2025 ANNUAL REPORT OF GIFTS
VISION 2028 | Bringing Interlochen to the World and the World to Interlochen
Dear Interlochen family and friends,
It was an extraordinary year for Interlochen. Your support has accelerated our progress toward achieving our Vision 2028 goals, and we are truly grateful. On every page of this 2025 Annual Report of Gifts, you’ll see the impact of your generosity: advancing our academic and artistic excellence, expanding student access to that excellence, and amplifying Interlochen Public Radio. This year, your support brought Interlochen artistry to the world through nearly two dozen Academy tours. Students premiered an Interlochen-created musical at Lincoln Center, performed at Carnegie Hall, participated in the Ottawa International Animation Festival, and found inspiration in the public art of Detroit. Next spring, students will tour Detroit, Philadelphia, and Boston for a series of multidisciplinary performances, celebrating America’s 250th birthday and kicking off Interlochen’s centennial celebration in partnership with the flagship orchestras in each city. We’ll be joined by guest artists Yo-Yo Ma in Philadelphia and Boston and Interlochen alumnus Josh McClendon in Detroit in the world premiere of a cello concerto we’ve commissioned from Wynton Marsalis. To say we’re excited is a grand understatement. We’re deeply grateful for how your support enhanced student excellence and access this year. At Camp, we launched the Shirley Young Distinguished Artist Series with piano virtuoso Lang Lang; all proceeds of ticket sales support a new endowment to bring world-class performers to our campus. At Academy, visits from high-profile instructors—including dance legend Twyla Tharp and poet Nandi Comer—reinforced Interlochen as a place where young artists are inspired and established artists convene. We awarded more financial aid than ever before—opening up opportunities like these to more young artists. This summer also saw the innovative energy and flair for community engagement that exemplify Interlochen Public Radio. IPR’s annual Sound Garden Project brought live concerts to public spaces. New for this year, a cohort of Lang Lang Young Scholars—exceptionally talented young pianists from around the world— delighted audiences at an IPR-organized “block party” in Traverse City and in IPR’s Studio A. Without you, so little of this would be possible. With you, our momentum continues to build as 2028 draws near—bringing Interlochen to the world and the world to Interlochen.
“With you, our momentum continues to build as 2028 draws near—bringing Interlochen to the world and the world to Interlochen.”
Trey Devey
With gratitude,
Trey Devey President
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ACADEMY TOURING 2024–25: BY THE NUMBERS
2024–25 HIGHLIGHTS | Academy Student Touring
• Total trips off campus taken by Academy students: 21 • Students who went on tours: 265
• Faculty & staff who accompanied them: 74
• Number of trips outside the U.S.: 3 • Festival or competition trips: 10 • Destination of farthest student tour: Siena, Italy, 4,511 miles away
Academy Students Find Confidence and Connections on the Road
In San Francisco, a cohort of students put on a “mini” version of “Collage,” our vibrant, interdisciplinary showcase performed annually during Camp and Academy. The same weekend, our singer-songwriters played venues in Los Angeles and traded notes with peers at a songwriting summit. Young artists in non-performing disciplines toured, too. In Nashville, music production and engineering students visited studios and met industry professionals. In Ottawa, Canada, animation students attended film screenings and meet-ups with top animators at the world’s second-largest animation festival. In Detroit, visual arts students found inspiration in a tour of public murals and at the Detroit Institute of Art. Philanthropy is essential in making these transformative, life-changing experiences possible.
Academy touring opportunities were in abundance this year. Twenty-one off-campus trips enabled young artists across disciplines to share their artistry and expand Interlochen’s reputation for educational excellence with new audiences and friends. Public performances broadened students’ horizons, while collaborations with arts education organizations honed their craft and confidence. In New York, we convened with our partner schools and organizations for the third year. After joint rehearsals and master classes, Interlochen and local musicians and dancers performed at Merkin Hall and at Alvin Ailey Studios. At Lincoln Center’s Clark Theatre, our actors performed the New York premiere of MUSE , a Shakespeare- inspired musical created by Interlochen students and faculty. A few weeks later, Academy piano students played a recital at Carnegie Hall.
Academy students, faculty, and staff during their New York tour this March, in which they collaborated and performed with NYC-area partner organizations for the third year.
Academy dancers performing a Pas de Trois from Swan Lake at The Ailey Citigroup Theater.
Interlochen Alumni Recognition (2024-25)
1 EMMY AWARD AND 8 NOMINATIONS
The cast of MUSE performing during its New York premiere at Clark Theatre.
“These past several years have brought opportunities like being the chair of our student government, getting to visit New York and perform at Lincoln Center, and most importantly, growth. I would not have become the student, artist, and person I am without your generous contributions that have allowed me to attend Academy all four years.” — Leah H. (IAC 21, IAA 21-24), dance student
2 TONY AWARDS AND 4 NOMINATIONS
“The benefits of touring for Interlochen students are profound. Touring is one of the surest ways to move students forward on their artist’s journey. It expands students’ platforms for community engagement and citizen artistry. It helps students engage and network with people they otherwise would not meet, test their skills, receive feedback, adapt to new settings, and grow as artists.” — Camille Colatosti, Provost
6 GRAMMY AWARDS, RECOGNIZING THE WORK OF 17 ACADEMY AND CAMP ALUMNI, AND 27 NOMINATIONS
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GUEST ARTISTS
INTERLOCHEN WELCOMED
ACADEMY AND
CAMP GUEST ARTISTS TO PERFORM, PRESENT, AND TEACH.
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ACADEMY HIGHLIGHTS
2024–25 ENROLLMENT
FINANCIAL AID
4.9%
$ 17.5 TOTAL AWARDED: MILLION
6.1%
83 %
OF ACADEMY STUDENTS AWARDED AID
6.1%
The President’s Award in Art, selected by President Trey Devey in consultation with our visual arts faculty, was given this year to two students: Willa Jaymes (IAA 23-25) and Haisong “Harry” Zhao (IAA 22-25). Willa’s work (pictured left) focuses on light and the influence of one’s environment, using muted colors to direct the viewer’s eye on the textures and beautiful imperfections of the materials being used. Harry’s art (right) uses installations and sculpture to explore the evolution of human civilization, the interplay between nature and humanity, and the connections between ancient and contemporary worlds. “This year, we encountered an array of remarkable senior thesis exhibitions. Each artist presented a journey, not just of artistic expression, but of deep, personal evolution and commitment to bringing people together through art.” — Trey Devey
6.6%
577 ACADEMY STUDENTS FROM 43 U.S. STATES, 1 U.S. TERRITORY, AND THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA, AS WELL AS 24 COUNTRIES
47.1%
BY MAJOR
9.9%
HONORS & RECOGNITIONS
17 YOUNGARTS HONOREES , INCLUDING 1 PRESIDENTIAL SCHOLAR IN THE ARTS NOMINEE 20 NATIONAL SCHOLASTIC ART AND WRITING AWARDS INCLUDING 10 GOLD MEDALS 2 NATIONAL MERIT SEMI-FINALISTS AND 5 NATIONAL MERIT COMMENDED STUDENTS 7 U.N. COMMUNITY SERVICE IMPACT AWARDS
19.4%
DOMESTIC DIVERSITY 35.7 % 16.1 % INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS
MUSIC THEATRE VISUALARTS FILM & NEWMEDIA
CREATIVEWRITING DANCE INTERDISCIPLINARY ARTS
ACADEMIC Visiting artists and collaborations sparked students’ intellectual curiosity and creative spirit. Nandi Comer (IAC 96), a Detroit-born author and Michigan’s first Poet Laureate in 65 years, inspired English classes to cherish poetry’s potential to build community. Competitively selected math students were accepted to InspiritAI, an online, pre-college program on using artificial intelligence for social good, developed and taught by graduate students and alumni from Stanford and MIT.
CREATIVE WRITING A series of prestigious visiting artists offered vital new perspectives for the Academy’s budding young writers. Among them was Patrice Gopo, author of Autumn Song: Essays on Absence and the winner of our inaugural Pattis Family Foundation Creative Arts Book Award, funded by philanthropic support. Gopo held a multi-day residency at Interlochen and gave presentations both on campus (pictured with students) and in Traverse City, in partnership with the National Writers Series.
INTERDISCIPLINARY ARTS A collaboration with guest artist Michael Spencer Phillips (IAC 96, IAC Fac 13-15) yielded a dynamic, multimedia concert, Figure Drawing , in which dance students performed original choreography inspired by interdisciplinary arts students’ drawings of the human form, all set to a piano work composed and performed by student Bianca C. (IAA 22-26). AI-generated interpretations of the students’ art, music, and dance were rendered in real time and projected onto the stage.
MUSIC The Academy Orchestra premiered new compositions by Chen Yi and Jeff Scott, both co-commissioned from Interlochen and Juilliard via a program that solicits new works by a diverse cohort of composers from historically underrepresented backgrounds. The partnership is supported by Jerold S. Kayden (IAC/NMC 62-63, 68-69), an alumnus of Interlochen Arts Camp and Juilliard. In 2025–26, premieres of works by Patrice Rushen and Viet Cuong are expected.
FILM & NEW MEDIA For two days in early November, Interlochen hosted its annual Future of Cinema Film Festival, which offers Academy filmmakers the chance to learn from industry professionals face-to-face. Animator, storyboard artist, and director Troy Quane joined Academy alumnae Alina Bobrova (IAA 14-17), Sunny Liu (IAA 09-11), and Jasmine Guo (IAA 10-12) for a series of Q&A sessions and master classes. Screenings of the artists’ works drew eager public audiences each evening.
DANCE The indomitable, inimitable Twyla Tharp—legendary choreographer, dancer, Kennedy Center honoree, and author of the acclaimed book The Creative Habit —charmed the Interlochen community during an April visit in which she shared her wit and insight from a lifetime on the stage and behind the scenes. Dance students, especially, gleaned lessons on grit and tenacity from Tharp’s superlative career, which has included choreography for four Broadway shows and films including Hair and Amadeus .
THEATRE Among this year’s productions was a play never before seen on an Interlochen stage—or any stage. As the only high school to collaborate in the Theatre for Young Audiences’ BIPOC Superhero Project (which promotes and celebrates the work of playwrights of color while exploring issues with which youth of color struggle), the Academy staged the world premiere of The Great MC (pictured), which playwright Susan H. Pak wrote after meeting with our theatre students and faculty.
VISUAL ARTS Visual arts students found a seemingly unlikely partner— a local public utility—in an initiative that brought our young artists’ creativity to new spaces and new eyes. The community-owned and operated Traverse City Light & Power collaborated with students in our Public Art class in the “Art on Infrastructure” project; students painted murals on electrical boxes in town and had the opportunity to interact with residents while the artworks were coming to life.
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2025 ANNUAL REPORT OF GIFTS
CAMP HIGHLIGHTS
SUMMER 2025 ENROLLMENT
3,409 ENROLLED YOUNG ARTISTS — THE HIGHEST IN CAMP HISTORY
GEOGRAPHY
CAMPERS HAILED FROM 49 U.S. STATES, THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA, 2 U.S. TERRITORIES, AND 49 COUNTRIES
6.8 %
41.2 %
INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS
DOMESTIC DIVERSITY
35.4 % OF CAMPERS (1,208) WERE RETURNING STUDENTS
CAMPERS BY DIVISION 529 JUNIORS (15.5%)
1,042 INTERMEDIATES (30.6%)
1,838 HIGH SCHOOLERS (53.9%)
2025 also saw the first year of a residency by the Lang Lang Young Scholars, a cohort of exceptionally talented young pianists from around the world who spent a week at our Intensives program, through full scholarships also funded by the US-China Cultural Foundation. In addition to master classes on campus, the scholars also performed, both at Interlochen Public Radio and at an outdoor “block party” in nearby Traverse City. Our summer stages resounded with theatrical artistry, too, including the Tony Award-nominated “jukebox” musical Beautiful: The Carole King Musical , and Shakespeare in Love , both performed by high school theatre students.
Interlochen’s 98th Arts Camp saw the launch of the Shirley Young Distinguished Artist Series. Generous funding from the US-China Cultural Foundation will bring to Interlochen each summer an established or rising classical music star to perform and inspire students through master classes and individual lessons. Our inaugural guest artist was internationally acclaimed piano virtuoso Lang Lang, who joined the World Youth Symphony Orchestra (WYSO) in Gershwin’s Rhapsody in Blue . Coming next summer and 2027, respectively, are soprano Renée Fleming and the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra with trumpeter and composer Wynton Marsalis. Series ticket sales will fund an endowment to make this visiting artist and performer series permanent.
CAMPERS BY ARTS AREA
MUSICCSSICAL THEATREARTS VISUALARTS MUSICCONTEMPORARY DANCE FILM & NEWMEDIA CREATIVEWRITING INTERDISCIPLINARYARTS
MUSICCSSICAL THEATREARTS VISUALARTS MUSICCONTEMPORARY DANCE FILM & NEWMEDIA CREATIVEWRITING INTERDISCIPLINARYARTS
MUSICCSSICAL THEATREARTS VISUALARTS MUSICCONTEMPORARY DANCE FILM & NEWMEDIA CREATIVEWRITING INTERDISCIPLINARYARTS FINANCIAL AID
Opportunity Scholarships Expand Access Across the U.S., philanthropic leadership and strategic partnerships with peer arts-education organizations have yielded Opportunity Scholarships that offer pathways to Camp for young artists of talent and potential from these areas:
53 %
OF STUDENTS RECEIVED FINANCIAL AID
$ 5.1 MILLION AWARDED
• New York • Los Angeles (see article, page 19) • San Francisco
LIFE AT CAMP
• Miami (see article, page 12) • Detroit (see article, page 19) • Northern Michigan (see article, page 19) • Cincinnati • Madison
2.96 AVERAGE NUMBER OF WEEKS AT CAMP: WEEKS MELODY FREEZE ICE CREAM CONES SERVED: ABOUT 120 36,000 CABINS USED:
“The US-China Cultural Foundation is thrilled to support the Shirley Young Distinguished Artist Series and the Lang Lang Young Scholars Program. These important initiatives deepen our connection to an institution that was close to the heart of our founder and my mother, Interlochen Trustee Emerita Shirley Young. The series and the program foster remarkable opportunities for students and audiences, build upon Interlochen’s global reach, and exemplify Interlochen’s role as a leader in creative youth development.” — Doug Hsieh, Interlochen Trustee and US-China Cultural Foundation Trustee
The Opportunity Scholarships, when combined with other scholarships, brought 332 students from these geographic areas to Camp in 2025.
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PHILANTHROPY Planting the Seeds for Today and Tomorrow
Fundraising Report
THE IMPACT OF YOUR SUPPORT (June 1, 2024 to May 31, 2025)
Every day at Interlochen, you’ll find students planting the seeds of their artistic growth. Some bloom within days, as talents sharpen and true potential emerges. For others, that growth takes longer. In all cases, the impact is for a lifetime. In the past year, you have fostered both kinds of transformation through your investments in both the present and future of Interlochen. Your gifts are sown with the confidence that—like our artists’ creativity—each will germinate in its own, right time. In response to our Vision 2028 initiative to bolster Interlochen excellence, you have made gifts to empower our students through everything from dance costumes to guest conductors, and from our traditional library to the digital frontier of artificial intelligence. To enhance access to Camp and Academy, you have established new annual scholarships that began to change lives immediately, and endowed scholarships to change lives well into Interlochen’s second century. Support for both the short and long term also continues to amplify Interlochen Public Radio, whether in new awards for IPR News or Classical IPR’s new Intermezzo , which is helping instill a love for music in the next generation of listeners. Gifts of all kinds and amounts, whether to our Annual Funds, named funds, or endowments, enable our successes and remind us that Interlochen’s brightest days lie ahead. Read on to see incredible examples of the philanthropic seeds you’ve planted this year and how their growth will, in turn, help Interlochen artists grow over their lifetimes. Thank you for all you make possible today and tomorrow.
Interlochen Annual Fund
$5,515,154
Interlochen Public Radio Annual Fund
$1,992,717
Endowment
$21,424,189
Special Projects
$5,151,461
Plant/Facilities
$300,000
Other
$5,032,000
TOTAL
$39,415,521
ENDOWED GIFTS
“Gifts of all kinds and amounts, whether to our Annual Funds, named funds, or endowments, enable our successes and remind us that Interlochen’s brightest days lie ahead.”
Other 4.7% IPR 3.2% Unrestricted 2.3%
Endowed Faculty Chair 0.3%
Endowed Program Fund 20.7%
John Bogley
Endowed Scholarship 68.8%
John Bogley Vice President of Philanthropy and Engagement
NON-ENDOWED GIFTS
Interlochen Annual Fund 42.5%
Cathy Dodge Miller, Associate Vice President of Philanthropy, has been Editor of our Annual Report of Gifts since she began working at Interlochen in 2015. After a distinguished career at Interlochen and beyond, she has retired. We thank Cathy for her dedicated service and leadership, and wish her the very best for her next chapter.
Interlochen Public Radio 15.4%
Other .34% IPR Programs 2.3%
Faculty Positions 1.9%
Visiting Artists, Artists-in-Residence, Visiting Faculty 5.4% Special Initiatives and Touring Opportunities 27.9%
Other - The Formative Experience 4.0% Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion .25%
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2025 ANNUAL REPORT OF GIFTS
EXCELLENCE | The Formative Experience
Donor Impact
As Interlochen’s centennial approaches in 2028, the depth and breadth of the Interlochen experience are advancing. Visionary philanthropic leadership is the catalyst behind achieving our excellence goals for Vision 2028, pushing the boundaries on how impactful and transformative an Interlochen education can be. Your generosity is making Interlochen Arts Camp and Academy even more exceptional places for young artists to grow in artistry, find creative and personal confidence, and transform their passion and potential into purpose. Thank you! New endowments and funds established this year to support programs, faculty, and special initiatives are listed immediately below, followed by several donor snapshots and a comprehensive list of our active endowments and funds.
From Miami to the Stately Pines: Philanthropists Change Artists’ Lives
NEW PROGRAM ENDOWMENTS Established between June 1, 2024 and May 31, 2025 Bonisteel Family Library and Archives Program Endowment Moe and Francine Handleman Visiting Artist Endowment Nancy Hoagland Dance Program Endowment Music Center Endowment Dr. Sheryl M. Szady Recreation and Waterfront Endowment Wu Family Conductor Endowment Shirley Young Distinguished Artist Series Endowment
NEW NAMED ANNUAL RESTRICTED PROGRAM FUNDS Established between June 1, 2024 and May 31, 2025 Centennial Celebrations Digital Animation and Art Faculty Position Fund Hood Family Ecology Fund for Campus Sustainability Imagine US: Celebrating America at 250 Instrument Services Lang Lang Foundation Young Scholars Program Dara K. and Jarett Levan Mental Health and Well-Being Fund Northern Michigan Journalism Project Terra Infirma
Guns, and Arts Access Miami—bringing 427 students to Interlochen. To date, 16 Miami students have continued to Interlochen Arts Academy, with scholarship support funded by Dillon and Lewis as well as Interlochen’s own scholarship budget. The partnership’s impact continues to grow. It’s been a model for other regionally-based partnership programs in seven other cities around the country—all of which have been possible through donors’ generosity in those respective areas. And Dillon and Lewis have recently set their sights on expanding our partnership efforts in Los Angeles. For the Miami students—many of whom have returned to Camp for multiple summers and returned home poised to be leaders and role models among their peers—the experience has been life-changing.
2025 marked the eighth year of a donor-sparked artistic exchange that has transformed the lives of young musicians in Miami, accelerating unprecedented momentum toward Interlochen achieving both greater excellence and access. In 2018, the visionary philanthropy of Dan Lewis and Valerie Dillon catalyzed a partnership between Interlochen and the Miami Music Project, a nonprofit that uses music education to uplift and empower youth in greater Miami, especially those from historically under-resourced communities. Through full-tuition scholarships, Miami students came to Interlochen Arts Camp to hone their craft and broaden their horizons. Faculty from both Interlochen and Miami also partnered with each other through networking and providing master classes. Since 2018, the collaboration has expanded to affinity organizations—Young Musicians Unite, Guitars Over
Preserving the Bonisteel Library’s Past and Future
The transformative impact of an Interlochen education can happen in a series of moments—artistic encounters, discoveries, and revelries of inspiration—as our young artists progress in their journeys. These moments of growth may occur on the stage, in the studio, or in quiet study, which is why a new endowment is dedicated to the Bonisteel Library, one of the quietest and most important places on our campus. The Bonisteel Library is a gathering place and repository of knowledge for students, faculty, and staff throughout the year. A welcoming home for reading, researching, and checking out materials from plays to scores, the facility bears the name of the Bonisteel family, whose foundation was instrumental in the creation of the central library. The building started life as a gymnasium for the Academy. In the late 1990s, with a leadership gift from the Bonisteels, the space was converted into the current library. Books and an extensive music library that had previously been scattered throughout campus were ultimately pulled together in this one, multi-level, accessible space. This year, the Bonisteel family has made another significant commitment to Interlochen. The Bonisteel Family Library and Archives Endowment ensures that the library and its archives will have a permanent source of funds for use at the discretion of library leadership.
“As we prepare to sunset the Bonisteel Family Foundation, we’re so proud that part of its legacy of giving will be perpetual support for the vital center of learning and discovery that already bears our family name. Interlochen is where future generations of leaders find their purpose and direction, and Bonisteel Library is an essential part of those life-changing academic and artistic journeys.” — Sidney Johnson Beckwith and Liz, Fran, and Katie Johnson, Bonisteel Family Foundation
“Since 2018, more than 300 students from the Miami Music Project have directly benefited from participating in Interlochen Arts Camp and Academy, returning with new skills and experiences that have not only shaped their lives, but also inspired and impacted hundreds of their peers. This is what true transformation looks like— this is real impact, possible only thanks to the power of a strong partnership.” — Anna Klimala, President and CEO, Miami Music Project
“At Camp, I learned how to be unapologetically myself and how to connect with others from around the world, which I will be taking with me to USC and beyond. Thank you from the bottom of my heart.” — Natalie B. (IAC 19-24), viola student
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EXCELLENCE | THE FORMATIVE EXPERIENCE
PROGRAM ENDOWMENTS AND ANNUAL PROGRAM FUNDS
David and Bernardine Wu Perpetuate Conducting Excellence
We are grateful to the donors who have given generously to establish the program endowments and named annual program funds listed below. Their gifts enable Interlochen to expand its commitments to faculty, visiting artists, educational programming, and every element of the young artist’s experience. A program endowment can be established with a minimum gift of $50,000 or $100,000, based on the area. A minimum gift of $10,000, recurring for at least three years, can form a named annual program fund.
conductors who, each summer, lead our World Youth Symphony Orchestra (WYSO). Among the luminaries to hold the WYSO baton in recent years have been Delyana Lazarova, winner of the 2020 James Conlon Conducting Prize; JoAnn Falletta, the groundbreaking leader of the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra; and Jader Bignamini, music director of the Detroit Symphony Orchestra (DSO). The Wu endowment will support the typical one-week tenure of a conductor, with a preference for the conductor of the DSO (currently held by Jader Bignamini) or, if unavailable, a resident, associate, or guest conductor of the DSO. During the Academy year, the Wu endowment will also support a multi-day residency of a guest conductor for the Interlochen Arts Academy Orchestra, preferably the DSO conductor or associates. This adds to our vibrant slate of visiting artists—a strategic focus of our Vision 2028 excellence initiative.
A recent major gift from Interlochen trustee Dr. David Wu (IAC/NMC 76-79) and his wife Dr. Bernadine Wu establishes an endowment supporting symphony conductors at both Camp and Academy.
PROGRAM ENDOWMENTS
Sengupta and Brooks Family Endowment Singer-Songwriter Program Endowment Linda VanSickle Smith Horn Chair Endowment The Stern Family Film & New Media Faculty Endowment Fund Talbot/Hoagland Endowment
RB Annis Endowment Ball Creative Writing Endowment Randy Bank Theatre Endowment
Breibart Family Health and Wellness Endowment Gordon Brunner Family Visual Art Endowment Carolyn A. Chormann Visiting Artists Endowment for Visual Arts Corson Auditorium Endowment Corson Park Endowment Corson Skinner Musical Theatre Visiting Artist Endowment Corson Skinner Dance Visiting Artist Endowment Allen B. Cutting John Manuel Camp Percussion Chair Dance Building Endowment DeRoy Testamentary Foundation Teaching Excellence Endowment Dow House Operating Endowment Barbara C. Dow Endowment Marjorie Wood Drackett Piano Chair
Theatre Leadership Discretionary Endowment Theatre Production Excellence Endowment
Trees for Interlochen PK Endowment Gerilyn K. (Twink) Turner Endowment Unrestricted Designated Endowment Valade Master Teacher Endowment Morris Family Visiting Artist Endowment Visual Arts Teaching Excellence Endowment L.C. and Margaret Walker Foundation Endowment Williams Family Endowment for Program Support in Music-Saxophone and Jazz
The new Wu Family Conductor Endowment provides funding in perpetuity for one of the rotating roster of
Visiting Artist Cultural Equity Endowment Generations Fund - Master Residency Goldstein Family Musical Theatre Endowment
“Bernadine and I value the long-term artistic and musical synergy between the DSO and Interlochen. Our conductor endowment hopes to support the amazing leadership of visiting conductors such as Jader Bignamini from the DSO with residency during Camp and the Academy Orchestra.” — Dr. David Wu (IAC/NMC 76-79)
Roberta Dee Gordon Endowment Guest Artist Residency Endowment
Hamann Family Jazz Piano Chair Hammes Counselors Endowment Byron Hanson Guest Teaching Endowment The Harding Ouweleen Teaching Excellence Endowment Howard Hintze Teaching Endowment Robert T. & Ruth Haidt Hughes Memorial Acquisitions Endowment IAA Operating Endowment IAC Operating Endowment IPR Endowment Stephen John Theatre Design and Production Endowment Fund Kearns Family Counseling Endowment Lambert Family Excellence in Teaching Endowment Bob Luby Endowment for Student Emergencies Lochlan MacLean Theatre Stuff Endowment Math Computer Program Nancy and Phillip Meek WYSO Conductor Endowment The Bonnie Mills and Douglas Eicher IPR Endowment Ruth Mott Creative Writing Endowment Ron Munson Academy Low Brass Guest Artist Endowment Music Building Endowment Musical Theatre Voice Chair Endowment Nelson Family Harp Chair Endowment Mary Ellen Newport Experiences in Ecology Endowment Oberlin Collaborative Initiative Endowment Omaha Steaks Visiting Artist Endowment Rev. Dr. Linda Patrick and Rebecca Phelps WYSO Chair Endowment SuSu Ramsay Professional Growth
Dara and Jarett Levan Support the Complete Artist for Generations Interlochen is a unique oasis in part because of our purposeful emphasis on holistic youth development. Our approach extends beyond artistic and educational growth to the mindset and confidence that will equip students for fulfilling, joyful lives in any field they pursue. This requires robust support for mental health services. The Dara K. and Jarett Levan Mental Health and Well-Being Fund will also expand professional development opportunities for our counseling and health services staff who directly support students’ mental health needs.
Generous support from the Foster Family Foundation is taking Interlochen dance and theatre productions to unprecedented heights. This year, the Foster Family Costume and Set Production Fund supported a new lighting system and projection screen, a remote-control platform for moving scenery, and an array of dazzling costume acquisitions or upgrades (such as Odette’s tutu from Swan Lake , pictured). The Foster Family Fund has added an extra sparkle—literally!—to our performances, from The Nutcracker to Carousel , helping embody the “only at Interlochen” excellence that inspires our students and audiences alike. Reaching New Heights on Interlochen Stages “Many universities don’t have the sort of capabilities that our new costumes, scenery movement, lighting, and projection systems provide. Students, visiting artists, and audience members all benefit.” — Brent Wrobel, Executive Director, Interlochen Presents
The Levans further supported Vision 2028 (see pages 17–19) by establishing the Dara K. and Jarett Levan Scholarship Endowment. Through immediate gifts and pledges both to their new scholarship
Interlochen Trustee Dara Levan (IAC/ NMC 83-90, IAC St 94) and her husband Jarett were moved by our Vision 2028 excellence initiative to establish a fund to enrich our mental health services and student wellness through support for visiting community speakers.
fund and its endowment, the Levans ensured that the scholarship would begin supporting young artists right away—and endure for generations to come.
“Interlochen shaped so much of who I am, first as a camper, then as an Academy parent. Creating this mental health and well-being fund is a way to give back to a place that gave me so much. I believe in nurturing the whole artist, not just their craft. Art opens us, stirs us, sometimes breaks us wide open, and in those moments, we need to know we’re not alone. This fund is my love letter to every student who needs a safe space to land, to be heard, to heal.” — Dara Levan (IAC/NMC 83-90, IAC St 94)
Richardson-Spica Fellowship Endowment Schamis Camp Dance Program Endowment Rudolf RA Schramm Endowment
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2025 ANNUAL REPORT OF GIFTS
ACCESS | Young Artist Destination
PROGRAM ENDOWMENTS AND ANNUAL PROGRAM FUNDS
NAMED ANNUAL RESTRICTED PROGRAM FUNDS Adult Band Camp Fund Annis Math/Science Director's Discretionary Fund Artificial Intelligence Project Ball Creative Writing Fund
Every day, philanthropic support is opening doors of opportunity at Interlochen and accelerating progress toward our access goal for Vision 2028: meeting the full demonstrated financial need of every student we admit to Camp and Academy. You are an essential partner in these efforts! On behalf of the students whose lives you will change, we cannot thank you enough. Endowed and named annual scholarships propel us toward this bold, ambitious goal. In the past fiscal year, 28 new scholarships have been established, with $8.3 million committed for the Academy and $3.0 million for Camp. Below, you’ll see the list of new endowed and named annual scholarships. The full list of active scholarships follows the features on a few of the donors who’ve established new scholarships this year.
IPR Sound Garden Project Fund Jazz Department Miscellaneous Expenses Fund Kayden-Interlochen Juilliard Commissioning Fund Lochlan MacLean Theatre Stuff Fund Arlene and Joseph Meraux Foundation Camp Scholarship Support Fund MUSE NYC Premiere Fund Music and Art of the African Diaspora Fund Music and Sound Production Fund Music Production and Engineering Fund New Library - Content Purchases Fund The Pattis Family Foundation Creative Arts Book Award at Interlochen Fund
Coalition for Educator Housing Fund Cole Family Residence Faculty Fund Dr. Michael Coonrod Piano Visiting Artists Fund Counseling Personnel Fund Dance Competition Travel & Guest Artists Fund Dance Production Sets and Scenery Fund Excellence in Dining Film and New Media Fund Foster Family Costume and Set Production Fund Gonzales Murphy Organ Fund Greenacres Foundation Film Project Fund
Percussion Program Fund Photography Program Fund Pinkerton/NYC Organizations Partnerships Fund President's Discretionary Fund Provost's Discretionary Fund Student Wellness and Resilience Upstaging Singer-Songwriter Travel Fund Visual Arts Deptartment Fund Visual Arts Outdoor Sculptures Fund Vocal/Choral Program Fund
NEW ENDOWED SCHOLARSHIPS Established between June 1, 2024 and May 31, 2025 Michael Berkowitz Memorial Endowed Camp Scholarship Boal Family Endowed Camp Scholarship Dara K. and Jarett Levan Endowed Scholarship Mimi’s Camp Scholarship
Greenhouse - Garden Program Fund Greenleaf Instrument Collection Fund
Indigenous Peoples Representation Program Fund Indigenous Student and Faculty Recruitment Fund IPR Live Programming Fund IPR Science and Conservation Journalism Fund
Northern Michigan Camp Scholarship Prelude Endowed Academy Scholarship Becky Ruthven Endowed Scholarship Rosemary and Mark Schlachter Endowed Scholarship Claire and Jim Skinner Endowed Musical Theatre Scholarship Stevens Family Endowed Academy Scholarship
Lillian Coleman Bonisteel Endowed Camp Scholarship Nancie Witz Burkett Endowed Bassoon Scholarship Kristine J. Ciccati Endowed Academy Scholarship in Music Orien Dalley Memorial Camp Endowed Music Scholarship Stanley and Evelyn Greenhoe Memorial Camp Endowed Music Scholarship
He Lima K ō kua Endowed Camp Scholarship Nicole R. Holmes Endowed Camp Scholarship
Olaf and Victoria Stokke Endowed Camp String Scholarship Towsley Foundation Interlochen Arts Camp Scholarship Whiting Family Endowed Scholarship Kurtis T. Wilder and Donna K. Fry Detroit Opportunity Endowed Scholarship Caryn Zmeskal Wilson Endowed Academy Scholarship
Joseph and Ethel Horwitz Endowed Camp Scholarship in Music Sophia Sorensen Jones Memorial Endowed Camp Scholarship Bonnie Koestner Camp Scholarship Los Angeles-Interlochen Camp Scholarship
NEW NAMED ANNUAL SCHOLARSHIPS Established between June 1, 2024 and May 31, 2025 Chicago Opportunity Scholarship Lang Lang Foundation Young Scholars Program at Interlochen State Savings Bank Scholarship Richard Winkler Camp Scholarship in Theatre
Inspired Donors Create the Prelude Endowed Academy Scholarship
“As Academy parents, supporting innovation and the integration of artificial intelligence at Interlochen is deeply important to us. We believe AI can be a transformative tool for artists and educators alike, opening new possibilities for learning, creativity, and collaboration. We’re proud to support Interlochen in leading the way in this vital field.” — Ozzy and Zeynep Oguz Interlochen parents Zeynep and Oguzhan (“Ozzy”) Oguz are fascinated by the potential of artificial intelligence to bring broad, transformative impact to society, including in education. That’s why Zeynep and Ozzy established the Artificial Intelligence (AI) Technology Fund, which has enabled Interlochen to advance our ongoing, investigative project to explore how AI should be responsibly incorporated into our academic, artistic, and professional spaces. The fund supports purchasing new AI-focused hardware and software; guest presentations from visiting AI experts; and training to bolster the AI competence and capacity of faculty, staff, and students.
Longtime Interlochen donors who wish to remain anonymous were inspired to support Interlochen’s top priorities. Meeting full demonstrated financial need for admitted students to the Arts Academy resonated most with them, and they wanted to help right away—and have the impact of their gift last. The donors made a generous gift to establish the Prelude Endowed Academy Scholarship, a significant boost to the Academy’s need-based financial aid capacity in the short and long term. Through their example, they want to encourage other donors to also support this important Vision 2028 priority. They also were inspired to give by the Camp experiences of their children, whose summers at Interlochen were instrumental in their later success in college and beyond, while instilling in them a deep commitment to the arts and culture of their community.
“We have tremendous confidence in Interlochen’s leadership and believe in directing our philanthropy toward their highest priorities. When they identified Academy scholarships as their greatest need, establishing our own scholarship was an easy decision, especially as we are continually impressed by the dedication and talents of Interlochen students. We encourage others to generously support Interlochen at this pivotal moment.” — Anonymous Donors
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2025 ANNUAL REPORT OF GIFTS
ACCESS | YOUNG ARTIST DESTINATION
ACCESS | YOUNG ARTIST DESTINATION
A Family’s Love for Music and Interlochen Sparks Access
Endowing Access for Generations of Northern Michiganders
The heart of our Vision 2028 access initiative is to remove financial roadblocks for talented young artists to experience the transformative potential of an Interlochen education. As we expand opportunities for students across the country and around the world, it’s vital we do the same for students in our own backyard. Our northern Michigan scholarship initiative began when an anonymous donor made a very generous gift to establish an endowed Camp scholarship for students, in any arts area, from northwestern Lower Michigan and the Upper Peninsula. This support inspired more: first, from longtime Interlochen institutional funders the Harry A. and Margaret D. Towsley Foundation, then soon thereafter Traverse City’s Jim and Diana Huckle through their family foundation, and most recently Traverse City entrepreneur, philanthropist, and Trustee Emeritus Casey Cowell. All gave to ensure this initiative began with firm financial support.
The love of Interlochen can span decades, with multiple generations having their own Interlochen experiences. This connection can also lead to a family legacy in giving. That’s certainly true for alumna Kristine Ciccati (IAC/NMC 61-62), whose family tree blooms with Interlochen alumni and supporters, including her daughter Alison (IAC/ NMC 87), brother Craig (IAC/NMC 62), sister Patricia (IAC/NMC 64, IAC/NMC St 68-70), and uncle David (IAC/NMC 49-54). Kristine’s parents, Paul and Lois Jordan, also established an endowed scholarship that has been supporting young artists at Interlochen for generations. To amplify the philanthropic legacy of her parents and honor the musical passions of her loved ones, Kristine recently established the Kristine J. Ciccati Endowed Academy Scholarship in Music. Kristine chose to make gifts annually so that the scholarship can be awarded as the endowment builds through her additional gifts in consecutive years. This ensures scholarships can be awarded right away to music students in cello, oboe, and trumpet while the endowment ensures future students will also receive support.
These four major gifts, combined, will enable more young artists from our region to have access to Interlochen excellence now and long into our second century.
“The Towsley Foundation is happy to team up with Interlochen Center for the Arts to offer Camp scholarships to deserving and talented young artists that live in northern Michigan. We believe this program will further strengthen Interlochen’s relationship with the area, and look forward to the life-changing positive effects of such a great summer camp experience.” — David Inglish, President, Harry A. and Margaret D. Towsley Foundation
“For a long time, I have had a deep love and appreciation for Interlochen and the type of education it has provided for young musicians since 1928. I am pleased that over the years my endowment will assist talented young musicians in achieving their musical aspirations through the wonderful opportunities that Interlochen provides. Interlochen is a part of my parents’ legacy, and I am happy to honor them by continuing my own support of this magical place.” — Kristine Ciccati (IAC/NMC 61-62)
“Supporting local students through the Northern Michigan Opportunity Scholarship is something we care deeply about. It’s been an honor to help provide
access to Interlochen’s world-class education for young artists from our own community.” — Jim and Diana Huckle Family Foundation
Extending a Helping Hand to Hawaiian Students Interlochen Trustee Amy Alston and husband Rob were inspired by their son Kieran’s (IAC 23, IAA 23-25) experience at Camp and Academy to establish an endowed scholarship. They named it the He Lima Kōkua Endowed Camp Scholarship since he lima kōkua is Hawaiian for “a helping hand.” Amy and Rob believe this is a fitting name for a scholarship rooted in “humility, generosity, and gratitude” which springs from their strong sense of kuleana (responsibility) for fellow Hawaiians.
Wilder & Fry Detroit Opportunity Scholarship Endowment
LA Opportunity Scholarship
Trustee Dean Schramm (IAC/NMC St 85) and wife Wendy Greuel are helping to broaden access to Interlochen for Los Angeles young artists. Dean and Wendy established the Los Angeles Scholarship Fund, which has brought 14 young artists in various artistic disciplines to Camp in the last few years. Eligibility is now being expanded
Trustee and board chair emeritus Hon. Kurtis T. Wilder (ret.) was drawn to Interlochen by the transformative experiences of his children: Klif, who studied double bass with Academy instructor Derek Weller, and Alycia (IAC 02-04, IAA 04-06), whose Camp and Academy years were a springboard for a
to Academy students. Among the fellow “Angelenos” to answer Dean and Wendy’s call to support the fund are: Amy Wakeland and Eric Garcetti, Gene and Tracy Sykes, Kelly Ann and Mark Holscher, Melanie Coto and Michael Stephenson, and Noah Mayer. “To a young artist, experiencing the magic of Interlochen is transformative. Interlochen Los Angeles Scholarships enable young people with the greatest needs and the fewest resources the opportunity to engage fully in their artistic journey. I’m very proud to be part of this generous group of Angelenos who support these impactful scholarships and invite more to join.” — Dean Schramm (IAC/NMC St 85)
Both Amy and Rob and the Alston ohana (extended and chosen family) have deep roots in Hawaii going back many generations. The Alston ohana have also supported this new scholarship, which was awarded for the first time to five students this summer. The Alstons’ “helping hand” was made to last.
flourishing musical career. Now, Kurt and wife Dr. Donna Fry have established the Kurtis T. Wilder and Donna K. Fry Detroit Opportunity Scholarship Endowment. The need-based scholarship, funded into perpetuity, expands access to Camp with a preference for Detroit’s young artists and/or those participating in a Detroit-based arts and culture organization. “What Interlochen provides is more than just a good education— its students receive transformative, often life-changing artistic and personal enrichment, a clarifying and empowering start to a young person’s life, regardless of what fields they ultimately pursue. We’ve seen Interlochen’s impact on our own children, and we’re committed to expanding access to these transformational experiences for all deserving students, especially here in our home state of Michigan. We’re excited that this scholarship endowment will bring generations of Detroiters to Camp.” — Hon. Kurtis T. Wilder and Dr. Donna K. Fry
“Our son, Kieran, IAA class of 2027, was first introduced to Interlochen at Camp, and it has catapulted him on an entirely new path in his life. We are eternally grateful for his experience at Camp, and we wanted to ensure that other children of Hawai’i would be able to enjoy the summer camp experience at Interlochen. This scholarship is our way of giving back to Hawai’i and the students who might have never even considered Interlochen because of the cost involved. We intend for this ‘helping hand’ to continue in perpetuity.” — Amy and Rob Alston
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2025 ANNUAL REPORT OF GIFTS
ENDOWED AND NAMED ANNUAL SCHOLARSHIPS
Gerald J. and Beth B. Fischer Scholarship Ken and Penny Fischer Endowed Camp Scholarship Harriet Flagg Music Scholarship Lawrence L. Fleming Memorial Scholarship Barrett Foa Endowed Camp Scholarship in Theatre Arts Edward E. Ford Foundation Scholarship Sidney Forrest Scholarship Susan Leigh Foster Endowed Academy Dance Scholarship
Camp Endowed Scholarship Caplin Foundation Camp Endowed Scholarship in Creative Writing Caplin Foundation Camp Endowed Scholarship in Dance Caplin Foundation Camp Endowed Scholarship in Film and New Media Caplin Foundation Camp Endowed Scholarship in Music Caplin Foundation Camp Endowed Scholarship in Theatre Arts Leo P. and Anthony J. Carlson Camp Scholarship Ellen Case Memorial Endowed Scholarship Jerome F. and Blanche M. Cerny Scholarship Clarence and Grace Chamberlin Foundation Academy Scholarship The Chormann Family Endowed Camp Scholarship in Music Cincinnati Opportunity Scholarship Elizabeth and Michael Clark Memorial Scholarship
Edward P. Frohlich Piano Scholarship Edith Davidson Geissler Scholarship Otto W. Geissler, Jr. Memorial Scholarship Generations Fund Scholarship
John R. Gonzales Endowed Scholarship in Music Mary and Donald Gonzales Memorial Scholarship James C. Gordon Memorial Scholarship Mary and Britt Gordon Endowed Scholarship Bertha I. Gordy Memorial Scholarship C. Joanne Grabinski Endowed Academy Scholarship in Creative Writing Betty B. Greenfield Scholarship Helen Grinnell Academy Scholarship
Jonathan David Cohen Memorial Scholarship Margie K. and Louis N. Cohen Music Scholarship
ACCESS | Young Artist Destination
Ralph S. Cohen Endowed Camp Scholarship Arthur J. and Glenna B. Collins Scholarship Annabel Comfort Memorial Scholarship Golde F. Copeland Memorial Scholarship Dorthy S. Corson and Lillie B. Scheide Memorial Scholarship Janice F. Corson Scholarship Corson Skinner Endowed Scholarship in Dance Corson Skinner Endowed Scholarship in Musical Theatre Cowell Family Camp Scholarship Creative Writing Award Scholarship Neil and Ruth Currie Academy Scholarship Allen B. Cutting Scholarship Jean Dake Memorial Scholarship Marvin and Betty Danto Scholarship The Steven D. Davis Endowed Camp Wind Symphony Scholarship David J. Davison Memorial Scholarship Robert Leason Sharpe and Anita C. Dean Scholarship Mary Jane Dempler Endowed Scholarship Denmark-Schwimmer Family Endowed Camp Scholarship
We are grateful to the donors whose generous gifts have created or sustained these scholarships. The list below includes Camp and Academy endowed scholarships and active named annual scholarships between June 1, 2024, and May 31, 2025. An endowed scholarship can be established with a minimum gift of $50,000 for Camp or $100,000 for Academy. For a named annual scholarship, a donor may make a $10,000 or more recurring gift for at least three years (five preferred), or a $5,000 recurring gift for at least five years, provided the scholarship is also supported and documented through the donor’s estate.
Helen Grinnell Camp Scholarship Cassel Grubb Cello Scholarship Margaret Schuele Haegg Endowed Camp Scholarship Romine G. Hamilton Memorial Scholarship Marge Hammes Scholarship Dr. Erik Hanby Memorial Endowed Camp Scholarship Marion and David Handleman Endowed Scholarship David Handleman Scholarship Moe and Francine Handleman Endowed Music Scholarship Julia Hansen Scholarship Ann and Byron Hanson Endowed Camp Scholarship Dr. and Mrs. Howard Hanson Scholarship Francis Harlow Scholarship Judith Rachel Harris Endowed Scholarship in Music Henry Harris Memorial Scholarship Naomi Harris Endowed Camp Scholarship Dan Hartman Arts and Music Foundation Scholarship Carl E. and Audrey E. Haskett Memorial Scholarship William Randolph Hearst Endowed Scholarship
ENDOWED SCHOLARSHIPS Academy Endowed Scholarship Morton and Barbara Achter Endowed Camp Scholarship Adult Symphonic Band - Endowed Camp Scholarship Virginia M. Alten Memorial Scholarship Otto and Anna Altman Memorial Endowed Camp Scholarship Jay D. Ambrosini Scholarship Ann T. and Richard G. Anderson Memorial Fund Charles and Rita Anderson Academy Scholarship Diane Anderson Endowed Academy Scholarship endowed by her father John B. Anderson in honor and memory of C. William Trout Dorothy Anderson Memorial Scholarship Katherine McKee Anderson Endowed Scholarship Lois Harper Anderson Scholarship Judith Andrews Memorial Camp Scholarship Bob Annis Endowed Scholarship Bob Armer Endowed Camp Scholarship George and Dolores Austin Memorial Scholarship Virginia B. Ball Creative Writing Competition Scholarship Martin A. Baloyan Memorial Scholarship
Alfred Berkowitz Foundation Scholarship Mandell and Madeleine Berman Foundation Camp Scholarship Berry Family Scholarship Helga and Jerry Bilik Endowed Camp Scholarship Sally Birnkrant-Myers Scholarship Bleck Family Endowed Camp Scholarship Boggess Family Endowed Scholarship Arnold Bourziel Memorial Scholarship Skipper Bourziel Junior Girls Scholarship Boutet Family Endowed Academy Scholarship in Low Brass Douglas Boyd Endowed Camp Scholarship for Strings
Lee Wick Dennison Memorial Scholarship Helen L. DeRoy Memorial Scholarship
Amy M. Devey Endowed Academy Scholarship in Dance Arthur M. Devey, Jr. Endowed Scholarship in Music Mary Carol Devey Endowed Scholarship in Visual Arts
Bettyjo Heckrodt Memorial Scholarship Pierre V. Heftler Memorial Scholarship Dorothy L. Henricks Memorial Scholarship John and Joan Herlitz Family Scholarship
Christina B. Diver Camper Scholarship Alden B. Dow Memorial Scholarship Herbert H. and Barbara C. Dow Endowed Academy Scholarship in Visual Arts
Kate Boyd Endowed Camp Scholarship in Piano Robert and Margaret Bracken Academy Scholarship Robert Emslie Bracken and George Thomas Applegate Academy Scholarship Mr. and Mrs. Fred M. Brakeman Scholarship M. Brandenburg Scholarship James and Pamela Brandman Family Endowed Camp Scholarship in Music Michael Jay Bresler, M.D., and Family Endowed Scholarship in Percussion Drs. Susan and Neil Bressler Scholarship
Edward J. and Joyce Downing Scholarship George W. Drake Memorial Scholarship Sandra Aldrich Drew Scholarship
Martha and Jack Hicks Scholarship Ted R. High Memorial Scholarship Barbara B. Hirschhorn Music Campership Endowment Kathy Mason Hodges Scholarship Russell and Annabelle Holcomb Endowed Scholarship Erwin K. Holland-Moritz Scholarship Jan Q. Holmquist Scholarship Jack (John R.) and Mary Lou Hood Endowed Academy Scholarship Miriam U. Hoover Endowed Camp Scholarship Pamela and Stephen Horne Family Endowed Camp Scholarship Dr. Claire Smith Hornung Intermediate Girl Scholarship
Dr. Scholl Foundation Creative Writing Scholarship Dr. Scholl Foundation Scholarship for Orchestra Strings Dr. Scholl Foundation Scholarship for Orchestra Winds Bruce and Christine Dunbar Percussion or Dance Scholarship Endowed Academy Scholarship in Music Evola Music Scholarship Festersen Family Scholarship Fey and Richmond Family Endowed Camp Scholarship Feyer Family Endowed Camp Scholarship Richard M. Fiegel Memorial Scholarship Morris and Nellie Finkelstein, Doherty and House Memorial Scholarship
Barnes-Womer Camp Scholarship Barstow Foundation Scholarship
Bressler WYSO Principal Clarinet Chair Scholarship Briggs Family Endowed Camp Music Scholarship Briggs - McDonald NMC Scholarship
Phoebe Nickel Barstow Memorial Scholarship Margaret Dieterle Bausch Memorial Scholarship J. Coleman Bean & Lois Mahoney Bean Endowed Scholarship Donald R. Belcher Memorial Scholarship Madeline Belkin Scholarship Berg Family Jazz Camp Scholarship
Dr. Charles and Debra Brindis Endowed Camp Scholarship Charles Brindis and Jo Ann Brindis Goisman Camp Scholarship Nadine Brunner Endowed Memorial Painting Scholarship Donna Louise Brunsma Endowed Scholarship Camp/Academy Endowed Scholarship
Page and Dan Houser Scholarship Marvin C. Howe Horn Scholarship
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