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Manny Matsudaira, left, and Tess Marks of HVRHS earned valedictorian and salutatorian in 2025.
FALLS VILLAGE — Manasseh “Manny” Matsudaira of Cornwall is the valedictorian of the Housatonic Valley Regional High School Class of 2025.
He has five siblings, and his mother Rachel works at HVRHS.
Matsudaira will attend Harvard in the fall. He plans to study economics along with environmental science and public policy.
He said the idea for the combination of disciplines came from his experience with the Envirothon and his interest in conservation, the social sciences and economics.
“The economy and environmentalism sometimes clash,“ he said. “I want to find a way to help them align.”
Matsudaira has been active in sports, He is captain of the tennis, ski and soccer teams.
On his experience at HVRHS: “It’s very welcoming. It’s an accurate slice of the real world, and what you can expect in the future.”
Matsudaira is also one of 621 semifinalists in the 2025 U.S. Presidential Scholars Program. The semifinalists were selected from over 6,000 candidates expected to graduate from U.S. high schools in the year 2025.
Matsudaira said the letter he received said the finalists would be announced “in the next few months.”
Asked about what he does for fun, he rattled off extracurricular activities at school: Envirothon, Academic Bowl, band (he plays the euphonium, and the Night Choir.
He plays club soccer too.
And this:
“I love to cook.”
He explained that his mother is of Italian descent and his late father was Japanese.
So he is working on a fusion of the two.
“I try” he said modestly. “It’s a difficult thing.”
Matsudaira credits his family’s support for his success. “I have good role models.”
And he gives credit to his faith: “God is an important part of my life.”
Salutatorian
Tess Marks of Salisbury is the salutatorian of the Housatonic Valley Regional High School Class of 2025.
Marks will attend Tufts University in the fall. She plans to study theater and education.
Her parents are Kristen Neary and Keith Marks, and she has an older sister, Josie.
About the former discipline, Marks said she was introduced to theater at an early age, when Michael Baldwin, a family friend, organized acting improvisation activities at family gatherings. “That sparked it.”
She’s been involved in theater since the third grade, she added.
As for wanting to be an educator, she cited her mother, aunt and grandmother’s careers.
“I see a lot of value in education. I’ve gotten a lot out of it, and I want to give back.”
Marks is busy at HVRHS, as class president, with the Student Government Association, and club soccer. She played soccer and lacrosse in previous years.
She recently cohosted the Battle of the Bands with Andy Delgado. Those two also revived a tradition of a completely student-run theater production, “The Unwritten Show.”
Asked what she does in her spare time, assuming she has any, Marks said she has a big family and she likes to spend time with them.
She is also a self-admitted bookworm. Her favorite book? “The Door” by Magda Szabo.
Asked about her experience at HVRHS, she said “There are so many opportunities here. And I think the community is so supportive. I’ve gone with the Travel Club to the Galapagos Islands and I’m going to Thailand. We couldn’t do that without the community.”
Gerd waters some new sprouts on the student-built grow tables with Vignesh and Chavka behind.
SOUTH KENT — It’s standardized testing and exams season, and the South Kent School students are in the weeds — literally — of the budding agricultural program on the school’s North Campus farm.
Half of the North Campus spring crew was waylaid by academic constraints during a visit to the school’s redeveloping sustainable agriculture and culinary education facilities in the afternoon sunshine on the first of May. The four who came, though, were grateful for the chance to get outside and enjoy the physicality of farm labor.
Tenth-grader Gerd P., who joined the farm program for the spring term, said the hands-on work is a “great distraction” from the more bookish obligations of boarding school life. His mother is Indigenous Peruvian, from a family who farmed on the rockier, sandier mountain soils of the Andes. He said that he appreciates getting in touch with the land as a connection to his mother and his heritage.
Head of School Brian Sullivan said that those connections to the earth, to the body, and to the physical product of the students’ labor are sometimes difficult to cultivate in a traditional classroom setting. “We’re letting the boys get their hands dirty,” he said.
He noted that 2025 is a ripe year to experiment with alternative learning models. “There’s such an opportunity to rethink and re-envision” what an academic curriculum should look like, he said. “I whole-heartedly believe a high school education is so much more than just science and math.”
The North Campus farm was originally bought for the school 12 years ago by two anonymous alumni who helped spearhead and develop the facility and program as “a center of innovation,” said Sullivan.
After years of student-led growth, the farm was productive and even possessed some livestock, however the COVID-19 pandemic and administration changes in the school caused farm operations to fall by the wayside in the years after 2020, said North Campus Director and Assistant Dean of Students Richard Chavka.
Chavka has been with the farm since its inception and said he found a ready partner when Sullivan took over duties at the school in 2023. Chavka remembers speaking to Sullivan about the possibilities of the 128-acre plot of land that extends down to the northern shoreline of Hatch Pond. “We’re really sitting on a gold mine out here — why don’t we take another shot?” the two had wondered.
The crew, plus Chavka, Sullivan, and Sullivan’s son and dog, in front of the barn which houses the kitchen. Alec Linden
The rebuilding process is well underway, which Chavka said has been an exercise in problem solving and adaptation, largely led by the students themselves, which has been a boon to the operation because, in Chavka’s words, “these guys are pretty smart.” Chavka said that it’s important that the farm grows on its own — and the students’ — terms: “It’s going to grow organically, no pun intended” The operation is currently seeking an official organic designation from the Northeast Organic Farming Association.
Two greenhouses, which Sullivan and Chavka said were impenetrably choked with weeds a year before, are now clear and orderly. One of them houses a neat array of grow tables and raised beds — all student built — sporting sprouts and some healthy-looking carrot and spinach plants, irrigated by a drip-timed watering system that was also designed by the North Campus team.
Vignesh P., who has had some agricultural experience at home in India, said that his favorite part of the spring North Campus curriculum was actually building the tables and beds in the greenhouse. He enjoyed the tactility and clear sense of purpose the build brought, which school Director of Communications Sarah Chase said is a core motivation of the North Campus program.
“When students take charge, they’re not just managing a task—they’re collaborating, adapting, and creating something together that didn’t exist before,” she said. She explained that the core ethos of the farming and culinary instruction curriculum is for the students, by means of collaboration and leadership initiative, to learn “to do right by the land and by each other.”
“It’s amazing to see your labor get finished,” said George W., a 10th grader from Hong Kong whose urban upbringing was far removed from the food production industry.
George is transferring next year and is disappointed he won’t be able to participate in the North Campus’ “plow-to-plate” programming that will be ramping up next year. Besides growing and harvesting of food, the other half of the North Campus’ mission focuses on cooking it.
Hidden inside a formidable barn-like structure is a state-of-the-art industrial kitchen that will host classes and programs teaching South Kent students about culinary arts and the farm-to-table restaurant business. The school has been hosting Friday night culinary sessions where local chefs, school staff and other food-service professionals lead workshops for the students.
As crop growing scales up, produce picked just outside the door will be used in these sessions. Chavka eventually plans to start supplying the school dining hall, as well as local food banks. Having a service element “is really important” to the broader purpose of the North Campus as not just a school resource, but one that benefits the whole community.
While those goals are down the road, the farm already has had impacts on the crew of high-schoolers who spend every afternoon bringing it back to life. Nekhel M., an 11th grade member of the spring farm crew, said that the wholesome aspect of watching the growing process from seeding to sprouting has compelled him to think about pursuing food systems beyond the North Campus. “I might have my own farm when I get older,” he said.
Chuck Goldberg of Kent Affordable Housing leads a gathering at which Kent’s nonprofits spoke about the missions of their groups.
KENT — Volunteerism is the engine that makes towns run.
Without the civic organizations whose missions cover a wide swath of objectives, communities would not be as rich and welcoming as they are.
This was apparent Thursday, May 1, as the Kent Chamber of Commerce gathered representatives from the town’s nonprofits to talk about the services and activities they offer. The discussion was led by Charles Goldberg, who said the purpose of the meeting was to let everyone know what each group was doing and encourage cooperation.
“There are wonderful outcomes when people get together to make things happen,” he said.
Goldberg was there as part of Kent Affordable Housing, which is now focused on a project to erect 13 rental units on a 1.59-acre parcel that was ceded to the group by the town. The land sits adjacent to Kent Commons and the design will consist of one building with an elevator.
Members of the Kent Garden Club described how they work to beautify the town by putting plantings around the Civil War monument and the welcoming signs at the four entrances to the village, among other initiatives. When president Nancy Schaefer said the club was established in 1933, that led to a friendly competition as to which organization was the longest standing.
Sarah Marshall, executive director of the Kent Memorial Library, spoke about the renovation and expansion project for which the groundbreaking is expected this fall. The plan is to annex the old firehouse next door, where an 80-person community room will be placed upstairs, as well as two small meeting rooms. The aim of the Kent Community Nursery School, located in the parish house of St. Andrew’s Episcopal Church, is to bring play and nature back to early childhood, said Anna deRham, co-director.
The Kent Art Association, which hosted the event, has monthly shows featuring a host of mediums. It was established in 1923 by nine well-known artists. The gallery on South Main Street was once part of the old Kent Inn and was moved to its current site in 1976. High Watch Recovery Center was founded in 1935, serving those with alcohol and drug addiction.
“We got this,” exclaimed K.C. Compton, who serves as parish secretary at St. Andrew’s, referring to being the oldest organization in the room. It is celebrating its 200th anniversary this year. “We really want to become a community hub, where everyone is welcome,” she said.
The Kent Lions Club is 48 years old, said President Karren Garrity. She said it basically helps fund such causes as the environment, cancer and eyesight. “We hold events to raise money so we can give it away,” she said. Connie Manes, executive director of the Kent Land Trust said that group doesn’t just protect nature, but seeks to engage people. It owns or has conserved 12,000 acres.
The Kent Chamber of Commerce runs a community calendar to let residents know where and when events are happening, which helps to prevent conflicts. Its not just about promoting businesses, but bringing people and nonprofits together to make Kent a destination point, said its members.
While the Kent Historical Society is not 200 years old, said curator Marge Smith, it is the repository of 250 years of documents and information. The Kent Quilters use their talent to create quilts that help raise funds for nonprofits.
Others who were in attendance were representatives of the Eric Sloane Museum, Trades Up, whose goal is to get youngsters to use hand tools, Kent Curiosity Lab, an enrichment program for Kent Center School students, and Kent Dispatch, an online community newspaper.
SALISBURY — At its April 28 meeting, the Inland Wetlands and Watercourses Commission approved a modification to a permit it issued last year for an application to redevelop the Wake Robin Inn.
It was the first public presentation of applicant ARADEV LLC’s amended proposal since withdrawing its initial application to the Planning and Zoning Commission in December 2024.
“Generally, it’s a pullback in the intensity of development,” said Mark Arigoni, a Landscape Architect with SLR Consulting who has represented the applicant, ARADEV LLC, since its first submission. Arigoni said the new plans were meant to respond to calls from the public and P&Z to scale down and lighten the impacts of the project after an extended public hearing late last year.
The major changes include reducing the number of newly-built cottages from twelve to four. The event barn, which was a highly contentious aspect of the initial proposal, moved from its previous position as a standalone structure to instead being a part of the expansion of the existing Inn building. The spa building was adjusted so it sits closer to the main structure and further from the wetland.
After presenting the updated plan, the Commission levied several questions towards the applicant regarding the new project. Commissioner John Landon noted that the new cottages look larger than those initially proposed. Stephen Cohen, of ARADEV, confirmed that they are approximately 2,000 square feet, compared to the previous buildings which topped out at around 1,100 square feet.
After several other questions regarding storm water management, a state-listed species relocation, and alterations to the cottage parking and access schemas, the IWWC concluded its examination. Chair Vivian Garfein clarified that the IWWC was reviewing an alteration, not a new application.
“We are not reissuing a permit,” she said, “We are asked to approve a minor modification that we have already approved.”
The Commission voted unanimously to approve the modification. ARADEV was to reappear in the town Zoom room on Monday, May 5 to present its modified application to P&Z.