring in advertising and public relations with an advertising creative concentration. Isabelle ’13 graduated from Yale last spring and is in her first year as an operation due diligence analyst in the alternatives group at Blackrock in NYC. John continues to help business owners and private clients with their finan- cial decisions, risk management, and planning and sees many old friends from the Calvert days in and around town. He regularly connects with classmates Tim Hathaway, Crawford Hubbard, and Chip Linehan on several occasions throughout the year. He shared a picture after a golf match last fall won by Webster & Hathaway (aka Team WebDog).

Class of 1987

Muffy Menton Fenwick continues to work in the Admissions Office at Calvert, where she does admission testing for Lower School applicants. She writes, “It is so fun to walk the halls of Calvert everyday ... although I still marvel at how small the lockers are! I am now sadly testing the kids of ‘kids’ I used to babysit (which just shows how old I am!). That being said, our class did not look or seem old at our reunion last spring. It was a great night with so many familiar faces (including a guest appearance by Mr. Hardesty!). My husband, Charlie, and I still live in Cockeysville and will soon be alone in the house with our two dogs. Annie, 20, is a sophomore at Bucknell and Charlie, 19, is heading off to college this fall where he will likely play squash

(exact location...to be determined!). We might need to take up some new hobbies!”

Class of 1988

John Greene and Calvert classmate L. Dyson Dryden are partners in a new steeplechase racing venture. They won their first races at My Lady's Manor with Stolen Shoes (GB) and at Grand National with Monbeg Stream (IRE). The name of their syndicate, Tuscany Racing LLC, pays tribute to their Calvert years spent on Tuscany Road.

her senior year at RPCS and is off to Northeastern next year, and they cannot wait to visit Boston! Katharine works as the COO of Bond Distributing, a local beer wholesaler, and loves it. The company was recently acquired and then in turn has acquired two adjacent businesses. Katharine lives in Lutherville with her girls, their two dogs, and two cats!

Class of 2006

Alix Gresov is still fighting fires in Ithaca, NY, and is heavily involved in her union. She also works for Homeland Security teaching firefighting, technical rope, and water rescue classes, as well as morning PT (physical training) for recruit firefighters at the state fire academy. Fitness is a passion for Alix, and she recently spent a rainy April day running and biking 78 miles around Seneca Lake with a team of her coworkers. She looks forward to trips to Montreal and the Grand Canyon later this year, as well as right back in Baltimore in June for the International Hazardous Materials Response Teams Conference!

Class of 2009

Rebecca Finney lives in Charlotte, NC. She met classmates Zoe Bilis, Ana Garcia-Moreno, and Katherine Phillips for lunch in December 2022 as they try to do each year.

Class of 1993

Jamison Hodges and wife Lexie have three young girls ages 6, 4, and 2. They live in Baltimore, and their oldest daughter McKenzie was accepted to join the Seventh Age at Calvert School next year! Jamie recently purchased a sailboat to take the family cruising and would love for Calvert to bring back the Home School Program!

Class of 1995

Ryan Vaughan ’95 and wife Christine Vaughan have been married for 12 years and welcomed a son in May.

Class of 1998

Katharine Fox Castro is in Baltimore and loves coming back to Calvert each day to drop Zoe ’29 off at school. Her older daughter, Stella, just completed

Kyle Stewart Rafferty wed Daniel Rafferty on July 23 at One Barn Farm in Mifflinburg, Pennsylvania. The couple met as student-athletes at Bucknell University, where Kyle ran track and Daniel played baseball. Calvert alumni in attendance included Claudia Buccino ’09, who was a bridesmaid, and Molly Danko ’09. The three classmates have been good friends since Sixth Age! The proud mother of the bride is former Calvert teacher Monica Stewart. Kyle and Daniel reside in Chicago.

Class of 2011

Scott Finney just finished his second semester of law school at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill.

Class of 2016

Eva Finney just finished her junior year at Middlebury College, where she is on the women’s squash team. Middlebury won its division at the College Squash Nationals on February 19. The team was presented with the Walker Cup following the tournament. In a fun Calvert connection, David Cromwell ’08 is the assistant coach for the Middlebury women’s squash team!

Class of 2017

Emma Fox is a rising junior at Temple University, where she is majoring in event and entertainment management. Emma is also a live entertainment photographer and journalist with published works in online publications. She was recently featured in an interview in local VoyageBaltimore Magazine for their Inspiring Stories Series: https://voyagebaltimore. com/interview/daily-inspiration-meet-emma-fox/

Emma Seto is a student at the University of Richmond. She was offered a paid internship with Rhia Ventures, an organization that educates and invests in women’s health.

Class of 2019

Warry Colhoun ’19, Bo Webster ’19, Patrick Rodgers ’19, Oscar Woloson ’19, Chase Tompkins ’19, Sean Collins ’19, and Stephen Fulchino ’19 play lacrosse together on Gilman’s varsity team.

Kiara Dresp Pedra will attend Swarthmore College. She was accepted first academically and then as a walk-on for the track and field team.

Do you have an important update, life event, or special news to share with your fellow alumni?

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Class of 2021

Catherine Quinn ’21 is a sophomore at The Park School of Baltimore, where she participates in the theater program. She played Ronnett in Park’s winter 2022 production of Little Shop of Horrors.

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Class of 2022

Jackson Angulo-Bartlett ’22 and Ryan Peel ’22 completed their ninth-grade year at St. Paul’s School, where Ryan was elected freshman class president and Jackson was elected vice president!