PARENTS, ALUMNI AND FRIENDS of PALMER TRINITY SCHOOL
Editor
Suzanne Gottlieb Calleja
E ditori AL A d V i S or S
Ben Hoke
Bruce Musgrave
Monica Sanchez
Kathy Vale
ALUMN i iN t E r N
Victoria Fernandez ‘10
EXECU ti VE S tAFF (alphabetical)
Suzanne Gottlieb Calleja, Director of Communications and Community Relations
Vivian Cerione, Registrar
Laurette Cestare, Head of Middle School
Ashley Chapman, Head of Upper School
Rita Feild, School Counselor
Ben Hoke, Director of Development
Julian Lentz, Chaplain
Susie Loiacono, Executive Assistant to the Head of School
Jose Chao, Director of Finance and Operations
Sean Murphy, Head of School
Bruce Musgrave, Assistant Head of School for Academics
Danny Reynolds, Director of Admission, College Counseling, and Financial Aid
Jake von Scherrer, Director of Athletics
PALME r tri N it Y
Joseph J. Kalbac, Jr., Chairman
Susan Ludovici, Vice-Chair
Michael Baiamonte, Secretary
Jim Davidson, Treasurer
Ricardo Albarran
Susan Benenati
Paula Brockway
Teresa Carreno
Rev. Frank J. Corbishley (Bishop’s Designate)
Rt. Rev. Leo Frade
Eloise Gonzalez-Geller
Anne Jackaway
Mitchell Kaplan
Charles Klenk
William Morrison
Vicki O’Meara
Rev. Jennie Lou Reid
Darryl Robinson
AB o U t t HE AERIE
Isabel Rodriguez
Magdalena Rothfeldt
Bronwen Rutter
Bishop Calvin Schofield
Gary Tarbe
Jo-Ann Titley
Michelle Torbert
Luis Villanueva
The Aerie is published twice a year (summer/fall and winter/spring) by Palmer Trinity School for alumni, parents, grandparents, students and friends.
The E-Newsletter keeps the community informed of campus events, as well as student and faculty accomplishments. Send story ideas or comments to scalleja@ palmertrinity.org or webmaster Mike Pena at mpena@palmertrinity.org.
Palmer Trinity School offers a full-service website – www.palmertrinity.org – where you can, among other things, look up friends in a searchable directory, find out about the latest news and events, and connect with our Alumni office. We also post back issues of our PTS e-newsletter and Aerie magazines online.
Please contact Monica Sanchez in the Alumni Office with news at msanchez@palmertrinity.org, or call (305) 969-4210.
The Aerie welcomes submissions and suggestions for magazine articles. If you have an idea for a feature story, please email the Aerie editor at scalleja@palmertrinity.org.
You can also join the PTS community by visiting www.facebook.com/PTSfanpage
As the editor of this magazine,
I always work with a theme, one that provides a thread between the seemingly distinct articles. For this issue, the theme is leadership, and the articles build on the notion that we need all kinds of leaders to run a functioning and successful society.
I wish I knew why some people are great leaders. You hear the term “born leader,” and I wonder if that’s true. Is leadership a gene? Do some people enter the world with a certain command and confidence?
There is no shortage of leadership on the Palmer Trinity campus, both past and present. Take time to read Head of School, Sean Murphy’s article, which highlights his approach to leadership, originally published in the October 2010 NAES newsletter, and reprinted here for the PTS community. Also in this issue of the Aerie magazine, you will read about several thriving groups led by recent PTS graduates. Douglas Rothfeldt ‘10 from the Palmer Trinity Investment Group, writes about how he and his fellow members raised the initial funds, three years ago, to actively manage and invest upwards of $60,000. Even during this volatile year, the investment group stayed on target, measured by a 35% portfolio profit, which translated to $4,000 for our endowment fund. There is no way this could have been accomplished without focused leadership.
Laura Portuondo ‘10, the former president of the Interact Club, shares details in her article about how club members are changing lives both locally and internationally. Last semester the club worked with Heifer International to identify families in developing countries who could benefit from the donation of a farm animal. These animals provide both nutrition and sustainable income. The Interact Club works to give hope to different communities.
Trae Kerdyk ‘10, a former member of the Coral Lab, is profiled in an article by Leopoldo Llinás. Since, according to Dr. Llinás, fellow students would look to Trae for leadership, he asked Trae what leadership meant to him: “In my opinion, leadership is a relative term. Any given situation requires leadership, and any given person can be a leader. All that is required for a leader is to stand up and take charge for the good of the given situation.”
Doug, Laura, and Trae are all graduates who are experiencing the next part of their journeys on different campuses: Doug Rothfeldt at Southern Methodist University in Dallas, Laura Portuondo at Yale University, and Trae Kerdyk at Eckerd College in St. Petersburg. Will they continue to be leaders in this new chapter of their lives? My guess is yes. Dedication of this sort doesn’t fade away so easily. Or, perhaps they will choose not to lead, but will be inspired by other leaders who validate their strongly held beliefs regarding ways to change the world.
John F. Kennedy’s words on leadership ring true: “Leadership and learning are indispensable to each other.” The Morrison family, who is profiled in a feature article in this issue, exemplifies this lesson. Read about their strong beliefs in the PTS community and be inspired by their hope for the future.
And, finally, in my search to understand effective leadership, Father Lentz used these words from Tao Te Ching in his article on spirituality, and I find them deeply inspiring: “It is said of a true leader that when the work is done, and the aim fulfilled, the people will say, ‘we did this ourselves.’”
Suzanne Gottlieb Calleja Director of Communications and Community Relations
Cit Y tE r M
S ANA I MAM ‘11
iN t E r AC t CLUB
L AURA P ORTUONDO ‘10
d r AMA
P HE b E H I b SHMAN , Drama Department
P ERSPECTIVES
A ME ri CAN St U di ES
Only Connect: Interdisciplinary Studies
M ARK E. H AYES , English Department
At HLE ti CS
Taking Time for the Time of Their Lives
J AKE vON S CHERRER , Director of Athletics
iNVES t MEN t C LUB
Sharing an Interest
DOUGLAS ROTHFELDT ‘10
Cor AL L AB
Environmental Leadership
D R . L EOPOLDO L LIN Á S , Science Department and Sustainability Coordinator
S P irit UAL it Y AN d L EA d E r SH i P
The Unknown Leader
J ULIAN L ENT z, Chaplain
Co LLE g E Co UNSEL i N g
A Class to be Remembered
D ANNY R EYNOLDS , Director of Admission, College Counseling and Financial Aid
V ISIONA ERIES
tHE
AN i NV itAtio N to i MA gi NE Palmer Trinity School’s
Sean Murphy Head of School
Headship as a Spiritual Practice
As Plato asserts in The Republic, no one in her right mind would want to be a leader, but if people in their right minds won’t lead, we shall be left with the alternative, and we shall get what we deserve. You need not be a great student of history to come up with examples of that truth both near and far. We absolutely need good leaders, and I hope that some of you good readers will seriously consider the job, if you haven’t already.
These days there is no shortage of advice on leadership. The bookshops are full of it, mostly aimed at CEOs and therefore not to be completely trusted. Closer to home, our sister organization NAIS has devoted their most recent edition of their quarterly magazine (Fall, 2010) to some very good articles about independent school leadership. Not necessarily a counterpoint, but certainly at times unconventional, what follows is my own homegrown collection of suggestions learned over the years and to which I often refer in my work as a head.
Know thyself. And a corollary from Emerson, “Trust thyself: every heart vibrates to that iron string.”
As heads we need to remember that our role is not our identity. We are souls in service to our King, and that must always come first, at least as much as is humanly possible.
When I first started as a head, I thought I was a poet and a professor of Shakespeare who had tragically shown promise as a manager. It turned out I am also a financier and a land developer, although most people wish I were a salesman and Mr. Chips. They all want you to fulfill their projections. be who you are, and be unapologetic about it. None of us can last long in a position of leadership if we are maintaining a persona or façade. If your school does not fit with who you are, you are better off in another place. As one of my mentors told me, “You don’t want to work in a school where you are not wanted.” And I would add, or well-understood. In the service of keeping your head on straight, a significant other who loves you and tells you the truth is a gift from God. A therapist or spiritual counselor is also not a bad idea.
Where there is no vision the people perish. (Proverbs 29:18)
Leaders must know what they want. In the end, the head is the decider. Of course there will be processes and dialogues and opinions aplenty, but no matter what happens in the end, you will be the one who gets the credit or the blame, so it might as well be a decision born out of true vision. In order to shape that vision, I recommend you read as much as possible. Every day I read an electronic digest of The Chronicle of Higher Ed, The New York Times, and Inside Higher Ed. I stay in close touch with materials from NAIS and ISM, not necessarily in that order. To stay spiritually grounded, I use Forward Day By Day, spend a lot of time with the book of Common Prayer, and a daily reading from A Year of Days by bishop Edmond Lee browning. My bookshelves are swelling with anything by Parker Palmer, Rob Evans, Michael Thompson, Roland barth, Malcolm Gladwell, and Thomas berry.
All mistakes are cultural.
You have probably heard the advice given to new leaders about not doing anything for the first year. The pace of change these days is accelerating, however, to the point of making that advice almost impossible to follow. More likely leaders will face the reality that if they just stand there, they will soon get run over by a train. best practices and procedures are mastered easily enough, but the most significant errors we make are not mechanical. They are a result of misjudging the culture of a school. Therefore, heads, and especially new heads, must get to know the individual people and personalities that are the heart and soul of a school. I think it is wise for a new leader to schedule individual meetings with as many people as possible and listen as much as possible during those meetings. Then you can better understand the context of your decisions and discern whether or not the culture of your community at any given moment can tolerate a decision and its consequent changes. Remember, no one is a leader who doesn’t have followers, and being right is necessary but not always sufficient.
No money, no mission.
Most of us began as teachers, a group commonly allergic to money. Not that we don’t need it or like the things it can buy, but in general we have spent our lives serving others and neglecting the details of finance. As heads we must do everything we can to learn and know as much about the financial workings of a school as anyone else including the business manager and the chair of your finance committee. We cannot abdicate responsibility for fiscal health. You do so at your peril. One cannot serve God and Mammon, so love God and learn to manage Mammon.
Better teaching, not better rules.
I have a brand new dean of students this year, and this rule is the first one I shared with her. There is a tendency in people to want to solve problems with rules. There is also a tendency to enjoy seeing others punished. So deans and heads too often have people urging them to create new rules, and/or enforce old rules with greater gusto. Unfortunately both urges are antithetical to our Episcopal mission, so as much as possible I counsel resistance. Get bigger, don’t get tougher. Your job is to love people, not control them.
You’ve seen one board, you’ve seen one board.
boards: you can’t live with ‘em, you can’t live without ‘em. Everyone who sits on a board went to school once. That means they know everything there is to know about your job. Much of your work with boards will be about convincing them that what they bring to the table is not their expertise in your area, but their ability to secure the future of the institution through their support of it and their strategic thinking and planning about that future. The ideal essence of a supportive board is a deep understanding of the vision for the school and an ability to work with the head to manifest and secure that vision. but they are each one a separate and individual personality, and the way in which they interact as a group is infinitely variable.
Be ye therefore as wise as a serpent and harmless as a dove. (Matthew 10:16)
Surveys about the characteristics of school leaders consistently identify the necessity of vision, integrity, ethics, trustworthiness, judgment, empathy, compassion, and patience. Not to mention intelligence, charisma, extroversion, loquaciousness, and indefatigability. Expectations are very high for school leaders, but the humility and innocence of the dove will rescue you from the temptation to rely on your own perfection. There are wolves out there, and you will be tested. You must also remember the teaching of the prophet Hosea, who wants mercy and not sacrifice. Yes, you must be very good. No doubt you are, but don’t forget the dove.
If you are already a school leader, you know what I mean. If you are not yet a school leader, I hope you will be soon. School leadership really is a spiritual discipline that requires the very best of us intellectually, physically, creatively, and morally. Every day we are called to walk in Christ’s love and to offer our lives in sacrifice, obedience, and joy. No other job lets us play king, father, mother, priest, psychologist, cop, judge, friend, counselor, teacher, actor, fool, doctor, janitor, and coach nearly every day. Nowhere else can we make such a profound impact on bringing the kingdom of God to bear in the lives of so many people, especially our own.
At the 8th grade Heritage Festival in October 2010: Alessandro Diaz-Barandiaran ‘15, Peter Tolmach, Sean Murphy, Phebe Hibshman, Hanna Domit ‘15, Sebastian Espinosa ‘15, Laurette Cestare, and Emily Franklin ‘15
CityTerm
by: S ANA I MAM ‘11
Times Square... Central Park... Madison Square Garden…
Bryant Park – just a few popular landmarks that characterize New York City.
Millions of people flow in and out of the city, residents, nonresident employees, and tourists, but only a group of 30 privileged students from across the country have the opportunity to uncover the mysteries and reasons that make New York, New York, while learning a little bit about themselves in the process. The semesterbased program CITYterm uses New York City as a model for students to explore and understand the real world and our role in that world through experience-based learning. Have you ever traversed Times Square and paid attention to the numerous gender-based advertisements that we have come to revere? Or how about creating a relationship with the over a century old brooklyn bridge? While I was in New York this past spring semester, I did exactly that and so much more. I experienced that learning doesn’t take place only in a classroom, but it can occur anywhere as long as you open yourself to it, be it 10 p.m. on a community service project with homeless people, or simply viewing the city from the Empire State building. Not only was I lucky enough to meet and chat with the author of every book I read at CITYterm, but I was able to engage in intelligent conversations
throughout my day and night with my classmates and teachers. I remember spending over nine hours on one occasion debating the topic, “Is the cat or the dog more successful in the world of evolution?” Who would have known that the little feline’s ability to be domesticated is actually its strength in some people’s eyes and not a weakness? CITYterm chooses 30 talented students every semester and slightly alters the curriculum to cater to the individual spirit of each semester to personalize every experience. For me, CITYterm presented the opportunity to discover life-long skills to enhance my learning experience inside and outside of the classroom. After living in New York City for four months, I can truly say that by spreading my wings to the
reality of the outside world, I’ve matured on a level beyond what I thought was imaginable and I’ve truly understood and embraced Aldous Huxley’s ideology that “Experience is not what happens to you. It is what you do with what happens to you.” Take hold of every opportunity you are presented with and make the most of it. What are you waiting for?
Interact Club Drama
by: L AURA P ORTUONDO ‘10
President, Amy Groh ’11
Vice-President, Gena Roberts ’11
Secretary, Ceci Neumeister ’11
Treasurer, Ashley Ramkishun ’11
The Palmer Trinity Interact Club was formed two years ago by Palmer Trinity students who wanted to make a difference.
Although many of those founding members have graduated and moved on to college, the Interact Club is still going strong. The Interact Club, associated with the Perrine-Cutler Ridge Rotary Club, is dedicated to community service both locally and on an international level. The club participates in a local community service project each month and at least one international project every school year. Past local projects have included a Halloween Party for elementary school children, the “Playful City” event at the Coral Gables Youth Center, Santa’s Parade of the Elves in South Miami, the Friends Forever Pet Rescue Adoption Drive, and the Rotary Club Casino Night.
Last semester, as its international project, the Interact Club decided to invest in a project that will keep on giving over time. Rather than simply donating to a cause, the Interact Club worked with Heifer International to provide families in need with the tools to escape their situation. Heifer International works to break the cycle of poverty by providing farm animals to families in developing nations and teaching these families how to use the animals to make a living. Not only do the animals provide a way for the families to improve their nutrition, they also provide a sustainable source of income. Heifer International places a high priority on protecting the environment and trains recipient families how to practice methods of farming that help achieve this goal. Perhaps most importantly,
in exchange for their livestock and training, families agree to give one of the animal’s offspring to another family in need. This ensures that the cycle of giving and hope grows as time goes on.
Through a series of fund raisers, the Interact Club was able to raise over $500 during the school year, enough to donate two water buffalos to Heifer International. In poor Filipino villages, water buffalos from Heifer provide draft power for planting rice and potatoes, milk for protein and manure for fertilizer and fuel. With the help of the water buffalos, farmers are able to plant four times more of their crop, providing more food for their families. The water buffalos also aid in the transport of rice, allowing farmers to carry the rice to the villages for sale, providing money that can be used for clothing, medical care, and school. It is our hope that the Interact Club’s donation of the water buffalos will eventually help many families in need as the gift of Heifer International continues to give over time.
Although much of the Interact Club’s leadership graduated in 2010, the club is being left in the very capable hands of President and vice President, Amy Groh ’11 and Gena Roberts ‘11. Though we alums are sad to leave the Club behind, we are confident that it will maintain in commitment to serving others and keep up its legacy of selfless devotion to the betterment of our community, both local and international.
Our 2009-2010 PTS theatre season closed with much success and joy.
Our graduating senior Thespians were amazing and devoted to our program. New York University accepts approximately 200 students for their prestigious University of New York’s Tisch School of the Arts acting program, and both Cecilia Leal and Raul Gonzalez were accepted into that program. The University of Southern California accepts approximately 35 students for their bFA acting program, and briana Henry was accepted into this highly competitive acting school. We expect great things from our PTS thespians! Our other equally impressive and exciting senior Thespians were Adam Wilson, attending Columbia University; Peter Ovelman, attending George Washington University; Christiana Ludovici, attending New York University; Christian Jaffe, attending University of virginia; Hannah Green, attending University of Alabama; Lynn Leveille, attending UCLA; Tiffani Hiler, attending Emerson College; and Yuxin Huang, attending bard College. “break a leg!” to our PTS Thespian graduates – we’ll miss you!
class, led by fashion expert Patricia Almodovar, created the costumes for our one-act play “Drop Dead Juliet,” which was performed October 15th, 16th and 17th. Gorgeous Elizabethan costumes enhanced the play as the students learn the art of designing a show. The same costumes will be on the runway on March 10th, 2011 for our second annual Fashion Show, benefiting “Equity fights Aids.” Our design and technical lab class is hard at work reconfiguring the theatre for “Drop Dead Juliet.”
Biraaj Mahajan ‘12, Farida Amer ‘13, and Andrew Miller ‘13 perform in Drop Dead Juliet in costumes designed by our US costume class.
Upper and Middle School students are busy preparing for the District 8 and District 4 Thespian Festivals, where regional schools compete in performance and technical theatre. These festivals will take place in November, and the Florida State Festivals will take place in 2011. A showcase will be offered for students and parents on January 14th and 15th, 2011 in the PTS theatre.
The 2010-2011 year is off to a fabulous beginning. A new costume and design
In March, the unorthodox musical Urinetown will have Middle School and Upper School students working together to recreate this hilarious broadway musical. Performances will be March 29th to April 1st, 2011.
Thank you, PTS students, parents, faculty and administration for such an amazing and exciting first year together, and we look forward to creating more wonderful theatre in the year ahead!
Come out to support our Thespians.
by: P HE b E H I b S H MAN Drama Department
Only Connect: Interdisciplinary Studies
In an age of information, connection, and communication, in most 21st-century schools there endures an almost unquestioned tendency toward fragmentation and subdivision.
In the previous century, in the name of efficiency, educators have embraced specialization – the impulse to departmentalize studies for the sake of supposedly more advanced learning from specialized educators. The place of the generalist in the classroom is now largely in elementary school. After elementary school, that contradictory impulse to pull materials together, to synthesize, to make something whole from all the pieces – is rarely revisited, if at all. but the need to seek connection and see the world as a whole – not as unconnected fragments –is perhaps among our most human impulses. No person – and no classroom – is an island unto itself.
This fragmentation of the learning community is exacerbated – especially in the secondary school – by high-stakes standardized testing and increasing subject specialization. No feature of the current high school curriculum better exemplifies this bias toward homogeneous overspecialization than Advanced Placement courses. It’s no mistake that some highly competitive independent schools are abandoning AP curricula in favor of more homegrown and self-assured advanced courses. While AP courses are still largely perceived as useful for providing nationally recognized assessment of specific skills and content for the college-bound, too much focus on an AP program of study will distort an independent school’s larger humanist vision of educating the whole student, not just academically, but in terms of athletics, the arts, service, and spirituality.
A favorite film of mine is Castaway – in part, because it reminds me so much of teaching. Despite the presence of scores of students in the classroom throughout each day, the classroom teacher often
works in isolation from other teachers.
Marooned in the classroom with my pupils and my subject matter, I know a sense of professional isolation can creep in. While I haven’t been as desperate as Tom Hanks when he started talking to that volleyball, I’ve often felt that having colleagues step into my classroom for more than just a look around would certainly be a good reason for dancing around the fire.
AME ri CAN St U di ES
by: M ARK E. H AYES, English Department
understood teaching. You can teach for 40 years, as a colleague of mine once said, or you can teach the same year 40 times. Interdisciplinary education creates a learning environment in which the tensions born out of differences of opinion and of subject actually help create a collaborative lesson, unit, or even course. Finding the common ground creates something new in the school curriculum. We’ve made fire by rubbing two sticks together. After all, it was the liberal arts, the integrated studia humanitatis, that helped move Europe out of the dark ages.
One would do well to remember that Hanks’s character, an information-age specialist, had to reinvent himself as the ultimate generalist in order to survive.
Film analogies aside, the truth is that when we teach, even in the midst of students, we usually teach alone. Oddly, some of the last things that teachers will share with each other are lesson plans, handouts and worksheets, ideas about pedagogy and instruction, and the latest developments in educational materials and technology. It’s almost as if, once a teacher goes into the classroom and
In 2007-2008, the Interdisciplinary Initiative Program was proposed and accepted, providing a focus for two sets of courses – one set being American Literature, US History, and Religion in America, and the other Environmental Science and The Universe Story. With the approval of American Studies as the first fully integrated course, Aldo Regalado and I began teaching the course with a dozen students in 2008-2009. The following year, this past one, we had almost a third of the junior class enrolled.
What does the American Studies classroom look like? Rather than desks, students sit at the Harkness table. Rather than study textbooks, we read critically a variety of primary sources – literature,
Finding the common ground creates something new in the school curriculum
closes the door, what happens inside with the students is confidential – even mysterious and unknown. My interest in teaching interdisciplinary courses arose, after 10 years in schools, from my need to cast away those institutional habits of seclusion, and, frankly, a self-serving idleness in how I thought I
historical and political documents, paintings and political cartoons, motion pictures, and sound recordings. Students journal on their reading – an initial process of reflection that helps in Harkness discussions and in more elaborate writing assignments. The basic intellectual framework of the cultural
history of the United States is provided by teacher lectures that make generous use of PowerPoints multimedia features. American Studies, which occupies a double period of 90 minutes each day, offers a great deal of flexibility in terms of how we can structure our lessons. Rather than losing content through the blending of History and English, we can cover more material, and in more depth.
Interdisciplinary courses are about connections, seeing the bigger pictures rather than the smaller ones. When details are learned in the context of a common framework, they have a much greater likelihood of being understood and retained. Dr. Regalado and I knew we were on the right track when, several days after we finished a unit on the American Revolution, we heard one of our students humming “The Liberty Song” to himself in the hallway: Come, join hand in hand, brave Americans all, And rouse your bold hearts at fair Liberty’s call; No tyrannous acts shall suppress your just claim, Or stain with dishonor America’s name.
In the arts and humanities, of course, the connections are more naturally made between literature and languages, history, religious studies and philosophy, as well as music and visual arts. What Dr. Regalado and I have learned is that interdisciplinary work is not so much about learning different subject matter, but learning how people from different disciplines think. How does a historian think differently from a literary critic? How does a linguist think differently from a musician? In learning how others think, students are better able to think for themselves. The real challenges await for those of us in the humanities who would seek to make connections to math, statistics, and the sciences. In finding those connections through interdisciplinary study, we do not lose a sense of departmental identity, but gain a clearer sense of what is distinctive about how we, as individuals, have learned to think about the world.
Taking Time for the Time of Their Lives
At HLE ti CS
b y : J AKE vON S CHERRER , Director of Athletics
ViCtoriA FErNANdEz graduated in May from PTS, and left for Dartmouth a few weeks ago. She earned her varsity letters in a number of sports including cross
Four “generations” of Palmer Trinity student athletes recently gathered to share their experiences of wearing the Falcons’ blue and gold. Although they were separated by several years, their collective memories were remarkably similar.
Whether it was re-telling a hilarious moment from a bus ride to a road game, sharing a poignant moment of a coach going the extra mile to help them personally, experiencing “just one more time” the thrill of victory or, in some cases, the agony of a defeat, we found that the experiences of these four had much more in common than you might think. Our four subjects were Wilson Hernandez ‘05, victoria Fernandez ‘10, bailey Evans ‘12, and Kristen Fernandez ‘15. We asked them to tell us about their time as a student athlete at Palmer Trinity and how it had (or has) impacted them outside the playing fields.
Although BAiLEY EVANS is only a junior, she has already earned six varsity letters in volleyball, soccer, and softball.
wiLSoN HErNANdEz played varsity baseball and varsity football at PTS. He recently graduated from F.I.U. with a degree in Education and plans to teach middle school
Finally, the youngest student athlete being profiled is KriStEN FErNANdEz, who began 8th grade this fall. She is also a three-sport athlete, and won the recognition of
WILSON
VICTORIA
CroSS CoUNtrY
SoCCEr
tENNiS
BAILEy
VoLLEYBALL
SoCCEr
SoFtBALL
KRISTEN
I took a few days and met with each of these students and asked them a variety of questions. Here are just a few of their thoughts.
How did you first get involved with sports at PTS?
ViCtoriA: As a new 7th grader, I didn’t know anyone. My father had recently passed away, and Mrs. (blossom) Gross asked me to think about joining the cross country team in hopes of becoming more involved in the community. I decided to try out, and I remember immediately feeling like a member of a family. Mrs. Gross was so helpful, along with my new teammates, and at a difficult time in my life, the cross-country team really made me feel welcomed at PTS.
When I came to PTS in grade, baseball was my main sport. One of the seniors (Kyle Rutter, recently inducted into the PTS Athletic Hall of Fame) immediately took me under his wing and made me feel like I was already part of team!
iLEY: In 6th grade, when I stepped foot on campus, I already had two cousins and a brother here, and they were involved with sports. I wanted to play because they played, but I also really enjoyed the competition.
What challenges did you have balancing practices and games with academics?
KriStEN: Sports actually help me stay organized. When I’m not on a team (at the end of the year), I find myself putting off my homework because I think I have a lot of time, and I end up not having time because I’ve watched T v or just lazed around. being on a team makes me manage my time, and it’s fun!
wiLSoN: I was on the baseball team and I also played in the wind and jazz ensemble, so I had to learn how to manage my time. My coaches and teachers were all great, and they allowed me to embrace academics and athletics, as well as my tuba playing!
ViCtoriA: I don’t think I would have done as well academically if I hadn’t been involved so much in sports. The outlet of my practices and my games was very important to me. I had to use my time wisely, but I always had time to complete my homework and still enjoy a complete experience at PTS.
Palmer Trinity prides itself on providing an exciting athletic experience for the “beginner” as well as the “trained” athlete – do you feel this is a true statement? How?
wiLSoN: I came here with a pretty good background in baseball, but the coaches – particularly Coach Harvey and Coach Rose – really helped me take my game to the next level. They challenged me to get better, both as a player and as a person, and I had a pretty good career at Palmer Trinity … good enough to play college baseball.
KriStEN: When I first started with volleyball, I was struggling
with setting. Coach (David) bradt took me aside to help me, and he stayed with me, encouraging me, until I got it. In track, all of the coaches spend extra time helping everyone … there are step-by-step instructions in all the events whether you are a star or just starting.
ViCtoriA: I saw it in cross country and in soccer where the coaches worked with everyone, the young kids as well as the seniors, because they know every member of the team is important … and the students responded by putting their best efforts forward. That’s something I’m going to miss, seeing that determination–training for a goal, continuing to battle, trying to get to states … it was a great way to wrap up my career.
BAiLEY: The coaches are amazing. They push you – sometimes it’s extreme and tough, but you end up pushing each other. They are the core of the program … they make it all come together. They teach you to become a better person … they care about you and the school.
If you can list your “Signature Moment” as a Falcon Student-Athlete, what would it be?
BAiLEY: Last year’s soccer season – District Champs and Regional Finalist! The closeness of that team and how we pushed each other and supported each other … we were playing a great team and competing right with them. We found out how good we were!
KriStEN: Just riding on the bus to the games. Singing songs, laughing with the team and the coaches, and getting pumped up for the games.
ViCtoriA: There were so many … I guess it would be when I heard that I had been accepted at Dartmouth... during one of our soccer games … we had a phone on the sideline, Coach Kemeness cleared the field … it was a great moment to share with my friends … we called everyone including
Mr. Murphy and Mr. Reynolds!
wiLSoN: It would have to be winning the District Championship in baseball. Hitting a home run and then pitching the final inning … throwing my glove up in the air and having Kyle Rutter sprint out and hug me … his father had recently passed away … it was truly an experience that I have never forgotten.
Outside of the game itself, what is the most important thing you have gotten out of your sport experience at PTS?
BAiLEY: Without a doubt, my friends, the closest ones. You develop an unbreakable bond from practicing and playing – the wins and losses – you just want to spend more time together with these same people.
KriStEN: I’ve met lots of new friends, and I also enjoy the relationships with my coaches … they are the best. It’s not just, go do this or go do that, they stay with you, and they work with you … the coaches help you become better.
ViCtoriA: The experience of hard work, team work, and dedication that is unique to the athletic experience. Having one of the boys on the cross country team saying, ‘I’m going to miss you, you’re a good captain,’ along with the great moments I was able to share with my friends, my coaches, and my teachers.
wiLSoN: My friends of course, but also the coaches. Coach Harvey and Coach Rose taught me how to be a man, to care about others, to work hard. You just can’t get that anywhere else.
Sharing an Interest perspectives
i NVES t MEN t CLUB
b y : D OUGLAS ROTHFELDT ‘10
When Investment Group member Jokari Birdsong said, “Investing isn’t just for old people, we can do it too,” he wasn’t lying. This year the Investment Group donated $4,000 to the Palmer Trinity’s Annual fund and made multiple business-creating microfinance loans.
When I began “teasing” myself with the idea of initiating a student led investment club during the earlier days of my high school career, I could not have imagined its present success! The Investment Group has rapidly become one of the most organized and widely respected student organizations on campus. After working to raise the necessary funds to begin initial investing, the students who compose the Palmer Trinity School Investment Group (PTSIG) actively managed and invested upwards of 60,000 dollars in the financial market with all earnings directed towards the Palmer Trinity School endowment. The amazing and diligent members of this group, who have worked relentlessly over the past three years to take the initial dream and turn it into reality, made this achievement possible. Credit should also be given to the open-minded Palmer Trinity administrators who supported this organization’s vision. Needless to say, we are also immensely grateful to our thoughtful donors, who have offered us generous financial resources in our ongoing efforts. Our success would not have been accomplished without their belief in the seriousness of our purpose. We are honored.
As the Investment Group concludes its third official year on campus, the global community is on the verge of breaking out of the trenches of the Great Recession, which began during the summer of 2007. These are truly eventful times around the world. Palmer Trinity Students have the unique opportunity to absorb and learn from all the lifechanging events that are occurring. During the course of the week, members of the Investment Group gather for scheduled meetings to engage in discussions on the exciting domestic and global economies. In short, our members have remained well informed about the current markets.
Not only has the Investment Group remained well informed, but we have been extremely accurate and on target with almost all of our investments during the volatile year. This can be proved by our roughly 35% portfolio profit ($8,000 dollars).
To view our portfolio and learn more details, please read through our Annual Newsletter, located on our website www.ptsinvest.com.
Throughout the school year we chose a couple of topics on which to conduct in-depth research and gain a thorough understanding. After much discussion, debate, and at some points, heated argument, we came to the following realizations:
What caused the Great Recession? (Whose fault is it?)
~ There are many different events that were happening over both a long and short period of time that may have triggered the Great Recession
~ Credit was too easy, which resulted in excessive spending.
~ banks were benefitting in the short term from lending to unqualified borrowers who did not have a strong credit rating.
~ Synthetic investment instruments
~ Failure of Regulator oversight
How has the Unites States attempted to dig itself out of it?
~ The U.S. Government has printed and borrowed an excessively large amount of money ranging into the trillions in the belief that using the taxpayers’ dollars to bail out the financial system immediately, will be more beneficial to the country than simply letting them learn the hard way and crash. This method of thinking is referred to as the Keynes theory.
What will the long-term consequences be for the United States?
~ The long-term consequences are still uncertain, but economists are divided regarding whether the U.S. economy will experience inflation or deflation; most observers agree on the need for an increase in taxes in order to restore fiscal balance.
~ Inflation is often seen as the better of two evils. Inflation would be caused because the U.S. has printed way too much money by engaging in quantitative easing. If inflation occurred the creditors would lose and the debtors would benefit. Liabilities throughout the economy would gradually diminish in real economic terms. This would certainly help the healing process and expedite the de-leveraging that is necessary but has
many negative side effects and would create long-term dislocations in the economy.
~ Deflation on the other hand would be the less favorable of the two outcomes because asset values would be falling. Creditors would be the winners and debtors the losers in this scenario. Debtors would suffer as the asset values would fall and their debts remain unchanged. We experienced a miniature version of this in the US housing industry in ’08-’09.
The members of the Palmer Trinity Investment Group have assumed tremendous pride in remaining well informed. It is our belief that our very best effort requires no less than excellence. I would like to offer much appreciation to Mr. Kirk Hatcher. He has been our loyal faculty advisor since the organization’s inception. Mr. Hatcher has helped create many of the key ideas behind the success of this organization. His belief in the worthy goals of this organization will never be taken for granted.
Thanks to the continuous support from the initial founders of this organization, we have been able to achieve so much. Special appreciation goes to Abraham brovold ‘08, Romain Lang-Willar ‘08, Alex Langwillar ‘08, Luciano viola ‘08, Sean Hew ‘09 and Michael Daud ‘09 for helping create and lay the foundation of this organization.
Finally, on a more sentimental note, I am so very proud of the students serving this organization. Their committed insight, rare maturity, and genuine hard work has made such a tremendous difference. Although I have departed from Palmer Trinity, I am confident that the members of this student led organization will take the Investment Group to an even higher horizon. Under the capable leadership of CEO-elect, Nicholas Gangemi, the Palmer Trinity Investment Group will further embrace what will become a proud tradition and bright promise on this campus. This is the start of something truly remarkable.
For more information, press releases, and updates please visit us at www.ptsinvest.com.
Environmental Leadership
C or AL LAB
b y : D R . L EOPOLDO L LIN Á S , Science Department and Sustainability Coordinator
From the time he was very small, Trae Kerdyk ‘10 enjoyed exploring the reefs, sea grasses, beaches, and mangroves around South Florida. He was fascinated by all aspects of the ocean and marine life. At Palmer Trinity School, he learned all he could about the wildlife of the Gulf and its coast.
As a member of the first group of volunteers at the Coral Lab, Trae dedicated himself to communicating to students and faculty his love and concern for our planet. He was a valuable member of the Coral Lab team and a role model for his peers. Trae quickly emerged as a genuine leader, someone who would reach out to other students. Trae taught and enabled them to turn their own aspirations into actuality. He trained new and prospective students. His advice and guidance were a great help to many, and he always took time to help them with a pleasant and encouraging attitude.
After Trae graduated from Palmer Trinity in 2010, he was proactive in protecting the Florida Keys environment from the Deepwater Horizon oil spill. He signed up as a volunteer and captain with keysspill.com, a site organizing volunteer opportunities and clean-ups throughout the Florida Keys. He obtained the CPR and Hazmat certification needed to work in the oily waters.
Looking back at his years at Palmer Trinity, one can see clearly that Trae inspired us through example and taught us to respect nature and care for it. Today, he is at Eckerd College to follow his passion and pursue a degree in Environmental Science.
You and another student, Zach Schwartz, helped create the Coral Lab in 2009. What’s its mission?
The Coral Lab has a few different purposes and missions. The main purpose is to raise awareness about marine flora and fauna among students who are unfamiliar with them. The Coral Lab also has a mission to help restore the environment by Coral Propagation and fish breeding. Right now we are funding part of the program by selling our captive grown coral back to fish stores, therefore preventing them from taking coral from the wild to sell.
What
is your vision for the Coral Lab?
My vision for the Coral Lab is a program that kids of all ages at Palmer can become involved with. I envision a coral propagation program that will be able one day to start returning native corals to our reefs and selling species of coral that are almost always taken from the wild back to aquarium stores. I hope to see students conducting important research on coral that will eventually be published and of use to other scientists.
What did you take away from your work at the Coral Lab?
Not only do I have a firm grasp of how to grow coral and maintain a marine aquarium, but I feel that the Coral Lab has helped me become more independent. I’ve learned to contact various people, set up meetings, make deadlines, and even manage a monthly budget.
Many students at the Coral Lab look up to you for guidance. Do you have any words of advice for them?
Figure out what specifically interests you, and then learn as much as you can about it. Remember that there is always more you can know or learn.
Can you name people whose leadership qualities have inspired you? Tell us about the things these inspiring people did or are doing.
One of my favorite leaders has been bill McKibben, whom I was fortunate to meet this year when he came to Palmer for convocation. He is credited as being the first person to recognize climate change. Currently he organizes worldwide climate activism through his organization “350.org.”
What
is leadership?
In my opinion, leadership is a relative term. Any given situation requires leadership, and any given person can be a leader. All that is required for a leader is to stand up and take charge for the good of the given situation. Although not all decisions of a leader are popular, a leader is always respected.
What is your passion?
Put simply, my passion is the ocean. Within the ocean I’m passionate about marine life, conservation of the ocean, scuba diving, spear fishing, and boating.
What’s the biggest environmental threat to our oceans?
In my opinion, the biggest threat to our oceans is taking too much from them by overfishing and overharvesting. Every year it is harder for fishermen to catch as many fish as the year before.
How does Palmer Trinity prepare students to tackle those problems?
Through classes like Ecology of Food, biology, Marine Environments in South Florida, and Environmental Science, students are taught that the current methods used for the wild harvesting of fish are not environmentally viable. Students also learn to refrain from eating certain species of wild-caught fish.
What do you hope to accomplish in your lifetime?
My main goal for my lifetime is to make a difference.
The
Unknown
Leader
“It is said of a good leader that when the work is done, the aim fulfilled, the people will say, ‘we did this ourselves.’ ”
— LAO T z U
When we think about leaders, it is often of famous persons who have well-known and published biographies, designated monuments, globally-recognized names, and live on through history, like Abraham Lincoln, Martin Luther King, Eleanor Roosevelt, Albert Einstein and Mahatma Ghandi – people we studied in school. but what of the “unknown” leaders whose lives impacted us and involved us personally? What about those persons who embodied the quotation above – those heroic persons who modeled and molded some nobility in us, showing us along with others the truth that “we too have achieved, led the way, and finished well.”
In fact, we do spend great energy and time training leaders in all walks of life: military, legal, medical, educational, political, athletic, scientific, artistic, and in community service, to name a few. We award degrees and honor this training process, install leaders in all fields, and expect that training to be applied to serve the common good. Once “trained,” we go forth to “lead,” but we all know there is much more to this process even though the training is important.
In retrospect, I believe that leadership is about bravely seizing a challenging moment. It is less about the roles we are given, the hats we wear, the tests on paper passed, or the years of training. It is more about the creative ability to adapt, respond, and with God’s grace, accept the challenge to lead others through to the other side. One of our graduates, Tal berman ‘07, was one of the strongest students in his class, and unlike many, he chose to defer college and listen to his calling to develop his leadership. So out he went to take deep
wilderness training in nature’s classroom. Tal has discovered much about leadership and the energy and joy he feels when guiding others out into nature.
On a daily basis I see many of my colleagues and students in leadership situations. At such moments, they often accept the call to act, adapt to the situation, and give their best effort to help make things better. Sometimes we fail, yet more often than not we emerge as leaders. Learning by association with others on the PTS campus and beyond gives us all the chance to grow in the courageous venture of becoming a leader. Therefore, leadership is more about being called into action than about having the perfect qualifications. It is more about overcoming our fears and acting out of a faith that we must give our best to a momentary situation, and that is all we can do.
Tal Berman ’07 backpacking in the Riskafjorden, Norway in 2009.
A Class to be Remembered
C
o LLE g E C o UNSELL i N g
b y : DANNY R EYNOLDS , Director of College Counseling, Admission and Financial Aid
Last month we said goodbye to our recent graduates as they headed off to university.
They applied to schools in 40 states and several foreign countries
In my tenure at Palmer Trinity, those 83 students were some of the outstanding graduates in our history. We received our first Silver Knight winner, Tyler Kalbac, and had two runners-up: bella verwaay and Margaret Cookson. No other school in Miami Dade County surpassed that accomplishment. For prestigious scholarships, Palmer Trinity was at the forefront. We had national finalists for the Morehead-Cain, A.b. Duke, Robertson, and Danforth scholarships, and we were the only high school in America to have two finalists from the same high school for the belk Scholarship. Margaret Cookson was one of five students national-wide chosen as a belk Scholar. With those accolades in high school, look for our students to be in the running for the Rhodes, Truman, and Fulbright Scholarships after university.
The class was adventurous in their college applications. They applied to schools in 40 states and several foreign countries. The class will attend college in 19 different states and the District of Columbia. As is traditional, about 80% will attend universities outside the state of Florida. Palmer Trinity students were accepted to every Ivy League school with multiple
acceptances to Dartmouth (4), Columbia (2) and Yale (2). Our students were accepted in bulk to some of the most competitive state schools, with four to the University of virginia, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and Georgia Tech. The University of California system is extremely competitive for out-ofstate students, but Palmer Trinity had three students accepted to UCLA, and two have enrolled. We also had students accepted to the University of Texas at Austin, where in Texas they say, “You have to walk on water to be accepted to UT if you live outside of Texas.”
Our students who excel in the arts put Palmer Trinity on the map in drama, dance and film. Raul Gonzalez and Ceci Leal will attend New York University’s Tisch School of the Arts for drama, one of the most selective programs in the nation. Kristen Marbert was one of only 30 females accepted to the dance program at UCLA, and brianna Henry one of 25 female students accepted to the drama program at the University of Southern California. Those young women will raise the Palmer Trinity banner on the West Coast. I foresee in a few years we will witness Lisa Krstajic and Yuxin Huang accepting Oscars for their films after completing the cinema programs at Emerson and bard.
In athletics, Kristen Titley will play volleyball at bucknell, Felix Castillo baseball at babson, Paul Siegel football at Ft. Lewis College in Colorado, Christian Melean soccer for FIU, and Erin benson will be a member of the nationally-known dance team at the University of Miami. Many of our students will be involved in intramurals and will continue their love of sport at their universities.
We will hear great things about this class as they pursue their undergraduate degrees and beyond. They will be leaders in the clubs and organizations at their universities. They will also continue their community service programs in cities throughout our country, making a difference as they did here in Miami. I know I sound like a doting father, but this was a class to be remembered. Their motivation, school spirit, humor, love of learning, and disdain for injustice will be hard to match.
The Morrison Family
b y : S U z ANNE G OTTLIE b C ALLEJA , Director of Communications and Community Relations
When a great family, and unique place are inextricably linked, extraordinary things happen. William (Bill) and Jan Morrison – parents of PTS graduates Will ‘07, Hugh ‘09, and Annie ’10 – have helped support and transform the growth of this school in myriad ways.
bill, who just stepped down as Palmer Trinity’s Chairman of the board of Trustees after almost four years, and Jan – a hard working, thoughtful and caring ambassador of PTS, have worked tirelessly to create a school that their children, and all the students, are proud to represent. Just don’t mention the words personal legacy.
“I don’t believe in personal legacies,” says bill, Executive vice President and Chief Financial Officer of Northern Trust Corporation. “Our children have grown and improved themselves as they have gone through Palmer Trinity. We are so proud of the transformational impact PTS has had on how our kids have grown up, adjusted to life’s unpredictable challenges, and prepared themselves for their next steps. The students at PTS are global kids with a substantial worldview, enhanced by the trips PTS offered to Japan, Nicaragua, Australia, Hawaii, Salamanca, and Aix en Provence. The kids really pay attention to the needs of others – they are oriented this way. It underscores why we sent them to PTS. So to me, the legacy that we have is the values that our kids evoke.”
The legacy that interests Jan the most is the idea that a school community integrates a legacy of family commitment.
“A school functions as a huge community,” she says. “I say to parents, do your kids get out of the car everyday and get back in the car at the end of the day happy? If the answer is yes, you’ve got to believe that something really good is occurring at that institution. I always say that Middle School is a time when our kids are learning so much about life and they will fall down and make mistakes. I tell parents that grades are important, but if the kids are so stressed and burned out by the time they reach high school, will they be ready for the hard work and challenges that really matter for college admission? At Palmer Trinity, they feel that they can share what is happening in their lives with many of their teachers, and that is very important, that someone is available to hear our kids – someone who represents the values that are aligned with our own values. This is one of the priceless gifts that Palmer Trinity has always given us as parents. There are so many people there that truly care about the kids.”
For all of their hard work and success, a similar thread of gratitude runs through the Morrison
At Palmer Trinity, they feel that they can share what is happening in their lives with many of their teachers, and that is very important, that someone is available to hear our kids – someone who represents the values that are aligned with our own values
kids. For Will, it was the teachers who made the difference. “I just feel that teachers, like Ms. bonner and Ms. vanegas, and Danny Reynolds care about us a lot,” he says. “They really care about our futures and what we want to do – they honestly want the best things for us. They make a permanent impact – they are still available if we need to talk or ask for advice.” Will is going into his senior year at Chapman University in California and hopes to return to Miami after attending graduate school.
Hugh, who is attending the University of Denver, also feels a kinship with some of his PTS teachers: “Mr. Hatcher, Mr. Gonzalez, and Ms. vanegas all taught me what is important in life – they really cared about the choices I was making, they listened to me, and made a huge effort to help me when I needed it. You don’t find that often – my friends in other local Miami schools didn’t have this. We were really lucky.” This summer Hugh traveled to Indonesia for a community service/journalism trip. For Annie, the exchange program at PTS was a highlight of her time here. This program also impressed bill and Jan, who noted that for many families unable to take extensive trips together abroad, the availability of these programs is instrumental in opening doors to new cultures for their kids. Will’s service/mission trip to Nicaragua a few years ago over winter break, where a group of PTS students built a house for a family in need, was “’very impactful”. I think this trip should be mandatory for all students. It changed me,” he says. He is also grateful for the Environmental trip to Hawaii. Annie, who is looking forward to attending Georgetown University starting this fall, traveled to Spain, France, Hawaii, and Australia on the different programs offered at PTS. “I think the exchange programs at PTS are awesome,” she says. “Our programs are really special — each one is unique. Most kids don’t get to go on these programs until college.”
Trying to explain what you care about in a school is difficult – it’s almost like describing what you like about your friends. So many components have to work together that a small degree of good fortune is necessary, as well as a synergy with a person or place.
bill and Jan wanted a school that had the standards and beliefs that they had growing up. Jan explains: “The plan was for the kids to go to boarding school as bill did – to Kent School in Connecticut.
humps and bumps in the road – I was right.”
Our programs are really special — each one is unique. Most kids don't get to go on these programs until college.
I attended a small, private girls’ school here in Miami – Everglades, which merged in 1973 as Ransom-Everglades. Fast forward to 1998 and the need to find a middle school that could give our children the education we had, without having to send them to boarding school, since we wanted them to stay in Miami. bill wanted a campus with lots of green space. I visited every open house around town – public and private. Watching and observing the behavior of the students and the feeling of the campus, I knew Palmer Trinity was the campus in which I wanted our children to thrive and grow and learn. We had narrowed our decision down to two schools and, ultimately, and I can say, happily, chose Palmer Trinity School.”
According to bill, “academics were important, but we felt the overall school environment echoed our values and principles. This was the right thing to do for us and for our family.”
With the Morrisons having been involved in the school for so many years, it is important to know what Palmer Trinity means to them.
bill: “I initially joined the board so that I could be a part of the discussions and decisions on how to improve the school. I can see that many of the gaps that existed years ago have been filled. There is a great sense of community – amidst all. All seniors are going to college – it’s very impressive: Yale, Dartmouth, Penn, etc. great schools, as it should be. For me, [the school represents] a triangle of personal values, sense of community, and academics.”
For Jan, it’s that synergy that made it all come together: “It’s a balance of religion, morals, and academics. One never knows what surprises you’ll have as your children go through their youth, and I felt Palmer Trinity would be there to help, listen and encourage Will, Hugh and Annie during the
For both bill and Jan, the PTS experience is about much more than paying tuition and other costs of school. In fact, Jan’s advice to new parents is to attend as many events as possible in the first couple of months. “Most parents want to get involved, meet their kids’ friends and share in the school community – volunteering is absolutely essential. There is as little or as much as you’d like to do. Whether or not you work or don’t work outside the home, most information is sent via email. Don’t think for a moment that you can’t get involved, even if you are working full time. If you bring in a special dish for the teacher/staff lunches, this will offer you a day when you can meet other wonderful parents in your child’s grade – read the ‘push pages’ and all the E-News and you will feel connected and will learn of ways to choose to be involved.”
bill explains that after all his years of being involved, the graduation event is his favorite and the culmination to a wonderful journey.
“Graduation reminds you of why you spent the money, why you volunteered so much, or why you served on board committees. It all comes together on that day.” For Jan, there are “so many memorable moments in addition to graduation. It’s not just the senior-year events that make a difference, but the incredible passage from 9th to 12th grade. Our children are bonded with students from all grades at PTS, and this bond continues as they go through college and beyond.”
potential. “The school is excellent, but we continue to have goals to improve our facilities to make this institution even better.” He wants families to appreciate the importance and impact of giving to the school. “Many families don’t understand the business model of private independent schools. Tuition covers only ninety percent of the actual costs to educate each student for one year. That’s why it is so important to support the annual fund each year. The endowment fund is different – this is to help the school grow and be prepared for emergencies and opportunities.
The benefit goes to the current students and future students of the school. It’s a wonderful tradition of giving and it’s not about the amount; it is about giving back to an institution that has given so much to our children,” explained bill.
The legacy, dare it be said, is in the unlimited future potential of the Morrison children and their classmates. “I can’t wait to hear the news of where they have decided to work, or what mission trip
besides volunteering, the Morrisons give generously to the annual and endowment fund. As the past Chairman of the board, bill understands the delicate position many notfor-profit private institutions find themselves in – tuition alone does not allow for emergencies or expanding growth opportunities.
This is one of the main reasons why bill will continue to serve on the board, to help with the goal of developing the school to its fullest
they might be involved in,” said Jan recently. While the Morrisons downplay their undeniable impact, we know that our school community has been forever changed and has blossomed under their care. bill and Jan Morrison have led by example and have raised their three children to recognize that building a strong sense of values and character are as important, if not more important a life lesson than simply striving for academic success alone. It is now a time for change and new beginnings as this family’s journey goes on. The Morrison family has left an indelible impact – our school community is wiser, happier, and grateful for their care.
It is a long-lasting legacy, indeed.
Palmer Trinity is proud to welcome five new members to the 2010-2011 Board of Trustees:
Ricardo, the current CEO of Holdinmex, SA de Cv International Corporate and Cargo Services, Inc. has worked in a variety of industry sectors including manufacturing, aviation, and advertising. He received degrees from Southern Methodist University and Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and the Instituto Tecnologico Autonomo de Mexico. Ricardo Albarran Campillo and his wife Carla, are the parents of PTS student Susanna ‘15, 5th grader Ricardo and 3rd grader Carla, both of whom are at Alexander Montessori.
Isabel graduated from the University of Miami with a degree in Physical Therapy. She is trained and certified in NeuroDevelopmental Treatment in Pediatrics. She works very closely with the Ronald McDonald House Charities of South Florida, as well as the McDonald’s Regional Leadership Council. She has served as a parent volunteer and officer of the Palmer Trinity Parents Association for many years. Isabel Rodriguez and her husband Alex are the parents of bryan ‘06 and Nicholas ‘10.
tE r ESA C A rr EN o, M d
Teresa is a psychiatrist in private practice in Adult, Child and Adolescent Psychiatry in Miami, Florida. She received her bS as well as her MD degrees from the University of Miami and completed psychoanalytic training at the Florida Psychoanalytic Institute. She previously served on the board of St. Stephen’s Episcopal School in Miami, and is currently on the vestry at St. Stephen’s Episcopal Church. Teresa and her husband, Humberto Casariego are parents of Carolina ’14 and Ana ’14.
iSABEL r odrig UE z
r i CA rdo A LBA rr AN
Board of Trustees
2010 – 2011
Jo SEPH J. K ALBAC , Jr., Chairman
S USAN L U doV i C i, Vice-Chair
Mi CHAEL B A i AM o N t E , Secretary
Ji M dAV id S o N , Treasurer
M AgdALENA
Magdalena, a native of Sweden, received her education there, including degrees from École FranÇaise in Stockholm, and bachelor of business Administration from the Stockholm School of Economics. She served as Chief Operating Officer at Carnegie, Inc. in New York and Albert berg, Inc. also in New York. Magdalena and her husband Marc are the parents of Douglas ‘10 and Danielle ‘13.
bishop Schofield received an undergraduate degree from Hobart College and a Master of Divinity Degree from berkeley Divinity School at Yale. He has also been awarded three honorary doctorates. He was ordained to the priesthood in 1962. In 1980, he became the second bishop of Southeast Florida and served until his retirement in 2000. He was the first vicar, then rector, of St. Andrew’s, Palmetto bay. Up until recently bishop Schofield served on the board of Trustees at St. Andrews Episcopal School in boca Raton. bishop Schofield and his wife Elaine reside in Palmetto bay. Their two children and two grandsons live in Denver, Colorado.
The board is the guardian of the school’s mission. Membership of the board includes alumni, parents of current or former students, and other individuals from the greater Miami community and throughout the country. The Board of Trustees is comprised of 26 voting members. All Trustees provide leadership and contribute to Palmer Trinity’s fund raising efforts and we proudly announce that we have a 100% participation from our board members towards the 2010-2011 Annual Fund and the Imagine Campaign for Endowment.
Thank you to all of our Trustees for their service and dedication to the PTS community.
r i CA rdo A LBA rr AN
S USAN B ENENAti
PAULA Bro CK wAY
tE r ESA C A rr EN o
rEV. Fr ANK J. Cor B i SHLEY
(Bishop’s Designate)
r t. rEV. L E o Fr A d E
E Loi SE g o N z ALE z- gELLE r
A NNE JACKAwAY
MitCHELL K APLAN
C HA r LES K LENK
w i LL i AM Morri S o N
Vi CK i o ’M EA r A
rEV. J ENN i E Lo U rE id
dA rrYL r o B i NS o N
iSABEL r odrig UE z
M AgdALENA r ot HFEL dt
Bro N w EN rU tt E r
Bi SH o P C ALV i N S CH o F i EL d
gA rY tA r BE
Jo-A NN t it LEY
Mi CHELLE tor BE rt
L U i S Vi LLANUEVA
r ot HFEL dt
Bi SH o P C ALV i N S CH o F i EL d
Thank You!
Palmer Trinity School offers the best of both worlds – a balance of academic rigor with a friendly campus community. Many of you have seen our new ad campaign in local media outlets. Others hear about us on public radio and still more sign up to learn about us on social media. And, don’t forget our regular “ENews” which lands in more than 2,000 inboxes, across the nation! Good news travels quickly. We are proud to share news about the dedication, hard work, and love that the school’s faculty, administration, parents, alumni, alumni parents, grandparents, and friends pour into the school. This Annual Report –Aerie Magazine, in general – tells a wonderful story of all who have given generously of their time, talent, and treasure. Your commitment to Palmer Trinity School is the best news of all!
Last year, the 2009-2010 Annual Fund set a new and impressive record in parent and alumni participation. More than 67% of our parents contributed and we doubled gifts from Alumni. We are proud of this accomplishment, given the economic challenges many currently face. More than just giving, volunteers joined in far greater numbers, whether PTPA, boosters, Alumni or through our fun special events. Setting records is a reflection of Palmer Trinity’s community commitment to a premier educational experience. Fundraising and volunteer efforts are central to the school’s ability to provide for the students of today and tomorrow. Now more than ever, it is important that we all give what we can to sustain the school’s commitment to being one of the best Episcopal schools in the nation.
The great news continues, as your contributions supported the opening and dedication of our new dining facility in January, along with a celebration of the Imagine Campaign’s “public phase.” This summer, the Imagine Campaign surpassed $8,000,000 in gifts /pledges. We applaud the highly dedicated team of Class of 2010 Liaisons who secured 84% parent participation in the Annual Fund. Palmer Trinity saw record attendance, once again, at Grandparents Day and the 10 Annual International Festival. Author b ooks & books) and the New Parent Reception remains standing room only. For five straight years, ill Ussery Motors has been the presenting sponsor of our Sandy Golf Tournament and, during these years, the school has raised $242,000 towards the Sandy
In this new school year, we encourage everyone in the school community to be positive ambassadors of our great school. Tell everyone you know about this special place in Palmetto ay. Create more buzz amongst your friends and neighbors, articulate the benefits of our nurturing environment, call the Admission office to refer a family, send in an Alumni class note, “friend” us on Facebook, participate on a volunteer committee, and keep sharing student highlights with our Communications office. Tell everyone how grateful you are for Palmer Trinity School.
Most importantly, thank you in advance for your loyal support and for sharing our story. It is a unique place where great things happen.
Board of Trustees
2009-2010
W ILLIAM M ORRISON , Chairman
PAULA B ROCKWAY, Vice-Chair
S USAN L UDOv ICI , Vice-Chair
M ICHAEL B AIAMONTE , Secretary
J IM DAv IDSON , Treasurer
S USAN B ENENATI
M ARGARET B RISBANE
T HOMAS C APO
M ICHAEL C ONTRERAS
R E v. F RANK C ORBISHLEY
D IANE D E O LAZARRA
S WANEE D I M ARE
R OBERT D UNLAP
T HE R T. R E v. B ISHOP L EO F RADE
B RETT F RENCH ‘97
E LOISE G ONZALEZ -G ELLER
N ANCY H ECTOR
A NNE J ACKAWAY
J OSEPH K ALBAC , J R .
M ITCHELL K APLAN
C HARLES K LENK
vICKI O’M EARA
R E v. J ENNIE L OU R EID
DARRYL R OBINSON
B RONWEN RUTTER
C HARLES S CURR
G ARY T ARBE
J O -A NN T ITLEY
M ICHELLE T ORBERT
L UIS vILLANUE vA
Administration
2009-2010
S EAN M URPHY, Head of School
B RUCE M USGRAv E , Assistant Head of School for Academics
J ULIAN L ENTZ , Chaplain
L AURETTE C ESTARE , Head of Middle School
A SHLEY C HAPMAN , Head of Upper School
DANNY R EYNOLDS , Director of Admission, College Counseling & Financial Aid
J AKE vON S CHERRER , Director of Athletics
S UZANNE G OTTLIEB C ALLEJA , Director of Communications
B EN H OKE , Director of Development
R OB L UNDGREN , Director of Finance and Operations
S USIE L OIACONO , Executive Assistant to the Head of School
vI v IAN C ERIONE , Registrar
PALMER TRINITY SCHOOL
J ULY 1, 2009 – J UNE 30, 2010 (Unaudited)
OPERATING INCOME AND OTHER SUPPORT
.00 EXPENSES, AID AND CAPITAL COSTS
$16,309,848 .00
Unrestricted Gifts
CLASS OF 2010 ENDOWMENT GIFT
Daniela Karina Agurcia
Camila Deli Aime
Sarah victoria Alfonso
Carolina beatriz barrios
Kirby Elizabeth battle
Richard Alexander befeler
Erin Patricia benson
valerie Ann blattner
Felix Christopher Castillo
Cindy Chang
Gabrielle Colindres
Margaret Tarleton Cookson
Nathalie Ann Davidson
Luke Evan Evans
Martina Faillace
Elise Cecile Falcon
victoria Milagros Fernandez
Claire Davidson Fisher
Tyler John Fisk
Carla Regina Forns
Domenica Leigh Fuller
Raúl Andres González
Hannah Elizabeth Green
Allison Lorraine Groh
Sebastian Laurent Guerra-Mondragon
briana Nicole Henry
Tiffani Jessica Hiler
Yuxin Huang
Christian Alexander Jaffe
Patrick Thomas Kalbac
Tyler Daniel Kalbac
William Trae Kerdyk
Evan Ryan Kleiss
Lisa Lydia Krstajic
Samuel Harry Lachterman
Richard Alexander Lage
Cecilia Andrea Leal
Lynn Ann Leveille
Daniel Allan List
Luis Miguel Lopez-blazquez
Christina Susan Ludovici
Kirsten Elizabeth Marbert
Mary Kate McKenna
Christian Melean
Alexandra Danielle Mendez
Julian Gordon Menkin
Landon Eric Michelson
Mauricio bastos Moreira
Annie Madeleine Morrison
Nik Martin Nevin
Nicholas Alexander Nieto
Katarina Flora Nordqvist
Peter Charles Ovelmen
Robert Gordon Parkin
Carolina Diane Perez
Andrés bernardo Policastro
Laura Grace Portuondo
Maria Puig
Erik Alexander Quisenberry-Diaz
Josefina Rochette
Michael Anthony Rodriguez
Nicholas Cesar Rodriguez
Santiago Alejandro Rojas
Joan Andrea Ronstadt
James Arthur Roos
Douglas Eric Rothfeldt
Gabriella Audrey Salazar
Guillermo Pelegrin Salazar
Eric bo Sanabria
Joseph Donato Santilli
zachary David Schwartz
Paul Andrew Siegel
Andrew Joseph-bracale Smith
brooke Nicole Sonenreich
Nadia Samantha Tahoun
Kristen barr Titley
Eric Steven Torbert
Paulina Toro
Javier Felipe Uribe
Daniela Fernanda vargas
Isabelle verwaay
Ivanna victoria villanueva
Adam George Wilson
ENDOWMENT GIFTS
Mr. and Mrs. Rashid Abbara
Ms. Gail Ackermann
Ms. Terri Agress
Mr. and Mrs. Ricardo Albarran
Mr. William Allen, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Juan Andreu
Mr. and Mrs. Graham Andrew
Mr. and Mrs. John Arrien
Mr. and Mrs. Michael baiamonte
Dr. and Mrs. Gerard J. barrios
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph b bekkevold
Mrs. Alyse Fogarty bell ‘87
Mr. Alex bellanton
Drs. James and Susan benenati
Mr. Joshua blumenthal
Ms. brook bodie
Mr. Nick bonheur
Mr. and Mrs. Robert bonner
Mr. Chris bradt and Mrs. Tania Castro-bradt
Mr. David bradt
Mr. and Mrs. Gregory breen
Mr. and Mrs. Robert brockway ‘82
Mr. and Mrs. Jack brumbaugh
Mr. and Mrs. victor Calderon
Mrs. barbara Calev
Mr. and Mrs. Jose Calleja
Ms. Teresa Campos
Mr. Thomas Capo
Mr. and Mrs. Rafael Casas
Mr. and Dr. Tim Cassel
Ms. Cristie Castellano
Mrs. Erica Cerione
Ms. vivian G. Cerione
Ms. Laurette Cestare
Mr. and Mrs. Karl Cetta
Mr. and Mrs. Jose Chao
Mr. and Mrs. Ashley Chapman
Mr. and Mrs. Ariel Chimelis
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas J. Chumbley
Mr. Jorge C. Colindres
Ms. Christina Colon-Marrero
Mr. and Mrs. Michael A. Contreras
Reverend and Mrs. Frank J. Corbishley
Mrs. Heather Coule bardier
Ms. Catie Cunning
Mr. Dave Cutler
Mr. and Mrs. James W. Davidson
Mr. and Mrs. Mateo de Sola
Mrs. Joanna R de velasco ‘98 and James Kohnstamm
Ms. Elena De villiers
Mr. Paul K. Dean and Mrs. Rosa Castro-Dean
Mr. brian Diaz
Ms. Odalys Diaz
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Duarte
The Dunspaugh-Dalton Foundation
The Edward E. Ford Foundation
Ms. Rita Feild
Mr. and Mrs. Jose Flores
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel H. Forman
The Rt. Rev. bishop and Mrs. Leo Frade
Mr. and Mrs. victor Fuller
Mr. and Mrs. Joshua Fullerton ‘95
Mr. Carlos N Garces
Dr. and Mrs. Edmund Geller
Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Godley
Mr. and Mrs. Howard L. Goldstein
Mr. and Mrs. Raul Gonzalez
Mr. and Mrs. William Gonzalez
Ms. Caroline R. Goodwin
Dr. and Mrs. John Griffin
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas A. Gross
Mr. and Mrs. Marcelo Guerra
Mrs. Helen Guo
Dr. and Mrs. Corey Harvin
Mr. Kirk Hatcher
Mr. Mark Hayes and Ms. Pamela Roza Hayes
Mrs. Robert C. Hector
Mr. and Mrs. Christopher O. Hew
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Hibshman
Mr. Dwight L. Hill and Mrs. Mary A. Kennerk
Mr. and Mrs. brett Hixon
Mr. bennett W. Hoke
Mrs. Anne Jackaway and Mr. Jay Jackson
Ms. Judi Jennings
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Johnson
Mr. Clint Jones
Mr. Dominic Jones
Dr. Douglas Jordan
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Kalbac, Jr.
Mrs. Alexandra Katzman
Ms. Sarah Kemeness
Mrs. Gwendolyn Kenes zanakos
Mr. and Mrs. Duane Kujawa
Fr. Julian Jay Lentz
Dr. and Mrs. Leopoldo Llinas
Mr. and Mrs. Chris Locke
Mr. and Mrs. vincent Loiacono
Mr. Stephen Ludovici ‘08
Mr. and Mrs. Edward P. Ludovici
Mr. and Mrs. Steven Lumish
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lundgren
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Marbert
Laura Massa and Horacio Alfano
Mr. Peter Masteller
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Mathelier
Mr. and Mrs. David McCain
Ms. Rashelle McGiboney
Mr. Robert McGlynn
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Mock
Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Monson
Mr. Robert Moorhouse
Mr. and Mrs. William L. Morrison
Mr. and Mrs. Sean Murphy
Mr. and Mrs. bruce Musgrave
Dr. Julianne Nagel
Mr. and Dr. Mauricio Nicholls
Mr. Jeramy Nichols
Ms. vicki A. O’Meara and Mr. Dale Gassaway
Mr. Michael Pena
Mr. and Mrs. Pablo Perez
Mrs. DeAnna Pledger ‘85
Mr. and Mrs. bernardo A. Portuondo
Mrs. April Queen
Carl and Anouchka Rachelson
Dr. and Mrs. Aldo Regalado
Mrs. Ana Regalado and Mr. Carl Hefley
Mr. benjamine and The Rev. Jennie Lou Reid
Mr. Danny Reynolds
Mrs. Maria Trinidad Rittenhouse
Mr. Akbar Rizvi
Mr. Leonard Roberts and Dr. Elaine Klein
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Robertson
Mr. James Robertson ‘83
Mr. and Mrs. Darryl Robinson
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Robledo
Ms. Emily Rolling
Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey A. Rose
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Rosen
Mr. and Mrs. Marc Rothfeldt
Mrs. bronwen Rutter
Mr. and Mrs. Gus Sabogal
Ms. Eva Thompson Salas ‘04
Mrs. barbara Ceuleers Salazar
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Sanchez
Mr. and Mrs. Hector Sardinas
Mr. and Mrs. Rainer Schael
Mr. and Mrs. Chris Schollmeyer
Mr. Charles Scurr and Mrs. barbara Ibarra-Scurr
Mr. and Mrs. Raul Segredo
Mr. Felipe Serrano ‘01
Mr. brad Showalter
Ms. Kenley Smith
Mr. William Stanard
Ms. Julie Suris
Mr. and Mrs. Gary P. Tarbe
Ms. Mercedes Terranova
Mr. and Mrs. W. James Tillett
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Titley
The Rev. and Mrs. Roger Tobin
Mr. and Mrs. Peter Tolmach
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas M. Torbert
Mr. Joseph Traba
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Truby
Mrs. Joan Trujillo
Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. vale
Dr. and Mrs. Guillermo valenzuela
Ms. Maria vanegas
Dr. and Mrs. Paul vignola
Mr. and Mrs. Luis villanueva
Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey D. vogel
Dr. Jake von Scherrer and Mrs. Jan Murphy
Mr. and Mrs. Marcelo Waisberg
Dr. and Mrs. Donald Watson
Mr. and Mrs. A. J. West
Ms. Leann Winn
Mrs. Sandi Wood
Mr. and Mrs. Arturo Xiques
Mr. and Mrs. Serafin Yanes
Mr. and Mrs. Mario Yanez
Mr. Greg zamarripa
Annual Fund
As an independent school, Palmer Trinity School operates without financial support from local, state or federal government, relying on tuition and a strong Annual Fund to maintain operations. Tuition covers only 90% of the total cost to educate each student. In 2009-2010, the gap between tuition and the actual cost per student was approximately $1,900. The Annual Fund supports the current-year operating budget by filling this gap. Your gift enhances the quality of education our students receive, changing their lives and the lives of their families. Every gift made a difference!
Thank You!
GOLDEN FALCON CIRCLE
$25,000 AND ABO v E
Mr. and Mrs. Robert brockway ‘82
Mr. and Mrs. William L. Morrison
Ms. vicki A. O’Meara and Mr. Dale Gassaway
Mr. and Mrs. Marc Rothfeldt
FOUNDERS CIRCLE
$10,000 TO $24,999
Dr. and Mrs. Edmund Geller
Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Gregor
Mrs. barbara Ceuleers Salazar
Mrs. Maria Lourdes Solares
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas M. Torbert
Ruby R. vale Foundation
Mr. and Mrs. Randall Whitman
TRUSTEES CIRCLE
$5,000 TO $9,999
Mrs. John brockway
Mr. and Mrs. Michael A. Contreras
Mr. and Mrs. James W. Davidson
Mr. and Mrs. Allen De Olazarra
Mrs. Robert C. Hector
Mr. and Mrs. William Hill
Mr. and Mrs. Edward P. Ludovici
Mr. and Mrs. Milton Martinez
Mr. and Mrs. David Ramras
Mr. benjamine and The Rev. Jennie Lou Reid
Mr. Leonard Roberts and Dr. Elaine Klein
SCHOLARS CIRCLE
$2,500 TO $4,999
Mr. and Ms. Phil bakes
Mr. and Mrs. Jack brumbaugh
Dr. and Mrs. Ranley Desir
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Fox
Investment Club
Mr. Ron Katz and Dr. Jan Katz ‘81 Parents of Marcus Kyle
Mr. and Mrs. Darius Nevin
Mr. and Mrs. Richard J. Ovelmen
Mr. and Mrs. Juan b. Policastro
Mrs. bronwen Rutter
Mr. and Mrs. Luis Soto
Mr. and Mrs. Miguel viyella
HEADS CIRCLE
$1,000 TO $2,499
Mr. and Mrs. Ricardo Albarran
Ms. Hilda bacardi
Mr. and Mrs. Michael baiamonte
Dr. and Mrs. victor barredo
Dr. and Mrs. Hank barreto
Dr. and Mrs. Gerard J. barrios
Mr. and Mrs. Timothy battle
Dr. and Mrs. Gilbert beauperthuy
Mr. and Mrs. William E. beckham
Mr. and Mrs. Alberto beeck
Drs. James and Susan benenati
Mr. and Mrs. Kyle benson
Mr. and Mrs. John brockway
Mr. and Mrs. Jose Cajiga
Mr. and Mrs. Sixto Campano
Mr. and Mrs. Jose M. Carbonell
Mr. and Mrs. Juan Carlos Coccarello
Mr. and Mrs. Carlos de Quesada
Mr. and Mrs. Darin Dibello
Mr. and Mrs. Paul DiMare
Mr. and Mrs. Jorge Espinosa
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Fisk
Mr. and Mrs. victor Fuller
Mr. and Mrs. Esteban Gerbasi
Dr. and Mrs. K. Randall Groh
Mr. and Mrs. Marcelo Guerra
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Haith, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Stuart Hebb
Mr. and Mrs. Carter Hopkins, Sr.
Mr. and Mrs. Ethan Johnson
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Kalbac, Jr.
Drs. Daniel and beth Kalbac
Mr. and Mrs. William J. Keunen
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Klenk
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Koffler
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Lewis
Mr. and Mrs. Steven Lumish
Mr. and Mrs. James Lupino
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Mara
Drs. Rodolfo and Yolanda Martinez
Mr. and Mrs. David McCain
Dr. and Mrs. Luis Mendez-Mulet
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Michelson
Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Miguel
Mr. and Mrs. Marc A. Milgram
Mr. Grant and Dr. Joyce Miller
Mr. and Mrs. John Randolph Millian
Mr. and Mrs. Dave Minto
Mr. and Mrs. Andrew T. Moo
Mr. and Mrs. Sean Murphy
Mr. and Dr. Mauricio Nicholls
Mr. and Mrs. bernardo A. Portuondo
Mr. and Mrs. Stefano Reiser
Mr. and Mrs. Darryl Robinson
Mr. and Mrs. Alex C. Rodriguez
Mr. and Mrs. Luis A. Rojas
Mr. and Mrs. Josh Rosen
Mr. and Mrs. Luis Salgado
Mr. and Mrs. Hector Sardinas
Dr. and Mrs. Jaime Sepulveda
Mr. and Mrs. Philip Serrate
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Shepherd
Mr. and Mrs. Steven Sonenreich
Mr. and Mrs. Michael A. Stacks
Mrs. blair Strickroot
Mr. and Mrs. Gary P. Tarbe
Mr. and Mrs. W. James Tillett
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Titley
Unicco Service Company
Dr. and Mrs. Guillermo valenzuela
Mr. and Mrs. David L. Wilson
Mr. Felipe Woll
Ms. Christina Xiques-Gravier
Mr. and Mrs. Luis Yanes
HONORS CIRCLE
$500 TO $999
Mr. and Mrs. Randy Ableman
Mr. and Mrs. John Arthur
Mr. and Mrs. Gregory barnes
Mr. and Mrs. Moises benchlouch
Mr. Francisco blazquez and Ms. zoriada Cruz
Mr. and Mrs. Lester brockmann
Mr. and Mrs. Jose Cadena
Mr. and Mrs. Felix Castillo
Mr. and Mrs. Chris Chang
Mr. and Mrs. Jose Chao
Mr. and Mrs. Fabrizio Cocchiano
Reverend and Mrs. Frank J. Corbishley
Mr. and Mrs. Manuel Dobrinsky
Dr. and Mrs. Joseph Fernandez
Mr. and Mrs. Matthew Forristall
Mr. and Mrs. Tony Forte
Mrs. Phyllis Glukstad
Mr. and Mrs. Andres R. Guerra-Mondragon
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Himes
Dr. Stuart H. Hoke
Dr. and Mrs. Albert Iglesias
Mr. and Mrs. Peter Joseph
Ms. Susan Klock ‘00
Dr. and Mrs. Andrew Lagomasino
Mr. and Mrs. Fernando Lauria
Fr. Julian Jay Lentz
Mr. and Mrs. Jose Lopez
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Marbert
Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Marin
Mr. and Mrs. Francisco Martinez
Dr. and Mrs. Rafael Mas
Mr. and Mrs. Yasson Matarangas
Mr. and Mrs. Adolfo McGregor
Mr. and Mrs. Fernando Mercenari
Mr. and Mrs. Ricardo Morean
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Morgan
Mr. and Mrs. Nigel Myers
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Orth
Mr. and Mrs. Luis Carlos Parody
Mr. and Mrs. Raul Pedraza
Mr. and Mrs. Pedro Penton
Mr. and Mrs. Luis Quintero
Mr. and Mrs. Jaime Ramirez
Mr. Danny Reynolds
Mr. and Mrs. Todd Roberts
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Robledo
Mr. and Mrs. Felipe M. Rodriguez
Mr. and Mrs. Mario Ruiz
Sage Dining Services, Inc.
Mr. Michel and Dr. Magalie Saliba
Mrs. Sabrina Gray Siso ‘98
Mr. and Mrs. Lee D. Sterling ‘81
Mr. Marcelo Suarez and Ms. Marcela biglieri
Mr. and Mrs. Dayne Tomasetti
Mr. and Mrs. Hendrik verwaay
Mr. and Mrs. Luis villanueva
Ms. Lorelei van Wey
Mr. brendan Winkler ‘98
Mr. and Mrs. Hayes Wood
Mr. and Mrs. Arturo Xiques
Mr. and Mrs. Stefan zachar, III
FRIENDS CIRCLE
$1 TO $499
Anonymous
Mr. and Mrs. Rashid Abbara
Mr. and Mrs. Tomas J. Abreu
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Adamo
Mr. Scott Adamo ‘03
Mr. Robert Adrien-Stark
Mr. and Mrs. Marcus Adside
Mr. and Mrs. Jorge A. Aime
Ms. Anabelle Alarcon
Mr. and Mrs. Juan M. Alfonso
Mr. and Mrs. Pete Alfonso
Drs. Orlando and Clara Almanza
Dr. and Mrs. Yuri Alvarez
Mr. Troy Alwine ‘96
Mr. Travis Anderson ‘00
Mr. and Mrs. Juan Andreu
Mr. and Mrs. Graham Andrew
Mr. and Mrs. David Andrews
Mr. and Mrs. Alexander Angueira
Mr. Carlos Anllo, Jr. ‘98
Mr. Larry Apple and Ms. Esther Perez Apple
Mr. and Mrs. Niorge Aragon
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Arango
Mr. and Mrs. Isilio Arriaga
Mr. and Mrs. John Arrien
Ms. Lily balleste
Dr. and Mrs. Richard baranowski
Mr. and Mrs. Larry barfield
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence barr
Mr. and Mrs. Charles baumberger ‘94
Mr. and Mrs. Hart baur ‘82
Mr. and Mrs. George befeler
Mrs. Alyse Fogarty bell ‘87
Mr. Alex bellanton
Ms. Daisy bello
Mr. and Mrs. Mark bennington
Mr. and Mrs. Fernando bertrand
Mr. and Mrs. Mitchell bidle
Ms. Kaitlin blazejack ‘95
Mr. Christopher b block ‘96
Dr. James block and Dr. Janet Nesbitt
Ms. brook bodie
Mr. and Mrs. Fernando bonet
Mr. Nick bonheur
Mr. and Mrs. Robert bonner
Mr. and Mrs. William boyd
Ms. Suzanne boyer
Mr. David bradt
Mr. and Mrs. Gregory breen
Rev. Jacqueline brovold
Mr. and Mrs. Everton burke
Mr. and Mrs. Christopher buss
Mr. and Mrs. victor Calderon
Mrs. barbara Calev
Mr. and Mrs. Jose Calleja
Ms. Katrina S. Campins ‘97
Ms. Teresa Campos
Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Campuzano
Mr. and Mrs. Richard W. Capik
Mr. Raul Capote
Ms. virginia H Carver
Mr. Humberto and Dr. Teresa Casariego
Mr. and Mrs. Loreto Casariego
Mr. and Mrs. Rafael Casas
Dr. and Mrs. Ignacio Cendan
Ms. vivian G. Cerione
Mr. Christopher Cerione ‘95
Mrs. Erica Cerione
Mr. Joseph Cerione ‘93
Mr. Jaime Cervera ‘00
Ms. Marta F Cervera
Mrs. Monica Cervera-Sijan ‘96
Ms. Laurette Cestare
Mr. and Mrs. Karl Cetta
Mr. and Mrs. Ashley Chapman
Mr. and Mrs. Gerardo Chavez
Mr. Alexander Chester ‘01
Dr. and Mrs. Alfred G. Childers ‘76
Mrs. Ed Chumbley
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas J. Chumbley
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Chynces
Mrs. Lynley Walker Ciorobea ‘96
Ms. Christina Colon-Marrero
Mrs. Stephanie Connor
Mr. Michael Contreras, Jr. ‘04
Mr. and Mrs. J. Thomas Cookson
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Cortazar
Mrs. Esther Cortazar
Ms. Catie Cunning
Mr. Dave Cutler
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Dass
Mr. and Mrs. Alan Davidson
Mr. and Mrs. Ted D. Davis
Mr. Luis de Leon Andres
Mr. and Mrs. Mateo de Sola
Mrs. Joanna R de velasco ‘98 and James Kohnstamm
Ms. Elena De villiers
Ms. Diane Deighton
Ms. Gisela Del Amo
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Devine
Mr. and Mrs. David DeWitt
Mr. brian Diaz
Mrs. Lizzette Diaz
Ms. Odalys Diaz
Mr. and Mrs. Erwin Diaz-Solis
Mr. and Mrs. John Dickason
Mr. Preston Dickerson ‘98
Mr. and Mrs. John DiFede
Mr. and Mrs. Pedro Domit
Mr. and Mrs. Alan Drecksler
Ms. Gitanjali D’Sa ‘05
Mr. and Mrs. Scott du Feu
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Duarte
Mr. and Mrs. Michel Dudley
Mr. and Mrs. John Erixon
Ms. Michelle Evans ‘09
Ms. Samantha Evans ‘06
Ms. Dorothy Evans
Mr. and Mrs. Evan Evans
Mr. Christopher and Rev. Wilifred Faiella
Mr. and Mrs. Gabriel F. Faillace
Ms. Martina Faillace ‘10
Mr. and Mrs. Charles R. Fairbank
Mr. and Mrs. Arturo Falcon
Mr. and Mrs. Carlos Falconi
Ms. Rita Feild
Mr. and Mrs. Horace Feliu
Mr. and Mrs. Jose Fernandez
Mr. and Mrs. Eduardo Jeronimo Fernandez
Mr. and Mrs. Lorenzo Fernandez
Mrs. Milagros Fernandez
Ms. victoria M. Fernandez
Ms. Francesca Fernandez
Mr. and Mrs. Ricardo Ferreira
Mr. and Mrs. Sean Fisher
Mr. and Mrs. Derek Fisher ‘91
Mr. and Mrs. Anthony C. Fitzgerald
Mr. and Mrs. Jose Flores
Mr. and Mrs. Javier Font
Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Forthman, Jr. ‘75
The Rt. Rev. bishop and Mrs. Leo Frade
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Fraser
Mr. and Mrs. brett French ‘97
Mr. and Mrs. Steven D. Friedland ‘83
Ms. belinda Frieri ‘99
Ms. Christine M Frigo ‘88
Mr. and Mrs. Joshua Fullerton ‘95
Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Fusfield
Mr. Carlos N Garces
Mr. Rolando A Garcia
Mr. and Mrs. brian Gershen ‘98
Mr. and Mrs. Marcello Glass
Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Godley
Ms. Amber Goethel ‘96
Ms. Delfina Gomez
Mr. and Mrs. William Gonzalez
Mr. and Mrs. Rene Gonzalez ‘95
Mr. and Mrs. Raul Gonzalez
Ms. Caroline R. Goodwin
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Gossele
Mr. and Mrs. Michele Grendene
Dr. and Mrs. John Griffin
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas A. Gross
Ms. Clara Guevara
Mr. and Mrs. virgilio Guma
Mrs. Helen Guo
Mr. and Mrs. Luis Gutierrez
Mr. and Mrs. Eric Haas
Mrs. Martha Ann R. Haas
Mrs. Jane Clutter Hardin ‘75 & Mr. Walter Hardin
Mr. and Mrs. Mason Harris
Mrs. Christina Hart ‘97
Dr. and Mrs. Corey Harvin
Mr. Kirk Hatcher
Mr. Mark Hayes and Ms. Pamela Roza Hayes
Mrs. Kristin Hayden Hebert ‘01
Mr. and Mrs. Julio Hernandez
Mr. and Mrs. Carlos Hernandez
Mr. Andy Hessen ‘76 & Mrs. Mary McMath ‘73
Mr. and Mrs. Peter L. Hew
Mr. and Mrs. Christopher O. Hew
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Hibshman
Mr. and Mrs. Richard A. Hiler
Mr. bennett W. Hoke
Ms. Mary Holle
Mr. and Mrs. Carter Hopkins, Jr.
Mr. Rolando Huerres
Ms. Elizabeth Hutson
Mr. and Mrs. Jesus Iglesias
Mrs. Anne Jackaway
Dr. and Mrs. Rudolf Jaffe
Ms. Judi Jennings
Mr. and Mrs. Trond S. Jensen
Mr. Ricky Jofre ‘90
Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Johnson
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Johnson
Mrs. Carin Ross Johnson ‘91
Dr. Katherine Jones
Mr. Dominic Jones
Mr. Clint Jones
Dr. Douglas Jordan
Mr. and Mrs. Angel Kaifer
Mr. and Mrs. Mitchell Kaplan
Mrs. Alexandra Katzman
Ms. Sarah Kemeness
Mr. and Mrs. William Kerdyk
Dr. and Mrs. ziad Khatib
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond E. Kilpatrick
Mr. and Mrs. Henry M. Knoblock
Dr. Martin Kokol
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Kopp
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Krissel
Dr. and Mrs. Richard Lage
Mr. and Mrs. Ramesh Lall
Mr. and Mrs. Jon Lawrence ‘98
Mrs. beth Lazar
Mr. and Mrs. Ricardo Leal
Mr. and Mrs. Ramon Leira
Mr. Gary Lesnik ‘84
Mr. Julio Ligorria ‘06
Mr. and Mrs. David List
Mr. and Mrs. Philip Littke
Mr. Hugo Lallemand
Dr. and Mrs. Leopoldo Llinas
Mr. and Mrs. Carter Logan
Mr. and Mrs. vincent Loiacono
Mr. and Mrs. Jorge Lopez
Ms. Corina Lopez ‘04
Mr. and Mrs. Felix Lopez
Ms. Ana Lopez-blazquez
Mr. and Mrs. Evens Louis-Jean
Ms. Christina Ludovici ‘10
Mr. Stephen Ludovici ‘08
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lundgren
Mr. and Ms. Robert Macaulay
Mr. and Mrs. Christopher MacNair
Mrs. Lily D. Maddock ‘95
CDR John Madril and Dr. Danielle Madril
Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Magenheimer
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Magenheimer ‘78
Mr. Mauricio Suazo and Ms. Sandra Maler
Mr. John C. Malloy ‘85
Mrs. Julie C. Mansfield ‘74
Dr. and Mrs. Jose Marquez
Mr. Manuel Martinez
Laura Massa and Horacio Alfano
Mr. and Mrs. Ramon Masson
Mr. Peter Masteller
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Mathelier
Mr. and Mrs. Rick Mattaway
Mrs. betty Matz ‘85
Ms. Jessica A. Mazon ‘09
Mr. and Mrs. Richard McAlpin
Mr. and Mrs. Richard McConachie
Mr. and Mrs. Christopher McDonough
Ms. Carolina McElroy
Mr. James McGehee ‘85
Ms. Rashelle McGiboney
Mr. Robert McGlynn
Mr. Miles McGrath ‘87
Mr. and Mrs. Paul A. McKenna
Mr. and Mrs. Richard McMichael
Ms. Elizabeth McNichol
Ms. Helen M McNutt ‘83
John and Susan Medina
Mr. and Mrs. Julio Melean
Mr. and Mrs. Carlos Menacho ‘88
Mr. and Mrs. Steven Menkin
Marty and Chris Migliaccio
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Miller
Drs. vivek and Anjana Mishra
Mrs. Sheree Mitchell-Rodríguez
Mr. and Mrs. ziyad Mneimneh
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Mock
Mr. Armando Molina
Mr. and Mrs. John S. Moll
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Montoya
Mr. Robert Moorhouse
Ms. Carmen Morales
Ms. Annie Morrison ‘10
Mr. Will Morrison ‘07
Mr. Laurence Moser ‘80
Mr. Adam Moskowitz ‘85
Mr. Sean Murphy ‘89
Mr. Erin Murphy ‘01
Mr. and Mrs. bruce Musgrave
Dr. Julianne Nagel
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Narchet
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Nespral
Mr. and Mrs. Scott Newman
Ms. JoNel Newman
Mr. and Mrs. Alan Nichols
Mr. Jeramy Nichols
Mr. and Mrs. Alejandro H. Nieto
Mr. Angel Nieto and Ms. veronica de Armas
Mr. Joakim Nordqvist ‘79
Ms. Regina Nordqvist
Mr. and Mrs. James Nosich
Mrs. Mary Anne Dooley O’Dea ‘81
Dr. and Mrs. vincent K. Omachonu
Mrs. Karla Ortez-Colindres
Mr. and Mrs. Manuel Ortiz
Mr. and Mrs. Clay Ostwald
Mr. and Mrs. David Pacewicz
Mr. and Mrs. Luiz Padilha
Mr. and Mrs. Alfredo Pedroso
Mr. and Mrs. Horacio O. Peiro
Mr. Michael Pena
Ms. Sophie Pendarakis
Mr. and Mrs. Joaquin Perez
Mr. and Mrs. Pablo Perez
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Pertierra
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Pfeiffer
Ms. Dianna Philipp
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Pimentel
Ms. Jenna Pimentel ‘04
Mr. and Mrs. Jose Pinto
Mrs. DeAnna Pledger ‘85
Mr. Jack Plunkett and Ms. Elsie Romero
Mr. and Mrs. Armando Porto
Mr. and Mrs. Ignasi Puig
Mr. and Mrs. Orlando Quant
Mrs. April Queen
Carl and Anouchka Rachelson
Ms. Rebecca Ray ‘02
Dr. and Mrs. Aldo Regalado
Dr. and Mrs. Luis Rey
Mrs. Maria Trinidad Rittenhouse
Mr. and Mrs. Orlando Rivas
Mr. Akbar Rizvi
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Robertson
Mr. James Robertson ‘83
Mr. and Mrs. Henrique Rocchiccioli
Mr. and Mrs. Alain Rochette
Mr. and Mrs. Tony Rodriguez
Mr. and Mrs. Pablo Rodriguez
Ms. Alegna Rodriguez
Ms. Katrina Rodriguez
Ms. Emily Rolling
Mr. and Mrs. Julian Rosas
Ms. Meridith Roy
Mrs. Josephine Rullan
Ms. Mary Scott Russell
Ms. Tamara Rutter ‘02
Mr. Kyle Rutter ‘04
Mr. and Mrs. Edmond Saade
Mr. and Mrs. Gus Sabogal
Ms. Eva Thompson Salas ‘04
Mrs. Rosario Salazar
Mr. and Mrs. Luis Saldarriaga
Mr. and Mrs. Gonzalo Sanabria
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Sanchez
Mr. William Sanchez
Mr. Mario Sanchez-Carion
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph A. Sanz
Mr. Christopher Sanz ‘04
Mr. Kevin Sanz ‘01
Mr. and Mrs. Rainer Schael
Mr. and Mrs. Manuel Schiappa Pietra
Mr. and Mrs. Chris Schollmeyer
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Schwartz
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Schwartz
Mr. Charles Scurr & Mrs. barbara Ibarra-Scurr
Mr. and Mrs. Dean Seavers
Mr. and Mrs. Raul Segredo
Mr. bradley Sensale ‘88
Mr. Felipe Serrano ‘01
Ms. Tania R. Seymour ‘82
Mr. and Mrs. Scott Shelfer ‘89
Mr. brad Showalter
Mr. and Mrs. James Slaman
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Smith
Mr. Perry Smith ‘85
Ms. Kenley Smith
Mr. and Mrs. Dean Sourber
Mr. William Stanard
State of Florida
Mrs. Joelle Wagshul Steinberg ‘86 and Mr. Howard Steinberg
Mr. and Mrs. Jay Steinman
Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Stephenson ‘85
Ms. Julie Suris
Target Corporation
Mr. Dax Tejera ‘03
Ms. Mercedes Terranova
Mr. Marc Thomes ‘98
The Rev. and Mrs. Roger Tobin
Drs. Ron Tolchin and Susan Yahia
Mr. and Mrs. Peter Tolmach
Mr. and Mrs. Andres Toro
Mr. and Mrs. Eric Torrese
Mrs. Cheryl Trane
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Truby
Mrs. Joan Trujillo
Mr. and Mrs. Roberto Uhart
Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. vale
Mr. and Mrs. Gustavo valle
Mrs. Aida Alfonso and Mr. Robert vallejo
Ms. Maria vanegas
Mr. and Mrs. Danny vega
Mr. and Mrs. Armando verde
Ms. Lynn vigar
Mr. Ron vigdor ‘87
Dr. and Mrs. Paul vignola
Mr. George villasana ‘85
Mrs. Rosina villavicencio
Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey D. vogel
Mr. Christopher D. van Grieken ‘90
Dr. Jake von Scherrer and Mrs. Jan Murphy
Mr. brad Wagshul ‘87
Constituent Gifts
BOARD OF TRUSTEE G IFTS
Mr. and Mrs. Marcelo Waisberg
Mr. Campbell Walker ‘94
Drs. Jianhua Wang and Hong Jiang
Mr. and Mrs. James Weatherspoon ‘84
Mr. Justin Weatherspoon ‘09
Mrs. Laura R. Weinfeld ‘88 & Dr. Paul E. Damski
Mr. and Mrs. brian Wienczkowski
Ms. Leann Winn
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas L. Wogan
Mr. and Mrs. Ted Wolfsthal
Mr. and Mrs. Howard S. Wolofsky ‘81
Mrs. Sandi Wood
Mr. and Mrs. Serafin Yanes
Mr. and Mrs. Raul zabala
Mr. Greg zamarripa
Mrs. Gwendolyn Kenes zanakos
Mr. and Mrs. Nathan zeder ‘98
Mrs. Mildred Gandia ziegelasch
Mr. and Mrs. Craig zimmett ‘77
At Palmer Trinity School, the board of Trustees is charged with leadership, mission enhancement, and framing the long-term financial stability of the School. For this reason, we are deeply grateful for your volunteer time and generous financial leadership of the Annual Fund.
Mr. and Mrs. Michael baiamonte
Drs. James and Susan benenati
Mr. and Mrs. Robert brockway ‘82
Mr. and Mrs. Michael A. Contreras
Reverend and Mrs. Frank J. Corbishley
Mr. and Mrs. James W. Davidson
Mr. and Mrs. Allen de Olazarra
The Rt. Rev. bishop and Mrs. Leo Frade
Mr. and Mrs. brett French ‘97
Dr. and Mrs. Edmund Geller
Mrs. Robert C. Hector
Mrs. Anne Jackaway and Mr. Jay Jackson
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Kalbac, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Mitchell Kaplan
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Klenk
Mr. and Mrs. Edward P. Ludovici
Mr. and Mrs. William L. Morrison
Ms. vicki A. O’Meara and Mr. Dale Gassaway
Mr. benjamine and The Rev. Jennie Lou Reid
Mr. and Mrs. Darryl Robinson
Mrs. bronwen Rutter
Mr. Charles Scurr & Mrs. barbara Ibarra-Scurr
Mr. and Mrs. Gary P. Tarbe
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Titley
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas M. Torbert
Mr. and Mrs. Luis villanueva
Grade Level Parent Gifts
C LASS OF 2010 – 12 TH G RADE
85% PARTICIPATION
Anonymous
Mr. and Mrs. Jorge A. Aime
Ms. Anabelle Alarcon
Mr. and Mrs. Pete Alfonso
Dr. and Mrs. Gerard J. barrios
Mr. and Mrs. Timothy battle
Mr. and Mrs. George befeler
Mr. and Mrs. Kyle benson
Ms. Suzanne boyer
Mr. and Mrs. Felix Castillo
Mr. and Mrs. Chris Chang
Mr. and Mrs. J. Thomas Cookson
Mr. and Mrs. Alan Davidson
Mrs. Lizzette Diaz
Mr. and Mrs. Evan Evans
Mr. and Mrs. Gabriel F. Faillace
Mr. and Mrs. Arturo Falcon
Mrs. Milagros Fernandez
Mr. and Mrs. Sean Fisher
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Fisk
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Fraser
Mr. and Mrs. victor Fuller
Mr. and Mrs. Raul Gonzalez
Dr. and Mrs. K. Randall Groh
Mr. and Mrs. Andres R. Guerra-Mondragon
Mr. and Mrs. Richard A. Hiler
Dr. and Mrs. Rudolf Jaffe
Drs. Daniel and beth Kalbac
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Kalbac, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. William Kerdyk
Dr. and Mrs. Richard Lage
Mr. and Mrs. Ricardo Leal
Mr. and Mrs. David List
Ms. Ana Lopez-blazquez
Mr. and Mrs. Edward P. Ludovici
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Marbert
Mr. and Mrs. Paul A. McKenna
Mr. and Mrs. Julio Melean
Dr. and Mrs. Luis Mendez-Mulet
Mr. and Mrs. Steven Menkin
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Michelson
Mr. and Mrs. William L. Morrison
Mr. and Mrs. Darius Nevin
Mr. and Mrs. Alejandro H. Nieto
Ms. Regina Nordqvist
Mrs. Karla Ortez-Colindres
Mr. and Mrs. Richard J. Ovelmen
Mr. and Mrs. Raul Pedraza
Mr. and Mrs. Joaquin Perez
Mr. and Mrs. Juan b. Policastro
Mr. and Mrs. bernardo A. Portuondo
Mr. and Mrs. Ignasi Puig
Mr. and Mrs. Alain Rochette
Mr. and Mrs. Alex C. Rodriguez
Mr. and Mrs. Tony Rodriguez
Mr. and Mrs. Luis A. Rojas
Mr. and Mrs. Marc Rothfeldt
Mrs. Josephine Rullan
Mr. and Mrs. Gonzalo Sanabria
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Schwartz
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Smith
Mr. and Mrs. Steven Sonenreich
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Titley
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas M. Torbert
Mr. and Mrs. Andres Toro
Mr. and Mrs. Hendrik verwaay
Mr. and Mrs. Luis villanueva
Mr. and Mrs. David L. Wilson
C LASS OF 2011 – 11TH G RADE 61% PARTICIPATION
Mr. and Mrs. Juan M. Alfonso
Mr. Larry Apple and Ms. Esther Perez Apple
Mr. and Mrs. John Arthur
Ms. Hilda bacardi
Mr. and Mrs. William E. beckham
Drs. James and Susan benenati
Mr. and Mrs. Fernando bertrand
Mr. Francisco blazquez and Ms. zoriada Cruz
Mr. and Mrs. Everton burke
Mr. and Mrs. Christopher buss
Mr. and Mrs. Jose Cadena
Mr. and Mrs. Jose Cajiga
Mr. and Mrs. Sixto Campano
Ms. Diane Deighton
Mr. and Mrs. David DeWitt
Mr. and Mrs. John DiFede
Mr. Christopher and Rev. Wilifred Faiella
Mr. and Mrs. Gabriel F. Faillace
Mr. and Mrs. Horace Feliu
Dr. and Mrs. Edmund Geller
Mr. and Mrs. Raul Gonzalez
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Gossele
Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Gregor
Dr. and Mrs. K. Randall Groh
Mr. and Mrs. Eric Haas
Mr. and Mrs. Peter L. Hew
Mr. and Mrs. Carter Hopkins, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Mitchell Kaplan
Mr. and Mrs. William J. Keunen
Mr. and Mrs. Ramesh Lall
Mr. and Mrs. Fernando Lauria
Mr. and Mrs. Jose Lopez
Mr. and Mrs. Christopher MacNair
Dr. and Mrs. Jose Marquez
Dr. and Mrs. Rafael Mas
Mr. and Mrs. Yasson Matarangas
Mr. and Mrs. Richard McConachie
Mr. and Mrs. Christopher McDonough
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Narchet
Mr. and Dr. Mauricio Nicholls
Mrs. Karla Ortez-Colindres
Mr. and Mrs. Luis Carlos Parody
Mr. and Mrs. Horacio O. Peiro
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Pimentel
Mr. and Mrs. Armando Porto
Mr. and Mrs. Orlando Quant
Mr. and Mrs. Todd Roberts
Mrs. blair Strickroot
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas M. Torbert
Mr. and Mrs. Eric Torrese
Mr. and Mrs. Gustavo valle
Mrs. Rosina villavicencio
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas L. Wogan
Mr. and Mrs. Ted Wolfsthal
Mr. and Mrs. Stefan zachar, III
C LASS OF 2012 – 10 TH G RADE 62% PARTICIPATION
Mr. and Mrs. Rashid Abbara
Mr. and Mrs. Jorge A. Aime
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Arango
Mr. and Mrs. Gregory barnes
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence barr
Dr. and Mrs. Gilbert beauperthuy
Mr. and Mrs. William boyd
Mr. and Mrs. Rafael Casas
Mr. and Mrs. Chris Chang
Ms. Odalys Diaz
Mr. and Mrs. Darin Dibello
Mr. and Mrs. Michel Dudley
Mr. and Mrs. Evan Evans
Mr. and Mrs. Carlos Falconi
Mr. and Mrs. Scott du Feu
Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Fusfield
Dr. and Mrs. Edmund Geller
Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Gregor
Mr. and Mrs. Marcelo Guerra
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Haith, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Julio Hernandez
Mr. and Mrs. Christopher O. Hew
Mr. and Mrs. Ethan Johnson
Mr. and Mrs. Peter Joseph
Drs. Daniel and beth Kalbac
Mr. Ron Katz and Dr. Jan Katz ‘81
Mr. and Mrs. William Kerdyk
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Kopp
Mr. and Mrs. James Lupino
Mr. and Mrs. Richard McAlpin
Mr. and Mrs. David McCain
Dr. and Mrs. Luis Mendez-Mulet
Mr. Grant and Dr. Joyce Miller
Mr. and Mrs. Andrew T. Moo
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Morgan
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Nespral
Mr. and Mrs. Scott Newman
Mr. and Dr. Mauricio Nicholls
Dr. and Mrs. vincent K. Omachonu
Mr. and Mrs. Manuel Ortiz
Mr. and Mrs. Pedro Penton
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Pfeiffer
Carl and Anouchka Rachelson
Mr. and Mrs. David Ramras
Dr. and Mrs. Luis Rey
Mr. and Mrs. Alain Rochette
Mr. and Mrs. Luis A. Rojas
Mrs. Rosario Salazar
Mr. and Mrs. Luis Salgado
Mr. and Mrs. Manuel Schiappa Pietra
Mr. and Mrs. Michael A. Stacks
Mr. and Mrs. Gary P. Tarbe
Mr. and Mrs. Dayne Tomasetti
Mrs. Aida Alfonso and Mr. Robert vallejo
Dr. and Mrs. Paul vignola
Mr. and Mrs. Luis Yanes
Mr. and Mrs. Raul zabala
C LASS OF 2013 – 9 TH G RADE
66% PARTICIPATION
Drs. Orlando and Clara Almanza
Mr. and Mrs. Juan Andreu
Mr. and Mrs. Alexander Angueira
Mr. and Mrs. Isilio Arriaga
Mr. and Mrs. Michael baiamonte
Mr. and Mrs. William E. beckham
Mr. and Mrs. Moises benchlouch
Mr. and Mrs. Fernando bonet
Mr. and Mrs. John brockway
Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Campuzano
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Chynces
Mr. and Mrs. Juan Carlos Coccarello
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Cortazar
Mr. and Mrs. Jose Fernandez
Mr. and Mrs. Ricardo Ferreira
Mr. and Mrs. Javier Font
Mr. and Mrs. Matthew Forristall
Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Godley
Dr. and Mrs. K. Randall Groh
Mr. and Mrs. Luis Gutierrez
Mr. and Mrs. Christopher O. Hew
Ms. Elizabeth Hutson
Mr. and Mrs. Jesus Iglesias
Dr. and Mrs. Albert Iglesias
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Koffler
Dr. and Mrs. Andrew Lagomasino
Mr. and Mrs. Evens Louis-Jean
Mr. and Ms. Robert Macaulay
Drs. Rodolfo and Yolanda Martinez
Mr. and Mrs. Adolfo McGregor
Mr. and Mrs. Fernando Mercenari
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Michelson
Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Miguel
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Miller
Mr. and Mrs. Dave Minto
Mr. and Mrs. Ricardo Morean
Mr. and Mrs. James Nosich
Mr. and Mrs. Clay Ostwald
Mr. and Mrs. Luiz Padilha
Mr. and Mrs. Pablo Perez
Mr. and Mrs. Orlando Quant
Mr. Leonard Roberts and Dr. Elaine Klein
Mr. and Mrs. Henrique Rocchiccioli
Mr. and Mrs. Marc Rothfeldt
Mr. and Mrs. W. James Tillett
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas M. Torbert
Mr. and Mrs. Armando verde
Mr. and Mrs. Miguel viyella
Mr. and Mrs. Hayes Wood
Mrs. Mildred Gandia ziegelasch
C LASS OF 2014 – 8 TH G RADE
55% PARTICIPATION
Mr. and Mrs. Randy Ableman
Mr. Robert Adrien-Stark
Mr. and Mrs. Marcus Adside
Ms. Lily balleste
Rev. Jacqueline brovold
Mr. and Mrs. Everton burke
Mr. Humberto and Dr. Teresa Casariego
Mr. and Mrs. J. Thomas Cookson
Mr. and Mrs. Allen De Olazarra
Dr. and Mrs. Ranley Desir
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Devine
Mr. and Mrs. Manuel Dobrinsky
Mr. and Mrs. Scott du Feu
Mr. and Mrs. Michel Dudley
Dr. and Mrs. Joseph Fernandez
Mr. and Mrs. Tony Forte
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Fox
Mr. and Mrs. Michele Grendene
Mr. and Mrs. Marcelo Guerra
Mr. and Mrs. Carlos Hernandez
Ms. Mary Holle
Mr. and Mrs. Angel Kaifer
Dr. and Mrs. ziad Khatib
Mr. and Mrs. Philip Littke
Mr. and Mrs. Steven Lumish
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lundgren
Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Magenheimer
Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Marin
Mr. and Mrs. Milton Martinez
Mr. and Mrs. Christopher McDonough
Ms. Carolina McElroy
John and Susan Medina
Mr. and Mrs. Dave Minto
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Orth
Mr. and Mrs. Alfredo Pedroso
Mr. and Mrs. Pedro Penton
Ms. Dianna Philipp
Mr. and Mrs. Stefano Reiser
Dr. and Mrs. Luis Rey
Mr. and Mrs. Tony Rodriguez
Mr. Jack Plunkett and Ms. Elsie Romero
Mr. and Mrs. Josh Rosen
Ms. Mary Scott Russell
Mr. and Mrs. Luis Salgado
Mr. and Mrs. Manuel Schiappa Pietra
Dr. and Mrs. Jaime Sepulveda
Mrs. Maria Lourdes Solares
Mr. and Mrs. Dayne Tomasetti
Dr. and Mrs. Guillermo valenzuela
Mr. and Mrs. Hendrik verwaay
Drs. Ron Tolchin and Susan Yahia
C
LASS OF 2015 – 7 TH G RADE
71% PARTICIPATION
Mr. and Mrs. Ricardo Albarran
Mr. and Mrs. Graham Andrew
Drs. vivek and Anjana Mishra
Mr. and Mrs. Niorge Aragon
Mr. and Mrs. Michael baiamonte
Mr. and Ms. Phil bakes
Ms. Lily balleste
Dr. and Mrs. Hank barreto
Dr. and Mrs. Gilbert beauperthuy
Mr. and Mrs. Kyle benson
Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Campuzano
Dr. and Mrs. Ignacio Cendan
Mr. and Mrs. Gerardo Chavez
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas J. Chumbley
Mr. and Mrs. Juan Carlos Coccarello
Mr. and Mrs. David DeWitt
Mr. and Mrs. Erwin Diaz-Solis
Mr. and Mrs. Pedro Domit
Mr. and Mrs. Jorge Espinosa
Dr. and Mrs. Joseph Fernandez
Mr. and Mrs. Eduardo Jeronimo Fernandez
Mr. and Mrs. Lorenzo Fernandez
Mr. and Mrs. Javier Font
Mr. and Mrs. Matthew Forristall
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Fox
Mr. and Mrs. Raul Gonzalez
Mr. and Mrs. Stuart Hebb
Mr. and Mrs. William Hill
Mr. and Mrs. Carter Logan
Mr. and Mrs. Jorge Lopez
CDR John Madril and Dr. Danielle Madril
Mr. Mauricio Suazo and Ms. Sandra Maler
Mr. John C. Malloy ‘85
Mr. and Mrs. Francisco Martinez
Mr. Manuel Martinez
Mr. and Mrs. Ramon Masson
Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Miguel
Mr. and Mrs. John Randolph Millian
Mr. and Mrs. ziyad Mneimneh
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Montoya
Mr. and Mrs. Ricardo Morean
Mr. and Mrs. Nigel Myers
Ms. Regina Nordqvist
Mr. and Mrs. James Nosich
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Pfeiffer
Mr. and Mrs. bernardo A. Portuondo
Mr. and Mrs. Luis Quintero
Mr. Leonard Roberts and Dr. Elaine Klein
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Robledo
Mr. and Mrs. Alain Rochette
Mr. and Mrs. Pablo Rodriguez
Mr. and Mrs. Mario Ruiz
Mr. and Mrs. Gus Sabogal
Mr. and Mrs. Luis Saldarriaga
Mr. and Mrs. Raul Segredo
Mr. and Mrs. Dean Sourber
Mr. Marcelo Suarez and Ms. Marcela biglieri
Ms. Lynn vigar
Drs. Jianhua Wang and Hong Jiang
Mr. and Mrs. Randall Whitman
Mr. and Mrs. Serafin Yanes
Mr. and Mrs. Stefan zachar, III
C LASS OF 2016 - 6 TH G RADE
71% PARTICIPATION
Dr. and Mrs. Yuri Alvarez
Mr. and Mrs. Michael baiamonte
Dr. and Mrs. victor barredo
Mr. and Mrs. Moises benchlouch
Mr. and Mrs. Mark bennington
Mr. and Mrs. Fernando bonet
Dr. James block and Dr. Janet Nesbitt
Mr. and Mrs. Fabrizio Cocchiano
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Dass
Mr. and Mrs. Carlos de Quesada
Mr. and Mrs. Mateo de Sola
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Devine
Mr. and Mrs. Paul DiMare
Mr. and Mrs. Alan Drecksler
Mr. and Mrs. John Erixon
Mr. and Mrs. Esteban Gerbasi
Mr. and Mrs. Marcello Glass
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Hibshman
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Himes
Mr. Dominic Jones
Dr. Katherine Jones
Drs. Daniel and beth Kalbac
Parents of Marcus Kyle
Mr. and Mrs. Ramesh Lall
Mr. and Mrs. Ramon Leira
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Lewis
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lundgren
Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Magenheimer
Mr. and Mrs. Francisco Martinez
Mr. and Mrs. Milton Martinez
Mr. and Mrs. Yasson Matarangas
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Mathelier
Mr. and Mrs. Richard McMichael
Mr. Grant and Dr. Joyce Miller
Ms. JoNel Newman
Mr. and Mrs. Alfredo Pedroso
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Pertierra
Mr. and Mrs. Jose Pinto
Mr. Jack Plunkett and Ms. Elsie Romero
Mr. and Mrs. Jaime Ramirez
Mr. and Mrs. Stefano Reiser
Mr. and Mrs. Henrique Rocchiccioli
Mr. Michel and Dr. Magalie Saliba
Mr. and Mrs. Hector Sardinas
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Shepherd
Mr. and Mrs. James Slaman
Mr. and Mrs. Luis Soto
Mr. and Mrs. Dean Sourber
Mr. and Mrs. Roberto Uhart
Ms. Lorelei van Wey
Mr. and Mrs. Randall Whitman
Ms. Christina Xiques-Gravier
Mr. and Mrs. Luis Yanes
FACULTY
& STAFF GIFTS
Mr. and Mrs. Juan Andreu
Mr. and Mrs. Graham Andrew
Mr. and Mrs. John Arrien
Mr. Alex bellanton
Ms. brook bodie
Mr. Nick bonheur
Mr. and Mrs. Robert bonner
Mr. David bradt
Mr. and Mrs. Gregory breen
Mr. and Mrs. victor Calderon
Mr. and Mrs. Jose Calleja
Ms. Teresa Campos
Mr. and Mrs. Rafael Casas
Mrs. Erica Cerione
Ms. vivian G. Cerione
Ms. Laurette Cestare
Mr. and Mrs. Karl Cetta
Mr. and Ms. Jose Chao
Mr. and Mrs. Ashley Chapman
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas J. Chumbley
Ms. Christina Colon-Marrero
Ms. Catie Cunning
Mr. Dave Cutler
Mr. and Mrs. Mateo de Sola
Ms. Elena De villiers
Mr. brian Diaz
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Duarte
Ms. Rita Feild
Mr. and Mrs. Jose Flores
Mr. and Mrs. Joshua Fullerton ‘95
Mr. Carlos N Garces
Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Godley
Mr. and Mrs. Raul Gonzalez
Mr. and Mrs. William Gonzalez
Ms. Caroline R. Goodwin
Dr. and Mrs. John Griffin
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas A. Gross
Mrs. Helen Guo
Dr. and Mrs. Corey Harvin
Mr. Kirk Hatcher
Mr. Mark Hayes and Ms. Pamela Roza Hayes
Mr. and Mrs. Christopher O. Hew
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Hibshman
Mr. bennett W. Hoke
Ms. Judi Jennings
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Johnson
Mr. Clint Jones
Mr. Dominic Jones
Dr. Katherine Jones
Dr. Douglas Jordan
Mrs. Alexandra Katzman
Ms. Sarah Kemeness
Fr. Julian Jay Lentz
Mr. and Mrs. David List
Dr. and Mrs. Leopoldo Llinas
Mr. and Mrs. vincent Loiacono
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lundgren
Laura Massa and Horacio Alfano
Mr. Peter Masteller
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Mathelier
Ms. Rashelle McGiboney
Mr. Robert McGlynn
Marty and Chris Migliaccio
Mrs. Sheree Mitchell-Rodríguez
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Mock
Mr. Robert Moorhouse
Mr. and Mrs. Sean Murphy
Mr. and Mrs. bruce Musgrave
Dr. Julianne Nagel
Mr. Jeramy Nichols
Mr. Michael Pena
Mrs. Maria Quant
Mrs. April Queen
Carl and Anouchka Rachelson
Dr. and Mrs. Aldo Regalado
Mr. Danny Reynolds
Mrs. Maria Trinidad Rittenhouse
Mr. Akbar Rizvi
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Robertson
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Robledo
Ms. Emily Rolling
Ms. Meridith Roy
Mr. and Mrs. Gus Sabogal
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Sanchez
Mr. and Mrs. Rainer Schael
Mr. and Mrs. Chris Schollmeyer
Mr. brad Showalter
Ms. Kenley Smith
Mr. William Stanard
Ms. Julie Suris
Ms. Mercedes Terranova
The Rev. and Mrs. Roger Tobin
Mr. and Mrs. Peter Tolmach
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Truby
Mrs. Joan Trujillo
Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. vale
Ms. Maria vanegas
Mr. and Mrs. Danny vega
Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey D. vogel
Dr. Jake von Scherrer and Mrs. Jan Murphy
Mr. and Mrs. Marcelo Waisberg
Ms. Leann Winn
Mrs. Sandi Wood
Mr. and Mrs. Serafin Yanes
Mr. Greg zamarripa
Mrs. Gwendolyn Kenes zanakos
UNICCO EMPLOYEE GIFTS
Ms. Daisy bello
Mr. Raul Capote
Mr. Luis de Leon Andres
Mr. Rolando A Garcia
Ms. Delfina Gomez
Ms. Clara Guevara
Mr. Rolando Huerres
Mr. Hugo Lallemand
Mr. and Mrs. Felix Lopez
Mr. Armando Molina
Ms. Carmen Morales
Ms. Alegna Rodriguez
Mr. and Mrs. Julian Rosas
Mr. William Sanchez
ALUMNI GIFTS
Mr. Scott Adamo ‘03
Mr. Troy Alwine ‘96
Mr. Travis Anderson ‘00
Mr. Carlos Anllo, Jr. ‘98
Mr. Charles baumberger ‘94
Mr. Hart baur ‘82
Mrs. Alyse Fogarty bell ‘87
Ms. Kaitlin blazejack ‘95
Mr. Christopher block ‘96
Mr. Robert brockway ‘82
Ms. Katrina Campins ‘97
Mr. Christopher Cerione ‘95
Mr. Joseph Cerione ‘93
Mr. Jaime Cervera ‘00
Mrs. Monica Cervera-Sijan ‘96
Mr. Alexander Chester ‘01
Dr. Alfred Childers ‘76
Mrs. Lynley Walker Ciorobea ‘96
Mr. Michael Contreras, Jr. ‘04
Mrs. Cassandra Miguel de Quesada ‘88
Mrs. Joanna R de velasco ‘98
Mr. Preston Dickerson ‘98
Ms. Gitanjali D’Sa ‘05
Ms. Samantha Evans ‘06
Ms. Michelle Evans ‘09
Ms. Martina Faillace ‘10
Ms. Francesca Fernandez ‘05
Ms. victoria M. Fernandez ‘10
Mr. Derek Fisher ‘91
Mr. Hugh Forthman, Jr. ‘75
Mr. brett French ‘97
Mr. Steven D. Friedland ‘83
Ms. belinda Frieri ‘99
Ms. Christine M Frigo ‘88
Mr. Joshua Fullerton ‘95
Mr. brian Gershen ‘98
Ms. Amber Goethel ‘96
Mrs. Corey Krissel Gonzalez ‘95
Mrs. Kelly Kimmel Guma ‘89
Mr. virgilio Guma ‘90
Mrs. Jane Clutter Hardin ‘75
Mr. Mason Harris ‘89
Mrs. Christina Hart ‘97
Mrs. Kristin Hayden Hebert ‘01
Mr. Andy Hessen ‘76
Mr. Ricky Jofre ‘90
Mrs. Carin Ross Johnson ‘91
Dr. Jan Sokol Katz ‘81
Ms. Susan Klock ‘00
Mr. Jon Lawrence ‘98
Mrs. beth Moskowitz Lazar ‘84
Mr. Gary Lesnik ‘84
Mr. Julio Ligorria ‘06
Ms. Corina Lopez ‘04
Mr. Stephen Ludovici ‘08
Ms. Christina Ludovici ‘10
Mrs. Lily Dickerson Maddock ‘95
Mr. Thomas Magenheimer ‘78
Mr. John C. Malloy ‘85
Mrs. Julie C. Mansfield ‘74
Mrs. betty Matz ‘85
Ms. Jessica A. Mazon ‘09
Mr. James McGehee ‘85
Mr. Miles McGrath ‘87
Mrs. Mary McMath ‘73
Ms. Elizabeth McNichol ‘07
Ms. Helen M McNutt ‘83
Mr. Carlos Menacho ‘88
Mr. Will Morrison ‘07
Ms. Annie Morrison ‘10
Mr. Laurence Moser ‘80
Mr. Adam Moskowitz ‘85
Mr. Erin Murphy ‘01
Mr. Sean Murphy ‘89
Mr. Joakim Nordqvist ‘79
Mrs. Mary Anne Dooley O’Dea ‘81
Ms. Jenna Pimentel ‘04
Mrs. DeAnna Pledger ‘85
Ms. Rebecca Ray ‘02
Mr. James Robertson ‘83
Ms. Katrina Rodriguez ‘08
Ms. Tamara Rutter ‘02
Mr. Kyle Rutter ‘04
Ms. Eva Thompson Salas ‘04
Mr. Kevin Sanz ‘01
Mr. Christopher Sanz ‘04
Mr. bradley Sensale ‘88
Mr. Felipe Serrano ‘01
Mrs. beth brockway Serrate ‘85
Ms. Tania R. Seymour ‘82
Mr. Scott Shelfer ‘89
Mrs. Sabrina Gray Siso ‘98
Mr. Perry Smith ‘85
Mrs. Joelle Wagshul Steinberg ‘86
Mrs. Kristen Thompson Stephenson ‘85
Mr. Lee D. Sterling ‘81
Mr. Dax Tejera ‘03
Mr. Marc Thomes ‘98
Mr. Ron vigdor ‘87
Mr. George villasana ‘85
Mr. Christopher D. van Grieken ‘90
Mr. brad Wagshul ‘87
Mr. Campbell Walker ‘94
Mr. James Weatherspoon ‘84
Mr. Justin Weatherspoon ‘09
Mrs. Laura R. Weinfeld ‘88
Mrs. Elkie Smoleny Wienczkowski ‘88
Mr. brendan Winkler ‘98
Mr. Howard S. Wolofsky ‘81
Mr. Nathan zeder ‘98
Mr. Craig zimmett ‘77
ALUMNI PARENT GIFTS
Mr. and Mrs. Tomas J. Abreu
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Adamo
Mr. and Mrs. Marcus Adside
Ms. Anabelle Alarcon
Mr. and Mrs. Juan M. Alfonso
Mr. and Mrs. John Arthur
Dr. and Mrs. Gerard J. barrios
Mr. and Mrs. Alberto beeck
Mr. and Mrs. George befeler
Drs. James and Susan benenati
Mr. and Mrs. Robert brockway ‘82
Mrs. John brockway
Rev. Jacqueline brovold
Mr. and Mrs. Jose Cadena
Mr. and Mrs. Richard W. Capik
Ms. virginia H Carver
Ms. vivian G. Cerione
Ms. Marta F Cervera
Mr. and Mrs. Ashley Chapman
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas J. Chumbley
Mr. and Mrs. Fabrizio Cocchiano
Mrs. Stephanie Connor
Mr. and Mrs. Michael A. Contreras
Mr. and Mrs. James W. Davidson
Mr. and Mrs. Ted D. Davis
Mr. and Mrs. Allen De Olazarra
Ms. Elena De villiers
Dr. and Mrs. Ranley Desir
Mrs. Lizzette Diaz
Mr. and Mrs. John DiFede
Mr. Christopher and Rev. Wilifred Faiella
Mr. and Mrs. Charles R. Fairbank
Mr. and Mrs. Anthony C. Fitzgerald
Ms. Caroline R. Goodwin
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Gossele
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas A. Gross
Mr. and Mrs. Andres R. Guerra-Mondragon
Mr. and Mrs. Luis Gutierrez
Mr. and Mrs. Christopher O. Hew
Mr. and Mrs. Peter L. Hew
Mrs. Anne Jackaway
Dr. and Mrs. Rudolf Jaffe
Mr. and Mrs. Trond S. Jensen
Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Johnson
Drs. Daniel and beth Kalbac
Mr. and Mrs. William J. Keunen
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond E. Kilpatrick
Mr. and Mrs. Henry M. Knoblock
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Krissel
Mr. and Mrs. vincent Loiacono
Mr. and Mrs. Edward P. Ludovici
Mr. and Mrs. Christopher MacNair
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Mara
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Marbert
Mr. and Mrs. Paul A. McKenna
Mr. and Mrs. Julio Melean
Marty and Chris Migliaccio
Mr. and Mrs. Marc A. Milgram
Mr. and Mrs. John S. Moll
Mr. and Mrs. Andrew T. Moo
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Morgan
Mr. and Mrs. William L. Morrison
Dr. Julianne Nagel
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Narchet
Mr. and Mrs. Darius Nevin
Mr. and Mrs. Alan Nichols
Dr. and Mrs. vincent K. Omachonu
Ms. vicki A. O’Meara and Mr. Dale Gassaway
Mrs. Karla Ortez-Colindres
Mr. and Mrs. Richard J. Ovelmen
Mr. and Mrs. David Pacewicz
Mr. and Mrs. Luis Carlos Parody
Mr. and Mrs. Juan b. Policastro
Mr. and Mrs. Armando Porto
Mr. and Mrs. bernardo A. Portuondo
Mr. benjamine and The Rev. Jennie Lou Reid
Mr. and Mrs. Orlando Rivas
Mr. and Mrs. Alex C. Rodriguez
Mr. and Mrs. Pablo Rodriguez
Mrs. bronwen Rutter
Mrs. Rosario Salazar
Mr. and Mrs. Gonzalo Sanabria
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph A. Sanz
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Schwartz
Mr. Charles Scurr and Mrs. barbara Ibarra-Scurr
Mr. and Mrs. Dean Seavers
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Smith
Mr. and Mrs. Michael A. Stacks
Mr. and Mrs. Jay Steinman
Mr. Mauricio Suazo and Ms. Sandra Maler
Mr. and Mrs. Gary P. Tarbe
Mr. and Mrs. W. James Tillett
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Titley
The Rev. and Mrs. Roger Tobin
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas M. Torbert
Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. vale
Mr. and Mrs. Hendrik verwaay
Mrs. Rosina villavicencio
Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey D. vogel
Mr. and Mrs. James Weatherspoon ‘84
Mr. and Mrs. David L. Wilson
Mr. John b Winkler
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas L. Wogan
Mr. Felipe Woll
Mr. and Mrs. Hayes Wood
GRANDPARENT GIFTS
Dr. and Mrs. Richard baranowski
Mr. and Mrs. Mitchell bidle
Mr. and Mrs. William boyd
Mr. and Mrs. Lester brockmann
Mrs. John brockway
Mr. and Mrs. Loreto Casariego
Mrs. Ed Chumbley
Mrs. Esther Cortazar
Dr. and Mrs. Alejandro de Quesada
Ms. Dorothy Evans
Mrs. Phyllis Glukstad
Mrs. Martha Ann R. Haas
Mr. and Mrs. Carter Hopkins, Sr.
Mr. Angel Nieto and Ms. veronica de Armas
Ms. Sophie Pendarakis
Corporation and Foundation Gifts
Mr. and Mrs. Felipe M. Rodriguez
Mr. Mario Sanchez-Carion
Mr. and Mrs. Arturo Xiques
FORMER BOARD OF TRUSTEE GIFTS
Mr. and Mrs. Tomas J. Abreu
Mr. and Mrs. Larry barfield
Mr. and Mrs. Jack brumbaugh
Mr. and Mrs. John Dickason
Mr. and Mrs. Charles R. Fairbank
Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Johnson
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Krissel
Ms. Ana Lopez-blazquez
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Magenheimer
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Marbert
Mr. and Mrs. David McCain
Mr. and Mrs. Marc A. Milgram
Mr. and Mrs. John S. Moll
Mr. and Mrs. Alan Nichols
Mr. and Mrs. David Pacewicz
Palmer Trinity School is fortunate to obtain support from corporations and foundations. Donors are able to increase their contribution to the School by participating in a Matching Gift Program. We acknowledge and thank these foundations and companies for generous gifts, sponsorships and matching gifts in 2009-2010.
A Personal Touch Fitness
Associated Photo & Imaging
Azamara Cruises
bal Harbour Shops
banco Santander
bank of America
bay Plumbing
bellezza Spa
books & books
C.S. Orchids, Inc.
Café Pilon
Camp Lenny Foundation Inc.
Casa Tua
Chevron
Christie’s
Colson, Hicks, Eidson, PA
Continental Travel Group
Cookies by Jani
Coventry Health Care
Deering bay Yacht & Country Club
Dolphin’s Plus
Elemis Spa at The village of Merrick Park
Exacta FL
Fanjul Family and Florida Crystals Corporation
French Gershen zeder Ptshp Fnd Trust
GE Foundation
Gen-Ex builders
Geomantic Designs Inc.
Island Tropical Foliage
JP Morgan Chase
Keen battle Mead & Company
Ketchum, Inc. - Steve Higgins
Kings bay Athletics
LRG Construction
M Cycle Gym
Malloy & Malloy P.A.
Mary Louise Designs
Mercedes benz of Coral Gables
Miami Heat
Nicamaka
Ocean Reef Club
Overholt Construction
PNC Advisors
Preferred Care Partners
Pro Energy Consultants
PuroPapel
R.b.S. Enterprises
Ramon Carpet Services
Randazzo’s
Resource 4 Floors
Ruby vale Foundation
SAGE Dining Services
Southern Wine & Spirits
Sports Grill
State of Florida
Stewart Tilghman Fox & bianchi, P.A.
Sunset Quickprint
Target
Textron
The Paul J. DiMare Foundation
The Yoga Institute
Torbert Produce, Inc.
Tropical Chinese Restaurant
Unicco
Wachovia
Weiss Family Foundation
Wellbeing Spa & Yoga
Wells Fargo
Wilson Washburn & Forster
Winslow Designs
Gifts-In-Kind
Mr. and Mrs. Facundo bacardi
Mr. and Mrs. Andrew bartha
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Castellano
Mr. and Mrs. Jose Chao
Mr. and Mrs. Jorge Espinosa
Mr. and Mrs. Alberto Fernandez
Mr. and Mrs. Javier Font
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas A. Gross
Mr. and Mrs. Carlos Hernandez
Memorial Gifts
Mr. and Mrs. Richard A. Hiler
Drs. Daniel and beth Kalbac
Mr. and Mrs. Evens Louis-Jean
Dr. and Ms. Ricardo Martinez-Ruiz
Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Miguel
Mr. and Mrs. Ricardo Morean
Mr. and Mrs. William L. Morrison
Mr. and Mrs. bruce Musgrave
Mr. and Mrs. Luis Quintero
Mr. vince Rado
Mrs. Shellaine Ramkishun
Mr. and Mrs. Hector Sardinas
Mr. and Mrs. bill R. Tillett
Mr. Michael Uzquiano
Mr. and Mrs. Jorge victoriano
Dr. Jake von Scherrer and Mrs. Jan Murphy
Mr. Jason Yanes
Mr. Jeff Yanes
Often times, occasions arise in which donors want to acknowledge a family member, student, faculty or friend. Palmer Trinity School is grateful for your thoughtfulness in making memorial gifts.
Margot and David Coleman, Given by Julie Coleman Mansfield ‘74
Mr. Peter Dluhy ’92, Given by Mr. Derek Fisher ‘91
Mr. Anthony O’Donnell, Given by Mr. and Mrs. John S. Moll
Mr. Nathaniel Rutter, Given by Tamara Rutter ‘02 & Kyle Rutter ‘04
Mr. Robert Yarbrough, Given by Mrs. Carin Ross Johnson ‘91
Special Event Gifts
Special event gifts listed below represent cash donations, including underwriting and sponsorship.
BOOK FAIR
Drs. Orlando and Clara Almanza
Mr. and Mrs. David Andrews
Dr. and Mrs. victor barredo
Dr. and Mrs. Gerard J. barrios
Mr. Francisco blazquez and Ms. zoriada Cruz
Mrs. Jennie block
Ms. Ellen bulkley
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas J. Chumbley
Dr. and Mrs. Alvaro Dangond
The Rev. Dr. and Mrs. Edward Dougherty
Mr. and Mrs. Jorge Espinosa
Mr. and Mrs. Alberto Fernandez
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Fisk
Mr. and Mrs. George Forns
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Fraser
Mr. and Mrs. Mauricio Garcia
Mr. and Mrs. Marcello Glass
Mr. and Mrs. Eric Haas
Parents of Marcus Kyle
Drs. Rodolfo and Yolanda Martinez
Ms. Patricia Guitierrez Mayorga
Ms. Joy McIntosh
Mr. and Mrs. Andrew T. Moo
Mr. and Mrs. William L. Morrison
Mr. and Mrs. Darius Nevin
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Pfeiffer
Mr. and Mrs. Hugues H. Posschelle
Mr. benjamine and The Rev. Jennie Lou Reid
Mr. Leonard Roberts and Dr. Elaine Klein
Dr. and Mrs. vicente E. Roger
Mr. and Mrs. Jonathan Sanchez-Jaimes
Mr. and Mrs. Hector Sardinas
Mr. and Mrs. Raul Segredo
Mr. and Mrs. Philip Serrate
Mrs. Maria Lourdes Solares
Mr. and Mrs. W. James Tillett
Mr. and Mrs. Rick Torres
Ms. Lorelei van Wey
Mr. and Mrs. Hayes Wood
Ms. Damarys zarling
SANDY GOLF TOURNAMENT
PRESENTING SPONSOR
Mercedes-benz of Coral Gables and Mercedes-benz of Cutler bay, a bill Ussery Motors Company
E AGLE S PONSORS
Associated Photo & Imaging
bal Harbour Shops
Coventry Health Care
DiMare Produce
The Ethan Johnson Family
Joseph J. Kalbac, Jr. and his partners at Colson Hicks Eidson
Keen battle Mead & Company
Malloy & Malloy, P.A.
Mr. and Mrs. William Morrison
Overholt Construction
Preferred Care Partners
Resource 4 Floors
Southern Wine & Spirits
Stewart Tilghman Fox & bianchi, P.A. Trial Lawyers
The Uzquiano Family
Weiss Family Foundation
Wilson, Washburn & Forster Insurance
bIRDIE S PONSORS
Camp Lenny Foundation
Ketchum
Torbert Produce
U NDERWRITING
Judy Andrews
A.S.P. Enterprises, Inc. and The Menacho Family bacardi
bay Plumbing Co.
Cavia Wines
Cookies for Jani
Exacta FL
French Gershen Lawrence zeder Partnership
Foundation Trust
GenEx builders
Geomantic Designs, Inc.
LRG Construction
Ramon Carpet Services
R.b.S. Enterprises
Sage Dining
Sunset Quickprint
Volunteer Leadership 2009-2010
Leading by example, volunteers at Palmer Trinity School encourage and exemplify service to others. The following individuals gave time and talent in 2009-2010 and Palmer Trinity School thanks these dedicated volunteers for their leadership service.
2009-2010 ANNUAL FUND
DE v ELOPMENT CHAIR
Paula brockway
PARENT v OLUNTEERS
SIXTH GRADE
Luly Sardinas
SE v ENTH GRADE
Phil bakes
Laurie Hill
Tina Portuondo
EIGHTH GRADE
Wendy Lumish
Sue Medina
NINTH GRADE
Mary beth burke
Yolanda Martinez
Nancy Michelson
Gladys Miller
Lenny Roberts
TENTH GRADE
Laura Gangemi
Sue Ludovici
ELE v ENTH GRADE
Rose Mann
Julia Wade-beckham
TWELFTH GRADE
Jane battle
Jan Morrison
Isa Rodriguez
FACULTY / STAFF
Janie Casas
vivian Cerione
Manuela Flores
Adrianna Truby
ALUMNI
Corina Lopez ‘04
Carlos Menacho ‘88
Sabrina Gray Siso ‘98
Lee Sterling ‘81
ALUMNI PARENT
Uretha and Dean Seavers
PALMER TRINITY
PARENTS ASSOCIATION
E XECUTI v E O FFICERS
Laura Miguel, President
Chriss Wood, Vice President
Jan Groh, Vice President
Happy Forristall, Treasurer
Isa Rodriguez, Secretary
Sandra Maler, Emeritus
C OMMITTEE C HAIRS
C OMMUNITY S ERv ICE
Chirine Mneimneh
F INE A RTS
Maggie Wilson
G REEN I NITIATI v E
Robin Fox
Julia Wade-beckham
H ELPING H ANDS
Helen Sonenreich
N EW PARENT M ENTORS
Mari Campano
PARENT E DUCATION
Ines Nicholls
Sue benenati
Tomas Hauff
vicki Rivas, Emeritus
Sandra Maler, Emeritus
S OCIAL Ev ENTS
Pilar Joseph
T EACHER A PPRECIATION
betty barrios
Carolina Hernandez
Maria Porto
Maria Salgado
Isa Rodriguez, Emeritus
G RADE L IAISONS
6th Grade Carla benchlouch
Mireya bonet
7th Grade Chirine Mneimneh
8th Grade Sue Medina
9th Grade Michelle Font
Heidi Nosich
10th Grade Jackie Moo
11th Grade Caroline zachar
12th Grade Jane battle
Jan Morrison
Isa Rodriguez
PALMER TRINITY BOOSTERS
E XECUTI v E C OMMITTEE
Chriss Wood, President
Lenny Roberts, Vice-President
Jan Groh, Treasurer
Caroline zachar, Secretary
C OMMITTEE C HAIRS
H OMECOMING 2010
Terri Eckblom and Nancy Michelson
bULLETIN bOARDS
Jane battle
FALCON ’ S N EST
Happy Forristall, Sally Franklin and Nancy Michelson
Celebrating the Arts, Maggie Wilson & Sharon Glick
Chocolat, vivian Pfeiffer
Equestrian, Karina Duenas-Aragon
Fruitful Tree, Claudia Castillo
Green Acres, Ruthanne vogel
Hawaiian Tropical Luau, Heidi Nosich & Michelle Font
Heroes for My Son, Rachelle Kaplan & Karina Duenas-Aragon
Life’s a Game, Lois Chumbley
One Love, Jackie Moo & Patricia Merritt
Orchidopia, Lenny Roberts & Elaine Klein
Our Seniors: Then & Now, Tina Portuondo & Jan Groh
Peacock Homage, Karina Duenas-Aragon
Save the Seas, Rhonda Drecksler
Seashore, Marilou Solares & Madelin Irastorza
Spring Has Sprung, Alison buss & blair Stickroot
Soda Fountain Shuffle, Chriss Wood & Jane battle
Tie a New Knot, Jan Morrison
The Graduate Wishing Tree, betty barrios & Evelyn villanueva
The Help, Susi Cetta & Norma Perez
The Wizard of Oz, Elizabeth Pryor Johnson
Three Cups of Tea, Kitty Koch Espinosa
Twilight, Frances Rodriguez & Gladys Miller
What’s the Buzz, Lori Haas
Ways of Giving
Philanthropy and volunteerism demonstrates your strong belief in the mission of Palmer Trinity School. Your gift, whatever its size or purpose, adds great value to the School and to the young people whose lives it impacts. because Palmer Trinity School is a 501 (c) (3), tax-exempt non-profit, donors can take full advantage of income, capital gifts, and estate tax deductions.
You may elect to make your gift without any restrictions, enabling the School to use it where it can achieve the greatest impact. Unrestricted gifts represent the greatest utility to the School, as they allow the Head of School and the board of Trustees to respond to unanticipated needs and opportunities throughout the year.
There are many ways to fulfill your charitable intentions and provide immediate and future benefits to the School and your family. It is important that donors are aware of options so that each family can make a gift with the type of asset most suited to respective financial situations. A well-structured charitable plan can last for generations and may allow you to be even more generous that you thought possible. based on existing tax laws and prudent financial planning, the below giving options enable you to enhance your giving capability by tailoring a gift to your unique financial and estate circumstances.
CASH GIFTS
Most donors make outright cash contributions. The School gratefully accepts cash gifts, including checks and the major credit cards, v ISA, American Express and MasterCard. A cash gift entitles the donor to an income tax deduction in the year of the gift.
SECURITIES
Appreciated securities are the best form of assets to use in making a charitable gift. An outright gift of appreciated securities entitles the donor to an income tax deduction for the fair market value of the securities and, in the case of securities which have been held for more than 18 months, the avoidance of capital gains tax.
BEQUEST
A donor may include a bequest to the School in an estate plan. bequests may be for a specified amount, a percentage of the donor’s estate, or even a residual portion.
INCOME INTEREST GIFTS
Through an income interest gift, a donor may contribute the income for an asset while retaining ownership of that asset. In this case, the School receives income for a designated period of years, after which the asset and any subsequent income returns to the donor, his or her spouse, children, or another designated individual. This form offers both immediate and future tax advantages.
REAL ESTATE
A donor may contribute various types of real property or a fractional interest in property to the School. Such real estate may be a personal or vacation home, farm, commercial building, or undeveloped property. For a personal residence, including a vacation home, the donor may make a gift of property and reserve the right to occupy it for his or her life and for the life of a spouse. Real estate gifts offer the donor various tax benefits.
TANGIBLE PERSONAL PROPERTY
If the donor gives a tangible asset, such as a work of art, which has appreciated in value, and if the asset is used by the School in its educational program, the donor receives a charitable deduction equal to the asset’s full fair market value. However, if the asset is not used by the School, the donor’s charitable deduction is limited to his or her cost basis.
LIFE INSURANCE
A donor may contribute an existing life insurance policy which is no longer needed or may designate the School the owner and beneficiary of a new policy. In either case, the value of the existing policy (or the donor’s investment, if less) or a gift to the School to cover annual premiums, are fully deductible as charitable contributions.
REMAINDER GIFT
Through the remainder gift, a donor may contribute assets, such as securities or real estate, to the School and retain for life the income from those assets. A remainder gift permits the donor to take an income tax deduction for the charitable portion of the value of the gift. Furthermore, if the gift is in the form of appreciated securities or real estate, the donor may not pay capital gains tax on the appreciation.
For additional information, please contact the Development Office at (305) 969-4242. All gifts are subject to Palmer Trinity School’s gift acceptance policies and are tax-deductible as provided by law. We also urge you to consult your attorney and/or financial adviser to determine which method of giving best meets your philanthropic goals.
An Invitation to Imagine
Visit our campus any day and enter a special environment with bright faces, soulful conversations, bustling energy, and a profound sense of enthusiasm. Our School already tells an extraordinary story. We know our true potential has yet to be developed... yet to be imagined.
Our still brighter future requires an ambitious fundraising initiative that features, at its core, lasting financial security through steady endowment growth. The Imagine Campaign for Palmer Trinity School supports the most urgent first steps toward fulfilling this security.
Jokari Birdsong ‘12
(Photo by: Monica Hopkins)
spirit mind
Steady endowment revenues raise the level of financial aid and help Palmer Trinity maintain our characteristic and celebrated diversity. A larger endowment will allow us to increase the percentage of students on aid and allow us to enroll more of the best qualified applicants.
body
Endowment funds help attract and retain South Florida’s best faculty. The competitive advantage of a sufficient endowment will help us recruit and retain quality faculty and staff committed to education and excited to grow in their work.
Invest I n P ts : Im P ortance of e ndowment
The principal goal of the Imagine Campaign is to substantially increase Palmer Trinity School’s endowment. Endowments provide a vital source of permanent funding to support school programs. The income-generating nature of endowment giving enables Palmer Trinity to engage in long-term planning and assures a consistent income stream for both ongoing operations and strategic priorities.
at
Palmer Trinity School’s often celebrated soul and spirit are unique among South Florida independent secondary schools. We thrive with a focus on integrity, social responsibility, service learning, spiritual nurture, and mutual respect.
the f orefront: t he a nnual f und
The Palmer Trinity School Annual Fund is a key component to the Imagine Campaign. Annual Fund gifts have an immediate impact on the yearly activities that sustain Palmer Trinity School. As an independent school, Palmer Trinity School operates without financial support from local, state or federal government, relying on tuition and a strong Annual Fund to maintain operations. Tuition covers only 90% of the total cost to educate each student. The Annual Fund supports the current-year operating budget by filling this gap.
a n Inv I tat I on to I ma GI ne
Palmer Trinity School is an institutional gem that furnishes so many of the educational, spiritual and wellness needs of this area’s young people. The Imagine Campaign for Palmer Trinity School is the most ambitious fundraising project in our history and touches every aspect of school life. The campaign is comprehensive, so every dollar raised during the course of the Imagine Campaign will count toward our $10,000,000 goal.
In this last year of the Imagine Campaign, all 2010-2011 gift and pledges to the Annual Fund and general endowment will count towards the $10 million goal. Your gift will help the students of today, as well as providing financial security to Palmer Trinity School for years to come. To learn more about supporting the Imagine Campaign, please visit our website: www.ptsimagine.org or contact Susi Cetta, Director of Annual Fund and Major Gifts, at (305) 969-4243 or scetta@palmertrinity.org.
College Matriculation — Acceptances Class of 2010
Agnes Scott College*
American University*
Amherst College*
Arizona State University
Auburn University*
Babson College*
Bard College*
barry University*
bentley University*
berklee College of Music*
berry College
Birmingham-Southern College
Boston College*
Boston University*
brandeis University
Bucknell University
California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo (College of Engineering) *
Carnegie Mellon University*
Chapman University*
Clemson University*
Coastal Carolina University*
College of Charleston*
College of William and Mary*
Colorado State University
Columbia College*
Columbia University*
Cornell University
Dartmouth College*
Davidson College*
Drew University
Drexel University*
Duke University*
Eckerd College*
Elon University*
Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University*
Emerson College*
Emmanuel College*
Emory University (Scholars Program) *
Fairfield University*
Fairleigh Dickinson University
Fashion Institute of Technology
Flagler College
Florida Atlantic University*
Florida Gulf Coast University*
Florida Institute of Technology
Florida International University*
Florida Southern College
Florida State University*
Fordham University*
Fort Lewis College
Furman University*
Georgetown University*
Georgia Institute of Technology*
Harvard University
High Point University*
Hobart and William Smith Colleges
Hofstra University
Howard University
Indiana University*
Ithaca College
Lesley University
Louisiana State University*
Loyola Marymount University*
Loyola University Chicago*
Loyola University New Orleans*
Marymount Manhattan College
Massachusetts College of Art and Design
Middlebury College
Mississippi State University
Montana State University, bozeman
Muhlenberg College
New College of Florida*
New York University*
New York University (Tisch School of the Arts)*
North Carolina State University
Northeastern University*
Oberlin College
Oglethorpe University
Oxford College*
Pace University*
Parsons School of Design
Pennsylvania State University, University Park
Princeton University
Purdue University
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
Rhodes College*
Rice University*
Rochester Institute of Technology
Roger Williams University
Rollins College*
Saint Mary’s College of California*
San Francisco Art Institute
Santa Clara University*
Santa Fe College
Sarah Lawrence College*
School of visual Arts
Sewanee: The University of the South Simmons College*
Skidmore College
Southern Methodist University*
Spelman College
Spring Hill College
St. Thomas University
Stanford University
Stetson University*
Stonehill College
Stony brook University
Suffolk University*
Swarthmore College*
Syracuse University
Tallahassee College
Texas A&M University
Texas Christian University*
The Catholic University of America*
The George Washington University*
The Ohio State University
The University of Alabama*
The University of Alabama at birmingham
The University of Montana, Missoula
The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill*
The University of Tampa*
The University of Texas, Austin
Tufts University*
Tulane University*
University of Arkansas*
University of California at Los Angeles*
University of California at Riverside
University of California at San Diego*
University of California at Santa barbara*
University of California at Santa Cruz
University of Central Florida*
University of Charleston
University of Chicago
University of Colorado at boulder*
University of Delaware
University of Denver*
University of Florida*
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
University of Kentucky
University of Maryland, College Park
University of Massachusetts, Amherst*
University of Miami*
University of Michigan*
University of Mississippi*
University of New Hampshire
University of North Carolina at Charlotte
University of North Carolina at Wilmington*
University of North Dakota
University of North Florida*
University of Notre Dame*
University of Pennsylvania
University of Redlands
University of Rhode Island
University of Richmond
University of Rochester
University of San Diego*
University of San Francisco*
University of South Dakota
University of South Florida, Tampa*
University of Southern California*
University of the Pacific*
University of virginia*
University of West Florida*
vanderbilt University*
vassar College
villanova University*
virginia Polytechnic Institute & State University
Wake Forest University*
Washington College
Washington University in St. Louis
Wellesley College
Wheaton College
Whittier College
Worcester Polytechnic Institute
Yale University
Class Notes strengthen the connection of our Alumni community to their classmates and their alma mater.
Class Agents
as of 8/31/10
1973 dAV id wood mdavidwood@comcast.net
1974 J UL i E (Co LEMAN ) M ANSF i EL d juliemansfield@comcast.net
1975 C LASS Ag EN t N EE d E d
1976 A N dY H ESSEN hesstang@aol.com
1977 Cr A ig z i MME tt cazfla@aol.com
1978 t o M M Agg ENHE i ME r tmagmai@aol.com
1979 Lori (Fog EL ) L A Forgi A ljlaforgia@gmail.com
1980 dAw N (HoY t) Kidd dawn_kidd@teachnet. edb.utexas.edu
1981 L EE St E r L i N g psports@bellsouth.net
1982 t r ACY tAB or S HEL owitz tracy@martintabor.com
1983 M A rY (JoYCE ) w i LBU r N marywilburn@bellsouth.net
1984 P E t E r C U tt E r guycutter@aol.com
1985 dALE B ENNE tt RB9999@aol.com
Jo HN M ALL oY jcmalloy@malloylaw.com
1986 Jo ELLE ( wAg SHUL ) St E i NBE rg jwagshul@aol.com
1987 Eti ENNE Fo N t etienne@claimscounsel.com
A LYSE (Fog A rt Y ) B ELL deltav101@aol.com
AlumNews is the first section Alumni turn to when they receive the Aerie Magazine, so this section is full of exciting and updated information. Please send us news for our next issue, log on to www.PalmerTrinity.org and click ‘Alumni’.
1988 E LENA (E SSEN ) E N dA r A partyuv5@bellsouth.net
1989 S Cott S HELFE r scott@exactaland.com
1990 P E t E r B AUMBE rg E r psb@rbrlaw.com
A L d EN ( dUN wodY ) Pi MEN t EL Pimentel@bellsouth.net
1991 dE r EK Fi SHE r derfisher@aol.com
1992 JoY (B E rg) Jo HNS o N jeremyandjoy@yahoo.com
1993 A MAN dA M AtAL o N amatalon@arnoldoil.com
1994 C HA r LES B AUMBE rg E r catcay@yahoo.com
C AMPBELL wALKE r cwalker@lincolnharris.com
1995 K A it L i N B LA z EJACK kkblaze@gmail.com
1996 LYNLEY wALKE r-Cioro BEA lynley3@yahoo.com
1997 Br E tt Fr ENCH brettfrench@yahoo.com
1998 Bri AN gE r SHEN briangershen@gmail.com
Pr ES to N d i CKE r S o N prestond@hotmail.com
N At HAN zE d E r nz1305@aol.com
1999 B EL i N dA Fri E ri belifrieri@yahoo.com
2000 rEBECCA w i LL i AMS matrias@aol.com
us on
AlumNews
2001 wES FA rr ELL wf159@aol.com
2002 Adri A (J ENK i NS ) Yo UN g juiceeasapeach@aol.com
2003 dAX tEJE r A dax.tejera@gmail.com
L AU r A At ECA laura.ateca@gmail.com
2004 Cori NA Lo PE z celopez721@gmail.com
2005 K At EY o ’ rE g AN katey613@yahoo.com
2006 Br AN do N M C N A rY bmcnary@indiana.edu
Ed L UCKMANN luckmann.e@neu.edu
2007 C LASS Ag EN t N EE d E d
2008 Ari EL Mog E r aem2178@columbia.edu
M E g AN C UNN i N g HAM megan215@gwu.edu
2009 J ESS i CA M A zo N jessica.mazon@gmail.com
M A r CEL Co N tr E r AS marcelc28@aol.com
N AtAL i A M AtALLANA natismata@hotmail.com
2010 Vi C tori A F E r NAN d E z vifer18@gmail.com
Alumni Reunion Weekend 2010
The Class of 1985 gathered at Pat brockway’s home to celebrate their 25th Reunion. There were over 75 people in attendance! These events could not have happened without the support of our Reunion Class organizers: Dale bennett ’85, John Malloy ’85, and beth (brockway) Serrate ’85.
Karen Burkett-Rundlet, Kristin Thompson Stephenson, Samuel Stephenson, and Stacey Jacobson-Overton Pat Brockway, Elena DeVillers, Valerie Giroux
Karen Barkett-Rundlet, Kevin Russo, Stacey Jacobson Overton, Perry Smith, Beth (Brockway) Serrate
1973
Michael Karaty recently moved from Miami to Douglasville, GA.
1974
Julie (Coleman) Mansfield met up for lunch with an old classmate, Margaret Black ’75, who was on a business trip in boston. Julie’s daughter, Emily, is heading to Gettysburg College in the fall and is currently working as a camp counselor. Julie’s younger daughter, Olivia, will be entering her sophomore year at beaver Country Day School in Chestnut Hill in the fall. The family spent their summer in Cape Cod and explored the Rhode Island and Connecticut Coasts and block Island.
1975
Hugh Forthman and his wife Stephanie have their daughter, Madison, attending PTS this year as a 6th-grade student!
1977
Lindsay (Eakins) Simmers lives in Palmyra, PA with her husband, Geene. Lindsay attended Dickinson College.
Craig Zimmett’s daughter, Alissa, graduated from Killian High School and was a Silver Knight nominee in Drama. Alissa will be attending the University of Florida in the fall. Craig and his wife, Donna, celebrated their 25th wedding anniversary in August.
1979
Joakim Nordqvist is a Florida registered professional engineer who received his degree from the University of Florida. Joakim is currently working in Gainesville, FL where he is partner in a consulting engineering business called GSE Engineering & Consulting, Inc.
1981
Mary Anne O’Dea and husband Kevin moved to Crozet, vA. Lee Sterling owns his own company called Paramount Sports. He
is featured in many newspapers around the nation and now has a column in the Miami Herald titled “Joe vs. The Pro.” As a professional sports handicapper, he goes against Joseph Goodman, The Miami Herald’s national football writer, making picks on eight games each week, including all games involving instate Football bowl Subdivision teams. Way to go Lee!
1982
Hart Baur and wife, Madeline, welcomed their second daughter, Morgan Aberline, in January. Scarlett Jett is thrilled to be an older sister!
Bristow Samford lives in Woodstock, GA with his wife, Karen.
1983
James Robertson left his position at John Snow, Inc. to take a new post with the International HIv/AIDS Alliance, as Country Director based in New Delhi, India in August 2010.
1984
Ashley (Edmonds) Cooke writes, “I am currently using my PhD in Industrial/Organizational Psychology working as a Senior Human Capital Strategist consulting for the Army’s RDECOM (Research, Development, and Engineering Command). This command is responsible for making all the cool toys for the Army. In my spare time, I am a photographer and I have had four one-woman photography exhibitions this past year. My work was also featured on the cover of the LifeStyle section of the Annapolis paper. I am now excited to announce that my work is finally for sale on the internet at http:// cookeadr2003.redbubble.com.”
1985
Andrew Ian Dodge is a writer, consultant and rocker. His blog is Dodgeblogium (www. andrewiandodge.com) which has existed since 2001. He reviews heavy rock for blogcritics.com as Marty Dodge (www.martydodge.
com). Andrew married actress Kim benson in 2007 and is busy working on writing projects with Kim including several novels and lyrics/singing for his band “Growing Old Disgracefully.” He has appeared on BBC World Asia, CBS Sunday Morning, Australia’s AbC, PJT v and SNN, to name a few. He is currently Tea Party Patriots coordinator for Maine, advises the national movement on press issues, writes extensively on tea party movements on PJM and other outlets, recently appeared on three standing-room-only panels @ CPAC and in November 2009 did an 8000-mile 26-day speaking tour to local tea party groups across the US. He is author of the techno thriller “And Glory,” which is part of a trilogy. His non-fiction book
1986
Larry Lerner recently moved to bethesda, MD with his wife.
1987
Greg Brenner was one of the officials in the bCS championship game between Texas and Alabama out in California.
1988
Elkie (Smoleny) Wienczkowski joined the Admission Advisory board at PTS this year.
1989
Kelly (Kimmel) Guma and husband virgil Guma ’90, along with several
“Socialism Still Sucks!” was released in the early summer. It is a sequel to “Statism Sucks!” that predicted in 2000 the future election of socialists in America and the rise of socialized medicine. Andrew attended Hull University, earning a Post-Graduate Diploma in Legislative Studies.
Stacey (Jacobson) Overton flew in from Malvern, PA for her 25th Reunion. She had a great time visiting campus with Diana (De Marchena) Rabin ’84 Elizabeth Handwerker and husband, Mark, and attended the Alumni Cocktail Reception during Reunion Weekend. They live in Miami and have two sons, John (age 9) and Robert (age 7).
Thank you to John Malloy and Beth (Brockway) Serrate for hosting the 25th Reunion at Mrs. brockway’s home in the Gables.
Palmer Alumni, attended Peter Baumberger’s ’90 wedding this summer.
1990
Christine (Kincheloe) Wagner attended Lenoir-Rhyne University and now works as a Special Ed Teacher at South Carolina School for the Deaf. She is currently living in Union, SC with her husband, K. Stewart. Peter Baumberger was married to Molly Meierhoffer in July 2010 at Ocean Reef.
virgil Guma writes: “I have many fond memories of Palmer including meeting my wife Kelly there. I have worked and lived in Texas, Europe, and Asia. I have met and worked with people from all walks of life since my own graduation in 1990. Through it all my fear of distance coming between my closest classmates dissipated. I was
(continues on page 48)
K ELL y G UMA '89
Alumni Reunion Weekend 2010
The Class of 1990 gathered at the Kosove’s home to celebrate their 20th Reunion. This was the first reunion organized for the class! These events could not have happened without the support of our Reunion Class organizers Julia (Arango) and Jason Kosove ’90.
Guma’89
John Cobb, Jason Kosove, Chris van Grieken, Kelly (Kimmel)
Maria Suarez Messa, Monica Villacres, Marty Migliaccio, and Elena DeVilliers catch up
Jason Kosove and Diana Fahmie
Joe Mancuso welcomes Cathy Balestra and guests
Matt Bender and John Cobb
Guest, Jessica Hartog, Monica Villacres
Marty Migliaccio
what made you decide to become a teacher?
In 1971, I graduated from high school and I was the first in my family to graduate from high school or go to college. At that time, despite the women’s liberation movement, it was the tail end of the thinking that working women were teachers or nurses. Regardless of that thinking, I was going to be a teacher. I decided on History because when I was a junior in high school, I had a young teacher, Mr. Poindexter, who taught U.S. History. He was a really good teacher and made the subject interesting to me. Mr. Poindexter was the reason I eventually got a teaching degree in Social Studies Education.
what was the best thing about your first year at Palmer?
The strong, wonderful friendships that were created. Many of my best friends today were the people I met in my early years at Palmer. Palmer was a very small school, less than 400 students in the early l980’s and everyone knew each other. It was a very close knit community of parents, teachers, and coaches who worked and played hard. Classes were small and we had clubs, sports, and activity periods. There were many opportunities to get involved in many activities other than just the subjects you taught.
what is your most memorable moment while you have been at Palmer?
I think each year our graduation ceremony is beautiful and very heartfelt. but the graduation ceremony of 1992 was particularly special. My goddaughter Sarah graduated from Palmer Trinity in l992. Her father, Mike Ferguson, was the Head of School at that time and as the students received their diplomas, each one put a red sticker heart on him. by the end of the graduation, he was covered with hearts and most of the audience was tearing up. Often at graduation, students do stupid stuff, but that year, it was very emotional and very significant for Sarah and her friends. The other memorable moment was when my daughter Lisa Migliaccio ‘04 took her first baby steps in the PTS gym. I was across the gym keeping the clock for a basketball game, so she wasn’t even walking toward me!
what makes Palmer trinity unique in your opinion?
In my opinion, it’s the small classes, closeness of the community, and the gentle caring approach at PTS. Although we give the students the tools and push them hard to succeed, it is not the pressure cooker that many private schools are today.
did you enjoy having Lisa at PtS while teaching?
Absolutely. When Lisa was in middle school at PTS, I was the Middle School Dean. There were days that her friends would give her a difficult time about her mother “getting them into trouble,” but she generally handled it well. When she moved to the high school, I had the opportunity to coach her on the Jv volleyball team for two years and that was great fun. I loved having her close to me all day, knowing her teachers well, and getting to know her friends. Even today, I remain extremely close with many of those girls who were her friends in high school.
Most memorable moments as a coach?
1 } Although I came to Palmer to coach softball, the Athletic Director also asked me to coach varsity volleyball. I said sure, even though I never played volleyball and did not know anything about it. The team went 3-14 that season. being the competitive person that I am, I went to volleyball camps, studied drill books, and was determined not to repeat that season. Three years later in l984, l985, and l986, the volleyball team went to Sectionals (one game from the State tournament) winning Conference, District, and Regional titles all three years. I am very proud of the girls on those teams.
2 } In l983, the varsity Softball team won the Conference, District, Regional, and lost 1-0 to a broward County school in the Sectional game, one game from the state tournament.
3 } During a volleyball tournament at Westminster, Lisa served the entire game, all 15 points against Ransom Everglades. The coach, who was my friend, called his timeouts and did everything he could to break her concentration, but she just kept firing bullet serves across the net. It was amazing!
during your 30 year tenure at PtS, what are the biggest changes you have witnessed?
1 } The increased enrollment and the development of our beautiful campus. When I started here in l981, we had only one classroom building, which is the current Middle School building. What today is the Senior Chickee, was my Mod, a portable round classroom I shared with Scott DuFeu. The current theatre was the library, and we had very few neighbors. When people return to the school today, they always marvel at how big and beautiful it is. PTS today is nearly twice the size it was in l98l!
2 } back in the day, most students played a sport every season. Sometimes, because we did not have enough players, we would allow the athletes to play more than one sport a season. I can remember many days where I did not have my shortstop or 3rd baseman because they had a tennis match that day. Multi-sport athletes were much more common and the coaches shared the players and worked out the scheduling conflicts. Today, many of our best athletes are specialized and only play one sport.
3 } The growth of technology at PTS. In l981, we were teaching typing classes. Today we are a laptop school. The amount of technology that has developed and is in daily use at PTS today is overwhelming compared to l981.
4 } Merging two different schools with different cultures, personnel, and modes of operating was very difficult. both schools lost their identities, many good friends, and great teachers during the merger process. Even the students had a difficult time dealing with merger issues and had a “sit-in” one day to protest what was going on at the school.
Can you give us some names of former faculty who really made a difference to you and the kids?
Many of the people I met at Palmer in the early days are some of my closest friends today. The following people made a big difference:
Michael Ferguson – Head of School, Dean of Students, basketball Coach
Mark oliver – basketball and Softball Coach
robert Yarbrough – Academic Dean
Jane Miller – Middle School Head, a caring educator and one of my mentors
david goodman – College Counselor and Coach
dave Hewett – Athletic Director and Head Football Coach
denise Crain – School Counselor and a mentor to me
what are most students surprised to learn about you?
Most people are surprised to hear the story of my baboon encounter during my second African safari. A large male baboon entered my apartment and proceeded to rifle my suitcase looking for food. It was very scary because he was between Lisa and I. I could not get to her and she was upset and crying.
why is PtS Athletic Hall of Fame important?
Palmer and Palmer Trinity had many very successful athletic teams. As a historian, I think it is important for current students to know the athletes, or at least the story of those successful award-winning athletes, who came before them. We have had many students go on to play college sports and some have even become professional athletes. Some of the athletes have come back to PTS as coaches, others continue to coach at rival schools, and also out in the South Florida community. Many of these people are life-long sportsmen and I think that is something our students should aspire to. I hope our students aspire to one day be inducted into the Hall of Fame.
what do you enjoy most regarding your connection/communication with Alumni?
More and more, many Alumni return to PTS and I enjoy seeing the former students all grown up with children of their own. So far, I have taught four students whose parent I also taught here at Palmer in the early l980’s! The subject I have mainly taught over the past 30 years has been Geography. So, in my mind, my former students are still 13 years old. It is fun to see adult Alumni and hear their stories from Palmer and the memories they have of the school while they were here. Teachers love to see the fruits of their labor in students’ lives. While you are teaching, you don’t always get to see their success, especially the late-bloomers. Participating in the Athletic Hall of Fame activities has enabled me to reconnect with many alums over the past few years and have wonderful talks about the good ‘ole days.
class notes
glad to see how easy it was to pick up right where we left off at our 20-year reunion celebrated spring 2010.”
Louis Rosas-Guyon has just published his second book titled Firm Wisdom Firm Wisdom is how to use social technology to record institutional memory and knowledge. Imagine a digital warehouse of all the collective ideas that your employees have picked up along the way. Check out the book on the following website: www.FirmWisdom.com.
1991
Jesse Dougherty and his wife, Rebecca, as well as Quinn (age 5) and Fiona (age 3) welcomed Liam John Dougherty into the world May 19th, 2010. Living in Philadelphia PA, Jesse is the head of the upper school at local independent school, Friends Select, and his wife is a physician at a local hospital.
1992
Joy (Berg) Johnson and her husband
Jeremy currently live in bloomington, IL with their daughter, Chandler (age 3). For the past three years Joy has been working as the Chief Domestic Engineer for her family. She completed her first half marathon in 2006 and is planning to run a full marathon in 2011. Joy has recently enjoyed re-connecting with old classmates on Facebook. Joy and Jeremy hope to expand their family in the near future. Joy attended Carson Newman College and earned her business Management Degree.
Sarah Ferguson and her husband, Travis Sheppard, are expecting their second child. Their son, vaughn, will be turning three over the summer.
Katherine Wittenmyer and husband, Wes, are expecting their second child. They have a daughter named Grace.
1993
Patricia (Bergstrom) King welcomed her second baby, Grant Alexander, on November 6, 2009.
1994
Lauren Bogage has moved back to Miami beach after living in NYC.
1995
Zander Bowen came to Miami for Reunion Weekend. He and his wife, Jacalyn, live in belize City, belize with two children, Aei (age 6) and Liza (age 5).
Andrew Bennett and his wife,
Cristina, are living in El Salvador with their two daughters, Sofia (age 4) and Alexandra (age 1). They had a great time visiting campus during Reunion Weekend and catching up with old friends and family.
Corey (Krissel) Gonzalez organized her 15-year class reunion in May. After having her son Jack, she took a sabbatical from work to be with him longer. She is enjoying having time with Jack as well as getting together with fellow PTS Alumni Jessica Corey ’96 and Maggie (Tkac) Jones ’97 who also have young babies Jack’s age for play dates. Her husband, Rene, teaches at Ransom and her mother-in-law runs the daycare at Ransom. She would like to see Jack come to PTS and she would love to see herself teaching here as well.
1996
Lynley Walker-Ciorobea and her husband, Gheorge welcomed their second child into this world earlier this year and named him
M ONICA CERVERA -S I j AN '96
Ly NLE y W ALKER -C I O ROBEA '96
PATRICIA BERGSTROM KING '93
jESSE D OUGHERT y '91
P ETER B AUMBERGER '90
The Class of 1995 gathered at The Chart House to celebrate their 15th Reunion. These events were made possible with the support of our Reunion Class organizers Corey (Krissel) Gonzalez ’95 and Anne beaumont (Nichols) Neithhardt ’95. Many Alumni came in from out of town to celebrate their first reunion gathering ever!
William. big brother, Walker, was featured on the Today Show on May 31, 2010 for his uncanny ability to name the make and model of every vehicle known to the world!
Monica Cervera-Sijan and husband, Nick, welcomed to this world a baby girl, Melani Cameron Sijan, in July. Monica has two year old twin boys, Andrew and brady.
1997
Katrina Campins was featured on bloomberg T v’s “Inside Track.” She discussed the Miami Luxury Real Estate market and recently joined our Admission Advisory board.
Michael H. Davis is now a major in the US Army. He recently completed his Master’s Degree in National Security — Counterterrorism. He and his wife, Jennifer, have two daughters, Maegan (age 4) and Claire (age 2).
Nathaniel Tobin married Maryann in November 2009. Many from the PTS alumni community
attended the wedding. Recently, they welcomed a basset hound named zelda to the family.
Alana Rosen married John Lyon in November 2009.
1998
Preston Dickerson is vice President of Tech 3 Solutions, Inc. located in South Miami. Tech 3 Solutions is a distributor of cogeneration (combined heat and power) products built to operate off of natural gas or biogas. Their units create two forms of power: electrical power and thermal power both of which can be utilized by the end user to help reduce operational expenses.
Rosa Maria Gonzalez-Guarda, PhD, MPH, RN, CPH is an Assistant Professor of Nursing and Health Studies at the University of Miami.
Daniel Diaz-Leyva works for Southern Strategy Group, the South’s largest lobbying firm. The new venture represents Southern Strategy Group’s fifth office in Florida and will be part of a network of 17 lobbying offices throughout the United States. Daniel Diaz-Leyva will take the lead as managing partner in the new Miami office, located in Coral
Gables. Daniel currently serves on the Executive Committee of the board of Directors of CHARLEE Homes for Children, and the board of Directors of Spectrum Programs, Inc. He is an active member of the Cuban American bar Association where he serves on the Legislative and Young Lawyer’s Steering Committees. He is also a Junior Director of the Latin builders Association’s board of Directors and was recently honored as its Junior Director of the Year for 2009. Diaz was recently appointed to serve on the board of Directors of CAMACOL, the Latin American Chamber of Commerce of the United States. He graduated with Honors from the University of Miami with a bachelor’s in business Administration and a Juris Doctor from St. Thomas University School of Law. Diaz-Leyva is also a graduate of the Greater Miami Chamber of Commerce’s leadership development program, Leadership Miami. Kamal Moo entered a screenwriting
A LANA R OSEN '97
Anne Beaumont (Nichols) Neithhardt, David Neithhardt, Corey (Krissel) Gonzalez, Rene Gonzalez, Sergio Mendoza, Sarah Fernandez Mendoza, Carman Fullerton, Josh Fullerton, Zaria Walter, Chip Walter, Cristina Bennett, Andrew Bennett, Zander Bowen, Frank Valdes and Guest
competition and his screenplay was selected as a finalist in the “best title” contest. He titled his screenplay, “Fall In Love, Damnit.”
Jillian (Gerner) Sheppard writes, “I have been living and working in Arcata, California for the past four and a half years. My husband and I got married here in July of 2007. Our daughter Ruby was born on May 12th and just started to crawl! My husband Colin is a research engineer. I work as an elementary school teacher, but am taking the school year off to be with Ruby. We love living close to the redwoods and the frigid waters of the Pacific. My parents, brother and sister have all moved out of Miami, so I haven’t been back in a while. best wishes to everyone from northern California!”
Sabrina (Gray) Siso writes, “We live right near the Chinatown/verizon center in DC and the area is very nice. My sister lives close by so I love it. After so many years of living in different cities, it is nice to see my nephew, Patrick, and my mom who moved up here last year. My husband, Carlos, is still practicing law and was hired by the Federal Government as a contract attorney for the Department of Transportation, specifically the Federal Aviation Administration. They are working on a massive billion-dollar project over the next 7-10 years to restructure the entire airway system and they hired a few new attorneys to handle the contract negotiations.”
1999
Jaclyn varela is a practicing attorney. She attended Smith College and received her Juris Doctorate from St. Thomas.
2000
Sarah Hanners writes, “I just started a new job in bolivia, working in the Amazon basin where I’ve been volunteering for the last three years. Please give my best to everyone at the 10th reunion. Perhaps catch you guys on the 15th Reunion!”
Horacio Rodriguez and wife,
Lorena von Plocki ’05, are now living in LA. He writes, “I work for Universal Music Group and as you can imagine LA is the center of the music industry so it made sense to move here. Fortunately, Loreana was able to keep her position with her employer in Miami and now works remotely from LA.”
Layda Morales came back to campus for Alumni College and Career Day to talk about her experience while at PTS and now as an Assistant Principal down in Homestead!
2001
Carlos Huerta writes, “I have been working at my family’s company, PLC de venezuela. We specialize in telecommunications between power substations through high voltage power lines. Next year I plan to go back to the US to work on my MbA in boston or NYC.”
Yolanda Frieri received her Criminal Justice degree at FIU and works as a Partnership Coordinator at Connect Familias. She and her
Matthew Forster writes, “As for my wedding: I married Ms. Leanna van Osten of Winchester, vA on May 22, 2010. The best men were fellow Alumni, Jaime Cervera and Joseph Sumberg Chris Rutter and Adrian Bustillo were also members of the wedding party. Guests included Anthony Blazejack and Robert O’Donnell.”
husband, Mauricio, live in Miami.
After graduating from Franklin & Marshall College in 2005, Alex Chester decided to enter the financial services business. After working in Citigroup’s Family Office business, Alex now works for Morgan Stanley as an Assistant vice President in the Private Wealth Management group.
Alex focuses on developing firm initiatives in the UHNW (UltraHigh-Net Worth) individual market. He got married last summer and lives in New York City with his wife, Kelly.
John Brevard Begeman has seen much success with his recently opened gallery that displays his design and art work in Miami’s Design District. John was just named one of “Florida’s Power Players Moving the State Forward” in Florida International Magazines People Edition. Check out his website at www.brevards.com.
2002
Adrian Foley graduated from Santa Clara Law School May 2010.
Alexis (Lexi) Jenkins is working as a nurse in Riverdale, GA. She attended Reunion Weekend and had a great time visiting campus and old friends.
Jeremy Carlos Burns and Nicolay Ivanov Siclunov were married on June 18th at the X v beacon Hotel in boston. PTS alumni Wayne Cribbs and Jordana Psiloyenis joined them for the celebration. Afterward, they spent their honeymoon biking through Catalonia, Spain for 10 days. In May, Jeremy completed the first year of his doctoral program in pathobiology at New York University. He graduated from Haverford College. Nicolay is the development director for new business and is also a senior LSAT instructor at the New York subsidiary of PowerScore, an academic test preparation company in Charleston, S.C. He graduated magna cum laude from Harvard and received a master’s degree in comparative literature from Yale.
2003
Jessica Johnson moved to Hong Kong in August. She will be living overseas for a year.
Simon De Los Rios is involved with a non-profit organization called Give back a Pack The Give back a Pack Foundation collects new and gently used backpacks and school supplies. They personally deliver them to children in need. Palmer Trinity participated by donating backpacks
C RISS y ( yABLONSK y) R UBIN '00
M ATTHEW F ORSTER '00
On Saturday evening, the Class of 2000 gathered at Dolores Lolita in Mary brickell village to celebrate their 10th Reunion. These events were made possible with the support of our Reunion Class organizer Soozie Klock ’00. Alumni came in from out of town as far away as LA and Argentina to see old friends again!
Gabe Montealegre, Nick Paray, Alex Policastro, Vincent Hendrickx
Horacio Rodriguez, Jackie Latour, Ani Sierra, Gabe Montealegre, Soozie Klock, Nick Paray, Tracey King, Vincent Hendrickx, Layda Morales, and Alex Policastro
Jackie Latour, Tracey King, Ani Sierra
Vincent Hendrickx and Tracey King
Tracey King, Layda Morales, Soozie Klock, Jackie Latour, and Ani Sierra
and was able to collect over 40 backpacks! On October 14th and 15th, 2009 Simon and his team travelled to La vega, Columbia where they visited two schools and were able to distribute 954 backpacks to the children! Congrats to Simon for making a difference and to all from PTS who
donated backpacks. Simon is also involved with another project over the summer and writes, “I am currently working at ISEL – Instituto Superior de Engenharia de Lisboa under an international scholarship for the project viP-DiGEM – virtual Power Producers and Distributed Generation
trading in Energy Markets, in coparticipation with Instituto Superior de Engenharia do Porto (ISEP) and funded by the Foundation of Science and Technology (FCT) of Portugal. The project deals with the integration of renewable energy sources in the electrical energy market using a simulation tool – MASCEM (MultiAgent Simulator of Competitive Electricity Markets). My work here was basically divided into three different parts. During the first couple of months, I worked on the optimization algorithm for the pricing structure of MASCEM. The second part of my time here was exploring opportunities to take this project from being a R&D idea to real life applications. As of right now, the idea has been received with great success, and a pilot application is underway in Argentina, and two other pilot proposals are underway in both Chile and Colombia. The third part of my
Anniversary. Using the 25 years of famed music magazine archives, she merged her collaging talents with her passion for music. She created a nearly 100-ft-long wall. Sky stated, “It was truly a great project to work on, and even better to see come to life at Manhattan’s Terminal 5 Concert Space where the five night concert celebrations took place.”
2004
Aliana Abascal is enjoying medical school and has begun to develop her medical skills. She decided that she wanted to use these new abilities as best she could. Went on a volunteer medical trip to Haiti right before Christmas 2009.
Jenna Pimentel writes, “I graduated from Santa Clara University in 2008 with a major in studio art. I currently go to Academy of Art University in San Francisco for graduate school
time here, has been coordinating the proposals of two international projects: CyTED Consortium130,000 Euro renewable energy interuniversity proposal and the ALFA III – 2.9 million Euros, 20 institution educational partnership between Latin America and Europe project.”
Jennifer Lampert attended San Diego State University for her undergraduate degree and graduated in May 2010 from Pepperdine University School of Law.
Sky Farrell worked on creating an installation for Spin Magazine’s 25th
in photography. I absolutely love it! I also work full-time as a graphic designer for an engineering firm. When I finish graduate school, who knows where life will take me … maybe back to Miami! My ultimate goal is to teach and possibly start a non-profit to help bring art, especially photography, to underprivileged children and communities. I also really want to do something with possibly the Children’s bereavement Center to teach teens going through tough times how to cope through art. If I am ever in Miami sometime soon I would love to come over to PTS! I
C HAD S TARK '02, M ERCE A NE z '03, S ARAH K EMENESS , AND M IKE y S ANTA C RU z yEPES '02
S K y F ARRELL '03
S IMON D E L OS R IOS '03
I AN W OGAN '04 FIU VS UM L ACROSSE
always get stuff on Facebook and I love to still be informed on the PTS community. Keep up the good work!”
Anna Seipp writes, “Currently I am living outside the country in Germany. I just finished my studies and will receive my bachelor of business in Event Management and
International Tourism this July. At the moment I am doing an internship at McCann Momentum in Frankfurt.”
2005
Alejandro Melean is playing professional soccer in bolivia for La Paz Futbol Club, a first Division professional team in the city of La Paz. Robert Moore graduated in December 2009 from the University of Miami with a bachelors of Science in Marine Affairs. He will be attending the University of Miami Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science in the fall for a Masters in Marine Affairs. He is also working for Africair Co. Mariana Foley is getting her degree in Interior Design in London.
Cady Klimas is opening a business in Equines, Maryland.
Lauren Santa-Cruz Yepes organized her 5-year class reunion in May. She is currently at UM in the School of Communications getting her graduate degree in Multi-Media Journalism. She also loves photography and would like to do something with both fields once she graduates. Last year, she spent the semester abroad studying architecture and photography. She spent the majority of the summer in Colombia with family.
Joe Tesmond is working with PTS by coaching the middle
school football and maybe some basketball teams this year!
2006
Brittney Fyffe writes, “I would like to share exciting news with the PTS community! Wilson Hernandez and I got engaged Dec. 27, 2009. We plan to be married in summer of 2011. Wilson graduated from Florida International University with a bS in Liberal Arts, focus in Geosciences. We both hope to teach in Miami someday soon. I graduated from vanderbilt University (Peabody College) this May with my bachelors of Science in Elementary Education and Spanish. I received the award for professional promise as a teacher of elementary education! I am heading back to vanderbilt to pursue a one-year masters program that will end in May 2011.
Samantha Evans has been working with an autistic boy for the past three years, two to three times a week. She has grown very attached to Tommy and his mom. because of this experience Sam has decided to be an Occupational Therapist and work with more children like Tommy.
Elizabeth Parsley writes, “I graduated May 1st. I’m moving to Ithaca this summer to attend Cornell College of veterinary Medicine. Hope all is well at Palmer!”
Edward Luckmann writes, “I am still at NEU. I am entering into my fifth year. I have only one semester left, but my program makes me do a year of internships. I will be going on my last six-month internship from July till December, then back to boston for my final semester.”
Shawn Adderly writes, “I studied wind power in Italy over the summer. Italy is the sixth largest user of wind power in the world, so I did my engineering residence there, which coincides with my major, Electrical Engineering.”
Tim Mara graduated from Columbia College of Chicago on May 16th where he received his bA in Arts, Entertainment and Media Management. He is now a model, a
fashion producer, a band manager and theater production assistant. Chris Fitzgerald just graduated and is coaching the middle school football team at PTS while he is waiting to hear from the forest service and the Peace Corps.
2007
Dolores Clara writes college counselor, Iraida Robledo, “I really enjoyed my ESL classes very much while at PTS! I still remember the American Literature book we used in class. My brother, Santi, graduated from an American school in buenos Aires called Lincoln (Asociacion Escuelas Lincoln), in May of 2008 and now he is studying engineering at ITbA (Instituto Tecnologico de buenos Aires), which is one of the best schools. I’m studying business administration at UADE and I’m working part time at American Express Argentina. I have a weird schedule because I work for Australia, New zealand, and Singapore, but I’m happy with it.”
Jordana Flick writes, “Everything is going great, it’s really different but I am slowly adjusting. I started a great internship with the African human rights organization which works with Amnesty International and is crazy cool. I’m working on conflict resolution in the southern region of Senegal where there is a civil war. Not to worry. I will not be allowed to go down there.”
Marimar velez worked on the
2010 census in New Orleans along with a group of Loyola students doing their part to make sure New Orleanians got counted. These students not only raised awareness, but they did so in communities where spreading the word was critical. As part of a national competition for public relations students, a group from Loyola launched a campaign called “Down for the Count.” It was designed to boost awareness about the country’s once-a-decade count of its population. The Loyola team spent their time sharpening their public relation skills by launching a series of outreach events around town, zeroing in on certain communities to clear up misconceptions and break through language barriers.
Courtney Clark writes, “I will be going to Europe for a garden tour
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B RITTAN y K ALBAC '07
W ILL M ORRISON '07
A LE j ANDRO M ELEAN '05
Julio Ligorria, Jr.
‘06
That was one of many lessons
I learned from a woman I met 23 years ago. Since before I can remember, this woman was a beacon of wisdom, an example of unity, a believer in hope and a sanctuary for love to anyone who asked her to be. She was selfless, kind and motherly to all, the kind of person you feel a need to be around for no reason at all. This woman was a grounded optimist who would see the upside in impossible situations. For 50 years, this woman, who unlike today’s women concerned with erasing the years, added life to hers by living it fully and enjoying every waking moment. Of course, her life wasn’t all easy, she had rough patches, forking paths and great obstacles to overcome.
In 2002, she was diagnosed with terminal breast cancer. The doctors found that her cancer had metastasized to the liver and bones and
concluded that she had four months to live. They recommended she choose quality of life over treatment because the amount of chemotherapy required would wreak havoc on her body, and the odds of coming out on top were unfavorable.
A few days after the initial diagnosis, she gathered her family in Miami and broke the news. For the children, life came crashing down because suddenly, their mother had one foot out the door. Luckily, the children were just as strong willed as her and stood by her side. Weekly chemotherapy treatments, whose side effects lasted five days, had the family on edge. The only thing keeping them sane was their unity and their ability to laugh even under the grimmest of circumstances. Positivity was the key to overcoming those obstacles.
During her journey with
The people who helped you yesterday may not be there tomorrow, so learn to paddle your own canoe.
breast cancer, she touched people’s lives in ways only they could explain. Her own life changed completely. Despite having gone through three rounds of chemotherapy over a six year period, she never backed away from her duties as a mother and wife. She tried to keep things as normal as possible, but at the end of the day, the end was a mistake away. For six years, that family’s sense of “normal” was 180 degrees of what others perceived to be normal. Months of chemotherapy, sleepless nights, health concerns, routine follow ups, pharmacy visits, and emergency room visits became the center of attention in their lives. Normal had become a relative term for them.
On November 25th, 2008 the greatest woman I ever knew passed away from breast cancer. She
fought valiantly for the third time in six years, but since there is no cure for cancer, the illness landed the final blow. She died knowing her entire family was present. Her parents, her husband and her three children were at her side for the final moments. The last minute of her life was spent looking into our eyes, her expressions telling us not to be scared, that everything was going to return to normal and that she was going to be ok.
Their lives, by societal standards, did return to normal. The oldest daughter has since gotten married and given birth to a beautiful baby girl, the second oldest daughter has gotten married, finished her studies and will soon start a family of her own, and the youngest son is on his way to finish his college studies and start a new chapter in his life.
The woman I speak of, the one who touched the lives of so many people, the one who persevered against insurmountable odds was my mother. Her name was Elizabeth and she died at the age of 50 having lived her life fully and unafraid until the very end.
The reason for this article is simple; my family and I want to spread my mother’s legacy of love and
allowed us to analyze the experience in much more depth and detail than before. It allowed for a deeper understanding of her psyche during times of uncertainty to delve into what can only be fact to those who have lived through this experience.
The secret is in your attitude towards the events to come, your will to live and most importantly, family unity.
hope to as many people as possible. In late 2007, she started writing a book for women with breast cancer but was unable to finish it. My father, with the help of my sisters and I, finished the book by the beginning of 2010. The experience of finishing my mother’s book not only helped us grieve, it also helped us see a new perspective of the experience: the experience through my mother’s eyes.
All these years we had lived through my mother’s hardship through our own eyes. but this medium
Her book undoubtedly changed the way I see cancer. Yes, it is a terrible and deadly experience, but if you have breast cancer, my mother’s story is the perfect example that cancer does not have to be a grim death sentence without hope. If I have learned anything from her it’s that there is hope. The secret is in your attitude towards the events to come, your will to live and most importantly, family unity. Those three steps I just mentioned were the reason for my mother’s motivation to write this book. She wrote this book in hopes that she could reach as many women as possible and provide any help she could by telling her story and providing them with tips in how to get through certain situations.
Today, my father is working closely with the largest publishing house in Latin America, Editorial Planeta, to publish the book in Spanish in Central America and the Caribbean, Mexico, the southern states of the United States and South America. Global proceeds from the book will go towards breast cancer research. In South Florida, 100% of the proceeds will be donated to the Memorial
breast Cancer Center in Hollywood Florida, the breast cancer center where my mother was treated for over five years. This facility is one of the top breast cancer centers in the United States. Not only because the level of care they provide, but because the people who work there have a genuine interest in taking care of your every need. They take a very unique approach to the treatment of breast cancer; they not only treat the illness, but they treat the individual as well. It is a far more holistic approach than what you will see anywhere else. To them, you are family and they treat you as such. And that is why we are donating 100% of the proceeds in the United States to the Memorial breast Cancer Center.
Finally, I want to thank Director of Alumni Relations, Monica Sanchez, for opening her door to me and hearing my story, for helping me with the steps that allowed me write this article. I would also like to thank the Palmer Trinity School community for their loyalty and all they have done throughout the years to help the members of their community.
study abroad with my cousin, John bryant. I figured I couldn’t beat doing my last general elective in Europe. It’s through UGA and we will go all through Italy and France visiting the major monuments/gardens. I will stay after the course to enjoy Europe a little while longer. I will be graduating from UGA next May. I’m still doing all my work with the yearbook and I’m the Managing Editor this year. It’s been really great, but really tough just because students don’t buy yearbooks anymore. So I will be in charge of creating the first digital yearbook next year, as long as we get it approved, which is exciting. I made the Dean’s List last semester and the semester before that I was a Presidential Scholar with a 4.0. I’m just trying to stay busy designing for a bunch of other student publications as well. Things are just really good right now!”
Ashley Pemsler writes, “I am still an
#3 in the country, and the team has compiled a record of 55-8 during his career. Will is a business Major with an emphasis in Marketing, and is on pace to graduate in June 2011. Will’s Head Lacrosse Coach at Chapman, Mike Wood writes, “Will has been one of the reasons our lacrosse program has excelled recently, and we are looking forward to another big year and title run next Spring. I am very proud to have Will Morrison on my team; his work ethic and character are traits that our younger players can look up to.” Great job Will!
Brittany Kalbac volunteered in Costa Rica over the summer to do some mission work. Check out her blog if you are interested in seeing the work she did: http:// crbrittany2010.blogspot.com.
Nick Fitzgerald is at UM in the art program and loving it!
2008
Nicholas Betancourt was the recipient of the “Retain The Talent Math and Science” grant at The University of Florida. He is a Junior at UF majoring in Mechanical Engineering with a minor in biomechanics. He is in the Honors College and participates in many activities on campus. He continues to stay involved with PTS and participated in Alumni College and Career Day in May.
Judd Smith was named to the bermuda Men’s World Lacrosse Team which competed over the summer at the FIL (Federation of International Lacrosse) World Championships. Smith was chosen after a tryout session that spanned more than 12 months taking place in both the United States and bermuda. A former Falcon captain
(continues on page 58)
undergrad at University of Rochester. I am currently working as a research assistant for the Healthy Living Center which is a research program that runs multiple studies on tobacco cessation, diabetes prevention, and general healthy living practices under the guidelines of Self-Determination Theory. I also am working on a senior honors thesis that examines parental styles in relation to risky behavior mediated by various psychological needs under the same theory (SDT). Hope all is well at PTS!”
Samantha Oliver is attending FIU and helping as a Softball Coach along with Joe Mancuso ’90 at Ransom. Will Morrison finished his junior year at Chapman University where he has been a three-year member of the lacrosse team. He plays midfield and has played in every game, scoring 19 goals and adding six assists this season. This year’s team was 18-3, ranked
K IT F AIELLA '07, R OCK jONES (P RESIDENT OF O HIO W ESLE y AN ) AND D ANN y R E y NOLDS
G RACE H ILL '07, jORO F ORMAN '08 AND D ANN y R E y NOLDS AT D ENISON C OLLEGE
jUDD S MITH '08 B ERMUDA 2010
jOE y C OULTER '08
Nick Betancourt ’08
We want to teach kids how to teach themselves, rather than memorize and regurgitate.
This summer, I worked as an intern for the One Laptop Per Child (OLPC) Project. OLPC is a spin off from a program at MIT, and is now an independent nonprofit organization. They have a specially made laptop called the XO, which is designed for the education of children ages 6 to 12. XO laptops are inexpensive at about $200, durable, and full of special features perfect for primary education.
The program is about more than just handing out free laptops, however. It also emphasizes a new teaching philosophy called “constructivist” education. Constructivist education is similar to the teaching philosophy at Palmer Trinity School. We want to teach kids how to teach themselves, rather than memorize and regurgitate.
I heard about the program through a family friend who works with OLPC, and he encouraged me to apply. I spent June and July in the Ancash region of Peru, north of Lima, helping set up programs in various villages. Interns hand out the computers and train both teachers and students in their most effective use.
As a junior at UF, I’m majoring in Mechanical Engineering. Engineering is challenging, but well worth it. My studies keep me busy but I still manage to have a good time. After college, I plan on pursuing a graduate degree in biomedical engineering, but for now I’m just focused on having a good time and surviving the rigors of my major.
and all-district selection during his senior year, Smith also played on the inaugural 2008 bermuda under 19 World Team in vancouver, b.C.
During that time he led the squad in
faceoff victories while tallying four goals, including the game winner against Finland in the first round of the playoffs. The FIL championships took place in Manchester, England from July 14-24, 2010.
Joey Coulter won the berlin ARCA 200 at the famed berlin Raceway on August 6, 2010. Joey states to the media, “We have had our fair share of rough patches this year, but I have believed in my team 100% and knew this day was always right around the corner. Short track racing has always been a great genre of track for me and tonight at berlin (Raceway) was a great example why. From practice to qualify to the race, we had a great car and my guys never gave up.” To find out more about Joey’s races, check out his website at www.JoeyCoulter.com.
Oliver Garcia and Angel Diaz competed against each other on Sunday, March 7 when Diaz and his University of Miami Hurricanes
hosted Garcia’s Golden Panthers of Florida International University lacrosse game. The game took place on the University of Miami Intramural Fields two former Falcon captains and 2008 Pinecrest Tribune Miami-Dade All-Star selections.
Lauren Adamo writes, “My first year at UM was fantastic, transferring here was the best decision I ever made. I went to visit my friend out in Las vegas this summer and then my brother in NYC. I also met my parents in Europe to do a trip for a week.”
George Keunen has recently been bestowed the honor of captain for the
what happened with the economy, Happened.” It was the fourth best essay out of over 200! He attributes this to the Investment Club. Sean said all the information he learned in the club enabled him to truly understand what happened and helped him to explain it clearly.
Dexter Carr writes, “A representative from bloc Agency saw me for the first time dancing at a show called Carnival in NYC and told me that she was going to sign me. They will submit my headshot for a tour or video and hopefully book me or send me on the auditions. bloc Agency has offices in
Fordham University men’s lacrosse team for his upcoming 2010-2011 junior year. The Rams play in the National College Lacrosse League’s NY Metro Division, and Keunen will assume his duties immediately. George, who first picked up a lacrosse stick during his ninth-grade school year, went on to help lead the Falcons on the midfield and defense for four seasons. A captain during his final year of play as a Falcon, he completed his high school career with three seasons on the varsity level in which he scored 20 goals, 19 assists and 151 groundballs.
Thomas Torbert will be attending the University of Miami for fall 2010.
2009
Sean Hew was recognized in his business management course for an essay he wrote explaining, “Why
LA and in NY. Hope everything’s going well at Palmer. I miss you guys!”
Mark Allen ran an impressive 14:54 in the 5000-meter race in Annapolis (Navy). He finished fourth overall. This performance places him, so far, in 10th position in the Patriot League Performance List for 2010. He was the only freshman on the list.
Libby Wogan will be attending school at UNC Wilmington this fall.
Stephanie Castillo writes Mrs. vale regarding her experience at Dartmouth, “This past year has been a tremendous learning experience for me. Dartmouth is wonderful and I absolutely love being there. My transition into freshman year involved discovering new interests, one of which is Art History. I cannot believe that I was able to hold in my hands two fourteenth century illuminated Gothic Art manuscripts (one of which was
M ARK A LLEN '09
O LIVER G ARCIA '08
AND A NGEL D IA z '08
jOSH B LUMENTHAL AND G EORGE K EUNEN '08
jOE M ASTERMAN '08 LOVING U LTIMATE F RISBEE WITH HIS H ARVARD TEAMMATES (continues
More than 100 Alumni attended the annual Alumni Reception in the new Dining Hall where many were shocked by the expansive space. Head of School, Sean Murphy, said a few words to the group regarding the state of the school and the victory regarding the Palmetto bay hearings.
Kohler Nordlund ’00, Wes Farrell ’01, Lorena Von Ploki ’05, Alex Policastro ’00, Tracey King ’00, and Alex Fabre ‘06
Andrew Bennett ’95 and Zander Bowen ‘95
Jan Tobin, Fernando Iglesia ‘07, Maria Vanegas, Christian Ehrenhaft ’07, Alexander Grosnoff ’08
Eva Thompson Salas ’04, Nick Stein ’04, and Corina Lopez ‘04
Richard Rosen, Caroline Goodwin, and Andre Carbonell ‘05
Nick Stein ’04, Cristina Bennett, Andrew Bennett ’95, Head of School, Sean Murphy, Zander Bowen ’95, Rene Gonzalez, and Corey (Krissel) Gonzalez ‘95
originally owned by the French Royal House) belonging to Dartmouth’s special collections library. The access to these types of resources and artifacts makes Art History truly come to life.
I was very fortunate to be accepted into Dartmouth’s Art History Foreign Study Program where I will spend ten weeks for sophomore spring term (2011) in Rome, Italy. I was again fortunate to have been accepted to a six-week Summer Medical and Dental Program at Yale University (from which I recently returned.) This valuable experience gave me insight into the life of a first year medical student. I was able to shadow doctors at the Yale-New Haven Hospital and interact with medical students and faculty, while taking science courses. This experience helped to solidify my enthusiasm and passion for medicine. Coincidentally, I just found out about a special program at Mount Sinai School of Medicine – the Humanities and Medicine Program. This program provides rising sophomore students majoring in the humanities with a unique opportunity to apply three years early to the Mount Sinai medical school outside of the traditional pre-med track. I am very interested in applying to this program as an Art History major, as it would allow me to pursue my passions in the humanities and also in medicine.” Way to go Stephanie!
Former Faculty
Richard Rosen writes, “I saw some of the PTS crew at Nate Tobin’s wedding
back in November. I’ve surprised myself how quickly I have moved onto my new life here in the Clearwater area. My wife Sandy is doing well as a big hotshot real estate agent with Century 21 and I’ve immersed myself into the rich and varied Tampa bay theater community. In late April I directed “Side by Side by Sondheim,” also with the West Coast Players.
In Memoriam
Peter Christopher Dluhy ’92 passed in June 2010. For the past eight years, Peter worked for the brunswick County School system and most recently for Southport Elementary School where he was a Media Specialist. He was a graduate of Trinity Episcopal School and barry University, where he majored in special education. For people who were fortunate enough to have known Peter, they knew him to be a kind, loving, and generous person who always engaged people in a positive way. For his family, he was truly a “hero” who overcame many obstacles in life, never failing to rise to life’s challenges. He traveled an incredible journey in life right to the end. For those who knew him well, he was an avid sports buff, a walking expert on the American movie scene, and a calming and loving master to his pets—Twinkle and Puff. besides his regular involvement in physical fitness, one of his proudest accomplishments in life was to complete four 26.2-mile Marathons. He earned four medals for these triumphs. We will all miss him terribly and deeply; we will remember
who he was, what he did, how he loved, and most of all what he meant to us. He is simply irreplaceable.
Tara Joy Levine ’00 passed away in June 2010. Her family writes, “If it is said that every life is extraordinary and every life is a blessing, then we have to believe that our Tara Joy spent her full twenty-eight years touching lives with a fierce loyalty and passion, exploring the depth of her creativity, and interacting with a universe that drew out her unique talents like an indelible magnet returning to its source. She came to us as an angel and now she is returning as one. Our “golden girl” (from her hair to her soul) who found harmony with adults and young children who needed her special blend of nurturing and joy. When T.J. sang... when T.J. wrote...when T.J. drew... when T.J. loved...her big heart knew no bounds and she knew no equal.”
Anthony O’Donnell passed away on June 17, 2010. The son of Anthony J. O’Donnell and Margaret Sloan, he was a gentleman of wit and learning, a Miami native reared in the historic Flipse-O’Donnell house, but more often schooled on the waters of biscayne bay. He was graduated from Palmetto High in 1964. In 1967, he received a bachelor of Arts with high honors from Emory University, where he was president of the Student Senate, officer of the Honor Council, president of Phi Delta Theta, a Ford Scholar and a member of numerous honor societies. In 1973, he obtained a Doctor of Philosophy in History from Princeton University. His dissertation, “National Liberalism and the Rise of the German Right,” was selected as the best published that year. He went on to an appointment as a professor of history at the University of Missouri-St. Louis before receiving a Juris Doctorate with honors from the University of Florida where he wrote for the Law Review and chaired the Moot Court board of Editors. He was a partner at several well-known law firms in Miami, including Greenberg Traurig and Akerman Senterfitt where he was involved in major zoning litigation. His zoning work helped shape the Miami skyline. Later, he
became of counsel with the Lehtinen vargas firm. best Lawyers in America selected him as one of the top in his field. He volunteered with numerous local organizations, including St. Thomas Episcopal School and Charlee House, and served proudly as a trustee of Trinity, subsequently Palmer Trinity School, for decades. He was a brilliant scholar and tireless volunteer in the community, but his greatest legacy was his family – four children including Lara O’Donnell Grillo ’98 and Robert A. O’Donnell ’00 and five grandchildren.
Louis Forster, passed away in February 2010. He was a generous individual for many years to PTS, donating a classroom that has been used by Mrs. Goodwin for over 10 years now. He is survived by his wife, Mariann Forster – former Palmer Trinity board of Trustees, member, member of the PTPA, and the former chair of the PTS Auction – and Matthew Forster ’00.
R ICHARD R OSEN
Palmer Trinity School had a great Reunion Weekend on May 21st and 22nd ! The weekend started off on Friday morning with Alumni College and Career Day. The Class of 2011 attended four different sessions involving alumni experiences in college and as professionals. Special thanks to all the Alumni who participated in College and Career Day.
Students asked many thought provoking questions regarding Alumni experiences
College and professional expectations were addressed in round table discussions
(L-R) first row: Head of School Sean Murphy, John Malloy ’85, Nick Betancourt ’08, Corey (Krissel) Gonzalez ’95, (L-R) second row: Hart Baur ’82, Ariel Moger ’08, Brianna Rivas ’08, Kristin (Hayden) Hebert ’01, Brittney Hoffman ’99, Michael Contreras ’04, Layda Morales ’00, Jon Lawrence ’98, Brian Gershen ’98, Chip Walter ’95, (L-R) third row: Nathan Zeder ’98, Lee Sterling ‘81
Nick Betancourt ’08, Brianna Rivas ’08, Ariel Moger ‘08
Class of 2010
Christina Ludovici and Laura Portuondo
Yuxin Wang and Christian Jaffe
Tyler Kalbac, Andrew Smith, Patrick Kalbac, Eric Sanabria,Guillermo Salazar, Eric Torbert
Patrick Kalbac and Brooke Sonnenreich
Joseph Santilli, Richard Befeler, Belle Verwaay, Victoria Fernandez
Nik Nevin, Luis Lopez-Blazquez, Cecilia Leal
Sebastian Guerra- Mondragon, Briana Henry, Kirby Battle, Sarah Alfonso Hannah Green, Kirsten Marbert
Laura Portuondo, Nadia Tahoun, Raul Gonzalez
Evan Kleiss and Landon Michelson
Claire Fisher, Valerie Blattner, Carolina Perez, Elise Falcon (behind group is Erik Quinsenberry-Diaz)
innovative extraordinary polite fun nurturing special
inclusive soulful diverse stimulating family supportive unique community respect transformational friendly personal respectful peaceful energetic loyal global kind unique outstanding opportunity friendly hopeful considerate vibrant security commitment beautiful truthful sincere imagination youthful hope understanding unbelievable safe g lobal c aring friend m emories thriving
Warm g roWing s pecial challenging h ome s piritual comfortable d edication s mart stimulating h opeful p otential g entle e nriching i nnovative challenging scholarly values tolerant preparatory responsible academic collegial e thical centered adventuresome m ultifaceted progressive dynamic
k noWledge friendship d evelopment thoughtful
Welcoming creative
Your gift has an immediate and positive impact on the people and programs that make Palmer Trinity School unique. Every gift counts and makes a difference. You may give securely online by visiting www.palmertrinity.org/onlinegiving, or mail checks or credit cards with the enclosed envelope or call (305) 969-4243. All gifts to the 2010-2011 Annual Fund count toward the imagine Campaign