Students shined in the theatrical productions of Little Women and Willy Wonka, Jr. this fall.
The Bulletin is a publication for the Collegiate Community and is produced twice a year. Information and photographs submitted for the publication should be sent to the following:
Louisville Collegiate School Attn: The Bulletin 2427 Glenmary Avenue Louisville, KY 40204
502.479.0340
info@louisvillecollegiate.org
Ange Chatham Director of Communications & Marketing
Stephanie Disney Director of Advancement
Catherine Gatewood Easley ‘02 Alumni, Events, and Partnerships Coordinator
Mandy Helton Assistant Director of Advancement
Todd Hinton Gifts Coordinator
Angela Shoemaker Visual Content Specialist
Note to Alumni Parents: If this issue of The Bulletin is addressed to your LCS graduate who no longer resides at your home, please notify Todd Hinton, Gifts Coordinator, at thinton@ louisvillecollegiate.org or 502.479.0344.
Senior Pace Harman celebrates a regional win over St. Xavier to advance to the boys soccer state tournament.
Photo by Cameron Kiefer ’26
Bottom photos: (left): Amazons volleyball team celebrates a win this fall. (middle): James Gurley ’26 and Roman Sierpina ’25 celebrating a first and second place finish at the state cross country championships.
(right): Eliza Lewis ’27 and Rosie Miller ’26 in a team huddle during a field hockey game.
FROM OUR LEADERSHIP
Dear Collegiate Community,
We opened the 2024-25 school year with nearly 800 students. We are proud that our school offers a healthy place for students to learn and grow. Over the past few months, we have watched our students not just learn but truly flourish in the classrooms, perform on stage, and compete in athletic events, a testament to their growth and potential.
This year, we introduced a new no cell phone/smartwatches policy in the Upper School. Each morning, students turn in their devices and retrieve them at the end of the day. Please read Head of Upper School Sara Gahan’s article on page six to understand how this positive change benefits our students. We have encouraged our faculty and staff to be mindful of this new policy by being role models and reducing their own cell phone usage. The result is a noticeable increase in peer-to-peer interactions during the school day, a positive step towards a more engaging learning environment.
We are committed to making our school the healthiest place for students, faculty, staff, and the LCS community. Our Parent Wellness Series, sponsored by the Parents Association, has been a great success. It provides meetings throughout the year with guest speakers and engaging activities for parents to connect and focus on ways to be happy and healthy. We are proud of the significant participation and the positive impact it has had on our community. These meetings are particularly important as it aligns with our wellness curriculum taught on campus.
Our athletic department celebrated many successes this fall. We celebrated Titan Soccer’s first appearance in the state championship game and had our first Amazon Varsity Volleyball team. A record number of 345 students in grades 5-12 participated in a fall sport. Please see page eight for a full recap of fall sports.
In November, our Upper School students presented Little Women. This inspiring play reminds us all about kindness, forgiveness, and love. I hope this message resonates with everyone beyond the walls of the Rounsavall Black Box. Our Middle School students presented Willy Wonka, Jr. Students wowed us with enchanting songs and the quest to find the golden ticket. These plays, along with Deck the Walls, Winterlude and our strings performances, showcase the talents of our students and faculty.
All of these achievements would not be possible without the generous support of our Annual Fund. We are deeply grateful to the community members who donated to Collegiate so far this year. Your contributions have made a significant difference in our school community. For those who have not given, we hope you will consider making a gift before December 31, 2024. Every donation, no matter the size, is greatly appreciated.
As we all look forward to spending time with our family and friends during the holiday season, I want to thank you for your continued support. Together, we make this community great!
Augusts Brown Holland ’94, Immediate Past President
MEMBERS
Campbell Brown
Dr. Alex Ding
Maggie Conner Faurest ’00
Doug Grissom
Lauren Huray
Laurence Nibur
Deana Paradis
Diana Robbins
Katie Rooprai
Michael Rust
Beth Salamon
Karen Trowbridge Savitz ’00
John Thompson
Kenny Vaughn
Erica Lee Williams
Mark Bowling ’03, Alumni Association President
Lucy Holzer, Parents Association President
DIRECTOR EMERITI
Paul J. Bickel III
Ceci Conway Boden ’85
Brian D. Cook ’94
Leslie Geoghegan
Babs Rodes Robinson ’80
Louise Rapp Wall ’47
Deceased Emeriti
Cornelia Atherton
J. McFerran Barr
Mary Lee Blakely
Elleanor Gray Blakemore ’25
Barbara Beard Castleman ’46
Harriet Collis
Kitty McCracken Davis ’37
Florence Norvel Mack Heyburn
Boyce F. Martin, Sr.
William M. Street ’09H
EX-OFFICIO
Dr. Robert P. Macrae, Head of School & The William M. Street Leadership Chair
Upper School Students Receive National Recognition
The National Merit Scholarship Corporation recognizes students for their achievement on the Preliminary SAT/National Merit Scholarship Qualifying Test (PSAT/NMSQT®) each year. We are proud to announce that five students were recognized this year.
Congratulations to Kate Grissom ’25, Cora Holland ’25, James Marshall ’25, Elizabeth Relish ’25, and Aidan Romero ’25 for being named National Merit Semifinalists!
Special congratulations to Henry Mason ’25 for being recognized as a National Merit Commended student.
Mock Trial Team Competes at Yale Invitational
Congratulations to our Upper School Mock Trial team, for being invited to participate in the Yale Bulldog Invitational. Twelve members of the team represented Collegiate and finished ninth in its first national tournament!
Students Start a Gardening Club
Fourth graders started
Students Accepted into the Louisville Youth Orchestra
Congratulations to the following students who were accepted to the Louisville Youth Orchestra for its 66th season. Every student spent the summer months practicing scales and excerpts to prepare for a successful audition. The musicians practice every Sunday for three hours and perform 4-6 concerts yearly. All musicians study with a private instructor and play in the Collegiate String program to follow the acceptance rules into the Louisville Youth Orchestra.
Benjamin Swaminathan ’33
Samuel Swaminathan ’33
Elliot Swaminathan ’30
Jude Seow ’29
Alina Zheng ’28
Sherlyn Choi ’27
Rafi Shah-Bozeman ’27
Lillian Chung ’26
Aliya Nasim ’26
Alex Makdah ’26
Samuel Rios ’25
Back row (l-r): Kate Grissom ’25, James Marshall ’25, and Elizabeth Relish ’25
Front row (l-r): Aidan Romero ’25 and Cora Holland ’25
a gardening club with Mrs. Martin. The students presented Chef Troy with the fresh produce, which he incorporated into our school lunch, a moment of great pride for the students!
Upper School Implements New Phone-Free Policy
By Sara Gahan, Head of Upper School
To be honest, I wasn’t sure how the Phone-Free Policy would go over with Upper School students once we implemented it at the start of this academic year. When Dr. Macrae and I announced the new policy back in May, parents and faculty rejoiced, but students…did not. I had anticipated resistance, but there were real looks of concern, frustration, and even betrayal on the faces of students I knew and loved that prompted me to immediately reread sections of Jonathan Haidt’s The Anxious Generation: How the Great Rewiring of Childhood is Causing an Epidemic of Mental Illness for reassurance.
After many discussions, much research, and our own lived experience, faculty and staff were confident this would be a good thing for our students and community. We had seen firsthand how these small but powerful devices interfered with student connection, productivity, and happiness. But how long would it take for the students to embrace this change?
Turns out not long. By the end of the first week of school, students started to whisper that they actually liked the new policy. They are more productive throughout the day, especially in study halls. They play volleyball, Spikeball, Ultimate Frisbee, and Uno with new and old friends in between classes. They linger over lunch. Faculty adapted their lessons such that students no longer needed their phones for class activities, and students use cameras and video cameras to capture the spirited daily life in the Upper School. We enjoy more conversation, laughter, creativity, and fun than we did when cell phones distracted us. Kyla Ford ’25 was an initial skeptic: “When this was announced, I was upset because I was used to having my phone all the time, and I thought I would be missing out on remembering my senior year. Instead, I am busy making memories. This change allows for deeper connections among students and faculty. I love it.”
“phone hotels” to store devices during the day. In addition to these rolling racks being efficient and effective for the collection and distribution of 280 phones every day, they also provide a space for students to distribute notes and treats to each other. Class officers have surprised their classmates with candy at the end of the day, and Senate
representatives used the cubbies to distribute Blue and Gold team invitations. Because the phone hotels are stationed at the same place every day, they also have cultivated gathering spaces for each class before and after school.
Some students have also expressed less interest in phone usage outside of school. Zoe Gathright ’27 reflects, “I feel like my overall screen time has gone down, including at home, because I don’t feel a need to be on my phone. I kind of realized how much I was on my phone and how I needed to cut back.”
We have also experienced unexpected joys. Thanks to the innovation of brilliant Greg Geis, Director of Maker Education, we use Collegiate-designed
There are several reasons why it has been so immediately transformative for our Upper School community. First, we had a strong community to begin with. Our students and faculty have always
Walter Smith ’27 puts his phone in the “phone hotel” to store it during the school day.
genuinely loved and liked each other. The desire to listen to and learn from each other has always been there, but the phones were a distraction that often got in the way. Removing phones from the school day was addition by subtraction; removing phones gave people permission to enjoy other daily activities together. The collective nature of the policy was also key. Cell phones are such a pervasive part of our daily lives now that we knew a clear and comprehensive policy was the best and most immediate path to positive change. Finally, we had the overwhelming support of parents and faculty. When Dr. Macrae shared the details of the phone-free policy with our community, close to 50 parents replied with words of gratitude, encouragement, and support. I think we all want kids to be able to be kids, to learn in a positive and nurturing environment free from social media and screens, to think freely and be present, and to engage with each other more and with devices less.
Students want these things for themselves too. Going phone-free in the Upper School has illuminated and enhanced the joy, support, opportunity, and community that have always made us strong.
UPCOMING EVENTS
STATE OF THE SCHOOL
January 23, 6:00 p.m.
Thornton Dining Commons
COMMUNITY WELLNESS SERIES EVENT
January 28, 8:15 a.m.
Thornton Dining Commons
2025 TRIVIA NIGHT
F ebruary 22, 5:30 p.m.
Mary Rodes Lannert Athletic Center
COMMUNITY WELLNESS SERIES EVENT
March 18, 8:15 a.m.
Thornton Dining Commons
ANNUAL FUND DAY OF GIVING
April 9
• Rate us the best school in the region on NICHE; niche.com/k12/survey
• Get SOCIAL with us: like, comment, and share our social media posts!
• Let GOOGLE know how we are doing: write a review on google.com.
• Invite family and friends to VISIT campus.
SPRING OPEN HOUSE: PROSPECTIVE FAMILIES
April 16, 9:00 a.m. - 12:00 p.m.
63RD KINDERGARTEN DERBY
May 1, 10:30 a.m. Campus Field
COLLEGIATE 109TH COMMENCEMENT
May 23, 1:00 p.m.
St. Matthews Baptist Church
For a complete list of upcoming events, visit louisvillecollegiate.org.
Historic 2024 Fall Athletic Season for our Amazons and Titans
By Paul Augustus, Director of Athletics
What an incredible fall athletic season for our Amazons and Titans! From amazing individual and team performances to our school community showing up and supporting our teams, we have much to be proud of and excited about. We had a record number of competitions, coaches, and student-athletes this fall season and many recordsetting accomplishments! These exciting highlights from this fall by our student-athletes, coaches, and teams will continue to impact our community for years to come.
CROSS COUNTRY
Our Amazon Cross Country team won the Regional Championship meet for the second year in a row and finished 6th at the KHSAA 1A Cross Country Championships. Mary Thomas Kute ’27 medaled in 14th place.
Titan Cross Country was the Regional Runner-Up in the team standings and placed 7th at the State Meet. James Gurley ’26 and Roman Sierpina ’25 ran away with FIRST and SECOND place respectively at the State Championships!
FIELD HOCKEY
Amazon Field Hockey advanced to the quarterfinal stage of the KHSAA State Tournament! They were 13-9-2 on the season, with major wins over rivals KCD and Ballard. The varsity Amazons were also the region runner-up. Our JV team was their pool champion at the Gateway Tournament in St. Louis. Congratulations to Eliza Lewis ’27 for winning the KY Field Hockey Coaches Association Defensive Player of the Year!
GOLF
Amazon Golf had a historic fall season with major highlights that included an All “A” Regional Championship and a third-place finish at the All “A” State Tournament (the best ever for girls’ golf). Heidi Mitchell ’27 was named to the second team All-Region for the sixth region. She finished third at the Regional Championship, 11th at the All “A” State Classic, and 20th at the KHSAA State Tournament!
Titan Golf had a terrific season, led by Jacob Holzer ’26 and Taiten Luehrs ’26. They were undefeated in match play, and Luehrs advanced to the KHSAA State Tournament, our first Titan golfer since 2011. The Titans won the All “A” Region and placed 5th (our highest team finish ever) at the All “A” State Classic Tournament!
Photo by Cameron Kiefer ’26
SOCCER
Titan Soccer (24-3) took our school community through a remarkable post-season run that will not soon be forgotten. The Titans defeated Male and St. X to claim the 26th District Title; they then beat Atherton, Manual, and St. X to take the 7th Region Tournament and advance to state for the 5th time in school history! They won our first three games in the KHSAA State Tournament by a combined score of 11-0 before falling to Henry Clay in the state championship match. The Titans also won the 7th Region All “A” Championship and the All “A” State Classic title for the 9th time in the program’s history! Coach Chad Wozniak was recognized as the KY Boys Soccer Coaches Association Private School Coach of the Year!
Amazon Soccer (7-9-1) started the season 3-0 after working to rebuild following the departure of 12 seniors from last year’s team. They were the 7th Region All “A” runner-up, with Tonya Amini ’25 and Hannah Rairick ’27 earning All-Tournament Team Honors. The Soccer ‘Zons strung together wins over North Bullitt, Whitefield, Holy Cross, Fern Creek, and Bullitt Central, among others, before falling to Assumption in the District Semifinals.
VOLLEYBALL
Our inaugural season of Amazon Volleyball (6-11) showed significant progress and growth. They beat Highlands Latin for our first-ever home varsity match, setting the tone for a raucous home environment all season. The gym was rocking for home matches, and our Amazons defeated the Highlanders, Grace James Academy, Walden, Waggener, and Brown on Senior Night during home matches this fall.
NEW ITEMS!
Visit the Glenmary Shop to purchase polos, sweatshirts, and spirit wear! Shop online at glenmaryshoponline.com. The Glenmary Shop is the only retail store that donates its profits back to the school. It is managed and operated by Collegiate Alumni. Contact Catherine Gatewood Easley ’02 to volunteer in the shop at ceasley@louisvillecollegiate.org.
SCHOOL HOURS
Mondays: 7:30 – 8:30 a.m.
Tuesdays: 2:30 – 4:00 p.m.
Wednesdays: 2:30 – 4:00 p.m.
Thursdays: 7:45 – 8:30 a.m.
Photo by Cameron Kiefer ’26
Collegiates Receives Reaccrediation from ISACS
By Clay Gahan, Dean of Faculty
Responsibility is one of Louisville Collegiate School’s Cornerstones. We have a joyful responsibility to reflect, study, listen, set goals, and try hard (even if we’d prefer not to) so that we can become stronger, more aware, and more hopeful as we encounter the future. Over the past two years, Collegiate as a whole has gotten to live out this conviction in a demonstrable way by preparing our self-study for the school’s seven-year accreditation and hosting a visiting team from ISACS on campus this fall.
The self-study and the visiting team’s time on campus were substantial successes. The rigors of research, analysis, and writing the 200-page study repeatedly illuminated how we can realize our mission and serve our students even better in the years ahead. The team’s visit allowed us to showcase the diligence, compassion, and pride that make Collegiate such a special place.
The visiting team, comprised of school leaders from other independent schools across the Midwest, was thorough, and the conversations with different community members were rich and helpful. Ange Chatham, the school’s Director of Communications and Marketing, remarked after meeting with visiting team members that “it was some of the most useful professional development I’ve ever had.”
The visit was replete with expressions of mutual respect and shared excitement for schools and education. Collegiate is a place genuinely trying to live out its mission, and that came across to the ISACS visiting team. At the end of their visit, the team leader shared their enthusiastic recommendation for accreditation, ending his remarks with the following: “You have been thorough in your examination of all aspects of school life, you live your mission wholeheartedly, you are well-led, and you are well-positioned for the exciting challenges that lie ahead.”
You
have been thorough in your examination of all aspects of school life, you live your mission wholeheartedly, you are well-led, and you are well-positioned for the exciting challenges that lie ahead.
Final remarks such as these are, of course, the goal of this kind of undertaking. However, this work has immense value as both a means and an end unto itself. The process is categorically a means: first, a means to gain accreditation, and second, a means to challenge the school to become the best version of itself. Additionally, though, the broad, participatory selfstudy process is also an end: the cooperation, the connections, the understanding--those are the things that make a school great, at least as much as the specific strategies and designs that a study like this creates.
The next day, a visiting team member wrote a note to the administrative team, “The team there at Collegiate was spectacular to work with, making my first time serving on an accreditation committee a genuinely enjoyable experience. If I lived in Louisville, I would be banging down your door to work there.”
The plans and priorities articulated in ours and the visiting team’s reports demonstrate that we see lots of specific avenues to pursue improvement--from carpool to curriculum to capital campaigns. The manner in which the LCS community went about the work of the recent accreditation cycle demonstrates convincingly that Louisville Collegiate School possesses the mettle to see those improvements to their end and even beyond.
Bring your A-game to Collegiate’s Trivia Night on Saturday, February 22, 2025!
Team registration opens on our website on Thursday, January 16, 2025 at 10:00 a.m.
Raffles are open to everyone!
All proceeds from Collegiate’s Trivia Night support robust financial aid, professional development, fine arts, and athletics programming for nearly 800 students!
Collegiate Welcomes Grandparents & Special Friends to Campus
Special thanks to all of our grandparents and special friends who came to Collegiate to spend the day with us! We welcomed over 500 guest to campus!
Recommend a Future Student
As you know, Collegiate provides an exceptional educational experience for Junior Kindergarten through 12th Grade students. Contact our Admission Office at 502.479.0378 if you know someone searching for a school where their child will be known, challenged, encouraged, and loved.
Invite them to our Spring Open House and to visit campus to see what makes Collegiate a special place!
Spring Open House April 16, 2025 9:00 a.m. - 12:00 p.m.
Admission & Ninth Grade Merit Assessments: January 11 or 25, 2025
Dear Fellow Alumni,
What a great time to be a proud alumnus of Louisville Collegiate School! The students’ successes in academics, the arts, and athletics are truly inspiring.
In mid-September, the Alumni Association hosted a revamped Alumni and Faculty Celebration Event, which included an after-party at TEN20 Brewery. It was a joy to reconnect with familiar faces and celebrate Collegiate’s impact on each of us. Congratulations to our amazing Alumni Awards winners, who embody the school’s spirit and are making the communities they live in a better place.
I’m happy to share that our alumni network in New York City is thriving. Over 50 alumni gathered at Jared Rouben’s ’00 new restaurant, Moody Tounge Sushi. Thank you to Jared and Alumni Board members Adrienne Gallus ’13, Sarah Hall ’16, and Sarah Pfeifer Vandekerckhove ’03 for organizing a wonderful event that allowed alumni to reminisce and reconnect. We are looking forward to an alumni gathering in Chicago in 2025, with more details to come.
Through the remainder of the school year, the Alumni Board is working to maintain high levels of alumni participation in the Annual Fund, support class reunions, increase alumni networking opportunities, and connect graduating seniors to alumni via the Co-Edge courses.
This year, our Alumni Association Board welcomed four new members: Gretchen Rounsavall Clark ’67, Max Burge ’11, Colleen Orr Engel ’13, and Cal LeDoux ’20. We are grateful for their commitment to Collegiate!
I encourage you to get involved in any way you can. Contact me if you have any ideas or events you would like to see happen.
With gratitude,
Mark Bowling ’03
Alumni Association President
CONNECT WITH US
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION BOARD 2024-2025
Mark Bowling ’03 President
Erin Eggers Fidler ’96
Vice President
Will Rawley ’03
Treasurer
Barbara Gibbs Pino ’09
Secretary
Katie Bickel Booker ’06
Glenmary Shop Coordinator
Catherine Gatewood Easley ’02 Alumni Relations
MEMBERS
Kathy Soskins Abbott ’90
Olivia Anderle ’17
Austin Thompson Anderton ’97
Emily Arensman ’02
Max Burge ’11
Dana Lucas Collins ’85
Sarah Davis Allen ’98
Lizzie Doll ’03
Colleen Orr Engel ’13
Adrienne Gallus ’13
Carey Faversham Goldstein ’90
Maggie Nugent Griesbeck ’04
Sarah Hall ’16
Megan Hoskins ’94
Cal LeDoux ’20
Louisa Rietze Lewandowski ’90
Matt McCall ’02
Viji Rangaswami ’89
Mary Winston Richardson ’12
Peter Schubert ’11
Kate Vogt Talamini ’67
Sarah Pfeifer Vandekerckhove ’03
Laurie Camp Vieth ’76
Jay Yepuri ’90
A Night to Remember: Highlights from the Alumni and Faculty Celebration
A heartfelt thank you to everyone who attended the Alumni and Faculty Celebration! It was inspiring to reconnect with familiar faces and to celebrate our community’s remarkable achievements and lasting impact.
Congratulations to our outstanding Alumni Award winners, who were honored at this special event for their exceptional contributions and leadership! Your achievements continue to inspire us all and highlight the values we hold dear.
Distinguished Alumni Award: Dr. Angela Singla ’89
Young Alumni Achievement Award: Emily Hawkins Heyde ’04
Collegiate Service Award: Louisa Rietze Lewandowski ’90
Faculty and Staff Legacy Award: Joyce Gerwing
Athletic Hall of Fame Award: Alexander “Sandy” Taft
A special thank you to everyone who brought energy and enthusiasm to the evening and after-party—your presence made the night unforgettable. We are so grateful to be a part of this community and to celebrate together!
Looking ahead, we’re now accepting nominations for next year’s Alumni Awards. If you know an alumnus who exemplifies our community’s spirit and excellence, we encourage you to nominate them by Friday, January 31, 2025. Let’s continue honoring the incredible people within our greater alumni family!
Award Winners (pictured l-r): Joyce Gerwing, Louisa Rietze Lewandowski ’90, Dr. Angela Singla ’89, Emily Hawkins Heyde ’04, and Ann Taft, wife of Sandy.
Share Your News & Update Your Information
We love to share your news with fellow alumni. Please tell us what you have been up to or update your contact information by scanning the QR code or visiting the alumni page on our website at louisvillecollegiate. org/connect. If you do not receive the monthly Alumni eNewsletter, please use that link to update your email address.
Did you recently have a baby? If so, let us know, and we will send you a Collegiate Teddy Bear!
IN MEMORIAM
Alice Cary Farmer Brown ’55
Peggy Rash Brown ’50
Bodie Stoll Dorsey ’43
Jean Dumesnil Miller ’44
Billy Minor ’99
Julie Baquie Morton ’50
Phyllis Shapira Parish ’67
Betty Funk Smith ’45
Margie Helm Van Meter ’50
Katherine “Cappy” Cohn Warner ’58
(l-r) Members of the Class of 1989: Patrick Allegra, Lee Harris Donahue, Alison Chmiel Brehm, Andrea Grant, Chip Ridge, Angela Singla, Danielle Pelfrey Duryea, and Abby Adelberg
(l-r) Collegiate Faculty: Darcy Cleaver, Zac Singer, LeAnna Jones ’11, Andrew Petti, and Sarah Davis Allen ’98
(l-r) Members of the Class of 1994: Deborah Topcik, Cory Moore Kokko, Megan Hoskins, Ilana Aponte Stewart, Katherine Smith, and Brian Cook
(l-r) Members of the Class of 1990: Jennifer Lindsay, Carey Faversham Goldstein, Kathy Soskins Abbott, Louisa Rietze Lewandowski, Carrie Osborne Butler, Anne Dedman Delahanty, and Jennifer Logan Segeleon
Alumni Enjoy Friendly Competition at the Annual Alumni Games
It was fantastic to welcome alumni back over the Thanksgiving break for field hockey, soccer, and lacrosse Alumni Games! The energy and camaraderie were in full swing as alumni enjoyed a little friendly competition. We had a blast trying out the squash courts and golf simulators, where both seasoned players and first-timers brought their A-game. Thank you to everyone who came out – can’t wait for next year!
Upcoming Alumni Events
Alumni Connection Photo April 15, 2025
Alumni Association Luncheon in honor of the Senior Class April 25, 2025
KCD VS LCS Pickleball Tournament May 7, 2025
LOWER SCHOOL FALL FESTIVAL
Alumni Gather for Collegiate Event in NYC
The October LCS alumni event in New York City brought together around 50 alumni for an evening of connection, conversation, and updates on the exciting projects taking place at the school. Alumni from various years shared stories, reminisced, and rekindled friendships, making it a memorable gathering. A special thank you to Jared Rouben ’00, who generously hosted the event at his new restaurant, Moody Tongue Sushi.
We had an incredible time at this year’s Lower School Fall Festival! It was a joy to see so many alumni back on campus enjoying the festivities with their families. Watching the next generation join in the fun reminded us how special our community truly is.
The Upper School Pep Club unveiled new mascot costumes at the fall Pep Rally this year. Special thanks to the Booster Club for making this possible.
Collegiate Community Squash and Golf Center NOWOPEN
Join us for lessons, clinics, and leagues to enhance your squash and golf skills!
The Collegiate Squash and Golf Center has four squash courts and a Golf Virtual Sports Lab with two state-of-the-art golf simulators, and indoor putting green. Members can enjoy the facility for lessons, clinics, and leagues. Membership is open to the public.
Memberships include:
• Unlimited access to the Squash Courts and Golf Simulators during hours of operation
• Ability to book Squash Courts and Golf Simulators online
• Schedule lessons and clinics with Squash Pros
OPEN HOUSE
Sunday, January 12 1:00 - 4:00 p.m.
Make a Gift to Collegiate
As you consider your year-end giving, please know that every student at Louisville Collegiate School benefits from a strong Annual Fund. All gifts received online or postmarked by December 31 may be tax-deductible.
COMMUNITY PARTNERS
Louisville Collegiate School would like to thank the following community partners who have expressed their support for Collegiate’s students, faculty/staff, programming, and mission.
GOLD PARTNERS
BRONZE PARTNERS
If you are interested in becoming a Community Partner, please contact Catherine Gatewood Easley ’02 at 502.479.0345 or ceasley@louisvillecollegiate.org.