ensights summer 2012

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S U M M E R 2 0 1 2 Into Ensworth School ENSIGHTS A GREAT YEAR! Will Moseley Day roller coasters tiger miles capstone program A GREAT YEAR! Will Moseley Day Roller coasters Tiger miles club Capstone program

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Page 1: Ensights Summer 2012

S U M M E R 2 0 1 2

Into Ensworth SchoolE N S I G H T S

A GREAT YEAR!

Will Moseley Day

roller coasters

tiger miles

capstone program

A GREAT YEAR!

Will Moseley Day

Roller coasters

Tiger miles club

Capstone program

Page 2: Ensights Summer 2012

c o n T E n T s

16 a GrEaT cElEBraTion wi l l mo s E l E Y DaY

an ass E m B lY o n Ea c h ca m P u s

26a GrEaT Ehs PlaY li T T l E sh o P o F ho r r o r s

Ex oT i c Y E T ch a r m i n G

GREAT STuDEnT EFFORT YE a r-lo n G sE r v i c E lE a r n i n G

al l Gr a D E lE v E l s 44

33 GrEaT sEnior EvEnT sTo r Y & so n G sT u D E n T s

cr E aT E a cl a ss Pa i n T i n G

14GrEaT FinDs in ThE crEEk on ca m P u s Ex P lo r aT i o n

in T h E ha r P E T h ri v E r

Page 3: Ensights Summer 2012

THANK YOUTo the Ensworth community for an incredible

twelve years as Headmaster of the Ensworth School. I knew from my first visit to the campus that En-

sworth would be a great place not only for me but also for my children. I cannot express how deeply Jenny and I appreciate your hospitality, generosity, support and friendship. It has been our very great privilege to be a part of this school community that is unique in its strength and in its commitment to what’s best for all our children.

As we move on to embrace future opportunities and challenges, I am completely confident that Ensworth will continue to focus on what’s most important: preparing our children for their future beyond the classroom – preparing them to be people of integrity who are lifelong learners and who contribute to the society in which they live and work. I am excited that David Braemer will come to provide new leadership for Ensworth. His vision and energy will enable the school to continue to move forward, constantly improving its programs and providing an excellent educational experience for each student - an experience that only gets better with each passing year.

I am totally confident that future generations of students and parents will continue to appreci-ate the core of what makes Ensworth a special place: the talent and dedication of our teaching faculty. Hearing our recent high school graduation speakers talk about how much they value their relationships with their teachers, from elementary years on forward, reminds me once again that mentoring by a teacher who genuinely loves his/her students is truly priceless.

Jenny and I have watched our children grow in this remarkable environment, and we have seen Ensworth grow to become a P1-12 school on two campuses with a high school that has charted new paths in many ways among the educational institutions in the Nashville area. This sort of major change and growth doesn’t just happen – it’s the result of many people rolling up their sleeves and working tirelessly to strengthen excellent foundations and create new opportunities in education. That is the spirit that we find to be the essence of Ensworth – we join together as a community, roll up our sleeves, and work together to accomplish great things. I know that spirit will never change, and I look forward to learning about Ensworth’s progress in the future.

It has been a great ride – thank you from all the Moseleys.

Take care of each other, and take care of this place!

Will Moseley 6th Headmaster

Page 4: Ensights Summer 2012

Class of 2012

2 / Ensights

Page 5: Ensights Summer 2012

Carol randolph allen darrington phillips altenbern, Jr.lewis addison armistead Vemily elender barnes Kate spenCer barnes lauren marie barnett Cory lamont batey natalie raine beaman Connor yoiChi binford peter reynolds bream iiishelby alexandra brown raChel erin bryan Kenneth marK bryant, Jr.nan stewart bumpus Kyara alexandria byner benJamin franKlin byrd iVandrew Clifton Campbell amber riCKea Carlton Keshonn d. Carter max Caswell

ethan douglas Christiansen Katherine Jane CoChran mary elizabeth Colton hannah Kaylee Cooper stephen nathaniel Crabtree Caroline arey deaton Jan stallings delozier Kean windsor deVine thomas andrew dooChin william leonard downey sCott Johnston earthman rodney tra Von edmiston elizabeth Coffman elCan allister Caldwell estes draKe weston eVans daniel zaChari eVerett sChuyler george floyd lee handly folK Katherine louise fry Clifford louis garrard

alexander James giger yaniKKa t’Keyah gittens Charles thomas glassford natalie stone glazer taylor addison graham anna leigh grainger eriCa simpson gray alexandra ellen harwell elizabeth ann hogan Kristen deming hollis Katherine lisle hooper Kaitlynn elizabeth JaCKson hannah o’grady Kimbrough JaCK f. King iiiphilip nesbitt Krebs Cynthia brooKe lampley JaCKson dean lundy John reuss maCKowiaK elam o’neal mangum John dupre masterson

lindsey erin miller mitChell riCKman moore miller layson morris eVan thomas mosKal miranda Jean mott matthew millard oglesby Kendall lee oxford wilson riVers patton matthew walKer peaCoCK austin sanders preVost forrest patriCK preVost erin elizabeth puryear leah Kennedy rose reJean feliCia rouse elizabeth barKalow rush Kaitlin elizabeth rye niCholas pride sCanlan anna Carlyle sCarola elizabeth parKer sChooley garney brennan sCott

Keely mCadams shearer Christina ruth slay elizabeth tynes smith stuart elizabeth smith william parKer stallworth Jalen ellis swett Katherine anne thompson Virginia irene underwood Valeria Vitali-birCher zaChary wilson walKer raChel isabelle wallaCe nathan paul watKins riCo alexander watson JaCob luCien west wilson tutwiler west Kaitlin elizabeth white maya arnae white James oliVer wilKins morgan elizabeth wilson

3 / summEr 2012

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sEnior momEnts

4 / Ensights

viEw morE photos on Ensworth’s wEbsitE / gallEry

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5 / summEr 2012

Page 8: Ensights Summer 2012

Jalen Swett is one of a kind. Not one to take the easy road, Jalen has committed to a challenging but rewarding col-lege career in accepting his appointment to West Point Military

Academy. After his time on the West Point campus where he plans to study engineering, he will serve an additional 5 years in the U.S. Army followed by 3 years of inactive duty. Why West Point? “It has the most history –Eisenhower, Lee, Grant – and was begun in 1802,” he says. Besides the physical tests (sit ups, mile run, pull ups, push ups, etc.) he also faced an interview panel for which he couldn’t prepare. He says, “This was definitely the hardest part of my application process.” Counselor Laura Stewart says, “Jalen is a young man of the highest character. As a member of Ensworth’s community, he has distinguished himself as a quiet and poised leader whose contributions have come with only devotion, and little fanfare. He’s made a tremendous impact on our campus.” What will he miss at EHS? “The close knit community that we have here,” he says. As a Project T.A.L.K. facilitator he met weekly with the Dean of Students to plan and lead student discussions about difficult is-sues like racist and sexist thoughts. He says, “I learned so much from the Project T.A.L.K. experience and from my peers in the discussions.”

Libby Rush wants to ‘seize dance now’ although her history of stellar academics could beg this ques-tion. College Counselor Missy Wallace says, “The accept rate

in dance programs is like that of the Ivies - maybe 8%? Libby is very brave to choose this path as it’s a vulnerable and difficult profession.” Why dance? Libby says, “I feel I can always go back to academ-ics. Dance makes me incredibly happy, and my years are limited. I’m listening to my heart in this decision rather than leting the world define my direction for me.” Her goal is to be a professional dancer in a company setting. She says, “I’m stronger in contemporary or modern dance, I feel, and I’ll complete a BFA along with attending Dance Festival in Italy next spring.” Wallace observes that the arts setting Libby has chosen is one the biggest in the country with 2,300 undergrads. It’s more balanced, more academic while being very established and offers great opportunities. Libby’s advice to rising seniors, “Make a plan both within and outside your passion. Write your common app in the summer.”

From Ivies to art conservatories, from military to liberal arts

institutions, EHS students are encouraged to find their best fits.

finding thE right fit

• Wanted a chance to ‘serve my country’• Applied to 10 colleges• First EHS student to attend a military academy

•Noteworthy: Seen as a leader by everyone,A Project T.A.L.K. facilitator, very focused

• Wanted a dance focused institution, a bigger city • Applied to 14 colleges, had 10 live auditions•Noteworthy: danced 20 hrs a week with 4 AP classes• Chose Dance Conservatory of PA, the largest in the country

6 / Ensights

JALEN SWETT

LIBBY RUSH

Page 9: Ensights Summer 2012

These four students symbolize the diversity of college searches

and choices for the Class of 2012.

finding thE right fitCollege

Wilson Patton is described as an incredibly mature student who’s in the top of his class, yet still has the joy of a teenager. College Counselor Laura Stewart, says,

“We didn’t want him to miss out on his high school experience or experience burnout. He’s very driven and works incredibly hard, but he did not need to maxx out on his course load and miss out, we wanted him to have balance in his life. Seeking advice from College Counseling as a freshman was unusual for a first year student but we were delighted to help.” Why did you come to EHS? He says, “I came because here I could be friends with students in all grades, with teachers, and with the staff. At Ensworth, I know that there are many who are really invested in me.” Patton has tried many things including neuroscience research at Vanderbilt with Dr. Kencatania, developing (with friends) a website for his non-profit, and developing a children’s game, a 99 cent app called Flying Meatball, which helps fund his non-profit CharityBandz. Now, he’ll be one of 6 freshmen on the men’s gymnastics squad at Stanford- keep your televi-sion tuned to collegiate sports!

• Wanted a medium sized school, small classes, school spirit, study abroad and great academics• Applied to 8 colleges

•Noteworthy: an outstanding student (7 APs), strong writer, very humble and very coachable

• Always wanted Stanford, sought College Counseling advice freshman year • Took 7 AP classes • Noteworthy: began his own non-profit,set a Guiness Book of World Records• Began gymnastics at the age of 6, practices 20 hrs a week (after his

shoulder surgery heals)

7 / summEr 2012

Lauren Barnett is the ‘whole package.’ She’s eager to live on the Vanderbilt campus in the newly created residential living ‘commons’ area for 1600 freshmen. She says, “I visited many

universities throughout the country and had several wonderful options but Vanderbilt had everything I wanted including study abroad in France.” College Counselor Laura Stewart says Lauren works very hard and despite being naturally reserved, she excelled around the Harkness table. She finished in the top of the class even with a demanding load of 7 AP exams in Statistics, Chemistry, Economics, French Language, Calculus BC and Physics C: Mechanics. Lauren also took hip-hop dance for 3 years and the dance for athletes class. She says, “I loved these classes - the cardio days, the high energy, stretching and yoga - with just 6 boys and 6 girls. Of all my AP classes, I liked Calculus with Mr. Brady the best. I just love the teachers at Ensworth.” Interested in research in math and/or economics, Lauren was busy in the summers, too, with travel volleyball, a service trip to Peru, and working camps for Time to Rise and Kids’ Academy. Her advice to rising seniors? “Don’t put off writing your essays til the last. Take advantage of Ensworth’s essay writing bootcamp!”

LAUREN BARNETT

WILSON PATTON

By: College Counselors Laura Stewart, Joe Brady & Missy Wallace

Page 10: Ensights Summer 2012

8 / Ensights

just thE faCtsAllegheny CollegeAmerican UniversityAppalachian State UniversityArizona State UniversityAuburn UniversityAustin Peay State UniversityBabson CollegeBard CollegeBarnard College Bates CollegeBaylor UniversityBellarmine UniversityBelmont UniversityBerklee College of MusicBerry CollegeBirmingham-Southern CollegeBond UniversityBoston CollegeBoston UniversityBradley UniversityBrigham Young UniversityBryn Mawr CollegeBucknell UniversityButler UniversityCarleton CollegeCase Western Reserve UniversityCentre CollegeChapman UniversityChristian Brothers UniversityClaremont McKenna CollegeClemson UniversityColby CollegeCollege of CharlestonCollege of the Holy CrossCollege of William and MaryColorado CollegeColorado State UniversityColumbia CollegeColumbia UniversityConnecticut CollegeCornell UniversityCornish College of the ArtsCumberland UniversityDallas Baptist UniversityDartmouth CollegeDavidson CollegeDenison UniversityDePaul University

DePauw UniversityDickinson CollegeDillard UniversityDominican University of CaliforniaDrury UniversityDuke UniversityEarlham CollegeEast Tennessee State UniversityEastern Illinois UniversityEastern Kentucky UniversityEckerd CollegeElon UniversityEmbry-Riddle Aeronautical UniversityEmory & Henry CollegeEmory UniversityEugene Lang College The New School of Liberal ArtsFlagler CollegeFlorida A&M UniversityFlorida Institute of TechnologyFlorida Southern CollegeFlorida State UniversityFordham UniversityFranklin and Mtarshall CollegeFurman UniversityGeorgetown UniversityGeorgia Institute of TechnologyGeorgia Southern UniversityGettysburg CollegeGoucher CollegeHamilton College - NYHampden-Sydney CollegeHampton UniversityHanover CollegeHarvard UniversityHaverford CollegeHendrix CollegeHigh Point UniversityHollins UniversityHoward UniversityIndiana University, BloomingtonIndiana University- Purdue University IndianapolisJames Madison UniversityJohns Hopkins UniversityKenyon College

King CollegeKnox CollegeLafayette CollegeLake Forest CollegeLee UniversityLees-McRae CollegeLehigh UniversityLindsey Wilson CollegeLipscomb UniversityLouisiana State UniversityLoyola Marymount UniversityLoyola University ChicagoLoyola University New OrleansLynn UniversityMarian UniversityMarquette UniversityMarymount Manhattan CollegeMassachusetts Institute of TechnologyMcGill UniversityMiami University, OxfordMiddle Tennessee State UniversityMiddlebury CollegeMillsaps CollegeMississippi College Mississippi State UniversityMontana State University, BozemanMorehouse CollegeMuhlenberg CollegeNew England Conservatory of MusicNew York UniversityNorth Carolina A&T State UniversityNorth Carolina State UniversityNortheastern UniversityNorthwestern UniversityOakwood UniversityOberlin CollegeOccidental CollegeOhio Wesleyan UniversityOklahoma State UniversityOregon State UniversityOxford College of Emory UniversityPeabody Institute of the

Johns Hopkins UniversityPepperdine UniversityPoint Park UniversityPratt InstitutePrinceton UniversityPurdue UniversityQuest University CanadaReed CollegeRhodes CollegeRochester Institute of TechnologyRollins CollegeRose-Hulman Institute of TechnologySaint John’s UniversitySaint Louis UniversitySalem CollegeSamford UniversitySanta Clara UniversitySavannah College of Art & DesignScripps CollegeSewanee: The University of the SouthSkidmore CollegeSmith CollegeSouthern Adventist UniversitySouthern Methodist UniversitySouthwestern UniversitySpring Hill CollegeStanford UniversityStetson UniversitySuffolk UniversitySUNY College of Environmen- tal Science & ForestrySyracuse UniversityTennessee State UniversityTennessee Technological UniversityTennessee Wesleyan CollegeTexas Christian UniversityTexas State University- San MarcosThe Catholic University of AmericaThe Citadel, the Military College of South CarolinaThe College of WoosterThe George Washington University

College Acceptanc

es ’09–’12

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9 / summEr 2012

Ensworth High School has 404

graduates in its last 4 classes

with 1575 acceptances by 271 colleges

The New School for Jazz & Contemporary MusicThe Ohio State UniversityThe University of AlabamaThe University of ArizonaThe University of MemphisThe University of Montana, MissoulaThe University of North Carolina at Chapel HillThe University of Texas, AustinThe University of the ArtsTransylvania UniversityTrevecca Nazarene UniversityTrinity UniversityTroy UniversityTufts UniversityTulane UniversityTusculum CollegeUnion CollegeUnion UniversityUnited States Military AcademyUniversity of Alabama at BirminghamUniversity of ArkansasUniversity of Arkansas at MonticelloUniversity of California at BerkleyUniversity of California at DavisUniversity of California at Los AngelesUniversity of California at Santa CruzUniversity of ChicagoUniversity of CincinnatiUniversity of Colorado at BoulderUniversity of ConnecticutUniversity of DallasUniversity of DaytonUniversity of DenverUniversity of EvansvilleUniversity of FloridaUniversity of GeorgiaUniversity of Great Falls

University of Illinois at Urbana-ChampaignUniversity of KentuckyUniversity of LouisvilleUniversity of Maryland, College ParkUniversity of Massachusetts, AmherstUniversity of Miami

By: College Counselors Laura Stewart, Joe Brady & Missy Wallace

University of MichiganUniversity of MississippiUniversity of Missouri ColumbiaUniversity of New HampshireUniversity of North AlabamaUniversity of North Carolina at AshevilleUniversity of North Carolina at CharlotteUniversity of North FloridaUniversity of Northern ColoradoUniversity of Notre DameUniversity of OklahomaUniversity of OregonUniversity of PennsylvaniaUniversity of PittsburghUniversity of RichmondUniversity of RochesterUniversity of San DiegoUniversity of San FranciscoUniversity of South AlabamaUniversity of South CarolinaUniversity of Southern

CaliforniaUniversity of Tennessee, ChattanoogaUniversity of Tennessee, KnoxvilleUniversity of Tennessee, MartinUniversity of TulsaUniversity of Utah

University of VermontUniversity of VirginiaUniversity of WashingtonUniversity of Washington, MadisonUniversity of Washington, TacomaUniversity of WyomingUrsinus CollegeUtah State UniversityVanderbilt UniversityVillanova UniversityVirginia Polytechnic Institute and State UniversityWake Forest UniversityWashington and Lee UniversityWashington University in St. LouisWebster UniversityWesleyan UniversityWestern Kentucky UniversityWestern Washington UniversityWestminster CollegeWestmont College

Whitman CollegeWilliams CollegeWofford CollegeXavier University of LouisianaYale University

Bolding indicates matriculation

Page 12: Ensights Summer 2012

10 / Ensights

COLLEGIATE INSIGHTS

Everything I learned about study habits, close-reading,

and class discussion at En-sworth has translated beauti-fully into the college classroom for me. Coming from a school with such a strong background in discussion-based learning, I feel confident conveying my thoughts and ideas to my peers. 

None of my friends’ high schools employed the Hark-ness method, so I had a definite leg up in class discussions. Ensworth’s emphasis on public speaking and exuding confi-dence in class presentations has made me very secure in sharing my opinions.Haley Evans ’10Notre Dame University

It wasn’t the knowledge I gained at EHS that benefitted

me most in college but the way I gained it. Ensworth’s culture of asking questions, discussion and caring about learning more than fact consumption sets it apart for me.

Ensworth encouraged me to start something, like the Broadcast Club, Ensworth Live. Ensworth embraced and nurtured new ideas instead of saying “this is the way our school is and you can only do this.” At Ensworth, with close-reading and Harkness table discussions, you’re really pushed to question why something is the way it is, which helps both in and outside the classroom.

I plan to be a television-based journalist covering sports. My university is the only one in the nation with a convergence

journalism program, which allows students to prepare for the rapidly changing journal-ism industry and learn to cover stories from traditional news channels, such as television, and radio, to blogs and even social media sites.William Joy ’10University of Missouri

Ensworth taught me how to look someone in the

eye and agree to disagree. I learned how to hold my own and know that my opinion is enough. I value the feeling of camaraderie with my teachers and the belief I inherited from them that– with time, patience, and practice, lots of practice— I could achieve anything. Now, more than ever, I realize that Ensworth is a one of a kind high school. Claire Glassford ’10New York University

CENTRE COLLEGEEmmaJulia Jones ’11

CORNELL UNIV.Miles Asafo-Adjei ’09

NEW YORK UNIV.Claire Glassford ’10

NORTHWESTERNChristina Chintanaphol ’09

NOTRE DAME Alex Boehm ’11

Haley Evans ’10

U OF MISSOURIWilliam Joy ’10

U OF RICHMONDHannah Leedle ’11

WASHINGTON USamantha Gaitsch, ’11

WILLIAMS COLLEGEPeter Awad ’11

With only 8 years under its belt and 5 graduating classes, Ensworth High School needed a report card from some collegiates. How did Ensworth High School prepare you for college? How do you compare to your peers? Current goals or after-college plans?

Here are some of their answers.

on how Ensworth prepared me for college

Page 13: Ensights Summer 2012

11 / summEr 2012

T he breadth of EHS course requirements helped

me be more open to classes I wouldn’t normally take if I focused solely on my major. For example, I’ve taken a fresh-man seminar on cryptology, Japanese history, and Linguistics - Sound Patterns in Language. The opportunities at Ensworth –service learning, Capstone, etc.– showed me that there are so many more opportunities to grab in college. I’ve been on an Alternative Spring Break trip, tutored 1st and 2nd generation youth after-school, participated in an externship at Chicago’s Adler School of Psychology, and played in master classes with world-class musicians. This is what the college experience is all about - being open to all the opportunities that surround me and using those experiences to delve into my passions.

I’m enrolled in a 5-year dual degree program here at North-western but plan to continue my research in graduate school in neuroscience. I’m particular-ly interested in communication sciences. I’m a research assistant in the Communication Neural Systems Research Group where we study the role of neurophys-iology in auditory perception and learning. We’re hoping to

develop effective treatment for auditory processing deficits. I’m currently studying how overnight learning of a tonal language affects the acquisition of different speech tones.Christina Chintanaphol ’09Northwestern University

How did EHS prepare me? Ensworth prepared me

with its emphasis on Harkness discussion. I’m in several smaller seminar classes, and feel right at home sitting in a circular arrangement and engaging in discussion. I wish that I still didn’t have to raise my hand to talk, but I have adjusted to that.Alex Boehm ’11 Notre Dame

Having to balance EHS’sclasses with both extra-

curricular dance and college applications senior year really taught me the importance of time management. I also be-lieve the Harkness tables were extremely beneficial. Having learned to discuss maturely with classmates and professors has been incredibly useful. Samantha Gaitsch ’11Washington University

The most valuable skill I learned at Ensworth was

how to interact with professors and take advantage of their knowledge. Simply reading the textbook (if there is one) will not suffice. Ensworth’s low student to faculty ratio and emphasis on student-teacher interactions is a central theme in higher education. Peter Awad ’11Williams College

In college, I’ve yet to feel overwhelmed by the work-

load here. Too, I’ve been able to form valuable connections with the faculty here just like at Ensworth. Hannah Leedle ’11 U of Richmond

After hearing the high school stories of friends,

I realized how grateful I am to Ensworth for its many op-portunities - Capstone, service learning emphasis and its varied projects, the EHS teacher-stu-dent relationship – which make my experience stand out from those of my peers. EmmaJulia Jones ’11Centre College

Learning how to be an active participant in the

classroom has benefitted me the most. During my fresh-man year, my professors in discussion sessions would often comment on my willingness to jump in and contribute. As a basketball player, time management has been very important. At Ensworth, having free periods where it was up to me to decide how to use my time taught me to get my work done before practices or games. I’ve been challenged academically like I never thought I would be, but I’ve never been overwhelmed and I have Ensworth to thank for that. Ensworth more than prepared me for the rigorous course work at Cornell.Miles Asafo-Adjei ’09Cornell University

Page 14: Ensights Summer 2012

L ifelong learners? These Capstone Scholars learned more than they anticipated as they began their individual processes but then re-invented them and became even more inspired. Funny that their faculty mentors learned a great deal, too.

CAPSTONE

12 / ENSighTS

The

Program

Miller Morris is a Capstone pioneer. She created a 4-week summer intensive called “Paso a Paso” designed to increase academic development for 4th graders for whom English is a second language. Similarly, she has selected and hired high school counselors with some proficiency in Spanish who can also benefit from this program. “It’s a win-win situation,” says David Whitfield who mentored Morris. “She is a go-getter who interviewed mem-bers of the Hispanic Chamber of Commerce and located a local site (Harding Academy) to host this brand new camp. Amazing!” Tom Jackoboice, Capstone

Director, says “These students are Ensworth’s most passionate learners on their individual topics. These kids are so lucky to have found topics that they love enough to study independently.” Jim Miller who mentored Mary Elizabeth Colton called her “a rare learner who is both artist and intellectual.” Jeanne Hubert says, “When Carol Allen approached me about studying the Great Depression, I was a little underwhelmed. Well, leave it to Carol to turn her laser-like focus to a topic I knew well and turn me into a student!” Carol’s original plan of focusing on Tennessee dur-

ing the Depression changed to a real interest in children during this particular time. “Time management became a big issue,” says Mary Eliza-beth Colton. Students had to balance their research and their writings along with AP classes, drama practices, col-lege applications and inter-views and varsity sports. Capstone students were both passionate about their subjects and committed to in-depth study. Erin Miller says, “My Capstone project has helped shape me into a more accepting and understanding human being.”

Rachel BRyan

Belmont caRol allen

Denison UniveRsity

maRy elizaBeth colton

BUcknell

Ben ByRD

smU

“I had to contend with writing for a deadline while still being inspired, digging deep to keep from being quantitative.”

“Life was harder yet simpler during the Great Depression. Everyone I interviewed said it made them stronger, wiser and a better person.”

“In studying the evolution of theater and writing an educational play about it I learned a lot about myself, too.”

“During the process of writing a plan for my prospective business, I branched out into finance and buy/hold or sell ratings.”

Faculty Mentors:

Jeanne Hubert

Tom Jackoboice

Dr. Andy Kelley

Jim Miller

Sean Smith

David Whitfield

Danny Wright

Page 15: Ensights Summer 2012

Students pursuing academic passions

–while still in high school

13 / summEr 2012

Ford Garrard

Jazz Composition, arranGinG

Carol allen

Kids oF the depression

erin miller

addiCtion

Ben Byrd

entrepreneurship

mary elizaBeth Colton

playwritinG

raChel Bryan

Creative writinG

eriCa Gray

ap Chinese

miller morris

hispaniC Camp Founder

FoRD GaRRaRD

Unc chapel hill

“I thought that composition would be easy and jazz arranging would be difficult, but it turned out to be the other way around.”

eRin milleR

miDDleBURy

eRica GRay

U oF michiGan

milleR moRRis

vanDeRBilt

“My goal was to study addiction from as many angles as possible - going on rounds with doctors, attending AA meetings, etc.”

“I found that even the smallest actions can be approached in entirely different ways simply because of one’s culture.”

“Expanding the Time to Rise camp to include Spanish-speaking elementaries has shaped my potential career path.”

Page 16: Ensights Summer 2012

14 / Ensights

How many types of organisms live under the bridge you drive over every day on your way to work? What forms of life are living in that

creek cutting through your neighborhood?

Ensworth High School students are taking the opportunity to study the wildlife living in their own backyard. The students are able to study marine ecology, plant growth and the pres-ence of animals in the creek without even leaving the campus. There have been crayfish, snakes, larvae, gastropods, crane fish and small swimming schools of fish spotted in the creeks right outside the doors.

backyard science

I was impressed with the number of crayfish and the different species we found. Our creek has a diverse population which is only true when the water is clean. C. Deaton ’12

Students learn to notice the changes in the creek over time and the impact human activity can have on the ecosystem. For ex-ample, the presence of trash in the creek one day led to a great discussion on responsibility for one’s surroundings and being a good steward of nature. This aquatic ecology class allows stu-dents to really experience the science while being outdoors in the natural world. Students see that even in their own backyard there is a playground of ecosystems ready explore.

Lucy Organ, EHS Science Faculty, says,“It’s been a great privi-lege to have such a protected habitat right outside our door to visit. It is so easy to drive or walk past something like our creek and never think about what lives there. We have talked about the fact that nature just goes on with its own business whether humans are watching or not.”

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17 / wintEr 2012

EHS Aquatic Ecology Classes

investigate campus boundaries

on the Little Harpeth River

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will mosElEy dayCelebratin

g

16 / Ensights

viEw morE photos on Ensworth’s wEbsitE / gallEry

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will mosElEy day

17 / summEr 2012

“You must be the change you wishto see in the world.” Gandhi

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Closing ExErCisEsRed Gables

18 / Ensights

viEw morE photos on Ensworth’s wEbsitE / gallEry

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John hudson alarCon

Kate Crosslin arChdeaCon

JaCK elliott beCKham

Jordan latham bone

Camille Chenault bostiCK

george Clay brooKs

Camille moulédoux bryan melanie wilson burCh

desmond ronald Cambridge, Jr.Kathryn ann reed Campbell

elgin elizabeth Cato

eden niCole ChabersKi

raChel mary Chang

arin alexis Chapman

niah Charles

Charles william Clifton

sarah ann Cooley

leighton saVoie Cooper

henry marion daVis

grant alden deCKer

warner Christine diCKson

marJorie mCCall donoho

patriCia Cate elCan

elizabeth blair enoCh

lillie may fergus

patriCK James ferris

samuel C. fleming

william sheehan galliVan

daniel Coleman goodwin

bretton emory gray

Colby garrett green

sarah franCes gregory

andrew miChael halloran

halina s. hannon

Collin ellis hopKins

Kathleen russell JaCKson

isabella bratsChi Johnston

andrew Joseph Kazimi

elizabeth graCe Kelley

JaCob alexander KirKham

mitChell andrew Krueger

greyson andrew lampley

amanda sage loh

robert wylie lowe iiiemma Justine mCbride

Catherine gray mCClellan

sam hughston mCClellan

ellen Carlisle mCdougall

maggie elizabeth mCgraw

stephanie Caroline morgan

russell franKlin morris iVgeorge taylor mullowney

annie graCe netterVille

James allen oVerby iiisarah elizabeth perlin

Christian alford pittman

Jeffrey eldon powell, Jr.isabel mary reeVe

patriCK Jones rowan

Jane bailey royse

Camille elizabeth ruyKhaVer

william turner barnhill sChooley

ethan thomas sCott

sophie simmons sCott

andrew mCCallister smith

James william smitherman

lila franCes sohr

sa’maria andrea stewart

hannah elizabeth stoVall

James henry taylor

Crom tidwell iVJaVier torres

Katherine rose turner

zaChary Joseph whisenant

morgan mCKenzie whitson

perri rose wiatraK

graCe reed wiley

sarah holland wilson

maya alisha wright

John Charles zager

19 / summEr 2012

EIGHTH GRADE - RED GABLES - MAY 30, 2012

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FLAGSoverensworthSi x

ROLLER COASTERS

I’ve seen them in the hall ever since Pre-First Grade.I’ve seen all the different themes.I’ve seen all the different tricks.

I’ve seen the best of the best over the years.And now it’s my turn.

I can’t wait to build a roller coaster!

Working with new people,Thinking up the craziest tricks to do,

Deciding on a fun theme,This project is going to be the best project

in all my years at Ensworth.The satisfaction you get when it is finished.

All the younger kids having fun playing with it.

I can’t wait to build a roller coaster!

James Smitherman, Grade 8

Students go to Six Flags? Sure! Our traditional eighth grade science trip serves several purposes. First, it helps them understand that physics is about modeling real world phenomena. Secondly,

the trip celebrates the winding down of our time together at Red Gables and generates excitement about our final project, the roller coaster “build.”

As seventh graders, our students study the Law of Conservation of Matter - matter can’t be created or destroyed in a closed system - only transformed from one form to another. Coasters are an excellent way in eighth grade to extend that understanding to the Law of Conservation of Energy – the transformation of potential energy to kinetic energy. Actually building roller coasters helps students conceptualize these principles as they relate to the height of the coaster and the changes in speed as it progresses. Besides, who doesn’t love a good roller coaster ride?

While understanding the underlying physics concepts is the primary goal, our students also gain good practice with math-ematical equations that model objects in motion. With the firm foundation in Algebra I our eighth graders have at the end of the school year, these mathematical equations can be appreciated when we actually study and build model roller coasters.

As ninth graders in high school, our students will arrive with a strong foundation in Newton’s laws of motion as well as an introduction to the kinematic equations that model accelerating objects. As middle school science teachers, we feel validated.

What’s the best lesson students learn from this? Collaboration –learning to work productively as a team. This is at the heart of our roller coaster project and also at the heart of our middle school science program. The “build” requires the synthesis of many different skill sets (engineering, creativity, time manage-ment) and demands that all group members work together to achieve their goals. When students are having fun learning together with projects like this, we see them arriving at school extra early and staying late just to fine tune these special roller coaster projects – together.

By Keith Crowe, RG Science Department Chair

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ENSWORTH CORE SKILLS

Collaborate

Communicate

Observe

Question

Speculate / hypothesize

Evaluate

Apply knowledge

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t i g E r :)m i l E sany-type-of-movement club

POPSICLES – AT 7:30 IN THE MORNING?No, no - it’s popsicle STICKS used to count laps around the track!

Each stick represents a full lap so Miss Keeble can log the miles completed by day, week or even

months. The TIGER MILES CLUB had 95 2nd–5th graders who met twice each week before school

to start their days with a brisk run or walk or even a healthy skip - any type of movement with a smile!

by Grace Keeble, RG Physical Education

2012 FUN FACTS:

38 students- half marathon / 52 laps

4 students - full marathon / 104 laps

977 total miles completed this year

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h i G h s c h o o l t h e a t e Rf a C f o C u s

• 4th Yr at Ensworth• B.S. U of North AL in Theater, English & Studio Art• Graduate studies at UNA -Education, Alabama A & M - Visual Art• Professionally trained in lighting consoles, entertainment electricity, rigging

DONNIE BRYAN is the tri-fecta of visual and performing arts. He’s taught studio and AP art, performed professionally with a touring company,

and now has a technical theater team that can “run the show.”

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“I spent most of the first year reading manuals

- manuals for remotes, sound, video, lighting,

even for changing fuses in the orchestra lift.”

Why Ensworth? “I saw opening a new theater as the opportunity of a lifetime and it meshed beautifully with my passion for theater arts in education. I wanted to work in an environment where the arts are an integral part of the school community. The study of drama, dance, music, and visual arts help students to explore realities, relationships, and ideas that cannot be conveyed simply in words or numbers.”

Bryan has a degree in studio art with a focus on design. This allows him to create production design concepts that will run coherently throughout every aspect of a production. He says, “Having the op-portunity to work with Ensworth students in creating the musical production is the most exciting project for me. I couldn’t wait to get a tech team up and running here. With a landmark facility and theater venue like ours, I wanted to see our students take control of our lighting, sound, stage management, and design and con-struction.” He feels technical experience gives students the chance to step into someone else’s shoes in a safe and meaningful way. He says, “Theater teaches student about the world and their place in it. And I think that’s what all education ought to be about.”

At heart while he says he’s a set painter who loves to “dress” a set and paint scenery, he’s also a showman. He performed in a profes-sional touring production of You’re a Good Man Charlie Brown and has stepped onto the EHS stage numerous times as a faculty member who can both sing and act.

Besides being named Dept. Chair of Visual & Performing Arts at EHS, he also serves as Chair of the Thespian Scholarship Program which auditions and interviews talented student applicants yearly.

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• 1st yr at Ensworth

• 10th yr as Ens.Parent

• B.A., Dartmouth

College

• M.A. Columbia

• University / East

Asian Languages

& Cultures

• Selected for the

NCTA Educator’s

Silk Road Tour

CAITLIN HARRIS chose Mandarin Chinese after a decade of studying French and even a year of Russian. Her young students greet

her excitedly in this new-to-them language when she enters their classrooms. Through aural instruction–nothing writ-ten– the children have learned numbers, colors and even favorite flavors of ice cream in Mandarin. Enunciating clearly to convey the language’s inherent tonal differences, Harris teaches using singsong repetition, games, and a basket full of visual props that her students enjoy.

She says, “Students naturally have a good ear at the younger ages and have no inhibition at all. They just soak up the sounds and four tones of the Chinese language. I love to have the students pretend they are shopping or eating at a cafe near the Forbidden City as they practice their vocabulary.

fa C f o C u s l o w e R s c h o o l c h i n e s e

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“Most people don’t know that Chinese is intuitive and builds on itself. Starting Chinese early means these children have an advantage in learning an important language.”What do you value most about Ensworth? Harris says, “I love how the Ensworth faculty really lets kids explore and be curious in their studies. Students are given the freedom to really enjoy learning and experience learning with their peers.”

This former gymnast and gymnastics teacher says she spent a good portion of her childhood upside down. She says, “I competed up and down the East Coast and spent 3-4 hours each day in the gym from 4th grade on. I taught gymnastics all four years of college and through graduate school - although I certainly wouldn’t attempt an aerial now!”

Summer 2012 will find Harris on an “amazing adventure on the Silk Road in China” after being accepted for this educator-only trek by the National Consortium for Teaching about Asia.

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fa C f o C u s m i D D l e s c h o o l h i s t o R y

• 35th year teaching

• 23rd yr at Ensworth

• B.A., M. Ed.

State University of

New York - Albany

• Distance Runner

• Ski Instructor

• Summers in Stowe,

Vermont

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A transplant from Florida, Terwilliger came to Ensworth in 1989 after serving as an inde-pendent school Headmaster in North Palm Beach. As a native of New York state, he was seeking a 4-season climate, a more community-minded atmosphere and a less demanding administrative job so as to spend more time with his family. “Ensworth, at that time, was quaint with a family of cats in the library fireplace, the Auction was held in tents on the front driveway, and effusively friendly colleagues like Rose Pickel welcomed me, Frannie and my two young sons.”

G ORDON TERWILLIGER’S “college professor demeanor” is a hoax. His middle school students readily appreciate his quirky sense of humor that creeps in unexpectedly to enliven the lesson at hand.

Why teach history? “For me, history explains who we are as a society and how we behave as individuals. Many great leaders have appreciated and been well versed in history for these very reasons. I truly enjoy teaching students in an active classroom that includes journals, novels, poetry and chances for students to speak in front of classmates - all projects that get us away from textbooks.”

This former ski instructor, ski patrolman, ski shop manager was “snowed” there by his future wife Frannie so, he says, “overall, the ski area experience was a worthwhile experience.” Too, Terwilliger’s return to the history classroom brings a wealth of other experiences including house parenting at a boarding school, directing RG admissions, chaperoning Coach Inman’s last Out West trip and coaching baseball, soccer, cross country, tennis and even football. He says with a laugh, “We ran a lot of crazy plays on offense.” Discovering distance run-ning in his fifties, Terwilliger completed 160 races in an 8-year period. He says, “The first race I ever ran was 5 miles in tennis sneakers with Bev Roberts and Cris Hempel in Brentwood!”

In his deferential manner, Terwilliger says, “I’m sure Mr. Moseley asked me to teach middle school history as a way of keeping the better teacher, Frannie, in 8th grade English!”

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C E n t E r s tag EEHS Ca

mpus Theater

v i E w m o r E p h oto s o n t h E E n s w o r t h w E b s i t E / g a l l E r y

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Little Shop of Horrors satirizes many things: science fiction, “B”movies, musical comedy itself, and even the Faust legend.

Thirty years ago, it may have seemed improbable that a musical with its roots in a low-budget thriller would, one day, blossom into an American classic, launching an award-winning composer-lyricist partnership. Yet, that is precisely what sprouted from the 1982 collaboration of Howard Ashman (book and lyrics) and Alan Menken (music) with the premiere of Little Shop of Horrors at the WPA Theatre in NYC.

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little shop oF hoRRoRs

enswoRth hiGh school

FeBRUaRy 10 - 11, 2012

The most striking aspect about this musical comes from within the characters and their interaction with each other.

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I think what I have found so fas-cinating about this musical is just how far we are sometimes willing to go to get what we want. I think that Little Shop of Horrors offers the audience a rather macabre view into the manipulation of the human psyche and its need to “have or covet” something else. It is obvious that the depth of this production is fairly limited when we think of its intrinsic value.

However, the most striking aspect about the musical comes from within the characters and their interaction with each other. It is the relationships that they build and the basic needs of survival that act as the catalyst for the characters’ choices and ac-tions throughout the production. Though Little Shop of Horrors truly falls into a category of being primarily a mode of entertain-ment and spectacle, I hope the audience sympathized with each character’s situation. – Donnie Bryan, Director

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o u r tow n Middle School Pre

view

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Our Town is perhaps your typical cliché school play. They say this drama is performed at least one time every night some-

where in the country. The beauty of this play is found in the actors and Wilder’s brilliance in depicting daily life.

rg drama Club

february 23, 2012

We performed a few scenes from Our Town then watched an EHS rehearsal where our MS actors came to fully appreciate the play’s message.I always loved the idea of seeing different monologues or small pieces of theater where many students can be showcased. The students worked very hard in a short amount of time and really embraced the show. It was seren-dipitous that Ensworth High School performed Our Town in its entirety this spring. It gave us a great opportunity to collaborate on some fun activities. Our middle school students visited the high school where they got to expe-rience a rehearsal and meet some of their cast counterparts. This was a great learning opportunity for the middle school and high school students alike and helped celebrate that we are one school–two campuses. Jasmine Davis, Director

viEw morE photos on Ensworth’s wEbsitE / gallEry

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o u r tow nHigh Sc

hool Performanc

e

Our Town is as well constructed a play as I know. It is eloquent, careful and concise. There is nothing wasted

in it. It strikes a pure note. It doesn’t matter how many times I read it, how many times I teach it. Every time I know exactly what is coming, and every time it gets to me. . . the bit about Joe Crowell, the bit about Babylon, the bit about the eternal nature of human beings, the bit about the union soldiers, the final lines. Our Town doesn’t hit below the belt; it hits you right in between the eyes.

Our Town is one of the great plays about community and about living together well. Like King Lear, it explores both

Our Town doesn’t hit below the belt;

it hits you right in between the eyes.

our blindness and our mo-ments of clarity. One thing that it helps me to see more clearly is how much I love these kids and cherish our time together in this place.

Our Town helps me to re-member that these few years together are about so much more than merely preparing for the future. Each class has the opportunity to live well together in this place, just for a moment. One of the things I love most about teaching is watching them try. David Berry, Director

ehs peRFoRmeRs

may 4–5, 2012

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DID YOU KNOW?

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Devon Farm’s Caldwell Collection By Donnie Bryan, EHS Arts Department Chair

The Caldwell Collection is made up of art donated to the Ensworth High School Arts Department by Ben and Gertrude Caldwell. This extensive collection includes numbered and signed original prints and numbered and signed lithographs. A variety of themes are represented including landscapes, portraits, cityscapes, florals, ceramics, sculpture, American folk art, and African art. There is a large collection of prints by John James Audubon who set a new standard for artistry and printing. Perhaps above all else, Audubon was a lover and observer of birds and nature. As I recently explored this portfolio from our collection of his prints, I found myself reflecting on the complex story that each painting is telling and the fragile beauty it is depicting. Over a dozen of the Audubon prints behind glass were displayed in the main gallery of the EHS theater this past year.

This collection will remain a great addition to the Arts Depart-ment’s collection, and a tangible expression of the Caldwells’ generosity. It is an affirmation that the visual arts are an integral part of Ensworth School’s mission as an institution that values the arts. There is no substitute for original artworks; the aesthetic awareness and appreciation for the visual arts will enrich the En-sworth community for years to come. We will continuously rotate the display of the art throughout the entire arts building. Currently in the works is a display for the 2012–2013 school year of a portion of the African pieces to be viewed in the high school library. Many of our Arts Building classrooms and offices have a Caldwell Collection piece on display. I share the Caldwells’ philosophy that art appeals to the depth of our inner being and it is to be displayed, viewed and enjoyed.

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BLACK HISTORYAppreci

ating

Feb 16Sankofa African Dance & Drum Ensemble

What Happened: Interactive performance with the audience

Feb. 27Long Time Coming: Black History in Words & MusicEnsworth faculty & students joined by Calvin Settles, Sr.,

Sarah Settles, Sterling Gittens, Sr., Jimmy Hall, Persephone Fentress & special guests King Hollands & Matthew Walker

What Happened: Civil Rights Activists Hollands & Walker recounted the first sit-ins in Nashville and first-hand experience

as a Freedom Rider. Faculty member Joe Brady told about hearing –in person– the last speech of MLK.

sankoFa DRUm ensemBle

lonG time cominG:

Black histoRy in woRDs & mUsic

Role oF the Black athlete

“We never dreamed that the audience of ‘Long Time

Coming’ would get such an accurate and enjoyable

account of the past. The need is great and it is real.

This education makes a better world in which to live.”

Civil Rights Activists: Hollands, Walker & Kwame Lillard

Feb. 29Panel: The Ongoing Role of the Black Athlete

James Franklin, Head Football Coach, Vanderbilt UniversityTheresa Phillips, Athletic Director, Tennessee State University

Lemanski Hall, former NFL playerJason Maxwell, former Major League baseball playerModerator: Dr. William Smith, Wheelock College,

featured in Sports Illustrated for his role as one of the first four players to integrate intercollegiate football

What Happened: Discussion of gender equity and the chal-lenge of role modeling. Coach Franklin instructs his football players to believe the initials NFL really mean Not For Long

emphasizing the importance of lifelong values.

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aCt i v i t i E sDevon F

arm

ehs hip hop Dance clUB “mR. moRGan says“- a spiRit week tRaDition

ehs Dance FoR athletes class

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ehs Campus garden

toms shoeless day

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v i E w m o r E p h oto s o n E n s w o r t h’s w E b s i t E / g a l l E r y

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stoRy & sonG 2012

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aCt i v i t i E sRed Gables

2nD GR. pioneeR Day

v i E w m o r E p h oto s o n E n s w o r t h’s w E b s i t E / g a l l E r y

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ReD GaBles GRanDpaRents Day

miDDle school BanD 4th GR. BioGRaphy FaiR

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RG DRama clUB peRFoRms “yoU can’t take it with yoU”

5th GR. oRiGinal plays

p-1 BUilDs haBitat siDewalks

ms choRal conceRt

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n ota b l E g u E s t s

YOYO ATHLETE

• Audience: RG Chinese classes

• Shared history and joy of

Chinese yoyo-ing

• Gave demonstrations from

beginner to advanced movements

• Taught simple tricks to older students

ADVICE GURU

• Audience: Parents of seniors

• Licensed family & marital therapist,

parent & grandparent

• Addressed the 5 ‘A’s - adulthood,

attachment, ambiguity, anxiety,

and appreciation

BASEBALL PHENOM

• Audience: EHS student body

• Professional athlete - pitcher for

the New York Mets

• Shared challenges of his recent

Mt. Kilimanjaro climb which benefitted

Bombay Teen Challenge which hopes to

end human trafficking in Mumbai, India

POP ARTIST

• Audience: 3rd, 4th, 7th grades

• RG Patchwork Artist-in-Residence

• Noted for whimsical folk art;

owns The Gray Umbrella

• Taught weeklong studio sessions

• Helped students explore their unique

creative ideas and imaginings

SURVIVOR • Audience: EHS Spring Break Assembly

• Nationally ranked HS tennis player

• College scholarship derailed

• Motivational speaker now on the

importance of not drinking and

driving, never giving up on yourself

JIM SCHLEICHER

AARONGRAYUM

YWCA SPEAKER

• Audience: High school students

• Domestic Violence Project Mgr.

• Shared ways of learning to

recognize domestic violence, what

to do when encountered, and an

overview of services & resources

LIZ TODARO

JENNIFER CHEN

BLAKEMCMEANS

R.A. DICKEY

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CAMEROON RESEARCHER

• Audience:Third grade class

• Native of Cameroon, now VU Ph.D.

candidate, researcher

• Described his home life and

customs as compared to the USA

ERNESTYUFENYUY

RANDYSMITH

MAUREEN SHERRY

CLEAN WATER ADVOCATE

• Audience: EHS Assembly

• Medical Director: Mobile Medical

Disaster Relief

• Described his 3-4 annual visits

to Haiti to provide health care for

HIV-AIDS, malaria, childhood ills

FAMOUS AUTHOR

• Audience: 4th grade students

• Wrote “Walls Within Walls” which

all fourth graders had read

• Said she used her family and their

apartment for this book’s inspiration

• Loved her colorful stack of TY notes

HK DERRYBERRYJIM BRADFORD

MARVGREEN

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MUSICIANS’ BEST FRIEND

• Audience: EHS Music & Lyrics Club

• Intellectual Properties Lawyer,

past parent, past Board member

• Shared legal aspects of music industry

• Gave ways to be in the industry

without being a performer

NASHVILLE SONGWRITER

• Audience: EHS Story & Song seniors

• Writer of 5 #1 country hit songs

• Honored by BMI for Song of the

Year, Songwriter of the Year

• Mentored the songwriting

three graduating EHS seniors

DR. DAVID VANDERPOOL

PARTNERS

• Audience: EHS students

• Shared their unique 10 yr. friendship

which revolves around Rotary,

family weekends, boys nights out

• HKD selected for Person of Charac-

ter Award - TN School for the Blind

• HKD spoke on seizing life to the fullest

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auCtion 2012

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supEr saturday

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for thE rECordU. of Georgia Foundation FellowshipLee Folk ’12 National Merit Scholar, was been awarded the Foun-dation Fellowship at University of Georgia.This award includes tuition support, study abroad in Oxford, England following the first year, travel-study grants for the 2nd, 3rd, and 4th years, research and aca-demic conference grants, special seminars with faculty and visiting professors, spring break travel-study programs, and faculty and peer mentoring. He is one of thirty chosen for this program.

Princeton Prize for Race RelationsLauren Elcan ’13 received the Princeton Prize for Race Relations and Doni Lehman ’13 was also recognized for this honor with an honorable mention. There were only 29 winners in the country this year. Lauren attended a race relations seminar on the Princ-eton campus for a weekend in early May. She was recognized for her work that involved the expansion of Ensworth High School’s highly successful student-run Kids Academy for rural at-risk chil-dren to a second Nashville area site at Battle Ground Academy. Doni Lehman was recognized for her exemplary work at the Oasis Center, for her leadership at the diversity awareness program Camp Anytown and her involvement with Ensworth’s Project T.A.L.K. (Thinking, Action/Acting, Learning, Kindness) that brings students and parents together for substantive discussions of race and gender issues.

Governor’s SchoolsEHS Junior Jack Sheridan was accepted to the Governor’s School for International Studies. He joined students chosen from applicants throughout Tennessee for a four-week concentrated program at the University of Memphis in global cultures, languages and perspectives, that also includes six credit hours of college coursework. Peter Nordlund ’13, was named an Alternate for International Studies; and Savannah Williams-Radecic ’13, was named an Alternate for Art/Theater Governor’s Schools.

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Appointment to West PointJalen Swett ’12 – The award presentation was made at the final EHS Awards Assembly by Lt. Col. (Retired) Bob Ogden, a 1983 graduate of West Point, who served in the Air Calvary unit and in the Tennessee Army National Guard before retiring after 22 years of total service. Swett will attend a year at West Point Military Academy Prep School before beginning four years of college at the Academy. He will then serve in the U.S. Army for five active years followed by three years of duty in the reserves. Swett was nominated by Congressman Jim Cooper and joins seven other TN appointees.

EHS Girls State& Boys StateRepresentativesJuniors who represented Ensworth High School this year at the annual conferences were: Lily Parrish & Doni Lehman, Girls State; and Rory Devine & Rajiv Patel, Boys State.

Moss-Oliver Award FinalistNathan Watkins ’12 was a finalist for the Nashville City Ci-vitan Club’s Moss-Oliver Award. The award honors an outstand-ing senior girl & boy basketball player for excellence in athletics, sportsmanship, academics, and his/her community leadership.

Jalen swett

lee Folk

laURen elcan

Doni lehman

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YMCA Youth in Government ConferenceDavid Chanaca, EHS faculty sponsor, reports, “The conference involved over 850 students from schools in Middle and West Tennes-see and produced over 400 bills to be debated and voted on. Despite the large number of participants, Ensworth presented five bills and reached some major accomplishments.” Blair Wilson, Casey Close & Kaitlyn Waggoner had their bill pass both the house and senate and reached the Governor’s desk for her signature for only the second time in our program’s history. In addition, Carolyn Cooper & Alexandria White were awarded The Outstanding Bill Award for their legislative group, the Blue House. Other EHS students participants included: Miller Morris, John Clifton, Ben Perlin, Martin Davis, Mitchell Byarlay, Carolyn Cooper, Bobby Bethke, & Tray Jackson.

ENGLISHGrade 9Bailey MurphyTeagan EvansMargaret WestGinny BoehmKayce BoehmLilli HigginsRebecca SmithJackson HarrisRachel SmithEmma HoodAnna DensonEmma SloanAshanti CharlesCarly GriffinAislinn MurphyHall LamarMadison ShireyDaniel MangumGreg McCloudLili Johnston

Grade 10Mary SauveShelby CrantsElizabeth CoxHunter MerrymanBlair Wilson

Grade 11Avery Brooks BennettKatelyn McEvoyJoe CastignettiTalia MaydenSara Jordan JacobsonAbbey BoundsAlanna FoleyAnne Douglas DingessHelen RueCaroline JohnsonJohn CliftonWilliam HigginsLauren ElcanSavannah Williams-Radecic

Grade 12Miranda Mott

HISTORYGrade 9Ginny BoehmBailey MurphyKayce BoehmEmma HoodEmma SloanAshanti CharlesLilly ChadwickReagan CaldwellCarly GriffinAnna DensonAislinn MurphyBen FumkinAbby BishopLilli HigginsMadison Shirey

Grade 10Shelby CrantsBenton RoseMaria SchulzBlair WilsonAlex HoltonMary SauveGilchrist GreenMary Kate Hannon

Grade 11Katelyn McEvoyBen PerlinWilliam HigginsRajiv Patel

Grade 12Lee FolkThomas DoochinLauren BarnettMiranda MottIrene UnderwoodNathan WatkinsWilson PattonJim WilkinsJack Masterson

LANGUAGEGrade 9Bailey MurphyKayce BoehmGinny BoehmLilly ChadwickEmma HoodLili JohnstonMatt LaleVictoria BellAnna DensonRebecca SmithCarly GriffinEmma SloanAislinn MurphyBen FrumkinAshanti CharlesTeagan Evans

Grade 10Mary SauveShelby CrantsBlair WilsonParker WadeBobby BethkeMary SawyerMaria SchulzEvanne DillCaroline ElcanBeau AllenHunter Merryman

Grade 11Katelyn McEvoyAbby PerkinsDoni LehmanAvery Brooks BennettAbbey BoundsAnthony BateyJustice SwettAbby Scanlan

Grade 12Lauren BarnettErin Miller

Students who earn a GPA of at least 95 in a depart- ment for the year are granted Cum Laude awards.

ARTGrade 11Katelyn McEvoyAubrey KazimiAbby Scanlan

Grade 12Ford GarrardRachel BryanRachel WallaceLibby RushLeah RoseIrene UnderwoodMary Elizabeth Colton

MATHGrade 9Carly GriffinEmma SloanEmma HoodJonas WoodKayce BoehmMargaret WestAbby BishopLaura Catherine WallaceVictoria Bell

Grade 10Shelby CrantsGilchrist GreenMary SauveAlexandra FarnsworthMaria Schulz

Grade 11Katelyn McEvoyAvery Brooks BennettDoni LehmanRory DevineGrant PopeJohn Clifton

Grade 12Erin MillerLauren BarnettMiranda MottNan Bumpus

SCIENCEGrade 9Kayce BoehmEmma HoodGinny BoehmBailey MurphyAnna DensonBen FrumkinEmma SloanLilly Chadwick

Grade 10Mary SauveBenton RoseMaria SchulzShelby CrantsHunter MerrymanElizabeth CoxGilchrist GreenBlair WilsonBeau Allen

Grade 11Ben PerlinJoe Castignetti

Grade 12Lee FolkMiranda MottLeah RoseLauren Barnett

The CLASS of 2012196 colleges accepted these seniors

4.1 schools per-student-average

45 schools accepted seniors for 1st time

80% of class will attend out of state

40% will attend out of the Southeast

23% will attend as the only EHS student

CUM LAUDE

CUM LAUDE

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NATIONAL MERITSCongratulations to Ensworth High School seniors recog-nized as National Merit Semi-finalists: Alex Giger, Jake West, Lee Folk; and to Ensworth High School National Merit Commended Students: Carol Allen Lauren Barnett, Kath-erine Cochran, Phillip Krebs, Miranda Mott, Matt Peacock.

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for thE rECordSilver Medal Camille BryanArin ChapmanKathleen JacksonIsabella JohnstonCaroline MorganBronze Medal Rachel ChangNiah CharlesGreyson Lampley Maggie McGrawJames SmithermanHonorable Mention Jack Beckham Javi TorresEden Chaberski Zach WhisenantSarah Frances GregoryHalina HannonCollin HopkinsAndrew KazimiElizabeth KelleyWylie LoweGray McClellanEllie McDougallAnnie Grace NettervilleJane RoyseCamille RuykhaverHannah StovallJames TaylorKatherine Turner Grade 7 - Level 01 SpanishGold MedalHannah Smalley -8th in TNSilver MedalConnor Phillips Keith Smith Bronze Medal Grace Ann AltenbernHonorable Mention Anne Grace CoxJack DavidsonTaylor McSpadden

Middle School AwardsHeadmaster Award Arin ChapmanJake Kirkham Sage Loh The James N. Brown AwardArin ChapmanNiah CharlesCate ElcanColeman GoodwinKathleen JacksonJake KirkhamSage LohSarah Perlin Trophy Presentation Black Captains: 707,775 points Isabel Reeve & Jack Zager Orange Captains: 716,225 points Cate Elcan & Charlie Clifton 2012 National Language ExamsGrade 8 - Level 1 Spanish Gold MedalMitchell Krueger - 9th in TNPerri Wiatrak -10th in TN

Evan NagaredaNatalie OverbyCarter Pankow Shayna RosenbloomEdward RuykhaverRachel Ryman

Grade 8 – Latin 1 Gold Medal, Summa Cum Laude Jake KirkhamEthan Scott Silver Medal, Maxima Cum LaudeSage LohGrant DeckerSophie ScottSarah PerlinJohn Hudson AlarconMagna Cum LaudeChristian PittmanMaya WrightWilliam GallivanCum LaudeMack SmithHarry Davis

Grade 7 – Intro to Latin ExamCertificate for Outstanding Achievement, ACL RibbonSam AlcottThomas EstesJulia NahleyElizabeth WoodCertificate of MeritJames GaitherJack FerraraCade ClaytonSterling AkersGalen ElcanIsabelle LafferJames SterchiAudrey SimsBen WallaceLauren SmithAnna ThompsonCooper HadleyPatricia Hammet

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4 BAR PINSGrade 12Lauren BarnettElizabeth ElcanLee FolkKatie FryAlex GigerPhilly KrebsErin MillerMatt PeacockLibby Rush

National Merit Student Recognition National Merit Finalists - Class of 2012

Lee FolkAlex GigerJake West

National Merit Commended Scholars - Class of 2012 Carol Allen

Lauren BarnettKatherine Cochran

Philip Krebs Miranda MottMatt Peacock

National Merit Scholarship Qualifying Test - top 3% Avery BennettDoni LehmanTalia Mayden

Katelyn McEvoyRajiv PatelBen Perlin

Jack Sheridan

Book AwardsHarvard Prize Book: Doni Lehman ’13Kenyon Review Award: Savannah Williams-Radecic ’13Middlebury Book Award: Sally Seitz ’13Randolph College Book Award: John Clifton ’13 Rhodes College Book Award: Blair Wilson ’13Sewanee Award for Excellence in Writing: Avery Bennett ’13St. Lawrence University Book Award: Lauren Elcan ’13 Smith College Book Award: Lily Parrish ’13Jefferson Book Award: Jack Sheridan ’13Vanderbilt University Book Award: Talia Mayden ’13Washington & Lee Univ. Book Award: Ben Bishop ’13Yale Book Award: Katelyn McEvoy ’13

3 BAR PINSGrade 11Ben BishopAbbey BoundsJohn CliftonDoni LehmanRachel OldhamLily ParrishBen PerlinMolly RalphHelen RueAbby ScanlanSally SeitzJack SheridanSavannah Williams-Radecic2 BAR PINSGrade 10Beau AllenBobby BethkeGrace ChangCasey Close

Elizabeth CoxShelby CrantsCaroline ElcanAlexandra FarnsworthGilchrist GreenSally KrebsAlexandra LiggettHunter MerrymanRichard RolappBecca RolfBenton RoseMary SauveMary SawyerMaria SchulzBlair Wilson1 BAR PINGrade 9David AllenVictoria BellAbby BishopKayce BoehmGinny Boehm

Reagan CaldwellLilly ChadwickAshanti CharlesAnna DensonTeagan EvansKennedy FarrisBen FrumkinCarly GriffinJackson HarrisAustin HertikLilli HigginsEmma HoodGracie JohnsonLili JohnstonMargo MaceyDaniel MangumAislinn MurphyBailey MurphyPJ SettlesMadison ShireyEmma Sloan

Bar pins signify Optime Merens achievement for an entire school year.

Rachel SmithRebecca SmithSophie WalkerLaura Catherine WallaceMargaret WestAshley Wines

Optime Merens Bar Pins

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for thE rECord

8th Grade built 210 ft of

fences, cleared 350 ft of

underbrush by working a

full day at Park Preserve.

National Spanish Exam GOLDSpanish 1 Carly GriffinDonovan SheffieldSpanish 2 Lilly ChadwickEmma SloanSam StallingsElla WerthanSpanish 3 Avery BennettMaria Schulz

National French Exam GOLDFrench 1 Victoria Bell: 7th state, 8th national

National Language Examination AwardsFrench 5 Lauren Barnett: 4th stateMary Elizabeth Colton: 15th stateErin Miller: 9th state

National Latin Exam SUMMA CUM LAUDELatin 1 Kayce BoehmGinny BoehmBailey MurphyEmma HoodLatin 2 Hall LamarLatin 4 Katelyn McEvoy

Numbers Game

Sophomores hosted over

300Special Olympic athletes

Freshmen planted

135 trees, removed exotics weeds

Second graders collected

1,000 toiletries for Monroe Carell Jr.

Children’s Hospital

Juniors interviewed

33organizations about their needs

Sophomores removed

1,660pounds of recyclables

from the Harpeth River

Seniors presented summaries of

25 hour individual service projects

Fifth graders visited

7classrooms at Tom Joy School

to read one-on-one

Ensworth students collected

490pounds of surplus Halloween candy to donate to servicemen

Thirty-four high school students contributed their poems, paintings, drawings, and writings to the Ensworth High School literary magazine The Eclipse for 2011-2012. Editor-in-Chief Blair Wilson was assisted by Buggy Stallings (cover art) and Staffers Sarah Awad, Ginny Boehm, Kayce Boehm, Siona Kalil, Claire Kirchoff, Cindy Lampley and Ella Werthan. Faculty Advisors were Mrs. Shuman & Mrs. Marks. Every Red Gables student received a copy of the 2011-2012 Ensworth Literary Magazine which featured selected poems, short stores, memoirs, journal writings and artworks by grade levels. An Addendum was also printed and given to all middle school students because 12 submissions were inadvertently omitted from the first printing.

LITERARY MAGAZINES

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Algebra 1:Almira SouthworthDaniel DavisJohn HersheyGeometry: Emma HoodKayce BoehmAnna DensonLaura Catherine WallaceGinny BoehmLilly ChadwickAlgebra 2: Bobby BethkeJosh DaughertyBenton RoseWill Garside Mary SauveShelby Crants

EHS MATH TEAMPrecalculus: Benjamin BishopJohn CliftonRajiv PatelJack SheridanSavannah Williams- RadecicKatelyn McEvoyStatistics: Avery BennettAlex GigerBen PerlinHunter MerrymanDoni LehmanCalculus: Lauren BarnettMiranda MottPhilip KrebsJohn MastersonMatt PeacockJake West Lee FolkCarol Allen

EHS Service Learning Days

sent students to a shelter,

a Franklin farm, and to

Williamson Co’s Graceworks.

THE DEVON CUP TROPHYHouse Leaders:Integrity – Kate Barnes, Addison ArmisteadMorality – Miller Morris, Nick ScanlanTruth – Callie Estes, Taylor GrahamVitality – Christina Slay, Patrick Prevost

The Devon Cup for 2011-2012 was awarded to the House of Integrity.

TN Mathematics Teachers Assoc. ContestFirst Place Statistics at District Testing Site Ben Perlin

National Scholastic Art Competition National Scholastic Art CompetitionGOLD KEY AWARDS Kaeley Scott, Digital ArtSavannah Williams-Radecic PaintingJane Anne Darken, PhotographyMax Caswell, Ceramics,American Vision Award Nominee

Congressional Art Competition 5th District 10th Grade Winner Sarah Crowe

CAPSTONE SCHOLARS 2013The following EHS Juniors have applied to and been accepted for The Capstone Scholars Pro-gram for the coming school year. Project focuses and faculty mentors follow each student’s name.

Sarah Awad Vanderbilt Antimalarial Compounds – Dr. Crystal MillerJohn Clifton Vanderbilt Protein Research – Dr. Crystal MillerAlanna Foley Human Trafficking – Brooke Morgan Alec Holcomb Guitar Instruction Sean SmithAubrey Kazimi Healing Powers of Dance – Lindsay WhiteKatelyn McEvoy Latin Textbook – David LovellDylan Minnick Music Recordings – Sean SmithRajiv Patel Economic Cost Studies – Danny WrightHelen Rue Latin Translations – Jennifer IsheeSally Seitz Original Play – David Berry

The Ensworth NatatoriumThis new addition to the EHS Devon Farm Campus is on schedule to open January 2013. Besides its friendly architecture that features trusses and lots of natural light flooding its spaces, this state-of-the-art facility is built on stilts to accommodate its flood plain location. Other features include:• An instructional pool for teaching• Four one-meter springboards• Provisions for ten 50-meter lanes (or 18 lanes in the 25 yard course)• Separate changing rooms for the competition pool, the instructional pool and for families• Ventilation for exhausting the pool surface to reduce the presence of chloramines

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Megan Florentine, Pre-First Grade, attended the “Teach-ers College Reading Institute” workshop at Columbia University on curriculum development and planning for teaching reading, units of study within reading workshop, comprehension strategy instruction, and the importance of assessment-based instruction.

Caitlin Harris, Lower School Chinese, was selected to travel with 16 other educators from the United States to the Chi-nese cities of Beijing, Xi’an, Shanghi, and the Ancient Silk Road cities of Turpan, Dunhuang, Urumqi, Kash-gar, and Hotan. They passed through both the Gobi and the Taklamakan Deserts and the Tarim Basin. She gained a deeper understanding of the historical significance of the ancient Silk Road trade route. The trip was organized by the National Consortium for Teaching about Asia (NCTA).

Will Hester, EHS Choral Music, attended an AP Music Theory teacher training class at Westminster Choir College in Princeton, NJ.

Lucy Organ, EHS Science, graded AP Chemistry exams in Louisville, Kentucky for The College Board.

faCulty nEwsWill Moseley To Become Interim Head Will Moseley will serve as Interim Head at Saint Andrews School in Boca Raton, FL for the 2012-13 school year. Saint Andrews is a coeducational school in the Episcopal tradition. It has 1,290 students in Kindergarten-12. Founded in 1961, the school includes a boarding program with students from more than 20 countries. He says, “My family and I will always cherish our 12 years at Ensworth and the extraordinary love, care and support that this community has extended to us. I have consistently said that Ensworth’s strength is its sense of community, and I know that a bright future lies ahead for the school, its families and supporters.”

Faculty Member Honored for Theater WorkThe Educational Theatre Association and its board of directors has announced that Donnie Bryan, EHS Theater Manager and newly named Visuan & Performing Arts Department Chair, will be the recipient of this year’s Hall of Fame Award. Mr. Bryan will accept this award at a conference in September in San Diego. Mr. Bryan has hosted the Alabama State Conference for twelve years, chaired the International Thespian Scholarships for the last ten years, and he has adjudicated plays and scholar-ships on their behalf. This is the Association’s highest honor to a theater educator.

Business Manager Earns National AwardEnsworth Business Manager Darrell Wells has been awarded the Will J. Hancock Unsung Heroes Award by the National Business Officers Association. The award goes to business officers who have made extraordinary contributions to their schools. NBOA is the national professional association for indepen-dent school business officers, promoting best business practices and standards of excellence. NBOA membership includes over 950 schools from every region in the country as well as several international sites.

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FACULTY WEDDINGStua Chaudhuri & Galen Bultje

Kari luCas & Paul Leah tish pilKerton & Bryan Picklesimer

FACULTY BIRTHS Jody lanG-smith (Stephen)

Robert Thomas Smith (Robbie) 4.25.12

ellen haBer (Matthew) Milton Alexander Haber (Max)

4.27.12roB herrinG (Sarah Rohde)

William Sydnor Herring 5.1.12

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Ellen Quertermous, 4th Grade, and Amy Rich, 2nd Grade, attended a Singa-pore Math Institute at the Bolles School in Jacksonville, Florida. Quertermous will also visit the Norfolk Botani-cal Gardens to view the eagles her fourth graders watched hatch and grow via the Eagle Cam this past year.

Debbie Schuld and Barbara Royse, 3rd Grade, were leaders of Ensworth’s service learning camp on the Red Gables campus. They planned age-appropriate ac-tivities for the campers which included working in a kin-dergarten readiness program, sorting toys in a community center, providing snacks and playing games with refugee children, and working in a vegetable garden at a local youth center.

Robin Smith, 2nd Grade, will be returning to LaFond, Haiti accompanied by Ruby Cortner, RG History Dept. Chair. In 2010 Robin was part of a World Leadership School team that helped build a school in LaFond. After returning home she remained in touch with a local family, and followed the rebuilding progress of two schools there along with many homes. Her second grade class helped sponsor two houses in La-Fond this past year.

(continued) This summer the two faculty members will inter-view elders of the community to insure that their stories will not be lost. They will also help run a summer arts camp, in English, for the children, and help rebuild houses. Their luggage will include a vintage “hand crank” sewing machine which they will leave behind in La Fond for the school’s use.

TRAVEL LEADERS 2012BELIZEBruce Libonn, Michelle Little, Keith Crowe &Mary Perkins, Red Gables Faculty, accompanied 19 middle school students in June to work with partner St. Matthew’s Government School.

COSTA RICAJeff Scott, Pascha Swett & Jennifer Tormey, Devon Farm Faculty, will travel with 9 high school students to assist in the construction of a computer lab and to teach classes of young students.

OUTWESTKeith Crowe, Rebekah Capps, Gretchen Thomp-son, Debbie McQuitty, Brooks Corzine, Adam Sherland & Barbara Royse, Red Gables Faculty, will lead the 41st annual Outwest Trip for 49 eighth graders in July. Recent EHS graduates Mary Elizabeth Colton, Elizabeth Elcan, and Charles Glassford will accompany the group as Junior Counselors.

PERUGreg Eubanks, Brooke Morgan & Danny Wright, Devon Farm Faculty, accom-panied 10 EHS students to Piscacucho, Peru where a homestay with local fami-lies is planned as part of the program.

TANZANIAMolly Wilson, Matt Kaminski, Lauren Losey & Sean Smith, Devon Farm Faculty, are travel-ing with 14 high school students to inaugurate a new service learning project in Tanzania.

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MIDDLE SCHOOL WINTER/SPRING HIGHLIGHTS

rg athlEtiCs (hvaC)

BOYS VARSITY BASKETBALL• 2012 HVAC Champs

• All-HVAC:

Coleman Goodwin,

Jacoby Stevens, Jordan Bone

GIRLS VARSITY BASKETBALL• All HVAC:

Lauren Smith, Caroline Morgan

6TH GRADE GIRLS BASKETBALL• 2012 MCAC Champions

6TH GRADE BOYS BASKETBALL• 2012 MCAC Runner-up

WRESTLING• Meier Werthan 1st place

HVAC Champion 88 lbs.

• Christian Pittman 1st place

HVAC Campion 160 lbs.

SWIMMING & DIVING• Sage Loh - 50 free:

1st place at Middle School

Championship Meet

• Charlie Clifton - Diving:

1st place at Middle School

Championship Meet

VARSITY BASEBALL• 2012 HVAC Champions

• All HVAC: Greyson Lampley,

Coleman Goodwin, Christian

Pittman, Turner Schooley

VARSITY SOFTBALL• HVAC Tourney Semi-Finalist

• All-HVAC: Jada Dotson,

Crosslin Archdeacon

BOYS TENNIS• HVAC # 1 doubles

runners up - Grant Decker &

Jamen Rollins

GIRLS TENNIS• Placed 2nd in the HVAC

• 8-1 Season

• HVAC champions: #3 singles

Julia Nahley and #2 doubles

Josephine Bass & Jenny Fisher

BOYS LACROSSE • 2012 TSLA Middle School

Tourney Runner-up

GIRLS LACROSSE• 2012 TGLA Middle School

Tourney Semi-finalist

GIRLS TRACK & FIELD• 2012 HVAC Runner-up

• Tyra Gittens:

High jump 5”6”- 1st place

(school record), 1st place Long

Jump, 1st Place 200m dash

• Sage Loh 1 mile - 1st place

• 4x200 team: Anne Grace

Cox, Maya Wright, Bailee

Mason, Jada Dotson

1st place HVAC

BOYS TRACK & FIELD• 2012 HVAC Runner Up

• JaCoby Stevens:

Long jump 1st place (19-6

new school record),

1ST place -100

• Jack Zager:

1st place high jump

Middle School Athletics Facts• 34 Teams participated in 13 different sports

• 95% of middle school students participated in one or more sport

• 30 Faculty coaches, 9 off-campus coaches 2 EHS student assistant coaches

• 1 undefeated season – Football

• 4 HVAC Championships – Boys Cross Country, Volleyball, Boys Basketball, Baseball

• 2 6th Grade Championships – Football, Girls Basketball

• Girls Athletics – 2nd Place HVAC Inman All-Sports competition (out of 15 schools)

• Boys Athletics – 3rd Place HVAC Inman All-Sports competition (out of 15 schools)

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HVAC Basketball Champions

HVAC Baseball Champions

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16 ATHLETES SIGN to PLAY IN COLLEGE

football

basketball

volleyball

gymnastics

tennis

baseball

lacrosse

track & field

swimming

RODNEY EDMISTON, University of Arkansas / football

CORY BATEY, Vanderbilt University / football

RICO WATSON, Butler University / football

WILSON PATTON, Stanford University / gymnastics

ERIN MILLER, Middlebury College / track & field

HANNAH KIMBROUGH, Eastern Illinois University / tennis

ANNA GRAINGER, University of Notre Dame / swimming

WILL DOWNEY, University of the South / basketball

KYARA BYNER, University of Cincinnati / lacrosse

YANIKKA GITTENS, University of South Alabama / volleyball

JALEN SWETT, West Point / baseball

CAROL ALLEN, Denison University / lacrosse

KESHONN CARTER, University of the South / basketball

TAYLOR GRAHAM, University of the South / footballl

REJEAN ROUSE, University of Tennessee / track & field

NATHAN WATKINS, University of the South / basketball

Ehs athlEtiCs

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basEball• Jalen Swett: Division II-AA All Region Team

bowling• Miranda Mott: 2011-12 DII-AA Girls Bowling State Runner-Up

• Miranda Mott: Tennessee State Bowling Proprietor’s Association

Miss Bowler of the Year

boys laCrossE• Michael Buttarazzi, Graham James and Tucker Deaton:

2nd team All Region team

WINTER/SPRING HIGHLIGHTS

Ehs athlEtiCsboys basKEtball• DII-AA State Champions

• DII-AA Middle-East Region Champions

• Nathan Watkins: DII-AA All Region Team

• Will Downey: DII-AA All Region Team &

the DII-AA All State Tournament Team

• Corn Elder: DII-AA All Region team, TWSA All State Team, DII-AA

All State Tournament Team, Player of the Year in the Middle/East

Region, DII-AA Mr. Basketball finalist (second year in a row),

TSSAA DII-AA 2012 State Tournament MVP

2012 Basketball State Champions

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WINTER/SPRING HIGHLIGHTS

Ehs athlEtiCsgirls basKEtball• DII-AA Middle-East Region Champions and the

State Runner-Up Champions

• Kyara Byner: DII-AA All State Tournament team

• Kennesha Nichols: DII-AA All-Region Team and the DII-AA All-

State Tournament team

• Christina Slay: DII-AA All-Region Team, the TSWA All-State

Team, the DII-AA All-State Tournament team, and was a DII-AA

Miss Basketball finalist

girls laCrossE• TGLA State Runner-Up

• Kyara Byner:

TGLA All-Region Team and the All Tournament Team

• Margaret Andrews & Carol Allen: TGLA All-Region Team,

All-State Team and the All-Tournament Team

• Kyara Byner and Margaret Andrews:

US Lacrosse Honorable Mention All Americans

• Justice Swett and Lauren Elcan: TGLA All Tournament Team

• Justice Swett: one of only 7 girls from the state of Tennessee

who will be representing the south in the 2012 Under Armour

All-American Lacrosse Classic this summer

iCE hoCKEy• Matt Peacock:

Greater Nashville Area Scholastic Hockey North All Star Team

softball• Chandler Overton:

DII-AA All Region Team as a Pitcher and Short Stop

swimming• Women’s team placed 10th in the state (out of over 100 teams)

• Anna Grainger: 2nd in 200 IM; 4th place in 100 backstroke at

State Finals

• Anna Grainger: All-American status and qualified for the Olympic

Trials in the 200 Meter backstroke

tEnnis• Hannah Kimbrough: DII-AA All Mid-State Team

traCK• ReJean Rouse: Shot Put State and Region Champion

(third consecutive year), Brian Ralls Award Recipient

at the Harper Relays

• Nikki Gittens: High Jump State and Region Champion

(second consecutive year)

• Rodney Edmiston: Triple Jump State Champion (second

consecutive year)

• Xavier Forrest: Shot Put state runner-up

ROBERT INMAN AWARD RECIPIENTSRobert Inman, a coach and teacher at Ensworth for 33 years,

instituted the ideals of Ensworth participation.

Mr. Inman coached 4 athletic seasons for over 30 years.

• Juniors who have participated in at least 8 athletic seasons:

Andrew Bowers, Justice Swett, Tray Jackson, John Clifton,

Justin Lloyd, Jourdan Swett, Andrew Freeland

• Seniors who have participated in at least 11 athletic seasons:

Keshonn Carter, ReJean Rouse, Rico Watson

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Phot

o: Ju

stin

Eoff

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Distinguished

lumnaJEANIE C. NELSON ’61

Land Trust CEO

Environmental advocate

Political activist

Adventurer

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Jeanie C. Nelson ’61, honored this spring as Ensworth’s 2012

Distinguished Alumna, began her address to the EHS community with profound words from T.S. Eliot.

“We shall not cease from exploration,

and the end of all our exploring will be to arrive where we started

and know the place for the first time.” T. S. Eliot

Jeanie is no stranger to exploration, and her life’s journey includes a variety of interesting expe-riences. She began her career as a lawyer at a time when very few women were involved in the legal field. She became a partner at Gullett Sanford Robinson & Martin where she practiced for 13 years before becoming Chief Deputy Attorney General for Tennessee in 1989. She was also active in the political realm, serving as Tennessee Campaign Manager for Al Gore’s Presidential Campaign and later as Director of President Clinton’s Crime Prevention Council. Ultimately, Jeanie’s passion for the environment led her to establish, with former Gover-nor Phil Bredesen, the Land Trust for Tennessee, where she is currently president and executive director, leading the efforts of communities and individuals to preserve and protect historic and natural land areas in Tennessee. Jeanie summed up her experiences with another T. S. Eliot line: “If you aren’t in over your head, how do you know how tall you are?” challenging students to step outside their comfort zones to welcome new and different adventures. In addition to her assembly presentation, Jeanie also talked with Lucy Organ’s (’72) AP Environmental Science class, answering questions about the mission of The Land Trust for Tennessee and encouraging students to think about how they can help preserve the land for future generations.

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ALUM NOTESLucy Organ ’72 just com-pleted her first academic year as a science teacher at EHS. She writes: “Mr. Kautzman taught me during his second year at Ensworth. This morning at 8th grade closing exercises, he was at the front of the Faculty procession and I was at the end. He and I exchanged greetings and congratulations. It is such an honor for me to serve on this faculty!” Steve Jobe ’84 is the Senior Clerk to Honorable Wil-liam C. Koch, Jr., one of the justices of the Tennessee Supreme Court. Stefan Gutow ’88 and his wife Mindy are living in Albuquerque with Jonah (3 1/2), Kate (18 months), and baby #3 due in July. Mary Brooke (Akers) Bonadies ’89 has been named

a realtor at Main Street Real Estate. She has a bachelor’s degree in interior design from the University of Alabama. Rachel Kesley ’96 is the Chef de Cuisine at Water Course Foods, a popular vegetarian restaurant in Denver, CO. She was named one of the best women chefs in Denver and participated in a charity event for underpriviliged women.

Tee Tompkins ’97, his wife Caroline and four month old son Tripp will be mov-ing from Washington, DC to Philadelphia where Tee will begin Wharton Business School at the University of Pennsylvania. Tee served six years with the United States Marine Corps. Julie Schneider ’98 will be running an arts camp, in English, for the children of LaFond, Haiti this summer.

Katie Tate (Tompkins) Dick ’99 and her husband Hagan will be moving to Atlanta from Washington, DC. Katie will be a Pre First Lead Teacher at The Westminster School. Hagan is an Assistant Vice President at Walker and Dunlop. Brian Kesley ’99 is working as a musician in NYC. Will Smith ’01 graduated with honors from The Univer-sity of Tennessee Law School. He was Executive editor of The Law Review and served on the staff of Transactions Journal. He will be working in the Nashville firm of Gullett Sanford Robinson and Martin.Elizabeth Krebs ’02 is a first year student at Wake For-est Medical School in North Carolina and is loving it. Mary Lindsay Krebs ’03 is a first year Teach for America Corps member teaching 32

fourth-graders at a Chicago charter school system called UNO Charter Schools. Harry McAlister ’03 gradu-ated from Macalester College in St. Paul, Minnesota last spring. He majored in English, Creative Writing, and German. He is moving to Nashville in June. Andrew Triggs ’03, was draft-ed by the Kansas City Royals Major League Baseball team. He has been an outstanding player at USC.

Rich Tompkins ’03 lives in Washington,DC. and works for Deloitte Consulting LLP as a Federal Human Capital Analyst.

Molly Arthur ’08 graduated the Aquinas School of Nurs-ing and married Michael Margadonna in June. They will also be counselors for Ensworth’s summer trek for

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DEATON: Caroline ’12, Nancy Coleman ’75 ESTES: Callie ’12, Kathleen Jackson ’78 FOLK: Ben ’66, Lee ’12 SCAROLA: Lynn McNally ’76, Carlyle ’12

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a l u m n o t E s

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rising eighth grade girls and boys to the Quetico Province in Canada in July. Taylor Astren ’08 gradu-ated Cum Laude from the University of Richmond with a BS in Business Administra-tion with a concentration in Finance and a minor in Environmental Studies Anna Bowers ’08 graduated from David Lipscomb Uni-versity Magna Cum Laude in American Studies with a French minor. She was on the NCAA Atlantic Sun All Academic Team all four years. She set the school record for three point goals in one game (eight). Anna was also 1 of 5 Lady Bisons in school history to enter the 1,000 points club. She is moving to Haiti to intern at the Cap Haitian Children’s Home, where she has spent time during the last 3 summers since graduating from Ensworth.

Elizabeth Clippard ’08 graduated from University of Mississippi Honors College with a Bachelor of Business Administration, with a major in Marketing and minor in Spanish. She was a member of Phi Kappa Phi Honor Society, Who’s Who Among Students in American Colleges and Universities, Gamma Beta Phi Honor Society, Chancellor’s Honor Roll, and President of the Ole Miss Business School. Lizzy will be attending The University of TennesseeSchool of Law. Duke DeLoache ’08 gradu-ated from Davidson College with a math major. He sang in a coed a cappella group, Androgyny, and was a member of KA fraternity. He has a job for two years as a math teacher in either middle or high school, as a Teach for America Corps member in New York City.

Austin Fabel ’08 gradu-ated from the University of Mississippi from the Busi-ness School with a major in Marketing. Liz Felker ’08 graduated With Distinction from The University of California, Berkeley with a BS in En-vironmental Science Policy and Management. She had a double major in Conservation & Resource Studies and So-ciety & Environment, along with a minor in Forestry. In her senior year, Liz was accepted into an Honors Pro-gram within her college, and she spent the year research-ing and writing a thesis. She presented her thesis in May at the Berkeley College of Natu-ral Resources honors sympo-sium. Her thesis was entitled “Situating Carbon Forestry: REDD as Means of Dispos-session.” She plans to stay in Berkeley and do research.

Taylor Francy ’08 graduated Summa Cum Laude from Westminster University with a BS in Sociology. Taylor is moving to Cincinnati, OH. Adelaide Freeman ’08 gradu-ated from the University of Delaware in January with a BA. She is now working in New York for American Eagle and is pursuing a fashion career.

Jake Gideon ’08 graduated from Vanderbilt with a BA in Economics. He has a paid internship for the next two months in Tokyo with the Japanese Central Railway. Thompson Grant ’08 gradu-ated from Furman University with a BA. He will be leaving in August to work in the Peace Corps where he will be doing micro-lending. Chela Green ’08 received a BA (government major, sociology minor) from

KREBS: Philly’12, Missy Nesbitt Voigt ’75 HARWELL: Sam ’77, Allie’12 COLTON: Overton ’74, Mary Elizabeth ’12 DOWNEY: Will ’12, Ken ’78

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BIRTHS

Roe Elam ’88 (Anne Tolly)Henry Elam 1.10.12

Nat Harris III ’88 (Allison)

Harper Elizabeth Harris 3.5.12

Rebecca Russell Howard ’90 (John)River Abigail Howard

Alice Ganier Rolli ’93 (Michael)

Benno Albert Rolli 1.30.12

Courtney Weaver Robers ’93 (Brad)Annie Marie Robers 2.12.12

Matt Neal ’96 (Grace)Brennick Thomas Neal 3.8.12

Tee Tompkins ’97 (Caroline)

Thomas Eugene Tompkins III “Tripp” 2.1.12

WEDDINGS

Betsy Vinson ‘61 & Thomas Matlock

Bryan Picklesimer ’95 and Tish Pilkerton ’99

James Patrick Warfield ’98 & Catherine Avery

Abigail Sinks ’99 & J.B. Spaulding

Liza Trickett ’00 & Cutler Averbuch ’00

William Pickens ’01 & Caroline Crouch

Molly Arthur ’08 & Michael Margadonna

Georgetown University. In her track career, she was NCAA First Round Qualifier, Big East Champion, Big East All-Academic Team, ECAC Champion. She also served as the Grassroot Hoyas Pro-gamming Chair. Chela was offered a Teach For America Corps position in Houston or grad school/Fifth Year at TCU or UH.

Bentley Hammet ’08 gradu-ated from Ole Miss with a BA in Art (emphasis in print making) and a minor in Mass Communications. She is working for Billy Reid in Nashville. Grayson Jones ’08 graduated Magna Cum Laude from the Annenberg School of Com-munication and Journalism at UCLA. She received a BA in Communication with an em-phasis in the Entertainment Industry, and a Minor in Music Industry Studies from the U.S.C. Thornton School of Music. Grayson was admit-ted to the Phi Beta Kappa honor society at U.S.C., and is a member of Kappa Alpha Theta sorority. Rob Leathers ’08 gradu-ated from the University of Tennessee. He received a BS in Business Administration in Logistics, with a concentra-tion in International Business. He made quite a few honor

rolls during his four years at UT and was the President of his fraternity, Phi Sigma Kappa. Rob has a job in Atlanta working as a freight broker for Unisource World-wide, a logistics company. Jeremy Lehman ’08 gradu-ated from Vanderbilt with a BA, majoring in Economics and Philosophy with a minor in Corporate Strategy.

Margaret Anne Moore ’08 graduated from Ole Miss with a BA in Elementary Educa-tion with an emphasis in So-cial Studies and English. She was inducted into Phi Kappa Phi and Gamma Beta Phi and served as an officer of Tri-Delta. She is headed to Washington D. C. Rachael Moore ’08 gradu-ated from Columbia College Chicago in December with a major in fiction writing and minor in web development. She has a job in Chicago working for UBM Studios, where they develop and ex-ecute virtual trade shows. Molly Nesbitt ’08 gradu-ated from the University of Virginia with BA degrees in Economics and Religious Studies. Jackson Nuismer ’08 gradu-ated from the University of Mississippi Business School

HOMECOMING & REUNION WEEKEND

October 5-6, 2012

Tailgate & football game vs. MBA on Friday

Reunion parties on Saturday

Save the Date

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a l u m n o t E swith a BBA in Economics. He was a walk-on for the football team and lettered this past season. Jackson was on the All SEC Academic Honor Roll (2 years) and UMAA Honor Roll (4 semesters). He plans to pursue an MBA while play-ing out his final 2 years of eligibility.

Adam O’Donnell ’08 gradu-ated Magna Cum Laude from Hampden-Sydney with a Bachelor of Arts in Eco-nomics. He has started an App company that caters to athletic departments of small colleges and universities. He will be based in Raleigh N.C. Annie Oldacre ’08 graduated Magna Cum Laude from the University of Alabama with a BA in Communication and Information Sciences. She is currently interviewing with advertising agencies.

Alex Peerman ’08 graduated from Princeton University Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Af-fairs. He is the Young Alumni Coordinator for Outdoor Action Princeton University this summer. Lucy Ralph ’08 gradu-ated from the University of Mississippi with a degree in Journalism. Rebecca Ralph ’08 gradu-ated from the University of Mississippi with a degree in Journalism. Sarah Thomas ’08 graduated Magna Cum Laude from the University of Miami (Florida) with a BA in Psychology. She was president of the Golf Club for two years and a member of ADPi sorority. She was president of Gamma Sigma Alpha academic honor society. Her plans include taking a year off, taking the

MCAT this summer, doing charitable, medical-related work and hopefully attending medical school in 2013. Taylor Thomas ’08 graduated from Davidson College, re-ceiving a Magna Cum Laude Bachelor of Arts degree. She finished the semester with her hands covered in paint and plaster--as usual--and left Davidson with a body of both sculptural and 2-D work. Thomas was awarded 1st place for Best in Show in both sculpture and painting for the Davidson Juried Student Art Exhibition. She is currently residing in Charlotte, North Carolina, and continuing to make work amidst applying to art residencies and intern-ships. To view and learn more about Thomas’s work, visit her recently constructed website and blog below. tay-lorthomasart.wordpress.com.

Carly Warfield ’08 gradu-ated from The University of the South with a BA, a major in Psychology and a minor in Biology. She was inducted into The Order of the Gowns-men in January 2012. She was a member of Theta Pi sorority and the softball team, serving as co-captain in 2010-2012, and named to the All Sportsmanship team of the Southern Collegiate Athletic Conference in 2010. She is headed to the University of Louisville in the fall to begin coursework toward an Accel-erated Bachelor of Science in Nursing/Masters in Psychiat-ric Nursing. Jackson Wilcox ’08 is com-peting in the Olympic Trials in Omaha this summer. He will be swimming 4 events: the 400 Free, 200 Free, 200 Butterfly and the 1500.

Lauren Wines ’09 is current-ly a junior at UNC-Chapel Hill, working on a math major and chemistry minor. She is a member of the Phi Beta Kappa Society and the Carolina Dance Team. Lauren recently accepted a summer job from Johns Hopkins where she will be a teaching assistant in Hong Kong at the Hong Kong University of Sci-ence and Technology.

DOOCHIN: Thomas ’12, Lawrence’76PATTON: Wilson ’12, Robin Ingram ’80 OXFORD: Kendall ’12, Celeste Griscom’71

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FIND ENSWORTH HERE

www.twitter.com/ensworth www.twitter.com/ensworthalumni

www.facebook.com/ensworthschool facebook.com/ensworthalumni

www.blogs.ensworth.com

59 / Ensights

Carell Brown ’09 writes, “In June I’m working with Kids Academy administratively as the regional manager. I’m responsible for checking in on both sites, doing feedback sessions with the staff and general oversight. We are in the midst of some big strate-gic planning for the future of Kids Academy. I am also fund raising and helping to open the camp’s new site at Battle Ground Academy. Rising EHS senior Lauren Elcan heads the Ensworth camp (60 campers) where she’s in charge of all of site operations. Lauren was also instrumental in opening our new BGA site which is headed by Han-nah Leedle ’11 (25 camp-ers). In July I’m interning at the YMCA to gain more experience in the non-profit sector and new ideas for Kids Academy.”

Andrew Colton ’09 will be interning this summer at McNeely Pigott & Fox public relations firm in Nashville. He’s a rising senior at SMU. Tyler Johnson ’09 was nominated for a pilot position in the Air Force. He received the highest Field Training score and graduated as a Distinguished Graduate as #2 out of 26 in his flight. After Field Training, he was 1 of

145 in the country to attend a Special Tactics Professional Military Development train-ing session.

Dan McAlister ’09 is a rising senior at Carleton College in Northfield Min-nesota. He is majoring in Cinema and Media Studies. He has recently completed a semester in Japan. William Joy ’10 is majoring in Broadcast Journalism with an emphasis in Convergence Sports Journalism at the Uni-versity of Missouri. Currently, he is the Assistant Sports Di-rector for MUTV (Missouri’s student television station) and Co-Executive Producer and Co-Host of “This Week In 23 Sports,” a weekly show

CallinG For ensworth memoraBilia

The Ensworth Archives is seeking archival quality school mementos, particularly from the early years. Pictures of long ago events and students are welcomed. Contact Mary Byrne Dailey for information: [email protected].

on MUTV covering col-lege sports but focusing on Missouri. Next year, he’ll be working at KOMU, an NBC affiliate station associated with the university for even more on and off-air experience. Jonathan Krebs ’10 just fin-ished his sophomore year at Vanderbilt and is a neurosci-ence major. Morgan Fabel ’11 is work-ing as a youth intern at First Presbyterian Church this summer for the rising senior class. She is teaching Sunday school, going on a mission trip to New Orleans, LA and planning activities and service opportunities for the youth throughout the week.

Monday, October 29, 2012Golf Club of Tennessee

Sign up NOW for a team or a sponsorship

[email protected]

7th Annual

She and Matthew McAlister ’11 have also begun an EHS alumni theatre company for graduates--this year they will be putting up the play Din-ner With Friends by Donald Margulies. Samantha Gaitsch ’11 is serving as one of six Program Assistants for the High School Summer Experiences Program at Washington University. She is living in a dormitory on campus along with about 175 high-school students, (sopho-mores and juniors), fellow PA’s, and supervisors.

Matthew McAlister ’11 has just completed his freshman year at Muhlenberg College in Allentown , Pa. He will be an RA next fall and plans to major in Theater.

Page 62: Ensights Summer 2012

generosity: the act of gifting unselfishly for the benefit of others; the bequest of 107 artworks in 2004 to Ensworth High School by Gertrude & Benjamin Caldwell

generosity: the act of gifting unselfishly for the benefit of others; the bequest of 107 artworks in 2004 to Ensworth High School by Gertrude & Benjamin Caldwell

When Ensworth High School opened in September 2004, its Visual Arts complex was a beautiful

but sterile building of shiny hallways, waxed floors, and natural light flooding its studios and classrooms.The Caldwells’ gift of paintings (Red Grooms, Miles Maille) sculptures in soapstone, granite and metal (Tim Lewis) and varied wooden artifacts transformed the building’s interiors almost overnight. Surround-ing students with gallery-worthy artworks allows boundless creativity to develop thanks to the generosity of Gertrude and Ben Caldwell. Legacies last forever. For more information, contact Bedell James: [email protected]

When Ensworth High School opened in September 2004, its Visual Arts complex was a beautiful

but sterile building of shiny hallways, waxed floors, and natural light flooding its studios and classrooms.The Caldwells’ gift of paintings (Red Grooms, Miles Maille) sculptures in soapstone, granite and metal (Tim Lewis) and varied wooden artifacts transformed the building’s interiors almost overnight. Surround-ing students with gallery-worthy artworks allows boundless creativity to develop thanks to the generosity of Gertrude and Ben Caldwell. Legacies last forever. For more information, contact Bedell James: [email protected]

Page 63: Ensights Summer 2012

The Caldwell Collection at Ensworth High School

OIL ON CANVAS - FOLK ART - MIXED MEDIA - MARBLE - SANDSTONE - SILKSCREEN

- WATERCOLOR - AFRICAN RELICS - CRAYPAS - SELENIUM PRINT- WELDED STEEL -

BRONZE SCULPTURE - LIMESTONE - LITHOGRAPH - PHOTOGRAPHS - ENGRAVINGS

- BEBO - ILONA BODO - RICHARD BURNSIDE - DAY - G.C. DEPRIE - DILL - JIM DINE -

FOLON - RED GROOMS - PAUL HARMON - TIM LEWIS - MILES MAILLIE - JOHN MORNINE

- ARTHUR ORR - JACK SPENCER - JACQUE VILLON - TOM WALTON - WERNER WILDER -

© Copyrighted 2012 by Ensworth School. The Ensworth School does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, religion, gender, or ethnic / national origin in its admissions or its hiring policies. Ensworth is a member of NAIS,

CASE, SACS, SAIS, and the Tennessee Association of Independent Schools.

William N. Moseley, Headmaster; Dr. Sarah Buchanan, Associate Head of School / Red Gables Campus; David Morgan, Associate Head of School/ Devon Farm Campus; Ricky Bowers, Associate Head of School / Devon Farm

Campus, EHS Athletic Director; Tim Wallace, Division Head Grades 6–8; Brooks Corzine, Dean of 6–8 Students; Erin Mayne, Dean of 9–12 Students ; Bruce Libonn, Division Head Grades P1–5; Sarah Biddy, RG Campus Athletic

Director; Dr. Ellen Reynolds, Counselor, RG Campus; Trina Flynn, Counselor, EHS Campus; Kathryn Brown, President, Board of Trustees.

ENSIGHTS is a bi-annual publication of Ensworth’s Office of Institutional Advancement, Adrienne Parker, Editor. Photography: Mary Byrne Dailey, Justin Eoff, Adrienne Parker, John Picklesimer, Tony Trumbo, Rob Watts.

Contributing Writers: David Berry, Donnie Bryan, Keith Crowe, Jasmine Davis, Caitlin Harris, Tom Jackoboice, Myra McLarey, Lucy Organ, Laura Stewart, Anne Stringham, Gordon Terwilliger, Missy Wallace, David Whitfield.

Paper: FSC certified paper (Chorus Art).

Page 64: Ensights Summer 2012

2011–2012 ENSWORTH ANNUAL FUND DONORSThank You!

Anonymous DonorsAlex AbramDr. & Mrs. Steven R. AbramMr. & Mrs. Randy AhujaJim & Michelle AlcottLisa Diane AldridgeMr. & Mrs. Andrew F. AlexanderHoney & Lamar AlexanderMr. & Mrs. Eric L. AlldredgeDavid & Nancy AllenMr. & Mrs. Lawson C. AllenMarcie AllenNewton & Burkley AllenMr. Samuel E. AllenDr. & Mrs. D. Phillips AltenbernFrannie & Albert AmbroseBeverly AndersonMr. & Mrs. Dan B. Andrews, Jr.Jada ArkovitzMr. & Mrs. James H. Armistead IIIMr. Robert H. F. ArmisteadStephanie Alyne ArmisteadMr. & Mrs. C. Michael ArmstrongMr. & Mrs. James R. ArmstrongMonica ArmstrongBill & Mimi ArthurMr. & Mrs. Charles W. AtwoodLiza AverbuchMark & Shelley AverbuchJane Gilliam & Joseph AwadDr. & Mrs. Dan BaccusMr. & Mrs. John BachmannStephanie & David BaileySallie & John BaileyBill & Paige BainbridgeDr. & Mrs. Elbert W. Baker, Jr.Sara & Galt BakerMr. & Mrs. Mark BanksErica BarbakowDr. & Mrs. Lee Cole BarfieldMary Frist & H. Lee Barfield IIJohn & Margaret BarkerDon & Leigh BarnesMr. & Mrs. W. Kevin BarnettMr. & Mrs. Charles BarrettKim & Rob BarrickJeanie & Hibbie BarrierMr. & Mrs. E. Warner BassEdith McBride BassMr. & Mrs. Jack M. Bass IIIMr. James O. Bass, Sr.Mr. & Mrs. James O. Bass, Jr.Mr. & Mrs. James O. Bass IIIJeanie Bass

Leslie McKinney BassTricia & Frank BassJames BatemanKerry & Ryan BauchieroMr. & Mrs. William BayliffVictoria BeamanAllison & John BeasleyHannah BeathLisa & Tom BeathMadera & Steve BeckhamMr. & Mrs. Roger BeckhamHelen D. BecknerMr. & Mrs. James L. BecknerBraden & Meredith BellRegina BellBonnie & Carney BellMr. & Mrs. Todd BenderHoney BennettMr. & Mrs. Thomas P. BennettMicah & Diane BennettKatie & Reno BensonEric & Leah BentleyMr. & Mrs. Michael BergerMr. & Mrs. Ray H. BerkDavid & Emily BerryAnnie Laurie & Irvin BerryMr. & Mrs. Ruphan BheerMr. & Mrs. Dewayne BiddyDrs. Robert S. & Julia S. BinfordMr. & Mrs. Kenneth R. BirdsongMr. & Mrs. George W. Bishop IIIMark & Deena BittlesClark Rose BivensMs. Dariel S. Blackledge-WhiteMs. Elizabeth H. BlalockCati BlitzMr. & Mrs. Donald F. BoehmAllie BohannonAndrew & Libby BondSuzanne & Paul BondJudge & Mrs. G. Harvey BoswellChad & LeAnne BottorffMr. & Mrs. Dennis C. BottorffJennifer & Todd BottorffBill & Inez BoundsRichard & Sara BovenderMr. & Mrs. Richard H. BowersMr. & Mrs. Douglas G. Bradbury IIIElizabeth BradburyJames C. Bradford IIILissa BradfordMr. & Mrs. William H. BradfordMr. & Mrs. Christopher A. BradleyJanet Bradshaw

Ray & Jeanette BradshawJohn J. Brady IIITiminy & David BraemerMr. & Mrs. A. Braddock BrawnerDr. & Mrs. Peter R. Bream, Jr.Carol L. BredesenKaty BreithauptWill & Judith BrightFlorence Jarrell BrinkhousDr. & Mrs. John W. Brock IIIDr. Terry BrockmanTay BrogdonNici & Ray BrooksMr. & Mrs. Aaron B. Brown IIICarell E. BrownCathy & Martin Brown, Jr.Mr. & Mrs. Charles H. BrownDarby & Vivian BrownMr. & Mrs. David H. BrownPeggy Kennedy BrownScott & Harkness BrownJean M. BruceDonnie BryanMr. & Mrs. John H. Bryan IIISarah & Bob BuchananLauren BuckheitJennifer BuddeTua BultjeMay & John BumpusAnn & Frank BumsteadGantt BumsteadMr. & Mrs. Jeffrey W. Buntin, Jr.Mr. & Mrs. Jeffrey W. Buntin, Sr.Tiffany & Frazer BuntinMr. & Mrs. John R. Burch, Jr.Molly BurgdorfRawls & Daphne ButlerMr. & Mrs. Michael ButtarazziMr. & Mrs. Paul F. BuynaMatt & Cathy ByarlayAllison C. ByrdMr. & Mrs. Barney ByrdBen & Mary ByrdMr. & Mrs. William H. Byrd, Jr.Edie Hofstead CabanissBetsy CaldwellMr. & Mrs. M. Winston CaldwellTerri CaldwellMr. & Mrs. Wentworth Caldwell, Jr.Bratschi CampbellDr. & Mrs. F. J. CampbellMr. Kevin Campbell & Ms. Julie BoswellDr. Orville C. & Dr. Marcia Campbell

Mr. & Mrs. Victor L. CampbellPete & Betty CapaldiniNathan CaplanRebekah CappsMrs. Monroe Carell, Jr.Greg & Jan CarnesMr. & Mrs. Trajan H. Carney IVMs. Debbie CarrollLucius Carroll IIIJeremiah CarterCecy Lovvorn CaseySarah Allen CassanegoMr. & Mrs. Albert CastignettiMr. & Mrs. Dave C. CaswellGeorge H. Cate, Jr.JoAnne & Tom CatoSusanne & Todd CatoEdd CaudillKirk S. ChaberskiMr. & Mrs. John H. ChadwickNicole ChalfantJohnette & Larry ChampagneMr. Chris Champion & Dr. Mary Clare ChampionDavid & Dawn ChanacaMichelle & Sam ChangAeneas ChapmanDr. Ravi S. Chari & Dr. Sharon E. AlbersMr. & Mrs. Adrian CharlesMr. & Mrs. D. Ross CheekMr. & Mrs. Pickslay Cheek, Jr., The Donna & Pickslay Cheek, Jr. Advised Fund of The Community Foundation of Middle TennesseeSusan Kathryn CheekMary Becca CherryDrs. Geoffrey & Kelli ChidseyMrs. Faye Jewell ChilesKate Sherrard ChinnDr. Karla ChristianDr. Douglas Christiansen & Amy Page ChristiansenKatherine & Chris CigarranMr. & Mrs. Glen CivittsJessica & Chip ClarkJohn & Rhonda ClarkMr. & Mrs. John W. Clay, Jr.Mr. John Clay IIINicole & Steele ClaytonMr. & Mrs. G. Paul Clements, Jr.Gina ClemmonsKristy & Peter CliftonJudy & Paul Clinkscales

Richard & Helen CloseEvie CoatesJane & Bill CobleKarin D. CobleMr. & Mrs. Neely Coble IIISandy & Don CochranMr. & Mrs. Jonathan J. ColeElliot Coleman, Jr.Greg & Liza ColemanMr. & Mrs. Robert T. ColemanAmy & Overton ColtonJohn O. ColtonMrs. Patricia K. ColtonMr. & Mrs. Raymond ConanAshley & Lew ConnerMr. & Mrs. L. Forrest ConnerWill Connor & Kim MatthewsMr. & Mrs. Charles W. Cook, Jr.Lawrence & Charlie CookWest CookJennifer K. CookeNancy Bass CookeMr. & Mrs. Christopher CooleyMr. & Mrs. Edgar B. CooperRuth & Chopper CoppeansGeorge CoppleJennifer CorbettCasey & Debbie CorbinRenette CorenswetRuby Cortner & Bill FletcherMr. & Mrs. Brooks CorzineMs. Allison CostelloCurrey CourtneyLinda & Ed CoxNan & Tom CoxMr. & Mrs. David CrabtreeMr. & Mrs. Ray CrabtreeMr. & Mrs. Rupert M. CraftonMr. & Mrs. Bob CrantsMr. & Mrs. Andrew CrawfordGeorge & Camille CrawfordDolly CreaseyEmily Keeble CrookMr. & Mrs. Steven CrookMr. & Mrs. Bruce CrosbyJoan & John CrosbyMr. & Mrs. Kevin CrossMr. & Mrs. James CrossmanAaron CroweDonna & Keith CroweDr. & Mrs. Clayton CummingsElizabeth A. CumminsMary & Richard Cummins, Jr.Mr. Christian B. Currey

Your support of Ensworth is truly important and appreciated—and your generosity and dedication to Ensworth’s mission is inspiring. Following is an alphabetical listing of all donors who made a contribution to the Ensworth Annual Fund during the 2011–2012 fiscal year.

Every effort has been made to ensure the accuracy of this listing, but if you notice an error, please contact the development office at 615-301-5376.

Page 1 (2011–2012 Donors)

Congratulations Ensworth Class of 2012!

Page 65: Ensights Summer 2012

Patsy Page CurryDan & Dawn DaddarioMichael & Janet DagleyChris & Mary Byrne DaileyMr. & Mrs. Albert J. Dale IIIMr. & Mrs. A. Jackson Dale IVMr. & Mrs. Kamel DaoukMr. & Mrs. Nazih DaoukAnne & Eric DarkenMr. & Mrs. David DarstMr. & Mrs. John C. Darwin IIIBarb & Jim DaughertyDr. & Mrs. Utpal P. DavéMary McGee DavenportNina & Page DavidsonLaToya DavisJasmine DavisDiana Day-CarteeDr. & Mrs. Mark DeatonMrs. Malcolm M. DeCampMr. & Mrs. William W. DeCampCourtenay & Bill DeckerWilliam DeckerMr. & Mrs. William S. Decker, Jr.Mr. & Mrs. Laurence DeFranceMr. & Mrs. William R. DeLoache, Jr.Drs. Joseph B. & Jan S. DeLozierNancy & Arthur DemmasElizabeth & Bob DennisMr. & Mrs. David L. DensonDenise & Sam DeVaneBrian & Conde DevineKathryn Tompkins DickMr. & Mrs. John M. DickerJim DicksonW. Joe Diehl, Jr.David & Ashley DillDavid & Elizabeth DingessMr. & Mrs. John H. DinkinsDiane & Mike DioguardiCol. & Mrs. James DismukesMr. & Mrs. Jim Dismukes IIMr. & Mrs. Matthew H. Dobson VMichael B. DonohoJanice & Larry DoochinDewayne & Glenda DotsonMr. & Mrs. Ken DowneyLyn & Frank DowneyDr. & Mrs. William DowneyChristine DozaMyra Blair DrewClaire & Frank DrowotaAlima DubrulleMartha Brothers DuffMr. & Mrs. Earl H. Dunn, Jr.Katie & Taylor DunnMissy & Warren DunnRonnie & Janine DunnMr. & Mrs. Gregory D. DuvallSusan & Jonathan DykeGayle Richardson EadieWhitney EarhartRob EarleyDan & Robyn EarthmanMrs. Elizabeth Warfield EarthmanMr. W. W. Earthman, Jr.

Kelly Koay & Maxwell EblaghieAmanda H. ElcanCal & Pamela ElcanMr. & Mrs. Charles A. ElcanJoseph G. ElcanKatie ElcanErrol L. & Dr. Jean B. ElshtainDavid H. & Liza A. EnglandJustin EoffDaniel EppesJulie EskindMr. & Mrs. Richard J. EskindMr. & Mrs. Alec T. EstesMr. & Mrs. T. William Estes, Jr.Greg EubanksDr. & Mrs. Jonathan EvansMr. & Mrs. Bryan EverettRandall & Maryanne EverettMr. & Mrs. Edward EwingMrs. Vadis L. Turner & Mr. William C. EzellCharlie EzzellSarah Ann & Jim EzzellCarol & Garth FailsFrank & Louisa FarleyDr. & Mrs. Larry FarmerBob & Amanda FarnsworthRichard & Inge FarrellMr. & Mrs. Ron D. FarrisJohn FaulknerBarbara Anne & Jim Felch, MDThomas & Christina FelchRoyce & Persephone FentressChris & Mary FerraraRon & Jerry Anne FilsonJannie FishbackIrwin & Jeff FisherMr. & Mrs. Robert C. Fisher, Jr.Kendall & Greg FlanaganMr. & Mrs. Jeffrey FleetwoodHoward & Lilyan FlemingDr. & Mrs. Philip E. FlemingDr. & Mrs. Mark FloraMegan FlorentineSchuyler H. FloydTrina FlynnMelissa FogarosJamie FohlLori FohlPatrick & Eloise FoleyMr. & Mrs. Chad R. FolkLaura & Ben FolkPete & Anna FongMr. & Mrs. Douglass G. Foote, Jr.Lisa & Doug FooteMr. & Mrs. Duncan M. Fort IIIMs. Lisa L. FrancisMr. & Mrs. John M. Franck IIDan & Chrissy FrankumDiana FrankumFreeland FamilyMr. & Mrs. J. Edmond Freeman, Jr.Steve & Phyllis FridrichRob & Craig FriedrichDr. & Mrs. Thomas F. Frist, Jr.Mr. & Mrs. Thomas F. Frist III

Dr. & Mrs. William H. FristMr. & Mrs. William R. FristFrost & Co.Mr. Jeffrey W. Frumkin & Dr. Shari L. BarkinBill & Lee Anne FryMr. & Mrs. Wilford FuquaSamantha GaitschMatthew & Gina GallivanMr. & Mrs. Ben S. Gambill, Jr.Mrs. James C. Gardner, Jr.Mr. & Mrs. Scott GarfinkelKarlen & Louis GarrardJeremy GarrettDr. & Mrs. Blake GarsideCarrie GauchatDr. & Daniel C. GeddieKathleen GeerDr. Richard GeerLaura GerdesmeierMr. & Mrs. Gregg A. GerkenHarris A. GilbertHarris N. GilbertMr. & Mrs. Vince GillSherri & Todd GiorgioClaire GlassfordMary Catherine & Grant GlassfordMr. & Mrs. Ralph T. GlassfordRobert GlausDr. Mark Glazer & Ms. Cynthia StoneDaniel GluckJonathan GluckLinda & Joel GluckEmma GoddardJanet E. GoettleMs. Nina S. GoinsKaren & Steve GoldsmithKatie GoldsteinMissy GoodmanJanice & George GoodwinMichael & Kelly GoorevichBernice & Joel C. GordonFrank & Gwen GordonDarcy & George GouldLinda & Kerry GrahamMadeline GrahamBill & Kathy GraingerMr. & Mrs. William GranaJamie & Jimmy GranberyMr. & Mrs. Frank T. GrantElena & David Graves Miller GravesDr. & Mrs. James R. GrayChris W. GreenEllen GreenMr. & Mrs. Marv GreenWes & Dianne GreenJo Ann & Robert GreenbergKristen & Chad GreerAndrew & Lori GregoryDon & Susan GriffinParker & Meredith GriffithLinda GrovesEllen HaberDr. Ralf Habermann & Dr. Manju Kandula

Mrs. Carolyne B. HaddenEdward A. HadleyMr. & Mrs. Tommy HadleyChrissy & Bill HagertyJohn & Libbey HagewoodJane D. HaggardSuzanne & David HagyMr. & Mrs. Douglas S. HaleScott & Dr. Connie HaleyCarolyn & Hartley HallLemanski HallMr. & Mrs. Anthony J. Halligan IIIMike & Lori HalloranMary B. & Beau HammetJon HamptonMike & Katie HaneyJenny HannonMrs. Frances K. HardcastleStephanie & Jay HardcastleMark HardisonAnn Phillips HarmerWiff & Wendell HarmerWinfred & Sue HarrellEstie & Rhett HarrisRobert & Caitlin HarrisSarah & Daniel HartKatherine & Dan HartleMr. & Mrs. John B. HarveyRobb & Nancy Hart HarveyBeth & Sam HarwellJonathan M. Harwell, Jr.Tom & Clark HarwellStephanie & Jim HastingsWilliam & Tricia HastingsJoanne F. HayesMrs. & Mr. John B. HayesMichael W. HayesGlenna & Sam HazenMr. & Mrs. David W. HeadIrene & Philip HeadLindsay HeadJamie HeardDr. & Mrs. Robert L. HedgesMr. & Mrs. Stephen J. Heins, Sr.Cris & Rob HempelAngie & Arthur HendersonMary M. HendersonWilliam I. HendersonJoe & Marion HerndonRob Herring & Sarah RohdeAmber & Phil HertikRisa Klein HerzogWill HesterSarah & Patrick HigginsJohn W. Hill & Jill Webb-HillVianda Hale HillKen HinmanTara HinmanEarlene HintonPatricia HodgsonDan & Phyllis HoganMr. & Mrs. Ronald L. HolcombTina & Blair HollisJames R. HolstonMr. & Mrs. Richard D. HoltonHenry & Sally Hood

Bradford HookerMr. & Mrs. Henry W. HookerWilliam Hamilton & Charliene HookerChelsy HooperJohn & Leslie HooperMr. & Mrs. Steven C. HooperMr. & Mrs. Thomas M. HooperTina & Hale HooperElizabeth H. HootonKellie HopkinsMr. & Mrs. Calvin Houghland, Jr.Randy & Shay HowardLaurin B. HowellElise HoworthWill HoworthMrs. Jeanne Hubert & Mr. Peter C. SalesAllan B. HuntMr. & Mrs. James V. Hunt, Sr.Mr. & Mrs. James V. Hunt, Jr.Sara HurstJo Ann HutchisonMr. & Mrs. Lara F. Hutt IIIMr. & Mrs. John R. IngramMrs. Martha R. IngramMr. & Mrs. Orrin H. Ingram IISarah & David IngramMichael IrelandMr. & Mrs. Bobby Irvine, Jr.Jennifer & Mark IsheeGavin & Martha IvesterBrian & Deana IveyMr. & Mrs. Thomas J. Jackoboice, Jr.Baxter JacksonChristopher D. JacksonEdward & Elizabeth JacksonElizabeth JacksonMr. & Mrs. Harold E. Jackson, Jr.Mary Lee & Granbery JacksonMr. & Mrs. Robert B. JacksonSally JacksonMr. & Mrs. John JacobsonAnne & Bedell JamesMr. & Mrs. Edward B. James, Jr.Glenn & Davie JamisonDr. & Mrs. David A. JarvisMr. & Mrs. J. James Jenkins, Jr.Shirley JenkinsMr. & Mrs. Randy JenningsSteve JobeAlan & Amy JohnsonAnne Laurence JohnsonCaroline JohnsonMr. & Mrs. Dale K. Johnson, Jr.Mr. & Mrs. David E. JohnsonEdie & David JohnsonEmily JohnsonHeather & Stephen JohnsonDr. James N. Johnson & Ms. Catherine J. StutznerJill & Steve JohnsonKatie JohnsonMrs. Lucy R. JohnsonMr. & Mrs. Samuel L. Johnson IIIMr. & Mrs. Victor S. Johnson III

Page 2 (2011–2012 Donors)

Page 66: Ensights Summer 2012

Barbara & Howard JohnstonMr. & Mrs. Bart A. JohnstonBratschi & Crews JohnstonPat & Tony JohnstonTami & Mac JohnstonJanice & Jamie JonesKathy JonesMary & Rick JonesMary Jane & Buck JonesMr. & Mrs. Richard A. JonesSusan & Bill Joy, Jr.Mr. & Mrs. Douglas JoyceMatthew KaminskiDrs. Narayana V. & Suseelamma R. KandulaBrad & Harriet KarroMiles KarroJeneen KaufmanMartin KaufmanMr. & Mrs. William F. Kautzman, Jr.A. J. & Kathy KazimiGrace B. KeebleAndy KelleyMr. & Mrs. Charles B. KelleyCynthia KelleyEd KelleyJon & Katy KelleyMary Herbert & Mark KellyMr. & Mrs. John Scott KendallJulie KennonMrs. David KerrGarth & Christie KilburnRev. & Mrs. Timothy E. KimbroughMr. & Mrs. Cannon KingDavid & Cathy KingMr. & Mrs. Jack F. King, Jr.Jerry Kirchoff & Jane Bentz Mr. & Mrs. Steve KirkhamMr. & Mrs. Howard L. KirshnerMr. & Mrs. Robert W. KitchelMr. & Mrs. Jerry D. KnightBecky Oliver KownPage & Kipp KranbuhlJonathan KrebsLois R. KrebsMr. Philip D. KrebsSteve & Sharlene KrehelyJames & Mary Lou KreissKaren & Jeffrey KungCoco & Chris KyriopoulosJohn & Deborah La GorceArthur & Melissa LafferMr. & Mrs. Randolph M. LaGasseJudy LagonegroLaura LaineRebecca & Craig LaineMr. & Mrs. George P. LaleMr. & Mrs. Howard H. Lamar IIIMr. & Mrs. Chris E. Lambos, Jr.Mr. & Mrs. David LampleyJessica LampleyMr. & Mrs. Thomas F. LandstreetRyan LangfordJody Lang-SmithLinden LantzMrs. Elinor LashleyMr. & Mrs. John F. Lavey

Claire Stadler LawhorneCarolyn & Tom LawrenceLisa & Gaylon LawrenceWestin LawrenceJanice M. LawsonJennifer LawsonMr. & Mrs. Fred W. LazenbyEva LeaKari Ann LeahMr. & Mrs. H. Rowan Leathers IIICatherine & Ryan LeeGray & Suzanne LeeTia FerrellEmmy Greer LeftwichEllen LehmanThe Lehman FamilyMr. & Mrs. Hill B. LendermanAnna Mary & Dick LendermanGregory & Katherine LettermanMr. & Mrs. Randy LeverettMr. & Mrs. Joseph C. LeviMamie & Jim LeviTommy & Sheri LewisDr. & Mrs. William H. Liggett, Jr.Elizabeth & Joshua LindseyThe Linley FamilyDr. & Mrs. MacRae Fort LintonDee Dee & Rob LittleMichelle LittleMr. & Mrs. Robert C. LittleMr. & Mrs. Jeff D. LloydJoe & Toni LloydMr. Nigel Lloyd & Dr. Caroline ChesterThe Loh FamilyLauren LoseyDavid W. LovellDr. & Mrs. Newton Lovvorn, Jr.Mr. & Mrs. John Powell LoweJames LundyJeff & Gwynne LundyJoseph M. & Linda C. LynchPatrick LynchDavid & Jenny MacDonaldDr. & Mrs. John W. Macey, Jr.Molly MachleitDan & Leslie MaclellanSally C. MacomberMr. & Mrs. David J. Mahanes IIIDavid & Patti MangumAnne & Rich MaradikJoshua & Dina MarksMrs. Ellen H. MartinMr. & Mrs. David C. MasonDr. Jewell J. MasonSteven & Laura MasonMr. & Mrs. Steven J. Mason, Sr.Mrs. Jack C. MasseySusan Chang MassickMarie & George MastersonDr. & Mrs. G. Patrick MaxwellMr. & Mrs. Jason MaxwellBarbara & Ted MaydenMs. Erin L. MayneEmily & Hill McAlisterHavens & Joel McAlisterJ.R. & Elizabeth McAllister

Mr. & Mrs. Robert A. McCabe, Jr.Mr. & Mrs. David McClellanMr. & Mrs. John W. McClellanMr. & Mrs. Jammy W. McCloudConor McDermottKevin P. & Deborah A. McDermottElizabeth & Mark McDonaldAlec & Monica McDougallChristopher & Vera McEvoyBartley & Paige McGeheeKate & Joel McGlassonMr. & Mrs. Michael McGuffinDrs. Hassane Mchaourab & Hanane KoteicheMyra McLarey & Steve PratiDr. & Mrs. Challace J. McMillinDebbie McQuittyBeth & Tom McRaeJanet & Glenn McRaeKim & David McRaeShawn & Laura McSpaddenMr. & Mrs. Scott A. MerrymanMary Kate MeyerDr. Crystal Miller & Mr. Daniel MillerJenny Amacher MillerJim MillerMr. & Mrs. Johnny L. MillerKaren MillerNancy & David MillerTony & Kim MillerMartha MillerMr. & Mrs. Thomas G. MilneKen & Lisa MinnickMr. & Mrs. Bill MitchellDr. & Mrs. Carl E. MitchellFulton MitchellDr. Megan MitchellChristopher & Patricia MixonDiana & Jeff MobleyPaul & Hope MoellerAlice MoganCapucine E. MonkCharlie & Royce MonkBrent & Shelby MoodyAlex & Lindsey MooreDaniel & Paige MooreKaren & Bruce MooreLewis & Jane MoorerDavid W. MorganFrank & Lori MorganMarisa A. MorganDr. & Mrs. Walter M. Morgan IIIHennie Benedict MorrisJohn & Julia MorrisMr. & Mrs. Russell MorrisMr. & Mrs. Will MorrowMegan MoseleyWill & Jenny MoseleyGeorge & Brenda MudterCeleste & Chetan MukundanJim & Frieda MullowneyMr. & Mrs. Kevin L. MurphyGerald R. MushiMeghann McConnell MyersRuth NagaredaEleanor & Jeff NahleyElaine Brown Nathurst

Mr. & Mrs. James F. Neal, Jr.Dr. & Mrs. Matthew T. NealKenny & Pam NeedhamGene NelsonDr. & Mrs. Jonathan C. NesbittDr. & Mrs. Thomas E. Nesbitt, Jr.David & Laurie NettervilleEmy NoelMr. & Mrs. T. Scott NoonanMrs. Donald NordlundSally NordlundWill & Heather NortonCarol & Jack NuismerMr. & Mrs. Allen Kerry OakleyMr. & Mrs. Sam OakleyJoy & Ed O’DellCelestia O’DonnellJennifer L. OertleyMr. & Mrs. Brett OeserBabs & Wills OglesbyBob & Vicki OglesbyMr. & Mrs. M. Wills OglesbyMary Beth OglesbyKim & Peter OldhamMark & Sharon OldhamChris OlsonHeidi & Michael O’Neil, The Taggie-Big Pig Advised Fund of The Community Foundation of Middle TennesseeJohn & Cynthia OrcuttLucy Adkins OrganMr. & Mrs. Joe OrgillKatie OsborneRenee OsteenCraig & Susan OttMelanie & Allen OverbyDr. & Mrs. Ronald OverfieldDr. & Mrs. John P. OverholtSandra OwenCeleste G. OxfordMr. & Mrs. Scott PackMrs. Alfene S. PageJeanne & James PankowAlexander ParikhMr. & Mrs. Andrew S. ParkPeter & Melanie ParkAdrienne C. ParkerAdrienne M. & Robert E. ParkerDrew ParkerMr. & Mrs. Patrick ParkerBen ParrishCole ParrishMr. & Mrs. Nathan C. Parrish, Sr.Mrs. Douglas ParsonsAlyssa PatelNeal & Supriya PatelDrs. Louise & Takis PatikasMr. & Mrs. Takis Patikas, Jr.David E. PattersonCheryl & Allen PattonMr. & Mrs. Richard PayneRod & Palmer PayneDrs. Mark & Nancy PeacockDr. & Mrs. Douglas PearceMr. & Mrs. Michael S. PeekMary Perkins

Scott PerkinsonDrs. Jonathan & Donna PerlinDr. & Mrs. Seymour PerlinCatherine Beckner PerryMeg PerryMr. & Mrs. Timothy M. PetrikinBarbara Gregg PhillipsPaul PhillipsDr. & Mrs. Robert PianaMr. & Mrs. James R. Pickel IIIRose & Harold PickelJohn PicklesimerMr. & Mrs. James F. Pilkerton IIITish PilkertonDr. & Mrs. Dale Pilkinton, Jr.Elliot & Jessica PinslyMaurice W. PinsonMr. & Mrs. Raymond PipkinW.J. & Martha PitmanJim & Katherine PittMatthew PlumbMr. & Mrs. F. Gordon Pollock, Jr.Gary & Verleon PopeMarietta Waldrum PoteetMichael D. PowellMr. & Mrs. Jeffrey E. PowellPam & Fred PrevostHenry R. & Shirley PriceMary Neil PriceRachel & Mark PriceDan & Beth PrideMr. & Mrs. William D. PriesterDr. & Mrs. Ron PruittDenny & Alice PryorBecky & Larry PuckettMr. Craig D. PulliamDr. & Mrs. Robert PulliamDan & Angela PursleyGus & Jennifer PuryearRobin & David PuryearMr. & Mrs. Frank J. Quirk, Jr.Florence RailsbackMark L. RainesElizabeth & Will RalphLucy RalphMolly RalphRebecca RalphMr. & Mrs. Boaz RamonEd & Terry Allison RappuhnShane RayCynthia & Franco RecchiaMs. Marie L. ReedLinda & Stuart ReeveChristopher & Kris RehmCynthia Y. ReiszArthur & Sheila ReutherMiller ReutherRebecca & Jonathan RevealDr. Ellen C. ReynoldsDouglas & Beth RiceMr. & Mrs. Hunter RiceAmy RichDrs. Mark & Kyra RichterMelissa & Wade RickStephen & Emmie RickDr. & Mrs. John A. RiddickCarolyn Riley

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Laura & Rob RileyLauren Martinez RileyMargaret RileyMr. & Mrs. Steven Allen RileyMr. & Mrs. Michael D. RippetoeMr. & Mrs. John F. RobbinsBev & Bill RobertsMr. & Mrs. Patrick H. F. RobertsMark & Deborah RobinJason RobinsonKatie Jackson RobinsonMrs. Margaret Ann RobinsonMr. & Mrs. Worrick G. Robinson IVMr. & Mrs. Jonas Michael RodriguezJohn & Amy RogersMr. & Mrs. Todd RolappJohn & Vanessa RolfeMr. & Mrs. Richard T. RolfeElena & Robert RollinsMary & David RollinsBarbara & Glenn RoseCindy RoseMr. & Mrs. John B. RosenEllie & Trent RosenbloomCynthia RosenblumAdele & Patrick RowanJohn & Lina RowlandMr. & Mrs. Charles B. RoyseJonathan & Eileen RuchmanRunyon-Hass FamilyLauren RupleyMargaret RushMr. & Mrs. Joseph V. RussellMr. & Mrs. Jonathan B. RuykhaverMark & Natalie RymanChris & Susan SadlerDr. & Mrs. Terry SaltsmanCamy & Sam SanchezJ. W. Chenault SandersDebbie & Michael SandwithKris SanteeDr. & Mrs. Harvey S. SatzKate & Eric SatzMr. & Mrs. Marcel A. SauveMr. & Mrs. H. Pride ScanlanMr. & Mrs. Rick ScarolaMr. & Mrs. Lee W. SchaeferMr. & Mrs. Dennis SchillingShelley SchmidtTerri Welch Schmidt-FellnerDean Schneider & Robin SmithDebbie SchuldMr. & Mrs. Stuart P. Schulz, Jr.Walter & Nancy SchultzConnor SchutzmanAntonia ScipioSue & John ScofieldGarney & Beth Anne ScottMr. & Mrs. Jeffrey K. ScottJK ScottVee Vee & John ScottSusannah Brown Scott-BarnesDr. & Mrs. George S. Scoville, Jr.Donald & Maureen SeitzMark T. SeitzMr. & Mrs. Charles G. SellDr. & Mrs. Steve Shankle

Mr. & Mrs. James L. Shaub IIMr. & Mrs. Jonathan A. ShayneGeorge H. Shearer, Jr.Jason & Libby SheerRobert & Tamara SheffieldGwyn & Rick ShepardKenlyn ShepherdPam & Michael SheridanAdam SherlandMr. & Mrs. Billy N. SherrillBrian & Susan ShippMr. & Mrs. Terrence B. Shirey, Jr.Stephanie ShockleyMr. & Mrs. Thomas ShoemakerDorothy & Clay SiffordJudy & Martin SimmonsDr. & Mrs. Robert E. SimsMr. & Mrs. Roy Sims Jr.Mary Roberts SingletonDarlene SinksRobbie & Leigh SinksEric & Emily SipeJohn & Jennifer SiscoMr. & Mrs. Steve SlatteryMr. & Mrs. Paul L. Sloan IIIHugh & Betsy SmalleyWally Smalley & Louise HansonMr. & Mrs. Brian S. SmallwoodBarbara & Brett SmithBetty & Randy SmithMr. & Mrs. Charles T. SmithDee Anna & Hubie SmithMr. & Mrs. Dudley D. SmithMr. & Mrs. Frank L. Smith, Jr.Mr. & Mrs. Gilbert P. SmithMr. & Mrs. James G. SmithJanette & Andy SmithLil Bradford SmithLinda & Gibbs SmithMr. & Mrs. Paul SmithMr. & Mrs. Robert L. Smith Sr.Sean SmithShepley & Shannon SmithSue & E. Dan SmithMrs. Stuart W. SmithMr. & Mrs. William T. Smith, Jr.Andrew H. & Macie P. SmithermanStan & Suzanne SnyderRick SobelHayden SohrLeah & Jim Sohr Family FoundationPeter & Linda SonkinMr. & Mrs. Richard M. SpeerMr. & Mrs. Roy SpeerMr. & Mrs. James W. Spradley, Jr.Judge & Mrs. Joseph E. Spruill, Jr.Ben SpurlockLee SrebnickMelinda & Patrick SrebnickJulie & George StadlerDr. & Mrs. S. Tyler StaelinStephen H. Staelin & Penny K. StaelinDr. & Mrs. Herman StallingsMr. & Mrs. John StallingsDrs. Bob & Cathy StallworthDr. & Mrs. William Stallworth

Fleur StanbrookMr. & Mrs. A. J. StarlingMr. & Mrs. Andrae K. StarlingSharon G. StearnsJim & Carolyn SteinhouseSarah Steinhousethe late Mr. Kermit C. Stengel, Jr. & Mrs. Kermit C. Stengel, Jr.Carol & Riggs StephensonJanet SterchiSara & Larry StesselMr. & Mrs. Jeremy StevensLaura StevensLaura StewartDr. Mary Laird W. Stewart & Mr. Russell O. StewartSteven & Cheryl StewartJames D. StigallTom & Cheryl StormsLaura StovallSam & Perian StrangAnne & Jack StringhamKathy & Tom StumbMary & Paul StumbDrs. Paul & Cristy StumbJane Gwinn StumpfJon & Stephanie SundockAaron & Jennifer SundstromJoe S. SuttonMr. & Mrs. George SweeneyJalen, Jourdan, & Justice SwettPascha L. SwettDr. Tianlai Tang & Dr. Christine DongElizabeth & Dan TarantinAnne & Jim TateChris TaylorClarence H. Taylor, Jr.Clay & Stewart TaylorKelly TaylorMargaret TaylorMrs. Melanie L. TaylorSally TaylorMr. & Mrs. Steve TaylorMr. & Mrs. T. Stephen C. TaylorRev. & Mrs. Tim TaylorMr. George TelferMelody TelferFrannie & Gordon TerwilligerMary Reid TevisMarcus & Michelle TheusMrs. Harriet R. ThomasMargaret Caldwell ThomasMr. & Mrs. Norman A. Thomas IIIMr. & Mrs. Tehran A. BateyMichael & Lezette ThomasonDr. & Mrs. John B. Thomison, Jr.Mr. & Mrs. DeWitt C. Thompson IVGretchen ThompsonMr. & Mrs. Michael P. ThompsonSophie K. ThompsonTory ThompsonKit & Matt ThomsonCurrey & Wade ThorntonCate TidwellMary Louise TidwellMr. & Mrs. O. Cromwell Tidwell IIIMr. & Mrs. Jim Todd

Cody TollisonJennifer TormeyMr. & Mrs. Joseph H. TorrenceJavier & Ivonne TorresBrandon & Michele ToungetteMs. Tiffany E. Townsend & Mr. Todd MatthewsAshley & Josh TravisLisa TravisAllison TrickettMr. & Mrs. Reed TrickettTony TrumboGrace TsengDeborah P. TullyBarbara S. TurnerChristi & Jay TurnerMr. Clay Ezell & Mrs. Vadis L. TurnerMr. & Mrs. Gregg TurnerLester & Linda TurnerMartha H. & Joseph C. P. TurnerWill TurneyMr. & Mrs. James L. UdenLaura UnderwoodShellie Sumner Unger & Rick UngerThe Upkins FamilyJohn & Melanie VanBryan Van VleetMr. & Mrs. David T. VandewaterMr. & Mrs. Jerry C. VaughanSundar & Nithya VenkateshJennifer Herbert VickJessica & Daniel VinerJohn Robert Voigt, Jr.Lindsay VoigtMissy Nesbitt VoigtWinston Nesbitt VoigtMr. & Mrs. Paul F. WadeKris & G.G. WaggonerJulie & Breck WalkerJulie & Hudson WalkerJulie & Mitch WalkerRonald & Gerri WalkerJanet & Chris WallMs. Anne B. Mimi WallaceMr. and Mrs. Jack WallaceLisa & Tim WallaceMark & Lisa WallacePat WallaceMissy & Paul WallaceDr. & Mrs. Trent WallaceTommy & Daffy WammackTom & Sarah WarburtonBrian WardCorinne & Jimmy WardMr. & Mrs. James C. Ward IIIRene Houghland WardPatrick WarfieldJoyce WarnerMr. & Mrs. Steven G. WatersMr. & Mrs. Clinton W. WatkinsMr. Justin WeatherbyMr. & Mrs. Eugene Woods Weathersby, Jr.Mrs. William C. Weaver IIIAdria WebbRegina Webster

Margaret WeesnerAsli & Hendrik WeitkampAnn Harwell WellsDarrell WellsMr. & Mrs. Jeremy S. WerthanAnn & Axson WestDrs. Patrick & Ursula WhalenShelby Bailey WhelissDebbie WhiteMrs. Dudley B. WhiteMs. Lenore WhiteLindsay WhiteMr. & Mrs. Cress WhitfieldDavid WhitfieldMr. & Mrs. Barton D. WhitmanJonna & Doug WhitmanMr. & Mrs. Bobby WhitsonCharles B. Whitworth IIIEleanor WhitworthMitchell & Stacy WiatrakJohn & Taliesa WicksMrs. Ann Hendricks WileyCynthia Kirby WileyMr. & Mrs. David W. Wiley IIIEllen W. WilkinsDrs. Elisabeth & Jeffrey WillersBuck & Patti WilliamsEmma WilliamsJennifer & Thomas WilliamsKathy & Royce WilliamsMandy WilliamsMarie Y. WilliamsMissy WilliamsRon & Janet WilliamsMr. & Mrs. Steven WilliamsBetty O. WilliamsonMr. & Mrs. David G. Williamson IIISharon Williams-RadecicMr. & Mrs. Blair J. WilsonJeffrey D. WilsonMr. & Mrs. Marc O. WilsonMr. & Mrs. William M. WilsonBetsy & T. J. WiltMr. & Mrs. Fleming WiltPhil & Sherri WinesDr. & Mrs. Lawrence K. WolfeJeff & Maria WolfgangHarry J. & Beth WolskijMr. & Mrs. J. Travis WombleMr. & Mrs. Stephen F. Wood, Jr.Elizabeth M. WoodardMike & Lisa WooleyDr. & Mrs. Richard E. WooleyMaury & Mark WoolwineMr. & Mrs. Dewayne J. WootsonMr. & Mrs. Chris D. WrightDick & Carol WrightEmmy WrightHeather & Danny WrightMr. & Mrs. Matthew W. WrightSarah & Robert YavorskiFaith Adams YoungMandy & Stephen YoungMr. & Mrs. John R. YoungerOrit & Igal ZamirMr. & Mrs. Thomas B. Zerfoss III

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