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Riparian<br />

T h e R i v e r s S c h o o l • s p r i n g 2 0 0 9<br />

<strong>Rivers</strong> is a school that maximizes<br />

the potential of its young people<br />

as students, as a†hletes, as artists,<br />

Creating<br />

Is <strong>Rivers</strong><br />

and, most important ly, as human beings.<br />

<strong>The</strong> school fosters the enthusiastic<br />

<strong>The</strong><br />

Renaissance<br />

Student<br />

pursuit of excellence in a caring community<br />

in which students are given the freedom,<br />

the responsibility, and the opportunities to explore<br />

new interests, test themselves,<br />

discover their †alents, and gain self-knowledge.<br />

Jim Lowell ’79 Looks at America’s Future | Food for Thought: Restaurants Redefined


Round up for <strong>Rivers</strong> Rodeo<br />

MacDowell Athletic Center • April 25, 2009, 6:30 p.m.<br />

All proceeds from this year’s Parents’ League auction will support<br />

Faculty Development and Enrichment Programs at <strong>Rivers</strong>,<br />

providing opportunities for professional growth so that the faculty<br />

in turn will challenge and inspire our students to grow and<br />

succeed.<br />

• Through workshops and courses, teachers have the opportunity<br />

to learn from and share information with educators at<br />

other schools.<br />

• During the summer, the faculty examines and develops curriculum,<br />

creates manuals, improves content, and devises programs.<br />

• Grants are awarded for special study, travel, graduate school<br />

tuition, and sabbatical projects.<br />

• Excellence in teaching is rewarded by attaining Senior and<br />

Master Teacher status through rigorous evaluation.<br />

Contact: Coordinator of Parent Relations Amy Dunne<br />

at 339-686-2235 or a.dunne@rivers.org<br />

Board of Trustees 2008–2009<br />

President: Roy S. MacDowell, Jr.<br />

Term Trustees<br />

Michael A. Bell<br />

Benjamin Bloomstone<br />

Robert E. Buonato ’81<br />

Karen L. Daniels<br />

Howard G. Davis ’70<br />

Robert J. Davis<br />

T. Christopher Donnelly<br />

Maria Furman<br />

Clinton P. Harris<br />

Andrew N. Jaffe ’93<br />

Daniel A. Kraft<br />

Frank H. Laukien<br />

Thomas L. Lyons<br />

Deborah H. McAneny<br />

Michael E. McGuinness<br />

Patricia Mordas<br />

James C. Mullen<br />

Geoffrey S. Rehnert<br />

Alan D. Rose, Jr. ’87<br />

Solomon B. Roth<br />

Laurie Schoen<br />

Mark S. Schuster ’72<br />

Steven J. Snider<br />

Michael Stansky<br />

Roger E. Tackeff ’72<br />

Cai von Rumohr<br />

Joan C. Walter<br />

Life Trustees<br />

David M. Berwind<br />

Charles C. Carswell<br />

Joan T. Cave<br />

Stephen R. Delinsky<br />

Peter A. Gaines<br />

G. Arnold Haynes<br />

Harriet R. Lewis<br />

Kenneth P. MacPherson ’42<br />

Edward R. Perry<br />

Joel B. Sherman<br />

William B. Tyler ’43<br />

Joan A. Vaccarino<br />

Frank S. Waterman III ’41<br />

Dudley H. Willis<br />

Honorary Trustees<br />

of the Corporation<br />

Joan T. Allison<br />

Thomas P. Beal, Jr.<br />

Richard A. Bradley<br />

Mida van Zuylen Dunn<br />

Marie Fitzpatrick<br />

Louis J. Grossman ’67<br />

Joshua M. Kraft ’85<br />

Warren M. Little ’51<br />

Virginia S. MacDowell<br />

Deborah S. Petri<br />

Frederick G. Pfannenstiehl ’59<br />

Eleanor Pyne Prince<br />

A. Tozzer Spalding ’62


V o l . XX I V • N u m b e r 1<br />

Riparian<br />

T h e R i v e r s S c h o o l • spring 2009<br />

E d i t o r<br />

Christine Martin, Director of<br />

Donor Relations<br />

C o n t r i b u t o r<br />

Adam Conner-Simons<br />

P h o t o g r a p h y<br />

Adam Conner-Simons, Christina<br />

Grady, Tim Morse, Tom Kates<br />

I l l u s t r a t i o n s<br />

Leigh Carroll ’09<br />

D e s i g n e r<br />

David Gerratt, NonprofitDesign.<br />

com<br />

P r i n t e r<br />

Signature Printing & Consulting,<br />

Brian Maranian ’96<br />

H e a d o f S c h o o l<br />

Thomas P. Olverson<br />

D i r e c t o r o f D e v e l o p m e n t<br />

Janice H. Hicinbothem<br />

A s s o c i a t e D i r e c t o r o f<br />

D e v e l o p m e n t<br />

Marney Hupper<br />

C o o r d i n a t o r o f<br />

P a r e n t R e l a t i o n s<br />

Amy Dunne<br />

D i r e c t o r o f<br />

C o m m u n i c a t i o n s<br />

Alexia Monsen<br />

2<br />

3<br />

4<br />

7<br />

8<br />

10<br />

12<br />

16 17<br />

18<br />

19<br />

20<br />

21<br />

Message from Head of <strong>School</strong> Tom Olverson<br />

Board of Trustees Welcomes Sol Roth<br />

In Memoriam: Edward L. Hutton<br />

F e a t u r e :<br />

Food for Thought: Restaurants Redefined<br />

Senior Parents’ Reception<br />

Student News<br />

C o n v e r s a t i o n :<br />

Jim Lowell ’79: A Positive Take on America<br />

<strong>Rivers</strong>’ 2009 Alumni Excellence Award Recipient<br />

F e a t u r e :<br />

Is <strong>Rivers</strong> Creating <strong>The</strong> Renaissance Student<br />

Homecoming and Grandparents Day 2008<br />

Alumni Council News and Events<br />

Run for <strong>Rivers</strong>: Marathoners Hit the Road<br />

Jarzavek Chair Affair<br />

Profile: Stephen Salny ’73, Fascinated for Life<br />

Class Notes<br />

<strong>The</strong> <strong>Rivers</strong> <strong>School</strong><br />

333 Winter Street<br />

Weston, MA 02493-1040<br />

781-235-9300<br />

www.rivers.org<br />

Riparian: “One that lives or has property on the bank of a river or lake.”<br />

<strong>The</strong> Riparian is published twice a year for <strong>The</strong> <strong>Rivers</strong> <strong>School</strong> alumni, parents, students, faculty and friends.<br />

To save on the cost of mailing the Riparian, <strong>Rivers</strong> has consolidated multiple mailings addressed to the same<br />

household so that your home will only receive one copy. If you have reason to receive additional copies at<br />

your address, please call Chris Martin at 781-235-9300, ext. 230.


Message from the Head of <strong>School</strong><br />

Learning for a Lifetime<br />

By Thomas P. Olverson, Head of <strong>School</strong><br />

In these difficult times, I find it very reassuring that here at<br />

<strong>Rivers</strong> we have a mission to fulfill that not only remains valid<br />

in this changing world, but has become increasingly crucial<br />

for our students. Never has it been more important to educate<br />

students who understand the world around them, who are<br />

prepared to go out and work diligently, creatively, and ethically to<br />

change it for the better.<br />

<strong>Rivers</strong> is a constant in these students’ lives, a place where they<br />

come not to escape the world but to prepare for it. <strong>The</strong>y learn to<br />

work as a team, share ideas, debate issues, and step up and lead<br />

with confidence and compassion. <strong>The</strong> faculty are here to share<br />

their knowledge, mentor our students, and model a love of learning.<br />

<strong>The</strong> strengthening of our culture of Excellence with Humanity<br />

over the last several years is, in no small way, attributable to an<br />

enthusiastic corps of teachers who are willing to go the extra mile.<br />

A few years ago, in anticipation of developing<br />

our current strategic plan, we<br />

had an educational consultant interview<br />

the faculty about their experiences at <strong>Rivers</strong>.<br />

In his report to the Board of Trustees,<br />

he said that <strong>Rivers</strong>’ faculty morale was one<br />

of the highest he had ever seen—9 on a<br />

scale of 10. Key to their enthusiasm was<br />

the culture of collaboration and collegiality<br />

at <strong>Rivers</strong> and the extensive professional<br />

We are committed to helping our<br />

faculty pursue their professional<br />

goals and dreams and every<br />

member of the <strong>Rivers</strong> community<br />

can join in that commitment.<br />

growth opportunities available<br />

to them.<br />

During the course of the<br />

year, there are numerous conferences,<br />

seminars, enrichment<br />

projects, and graduate<br />

courses available to our faculty. A number of our teachers are<br />

working toward advanced degrees in their disciplines. Eight teachers<br />

each year are able to enroll in the Teachers as Scholars Program,<br />

which offers dozens of multi-day seminars at area colleges.<br />

Our Faculty Enrichment Program provides nearly two dozen<br />

grants a year for teachers to take summer courses, travel to the<br />

countries whose literature and history they teach, and enrich their<br />

minds and bodies in myriad ways.<br />

We are committed to helping our faculty pursue their professional<br />

goals and dreams and every member<br />

of the <strong>Rivers</strong> community can join in that<br />

commitment by supporting the various<br />

funds and activities that promote professional<br />

development. In fact, this year the<br />

Parents’ League is designating the proceeds<br />

of the spring auction for professional development.<br />

<strong>The</strong>y know that ultimately it<br />

is our students who benefit from their<br />

teachers’ knowledge and growth.<br />

<strong>Rivers</strong>’ Board of Trustees Welcomes<br />

Sol Roth P’09, ’11, ’14<br />

Solomon Roth is a former investment manager at Convexity Capital Management in Boston, a hedge<br />

fund founded in 2006. Previously, he was a fund manager at the Harvard Management Company.<br />

A graduate of the University of Illinois, he has an MBA from the University of Chicago.<br />

Roth has been an invaluable member of <strong>The</strong> <strong>Rivers</strong> <strong>School</strong> Investment Committee since 2003.<br />

He previously served on the board of trustees at the West Suburban YMCA and is currently on the<br />

Greenlight Fund advisory board and the Best Buddies of Massachusetts board. Roth and his wife<br />

Donna live in Newton and are the parents of Adam, <strong>Rivers</strong> Class of 2009; Jacob, Class of 2011; and<br />

Sarah, Class of 2014.<br />

• Riparian • Spring 2009


In Memoriam<br />

E d wa r d L . H u t t o n<br />

With the recent passing of Edward<br />

L. Hutton at age 89, <strong>The</strong> <strong>Rivers</strong><br />

<strong>School</strong> has lost a generous benefactor<br />

who impacted the lives of<br />

<strong>Rivers</strong> students in two critical ways. Not only was<br />

he a major contributor to the Defining Moment<br />

Campaign, which financed the construction of<br />

the new athletic center, he also established the<br />

Hutton Scholarship Fund in honor of his daughter,<br />

<strong>Rivers</strong> English teacher Jennie Hutton Jacoby.<br />

For the past five years, Hutton Hall, Hutton<br />

Commons, and Hutton Terrace have been a focal<br />

point of the <strong>Rivers</strong> campus. At the heart of the<br />

MacDowell Athletic Center, these spaces, given in<br />

honor of his daughter and grandson, Miles Hutton Jacoby<br />

’07, have hosted everything from trustee meetings to brownbag<br />

science seminars, study halls to alumni barbecues, as well<br />

as legions of cheering Red Wings fans.<br />

“My grandfather was a storyteller,” said Miles Jacoby. “We<br />

would sit for hours as he told and often retold stories of his<br />

youth, impressing upon me the importance of a good education,<br />

strong character, and moral compass, and of leaving<br />

the world a better place than I found it. He was a teacher and<br />

an inspiration; I have and always will follow my grandfather’s<br />

example. I only hope to one day be as loving and giving as<br />

he was.”<br />

Mr. Hutton wrote in a letter to Jennie Jacoby that “education<br />

for our youngsters is the great hope—perhaps the only<br />

hope—for this world.” His generosity was not limited to <strong>Rivers</strong>,<br />

but enjoyed by other institutions, such as his high school<br />

in Bedford, IN and Indiana University (IU), where he earned<br />

his bachelor’s and master’s degrees. In recognition of his philanthropy,<br />

he also received an honorary Doctor of Laws degree<br />

from IU in 1992 and the IU Foundation’s Herman B.<br />

Wells Visionary award in 2002.<br />

<strong>The</strong> years he spent in the U.S. Army in Germany, and<br />

subsequently in Berlin working for the occupational government,<br />

gave him a global perspective that he felt every student<br />

should acquire during their education. He once wrote, “In a<br />

rapidly changing world, if we are to discharge our international<br />

leadership duties in a responsible manner, we must<br />

produce at an accelerating pace hundreds of thousands of<br />

new leaders with some international experience.” Years later,<br />

Edward Hutton with Miles<br />

and Jennie Jacoby<br />

he established the International Experiences Program at IU to<br />

encourage and support foreign study. He also established a<br />

new Political and Civic Engagement Program and Hutton<br />

Honors College at IU, as well as the Hutton <strong>School</strong> of Business<br />

at Cumberland College in Kentucky.<br />

Mr. Hutton was the founder and chairman of the Cincinnati-based<br />

Chemed Corporation. He was chief executive<br />

officer of the company from 1971 until 2001, and continued to<br />

serve as chairman of a Chemed affiliate, Omnicare, until his<br />

retirement in 2008. According to a recent Wall Street Journal<br />

obituary, he was a firm believer in hard work, loyalty, and<br />

fairness, and his conservative business practices were key to<br />

his success.<br />

“Mr. Hutton was the embodiment of <strong>Rivers</strong>’ core values of<br />

Integritas et Sedulitas, integrity and perseverance,” said Head<br />

of <strong>School</strong> Tom Olverson. “He was a well-respected and hardworking<br />

businessman who used his success to improve the<br />

educational opportunities of hundreds of students. He had<br />

great respect for teachers like his daughter Jennie and understood<br />

the impact a teacher can have on a student’s life.”<br />

Mr. Hutton summed up his outlook on life in his autobiography<br />

as follows, “Be thankful for your success and repay the<br />

debts to those who have helped you. Put back into this world<br />

more than you take out of it. Be most appreciative of your<br />

blessings and give a helping hand to the less fortunate.”<br />

“From his ‘rags to riches’ journey to his tremendous<br />

philanthropy, my father’s life story has been quite inspirational<br />

for my family and me,” said Jennie Hutton Jacoby. “He was a<br />

remarkable man.”<br />

Spring 2009 • Riparian •


Student News<br />

Food for Thought:<br />

Restaurants Redefinedl<br />

By Adam Conner-SimonS with illustrations by Leigh Carroll ’09<br />

<strong>The</strong> grim economic<br />

news of the past few<br />

months has translated<br />

into less shopping,<br />

fewer trips, and<br />

penny-pinching seemingly<br />

at every turn. But everybody’s<br />

gotta eat, right<br />

“I’ve never seen a situation<br />

impact as many people in<br />

the restaurant business as<br />

strongly as this.”<br />

Stephen Simmons ‘77<br />

ment, and an inn for George Lucas’ Skywalker<br />

Ranch in Marin County).<br />

Industry insiders say that patrons<br />

are cutting back on their habits, with<br />

everyone from the regulars to the bimonthly<br />

customers eating out less frequently.<br />

For many diners, even the<br />

experience itself has become a<br />

less extravagant affair. “People<br />

are still going to have their<br />

glass of wine,” says Scott Allen<br />

’79, who serves as general manager<br />

of M.S. Walker, a wholesale<br />

distributor of wines and<br />

spirits. “<strong>The</strong>y just might not go<br />

for a $100 bottle.” In addition<br />

to customers’ more discretion-<br />

A Fiend of Fromage<br />

Matthew Jennings never intended<br />

to run a stable of culinary institutions.<br />

Like the food he makes,<br />

it just happened naturally. “<strong>The</strong> whole life<br />

cycle of our business has been organic and,<br />

in a sense, reactive,” says Jennings ’94,<br />

owner of Farmstead Inc. “<strong>The</strong> bottom line<br />

is that we listen to our customers.”<br />

<strong>The</strong> customers have certainly been<br />

talking. Ever since 2003, when Jennings<br />

and his wife Kate started up a modest, 500-<br />

square-foot Providence cheese shop named<br />

Farmstead, his selections has found a sizable<br />

clientele of retail customers, as well as<br />

30 or 40 wholesale clients from high-end<br />

restaurants all over Rhode Island. Over<br />

time, the regulars began inquiring about<br />

Yes and no. Certainly, we all have to get<br />

our three meals a day. That, however,<br />

doesn’t change the fact that, for many<br />

Americans, dining out has become a<br />

luxury that they are increasingly willing<br />

to forgo.<br />

“I’ve never seen a situation impact<br />

as many people in the restaurant<br />

business as strongly as<br />

this,” says Stephen Simmons ’77,<br />

who has more than 25 years’<br />

experience as an executive chef<br />

for an eclectic mix of restaurants,<br />

hotels, and corporations<br />

in the San Francisco area (including,<br />

most recently, three<br />

restaurants, a catering departbeing<br />

able to have a glass of wine with their<br />

Farmstead cheese, and when a space adjacent<br />

to the store opened up in 2006, the<br />

Jennings family turned it into a wine bar,<br />

which they then later expanded to become<br />

a full-service bistro. Last year, the duo extended<br />

their brand to the business of artisan<br />

sandwiches with Farmstead Lunch.<br />

<strong>The</strong> expansion process has been exciting<br />

for the 32-year-old New England Culinary<br />

Institute graduate, who shuttled between<br />

restaurant jobs for several years<br />

before getting his self-proclaimed “cheese<br />

education” at the nationally renowned Formaggio<br />

Kitchen in Boston in the summer<br />

of 2000, where his globetrotting to farms in<br />

France, Italy, and beyond helped stir his<br />

passion for artisan cheese. “You can’t really<br />

put a price on those experiences,” he says.<br />

“It helped me become a better cheesemonger,<br />

and, eventually, a better chef.”<br />

Nowadays, his position entails overseeing<br />

30 employees, running three separate<br />

food institutions, and often logging 16- or<br />

17-hour days. “It’s delightful madness,” he<br />

says of the job, which finds him doing<br />

everything from preparing<br />

sauces and stocks to replenishing<br />

the petty<br />

cash. “I’ve built my<br />

role to be flexible<br />

so I can be the<br />

‘pinch hitter’ for<br />

all situations.”<br />

• Riparian • Spring 2009


ary spending, the restaurant business has<br />

also been affected by double-digit price increases<br />

on food items like rice and wheat,<br />

as well as unprecedented fuel surcharges.<br />

Such obstacles have forced<br />

many owners to economize in<br />

the form of cheaper cuts of<br />

meat or simplified menus.<br />

Damien De Magistris<br />

’97, general manager<br />

of dante in Cambridge,<br />

says his<br />

restaurant recently<br />

started offering a $35 three-course prixfixe<br />

menu. Josh Huggard ’94, co-owner of<br />

the Upper Crust pizza chain, has reduced<br />

spending at his restaurants by streamlining<br />

everything from trash pick-up to office<br />

supplies.<br />

Others have used more inventive methods<br />

to keep customers’ interest. Matthew<br />

Jennings ’94, owner of the Farmstead cheese<br />

shop in Providence, Rhode Island (see accompanying<br />

profile), has been organizing<br />

workshops about cheese, beer, and wine for<br />

many years. “We started it because we really<br />

value the importance of educating our<br />

customers about our food,” he said. It<br />

doesn’t hurt that it’s also a sure-fire way to<br />

help maintain profit margins.<br />

Many chefs hypothesize that the recession<br />

will hurt high-end establishments<br />

but may not have the same<br />

effect on waiter-free “fast-casual”<br />

brands like Panera Bread or<br />

pizza places such as Upper<br />

Crust. “You’re not going to<br />

lose that many customers if<br />

all they’re ordering is a pizza,<br />

a salad, and a glass of Chianti,”<br />

says Michael Buchhalter ’94, who<br />

owns the Upper Crust franchise in Salem.<br />

But while the sheer size and scope of franchises<br />

put them on slightly more solid<br />

ground, they are far from immune, with<br />

even chains such as <strong>The</strong> Cheesecake Factory<br />

reporting significant decreases in revenue<br />

over the past year.<br />

Rising concerns about energy use and<br />

other environmental issues have also made<br />

sustainability a hot buzzword for the food industry.<br />

“Restaurant owners are getting on<br />

board, just like everyone has to,” says Simmons,<br />

who is currently pursuing a master’s<br />

in green business. “Customers are aware of<br />

sustainability, and are demanding it.”<br />

And while not always practical for restaurants,<br />

many more niche-minded locales<br />

“People are still going<br />

to have their glass of wine.<br />

<strong>The</strong>y just might not go for<br />

a $100 bottle.”<br />

Scott Allen ‘79<br />

“At how many other places<br />

can you finish your meal<br />

and go next door to buy the<br />

prosecco vinegar that was<br />

used on the salad”<br />

Matthew Jennings ‘94<br />

Jennings proudly emphasizes the importance<br />

of culinary education, regularly<br />

holding workshops and tastings of Farmstead’s<br />

cheese, beer, and wine. “We like to<br />

see ourselves as the ambassadors for these<br />

foods,” he says. “<strong>The</strong> more we can educate<br />

customers, the better.” For many years, Jennings<br />

has organized the annual Pasture-to-<br />

Plate Excursion, in which he takes chefs on<br />

trips to New England farms to meet their<br />

cheese producers. “It helps the chefs gain a<br />

whole new appreciation for the craft of<br />

cheese-making,” he says. “<strong>The</strong>re’s nothing<br />

like seeing some city chef ’s eyes when he<br />

first sees an animal getting milked.”<br />

<strong>The</strong> Farmstead businesses are also<br />

unique for offering a side-by-side food retail<br />

and restaurant environment. “This is<br />

the all-encompassing culinary experience,”<br />

he says. “At how many other places can you<br />

finish your meal and go next door to buy<br />

the prosecco vinegar that was used on the<br />

salad”<br />

Even with all of his ventures, Jennings<br />

is always looking for more opportunities to<br />

expand and has kicked around ideas for a<br />

dessert bar and a “classy dive bar.” As he<br />

puts it, “even in these rough financial times<br />

it’s important to continue to seek opportunities<br />

to solidify our name in the marketplace.”<br />

Jennings is most proud of the fact that<br />

his customers run the gamut from welltraveled<br />

cheese connoisseurs to college history<br />

majors. “Heck, we have even turned<br />

cheese haters into fiends of fromage,” he<br />

says. “No matter what category you fall<br />

into, artisan cheese has its place.”<br />

Spring 2009 • Riparian •


pride themselves on buying local. “For us, it’s all about forming<br />

relationships with farmers and supporting local agriculture,” says<br />

Jennings, who also co-owns La Laiterie Bistro. “It allows you to<br />

have what I call ‘honest’ food.”<br />

For many chefs, this emphasis on back-to-the-basics culinary<br />

arts takes precedence over any particular business strategy in the increasingly<br />

shaky restaurant industry. “Keep it simple,” Jennings says,<br />

when asked about the take-home message of dealing with the current<br />

economic climate. “Focus on buying great quality ingredients, and let<br />

the food speak for itself.”<br />

“For us, it’s all about forming<br />

relationships with farmers and<br />

supporting local agriculture.”<br />

Matthew Jennings ‘94<br />

Nantucket, Naturally<br />

If you ask Christopher Willis ’93 what<br />

keeps him excited about the food industry,<br />

the discussion inevitably turns<br />

to the adrenaline-fueled restaurant atmosphere.<br />

“Everything’s accelerated in the<br />

kitchen,” he says. “Things have to be done<br />

quickly, efficiently, and correctly. It’s a rush<br />

unlike anything else.”<br />

Willis’ rise in the restaurant industry<br />

has been surprisingly rapid. In 2001, with<br />

one cooking job under his belt, he was<br />

given the chance to work under famed chef<br />

Jody Adams at Rialto in Boston, which ultimately<br />

opened up opportunities at a variety<br />

of two- and three-star restaurants<br />

in both Beantown and<br />

New York City. Since 2007,<br />

he has served as chef<br />

de cuisine at Nantucket’s<br />

Sfoglia, where between<br />

September and June he is<br />

essentially the restaurant’s<br />

head chef. “It’s definitely<br />

more about dealing with people<br />

and personalities now,” he says, “but<br />

I’m still very hands-on.”<br />

Having spent time cooking in cities<br />

ranging from Boston to rural Vermont,<br />

Willis has a breadth of experience at restaurants<br />

that vary significantly in size and<br />

intensity. Nantucket, for instance, certainly<br />

gives off a more relaxed vibe than New<br />

York—particularly during an off-season in<br />

which it has only 10,000 residents. For Willis,<br />

that translates into a more manageable<br />

work schedule, even if he still has to work<br />

his fair-share of 10-hour days.<br />

For the formerly metropolitan Willis,<br />

however, one of the biggest appeals of<br />

working on Nantucket is being able to build<br />

connections with local farmers. “In the city<br />

it’s all middlemen and sales reps, but here<br />

you’re speaking every week with the farmers<br />

themselves,” he says. “It’s a very visceral<br />

experience to be able to get your hands<br />

dirty and taste the vegetables<br />

coming right out of the<br />

ground.”<br />

Willis’ love for buying<br />

local generally supercedes<br />

his desire to “buy organic,”<br />

especially given the nebulously<br />

defined nature of<br />

that certification. By the<br />

same token, he also emphasizes<br />

the importance of understanding the full<br />

context of a purchase’s environmental ramifications.<br />

“Buying organic isn’t the solution<br />

if the food’s coming over to the island in a<br />

giant, fuel-guzzling ferry-boat,” he says.<br />

One trend Willis has noticed is the sizable<br />

contingent of friends turning to the<br />

farming industry rather than deal with the<br />

hustle and bustle of running, say, a highend<br />

restaurant on the Lower East Side.<br />

“After six or seven years, people get to a<br />

crossroads where they’re either going to<br />

pursue cooking as a lifelong career path, or<br />

“It’s a very visceral<br />

experience to be able to get<br />

your hands dirty and taste<br />

the vegetables coming right<br />

out of the ground.”<br />

Christopher Willis ‘93<br />

do something in the food industry that is<br />

less rigorous,” he says.<br />

He sees the latest economic woes for<br />

the industry as a challenge to work more efficiently<br />

with limited resources. “As chefs<br />

focus more on the quality of their ingredients,<br />

they will begin to more closely examine<br />

the character of the product being sold<br />

to them,” Willis says. “I think of it as a way<br />

to respond to these challenges with enduring<br />

changes that benefit the long-term future<br />

of the industry.”<br />

• Riparian • Spring 2009


Student News<br />

Parent News<br />

Senior Parent Reception<br />

Spirits were high as parents of the Class of 2009 gathered this fall<br />

at the home of Laurie and Scott Schoen to kick off senior year.<br />

History teacher Amy Enright spoke briefly and passionately about<br />

how much she has benefited from faculty enrichment grants at <strong>Rivers</strong>,<br />

including grants to chaperone a student trip to China and to take graduate<br />

courses at Harvard University. <strong>The</strong> Schoens both echoed her feelings,<br />

reminding parents that the students are the ultimate beneficiaries<br />

of their teachers’ enthusiasm and expertise. Gifts from parents of seniors<br />

are traditionally designated for faculty development through the<br />

Faculty Enrichment Fund.<br />

John Barstow and Genie Ware<br />

Nina DelFavero and Deanna Cowan<br />

Hosts Scott and<br />

Laurie Schoen<br />

Scott Schoen with Robert and Jackie Lapides<br />

Deirdre and Corey Griffin<br />

Ellen Ades and Head of Upper<br />

<strong>School</strong> Patti Carbery<br />

Tom Bigony and<br />

Jim Connors<br />

Head of <strong>School</strong><br />

Tom Olverson,<br />

Laurie Schoen,<br />

and Jack<br />

Dempsey<br />

Genie Barstow, Peggy Walsh and faculty<br />

member Amy Enright<br />

Spring 2009 • Riparian •


Student News<br />

earning awards in all of the different disciplines<br />

we teach,” says Art Department chair<br />

David Saul. “It clearly demonstrates the<br />

passion and energy of the <strong>Rivers</strong> faculty<br />

working with our student artists.”<br />

On Campus<br />

Winter play How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying<br />

Accolades<br />

<strong>Rivers</strong> Musicians<br />

Take Home Jazz Awards<br />

In January, both the jazz combo and big<br />

band at <strong>The</strong> <strong>Rivers</strong> <strong>School</strong> were selected<br />

from a pool of more than 100 schools in<br />

the Northeast to compete in the first annual<br />

Charles Mingus Competition at the<br />

Manhattan <strong>School</strong> of Music (MSM) in New<br />

York. <strong>The</strong> two groups were each among the<br />

five finalists in their respective categories at<br />

the event, which took place as part of a<br />

three-day “Mingus Summit” at MSM in<br />

February.<br />

Casey Berman ’09 and Tom Chalmers<br />

’10 both received individual awards for<br />

Outstanding Soloist during the summit.<br />

Fall musical Much Ado About Nothing<br />

“I wanted to personally congratulate<br />

you for the fine work you’ve done with your<br />

students,” wrote Sue Mingus, the widow of<br />

the acclaimed jazz composer for whom the<br />

festivities are named, to <strong>Rivers</strong> jazz director<br />

Philippe Crettien. Mingus commended<br />

the school for having both of its groups<br />

chosen from a competitive applicant pool<br />

consisting predominantly of large music<br />

performance schools.<br />

“It’s great to be honored by Ms. Mingus<br />

and such an esteemed school as MSM,”<br />

says Crettien. “This truly is a huge achievement<br />

for <strong>Rivers</strong>.”<br />

22 <strong>Rivers</strong> Students Honored<br />

with Boston Globe Art Awards<br />

In February, 22 students from <strong>Rivers</strong> were<br />

honored with Boston Globe Scholastic Art<br />

Awards. Selected from more than 5,200<br />

applicants across Massachusetts, <strong>Rivers</strong> students<br />

won a total of 13 Honorable Mentions<br />

and four Silver Key awards, while five<br />

students won the prestigious Gold Key<br />

Awards—Adrienne Anderson ’09, Shylana<br />

Roman ’09, and Charlie Rugg ’09, Page<br />

Cochran ’12, and Katherine Mecke ’13.<br />

Gold and Silver Key art was on display in<br />

Boston during the month of February, after<br />

which the Gold Key pieces traveled to New<br />

York City to be juried on the national level.<br />

In all, more than half of the school’s entries<br />

were honored in the competition.<br />

“<strong>The</strong>se awards are a testament to the depth<br />

of the arts program at <strong>Rivers</strong>, with students<br />

<strong>Rivers</strong> Goes Global<br />

with International Dinner<br />

In November, <strong>Rivers</strong> held its fifth annual<br />

International Night in the Berwind Auditorium.<br />

With food, music, and art from 16<br />

distinct cultures, the event featured Greek<br />

dancing and performances by the <strong>Rivers</strong><br />

jazz combo and the Afro-Mediterranean<br />

musical group Atlas Soul. More than 200<br />

students, parents, faculty, and staff attended<br />

the festivities, representing countries that<br />

include Guatemala, Indonesia, Ethiopia,<br />

and Columbia, among many others.<br />

<strong>Rivers</strong> Gives Back<br />

with Thanksgiving Food Drive<br />

<strong>The</strong> <strong>Rivers</strong> <strong>School</strong> Council organized a<br />

successful campus food drive the week before<br />

Thanksgiving, with several hundred<br />

pounds of food collected and distributed to<br />

the Natick Food Pantry, the Weston Senior<br />

Center Food Pantry, and A Place to Turn in<br />

Natick, among other places.<br />

International Night<br />

• Riparian • Spring 2009


A <strong>Rivers</strong> tradition for nearly 20 years,<br />

the annual drive featured strong participation<br />

from students, staff and faculty as they<br />

donated, organized, and shipped out nonperishable<br />

food items ranging from soup<br />

cans to cake mix. “It’s Thanksgiving, and<br />

helping people is what you do,” said <strong>Rivers</strong><br />

Director of Community Service Jeanette<br />

Szretter. “Throughout the years this has always<br />

been important for us, and in the current<br />

economic climate, the need is greater<br />

than ever.”<br />

Athletics<br />

Rugg Named All-American,<br />

Leads Soccer to N.E. Finals<br />

In addition to his All-State and All-New<br />

England honors, Charlie Rugg ’09 was one<br />

of four high school soccer players in Massachusetts<br />

to be named a National Soccer<br />

Coaches Association of America (NSCAA)<br />

All-American this past November.<br />

<strong>The</strong> boys’ soccer team captain, who led<br />

the Independent <strong>School</strong> League (<strong>IS</strong>L) in<br />

scoring this year by a commanding 21<br />

points, helped <strong>Rivers</strong> finish second in the<br />

<strong>IS</strong>L and earn a spot in the finals at the New<br />

England Preparatory <strong>School</strong> Athletic Council<br />

(NEPSAC) tournament.<br />

Packing<br />

up for the<br />

Thanksgiving<br />

Food Drive<br />

<strong>Rivers</strong> girls’ basketball wins<br />

NEPSAC Title<br />

<strong>The</strong> <strong>Rivers</strong> girls’ basketball team won the<br />

New England Class B Championship over<br />

Pomfret Academy last month. Forward Tayra<br />

Melendez ’12 had 19 points, 10 rebounds<br />

and four assists to earn tournament MVP<br />

honors.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Red Wings (18–6) also got a strong<br />

performance from guard Megan Kerbs ’12,<br />

who added 12 points, and guard Sara Berthiaume<br />

’11 with eight points. Center Clare<br />

Sullivan ’11 had four free throws at the end<br />

of the game to help seal the win for <strong>Rivers</strong>.<br />

“It went as well as we could have ever<br />

hoped,” said coach Bob Pipe. “We played<br />

our very best basketball.”<br />

<strong>The</strong> winning season included the title<br />

at the 39th annual <strong>Rivers</strong> Holiday Tournament<br />

in December when the team defeated<br />

Milton Academy in the championship<br />

game. <strong>The</strong> boys’ team found success as well,<br />

advancing to the second round of the tournament.<br />

<strong>The</strong> games drew strong attendance<br />

even in the midst of a massive snowstorm.<br />

<strong>The</strong> girls’ ice hockey team capped off<br />

their own impressive season with a tournament<br />

run. Defeating North Yarmouth Academy<br />

(ME) 7–0 at home, the Red Wings lost<br />

a tough semifinal contest against Southfield<br />

<strong>School</strong>.<br />

Jillian Dempsey Helps US Hockey<br />

Win Gold at World Championships<br />

In January, Jillian Dempsey ’09 won a gold<br />

medal playing for the USA Women’s<br />

Hockey Under-18 National Team at the International<br />

Ice Hockey Federation (IIHF)<br />

World Championship in Fussen, Germany.<br />

Dempsey helped the US defend its world<br />

title by defeating Canada 3–2.<br />

“As soon as [the winning goal] went in,<br />

we were all jumping off the benches into a<br />

big pigpile on the ice,” says Dempsey. “It<br />

was an exhilarating feeling.”<br />

Jillian was one of only 22 players across<br />

the country to be selected for the U-18<br />

team. Jillian will continue to play hockey<br />

next year at Harvard University, hoping to<br />

qualify for the U-22 and, ultimately, the US<br />

Olympic team.<br />

“It was so great to put on that USA jersey<br />

and represent my country,” she says.<br />

“And I’m hoping that it won’t be the last<br />

time.”<br />

Jillian Dempsey ’09<br />

Spring 2009 • Riparian •


Alumni Profile<br />

Jim Lowell ’79, P’15:<br />

A Positive Take on America’s Future<br />

By Christine Martin<br />

Jim Lowell has been analyzing the<br />

stock market for more than twenty<br />

years as editor of Fidelity Investor,<br />

ETF Trader, and <strong>The</strong> Rankings Service;<br />

chief investment strategist for Adviser<br />

Investments; and president of Fundworks,<br />

Inc. He is the author of several books on<br />

investing as well as a steady stream of poetry<br />

and appears regularly on Marketwatch<br />

and NECN. Jim will be the recipient of the<br />

Alumni Excellence Award at the Reunion<br />

Dinner at <strong>Rivers</strong> on May 16.<br />

We caught up with him recently and<br />

found a bit of optimism in his outlook for<br />

America’s financial future.<br />

When the Riparian interviewed you in<br />

2002, the market was reeling in the<br />

aftermath of 9/11. Where are we today<br />

<strong>The</strong> current crisis is unprecedented in<br />

scope and scale. It has shaken not simply<br />

companies and even industries to their<br />

core, but it has underscored a pervasive<br />

sense of helplessness and hopelessness<br />

which has shaken investors to their core<br />

beliefs in investing. It is not the belief that<br />

Capitalism has hit an iceberg, it is more a<br />

sense that perhaps Capitalism was the iceberg<br />

to begin with. Nothing feels safe. No<br />

assumptions are secure. It is, as the German<br />

Romantic philosopher G.W.F. Hegel<br />

once quipped, “<strong>The</strong> night in which all cows<br />

are black.” That being the case, I take solace<br />

from history’s unyielding desire to repeat<br />

itself; better days will turn up. Between<br />

now and then, I’d recommend watching<br />

the news with the sound off and taking any<br />

sound bite about our current predicament<br />

with more than a grain of salt. Put it another,<br />

more hopeful way—Holderlin, in his<br />

poem Patmos, proposes, “Wo aber Gerfahrist,<br />

wachst/Das Rettende auch”—where danger<br />

lies, there the saving ground presents itself.<br />

Has your own “belief system” in investing<br />

changed drastically<br />

Since my awakening at <strong>Rivers</strong> in 1977, my<br />

own belief system continues to evolve; the<br />

market has a random chance of uplifting or<br />

upbraiding my views, no matter how well<br />

considered they are. I’m a staunch advocate<br />

of diversification among types of investments<br />

across different asset classes to better<br />

account for the fact that today’s sage is<br />

often tomorrow’s fool. I have also always<br />

focused at least as much of my time and attention<br />

on managing risk as I have on delivering<br />

return. I enlist a unique tool and<br />

perspective in my pursuits: one of my companies<br />

holds the largest proprietary database<br />

of individual manager track records.<br />

This database allows me to answer a key<br />

question: which managers have (or lack)<br />

the skill sets to manage whatever environment<br />

we’re in. Currently, I’m focused on<br />

managers who weathered the 1989-1992<br />

real-estate led banking crisis and resultant<br />

market meltdown well. Cleverness and<br />

luck are haphazard. Knowledge, intelligence,<br />

and experience matter.<br />

Overconsumption has received its share<br />

of the blame, and yet we’re told to start<br />

buying again to get the economy going<br />

Where’s the healthy balance<br />

We’re witnessing the convergence of several<br />

types of overindulgence and the desire<br />

to first control then better manage them.<br />

Whether it’s our culture’s ironic obsession<br />

with obesity and celebrity chefs, or Washington’s<br />

command for obeisance to fiscal<br />

conservatism and profligate stimulus, or<br />

Wall Street’s projection of prudence and<br />

pell-mell pursuit of profits, a healthy balance<br />

is hard to find. In such moments of<br />

imbalance, however, we all learn the necessity<br />

of balancing acts as opposed to merely<br />

acting balanced. That’s a healthy inclination.<br />

At the end of the day, I believe that<br />

we’ll be in better shape for having gone<br />

through this current crucible. Meister Eckhardt’s<br />

plaint that ‘pain is the quickest beast<br />

to carry you to perfection’ rings true. So<br />

does Chevy Chase’s Ty Webb quip in Caddyshack,<br />

“A flute with no holes is not a<br />

flute;” the sour, sub-prime note of products<br />

that claimed to be one thing, turning out to<br />

be nothing, are nothing new. Neither is the<br />

fact that good and bad policies may get unjustly<br />

punished or rewarded; that’s politics.<br />

But the bottom line for investors will be<br />

that good companies will survive based on<br />

being able to balance, rather than cook,<br />

their books. And, as my daughter knows<br />

thanks to her 6th grade Latin teacher, Ms.<br />

Favreau, caveat emptor.<br />

10 • Riparian • Spring 2009


You have studied and taught religion,<br />

so you must be attuned to morality and<br />

ethics. How do you reconcile this inclination<br />

with being in a profession where<br />

people seem to be increasingly unethical<br />

I have never seen a separation between<br />

Capitalism and morality, which is not the<br />

same thing as saying that I have never seen<br />

immoral and/or unethical capitalists. I<br />

don’t wake up thinking, “today I will make<br />

money and that will make me a better person’<br />

anymore than I might think that if I<br />

am a better person,” I am more likely to be<br />

a better money manager. Crooks have to<br />

live with themselves just like we do, and if<br />

conscience isn’t a good guide, it will be the<br />

bars which tax the soul even if one lives<br />

scot free. If ethics can be viewed as a code<br />

of conduct for a community, and morality<br />

can be viewed as the mannered expression<br />

of that code among that community’s<br />

members, then history has only revealed<br />

the indominatable desire for, and the imperfect<br />

of achievement of, a state of either<br />

in any construct: religious, political, social,<br />

economic. Greed has its converts, fear has<br />

its adherents, power its proponents. Ideology<br />

and idolatry are always clapping. <strong>The</strong><br />

current cult of personality, which seeks to<br />

elevate or scapegoat individuals and misalign<br />

stereotypes with archetypes, feels as<br />

democratic as a coronation at a witch trial.<br />

Matthew 10:36: <strong>The</strong> foes shall be they of<br />

your own household.<br />

Americans hear about impact on the<br />

US and other major markets, but do you<br />

think they realize the effect this situation<br />

is having on third world countries<br />

Global growth and global risks are two<br />

sides of our age’s coin. It’s hard to put that<br />

coin into an ethical jukebox and not hear<br />

the blues. <strong>The</strong>re have been such significant<br />

advancements in human care from cultural<br />

awareness to major pharmaceutical treatments<br />

that it is nearly overwhelming to see<br />

how uncaring and inhumane the treatment<br />

of whole populations still can be. Now,<br />

with the health of the most powerful countries<br />

in the world in question, the concerns<br />

of uplifting the downtrodden are vulnerable<br />

to being downtrodden themselves. But,<br />

as has always been the case, our unique<br />

strength as a country is that we are, in the<br />

main, a composite of those who once were<br />

downcast and downtrodden. We have more<br />

than an educated notion of doing the right<br />

thing; we have an ingrained, empathetic<br />

understanding of helping not only our<br />

neighbors but those completely unrelated<br />

to and geographically far removed from us.<br />

Americans are strongest in times of greatest<br />

weakness. We give no quarter to failing<br />

to pursue inalienable rights for all.<br />

Do you keep your poetry writing separate<br />

from your business writing<br />

On the surface, I suppose I look like Yeat’s<br />

swan—calm and collected and gliding on<br />

an air of certainty. But, like Yeat’s swan, I’m<br />

mostly tumult and business underneath.<br />

<strong>The</strong> tumult is born of being open-eyed and<br />

open-minded in a world often motivated<br />

by and celebratory of blinders. Sometimes,<br />

I’m moved to champion what I see, other<br />

times I feel compelled to challenge what’s<br />

Nominate an Alumnus<br />

there, sometimes I watch football with a<br />

passion that would make a crow blush—<br />

and if my passion didn’t make that crow<br />

blush, my vocabulary would. I don’t make a<br />

big distinction between writing about the<br />

world while investing in it and investing in<br />

the world while writing in it. I do think<br />

that the markets have rhythms all their<br />

own; it’s my job to be attuned to them. I<br />

do think that writing poetry is part of my<br />

own rhythm—as I go on, that beat goes on,<br />

and vice versa. Interestingly, what moves<br />

me to invest in writing, and through writing<br />

to invest, is the existential enjoyment I<br />

derive from the infinity of my finitude—<br />

what the pre-Socratic philosopher Heraclitus<br />

phrased as not being able to step in the<br />

same river twice. I’ve never stepped into<br />

the same market twice. I’ve never stepped<br />

into the same poem twice. I’m certainly not<br />

stepping in the same <strong>Rivers</strong> today with my<br />

daughter as when I was fortunate enough<br />

to be here before. Yet, I enjoy the ability to<br />

appreciate distinct moments equally as<br />

much and have yet to tire of trying to better<br />

comprehend and express what being a<br />

part of such rivers means to and for me,<br />

sink or swim.<br />

E<br />

stablished in 2001, <strong>The</strong> <strong>Rivers</strong> <strong>School</strong> Alumni Excellence Award is presented<br />

by the Alumni Association to members of the <strong>Rivers</strong> community who display<br />

extraordinary achievement within their career field or through an outstanding<br />

commitment to social, political, or other volunteer causes. <strong>The</strong> purpose of the<br />

Award is to highlight the professional and volunteer achievements of select members<br />

of the <strong>Rivers</strong> community and in so doing inspire <strong>Rivers</strong> students to pursue<br />

their passions.<br />

When nominating a <strong>Rivers</strong> alumnus, please include the following information:<br />

• Name and class year<br />

• Address, phone number, email address<br />

• Title, company or industry<br />

• List of professional achievements, professional, and civic commitments<br />

• Other information relevant to the candidate’s professional contributions<br />

Please submit nominations to Christina Grady at c.grady@rivers.org.<br />

Spring 2009 • Riparian • 11


I s R i v e r s C r e a t i n g<br />

<strong>The</strong> Renaissance Student <br />

By Adam Conner-Simons<br />

Tall and soft-spoken, carrying<br />

himself with a calm confidence<br />

and a gentle smile, Charlie Rugg<br />

’09 is a quiet and unassuming<br />

character on the <strong>Rivers</strong> campus. If his demeanor<br />

does not suggest an All-American<br />

soccer player so much as, say, a<br />

pensive sketch artist, it may be<br />

because…well, he’s both.<br />

Emily Creedon ’09 is similarly<br />

tough to pin down. While<br />

she is frequently involved in<br />

school theater productions and<br />

plays piano for the jazz band,<br />

you wouldn’t want to box her<br />

in as the artsy type—she’s also<br />

an All-Scholastic softball player<br />

and was the only high school<br />

student in the country to present research<br />

at an international science conference this<br />

past summer.<br />

Rugg and Creedon are undeniably interesting<br />

personalities at <strong>Rivers</strong>, and the<br />

school is not shy about acknowledging<br />

their accomplishments (and those of many<br />

of their peers). But the stories of these students,<br />

with their diverse experiences mixing<br />

art, academics, athletics, and more, beg<br />

the question: are they truly representative<br />

of <strong>Rivers</strong> Perhaps just as important, does<br />

<strong>Rivers</strong> actively foster such Renaissance men<br />

and women, or would they turn out that<br />

way regardless of the school they attend<br />

<strong>The</strong> answer, it seems, is not as cut-anddried<br />

as one might hope. <strong>Rivers</strong> certainly<br />

deserves much of the credit for instilling in<br />

students the importance of a liberal arts<br />

education - for starters, by requiring students<br />

to take six full trimesters of art<br />

classes, including three upper-level courses.<br />

“It’s a continuous learning process, usually<br />

spread out over three or four years,” says<br />

Head of Upper <strong>School</strong> Patricia Carbery.<br />

“This challenges students to go far beyond<br />

their comfort zones and develop creative<br />

skills they never thought they had.”<br />

For every uninterested kid who may<br />

gripe at the prospect of taking two full<br />

years of arts courses, there’s a<br />

student like Rugg who might<br />

not have otherwise thought to<br />

take such classes but ended up<br />

enjoying it and excelling (if his<br />

slew of student art awards is<br />

any indication).<br />

Besides the art requirement,<br />

there is also the simple<br />

fact that <strong>Rivers</strong> organizes sports<br />

practices, music rehearsals, and<br />

other events without significant<br />

scheduling conflicts. “You can do three<br />

seasons of sports and still play in the school<br />

bands year-round,” says athletics director<br />

Jim McNally, “which is hard to come by at<br />

a lot of high schools.” Henry Eisenhart ’08,<br />

for instance, was on the soccer, basketball,<br />

and baseball teams at <strong>Rivers</strong> while also<br />

playing trombone in the jazz band.<br />

And while it would be difficult to discern<br />

between causality and correlation, many<br />

members of the <strong>Rivers</strong> community cite special<br />

programs and workshops<br />

that they believe help inform<br />

students’ perspectives as early<br />

as middle school—including the<br />

mandatory 7th-grade media<br />

literacy class and the annual<br />

three-day leadership program,<br />

which Head of Middle <strong>School</strong><br />

Susan McGee says “fosters a<br />

sense of exploration and risktaking<br />

that permeates into the<br />

classroom and becomes completely integrated<br />

into the <strong>Rivers</strong> environment.”<br />

More influential than any individual<br />

classes or activities, however, is the open,<br />

inclusive culture that <strong>Rivers</strong> tries to promote.<br />

At another school, a 18-year-old soccer<br />

star like Rugg might be ostracized by<br />

his sports team if he professed a love for<br />

fine art. At <strong>Rivers</strong>, though—a school that<br />

holds weekly meetings that feature announcements<br />

of arts and sports awards<br />

alike—interests of all kinds are encouraged<br />

by students, faculty, and staff. “One week<br />

six different people came to the art room<br />

asking if they could see Charlie’s latest portrait,”<br />

says art teacher Catelin Mathers-<br />

Suter. “At other places it might not be cool<br />

to excel in the arts, but here it’s something<br />

students strive for and celebrate.”<br />

Such a culture also in some small part<br />

diverges from the typical high school experience<br />

filled with jocks, nerds, theater<br />

geeks, etc. While students certainly don’t<br />

pretend that <strong>Rivers</strong> is completely immune<br />

from such clique distinctions, the school’s<br />

status as a small private institution—with<br />

intimate classes, special academic programs<br />

and unique curricular requirements—helps<br />

encourage exploration, self-discovery and<br />

a community conducive to Renaissance<br />

students. “<strong>The</strong>re definitely are cliques here,”<br />

Rugg says, “but you wouldn’t be<br />

judged harshly if you stepped<br />

out of your group.”<br />

Students’ freedom to explore<br />

numerous paths is further<br />

re-affirmed by their teachers’<br />

mirroring multiplicity of interests.<br />

From science department<br />

chair Stewart Pierson, a former<br />

semi-professional soccer player<br />

who also dabbles in music and<br />

12 • Riparian • Spring 2009


Softball Science<br />

It looked like any other science<br />

conference. In a 27-story hotel in<br />

Reno, a group of more than 30<br />

professionals from the cutting-edge<br />

field of mass-spectometry imaging<br />

(MSI) were gathered in a room with a<br />

PowerPoint. All the usual suspects<br />

were there: distinguished-looking professors,<br />

middle-aged researchers, and<br />

a smattering of twentysomething graduate<br />

students, all dressed in suits and<br />

engaging in good-natured banter about<br />

their work.<br />

In the middle of it all was 17-yearold<br />

<strong>Rivers</strong> senior Emily Creedon. Surrounded<br />

by researchers who had been<br />

conducting MSI research for decades,<br />

Creedon had learned the technology<br />

in seven days and done lab work for<br />

all of seven weeks.<br />

“I guess you could say I was a little<br />

nervous,” Creedon says with a laugh<br />

as she recalls her presentation at the<br />

Federation of Analytical Chemistry<br />

and Spectroscopic Societies (FACSS)<br />

annual conference. At the same time,<br />

after finishing a <strong>Rivers</strong> science internship<br />

over the summer at Bruker Daltronics,<br />

a science manufacturing company<br />

in Billerica, she took the challenge<br />

in stride—particularly for someone<br />

who had never done lab research<br />

before.<br />

Paul Kowalski, who served as<br />

Creedon’s supervisor at Bruker, wasn’t<br />

surprised with her impressive knowledge<br />

of the material. “<strong>The</strong>se are ideas<br />

that most advanced Ph.D. students<br />

are trying to grasp,” he said, “and yet<br />

here she was, piecing the concepts<br />

together herself.”<br />

In addition to her duties in the<br />

lab, Creedon was also able to dabble<br />

in other aspects of the operation, from<br />

making sales visits to meeting with<br />

the company’s R&D department. “It<br />

“<strong>The</strong>se are ideas that most<br />

advanced Ph.D. students<br />

are trying to grasp, and yet<br />

here she was, piecing the<br />

concepts together herself.”<br />

Paul Kowalski, Bruker Daltronics<br />

was great to see a big corporation from the<br />

inside,” she said. “<strong>The</strong> business experience<br />

I gained was invaluable.”<br />

Besides her science research and a<br />

course load that includes four AP classes,<br />

Creedon has been involved in numerous<br />

extracurricular activities. She has performed<br />

in several <strong>Rivers</strong> stage productions<br />

(including last year’s “<strong>The</strong> Mouse That<br />

Roared”), plays piano for the big band, volunteered<br />

for State Representative candidate<br />

Brian O’Connor this fall, and is an All-<br />

Scholastic softball player at <strong>Rivers</strong>. Free<br />

time What’s that “I had to give up my<br />

fantasy football team this year,” she says<br />

with a sigh. “But I’m never bored!”<br />

Most recently, she started <strong>Rivers</strong>’<br />

first debate team with the help of head<br />

of school Tom Olverson and advisor<br />

Bill McGinty. “I love debate because<br />

I’m very opinionated and logical to a<br />

fault,” she says. “It’s like a tennis match,<br />

where you’re volleying back and forth<br />

and trying to beat your opponent’s<br />

point.”<br />

While Creedon isn’t sure what she<br />

wants to major in at college—she is<br />

looking mainly at liberal arts colleges,<br />

and may go to business school after<br />

that—she’s happy to keep her options<br />

open with a plethora of academic and<br />

extracurricular interests.<br />

“<strong>The</strong> good thing about being involved<br />

in so many things is that I have<br />

a broad range of experiences and can<br />

connect with many different types of<br />

people,” she says. “I know that whatever<br />

I end up doing, I’ll be prepared.”<br />

Spring 2009 • Riparian • 13


Student News<br />

but I didn’t really know that much about<br />

soccer,” says Rugg. “My coaches helped<br />

me develop the skills that I needed mentally—like<br />

staying focused and making<br />

the right decisions on the field.”<br />

This past season was a successful one<br />

for the Red Wings, as Rugg led the team<br />

to a second-place finish in <strong>IS</strong>L and a spot<br />

at the finals of the New England Preparatory<br />

<strong>School</strong> Athletic Council (NEPSAC)<br />

tournament. Rugg’s athletic prowess garnered<br />

considerable attention from college<br />

scouts, with schools ranging from Boston<br />

University to the University of Connecticut<br />

vying to offer him scholarships. He<br />

ultimately elected to stay close to home at<br />

Boston College. “It’s a perfect fit for me,”<br />

he says. “It’s a great school, academically,<br />

and they really support athletes there.”<br />

And while he’s open to pursuing art in<br />

college, he speaks cautiously when discarpentry,<br />

to Tim Clark, an art teacher<br />

who also serves as a boys’ tennis coach, the<br />

faculty’s varied concentrations<br />

re-enforce the unspoken ethos<br />

of well-roundedness at <strong>Rivers</strong>.<br />

“When you’ve got a teacher who<br />

plays a sport, and an instrument,<br />

and does community<br />

service on the side,” Head of<br />

<strong>School</strong> Tom Olverson says, “it’s<br />

inevitable that that kind of behavior<br />

is echoed in his or her<br />

students.” <strong>The</strong> school itself also<br />

helps encourage such talent and<br />

diversity through annual faculty enrichment<br />

grants for special study, travel, graduate<br />

school, and sabbatical projects.<br />

Beyond the question of whether wellroundedness<br />

at <strong>Rivers</strong> is the exception<br />

rather than the rule is an equally important<br />

chicken-and-the-egg conundrum: are these<br />

students successful because of <strong>Rivers</strong> or because<br />

of their own inherent abilities and<br />

motivations<br />

“<strong>The</strong>re are definitely kids who would excel<br />

here anyway [without <strong>Rivers</strong>’ help],” says<br />

Rugg. Indeed, Director of Admissions<br />

Gillian Lloyd says that<br />

<strong>Rivers</strong> is drawn towards applicants<br />

who exhibit a variety of<br />

passions, though she cautions<br />

that there are benefits to making<br />

efforts to recruit more singularly-focused<br />

students, as well.<br />

“We want the core of the community<br />

to have well-rounded<br />

attributes so they can spill into<br />

all of the different<br />

campus activities,” she says, “but<br />

you also want to have kids who<br />

are, in a sense, ‘specialists,’ because<br />

they are going to help<br />

drive the programs and really<br />

give that hockey team or orchestra<br />

something extra.”<br />

Furthermore, a lot of the<br />

students make their mark in<br />

ways that cannot be attributed<br />

to <strong>Rivers</strong>-related activities. Jake Solomon<br />

’09, a strong student who plays drums for<br />

the jazz band, spends his weekends as a<br />

concert-lighting director and has lent his<br />

technical expertise to such music venues<br />

as the Bank of America Pavilion in Boston.<br />

Bryan Schoen ’09, a varsity basketball<br />

player and top scorer for the math club,<br />

started up his own business selling paintball<br />

equipment at the age of 14 and has<br />

earned the unusual distinction of being<br />

the inspiration for a character in an upcoming<br />

Xbox video game. As tempting as<br />

it may be to focus on the typical<br />

trifecta of academics, athletics<br />

and arts, it’s important to<br />

recognize that well-roundedness<br />

extends to community<br />

service, work experience and<br />

even examples of entrepreneurship<br />

that you wouldn’t<br />

necessarily see on campus.<br />

At the same time, just<br />

because students prosper out-<br />

<strong>The</strong> Art of Soccer<br />

His soccer accolades are impressive<br />

and extensive—<strong>Rivers</strong> team captain,<br />

the league-leading scorer in<br />

the Independent <strong>School</strong> League (<strong>IS</strong>L) by a<br />

21-point margin, an All-American, and an<br />

invited member of the New England Revolution’s<br />

under-18 youth team.<br />

What many people might not be aware,<br />

however, is that <strong>Rivers</strong> senior Charlie Rugg<br />

has a flair for another, seemingly divergent<br />

talent: art. An award-winning portrait artist,<br />

he’s been taking drawing and painting<br />

classes all four years at <strong>Rivers</strong> and has what<br />

teacher Catelin Mathers-Suther describes<br />

as “an amazing eye and an almost photographic<br />

understanding of space.” He won a<br />

first-place award at last year’s Small Independent<br />

<strong>School</strong> Arts League (S<strong>IS</strong>AL) show,<br />

as well as a prestigious Boston Globe Gold<br />

Key Award this year. “You could profile<br />

14 • Riparian • Spring 2009<br />

“You could profile him on just<br />

his art or just his athletics.”<br />

Robert Pipe,<br />

Associate Director of Athletics<br />

ing since 3rd grade. A casual player in elementary<br />

school, he got more serious about<br />

the sport in 6th grade when he joined the<br />

FC Greater Boston Bolts club team under<br />

Boston University assistant coach Francis<br />

Okaroh. Rugg credits Pipe and Okaroh as<br />

important mentors for developing his game.<br />

“Before 9th grade I had physical speed,<br />

him on just his art or just his athletics,” says<br />

Robert Pipe, who has been his soccer coach<br />

at <strong>Rivers</strong> for four years. “He’s a special kid in<br />

many different ways.”<br />

Rugg’s first and still strongest passion,<br />

however, is soccer, which he has been play-


Student News<br />

side of the <strong>Rivers</strong> environment doesn’t mean<br />

their school experiences play no part. <strong>The</strong><br />

general emphasis on student involvement<br />

and the substantial arts and sports requirements<br />

at <strong>Rivers</strong> often steer kids towards<br />

interests that they might not normally pursue.<br />

“<strong>Rivers</strong> does a great job of not limiting<br />

students in any way,” says Science Department<br />

chair Kim Kopelman. “If they’re interested<br />

in science, they could still do art,<br />

or sports, or something else entirely.”<br />

Ultimately, there is a prevailing sense at<br />

<strong>Rivers</strong> that students are the sum of their<br />

collective experiences, rather than molded<br />

completely by one influence over another.<br />

“I think it’s a combination of the strength<br />

of the teachers and programs, the high<br />

standards we set, and a school environment<br />

that is supportive of many different<br />

pursuits,” says Olverson. “I wouldn’t claim<br />

that we are creating Renaissance students<br />

out of thin air, but I definitely think we do<br />

a good job of providing opportunities and<br />

a culture conducive to well-roundedness.”<br />

cussing his future plans. “Going pro is<br />

always in the back of my mind,” he says,<br />

unveiling a smile just ambiguous enough<br />

to make you wonder which profession he<br />

might be referring to . . .<br />

Lighting Up the Stage—<br />

Do you ever think about how a rock<br />

concert gets put together Contrary to<br />

what you might assume from Spinal<br />

Tap, band members don’t just pile out of their<br />

dressing rooms, stumble onto the stage and<br />

start playing. Each show requires significant<br />

amounts of time, effort and money that go into<br />

set-up, sound and lighting, and just one snafu<br />

from someone on the sidelines can be the difference<br />

between perfection and disaster.<br />

Jake Solomon is one such person who<br />

keeps things running smoothly backstage.<br />

Scaling the high ladders, double-checking the<br />

bulbs, and overseeing the lighting boards, he<br />

has done lighting work at the 5,000-seat Bank<br />

of America Pavilion and has a regular weekend<br />

gig at <strong>The</strong> Center for the Arts in Natick<br />

(TCAN). He’d help out during the week, too,<br />

but he’s got another job that occupies his 9-to-<br />

5: full-time high school senior at <strong>Rivers</strong>.<br />

“For me, doing the lights<br />

is kind of like being an<br />

extra instrument.”<br />

Jake Solomon<br />

Solomon has been immersed in the music scene from an early age, his father<br />

Frank having spent more than 20 years managing rock artists that include Dreamtheater<br />

and Deep Purple guitarist Steve Morse. “Every time we went to shows and he<br />

had to take care of some business, I’d get dumped in the lighting area,” Solomon says<br />

with a smile. “So I watched people working backstage for a long time.”<br />

In 2004, the then-13-year-old Solomon decided to give it a go himself. A Natick<br />

native, he talked to TCAN executive director Dave Lavalley, who also happened to be<br />

his former soccer coach. Helping out with high school rock shows, Solomon proved<br />

to be a quick study and has since been promoted as the chief lighting designer for<br />

TCAN’s weekend concert programming.<br />

While lighting is relatively straightforward for simple “guy with a guitar” gigs,<br />

bigger concerts allow Solomon to flex his creative muscle as a lighting technician.<br />

“For those shows, I try to learn the music ahead of time,” he says. “I’ll get there early<br />

to set up different spotlights and pick out specific parts that I’ll change the light for.<br />

A lot of it, though, I end up figuring out as it happens.”<br />

Solomon’s experience reflects his commitment to volunteering, a quality that<br />

<strong>Rivers</strong> highly encourages through its programs. Says Lavalley: “Jake has really demonstrated<br />

service to the community with this nonprofit work.” Having logged more<br />

than 1,200 volunteer hours at TCAN, Solomon can safely say that he’s “quite a bit<br />

over the required 30 hours [of community service].”<br />

As for his future prospects, Solomon is interested in a career as a booking agent<br />

or manager, just like his father, and has been looking mostly at colleges with music<br />

business programs. Even if he doesn’t continue his career as a lighting director, he<br />

says he’ll never forget his experiences at TCAN: “For me, doing the lights is kind of<br />

like being an extra instrument,” he says. “In a way, you really get to be part of the<br />

band.”<br />

Spring 2009 • Riparian • 15


Grandparents Day<br />

Simone Blake ’14 with Daniel and Berthe Blake and Grady and Lloyd Cox<br />

Grandparents’ Day brought more than 100 grandparents of Middle <strong>School</strong> students to attend classes<br />

and get a better sense of their grandchildren’s educational experiences at <strong>Rivers</strong>. All across campus,<br />

they listened attentively to discussions ranging from current events to algebra, participated in science<br />

classes, sketched self-portraits, and conversed in Spanish, French, Chinese, and more. Guests ended the<br />

morning with musical performances and a luncheon with the students.<br />

Max Rubin ’15 with Michael Rubin and Ginny<br />

and Roy MacDowell<br />

Homecoming<br />

Alison Kraft ’15 with Myra and Bob Kraft<br />

Justin Snider ’15 with David Snider<br />

and Leonard Ansin<br />

Under picture perfect skies and warm breezes, <strong>Rivers</strong> fans turned out to cheer on the Red Wings.<br />

Alumni, parents, and students alike enjoyed the chili and chowder on Hutton Terrace, and the Class<br />

of 2008 in particular enjoyed comparing college stories.<br />

Waiting for the action to begin<br />

Superfans!<br />

2008 classmates reunite<br />

Getting a<br />

jump on<br />

Halloween<br />

More ’08s<br />

catching up<br />

16 • Riparian • Spring 2009


Student News<br />

Alumni News<br />

Message from Alumni Association<br />

President Charlie Abrams ’88<br />

Charles<br />

Abrams<br />

’88<br />

It seems the only thing on the upswing<br />

recently has been <strong>Rivers</strong>. Alumni have<br />

been turning out in force for our<br />

events. People everywhere are anxious<br />

to talk, about the economy, about jobs, about<br />

where we’re headed as a country. <strong>The</strong> power<br />

and benefits of networking have never been<br />

more apparent, whether it is to offer advice<br />

or to find reassurance. Reaching out to others<br />

in the <strong>Rivers</strong> community can be a great<br />

resource these days. <strong>The</strong> Special Events<br />

Committee has been working along with the<br />

Alumni Office to increase the opportunities<br />

for alumni to network as well as just have fun<br />

socializing. Take a minute to look through the<br />

alumni section for familiar faces at our recent<br />

events and think about joining us at one of<br />

the many activities planned for this spring.<br />

I also want to mention the increasingly<br />

important role that the Alumni<br />

Association plays in <strong>Rivers</strong>’ financial aid<br />

program. <strong>The</strong> proceeds from the annual<br />

golf tournament, now in its ninth year,<br />

provide direct tuition assistance to <strong>Rivers</strong><br />

students. Alumni and parents, as players<br />

and sponsors, have enabled the Association<br />

to offer aid to a growing number<br />

of students each year, ranging from talented<br />

athletes to musicians to dedicated<br />

community service volunteers. <strong>The</strong> tournament<br />

is always a great day of golf and<br />

socializing and a positive way to support<br />

deserving students at <strong>Rivers</strong>.<br />

So please add <strong>Rivers</strong> to your calendar<br />

when an invitation arrives at your<br />

door or in your e-mail. You’ll enjoy reconnecting,<br />

networking, and helping strengthen<br />

the <strong>Rivers</strong> community along the way. If you<br />

have any suggestions for improving our Alumni<br />

Association or you are interested in taking a<br />

more active role, please contact me at cabrams@<br />

delaquality.com or Associate Director of Development<br />

Marney Hupper at m.hupper@<br />

rivers.org.<br />

Evon Burroughs ’98,<br />

Matt Williamson ’98,<br />

Ben Henry ’99<br />

Jessica Panaccione<br />

’00 and Lindsay<br />

George ’00<br />

Thanksgiving Tradition<br />

Dozens of alumni came and went in a steady stream throughout<br />

the evening at the pre-Thanksgiving gathering for alumni in<br />

Boston. <strong>The</strong> event, held at Boston Beerworks, has become a<br />

<strong>Rivers</strong> tradition for students returning from college for the long holiday<br />

weekend as well as local alumni stopping by before heading home.<br />

Jessica<br />

Panaccione<br />

’00, Dave<br />

Garsh ’99,<br />

Ricki Askin<br />

’00, Bridget<br />

O’Connor<br />

’00, Melissa<br />

Greenberg<br />

’00, Marc<br />

Stroum ’98,<br />

and Sofia<br />

Teixeira ’00<br />

Alex Chadis ’98, Marc Stroum ’98, Chris Fuller ’99, Dave<br />

Garsh ’99, David Meropol ’03, Scott Olser ’98<br />

Spring 2009 • Riparian • 17


Student News<br />

Alumni News<br />

Run for <strong>Rivers</strong>:<br />

Marathon 2009<br />

Growing up in Ashland,<br />

Ian Greenblatt ’04 was a<br />

perennial fan of the Boston<br />

Marathon. While not a longdistance<br />

runner himself, Ian saw<br />

his own passion for soccer and lacrosse<br />

mirrored in the runners’<br />

dedication to their sport. He was<br />

as enthusiastic a fan along the race<br />

course as he was on the balconies<br />

of Haffenreffer and Benson Gymnasiums,<br />

where he watched <strong>Rivers</strong>’<br />

basketball teams run the floor.<br />

After his untimely death in an<br />

automobile accident less than a<br />

month after his <strong>Rivers</strong> graduation,<br />

Ian’s family established a scholarship<br />

fund to support <strong>Rivers</strong> students<br />

who shared Ian’s dedication<br />

in the classroom and on the athletic<br />

fields.<br />

This year, <strong>Rivers</strong> is fielding a<br />

team to run the Boston Marathon<br />

to raise money for the Ian Andrew<br />

Greenblatt ’04 Scholarship Fund.<br />

“This is a great way to help grow<br />

the fund and keep Ian’s memory<br />

alive,” said his mother Stephanie<br />

Greenblatt. “We’re thrilled so many<br />

from the <strong>Rivers</strong> community are<br />

running or walking, volunteering,<br />

or supporting the runners and the<br />

fund,” she said. She has also recruited<br />

friends and family members<br />

who are runners for “Team Ian.”<br />

New York City Reception<br />

About 30 <strong>Rivers</strong> alumni living and working in the New York City area<br />

gathered this fall for a reception at Club Metropolitan at Arbitron, Inc.<br />

Alumni Association President Charlie Abrams ’88 welcomed the lively<br />

group and encouraged continued involvement with the <strong>Rivers</strong> community,<br />

while Head of <strong>School</strong> Tom Olverson updated them with some of the current<br />

achievements and future goals of the school’s strategic plan. <strong>The</strong> reception was<br />

organized courtesy of Pierre Bouvard ’79, president of sales and marketing<br />

at the international media and marketing research firm Arbitron.<br />

Head of <strong>School</strong> Tom Olverson<br />

and David Olverson ’02<br />

Elissa Hintlian ’99, Becca Roblin ’99,<br />

David Snider ’99<br />

Charlie Abrams ’88 and<br />

Brian Snerson ’86<br />

Above: Tim<br />

Ward ’03, Dave<br />

Olverson ’02,<br />

Grady O’Gara<br />

’03, Carolyn<br />

Bass ’01<br />

To participate in any way, contact<br />

Chris Martin at c.martin@rivers.<br />

org or 339-686-2230. Contributions<br />

to the fund may be mailed to the<br />

Alumni Office at <strong>Rivers</strong> or made<br />

online at www.rivers.org, click<br />

on “Giving.” Write Greenblatt<br />

Marathon in the comments field.<br />

18 • Riparian • Spring 2009<br />

Melissa Greenberg ’00 and<br />

Ricki Askin ’00<br />

Jared Gerstenblatt ’93, Leigh Gerstenblatt,<br />

Tracey Kaplowitz ’93, Kevin Reilly ’93


Student News<br />

Alumni News<br />

<strong>The</strong> Jarzavek Chair Affair<br />

<strong>The</strong> memories flowed along with the wine at the inaugural Jarzavek<br />

Chair Affair—an Italian food and wine tasting at La Campania<br />

in Waltham in November. Alumni, parents of alumni, current<br />

parents, and faculty gathered to honor one of <strong>Rivers</strong>’ most dynamic former<br />

teachers and support the endowed teaching chair established in his name.<br />

Susan Cohn, John Rozario ’80, and<br />

Lewis Cohn ’81<br />

Honorary<br />

trustee of the<br />

corporation<br />

Louis<br />

Grossman ’67<br />

and former<br />

trustee<br />

Arnold Scott<br />

Greg Cahill ’77, trustee Joan Walter, and Jack Jarzavek<br />

Jack Jarzavek with Carolyn Snider,<br />

Jamie Carlin ’81 and Jeff Snider ’82<br />

Hank Miller ’77, Jeff<br />

Lowenstein ’77, and<br />

Scott Allen ’79 with<br />

one of the sommeliers<br />

(second from right)<br />

Steve Sugarman ’92 with<br />

former faculty member<br />

Tom Walsh<br />

Student Reps Have Voice on Council<br />

For the third year, student representatives on the <strong>Rivers</strong> Alumni Council have helped<br />

council members gain insight into the concerns and priorities of the student body.<br />

This years’ representatives, seniors Liza Warshaver, Becca Nichols, and Kat Gourinovitch,<br />

run the spectrum from student advisor to school co-president to Russian language<br />

aficionado. <strong>The</strong>ir interests range from ice hockey, tennis, yearbook, and advanced<br />

art to co-founding a local Special Olympics basketball team.<br />

In addition to attending Council meetings, the student representatives act as liaisons<br />

to the senior class and volunteer during Annual Fund phonathons. “<strong>The</strong> phonathons are a<br />

great opportunity to chat with the many people who love our school and are very generous<br />

in giving towards the fund,” said Liza Warshaver. “It was difficult this year because of the<br />

economy. <strong>Rivers</strong> alumni, however, are very supportive, and I was very impressed to hear<br />

from so many people donating even in these tough times.”<br />

Kat Gourinovitch, Liza Warshaver, and<br />

Becca Nichols, all Class of 2009<br />

Spring 2009 • Riparian • 19


Student News<br />

Alumni News<br />

Stephen Salny ’73: Fascinated for Life<br />

It all began in college while cruising the<br />

posh neighborhoods of Lake Forest, 30<br />

miles north of Chicago. Stephen Salny<br />

found himself drawn to a dozen or so<br />

French, Georgian and Mediterranean-style<br />

houses dotting the countryside. Further investigation<br />

revealed that they had all been<br />

designed by one David Adler in the first<br />

half of the 1900s. That led to a three-decade<br />

fascination with Adler, his sister, interior<br />

designer Frances Elkins, and her greatest<br />

disciple, Michael Taylor. And the 75-page<br />

independent study he wrote on Adler as a<br />

college senior, under the auspices of Franz<br />

Schulze, renowned art and architectural<br />

historian, has led to three lavishly illustrated<br />

books published by W.W. Norton<br />

& Co, with the latest one published in<br />

January.<br />

Writing, researching, and lecturing,<br />

however, is not Salny’s real job. By day, he<br />

oversees a third-generation property management<br />

business in Baltimore where he<br />

has lived for 32 years. “My grandfather was<br />

a New England labor attorney who invested<br />

in real estate down here years ago. I always<br />

knew I’d go into the family business,” said<br />

Salny. “In fact, at Lake Forest I majored<br />

in economics because it was as close as I<br />

could get to a business major at a liberal<br />

arts college.”<br />

At night and on weekends, Salny writes,<br />

or chases the endless details needed to document<br />

his subjects’ work, be it floorplans,<br />

photos, correspondence, or interviews with<br />

owners. “I enjoy the chase and I enjoy the<br />

challenge,” said Salny. “I’m what I like to<br />

call ‘diplomatically aggressive’ in getting<br />

what I need for a book.”<br />

Despite his lack of formal training, Salny’s<br />

books have met with world-wide critical<br />

acclaim. For the new book on Taylor, he<br />

did a two week tour on the West Coast,<br />

with receptions at design centers, museums,<br />

and cultural centers. He is a frequent<br />

lecturer at architectural forums such as<br />

those held at the Winterthur Museum in<br />

Delaware. He has contributed numerous<br />

articles to Architectural Digest and has also<br />

been profiled in the New York Times.<br />

“I published my first piece on Frances<br />

Elkins and David Adler in 1980 in Architectural<br />

Digest. <strong>The</strong>n, in 1995, an archivist<br />

from Lake Forest College asked my opinion<br />

about a room thought to be by Adler<br />

and his sister, and I realized, with the urging<br />

of Schulze, that I should really publish<br />

my research in a book.”<br />

New Englanders might recognize David<br />

Adler for his design of “Castle Hill,” the<br />

famous Crane Estate on the North Shore.<br />

He often collaborated with his sister, Frances<br />

Elkins, who designed the interiors in<br />

many of his houses, albeit with a more dramatic<br />

and avant-garde flair. She established<br />

her own thriving business on the West<br />

Coast at a time when women were a rarity<br />

“I enjoy the chase and<br />

I enjoy the challenge,”<br />

said Salny. “I’m what<br />

I like to call ‘diplomatically<br />

aggressive’ in getting<br />

what I need for a book.”<br />

in the work place and interior designers in<br />

the United States were few and far between.<br />

She in turn had tremendous influence on<br />

Michael Taylor who created the traditionbreaking<br />

“California Look,” bringing outdoor<br />

elements indoors, mixing trees with<br />

antiquities, warm whites with bright accent<br />

colors.<br />

Salny’s day job does impact his writing<br />

projects. “<strong>The</strong>re is a lot of legality and business<br />

negotiation in doing a book like this<br />

with licensing rights and so on, so it is similar<br />

to the skills I use on a daily basis,” he<br />

said. Plus, he has had some fun putting<br />

those design theories to use in the model<br />

apartments for his properties.<br />

—Christine Martin<br />

20 • Riparian • Spring 2009


Student News<br />

Alumni News<br />

Class Notes<br />

Veterans’ Day<br />

at <strong>Rivers</strong><br />

Rod MacPhie, Court Dwyer, John Lafferty<br />

and Steve Cline, all Class of ’66 at the<br />

wedding of Court’s son<br />

C l a s s o f 1 9 3 6<br />

<strong>The</strong>odore C. “Ted” Haffenreffer, Jr. passed<br />

away on Dec. 27, 2008 at home in Chestnut<br />

Hill, Massachusetts. He is survived by<br />

his wife and five children. Ted studied<br />

chemistry in England, trained at the Tuborg<br />

Brewery in Copenhagen, then oversaw<br />

his family business, Haffenreffer &<br />

Co., until its closing in 1964. <strong>The</strong> Haffenreffer<br />

Gymnasium is named in honor of<br />

the family and their dedication and generosity<br />

to <strong>Rivers</strong>.<br />

C l a s s o f 1 9 4 2<br />

Ken MacPherson wrote, “Our first great<br />

granddaugher was born a year ago on<br />

my birthday. We were given a joint party<br />

this year in honor of both of our birthdays!”<br />

C l a s s o f 1 9 4 3<br />

Pax Stodder e-mailed: “Thanks for the<br />

“old” news about classmates. I have been<br />

retired from Internal Medicine for five<br />

years and trying to stay connected from<br />

here in Los Angeles.”<br />

C l a s s o f 1 9 4 8<br />

Jim Hoftyzer has been retired for 12 years<br />

and is happily living in Northern California’s<br />

“Wine Country.”<br />

C l a s s o f 1 9 5 1<br />

Stew Sanders wrote, “I attended from<br />

1945 to 1949. My two older brothers attended<br />

during that period; R. Wyman<br />

Sanders was two years ahead of me and<br />

lives in Los Angeles; Henry M. was three<br />

years ahead and passed away in 2008.”<br />

C l a s s o f 1 9 5 4<br />

Henry Bentley Bradley recently reconnected<br />

with <strong>Rivers</strong>. He spent a half year at<br />

<strong>Rivers</strong> in 1949 before being hospitalized<br />

with polio for a year. He graduated from<br />

Stanford, worked in the auto industry as a<br />

car designer, and designed matchbox<br />

cars for Mattel. He recently donated his<br />

design collection to the Museum of Fine<br />

Arts in Boston and had an exhibition of<br />

his Matchbox car drawings at Children’s<br />

Hospital this winter.<br />

C l a s s o f 1 9 5 5<br />

Jim Scharnberg e-mailed, “I’m a retired<br />

advertising and creative art director, living<br />

in Malvern, Pennsylvania. I work with<br />

area land and watershed conservation<br />

organizations in Chester County to protect<br />

working farms and woodlands from<br />

rapid, uncontrolled development. I am<br />

also a master of a pack of hounds, and<br />

our hunt has been recently recognized<br />

by the Pennsylvania State Senate for its<br />

conservation efforts and its 60th anniversary<br />

of hunting in the county.”<br />

C l a s s o f 1 9 6 9<br />

Jim Schuknechts wrote regretfully that<br />

Mark DeGuzman passed away in March<br />

of 2008 as a result of complications following<br />

a long battle with kidney disease.<br />

C l a s s o f 1 9 7 1<br />

Rick Bedrick wrote, “I was unable to<br />

attend the Jarzavek Chair Affair event in<br />

November, but Jack’s influence on me at<br />

<strong>Rivers</strong> was profound and still felt today. I<br />

am thrilled he is being honored in this<br />

way!”<br />

Mark Kelly wrote, “I gave a eulogy for<br />

Jack Falla, brother of Patrick Falla ‘85.<br />

Jack worked at <strong>Rivers</strong> in the late 1970’s in<br />

public relations and development and<br />

was the varsity hockey coach. After <strong>Rivers</strong><br />

Spring 2009 • Riparian • 21


Student News<br />

Alumni News<br />

he went on to write books, worked for<br />

Sports Illustrated and the NHL, and taught<br />

at Boston University until his death.”<br />

C l a s s o f 1 9 7 3<br />

Wayne Durkin and his wife Rita welcomed<br />

their third grandchild in September.<br />

“Rita and I spend summers at our<br />

home on Northwood Lake, NH, and thoroughly<br />

enjoy the quiet boating ventures<br />

on this 880 acre lake. We also do some<br />

kayaking, as well as vacationing at Gulf<br />

Shores, Alabama. I retired from HP after a<br />

25 year career in Supply Chain Management.<br />

I now work for Expeditors International,<br />

a freight forwarding company,<br />

with Marc Manna, father of Tom ’10.”<br />

C l a s s o f 1 9 7 9<br />

Patrick Crowley e-mailed, “Thought <strong>Rivers</strong><br />

might be interested in my new pastime—winter<br />

mountain climbing. I use<br />

Mt. Washington in NH as a training<br />

ground in the winter. It’s a nine hour up<br />

and back climb. Once last October the<br />

gusts at the top were clocked 92 mph<br />

and we had to wait until they dropped to<br />

below 80 mph to start our descent.”<br />

Patrick Crowley ’79, right, atop Mount<br />

Washington in December 2007 with<br />

climbing companion<br />

C l a s s o f 1 9 8 1<br />

Stu Birger wrote, “I have been living in<br />

California for 14 years and have two children<br />

with my wife Debi. Allyson is 9 and<br />

Blake is 6.”<br />

C l a s s o f 1 9 8 8<br />

Baker Bent is living in Ridgeway, Colorado<br />

with his wife and two children.<br />

Dave Liddell noted, “I am truly thankful<br />

for my education at <strong>Rivers</strong> and later at<br />

Providence College. I wish everyone were<br />

as fortunate as I to receive such a gift.<br />

Take care all and I’ll try to make it to a<br />

reunion one of these days. Veritas et<br />

Libertas.”<br />

C l a s s o f 1 9 8 9<br />

Andrew Neustadter wrote to Jack Jarzavek,<br />

“It is great to hear from you. Wish I<br />

knew you were in Italy as I live here now!<br />

My partner Claudia and I moved from<br />

London to Ravenna a few months ago. It<br />

is her childhood home and for me well...it<br />

is a great adventure! Liam Jay Neustadter,<br />

our first child, was born December 4, and<br />

all is well with everyone, mother and<br />

father included.”<br />

C l a s s o f 1 9 8 9<br />

Chris von Rumohr and his wife Amanda<br />

welcomed baby boy Oskar November 11.<br />

C l a s s o f 1 9 9 0<br />

Wiley Osborn was married on November<br />

1, 2008 to Ann Cheng. He works for Conta<br />

Costa County as a G<strong>IS</strong> coordinator and<br />

they live in El Cerrito, California.<br />

C l a s s o f 1 9 9 1<br />

Parker Bent lives in Los Angeles and is a<br />

children’s musician. He stays in touch<br />

with classmates Greg Paraskos and Ben<br />

Tuck.<br />

Christopher Burdick wrote to Jack Jarzavek,<br />

“Noelle Moore and I were married<br />

at the Country Club in Brookline on June<br />

21. Geoff Harris ‘90 was in attendance,<br />

along with my brother Will ’95 who<br />

served as the best man, James Cater ’95,<br />

and G. West Saltonstall ’61. We honeymooned<br />

in Venice, Florence, Barcelona,<br />

and Marbella. <strong>The</strong> museums, food, and<br />

wine were just spectacular and it couldn’t<br />

have been a better trip.”<br />

Dave Kirk and wife Christy welcomed<br />

their third child, Keenan David Kirk, on<br />

August 12.<br />

Jeremy Levine e-mailed, “I am getting<br />

married on March 7 to Lisa Russo and<br />

we’ve planned a nice, long honeymoon<br />

to Thailand and the Maldives to follow.<br />

We are very excited to see the Thai art<br />

and Temples which I understand are<br />

spectacular. I’m currently the vice president<br />

for sales & associate publisher of<br />

Billboard/Billboard.com and have been<br />

here since September, prior to which I<br />

was the associate publisher at Men’s<br />

Journal.”<br />

C l a s s o f 1 9 9 2<br />

Susie Godino Ellis is living in Wellesley<br />

with husband Chris, and enjoying their<br />

two-year-old son, Brady Patrick Ellis.<br />

Andrew Lannon wrote, “I am happy to<br />

keep up with old classmates through<br />

Facebook or LinkedIn. I am working as a<br />

deputy city attorney for the city of Palm<br />

Bay, FL.”<br />

C l a s s o f 1 9 9 3<br />

Jared Gerstenblatt and his wife Leigh<br />

welcomed baby Stella on August 1.<br />

T.J. Hill has been living in Los Angeles for<br />

almost six years. “I’m currently working at<br />

the Disability Rights Legal Center as one<br />

of the program directors. I teach law students,<br />

which is fun. I’m on the Board of<br />

Directors for the ACLU of Southern California<br />

and Vice Chair of the Santa Monica<br />

Disabilities Commission. I’ll be the new<br />

Mental Health Policy Director for the Association<br />

of Community Health Service<br />

Agencies starting in March. It’s a big step<br />

and change for me professionally.”<br />

22 • Riparian • Spring 2009


Student News<br />

Alumni News<br />

C l a s s o f 1 9 9 6<br />

Danielle Bartone is the Director of Special<br />

Projects and Business Development<br />

at Jacob’s Ladder, a neurodevelopmental<br />

learning center founded in 1999 in Atlanta<br />

to treat children with neurological<br />

disorders.<br />

Ben Curtis wrote, “I’m living in Denver<br />

now, working for a production studio out<br />

of LA. I’m working on a Nascar Hotpass<br />

on DirecTV as an associate producer.”<br />

Front: Elizabeth Leary<br />

(Soule) ‘98 and Conan<br />

Leary. Back (L-R):<br />

Mina Kaddis ‘98,<br />

Lauren Mirel ‘98, Kate<br />

McCourt ‘98, Brooke<br />

Hegarty ‘98, Margaret<br />

O’Conor Dean ‘98, Jill<br />

Hoffmeister ’01, and<br />

Becca Soule ’01<br />

Max Praver e-mailed, “Life over here in<br />

Kobe, Japan has been busy as usual but<br />

Chiemi, Emma, and I are doing great! I<br />

will be in Temple University’s doctoral<br />

program in September at their Osaka<br />

campus, pursuing a D.Ed. in Curriculum,<br />

Instruction, and Technology in Education<br />

With Specialization in TESOL. I’m looking<br />

forward to the challenge.”<br />

C l a s s o f 1 9 9 8<br />

Liz Leary, along with a number of <strong>Rivers</strong><br />

classmates attended Elizabeth Soule’s<br />

wedding in August. Elizabeth and her<br />

husband Conan met and still work as<br />

teachers at Tabor Academy.<br />

C l a s s o f 1 9 9 9<br />

Jeffrey Berman married Amanda Bromberg<br />

on October 19th in Ojai, CA. Elissa<br />

Hintlian and Esme Williams attended.<br />

Chris Fuller e-mailed Jack Jarzavek, “I’m<br />

currently working at Yahoo! selling advertising<br />

which is going well. I finished<br />

up my MBA from Babson in September<br />

which felt good.”<br />

Dave Garsh e-mailed, “<strong>The</strong> last ten years<br />

have been flying by. I started a small company,<br />

www.knotboardsetc.com with my<br />

father, and started working at an advertising<br />

agency. I have been working here<br />

In Memoriam: Ian McVey ’03<br />

Looking at photos of Ian McVey from his <strong>Rivers</strong>’ days is a study in contrasts: from a mud-splattered, triumphant football<br />

player to a laurel-crowned Latin prize winner and graduation speaker. Ian’s interests and achievements ran the gamut<br />

from sports to academics with a heavy dose of technology and jazz thrown in.<br />

He kept adding to that list of accomplishments during his years at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute where he was a dean’s list<br />

student with a dual major in computer and systems engineering as well as computer science with a concentration in robotics.<br />

While there, he was elected to membership in two national computer science honor societies, and was enrolled in the institute’s<br />

ROTC program.<br />

After graduation, Ian was commissioned in the United States Marines Corps as a Second Lieutenant. He was a Combat<br />

Engineer Officer assigned to 2nd Combat Engineer Battalion, 2nd Marine Division, Camp LeJeune, N.C. His personal awards<br />

included the Global War on Terrorism Service Medal and the National Defense Service Medal.<br />

Ian’s death last summer as a result of a motorcycle accident near his base was a blow to his family and the <strong>Rivers</strong> community.<br />

Ian and his brothers Jeffrey ’95 and Evan ’05 had practically grown up on the <strong>Rivers</strong> campus where his father John McVey has<br />

taught Latin for nearly two decades. His family has established a financial aid fund in Ian’s name, to give other students the<br />

opportunities he had here at <strong>Rivers</strong> to develop so many facets of his personality.<br />

“Ian was a lifelong athlete and an avid public servant who felt compelled to join the Marine Corps in order to help others,”<br />

said John McVey. “<strong>Rivers</strong> helped him become that person, and we want others to have that chance too.” A memorial service will<br />

be held during Alumni Weekend, on Sunday, May 17 at 2:00 p.m. in Corkin Auditorium.<br />

Contributions to the Ian Thomas McVey Financial Aid Fund may be mailed to the Alumni Office at <strong>Rivers</strong> or given online at<br />

www.rivers.org, (click on “Giving”).<br />

Spring 2009 • Riparian • 23


Student News<br />

Alumni News<br />

Susanna Donahue and US Marine Corps<br />

2nd Lt. David Donahue ’03 at Veterans’ Day<br />

at <strong>Rivers</strong>.<br />

for three years, and just recently we have<br />

opened a marine division. I am looking<br />

into going back to business school.”<br />

Aislynn Rodeghiero works as executive<br />

director of the Abundant Table, a meal<br />

program for those in need in the suburban<br />

cities/towns outside of Boston. “I also<br />

own my own consulting business and offer<br />

non-profit management, organizational<br />

buildups, strategic planning, team<br />

building, educational reform, and general<br />

therapeutic counseling. I will be beginning<br />

my Ph.D. coursework next fall.”<br />

C l a s s o f 2 0 0 1<br />

Jonathan Karelitz is working at Oppenheim<br />

Funds as a financial advisor.<br />

New at www.rivers.org<br />

C l a s s o f 2 0 0 2<br />

Charlotte Lewis wrote, “I completed my<br />

first marathon on June first in the San Diego<br />

Rock N’ Roll Marathon, and I just<br />

wanted to thank all of my classmates for<br />

supporting my fundraiser for the Leukemia<br />

and Lymphoma Society. We raised<br />

$18,330! I’m currently living in New York;<br />

I’ve been hanging out with Maggie Lahey,<br />

Amelia Hutchinson, and Kathryn<br />

Jigarjian as well as Sammy Yazdensetta<br />

and Melanie Platten. I’m happy to say I<br />

have made wonderful friends at <strong>Rivers</strong>!”<br />

C l a s s o f 2 0 0 3<br />

Liz Maynard wrote, “I am living in NYC<br />

and going to grad school at Teachers College<br />

at Columbia University, getting a<br />

masters and certification in elementary<br />

education. I love living in the city on the<br />

Upper West Side and recently ran into<br />

Tim Ward, Grady O’Gara, and Dave Donahue,<br />

all of whom seem to be doing<br />

great!”<br />

C l a s s o f 2 0 0 4<br />

Ricky Kaufman just graduated from the<br />

University of Colorado with a degree in<br />

molecular biology.<br />

Thai Nguyen was featured on Fox News<br />

recently showcasing his new online job<br />

auction site. Called jobaphiles.com, the<br />

site enables workers to post their qualifications<br />

and target salary for a position<br />

listed by an employer. Like an eBay for<br />

jobs, the website allows young workers<br />

to find jobs and employers to stay within<br />

their budgets.<br />

We’re happy to announce that <strong>Rivers</strong> recently launched <strong>Rivers</strong>blog; visit<br />

www.theriversschool.blogspot.com to read more! Also, don’t miss<br />

the new ‘Notable Alumni Athletes’ section of our website on the Athletics page.<br />

Please help us keep this section of our website up to date by sending submissions<br />

to Jim McNally, Athletic Director, at j.mcnally@rivers.org .<br />

C l a s s o f 2 0 0 5<br />

Elise Traub, a senior at Wellesley College,<br />

spends much of her free time on various<br />

animal welfare causes, such as gathering<br />

signatures for the recent petition to ban<br />

dog track betting and volunteering at<br />

Buddy Dog Humane Society Best Friends<br />

Animal Society in Utah. She hopes to attend<br />

law school and work in animal welfare<br />

law.<br />

C l a s s o f 2 0 0 6<br />

Derek Stenquist started at center midfield<br />

for Dartmouth Men’s Soccer this fall.<br />

<strong>The</strong> team went to the Division 1 NCAA<br />

tournament at the #16 seed. <strong>The</strong>y were<br />

the Ivy League champs in 2008 and lost<br />

to #1 Wake Forest in the first round. Derek<br />

studied biology in Costa Rica for the winter<br />

of 2008.<br />

C l a s s o f 2 0 0 7<br />

Bryan Kaufman is a sophomore and is<br />

currently in England at NYU’s London<br />

campus majoring in finance.<br />

C l a s s o f 2 0 0 8<br />

Caite Cutler wrote, “I’m at Villanova and<br />

loving the nursing school.”<br />

Nicole Stenquist won the NESCAC tournament<br />

with Williams’ Women’s Soccer.<br />

<strong>The</strong>y went to the NCAA Division 3 Final<br />

Four and Nicole was named to the All<br />

Tournament Team as a freshman.<br />

D e c e a s e d<br />

Alice Canaday, Sept. 24, 2008, former<br />

piano teacher, <strong>The</strong> <strong>Rivers</strong> <strong>School</strong><br />

Conservatory<br />

Helen F. DeLuca, February 6, 2009, staff,<br />

<strong>The</strong> <strong>Rivers</strong> <strong>School</strong> Conservatory<br />

Jack Falla, September 14, 2008, former<br />

hockey coach, <strong>The</strong> <strong>Rivers</strong> <strong>School</strong><br />

<strong>The</strong>odore C. Haffenreffer, Jr. ’36,<br />

December 27, 2008<br />

Mark deGuzman ’69, March 2008<br />

24 • Riparian • Spring 2009


Alumni Networking Event<br />

More than three dozen alumni were treated to delicious Upper<br />

Crust Pizza and the entrepreneurial adventures of Josh<br />

Huggard ’94, founder of ever-expanding pizzeria chain and<br />

classmate Michael Buchhalter ’94, first franchise owner, at the Willis<br />

House event in early December. Also sharing their expertise were Mark<br />

Chudnow ’74, executive vice-president of Event Temps Catering, and<br />

Ian Meropol ’98, producer at WEEI Sports Radio.<br />

Josh Huggard ’94 and<br />

Michael Buchhalter ’94<br />

Scott Moriyama ’03, Emma Bailey ’03,<br />

and Josh Huggard ’94<br />

Tyson Robb ’02, Adam Wells ’02, and Stephen Robb ’99<br />

Above: Michael<br />

Buchhalter ’94<br />

and Seth Lerner<br />

’78<br />

Left: John<br />

Elander ’81,<br />

Michael Gosman<br />

’81, and Andrew<br />

Gosman ’83<br />

Alumni Council 08–09<br />

President: Mr. Charles J. Abrams ‘88<br />

George C. Alex ‘77<br />

Craig S. Belson ‘78<br />

Gregory H. Cahill ‘77<br />

Robert N. Cleverdon ‘40<br />

Bruce F. Clifford ‘83<br />

D. Mitchell Coddington ‘73<br />

Lewis J. Cohn ‘81<br />

Vincent C. Dwyer ‘66<br />

David J. Feldman ‘62<br />

Clifton P. Gerald ‘77<br />

Jared S. Gerstenblatt ‘93<br />

Lawrence M. Glazer ‘86<br />

Joshua P. Gold ‘89<br />

Andrew D. Gosman ‘83<br />

Jesse D. Greenberg ‘98<br />

Louis J. Grossman ‘67<br />

Michael I. Handler ‘90<br />

Herbert L. Holtz ‘79<br />

Nelson D. Hooe ‘47<br />

Andrew N. Jaffe ‘93<br />

Jeffrey S. Katz ‘95<br />

Howard Leeder ‘84<br />

Timothy T. Lindblad ‘73<br />

Arthur M. Love ‘52<br />

L. Jeffrey Lowenstein ‘77<br />

Stephen J. Masiello ‘83<br />

Lauren E. Mirel ‘98<br />

Thomas M. Navoni ‘78<br />

Nicholas B. Petri ‘72<br />

Lisa H. Raftery ‘93<br />

Robert J. Rand ‘62<br />

Alan D. Rose ‘87<br />

John A. Rozario ’80<br />

Endicott P. Saltonstall ‘59<br />

Richard L. Seegel ‘55<br />

David J. Shemligian ‘86<br />

Edward I. Shifman ‘61<br />

Alfred T. Spalding ‘62<br />

John L. Sperber ‘77<br />

Stephen K. Sugarman ‘92<br />

William J. Sullivan ‘78<br />

James B. Taylor ‘43<br />

Matthew D. Tobin ‘90<br />

Christopher A. Visvis ‘78<br />

Charles M. Warshaver ‘78<br />

Clifford L. White ‘76<br />

William M. Whittemore ‘69<br />

Douglas W. Wooldridge ‘90<br />

Michael P. Zafiropoulos ’82<br />

Spring 2009 • Riparian • 25


<strong>The</strong> <strong>Rivers</strong> <strong>School</strong><br />

333 Winter Street<br />

Weston, MA 02493-1040<br />

Address Service Requested<br />

Non-Profit<br />

Organization<br />

U.S. Postage<br />

PAID<br />

Boston MA<br />

Permit No. 10<br />

<strong>Rivers</strong> admits academically qualified students of any<br />

race, religion, sex, disability, or national origin to all the<br />

rights, privileges, programs, and activities generally<br />

available to its students. <strong>Rivers</strong> does not discriminate<br />

on the basis of race, religion, sex, disability, color, ethnic,<br />

or national origin in our admissions policies, educational<br />

policies, scholarship and loan programs, and athletic or<br />

other school-administered programs.<br />

Please notify us if your phone number, mailing address or e-mail address changes so that <strong>Rivers</strong> can better keep<br />

in touch with you and your family. Contact Brendan Flemming at 339-686-2234 or b.flemming@rivers.org.<br />

Alumni Lacrosse Game · Alumni Day · Golf Tournament<br />

M ay 9 M ay 1 6 M ay 2 6<br />

For more information or to register for these spring events, go<br />

online at www.rivers.org and click on “alumni” or contact Director of Alumni<br />

Programs Christina Grady at c.grady@rivers.org or 339-686-2245.

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