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Headmaster's Notes Dr. Vincent M. Stumpo, Headmaster
The last month was a time of travel for Linden Hall community members. In addition to many visits home, students and faculty ventured to Italy and France over Spring Break, and to New England for whale-watching and Shenandoah National Park (VA) for mountain hiking during the extended Easter weekend.
This time marks the last significant holiday break of the school year. As students and faculty are setting their sights on final examinations and college acceptances, the administration has been intensely planning for the next academic year. New curricula are being developed, modern technology is being inserted into the classrooms, and plans for renovating the physical plant are being developed. All such efforts are geared toward ensuring that Linden Hall will offer one of the finest college-preparatory experiences in the nation.
As a result of the changes in our academic program, an aggressive marketing campaign, and the inspired work of Kate Rill, our new Admission Director and her assistant, Amy Weaver, we are experiencing a stronger and larger applicant pool for 2007-2008. If that trend continues, we anticipate opening the year with a talented, motivated, and diverse student body. It is a very exciting time to be a member of our community of learners.
The approach of summer also signifies that our Annual Fund will be drawing to a close. As has been mentioned and written before, independent schools tend to set tuition to cover only 85% of operating costs. The resulting considerable shortfall must be raised each year by the school using various ancillary methods, most significant of which is the Annual Fund. These fundraising efforts at Linden Hall must raise approximately $6000 for each boarder and $3000 for each day student. By the end of June, we hope that every current family, and as many of our alumnae and school friends as possible, will make a generous contribution to the Annual Fund.
Please return to our website as frequently as possible. Because of the generous donation of Evi Allen '65, Board member and alumna, the website has been redesigned and continues to be updated. The 20-minute video production created by Mind Over Media is being edited and should be available for viewing by late spring/early summer.
One final celebratory note: As Linden Hall advances into the 21st century, our goal is to create and cultivate programs of excellence. Recently, our Equestrian Team and our Drama Troupe set shining examples of such excellence. Our riders recently captured the 2007 IEA Zone Championship during a competition at the Grier School. The girls will now be one of 20 teams from across the country that will compete for the National Championship in Ohio later this month. It is with great pride that we congratulate Diana Egnatz, Chelsea Kiser, Brittany Kosiak, Diana Lavery, Emily Riden, Abby Milnor-Sweetser, Elizabeth Scarff, Amy Weatherbee, Marta Williams, and our Riding Director, Jen Dolk, for their stellar performance. Likewise, on April 10th our Drama Competition Team attended the 23rd Annual Fulton Theater High School Drama Festival. Jennifer Darrell, Paige Espenshade, Emily Horne, Cerah Kolarcik, and Abby Milnor-Sweetser performed a cutting from "The Compleat Works of Wllm Shkspr (abridged)." At the end of the day our Linden Hall Drama Queens were awarded the first-ever Student Choice Award, voted by the assembled students, directors, and judges. In addition, the team was recognized for excellence in comic ensemble and achievement in acting style. Abby Milnor-Sweetser received the honor as "Outstanding Comic Performer." Congratulations to our performers and to Mr. Foreman, our Drama Director.
Advancement Announcements June Stine, Director of Advancement
Do you know someone who owns a business of any type, any size, in any Pennsylvania location? If so, you can help Linden Hall's Scholarship Program!
Businesses can receive tax credits and help Linden Hall at the same time through the Pennsylvania's Educational Improvement Tax Credit Program (EITC).
Eligibility: If you own a business or know someone who does and that business is authorized to do business in Pennsylvania and is subject to one or more of the following taxes--Corporate Net Income Tax; Capital Stock Franchise Tax, Bank and Trust Company Shares Tax; Title Insurance Companies Shares Tax; Title Insurance Companies Shares Tax; Insurance Premiums Tax; or Mutual Thrift Institution Tax--you can help Linden Hall's Scholarship Program.
Uses: Tax credits may be applied against the tax liability of a business for the tax year in which the contribution was made.
Where to Apply: DCED Center for Business Financing, Tax Credit Division, 4th Floor, Commonwealth Keystone Building, 400 North Street, Harrisburg, PA 17120: (717)-787-7120 or tknorr@state.pa.us. New business applications should be submitted on or after the first business day (July 2, 2007) of the State fiscal year. Applications are approved on a first-come-first-served basis by the date received.
Amounts: Tax credits equal to 75% of its contribution up to a maximum of $200,000 per taxable year and can be increased to 90% of the contribution if the business agrees to provide the same amount for two consecutive tax years.
Terms: An approved company must provide proof to DCED within 90 days of the notification letter that the contribution was made within 60 days of the notification letter. Tax credits not used in the tax year the contribution was made may not be carried forward or carried back and the contribution is not refundable or transferable.
For more information and to locate a downloadable application, please visit the Educational Improvement Tax Credit Program (EITC) Business Guidelines or contact June Stine at Linden Hall who will send you the necessary information.
Parents' Association Alert Cindy Boscov, President
ROOTS OF OUR PAST SHAPE THE BRANCHES OF OUR FUTURE
A LINDEN HALL ALUMNAE ASSOCIATION AND PARENTS' ASSOCIATION SPONSORED EVENING TO SUPPORT THE RESTORATION OF OUR HISTORICAL BUILDINGS.
On May 5, 2007, we will be celebrating both Alumnae Reunion Weekend and Parents' Weekend on the historic campus of Linden Hall. The Anne Brossman Sweigart Sports and Fitness Center will be transformed for a magical evening featuring an elegant array of hors d'oeuvres and luscious Sweet Street desserts. The silent and live auctions will be overflowing with gift certificates, special events, student-created treasures, destinations, services, teacher outings, just to name a few, plus the largest 50/50 jackpot in the history of Linden Hall.
Your help is very important. Please consider one or more of the following ways you can make a difference:
- Donate one or more items. It might be a gift certificate or something from your place of business. All item donations are tax deductible.
- Make a tax deductible cash donation to the event.
- Purchase a personal and/or business ad in the auction catalog.
- Purchase a $25 ticket for our 50/50 raffle.
Your contribution and participation will support the new campus Historical Restoration Fund. For more information or to make a donation, please call Missy Anderson at 717-626-8512 or 1-800-258-5778. Thank you!
College Counseling News Susan Kirkland, Director of College Placement
The wait is almost over for the seniors. Responses have been received from most colleges although several more are still to come. April 15, the last response date, seems as if it will never arrive! The girls are making their final selections, sending tuition deposits, and counting the days until graduation. It is a happy and exciting time in their lives.
Juniors have begun researching and visiting schools on their initial college lists, and they have registered for the May 5 SAT I. The class is also in the process of completing the SAT on-line course, and the next SAT practice test is scheduled for April 14. The girls have finished a Common Application which required them to gather all the information they will need to complete any application next year. The Common Application is a wonderful time-saving tool if it can be used in the application process because copies can be sent to admission offices either in paper form or on-line. Approximately three hundred colleges accept the Common Application, and more schools join the Common Application Group every year.
Sophomores took the Strong Interest Inventory, and students received a detailed interpretive report on career possibilities suited to their particular interests. They also received a list of career resources for research purposes. The girls really enjoyed learning about both the expected and unexpected results of this activity. In addition, the sophomores and their parents were given the "self appraisal" pages from The College Handbook and encouraged to begin thoughtful discussions.
Advanced Placement testing will take place the week of May 7-11 for Linden Hall students. AP tests will be taken in Spanish, English Literature, Calculus AB, and European History. The cost for each AP exam is $83.00, and the fees will be collected immediately after Easter Break.
The College Advising Office is busy, fun, and always available to you. Please call or come in at any time.
Upper School Update Shaaron Lavery, Assistant Head
What happens at Linden Hall after the girls leave for the summer? For the past eight years Linden Hall has run a day camp for girls ages 7 - 12. The camp has become very popular in the community with attendance averaging 60 at each of its three 3-week sessions. During each day of camp, the girls participate in drama, dance, gymnastics, crafts, recreational games, computers, swimming, and riding (optional). This is the first year that Linden Hall is offering a day camp, separate from the girls camp, for boys. This program will keep the boys very physically active by involving them in soccer, wrestling, karate, swimming, and computers. We look forward to the growing success of this new program.
Middle School Messages Sally Watkins, Middle School Dean
March found us traveling during Spring Break--whether home to Japan, Mexico, or the US as well as on school trips to Italy and France. Everyone returned with stories of their adventures and ready for spring at Linden Hall! It didn't take us very long to re-adjust to the school schedule of reading, writing, and mathematics. What follows is an idea of what has been happening.
The Middle School math students participated in the St. Jude Mathathon for the tenth year, coordinated by Mrs. Olah. After receiving pledges from their friends and relatives, the girls completed about 200 math problems in a booklet or on the computer. Then, they collected the pledge money which was sent to St. Jude Children's Research Hospital to help discover cures for serious diseases, especially in children. The top Middle School contributor was Ariel Silbert; the top Upper School contributor was Cristina Rosario-Mejia. Participants will receive t-shirts and book bags from St. Jude's in appreciation for their efforts as well as Linden Hall PDPs for community service. Linden Hall sent a total of $330 to benefit St. Jude's research.
Mrs. Olah's Seventh Grade Social Studies class participated in an essay contest sponsored by the National Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution. The topic for the 1,000 word essay was "Jamestown Colony Is Settled." After research and discussion of their voyage to the New World, their arrival in Jamestown, and their first year in this land, each student chose a settler and wrote her essay from that person's viewpoint. Several of the girls have received notification that they are finalists; we eagerly await the results!
In music class the students have just completed a unit on Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. In addition to increasing their knowledge of this composer, the girls had an opportunity to hear more of his music. Students are now beginning a unit on program music which will include composers that they will not be as familiar with: Grofe, Anderson, Mussorgsky, and Gershwin.
In Mrs. Olah's B Block MS Art Class, students are studying color and subtle variations of color found in nature. Students researched mosaics and then chose a subject found in nature to render in mosaic style using paper "tiles" cut from magazine photos. In Mrs. Olah's performing arts class, Bells, a new group of novice eighth graders has begun learning the techniques of ringing.
In ESL 1 students have read a simplified version of Jane Austen's Sense and Sensibility and are currently working on the novel, Emma. The students in ESL 2 are reading Charles Dickens' Great Expectations and are learning about the Victorian Era. In grammar, the girls are working on English articles and on prepositions.
In English 6 students are continuing their grammar study, writing mystery pieces, and continuing with Reading and Writing Workshop. Students in reading class just completed The Door in the Wall by Marguerite de Angeli. Set in the Middle Ages, the language and vocabulary prepared students for their next visit to the Renaissance Faire. They also learned to look for their own "door in the wall," or opportunity when faced with a challenge. Now, students are beginning their study of Lucy Maud Montgomery and her literary works, including Ann of Green Gables, and will perform a short play based on this famous piece. In the seventh grade English class, students have finished their mythology unit, including oral presentations on myths and legends. Punctuation is the focus of the current grammar unit, and after reading several more short stories, the class will be reading Lois Lowry's classic novel, The Giver. Eighth graders are currently reading poetry and nonfiction, having completed a grammar unit on irregular verbs. Up next for these students is the work, Farewell to Manzanar, a true story about Japanese internment camps in the US during World War II. Eighth graders are in the early stages of writing a persuasive essay.
Math 6 students are currently studying rates, ratios, and proportions. Now they know how to compare products for the best price per unit! In pre-algebra, students are learning about linear functions with topics such as slope, intercepts, equations of lines, and parallel and perpendicular lines. The Smart Board plays an important role in these lessons.
In Social Studies 6 students are studying Medieval Civilizations, and in grade 7 students are following the Founding Fathers and their wives and daughters through the process of forming a new nation and writing a Constitution. Social Studies 8 students are examining Asian culture, history, and geography. ESL History students are currently studying the Great Depression and World War II, working on reading, writing, and speaking skills. Ethics class finds the girls having just completed a discussion of the value of being proactive and using the human tools of self-awareness, conscience, imagination, and will power; students are ready to begin the work, "Begin with the End in Mind." The class is now examining the question of "What is a value?" as well as identifying the values on which they choose to base their life decisions. For inspiration in writing their own personal mission statements, they are studying the LH Statement of Community and Mission Statement.
In Science 6 students have finished their study of invertebrates and are beginning to study vertebrates. The seventh grade earth science class is studying weather. The unusual weather conditions have created many teachable moments. The students are using the Pasco Explorer GLX hand-held science computers to gather weather information because the GLX makes it simple to determine the dew point, air temperature, air pressure, and relative humidity in various locations. After Easter Break the seventh graders will monitor the weather using the Linden Hall weather station located on the widow's peak above the main offices and accessible on our web page. The eighth grade physical science students are currently learning about energy and work. This unit involves laboratory activities and problem-solving as well as developing an understanding of the various forms of energy. Out of class, the eighth graders are sponsoring a car wash on Saturday, May 5, during Parents' Weekend!
Academic Spotlight: PBR Dining Service, Inc. Robert Linkens, Chef
Linden Hall's food service is headed by Chef Robert Linkens. Bob and his dedicated staff have, for eight years, provided a top-quality food service customized for the needs of the Linden Hall student.
Menus are varied and exciting with international influences reflecting the variety of student life on the Linden Hall campus. Chef Bob maintains an open-door policy which takes into consideration not only the dietary needs of the students such as food allergies but also the desires, likes, and dislikes of the student population.
A promise is made to each student at Linden Hall to provide healthy nutritional choices. Vegetarian entrees, fresh locally grown fruits and produce, as well as a well-stocked salad bar are available each day to students.
Important nutritional elements such as whole-grain and high-protein breakfast cereals featuring Kashi brands have been added. The kitchen maintains a no trans-fat menu commitment, and the soda machines have been replaced with purified flavored waters, green tea alternatives, and natural juice dispensers.
In addition to a daily healthy and flavorful menu, a nutrition expert is brought on campus on a regular basis to educate the students on healthy choices for life-style management.
The food service staff will continue with their dedication to a healthy student population, providing the students with tastes and varieties that they enjoy.
Easel, Film, and Clay Nora Workman, Art Department Chairperson
The 13th Annual Arts Night was a great success. The gallery was full of art and photography, and there were instrumental performances by our talented students involved with private lessons. A special treat for the audience was a sneak preview of the competition drama team's performance of "The Compleat Works of Wllm Shkspr (abridged)."
A handful of art and photography students are participating in the “Women's Expressions” exhibit at the Women and Babies Hospital in Lancaster. The students involved are Diana Egnatz, grade 9; Joo Hyun Park, grade 11; Melissa Wishner, grade 9; Natasha King, grade 10; and Jennifer Darrell, grade 12.
The first weekend in May, Parents and Alumnae Weekend, there will be much to see and do on campus. Friday, Saturday and Sunday there will be performances of our Spring Musical, Cinderella. We hope you are able to attend one of the performances to support our fine drama program.
The chorus will participate in the County Music Adjudication in early May. They have represented us well in years past, and we anticipate another good year. See details about the drama and music competitions in May's eBulletin.
Drama Festival Results
On Tuesday, April 10th our Drama Competition Team attended the 23rd Annual Fulton Theater High School Drama Festival. Jennifer Darrell, Paige Espenshade, Emily Horne, Cerah Kolarcik and Abby Milnor-Sweetser performed a cutting from "The Compleat Works of Wm Shkspr (abridged)." At the end of the day our Linden Hall Drama Queens were awarded the first-ever Student Choice Award, voted on by the assembled students, directors and judges! In addition, the team was recognized for excellence in comic ensemble and achievement in acting style. Abby Milnor-Sweetser received the honor as "Outstanding Comic Performer." Congratulations to all!
Between the Lines Linda Mummert, Athletic Director
Riding Team earned Champion status at Madeira IEA competition on February 24. All ten team members placed with Emily Riden earning a 1st and Diana Egnatz a 2nd. The team has qualified for regionals in April.
The Riding Team captured IEA Zone II Championship with nine first, two second and three third place finishes. Freshman Diana Egnatz and middle school rider Marta Williams earned high point awards for their outstanding point totals for the year. In addition, Diana Lavery, Abby Milnor-Sweetser, Brittany Kosiak, Emily Riden, Amy Weatherbee and Elizabeth Scarff will represent Linden Hall at the IEA Nationals in Ohio at the end of April.
The Varsity Basketball Team finished the season with 7-6 record--the top two leading scorers, leading rebounder and ball handler to return next season. Linden Hall will again appear in a tip-off tournament in Harrisburg.
Up-to-date schedules for both games and practices can be found on the Linden Hall Sports Calendar.
Reminder: MAY 6, 2007 SPORTS AWARDS BREAKFAST. If you are a parent, relative, or friend of a varsity or middle school athlete, please plan on attending.
9:30 AM - Continental Breakfast in Anne Brossman Sweigart Sports & Fitness Center
10:00 AM - Wall of Fame Dedication
10:15 AM - Awards in Snavely Theater
RSVP to Linda Mummert by May 1, 2007
In the Dorms Dennis Foreman, Upper School Dorm Director
The dorm hallways and lounges are sporting fresh paint and look terrific, and there's more to come! Several students are meeting with Mrs. Lavery, Mr. Foreman, and a local designer to discuss renovations to Honeycutt and the Green and Yellow Lounges. With many exciting suggestions, we look forward to seeing a new look next fall.
Speaking of next fall, many of our girls are in the process of applying for acceptance to the ILD (Independent Living Dorm). Girls are accepted into the ILD based on leadership and scholarship. The ILD houses 19 students in private rooms. With limited regulations, ILD students are expected to govern themselves. This program helps prepare them for college dorm life. Students must have spent one year at Linden Hall and receive recommendations from a faculty member, a dorm staff member, and a former roommate.
With the prom scheduled for April 21, the buzz in the dorm is fashion. This year's prom is being held at the Eden Resort's Courtyard. Everyone is excited.
France Trip Recap Carolyn Vaughan, French Teacher and Chaperone
Our trip to France was a huge success with just a few glitches along the way. The weather was glorious, 60 degrees, sunny and no rain at all. We could not have asked for better. The tulips and daffodils were in bloom, and the grass was actually being mowed! It was full-blown spring in France, exactly what we needed, since we had left Linden Hall right after a snowstorm and returned to a snowstorm!

The highlights of our trip were a glorious visit to the top of the Eiffel Tower at night, a fun dinner in a troglodyte cave with a discotheque, an amazing visit to Azay-le-Rideau and Chenonceaux, an awe-inspiring climb to the top of Mont St Michel (we each have a pin to prove we did it!), a fascinating tour of both Chartres and Rouen cathedrals (Mrs. Workman was in heaven), the silent wonder of the American Military Cemetery at Omaha Beach, and last, but certainly not least, the phenomenal Caen Peace Memorial Museum, which is dedicated to stopping war.

We loved our guide, Jean-Christophe, who even danced with us at the disco! (Seeing him dance did not amaze the girls as much as seeing Mrs. Workman, Mrs. Millard, and me dance!) Some of the girls who didn't know any French learned some, and some of the students who did used it. We all appreciated our cafe au lait, French bread and croissants for breakfast and tried croque monsieur and tartine campagnard for lunch. We enjoyed flamquiche (flat pizza with different toppings) and fouee (pita bread). Best of all, was the ice cream shop that my friend, Louis, took us to in Paris. It was the best! (Ask one of the girls to tell you where it is.)

The girls, I'm sure, have a different perspective on the trip than I do. They were all great travelers, and I am so very proud of each and every one of them. It's an exhausting trip, and they excelled in every way. Here are some of their reactions:
Jen Darrell said, "I loved the trip. I was amazed by all the giant beautiful buildings that were built so long ago. The most memorable things for me were the coasts of Brittany and Normandy. Seeing all of the white crosses at the cemetery was intense."
Jennifer Wong would add, "I loved jumping on the spongy grass at Pointe du Grouin."
Stephanie Heffner commented, "The weather was gorgeous, especially in the countryside where everything was so green!"
Lis Stoddard said, "Jean-Christophe, our guide, was the best."
Student Council Corner Evan McGrath Ed.D., Student Council Advisor
Student Council has been working at a feverish pace to put the final touches on International Night. The girls have been rehearsing their talent performances, perfecting their walks for the fashion show, and preparing delicious desserts for our guests on April 15 and 16 at 7:00 P.M.. International Night is always a special event at Linden Hall because it brings our students closer together. Everyone is encouraged to get involved. Please come and join us for this wonderful event.
Our social calendar continues to expand. In March, we traveled to the Phelps School for brunch, a pickup basketball game, and some recreational time. The students showed some excellent skills on the court and at the pool table. We will be going to see the Philadelphia Phillies play on April 27. Phelps will be hosting us in a special section of the park. Further outings are planned for May, and our middle schoolers will be joining the fun. The year has seen Student Council heading in new directions to better serve the students and the school.
Student's Soapbox Jacquelyn Keeney, Class of 2011
This short, short story was composed by Jacquelyn Keeney, an eighth grader, and was submitted to the Scholastic Writing Awards as an outstanding piece by a Middle School student.
The Pack of Gum
I was about three years old at the time. We were standing at the checkout line in Weis. It smelled of a mixture of meats, dairy, and cardboard, just like any ordinary store. At that moment, all I knew is that I wanted a pack of gum. It was the kind with the different colored square pieces inside a colorful packaging, and my mother wouldn't buy it for me, no matter what.
While my mother unloaded our overstuffed cart, I pleaded, "Mommy, please, please, I really want it. I'll do anything for it. Please can you just get it for me? I will never ask for anything again." She responded to me with that kind of tone that tells you her mind is made up. "No, you don't need it, and I already told you before I wasn't going to get anything extra."
So, I took the yellow pack of gum, with the colorful pieces inside and stuck it in the small pocket of my jacket. I then proceeded out the automatic doors beside the cart full of everything except what I had wanted. When my mother was unpacking the cart, I took the gum I had been longing for out of my pocked in which it was hiding.
Immediately, my mother's hazel eyes widened, and she crossly asked me, "Jacquelyn, where did you get that pack of gum?" I slowly responded thinking of what I should say. "Daddy bought it for me yesterday," I lied.
My mother, who seemed so tall, stared at me, looking right through me like a glass window. "Are you sure? I want you to think about this, because if you aren't telling the truth, you're going to be in more trouble than if you tell me the truth right now."
I knew that look, and realized I must have done something terribly wrong. So, in a quiet voice, I said, "I took it off the shelf in the store." My mother's facial expression changed from cross to disappointed, and she explained to me, "Thank you for telling me the truth, but you are still in trouble. You will be punished, but first you're going to go back into the store and tell them what you have done."
Slowly, I walked back into the store beside my mother. The whole time I was looking down at my dark blue sneakers. As we walked on, it felt like a lifetime. We went across the jam-packed parking lot, back through the sliding glass doors, and up to the main desk.
The young, brown-haired man asked my mother, "May I help you?" My mother sighed in disappointment and responded, "Yes, you can. My daughter has something she would like to tell you."
Upon looking up, I was only barely able to see the man's face over the desk, "Here is you pack of gum. I am sorry for taking it without paying. I won't do it again." The man took that gum I had so longed for, and insisted to my mother that it was all right.
My mother got furious at the man. When she tells the story now, she says, "And I don't know what that man was thinking. Here I am trying to teach my daughter a lesson, and he's telling her that it was just fine. It wasn't fine at all!"
From that moment on, I knew it wasn't right to take things from stores without paying. Unfortunately for my sisters and me, we didn't learn from each other's mistakes. Each of us had to learn this lesson on our own.
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IN THIS ISSUE:
Headmaster's Notes
Reflections on recent accomplishments, current projects, and plans for the 2007-2008 school year.
Advancement Announcements
Businesses can receive tax credits and help Linden Hall's Scholarship Program at the same time through the Pennsylvania's Educational Improvement Tax Credit Program (EITC).
Parents' Association Alert
Silent and live auctions
College Counseling News
Seniors looking forward to the last notification date, juniors start their active college searches, and sophomores start the college-search process.
Upper School Update
Looking forward to Summer Camp!
Middle School Messages
St. Jude Marathon, essay contest for the D.A.R., and academics updates
Academic Spotlight
Dining service nutritional planning and educational presentations
Easel, Film, and Clay
Arts Night recap, "Women's Expressions" exhibit, Parents' and Alumnae Weekend planning, Chorus Adjudication preparation, and Linden Hall Drama Queens competition results
Between the Lines
Riding team wins champion status, Varsity basketball team to take part in tip-off tournament, and information about the Sports Award Breakfast on Parents' and Alumnae Weekend
In the Dorms
Renovations underway, Independent Living Dorm applications, and Prom excitement
France Trip Recap
Pictures, student impressions, and more!
Student Council Corner
International Night preparations and events with Phelps School
Student's Soapbox
Jacquelyn Keeney, Class of 2011
UPCOMING EVENTS:
Sunday, April 15 International Night, open to the public
Monday, April 16 International Night, Linden Hall Students and Faculty
Tuesday, April 17 Art Field Trip
Friday, May 4 to Sunday, May 6 Parents' and Alumnae Weekend
Saturday, May 12 Chorus Adjudication
Monday, May 14 Performing Arts Social
Wednesday, May 16 Senior Tea
Friday, May 18 Activity Awards Program
Monday, May 21 to Wednesday, May 24 Final Exams
Thursday, May 24 Awards Assembly, Senior Dinner, Baccalaureate
Friday, May 25 Graduation
Linden Hall Calendar
Weekend Activities
Sports Calendar
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