New Paths Forward - Camphill Soltane

Transcription

New Paths Forward - Camphill Soltane
The Camphill Challenge
On Sunday, October 17, the Camphill Village
Kimberton Hills landscape, bursting with
a palette of breathtaking fall foliage, served
as backdrop to the vast array of colors sported
by our 270+ bicyclists. The cool, brisk air
tingled with anticipation as the cyclists geared
up to participate in the 4th Annual Camphill
Challenge co-hosted by Camphill Soltane, Camphill Special
School and Camphill Village Kimberton Hills. Riders ranged
from beginner to expert as did the three routes: a 10-mile
family friendly ride, a moderately challenging 35-mile route,
and a 50-mile expert route. Picture-perfect weather highlighted
the beauty of Chester County as riders pedaled by the rolling
hills, historic homes and horse farms along the way. Post-ride,
cyclists and families gathered for a picnic accompanied by
live music, door prizes, and booths of handcrafted wonders
produced by the students and residents of the three Camphill
communities. All proceeds support Camphill in providing life
sharing and educational opportunities for children, youth,
and adults with developmental disabilities.
Thanks to all our riders, sponsors, supporters, and volunteers,
this event was a smashing success! Mark your calendars
now for next year’s Challenge on October 16, 2011.
“Ride for a cause, not just because!”
Par for the Course!
Under a blazing Summer Solstice sun and
soaring temperatures, the June 21, 2010
“Golf with a Purpose!” event served up
a friendly, but heated, competition at
beautiful Stonewall golf course. Last year’s
reigning champs, Rich Franklin and Dick
Delaney, both members of the Camphill Soltane
Board of Directors, vied to maintain championship status
against all comers. After a hot day on the course, the players
gathered back at the cool and comfortable club house for a
generous dinner buffet and challenging putting competition
while scorekeepers tallied totals to determine the 2010
Champions. As the results were anxiously awaited, the Silent
Auction items (golf packages and attire, art work, wine and
more), sold quickly. Finally, Ted Swinnerton approached with
the results and the tension mounted. The 2010 Champions:
First Place went to Mark Stull and Jerry Corrigan and Second
Place to Steve Gautier and Chris Flick, with last year’s
champions finishing ‘in the money.’
The event raised close to $15,000 in support of Camphill
Soltane’s “Learning for Life” program.
A very special “Thank You” to Peter Garvey and Barbara
Bell of Integro Insurance Brokers for being the Outing
Sponsor, once again.
Camphill soltane
224 Nantmeal Road
Glenmoore, PA 19343
610.469.0933
610.469.1054 (fax)
www.camphillsoltane.org
info@camphillsoltane.org
Camphill Soltane 2009-2010 Annual Report
..............................
New Paths Forward
Table of contents
Guy alma
1 Guy Alma: Letter from the President
Letter from the President
..............................................................
2 Nancy Winkelman: Our Journey to Camphill
4Pamela Smith: Words Do Matter
5Sabine Otto, Program Director
These are exciting times at Camphill Soltane, and it is wonderful for each of us who serve as
board members to witness the transformation that the community is undergoing.
6 Adrian Bowden, Administrative Director
6Ashaun Hopkins: Growing Confidence
Following the creation of the Strategic Plan for 2010-2012, Adrian Bowden and Sabine Otto
were elected as Soltane’s Administrative Director and Program Director. They are joined by
Anne-Marie McMahon and Rachel Berk; together the four constitute the Management Team.
Under their leadership several initiatives are unfolding:
8The Edmonds Doberenz Family:
Making a Home in Camphill
9Anne-Marie McMahon,
Coworker Development Coordinator
• Some Soltane students are eligible for public funding through Soltane’s new Qualified Provider status;
10Rachel Berk,
Camphill Soltane Foundation Acting President
•A n intensive coworker training program in Youth Guidance has been developed and the first nine
coworkers are enrolled and studying hard;
11 Friend-Raiser: Students in Action
•The Camphill Soltane Foundation, the philanthropic arm of the community, is engaged in
a thorough audit by Changing Our World. The results of this will be used to reconfigure and
energize the work of the Foundation so that it can better provide for Soltane’s future growth;
12 Donors & Sponsors
13 Financials
• The Strategic Plan continues to unfold, and an exciting future vision is emerging from the work.
Camphill Soltane Board
Camphill Soltane Foundation Board
Johanna Allston, Ph.D., President
Gry Brudvik, President
J. William Widing, III, Esq., Vice President
J. William Widing, III, Esq., Vice President
Richard Franklin, Treasurer
Joseph Pancerella, Treasurer
Gry Brudvik, Secretary
Johanna Allston, Ph.D., Secretary
Guy Alma, President-Elect, June, 2010
Guy Alma
Barbara Bell
Rachel K. Berk, Acting President-Elect, June, 2010
Rachel K. Berk
Adrian Bowden
Adrian Bowden
Richard Franklin
Zalene C. Corey
Sabine Otto
Richard Delaney
We wish to extend a warm welcome to Dick Delaney and Bill Rahling. Both gentlemen recently
joined the Board of Directors. Dick brings tremendous warmth and a lifetime of experience in strategic
planning and organizational consulting. Bill is a proud Soltane parent and local businessman who
brings unique skills and a thorough understanding of Soltane’s mission to his board work.
We thank Johanna Allston and Bill Widing for their many years of service on Soltane’s board.
They have guided Soltane well, leaving us in a position of strength with tremendous opportunities
ahead. Their leadership has been a true gift. Both Johanna and Bill will continue to serve Soltane
through their membership on the Camphill Soltane Foundation board.
Two long-term coworkers and board members left Soltane in August. Gry Brudvik is spending a
year on sabbatical, helping an emerging life-sharing community in Colorado to grow. Zalene Corey
has been a longstanding member of Camphill in North America, and we wish her a fond farewell.
Lastly, look for Soltane’s “in good company” products at local farmers’ markets and craft shows. Maja
Schelski’s creative weavers and textile artists have been producing and selling hundreds of high quality items
over the past year. Also, check out the Kimberton Whole Foods Store for ketchup, fruit spreads, and apple
cider slushies produced by Soltane’s Land Works program. It has indeed been a productive year at Soltane.
Sabine Otto
William Rahling
With thanks for your engagement and support,
Guy Alma
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a parent’s greatest wish
.................................................................
Our Journey to Camphill
Bearing a child with a disability is a life-altering
event. Raising that child is an awesome responsibility,
full of important lifelong decisions and issues and
concerns. For me, chief among those has always
been: Where will Sonia live when she grows up? Will she be safe? Will she be happy? Will she love
and be loved? As a mother, my dreams for Sonia
are the same as my dreams for my other daughter:
that she be safe, that she be happy, that she find
a place in the world that supports and encourages
her full and tremendous potential.
We have found in Camphill Soltane a community
that exceeds all hopes, dreams, and expectations.
I always knew that staying at home in her adult years was not an option for Sonia. She is far
too social, far too wanting to be part of the world, far too adventurous. Yet, what were the
options? As Sonia reached her teens, I started looking, researching, talking to everyone and
anyone I could find. Group homes, with their “staff” mentality, seemed out of the question.
Traditional residential schools, with their focus on rules and points and behavior, didn’t fit
the bill either. Supervised independent living situations likely wouldn’t provide enough support.
Then, two people who had relatives living in a Camphill community independently told
me about Camphill. As soon as I set foot at Camphill Soltane, I knew it would be just the
right place for Sonia. If pressed to describe the difference in a single word between Soltane
and any other place I had considered for Sonia, that word would be “respect.” At Soltane,
every individual is a valued and valuable member of the community. Everyone has a
contribution to make. Labels disappear. We each have strengths and weaknesses.
We each have abilities and disabilities. We each are different. We each are special.
That respect infuses the community and, from my vantage point, creates an environment
where everyone can function at her/his very best. Sonia is happier, safer, and more a part
of a community (rather than, apart from a community) than I ever imagined she could
be. She is learning, thriving, growing, and becoming more confident, competent, and
independent every day.
As a mother with the awesome responsibility of raising Sonia and carrying her through
to adulthood, I am blessed to have discovered Camphill Soltane.
Nancy Winkelman & Sonia Lieberman
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Sabine Otto
Program Director
community resident and activist
..............................................
Words Do Matter
A 1995 graduate of Camphill
Special School–Beaver Run
and 2000 graduate of Camphill
Soltane’s college program,
Pam Smith is a do-er.
Residing in Nantmel Farm House as a long-term
Community Resident, she is senior to many of the volunteer
co-workers who live and work with her. Her primary
work activity at Soltane is in the Food Processing/Bakery
operation. In addition, she looks forward to working at
a local Food Bank, an opportunity currently being arranged.
On July 12, Pam’s activism through “Speaking for
Ourselves,” a state-wide advocacy program for individuals
with developmental disabilities, was called upon. She was
asked to represent the community of those with special
needs at a press conference in support of the “Words Do
Matter” bill proposed by State Senator Andrew Dinniman.
With confidence in her cause, Pam spoke with conviction to
the roomful of participants, calling for the abolition of the “R”
word (“retarded”) in all government literature and language.
She advocated for the use of words showing greater respect.
We eagerly anticipate Pam’s next public speaking engagement:
Senator Dinniman has promised her the opportunity to speak
on the floor of the state senate in Harrisburg when
the bill supporting this objective comes before
the senators for a vote. It will be a proud
and happy day for all of us.
Great work, Pam!
You go, girl!
Sabine Otto is a youthful veteran of Camphill
living. Born in Germany, she grew up with her
two brothers in the Black Forest of southern
Germany. At 21, she found Camphill through a
friend, and joined the community of Glencraig
outside Belfast, Northern Ireland. During her
18 years there she successfully completed the
three-year Curative Education seminar, taught
for ten years as a class teacher for Grades 1–8,
and welcomed her son Benjamin into the world
in 1997. Then, Soltane beckoned.
Sabine arrived in 2000, with young Benjamin,
and offered her considerable skills and
experience in the areas of householding,
herb gardening, and managing the candlemaking workshop. She quickly joined the
leadership group, the Soltane Meeting, and,
as the community began transitioning out
of its one-person leadership model, she
chaired the Soltane Meeting and was appointed
Co-Executive Director for three years with
her primary focus on education and the
overall community-living program.
Sabine sees this year’s transition in leadership
as a healthy next step, and embraces her role
as Program Director, an essential part of the
Management Team, with good will and energy.
Her primary motivation in living life in Camphill
is its focus on community building: moving
human relationships and structures forward.
Says Sabine: “By launching its next phase
of development with a vision to expand its
activity outside this 52-acre campus, Soltane
has the opportunity to create healthy and
sustainable life styles for all. A shared vision
of participating in the socially responsible
movement around us is leading us into the
future. It is our responsibility to ensure that
the friends we live, work and learn with, are
active participants in this vision.”
Pamela Smith
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5
Adrian Bowden
Administrative Director
Adrian Bowden comes to us from Australia,
by way of 13 years of Camphill life in Norway.
Five years out of law school, as a young
corporate lawyer with a specialty in Business
Taxation, Adrian experienced an epiphany which
led to rock-climbing expeditions in Thailand,
Europe, and Norway. There, as a Visiting Fellow
at the University of Oslo, he learned about
Camphill, visited the small community Solborg,
(23 “villagers” and 20 co-workers) and soon
found himself, in addition to householder, teacher
and workshop master, as the Administrative
Director of the Camphill Village Trust, serving
six Camphill communities in Norway.
On sabbatical in 2008, Adrian came to
visit Camphill Soltane and met like-minded
individuals who carried the same questions:
“How can Camphill bring its essence to the
greater community? How can our friends with
special needs bring healing and a different
social consciousness into our society?”
Soltane, at age 22 and now a “grown-up,”
is re-stating its original intention of equipping
all residents of the community, differentlyabled and otherwise, to share the values and
heart-warmth of Camphill through every
interaction with the wider world. His hope
is that Soltane will develop models
(e.g. workshops, café, urban households)
with partners in other organizations that
will result in meaningful contributions
to the well-being of the wider community.
“We can create a supply line to the cultural
aspects of Camphill Soltane with its focus
on nature, beauty, art, and the consciousness
of the value of each human life, and still be
off-campus, collaborating and connecting
with others for the benefit of all.”
This summer, Adrian joined the Management
Team as Administrative Director. His work
encompasses legal, financial, and organizational
management. Far from being holed up in an
office, Adrian continues living the Camphill
experience: sharing daily life with nine others
in Nantmel Farm House, giving computer
classes to students, and fully participating
in the cultural life of the community.
6
Learning to chill...and more
....................................
Growing
Confidence
Ashaun Hopkins is an easy-going, self-assured 24-year-old
who has been living and learning in Camphill Soltane
since 2005. He spent his early years growing up in
Philadelphia and San Diego with his father, a well-known
muralist, and his step-mother, a designer. He came to
Soltane after high school, looking for opportunities for
further development and education.
In his time here, Ashaun has lived with a variety of people,
learned to prepare meals, joined the soccer team, had an
internship in a high school cafeteria, and built and maintained
friendships with many fellow students. This year, Ashaun has
taken a behind-the-scenes role in Soltane’s cultural life, nobly
serving as a judge in our fall Michaelmas festival’s apple dessert
bake-off, and helping to prepare a meal for the community on
Halloween night. He lives with a roommate in a two-bedroom
apartment in Nantmel Farm House, and looks forward to
cooking and entertaining more independently in that space.
Ashaun will graduate from the “Learning for Life” college
program in June 2011. When asked what his plans are
for the future, Ashaun admitted that he would love
to stay in Soltane, teaching other students swimming
and other skills, like cleaning and cooking, but most
importantly, “how to chill and take it easy.” He says,
“You don’t have to go out all the time. It’s okay to
stay home and relax.”
Ashaun’s father, Daniel Hopkins, notes: “Family
and friends have noticed Ashaun’s gained
confidence, ability and determination in
voicing his thoughts; this is an inspiration
to us all. Ashaun has always been somewhat
independent; however, being in an environment
amongst his peers has given him a greater sense
of self and comfort within his own being,
which we see as maturity.”
Ashaun Hopkins
7
The Edmonds Doberenz Family
A highly motivated duo, Mark met Mary when she hired
him for the Jesuit Volunteer Corp in Alaska. He, from Indiana,
and she, born in Pennsylvania and raised in Ohio, discovered
they had traveled similar spiritual and educational pathways
in their commitment to the ideals embodied by the JVC:
“simple living, community, social justice and spirituality.”
Their paths diverged, geographically, when she served for
a year in Guatemala, returning war-displaced refugees to
their lands, and he engaged in social service work in Indonesia.
Once reunited, both with degrees in Theology, their years in
Oregon were devoted to high school teaching, social justice
through church organizations, and starting a family.
Seeking a life of service in an
“intentional community,” they learned
of Camphill and felt it represented
everything to which they aspired.
From 2002-2009, Mark turned to his passion for baking:
constructing a wood-fired oven, overseeing a bakery crew,
building up the bakery/café business, developing his
expertise in fermented food production: cheese, yogurt,
sauerkraut, and vegetable pickles. Mary focused her
considerable energies on home-making, which is the heart
of the Camphill experience. During these years she also
completed the four-year Social Therapy Seminar, the
three-year Householders Seminar, and Leo was born.
Growing a Family; Building a Life
...........................................
Making a Home
in Camphill
An enthusiastic welcome to Mark Doberenz and Mary Edmonds,
and their three children: Ruth, Avila and Leo, who have come to
live, work and grow in Camphill Soltane after seven excellent years
of community life at Camphill Village USA in Copake, New York.
8
The move to Camphill Soltane, a smaller community
serving a younger population, seemed the next right step
in their journey. Bringing considerable skills, they are eager
to find their right work and right relationship to the hive of
energy and enterprise which is Camphill Soltane as it makes
a re-commitment to bringing the gifts and strengths of all
Soltaners, and their healing capacities, into the world.
As Mary eloquently states: “Camphill, in its ideal, is a
model of living that champions relationships over assets,
hard work and responsibility over complacency, and vision
over self-indulgence. It is a deeply meaningful life.”
Anne-Marie McMahon
Coworker Development Coordinator
A native of Reading,
Pennsylvania, Anne-Marie has
traveled widely around the world
and come back home again.
A graduate of Ursinus College
with a degree in Anthropology,
she credits her study abroad
year in Hyderabad, India and her
two years service in the Peace
Corps in Guinea-Bissau, West
Africa as “life-changers.” While in the Peace
Corps, she nurtured community vegetable
gardening as an Agriculture Extension
volunteer, and helped develop a women’s
micro-lending association in her village.
Upon returning to the USA, she continued to
combine her interests in horticulture, travel,
and social service. She worked for a year in
a nursery in Montana, followed by two years
in the recruiting office for the Peace Corps
in Dallas, Texas. After returning home to
Pennsylvania, she began working at Camphill
Soltane and, shortly thereafter, founded
Sugarbush Nursery. Anne-Marie now lives near
Reading with her husband and two sons, ages
six and four. Managing this diverse and busy
lifestyle has given Anne-Marie a very special
quality – adaptability!
In her eight years at Soltane, Anne-Marie, a
“non-resident Camphiller,” has been involved
in all aspects of coworker recruitment and
retention as well as managing special projects
in program areas, implementing administrative
systems, assisting communication flow, and
now has joined the Management Team. She is
inspired by Soltane’s support of advocacy, and
the focus on liberal arts in the Learning for Life
Program. Expansion of the Soltane community
out into the wider community is a goal she
strongly supports. “Soltane has real expertise
in the ‘social arts’ and in community-building;
these are gifts that should be shared more
deliberately with the rest of the world.”
Welcome indeed to the Edmonds Doberenz family.
We celebrate your arrival!
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rachel berk
Camphill Soltane Foundation
Acting President
Rachel Berk is striving...and thriving.
Born and raised in Lansdale, Pennsylvania, her first
experience working with diverse populations was in
high school and college, teaching English and math to
high-achieving, low-income middle-schoolers through
an organization called Summerbridge at the Town
School (now known as “Breakthrough New York”).
After graduating college (Bennington College, BA
in Liberal Arts with a Focus in Music, Education,
and Psychology) she moved to New York City,
assisting in concert management and grant-writing
for Bargemusic, a venue well-known for its offerings
of high-quality classical chamber music as well as
its unique setting: a transformed coffee barge
moored under the Brooklyn Bridge.
Inspired by social justice work and the benefits of
communal living, an online search led her to discover
the Camphill Movement for social renewal. She arrived
at Soltane in 2006 and quickly became an essential
part of the fabric of life: householding, building up
the Store into one of the Soltane Works work areas,
creating and running Iduna’s Café which provided
daily lunches for the community. She also became
the first director of Soltane Works, now one of the
two defining programs of Camphill Soltane.
Rachel completed the Seminar for Social Healing,
became Soltane’s trustee for the Camphill Association
of North America, and was invited to join the Board
of Directors of Camphill Soltane. This year, in addition
to co-householding and life-sharing with students
and community residents, she accepted the position
of Acting President of the Board of Camphill Soltane
Foundation where she is overseeing a philanthropic
audit to clarify, streamline, and develop its
fund-raising and investment functions. She has also
stepped into the four-person Management Team.
Outside of Soltane, Rachel serves as a Core Group
member of Think OutWord, an initiative of young
people committed to peer-led education on topics
of societal transformation. She also serves as
Finance Coordinator of the Youth Section of the
School of Spiritual Science in North America.
Her vision for Soltane is that it be a place of
inspiration, hope and healing for young people:
that each may learn to connect with and honor his
or her own uniqueness for the purpose of sharing
his or her gifts and strengths with the world.
10
friend-raiser
...............................................
Students in Action
Camphill Soltane’s “Learning for
Life” students hosted their second
Empty Bowls Benefit Dinner
on Sunday, June 13, 2010 in the
Rose Room at Camphill Soltane.
What a success!
The $1,000 raised will benefit the internet-based
micro-lending organization, Kiva (www.kiva.org). Kiva’s
mission is to connect people, through micro-lending,
for the sake of alleviating poverty. Loans from Kiva
help small businesses and entrepreneurs from developing
countries around the globe to become independent
and self-sustaining.
Students will be meeting after the Thanksgiving break to learn about the various
businesses and entrepreneurs from which to choose to dedicate their money.
Students will receive regular updates and be able to see how their loans change
lives. After a loan is repaid to the student account at Camphill Soltane, the group
can re-loan the funds to another needy business or entrepreneur.
Each “Learning for Life” class took an active role in preparing for this event. A simple
meal of delicious homemade soup and bread was offered with contributions from our
prevocational cooking and gardening programs. Publicity and tickets were developed
by students, and the pottery class created beautiful bowls for the dinner. A Silent Auction
Table included personal student contributions, miscellaneous pottery items, herbal
ointments and teas, musical instruments from our Wood Workshop and a bicycle
from Soltane’s Bike Shop. On the day of the event, students and coworkers set up,
directed parking, manned the ticket sales tables and the table from which guests
chose their unique pottery bowls. Several also welcomed guests and served bread,
dessert and herbal tea in the dining room area, cooked and served soup in the
kitchen and hosted the raffle, 50/50, and auction table sales.
Congratulations to all who put their hearts and souls
into the success of this event!
11
Donors & Sponsors
Financials
Reflecting fiscal year 9/1/2009 – 8/31/2010
$20,000 & above
Frank and Karen Auffenberg
Eggert and Agneta Benzon
Thomas and Kamala Buckner
Vildan and Aynur Guleryuz
Peter Pohly
Steven and
Amy Rubenstein Family
The John Lazarich Foundation
Dermott and Martina O’Flanagan
Norman Parton and Ellie Becker
Jerry and Heidi Preschutti
Dr.Richard and
Hallie Rosenbloom
The Asen Foundation
Andrew Wigglesworth
Dr. Lester and
Marjorie Zimmerman
$10,000 – $19,999
$1,000 – $2,499
Peter Garvey and Barbara Bell
William Kronenberg, III
Jim and Dinae Norris
Howard and Barbara Peterson
George and Janet Smith
Daniel Staub
United Way of Southeastern PA
$5,000 – $9,999
Anonymous
Katharine Bacon
Connelly Foundation
Guy Diana and Anna Marie Pizzi
Stephen and Debra Gautier
Joel and Evelyn Goldhammer
Mrs. J. Maxwell Moran
Kenneth and Laurie Renko
Thomas Ringe, III
George G. & Elizabeth
G. Smith Foundation, Inc.
Mark and Linda Stull
The Arthur Loeb Foundation
Andy and Shawn Towne
$2,500 – $4,999
Johanna Allston and
Ted Swinnerton
Richard Belas and Judith Soltz
Christl Bender
Al DePalantino
Drex and Debbie Douglas
Arthur and Lois Goodman
Hankin Foundation
Lowell Herrero and
Janet Gentile
Michael McNamara and
Connie Househ
Carolyn and Samuel Morris, Jr.
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Dennis and Debra Barba
Richard and Joanne Delaney
Steven and Joyce Eisenberg
Richard and Joan Franklin
Dr. Marvin and Ellen Gross
Mark and Liz Hansler
John and Diana Herzog
Bill and Carol Herzog
Noah Levy
Liza Morehouse
Nicholas Paumgarten
William and Leslie Rahling
Kenneth and Katie Rogers
Dana and Kathy Smith
Thym Smith
Elizabeth Somers
Robert and Norma Strouse
William and
Mary Joan Widing, III
Susan and David Williams
$500 – $999
Daniel Bacon
Jamie and Kristin Biddle
Toni Bowersox
Cigna Foundation
John Erdmann
John F. Erdmann, III
Anthony Fingleton
Chris Flick
Joseph and Nita Gottesman
Annie and John Hall
Rick Kolinsky
Richard Leroy and Donna Levy
Pierre and Rosemary Levai
Jeffrey and Cynthia Mack
Mrs. James K. Makrianes
David and Martha Martin
Iqbal and Janet Paroo
John and Mary Pellack
Scheerer Family Foundation
Elliott and Lenore Schwartz
Joel and Harriet Shaiman
Emily Smith
Wes and Kerrill Taylor
Vanguard Charitable
Endowment Program
Ward Woods
Tyler and Tildy Wren
Dr. Murray Schwartz and
Marilyn Yablon
$250 – $499
Anonymous
Julie Blank
Jacqueline Botwinick
Gry Brudvik
Raif and Elena Ezratty
Betsy Gemmill
Devin and Rachel Gross
Ted and Patricia Haley
Ronald and Melinda Helveston
Daniel Hopkins
Dr. Lacy H. Hunt
Michael Lillard
Justin Meshberg and
Romi Soleimani
Jonathan and Susanne Mordoh
Alan Natanson
Elizabeth Peabody
Orin and Robin Portnoy
Thomas and Karen Robards
Don and Heather Robitzer
Fred Rubenstein
Dr. Isaiah and Janet Seligman
Joseph and
Patricia St. Georges
Milton and Alice Wolson
$100 – $249
Tito and Mary Ellen Balducci
Donald Benson and Janet Segal
Norene Benton
Fred and Joyce Bogen
Roberta M. Bradley
Michael and Susan Brown
John and Linda Chruney
Jerry Corrigan
Dennis and Michele Duym
Monte and Jackie Ezratty
Marcia Fox
Dr. Jerry Goldfischer and
Lila Mordoh
Jim and Ellen Greenwood
Edward and Amanda Haluska
William and Elizabeth Herman
Angela Horvat
Arthur and Jackie Kaufman
John and Hope Lapsley
Kyle McBrien
James and Joan Moore
Brian O’Flanagan
Leonard and Diane Olsen, Jr.
Patricia P. Irgens Larsen
Charitable Foundation
Pat and Kathleen Quinn
Carlena Robison
Dr. Nathan and Valerie Rudolph
Doug Shapiro and Julie Scott
Brian Slater and Lynne Norris
Yahanas Tabb-bey
Rick Umani
Michael and Martha Welch
Brooke Wittwer
Priscilla Woods
Gerard and Joyce LoDolce
William C. and Patricia McRae
George and Florence Millman
Matt Rosenberg
Harry Rosenberg
Lee Ruth
Theresa Savel
Bentley and Anne Sherman
David and Sylvia Siegel
William Stirling and
Martha Davidson
Scott Wheeler
Charlotte Zimmerman
Peredur Staff
In honor of
Eleanor Linke
$25 – $99
Isaac Levy
Dr. Fredric and Judy Bomback
Julia N. Catini
Jon Cohen and Jody Hill
Richard and Emily Cohen
Zalene C. Corey
Joel and Toby Cross
Ed Donaghy
Norman Fenimore and Debbie Fecht
Jonathan and Gilda Gispan
Robert Goschler
Gil and Marion Hersch
Christine Huston
Jim Jarvie
Brian Kates
Michael Kimble
Robert and Kazuko Landau
Eleanor Linke
Andrew and Joselyn Ney
William and Leslie Rahling
Robert McRae
Julia N. Catini
William C. and Patricia McRae
Tony Bacon
Annie and John Hall
Mrs. James K. Makrianes
Priscilla Woods
In memory of
Annegret Youmans
& Nick Daisley
John and Diana Herzog
Sponsors
Andrew Schwartz
Adams County Winery
Andrew Geoffrey Vineyards
Anomaly Vineyards
Araujo Estate Wines
Arista Investment Advisors, Ltd.
Bell Wine Cellars
bioCapture, LLC
Calera Wine Company
Charter Oak Wine
Clark-Claudon Vineyards
Creed’s Seafood & Steaks
Delaware Theatre Company
Destination Salon & Spa
Diament Building Corporation
Eastern Mountain Sports
Fox Rothschild, LLP
Frey Vineyards
Grace Family Vineyards
Hagley Museum & Library
Hangley Aronchick Segal
& Pudlin
Hanzell Vineyards
Harbison Wines
Hare Chase & Heckman
Harry’s Savoy Grill & Ballroom
Holy Redeemer Health System
in good company
Integro Insurance Brokers
Kimberton Whole Foods
Kulp Car Rentals
Fred and Joyce Bogen
Richard and Emily Cohen
Joseph and Nita Gottesman
Richard Leroy and Donna Levy
Jonathan and Susanne Mordoh
Kenneth and Katie Rogers
Emily Zimmerman
Michael and Susan Brown
Dr. Murray Schwartz and
Marilyn Yablon
William Stirling and
Martha Davidson
Kathleen Rahling
Elizabeth Somers
Lester Zimmerman
Michael and Susan Brown
Dr. Murray Schwartz and
Marilyn Yablon
Max Soleimani
Dr. Fredric and Judy Bomback
Mr. and Mrs. Neil Ross
Bentley and Anne Sherman
Murray Wiseman
Bentley and Anne Sherman
Law Offices of Tyler E. Wren
Longwood Gardens
Lowell Herrero & Janet Gentile
Margaret Kuo’s Restaurant
Montesano Bros.
Italian Marketing & Catering
National Penn Bank
Pancerella & Associates, LLP
People’s Light &
Theatre Company
Philadelphia 76ers
Philadelphia Eagles
Quaker Smith Capital, LLC
Rancho La Puerta Health Spa
Ravenswood Winery
Reading Phillies
Baseball Club
Salon Secrets
Seven Stars Inn
Soltane Pottery Crew
St. Supery Vineyards
Stonewall Golf Course
Superior Plus Energy
Switchback Ridge
The Hankin Group
The Melting Pot
The Pennsylvania
Trust Company
The Rusty Staub Foundation
The Sly Fox
Valley Forge
Asset Management
Vetri Restaurant
Viader Vineyards
Windstream
Communications, Inc.
Yangming
Yellow Springs Catering
Revenue
2%
10%
31%
57%
Tuition (less financial aid) $1,571,725
Contributions
$847,791
Endowment Distributions $283,250
Other Income
$56,748
Total Revenue
$2,759,514
Functional expenses
<1%
19%
81%
Program Services Management
Fund-Raising
Total Expenses
$2,052,348
$486,722
$2,731*
$2,541,801
*Other fund-raising expenses
of $166,157 are carried by Camphill
Soltane Foundation, a separate
501(c)3 supporting organization.
Unaudited.
Audit completion date: 11/19/10.
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