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Our Community, Ourselves The Aloha Foundation 2008 Annual Report

Leadership Messages Inside Leadership Messages

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Camp Directors’ Messages

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The World Comes to Camp

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Funding Families to Share the Fun

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Diverse in Purpose; Diverse in People

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Anyone Can Camp

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Financial Reports

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Volunteers

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Gifts

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Board of Trustees

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I

have discovered that if you want to increase the pace of your life, just become President of The Aloha Foundation Board of Trustees. It was a little more than three years ago that I took over the helm of the Board and now, suddenly, it’s over. What a ride! Each year was memorable, but in 2008 the momentum seemed to build exponentially, culminating in a series of outstanding achievements. The residential camps enjoyed record attendance, and Ohana Camp opened after Herculean efforts led by Win Ameden, Andy Williams and, of course, Jim Zien. The Centennial Campaign closed at year-end with resounding success, as you will read later in this report. By way of perspective, we raised FIVE TIMES as many dollars as in our previous capital campaign. It is truly humbling to reflect on the generosity of our constituents and the superlative efforts staff and trustees made to reach out and connect. Congratulations to all! On the policy front, trustee Mark Zvonkovic led a behind-the-scenes effort to revise and adopt governance documents and practices that comply with recent changes in federal laws concerning corporate oversight. He also drafted guidelines for modernizing our Board committees and meeting procedures. Kudos to Mark not only for seeing the need for these changes, but also for the countless hours he devoted to their implementation. I also want to thank longtime Board members James Bone and Jo Ann Silverstein for their many years of service. Both retired as trustees in 2008, and they already are missed. It has been a singular honor for me to have served as President of the Board. I appreciated the opportunity and I want to thank my fellow Trustees for their encouragement, wisdom and expertise. In addition, the many outstanding members of the Foundation staff have provided remarkable support and assistance. Thank you all. Finally, I’m pleased to turn the role of Board President over to Sally Reid, who we all know is uniquely qualified to provide leadership and direction to the Foundation going forward. Bob White President, Board of Trustees 2005-2008

The Aloha Foundation is a non-profit educational institution with the objectives of fostering personal growth, self-reliance, self-confidence, cooperation, and a sense of community in people of all ages and backgrounds. These objectives are accomplished through a variety of experiences including, camping, hiking, athletics, water sports, art, music, crafts, theater, and environmental education. In a warm and caring atmosphere, Aloha’s professional staff nurtures the health and well-being of individuals and helps guide them through challenging experiences that enrich their lives.

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hank you, Bob, for that vote of confidence. I am not entirely sure what uniquely qualifies me to lead the Foundation in what promises to be interesting times, but I know that as a community and an organization we are strong. Just look at the commitment the Aloha family demonstrated in supporting our enormously successful Centennial Campaign. Look at Mark Zvonkovic’s project to bring our governance practices and policies into the 21st Century—a labor of love made all the more remarkable by his success in melding modern “best practices” with the Foundation’s historic culture of close collaboration between Trustees and management. This is an organization prepared to meet the challenges of our next 100 years. But when I think about the Foundation and how proud I am to lead it, I don’t focus on fundraising, or governance, or dwell on economic uncertainties. I think about “those green-clad hills,” the safe haven they have provided to children for decades—in good times and bad—and the unique opportunity for growth and joy that they have afforded us, our children and our grandchildren. I close my eyes, smell the smoke from the campfire and hear the voices singing of Aloha. And then I know: whatever the challenges ahead, I do not have to meet them alone; we will meet them together, as we always have. That’s the Aloha way. Sally Reid President, Board of Trustees 2008–2010

I

t’s inevitable in an annual report to view the year past through the lens of the present. Looking back at 2008 from the vantage of early 2009, we can see clearly now that The Aloha Foundation reached new plateaus of activity in several dimensions at a critical time in our community’s distinguished history. How fortunate we are to have topped up the Centennial Capital Campaign as the national economy began running on empty. How good it is that we hosted more campers in 2008 than we’ve seen in decades, establishing a strong position in these chilly economic winds for weathering possible swings in enrollment. Where else could financially buffeted families find a little help to keep their children coming to camp, than right among us, through the generosity of alumni who continue to have means to give the gift of summer, and readily do? What a wonder that we put the finishing touches on our fine new family camp just in time to make simple, natural and affordable vacations available to mom, dad, the kids, a couple of grandparents, and a few aunts, uncles and cousins, pooling their resources. All these benefits accrue to the Alohas through our strength as a community enriched by diversity in all its forms and meanings. This 2008 Annual Report explores Our Community, Ourselves from a variety of points of view: the diverse people we serve, the varieties of experience we provide, the means we offer to make them accessible to all, and the benefits they deliver to everyone. I hope you will enjoy reading these pages for the stories of community they tell, as well as the financial indicators they present of our fundamentally hale condition, and the thanks they extend to all who support us in being so. Jim Zien Executive Director The Aloha Foundation Annual Report

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Camp Directors’ Messages Aloha

MJ Parry Nowadays, technology bridges vast distances, bringing worlds we never even dreamed of to desktops and cell phones in a flash. Simultaneously, it’s getting harder to sustain communities of real people in human time and human space. Neighborhoods and social blocks are fast becoming artifacts of a former age. Children no longer “go out and play” much with friends around the corner or down the street. Texting increasingly supplants talk—time with friends is spent tapping on a 2" screen rather than together in a family room. At Aloha, though, we create a community that’s genuinely in touch—with one another, with nature, and with the perceptions and inspirations both realms provide, when we really pay attention. Here, girls and young women from cities, suburbs, small towns and many countries live and grow together unplugged, in a well-connected summer neighborhood of their own making. Camp conversations— in tents and cabins or around dining tables and campfires—draw girls with diverse backgrounds, personalities and life experiences into worlds of knowledge and understanding that no instant message or emoticon possibly can convey. We like that, and judging from their rate of return, Aloha campers do, too.

Hive

Kathy Plunkett Campers live simply and mindfully at Aloha Hive, in a rich, natural world of opportunities for experiencing new sensations daily: birds singing around their tents each morning, the sweet smell of the dew as they walk down the hillside to breakfast, mist over the lake signaling the start of another warm summer day. On hot afternoons campers weave baskets at the arts and crafts dock, cooling their toes in the lake’s clear waters. Or, paddling a river, they feel the current trickle and flow coldly through their fingers. Nature’s diversity creates the framework for the choices and the feelings that shape our lives at camp, teaching us to appreciate each other and our summer days together in so many ways. And then at the end of each day, there’s the call of the owls heralding the arrival of nightfall— and in the deep darkness of Vermont, a magically beautiful starry sky. 2

The Aloha Foundation Annual Report

Lanakila Barnes Boffey Celebrating a diverse population at the Aloha camps has an interesting twist to it. People from different cultures, races and backgrounds come to camp, and we immediately take away many things which highlight individual differences. Uniforms replace hometown sweatshirts and we downplay many other trappings which draw focus to how different we are. The power of Aloha diversity is first felt as awareness that we are all a great deal more the same than we are different. The power of Aloha diversity rests in the realization that our primary way of relating to others should not be in their dissimilarity, but in the humanness and personhood that resides behind the clothes and hats and jewelry and gadgets that too often draw one’s initial attention. Once we feel connected in our deep human sameness, we can be open to our differences in a significantly compassionate manner, celebrating our personal and cultural views of the world and life’s journey. Rather than recycling attitudes and perceptions based on an unchanged view of our spiritual connection, we can truly appreciate each other from the inside out.

Once we feel connected in our human sameness, we can be open to our differences in a significantly compassionate manner, celebrating our personal and cultural views of the world and life's journey.

Horizons

Hulbert Outdoor Center

Danny Kerr One of the rewarding developments in Horizons’ short history has been the growing involvement of “grandcampers”—grand children who attend camp while visiting grandparents in the Upper Valley. What a perfect arrangement! Grandma and grandpa have the pleasure of hosting a young family member or two while the youngsters have fun every day, swimming, canoeing, sailing, playing sports, doing arts and crafts, producing plays, and participating in all of the other activities Horizons offers. Grandparents tell us they love sharing a grandchild’s daily excitement about summer experiences at camp, especially because the elders and young ‘uns see each other so infrequently otherwise. Quiet conversations at the end of each camp day play a big part, they say, in creating closer bonds between the generations. Parents of “grandcampers” love the concept, too. In fact they get the best of several worlds: a welcome respite from regular child care; a fine connection with their own mothers and fathers around their children’s everyday joys; and the chance to spend a few days in beautiful Vermont at the beginning and end of each grand-camping season. Who knew at Horizons’ onset a decade ago that we’d be creating an intergenerational day camp community? And how great that it’s turned out that way!

Andy Williams For 30 years now the Hulbert Outdoor Center has provided learning and leadership development experiences to hundreds of school and community groups, and tens of thousands of individuals of all ages. Having had the privilege of watching Hulbert grow for 20 of those years, I think often about the Center’s beginnings and the vision of the founding staff—Paul Pilcher, then Director of Lanakila, and a loyal group of camp counselors working mostly for room and board. Hulbert welcomed the first school groups in the spring of 1978, when its facilities consisted of a makeshift dorm room in the upper dining hall, heated with wood. The “camper jobs program” still in place today, was created because there was simply no money to hire kitchen staff. Hulbert was born in financially hard times not unlike today, when the Foundation needed to make more productive use of camp facilities that were otherwise closed up for nine months of every year. Fortunately, the Trustees and staff had faith in the future of year-round programming, which would eventually serve over 6,000 children and adults annually through school programs, family camps, wilderness trips, Elderhostels, skills workshops and educational conferences. Like a good outdoorsman, Hulbert has adapted over the decades to changes in the environment for its services and resources, and looks toward the future with great confidence in our capacity to keep on trail blazing.

Grandparents tell us they love sharing a grandchild's daily excitement about summer experiences at camp, especially because the elders and young'uns see each other so infrequently otherwise.

Ohana

Andy Williams Harriet and Edward Gulick knew that bringing diversity to the routines of life offers enormous potential for growth. To be in a new place; to do new things in new ways; to meet new people; to live, play, and learn together—these are the essential elements of the “Aloha camp summer” we have nurtured here in Fairlee for 105 years. We continue to find strength in these fundamental ideas in fashioning the program at Ohana. In 2008, Ohana’s inaugural year, families traveled from near and far to form diverse camp communities week by week: from Hanover, NH, and New York City; from Massachusetts, New Jersey, Ohio and California; from Austria, France, Spain and Singapore. Some came in singles or pairs; others came in force, with representation from every generation—infants, toddlers and school children; parents, grandparents and great grandparents; aunts, uncles and cousins. The largest family contingent numbered 23, sharing meals; swimming, sailing, canoeing, and kayaking; hiking and biking side by side; singing and contra dancing with one another, unplugged and relaxed. The Gulicks would have been pleased.

The World Comes to Camp At the Alohas, Friends from Here, There and Everywhere

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ubbing elbows with camp-mates from all over the world is a seldom-remarked but especially meaningful benefit of a summer in Fairlee. From their earliest days, the camps of The Aloha Foundation sought out and welcomed international campers and counselors. Last summer there was a pretty good chance you’d hear French, Spanish, German, Dutch, Russian, Polish, Hebrew, Hungarian, Irish, Scottish, and Aussie, as well as the King’s English spoken around the grounds of Aloha, Hive, Lanakila and Ohana. Every camp summer, more than 100 campers and counselors cross dozens of international boundaries on their way to Fairlee. The rest, 900 or so in all, hail from all but a few of our United States—from Washington, Oregon and California to Maine, Virginia, Georgia and Florida.

AZ CA CO CT DC DE FL GA IA ID

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IL KS KY LA MA MD ME MI MN NC

NH NJ NV NY OH OK OR PA PR RI

TN TX UT VA VT WA WI WV WY

The Aloha Foundation Annual Report

Australia Bahamas Belarus Canada China Croatia Ecuador Egypt England

France Germany Hong Kong Hungary Ireland Israel Italy Mexico Netherlands

New Zealand Northern Ireland Poland Russia Scotland Singapore Slovenia South Africa Spain

From their earliest days, the camps of The Aloha Foundation sought out and welcomed international campers and counselors.

Switzerland Tunisia Turkey Ukraine USA Venezuela Wales

Rain in Spain? Not for Them This Summer Victoria and Nicolás Aldama

Victoria and Nicolás were first-time campers at Lanakila and Hive in 2008. They live in Barcelona, Spain, had never left home before, and will to return to camp in 2009. “We had a great time,” says Victoria. “The activities were fun and the food was good too!” “People were very kind to us and made us feel special, and we improved our English a lot,” Nicolás adds. (In fact, brother and sister agree they’d rather not invite any Barcelona friends to camp, so they won’t be tempted to speak Spanish with them.) Mom Bettina Ingham remembers Nicolás saying his counselors really paid attention to him whenever he shared his thoughts or feelings. “It would not come in through one ear and go out through the other,” he told her, which often happens in school back in Spain. “When we picked Nicolás up after camp he was happy to see us. However, he did not want to leave Lanakila and pleaded with us to send him for seven weeks next summer.” Meanwhile Victoria will “graduate” to Aloha next year, “where she knows she will have more free time to enjoy ‘chats’ with her teenage campmates. And our youngest, Sofia, will be ready next year for Hive!” The magic of it all is that it is definitely a rich, intense and challenging personal experience: they were able to handle difficult situations on their own, considering their still very young age. Travelling on an eight hour flight to Boston plus three and a half weeks in a completely different surrounding to what they were used to, with neither parents nor a single person they knew, was a serious matter for them. But they succeeded and felt very good about it.

Home Sweet Hive Mercedes and Nigel Baynes Mercedes Baynes is a veteran Hive counselor. She moved to the U.S. from St. Kitts twenty years ago. Her son Nigel spent his 5th summer at Lanakila in 2008. “I started at Hive in 2001 as a counselor in Arts and Crafts, and I fell in love with the environment. It reminded me of home. St. Kitts in the summer was like camp in a way, fishing and running through the mountains; and the stars there are so bright, just like at Hive. But coming from such a different background from everyone else I doubted my abilities, so I felt terrified and insecure at first. I pretended not to know certain things and just watched. “But after a while I really decided, ‘You’re bringing something to camp. You’re capable; let them see it.’ I realized that we’re all different in various ways, but in those differences we all have something we can teach each other. So I teach the kids things my grandparents and aunts taught me—braiding rugs, which I’m so passionate about, and basket weaving like we did on the island. And I usually share a story while we weave. I also want the campers to get in the habit of not throwing away old things, so I bring stuff each summer for Arts and Crafts projects from my apartment in New York. That way they always have something of me, even after they leave camp. “At home in the city, Nigel says all the time that he misses Lanakila. Just recently he was applying to schools, and got in to all three of his choices. He didn’t decide on the one his father and I liked best. He chose the most diverse school instead. He said, ‘I want to go to a school that’s just like camp—all mixed up.’”

Funding Families to

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The Aloha Foundation Annual Report

Share the Fun

Aloha’s Commitment to Camperships

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arriet and Edward Gulick understood that cultural and economic diversity bring richness to the camp community. From their earliest days, the Aloha camps had an international flavor, welcoming campers and counselors from Japan, China, Austria, and Columbia. In the 1920s, the Gulicks established the Ohana Fund (“Ohana” means family in Hawaiian) in order to support camp summers for children whose parents lacked the means to pay the tuition of the era—$300 for two months at Aloha, Hive or Lanakila! Today that fund’s successors—the Annual Fund, the Ed Gulick Campership Endowment and several other endowments dedicated to financial aid—help over 100 families afford camp each year, through nearly $500,000 in camperships. Annual gifts from approximately 1,000 alumni, parents and friends of the Alohas go a long way toward making all this aid possible, as does the income from over $2.5 million in campership endowment. We don’t do our work alone, however, in finding and funding families whose children would benefit from a camp experience and enrich camp with their special qualities in return. For many years, the Foundation has identified campership candidates through partnerships with youth and social service agencies in Vermont, New Hampshire, Massachusetts and New York. We’ve also benefited from the individual recruitment efforts of many devoted camp alumni and parents. With all this good help, the philosophy of inclusion that has shaped the communities of Aloha for more than a century will continue indefinitely into the future, uncompromised by changing times or economic tides.

Cornerstone Walls Building Diversity, One Camper at a Time The Aloha Foundation was created in 1967 by devoted alumni of Aloha, Hive and Lanakila to sustain the camps for future generations. Harriet and Edward Gulick and their heirs had by then fostered an international camp community for decades. Now, in the 1960s era of social ferment, the leadership of the newly formed Foundation wanted to make camp summers in Fairlee accessible to children from racial and cultural communities closer to home, as well. So with help from the American Camp Association and “campership” funding from alumni and parents, Paul Pilcher at Lanakila, Valerie Pilcher at Hive and Julia Duncan at Aloha began around 1970 to recruit campers and counselors of minority background, through personal contacts in city schools and social service organizations in New England and New York. Through a Lanakila alumnus, Paul met a mutual acquaintance named Furman Walls, an elder in one of New York’s distinguished African American institutions, the Cornerstone Baptist Church of Brooklyn. Mr. Walls soon traveled to Fairlee for a camp visit, accompanied by two boys from the church. The boys soon signed on at Lanakila, becoming the first of many youngsters to attend the Aloha camps through a longtime recruitment partnership between the Church and the Foundation. In the early days, Mr. Walls frequently had to convince skeptical Cornerstone parents that a camp far away from the city in the wilds of Vermont would be a good place for their sons and daughters. Cornerstone attendance expanded, however, as families began to spread the word of their children’s enthusiasm for their Aloha experiences, and each summer Mr. Walls would spend a week or so in Fairlee checking up on his flock. The Cornerstone partnership became a model for Foundation outreach in other parts of the country. Today children of many backgrounds make up the Aloha family. And as Mr. Walls knew well, we’re all beneficiaries of the diversity that he and his original collaborators helped the camps to build. The Aloha Foundation Annual Report

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Diverse in Purpose Diverse in People

The Aloha Camps by Design

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o attend a traditional sleep-away camp is almost by definition to experience diversity. Where else do boys and girls rise each morning among peers from near and far, in the company of caring, multitalented young adults—then join scores more friends around animated breakfast tables, collectively fueling their engines and formulating their own plans for activity-rich days? Where else do seemingly infinite varieties of fun lie so close at hand, just beyond the flap of a tent or right outside the dining hall door? It’s all so simple and spontaneous. Or is it, really? At the camps of The Aloha Foundation, diversity of experience and varieties of fun are deliberately designed to provide campers with natural opportunities to choose, experiment and discover, risk failure safely, succeed, learn and grow. Nothing is taken for granted. With extraordinary alumni support toward tuition aid and staff endowments, we consciously create communities of children and counselors from many different economic, geographic, social and cultural backgrounds. Tent and cabin “families” are carefully arranged to bring distinct yet complementary personalities together in positive interaction. Activity programs under expert leadership—canoeing, kayaking and sailing, archery and riflery, baseball and soccer, arts, crafts and drama, mountain and river tripping, and dozens more— combine skill-building with cooperative learning, work and play, leadership development, and proud recognition of self-motivated achievement. While some camps specialize in one activity or another—tennis, horseback riding, performing arts or science, are common—the Aloha camps specialize in children. Our mission is to nurture mind, body and community in an environment enriched by a diversity of life experiences, unmatched places for play and learning, and opportunities for personal growth daily.

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The Aloha Foundation Annual Report

Iran Davar Ardalan Iran Davar Ardalan, Senior Producer for NPR’s Weekend Edition Sunday, was born in San Francisco in 1964, but took her first steps a year later among the ruins of Masjid-i-Sulayman, Iran, where her parents had recently relocated. Iran and her siblings spent their childhood in Tehran, but in 1976, a family friend introduced them to the Aloha Camps and the Ardalans packed Iran off to Hive, older sister Mani to Aloha and brother Karim to Lanakila, wanting the children to know the familiar American summer traditions they had enjoyed themselves. Returning to Fairlee for a second camp experience in 1977, after a difficult winter for the family in Tehran, Iran wrote that the three children clung “...to one another that summer as we tried to piece together what was happening to our lives. The peaceful Lake

James Mutaka

Morey, with the backdrop of New England’s Green Mountains, the sound of children playing in the lake, the songs around the campfire, the music of birds, and the smell of fresh pine brought meaning once again into our lives.” Iran’s career in journalism began as an English-speaking anchor for the Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting, promoting the accomplishments of the Islamic Republic. After stints with the Albuquerque Journal and a local ABC affiliate, Iran took an internship at Weekend Edition Saturday which led to a full time position at NPR. Iran works closely with Jacki Lyden, Liane Hansen and Scott Simon, and is particularly fascinated with telling women's stories. In February 2004, research led to an NPR and American RadioWorks series called, “My Name is Iran,” and that in turn was the inspiration for her memoir of the same name published in 2007.

In 2004, as a first-year counselor, Ugandan James Mutaka made close friendships with camper Ben Manning, and fellow counselor and Scot native, Neil Mackenzie. The relationships that formed that summer continue to thrive and reap benefits for James' impoverished village home of Serere. After two summers in Fairlee, James received a degree from Uganda Christian University, and then became the Program Manager for Village2Village, a Vermont-based organization bringing resources to the children of Serere. Over the last five years, the Mannings have sponsored two children from the village, and have kept in close contact with James about Village2Village’s efforts. In February of 2009, Ben and his parents Karen and Hal, made a long hoped-for trip to visit James, creating occasion for celebration. Wonderful meals were prepared by grateful villagers, and the children performed traditional songs and dances. When asked by Karen Manning about his well-honed abilities to reach out to, and provide comfort for troubled villagers, James credited Lanakila Director Barnes Boffey as his inspiration. His summers at Lanakila helped James achieve some of the skills that he uses every day to improve lives in Serere. This summer, Neil Mackenzie, a Lanakila counselor for ten years, will be leading a group of 24 Scouts from his native Scotland on an expedition to Uganda. Like the Mannings, Neil was deeply influenced by James, and the work he has accomplished in his home through Village2Village. Along with other leaders, Neil will guide his Scout Unit as they build an adventure playground and staff meeting place in Serere. Neil wrote, “In today's society where teens are often lambasted, it is pleasing to see so many teenagers make the choice to become involved in scouting and this expedition in order to make a difference in the lives of many Ugandans.” Along with fellow Edinburgh resident and former Lanakila counselor, Russell Torrance, Neil set up an Explorer Scout Unit for local teenagers, using the philosophies of Lanakila. In reference to his trip, Neil wrote, “Camp has taught me to not only seize opportunities, but to seek them as well. On one summer afternoon, who would have believed a chance meeting between a Ugandan counselor and a Scottish counselor would have led to this exchange. I guess this is only possible at Lanakila.”

Jenny Searles Jenny Searles’ first vocal performance at The Alohas took place in the summer of 1989 as a Dolphin at Aloha Hive. While Jenny’s mother Sharon directed the performing arts at Aloha that summer, Jenny and her sister Megan raised their voices along Lake Fairlee’s shore. The three women from Zionsville, Indiana, became immediate fans of the musical scene at the Alohas. In addition to her time as a Hiver, Jenny was a camper and counselor at Aloha, as recently as 2007. Now a soprano who performs opera professionally, Jenny holds a Bachelor of Music degree in vocal performance from Butler University, and a Master of Music degree from Southern Methodist University. Her career in opera has taken her all over the world and she currently lives in New York City where her most recent performance, as Nedda in Paliacci, was with the Bronx Opera. Jenny recently shared her feelings about camp and its meaning to her. “In the crazy, judgmental, hectic, competitive world of performing, the skills I developed as a camper and counselor at Aloha keep me grounded and secure. Having a strong sense of self worth in such a crazy career is essential and Aloha definitely nurtured that in me.” Jenny particularly values the ability to leave behind the trappings of the opera, and return to Fairlee to recharge her spirit and energy. As much as she adores the world of professional opera, it can be draining, and Aloha remains a touchstone where Jenny returns to reflect and regain her equilibrium. There is always a bit of the Aloha song in every performance Jenny gives. The Aloha Foundation Annual Report

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Anyone Can Camp Enabling Joy and Affinity at the Alohas

People with many special interests and needs enjoy the natural resources of the Aloha camps, thanks to Foundation partnerships with diverse local, regional and national nonprofits. We’re deeply committed to these long-standing relationships, and proud of the rewards they deliver to participants in the programs they support.

Camp Dartmouth-Hitchcock Youngsters with rheumatoid arthritis get uncommonly active outdoors at Camp Dartmouth-Hitchcock every August on the Hulbert Outdoor Center campus. Camp DH brings children together to share the challenges and successes of besting a debilitating disease, in a reassuring environment supervised by volunteer physicians, nurses and therapists from the Rheumatology Section of the Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center. At DH, children who rarely participate in physical activities swim, canoe, hike, play sports and games, climb the high ropes and ride zip lines enthusiastically—overcoming limitations and fears while making friendships that endure across distance and time. “We know from participant surveys that camp really helps children with arthritis build self-esteem,” says Camp DH administrator Linda Jarvis. “Kids who struggle with simple tasks such as combing their hair, tying their shoes and writing, try harder to do things for themselves after coming to camp.” Many former campers return as counselors because DH has been such a huge part of their lives—like the young woman who raced back from her honeymoon one summer to be there.

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The Aloha Foundation Annual Report

A Week at D-H in August For Emily Smith, it’s better than a Dutch Date Emily Smith had a chance to visit her Foreign Service Officer uncle in Holland last August, but instead she chose to return to Camp DartmouthHitchcock for a sixth summer, as a senior camper. She’s 17 now, and among other things she learned to do at Camp DH, Emily likes dancing, paddling canoes and kayaks, and baking cookie “pizzas” with gummy bears and jelly beans for toppings. At seven, she couldn’t even dress herself. Emily was pretty nervous during her first weekend at camp— she didn’t think she’d even make it to Tuesday. But by the second morning she’d met veteran DH campers with physical problems both lesser and greater than hers, and she’d seen their enthusiasm for everything about the place. That gave her the courage to stay and play. Being from Virginia, Emily loves the August weather in Vermont and dreads the year she’ll have to take off from DH before returning as a counselor when she turns 20. In the meantime she’ll be working hard in school on her plan to become a nurse.

Camp Exclamation Point! The Baker and More than 100 children from rural working-poor families spend a fee-free week at Camp Exclamation Point each August on the Hive campus. Many of their parents or guardians work itinerantly around New England in rural agriculture. Founded by former staff members of the Vermont Migrant Education Program, CAMP! serves eight to twelve-year-old boys and girls whose lives are often disrupted by family moves, and the stresses they cause. The children who attend CAMP! benefit from learning, confidence-building and social experiences that help them cope with the dislocations of their frequently temporary circumstances. Longtime CAMP! counselors, all of them dedicated volunteers, see growth from year to year in returning campers’ abilities to try new things, laugh off mistakes, risk failure and try again in a safe and nurturing environment. After “graduating” from CAMP! many teenagers return for supervised leadership experiences as counselors-in-training, acquiring valuable teaching and mentoring skills.

Farmer Browns Nick and Alyssa at CAMP! Until they were nine, eight, and seven, Noah, Nick and Alyssa Brown lived here-there-and-everywhere with their parents, following the crops in Northern New England before finally settling down near the Canadian border, in Bakersfield, Vermont. Then their father walked ten miles from home every day to work on a farm in St. Albans. Moving from place to place, the Brown children had a hard time making friends; even when they began attending school regularly in Bakersfield, some of the local kids weren’t too friendly to migrant newcomers. Fist fights sometimes broke out. CAMP! was the place they found their true community: Noah, Nick and Alyssa have been campers, then counselors there every August since 1996, overcoming shyness, gaining confidence, acquiring new skills and sharing them. Nick is now 20, and studying to raise beef cattle at a community college. Alyssa, 19, aims to work as a baker after graduating from the New England Culinary Institute (she started out cooking in the CAMP! kitchen). Noah’s off in Pennsylvania at Dickison College. Each one of them clearly on point!

Homeschoolers at Hulbert Since 1990, homeschooled children from cities and towns up and down the East Coast have come together at the Hulbert Outdoor Center for week-long programs of learning, shared work and fun several times each year. Ranging in age from nine to seventeen, sixty or so participants in each Hulbert homeschool gathering bring a wide range of personal interests and talents to Fairlee. Accomplished homeschoolers often lead the group in creative and challenging activities they design themselves. “We’ve been involved in Hulbert homeschool weeks for ten years,” one participant has written. “The campers, parents and outstanding staff quickly become an extended family. I say proudly and often that my children have been ‘Hulbert grown’ in journeys of discovery with the finest people and activities I can imagine. The interpersonal and community skills they have developed at Hulbert have served them well in every aspect of their lives, and we continue to return year after year for pure fun and friendship. I can’t imagine not having Hulbert supporting our homeschooling experience.”

Very Seriously Assyrian Maegan Bet Givargis-McDaniel Nearly 3000 years ago, people known as Assyrians ruled ancient Persia— today’s Iraq and Iran. Many Assyrians later adopted Christianity, remaining in their Persian homeland for centuries until religious persecution prompted an exodus around 1900. Quite a few came to the United States, settling in New Britain, Connecticut. Among the immigrants were the grandparents and mother of longtime Hulbert homeschooler Maegan Bet GivargisMcDaniel. Now a senior at Hampshire College, Maegan became a published author at age 20, with a cultural history book called “The Assyrians of New Britain.” You’ll find it on Amazon.com. The work is a fine example of the creativity and passion homeschoolers bring to learning at an early age. (Maegan’s 16 year-old sister Akadeena, another Hulbert homeschooler, designs her own line of jewelry and clothing.) Would it surprise you to learn that Maegan plans to practice immigration law in order to help people like her forebears seek shlama —“peace” in the Assyrian language—and prosperity in new countries of their choosing? The Aloha Foundation Annual Report

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THE ALOHA FOUNDATION, INC. STATEMENTS OF FINANCIAL POSITION December 31, 2008 and 2007 2007

2008 ASSETS: $ 310,064 2,723,620

$ 253,388 2,760,362

681,439 57,549

1,009,736 54,853

12,225 8,433,973 186,125

10,092 11,088,147 126,425 7,342

8,864,733 56,763

8,419,287

$ 21,326,491

$ 23,729,632

Cash Account receivables, net of allowance of $0 in 2008 and $675 in 2007 Pledges receivable, net of present value allowances of $30,393 in 2008 and $54,648 in 2007 and net of doubtful pledges of $3,348 in 2008 Prepaid expenses Operating supplies and book inventory, net of allowance of $124,355 in 2008 and $130,240 in 2007 Investments at market value Deferred scholarships Assets held for resale Land, buildings and equipment at cost, less accumulated depreciation of $4,446,693 in 2008 and $4,076,571 in 2007 Strategic marketing plan, net of accumulated amortization of $11,353 in 2008 TOTAL ASSETS LIABILITIES AND NET ASSETS LIABILITIES: Accounts payable and accrued liabilities Deferred revenue Long-term debt TOTAL LIABILITIES Commitments and contingencies NET ASSETS: Unrestricted: Undesignated Board designated to function as endowment Invested in plant Temporarily Restricted: Donor restricted to provide scholarships Donor restricted for preservation Donor restricted to support particular programs Donor restricted for land, buildings and equip. acquisitions & Master Facilities Plan Restricted for Centennial Campaign Permanently Restricted: Donor restricted for endowment TOTAL NET ASSETS TOTAL LIABILITIES & NET ASSETS

12

The Aloha Foundation Annual Report

$

203,852 3,241,433 567,362 4,012,647 0

$

318,598 3,247,415 1,991,876 5,557,889 0

1,261,811 1,739,552 8,534,023

908,785 2,942,203 7,948,667

181,553 183,498 33,252 (2,688,898)

937,327 230,635 521,484 (2,927,495)

2,915,615

2,920,438

5,153,438 17,313,844

4,689,699 18,171,743

$ 21,326,491

$ 23,729,632

Financial Reports Note from the Treasurer, John Herrick, Jr. As was the case for most organizations last year, 2008 presented significant financial challenges for The Aloha Foundation. On the positive side, we realized an operating surplus for the year through a combination of strong enrollments and prudent financial management. We also concluded our historic Centennial Capital Campaign with over $11 million in contributions from all sources, significantly growing our assets in several important areas, and helping to sustain our financial strength into the future. On the challenging side, the value of our combined endowment funds dropped 23% or $2.3 million from last year’s high of $10 million, to $7.6 million. Fortunately, compared to peer organizations, the Foundation’s annual operating budget relies on a relatively low percentage of income from its endowments—approximately 5%. Nevertheless, the drop in endowment income will affect our budgets for several years to come. Heading into 2009, the Foundation remains quite solid financially, in the midst of a difficult and uncertain economy. Of particular importance is our debt-free balance sheet and plentiful cash position. We have prepared a conservative budget for the year ahead, mindful that the Foundation’s revenues will likely be lower than in recent years, and that the value of our investments may continue to fall. Should economic events warrant further action, we have prepared contingency cost reduction plans.

THE ALOHA FOUNDATION, INC. STATEMENTS OF ACTIVITIES For the Twelve Months Ended December 31, 2008 and 2007 REVENUES, GAINS & OTHER SUPPORT Tuition Registrations Less scholarships and discounts Tuitions and fees, net Gifts: Restricted Unrestricted Investment income, net of management fees of $42,789 in 2008 and $42,579 in 2007 Realized gains (losses) on sale of investments Unrealized appreciation/(depreciation) of investments Gain on sale of fixed assets Other sources, net TOTAL REVENUES, GAINS and OTHER SUPPORT EXPENSES: Aloha Aloha Hive Lanakila Hulbert Outdoor Center Horizons Ohana Camp Management and General Buildings & Grounds and Master Facilities Plan costs Interest expense Alumni Relations Fund raising costs Centennial Campaign costs Centennial Campaign bad debt expense Depreciation and amortization expense TOTAL EXPENSES CHANGE IN NET ASSETS Net assets, beginning of year Net assets, end of year

2008

2007

$ 4,956,454 297,500 (310,428) 4,943,526

$ 4,340,970 272,300 (281,060) 4,332,210

2,154,179 275,067

1,198,199 351,779

217,371 26,498 (2,547,297) 2,927 147,849 5,220,120

378,951 643,141 (408,203) 2,700 156,559 6,655,336

471,606 513,777 606,788 765,419 231,414 183,080 886,267 1,386,054 36,355 159,365 149,146 187,682 3,377 497,689 6,078,019

473,404 425,555 558,442 693,451 206,232 103,646 770,632 1,296,517 127,713 125,082 161,483 213,963 8,000 436,313 5,600,433

(857,899)

1,054,903

18,171,743

17,116,840

$ 17,313,844

$ 18,171,743

The Aloha Foundation Annual Report

13

Volunteers Summer Volunteers

Open House Hosts

The volunteered expertise and talent of our alums, parents, friends, and Foundation staff help to enrich our summer program each year. We are fortunate and grateful for the following volunteers who came in 2008 to visit and fix equipment, spruce up our gardens, bring special art projects, teach sailing, hike with campers, and help with Bonfire, Bikes, and Banquets. Mahalo!

Kirk & Megan Kellogg Doug & Libby Moffitt Gregory Endress & Amy Stephens Daniel Wallick & Jennifer Mogck Dennis & Angela Coleman Victoria Lindgren Sam & Jo Ann Silverstein Douglas & Michaeline Curtis Mike & Stacy Holman Tom Ward & Katherine Babbott Mark & Emmie Ventling Joe & Laurie Leone Frank & Lisa Goldman Paul & Margie Gaudin Chris & Cynthia Oates Doug & Carrie Dorsey Chris & Kiki Keating Joe & Anne Juster Sarah Cherry Peter & Mary Conway John & Laura Herrick Bill & Anne Kilroy Craig & Lisa McConnell Bob White Pam Blossom

Aloha

Hive

Lanakila

Sally Ameden Hattie Ball Bob Bassett Norma Gobey Laurel Needell Lizza Sandoe Ginny Stevens Ricky Thieler

Allison Bamforth Mark Dorion Sinead Geraghty Nikki Holdaway Ali Kemp Kirsten Kunz Dwight Sperry Scott Vickers Clare Woodhead Kate Young

Tracy Frazee Paul Harwood Simon Holdaway Woody Needell Paul Pilcher Becky Proulx Chris Spicer Andy Watson Bud Young

Horizons Emily Katz Joyce Kramer Lily Perry

Ohana Volunteers Peg Ackerson Rich Ackerson Ellen Bagley Neil Bakalar Hattie Ball Bob Bassett Carolyn Bassett Helen Bassett Sarah Bassett Helena Binder Anne Borg Robert Borg Betty Lou Bowles Erin Bowles Peter Bowles Skip Brown Tim Bucklin Libby Chapin Jeremy Dakin Paul Doolittle

14

Nancy Doyle Laura Gillespie Lewis Goff Willem Goff Jen Hargrave Ruth Jabbs Ted Jabbs Brandon Kavanagh Katherine Kavanagh Rick Kavanagh Steven Kavanagh John Lombard Lilly Lombard Luke Lombard Madeleine Lombard David Loomis Leslie Loomis Nate Loomis Ian Mackey Paul Mackey

The Aloha Foundation Annual Report

Ronan Mackey Dusty Miller Margery Miller Charles Parry Marijean Parry Sam Pease Jon Powell Sara Powell Susan Powell Henry Rusinek Roza Rusinek Helen Savage Louisa Savage John Shuttleworth Jennifer Silverstein Roger Soderberg Peter Spicer Eric Thum Scott Vickers Jim Zien

Hulbert’s Homeschool Programs Elizabeth Asch Cari Burkard David Delaney Dana Dwinell-Yardley Hilary Godfrey Jack Hayes Marisa Keller Kelly Mogren Erin Moody Sam Moody Whitney Singer Dianna Sinovic Daly Stoltzfus Daren Yeo

Phonathoners 2008 In July and August 2008, 26 counselors from Lanakila, Hive, and Aloha gathered at the Aloha Center to call alums and parents and ask for pledges for the Annual Fund. These counselors volunteered their free time in the evening and raised $20,700 for the camps and the programs to which they dedicate their energy and talents throughout the summer. Alums and parents who answered the call had a chance to hear first-hand about the heart-warming, fun, and exciting stories unfolding daily, to share their own memories, and to pledge their support to keep it all going. Kudos and many thanks to the following phonathon counselors. Our heartfelt gratitude, also, to those who answered their calls and gave generously.

Aloha

Hive

Tara Forrester Grace Hearty Bo Holleran Leeann Jefferies Lee Ann Kerr Laura Lee Sarah Lettiere Becca Taylor

Molly Baird Eleanor Horowitz Andrea Kunz India Laughlin Allison Maryan Annie Pforzheimer Lucy Reynard Rachel Warehime Abby Westcott Sadie Williams

Council of Friends Attendees 2008 Allie Altman Janet Atkins & Tarleton Watkins Chip Baines Bob Bassett Susan Clearwater Lisanne Dorion Anne Downey Rebekah Eckstein Sarah Littlefield Patty Michaelson Chris Overtree Paul Pilcher Lara Ramsey Jennifer Silverstein Chippy Wolf

Lanakila

Moran Berger Fraser Boyd Stuart Dickison Jeff Dobronyi Jasper Drisko Melissa Ebert David Hatch Neil Mackenzie

Travel Volunteers Susan Clearwater Posie Taylor Bud Young

The Aloha Foundation Annual Report

15

Gifts Centennial Campaign Leaders’ Message Sally Reid and Skip Brown, Co-Chairs Mahalo ´oukou! Thank you all, Aloha friends! The Centennial Capital Campaign came to a successful and very gratifying close on December 31, 2008, with $11.3 million contributed, topping its goal by over $1 million. Thanks to the exceptional generosity of more than 500 camp alumni, parents, grandparents, our trustees and other enthusiasts, resources realized through the Campaign have strengthened The Aloha Foundation in a variety of significant ways: • Endowments have been established to sustain key counselor roles at every camp, including department heads in Arts and Crafts, Athletics, Canoeing, Crew, Performing Arts, Swimming, Tripping and Woodworking. • A fund was created to support nature conservation in our corner of Vermont, as well as acquisition of wilderness spots for our tripping programs. • With donations for projects at Aloha, Hive and Lanakila, new cabins, waterfront improvements, a tripping center, a theatrical costume shop, washhouses and a health house are on the ground or in the works. • Underwritten by major gifts made toward its purchase and long-term endowment, a beautifully restored Ohana Camp debuted last summer, to the delight of dozens of families. • Substantial support was dedicated to ongoing efforts to bring greater economic and social diversity to our camp communities. The success of the Centennial Capital Campaign celebrates the love of many generations for the Alohas. We toast each and every one of you who has made that possible.

Centennial Campaign Gifts have been given in memory of: Richard (Dick) Allen Lua A. Ameden Martha A. Baines Gene Pierce Blood Peter A. Cooley Jane Culver Judy Downing Morna Dusenbury Clarissa Bassett Edgerton, Susan Posson Bassett, and Hans Wolf Mary Decker Flintermann Alan G. Friedman Carol Hulbert Jane Decker Kohring

Josephine Emerson Meek Cornelia Oliver Elizabeth Rollings Lee Sansom Virginia (Jincie) Schauffler Alice Stanley Grandfather Fredrick Steger Austin and Elizabeth Tifft Betsey Bourne Tracy Thomas B. and Ruth Bliss Webster Charles Wiecking Gwendolyn Wilder Wood

Centennial Campaign Gifts have been given in honor of: Aloha’s Admirals Barbara (Bebe) Bass Mercedes Baynes Elizabeth and William Berkey Barnes Boffey Bridge ‘98 Frederick W. Downing Judy Downing Julie Duncan Richard & Jane Hough and Bill Hough Ralph Hulbert Nancy Sorace Machamer Nancy Linkroum Pennell

Kathy Plunkett Fran Rosenfeld Jincie Schauffler Helen Shaw Al Stanley Kit Taylor Posie Taylor Dorothy Waldron William A. and Gertrude N. Waldron Charles Wiecking Andy and Deb Williams Jim Zien Ali, Claire, and Kit Zipf

Aloha! Sally and Skip

A Centennial Thank You Posie Taylor and Nancy Pennell The list shown here is filled with the names of friends both old and new who shared our excitement for the vision of the Alohas’ second century. These fellow believers know that our children, our grandchildren, and all the generations to come will need the life essentials that a Fairlee summer can provide— the sun, fresh air and natural beauty, all the excitement and self-made fun, the break from electronics and constant noise and instant everything. They know that the magic of the Aloha experience will be a vital part of growing healthy, happy and engaged young people in the years ahead. When we began planning for our Centennial, we could only dream that our friends and family would be ready to step up and support such an ambitious vision; after all, our previous campaign, which was a huge success and set a standard in our industry, raised just $2.1 million. Now, here we are, after so much effort and so many wonderful gifts, with more than five times that support! We are humbled by the depth of generosity of the Aloha Family and more confident than ever of the Foundation’s future. We both thank you for the opportunity to visit with so many of you over these past few years. After so many miles and so many long talks, we can truly say the bonds of love and friendship that hold the Aloha family together are stronger than ever! And now imagine—as we’re sure you can—all the camp bugles at full volume, playing together a fanfare of celebration and thanks to every one of you! Because you reached out to bless us with your support, the Aloha dream is alive and well! Thank you! Posie and Nancy 16

The Aloha Foundation Annual Report

Centennial Campaign Gifts Anonymous (9) Anonymous (4) Jane B. Ackerman Henry J. Adams James Aisenberg, MD The Alderson-Smith Family Alice C. Jones Charitable Trust Gregory P. Allen Ken & Kathy Allen Perry Allison & Michael Schunk Ginia Schauffler Allison Barbara Flintermann Alter Lauren & Lily Alverson Dr. & Mrs. Allen S. Anderson & The Woodbury Foundation Dibbie Spurr Appleton Cynthia Smith Babbott Ellen Bagley Mr. & Mrs. David E. Baines Elliot & Janet Baines Elliot Baines, Sr k (Estate of) Chip & Linda Baines Kevin & Jenine Baines

Harriet Hulbert Ball Bank of America Matching Gifts Mr. & Mrs. Russell D. Barnard Mr. & Mrs. R. Bruce Bass and Family Dr. Kelly Bass Cynthia Bassett David R. & Miyoko Bassett k Reverend Joe and Nancy Bassett Bob Bassett Marion T. Batchelder and Susan Welch Mr. & Mrs. George Beal Mr. and Mrs. William A. Beal Jr Philip Bean David Bemis & Lisa Hoke Jean Bender Jeffrey Bender Christian Bender Matthew Bender IV and The Bender Family Foundation Daniel S. and Ann Richardson Berkey Mr. & Mrs. John J. Betchkal Louisa Kimmel Blodgett Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Bauer Boak Gene Boehne Adam Boffey The Boffey Family Michelle and Daniel Boffey David & Lee Boffey Mercer Boffey Peter Boffey, Ophira Druch, Ariel Druch-Boffey Sharon E. Boffey Bone Family Fund Bill & Nancy Bonneville Charlotte Booth John and Becky Booth John Booth III Peter & Betty Lou Bowles Mr. & Mrs. Eugene N. Bratton Suzanne Sincerbeaux Brian

Mr. & Mrs. Christopher W. Carey Mr. & Mrs. Mike Chamberlain Jane Burge Chandler Mrs. Margaret Richards Chapman Sally Berry Christenson Katharine Stoneback Christie The Woodberry Family Charitable Remainder Trust - Estate of Constance Woodberry Susan B. Clearwater Jan Coates Mr. Will Coit Atwood, Price, Bass, and Coleman Families Mr. Peter Coleman and Ms. Heather Kaplan Coleman Nancy Comstock Mary and Bill Conway Charlie and Grosvie Cooley and The Charles P. and Lucy G.R. Cooley Foundation Trig & Sam Cooley Marcia A. Corbin Mr. & Mrs. William C. Corson Laurence & Constance Cranch Ellen McVeigh Crawford Mr. and Mrs. Michael F. Cronin The Cross Ridge Foundation Mr. Tom Crow and Ms. Terri Ragot Jac Culver Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Daitz Lucy Kellogg Daniel Shirley (Shirts) Shaw Daniel Roger & Martha Daum Freddy & Hornor Davis Mr. & Mrs. James H. Day Anne Floeckher Delano Deutsche Bank Americas Foundation A. Rene and Mary Dickens Mr. & Mrs. Donald B. Dickerson

Ms. Anne Otter Downs Nancy Doyle & Neil Bakalar and Crawford-Doyle Charitable Foundation Jeff & Pam Drake Katie Baines Drossos Mr. & Mrs. Douglas E. Duffies Tootie Earle John F. Eckstein, III John F. Eckstein, IV Rebekah Hill Eckstein Mr. and Mrs. Hugh G. Edmunds, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. James C. Edwards, Jr. Ines Escobar Madge Evans Morgie Evans Cathy & Joe Feldman Sallie Findlay & Gene Nelson Rocco Maggiotto & Kathy Fisher Peter & Jeanne Floeckher, Jr. Sarah Chase Flynn Nathaniel & Laura Foote Dr. & Mrs. Robert W. Fraser III Lindsay Frazier and Owen Dempsey Lycia Carmody Fried & Richard Fried Alan k & Carolyn Friedman Kathryn Friedman Polly Friess & Connemara Fund The Janco-Frizzi Family Dick & Susan Gaffney Peter W. Gaillard and The Wiggins Foundation, Inc. Mrs. Ann Dodson Gallager Mr. & Mrs. John G. Gans Zhuoman & Morgan Gardner Mr. & Mrs. J. Jeffrey Geldermann General Electric Foundation Georgetown University School of Nursing & Health Studies

Sarah Groves Chris Sorace Gruendeman Patricia Manney Gruendemann Mr. & Mrs. Joseph L. Guarriello E. Leeds Gulick Tad, Julie & Graeme Gulick Clark P. Halstead Mrs. Richard Hamilton Mark Harris, MD Ms. Ann W. Harrison Katherine Hay Clay & Debbie Heaton Peggy Hedberg Jon Helmreich Charles & Lelia Helms Edde O. Henderson k (Estate of) Mr. & Mrs. John F. Herrick, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. John F. Herrick, Sr. Catherine Herrick Levy Sarah Davies Hertfelder Mary & Larry Hewes Hi Tech Tennis, Inc. Martha S. High Mary Kohring Highberger Harriet P. Wright Miller Hight k Rachel Read Hillman Charles Hirschler and Marianne Rosenberg Susan Carr Hirschman Chris, Martha, Peter, Spencer Hitchcock Louise Churchill Hoagland Jane Kohring Hoey Mr. Richard F. Hoffard Simon Holdaway Bo Holleran Romer & Deming Holleran Mr. & Mrs. William C. Holly Robert K. & Tari A. Holterman The Horan Family Shirley & William Horbatt Houghton Mifflin Matching Gift Program

We recognize donors who have contributed to The Aloha Foundation regularly for at least five consecutive years with the mark of the Kanaka ( ), a figure that represents the spirit in nature in the Hawaiian culture, which Mother and Father Gulick loved and commemorated. Continuous giving by so many alums and friends ensures our ability to promote the Gulicks’ vision for Aloha long into the future.

Hugh Buchan and The Buchan Family Fund Katherine D. Buchan and The Buchan Family Fund Rob & Taylor Bucklin Julie Schauffler Bucklin k Ian & Sally Bund J.C. & Helen Rankin Butler Anne Butterfield Mr. & Mrs. Brian Cadieux Camp Billings Sally Van Winkle Campbell Abigail & Cass Canfield, Jr. Eugene B. & Virginia H. Canfield

Jeannie & Jon Didrichsen Ferenc & Carol Dobronyi Joseph B. Dobronyi, Jr. Fran Groves Dodd Patrick and Jennifer Donovan CDR & Mrs. Paul H. Doolittle, USN Dr. & Mrs. George H. Dorion Anne P. Downey and Glenn G. King Daniel Downey Bob & Nancy Downey and the Robert N. and Nancy A. Downey Foundation Ms. Susan P. Downey

Connie Jones & Dale Gephart Merrily S. Gerrish Ephraim and Catherine Gildor Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Gilroy Mr. and Mrs. Karl Glocker Regina A. Glocker Mr. Robert L. Gray Randy Grayson Carolyn Knight Green & David Green Mr. and Mrs. Ross Greenburg Mr. Arthur W. Gregg Kitty Mayo Griffith Rufus Griscom Pam Groves

Peter J. & Leslie Howell Cindy L. Howland Cotton, John, Robin, Jay Hubard & The Chapin Davis Foundation Mrs. Hope G. Hungerford Marcia J. Hunkins Roger B. Hunt Jerry & Jane Huppee Kazuhiko & Aya Itagaki Ted & Ruth Jabbs Anne Rickard Jackowitz Todd Jackowitz Herrick Jackson & Connemara Fund Michael J. Jackson & The Grace Jones Richardson Trust

The Aloha Foundation Annual Report

17

Gifts

Centennial Campaign continued

18

Susan Hurlburt Jacques Betsy Culver Jahnke Betsy James Mr. & Mrs. Alan J. Jankowski Carol Barber & Joseph Jankowski Sarah, Katie, Yardly & Scott Jenkins Tracy H. Jenkins Perry Ann Schauffler Jeveli Ann Johnson Randy Johnson Katharine Childs Jones Edith Tozzer Jordan Anne Conway Juster Dr. Salim Kabawat & Ms. Ann O’Connell Keith Keeler Phyl Kelley Kirk & Megan Kellogg & the J.C. Kellogg Foundation Karen & Bob Kenagy Danny & Julia Kerr Caroline Sincerbeaux King Judith S. & B. Anthony King and the Judy and Tony King Foundation Ms. Elizabeth Klein Peter & Judi Kleinman Caitlin Klenk John C. Klopf Lynne Klopf Jax and Judy Kneppers Peter Kohn Lisa Karlin & James Kunen Mrs. Deane F. Kysar Paige L’Hommedieu

Dana & Anne Low Brooks Low Sharon Lee Lumadue Mr. & Mrs. Carol Lyttle, Jr. Yo-Yo Ma & Jill Hornor Priscilla & Bob Maddock Elizabeth L. Mahaffey Jennifer & Richard Mandelson Richard & Gloria Manney Ms. Leda J. Mareth and Mr. John Adam Caroline Crawford Maryan Sarah Masters Mrs. Marion Matson Mr. and Mrs. Eric and Robin Matza Tom & Holly Mayer Lisa M. Mayer Craig and Lisa McConnell Susan Buckingham McGarvey Cynthia & Bruce McGeoch Catherine McGrath Cheryl & Glenn McKinley Dudley H. Meek k Mrs. Leslie Meek Wileman Susan Childs Merrick & Frank B. Merrick and the Merrick Family Fund of the Community Foundation of New Jersey Kate Merritt Katarina Mesarovich and The R. Mesarovich Fund E. Franklin Robbins Charitable Trust & Joyce and Patty Michaelson Patty Michaelson Erwin H. Miller

Kate Shockey Lafrance Catherine N. Lambert Patricia A. Latimer Ledge Ledyard Mrs. Timothy Leedy Patricia Bowler Leggat Christopher & Judith Leich Russ & Marilyn Leonard Stephanie & Terry Lewis Edward A. & Mary Purves Liechty Sarah & Chris Littlefield Marian Carpenter Lockwood Mary Lou Lorenz Mr. & Mrs. Daniel Lovinger

Mr. & Mrs. Robert Lang Miller Marisa E. Miller Tom Miller and Coleen Lawlor Bill & Susan Minard Mr. & Mrs. Harvey R. Mitchell Madlin G. Moore Ms. Elizabeth M. Morris Linda, Bob & Elizabeth Morris The Morrison/ Pughe Family Mary S. Morrison Penelope T. Morton and The Tarrant Foundation, Inc. Ted & Caroline Murray

The Aloha Foundation Annual Report

Miles, Pat, & Jacob Mushlin & the Argo Foundation Woody and Jerry Needell Kit (Van Ness) & Steve Nelson Mr. & Mrs. William Newbury Nancy Newbury-Andresen Ms. Ellen E. Newman Bill & Katie Nixon David & Pam O’Halloran Mr. & Mrs. J. Christopher Oates Mr. & Mrs. Christopher Oddleifson The Offensend Family Charles & Carol Ogelsby Mr. George B. Oliver Mr. Jon D. Olsen & Ms. Carole A. Dempsey Mr. & Mrs. Donald C. Opatrny and The Opatrny Family Foundation Christopher Overtree and Heidi Zahra Edie & Ed Overtree Elizabeth and Robert Owens and the Tresorelle Foundation Margaret, Julia, and Elizabeth Owens and the Tresorelle Foundation Margaret, Henry, Corey & Emily Palmer Faith J. Parker Wayne R. Parks Marijean & Charles Parry Dave & Bev Payne and family Simon & Pia Pearce Dick & Kayla Pechter and The Pechter Family Foundation Zoe L. Pechter and The Pechter Family Foundation Jim & Nan Peckham Mary Wolfenden Peckham John & Patty Pegram and The Pegram Family Fund Nancy & Hugh Pennell Keith Pennell Rhodes k & Margaret Boyd Perdue Amy M. Peterson John & Karen Peterson Tory M. Peterson Gary & Mary Pforzheimer Dick Phillippe Mr. & Mrs. George Phocas Mr. & Mrs. Mark Picucci Bill & Liz Pierce Win & Janne Piper The Pollock Family and Kristin and Elizabeth Pride The Prill Family The Quinn Family Craig Ramey Jane Ellen Ramsey & Lara Ramsey Fraser A. Randolph Al & Viki Rankin, Jr. Benjamin Rausch Colin Reed James & Donna Reid Sally C. Reid & John D. Sigel Pamela Clark Reilly R. H. Richards, III, Esq. George & Gail Richardson

Rebecca Schmitt Richardson Gail N. Richter Bill & Kim Rollings Peter M. Rosacker Molly Tracy Rosen and Seth Rosen Eric & Fran Rosenfeld Lizza Sandoe Alexandra Richards Sanford Douglas Sansom Lee Sansom Ridge Satterthwaite Henry and Helen Young Savage, Jr. Jerry W. P. Schauffler Richard & Coco Kim Schetman Gary & Gail Schreiner Dr. Andrei Shleifer and Ms. Nancy Zimmerman Toni Colby Shoham The Benjamin R. Shute, Jr. Family James R. Sigel Jenny Silverstein Jo Ann & Sam Silverstein Charles & Anne Sincerbeaux Richard M. Sincerbeaux, Sr. Richard Sincerbeaux, Jr. Robert M. Sincerbeaux Sarah M. Sincerbeaux Nancy S. & Richard K. Sinkler Anne, Ric, Marina, & Samantha Smalling & Meinig Family Foundation Gregory N. Smith & Wren Floeckher Smith k Russell B. & Barbara E. Smith Philip & Susan Smith and Family Wendy Smith Jeffrey & Willa Speiser Patricia A. & Thomas A. Spencer Tim Sperry & Lynne Tirrell Peter Spicer Ms. Bleecker Springs Mr. and Mrs. Orlando Springs Anne Stafford Lisa Stanbury The Rev. E. Bevan Stanley Steel Shipping Container Institute Amy Allison Steele Topper Steinman Ms. Sarah Stern Dr. & Mrs. Peter Stern Ms. Sarah Stern Ginny Hazelwood Stevens Peter & Laura Strauss Bob Stringer Susan Stringer Mrs. James J. Strnad Mr. & Mrs. Tighe P. Sullivan Tony Susen Jean Talmage Posie Taylor & Bill Culp Ms. Elizabeth J. Terry Mr. & Mrs. W. Todd Terry, Jr. The Clifford E. Lovering Trust The Fraser-Parker Foundation The Lubrizol Corporation

Deborah Carpenter Thompson Robert & Shari Thurer Fleeta D. Thurston Adelaide Tingley The Derald H. Ruttenberg Foundation The Susan & John Turben Foundation Patricia and Rory Veevers-Carter Mark & Emelie Bean Ventling Sara Tifft & Ray Victurine Arthur & Xiaowei and Charles and Theodore Waldron Dorothy W. Waldron William A. Waldron Gwyneth Walker Joann B. Walker Stanley Wallach Ms. Olivia Walsh Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth Wang & The Wang Charitable Foundation

Victoria Buchanan Ward Mrs. S.R. Waters Margaret H. Watkins Janet, Tarleton and Timon Watkins Mr. & Mrs. Donald K. Weaver Martha Wagner Weinberg Dale & Pete Wentz Rick Werner John & Marilyn Werst Nancy N. West , William N. West, Ashley D. West & Amelia Knox West Carla & Mark Westcott and The Westcott Charitable Fund John & Jannine Whartnaby Langdon Wheeler & Katherine Metcalfe and The MetcalfeWheeler Family Charitable Fund Murray Wheeler, Jr.

Mr. J. Bruce Whelihan Katie White Lindsey A. White Mrs. Robert Y. White Robert Y. White, Jr. & Family Mr. & Mrs. Allen K. Wiant Mr. & Mrs. Robert B. Wicker III Julia, Nigel, Isabel & Anna Widdowson & Field-Day Foundation Nancy Wiecking and The Wiecking Family Molly Chase Wiellette John A. Wilcox Deborah E. Wiley Andy & Deb Williams Ben Williams Don & Nancy Williams, Jr. Ms. Eve Williams Ed & Kris Winnicki Astrid Witschi-Bernz

Hans k & Chippy Wolf and The Hans and Elizabeth Wolf Foundation Jack & Byrd Wood Jane Wood & Family P.J. Wood Carol Kingsley Woodley Antonia Woods & David Halloran Chris & Jaqueline Wren Lori and Steve Wyckoff Emily Groves Yazwinski Elizabeth F. Youngman Boniface & Alison Zaino Jim Zien The Zipf Family Mark & Nancy Zvonkovic

2008 Gifts and Pledges to the Foundation Top $2.4 million The Foundation is grateful to the many donors who contributed to this year’s Annual Fund. Eight-hundred-twenty donors gave $247,708 to the Fund, which provides the majority of our campership support each year. We would especially like to thank our Annual Fund co-chairs Lara Ramsey, Ann Johnson and Chris Overtree for their help. And Mahalo to the counselors from Aloha, Hive and Lanakila, who raised $20,700 during their summer phonathon. In addition to the $1,895,121 in new gifts and pledges received by the Centennial Capital Campaign, the Foundation received other restricted contributions totaling $261,713. These gifts were directed to a wide range of funds, from campership, program and grounds maintenance endowments, to the discretionary funds of the individual camp directors. In all, the Foundation received $2,404,542 in support from more than 1,000 donors—and we are most grateful!

Ed Gulick Campership Endowment Established in memory of Ed Gulick (L36-42) The Ed Gulick Campership Endowment provides financial aid to families who lack the means to support a camp tuition. Beneficiaries include campers referred to the Foundation by youth and community service agencies in New Hampshire, Vermont, Boston, New York City and elsewhere. Mr. and Mrs. Michael F. Cronin Madlin G. Moore Tad, Julie & Graeme Gulick E. Leeds Gulick Anonymous

Tom Miller Director of Development The Aloha Foundation Annual Report

19

Restricted Funds

Love Music Endowment

We are especially thankful to the following generous donors who contributed to specific programs and projects in 2008.

Established in Memory of Bob Love (L*43-48,50-52, 66-83,85-01) The Love Music Endowment helps sustain the cherished musical heritage of the Aloha camps, through maintenance of pianos and other music equipment, revision and publication of song books, and presentation of special musical programs.

Peter Einstein Anonymous Mr. Robert N. Meltzer and Mrs. Sharon D. Camm Michael Marvin Daniel W. Mulno Miles, Pat, & Jacob Mushlin and the Argo Foundation

The Zipf Family Mr. & Mrs. James Bone Joe & Carol Dobronyi Alexa Raether Maddock United Congregational Church of Orford Debra H. Payne and the Payne Family Foundation

Ohana Camp Artwork Commission Vermont’s renowned woodblock print maker Sabra Field has created an artistic grand view of the Middlebrook Valley as seen from the Ohana lodge porch. The four-panel work hangs over the central fireplace of the lodge. The Foundation will recognize significant gifts toward the restoration of Ohana Camp with handprinted sets of the work, as well as fine art reproductions. In 2008, The Sabra Field commission was underwritten by the following generous donors. Posie Taylor & Bill Culp

Peter & Jeanne Floeckher, Jr.

E. Leeds Gulick Tad, Julie & Graeme Gulick John S. Thorne Rick Werner Anonymous Elizabeth C. Evans-Iliesiu

Lilian Gulick Endowment for the Beautification of The Aloha Camps Established in memory of Lilian Gulick (A*36-69) The Lilian Gulick Endowment supports projects in landscape care and garden creation on every Foundation campus.

Clifford Lovering Happy Wanderer Endowment For many camp alumni, Clifford Lovering defines the Aloha spirit. For decades, Cliffie drove the camp trucks and vans carrying campers to their wilderness adventures. Handing out his famous fireballs and patiently listening to another round of “Hi Ho, The Rattlin Bog”, Cliffie was the driver and much more. He cheered and encouraged in times of challenge, he supported in times of trial, he befriended always. In 2008, the following donors made gifts in Cliffie’s memory to The Happy Wanderer Endowment, which is part of the Foundation’s endowed support for camperships. Nancy S. & Richard K. Sinkler Diana Davis Madsen

John A. & Judith A. Currier Elizabeth C. Evans-Iliesiu

The Edgerton Natural History Endowment Established in memory of Clarissa B. Buffum Bassett Edgerton (H23-25) The Edgerton Natural History Endowment supports nature education programs at the summer camps and the Hulbert Outdoor Center, as well as stewardship of campus natural environments. Bob Bassett

Chippy Wolf and The Hans and Elizabeth Wolf Foundation

Nancy Comstock Madlin G. Moore Tad, Julie & Graeme Gulick Patricia Michaelson & Walter Klisiwecz E. Leeds Gulick Anonymous

Camp History Code A = Aloha H = Hive L = Lanakila D = Horizons Day Camp HOC = Hulbert Outdoor Center V = Voyageurs * (asterisk) = Counselor P = Parent GP = Grandparent k = Deceased

Gulick Legacy A growing number of alumni, parents, and friends have found ways to ensure that the Aloha camps will thrive for many generations to come. They have become members of the Gulick Legacy by making planned gifts such as bequests, charitable remainder trusts, charitable gift annuities, and insurance policies to benefit The Aloha Foundation. Our heartfelt thanks to the following members of the Aloha family, who have notified us of their plans: Elizabeth & David Ackerman Jane B. Ackerman Ginia Schauffler Allison Matthew Bender IV Peter & Betty Lou Bowles Skip Brown Peter & Kathy Christie Susan B. Clearwater Christopher C. Dorion Harriet F. Dwyer Elizabeth C. Evans-Iliesiu Ginger Fischer Farquhar Sallie Findlay and Gene Nelson 20

Andy Gerber Mary Kohring Highberger Susan Carr Hirschman Chas Howell Marcia J. Hunkins Julianna Johnson Bob & Karen Kenagy Peter Kohn Kate Shockey Lafrance Ledge Ledyard Susan Buckingham McGarvey Cynthia McGeoch Susan Childs Merrick

The Aloha Foundation Annual Report

Kate Merritt Margaretta K. Mitchell Robert W. Morris Suzanna Anstine Norbeck Faith J. Parker Katherine Duff Rines Ginny Hazelwood Stevens Mark and Emelie Bean Ventling Gwyneth Walker Harrison B. Wetherill, Jr.

We are also deeply grateful for bequests received from these thoughtful and generous friends of the Foundation upon their deaths: Elliot & Janet Baines Sr. k Eleanor Clemence k Natalie Cornell k Janet Harte k Edde O. Henderson k Harriet Miller Hight k Alice C. Jones k Barbara Little k Clifford E. Lovering k Gladys McCarthy k Pat McPhilomy Misura k Ethel M. Orpen k Jean J. D. Peale k Sarah Emily Brown Schoenhut k Constance Woodberry k Mary M. Yost k

Donors to the Aloha Annual Fund 2008 Presidentials ($2,500 and above) Anonymous Matthew Bender IV Eugene B. and Virginia H. Canfield Marcia A. Corbin and the Corbin Family Fund The Harry and Misook Doolittle Foundation Rocco Maggiotto and Kathy Fisher Deborah Stahl-Hannam Colin S. Magowan and The Magowan Family Foundation Mr. & Mrs. Colin Moore Margaret Owens Moran, Julia & Elizabeth Owens & The Tresorelle Foundation Elizabeth & Robert Owens John & Patty Pegram and The Pegram Family Fund Mrs. Robin T. Prescott Mrs. William C. Rands, III (Happy Endicott) and The Elizabeth Endicott Rands Fund Sally C. Reid and John D. Sigel Eric & Fran Rosenfeld David S. Stare Mrs. Fredrick J. Stare and The Stare Fund Mark & Emelie Bean Ventling Langdon Wheeler & Katherine Metcalfe Mary & Brad Wilkinson and the Stare Fund Lori and Steve Wyckoff Boniface & Alison Zaino Mark & Nancy Zvonkovic Franconia ($1,000-$2,499) Ginia Schauffler Allison Chip & Linda Baines Kevin & Jenine Baines Mrs. Robert C. Baker and The Haffenreffer Family Fund

Dr. and Mrs. Jeffrey Campbell Dorcas Crawford Casey Susan B. Clearwater Mary French Conway Midge Wicoff Cooper Sarah Miller Jac Culver Nancy Doyle Bakalar & Neil Bakalar and the Crawford-Doyle Charitable Foundation John F. Eckstein, IV Cathy & Joe Feldman Melissa & Charles Froland Meinig Family Foundation John Lodge Gillespie, Jr. Elizabeth Grayer Anne Marguerite Herbst Mr. & Mrs. John F. Herrick, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. William C. Holly Mr. A. Clark Johnson Anne Conway Juster & Joseph Juster Judith S. & B. Anthony King Susan Buckingham McGarvey Kate Merritt Leslee Ann Michaels & Michael Zubkoff Joyce Michaelson and the E.F. Robbins Foundation Edie & Ed Overtree Mr. & Mrs. David B. Payne and The Payne Family Foundation Mrs. E. W. Phares II Melssa & John Phares-Jacobson Charles & Anne Sincerbeaux Richard M. Sincerbeaux, Sr. Alexandra & Thomas Skove Mr. & Mrs. John A. Sommers, Jr. Robert Traylor and the Traylor Charitable Fund Robert H. Traylor, Jr. and the Traylor Charitable Fund Dorothy W. Waldron Robert Y. White, Jr.

Julia Harte, Nigel, Isabel & Anna Widdowson and the Field-Day Foundation Chippy Wolf and The Hans and Elizabeth Wolf Foundation Mr. Dudley Yost William (Bud) Young Moosilauke ($500-$999) Anonymous (3) Anonymous (2) Mr. Carlos Aiza and Ms. Gina Hojel-Aiza Mr. & Mrs. David E. Baines Katharine C. Bartlett Bill & Nancy Bonneville Anne Wilder Borg Mr. and Mrs. William S. Brenizer Betty Moorhead Brown & Martin Brown and The Atticus Trust Skip Brown Caroline Walker Bynum Abigail & Cass Canfield, Jr. Charlie Cherington and Ashley Pettus Peter & Kathy Christie Jan Coates Caroline Bass Coleman Charlie P. Cooley Trig & Sam Cooley John A. & Judith A. Currier Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Daitz Sarah Taylor Diuguid Joe & Carol Dobronyi Chuck Dohrenwend R. Carl Drisko & Allie Altman Peter & Joan Fortune The Gaffney Family Peter W. Gaillard Robert & Susan Galford and the Galford Family Gift Fund

Mr. & Mrs. Paul B. Gaudin Mr. & Mrs. J. Jeffrey Geldermann Tom & Anna Gerrity Mrs. Jessica Hall Holly Langsdorf Hatch & Andy Hatch Charles Hirschler and Marianne Rosenberg Hive Chapel Collection Dr. & Mrs. David Horan Mr. James D. Ireland III Randy Johnson & Laurie Medley Elisabeth Schupf Lonsdale Fred & Andrea Marcusa Woody & Jerry Needell Faith J. Parker Mr. and Mrs. Leigh H. Perkins, Sr. Fraser A. Randolph Mr. & Mrs. James S. Reid, Jr. David & Ellen Ross and The Ross Foundation Linda Pennell & Leon Schulzinger Mr. and Mrs. Stephen C. Sherrill Jo Ann & Sam Silverstein Tim Sperry & Lynne Tirrell Ginny Hazelwood Stevens Ms. Carolyn L. Strauss Mr. & Mrs. Jack and Sylvia Sweeney Jean Talmage Dale & Pete Wentz Evelyn Wicoff Ann L. Willard The Zipf Family Chocorua ($250-$499) Anonymous Perry Allison & Michael Schunk Mr. & Mrs. Dwight Arnesen Barry A. Baines Mr. & Mrs. Elson Oshman Blunt Jean Bohner

Footnotes A number of our donors made their gifts through Community Foundations or other fiduciary organizations. We have listed the name of the donor and the fund, but not the fiduciary organizations.

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Walter Brough Penny Forney Canny John & Libby Chapin Aimée Christensen Mr. Tom Crow & Ms. Terri Ragot F. Louise David Freddy & Hornor Davis Mr. & Mrs. James H. Day Nicholas, Elizabeth, & Alexis Deane and The Tulgey Wood Foundation Mr. Jeff Dobronyi Mrs. Jean Culver Dragon Celia Dunlap Laura Hush Evans Peter & Jeanne Floeckher, Jr. Lindsay Frazier and Owen Dempsey Carolyn Friedman Mr. and Mrs. Ronald A. Hadorn Mr. & Mrs. Charles C. Harwood, Jr. Ms. Christine C. Hegarty Catherine Herrick Levy Susan Carr Hirschman Dorothy & Richard Hulbert Katharine Denny Joyce Malaika K. Kamunanwire Robert M. Kingsley Lynne Klopf Christopher and Judith Leich Mr. Patrick Lewtas Mr. and Mrs. David J. Loomis Frank & Natalie Lyon Jill Hornor & Yo-Yo Ma Betsey Blanton McGrath & Greg McGrath Ken & Kerri McPhail Patricia Michaelson & Walter Klisiwecz Jeff, Linda, Kate, Abby & Brian Miller 22

Tom Miller and Coleen Lawlor Don Mullen Caroline & Ted Murray & The Murray Family Fund Mr. and Mrs. Timothy J. O’Conner Pam & David O’Halloran Jeffrey Paley Mr. and Mrs. Michael Peterson Gary & Mary Pforzheimer Mr. & Mrs. Alfred M. Rankin, Jr. Allison Warren Richardson Katherine Duff Rines Darby Ringer Amy and Ryan Scott Mr. and Mrs. John C. Simons Carol & Gary T. Smith Seashols N. Starks Mr. & Mrs. Tighe P. Sullivan Deborah Carpenter Thompson Louise Rapp Wall Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth Wang Mr. and Mrs. Micheal R. Weitz Kathryn & Mason Wells Orme & Mary Wilson Arnold S. Wood, Jr. Carol Kingsley Woodley Piper Hartshorn Woods Jim Zien Mt. Cube ($100-$249) Anonymous (2) Anonymous (1) Mr. and Mrs. Sheldon S. Abelson Jane B. Ackerman Margaret E. Adams Ms. Annie M. Ahrens Jane Tracy Ahrens The Alderson-Smith Family Joan Dodge & Jeffrey Alexander Gregory P. Allen Bruce H. Bairstow, Jr.

The Aloha Foundation Annual Report

Mr. & Mrs. Daniel W. Baker Carol H. Ball Barbara F. Bass Mr. & Mrs. R. Bruce Bass Helen Bassett Joanna Bassett & Mark Kellogg Mr. & Mrs. Gregory W. Bauer Daniel S. and Ann Richardson Berkey Betsey A. Boehne Barnes Boffey R. Reid Bogie John & Kathleen Born Peter & Betty Lou Bowles Mr. Michael Boylen Anne E. Brewer Gary Brooks & Barbara Duncan Joe & Elaine Camarda Ellie Cashman Susan & Bill Cercone Jane Burge Chandler Stephen Chang & Susan Opotow Rita Frew Childers Matt Christie Jerry Churchill Mr. and Mrs. George and Mimi Clark Megan Hollis Clough & Scott Clough Mr. & Mrs. John W. Cooley Mr. Horace K. Corbin, III and the Corbin Family Fund Mr. and Mrs. Roger Cortesi Mr. and Mrs. Frederick R. Croen Carol Booher Cutler k Mr. Peter Damario G. Geoffrey Dampeer Shirley (Shirts) Shaw Daniel Mr. Martin P. Daniels & Ms. Amy Kennedy Luke & Elizabeth Dann Mr.and Mrs. Stanley Day Anne & Collins Denny

Janet Goosetrey Desch Carol Dickson Elizabeth F. Dodd Robert & Patricia Dohrenwend Mrs. Mary Dolphin CDR and Mrs. Paul H. Doolittle, USN Christopher C. Dorion Ms. Susan P. Downey Nori Duncan Ms. Mary Dzurik Mr. and Mrs. James C. Edwards, Jr. Howard & Susan Elliott Anthony & Elizabeth Enders Friedel & Greetje Erdelmann Elizabeth C. Evans-Iliesiu Sandy Feldman & Anne Strassner Mr. and Mrs. Robert Flynn Sarah Chase Flynn Ms. Tracy E. Frazee Carolyn Miller French Bailey & Nina Freund Ben & Barbara Friedman Kathryn Friedman Mare, Steve, Lucy, and Philip Fromyer Mr. and Mrs. Steve Galbincea Peter & Lou Gardner Hilary Trotman Garland Mr. Geoffrey Genth and Ms. Rachel Eisler The Gershon Family Dr. Sonya Suydam Gill Laura Gillespie Mr. Philip Gingrow Dr. David E. Golan and Dr. Laura C. Green Genevra Goodwin Randy Grayson Ms. Amy A. Greene

Sarah Groves Peter Gulick Mrs. Mary Collis Hancock Catherine Stifel Hansen Beth Hansen Carolyn Potter Harriman Ms. Ann W. Harrison Mrs. Nancy L. Hayes Leislene Hendrickson Margaret McMath Herring Mary Kohring Highberger Cynthia Kohn Hobart Ms. Caralee S. Holloway Robert K. & Tari A. Holterman Mr. & Mrs. John J. Horan Shirley & William Horbatt Carolyn Hubbard-Kamunanwire Fred Hughson Mary Hulbert & Anne Morehouse Hope Gibson Hungerford Marcia J. Hunkins Anna Green Hunnicutt Mr. and Mrs. Michael Huppert D’Anne Hurd Douglas Hurd & Cynthia J. Parlato-Hurd Barrett & Carter Smith Jennifer Ippoliti Mr. Richard Jacoby and Ms. Nikki Sterios Carol Barber & Joseph Jankowski Doris Jannke Ms. Marina Jenkins Nanette S. Jenkins Tracy H. Jenkins Ann Johnson Julianna Johnson Katherine & Peter Juhas Ky Kehl’s Family Dr. Elizabeth A. Kelley and Mr. Robert Dumanois Phyl Kelley Bob & Karen Kenagy Mr. Michael Kendall & Dr. Alexandra L Haagensen Mr. & Mrs. Edward G. Kirby III John C. Klopf Elizabeth P. Kohn Peter H. Kromayer Mary Kunzler-Larmann Kate Shockey Lafrance Roger W. Langsdorf Jean Miller Latimer Russ & Marilyn Leonard The Levensons Ms. Victoria Lindgren Pete & Barbara Linkroum Mr. & Mrs. Daniel Lovinger Mr. James G. Lowenstein Mr. and Mrs. George Luste Jan Lutz Nicholas Ma Priscilla & Bob Maddock Carol Magowan Richard & Gloria Manney Caroline Crawford Maryan Howie & Tory Masters Catherine McGrath Mr. & Mrs. Hugh McGuirk Mr. Paul G. Mergens Jocelyn Merrick

Susan Childs Merrick & Frank B. Merrick and the Merrick Family Fund Erwin H. Miller Mr. & Mrs. Douglas D. Moffitt Mr. and Mrs. Gerard C. Mooney Ken Morrison Boo Morton Deborah A. Mulno Charles & Carol Ogelsby Mr. Jon D. Olsen & Ms. Carole A. Dempsey Stephen & Faith Osborn Nancy & Richard Palmer Mr. & Mrs. Richard W. Palmer, Jr. Drs. Tim Parsons & Anne Judson David S. Payne and The Payne Family Foundation Nancy & Hugh Pennell Robbie Pennoyer Merz & Nancy Peters John & Karen Peterson Mrs. Jeanne N. Petropoulos Mr. & Mrs. Carl H. Pforzheimer III Mr. David S. Phillips Pierce Family Carol Portlock Mr. & Mrs. Victor O. Prall III Lara Ramsey Mrs. Forrest B. Randall Pamela Clark Reilly Mr. and Mrs. David Reynolds Douglas Rice & Cynthia Elliott Mrs. Carol Roberts Ms. Eleanor Roberts Mr. & Mrs. Jonathan Rodeheffer Mr. Caleb Rosen Craig Sabina Lizza Sandoe Mim & Art Saunders The Schiltkamp Family Ms. Wendy Scott and Mr. Al Stirt John & Peggy Sherman Margo Jamison Sisson Rebecca Smith Susan & Philip Smith Mr. Roger Soderberg Stephanie Luttrell Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Stephens Joseph Stetzel Susan Stringer Preb Stritter Mrs. James J. Strnad Carole & Dennis Swartz Mr. Davis Taylor Posie Taylor & Bill Culp Ms. Kathleen Thomas Rick Thorne Drs. Robert & Shari Thurer Susanne Tompkins Art Trotman The Susan & John Turben Foundation Julie Lucas Tuttle Richard C. Unger III Mr. & Mrs. John C. Upshall Sandra A. Urie & Katherine U. Thorpe Samuel C. Vrooman William A. Waldron Gwyneth Walker Ms. Kathleen C. Walsh

Alvin and Judy Warren Matt S. Warren T.C. and Giselle Waugh Mr. & Mrs. Donald K. Weaver Anne Slade Newbegin Webb Jay & Ellen Werb Bernard & Shirley Wesson Harrison B. Wetherill, Jr. Molly Chase Wiellette Brad and Alice Williams Ed & Kris Winnicki Jack & Byrd Wood Mr. David M. Woodrow Kathryn Mohn Wooters Mr. William Yaro and Ms. Rosamond Barber Emily Groves Yazwinski Bob & Sally Young Ali Zipf Palisades ($1–$99) Anonymous (6) Anonymous (2) William J. Abrams & Ellen R. Kiell Mr. & Mrs. John K. Adams, Jr. Chris Alberti Elizabeth Alderman

Beatrice S. Alexander Mr. Horacio Alvarez and Ms. Ana T. Machado Mrs. J. M. Amis Dr. & Mrs. Allen S. Anderson Mr. Ignacio L. Angulo Poleo and Ms. Marelia Barrios Marquina Mr. and Mrs. Dean B. Arvidson Stewart F. & Cecilia Babbott Skip & Keppy Babcock Mr. & Mrs. Edward Bair Jennifer (Jefan) and Lowry (Loper) Baldwin Shel Ball Sally Willis Bancroft Suzanne Banghart Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Barbour Virginia S. Barnes Norma A. Barr Cynthia Bassett Bob Bassett Mr. & Mrs. Colin Baynes Mr. & Mrs. George Beal Mr. and Mrs. William A. Beal Jr

Edwin & Susan Bean Philip Bean Jean Young Behan Mr. and Mrs. Albert Beliveau Ms. Bonnie L. Berthiaume and Ms. Emily Casey Marion Biel Betsy Grant Bird Ms. Annmarie Black Ms. Daria H. Blackham and Mr. Enrique Lopez-Balboa Robert & Jill Blair-Smith Mr. and Mrs. Steven A. Blanchard Nancy Reeve Blank Mr. & Mrs. Robert G. Blue Mr. and Mrs. John Blunt Gene Boehne Ms. Erin J. Bowles and Mr. Samuel A. Pease Fraser Boyd Christian M. Bradeen Mr. and Mrs. Sean Brennan Ms. Emily Brewster Dr. Paul M. Brisson and Ms. Brigitte Hebert Charlie & Alice Brown Colin Brown David W. Brown

Mrs. Joan Brown Wendy Zug & Jeff Brown Lisa Schattinger Buchan Mr. J. Christopher Burch Mr. Jonathan Bush Mr. & Mrs. Brian Cadieux Mr. and Mrs. John Callaghan Mr. and Mrs. James Cammarata Joan Meyer Capriotti Mr. & Mrs. Christopher W. Carey Marie and Frederick Carleton Robert & Kate Chamberlin Shane Chapman & Nicole Pace Mrs. Margaret Chapman Mr. and Mrs. Robert Chapman Mr. and Mrs. N. David Charkes Sally Berry Christenson Mr. Daniel Chung and Ms. Alexandra Alger Mr. & Mrs. Michael K. Clare B. Caulkins Clark William & Amy Clark Darrin & Cathy Daum Clement

The Aloha Foundation Annual Report

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The Aloha Foundation Annual Report

Gabrielle, Keith, Karolyn, and Norm Coleman Kate Conklin Ciriello Richard W. Constantine Robert E. & Lee Cook Marion Mundy Cooke William Corson Meghan Cox Ellen McVeigh Crawford Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Crimmins Stacey Wyman Cromley Ms. Anda E. Cumings Jonathan & Kristen Currier Douglas & Michaeline Curtis B.H. & D.P. Daniels Mr. Robert Danz & Ms. Lydia Littlefield Joel Davis & Sarah Keegan Mr. and Mrs. Willie J. Davis Crawford & Jessica Del Prete John & Jill Dempsey Mr. and Mrs. Antonio Depina Mr. Mark P. Dibble and Ms. Anne Stetson Susan Dickie Mr. Thomas A. Dickie Mr. & Mrs. David A. Doll Carol Cram Donley Mr. Michael Donovan and Ms. Deborah Malden Ms. Elizabeth K. Doran Carolyn and Douglas Dorsey Anne P. Downey and Glenn G. King Daniel Downey Nate Downey Ms. Katie Baines Drossos Jennifer Zoe DuBois Ms. Shirley L. Dunbar Peter & Sylvi Duncan Mr. and Mrs. David Dunn Janet and Mark Edwards Peter Einstein Sally McCrillis Eldredge Midge Grassi Eliassen Andy & Katherine Ellenthal Mr. and Mrs. Louis Elson Charles T. Enders Matt Erskine Dan & Julie Evans Robin Bunshaft Fan Brian Farley & Anne M. McSorley Mr. and Mrs. Charles Faulkner II Mr. and Mrs. Rodney Ferris David B. Findlay, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. John W. Fraser Anne & Walter Frey Gregory Fukutomi & Phoebe Barnard Mr. & Mrs. Richard Fumanti Barbara Black Funk Don and Kate Fusco Sara Dunphy and Jean Henri Gabriel Mr. and Mrs. Francis X. Gallagher, Jr. John & Colette Gambino Brittney Gaspari Mr. Seth Gibson John Lodge Gillespie Julie Kniseley Gorte Mr. Robert L. Gray Mr. Arthur W. Gregg

Mr. & Mrs. John C. Groschner Pam Groves Holly Hahn-Baker David A. Hall Mr. and Mrs. David Hamlin Mr. & Mrs. David E. Hamlin Kristin & Adam Harder Kathy Harvard Mr. & Mrs. Charles C. Harwood Katherine Hay Kathryn P. Hearst Edith Miller Heier Jon Helmreich Mr. and Mrs. Todd A. Helmus Mr. & Mrs. Bart Henderson J. Radley & Margaret Herold Ann Hile Dr. & Mrs. William H. Hines Ms. Deborah J. Hirst Garth H. Hoffman & Gwen A. Tarbox Mr. and Mrs. Richard Hojel Mr. and Mrs. Mark E. Holmen Alison & Sarah Holmes Mr. and Mrs. Drew D. Howard Dr. Edward F.X. Hughes Sarah & Donald Hundgen Mr. Joseph C. Hungler Susannah Canfield Mr. & Mrs. Brad Hutensky Mr. and Mrs. Hans J. Hvide Mr. and Mrs. David Hvolbeck Edith Evans Hyatt Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Ingersoll Ted & Ruth Jabbs Katharine Lyon Jackson Susan Hurlburt Jacques Laura B. Jamison David A. Jarratt Katharine Childs Jones Edith Tozzer Jordan David G. Kano Dr. Jeffery Kay & Ms. Alice Roberge Kim Norbeck Keating Maurice & Carol Kelley Mr. & Mrs. Nick D. Kennedy T.L. Kenyon Mr. and Mrs. William S. Kilroy Nancy Kestenbaum and David S. Klafter Mr. Rafael Klemprer & Ms. Andreina Melo de Klemprer Christina Sandoe Klinteback Mr. & Mrs. John Klopp Kathy Koo Mr. & Mrs. David Koris Mr. & Mrs. P. Nicholas Kourides Raymond P. Kress Mr. and Mrs. Paige B. L’Hommedieu Lisa Baker Laible Kathleen Corkins Lammert Anne Parish Larsen Patricia A. Latimer Sarah & Ledlie Laughlin Jennifer Lear & Todd Cunfer Catherine Dey Leary Mr. & Mrs. David Leatherwood Patricia Bowler Leggat Donald & Nan Leitch Mr. and Mrs. Thomas C. Leonard

Nancy M. Linsley Ms. Doris W. Lipetz Marian Carpenter Lockwood Mrs. Anne Lohn Mr. & Mrs. Jesse Lopez Chip Loughridge & Jenny Mackenzie Mr. & Mrs. Walter Love, Jr. William & Peggy Lynch Mr. & Mrs. Carol Lyttle, Jr. William T. Madden & Union Pacific Corporation Diana Davis Madsen M. Porter Mansfield Ruth E. Margulies Sarah Masters Eric and Robin Matza Mr. & Mrs. Benjamin T. May Mr. & Mrs. Daniel F. McCarthy Susan & Earl McClanahan Mr. Robert W. and Dr. Elizabeth A. McGrath Ms. Joan McKinnon Mr. David B. McNaughton and Ms. Janice Light Leslie Meek Wileman Katarina Mesarovich and The Mesarovich Fund Sarah Grinnell Metzger Ms. Clare Midgley Mr. and Mrs. Jeremiah Milbank Miss Elizabeth H. Miller Emilie W. Miller-Fruit and Andrew C. Fruit Evelyn Gurney Miller Margaretta K. Mitchell Lynn Appleton Moore Mr. Alex Moot and Ms. Nancy Roosa Missy Evans and Rich Moreland Mr. George Murphy and Ms. Jo Stringer Mr. and Mrs. George J. Nemphos Abbey W. Newlin Merrill Noble Dr. Carrie P. Ogorek and Ms. Keiren M. O’Connell Mr. George B. Oliver Ms. Gillian T. Opatrny Mrs. Phylis Orem Ms. Irma Osborne Christopher Overtree John F. Palmer Meredith Towner Palmer Mr. & Mrs. Neill Parker Bill Parker & Susanne Beck Mrs. Vera Parks Linda Patchett & Brian Walsh Oliver Paul Mr. & Mrs. Dale B. Pearce Mr. Donald R. Peck and Ms. Laurie Peck Mr. Manuel J. Perez and Mrs. Janet W. Shute Andrew L. Petersen Georgia C. Pettus Janet Pfleeger Mr. & Mrs. George Phocas Bill & Liz Pierce Hendon Pingeon Win & Janne Piper Martha Platt

Andrew Potter Connie Doyle Purdy Mr. & Mrs. James W. Quinn III Thomas & Lynn Quinn Carol & Ned Randell Ms. Cherryann Reed Colin Reed Jeanne Reid & Gregory R. Anrig Mr. Daniel Reynolds George & Gail Richardson Laurel Riegel Mr. and Mrs. Les and Diane Riman Mr. & Mrs. Jaehun Ro Dr. and Mrs. Thomas D. Robinson Molly Tracy Rosen & Seth Rosen Mr. and Mrs. Lon Rosen Linda & Norton Rosensweig Mary Belle Bloch Royer Enid K. Rubin Ernie and Bette Rueter Eric Ruttenberg & Perri Peltz Mr. & Mrs. Robert Ryan Erica Schur Rydzewski The Sachs Family Gregory & Lucy Marshall Sandor Susan Hartnett Sanitate Mr. and Mrs. Camillo Santomero Charles K. Savage, Jr. Mrs. Georgia Saylor Doug Schattinger Joan Myers Schattinger Julia E. Schlozman Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Schlozman Mr. Timothy Schmidt & Ms. Maude Chilton Mrs. Pamela B. Schoen Beth Ballantyne Schuller Mr. & Mrs. Jeffrey Seidel Dana Denker Semmes Mr. & Mrs. John Patrick Sheehan Kristin & John Sheehan Mr. Barry Sherman & Ms. Lisa Palattella Ms. Robin Shield and Mr. John Tariot Mr. and Mrs. Jonathan R. Sigel Richard Sincerbeaux, Jr. Mr. Matthew Slaughter and Ms. Lindsey Klecan Mr. and Mrs. Mikael Salovaara Anne, Rich, Marina and Samantha Smalling Thomas Smidt II Mr. Greg Smith and Dr. Ann McKee Mr. Henry W. Smith and Mrs. Sarah A. Thomas Mr. J. Kevin Smith Mr. and Mrs. James Smith Russell B. & Barbara E. Smith Mr. & Mrs. John A. Sommers, Jr. Anne Stafford Mr. & Mrs. John J. Stetzer III Nell Stifel Mrs. Margaret C. Stillman Ms. Susan C. Stone Nancy Towner Street Reverend and Mrs. Strek Mr. and Mrs. Edward P. Stritter Brooke Suhler Maureen Mackay Sullivan and Family

The Aloha Foundation Annual Report

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Sarah Swanson Julie T. Spellman Allen Symonds Mr. Stephen Tager and Mrs. Mary Nance-Tager Anna and Jim Thayer Mary Willis Thompson Tom & Cameron Thornton Mr. & Mrs. John Tittman David & Beth Towle Mr. and Mrs. Ransom Towsley Mr. and Mrs. Heinz H. Trebitz Sheff Tulp Family Elizabeth Smith Vaccaro

Mr. Michael G. Vecchiarelli Patricia and Rory Veevers-Carter Mr. Charles Von Simson and Ms. Erin Kelly Jennifer Blackburn Walker Mrs. Page C. Wallace Dr. and Mrs. Arthur Walsh Mr. & Mrs. John P. Ward Victoria Buchanan Ward Karin Wanke Ms. Eve Chilton Weinstein Mr. Mark Weltner & Ms. Sandra Crawford

Carla & Mark Westcott and The Westcott Charitable Fund Katya Link White Katie White Holly Whittemore John A. Wilcox Mr. and Mrs. Fielding L. Williams Lee C. Williams Lucia A. Williams Mr. Richard G. Williams & Ms. Martha Donovan Mr. & Mrs. Robert R. Williams III Elisabeth Thomas Wolfe P.J. Wood

Christy Woodcock John Wyckoff and Katherine Wyckoff Christine Ye Mr. & Mrs. Eugene F. Yeates Mr. Scott Yoder & Ms. Donna Starace David & Christine Yost Mr. and Mrs. James W. Zug Kate Zvonkovic

Jane Dusenbury Culver and Morna Betty Dusenberg Betsy Culver Jahnke

Herb Kempe Patricia Michaelson and Walter Klisiwecz Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Day Friedel & Greetje Erdelmann Mrs. Nancy L. Hayes Mrs. Forrest B. Randall Ginny Hazelwood Stevens

Brita Reed Mr. and Mrs. Carl A. Reed

Vickie Lane Kempe Patricia Michaelson and Walter Klisiwecz Mrs. J. M. Amis B.H. & D.P. Daniels Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Day Mrs. Nancy L. Hayes T.L. Kenyon Mrs. Anne Lohn Mrs. Forrest B. Randall Shenfield Parochial Church Council Ginny Hazelwood Stevens

Wren Smith Peter & Jeanne Floeckher, Jr.

Gifts in Memory Dick Allen Ken & Kathy Allen Lua Ameden Anonymous Holly Ameden and Dave Gold Mr. and Mrs. Ethan A. Brecher Mr. Carlos F. Carballo and Ms. Liesbeth Carballo-Jans Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Feda Andrea Abbott’s Fourth Grade Class Kathryn Friedman Mr. and Mrs. Hiroaki Ishida Ms. Rebecca Jessel Paul & Gina Krasnavage Mr. and Mrs. J. Michael Lewis Robert & Michelle Maddock Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Prezioso Phyllis Shea Mr. and Mrs. Juan Velutini Katie White Elliot A. Baines, Sr. Tom Miller and Coleen Lawlor Miyoko Bassett Joanna Bassett and Mark Kellogg Gene Pierce Blood Anonymous Dorcas Ann Casey Margo Jamison Sisson Peg Cook Ginny Hazelwood Stevens

Judy Downing and Alice Stanley Carol Kingsley Woodley Mary Decker Flintermann Barbara Flintermann Alter Alan G. Friedman Kathryn Friedman Eunice Dunham Goodwin Genevra Goodwin Harriet Miller Hight Margaret E. Adams Mr. and Mrs. Dean B. Arvidson Ms. Bonnie L. Berthiaume and Ms. Emily Casey Ms. Shirley L. Dunbar Mr. and Mrs. Rodney Ferris Mr. and Mrs. Ronald A. Hadorn Ms. Caralee S. Holloway Mr. and Mrs. Drew D. Howard Mr. Joseph C. Hungler Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Ingersoll Judith S. & B. Anthony King Miss Elizabeth H. Miller Erwin H. Miller Ted & Caroline Murray Nancy & Hugh Pennell Mr. and Mrs. Jonathan R. Sigel Posie Taylor & Bill Culp The Boys and Girls Club of Worcester

Peter A. Cooley Charlie P. Cooley & The Lubrizol Corporation

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The Aloha Foundation Annual Report

Claire Linkroum Posie Taylor & Bill Culp Cliffie Lovering John A. & Judith A. Currier Diana Davis Madsen Nancy S. & Richard K. Sinkler Elizabeth C. Evans-Iliesiu Josephine Emerson Meek Leslie Meek Wileman Cornelia (Neal) Davidson Oliver Mr. George B. Oliver Jack & Byrd Wood

Anne C. Reid Julie Lucas Tuttle Lee Sansom Cynthia Smith Babbott

Alice (Al) Stanley Carol Kingsley Woodley Betsey Bourne Tracy Jane Tracy Ahrens Molly Tracy Rosen & Seth Rosen Annie Ahrens Caleb Rosen Tracey Jenkins Marina Jenkins Gwendolyn Wilder Wood P.J. Wood

Gifts in Honor Annie Ahrens, Caleb Rosen, Tracy Jenkins, Marina Jenkins Jane Tracy Ahrens Dr. Barbara F. “Bebe” Bass Mrs. R. Bruce Bass Caroline Bass Coleman Mr. Peter Coleman and Ms. Heather Kaplan Coleman

Toni Hull, Annie Hull, and Juliet King Ms. Christine C. Hegarty Nancy Narten Sorace Chris Sorace Gruendeman Ohana Camp Joan McKinnon

Matching Gifts American Express Foundation Mr. & Mrs. P. Nicholas Kourides Atlas Venture Advisors, Inc. Holly Whittemore Bank Of America Merrily S. Gerrish

Mercedes Baynes Katrina Mesarovich and R. Mesarovich Fund

Nancy Pennell Ginny Hazelwood Stevens

Barnes Boffey, Nancy Pennell, Kathy Plunkett, Posie Taylor, Jim Zien Mr. and Mrs. Charles Parry

Annie Pierce Mr. and Mrs. Micheal R. Weitz

General Electric Foundation Sheldon S. Abelson Mr. & Mrs. Daniel Lovinger

Kathy Plunkett Mr. and Mrs. Micheal R. Weitz

Goldman Sachs Matching Gift Program Charles & Anne Sincerbeaux

Becky Proulx Patricia Michaelson & Walter Klisiwecz

Kraft Employee Involvement Programs Mr. & Mrs. Edward G. Kirby III

Julia E. Schlozman Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Schlozman

The Lubrizol Corporation Charles P. and Lucy G.R. Cooley Foundation

Kit Taylor and Helen Shaw Toni Colby Shoham

Syncora Guarantee RE Ltd. Lisa Schattinger Buchan

Sam Zale's 12th birthday Stanley and Claudia Zale

Starbucks Matching Gift Meghan Cox

Dorothy Waldron William A. Waldron

The Winston - Salem Foundation Brittney Gaspari

Claire, Alexandra, and Christopher Zipf The Zipf Family

Tiff Advisory Services John Lodge Gillespie, Jr.

Barnes Boffey Murray Wheeler, Jr. Stuart and James Dickison Laura Gillespie Stuart Dickison and David Hatch Katharine Denny Joyce Stuart Fairbairn Mr. & Mrs. Tighe P. Sullivan Meredith Hoffman Dr. Sonya Suydam Gill Jane, Richard and Bill Hough Edie & Ed Overtree Elton, Andrew, Dana, and Robert Hoyt Robert Y. White, Jr.

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Board of Trustees 2008 Virginia Schauffler Allison Hanover, New Hampshire Trustee 1997-Present

Peter W. Gaillard Fairfield, Connecticut Trustee 2004-Present

Anne Conway Juster Shaker Heights, Ohio Trustee 2004-Present

Jo Ann Silverstein New York, New York Trustee 1994-2008

James Bone Lincoln, Rhode Island Trustee 1997-2008

Rudolph K. Glocker Boston, Massachusetts Trustee 2007-Present

Susan Buckingham McGarvey Needham, Massachusetts Trustee 1996-Present

Emelie R. Ventling Lake Forest, IL Trustee 2007-Present

Janis Coates Mount Desert, Maine Trustee 1999-Present

Kathleen Harvard Hanover, New Hampshire Trustee, 2008-Present

Kate Merritt Auburndale, Massachusetts Trustee 1982-1994, 1995-Present

Joseph Dobronyi Larchmont, New York Trustee 2004-Present

John F. Herrick, Jr. Shaker Heights, Ohio Vice President Treasurer Trustee 1999-Present

Patricia Michaelson Delmar, New York Trustee, 2008-Present

Robert Y. White, Jr. Willoughby, Ohio Vice President President, 2006-2008 Trustee 1997-Present

Kathleen Fisher New York, New York Trustee, 2008-Present Lindsay Frazier Belmont, Massachusetts Trustee 2004-Present

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Randall Johnson Hamden, Connecticut Trustee 1998-Present

The Aloha Foundation Annual Report

Sally C. Reid Dedham, Massachusetts President, 2008-2010 Trustee 1999-Present Fran Rosenfeld Larchmont, New York Secretary Trustee 2003-Present

Stephen Zipf Gladwyne, Pennsylvania Trustee 2004-Present Mark Zvonkovic New York, NY Trustee 2001-Present

Emeritus Trustees Elliot A. Baines, Jr. Naperville, Illinois Trustee 1991-2003 Matthew Bender IV Albany, New York Trustee 1969-1991 Tracy Brown Fairlee, Vermont Trustee 1985-2000 Peter Christie Etna, New Hampshire Trustee 1982-1991, 1992-2007 Samuel P. Cooley Bloomfield, Connecticut Trustee 1975-1991 Mary Kohring Highberger Hendersonville, North Carolina Trustee 1976-1983 Robert C. Kenagy Litchfield, Connecticut Trustee 1982-1991 Elizabeth Harte Owens Boston, Massachusetts Trustee 1980-1983,1989-1996 Faith Jackson Parker Stowe, Vermont Trustee 1982-1991 Donald R. Williams, Jr. Naples, Florida Trustee 1969-1985 Edmund A. Winnicki Chester, Vermont Trustee 1986-1998

The Aloha Foundation, Inc. 2968 Lake Morey Road Fairlee, Vermont 05045

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