Her power, our promise
IN THIS ISSUE: INVESTING IN OUR FUTURE
A new financial literacy program is designed to help students invest in themselves
LEADING WITH COMMUNITY
CSG alumna Dr. Olivia Nathan β05 has shaped her career around advocacy work
BLUEPRINT FOR SUCCESS
The art and engineering class that helps prep students for the world of design NURTURING

A GROWTH MINDSET
Empowering students with the skills they need to thrive






LETTER FROM THE HEAD OF SCHOOL
In 1898, Columbus School for Girls was founded by two trailblazing women who believed in the limitless capacity of girls. One of many schools across the country that rose to prominence during this time, CSG became a beacon of light for young women who were seeking a rich and challenging educational experience that opened doors for them to enter the nationβs colleges and universities and pursue careers that previously had been closed to them.
Now, 124 years later, we continue this legacy and lean fully into the work of providing a space for the academic and social-emotional needs of girls to be centered, celebrated, and honored. We know that girlsβ schools create extraordinary outcomes for young womenβgraduates of girlsβ schools are more likely to be engaged in civic life, they are more confident in their voices, and most importantly, they firmly believe in their capacity to impact the world around them.
At CSG, we remain committed to our founding missionβto empower girls to discover their distinct potential as learners and leaders. For us, this means providing students with meaningful experiences and opportunities to uncover their potential, lean into their purpose, and ultimately know and own their power.
You may be wondering what this looks like, and in these pages, you will find the answersβ knowing oneβs power means using it to make the communities around you stronger; it means recognizing the interconnectedness of engineering and the arts; it looks like building financial literacy in students and increasing their capacity to break barriers; it means seeing a need and doing something about it, and it means finding joy in learning. What I love about the stories featured here is that they capture the journeys of our students and our young alumnae. They boldly profess the message that you need not wait another day to change the worldβit starts here and now, with you.
This edition of Forte celebrates the power and promise of girlsβ schools and elevates the magic that happens when communities come together on purpose and by design. We are grateful that you will take the time to read more about the work of CSG and what happens when a girl graduates as a leader who knows her power, and we look forward to working with you as we look ahead to the next chapter for our beloved school.
Camille Seals Head of SchoolBOARD OF TRUSTEES
2022β2023

Steve Falk Pβ18β22, Secretary
Lacey Greenwalt β04, Finance Chair
Nicci Hicks Pβ32
Denise Page Hood β70
Liza Kessler β86, Board Chair
Carey Krug Pβ29β33
Taylor Lint β11
Chris Olsen Pβ30β32β37, Nominating and Board Governance Chair
Brandi Slaughter β95
Anne Jeffrey Wright β70
EX OFFICIO
Michael Glimcher Pβ14β20, ex-officio
Camille Seals Pβ30β35, Head of School, ex-officio

CSG STAFF
Amy Borntrager Pβ34, Chief Development Officer
Julie Eikenberry, Chief Financial Officer
Chelsea Woods β00, Director of Enrollment Management
Significantly CSG
National Merit Scholarship Program recognizes CSG students
COSI visits Lower School
students
Chemical reactions were at the center of demonstrations done in mid-September in an assembly led by COSI President & CEO Dr. Frederic Bertley. Helped by Simone Smyth β31 and Gabby Smyth β33, Dr. Bertley showed students demonstrations featuring dry ice, acetone, and styrofoam. Students even got to take group pictures together in front of dry ice clouds! The assembly was a wonderful start to the school day and a great opportunity for Lower School students to see science in action.

Gabrielle Yuan β23 was named a Semifinalist in the 2023 National Merit Scholarship Competition, and Maya Howard β23 was named a Commended Student. Semifinalists are those students who scored in the top 1% of all students in Ohio who took the 2020 PSAT, and Commended Students scored in the top 3%. Semifinalists have the opportunity to compete for National Merit Scholarships, which are worth more than $30 million and will be awarded in the spring.


Naomi Adler β24 with some of her American friends in Berlin

Form XI student participated in study abroad program
CSG student Naomi Adler β24 spent last school year in Germany as part of a foreign exchange program. In the spring of 2021, she participated in a competitive application process and was ultimately accepted into the Congress Bundestag Youth Exchange (CBYX), an immersive exchange program jointly offered by the United States and German governments. Adler spent the 2021-2022 school year attending a German high school, living with a host family, learning the German language, and immersing herself in the culture.
Upper School students participate in CSG Summit

This past September Upper School students had an opportunity to discuss what they believe to be the most pressing political issues for girls and young women during the CSG Summit: Your Seat at the Table, hosted by the Center for Girlsβ and Young Womenβs Leadership. Students presented to their peers on a variety of topics of their choosing and later attended Advisory breakout sessions and a panel on civic engagement featuring several changemakers in the greater Franklin County community, including April Zimmerman Katz β87.
CSG students participate in school-wide art exhibition
On October 11 in recognition of the International Day of the Girl Child, CSG showcased folding chairs designed by all students, from PYC through Form XII. The chairs, which were set up outside along the perimeter of the Main Campus, featured art illustrating important issues students would want to address or advocate for if they had a βseat at the table.β The concept was inspired by former New York State Representative Shirley Chisholmβspecifically her quote, βIf they donβt give you a seat at the table, bring a folding chair.β PYC students collaborated in groups to paint five small chairs, while Lower-, Middle-, and Upper School students each designed their own chair. Hosted by the Center for Girlsβ and Young Womenβs Leadership, the event was created to help students feel empowered and to teach them that gender doesnβt preclude them from gaining access to opportunities to create change and make an impact in the lives of themselves, their peers, and their communities.

Soul Food Fest
Our students in the Beauty of African American Culture Club (BAACC) organized the 2022 Soul Food Fest, which was held on April 27 on our Main Campus. Everyone enjoyed food, games, and community. Proceeds benefited local nonprofit Eryn PiNK Ltd.






CSG Track Team finishes as runner-up in League Championship Meet


With strong performances on the track and in the field, four athletes earned 1st Team League Honors by placing first in an event, and six athletes earned League Honors by placing second or third in an event. Student-athletes earned the following distinctions.
1st Team All-League (1st place)
Kayden Edwards β22, 100M Hurdles
Annie Wagenbrenner β23, 300M Hurdles
4x400 Relay: Kayden Edwards β22, Carly Priest β22, Jameson Pillifant β24, Annie Wagenbrenner β23
2nd Team All-League (2nd place)
Elise Barber β25, High Jump
Jameson Pillifant β24, Long Jump
Honorable Mention All-League (3rd Place)
Mira Martin β24, 1600M Run
Pilar Walton β25, High Jump
Maya Howard β22, Shot Put
4x200 Relay: Ciara Latham β23, Jameson Pillifant β24, Annie Wagenbrenner β23, Kayden Edwards β22
Maya Howard β23 recognized as Scholar Athlete
Kayden Edwards β22 earns third trip to State Track Meet
Maya Howard β23 was recognized as the Junior MSL League Ohio Division Scholar Athlete Scholarship winner in spring 2022. The Scholar Athlete designation is given to just one female winner in the entire league. Howard is a three-sport athlete, playing tennis, basketball, and track and field.


With a lifetime PR in the 100M Hurdles at the Regional Track Meet, Kayden Edwards β22 earned a trip to the State Meet for her third time. She qualified for the State finals and placed ninth.

Emma Spangler β22 this past June received a $4,000 scholarship as second runner-up Female Athlete of the Year. This Week Community News announced the scholarships as part of the Central Ohio High School Sports Awards, held June 15 at the Ohio Theatre. While at CSG, Spangler participated in soccer, basketball, swimming, and track.


Lacrosse Team student-athletes earn league accolades



With outstanding performances on the field, studentathletes earned the following Central Independent League distinctions:
Elizabeth Burgess β24 - 1st Team
Bridget Donnelly β25 - 2nd Team
Sarah Alexander β24 - 2nd Team
Yori OβNeal β24 - Honorable Mention
The following student-athletes also were recognized by the Mid-State League:
Elizabeth Burgess β24 - 1st Team
Bridget Donnelly β25 - 1st Team
Sarah Alexander β24 - 2nd Team
Cynthia Alexander β22 - Honorable Mention
Gillian Spangler β25 - Honorable Mention
Rose McLarty β25 - Honorable Mention
Kirk Campus Spring Celebration
Our Kirk Campus Spring Celebration was an opportunity to come together to support our Unicorns as they competed in two different lacrosse games. Middle School Lacrosse defeated the Wellington School 17-5, and Upper School Lacrosse played an extremely well-fought game against Hilliard Darby High School!

Meaningful Mentorship
Women make up the majority of those coaching CSG student-athletes
Columbus School for Girls Head Soccer Coach Genelle Castro had one female head coach during her entire soccer career, which began at age 5 and continued through college. Now in her seventh season with CSGβs soccer program, Castroβwho also serves as a member of the Health and P.E. faculty hereβ takes her role as a positive role model and mentor for her students very seriously.
βI think the representation alone is a huge benefit of having female coaches,β she said.
Data shows that the benefits of female coaches are far reaching.
In an article published in July of 2017, Linda Flanagan, freelance writer, researcher, and editor detailed her conclusions about the lasting effects of the lack of female coaches in youth sports. She asserted that girls with female coaches more readily identify with and see their female coaches as mentor s and role models. This can help counter stereotypes and boost girlsβ confidence, self-efficacy, and sense of belonging.

University of Toronto social psychologist Penelope Lockwood, who studied the impact of race and gender in role modeling, found that same-sex role models were vitally important for women, exemplifying inspirational examples of success and accomplishment.
Despite these advantages, the presence of female coaches in sports has been found to be lacking. A 2015 survey conducted by the Sports and Fitness Industry Association found that only 27% of over 6.5 million adults who coach youth teams up to age 14 are women.
In contrast, 77% of CSGβs 53 coaching positions are held by women compared to the high school national average of only 33%. And 35% of our coaches are full-time CSG employees. The environment is one that sets students up for success, giving them the opportunity to regularly see examples of strong female leadership not only in classrooms, but also on fields and courts.
The high percentage of female coaches at CSG is no accident. While in college, Athletic Director Megan Henry did her grad school thesis on the decline of female coaches in womenβs sports back in 1987. When she joined CSG in 2013, she brought with her the understanding of just how important female coaches are to girls and young women.
βIt has been a passion of mine and something I believe in,β she said.
Members of the female coaching staff appreciate the ability to offer girls the opportunities that they themselves often didnβt have as student-athletes.
CSG Varsity Basketball Coach Rebecca Bailey believes providing girls and young women with strong female role models, especially in athletics, is vital.


βGrowing up I always saw men at the helm in athletics,β Bailey said. βWhile I had such a passion for sports, it often felt like a career in athletics was not an option. But when our CSG athletes have the opportunity to work with female coaches, they see examples of strong, bold, fierce women breaking down barriers and teaching, inspiring, and challenging them on the sidelines. Our girls see firsthand that they have limitless potential to lead in whatever capacity they desire, whether it be on the court or in the boardroom, in the lab, in the Statehouseβyou name it and they can do it.β

Bailey serves as CSGβs Assistant Director of Development, Major Gifts as well as Assistant Coach for Middle School Cross Country. She enjoys instilling her own passion and competitive nature into her student-athletes and helping them to truly believe in themselves.
βWhen you have a coach that believes in you and that is invested, it can make all the difference,β she said.
Coaching also gives those who work at CSG in academic roles an opportunity to more fully get to know their students.
Dr. Emily Krichbaum serves as Director of the Center for Girlsβ and Young Womenβs Leadership as well as Varsity Cross Country Coach. Her different roles allow her to see different sides of her students.
βCoaching is simply one aspect of approaching a young womanβs holistic development,β she said. βSports, if done right, make people better.β
Research shows that participation in sports is beneficial to female student-athletes. A 2017 national survey conducted by Ruling Our eXperiences (ROX), a nonprofit that provides education, programming, resources, and research with the goal of creating generations of confident girls, examined the relationship between sports participation and other factors in girlsβ lives. The survey found that when compared to girls who do not play sports, female high school athletes are 14% more likely to believe they are smart enough for their dream career, 11% more likely to say that they are happy the way they are, and 16% less likely to want to change their appearance.
Research also shows the link between student-athletes and leadership roles at top U.S. corporations. A global study conducted by Ernst & Young in partnership with espnW, an ESPN brand created to celebrate female athletes and elevate diverse
voices and perspectives, found that 80% of Fortune 500 female executives have played sports in their earlier years.
Athletics can provide the backdrop for the evolution of important life skills for student-athletes. At CSG, students learn these vital skills while also learning from their coaches that they can pursue anything they put their minds to.
Adaptability, communication, perseverance, and the ability to see the larger picture were just some of the skills that Lisa Mueller Greene β83, fostered while participating in CSG athletics that she was later able to apply to a marketing career in which sheβs held leadership roles for the past 20 years in various industries.
CSG offered a safe space that helped Greene feel comfortable taking risks. Sports didnβt come naturally to her, but Greene was always drawn to them. She participated in track the first two years of her high school career, and volleyball for the last two years. Running the half-mile race in track, she habitually came in last at every single meetβexcept for one, when she came in second-tolast. The experience taught her the importance of determination. Much later, she learned her old coach often shared her story with his current CSG students to demonstrate the power of keeping at it.
βCSG gave me that opportunity, and those skills that Iβve learned have been so valuable in my personal and professional development,β she said.
First row, from left to right: Middle School Head Field Hockey and Middle School Head Lacrosse Coach Lauren Todd, Upper School Asst. Basketball Coach Lindsey Guth, Upper School Head Basketball Coach and Middle School Asst. Cross Country Coach Rebecca Bailey, Upper School JV Head Tennis Coach Sarah Brewer, Upper School Head Track and Field Coach Jen Bunker, Upper School Head Soccer Coach Genelle Castro, Upper School Head Field Hockey Coach Brittany Burga, Upper School Head Swim Coach Karrie Heintz, Upper School Asst. Swim Coach Marikate Evans
Middle row, from left to right: Middle School Asst. Track Coach Maura Ruff β14, Upper School Head Lacrosse Coach Kim Rocheleau, Upper School Asst. Basketball Coach Michelle Umali, Upper School JV Head Volleyball Coach Isabel Jimenez, Middle School Head Volleyball Coach Jessica Fries-Gaither, Middle School Asst. Volleyball Coach Briena Breckenridge β15, Middle School Asst. Field Hockey Coach Brinley Zieg β18, Upper School Asst. Field Hockey Coach Betsy Greenbaum Bankhurst β06, Middle School Asst. Tennis Coach Caroline Davakis β16, Middle School Head Tennis Coach Jennifer Murphy Back row, left to right: Upper School Head Cross Country Coach Dr. Emily Krichbaum, Upper School Head Tennis Coach Sean Delaney, Upper School Asst. Track and Field Coach Maggie Bunker, Upper School Asst. Cross Country Coach Megan Smeeding, Upper School Head Volleyball Coach Alaina Monroe, Middle School Asst. Volleyball Coach Skylar King β17, Middle School Head Swim Coach Morgan Grodesky, Upper School Asst. Tennis Coach Shelby Cheses, Middle School Head Golf Coach Jessica Cyrus, Athletic Coordinator Caitlin McWilliams
Not pictured: Upper School Asst. Tennis Coach Stephanie Thomas, Middle School Head Soccer Coach, Middle School Asst. Basketball Coach, and Middle School Asst. Lacrosse Coach Elizabeth Garcia, Upper- and Middle School Head Dive Coach Jill McInerney, Upper School Asst. Track and Field Coach Dena Thobe, Upper School Asst. Track and Field Coach Cirrus Robinson

A legacy of kindness
Honoring a dear coworker and friend
This fall, our CSG family lost a beloved community member who touched so many of our lives with his kind and compassionate spirit. Ben Simon , who served as Director of Marketing and Communications, played an instrumental role at CSG in a variety of ways, from leading our Schoolβs strategic communications, to documenting our celebrations and daily life in photos and videos, to sharing his design expertise with Silhouette students. Prior to joining CSG, Ben served as a design and photography director, managed his own photography business, and served as an operations manager.
He joined the CSG community in 2016 as Assistant Director of Marketing and Communications, serving as Director of Marketing and Communications in an interim capacity from June to December of 2021 before officially taking on the role at the beginning of 2022. Ben adeptly led the communications team at CSG and always was at the ready to help coworkers and the greater School community with any project, big or small. From assisting with school events to cooking hot dogs at summer faculty and staff cookouts, Ben gave of his time and talents freely and joyfully. His example inspires us to be better friends, coworkers, and community members, and we will sorely miss his warm and steady presence here at School.

CSG celebrates three retirees




At the end of the 2021-2022 school year, our CSG community said thank you to Maintenance Manager Joe McLain; Upper School History Teacher Frank OβGrady; and Upper School Math Teacher Leah Weintraub. All three dedicated an impressive amount of time to our School; collectively, they have served CSG for nearly 80 years! Leah, Joe, and Frank are treasured members of the CSG community, and we are so grateful for their years of service. Their dedication to our mission and our students has been clear in all they have done, whether they were teaching, coaching, or ensuring our school campus was in good working order. Congratulations to Joe, Frank, and Leah!
Jessica Fries-Gaither, Science Department Chair and Lower School Science Specialist, this past summer led a virtual, four-session study on her book, Science Notebooks in Student-Centered Classrooms , with K-12 teachers across the country. The book was published in January by the National Science Teaching Association (NSTA) Press and serves as a guide for teachers who want to start using science notebooks in their classrooms or who are looking to refine and improve their current use of notebooks. Fries-Gaither has also been asked to visit with education students at universities, since their professors plan to use her book as required text in class.
Dr. Emily Krichbaum, Director of the Center for Girlsβ and Young Womenβs Leadership, this past spring received a Diversity Award from The Ohio State Universityβs Fisher College of Business for her work with the Fisher Graduate Women in Business. For several years, Dr. Krichbaum has spoken to female MBA students about womenβs history. Sheβs talked about how to leverage the history of women as an empowering and uplifting force in their lives and careers as they negotiate salaries and enter into spaces either currently or previously dominated by men.
Lower School Librarian Annie Ruefle was the presenter for an Ohio school librarians conference in April hosted by META Solutions, where she presented on Collaboration in Schools, focusing on the collaborative work we do at CSG through Childrenβs Book Week research, projects, and activities. She also contributed to a 2021 book called From Poverty to Possibility: Serving Children and Teens in Generational Poverty Through Literature, by Christina Dorr, ALA Publications.
Computer Science Teacher Karen Scranton at the close of the 2021-2022 school year was honored with the Dorothy Sehring Award for Excellence in Teaching. The award is presented every other year by the Head of School to a returning faculty member who has completed five continuous years of full-time employment or 10 continuous years of part-time employment at CSG and demonstrated a deep love for and commitment to the education of young people. Scranton first joined CSG as a substitute teacher in 1998 for the Program for Young Children and continued working here for the next decade in different capacities. Since 2017, she has served as Lower Schoolβs Computer Science Teacher and teaches programming and robotics to students.



Leading with Community
CSG alumna Dr. Olivia Nathan β05 has shaped her career around advocacy work

As a CSG senior, Dr. Olivia Nathan β05 won a Jefferson Award for her work with the deaf community.
The award, granted by Multiplying Goodβan organization centered around service work that supports individuals and their communitiesβwas given to Dr. Nathan for her work participating in her churchβs deaf ministry and helping members of the deaf community interpret their taxes.
βJust having the heart for people and a servantβs heart for the community has always been a core value of mine,β she said.
Throughout her life, Dr. Nathan has been inspired to break down barriers for marginalized communities. In her role with Equitas Health in King-Lincoln Bronzeville, she strives to connect people with vital health services and is driven to advocate for the Black community. She credits her CSG education with giving her the foundational skills that would stick with her throughout her career and in her daily life.
βI just learned to never give up, because anything is possibleβ¦ I saw that early on,β she said.
Dr. Nathan likes to say that CSG was the best gift that her parents ever gave herβeven though she wasnβt always aware
of it. She attended CSG from Form I through Form XII and felt grateful to experience our traditions and community.
During her time at CSG, Dr. Nathan appreciated the robust support of her identity as a Black girl she received from her parents, the Big/Little Sister program, and the Black Awareness Club, now known as the Beauty of African and African-American Culture Club. These spaces provided her with an opportunity to connect with other people who shared her unique experiences and helped her develop the confidence and power to fully grow into her identity. This early foundation supported her work serving people of color.
βI never felt unwelcomed; I never felt that I wasnβt a part of the community,β she said.
While Dr. Nathan found community at CSG, she also learned the value of tenacity and gritβqualities that have stuck with her throughout her career. Experiences such as traveling in Form VII to Italy with her history class and visiting locations across the country to sing with the founding members of Grace Notes widened her worldview. Her time at CSG taught her how to engage with a variety of people from different backgrounds.
βAll of our experiences matter,β she said.
Dr. Nathan continued her all-girl education at Spelman College, this time to take advantage of the opportunity to attend a prestigious, historically Black institutionβan alma mater she shares with Head of School Camille Seals. Dr. Nathan earned a Bachelor of Science in Biology in 2009. During the course of her undergraduate education, she was inspired to focus on HIV/AIDS prevention, specifically on the disparity of care found in Black communities.
Dr. Nathan went on to earn her Doctorate of Pharmacy from the University of California San Francisco in 2017. In 2019, she joined Equitas Health, a regional nonprofit health system serving healthcare needs of the LGBTQ+ community. During the beginning of 2021, she worked first locally and then statewide to ensure elderly residents received the COVID-19 vaccination. Dr. Nathan held vaccination appointments for those who didnβt have the technology to register online. Partnering with Columbus Public Health and several churches, she also worked to reach community members where they were most comfortable.
She began working out of several Equitas locations to continue to reach more people of color in areas where vaccination rates were low.
Dr. Nathanβs efforts to reach underserved community members helped to launch her in September of last year into a brand new role at Equitas. As the Community Engagement Pharmacist, she works in the King-Lincoln Bronzeville pharmacy Monday through Thursday. On Friday, she goes into the community to deliver primary care services via mobile health units to community members.
While Dr. Nathanβs career has focused on treatment for her clients, sheβs also increasingly interested in the causation. Sheβs now pursuing a Masterβs degree in Public Health from The Ohio State University and applying the tools sheβs gaining to her role at Equitas, where she continues to advocate for those without the resources to advocate for themselves.
βPeople begin to trust you when they know your name and they know youβll show up,β she said. βThe power of community outreach is really important.β
Having the heart for people and a servantβs heart for the community has always been a core value of mine.
Investing in our Future
A new financial literacy program is designed to help students invest in themselves
This past spring, four CSG students competed in the National Council on Economic Educationβs Personal Finance Challenge.
Gabi Yuan β23, Peyton Readler β23, Claudia Jones β23, and Anya Nguyen β23 made it to the state level of the competition, which was held virtually. As the only all-girl team, the only female faces they saw over Zoom were their own.
The experience served as a reminder of the gender disparity that exists in math and finance fields. As CSG works to empower girls and young women, part of that effort will increase the attention spent on financial literacy and exposure to finance careers.
Slated to launch this fall, the financial literacy program is one of the first offerings from the Center for Girlsβ and Young Womenβs Leadershipβa new CSG signature program created through the Power & Promise campaign to enrich our commitment to empowering girls and young women to find their voice and know their power.
Suggested by Yori OβNeal β24, the financial literacy program features a six-week curriculum in which students learn about earning, spending, saving, investing, and managing money. Students will also have the opportunity to meet women in the finance field, such as financial advisors, investment bankers, and stockbrokers.
Dr. Emily Krichbaum, who serves as the Centerβs Director, said the goal of the program is to invest in young women so they can invest in themselves. Students often leave for college highly competent in a variety of abstract theories. Equipping students with practical tools to better themselves now and in the future is of equal importance.
βWe send our students to college having conquered AP Calculus AB, but we need to make sure they also know about APRs and IRAs,β Dr. Krichbaum said. βThere are too many women who wished they would have learned these things earlier. Part of positioning our students to find their voice and
know their power is giving them the tools they need to invest in themselves and their future.β
Controlling credit, loans, and debt and investing in the stock market were just some of the things OβNeal hoped to learn through involvement with the program.
βThe goal is to ensure financial literacy and to have fun while doing it,β she said.
Educating girls and young women in personal finance is also necessary to decrease the wealth gap between men and women and increase the number of women in finance roles, OβNeal said.
Statistics show the finance industry suffers from a severe lack of gender equality. According to Rock the Street, Wall Street, a nonprofit with the goal to bring gender and racial equity to financial markets, women represent only 2.5% of hedge fund managers, 8% of venture capitalist partners, and 9% of mutual fund managers. According to Girls Who Invest, a nonprofit dedicated to increasing the number of women in portfolio management and executive leadership in the asset management industry, only 6% of the chief investment officers of the largest institutional U.S. money managers are women. Only 6% of senior leaders in private equity are womenβ4% in real estate and 3% in hedge funds.
While for generations women in finance have had difficulty getting seats at the table, CSG is equipping our girls with the skills and knowledge they need to thrive in leadership roles within the industry.
OβNeal said the program caters to those with an interest in finance while also giving other students the opportunity to learn more about the field.
βIt is important that women are aware of the opportunities in finance and are not pushed away because of the lack of mentorship and knowledge,β she said. βWith an increase in financial leadership in girls and women, barriers can be broken.β
Nurturing a Growth Mindset
As Columbus School for Girls enters an exciting new era of leadership with Head of School Camille Seals, the Upper School is also embarking on thrilling new initiatives. With the school
year well underway, Upper School Director Scott Parsons is partnering with Dean of Students Dr. Meghan Hattaway and our talented Upper School faculty members to build upon the Schoolβs long legacy of academic excellence, social-emotional learning, and robust community.
This is an exciting time for our Upper School as we lean into new leadership, ideas, and avenues for connection. Parsons has a track record of emphasizing safe and healthy risk-taking and a growth mindset, two ideas that are at the core of how CSG approaches education. In partnership with expert faculty, he will continue to help students push themselves academically and socially.
One important academic change made this school year was to augment student schedules. In addition to maximizing student learning within the classroom, the changes also allow for more flexibility for students to meet with their teachers outside of class time in a manner similar to what one would find in a university environment.

Work is also being done in the Upper School to support studentsβ development of personal identity, sense of belonging, and personal efficacy. The work is familiar to Parsons, who throughout his career in education has focused on the core social motives of belonging, understanding, control, esteem, and trust that inform the ways in which adolescents navigate their days. Parsonsβ previous experience with these social-emotional skills translate well to address the opportunities we have in Upper School.
A key component of the work being done in Upper School consists of the decision to have Dr. Hattaway serve as Dean of Students. Prior to serving as Dean of Students, Dr. Hattaway was English Department Chair. In her new role, she is working in partnership with Parsons to foster community in the Upper School by coordinating celebrations, events, and form-level field trips and retreats to destinations in and out of state.
Upper School kicked off the year with an overnight retreat for seniors at Salt Fork State Park, and freshmen also attended a full-day retreat to Hocking Hills. In November, juniors will visit Cleveland to see productions of Romeo and Juliet and Cats on a trip related to their English curriculum. The trip will also be
Empowering students with the skills they need to thriveFrom left to right, Rhian Wallace β23, Anya Nguyen β23, and Lina Jeffers β23 look at text material together.
an opportunity to reflect on the importance of being intentional about setting community norms, values, and identity. The sophomore class this year will also be making a trip to Washington D.C., a trip that had been canceled during their Form VIII year due to COVID-19, where they will study American history, civics, and government.

While these trips all vary in size and scope, they help our students learn to build community with each other. Other events, such as Bring a Friend to School Day and Red-Gold games, have also helped to instill fellowship and belonging. The work the Upper School team is doing around community and culture will help enrich our already extraordinary academic program, which is providing exceptional outcomes for CSG graduates.
This fall, we celebrated the achievements of our students, with more than 30 percent of the junior and senior classes being honored by the National Merit Corporation and the College Board for outstanding achievements in academics. Not only are our girls excelling in the classroom, but they are also thriving as athletes. This athletic season was marked by district, regional, and state tournaments and championships as our girls continued to show their prowess on fields, courts, and tracks.
Our golf team finished as District Runner-up, and one of our golfers competed in the State Golf Tournament. Meanwhile, our cross country team qualified for Regionals and sent one of our runners to the State Championships. Our students enjoyed a successful fall season across the board: Our varsity soccer team had a regular season record of 11-4 and hosted a District Semifinal game. And our tennis program had a combined 25-5 record, placed second in the very competitive Mid-State League competition, and had five District Qualifiers.
The vibrancy of our Upper School program remains a hallmark of the CSG experience for students, and we are looking forward to a prosperous future for the division and for the School. As we approach our 125th anniversary, our mission of empowering girls to discover their distinct potential as learners and leaders is more important than ever. As long as girls and women face gender disparities, girlsβ schools, especially CSG, will remain relevant and necessary. Our School continues to provide the foundational framework to ensure generations of young women know their power and possess the skills to confidently lead and forge a path for not only themselves, but also those who come after them.
CSGβs mission of empowering girls to discover their distinct potential as learners and leaders is exemplified by the Center for Girlsβ and Young Womenβs Leadership, a new signature CSG program created through the Power & Promise campaign.

Blueprint for Success
After taking a Columbus School for Girls class that explores design applications with both art and engineering perspectives, Baillie Breckenridge β21 knew that industrial design was well suited to her.

As a senior at CSG, Breckenridge was starting to decide what she wanted to study in college and where she wanted to attend school. She knew she was interested in a design field, specifically industrial design. She decided to take the class, Design: The Intersection of Art and Engineering, after teachers recommended it to her.
Now a second-year student at the University of Cincinnati, Breckenridge is studying industrial design in the College of Design, Architecture, Art, and Planning. She said the class she took at CSG helped her learn a great deal about the different fields included in the design world.
βI would highly recommend this class to anyone who has even the slightest interest in the design field,β she said.
At CSG, faculty are always working to evolve curricula to better meet the needs of students. One strong example of this is Design: The Intersection of Art and Engineering. This school year is the third iteration of the class, which is co-taught by Upper School Science Teacher and Form XI Dean Dr. Kevin Sweeney and Upper School Art Teacher and Fine Arts Department Chair Susan OβConnor.
The course, which counts as either an art or science credit, introduces students to design and to the designed world, building on foundational skills in math, science, and art, while applying fundamental principles of engineering, problem solving, and design. Through project-based instruction, students learn how to problem solve by applying creative skills. Students work with both 2- and 3-D designs, using design portfolios to document their ideas and results.
The idea for the course came out of the desire to better educate students who were interested in pursuing a career in
The art and engineering class that helps prep students for the world of design
various fields of design. Dr. Sweeney had previously led the Schoolβs Robotics program and as part of that job, started tracking the intended majors of CSG graduates. He noticed that while many students planned to pursue STEM fields such as engineering, some students who started in an engineering program in college eventually moved into fields more closely related to art and design.
βIt was my observation that these students loved the aspects of engineeringβsuch as designing, making, and testingβthat they were exposed to while at CSG, but when they got into their engineering program of study in college, they started to miss the more creative side of things and looked for a new path,β Dr. Sweeney said.
After OβConnor started at CSG in 2014, Dr. Sweeney approached her about his idea for a class that could combine the best of both the engineering and art worlds. She loved the idea.
βMy formal training, as well as my studio practice, is very much steeped in the Fine Arts, but I had always been interested in and inspired by the link to science,β OβConnor said. βAs we talked more and more, it was clear that we could do something with that intersectionβthat missing
creative linkβwhich a segment of our students wanted but didnβt know how to attain.β
The classβ unique co-teaching style further highlights the important relationship between the worlds of engineering and art. OβConnor and Dr. Sweeney are both present in every class, leading content material respective to their individual fields of study: Dr. Sweeney will lead portions with engineering elements, for example, while OβConnor will instruct students in how to sketch out their ideas.
One such sketching project was one of Breckenridgeβs favorite class assignments. Students were tasked with designing the βperfectβ chair using the different elements of design they had learned. The experience helped her better understand what industrial designers do.


The class also helped Breckenridge connect with Columbusarea industrial designers, who came in to discuss their designs and their day-to-day responsibilities. Sheβs maintained contact with some of them into her college years.
Breckenridge said she learned a great deal from Dr. Sweeney and OβConnor.
βI learned a lot about the design process and what it means to create a βgood design,ββ she said.
Ever-evolving Education
An important partnership helps CSG best meet the needs of students
As part of CSGβs ongoing, student-centered approach to diversity, equity, inclusion, and belonging (DEIB), our school established a partnership with Dr. Cynthia Tyson, an awardwinning professor in the Department of Teaching and Learning within The Ohio State Universityβs College of Education and Human Ecology.

Dr. Tyson, who worked as an elementary classroom teacher and multicultural education staff development specialist, has served as an educational consultant to schools for initiatives including curriculum development, assessment, and policy audits. As part of a multi-year partnership with her, weβre working as a community to expand our awareness of DEIB principles, while building the foundational knowledge needed to best assess our curricula through a DEIB lens.
βWhile weβve always worked to improve and adapt our curricula to the changing world to better meet the needs of our students, we also want to provide our students with relevant skill sets to better navigate a globally diverse world,β said Leisan Smith, CSGβs Chief Equity Officer.
βWe want our students to be good citizens of the world,β she said.
The endeavor to carry out a DEIB-centered curriculum assessment is part of CSGβs Anti-Racism Action Plan, which includes priorities for the next two years. In addition to curriculum evaluation, the plan also focuses on recruitment and hiring of faculty, staff, and administrators; evaluating and evolving programs and traditions as necessary; developing a system for incident reporting; and communicating the work the school does daily to equip our girls with the skills and competencies they need to thrive in a diverse and multicultural world.
As CSG works to carry out the tasks outlined by the Action Plan, we also are focusing on important professional development for faculty and staff. This past school year, Dr. Tyson worked with faculty and staff in training designed to define who we are as a community and encourage reflection about interacting with students and other community members.
βThose things were important to include everyone in,β Smith said.
As the work continue, CSG will work with Dr. Tysonβs support to assess our curricula to better meet the needs of students.
On the Same Page
Using Childrenβs Book Week to build community and learn in novel ways
At Columbus School for Girls, students benefit from a project-based approach that involves immersing themselves in real-world and personally meaningful projects. By connecting with the material in a hands-on way, students are able to more deeply understand and retain what theyβve learned.
CSG saw an opportunity to weave last school yearβs Childrenβs Book Week (CBW) theme, βWild About Reading,β into existing curricula to create unique projects that would have lasting impact. Students employed skills such as critical thinking, flexibility, collaboration, and technology literacy to investigate the amazing diversity of wild animals around the world. They also connected with each other across grade levels, building community in a meaningful way.
All three PYC classes studied ocean animals for CBW, reading nonfiction and fiction books about a variety of ocean animalsβespecially penguins, whales, and dolphins. Everyone worked together to paint two large ocean murals depicting toothed and baleen whales.
In Lower School, students created cross-disciplinary projects. For example, after Form II students learned about birdsβ characteristics and adaptations in Science, they extended their study in Library class. While Form II









students investigated birds, Form VII students focused on aquatic life. Form VII students in Ann Marie McDonnellβs science classes built upon their trip to Stone Lab, The Ohio State Universityβs Lake Erie campus, transforming the windows of the Middle School Commons into Lake Erie, featuring 3D paper fish and QR codes that featured brief videos of students providing details about a specific marine animal.
The CBW theme lent itself to more than just science disciplines. Upper School students in Susan OβConnorβs Ceramics class, for example, made animal sculptures. And in their Principles of Engineering and Design class, Upper School students worked with Lower School students to design and manufacture 3D animal designs.
CBW helped students grow in knowledge and skills and also provided opportunities to build community within the schoolβcrucial after the isolation brought about by the COVID-19 pandemic. During a February Big/Little
Sister event, students teamed up to create paper vines, leaves, flowers, birds, and seahorses that were used throughout the school as decorations during CBW.

Big and Little Sisters also paired up during the culminating CBW event, a trip to the Columbus Zoo and Aquarium. PYC through Form XII spent a full day at the zoo, which included a morning Big/Little Sister animal scavenger hunt. The trip was a wonderful way to end a week celebrating student work and building community.

CBW has become a beloved addition to the CSG calendar. Our faculty will continue involving the entire school community in the event, which this school year has the theme Reading is Music to Our Ears. As we get further into the school year, students will incorporate the musical theme into various parts of curricula. Sound of Music, the spring musical from Middle- and Upper School students, will kick off Book Week itself.
At CSG, each yearβs CBW is a celebration and culmination of literacy-related activities around a unifying, interdisciplinary theme. The ability to explore these themes through reading, research, writing, art, music, and hands-on projects allows students to delve joyfully and deeply into authentic, engaging learning. The work provides ways to build community while also building the studentsβ sense of pride and accomplishment in themselves.
When you buy flowers through the flower sale, t-shirts from the Unicorner, or previously loved uniforms from the Attic, your money goes toward supporting our students, faculty, and staff. Last year, the Parentsβ Association presented CSG a $64k check at the end of the 2021-2022 school year.



The money is funding a variety of special initiatives for the Program for Young Children, Lower School, Middle School, and Upper School. One of the most exciting ways in which the Program for Young Children is benefiting from this generous gift is updates to the PYC playscape. In the Lower School, students will continue to have the opportunity to learn with cuttingedge educational software. In Middle and Upper schools, the funding makes enrichment activities such as Robotics, student publications, and class trips possible. To learn more about how the funds are being used this school year, you can visit the Parentsβ Association page via CSGβs website.

Driven to Serve

This past spring, Robin Smith β12 spent two weeks in Poland helping communities learn how to better serve the Ukrainian refugees fleeing from war with Russia.
Smith spent a week in Lublin and then another week in Warsaw. Though she helped instruct teachers and school administrators in providing trauma-informed care to an influx of students, Smith also worked with individual community members interested in providing supplies and housing to refugees.
βI think I was struck by how many regular Polish citizens were doing the work,β she said.
Smithβs trip to Poland is just one example of her commitment to serving others, both at home and abroad. As she grew into adulthood, she forged a future for herself heavily influenced by a love for international study as well as leadership and philanthropy. She credits CSG with supporting her by providing foundational skills as well as the flexibility to pursue life-changing educational experiences.
Smith, who attended CSG beginning in the Program for Young Children, said her education helped her learn how to be assertive as well as how to ask for help. Certain projects and opportunities also helped foster interests that would influence her career path. In Form VII, Smith worked with other students to write grant proposals addressing issues in specific countries theyβd researched. Throughout Upper School, she was involved with the Service Club, serving as Co-President her senior year. For her Senior May Program, Smith interned at the Columbus Foundation.
Smith was also grateful for her participation in a YWCA program called Bright Futures, in which she learned foundational leadership skills with other central Ohio students. CSG nominated her and also provided the funding for her participation in the program, which was held one weekend per month over the course of Smithβs junior year.
βI think about that experience a lot, even today,β she said.
While Smith spent much of her formative years exploring her passion for service, she also learned how much she enjoyed traveling to and studying places outside the U.S. During her sophomore year at CSG, she was an exchange student in
Ecuador. The summer before her junior year, she got a job to pay for a trip to Moscow to visit her host family from Ecuador (who had moved there because her host dad worked at the Russian Embassy). That trip inspired her to spend a year in Russia after graduating from CSG.
Smith went on to earn a Bachelor of Arts degree in Russian and Political Science from The Ohio State University and a Master of Arts degree in Applied Psychology from the University of Washington. Now living in Seattle, she works for a dialectical behavioral therapy clinic as a mental health therapist. During the COVID-19 pandemic, Smith volunteered as a behavioral health first responder in Seattle to work with children affected by the pandemic suffering from child abuse, traumatic grief, anxiety, and depression.
As volunteer efforts developed abroad in response to the war between Ukraine and Russia, Smith was asked to deploy with psychologists and psychiatrists from the University of Washington, Seattle University, and National Center for School Mental Health because of her experience living and working in that part of the world. (She lived in Russia and then worked in Kyrgyzstan.) Though that trip has concluded, Smith continues to volunteer in Seattle on behalf of refugees abroad.
Working with Jewish Family Services, Smith is assisting refugees applying for asylum in the U.S. Sheβs also part of a virtual exchange program sponsored by America House Kyiv/ IREX to share resources with medical providers living in Ukraine.
Smith said her service work has given her the opportunity to see the ways in which those from different countries help each other. The experiences have shown her just how adaptable people can be in finding ways to survive.
βPeople are really resilient,β she said.
CSG alumna Robin Smith β12 is passionate about helping those at home and abroad
People are really resilient.




Biking Abroad
During her junior year at CSG, Ruthie Saar β22 happened to discover a journal from her mother, Julie Schottenstein Saar β84, detailing her month-long biking journey in 1981 through much of Europe.
βI read the entire thing in one sitting and knew that one day I wanted to redo the trip,β Saar said.
The CSG graduate didnβt have to wait long for her opportunity. For her Senior May Program, Saar and her mother visited Europe and France this past school year to recreate the trip her mother made over 40 years ago. Though the trip was three weeks long this time around and smaller in scope, Saar said the experience taught her many valuable lessons.
βI learned more about myself and how to challenge my comfort levels, especially when it came to biking up to 60 miles each day,β she said. βLearning to be comfortable with the uncomfortable is something I continue to teach and reteach myself.β
Saar had already decided in Form IX that she wanted her May Program project to be based on something that she wouldnβt typically have time to doβsomething that she might regret not doing once she was older. So as a Form XII student, she began to discuss the logistics of her trip with Dr. Emily Krichbaum, who as the Director of the Center for Girlsβ and Young Womenβs Leadership leads the Senior May Program. βI immediately said that my mom should join me so that she would have the chance to recreate her trip, but with new perspectives and a little more wisdom,β Saar said.
During the summer before her sophomore year at CSG, Julie Schottenstein Saar spent a month abroad, biking through England, France, Belgium, and Holland. Ruthie Saar recreated that trip on a smaller scale, visiting England and France for the first time.

At school, Saar learned that her anxiety about receiving high marks on her assignments wasnβt constructive. She found being flexible was necessary, both at school and during the trip abroad with her mother. The two often had to make last-second decisions, such as deciding where to eat in the evenings or quickly hopping off subways and determining the correct course of travel.
βThis lesson helped me understand that Iβm not always going to have every detail of my day or my job planned out, and that I can take things as they come rather than overthinking and overplanning,β she said.
While Saar learned valuable lessons during her trip, she also was able to apply skills she learned at CSG.
βI genuinely believe that CSG has not only prepared me to take on the world, but also to do so independently,β she said. βCSG has given me the confidence, strength, and grace to live my life to the fullest, and I will always remember the impact growing up at the school has had on me.β
As Saar and her mother biked to and from landmarks across the two countries, Saar learned the importance of going with the flow. Throughout the trip she tried to be more relaxed and flexible, something she also had been working toward while managing a challenging course load at CSG. Saar appreciated CSGβs understanding and helpful teachers, who were able to create a calming environment in their classrooms. Ruthie
Under the Sea


The Class of 2022 turned CSG into a watery wonderland with their βJust Keep Swimmingβ Senior Day theme, based on the 2003 hit film Finding Nemo. The students outdid themselves decorating the School with a plethora of underwater sea creaturesβand of courseβseagulls. Seniors prepared a carnival experience for each division, featuring snacks, face painting, games, and more. Proceeds from the fundraiser went toward the Class of 2022βs Senior Gift.









POWER & PROMISE
The Campaign for Columbus School for Girls
Columbus School for Girls is proud to introduce the Power & Promise campaign: a $15 million, five-year fundraising effort that invests in the heart and soul of CSGβour people and our programsβand the financial sustainability of our beloved school. Since the quiet phase of Power & Promise began in 2018, our community has come together to donate $13.5 million in support of our students and school. While we have had tremendous success thus far, we need your help to reach the finish line. Join us in this extraordinary effort so that we can build a brighter, bolder future for the learners of today and leaders of tomorrow. Together, we will ensure that CSG takes its place as the leader in education for girls and young women.

PEOPLE
TUITION ASSISTANCE
Expand
PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT
FACULTY COMPENSATION
We will invest in our...
TURF FIELD
Level the playing field for our student-athletes by installing a new turf field.
COMPUTER SCIENCE
Advance CSGβs computer science curriculum through our partnership with HER Academy and STEM opportunities.
LEADERSHIP CENTER
Launch the Center for Girlsβ and Young Womenβs Leadership and inspire the next generation of female leaders.

ENDOWMENT
Ensure the long-term fiscal strength of our beloved school for generations of girls and young women to come.

EQUITY & BELONGING
Further our diversity, equity, and inclusion work so that all students feel that CSG is a place where they belong.
GLOBAL ENGAGEMENT
Expand access for Upper School students to have a global leadership experience.

ANNUAL FUND
Annual Fund gifts, made in tandem with campaign gifts, will help CSG maintain the financial foundation of the school while providing additional flexibility to address immediate needs.
POWER OF PHILANTHROPY
Lifting up the faculty and staff at CSG
At CSG, our faculty are trailblazers in education working tirelessly to give each student an innovative and empowering learning environment. They challenge even our youngest learners to think big and bold, yet provide a safe space to fail and try again. Through Power & Promise, our community came together to raise the necessary funds to lift up our faculty salary and benefit packages to be in the top 25% of peer schools, allowing CSG to appeal to the most sought-after teachers across the country and retain our current exemplary faculty.
Leading a culture of change in STEM


The world needs more women leaders in STEM, and CSG has the expertise to prepare them. Over the past three years, CSG has invested deeply through Power & Promise in creating a computer science curriculum that launched and solidified our partnership with HER (Her Educational Revolution) Academy. And we are already seeing results: Of our 2022 graduating class, 51% indicated that they are pursuing a STEM field in college and 12% are pursuing computer science.
Considering that the national average for girlsβ school graduates pursuing a computer science degree is 4.4%, it is clear to see that CSG is leading a culture of change that truly celebrates women in technology.
Inspiring the next generation of female leaders
Through Power & Promise, CSG has secured the funding to launch the Center for Girlsβ and Young Womenβs Leadership, a signature program that will strengthen CSGβs leadership curriculum, expand partnerships with local organizations and universities, and provide opportunities for all girls in the central Ohio area to connect, learn, and collaborate with one another. The Center will propel CSG into a new era of leadership among our nationβs independent schools and, more importantly, inspire the next generation of female leaders in our city, region, nation, and world.

Thanks to the philanthropic power of our community, CSG has been able to fund the following Power & Promise priorities.
Level the playing field
Athletics play a vital role in the lives of countless CSG students. Our studentathletes are passionate and with every practice and contest, they exude strength and grace. Prior to this season, CSG was one of the few schools in Ohio who have field hockey and lacrosse programs, but did not have a turf field. Thanks to the generosity of our community, we have installed a state-of-the-art turf field on CSGβs Kirk Campus, ensuring our student-athletes are able compete at the highest level and be successful.

The promise of tomorrow
Celebrating a legacy of strength and grace was at the heart of Tad and Nancy Jeffreyβs decision to give an incredible $2.5 million gift to Columbus School for Girls in support of tuition assistance and the endowment. Their transformative gift was instrumental in reaching our Power & Promise endowment goal and providing a more secure, stable financial future for our school. Through this gift and the support of our community, CSG is set up for long-term fiscal success that will have a lasting impact for generations of girls and young women to come.

A community where all of our students belong

CSG celebrates diversity and is committed to building a community where all members feel safe, connected, and respected. Through Power & Promise, we deepened our investment in our equity, inclusion, and belonging work, with a continued focus on our anti-racism action plan and practices, strengthening our ability to be a more equitable and inclusive community.
Thank you to our Campaign Co-Chairs, Campaign Cabinet, Alumnae Challengers, Parent Committee, Faculty and Staff Working Group, and other invaluable volunteers for dedicating countless hours of service towards ensuring that Power & Promise will be successful. This campaign is truly a community effort, and we are so grateful for your commitment to our students and school!
PROMISE TO OUR STUDENTS
Maintaining the financial foundation
Every year, CSG faces a funding gap between tuition income and expenses. For each student enrolled at CSG, we must raise $3,000 to fully cover the cost of her education and provide her with transformative experiences in and out of the classroom. To do this, our entire community comes togetherβalumnae, parents, family, and friendsβto help bridge this gap by giving to the Annual Fund. Annual Fund gifts, made in tandem with campaign gifts, will help maintain CSGβs financial foundation while providing additional flexibility to address immediate needs of the school. A flourishing Annual Fund is a critical component to a successful future for CSG.
Expanding access to a CSG education

CSG is committed to ensuring that any student who could flourish and thrive at our beloved school has the opportunity to do so. Access and affordability are critical components of our community. CSG students come from more than 50 zip codes and a variety of socioeconomic backgrounds. During the 2021-2022 school year, CSG awarded $2.3 million in tuition assistance to 36% of our student body. CSGβs tuition assistance program ensures that a premier CSG education is accessible to families all over central Ohio.


Living a global leadership experience
All students at CSG should have a chance to experience what it means to be a global citizenβto understand that humanity binds all communities and cultures together, that friendships transcend borders, that the exchange of knowledge is a two-way street. This priority will create a fund to expand access so that every Upper School student, regardless of financial background, will have the opportunity to have a global experience and become a globally competent woman of action.
Though we have made incredible progress and have much to celebrate, we must rally together to fulfill our promise to our students in the following areas.
Investing in faculty and staff professional development
By investing in professional development, CSG will provide opportunities that expand our facultyβs expertise in cultural competency and maintain CSGβs high caliber of academic excellence. Whether itβs our science faculty exploring the biological diversity in the Galapagos, our art teachers visiting new exhibits in premier museums, or our staff developing innovative ideas at conferences across the country, this initiative will strategically invest in our faculty to enhance CSGβs academic excellence and student experience.
Your gift can be made by mailing the enclosed envelope or by visiting www.columbusschoolforgirls.org/giving/give-now.
If you have questions or if you would like to speak with someone about your investment, please contact CSGβs Chief Development Officer, Amy Borntrager, at aborntrager@columbusschoolforgirls.org.

Congratulations, Class of 2022
Though rain fell for much of the afternoon on May 27, 2022, it did not dampen the excitement in the air as the CSG community assembled to honor the Class of 2022.

This was the day that each student had been working toward since the start of their CSG career. The pride and joy they felt could be seen on their faces as they exited the ceremony with diplomas in handβit could be heard in the traditional senior scream that erupted after they recessed out from under the great white tent and onto the Cinderella stairs.
But in addition to the excitement and joy, the ceremony was also poignant at times, recognizing that the start of a new chapter comes only with the closing of another. During her speech to classmates, Student Council President Cynthia Alexander β22 described the late-night phone conversations her motherβalso a CSG gradβoften has with her fellow alumnae.
βWhile we say goodbye to each other today, know that our late-night conversations will never end, and that weβll be laughing about our time here at CSG for the rest of our lives,β Alexander said. βIf home is a group of people, then you all are my home. I know that Iβll have a part of my home wherever you are,β she said.
Alexander told the CSG community that she was gratefulβfor her fellow students, for their families who supported them and celebrated their achievements, for their teachers and administrators.


βOur teachers here havenβt just taught us formulas, names, and dates,β she said. βThey taught us to be warm, compassionate, generous, and understanding. They taught us to appreciate the world around us and to love learning.β
During her speech, commencement speaker Lucy Kirk β58 also expressed gratitude for the time she spent learning at CSG.

Kirk told the Class of 2022 that after she left CSG and embarked on the beginning of her higher education at Wellesley College, she knew she wanted to do something different, but she wasnβt yet sure what that was.




βI had no idea what I was going to do,β she said.
Kirk shared the path that her higher education and career ultimately took: How time spent living in Argentina for an
international program ultimately inspired her to pursue a masterβs degree in international relations, and how that later led to a career in the CIA that would include domestic and overseas assignments.

She urged each member of the Class of 2022 to listen to their inner voice and pursue their passion.




βLet that lead you into and through your life,β she said.

Class of 2022: Whatβs Next
Cynthia Alexander Amherst College
Julianne Aslaner University of Cincinnati
Ella Ballard
The Ohio State University
Atticus Basso-Schricker New York University
Caroline Caskey Ohio University
Rose Clubok Barnard College of Columbia University and the Jewish Theological Seminary
Grace Edic Northeastern University
Kayden Edwards Howard University
Abigail Falk Wesleyan University
Anja Fleege University of Cincinnati
Jay Gammons University of Arizona
Maya Gonela The College of Wooster
Suhanna Halaharvi The Ohio State University
Emma Hardy Clemson University
Ansley Herron University of South Carolina
Katie Humphrys Southern Methodist University
Inaya Hussain Northwestern University
Tori Johnson University of Cincinnati
Ainsleigh Kemper Ohio University
Alexis Knight University of Hawai'i at Manoa
Angelina Kofman Northeastern University
Eva Krupovlyanskiy The Ohio State University
Zydeco Lamaze Columbus State Community College
Max Lang Oberlin College
Eden Lanham Vassar College
Fennik Lindstedt Hofstra University
Sarah Long The Ohio State University
Sarah Lonser Northwestern University
Catherine Lyons Ohio University

Elizabeth Maite
The Ohio State University
Evelyn McCarthy Purdue University
Makenna McCoy Wake Forest University
Riley Murphy University of Miami (Florida)
Sophia Nagy The Ohio State University
Gia Noel Butler University
Molly Pawlik Villanova University
Mairin Pema Emory University
Taylor Porter Savannah College of Art and Design
Carly Priest Haverford College
Saba Rehan The Ohio State University
Kiera Rennick Grinnell College
Allison Renshaw The Ohio State University
Ruthie Saar University of Colorado Boulder
Neva Schehl University of Cincinnati
Elizabeth Schrim Clemson University
Bonita Seeley Ohio University
Reilly Shackelford University of Alabama
Avery Sharfin University of Colorado Boulder
Lane Sharfin University of Arizona
Diana Skestos Skidmore College
Lauren Sloan
The Ohio State University
Emma Spangler Villanova University
Natasha Spivak Kent State University
Casey Sussman IUPUI
Abby Vanderzwan
The Ohio State University
Eva Weiland Dartmouth College
Esther Woda University of Maryland
Grace Wong Wake Forest University
Riona Yu Cornell University
Breaking Glass Ceilings
CSG alumna Lucy Kirk β58 persevered to land coveted roles in the CIA
When Commencement speaker Lucy Kirk β58 entered a special training program upon joining the CIA, she experienced a major culture shock.
Kirk, who had for the majority of her educational career attended all-girl schools, found herself in a class with nine women and 90 men.
βI wasnβt prepared for that,β she said.
But throughout her career in the CIA, which spanned from 1967 to 2000, Kirk worked to overcome the adversity she faced as a female in a male-dominated field. And throughout it all, she used the foundational skills she said her education at Columbus School for Girls provided her.
βI just got a fabulous education there,β she said.
Kirk first attended CSG in kindergarten, but later left to attend public school, returning to CSG in Form VIII and staying through Upper School. During her time as a Unicorn, Kirk was heavily involved in student council, serving as Secretary her junior year and President her senior year.
After graduating from CSG, Kirk knew she wanted to do something different, but was unsure exactly what path to take. She headed to Wellesley College and earned a bachelorβs degree in American Studies.
One of the defining moments of Kirkβs early life came after she earned her undergraduate degree, when she spent time living with a family in Argentina for the Experiment in International Living program. She fell in love with the area and the culture, and the experience sparked an interest in an international relations career.
After graduating with a masterβs degree in International Relations and Latin American Studies, Kirk joined the CIA. As a female in a male-dominated workforce, she faced a considerable amount of discrimination and struggled to get overseas assignments.
βI really didnβt want people to dislike me,β Kirk said. βI wasnβt out to rattle cages and have fights.β
Despite these challenges, Kirk persevered. During the course of her career, she held positions of increasing responsibility in multiple cities across the country including New York City, Washington, D.C., Philadelphia, and San Francisco.
From 1989 to 1993, she served stateside as a Chief of Station, working in close collaboration with the Federal Bureau of Investigations, The Immigration and Naturalization Services, and U.S. Customs. She served as the liaison officer within the Office of Congressional Affairs from 1993 to 1996 before serving in London as the First Secretary of the U.S. Embassy from 1996 to 1999.
βI had the best assignment of my life,β she said of her service abroad. βIt was just wonderful.β
After leaving the CIA, Kirk continued to stay active, pursuing a new career in real estate and teaching courses about the Cold War. In 2020, she published her first book, The Poison Factory: Operation Kamera, a spy novel set in 2012.
In addition to spending time writing her own stories, Kirk has remained focused on learning the stories of others. Though time has passed since Kirk first received her education at CSG, sheβs very much still a student, taking courses in literature and history where she lives in New York City.
βIβm picking up where I left off,β she said. βAnd itβs great.β

Alumnae Weekend 2022
More than 125 alumnae with graduation years ranging from 1950 to 2019 gathered April 29-30 for the first in-person Alumnae Weekend in two years. Virtual and hybrid elements were also offered in order to include alumnae who were unable to travel or attend in person.






The celebration included inducting 59 seniors into the alumnae community, recognizing longtime Director of Development at CSG Carolyn Thomas Christy β60 as Alumna of the Year, and honoring Saba Rehan β22 with the Virginia Colgan McCloud Award as voted by her peers. Attendees also toasted outgoing Head of School Jennifer Ciccarelli and made her an honorary member of the

At Left: Class of β70: from left to right, (top row)


Susan Leach Madden, Susan Smith Shages, Lesley Wilson Schaab, Leslie Huntington, Christine Heer Dill, Janie Marr Werum, Anne Jeffrey Wright, (bottom row) Sara Smith Harris, Sally Schmidt Austen, Anne St. Clair Chapwell, Lynne Aronson, Babs Summer Glazier, Pamela McMurray Foote, Jill Levy, Rose Anna Coleman Kolar
At Right: Also Class of β70: from left to right, (top row) Leslie Huntington, Anne St. Clair Chapwell, Janie Marr Werum, Susan Smith Shages, Christine Heer Dill, Lesley Wilson Schaab, (bottom row) Sally Schmidt Austen, Anne Jeffrey Wright, Susan Leach Madden, Lynne Aronson, Sara Smith Harris, Pamela McMurray Foote, Rose Anna Coleman Kolar, Babs Summer Glazier



The Class of β72: from left to right, (top row)
Tracey Lind, Rita Freimanis, Betsy Morris, Anne Garden, Lucy Joyce, Molly Lambright Sills, Jenifer Sehring Alexander, (bottom row) Christine Davis, Marnie Chapman Black, Carolyn Cox Batcheller, Paula Penn-Nabrit, and Sally Jeffrey OβNeil

Alumnae Association to thank her for her eight years as CSGβs leader.






As festivities continued, alumnae experienced hands-on learning. They met with faculty and students to learn about CSG opportunities in the areas of leadership; global engagement; computer science; and diversity, equity, inclusion, and belonging. Though they didnβt know it at the time, these sessions were an exclusive preview of the Power & Promise campaign for our Alumnae Weekend goers.
Attendees congratulated members of the Class of 1972 for celebrating their milestone 50th reunion, and everyone learned the new CSG Fight Song together. Alumnae also devoted time to honoring fundraising efforts. The Class of 1987 was awarded the Red/Gold Cup for the most funds raised, while the Class of 1967 earned the Champagne Cup for the highest participation in giving to the Annual Fund.
Perhaps most prominent throughout the weekend were the connections made between alumnae and students. Carol Benua Major β67 and Natasha Spivak β22 formed a quick friendship during the networking reception and planned to keep in touch. Anne Jeffrey Wright β70 offered Carly Priest β22 a place to do her laundry next yearβCarly is a studentathlete at Haverford College now just minutes away from Anne. And Caroline Orrick β72 and Zydeco Lamaze β22 connected over their love of clowning!
Plan to join us next Alumnae Weekend April 28-29, 2023. Remember, all classes are always welcome!
In the meantime, please be sure to stay connected through CSG Connect by visiting Columbus School for Girls and installing the mobile app βCSG Connectβ through the
or Google Play app store.
Leveling Up
CSG alumna Laura Raines β09 embraces problem solving with Google role

Laura Raines β09 never saw herself at Google. As a college student at the University of Michigan, the CSG alum assumed Google was only for those with technical and computer programming skills.
βI never really felt like it was an opportunity or an option for me,β she said.
But Raines defied her own expectations by joining Google as Programmatic Account Strategist in 2015, working with large companies to assist them with their online advertising. The 31 year old credits her experience at CSG for fostering within her the curiosity and eagerness to learn that would become vital in taking her career to the next level.
βItβs not about being a technical person or being able to code,β she said. βItβs about being able to solve problems. Once you get into the real world, itβs the knowledge that you get on the job thatβs the most important,β she said.
At Google, Raines works with companies to figure out how to solve marketing challenges and drive business results from ads that Google helps display across the internet. She likes that what she does results in tangible benefits for these clients. Raines got the opportunity to apply for her role through a friend, and she had already built the foundational skills necessary for the job right out of college. After graduating from the University of Michigan in May of 2013 with a double major in communications and informatics (a combination of computer programming, statistics, and online information systems), Raines landed a job that August with programmatic advertising business, Rocket Fuel.
Though Rocket Fuel introduced Raines to the world of online advertising, she began learning the soft skills needed for career success much earlier. Raines attended Columbus School for Girls from Form VI through XII, and she said her experiences instilled in her a curiosity she still carries today.
During her sophomore year in Upper School, Raines participated in a program led by Dr. Kevin Sweeney in which
she and other students, working with power tools, invented a reenvisioned lockerβand presented it at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. For her Senior May Program, Raines did a public relations internship at Victoriaβs Secret, an experience that would motivate her to pursue communications upon entering college.
While CSG gave Raines unique educational opportunities, the all-girl setting also contributed to her growth. Raines talked often in her classes and she said attending classes with fellow girls helped give her the confidence to take risks.
βI always felt comfortable raising my hand in class and providing my perspective or asking a questionβI never really secondguessed myself,β she said. βIt was always a learning opportunity.β
Attending classes with fellow girls helped give me the confidence to take risks.Laura Raines β09
Embracing Entrepreneurship
CSG alumna Camryn Pickworth β17 forges her own creative career pathOne of the biggest lessons Camryn Pickworth β17 has learned is to ignore her detractors.
Women are often told they canβt or shouldnβt do certain things. Through starting and owning a business, Pickworth has learned the importance of trusting herself to take risks. The CSG alumna started her own business, The First Pick VA Group, during her junior year in college in an effort to build a strong virtual assistant network that both supports female freelancers and provides top-notch service to clients.
Now, she wants other young women to know that options exist outside of the traditional career trajectory that allow for an easier work-life balance.

βGirls have the option to take an alternative path, even if it doesnβt always feel that way,β Pickworth said.
Exploring freelance opportunities during her sophomore year of college at Willamette University put Pickworth on her own path to entrepreneurship. She found that working as a virtual assistant was both more rewarding and lucrative than working traditional college jobs in food service or retail. The 23-year-old also found that the more she worked, the more her clients came to depend on and trust her to find great contractors for workplace needs.
In 2020 while a junior at Willamette, Pickworth started The First Pick VA Group, a virtual assistant agency that offers training and mentorship to freelancers before connecting them with clients. The First Pick VA Group consists of six core virtual assistants as well as a referral network available for clients in search of more specialized skills. In the next three years, she hopes to expand her team to as many as 50 virtual assistants.
βWeβve been very fortunate to have a positive reaction from our amazing clients,β Pickworth said.
The agencyβs virtual assistants take on an assortment of tasks including clerical assignments, such as email communications, spreadsheets, and general research. Clients include entrepreneurs, consultants, nonprofits, and small- and mid-sized businesses.
When new professionals join Pickworthβs team, they spend one month being trained by senior-level assistants before working with their first client. During this period, they learn how to engage with clients and receive personalized mentorship as they hone their skills.
Contract work can be isolating and disorganized. Pickworth said her business offers freelance workers the opportunity to have a team of people to go to with questions as well as a safe and secure environment to practice their work.
βWe are looking to be the ethical foundation for freelance work moving forward,β she said. βBy creating a community, we really are a community, and we really are friends on top of demanding a high level of respect and care from our clients. We are creating a safe and ethical workplace while also providing top quality services.β
While Pickworth is focused on growing her community of virtual assistants over the next few years, she also wants to embrace opportunities outside her growing business.
ALUMNAE
Sheβs since graduated from Willamette and holds a B.A. in Civic Communications in Media with a minor in Psychology and Women & Gender Studies. In addition to earning her degree, Pickworth now carries with her the experience of forging a unique career path for herself. She is now an organizational strategist and wants to continue looking for entrepreneurial opportunities while branching into business consulting.
Pickworth specializes in organization and business strategy and provides the helping hand that many clients, business owners, and organizations need to efficiently run their operations. Currently, she primarily works with entrepreneurs and nonprofits. In the future she is open to speaking to professional or student-based groups about productivity,
organization, or entrepreneurship within life and the workplace. Sheβs also interested in working with small- to mid-sized businesses as an organizational strategy consultant.
Her experience founding her own business has taught Pickworth that risk taking is important, and failure is part of the learning process. The most important thing, she said, is to try.
βIf you have a goal, go after it,β she said.
To learn more about Pickworthβs business, visit firstpickva.com.
Alumnae in the Classroom

Weβre always looking for outstanding alumnae in various fields to share their expertise and wisdom with todayβs students.
Contact Lisa Dodge at ldodge@columbusschoolforgirls.org to participate in our Alumnae in the Classroom program.



























1950
Class rep: Judith Gibson Stone β50
Nancy Lurie Salzman β50βs youngest, Jim, is a visiting professor at Harvard Law School two blocks away, so she gets to see him and his wife. She writes: βI have a to-do list for him, including cutting fallen branches into logs. Two granddaughters are working in London, England, and I hope to visit them after COVID-19. My three grandsons are in the USA. My whole Israel family (son, his wife, my grandson, and my granddaughter and her husband) all got COVID-19, although all were vaccinated. Their two grandbabies (my great-grandbabies) also got COVID-19, but all survived. My son Davidβs widow lives nearbyβmy only family in Boston. I swim 30 minutes three times a week, walk other days. So I fully expect to celebrate my 100thβand to enjoy our CSG Reunions for years to come. Much to do in Boston, so I only decamp in the summer to Marthaβs Vineyard: for family, garden, swimming, and sailing.β
1951
Class rep: Nancy Cottingham Miles β51 1952
Class rep: Needed 1953
Class rep: Needed 1954
Class rep: Needed 1955
Class rep: Bobbie Isaac Weiler β55
1956
Class rep: Andrea Smith Lorig β56 1957
Class rep: Needed
1958
Class rep: Julie Price Myers β58 1959
Class rep: Ramona Lopez Dreebin β59
1960
Class rep: Carolyn Thomas Christy β60 1961
Class rep: Abigail Hobbs Faerber β61 and Joann Smith β61 1962

Class rep: Patricia Tice Offenberg β62 1963
Class rep: Needed 1964
Class reps: Linda Benua β64 and Carla Pollock Lane β64 1965
Class rep: Needed 1966
Class rep: Needed 1967
Class reps: Carol Benua Major β67 and Mary Larrick Schmertz β67
Class rep Carol Benua Major β67 and her husband have been working with their Habitat for Humanity affiliate helping build three new houses for tornado victims in their county.
Nancy Benua β67 βBennyβ had an extended solo at the Maturango Museum in Ridgecrest, California on the edge of the Mojave Desert in spring of 2022 and sold
paintings. There are special permits to gather desert blossoms, and she requested an extension to place them beneath her paintings. If you Google search her art name, Benny Alba, and the show title, Dusk and Bright Horizons, there is an interview with a family story and some of the paintings. βI am close to San Antonio, Texas to pick up an elderly, full Rhodesian Ridgeback rescue. Sister Mary Margaret will join this elderly woman and her other elderly dog soon!β
CSGβs Class of 1967 invites all alums to join us in supporting CSG juniors and seniors who have limited financial resources to attend the college of their choice. Our class created the College Access Fund (CAF) in 2019 to cover incidental expenses for families who may not be able to afford the costs of college application fees, tutoring, fees for college readiness exams (SAT/ACT/ AP), and the like. The need clearly exists, with approximately 36% of CSG families today receiving some form of tuition assistance. We are hoping to build this fund into an endowment that would support CSG students for many years to come.
We hope that you will consider supplementing your annual gift to CSG with an additional contribution to the College Access Fund. Checks to the College Access Fund can be made at any time of year and mailed to CSG, Development Office, 65 S. Drexel Ave., Columbus, Ohio 43209.
1968
Class rep: Pamela Lynn β68
Rosalind Mercier β68 was finally able to return the Founders Portrait, which she had taken with her on her move to Europe. She had wanted to repaint one of the portraits she still wasnβt happy with. But due to all the COVID-19 rules, the painting was locked away in France for two years! It is now back in its place on the Hayot Boardroom walls.
1969
Class rep: Candace Corson β69
1970
Class reps: Leslie Huntington β70 and Lesley Wilson Schaab β70
1971
Class rep: Nancy Pace β71
1972
Class rep: Caroline Farrar Orrick β72
Long-time Smith College Head Womenβs Tennis Coach Christine Davis β72 has been selected as recipient of the ITA Meritorious Service Award, presented by ConantLeadership. Davis assumed the head coaching position at Smith College in
1978 and led the Pioneers to New8 Conference regular-season titles in 1987, 1988, 1989, and 1998 and advanced to the NCAA Division III Championships in 1988, 1993, and 1994. The 1989 and 1993-1995 teams reached the conference tournament finals. Davisβ contributions to the sport of tennis extend beyond the college game, as she has her PTR professional level as well as USTA high performance certification. She holds numerous teaching and tennis director positions, including Tennis Director at The Country Club at Muirfield Village in Dublin, Ohio.
1973
Class rep: Susie Bauer β73
In recognition of the 50th anniversary of Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972, the University of Notre Dame, its Athletics Department, and the Notre Dame Monogram Club award more than 250 honorary monograms to passionate women who paved the way for the success of the universityβs current womenβs varsity programs. Among those recognized will be Rev. Dr. Anne Dilenschneider β73 . Anne played field hockey at Notre Dame and was the first woman lifeguard and first woman swimming instructor. She will be honored at the UNLV game in October with the official monogram jacket ceremony. Her CSG field hockey stick that she used to play for Notre Dame still hangs on her office wall. Womenβs athletics have come so far!
During the South Dakota legislative session, Anne was interviewed by local and national media on issues related to transgender healthcare, her specialty area. She continues to lecture at University of South Dakotaβs Sanford School of Medicine on transgender healthcare. She has been asked to serve on the Diversity, Inclusion & Community Engagement Committee of the Global Education Institute (GEI) for the World Professional Association for Transgender Health (WPATH).
1974
Class rep: Muffy Hamilton Parsons β74
1975
Class rep: Julie Friedlander β75
1976
Class rep: Charlotte Stiverson β76
Ann Arthur Cook β76 and Jane Arthur Roslovic β80 lost their dad, William Arthur, this summer.
Jayne Miles Schiefer β76 attended CSG from Form II through VI. She writes, βalthough Iβve lost contact with my old classmates, I remember them very well. Our elementary years were memorable, and even though I didnβt graduate with this class you will always be my classmates. After finishing high school at Upper Arlington and attending Ohio State, I finished my college years at the University of Arizona with a BFA. Marriage and children have kept me busy over the years. From Columbus to Pittsburgh to Chapel Hill, and a year in Grand Rapidsβmy husband Mark and I have made our home in Venice, Florida now for over 15 years. We have two daughters and six grandchildren. My mother is the class representative for the class of β51. I would love to hear from my former classmates.β
1977
Class rep: Constance Staber β77

1978
Class rep: Kate Estabrook Schoedinger β78 1979
Class rep: Margaret Cunningham Basiliadis β79

1980
Class rep: Robon Warburton Donaldson β80 1981
Class rep: Marla Krupman β81
Dawn Echols β81 shares big news that she moved to West Palm Beach, Florida in May. She is enjoying living downtown and walking much more than driving. The beach is only a mile away, and she is having fun exploring South Florida. Her daughter Giselle graduated from Hilton Head Prep in May and is off to NYU (majoring in Real Estate with plans to become a developer). Canβt wait to see what adventures await these ladies in their new hometowns.
Susan Dawson-Cook β81 , M.S. has not only been Swimming with Dolphins (for real), but her book of the same name is available as an e-book on Amazon (paperbacks available soon).
Shelagh Connor β81 was a fiction judge for the Vermont Book Award in 2022. She reports that it was a great experience. The winning book, The Hare, by Melanie Finn, is a feminist literary thriller (incredible writing). Shelagh is now working on the board of the Green Mountain Book Festival, which will bring a new annual festival to Burlington in September, during Banned Books Week. The headliner is Ruth Ozeki, another incredible novelist. Shelagh is also working on a revision of a new novel, and she is trying to find a publisher for a nonfiction book proposal: a craft book which would include the wisdom (through 14 years and counting) of guests from her radio show, Write the Book, as well as her own advice about writing.
Also in Vermontβ¦ Jenny Brown Cohen β81 is thriving and still loves living in Burlington and teaching high school English. She warmly invites you to give her a call if you are ever in the area!
Manette Sykes β81 loves her new job at Recovery Centers of America that allows her to share her sobriety and experiences with patients while helping them with FMLA and short-term disability claims.
Ronda Mankamyer McIntyre β81 is embracing a simple life these days and counting her blessings, including news that she is going to be a grandmother in October!
Laura Chu β81 and Lori Bornstein Linskey β81 had a great time getting all caught up last month while enjoying dinner on the waterfront. Photo below!
1982
Class rep: Leslie Rogovin Fox β82
Marsha Robinson β82 wrote Matriarchy, Patriarchy, and National Security: The Idea of National Security in Africa, in Europe and in the United States. She notes: βMr. Guyβs, Mrs. Smithsβ, and Mrs. Fryβs history lessons inspired me to spend time in archives in several nations.β
Catherine Colinvaux β82 hosted alumnae in the Boston area for a meet-and-greet event in August at the Harvard Club (see picture below).

1983
Class rep: Needed 1984
Class rep: Andrea Krupman Powell β84
1985
Class rep: Robin Ives Canowitz β85
1986
Class rep: Sandra Kim β86
1987
Class reps: Karen Lurie Jones β87 and Maggie McLeod Bowers β87 1988
Class reps: Cathy Vrenna β88 and Paige Lucas OβMahoney β88 1989
Class rep: Needed
1990
Class rep: Janet Knight Rauschenberger β90
1991
Class rep: Michelle Congbalay McMichael β91
1992
Class rep: Bethany Broderick β92
Distinguished litigator, legal expert, public servant (and CSG alumna!) Judge Laurel Beatty Blunt β92 will join the University of Michigan Ford School faculty as a Harry A. and Margaret D. Towsley Foundation Policymaker in Residence.
1993
Class rep: Marnie Stein β93
Mindy Snyder β93 , Marnie Stein β93, Larke Paul White β93 (currently living in Los Angeles) and Jessica Miller Garron β93 (currently living in Alaska) recently got together.
Jessica was awarded her Ph.D last May from University of Alaska, Fairbanks, College of Natural Science and Mathematics. Her Ph.D is in Remote Sensing Decision Making: Interdisciplinary Studies. Her thesis was: βIntegration of Remote Sensing Technologies into Arctic Oil Spill Response.β
Larke is the Managing Director at Swell Creative Group, which is an award-winning agency specializing in creative and marketing strategies for social justice
causes by partnering with storytellers, organizations, brands, and candidates to create people-based movements. They had a great time catching up and reminiscing and are looking forward to seeing one another again for reunion next year!

1994
Class rep: Jessica Bailey Rush β94
1995
Class reps: Audra Longert β95 and Bernadette Kuhnsman Donovan β95
1996
Class rep: Molly Schirner Fortune β96
1997
Class reps: Julie Ferber Zuckerman β97 and Krissy Rose-Anderson Fenner β97
1998
Class rep: Miranda Martin Warren β98 1999
Class rep: Amanda Moore McGinnis β99 2000
Class rep: Jennifer Good Skrobarcek β00
2001
Class rep: Janis Penn Bond β01 2002
Class reps: Jane Alexander β02 2003
Class rep: Liz Liston β03
2004
Class reps: Carolyn Thurman β04 and Carey Rabold Woodruff β04 2005
Class rep: Maria Dixon LeBlanc β05 2006
Class rep: Marielle Perrault McGregor β06 2007
Class rep: Kate Vorys β07
Jordan Hilbrands Gramlich β07 and her husband, Ryan, welcomed Calvin Frederick Gramlich to their family in November 2021 (picture on next page). Evie is obsessed with giving him big hugs and has grown into her role as a big sister with so much joy!
Elizabeth βBizzβ Burns Lloyd β07 and her husband Greg welcomed Avery Louise Lloyd,

their first child, on July 21, 2022. Bizz has been working as a Neurologic Certified Specialist Physical Therapist at Inova Fairfax Hospital Inpatient Rehab in Fairfax, VA.
Hannah Scheckelhoff Javelly β07 and spouse Alex Javelly welcomed daughter Cora Elizabeth Javelly on March 26, 2021. Hannah has spent the last 3+ years as in-house legal counsel for WeWork and is based in NYC.

2008
Class reps: Megan Fitzmartin β08 and Teresa Eigel β08
2009
Class reps: Patricia Arehart β09 and Laura Raines β09
2010
Class rep: Molly Schissel β10
2011
Class rep: Taylor Lint β11
2012
Class rep: Angela Mentel Burd β12 and Jordan James β12
2013
Class rep: Evlin Hogan β13
2014
Class rep: Hannah Barends β14
2015
Class rep: Juntao He β15
2016
Class rep: Needed Eleanor Wade β16 grew up hosting six exchange students, which sparked an interest in traveling and her compassion for learning about people of different backgrounds. Eleanor recently set off on a 27-month trip to Uganda as a member of the Peace Corpsβone of the first people to go back overseas with the Peace Corps since the pandemic began. Her interest in public health grew during her time in college at New York University in Shanghai, China. She studied public health as an undergraduate and was hoping to go to the Peace Corps right after graduation in 2020, but the pandemic stopped that plan in its tracks. Eleanor doesnβt yet know what her responsibilities in Uganda will be. She could be doing anything from maternal to child health, HIV and AIDS assistance, water sanitation, or countless other activities.
2017
Class reps: Mia George β17 and Marissa Madison β17
2018
Class reps: Katie Watts β18 and Julia Lunt β18
2019
Class reps: Eleanor Richardson β19 and Mackenzie Peterson β19
2020
Class reps: Amirah Lomax β20 and Greta Schoetmer β20
2021
Class rep: Alyssa Canowitz β21
2022
Class reps: Carly Priest β22 and Evelyn McCarthy β22
In Memoriam
Ruth βTuckerβ Ayers Harris β55 December 27, 2021
Maureen Stevens Shedenhelm β63 January 16, 2022
Peggy Kauffman Connors β70 January 30, 2022
Daphne Daunt β61 Spring 2022
Sally Edler Scott β49 May 28, 2022
Debbie L. Bowman β70 July 24, 2022

Thank You!
Columbus School for Girls sees donor recognition as an extension of our belief in the power of community investment. Publicly celebrating donors demonstrates that philanthropy is a shared community value. This donor impact report recognizes members of the CSG community for their generous gifts and support during the past giving year, July 1, 2021 through June 30, 2022. We also thank and recognize the donors who gave anonymously that are not listed below. Thank you for your commitment to supporting our students and school.
Abbott Laboratories Employee Giving Campaign
Mrs. Najla Abbousy and Dr. Fadhil Abbousy Ms. Allison Abell
Mrs. Jane Kirk Ackley β65 and Mr. Stanford Ackley Ms. Leah Weintraub and Mr. John Adams
Mrs. Deborah Willi Addison β77 and Mr. Douglas Addison
Mrs. Dana Adler and Dr. Brent Adler
Mrs. Shakila Ali and Mr. Glen Ahrens
Ms. Zulal Fazlioglu Akin and Mr. Yigit Akin Dr. Tayma al Faruqi
Mrs. Cecily Chester Alexander β88 and Mr. Brett Alexander Mrs. Liz Alexander
Ms. Emily Alonso-Taub β89 and Mr. Orlay Alonso Mrs. Susan Altan and Dr. Taylan Altan Mrs. Judith Altreuter β75
Altria American Electric Power American Endowment Foundation
Ms. Annie Ruefle and Mr. Richard Amicon Ms. Morgan Amigo β13
Dr. DanaMarie Aminian and Mr. Ashley Aminian Ms. Linda McNealey Anderson β64 and Mr. Gary Anderson Dr. Kathleen Anderson-Sandman and Dr. Peter Anderson
Mrs. Katherine Mills Anderson β67 and Mr. R. Joseph Anderson Mrs. Lindsay Anderson and Mr. Ryan Anderson Mrs. Elena Sadar Andrews β92 and Mr. Brian Andrews Mrs. Nicole Anosike and Mr. Dozie Anosike Ms. Allison Ansari β05
Mrs. Rebecca Ansley and Mr. Charles Ansley Apple Matching Gifts Program Ms. Brigid Arace
Mrs. Laura Braley Arch β65 and Mr. Barry Arch Arch Capital Group
Mrs. Kerri Armstrong and Mr. Joseph Armstrong Estate of Barbara Miller Boothby Arnold β30 Ms. Leia Arnold
Mrs. Karen Feibel Aronoff β78 and Mr. James Aronoff Mrs. Amy Aslaner and Mr. Tim Aslaner
Mrs. Jill Aubert and Mr. Brian Aubert
Mrs. Sally Schmidt Austen β70 and Mr. George Austen Mrs. Susan Robinson Austin β87 and Mr. Sidney Austin, IV Mrs. Sine-Marie Ayres
Ms. Elizabeth Williams β76 and Mr. Tom Ayres Dr. Samiya Saklayen and Dr. Farhad Aziz Ms. Rebecca Bailey
The Baird Foundation
Mr. Corey Baker
Dr. Cindy Baker and Mr. Robert Baker, III
Mrs. Margaret Forbes Baker β89 and Mr. Tyler Baker Mrs. Patricia Balassone and Mr. Frank Balassone Ms. Elizabeth Jeffrey Balderston β75 and Mr. Thomas Balderston Ms. Kathy Bapst and Mr. Brian Bapst Mrs. RaMona Barber and Mr. David Barber Mrs. Catherine Sirak Bardsley β67 and Mr. Wayne Bardsley Dr. Maria Mapa Barfield and Dr. Jason Barfield Ms. Anne Barnes Dr. Kathleen Krueger Barrows β72 and Dr. Jeffrey Barrows Ms. Karen Bartley
Ms. Amy Bodiker Baskes β90 and Mr. Jeremy Baskes Mrs. Janie Aronson Baskin β70 and Mr. Brad Baskin Mrs. Carolyn Cox Batcheller β72 and Mr. William Batcheller Bath & Body Works Foundation
Mr. Richard Bauer Mrs. Julia Baughman and Mr. Milton Baughman Mrs. Ashley Beavers and The Reverend Karyl Beavers Mrs. Agnes Becker and Mr. James Becker Mrs. Eileen Becknell and Mr. Jerry Becknell Mrs. Cathy Balshone-Becze β64 and Mr. William Becze Ms. Samantha Shuler β87 and Mr. Michael Beekhuizen Dr. Maria Behbehani and Dr. Greg Behbehani Ms. Kathryn Belfance Ms. Susan Benjamin Mrs. Alexis Mersel Bennett and Mr. Andrew Bennett Dr. Jessica Bennett and Mr. Daniel Bennett Mrs. Shiann Bennett and Mr. Jose Bennett Mrs. Jewel Benson and Mr. Frank Benson, III Ms. Pamela Lynn β68 and Mr. John Benson Ms. Linda Benson Mrs. Traci Dodderer Bentley β96 and Mr. James Bentley Mrs. Sara Saxby Bentley β62 and Mr. William Bentley Ms. Linda Benua β64 Mrs. Nicole Kendell and Mr. Sven Bergmann Mrs. Cheryl Berner and Mr. David Berner Ms. Susan Bauer β73 and Mr. Stephen Bernheim Ms. Marla Krupman β81 and Mr. Dan Bernstein Dr. Naomi Chen and Dr. Sumit Bhatla Big Lots Stores, Inc. Mrs. Delinda Bing and Mr. Joey Bing Ms. Elizabeth Wheeler Bishara β00 and Mr. Joe Bishara Mrs. Julie Biswas and Mr. Arun Biswas Mrs. Marnie Chapman Black β72 and The Honorable Timothy Black Mrs. Emily Chapman Blodgett β80 and Mr. Jeff Blodgett Mr. Theodore Bloom BNY Mellon Community Partnership Mrs. Constance Aldrich Bodiker β54 Boeing
Mrs. Mary Jane Dawes Bolon β54 and Mr. Thomas Bolon, Esq.
Ms. Anne Bonney β67
Ms. Leah Sellers and Mr. Brian Bornino
Ms. Amy Borntrager and Mr. Randy Borntrager
Mrs. Sharon Borntrager
Mrs. Deloris Bosley and Mr. Dalton Bosley, Jr. Mrs. Nancy Rice Bott β60
Mrs. Karlyn Botzman and Mr. Brian Botzman Mrs. Jennifer Bova and Ms. Clint Bova
Eleanor L. Craig Bowsher Fund
Mrs. Judy Yenkin Brachman β56 and Mr. Merom Brachman Ms. Suzanne Brady β93
Mrs. Joanne DβIppolito Brake β93 and Mr. Jay Brake Mrs. Eleanor Ackley Brandt β89 and Mr. Adam Brandt Bright Funds
Mrs. Brandy Brockway and Mr. Loren Brockway Mrs. Cynthia Porter Brown β67 and Mr. Colin Brown
Ms. Kathryn Kah Brown β77 and Mr. Dencil Brown, Jr. Mrs. Sue Andreae Brown β56 and Mr. H. Hewett Brown
Ms. Sarah Brown β99
Dr. Susan Buchanan, MPH β79 and Mr. Stephen Brown
Mrs. Karmen Brown and Mr. Timothy Brown, Sr. Ms. Jodi Ford and Mr. Christopher Browning Dr. Paige Shalter Bruening β89 and Dr. Andy Bruening
Ms. Blair Bethel, D.V.M. β82 and Mr. Joseph Buckley Mrs. Jennifer Bunker and Mr. Jonathan Bunker Miss Elizabeth Burgess β24
Mrs. Raleigh Burges Burgess β82 and Mr. Eric Burgess Mrs. Amy Burgess and Mr. Ryan Burgess
Dr. Marian Morris Burns β75
Ms. Elizabeth Butler β87
Mrs. Sarah Buxton and Mr. Joseph Buxton Mrs. Nancy Dunn Byers β75 and Mr. George Byers, III
Dr. Laurence Coutellier Cabanas and Mr. Carl Cabanas Mrs. Rebecca Calkins and Mr. Vinson Calkins Ms. Alyssa Canowitz β21
Mrs. Robin Ives Canowitz β85 and Mr. H. Jay Canowitz Mrs. Mary Mitchell Canter β70 and Mr. Robert Canter, Jr. Mrs. Jeanette Canyon and Mr. Christopher Canyon Ms. Angi Carbonaro-Crawford β95
Ms. Barbara Van Meter Carey β47 and Dr. Donald Carey Mrs. Cheryl Carey and Dr. Jeff Carey
Mrs. Ami Carmon and Mr. James Carmon Ms. Jennifer Nelson Carney and Mr. John Carney Dr. Angela Casey and Mr. Michael Casey
Mrs. Laura Caskey and Mr. Michael Caskey Dr. Marya Goldberg Cassandra β92 and Dr. James Cassandra Mrs. Ann Casto, Esq. and Mr. Don Casto, III Ms. Genelle Castro
Mrs. Clare Willoughby Ceballos β95 and Mr. Michael Ceballos
Mrs. Jennifer Chapman and Dr. Scott Chapman
Ms. Kacey Chappelear β98
Mrs. Sharon Chappelear and Mr. Stephen Chappelear, Esq. Ms. Anne Chapman St. Clair Chapwell β70
Mrs. Catherine Kessler Chatas β84 and Mr. Geoffrey Chatas Ms. Chi Chen β09
Dr. Elizabeth Simmons β81 and Mr. R. Sekhar Chivukula Dr. Mary Chomic and Mr. James Chomic Ms. Kerry Christensen β77
Mrs. Mara Christine and Mr. Steve Christine
Ms. Carolyn Thomas Christy β60 Mrs. Sara Lacey Chylack β58 and Dr. Leo Chylack, Jr. Mrs. Constance Evans Claar β54 and Mr. Richard Claar Ms. Michelle Clarett
Ms. Jo Ellen Cline β87
Mrs. Laura Clubok and Mr. Kenneth Clubok Mrs. Lauren Feibel Cohen β82 and Mr. Bennett Cohen Ms. Sarah Cole Dr. Karen Evans and Mr. Andre Coleman Columbus Jewish Foundation Dr. Maria Congbalay Mrs. M. Annette Conkle and Mr. Chuck Conkle Mrs. Katharine Ireland Conley β73 and Dr. Christopher Conley Mrs. Kristen Cook and Mr. Chad Cook Mrs. Saundra Dombey Cooke β55 Mr. Mark Corna
Cornell University Foundation Mrs. Emily Bartz Costello β97 and Mr. Nick Costello Mrs. Martha Gottling Cottrill β80 and Mr. Thomas Cottrill Mrs. Emily Allen Cowles β03 and Mr. Jason Cowles Ms. Sarah Crane Cox β75 and Mr. Cary Cox Estate of Eleanor Hommon Crabbe β27 Ms. Loann Crane* Ms. Mary Croft
Mrs. Kathryn Isaac Croke β67 and Mr. Timothy Croke Ms. Marian Cropp Mrs. Lucy Morris Crotty β83 and Maj. Sean Crotty Mrs. Elaine Cryer and Mr. Arthur W Cryer CSG Parents Association
CSG Scholarship and Faculty Fund CSG Senior Class Gift Mrs. Laura Bailey Culp β78 and Mr. Robert Culp, Jr. Ms. Asia Cunningham β13 Ms. Virginia Cunningham β61 Mrs. Wendy Fahey Currier β02 Dr. Tiffany Tynes Curry and Mr. Anthony Curry Ms. Ruth Milligan β86 and Mr. Dave Daiber Mrs. Lani Davakis and Dr. Nicholas Davakis Mrs. Louise Davidson and Mr. Alan Davidson Dr. Louise Davidson-Schmich β86 and Mr. Michael Davidson-Schmich Ms. Christine Davis β72 Mrs. Tenile Davis and Mr. Franklin Davis Mrs. Gretchen Wells Davis β70 and Mr. Howard Davis Dr. Juliet Taylor and Mr. Michael Davis Ms. Shea Davis Mrs. Vivian Davis Davis-Cook Fund Mrs. Linda de Lorenzo and Dr. David de Lorenzo Ms. Malinda Susalla and Dr. L. Mark Dean Ms. Susan DeGraaf β82 Ms. Laura Dehlendorf β78 Mrs. Sara DeLuca and Mr. Michael DeLuca Ms. Jacque DeMarco Mr. Peter Denisky Mrs. Elaine DeVennish and Mr. Edward DeVennish Ms. Melissa White β82 and Mr. Jean-Marie Dimangjo Dr. Deborah Woidtke and Dr. Victor Dizon Ms. Monica Welt β94 and Mr. Babak Djourabchi
Mrs. Lisa Dodge and Mr. Keith Dodge
Mrs. Stephanie Dokko and Mr. David Dokko
Mrs. Brittney Donley and Mr. David Donley
Mrs. Kellyn Donnelly and Mr. Sean Donnelly
Mrs. Bernadette Kuhnsman Donovan β95 and Mr. Todd Donovan
Ms. Kimberly Feinknopf-Dorrian β84 and Mr. Joseph Dorrian
Mrs. Sarah Evans Drawz β95 and Mr. Paul Drawz
Ms. Ramona Lopez Dreebin β59 and Mr. Michael Dreebin
Ms. Edie Milligan Driskill β76 and Mr. Allen Driskill
Mrs. Corinne Francis Driver β52
Ms. Courtney Druen β97
Mrs. Emily Johnston DubΓ© β85 and Mr. Robert DubΓ© Ms. Sarah Rubenstein β88 and Mr. Robert Dubinsky Mrs. Jacquelin Cummins Ducharme β70 and Mr. Stanley Ducharme Mrs. Tiffany Burton Duncan β92 and Mr. Thomas Duncan Mr. Frank Dunham
Mrs. Lindsay Dunn and Mr. Andrew Dunn
Mrs. Danielle Dunn and Mr. Russell Dunn, Jr. Ms. Elizabeth Tynan β67 and Mr. Timothy DuPertius Mrs. Anne Durell and Mr. David Durell Mrs. Carol Durley and Mr. Dale Durley Mrs. Kathleen Earles and Mr. Bart Earles East West Sisters
Mrs. Teresa Edic and Mr. Matthew Edic
Mrs. Jennifer Ross Edwards β59 and Mr. Garth Edwards Mrs. Nancy Edwards and Mr. John Edwards Mrs. Peggy Edwards
Mrs. Julie Eikenberry and Mr. John Eikenberry
Eli Lilly & Company Foundation
Ms. Caroline Elia β09
Mrs. Christina Brown Ellis β96 and Mr. Samuel Ellis
Ms. Cynthia Epler β95
Ms. Melinda Snyder β93 and Mr. Aaron Epstein Dr. Donna Erickson
Ms. Ann Westwater β01 and Mr. Cormac Eubanks Dr. Allison Evans and Dr. David Evans Mrs. Jennifer Johnson Eve β80 and Mr. Kurt Eve Ms. Caroline Donnan β71 and Mr. John Evers Ms. Katherine Exline β02 Expedia
Mrs. Marilu Faber and Mr. Timothy Faber Dr. Abigail Hobbs Faerber β61 and Dr. George Faerber
Mrs. Nancy Falk and Mr. Steve Falk
Ms. Elaine Chu β78 and Mr. Elliot Fan
Mrs. Jeanne Ferguson Fansler β72 and Mr. Thomas Fansler
Mrs. Pam Matthews Farber β80 and Mr. Seth Farber
Ms. Sheri Farber β85
Ms. Susan Farfan
Ms. Janet Kaufman Felber β74 and Mr. Ross Felber
Ms. Melissa Zox β82 and Dr. Bryan Feldman
Ms. Cheryl Fenner
Ms. Kristian Rose-Anderson Fenner β97 and Mr. Nakia Fenner
John C. Fergus Family Fund
Mrs. Khampraseuth Fetters and Mr. John Fetters
Ms. Jamie Feyko β12
Fidelity Charitable
Mrs. Karen Fiorile and Mr. Michael Fiorile Fiserv
Mrs. Ann Flaherty and Mr. Michael Flaherty
Mrs. Lisa Fleege and Mr. Robert Fleege Mrs. Anne Budros Fletcher β92 and Mr. A. Fletcher Ms. Crystal Fletcher Ms. Caitlan Ruff Flis β08 and Mr. Michael Flis, Jr. Mrs. Kristin Kirk Florey β84 and Mr. Jeff Florey Mrs. Nancy Flynn and Mr. Brian Flynn Mrs. Deborah Dawes Fortkamp β59 Mrs. Molly Schirner Fortune β96 and Mr. Todd Fortune Dr. Jessica Foster and Mr. Daren Foster Mrs. Joanna Walz Foster β56 and Dr. Jerry Foster Mrs. Diane Spelleri Foster β84 and Mr. John Foster Mrs. Michelle Harrison Francois β07 Mrs. Louise Gorrell Frank β63 and Mr. Theodore Frank Ms. Wendy Lazarus β67 and Mr. Harley Frankel Dr. Rita Freimanis β72 Mrs. Mindy French and Dr. Bruce French Mrs. Jennifer Ull Frey β94 and Mr. K. Sean Frey Mrs. Julie Feibel Friedlander β75 and Mr. Randal Friedlander Mrs. Hindi Lichtenstein Friedman β68 and Dr. Stewart Friedman Mrs. Ann Fullerton Dr. Lena Furci and Mr. Josh Furci Ms. Sandra Mendel Furman β71 Mrs. Natalie Furniss and Mr. John Furniss Mrs. Jessica Fries-Gaither and Mr. Tre Gaither Mr. Timothy Gall Dr. Marilee Gallagher β67 Mrs. Suzanne Schiff Gallant β57* and Mr. Murray Gallant* Ms. Emily Gammons β13
Ms. Elizabeth Johnson and Mr. Greg Gammons Ms. Danielle Demko and Mr. Aman Garcha Miss Elizabeth Garcia Ms. Carol Andreae β63 and Mr. James Garland Ms. Jenee Gaskin β06 Mrs. Lyndsey Fish Gelhaus β95 and Mr. Joshua Gelhaus Mrs. Helen Hamer Geoffrion β56* and Mr. Arthur Geoffrion Dr. Patricia Gianakopoulos and Dr. William Gianakopoulos Ms. Elizabeth DeLeo Gibbs β78 and Mr. Donald Gibbs Ms. Erika Farfan and Dr. John Giblin Ms. Jane Gibson Mrs. Janet Gilani and Mr. Joseph Gilani Mrs. Catherine Zacks Gildenhorn β74 and Mr. Michael Gildenhorn Ms. Leah Giller β21 Mrs. Kate Carlin Giller β87 and Mr. Patrick Giller Ms. Victoria Davis β00 and Mr. Christopher Glasnapp Mrs. Michele Weinberger Glasser β86 and Mr. Daniel Glasser Ms. Prudence Schofield β69 and Mr. John Glaus Mrs. Barbara Summer Glazier β70 and Mr. Mitchell Glazier Mr. Michael Glimcher Mrs. Jennifer Glimpse Mrs. Autumn Glover and Mr. James Glover Ms. Wendolyn Holland β87 and Mr. David Gnojek Mrs. Tracy Godfrey and Mr. Turhan Godfrey Mrs. Margie Goldach and Mr. Eli Goldach Mrs. Lynnette Goldberg and Dr. Daniel Goldberg Ms. Ruthellen Weaver and Mr. Larry Goldin Google Mrs. Linda Gordon and Mr. Andy Gordon Ms. Babette Gorman β69 Mrs. Melissa Gorman and Mr. Donald Gorman
Dr. Shari Graham and Mr. Christopher Graham
Mrs. Virginia Brown Graham and Dr. Kellen Graham
Mrs. Amy Greenberg and Mr. Joshua Greenberg
Dr. Sarah Greenberger β97
Mrs. Lisa Mueller Greene β83 and Mr. Timothy Greene
Ms. Lacey Greenwalt β04
Mrs. Debbie Griffin and Mr. Eugene Griffin
Mrs. Melinda Case Griffin β69 and Mr. John Griffin
Mrs. Karen Groeber and Mr. John Groeber Mrs. Judy Groff and Mr. Randy Groff
Mrs. Marjory Wasserstrom Gross β55 and Dr. Herbert Gross
Mrs. Betsy Gugle and Mr. Jeff Gugle
Ms. Lisa Gullett
Mrs. Stacy Grossman and Mr. Adam Gurevitz Miss Eva Gurevitz β30
Mrs. Pam Swedlow Gurwin β85 and Dr. Scott Gurwin Mrs. Cynthia Price and Mr. Jack Guy Mrs. Lydia Hadley
Ms. Madeline Hadley β13
Ms. Amy Haid
Miss Mallory Halley β06
Mrs. Elizabeth Wolfe Hamrick β82 and Mr. John Hamrick
Ms. Ingrid Wobst β82 and Mr. Kerry Hanes
Ms. Babette Davis β96 and Mr. Sean Harmon
Estate of Suzanne Bowman Harmon β48
Mrs. Annette Harrell and Mr. Durward Harrell Mrs. Sara Smith Harris β70 and Mr. Alan Harris Ms. Abigail Blosser and Mr. Harry Harris, III
Ms. Brittany Harrison
Patti Harrison Snyder and Jimmy Harrison Memorial Fund Mrs. Amy Hartman and Mr. Drew Hartman
Ms. Jennifer Readler and Mr. Philip Hartmann Mrs. Pamela Hartshorne and Mr. John Hartshorne Ms. Ajmeri Hoque and Dr. Shahed Hasnat Dr. Meghan Hattaway
Mr. W. Henry Hauser, Jr. Estate of Barbara B. Havens Mrs. Michaella Havens and Mr. John Havens, II Dr. Patricia Hayot Ms. Juntao He β15
Ms. Caron Zand β74 and Mr. Donald Head Ms. Karen Auble and Mr. Scott Hearst Mrs. Sheryl Heit and Dr. Philip Heit Ms. Peri Altan β86 and Mr. Jeffrey Helbling Ms. Elizabeth Morris β72 and Mr. John Helyar
Ms. Elizabeth Kessler β86 and Mr. Gregory Henchel Ms. Ann Henderson
Ms. Megan Henry
Mrs. Nancy Henry and Mr. Richard Henry Mrs. Kimberly Hensley and Mr. Christopher Hensley Mrs. Jozefa Hernon and Mr. Donogh Hernon Mrs. Margaret Herrmann and Mr. Richard Herrmann Dr. Talia Kayne Herst β05 and Mr. Brian Herst Ms. Frances Johnson Hester β77 and Mr. Timothy Hester Mr. Dwight Hibbard*
Mrs. Nicci Hicks and Dr. William Hicks, II Mrs. Michelle Hilbert and Mr. Rob Hilbert
Ms. Laurie Hill and Mr. Thomas Hill Mrs. Devra Hiller and Mr. R. Patrick Hiller
Mrs. Alissa Hadley Hines β91 and Mr. Edward Hines Mrs. Lisa Hinson and Mr. Alan Hinson Mrs. Charleen Hinson Dr. Leslie Hoffman and Dr. Seth Hoffman Ms. Evlin Hogan β13 Ms. Susan Burchfield Holliday, Ph.D. β69 and Mr. William Holliday, M.D. The Honorable Denise Page Hood β70 and The Reverend Nicholas Hood, III
Ms. Ann Griffin Turpie-Hooker β50 and Mr. Tom Hooker Mrs. Mary Armande Hopkins and Mr. Jim Hopkins Ms. Sophia Corna β97 and Mr. Scott Horowitz Ms. Nikki Mesnard and Mr. Eric Horvath Mrs. Julie Hostetler and Mr. Duane Hostetler Ms. Kelly Hoyt-Standley Ms. Huiqing Fang and Dr. Jiang Hua Dr. Kasey Huffman and Mr. Kent Huffman Ms. Melissa Huffman β95 Ms. Stephanie Woodhouse Hughes β95 and Mr. William Hughes Huntington
Ms. Leslie Huntington β70 Mrs. LeShel Hutchings and Mr. Justin Hutchings Mrs. Randi Stein Hutton β70 and Mr. Kenneth Hutton Mrs. Rebecca McCabe Ibel β84 and Mr. Sebastian Ibel Mrs. Tracey Ingram and Mr. Norman Ingram Mrs. Ashley Kincaid Ings β00 and Mr. David Ings Ms. Judith Isaac and Mr. Frederick Isaac Mr. Ivo Ivanovski Mrs. Lynn Balshone Jacobs β60 and Mr. Frank Jacobs Mrs. Maria Jagjiwan and Mr. Kal Jagjiwan Ms. Karen James
Dr. Tensing Maa β92 and Mr. James Jeffers Mrs. Nancy Kittredge Jeffrey* and Mr. Robert H. βTadβ Jeffrey* Mrs. Rashida Jeffries and Dr. Hasan Jeffries Ms. Janell Jelliffe β73 Mr. Dan Jenkins Ms. Amanda Johnson β19 The Reverend Jane Power Mykrantz β52 and Mr. Kiehner Johnson Mrs. Tammy Johnson and Mr. Levon Johnson Ms. Nicole Johnson Ms. Christiane Buuck and Mr. David Johnston Mrs. Patricia Hunter Joklik β45 and Mr. Wolfgang Joklik Ms. Amy Sardone and Prof. John Jones Mrs. Miycol Moore Jones β97 and Mr. Kaiser Jones, III Mrs. Grace Jones and Mr. Kenneth Jones Dr. Jennifer Jones and Mr. Kevin Jones Mrs. Lori Jones and Mr. Martin Jones Ms. Mary Jones Mrs. Karen Lurie Jones β87 and Mr. Michael Jones Mr. Matt Jorgenson Ms. Ann Joyce β69 Dr. Anna Kamp and Dr. Ryan Kamp Mrs. Emily Kandel and Mr. Elan Kandel Mrs. Leigh Kane and Mr. Bryon Kane Ms. Debora Kane and Mr. Ira Kane
Ms. Nancy Pace, M.D., MSPH β71 and Mr. Melvin Kaneshige Mrs. Erica Kaplan and Mr. David Kaplan Mrs. Melita Karagirova Mr. Gordon Karels Mrs. April Zimmerman Katz β87 and Mr. Kyle Katz
Mr. Stanley Katz
Mrs. Leah Kayes and Mr. Nathan Kayes
Ms. Sandra Keeling and Mr. Jonathan Keeling
Ms. Sandra Matarrese-Keeling and Dr. Thomas Keeling
Mx. Carson Reid Keene β02
Mrs. Rebecca Keglewitsch and Mr. Josef Keglewitsch
Ms. Sara Winters Kehoe β07 and Mr. David Kehoe
Mrs. Sally Kemper
Ms. Meghan Kennedy
Mrs. Charlotte Power Kessler β61 and Mr. John Kessler
Ms. Tracy Kessler
Mrs. Jessica Orlov Ketner β02 and Mr. Joel Ketner
Mrs. Sandy Ketner and Mr. Scott Ketner
Ms. Charlotte Stiverson β76 and Mr. Dale Killian
Mrs. Kimberly Tepper Killian and Mr. Todd Killian Ms. Julia Kim β90
Mrs. Julie Kirby and Mr. Terence Kirby
Ms. Linda Klayman
Mrs. Heidi Ruben Kleinman β91 and Mr. Stephen Kleinman
Ms. Kelsey Klopfer β10
Mrs. Sarah Sofia Knepp β96 and Mr. Adam Knepp
Ms. Anne Werum Lambright β68 and Mr. Steven Knopp
Mrs. Leslie Knott and Mr. Patrick Knott
Ms. Rocio Knotts
Dr. Candace Corson β69 and Mr. George Knowles, M.D. Mrs. Maggie Wuorinen Koerner β77 and Mr. James Koerner
Dr. Elizabeth Koffler and Mr. Lucas Koffler
Mrs. Eleonora Kofman
Ms. Rose Coleman Kolar β70 and Mr. John Kolar
Ms. Janie Marr Werum β70 and Mr. David Korn
Fred S. Kotte, Jr. and Rose E. Kotte Charitable Fund
Dr. Anne Krabacher and Mr. Gregory Krabacher Dr. Stephanie Kakos Kraft β86 and Mr. Michael Kraft
Mrs. Roberta Yenkin Krakoff β55 and Dr. Lawrence Krakoff Mrs. Lynn Garrett Kranz β70 and Mr. Bruce Kranz Mrs. Carey Collins Krug and Mr. Peter Krug Mrs. Linda Kurtz and Mr. Charles Kurtz, III
Ms. Sarah Brooks and Mr. Marcus Kurtz
Ms. Keely Ayres β82 and Mr. Steve Lake Ms. Shari McCaskill Lamar β85
Mrs. Allison Paine Landers β93 and Mr. Steven Landers Mrs. Carla Pollack Lane β64 and Mr. Kenneth Lane Mrs. Enas Lanham and Mr. James Lanham
Ms. Gen Anne Lanphere β74
Mrs. Karen Larrimer and Dr. John Larrimer
Mr. John Larrimer
Ms. Paula Lausa β73
Ms. Priscilla Leach β67
Mrs. Mary Zook Legere β95 and Mr. Luke Legere
Ms. M. Drue Lehmann β66
Ms. Katelyn Lennon β13
Ms. Mary Ann Leonard
Ms. Serena Lett
Ms. Meredith Levine
Ms. Jill Levy β70
Ms. Hua Dang and Mr. Biao Li
Ms. Jennifer Li
Ms. Suzanne Lin
The Reverend Tracey Lind β72
Ms. Susan Drake and Dr. David Lindstedt Mrs. Karen Lint and Mr. Gerald Lint Ms. Taylor Lint β11 Mrs. Tiffany Lipscomb-Jackson and Mr. Robert Lipscomb-Jackson Mrs. Mary Monaghan Lisko β67 and Mr. Roy Lisko Mrs. Marianne Lisska and Mr. Anthony Lisska Ms. Elizabeth Liston β03 Ms. Kathryn Logan β01 Mrs. Trish Longstreth and Mr. Tim Longstreth Dr. Carolyn Lonser and Dr. Russell Lonser Ms. Jane Alexander β02 and Mr. Cesar Lopez Mrs. Andrea Smith Lorig β56 Ms. Ashley Love β01 Dr. Sarah Lowder β92 Mrs. Nydia Luckage and Mr. Eric Luckage Ms. Heather Luke β96 Mrs. Nancy Lurie and Mr. Thomas Lurie Ms. Lisa Berger β87 and Mr. Peter Lusenhop Ms. Deborah Lynn β76 Atty. Taylor Waters and Mr. Jesse Lyon Ms. Margie Toy and Mr. Kevin Ma Mr. Theodore Mack Mrs. Linda Day-Mackessy and Mr. John Mackessy Ms. Susan Leach Madden β70 and Mr. Paul Madden Mrs. Carrie Madison and Mr. Andrew Madison Mrs. Lori Maite and Mr. Vincent Maite Mrs. Carol Benua Major β67 and Mr. Michael Major Mrs. Andrea Maksim and Dr. Nicholas Maksim Mrs. Ruth Ruggles Malick β71 and Mr. Keith Malick Ms. Marie Malloy and Mr. Sean Malloy Mrs. Alyson Neugebauer Mandel β88 and Mr. Greg Mandel Mrs. Kimberly Snyder Manno β97 and Mr. Scott Manno Dr. Helouise Mapa and Dr. Manolo Mapa Ms. PollyAnn Mapes Mrs. Stacy Wolery Marcus β97 and Mr. Derek Marcus Ms. Laurel Marks β84 Mrs. Molly Kauffman Marsh β64 Mrs. Lucinda Martin and Mr. Robert Martin Ms. Libby Marvel β05 Mrs. Cynthia Massimiani and Mr. John Massimiani Ms. Anne Garden β72 and Mr. Leonard Mastromonico Mrs. Elinor Vorys Matchneer β50 Mrs. Kathleen Piazza Matney β95 and Mr. Christopher Matney Mrs. Regan Mazak and Mr. Andrew Mazak Mrs. Mary Ellen Mazak and The Reverend Andrew Mazak Dr. Alyson Leeman β81 and Mr. Joel Mazel Ms. Amelia Mazur β26 Ms. Rachel Mazur and Mr. Matthew Mazur Ms. Seeley Mazur β25
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Mrs. Heidi McCabe and Mr. Tim McCabe Ms. Leslie Siegel McCarthy β92 and Mr. Robert McCarthy Mrs. Tanya McCarthy and Mr. Robert McCarthy Mrs. Beverly McCaskill Mrs. Rachael McCloskey Mrs. Sandy McCormick Mrs. Jennifer McCormick and Mr. Scott McCormick Mrs. Elisa McCurdy and Mr. David McCurdy
Mrs. Sandra McDavid and Mr. Bradford McDavid
Ms. Ann Marie McDonnell
McGraw-Hill Education
Dr. Cathy Crompton β77 and Mr. Ross McGregor
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Ms. Elizabeth Crane β69 and Mr. Richard McKee
Mrs. Lanette McLain and Mr. Joe McLain
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Mrs. Cynthia McLarty and Mr. Walter McLarty Ms. Ashandra McLymont β95
Ms. Elizabeth McNamara β78
Mrs. Susan McNeil and Mr. Kevin McNeil
Mrs. Courtney Mcnutt and Mr. Jeremy Mcnutt Mrs. Marilyn Masson McRae β57 and Mr. David McRae
Ms. Lizanne Galbreath Megrue β75 and Mr. John Megrue, Jr. Mrs. Carol Mehas and Mr. John Mehas Mrs. Kelly Mehta and Dr. Tejas Mehta
Mrs. Susan Culter Meiling β61
Mrs. Jeanne Meleca and Mr. Ben Meleca Mrs. Angela Meleca and Mr. David Meleca
The Anne H. Melvin Fund
Mrs. Lee Mendelsohn and Dr. Daniel Mendelsohn
Ms. Lucy Joyce β72 and Mr. Lyle Mendive
Ms. Angela Mentel β12
Mrs. Ashley Klein Messick β02 and Mr. Eric Messick Miss Brittney Mettke
Dr. James Metz
Mrs. Mo Meuse and Mr. David Meuse
Mrs. Lisa Benson Meuse β99 Dr. Peter Meuse
Mrs. Sharon Meyer and Mr. Mark Meyer Miss Heather Taylor-Miesle and Mr. Donald Miesle Ms. Alicia Miklos
Ms. Hailey Miller β13
Mrs. Lanah McNamara Miller β57 and Mr. John Miller
Dr. Jennifer Robbins Miller β93 and Mr. Jonathan Miller Mrs. Katie Miller
Mrs. Sarah Miller and Mr. Matthew Miller
Ms. Jameson Crane and Mr. Timothy Miller Mrs. Shelley Miller and Dr. William Miller, III Ms. Susan Wuorinen β82 and Mr. Mike Mills
Mrs. Vuoch Tan Minnich β93 and Mr. Scott Minnich Ms. Susan Mitchell β87
Mrs. Edna Slauson Mitchell β63 and Mr. Wilmer Mitchell, Esq. Ms. Mary Dawson Joyce β77 and Mr. Steven Monahan, Jr. Mrs. Allison Moneme and Dr. Obinna Moneme
Ms. Stephanie Burchfield β74 and Mr. Steven Moore
Mrs. Tiara Evans-Moorer and Mr. Antonio Moorer Mrs. Sarah Morris and Mr. Kevin Morris Mrs. Betty Morse and Mr. William Morse Mrs. Marianne Mueller and Dr. Ivan Mueller Ms. Julianne Mueller β74
Mrs. Christine Murakami and Dr. James Murakami Miss Courtney Musick
Mrs. Katherine Wilson Muth β68 and Mr. John Muth Mrs. Julie Price Myers β58
Ms. Tene Nash β94
National Christian Foundation Mr. Thomas Grote and Mr. Richard Neal, Jr.
Dr. Stephanie Nelson
Network for Good
Mrs. Suzanne Havens Nick β81 and Mr. Philipp Nick Dr. Yasyn Lee β78 and Mr. Mark Niemer Mr. Randall Niemi
Mrs. Flo Nodine and Mr. Boyce Nodine Dr. Julie Norton and Dr. Michael Norton Ms. Sarah Good and Mr. Daniel Nuber
Mrs. Maria Nuyles and Mr. Michael Nuyles Dr. Susan Lazarus β78 and Mr. Aongus OβCairbre Ms. Susan Li OβConnor Mrs. Colleen OβDell and Mr. Timothy OβDell Mr. Francis OβGrady Ms. Patricia Miranda and Mr. Christopher OβLeary Mrs. Sally Jeffrey OβNeil β72 Ms. Emily Wightman OβReilly β04 Mrs. Paula OβReilly and Mr. Shawn OβReilly Mrs. Anna Kakos β88 and Mr. Patrick Okell Olive Tree Foundation for Girls Mr. Chris Olsen Mrs. Gina Olsen
Ms. Mary Boosalis and Dr. Thomas Olsen Mrs. Laurie Onda and Mr. Robert Onda Mrs. Caroline Farrar Orrick β72 and Mr. William Orrick, III Mrs. Ashley Osinski and Mr. John Osinski Mrs. Tara Ottey Ms. Lindsey Innes β04 and Mr. Daniel Owens Ms. Penelope Packard β53 Ms. Elizabeth Page Mrs. Nancy Page Mrs. Mary Paige and Mr. Thomas Paige Ms. Parker Havens Panik β06 and Mr. Dean Panik Mrs. Kennia Papadakis and Mr. Michael Papadakis Atty. Leonore Paragas and Atty. David Paragas Ms. Sarah Pariser β04 Mrs. Ann Blake Parsons β55 Mrs. Muffy Hamilton Parsons β74 and Mr. Donald Parsons Ms. Hannah Paschall β00 Mrs. Linda Patterson and Mr. W. Patterson Mrs. Elizabeth Pattison Ms. Ashley Pauley Mrs. Tamera Pedon Ms. Paula Penn-Nabrit β72 Ms. Jennifer Ciccarelli and Mr. Chad Perry Ms. MacKenzie Peterson β19 Ms. Sarah Hollis and Mr. Damian Petrescu Mrs. Stephanie Picketts and Mr. Daniel Picketts Dr. Rebecca Wallihan and Mr. John Pieper Mrs. Zula Evans Pierce β97 and Mr. Nathan Pierce Ms. Susan Pierce β78 Mrs. Megan Pillifant and Mr. Thomas Pillifant, IV Ms. Kun Hua β05 and Mr. Michael Pizer Mrs. Ann Pizzuti and Mr. Ronald Pizzuti Mrs. Stacie Poindexter and Mr. Timothy Poindexter Ms. Stephanie Savic Polk β77 and Mr. Walter Polk Mrs. Whitney Poma and Mr. Jonathan Poma Mrs. Diane Popadych Mrs. Tamara Porter and Mr. Henry Porter Mrs. Marnie Stein β93 and Mr. Scott Poulos
Mrs. Andrea Krupman β84 and Mr. Joe Powell
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Ms. Susan Prince
Ms. Alicia Wilcox Prokos β84
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Dr. Allison Quick and Dr. Adam Quick
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Mrs. Theresa Rakocy and Mr. Joel Rakocy
Ms. Erin Nash β91 and Mr. Adam Ramseyer
Ms. Kathryn Potts β96 and Ms. Liz Ratliff β96
Ms. Barbara Ratner β53
Raymond James Charitable Endowment
Mr. Chad Readler
Dr. Erica Reaves β00
Ms. Judy Pass Redd β57
Ms. Jennifer Redman β06
Ms. Leslie Sawyer β71 and Mr. Ricky Redmon
Ms. Tala Reese β17
Ms. Emily Reidenbach β81
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Dr. Kirstin Lindberg and Mr. Tim Rennick
Mrs. Linda Resch and Mr. F. David Resch
Ms. Christa Roundhouse Reurink β05
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Mr. C. Thomas Rice
Ms. Barbara Werum Richard β75
Mrs. Barbara Richards and Mr. R.L. Richards
Mrs. Frances Sterner Richardson β44
Mrs. Brandy Ridenour Rickard β95 and Mr. Erik Rickard Robert W. Baird & Co. Inc.
Ms. Alexandra Roberts β08
Mrs. Mary Robins and Mr. Ronald Robins, Jr. Mrs. Carol Robinson and Dr. John Robinson
Ms. Amy Rodriguez
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Mrs. Jennifer Poulton Rose β74 and Mr. Leo Rose, III
Mrs. Carrie Rosen and Mr. Barry Rosen
Mrs. Laura Crabbe Rosenberg β90 and Mr. Howard Rosenberg Ms. Aris K Rosh β94
Mrs. Betsy Lurie Ross β86 and Mr. Bryan Ross Mrs. Schyvonne Ross and Mr. Otis Ross, III Mrs. Rita Ross and Mr. Roger Ross Ms. Sally Ross β67
Mrs. Charisse Rossler and Mr. Ryan Rossler
Ms. Claire Rothchild
Ms. Virginia Rothschild β97
Mrs. Debbie Ross Rouse β68 and Mr. Milo Rouse, Jr.
Ms. Kathleen Lach-Rowan β81 and Mr. Dan Rowan Rowe Boutique
Mrs. Judy Rowe and Mr. Jerome Rowe
Mrs. Sondra Traub and Mr. Rhome Ruanphae Mrs. Karen Ruben and Dr. Roger Ruben Mrs. Sarah Keny Rugen β68 and Mr. Richard Rugen Mrs. Katherine Rupp and Mr. Daniel Rupp Mrs. Jessica Bailey Rush β94
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The Siemer Family Foundation Mr. Will Sierzputowski Ms. Molly Lambright Sills β72 Mrs. Linda Krakoff Silverman β63 and Mr. Richard Silverman
Mrs. Margaret Simmons and Mr. Kent Simmons
Mr. Ben Simon*
Mrs. Joyce Simson and Mr. Douglas Simson
Mrs. Sophie DeVennish Sisler β71 and Mr. Louis Sisler, Jr. Miss Elisabeth Skaggs
Mrs. Cindy Skaruppa and Mr. Matthew Skaruppa Mrs. Sue Skasko and Dr. Andrew Skasko Mrs. Kathleen Carberry Skestos β84 Ms. Nancy Skinner
Mrs. Marilyn Skolds and Mr. John Skolds, Sr. Ms. Linsey Skolds
Mrs. Vicki Skolds
Ms. Brandi Slaughter β95
Dr. Alison Slechter and Mr. Jacob Slechter Dr. Lyndsey Sloan and Dr. Timothy Sloan Ms. Amanda Smallwood
Ms. Lavea Brachman β80 and Mr. Andrew Smith
Mr. Andrew Smith, Jr. Ms. Desiree Smith
Mrs. Karen Smith and Mr. Gregory Smith Ms. Joyce Smith
Ms. Arnesia McMillan and Ms. Leisan Smith Ms. Robin Smith β12
Ms. Karen Scranton and Mr. Russell Smith
Mrs. Lynne Smith and Mr. Stephen Smith
Mrs. Christine Smoot and Dr. Jeffrey Smoot
Dr. Emily Smyth and Mr. Antonio Smyth
Ms. Cynthia Snyder
Mrs. Christine Wittmann Snyder β69 and Mr. Joel Snyder Mrs. Lucy Hampton Sohm β58 and Mr. Jacque Sohm
Ms. Sarah Sole
Mrs. Alecia Solomon and Mr. Scott Solomon
Ms. Rachita Chandak and Dr. Robert Soni Mrs. Erin Aland Spalsbury β90 and Mr. Ross Spalsbury Mrs. Caryn Spangler and Mr. Michael Spangler Mrs. Krissa Kean Spence β95 and Mr. Christopher Spence Mrs. Cindy Spiers β82
The Springfield Foundation Ms. Amanda St Andre
Ms. Kelly Kivland and Mr. Christopher Stackhouse Donna L. Stafford Scholarship Fund
Mrs. Audrey Wobst Stanley β07 and Mr. Tyler Stanley Ms. Anastasia Staten β98
Mrs. Beverly Staten and Mr. Joe Staten Mrs. Anna Steere and Mr. Donald Steere
Ms. Patricia Lynn β77 and Mr. Paul Steltz Ms. Catherine Stephenson β71
Dr. Stephanie Stephenson and Mr. Heath Stephenson Mrs. Kristin McMenamy Stevens β87 and Mr. Jason Stevens
Ms. Julia Stevenson β99
Mrs. Nancy Stewart and Mr. Philip Stewart Mrs. Alitzah Stinson and Mr. Brandon Stinson Mrs. Lisa Stinziano and Mr. Mike Stinziano Mrs. Carole Schiff Straus β52 and Mr. James Straus Ms. Mimi Moras and Mr. Matthew Streeter Mrs. Patricia Kauffman Strickland β67 and Mr. Robert Strickland Mrs. Kristin Stephens Stults β95 and Mr. Ryan Stults Mr. Craig Stuntz
Ms. Jennifer Sugerik
Ms. Anne Melvin β81 and Dr. Daniel Sullivan
Mrs. Amy Westwater Sullivan β99 and Mr. Glen Sullivan Mrs. Esther Webster Summers β55 Ms. Lori Sussman and Ms. Cara Sussman Ms. Tally Wolff β06 and Mr. Jack Swain Ms. Lynn Swander Mrs. Lynn Sweeney and Dr. Kevin Sweeney Mrs. Emily Marsh Szabo β80 and Mr. Lajos Szabo Mrs. Lisa Munster Tananbaum β82 and Mr. Steven Tananbaum Ms. Michaune Tillman-Tate and Mr. Andre Tate Ms. Katherine Taub β94 Mrs. Elizabeth Johnson Taylor β75 and Mr. James Taylor Ms. Sarah Taylor β12 Mrs. Sarah Young Taylor β75 and Mr. Steve Taylor Tegna Foundation Mrs. Carol Thompson and Mr. Dennis Thompson Mrs. Barbara Thorson Mrs. Barbara Boothby Thun β56 and Mr. David Thun Ms. Andrea Tiballi Ms. Nora Tien β13 Ms. Deborah Cummings-Timcho and Mr. Thomas Timcho Mrs. Corey Tishkoff and Mr. Gregory Tishkoff Ms. Ashley Todaro β06 Mrs. Lauren Todd Ms. Sinoun Todd
Ms. Oanh Do and Mr. Nhi Tran Ms. Mary Jane Trapp β74 Mrs. Ellen Larrimer Tripp β61 and Mr. Thomas Tripp Dr. Shannon Trotter and Mr. Benjamin Trotter Mrs. Hannah Powell and Mr. Todd Tuney Ms. Katrin Warren Turina β97 Mrs. Javonne Tyson and Mr. Renny Tyson, Jr. Atty. And Mrs. George Tzagournis U.S. Bank Foundation Employee Matching Gift Program U.S. Charitable Gift Trust Mrs. Mary Ulbrich Ms. Susan Tomasky and Mr. Ronald Ungvarsky Mrs. Ann Uselman and Dr. James Uselman Ms. Meghan VanCleve Vanguard Charitable Mrs. Rosamond Brown Vaule β55 and Mr. Sven Vaule, Jr. Verizon Foundation Mrs. Diane Evans Vernon β46 and Mr. Robert Vernon Ms. Ellen Marie Pizzuti β94 and Mr. Casey Vincent Mrs. Dianne Loehnert Vogt β66 and Mr. David Vogt Ms. Eleanor Vorys β12 Mrs. Patricia Vradenburg and Mr. Gregory Vradenburg Mrs. Catherine Kurtz Vrenna β88 and Mr. Sean Vrenna Ms. Katherine Arnold Wade β66 and Mr. Paul Wade Mrs. Leah Wagenbrenner and Mr. Mark Wagenbrenner Ms. Sarah Quillin Wagner β82 and Mr. Thomas Wagner Dr. Anupama Chauhan and Dr. John Wakelin Ms. Carolyn Macbain-Waldo and Mr. Michael Waldo Mrs. Kimberly Karels and Dr. Daniel Walker Dr. Jaquelyn Bitler and Dr. Matthew Walker Mrs. LaTawnia Wallace and Mr. Kenneth Wallace Mrs. Tyronza Walton and Mr. Henry Walton, IV Mrs. Jane Peters Ward β55 and Dr. Richard Ward Ms. Elizabeth Esser and Mr. Zachary Warder
Ms. Laurie Zox Leder β69 and Mr. Gary Watkins
Ms. Elizabeth Carlin β83 and Ms. Becky Watson
Mrs. Rebecca Watts and Mr. Arthur Watts
Mrs. Mary Weiland and Mr. Peter Weiland
Ms. Heather Forrest and Mr. Stanley Weiland
Mrs. Beatrice Isaac Weiler β55 and Mr. Alan Weiler
Ms. Susan Weiler β84
Dr. Snigdha Weinberg and Prof. Matthew Weinberg Mrs. Elizabeth Simson Weinstein β97 and Mr. Jason Weinstein
Ms. Seton Melvin β78 and Mr. Edward Weld
Ms. Erin McConaha β87 and Mr. Andreas Werner
Mrs. Elizabeth Cook Werth β65 and Mr. William Werth
Ms. Alexandra Wesolek β12
Dr. Tracy Westgarth-Taylor and Dr. Christopher Westgarth-Taylor Mrs. Leah Westwater and Mr. Brian Westwater Mrs. Linda Larrimer and Mr. Hugh Westwater
Ms. Lisa Miller Westwater β71
Weyerhaeuser
Mrs. Ruth Wheeler and Mr. A. Wheeler
The Reverend Holly Wilson Whitcomb β71 and Dr. John Whitcomb
Ms. Jamee Patton and Mr. Brian White
Ms. Heidi Popadych and Mr. Craig White
Ms. Larke Paul White β93
Mrs. Erin Whitt and Mr. Nicholas Whitt
Mrs. Jeanne Willcox Whittaker β47
Ms. Jane Coffman Wichman β80 and Mr. Ken Wichman
Mrs. Anne Kirsten Wilder β61 Ms. Nancy Kohler Wilkins β99
Mrs. Sook Wilkinson and Mr. Todd Wilkinson Ms. Catherine Williams β97
Mrs. Manika Williams and Mr. Jason Williams Ms. Kimberly Williams β88 Ms. Shelby Williams β12
Mrs. Margaret Barton Williams β57 and Dr. Thomas Williams, Jr. Mrs. Celeste Williams and Mr. William Williams Mr. Max Williamson
Mrs. Cathryn Jones Williard β83 and Mr. Stephen Williard
Mrs. Elspeth Willoughby and Mr. Tom Willoughby Mrs. Kimberly Rice Wilson β80 and Mr. James Wilson Mrs. Vandita Malviya Wilson β86 and Mr. John Wilson, III Ms. Kathryn Wilson β95 Mrs. Rebecca Schuller Wilsusen β91 and Mr. Joshua Wilsusen Mrs. Christina Casto Wirthman β74 and Mr. William Wirthman, Jr. Charlotte and Richard Witkind Fund Mrs. Leigh Ann Wobst and Mr. Franck Wobst Ms. Katherine Wolford Mrs. Janice Wolman and Mr. Herbert Wolman Ms. Hope Wolman β82 Mr. Daniel Wong Ms. Marsha Robinson β82 and Mr. Bronson Woodroffe Mrs. Elizabeth Ely Woodruff β87 and Mr. William Woodruff Mrs. Allison Woods Ms. Chelsea Woods β00 Ms. Anne Jeffrey Wright β70 Ms. Jessi Wright Mrs. Amy Nuzum and Mr. Kevin Wright Ms. Ping Wu Mrs. Xiujuan Xue
Ms. Marjorie Yano β03 Mrs. Margie Yatsko and Mr. Tom Yatsko Ms. Linda Yenkin β59 Ms. Audra York β12
Mrs. Lisa Young and Mr. Stuart Young Mrs. Kitty Porter Young β70 and Mr. Timothy Young Ms. Raelina Yu β19 Ms. Catherine Colinvaux β82 and Mr. Phillip Zamore Mrs. Shenika Ashley Zarebski and Mr. George Zarebski, Jr. Ms. Rebecca Moehring β83 and Mr. Frank Zbacnik Mrs. Linda Johnson Ziegler β57 Mrs. Stephanie Zimmerman and Mr. Richard Zimmerman, Jr. Mrs. Karin Zink and Mr. James Zink Mrs. Lorna Prince Zivin β84 and Mr. Adam Zivin Ms. Susan Zoldak and Mr. John Narcross Mrs. Julie Ferber Zuckerman β97 and Mr. Daniel Zuckerman
Every effort has been made to ensure the accuracy of this list, but if we have made an error, we apologize and would be grateful if you would advise us so that we may correct our records by contacting us at development@columbusschoolforgirls.org or (614)252-0781 ext. 131.
Bolded names denote donors who have given $2,500 or more the past fiscal year.
Names followed by an asterisk* denote donors who have passed away.
Columbus School for Girls
65 S. Drexel Ave. Columbus, OH 43209
www.columbusschoolforgirls.org
COLUMBUS, OH PERMIT NO. 153
