WASHINGTON COLLEGE MAGAZINE
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SPECIAL SECTION: 1986-87 ANNUAL REPORT
GREEN THUMBS UP FOR THE MILLERS
BEYOND COMMENCEMENT
"Suminertime....and the livin' is
easy..." At first glance these languor-
ous lyrics from Porgy and Bess could
well depict the atmosphere at WC
during the days of July and August.
Gone are the crowds of springtime
students who had milled back and
forth in front of William Smith Hall
between classes. And in the library
computer area, the click-clack of a
single user resonates weirdly in a
room accustomed to the nervous
coughs and whispered conversations
of a dozen sweating term paper writ-
ers.
Yet, closer inspection shows the
College has not simply slowed to a
state of suspended animation, lethar-
gically waiting for the return of stu-
dents in the fall.
Beneath the still surface there
teems activity: professors traveling to
foreign places to conduct firsthand
research; new staff members slipping
into the shoes of those who have left-
construction workers breaking
ground for long-awaited facility
renovations; and faculty members at-
tending conferences designed to in-
vigorate their courses in the fall.
In this issue otThe Washington
College Magazine, we report on these
activities and many more — to let you
know just what goes on between the
time the last graduate pulls away in
May, and the first freshman arrives
in September.
-SMD
The response to the pilot issue of the
Washington College Magazine was
overwhelmingly favorable. We
planned to excerpt several of the
letters we received in this space where
we hope to run letters to the editor in
the future.
Just at press time we received the
letter below. The staff of the Maga-
zine felt it should pre-empt the
laudatory remarks we planned to run.
I am writing to inform the College
community of the death of Steven
L. "Shadow" Bartalsky II '73.
Shadow died on August 4, 1987
in a helicopter crash in Addis
Ababa, Ethiopia. He was piloting
the helicopter when the engine
malfunctioned at an altitude of 200
feet over a heavily forested area
only ten minutes from the airport.
The helicopter dropped at a severe
angle and Shadow and his one
passenger were killed instantly.
He was buried in a foreigners'
cemetery in Addis Ababa on
August 6, 1987.
Shadow is survived by his wife,
Kathy, and his five-year-old son,
Steven III.
Shadow was in Africa doing
missionary work with a non-de-
nominational Christian organiza-
tion called Helimission. His
Marine Corps pilot's experience
gave him the necessary back-
ground to fly missionaries and
medical teams into remote areas.
His services were in great demand.
Shadow had been in Africa since
March 1986. He was originally
We very much appreciated the
supportive comments we received
and wish to thank also those who
responded to our questionnaire.
You will recognize many of your
suggestions in this and future
issues.
We welcome your letters on any
topic and will share with our
readers as many as space will
permit us to print.
assigned to Cameroon, West
Africa. He was the the first pilot
on the scene of the natural gas
disaster of last year in Cameroon.
His heroism in flying into the area
so soon after the disaster was rec-
ognized by the world press and he
was interviewed by world news
agencies for information about the
disaster area.
His duty in Cameroon, however,
was marred by tragedy. His three-
year-old son, Colby, died in
Cameroon in April of this year
after ingesting insecticide.
Though devastated. Shadow and
Kathy's commitment remained
undeterred, and they accepted
reassignment to Ethiopia in July of
this year.
Shadow's commitment to his
vocation was based upon his deep,
spiritual conviction and his strong
desire to help the poor and needy.
He gave all to help others. He
will be missed.
Sincerely,
Rick Horstmann '73
Huntington Beach, CA
WASHINGTON COLLEGE MAGAZINE
VOLUME XXXVI NO. 1
FALL 1987 (Annual Report Issue)
STAFF
Issue Editor, Sue De Pasquale '87
Editor, Meredith B. Davies
Managing Editor, Marcia Landskroener
Assistant Editor, Diane D. Landskroener 76
Contributing Writer, Pat Trams 75 (Class
Notes)
Printing and Mailing, American Press, Inc.
Typesetting, layout, and paste-up were
done at Washington College using the
Macintosh Plus, Apple LaserWriter Plus,
and PageMaker software. Final copy was
produced on the Allied Linotronic LI 00 at
Spectrum Arts in Baltimore.
This is a special issue of The Washington
College Reporter, which is published five
times a year by Washington College for
alumni, parents, community, and friends.
Second-class postage paid at Chestertown,
Maryland and additional entry offices.
POSTMASTER:
Send address changes to Central Services,
William Smith Hall, Washington College,
Chestertown, MD 21620. Copyright 1987
Washington College.
Address corresfxjndence to Washington
College Reporter, Bunting Hall, Washington
College, Chestertown, MD 21620. (Tele-
phone: 301-778-2800.) Contributed
materials are welcome and are published at
the discretion of the editor.
FEATURES
About the Cover: Coach Ed Athey calling the
shots: a familiar sight to four decades of
Sho'men athletes. Photo by M.E. Warren.
Back Cover: The newest addition to the
campus, the Casey Swim Center, seen in an
unfamiliar light. Photo by Ed Deasy '73.
The Athey Years: End Of An Era 12
A legendary figure in the WC and Chestertown community,
Ed Athey has retired as College Athletic Director.
]ack Gildeu '87, Photos by ]. M. Fmgometii '88.
She Digs For Tell-ing Artifacts 17
Judy Thompson Miragliuolo '67 is happiest when she's knee-
deep in the dusty excavation sites of the Middle East.
Sue De Pasquale'87
Karl And Irma Miller: Tillers Of Good Will 20
An energetic Chestertown couple showers the College's
gardens, and its students, with loving care.
Sue De Pasquale '87, Photos by }. M. Fragomeni '88.
DEPARTMENTS
The Reporter 2
The Apple Computing Conference bears fruit; some '87 grads
tell what's next; three faculty members do summer research
south of the border.
Alumni Reporter 24
News of new chapters and Hall of Fame inductees.
Class Notes 26
Life in a pawn shop and an out-of-this-world discovery.
Currents 34
Dean Elizabeth Baer offers comfort to computer-phobes.
ANNUAL REPORT 1986-87
3 5
WASHINGTON COLLEGE
The Reporter
Planting Seeds
for Academic
Computing
A strange thing happens when
a college campus becomes
computer-intensive. "The
college community changes," said
Brian Hawkins, vice president for
computing and information services at
Brown University. "Faculty, even fac-
ulty from different disciplines, start
talking to each other."
Hawkins, in his opening address for
the conference on "Computing in the
Liberal Arts" jointly sponsored by
Apple Corporation and Washington
College, told the 100 college adminis-
trators and faculty gathered on cam-
pus last June that the so-called "com-
puter revolution" really hasn't hap-
pened yet, and academic computing is
still in its infancy. Small liberal arts
colleges, though, are in the forefront of
academic computing, because "their
campuses are small enough that a few
people can make a significant differ-
ence." Hawkins said 63 percent of the
institutions utilizing academic com-
puting are small liberal arts colleges.
In implementing an academic com-
puting program, Hawkins said, "you
have to decide whether you are a
teaching school that does occasional
research, or a research institution that
occasionally puts students in its equa-
tion. Integration of bodies of informa-
tion is the fundamental nature of lib-
eral arts, and the technology [of micro-
computers] fits the mission of liberal
arts colleges."
If there's one thing I like to empha-
size," says Steven Cades, sociology
professor and conference director, "it
is that this is still a liberal arts college
in which faculty teach students. The
computer is simply a tool that helps us
do that better."
For those conference participants
new to the academic computing game,
Washington College proved to be a
good model to emulate. Several WC
administrators and faculty led discus-
sions focusing on program funding,
faculty involvement, curricular apph-
cations, distributed computing, au-
thoring tools, and desktop publishing.
President Douglass Cater offered these
words of advice for implementing aca-
demic computing at a small college:
"Find an important trustee to back
you," Cater said, introducing WC
Trustee Henry C. Beck, "and don't ne-
glect to interest and involve the faculty
at the very beginning."
Faculty involvement has been the
key to the success of Washington
PHOTO: J.M. FRAGOMENI I
A diverse group of college administrators
and faculty met on campus in June to ex-
amine "computing in the liberal arts. "
College's program, and was a major
factor in the success of this second an-
nual conference, says Elizabeth R.
Baer, Dean of the College. Twenty-
five WC faculty participated in or led
the various group discussions, "allow-
ing them to see the campus through
outsiders' eyes," she says, "and mak-
ing them appreciate the facilities we
have on campus. Many faculty mem-
bers have called on Paul Bishop [direc-
tor of academic computing] since the
conference, realizing they have not
been taking full advantage of the com-
puters and software available."
Other faculty had fully embraced
academic computing. Psychology de-
partment chairman George Spilich,
who led a conference discussion on
computers and teaching statistics, says,
"I was a firm believer going in. The
psychology department is doing eve-
rything we possibly can" to use com-
puter-based demonstrations as a teach-
ing tool. The opportunity to share this
with his peers at other colleges, he
says, "shows WC off very well."
Baer's objectives for this conference
included criteria not offered at the first
academic computing conference she
and Cades attended. In offering to
host the conference here, they wanted
to ensure that participants had ample
access to hardware, that women in the
field were not neglected, and that par-
ticipants were given a flexible schedule
allowing for relaxation and experimen-
tation with computer software. These
objectives were fulfilled.
"Apple was excited by a different
vision of the conference, and I'm
pleased we were able to achieve that.
People were positive about the experi-
ence— Brian Hawkins, who attends
conferences like this nearly every
week, said this was the best he's ever
attended," Baer says, "and I think
Apple reconfirmed that we are a
model institution for academic com-
puting."
What impressed them most, says
Cades, was the support offered by the
administration and faculty for aca-
demic computing. Visiting college
administrators have been guided by
WC's expertise in funding and plan-
ning an academic computing program,
and desktop publishing. Calls and let-
ters praising the conference and asking
for further guidance are still coming
in. Bishop says. Director of College
Relations Meredith Davies reports that
Aldus, the creators of the PageMaker
software used in desktop publishing,
awarded the first issue of the Washing-
ton College Magazine honorable men-
tion in its design competition, and is
reproducing a spread from the sum-
mer issue in an upcoming brochure
advertising its software.
"Our job is to provide services for
the entire campus," Bishop says, ex-
plaining the mechanism of technical
support offered in the Academic Com-
puting Center. "The integrated cam-
pus network was a natural progression
of a work-group mentality that
evolved from people in an office want-
ing to share a laserwriter. Electronic
mail was the next step." What's in
store for the future of academic com-
puting at WC? "Anything," he says,
"that makes our job more exciting."
A number of faculty already dab-
bling in courseware development were
encouraged by new authoring tools in-
troduced, such as "Course of Action,"
which makes courseware development
simpler. Jeff Chaffin, assistant librar-
ian, has gained national recognition
with his innovative Macintosh tour of
the Miller Library. He plans to design
a new version using the more sophisti-
cated authoring tool.
"We gained a great deal of technical
expertise simply by setting up the con-
ference," says Cades, "and we made
new contacts for the months ahead as
the College pursues its own academic
computing program. I think we all got
the sense that what we've been doing
is breaking ground for academic com-
puting at small colleges."
Pomp and
Circumstance
The morning of May 17 in
Chestertown had all the elements
of a fine graduation day: robed digni-
taries and faculty, proud parents and
friends, nervous seniors, and sunshine.
The campus lawn was teeming with
a gaily dressed audience, come to hear
the former U.S. Senator and recent
Tower Commission panelist Edmund
S. Muskie address the senior class, and
to take snapshots of their sons and
daughters who had survived the final
weeks of classes, projects, exams, and
papers.
In all, 130 bachelor of arts and seven
bachelor of science degrees were con-
ferred, as well as 15 master of arts
degrees. Honorary doctoral degrees
were bestowed upon Senator Muskie,
former U.S. Senator ]. WilUam
Fulbright, and philosopher and author
Mortimer J. Adler.
Muskie challenged members of the
graduating class to continue their edu-
cation by becoming knowledgeable of
"the currents sweeping the world,"
and America's role in world affairs.
He also urged them to participate ac-
tively in government decision-making.
Citizens, he said, must use information
intelligently to help make the critical
decisions now facing our government.
"This doesn't mean just paying
passing attention to world events
PHOTO AUSTIN WALMSLEY
Senator Edmund S. Muskie
through watching the evening news,"
Muskie admonished. "At heart,
becoming more knowledgeable about
the outside world is a quality of mind:
a commitment to finding out, to
caring, to acting. It means learning
more about our own history; being
attentive to the history of others;
learning to be thoughtful about what
we are told — with a good dose of old
Yankee skepticism; and keeping our
eyes and ears open."
Had the American people better
understood the character of the
peoples of Indochina, Muskie pro-
posed, or if we had been able to think
more clearly about our basic interests
in that region, or if we had been
willing to learn from France's experi-
ence in Vietnam, "how different our
history might have been."
It was a basic lack of understanding
of components of Iranian society,
history, religion, and government, as
well as outside and domestic influ-
ences, that led to the Iranian hostage
crisis, Muskie said. And as the Tower
Commission's recent examination of
the Iran-Contra affair proved, "it is not
enough simply to trust our leaders to
do the right thing."
Even though only a fraction of the
populus is ever directly involved in
foreign and defense policymaking,
Muskie said, to ensure that we have
people who can assume these duties
"an entire generation" needs to be
trained to deal intelligently v^nth and
relate disparate aspects of foreign
affairs.
In awarding Senator Muskie the
honorary Doctor of Laws degree.
College President Douglass Cater
called him a member of "the very
small corps of elder statesmen who are
called on to restore credibility to
government in times of crisis."
Cater presented J. William Fulbright,
former Chairman of the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee and sponsor of
the Fulbright Exchange Scholars
Program, with the honorary Doctor of
Laws degree for his contributions
which have "strengthened the world's
wisdom." Fulbright's crusade against
what he calls "arrogance of power"
and lack of understanding between
nations. Cater said, has cost "only a
tiny fraction of the price of a single
submarine."
Mortimer J. Adler, described by
Cater as "philosopher, teacher, lusty
lover of great ideas and great books,"
was awarded the honorary Doctorate
of Humane Letters. "His secret of
success," Cater said, "lies with the
decision to write books without
footnotes." Adler, he said, who
suggests that we honor the 200th
birthday of the U.S. Constitution by
simply reading it, "stimulates in
ordinary people, even children, the
curiosity to explore fundamental
truths and fallacies passed down
through the ages of man and woman."
Senior drama major Susan M. KoUs
addressed her classmates, urging them
to put their dreams into action. "The
time has come for us to stop dreaming
and to start achieving," Kolls said. "If
you must dream, dream at night, and
use the day for changing, use the day
for doing. Start today and do your
part to change the world."
Senior Awards:
George and Sophie's
Choice
Susan M. De Pasquale, founding
editor of the Collegian, former
editor of the Elm, contributor to the
Washington College Reporter, campus
leader and flutist, needed a satchel to
carry home her prizes from com-
mencement.
De Pasquale, of Towson, won the
College's highest honor, the prestig-
ious George Washington Medal and
Award, as well as the most valuable,
the Sophie Kerr Prize, which totalled
$30,534 this year. The Washington
Medal and Award is given to the sen-
ior who shows the "greatest promise
of understanding and realizing in both
life and work the ideals of a liberal arts
education." The Kerr Prize is given in
recognition of "ability and promise for
future fulfillment in the field of literary
endeavor."
In addition, the English and political
science major who graduated third in
her class walked away with a Gold
Pentagon Award in recognition of
meritorious service to the College. (As-
sociate Dean Alice Berry was also hon-
ored with a Gold Pentagon Award.)
De Pasquale's other awards include
the Emil J. C. Hildenbrand Memorial
Medal for attaining the highest
average in English study, and the
Alpha Chi Music Award, given in rec-
ognition of excellence in music. She is
a member of Omicron Delta Kappa, a
national leadership honor society.
De Pasquale's submissions to the
Sophie Kerr Committee included her
senior thesis in English, a decon-
struction of the feminist implications
in the works of Henry James, as well
as several journalistic works. English
Department chairman Nancy Tatum
said the Committee was impressed
with the range and maturity of her
writing, as well as the leadership and
organizational abilities evident in her
editorships.
This fall, De Pasquale will pursue
her master's degree at Columbia
University's School of Journalism.
Ihe Catlin Medal, given annually to
the senior man who, in the opinion of
the faculty, has demonstrated "out-
PHOTO: AUSTIN WALMSLEY
Susan De Pasquale receives the Sophie
Kerr Prize from President Douglass Cater.
standing qualities of scholarship, char-
acter, leadership, and campus citizen-
ship," went to two graduates. Donald
A. Duhadaway of Clayton, Delaware,
and Jere Wayne Wallace, a non-tradi-
tional student from Ridgely, Mary-
land, shared the distinction.
Duhadaway, who graduated magna
cum laude with a degree in history and
Spanish, was also awarded the Arthur
A. Knapp Memorial Prize in History.
He is a member of Phi Alpha Theta, an
international honor society recogniz-
ing high standards in the study or
writing of history.
Wallace, 45, was the College's top
graduate with a near perfect cumula-
tive grade point average. After spend-
ing five semesters at Washington Col-
lege to finish his degree in English, he
was graduated with departmental
honors.
1 he Eugene B. Casey Medal, given
annually to the senior woman voted
by the faculty to be "outstanding in
scholarship, character, leadership, and
campus citizenship," went to two
graduates as well. Allyson Marie Tun-
ney of Bearon, Delaware, and Susan
M. Kolls of Suffield, Connecticut, were
both honored.
Tunney, a Presidential Scholar at
Washington College where she ma-
jored in math and Spanish, was
graduated magna cum laude. She also
was awarded the William Gover
Duvall '39 Prize in mathematics.
Kolls, a drama major who was active
in the College's Writers' Union and
other Literary activities, was graduated
with departmental honors. The recipi-
ent of the Stewart Drama Award for
her outstanding contributions to the
College through dramatic and speak-
ing ability, Kolls was chosen to ad-
dress her graduating class.
Both seniors are members of
Omicron Delta Kappa, a national lead-
ership honor society.
illiric A. Lorberer of New Castle, Dela-
ware, was awarded the Clark-Porter
Medal. The award is given annually to
the student whose character and per-
sonal integrity, in the opinion of the
faculty, have most clearly enhanced
the quality of campus life.
Lorberer, who majored in English
and humanities, was graduated magna
cum laude and with departmental hon-
ors. He was inducted into the Delta
Chapter of Phi Sigma Tau, a national
honor society in philosophy, and was
active in the Writers' Union and other
literary activities at the College.
'87 Grads—What
Next?
Commencement has come and
gone for members of the Class of
1987. Now that the college days of the-
sis writing and keg parties are past,
our young grads face the sobering
question: What next?
Many new alums, true to the liberal
arts ideal, will spend a year or two ex-
ploring various avenues until they dis-
cover the one they like best. A few,
however, have more concrete plans;
they have a specific goal to reach and
know exactly where their energies will
be channeled in the coming months.
Here, the Magazine profiles five
such '87 grads from a variety of ma-
jors. Some will be heading back to the
classroom, while others will expand
their education on the job or through
travel...
lleidi Collier was sitting in Dr. Patri-
cia Home's Intro to Sociology class
several years ago when she suddenly
realized, "This is really it!" From that
point on, the 21 -year-old knew sociol-
ogy was the field she would pursue.
This fall will mark her start in a two-
year master's program at the Univer-
sity of Maryland's School of Social
Work, with a special concentration in
Health. Two days each week, a 30-
minute commute from her Rockville
home will take Collier to the Washing-
ton Hospital Center. There, she'll work
in emergency room crisis intervention,
dealing with rape and accident victims
and potential suicides.
Hands-on work isn't new to Collier,
recipient of the 1987 Sociology Depart-
ment Award. In Professor Barry
Barren's Field Experience class last
year, she worked with patients each
Tuesday at the Upper Shore Mental
Health Center.
"When you first get started, every
case will teach you something," recalls
Collier. "1 was struck most by the lack
of resources available on the Eastern
Shore — it's a very rural area. 1 live in
an urban area, so almost every case
gave me a new outlook on Maryland."
Her senior thesis (one of only two to
receive departmental honors), exam-
ined the importance of the "emergent
group" in the emergency social sys-
tem. What, exactly, is an "emergent
group?"
Pointing to the Maryland AmTrak
disaster as an example. Collier ex-
plains that emergencies usually
prompt individuals to assume roles as
both "leaders" and "followers" when
providing assistance. By studying this
group interaction more closely. Collier
concluded, "You can train groups
ahead of time to deal with [specific
crises] and things can get done much
more efficiently."
Collier's work, both in and out of
the classroom, has given her some
very definite goals for the future. After
earning her master's degree (and per-
haps her doctorate), she wants to work
in a hospital trauma center, providing
long-term support and care for pa-
tients and their families.
/\n international affairs major, Harris
Whitbeck aspires to a career in journal-
ism and he's off to a running start,
working as an assistant in the interna-
tional department for a television news
show in his native Guatamala.
"My job, since 1 am the only one to
speak English, is to analyze, translate,
and write about the different stories
that come in from abroad on our satel-
lite feed," he says, continuing, "The job
combines perfectly my interests in
journalism and international affairs.
I'm constantly seeing images from all
over the world, and trying to analyze
what is going on, what world leaders
are trying to say, and then putting all
that into the context of the interna-
tional political and social scene."
Laughing, he explains that world af-
fairs are not always as serious as the
title would imply. "1 think my most
exciting experience so far was watch-
ing Nancy Reagan get wet on by a
baby she was holding in an unedited
tape of her official visit to Stockholm."
Harris Wliitbeck '87
Hardly a newcomer to the world of
international journalism, Whitbeck
worked for UPI in Mexico during the
summer of 1984, where he was on the
other side of the wire — preparing the
stories that would go out to subscrib-
ers. During his tenure at WC he served
as news editor for the Washington Col-
lege Elm, spent his junior year abroad
studying in Paris, and was an active
member of the International Relations
Club.
After a year with the Guatamalan
news show 7 Dias, Whitbeck plans to
apply to the London School of Eco-
nomics and to Columbia University.
Ihroughout the humid summer
months, Allyson Tunney worked ev-
ery morning and afternoon as a cashier
at a local department store, then
rushed home to change for her eve-
ning waitressing job at "Chi-Chi's Res-
taurant."
"1 got very tired," says Tunney,
"but it was the only way to get the
money. 1 just kept telling myself, 'In
two months, you'll be in Europe.' "
A Spanish/mathematics double ma-
jor, Tunney took her earnings and left
for Europe in August. Her itinerary in-
cludes a two-month backpacking trip
through Europe with her sister, with
stops planned in the British Isles,
Greece, and even Moscow. She'll end
her portion of the trip in Spain, where
she intends to settle and teach English
for the rest of the year.
Tunney says she fell in love with the
Spanish culture when she spent three
weeks there last summer. "The place is
gorgeous and so friendly. There's such
a relaxed atmosphere."
After four years of studying Spanish
at Washington College, the 22-year-old
says she's fairly fluent, but still has to
"stop and think," when it comes to
conjugating verbs. By immersing her-
self in the culture, she hopes to pre-
pare herself for a bi-lingual computer-
oriented career that will allow her fre-
quent travel to Spain and Latin Amer-
ica.
A resident assistant on the Interna-
tional Language Floor last year, Tun-
ney earned "honors" on her Spanish
senior thesis, which examined the rela-
tionship between revolutionary poetry
and the Nicaraguan Revolution.
linglish major Margaret Virkus is re-
turning to school this fall, but not as a
student. She'll be Director of Publica-
tions for Kalamazoo College in Michi-
gan, drawing on expertise in desktop
publishing on the Macintosh which
she picked up while working in WC's
College Relations Department
throughout her senior year.
Virkus began her work with a Gan-
nett Foundation grant; ostensibly her
task was to master desktop publishing
software, and pass her knowledge on
to student editors. But as her senior
year progressed, her job description
expanded and she worked 10-15 hours
each week designing posters and small
brochures, as well as formating the
College's directory and catalog.
Jake Baas grew familiar with her
work during his tenure at WC as Vice-
President for Development and Col-
lege Relations; when he left to fill a
similar post at Kalamazoo College, he
made Virkus the job offer. "If there's
one thing I've learned at Washington
College," she laughs, "it's to use any
connections you make."
Her first task at Kalamazoo will in-
volve re-vamping the design of the
College's alumni magazine. She hopes
to find time to take classes in religion
and philosophy, studies which piqued
her interest during a three-week trip to
England in June.
A crew enthusiast during her years
at WC, Virkus is a trifle nervous about
starting a new life in a place so far
from home — and so cold. But she re-
mains optimistic: "I didn't know what
1 would do with an English major, but
this is the best opportunity for me.
There's room for creativity on the job
and I'll be able to take classes.. .1 realty
think I'll always want to be connected
with a college or university, in an at-
mosphere where there's a continual
flow of ideas."
l\t 22, psychology major Laura
Brown feels most comfortable with
people three times her age. "I've al-
ways loved to be around elderly
people. I'm really interested in chang-
ing some of the stereotypes we have
about them; 1 think a lot of perceptions
are unfair."
The graduate program at the Uni-
versity of South Carolina, Brown be-
lieves, should put her closer to that
goal. While beginning work this fall
toward a doctorate in psychology, she
will simultaneously earn a certificate
in gerontology. Most exciting about
this program is a research assistant-
ship that will keep her in constant
contact with elderly test "subjects."
Brown first realized her affinity for
the elderly during a routine summer
job at a nursing home. "1 always
wanted to go back and visit them,"
says the Greensboro, Maryland resi-
dent, so she began paying frequent
calls with her church youth group.
During her senior year at Washing-
ton College, her psychology thesis led
her to meet frequently with local sen-
ior citizens. Entitled "Strategies Used
by Elderly and Young People on Rec-
ognition Tasks, and a Survey of Medi-
cation Uses," the project examined
medication's effect on memory.
Brown began investigating graduate
programs largely due to the encour-
agement of psychology professors Dr.
Jim Siemen and Dr. George Spilich.
"Without them, 1 wouldn't have met
representatives from so many univer-
sities," she says. With its special train-
ing in gerontology. University of South
Carolina emerged as her first choice,
nudging out University of Georgia and
University of North Carolina.
Though not yet certain how long
she'll take to complete the program, or
what she'll do afterwards. Brown says
her plan is to work directly with the
elderly, not "just in teaching or doing
research."
"1 want to help younger people un-
derstand aging and some of the things
that go along with it."
Class of '87 Graduate School Plans
The following graduate school information was provided by graduating seniors
at the time of Commencement:
NAME
MAJOR
SCHOOL
Steven Bergenholtz
Eng/Philosophy
Catholic University
Christopher Brown
Political Science
George Mason University
Laura Brown
Psychology
Univ. of South Carolina
Scott Butler
Psychology
Univ. of Md., College Park
Heidi Collier
Sociology
Univ. of Md., School of Social Work
Susan De Pasquale
Eng/Poli Sci
Columbia School of Journalism
Don Duhadaway
History /Spanish
University of Delaware
Will Hayes
Psychology
University of Pittsburgh
Sharon Himmanen
Psychology
Hunter College, New York
Eric Lorberer
English/Humanities University of Massachusetts |
Jackie Loughman
Business Mgt.
Washington and Lee Law School
John Musachio
Chemistry
Johns Hopkins University
Russell Mark Nasteff
Economics
Univ. of Kansas Law School
Antone Silvia
Biology
Purdue University
Amy Jean Steiglemar
I History
Univ. of Baltimore Law School
Jere Wallace
Enghsh
Washington College
Jill Wagner
English
Washington College
Marcia Waynant
Chemistry
Johns Hopkins University
Churchill Revived At
Senior Convocation
Humorists Art Buchwald and
Mark Russell could be mighty
tough acts to follow. That is, of course,
unless you are "The Greatest Man in
All The World"— Winston Churchill.
The famed British statesman leapt into
life at the College's third Senior Con-
vocation in April, when impersonator
James C. Humes took the stage.
Though the audience was spotted
with parents and grandparents who
had grown to adulthood with
James Humes as Winston Churchill
Churchill's jowly presence constantly
dominating the news, the great num-
ber of students watching the perform-
ance knew the statesman only as a pic-
ture in a history textbook.
Pacing slowly back and forth, his
shoulders squared and his face drawn
into a scowl, Humes transported these
young adults back through time, al-
most magically communicating the es-
sence of Churchill's heroism — and his
humor.
For in addition to being a soldier,
artist, sportsman, bricklayer and au-
thor ("He had more words published
than Shakespeare, Sir Walter Scott and
Dickens put together"); in addition to
playing a leadership role in two world
wars; in addition to holding office for
61 years ("When he was first elected to
office. Queen Victoria sent him a letter
and when he resigned from office
years later, CJueen Elizabeth the Sec-
ond held a dinner for him"); Churchill
also was the possessor of a biting wit.
Humes described an incident on the
House of Commons floor when
Churchill collided with a rather rotund
female House member. Gesturing to
his own portly figure, Humes ex-
plained, "Now Betsy makes me look...
svelte. Betsy has a face that would
make a horse look.. .handsome."
Churchill had just "dispensed with liq-
uid libations," when he came wob-
bling down the aisle and knocked the
old woman over.
"And down goes Betsy for the
count. And she pulls herself up from
the floor, mad as a hornet and says,
'Winston, you're drunk — what's more,
you're disgracefully drunk!' The old
man looks at her and says, 'And might
1 say that you are ugly! And might 1
also inform you that you are extremely
ugly. Disgracefully ugly. And what's
more, tomorrow 1 shall be sober!"
Perhaps most encouraging to mem-
bers of the Washington College audi-
ence was Hume's admission that
Churchill's childhood and young
adulthood were hardly harbingers of
his later success. Far from being a
natural speaker, young Winston suf-
fered from a stutter so severe that "a
10-minute speech was a 20-minute or-
deal."
He was sent off to boarding school
at age seven, and his parents never
picked him up, even for the Christmas
holiday. Tremendously lonely, ("his
father only talked to him five times his
whole life"), Winston would sneak off
at recess to memorize storybooks so
that at night he could "recite himself
to sleep." Humes went on to inform a
surprised group of seniors that
Churchill never graduated from col-
lege— in fact, never even attended.
Noted President Douglass Cater
when Humes had completed his per-
formance, "The message is it's never
too late to start, for those of you who
may be getting through on less than a
Summa. At the time [Churchill] would
have been a college senior, he was not
earmarked for success in the world."
Before presenting Humes with a
special citation. Cater concluded,
"Those who cannot remember the past
are doomed to repeat it. Today with
the help of James Humes, we not only
remember but revel in the wisdom,
humor, and courage of one of the
world's greatest statesmen. The echo
of Winston Churchill's voice has
meaning to those who believe in the
power of words. Winston Churchill
used the English language to save the
Western World. James Humes calls on
that language to remind us and to
challenge us."
Geoffrey N. Miller, new Athletic Director
A New Face in Cain
Gymnasium
His publicity photograph reveals a
young, athletic-looking man with
deep laugh hnes. That's the new Ath-
letic Director, Geoffrey M. Miller, who
is succeeding Edward L. Athey.
Athey's laugh lines are deeper, but
then, he's been here 39 years.
Miller is the former associate athletic
director at Guilford College in Greens-
boro, NC, where he also served as di-
rector of the Physical Education Cen-
ter. He was the top candidate recom-
mended by the Search Committee,
which was chaired by Washington
College trustee and alumnus Charles
B. Clark and included several key al-
ums involved in the College's athletic
activities.
"Miller had strong endorsements
from within and outside our campus,"
College President Douglass Cater said
in announcing his appointment. Cater
has charged Miller with the task of
drafting a long range plan for athletics
and physical education as part of the
College's strategic planning for the
years ahead. He will have no initial
coaching responsibilities.
"President Cater and 1 discussed the
need to do a self-study in the athletic
and physical education department ar-
eas," Miller said before joining the
staff in mid-July, "to determine where
we want to go. A key element for me
will be to meet with all the staff indi-
vidually and let them air their views
and areas of concern."
The Swarthmore, PA, native has
nine years experience in the admini-
stration of collegiate athletics includ-
ing fund raising and extensive coach-
ing experience in lacrosse.
Miller joined Guilford College in
1980 as director of the Physical Educa-
tion Center and head lacrosse coach.
In 1982 he began serving as the fund
raising coordinator for the Quaker
Club, and he was named assistant ath-
letic director in 1983. He was pro-
moted to associate director in 1986.
As head lacrosse coach at Guilford
for seven years. Miller developed a
successful program, compiling a 63-27
(.700) record. His best team posted an
11-3 mark in 1986 and finished sixth in
the final USILA Division III poll. He
earned Coach of the Year honors in
Division III that year, and served as an
assistant coach for the South squad in
the annual All-Star Classic.
Miller graduated from Amherst Col-
lege, where he earned a B.A. in Ameri-
can history and a Master of Science in
sport management.
Sansing Is Assistant
Dean
Lucille S. Sansing has been named
assistant dean at WC, succeeding
Alice F. Berry, who resigned to return
to a teaching career.
Sansing comes to Chestertown from
the Northern Virginia Community
College, where she taught sociology
and anthropology for 18 years, and
worked for faculty and staff profes-
sional development there. She also
served as adjunct associate professor
of sociology at George Washington
University.
Sansing will be responsible for man-
agement of faculty and peer adviso-
ries, and will serve on various commit-
tees dealing with such issues as aca-
demic standing and student aid. She
also has a faculty appointment at WC,
and will teach one course of sociology
per semester, beginning next spring.
Her first course will focus on family
violence.
A 1967 graduate of Bates College in
Maine, Sansing earned her master's
degree in sociology and anthropology
from the University of Virginia in
1969. After several years of teaching
and raising a family, she pursued her
doctorate at George Washington Uni-
versity, and earned her degree in 1983.
Appropriately enough, her disserta-
tion focused on "Marital and Mother-
ing Roles Among Re-entry Women in
Higher Education."
Sansing knows first hand the prob-
lems many women face when they
pursue their education or careers, and
the solutions sometimes demand
"creative lifestyles," she says. Sansing,
the mother of a 12-year-old daughter,
will be commuting from a second resi-
dence on Kent Island while her hus-
band and daughter remain in Wash-
ington, D.C. They will visit her two
nights a week, she says, and family
weekends can be spent in the city or
the country.
"My husband's work is there [in
D.C], and my daughter is at the age
where her world revolves around two
or three friends. I didn't want to up-
root her, and she's old enough now
that she can take the subway from
school to her dad's office, and go home
with him from there. I'm lucky — the
timing was right for me to accept this
position."
lege. Through his hard work three
years ago, the state granted the Col-
lege the largest single capital grant to a
private institution in Maryland's his-
tory. In 1985, the College awarded
Delegate Mitchell a special citation for
leadership beyond the call of duty, and
in January, 1987, he was again
awarded with an honorary member-
ship in WC's 1782 Society.
Delegate Mitchell has been a mem-
ber of the House of Delegates since
1971, serving recently as Chairman of
the House Appropriations Committee.
He also serves as Vice-Chairman of the
Spending Affordability Committee
and as a member of the Legislative
Policy Committee and the Joint Budget
and Audit Committee. His son, Chris,
is a 1987 graduate of the College.
Walter Sondheim, Jr., Chairman of
Charles Center-Inner Harbor Manage-
ment, Inc., is a recent gubernatorial
appointment to the Board. Sondheim
retired from his position as Senior Vice
President and Treasurer of
Hochschild, Kohn & Company in 1970,
Board Appointments
Recent appointments to the Board
.of Visitors and Governors of
Washington College include Maryland
Delegate R. Clayton Mitchell, Walter
Sondheim, Jr., and Alumni appoint-
ments Clare S. "Pat" Ingersoll and John
H. Davie.
Maryland's new Speaker of the
House, R. Clayton Mitchell, has long
been a supporter of Washington Col-
R. Clayton Mitchell with wife, Teel, and
President and Mrs. Cater, displays a Sue
Tessum print at a dinner in his honor.
and since that time has received many
awards attesting to his tireless work in
community affairs as well as his busi-
ness acumen. In 1973, he received the
"William J. Casey Award" from the
American Red Cross; and in 1976 the
United Fund of Central Maryland
granted him its "Irving Blum Award."
Sondheim is also the recipient of
honorary degrees from Morgan State
University (1958), Haverford College
(1963), and the University of Maryland
(1979). He is Honorary Director of the
Baltimore Regional Chapter of the
American Red Cross and the Jewish
Family and Children's Bureau. He
currently serves as Honorary Trustee
of Sinai Hospital of Baltimore and as
Trustee Emeritus of Goucher College.
After raising four children, Clare S.
"Pat" Ingersoll enrolled at Washington
College and graduated cum laude with
honors in sociology in 1971. She then
went on to graduate school at the Uni-
versity of Pennsylvania, earning an
M.A. and an A.B.D. Ingersoll has
worked as a substitute instructor, a tu-
tor and a part-time instructor in sociol-
ogy at Washington College. She has
been a trustee of the Kent County Pub-
lic Library, serving at times as secre-
tary, vice president, and president.
She is also a member of the Mid-Shore
Symphony Society and chairman of
Kent County's chapter, and is a mem-
ber of St. Paul's Church, where she
sings in the choir and serves on the fi-
nance committee.
"I am deeply appreciative of the
trust the alumni have placed in me in
asking me to represent them," Inger-
soll says. "As a Washington College
wife, student, alumna, parent, part-
time faculty, and longtime resident of
Chestertown, I have known and loved
the College in many ways. It has
added so much to my life that I think it
only appropriate to offer, in return,
whatever talent, experience, and en-
ergy I have."
While an economics major at Wash-
ington College, John H. Davie, Jr. '58
served as president of the Theta Chi
fraternity and as Inter-Fraternity
Council vice president. He is currently
president of Sharp Corporation, a
pharmaceutical packaging company at
the top of its field. Davie served as a
member of the Board of Directors of
the Merion Cricket Club from 1970-
1975 and as a member of the Board of
Directors of Gladv^ryn Civic Associa-
tion from 1973-1976. He was president
of the Gladwfyn Sports Association
from 1974-1976. Davie says that he
considers serving on the Board "a la-
bor of love," and looks forward to
being able to "repay the College for
preparing me so well to enjoy a satisfy-
ing and full life."
Freshmn)i Peter Mailer was one of five
men's tennis players to earn All-American
status at the NCAA National champion-
ship tournament in Snlisbun/ this spring.
Other Ail-Americans reaching either the
final 16 or the quarterfinals were seniors
Alejandro Hernendez and Claudio
Gonzales, freshman Larry Gewer, and so-
phomore Rich Phoebus. The WC tennis
tandem captured third place by defeating
Claremont 7-2 in the opening round, drop-
ping the semis to eventual title-winner
Kalamazoo, and fending off Santa Cruz in
the consolation round.
O'Neill Literary
House Happenings
Alone student with a muffler tos-
sed about his neck, head bent ov-
er some dusty pages in a room that lets
in little light and much cold air; the
Dickensian image that springs to mind
when one thinks about literary pur-
suits.
Life in the O'Neill Literary House
this spring has gone a long way to-
ward dispelling such imaginings. The
dedication of a garden, a cold reading
of a brand new play and a photogra-
phy exhibit are just a few of the atypi-
cal events which transpired in and
around the Literary House.
Writer's Theater, a small group of
students who perform the dramatic
endeavors of their fellow students, was
also active in the Literary House. Their
two spring productions included "The
Second Loaf," a play in two scenes by
freshman Michele Volansky, which
was performed on February 26; and
"1787: a Farce in Progress" by faculty
member Ed Weissman and long-time
College friend Mary Wood '68.
Volansky's play depicted a 'nuclear'
family in an atomic age. Although this
was the freshman's first play to make
it to the stage, it had the humor and
caustic accuracy of a much more expe-
rienced writer. A delightful comedy
of errors, "1787" was read from the
script on Thursday, April 30. The col-
laboration between Weissman and
Wood resulted in an evening of miss-
ing boxes, confused identities, wailing
maidens and one Frenchman with a
distinctly German accent. The play,
which celebrates the founding of the
Constitution, is scheduled to be pre-
sented in a full production some time
in October in the Church Hill Theater
in Church Hill, Md.
Diane Landskroener '76, Director of
Writer's Theater, was delighted with
the accomplishments of her group this
semester. "The students work so hard
to make the most out of each other's
creations. Of course, having the au-
thor sit next to you in Creative Writing
Class probably doesn't hurt. It's great
that students can get a chance to see
their work performed."
Writing "1787" with Weissman was
not the only activity taking up Wood's
time this spring. In an effort to thank
her for her generous donation of fur-
nishings, rugs and reference books in
the sitting room of the Lit House,
members of the Writer's Union threw
her a surprise reception, followed by a
reading by one of her favorite poets,
Pulitzer Prize winner Henry Taylor on
April 10.
An exhibit, provided by the Aus-
trian Institute on the Literary Works of
Arthur Schnitzler, was on view in the
Literary House from March 16-21.
Brenda Keiser, Washington College
Assistant Professor of German, opened
the exhibit with an afternoon talk on
Schnitzler. A Student-Alumni Photog-
raphy Show graced the walls of
O'Neill from April 1-11, featuring,
among others, works by senior Jim
Fragomeni and alumnus and Chester-
town resident J. Tyler Campbell '76.
Also in April was the Dedication of the
Ermon Foster Flower Garden, a small
garden located just adjacent to the Lit-
erary House. Mr. Foster, retired Regis-
trar of the College, was feted because
"he was really the person who, for
years, kept flowers blooming on this
campus. It seemed appropriate to
honor him," says Kathy Wagner, Lec-
turer in English and Assistant Director
of the Literary House.
Faculty Take
Research South Of
The Border
This is a story of three faculty
members' field studies in Latin
and Central America. Political science
professor Daniel Premo was recently
in Nicaragua for a research seminar
involving government officials,
intellectuals, and peasants in discus-
sions of foreign relations, the relation-
ship between church and state, and
Premo's special topic of interest,
political opposition groups. George
Shivers, whose recent translation of
Chilean author Ariel Dorfman's novel
The Last Song of Manuel Sendero has met
with critical acclaim, traveled to Brazil
as part of group of Fulbright scholars
interested in developing Brazilian
studies. And sociology professor
Jeannette Sherbondy has made some
interesting anthropological discoveries
in the highlands of Peru. This fall, all
three of them will be involved in an
honors course focusing on one Latin
American country: modem Brazil.
1 he Reagan administration has been
successful in portraying certain as-
sumptions about Nicaragua, says
Daniel Premo. But after his visit to
Nicaragua, he has reason to doubt
whether any of these assumptions are
true.
The allegation of systematic reli-
gious persecution by the Sandanista
government was denied by everyone
Premo met, from representatives of the
evangelical missions. Catholic priests
serving rural parishes, and the Minis-
ter of Culture (one of the three Jesuit
priests serving in high cabinet-level
positions in the Sandanista govern-
ment), to one of Managua's Catholic
priests most active in the Liberation
Theology movement.
"They were all in a position to com-
ment quite accurately on church/state
relations in Nicaragua, as well as the
tensions within the church itself,"
Premo says. "This is not to say there
have not been instances of religious
persecution in some form. But to gen-
eralize on those infrequent instances,
to charge that this is a concerted pol-
icy, is strictly not true. It is vehe-
mently denied by those within the
Sandanista government, and it is vehe-
mently denied by those Protestant
church groups who we claim are the
subject of persecution."
The contra rebels are not the military
powerhouse they are made out to be,
either, says Premo. "Those Nicara-
guans with whom we spoke, including
a representative of the Minister of the
Interior representing the Sandanist
army's position, seemed to believe that
they have succeeded in defeating the
contras militarily." Nicaraguan offi-
cials emphasized that because the con-
tras have lost their strategic capabili-
ties, they are attacking almost exclu-
sively civilian, not military, targets.
"This was certainly reflected in the
kinds of casualties reported in the
Nicaraguan press during the time we
were there," says Premo, "with attacks
carried out on several peasant coop-
eratives in which victims included
children and women."
The Nicaraguan military are more
concerned with what they see as "a
very real possibility of direct U.S.
intervention," Premo says. They feel
threatened by the continued U.S. mili-
tary buildup in Honduras, and
roughly 50 percent of their national
budget is required to maintain a state
of "military readiness," he says.
The economic impact of this is not
lost on Nicaraguan officials. With the
embargo imposed by the United
States, the people of Nicaragua have
suffered shortages of manufactured
goods and grains, and the government
was forced to seek foreign trade and
assistance from other countries. While
it has actively increased its trade with
the Socialist Bloc by 30 percent, Nica-
ragua also trades with Western Eu-
rope, Japan, and other Latin American
countries. All but the Socialist Bloc
countries have refused credit to Nica-
ragua.
As to the charges by the U.S. ad-
ministration that the 1984 elections
were not legitimate, that judgment is
"untenable," says Premo. "The Nica-
raguans have established as the basis
of those elections a constitutional proc-
ess which for them is particularly le-
gitimate. They have opposition politi-
cal parties which are functioning,
which have taken an active role in the
constituent process to draft a new
constitution, which are presently sit-
ting within the National Assembly,
and with some of whom we spoke.
They take no exception to the fact that
the electoral process was a legitimate
one in which they took part. For us to
state the 1984 elections were invalid,
because of our pressures which re-
sulted in the withdrawal of certain
parties and certain candidates, and
demand they hold democratic elec-
tions, seems to me to be very unrealis-
tic."
Or
'n the heels of critical acclaim for
George Shivers' English translation of
Ariel Dorfman's novel. The Last Song of
Manuel Sendero, he has been asked to
translate from Portuguese another
Dorfman body of work, a collection of
short stories. Viking Press wants to
have the translation ready for publica-
tion by mid-January.
So it was appropriate that Shivers,
with a group of other Spanish Ameri-
canists, was able to immerse himself in
the Portuguese language, literature
and culture this summer with a
month-long visit to Brazil. He says,
"The idea was to introduce us — an
eclectic group including historians, an-
thropologists, and political scientists —
to Brazil, with the purpose of bringing
Brazilian studies more to the forefront
at American colleges and universities."
Shivers finds Brazilian literature
similar to Spanish American literature,
but on first impression, he holds con-
temporary Spanish American litera-
ture in higher regard. The "magic re-
alism" of much of Spanish American
literature is lost to a "heavy realistic
strain" running through contemporary
Brazilian literature.
One of the most widely-published
Brazilian writers, Jorge Amado, gets
mixed reviews from both sides of the
border, he says. "He started out as a
radical social revolutionary and has
10
become a folklorist at the end of his
life, and his novels are perceived as
perpetuating some of the negativeness
of Brazil. He is a good teller of tales,
but there are aspects of his work that I
would agree are sexist and stereotypi-
cal," Shivers says.
Still, there are other Brazilian writers
worth considering: the late 19th cen-
tury realist writer Machado de Assis,
the early 20th century social writer
Graciliano Ramos, and more contem-
porary writers such as Lyaluft, Rachel
de Queirz, and many writers whose
works have just begun to be translated
in the past five or six years.
Thomas Colchie, the literary agent
for Manuel Puig and Ariel Dorfman,
has been responsible for many of those
translations. Shivers says. Shivers' re-
cent trip to Brazil and the upcoming
translation of Dorfman's collection of
short stories may lead to offers to
translate other Portuguese-speaking
writers.
His love of the language led him to
his first published translation of Portu-
guese, Dorfman's Last Song. Colchie,
who visited Washington College in
1983 with Kiss of the Spider Woman au-
thor Manuel Puig, had discovered a
Chilean writer of promise, Ariel Dorf-
man, and needed a translator.
"Translating has always been some-
thing I wanted to do. 1 don't know
that 1 could have done it if if had been
by someone who spoke no English,"
Shivers says modestly. "The fact that
Ariel Dorfman speaks English better
than 1 do, and that he was nearby [in
Bethesda] at that time helped im-
mensely."
in Peru, the Andean people still make
offerings of food and animals to their
source of life — the springs, lakes and
canals whose spirits provide them wa-
ter. If the spirits allow the springs to
dry, or threaten their crops with
floods, the ultimate sacrifice is of-
fered— a human life.
Last summer, before joining the
Washington College sociology depart-
ment, Jeannette Sherbondy was in the
highlands when such a sacrifice was
made. The fat and blood of a llama,
symbols of energy and life, had not
been enough to appease the spirits
who continued to send too much rain.
After the community members drew
lots, the father of nine children offered
his life willingly so that his family and
neighbors could live. Ceremoniously
and with due reverence, the man's life
was taken, his body quartered and
planted in the four comers of the com-
munity. It was only when one of his
children without faith in this ancient
ritual alerted the police that the event
was picked up by the media.
Sherbondy' s anthropological studies
in Peru have shown that many of the
Andean people are following a reli-
gious, political, and social organization
established over 500 years ago during
the reign of the Incas, and are keeping
ahve the myths that explain their crea-
tion and way of life. In an arid land
where water means life, the irrigation
systems are both the literal and figura-
tive centers of Andean culture.
For her dissertation, which deci-
phers the symbolism of Andean irriga-
tion, Sherbondy traveled to Cuzco, the
former capitol of the Inca empire.
There she discovered a "live Inca irri-
gation system," Sherbondy says. "I re-
alized that one line of irrigation is
being owned, controlled, and used by
the same group who owned, con-
trolled, and used it during the Inca pe-
riod."
According to historical records, Sh-
erbondy says, the village of Cuzco was
laid out on imaginary lines radiating
from a hub — the Temple of the Sun in
the center of Cuzco. Specific lineages
were assigned the care of the village's
320 Inca shrines which were set on 44
radiating spokes, and this organization
had been studied by anthropologists
both as a religious and social system.
Sherbondy discovered that it was a
map of irrigation systems as well. "1
found that lines designated for certain
lineages always went through the
sources of water for the canals that
those lineages used and owned. It was
a code of water and land rights, and I
realized that was the fundamental ba-
sis for organizing Cuzco."
On the fringes of urban Cuzco, Sher-
bondy found Andean people were still
using an old Inca canal, and perpetuat-
ing an ancient myth of a mountain lake
as a water source. "Everybody in the
surrounding communities said that
their water came by subterranean Inca
canal from this lake," Sherbondy says.
"So I hiked up one day to look at these
wonderful Inca canals and found no
canals at all, but natural springs." The
lake wasn't a wellspring as the people
had described either. Says Sherbondy,
"It didn't even have a natural outlet."
Looking at the topography, Sher-
bondy realized the water could not
possibly come from this lake, but then
"something cUcked," she says. "I re-
membered the Inca myths and legends
that had been written down and real-
ized when they talked of kings and
queens they were really talking about
geography and mountains and water.
When the national government tries to
"help" the people by building new irri-
gation canals, the Andeans will not use
or maintain a canal built by outside
contract labor. "Their feeling is," says
Sherbondy, "that these people en-
croached on their land, and that the
canal is theirs to use and maintain. Ir-
rigation projects based on community
initiatives are much more successful."
Sherbondy hopes to return to Peru
next summer to implement her holistic
approach to water, soil and tree man-
agement.
11
CAMPUS PROFILE
The Athey Years:
End Of An Era
by Jack Gilden '87
Photographs by J. M. Fragomeni '88
Ed Athey '43 got mad once. It's true, because
even he remembers it.
He was in his second year of employment at
Washington College when he lost his temper,
and it was because his Shoremen basketball
team was getting badly whipped in the first half
of a contest. "I knew we didn't have our heads
in the game and I wanted to shake the boys up
at half time," remembers the coach today. "I
stormed into the locker room with a basketball
in my hand intending to throw it against the
wall as hard as 1 could — you know, get their at-
tention. So, I cocked back and heaved the ball,
and it went right through the locker room win-
dow. That cost me a few dollars."
Edward Lorain Athey never was very good at
losing his temper (says his son, Ed, "I was prac-
tically a teenager before I ever heard my father
cuss.") But, over the course of an almost 40-year
career as Athletic Director at Washington Col-
lege— a career that officially came to an end this
summer when he retired — it is precisely his
easy-going, caring temperament which has
made the silver-haired Athey a legendary figure
in the Chestertown community.
When Athey came to Washington Col-
lege as its Athletic Director way back in
1948, he had big shoes to fill.
J. Thomas Kibler held the post for 26
years from 1913 to 1939. He was a rela-
tively small man standing at about 5'9",
but, as Kent County Neuys editor Hurtt
Deringer observed, he was a "giant" in
the eyes of those who knew him. Kibler
was a decorated war hero, a great
athlete, and an enormously successful
coach. He was also a local boy, bom
and raised in Kent County, and when
he left the school in 1939 to take part in
his second war effort, it is probable that
the powers at Washington College
thought they would never see his likes
again.
They were wrong.
Had they wanted to find a man like
Kibler, to replace Kibler, they could
have looked where Kibler was; young
Ed Athey left Washington College in
February of his junior year to take part
in the war.
Before leaving to join the Air Force,
Athey had already started to make quite
a name for himself as an athlete. The
Cumberland, Maryland resident spent
his freshman and sophomore years at
Frostburg College, earning six letters as
he starred in soccer, basketball and
baseball. It was during the summer of
1942 while he was working for the
Queen's Brewing Company in Cumber-
land, that Kibler approached young
Athey and convinced him to play for
Washington College.
In the fall of '42, Athey went out for
the WC basketball team coached by
Fred "Dutch" Dumschott, quickly
breaking into the starting line-up.
Though the team dominated the Mason-
Dixon Conference regular season with a
14-4 record, the war siphoned off every
starter before the March tournament.
Just two days before Athey left to serve
12
Ed Athey 's players say he is
a coach in the old time,
All- American way. Always
optimistic and encouraging, he
believes, simply enough, that sports
should he fun. It is this philosophy that
the veteran coach has instilled in
hundreds of VMC athletes.
Exercise is just one of the many activities
that Ed and Rachel Athey have shared in
their 44-year marriage. Frequently seen
pedalling around Chestertown on their
tandem bicycle, the couple is hoping that
retirement will afford more time for their
other interest— travel.
13
his country on February 22, 1943, he
married Frostburg sweetheart, Rachel
Lovell of Hagerstown.
Athey was dispatched to China
where he flew Douglas C-47s out of
Chengtu, Shanghai and Kunming. The
21-year-old went on over 200 missions,
risking his hfe to bring fuel and sup-
plies to fighter pilots.
After the war, Kibler and Athey both
returned to Chestertown, though life
was different for each of them. Kibler,
due to a heart condition, had to cut
down on his athletic contributions, and
no longer served as Athletic Director.
He instead became Dean of Men and
Special Assistant to President Daniel
Z. Gibson.
Athey, though young and healthy
enough, was no longer looking at ath-
letics (or for that matter, college) in the
same light. Now a family man, he was
older and more mature than when
he'd left. "1 started thinking, for the
first time, very heavily about what I
would do when college was over,"
says Athey. "I always knew I wanted
to be a teacher and a coach but for the
first time I was ready to work hard to
achieve that goal."
Earning "mostly A's and B's" his
senior year, Athey was an outstanding
player on the football and baseball
teams, and in basketball, his unique
two-handed set shot made him a
deadly shooting guard. The student/
athlete received his B.A. in 1947. The
following year he traveled to New
York City and Columbia University,
where he earned a masters degree in
physical education.
In Chestertown, meanwhile. College
officials were looking for a full-time
successor for Kibler. During the war
"Dutch" Dumschott and George
Ekaitis had filled in, but now the
school needed someone permanent.
"When I left Columbia Dr. (Wilcox)
Mead [then WC President] offered me
a job teaching physical education and
designing a phys. ed. major," says
Athey. "He said there was a chance of
becoming the Athletic Director."
So, without missing a beat, Wash-
ington College smoothly stepped into
its next athletic era. Unbelievably the
new era would be as stable — perhaps
more stable — than the preceeding one.
When Athey signed on in 1948, he was
back in Chestertown to stay.
"In '51 or '52 I had a chance to go to
the University of Maryland as basket-
ball coach," he recalls. "I was playing
basketball in the Eastern Shore League
with two members of Maryland's
Board of Regents and they approached
me about the vacant position. I told
them thanks, but I was happy where I
was.
High School, where he [and Kibler]
knew the athletic director, and, of
course Washington College," says Fin-
negan. "After 1 got the Washington
job, he gave me the time I needed to
build a successful program. My first
four years at the school I was 21-70,
"Back then it [the Washington Col-
lege job] was very simple and nice,"
Athey continues. "The department
was small and we all coached and
taught and had fun. As coaches, we
felt like family with the athletes."
The athletes felt the same way.
Tom Finnegan '65, currently the
Shoremen's longtime and highly suc-
cessful basketball coach, says that
Athey is "almost like a second father"
to him. "I've known Mr. Athey for 25
years, which is more than half my
life," Finnegan says. "I played soccer
goalie for him in 1964. That year we
went 11-1 and won both the Mason
Dixon and Middle Atlantic champion-
ships."
Earning trophies was gratifjring, of
course, but Finnegan says it was
Athey' s integrity which made the
coach a true "winner" to his players.
"He was a coach in the old time, ail-
American way. He is a Christian gen-
tleman in every sense of the word. As
a coach he never used profanity, was
always optimistic and encouraging,
and he developed a sense of loyalty in
his players."
Of course, Athey was as loyal to the
players as they were to him. "He was
instrumental in helping me get my
first two coaching jobs — McDonogh
but he was patient and understanding.
He allowed me the freedom to build
my basketball program according to
my standards and expectations."
Athey's loyalty to Finnegan paid
high dividends. Finnegan ultimately
brought the College its best basketball
teams since the famed "Flying Penta-
gon" squads of the 1920s; Shoremen
teams are now consistently ranked
among the nation's Division III elite.
14
and several recent players have made
all- American lists.
When Athey is on the field, the vet-
eran coach treats his players much the
way he does his own children: Ed-
ward, Ron, and Patty Sue, now all
grown and married.
of those great years. He was batting
about .420, with something like seven
home runs and 25 RBI's. Then, in the
game before Hopkins, [the most im-
portant match-up of the year] we were
playing some scrub team in an
unimportant game; we were way
Ba&kidbaU
" I
1
As the athletic program expanded, Athey
still did the little things — overseeing the
maintenance of Kibler Field (upper left)
and finding time to spend with his family
(lower left). Relaxing with mom and dad
are (left to right) Ed, Patty Sue, and Ron.
Above, a sports page from the 1947
Pegasus captures young Edward Lorain
Athey surrounded by his Shoreman
teammates.
"I really like Coach Athey's relaxed
style," explains Joe McAleer, a second
baseman on the 1987 baseball squad.
"But the thing about him that most im-
presses me is the way he cares about
people." McAleer points to one epi-
sode in the 1987 season: "Chris
Rosfelder was the starting catcher and
the best player on our team this year.
We had only played about eight
games, but he was already having one
ahead when Chris dove into first base
and broke his hand.
"We were crushed about losing our
best player, but the thing I remember
most is that that night Coach went to
Chris' apartment on campus to see
how he felt. He already knew Chris
was out for the year, but he just
wanted to cheer him up. I've never
seen a coach do that before."
Throughout his nearly four decades
at WC, Athey has certainly encouraged
a familial atmosphere among all mem-
bers of the sporting community; and
for the most part, players and coaches
responded well to it. But, even in the
best of families...
"When I first started working at
Washington," says Athey, "the football
coach was a guy named Dim Montero.
He was a very religious ItaUan Catho-
lic who didn't like to go to mass alone.
So, on Sunday mornings, he started
invading the dorms where the athletes
lived and knocking on doors. He
wanted to wake the kids up and make
them go to mass with him.
"Well, the Catholic ones would go,
but the others got sick of being awak-
ened early every Sunday and started
putting signs on their doors that said
something like: 'Thanks just the same
Coach Montero, but I'm Methodist,' or
Jewish, or whatever," Athey remem-
bers, chuckling.
Donald Chatellier, a physical educa-
tion instructor and the men's varsity
crew coach, was hired by Athey and
has worked with him for 32 years. He
also remembers the closeness between
coaches.
"When 1 first came to this school Ed
and I were the only two men in the
phys. ed. department, and we became
good personal friends, not just work-
mates. We attended the same church,
went on picnics together, and our chil-
dren were friends. Before Kent House
was constructed, we lived next door to
each other in houses that were on that
edge of the campus."
That familial atmosphere lent itself
well to the type of work Athey and the
other employees were asked to do. As
Chatellier says, "In those days, there
was no such thing as nine-to-five.
There wasn't much money involved
and we did what we did because we
loved the job and we wanted the kids
to have fun."
What they did was much more than
just coaching or teaching. They also
were janitors, forced out of necessity to
clean facilities and set up spectator
stands. They were landscapers, main-
taining fields. And they were busdriv-
ers, transporting athletes.
That last activity could sometimes
be the most difficult one. Baltimore
Evening Sun sports editor Bill Tanton
wrote a column about Athey's retire-
ment in which he told the story of a
1956 Mount St. Mary's basketball
game and the snow^ ride home.
"'We were traveling back to school
in two cars and I was driving the lead
car,'" Tanton quoted Athey as saying.
"One of our players, Ronnie Sisk, was
driving the second car.
"I thought I saw Ronnie's headlights
in the rear-view mirror all the way to
Chestertown. When I got home Rachel
told me Ronnie had called to tell her
his car had run off the road into a
15
snowbank on Rt. 15 just as you leave
Mount St. Mary's.
"The State Police drove the boys to
Baltimore. I got in my car and drove
all the way back to Baltimore in the
snow to pick them up. It was about 4
o'clock in the morning when I met
them. They were sitting in a White
Coffee Pot drinking coffee."
Wearing a variety of hats as a college
coach in a small town was not all bad,
though. Athey does remember times
when limited facilities were an advan-
tage.
"A few years ago 1 ran
into a guy who used to
coach a basketball team we
plaved all the time in the
'50s/' says Athey. "We
were talking about how
Washington College used
to beat his team every time
they came to Chestertown.
I couldn't figure out why
that was so. But he said it
was easy enough to explain.
"When his team came
here we put them up in this
old hotel called the Voshell
House. All their players
would be up the whole
night in there because the
place, he said, didn't have
anv heat. They were too
cold to sleep," Athey grins.
"Finally they started bring-
ing blankets to Chester-
town with them."
For a while it seemed as
though the sporting life at
Washington College would
stay simple and the good
times would last forever.
Athey says President
Gibson — at the school's
helm for so manv vears —
stressed academics, keep-
ing athletics low-key.
While other schools were
emphasizing "money" sports like foot-
ball, or working toward notoriety in bas-
ketball, the Shoremen became powers in
the relativelv small world of lacrosse.
Athey didn't particularly like or dis-
like the "small is better" athletic poUcy
of his college; he just liked sports. Win
or lose, big or small, he loved to play.
Playing is all that ever mattered.
"Ed has a lot of boyish enthusiasm
for life," says Ron Sisk '56, a close per-
sonal friend and former Shoremen bas-
ketball player. "He loves to have fun.
and that's what athletics are about for
him. I've spent a few Christmas' with
him and his family and you should see
Ed on Christmas morning. When the
tovs are brought out he's more excited
than any of the children."
Somewhere along the Une, the ath-
letic director's job, even at tiny Wash-
ington, stopped being like Christmas.
Athletic programs all over the country,
both collegiate and pro, were booming
in the '60s and '70s. As sports became
more prominent, so did the need to
regulate them. Paperwork became a
mainstay on the desks of all athletic di-
rectors and Athe/s was no exception.
"I never even had a secretary until 1
moved into the new building," he
says. "I used to like to shoot baskets or
hit baseballs at lunch time. Now, there
hasn't been a night in years when 1
haven't taken work home with me.
"You become an athletic director be-
cause you love sports, and you want to
coach them. Somewhere along the
Une, though, vour administrative du-
ties overwhelm the time you spend
coaching, and you lose touch with the
aspect of the job you value most."
But despite such demands, Athey
has consistently taken leadership roles
in athletic organizations well outside
the Eastern Shore community. He has
served twice as president of the U.S.
Intercollegiate Lacrosse Association,
and of the Mason Dixon Conference.
Currently, the 65-year-old is President
of the Man,'land Hall of Fame. "He's
the best president we've ever had,"
says Bill Tanton, Hall of Fame commit-
tee member.
Now, after 39 years on
the job, Ed Athey is retir-
ing. "My wife and I still
have our health," he says,
"and we would like to
spend time together, travel
and just slow douTi."
Indeed, he still does
have his health. At 6'0"
and 200 lbs., Athey re-
mains trim and athletic-
looking. His short-
cropped hair retains just a
hint of the black it once
was, and his agUe stride
shows his total recovery
from a hip replacement
operation undergone just
two years ago. The sum-
mer months found him ac-
tively golfing and playing
tennis and Softball.
Athey won't be leaving
Washington College alto-
gether, since, like Kibler,
he will continue to coach
baseball. SHll, for the first
time in four decades he
won't be in charge of ath-
letics on the Shore.
Another sporting era has
come to an end at Wash-
ington College. In his 39
years, Athey has seen
football and track die at
WC; he's seen lacrosse and soccer
borne into popularity; he's seen the
women's sports program multiply;
and he's seen the birth first of crew,
and later, of swimming.
But throughout these years of
change, he has remained a member of
the old school who thinks, simply
enough, that sports should be fun; a
belief he has inculcated in hundreds of
athletes.
It is this legacy that Edward Lorain
Athey leaves behind.
16
ALUMNI PROFILE
She Digs For Tell-ing
Artifacts
by Sue De Pasquale '87
Photograph hy J. M. Fragomeni '88
When the time came for Judy Thompson
MiragHuolo '67 to choose a college, she was
overcome by a restlessness that set her looking
well beyond the Tennessee home she'd known
all her life. "I was convinced that somewhere out
there was the wide world," she says. "I knew
there had to be something beyond Memphis."
Literally memorizing the tattered pages of her
guide to colleges, Thompson finally opted for
Washington College ("The school seemed so
quaint in the pictures") and immediately fell in
love with Chestertown and Maryland's Eastern
Shore. But her travels didn't end there. In the 20
years that have passed since graduation, the an-
thropologist has realized just how "wide" the
world really is.
Her resume reads like an exotic travel guide,
and when the soft-spoken 40-year-old talks about
her experiences in the field, her self-effacing
manner can't mask the resemblance her life has
borne to an Indiana Jones adventure film.
Excavations in pre-Ayatollah Iran
meant spending months living from
the back of a Land Rover and fighting
governmental opposition; the Andean
Mountains in Peru provided the back-
drop against which she wrote her doc-
toral dissertation; and an "intermi-
nable" three-year stay in Saudi Arabia
gave firsthand testament to the bleak
existence women face in Muslim cul-
ture.
In the midst of her treks, Thompson
married Italian contractor Luigi Mi-
ragHuolo and they now have two chil-
dren: Antonio, 7, and Julia, 5. Once
the children came along, "It wasn't
quite so easy anymore," to pursue
archeological interests, Miragliuolo
says. Nevertheless, in 1985 she made
a discovery in Syria which could have
a tremendous impact on archeological
study in the Middle Eastern region.
Throughout Syria, the grassy plains
are dotted by "tells," — large mounds
that form over ancient cities which
were abandoned thousands of years
ago. While working in conjunction
with a study group funded by UCLA,
Miragliuolo examined aerial photo-
graphs which showed a shadowy cir-
cumference outlining one particular
tell. If the anthropologist could un-
cover artifacts under that perimeter,
she would be able to establish it as the
circumscribing wall to a very sizeable
city; a city inhabitated by a Hurrian
culture which historians believed ex-
isted, but had not yet been able to find.
Once the UCLA group left to go
back to the States in the summer of
1985, Miragliuolo made daily visits to
the dig site. She paced off from the
fell's center in each direction, and then
chose random 10-meter square areas
from which to gather surface rubble.
(Surface remains are a good indication
that artifacts will be found directly be-
17
neath the ground.) The first square
area yielded nothing. The second was
the same. But her third effort paid off;
MiragUuolo gathered over 850 pieces
of pottery and debris. "It was a tre-
mendous amount of work."
Heartened by her findings, the an-
thropologist left her family in Peru the
following summer, and returned to the
site to work again with the UCLA
group. This time they excavated the
ground beneath her surface finds. Af-
ter workmen took off the first layer of
earth with shovels, Miragliuolo and
her colleagues began the painstaking
digging process, first using troughs,
and eventually resorting to dental
picks.
What they found was "terribly excit-
ing," reports the anthropologist: "A
huge tomb that had been robbed in an-
tiquity, with artifacts all in the same
period as the tell." If future digs can
uncover tablets with Hurrian inscrip-
tions, as she predicts they will, the
archeologists will indeed be able to
confirm that the Hurrians — in addition
to the Summarians and the Hittites —
were ancient inhabitants of that Near
Eastern region.
When Miragliuolo speaks about
these excavations her face grows ani-
mated and her phrases glide by in a
not-quite-identifiable accent. A far cry
from her parents' Tennessee southern
drawl, Miragliuolo says her speech has
been affected by 20 years immersed in
the cultures of the Middle East, Far
East, Latin America and Europe. Add
to that a native Italian husband, and a
home base outside Rome, and it's easy
to see why, as she explains with an
apologetic smile, she's had a hard time
teaching her kids colloquial American
expressions. "The children have
learned their English from me," she
says, "and they get laughed at by their
cousins in Memphis."
Miragliuolo married husband Luigi
eight years ago while she was doing
research in Iran and he was overseeing
construction of a Pakistan road system.
"We met in the middle of nowhere,"
she says. Currently engineering the
construction of an airport in the Ama-
zon, his work has coupled with hers to
keep the family continually uprooted.
Such a lifestyle can be trying, Mi-
ragliuolo says, and she points as evi-
dence to one particular wintry episode
when Luigi was working in Damascus.
Determined to join him, she closed up
the family home near Rome and
herded her children, 90-year-old
mother-in-law and their baggage onto
an airplane. Unfortunately the Damas-
cus airport got fogged in and the plane
was forced to land in Amman, Jordan.
Rather than put the passengers up in a
hotel overnight as Miragliuolo had ex-
walks along the Chester River. "I
thought I was going to go into Interna-
tional Relations at first," she recalls,
"but after my first course in anthropol-
ogy with Maggie Horsley, I knew,
'This is home.'"
The College didn't offer courses in
archeology, but since Miragliuolo
I
pected, the airline brought in a dilapi-
dated school bus for transportation.
Without enough seats, the boarders
spilled over into the aisles, and there
was no heat to take the edge off the
December chill. The ride was sup-
posed to take three hours, at the most,
four.
"There were no bathrooms and no
food. There I was with a mother-in-
law, two kids, five big boxes, and a cat.
The bus kept breaking down — and 13
hours later we arrived in Damascus."
But despite it all, the anthropologist
says she loves being constantly on the
move. "My sister never got out of
Memphis. She married right out of
high school and is the typical prosper-
ous American suburban housewife.
She leads a beautiful life, but I just
could never be that settled. And I
wouldn't want to."
Miragliuolo's life was once more
conventional. During her years at
Washington College in the late 60s, she
worked as news editor of the Washing-
ton College Elm, and had an active so-
cial life of beach parties, dances, and
earned her degree in three years, she
affirmed her interest by taking sum-
mer courses in that subject at the Uni-
versity of Memphis. After graduating
she married an Air Force man whom
she'd met while taking the American
Foreign Service Exam. She worked for
a year as a congressional aide in Wash-
ington D.C. before going on to pursue
a graduate degree in anthropology at
American University.
After studying the work conducted
in Iran by an American University pro-
fessor specializing in Old World
Archeology, Miragliuolo chose that
subject for her doctoral work. When
four years passed and he continually
failed to write up a grant proposal, she
took the situation into her own hands
and submitted the proposal to the Na-
tional Science Foundation.
To her surprise, they funded it. Only
later did the WC alumna realize she
had asked for "a ridiculously small
amount," by basing her cost estimates
on a pre-oil boom economy. "Once we
got to Iran we found prices 30 times
higher than they'd been during my
18
adviser's day. We lived on less than a
shoe-string budget."
For a while, she and her husband
slept in the back of their Land Rover; a
situation that grew uncomfortable as
the weather got colder. "There were
some mornings when 1 had to break
the ice off my contacts just to put them
in/' she remembers. To make matters
worse, her husband came down with
hepatitis, and she was forced to leave
him in Tehran for four months while
she set off for the province of Baluchis-
tan with a government representative/
translator to do field work.
"There were some
mornings I had to break
the ice off my contact
lenses to put them in. "
Living conditions improved eventu-
ally when they moved into a structure
built by the Peace Corps. "The accom-
modations consisted of one room in a
mud hut, and a courtyard with a
pump outside, as well as an outdoor
bathroom — a hole with two ceramic
footprints." For five months they slept
on army cots in the courtyard, "except
during sandstorms." Despite the aus-
tere conditions, Miragliuolo has only
fond memories of that period: "1 loved
it. I look back on it as the best time of
my life, when 1 was doing my [most
exciting work]."
Unfortunately, the Iranian govern-
ment repeatedly stepped in to compli-
cate her studies. Her first problem
was the government translator who
was both surly and unwilling to fulfill
his fieldwork duties. "One night he
drank too much and got just a little too
obnoxious," she explains. "Another
archeologist defended me and humili-
ated the guy, so he packed up and left
in the middle of the night." It took a
personal visit to the Iranian Minister of
Culture on Miragliuolo's part to iron
out the problem.
The next snafu arose when she be-
gan observing the Baluchistan no-
mads. As part of her role as an eth-
noarcheologist she had to visit their
tent encampments to question them
about their grazing customs and water
use. Government officials found this
personal contact with its citizens suspi-
cious, and expelled Miragliuolo from
the province. Her entire research de-
sign had to be restructured; months
later she discovered that she'd been
put on a government list that would
mean her arrest if she ever returned.
Miragliuolo did manage to gather
enough evidence to support her hy-
pothesis; however, she didn't complete
her doctoral dissertation until several
years later in Peru. By that time, her
first marriage had ended, she'd spent a
"wonderful" year in the Philippines,
and had married Luigi and started a
family.
"All of a sudden, it wasn't so much
fun anymore," she says bluntly, "with
carrying diaper bags and strollers... the
babies crying on all-night flights." But
things only got worse. Luigi's job took
the family to Riad, Saudi Arabia, ("It
looks a lot like Los Angeles but with-
out any women," she explains), and
for three years Miragliuolo endured a
stifling existence that still makes her
shudder when she thinks about it.
The feminist movement which had
swept the Western World by the 1970s
had no effect on a Saudi Arabian cul-
ture which mandates that women re-
main in the home. Not only were ca-
reers prohibited, but females couldn't
be seen in restaurants or theaters, Mi-
ragliuolo says. Early during their stay,
she innocently accompanied her hus-
band and toddler son to the town
park, only to be stopped by a religious
leader with his long stick, ordering,
"Madame, Out!"
"My husband would come home
tired from a long day at work, and I'd
been alone all day with two babies. I'd
say, 'I've got to get out! Take me to the
supermarket.'" Going to the grocery
store quickly became a regular nightly
outing, whether the couple needed
anything or not.
Miragliuolo knew no other women
in the city, so when she got the chance
to participate in a women's club, she
jumped at the opportunity in despera-
tion. Even the topic of the group's
latest discussion couldn't discourage
her: "How to Apply Make-up in a Des-
ert Environment." But before she
could attend her first meeting, the
club had been officially disbanded by
order of the King.
As months passed, she grew steadily
more dispirited, declining even to go
shopping. "After three years, I under-
stood why women in Saudi Arabia are
the way they are. I had become an
Arab woman, so dependent on men
that I'd lost my own volition," she
says. Eventually her husband finished
his job, and the family moved back to
their home in Italy, but Miragliuolo
says it took some time before she re-
covered her sense of self-worth. "You
don't realize how slowly you sink into
a morass like that until you get out of
it."
Her quiet, inner-strength was put to
the test yet again when Luigi, 20 years
her elder, recently suffered a heart at-
tack. He recovered and returned to
work but the couple has decided that
it's time for him to retire, so Judy is
currently looking for a position which
will allow her to be the family's sole
breadwinner. "It's hard to get started
in a career at age 40," she admits.
As much as the Miragliuolos enjoy
moving around and exploring un-
known cultures, they've decided to re-
settle in the United States. Though
Luigi would prefer staying in Italy,
and Judy absolutely "loves" that coun-
try, she says, "There's no future for the
children [there]. ..and our first priority
is the children. The only place for
higher education is the United States."
The WC alum spent several weeks
jobhunting in the Washington D.C.
area this summer. She hopes to locate
a teaching spot or a government posi-
tion in the field of international eco-
nomic development or intercultural re-
lations, since finding an archeological
position that would pay enough to
support a family of four is a virtual
impossibility.
"There aren't many calls for arche-
ologists in the want ads," Miragliuolo
accedes, and her voice can't conceal
disappointment. For now, she'll put
her field work "on the back burner,"
but she says that foreign travel is too
much a part of her blood to give it up
for long. She'd like to return to the tell
digsite in Syria, and if the political cli-
mate ever clears up, she says, "I'd love
to go back into Iran, Pakistan and Iraq.
I have a lot of problems with Muslim
ideology but I keep getting drawn
back. I'm fascinated by it and I want to
understand [it]."
Even today, at age 40, Miragliuolo
says her Tenneseean parents can't get
used to her yen for world travel. "They
rue the day that they ever let me go to
Washington College," she laughs.
"That was their big mistake."
19
ABOUT TOWN
Karl And Irma Miller:
Tillers Of Good Will
by Sue De Pasquale '87
Photographs by ].M. Fragomeni '88
Karl and Irma Miller are matter-of-fact when it
comes to talking about their gardening projects in
Chestertown. In addition to maintaining the
grounds and interior of their centuries-old River
House on Water Street, they tend the presidential
Hynson-Ringgold gardens for Washington Col-
lege, and are helping to implement the College's
campus landscaping plan. For several years
they led efforts to beautify the Chestertown
Park, a job they've since turned over to the
Chestertown Garden Club. Officially, that is.
At 84 and 81, they see nothing unusual
about a workload that keeps them
bending, hoeing, digging and watering
for hours upon hours nearly every day
of the week. But ask people half their
age — even a quarter — who know
them, and their energy earns a respect
that borders almost on awe.
"They are really incredible people.
They can outwork anybody," says
Mary Hamilton, College Grounds
Supervisor, who began working in the
Hynson-Ringgold garden with the
couple in 1985. Echoes student
employee Chas. Foster '88, "They
work non-stop.. .Mr. Miller will always
be going up ladders or carrying the
heavy stuff and I'll have to say, 'No,
no, let me do that."
Foster remembers one morning last
spring, when Irma Miller announced
that window-cleaning would be the
project for the day at the River House.
Armed with towels and cleaner, the
two men purposefully climbed the oak
stairs, with Foster all the while
wondering how they'd ever be able to
reach the outside of the massive
windows hanging four stories in the
air.
His question was answered seconds
later when Karl Miller threw open the
first window, climbed through it and
then turned around to perch precari-
ously on the windowsill which
overlooked Water Street far below.
Remembers Foster with a chuckle,
"There he was, hanging out over the
street; it just surprised me, for some-
one that age."
When Mary Hamilton was suffering
from a back ailment several months
ago, she began complaining one day to
Irma Miller while the two women
were working in the Hynson-Ringgold
gardens. Since the elderly woman
suffers from osteoporosis she empa-
20
K
arl and Irma Miller nurture the
College's students as lovingly as
the Hynson-Ringgold gardens.
Young adults who know the elderly
couple say they have an uncanny ability
to bridge the generation gap.
IH
The Millers spend several hours each
summer-time afternoon working here in
the gardens of the Hynson-Ringgold
House. It has become a showcase for
shrubbery, perennials and annuals.
21
thized; but in her no-nonsense manner,
she cautioned against giving in to self-
pity: "I put up with it every day. You
just have to get out there and put up
with it." For Hamilton, Irma's
example is inspirational: "She's always
in pain, but she just doesn't let it
bother her... They' re both my mentors.
They keep putting themselves out and
never asking for anything back."
That spirit was what led the couple
to Chestertown back in 1968. After
Karl retired from his job with a
Baltimore roofing corporation, the
Millers began looking around "for a
good retirement project." Long
interested in historic preservation and
restoration, the couple combed the
East Coast, "from Newport to
Newbury and everyrwhere in be-
tween," says Irma, before they
happened upon the historic River
House on Water Street. "It was just
crying for help," she recalls.
The house and grounds had been
deeded to the Maryland Historical
Trust in 1967, but the organization was
unable to raise the money for restora-
tion until the Millers came along. "We
paid for the interior restoration and
made it a gift to the Trust," explains
Karl, "and for that we have a life
tenancy."
Irma remembers the first years of
renovation as a hectic time, when
architects, contractors and laborers
were constantly in and out. The
exterior renovation involved the
removal of a 1912 addition and
recreation of an earlier porch on the
river facade, as well as the removal of
a Greek Revival porch on the street
facade. The grounds, overgrown with
weeds and vines, also required
extensive work.
As the restoration efforts ended and
life settled back down, the Millers
realized they could use another set of
(younger) hands around the house —
primarily for maintenance work, but
also, as it turns out, to ensure their
continued vitality. Peter Boggs '72
became the first Washington College
student to work at River House. When
he graduated, he passed the job on to a
lacrosse-playing classmate, thus
establishing a tradition of student
involvement that continues today.
Though the Millers expect their
student employees to work hard — to
truly "earn" their pay — it's clear that
what concerns them most is the well-
being of the young adults themselves.
When Irma and Karl talk about the
college students they've come to know
over the years, their voices warm up
and they speak with a grandparently
sense of possess! veness... and pride.
"There was Doug Lippoldt '79. He
was a Fulbright scholar and a German
major.. .a nice, nice boy. I think he went
on to the Peace Corps," says Irma,
looking over to her husband for
confirmation, as the two sit in their
The Millers combed the
East Coast before happen-
ing upon Water Street's
historic River House.
backyard gardens. "Oh, and the Bate
boys. One became a writer in Maine
and the other went to law school in
Baltimore."
Karl cuts in, "What about John
Wagner [currently Director of
Waterfront Activities]. 'Little John.'
He's one of our boys — one of the best.'
They continue to list names and ac-
complishments, the phrase, "One of
our boys," surfacing again and again.
"We keep up with them," explains
Irma, "That's one of the nice things
about settling in a small town with a
college. They come back and bring
their girlfriends, then their wives and
then their kids. It's just like having a
niece or nephew around."
At first, the Millers "inherited" a
string of lacrosse-playing student
helpers. "Somehow that got broken
up," laughs Irma. "Now we've got
artists." When art major Chas. Foster
(a free-spirited 21 -year-old known for
his unconventionality) showed up for
work last winter, he says the couple
accepted him without blinking an
eye — except for his name. "They said,
'We can't get used to calling you
Chas.,' so they call me 'Charles'
instead."
The inclination toward formality
ends there; young adults who know
the Millers agree that the elderly
couple has an almost uncanny ability
to bridge the generation gap. "In one
way they're kind of like grandparents.
They're constantly feeding me, and
Mrs. Miller even gave me some of Mr.
Miller's old clothes to wear — a nice
suit with a jacket I've worn a lot of
times, and some long underwear,"
says Foster.
"But they are also closer to being
friends," he continues. Over break-
fasts and lunches throughout the
spring, the threesome engaged in
discussions on subjects including
poverty and racism in Chestertown.
Says Foster, "They would always let
me have my own opinion."
Though the topics have changed
since the early 1970s, John Wagner '73
remembers similar dialogues. "The
best part of my employment with the
Millers was the lunches," says the
Director of Waterfront Activities.
After a morning spent cutting the
grass, weeding the gardens, or waxing
River House's "beautiful hardwood
floors," he recalls, Mrs. Miller's iced
tea and sandwiches were a welcome
sight.
Like other WC alums, Wagner is
touched by the Miller's selflessness.
"They're interested in improving the
quality of life for everybody," he says,
pointing to the Chestertown Park as an
apt example. The Park "had always
been a mess, with just some grass, a
couple of bushes and the fountain,"
until the Millers joined the Chester-
town Garden Club and led a beautifi-
cation campaign.
Their first step was to bring in a
landscape architect, who suggested
putting in brick walkways, flowerbeds
and ornamental shrubs. The Millers
and the Garden Club Committee did
their best to carry out the profes-
22
sional's plans, but success wasn't
immediate. "The first year, the town
kids drove their bicycles through the
petunia beds," recalls Wagner.
However, the committee's persis-
tence paid off, and today the Town
Park is a colorful and well-tended
community gathering spot.
The Millers officially ended their
tenure on the Garden Club Committee
in 1983, but the arrival of Douglass
and Libby Cater in Chestertown meant
they weren't idle for long.
When the First Lady assembled a
group of volunteers to aid in restoring
the interior and exterior of the historic
Hynson-Ringgold House, Karl and
Irma took responsibility for the lawns
and gardens. As Karl remembers it,
"The place was a jungle. There were
dead trees and vines everywhere."
The Caters wanted space for enter-
taining large groups of students and
college visitors, so the Millers removed
a hedge of boxwoods that had divided
the spacious lawns. Straggly rose
bushes were the next to go. "That was
no place for a rose garden under
magnolia trees," Irma says, shaking
her head. At Douglass Cater's request,
lilac bushes and hollyhocks were
added, and a Chippendale bench
(Libby Cater's favorite) found a new
home beneath the boughs of a shady
willow oak.
Washington College's budget
doesn't fund the Hynson-Ringgold
Garden, and the new ornamental trees.
shrubs and flowers weren't cheap. As
part of an ingenius fund raising effort,
the Millers organized an outdoor
cocktail party once the greenery was in
place. "Each tree and shrub had a cost
on it," explains Irma. Guests could
"buy" the planting of their choice.
Over $8,000 was raised.
When the Millers
launched efforts to
restore the Hynson-
Ringgold gardens, says
Karl, "The place was a
jungle. There were
dead trees and vines
everywhere. "
Restoring the Hynson-Ringgold
Gardens was a time-consuming labor,
and maintaining them is no simple
task, either. Though the College
Maintenance Department keeps the
grass trimmed, it is Karl and Irma
Miller (with the help of Mary Hamil-
ton), who spend several hours each
day, pruning, weeding, and watering
under the hot summer sun.
Attests Libby Cater, "After an
hour I'm utterly exhausted, but they're
still going strong. " The First Lady
says she's confident leaving the
gardening work in the hands of the
Millers. "My only job," she says,
"has been to pinch the pansies."
Mrs. Cater is particularly pleased that
]ohn Wagner 73 (center) remembers his
work at the River House with fondness.
"The best part of my employment, " he
jokes, "was the lunches. "
the Millers use the Hynson-Ringgold
Garden as a gathering place for plants
that got their starts in other area
gardens. Pointing to a cluster of
ferns which first grew at River House,
Mrs. Cater explains, "CXir flowers are
related to people all over Chester-
town and Kent County. It gives us a
great feeling of community and
history."
While Karl and Irma spend the
morning hours maintaining the
lovely River House lawns, and the
long afternoon hours toiling in the
Hynson-Ringgold Garden, Karl also
serves one afternoon each week as a
valuable consultant to the campus
landscaping committee.
The Millers are uncomfortable
receiving praise for their service to
the community. In their eyes, the
green-thumb work is simply some-
thing that must be done, so they do it.
But their acquaintances see it differ-
ently.
"In a ' me, me, me world,' "
says John Wagner, "it's refreshing
to run into people genuinely
interested in doing things for the
community's sake — not for
awards, not for influence from the
mayor, not for recognition...
they're just kind, generous, giving
people."
23
WASHINGTON COLLEGE
Alumni Reporter
Revitalizing
Alumni
Chapters
There is a saying — "You are a WC
student only a few years, but you
are a WC alum forever."
Unfortunately, once leaving the
Chestertown limits and starting down
that road called "Real Life," many
alumni find themselves permanently
cut off from their College friends — and
Washington College becomes nothing
but a memory.
But that needn't happen.
Local alumni chapters offer a chance
for alumni, neighbors and friends to
keep in touch with each other and to
stay abreast of campus activities. They
provide opportunities for continuing
education programs, participation in
administrative programs, and career
networking. And, in the Washington
College tradition, these chapters have
some good parties. Those who once
waded through beer in the basement
of East Hall have recently toasted each
other at the Rayburn Building and Mt.
Vernon. Old friends have been re-
united and new friendships begun.
For those of you who would like to
actively participate in your local com-
munities, the chapters and their presi-
dents are listed below. If there is not
an active chapter in your neighbor-
hood and you would like to organize
one, the Alumni Association and the
Alumni Department are anxious to of-
fer their support. Please contact Pat
Trams, Director of Alumni Affairs,
Washington College, Chestertown,
Maryland, 21620. Or call (toll-free)
800-331-5842.
ALUMNI CHAPTERS
Annapolis: Leslie Tice White '74 (647-
3304)
Baltimore: Jack Bacon '52 (828-8770)
and Kathy Wurzbacher '83 (828-4338)
D.C. area: Arlene Lee Hawkridge '83
(301-570-0112)
Kent & Queen Anne's counties: Bob
Moore '59 (348-5812)
Mardel: Lou Smith'49 (301-749-4235)
Philadelphia: Phil Heaver '83 (667-
0906)
South Jersey: Glen Beebe '81 (585-3489)
Correction
Suzanne Horn Duckworth '52 was
mistakenly identified as "Susan,"
a member of the class of 1951, in
the profile of her featured in the
Summer 1987 issue. We sincerely
regret the error.
The Annual Kent-Queen Anne's Chapter
Crab Feast.
Alumni Citation
Nominations Sought
The Alumni Citation Awards
program was created as a means
of formally identifying and recogniz-
ing outstanding alumni. This award is
the highest honor the Alumni Associa-
tion can bestow upon its members.
The award shall be given to an
alumnus /alumna who has made a sig-
nificant conribution to, or accomplish-
ment in his/her chosen field of en-
deavor or in community public serv-
ice.
The awards wdll be presented at
Commencement in May. Nominations
are due at the Aluitmi House by Octo-
ber 15.
24
Hall ofFamers
Washington College will be in-
ducting eight former athletes
into its Athletic Hall of Fame on
Friday, October 16, and paying tribute
to three former great teams.
Hall of Fame inductees are John
Bankert '25, Lee Curry '61, Ellis Dwyer
'35, Turner Hastings '48 (deceased),
Dorsey ("Skip") Rudolph '62, John
Sloan '66, Louis Thibodeau '11 (de-
ceased), and Hobart Tignor '36 (de-
ceased).
Also honored will be the 1929-30
baseball team, the 1951 lacrosse team,
and the 1964 soccer team.
Tickets ($15 per person) may be pur-
chased at the door, but advance reser-
vations would be appreciated. Send
your checks, made payable to The
Washington College Athletic Hall of
Fame, to the Alumni House, Washing-
ton College, Chestertown, MD 21620.
Oldest Alumna Dies
At Age 99
Pearl Griffin Stewart '05 died on
June 11, 1987 at the home of her
daughter in East Falmouth, Massachu-
setts, 19 days before her 100th birth-
day.
Graveside services were conducted
in Baltimore on June 15. Stewart, a na-
tive of Denton in Caroline County, was
the College's oldest living alumna and
had remained actively involved with
the College.
At Washington College, Stewart was
the president of her class and valedic-
torian speaker at the 1905 commence-
ment. She was awarded the Alumni
Medal for the highest average in her
senior normal classes, as well as a
prize for the "neatest room." After
graduation, she taught high school
Latin in Maryland for five years, and
married the late M. Melvin Stewart at
age 28. When he was named director
of an insurance company, she and her
husband moved to Harrisburg, PA.
There she became involved in civic
affairs, establishing the Girl Scouts of
America in Harrisburg and contribut-
ing time to women's clubs, civic
groups, libraries, and churches. She
was president of the Friends of the Li-
brary and helped begin the Great
Books program in three Pennsylvania
counties. The recognition of which she
was most proud was bestowed upon
her in 1953 — "The Military Order of
the Purple Heart" — presented for
10,000 hours of U.S.O. and military as-
sistance inWorld War II and the Ko-
rean War.
Throughout most of her lifetime,
Stewart persuaded many young
people to attend her "beloved college,"
and she tried to get back to campus
every year at reunion time. In 1954,
Stewart was honored with the
College's Alumni Citation in recogni-
tion of her civic leadership. In 1976
she established the Pearl Griffin Ste-
wart Drama Award, given annually to
the graduating senior who has made
an outstanding contribution to the Col-
lege through dramatic and speaking
ability. In 1980 and 1985, at her 75th
and 80th class reunions, respectively,
the College paid special tributes to its
oldest alumna. A magnolia tree was
planted on campus in her honor.
Stewart was always a vigorous sup-
porter of education, and possessed a
keen interest in history and a particu-
lar zest for life that kept her active in
her later years. She returned to college
in 1975 (at age 88) when the University
of New Hampshire began offering
summer courses for people 65 years of
age and older. She also participated in
several Elderhostel programs.
Stewart is survived by a daughter,
seven grandchildren, and 11 great
grandchildren.
PHOTOMICHELE BALZE Hi
The D.C . Alumni Chapter hosted a gala
evening at Mt. Vernon in April.
All Invited To
Athey Tribute
A celebration to honor retiring
Athletic Director Ed Athey will
be held on Saturday, November 14.
Contact the Student Affairs Office, at
778-2800, ext. 210, for time and ticket
information.
Trustee Emeritus
Dies
A retired consulting engineer and
trustee emeritus at WC,
W. Howard Corddry '08, died on May
28, 1987.
He was a loyal supporter of the Col-
lege for many years, with a keen inter-
est in the academic status of the Col-
lege. He began serving on the Board
of Visitors and Governors in 1961.
Corddry was associated with one of
the largest engineering firms in the
country — Gannett Fleming Corddry
and Carpenter, and was president and
director of that firm upon his retire-
ment. For his distinction in the field
of engineering, he received an Alumni
Citation from the College.
He is survived by a daughter, Eliza-
beth Corddry Jones, of Lebanon, NJ.
25
WASHINGTON COLLEGE
Class Notes
A.\J Chesapeake College Press has re-
leased Gilbert Byron's Chesapeake Season: A
Coz'e journal, a collection of about 100 of
his columns. This paperback covers the
years between 1959 and 1977 and is sepa-
rated into four chapters — one for each sea-
son. Byron is the author of two novels and
seven volumes of poetry, with "more to
come."
zL\D Rebecca Brown Owens, the first
woman president of the Alumni Associa-
tion, retired from teaching in 1964. She
lives in Port Charlotte, FL and volunteers
her extensive knowledge in the field of ger-
ontology as honorary life member of the
board for the Council on Aging. She was
honored by the County Commissioners for
her services in promoting programs for the
elderly. A building in the Community
Center that serves senior citizens was dedi-
cated in her name.
John Bankert will be mducted into the Ath-
letic Hall of Fame at WC on October 16th.
.^OThe Alumni Association will honor
the returning members of this class at their
60th reunion. May 20th and 21st.
A. Crawford ("Dinty") Moore, WC's first
tennis captain, is still playing tennis regu-
larly. He lives with his wife, Rebecca, in
Houston, TX.
The first recipient of the Charles E. Smith
Scholarship was named at William Penn
High School on June 4, 1987. This full
scholarship is awarded by Goldey Beacom
College to a graduating senior in recogni-
tion of Smith's 44 years of educational
service as teacher and principal at William
Penn High in Newcastle, DE.
J iRetired English and history teacher
Geraldine Harwood Biles of Amber, PA, is
president of the Fort Washmgton Historical
Society. The Society and the museum at
Clifton House study local history and work
toward its preservation. She says that the
long hours "keep one out of mischief."
This grandmother of five has traveled in
the United States, South Africa, Egypt and
the British Isles, and hopes to get to France.
k3v)Warren D. Johnson '33 has written a
book entitled Go/Zi/, It's been Fun, or The
Memoirs of a Turkey Farmer. Classmate
Phil Wingate offers this review: "All who
think that the memoirs of a turkey farmer
are sure to be dull stuff are in for a shock
when they read this book. First, it is writ-
ten in a style which Hemingway and
Mencken would approve; it is as crisp and
clear as an October day. Second, this tur-
key farmer is no turkey. He made enough
money to fly his personal planes all over
the U.S. and to hunt in all the states with
good hunting. It has the ring of truth on
every page, and by golly, it sure does
sound like it must have been fun." If your
bookstore doesn't have Golly, It's Been
Fun, write directly to Warren Johnson at
his home: Turkey Farm, 3003 Barren Road,
Oxford, PA 19363.
J^^ Dr. Ivon E. Culver and his wife
moved to Rorida in 1980. His "hobby is
Ruth Eckerd Hall"... a four-acre, 2,182 seat
performing arts center. The auditorium,
heart of the Richard B. Baumgardner com-
plex in Clearwater, is home of the noted
Rorida Symphony Orchestra and hosts na-
tional and international cultural perform-
ances and art exhibitions. Dr. Culver
serves the Performing Arts Cultural The-
atre as tour guide, computer operator for
marketing, membership and educational
departments, and in development and
communications. He was honored by
PACT as Volunteer of the Year 1986-87 at a
dinner attended by 1,000 volunteers and
guests. Dr. Culver concludes, "There's still
life in the old boy yet."
\J / Katherine Sheppard Kilby of Bridg-
etown, NJ, reports that her husband Ray
Kilby '39, who was inducted into the WC
Hall of Fame posthumously last October,
had organized several charity golf tourna-
ments during his lifetime. On May 13, the
Holly Hills Country Club renamed its hos-
pital fund raiser The Ray Kilby Golf Classic
in honor of the man whose leadership cre-
ated one of the most successful tourna-
ment/fund raisers in South Jersey.
v30 You'' 50th reunion will be celebrated
in Chestertown on May 20th and 21st. The
Alumni Office asks that each class member
contact a classmate and make plans to meet
again on campus. For help locating old
friends, call 800-445-5526 (In-State), 800-
331-5842 (Out-of-state).
Alma Dean AUfather and her husband,
Kenneth, have raised two sons. She is the
owner/operator of The House of Frames
and Paintings, a gallery in Columbia, SC,
and a social worker for the Epworth
Children's Home. The Altfathers live part-
time in Florida.
"After 32 years of instigating interreligious
dialogue, provoking police-community co-
operation, stirring up equality of job op-
portunity, undermining adult-youth hos-
tilities and generally crusading for de-Na-
zification," Charles "Iggy" Benham has re-
tired as Director for National Conference of
Christians and Jews. He lives in Wilbra-
ham, MA, and was there when Lee Horow-
itz '38 celebrated his 70th "with appropri-
ate ceremonies."
William F. Doering retired in 1984 after 43
years in Federal Civil Service. At the U.S.
Foreign Agricultural Service he was a spe-
ciahst in international trade of agricultural
products. A "wine hobbyist" and "ama-
teur chef" for over 40 years, he has been a
contributor to wine trade/gourmet publi-
cations and treasurer of the International
Wine and Food Society in Washington, DC.
He is a jazz fan as well.
Lorraine Pink Evans resides in Cambridge,
MD. She has two sons, Edward and
Stephen.
Philip A. and Margaret Bell Hickman have
done some traveling from their Cham-
paign, IL home. Phil is retired as General
Manager of the Grain Division at Joseph E.
Seagram & Sons, Inc. They have raised
three children.
Audrey Clough Johnson retired from
teaching in 1981 but continues to tutor
small children in reading and math. She
helped to organize the Rock Hall Museum
where she exhibits her collection and lec-
tures on Ozini artifacts. She also collects
antique furniture and glassware, and cro-
chets and quilts. Her daughter. Dr. Karen
Johnson '68, is with the National Cancer
Institute.
After 34 years of teaching and guidance
counseling, Betty Smith Orme has retired
in Denton, MD, and is taking oil painting
classes. " I'll never be another Grandma
26
Moses, but it really is fun." The quilts she
makes have been exhibited in the Salisbury
Civic Center. Most of her summer days are
spent cruising the Choptank and the Che-
sapeake with her husband, Lacey, daughter
and granddaughters.
Carrie E. Schreiber remains active in the
Kent County Historical Society and the
Kent County Mental Health Association.
Having completed her graduate work at
Ohio State and the University of Maryland,
she taught in Montgomery County and is
currently at the Kent School.
Class President Norman Shorb retired a
Captain from the U.S. Navy and Chairman
of the Board of the American Plant Food
Association, Inc. He spends winters in
Hawaii and returns to Rockville, MD,
when the golf courses thaw. He "had a
suprise phone call from Elton 'Ace' Wilmot
last December, and after 48 years it was
fantastic."
Retired professor William ("Bill") Van-
Newkirk continues to keep in touch with
the psychology department and serves as a
fraternity advisor at Frostburg State Col-
lege in Maryland. He is an AARP tax coor-
dinator, counselor and an organizer for de-
livery of Meals-on-Wheels. His wife, Betty,
is the historical researcher and curator of
the Frostburg Museum. They have trav-
eled through the eastern states and abroad
to England and Europe. "I bowl regularly,
clinging to an average of 146, and walk for
any errands under a mile."
Tt.^ William C. Benjamin, Jr., a retired
Federal Civil Service employee, is a part-
time salesman for Safety First, Inc. in Aber-
deen, MD, and is serving as a Town
Commissioner. He is a member of the As-
sociation of Fire Chiefs, the International
Association of Fire Chiefs, the Aberdeen
Fire Department and the Bernard L. Tobin
American Legion Post 128. William is a
widower with two children.
TtO Members of this Class will be cele-
brating their 45th Reunion this May.
Betty Dockborn Davis retired as Assistant
Administrator of the Foster Care Program
in Oklahoma after becoming a widow. She
has returned to live in Baltimore this year.
Frances ("Babe") Harris Brandt, retired
teacher, is traveling a little and playing a
lot of golf. With her husband, Walt, she en-
joys two families of Brandt-Dudderar chil-
dren and grandchildren.
Donald McClellan is president of the
Conestoga Muletrain Heritage, Inc., a small
trucking company. He retired in 1976 as
First Officer-Administration for United Na-
tions Secretariat where he served in Rome,
New York, and Bangladesh. Several sum-
mers ago with crew Steve Shaw '84 and
daughter Lisa '85, he sailed his 27' sloop.
Eureka, from Rock Hall to Bermuda.
Dr. Harry Myer has a large family practice
in Vienna, WV. He and his wife, Elaine,
have raised two children.
Enjoying the country living in the "North
Country," Edith Bishop Pierre and her hus-
band, George, have their home in Potsdam,
NY. They have traveled on the Mississippi
Queen and in Texas and Horida. She is
still in contact with Karen Todd Tolley,
Jean Wood Garrison, Mary Nardi Zimmer-
man, Hilda Hotchkiss Shotwell, Elenanor
Rieck Kardash, and Judith Fairchild Fue.
Helen Marie Culver Reed spent 21 years
teaching in Maryland and Connecticut.
She and her husband moved to Stuart, FL
in 1988 where she substitute teaches, plays
bridge, bowls, fishes, boats, gardens, and
plays lots of golf. "Had a hole-in-one last
year!" Helen is the Alumni Treasurer of
the Coast Chapter of Alpha Chi Omega.
For the last 15 years she has had a reunion
in Bethany Beach, DE with Mary Liz
Humphries Moorshead '42, Babe Harris
Brandt, Dorothy Riedy Williams '44, and
Polly Pippen Godwin '44 at the home of
Grace Neighbor Johnson '44.
William H. Revelle, Jr. has retired as a
United Methodist minister and lives in
Grasonville, MD. He writes that he has
"had a full, wonderful life."
Living in Seaford, DE, Ruth Smith Rich and
her husband, Charles, have one daughter.
Retired from teaching, Ruth spends her
time playing "lots of golf. If anyone wants
a game — come on down."
Spence Robinson and his wife, Betty, have
retired to Naples, FL. Spence was formerly
From The Block to
High Street
T!
J_/veryone thinks pawnshops are sleazy,
or that they're just fences, but the major
ones are pretty honest," says Andy God-
dard '73. In the two years she spent man-
aging "Livingston's," a pawn shop on
The Block in Baltimore, Goddard got to
know the "local clientele" pretty weU.
Customers routinely came in on Friday
paydays, picking up goods they'd
pawned earUer in the week. Broke by
Monday morning, they were back to
pawn off the same merchandise. "We are
their banks," explains Goddard. "They
have no lines of credit.. .so when they
need money for a weekend, they just
pawn their T.V. sets."
Goddard dealt with the occasional
"little old lady," who came hunting for
bargains on jewelry and silver, as well as
some rather desperate customers who
pawned unconventional belongings.
"One guy used to pawn his glass eye all
the time. Then there was the guy who
pawned his pants and walked out in his
underwear. He was picked up by the po-
lice shortly thereafter," she remembers
with a laugh.
PHOTO: J.M.FRAGOMENI '81
Need drove one customer to forget that
dog is man's best friend — and to forget the
dog, period. He pawned his canine for $40
in order to bail a co-hort out of jail "Then
he never did come back," Goddard recalls.
"We'd get a lot of sob stories; a lot of
people who had brothers and sisters who
died, or were in the hospital or in car acci-
dents," she says, explaining she sometimes
felt guilty for charging the prescribed
"fairly hefty" interest of 10% each month.
Despite "Livingston's" locale on The
Block, Goddard calls the area one of "the
safest places in the city," since it's located
directly across from a police station.
"There were undercover cops
everywhere. ..and they always looked out
for me, so that even at 10 or 12 o'clock at
night, 1 felt safe."
Nevertheless, the 35-year-old grew
tired of urban living after four years in
Baltimore. Recently, she moved back to
Chestertown to open and manage a bar
on the property formerly inhabitated by
"Danny's." The move means Goddard's
life has come full circle; prior to her
pawnshop days, she spent several years
managing a bar at the same location.
While the new venture will involve an
owner partnership with Martin Kabat '63
and Frank Hogans, Jr., it is Goddard
who will manage the bar.
The trio plan to establish "an up-scale
alternative to the local taverns in town
...there won't be any loud rock and roll
music. We'U have a piano in back and
light food at the bar," Goddard says.
Skylights will lighten the atmosphere.
Though a bar in sleepy Chestertown is
a far cry from a pawnshop in the heart of
the city, Goddard sees similarities in
both lines of work. "You have to learn to
cope with people of all different kinds of
personalities. And you tend to listen to a
lot of stories in either place."
27
Vice President for Development at Beloit
College in Wisconsin.
Naomi Russell Taylor is an electron micros-
copist at the Johns Hopkins Medical
School. She lives in Annapohs with her
husband, Rowland '40. They have two
children and seven grandchildren.
^O Those who graduated in 1948 are in-
vited to celebrate at the Starlight Dance,
Reunion Weekend. Recall your favorite
dance partners of 40 years ago and call
them. The Alumni Office will forward
available phone numbers.
Raymond Clark lives in St. Michaels, MD,
where he is a self-employed editor, pub-
lisher, consultant and lecturer.
Nancy Moran Conant and her husband,
Daniel, live in Kensington, MD. They have
raised three sons.
Margot Albinson Connellee completed sec-
ondary teaching requirements at the Uni-
versities of Rhode Island and Delaware
and is currently a realtor with ERA Alden
Bugher Association. She is also associated
with Union Hospital 3rd District Auxiliary,
Cecil Counfv Historical Society, Elkton
Downtown Revitalization Committee and
the Vestry of Trinity Church. She lives in
Elkton, MD and vacations in Ocean City
with Barbara Evans Oelschlaeger, Jo Gar-
ner Evans, and Lois Koontz Rook.
Jacqueline Heck Feeley is the Director of
Human Resources for Cooperative Health
Care of Southern New Jersey. She and her
husband. Jack '49, have four children and
five grandchildren.
Current President of the Women's League
of WC, Billie Ballard Grieb lives in Chester-
town. She continued her education at WC
with a masters equivalent in English for the
State of MD and a masters in psychology.
Billie is a professor at Chesapeake College.
She and her husband, Norman, are the par-
ents of four.
John A. Hitchcock continued his studies at
Columbia University, the University of
MD, and Johns Hopkins. He lives now in
Waldorf, MD, plays with two bands and
has four children and seven grandchildren.
"Almost retired" after 22 years of teaching
high school, Louise Hancock Littleton
works one day a week at the gift shop she
and her husband, Wayne, sold three years
ago. They live in Stockton, MD.
Reverend Lester Loder was previously a
banker with Chase Manhattan Bank in
New York City.
Barbara Evans Oelschlaeger and her hus-
band, Russell, have raised two children.
They live in Damstown, MD.
Retired from their Chestertown business,
Kirby Memorials, (Their advertisement
reads "Drive Carefully. We Can Wait."),
Kirby L. Smith and his wife, Peggy Steffens
Smith '46, have enjoyed "good ole Eastern
Shore living — hunting, crabbing and fish-
ing." They have a son and a daughter.
Wayne and Barb Cawley — "Don't forget
our 40th in May."
John Sutton Ph.D. and his wife, Eloise, live
in Metuchen, NJ. John is a clinical psy-
chologist at the VA Medical Center in East
Orange.
Virginia Gill Truax lives in Sanibel, FL. She
received her MSW at the University of
Maryland School of Social Work and Com-
munity Planning and is a social worker/
therapist in the Chemical Dependency Unit
of Charter Glade Hospital. She has raised
four children. "1 live on the islands so I
spend as much time as possible on the
beach. Good living dowoi here."
Judson Williams is retired and hving with
his wife, Dorothy, in Chestertown. They
have two sons.
OU James P. Brown is enjoying the
"slower life east of the Chesapeake Bay,
playing 'old timers' Softball, gardening,
biking, and collecting and listening to
good music." He is retired ater 30 years
of service in the Department of Defense
of the National Security Agency. James
and his new bride are living in Snow Hill,
MD.
'53
Frank S. Henry, who teaches chemis-
try at Sparta High School in Andover, N],
is one of 26 teachers selected from a na-
tional pool of candidates to participate in
the Summer Workshop for Teachers of
High School Chemistry at Hollins CoUege.
Wayne Millner has been named Vice Presi-
dent of Site Aquisitions for the KMS
Group, Inc., the Columbia, MD, based real
estate developer. Wayne, who joined the
company in 1985, is now responsible
for analyzing and acquiring potential de-
velopment sites in the mid-Atlantic region.
Previously he was a commercial real estate
associate with O'Connor, Piper & Hynn.
OO Mark your calendars for your 30th
Reunion on May 21st and 22nd. If you
have lost contact with those classmates
you'd most like to celebrate with, the
Alumni Office will forward your letter.
Warner Andrews owns Andrews Associ-
ates, a manufacturers representative com-
pany that sells capitol equipment to the
electronics industry in Colorado and Utah.
He and Natalie have two sons and one
grandson.
Residing in Grand Rapids, MI are Robert
Cleaver, and his wife, Ann Hurst '57.
Robert received a professional degree as a
Chartered Property and Casualty Under-
writer (C.P.C.U.) and is the general man-
ager of the commercial division of Aetna
Life & Casuahty. They have two daughters
and live near Emery "Mac" Hatch '57.
Orienteering From
Obscurity
V_y rienteering a.) the act of journeying
through the Orient; b.) the process of
helping a freshman become acclimated
to the college environment (He was ori-
enleered straight into a frat party and
handed a beer; c.) a career; like engineer-
ing.
The correct answer is neither a, b, nor
c, but if you guessed wrong, don't feel
bad. Anthony D. Tall '50, founder and
current president of the Western Con-
necticut Orienteering Club, is the first to
admit that his favorite hobby is an "ob-
scure activity." When pressed for a defi-
nition, he explains patiently, "It's like a
road rally on foot."
In Scandinavia and other European
countries, the sport of orienteering is al-
most a household word, but it was not
until the early 1970's, Tall says, that the
activity was organized nationally in the
United States. Since then it's gained
most popularity in New England.
Working only with a finely-detailed
topographical map and a compass, par-
ticipants compete to find the quickest
path to a series of mapped checkpoints.
or "controls," where they punch their ori-
enteering cards. "It's a challenge to make
the best choices," says Tall, "whether to go
up a sloping incline or around it."
Not everyone, however, races to the fin-
ish line. Some participants simply enjoy
completing the course at their own pace; at
large orienteering meets, there are over 35
categories based upon age, sex and skill
level. The sport thus "lends itself to family
participation," Tall says. More than 150
families belong to the Western Connecticut
Club, and Tail's kids, Stephen and Cather-
ine, now in their 20's, have competed since
they were 10 years old.
This October, Tall will serve as Meet Di-
rector of the New England Orienteering
Championships, a jxisition which involves
plotting the complicated navigational
maps. Tall says it was his work with "qual-
ity maps," during a stint in the Marine
Corps officer's training school, which first
sparked his interest in orienteering.
Since retiring from the Connecticut De-
partment of Mental Health in May, Tall
now has the time to compete in the Euro-
pean meets he had long only dreamed of
attending. In July, he participated in the
yearly Swedish championship meet — a
five-day international competition; and in
August, he took part in a six -day contest at
28
Joseph M. Harasta received his MBA at
Temple University. He is a service analyst
for E.I. DuPont. Joseph has spent 26 years
in the Military Actives and Reserves, and is
currently a Captain in the U.S. Coast Guard
Reserve. He Uves in Salem, NJ and is the
father of four.
William C. Litsinger, Jr. is the assistant di-
rector of Juvenile Services in Baldwin, MD.
Since 1982 he has been the co-founder and
president of a private non-profit commu-
nity-based counseling service for kids and
parents. His duties include hiring, plan-
ning, and fund raising. "It is a much-
needed, quite rewarding service to this ru-
ral area." In May William received the
Governor's Certificate for Merit in the Field
of Victims' Rights. In June he "lost at
Wimbledon under an assumed name."
Robert Shockley and Barbara Dew '57 have
moved from L.A. to San Francisco where
they have been reunited with Tony
Cameron '61, V.P. and resident manager of
Paine Webber. The Shockleys live in Marin
County. "Come on out!"
Jack R. Schroeder is based in the "Saltbox"
in Crisfield, MD. He works as a self-em-
ployed illustrator and painter around the
Eastern Shore and Annapolis. His work
includes "commissioned paintings, draw-
ings and wall murals." (See Dissette '73).
Arnold and Joyce Smith Sten live in Down-
ingtown, PA. Arnold is a project manager
of Systems Test & Verification for General
Inverness in Scotland. "For me, it was
kind of like a Moslem going to Mecca,"
he says.
Electric Co. He stays active playing volley-
ball, basketball and fast pitch Softball.
They just became grandparents.
Mary Lou Joseph Vernon is a business edu-
cation teacher at the Caesar Rodney High
School in Camden, DE. She and husband,
Ebe L. '56, have raised three daughters and
live in Smyrna, DE.
Kathleen Bracket! White is living in Queen-
stown, MD and teaching at the Kent Learn-
ing Center and for an education course at
WC during the spring semester. She re-
ceived her MA in psychology at WC, has
remained actively involved with ZTA and
reminds the TB Chapter members that
there will be a 50th reunion in April. She
raises standard bred horses with her hus-
band, Maynard P. She sees Jane Rayner
Massey '59, Ellen Jo Sterling Litsinger '59,
Joyce Poetzl '60, and Susan Hair Wright '62
on a regular basis.
O 1 Robert M. Lentz is living in Chapel
Hill, NC, and is the Director of Health Sys-
tems, HMO-NC (BCBSNC).
'63
May 21st and 22nd will be your 25th
Reunion. The Alumni Office welcomes
your ideas for a special celebration.
Katherine Yoder Eaton is hving with her
husband, Joseph, in Essex, CT. She is
doing yacht and house maintainence and
refinishing and sails on a 75' sloop when-
ever possible. "1 take my dog for a run
across the WC campus on trips north and
south in the spring and fall."
Carolyn Dunne Gray has been living in
Rochester, NY, working in production and
industry control in the manufacture of
ektachem analyzers for Eastman Kodak.
July 1st she started a new job as personnel
and training coordinator for a new plant in
NC. "I would welcome contact from any
alums in the Charlotte area."
A seventh grade reading teacher, Judith
Clayton Hogan received her MA from Kan-
sas State in 1985. She also spent several
years working as a data processing and
accounts payable clerk for a cable televi-
sion company. She and her husband, Nor-
man, have two sons.
David Honingstoch and his wife, Susan,
live in Beaverton, OR. He is technical sales
representative, PSF, selling to the wet and
dry filteration industries throughout the
western U.S.A.
Stephen Levine is practicing and teaching
pediatric ophthalmology in Atlanta, GA.
He and Susan have three daughters. He is
"still playing tennis, hopefully a bit better
than when 1 had four wonderful years as a
member of the WC tennis team, which at
one point had a string of somewhere in ex-
cess of 40 straight losses."
OO Susan Achom Burgess just finished a
semester at Framingham (MA) State Col-
lege teaching Literature for Children. She
continues to run her own consulting busi-
ness in children's literature.
O/ After graduation, Nancy Lee Gal-
loway was an international flight attendant
with Pan Am, and after 14 months moved
to London. She lived in England and Eu-
rope for eight years while working as a
fashion model, and then moved to New
York in 1976, where she worked for
Steelcase, Inc., an office furniture manufac-
turer. In April of 1980 she moved to Salt
Lake City "for the skiing."
Richard Wunderlich has been a partner at
Alex. Brown in Baltimore since 1985 and is
the investment firm's highest ranking over-
the-counter stock trader. Raised in Denton,
Richard ran his father's building contractor
business after graduating from WC. Late
in the summer of 1967 he went into the fi-
nancial field at Mercantile Bank & Trust
Co. in Baltimore. He joined Alex. Brown in
in 1977, and works there with Richard
Bryant '77, John Cheek '77, Taylor Cook
'75, Robert Lewis '79, Chris Mamunes '81,
Mathew Morris '78, and Jonathan Price '80.
His sister, Lisa '87, joins the WC staff in the
fall. Richard lives with his wife. Celeste, in
Butler, MD. He relaxes by playing pool
and biking.
DO "If you remember the sixties. ..you
didn't Live them." The Alumni Association
invites you to disprove Robin Williams, or
discover Chestertown at your 25th Reun-
ion, May 21st and 22nd.
Michael "Mickey" Fineberg received his
masters in psychology from Villanova
University and his Ph.D. from Temple Uni-
versity. He is an industrial psychologist/
personnel management consultant. He and
his wife, Rhonda, and daughter live in
King of Prussia. According to Mickey "Al
'The Jet' Perry has a beautiful new wife,
Sally, and a beautiful baby girl."
James "Jim" Huggins, received his M.D. in
1979 from Eastern Virginia Medical School,
completed his residency training and be-
came Board certified in 1983. Since then he
has been a radiologist at Kings Daughters
Hospital in Staunton, VA. Jim served as a
Navy fighter pilot 1968-73 and then earned
pre-med credits at Old Dominion Univer-
sity. He is married to the former Pamela
Tompkins and they have three daughters.
Karen Johnson received her Ph.D. in or-
ganic chemistry at Delaware in 1972 and
her M.D. at Jefferson College in '81. She
now lives in Arlington, VA. where she is a
scientific associate at the National Cancer
Institute. "1 am looking forward to reunion
this year since my mother, Audrey Clough
Johnson '38, and I together will have 70
years to celebrate."
29
Judith Kohn, a native of Maryland, is now
living in Nasha, NH. She was a graduate
student of philosophy at Temple Univer-
sity. In the summer of 1970 she went with
her husband to Istanbul and began taking
courses at the Turkish School of Crafts
where she began weaving. She returned to
study textiles at St. Lawrence College of
Art. She has won several awards for her
works.
The Chief Concierge at the Madison Hotel
in Morristown, NJ, is Karen Laux Reilly.
From 1969-81 she was an international
flight attendant with Pan Am out of JFTC.
In '82 she was hired by the Madison Hotel.
She is currently the only woman in NJ ac-
cepted for membership in Les Clefs d 'Or,
the international concierge society. She
gets together with Nancy Galloway '67 of
Salt Lake City, UT, when Nancy visits her
parents in Easton, MD.
Kathryn Lewis earned her M.B.A. and
Ph.D. from Arizona State University. She
is an associate professor in the Department
of Management, College of Business at
California State University in Chico. She
has two children.
John Merrill, his wife and two children
live in Grafton, MA. He is Director of Col-
lege Counseling at Worchester Academy.
Dr. Stephen B. Miller is with Corning Glass
Works in its Research, Development & En-
gineering Division. He joined Coming in
1978 and has been a lab technology man-
ager since 1986.
Charles Mock lives in Hurlock, Md and is a
sales representative with Conveyor Han-
dling Co., Inc. He is involved with the
Hurlock Lions Club and District Leader-
ship Development.
Paula Deschere Murphy is a fuUtime
mother to two sons while pursuing a de-
gree as computer programmer. She has
been an exercise instructor for six years,
and teaches a women's class in the local jail
for Body & Soul, Christian Exercise Pro-
gram. Her husband, Roy, is a Navy Cap-
tain at the Pentagon.
Susan Smith O'Connor received her Mas-
ters of Education and completed her doc-
toral dissertation at the University of Mary-
land in 1986. She is a learning disabilities
teacher in Baltimore County. She and her
husband, Damian, have three daughters.
Charles Skipper is a school administrator
for the Anne Arundel County Board of
Education. Charles and Patricia hve in
Severna Park, MD.
Benjamin T. Whitman is Assistant Director
of the Secondary School Admissions Test
Board and lives with his bride, Margaret, in
Lawrenceville, NJ. He taught at St.
Andrew's School in Boca Raton, FL for 15
years and served as director of admissions
while coaching several championship track
and cross-country teams. He "encoun-
tered WC Trustee josiah Bunting as we
worked out on the Lawrenceville School
track."
Mary Wood has collaborated with WC pro-
fessor Ed Weissman on "1787," an uncon-
stitutional farce that will be performed in
October at the Church Hill Theatre. The
play is set in Church Hill in 1787 and the
plot revolves around lost loves, lost jewels,
a lost baby, and the disappearance of the
only extant copy of the Constitution.
Mary, a long-time Centreville resident and
community leader, is a playwright and
poet. She also serves as alumni representa-
tive to the Board of Visitors and Governors.
Paula Wordtt, former manager of the Kent
Athletic Club, Inc. spends a lot of time bik-
ing and teaching both aerobics and toning
exercise classes. "Although 1 still love to
travel 1 haven't found any place I'd rather
live than Chestertown." She has been an
executive of the Kent and Queen Anne's
Alumni Chapter, and a patroness of ZTA.
She continues to follow WC sports, espe-
cially basketball and lacrosse. Paula says,
"Let's see a real showing of our class for
our 20th in May. Remember...! can always
make room."
'69,
David D. Stokes has been appointed
Chief of the Personnel Division, 34th Hos-
pital in Augsburg, Germany.
/ Z- Major Eugenia Thorton has been
awarded the Defense Meritorius Service
Medal by the Department of Defense and
the Army following two years of duty in
the Pentagon. She and her husband, Lt.
Col. Donovan Jagger, have both been re-
cently reassigned to Schweinfert, Germany
where she will be commanding officer of
the Regional Personnel Center.
/ \D Songs Before Zero Press, founded in
1985 in Bandon, OR by Jim Dissette, is de-
buting with a letter pressed, limited edition
of Pablo Neruda's Heights of Macchti Picchu,
newly translated by David Yervy, Chair-
man of English at Oberon College. The
title page carries a line drawing of a condor
by Jack Schroeder '58. Planned for 1987-88
are The Creation of the Animals by Jules Su-
perveille and possibly an extended poem.
Fierce Blessings, by Dissette. Jim visited the
Eastern Shore in early June with Misty Elli-
ott '75.
Paul Stevens Eldridge began his own de-
sign firm, Paul Eldridge Associates, in
1986. They "will design anything from lo-
gos to condominiums."
President of the WC Alumni Association
Karen Gossard Price says most of her
"spare" time was devoted to the Alumni
Association this past year. "Because of the
high regard our alumni have for our alma
mater this has been an extremely reward-
ing experience. Fred and 1 have also found
time to go skiing and to take Charlie to the
beach. Hope to see our classmates at the
Aquarium!" Fred '72 was reelected for a
second term as States Attorney for Kent
County in November.
Trish Witherington left in November for a
two month vacation in Austrailia, trusting
the care of her blind cat, Oedipuss, to Pat
Trams '75. Trish has not yet returned.
Trams notes that Mel Gibson has eight
brothers and that she probably owns a cat.
V4i
■ Robert D. Farwell was appointed di-
rector of the Penobscot Marine Museum in
1985. He is currently embarking on a $1.5
million capital campaign for endowment
development.
Dr. Bernard J. Sadusky MA has been ap-
pointed supervisor of instruction by the
Kent and Queen Anne's Board of Educa-
tion.
/ O Mary A. Stroh was awarded the de-
gree of Master of Science in Social Work
from Kent School of Social Work at the
University of Louisville on May 17, 1987.
She spent seven weeks traveling in Europe.
Harold Webster Thompson, Jr. earned his
MBA from Duke College School of Busi-
ness on May 10, 1987.
/ O James A. Callahan II has joined W.C.
Pinkard and Co., Inc. as an industrial leas-
ing specialist. Prior to this he was a leasing
agent with Parker Frames and Co., Inc. He
is a member of the Greater Baltimore Board
of Realtors.
Mark S. Henckel has recently joined the
law firm of Dirska & Levin in Columbia,
MD, to specialize in insurance defense hti-
gation. He lives in Lutherville.
Tracy P. Smith married James C. AlHson in
April in Wilmington, Del. Patty Perry Via-
monte '74 flew in from Corpus Christi, TX,
to participate in the ceremonies and was
instrumental in getting the bride to the
church on time. Tracy and Jim both work
for Conoco Inc. and have just been trans-
fered to Houston. They are delighted to be
closer to Patty and her husband, Novy Via-
monte '73.
V8
Your 10th Reunion will be May
21st and 22nd. The Alumni House is
taking reservations for rooms in the
dorms.
Arthur Bilodeau is a Captain in the U.S.
Army. He is a qualified Airborne Ranger,
commanding Alpha Company of the 2nd
Battalion, 505th Infantry (approximately
250 soldiers) at Fort Bragg. He is being
considered to teach Enghsh at West Point.
He and his wife, Mary, have two daugh-
ters.
30
Monica Jarmer '85:
Learning More
About A Faraway
Moon
IVionica Jarmer '85 was four years old
wher> she got her first telescope. It was a
prophetic gift from her father — today
she analyzes data beamed to Earth from
the Voyager satellite, now travelling in
the outer limits of the solar system.
Jarmer, a research assistant in chemis-
try at the University of Maryland and a
part-time researcher at nearby Goddard
Space Center, already has contributed to
space research. Working from infrared
spectral data collected by Voyager, she
was the first person to identify a con-
densed nitrile, or organic cyanide com-
pound, in the atmosphere of Titan.
One of the larger moons of Saturn, Ti-
tan is, she says, the planet's only moon
with a "real" atmosphere. Because of
what was already known about Titan's
gasoline-like atmosphere, researchers
suspected it would contain the nitrile —
dicyanoacetylene, or C,N,. Such nitriles
are produced in the presence of methane
and nitrogen under an influx of energy
from the sun, and both had already been
found. Moreover, researchers had also
found another nitrile gas in the carbon-
chain buildup. Its successor, in turn, is
logically C^N,. Yet that compound's dis-
tinctive "signature" as a gas didn't show
up on the infrared spectrum.
So, says Jarmer, she decided to look at
CjN2 as a solid. When the gas was fro-
zen in the lab, it emitted the same fre-
quency recorded on Voyager's spectrum.
"As the energy [required to make a solid]
increased, the frequencies shifted, and
sure enough, it matched up perfectly. That
gave us a tentative identification." She
and her colleagues were able to verify the
discovery and, last November, Jarmer pre-
sented her findings in Paris at a meeting of
the American Astronomical Society's
planetary science division. Now she is at
work determining how much C^N, exists in
Titan's atmosphere. At Goddard, she
puzzles over "radiative transfer calcula-
tions." Essentially, she uses a computer to
simulate the atmosphere. Jarmer superim-
poses variables of a cloud of C^N, on the
background clouds of Titan to try to de-
termine where the cloud is located and
how dense it is.
Saturn's moon and Earth seem at first
glance to have little in common: "Titan
has a primordial atmosphere which is
still under development," says Jarmer.
"If there is life there, it is not life as we
know it. On Titan, it rains hydrogen
cyanide. It has oceans of methane and
ethane. It's unlikely that anything can
grow under those conditions."
Yet, she points out, "All the planets
developed under the same conditions as
Earth did. Why did Earth develop dif-
ferently? 1 don't know, but it's unlikely
that we are alone in the universe."
Ann Atwater Bourne is attending Mac-
queen Gibbs Willis School of Nursing,
working with her husband, Michael, in his
architectural consulting firm, and running
her secondhand bookshop. She is the
mother of two. Ann and Michael are host
to Jerry Wilson '75 on his trips to Chester-
town.
Barton Kimball Byron received USAF Pilot
Training and is now a Captain. Kimball
flew B-52 bombers out of Sacramento for
four years. " Glad to say I'm out of the
bomber business [and] back East (Raleigh,
NC). Now in the right seat of a KC-10,
military version of the DC-10. See you at
Gill International Airport, Chestertown, for
the 10th Reunion." He and his wife, Han-
nah, had a son in April.
Vicki Krowe Carr works with IBM. She is
living on seven acres in Areola, VA helping
her husband, Richard, restore their 100
year old home and develop his landscap-
ing business.
Having earned his MA in chemistry from
the University of Delaware in 1983, Dana
Chatellier is a lecturer/demonstrator in
chemistry there. He has been playing "Mr.
Wizard" for Newark, DE first graders and
U. of DE freshmen. He hopes to publish
soon in the Journal of Chemical Education.
After attending the University of Baltimore
School of Law, Andrew Cooper is working
in the office of the Public Defender. He
lives in Cockeysville, MD with his wife,
Carol and has been "climbing Mt. Everest,
touring Africa on bicycle, swimming the
English Channel and fishing for black
marlin off Austraiha." Sure, and the new
Alumni Director is Mrs. Paul McCartney!
Gail Ann Emow has been commissioned in
the U.S. Navy since 1982. She was sta-
tioned in Yokosuka, Japan, from 1982-85
and then in Washington, DC, with a speci-
ality in "manpower requirements and qual-
ity distribution." She anticipates being sta-
tioned in DC until '89. Gail stays in touch
with JoAnne DriscoU Jackson and Deborah
Straus Tormey.
Joseph Richard ("Rick") Harris, Jr. is a
graduate of Maryland Banking School and
is currently the vice president of Caroline
County Bank. He and his wife, Diane, live
in Greensboro with their daughter.
Andrea Dunleavy and her husband, T.
Craig Jackson '75, live in Chestertown with
their two children. Andy works in the ac-
counting department of the Kent and
Queen Anne's Hospital. She is active in the
Chester River Rowing Club and treasurer
of the Kent and (Jueen Anne's Alumni
Chapter.
Taylor Connor McGee is working for IBM
in Glen Ellyn, IL. She and Michael are par-
ents to newborn son.
Watson E. Joseph, Jr. is an OB/GYN physi-
cian in Vicenza, Italy. He spent four years
in Hawaii in a "busy medical center corh-
pleting residency training. Now at a small
Meddac in Northern Italy in a two man
practice." He travels around Europe in his
off time.
Amy Nelson Miller is an entertainment co-
ordinator in Wilmington, DE. "Dr. Dale
Trusheim '72 is the drummer in 'Har-
31
Banking On Latin
America
VV hen the Inter-American Develop-
ment Bank was estabhshed in 1959 as a
regional development bank for Latin
American countries, it loaned money for
highways, hospitals, ports, and dams,
but little money trickled down to the
poor of those countries. Many Latinos
lacked jobs, skills, resources, and credit,
and had no means to obtain them.
That's why in 1978 the IDB initiated a
pilot project called the Program for the
Financing of Small Projects, and it is
through this project that Guillermo
("Mincho") Arrivillaga '78 has been
helping to make a difference in the lives
of the Third World poor.
Since 1979, as a financing operations
officer at IDB in Washington, D.C., Ar-
rivillaga has helped the people of Costa
Rica, the Dominican Republic, Colombia,
Paraguay, and most recently, Haiti, Ar-
gentina, and Honduras, develop small
urban businesses and rural self-help
projects such as farming cooperatives
and reforestation efforts.
The Chilean-bom Arrivillaga, now
project officer for Haiti, Argentina, and
Honduras, finds the funds to get small
businesses off the ground and the re-
sources to teach the Latin American
people good business practices, and fun-
nels money to those countries through
non-profit organizations and govern-
mental institutions. The Small Projects
Program identifies potential projects
with the assistance of IDB office in each
Latin American country. The funds used
are either foundation grants or residuals
from IDB's capital projects, Arrivillaga
says, and are offered at concessionary rates
of as low as one percent, with a 40 year
payout and a ten year grace period. "It's
not really a loan in the conventional sense,"
says Arrivillaga, but it is a good investment
in economic development: every $1,500
spent in technical assistance such as man-
agement and marketing training, or in
modem equipment, generates one job.
Compare this, he says, to $10,000 to $12,000
per job in other areas.
The first small project financing was
awarded to a group of rural women in
Uruguay, Arrivillaga says, who knitted
and wove woolen items. A loan to their
enterprise, Manos del Urugav, permitted
them to increase production and market
their wares throughout the world, and in
the process, strengthened the cooperative
system through which Manos operates.
The Haitian Development Foundation, a
non-profit effort administered by IDB, pro-
vides start-up money for carpenters, shoe-
makers, and other cottage industries, and
aids community development in rural ar-
eas of Haiti. Farming cooperatives have
been established, technical assistance in
management and marketing given, and the
swine population, wiped out several vears
ago by African fever, is being replenished.
In Honduras' urban areas of Teguci-
galpa, San Pedro Sula, and Islas de La-
bahia, Arrivillaga says, a revolving fund
nurtures urban micro-enterprise develop-
ment. Individual cooperatives involved in
the production of furniture, clothing, and
foodstuffs are provided with credit for
equipment and working capital for raw
materials. Again, Arrivillaga says, as little
as $1,200 can generate a new job, and mod-
em equipment and a little training can
double production.
In Argentina, rural youth projects are
providing training and resources to the
young people of that country, who oth-
erwise would migrate to the cities and
intensify crowding and unemployment
problems there. This project, which Ar-
rivillaga compares to the U.S. 4-H youth
organizations, trains young people to
care for livestock, raise foodcrops, man-
age natural resources, and instills in
them a sense of caring and responsibility
for their community.
"This is really grass roots develop-
ment," Arrivillaga says, "and it's having
tremendous success." Has he ever con-
sidered another line of work? "No, I re-
ally love it. Most people who come to
work for the IDB stay for a long time."
mony,' one of the bands I book. Since Dale
joined the band their bookings have
soared."
Neal Oldford trained at the Culinary Insti-
tute of America and is an executive chef in
Stanford, CT.
Claire Pula did her graduate work at the
University of St. Andrews in Scotland and
at the Princeton Theological Seminary.
Now she is a fulltime Master of Divinity
student at University of Dubuque. She has
been a coordinator of the University of
Dubuque Seminary Women's Center for a
year and is currently a volunteer at
Dubuque Battered Women's Center. Claire
and Carlos E. Wilton '78 are the parents of
a son.
Terri Taylor Selby obtained her J.D. from
the University of Baltimore Law School in
1981. She recently left her private law
practice to become mother of a daughter.
Currently working on her MBA in market-
ing at George Washington University,
Shelley Sharp is a marketing representative
at IBM. She plans to have a Decade Party
at her home in Bethesda, MD on October
10th for all alumni who graduated in the
'70s and are hving in the DC area. She
serves on the WC Visiting and Develop-
ment Committees. Shelley enjoyed attend-
ing Summer Institute again this year. "Sail-
ing on the Chester River is still magical."
Michele Williams Skarweki, a legal secre-
tary, recently moved to the Eastern Shore.
"It brings back memories of the easy going
attitude of the members of the C'town
community. Looking forward to seeing
lots of people at the Aquarium in Septem-
ber."
JoAnn Pittman Sparks is a systems analyst
in Wilmington, DE. She has her scuba div-
ing certification and a black belt in Chinese
Kenpo Karate. She teaches karate with her
husband, Ian.
J.S. Edward "Ward" Tatnall is chairman of
the English department at West Notting-
ham Academy in Colora MD, the nation's
second oldest boarding school (founded in
1744).
Denise Trevisan and her husband, Daniel
Walton, are renovating their home in Hav-
ertown, PA, step by step. Denise is a psy-
chotherapist who has volunteered to work
with abused women and is currently em-
ployed at the community mental health
center. She reports: "Ann Taylor has
moved again! I was matron of honor at
Charlene Rickman's '80 and John
Connelly's '81 November wedding. They
have just moved into a beautiful new
home."
J. Christopher Weingard earned his Mas-
ters in library science from the State Uni-
versity of New York in 1982. He is branch
librarian at Richardson Library in Emporia,
VA. He and his wife. Laurel D. Snode '79,
have a newborn daughter.
Beverly Strehle Williams received her
bachelor's degree from the University of
Delaware and her Master of Psychology
from WC. She is director of AID at Dover,
32
Inc., a counseling service for troubled
adolescents.
Carlos E. Wilton earned his Master of Di-
vinity from Princeton Theological Semi-
nary in 1982 and his Master of Philosophy
from the University of St. Andrews, Scot-
land in '84. He was ordained minister in
the Presbyterian Church in '83 and is cur-
rently director of admissions at the Univer-
sity of Dubuque Theological Seminary in
Iowa. He is married to Claire Pula.
OU Tim Connor is working for E. F. Hut-
ton in San Francisco.
F. Mark Dugan received his M.D. from the
Medical College of Pennsylvania, May 30,
1987.
Ot Christinia De Nayer is living in Le-
esberg, VA , and is employed by the
American Horse Protection Association, a
non-profit equine humane organization
dealing mostly with federal legislation re-
garding equine cruelty policies. She is the
fund raising coordinator and is involved
with program development as well as in-
vestigating cases of abuse.
OC? Susan Kelly works for KeUy Leasing
as a fleet and leasing manager in Emmaus,
PA. She travels regularly to their other of-
fice in Jacksonville, FL.
Stephen D. Halla lives in Anaheim, CA and
is a salesman with MacDermid Inc., a spe-
cialty chemical company which supplies
products to the microelectronics industry
as well as other industries concerned with
surface treatments. Steve is responsible for
sales in southern California and the Silicon
Valley.
Lisa Mendelson is a planner and project
manager for Wallace, Roberts and Todd, an
architectural planning, landscape architec-
tural and urban design firm in Philadel-
phia. She is also working on a Master of
Architecture degree, taking classes at he
University of Pennsylvania, Pennsylvania
Academy of Fine Arts, and Moore College
of Arts.
Nimi Natan presented a talk: "Investiga-
tions of Some Factors Influencing the Rate
of Sensitization and the Maximum Sensi-
tivity of Iridium (III) Surface Sensitized Sil-
ver Bromide Emulsion" at the SPSE 40th
annual conference in Rochester, NY.
OO Mary Helen HoLzgang is public rela-
tions director for Printing Industries of
Maryland, the state's trade association for
printing and the graphic arts.
O/ Christopher DiPietro and Christian
Engle are in a management training pro-
gram for the Equitable Trust Bank in Balti-
more, MD. DiPietro will be working at the
EUicott City branch for the next six months.
Jack Cilden is a staff reporter for the Ran-
dallstown News.
Michelle Lin Royal is living in Princeton,
NJ and working for a center for troubled
youth.
David W. Quinn is a vocational supervisor
at the Benedictine HabUitation Center in
Ridgeley, MD when he is not playing ten-
nis. In April Dave represented WC in the
Volvo Campus Mixed Doubles Tourna-
ment at Princeton University. He and his
partner came in second of fifteen, winning
$1,000 for the Washington College tennis
program. This prize helped to pay for the
'86-'87 tennis team to travel to the NCAA
Division 111 Championship at Salisbury
State in May. There five of our players
earned All-American status and the Wash-
ington College tennis team was ranked
third in the nation.
Sara Welch is moving to Annapolis to work
for the Maryland State Legislature.
Jill-Anne Wagner '87 was married in July to
William S. Hayes '87 at the Lelia Hynson
Boating Pavilion. They will be living in
Pittsburgh where he will be studying at the
University of Pittsburgh.
Deaths
Marriages
Pearl Griffin Stewart '05, June 1987.
Lawrence P. Strong '07, August 1986.
Addie Gale Nobel '12, March 1981.
Anna Bowers '13, November 1986.
Howard T. Rayne '26, May 1985.
WiUiam Horace Wheeler '26, April 1987.
Carolyn Wingate Todd '29, August 1986.
Elizabeth Titsworth StULman '30, June 1987.
John W. Long '35, March 1986.
Ray Kilby '39, August 1986.
Lt. Col. John P. Stack '41, March 1987.
Mildred C. Melvin '45, July 1986.
Margaret Metcalfe Brogan '50, July 1987.
Richard P. Parsons '51, July 1986.
Lawrence W. Swanstron '67, September
1986.
Robert P. Newlin '81, October 1986.
Tracy Pearson Smith '76 to James Craig
AUison, April 25, 1987.
Jean McLanahan Merrick '82 to Herbert A.
Wagner, May, 1987.
Catherine A. Schreiber '83 to Stephen
McNally, July 3, 1987.
Donald James Sutherland, Jr. '83, to
Kimberly Ann Tooley, June 6, 1987.
Laurel Ann Scarborough '87 to Joseph Lee
Figgs, March 28, 1987.
Births
Susan Smith CCormor '68, a
daughter, Maureen Elizabeth, May 5,
1987.
Brian S. '69 and Lauren Moon Kimerer
'72 , a son, WilUam Scott, October 12,
1985, joining sister Danielle, now five.
Penelope Baldwin Wasem '70, a son,
Andrew Reed, July 10, 1987.
Les Cioffi '72, a daughter, Andrea
Katherine, March 1, 1987.
Jerry Wilson '75, a son, Daniel Agusta, 1987.
Diana Duvall Grunow '77, a son, An-
drewLinsley, Jr., February 24, 1987.
Geoffrey S. '77 and Laura Chase Kurt-
zman'83, a son, Kevin Morris, 1986.
Lt. B. Kimball Byron '78, a son, Phihp
Lee, April 29, 1987.
Sandra Green Devan '78, triplets,
Kathryn Elise, Tyler Mullen and Sarah
AmeUa, April 27, 1987.
Terri Taylor Selby '78, a daughter,
Maria Elizabeth, June 12, 1987.
Betsy Arrington Sobolewski '79, a son,
Matthew Austin, February 2, 1987.
SalUe Lewis Miller '80, a daughter,
EUzabeth Lea, April 21, 1987.
Joy Chamberlin Wemmer '80, a son,
Matthew Stewart, 1987.
Benjamin A. '82 and Andrea Seeley '81
Tuckerman, a son, Evan Patrick, 1986.
Heather Pusey Baltovich '83, a
daughter, Courtney Brooke, 1986.
Marybeth Sadler Van Fossen '84, a
girl, Margaret Evelyn, April 26, 1987.
33
WASHINGTON COLLEGE
Currents
An Apple for
the Dean
By Elizabeth R. Baer
My last mathematics course
was Algebra II in high school
in 1963. I passed that only
because my mother, a chemistry major
in college, helped me with my
homework every night.
Computers scared me because, first
of all, they were machines. Secondly,
they were math machines. During the
four years I worked at Dartmouth Col-
lege in the mid-'70s, I knew I should
confront computers. But Dartmouth
was almost all mainframe computer at
that time — and the whole thing
seemed overwhelming.
A conference for women administra-
tors was my first introduction to the
microcomputer. A computer salesman
began his demonstration by taking off
the cover and showing his audience
the inside of the computer. Instant
demystification!
Shortly thereafter, in a conversation
at Sweet Briar College with John Sav-
arese, associate professor of English
who is now Assistant Director of Com-
puting at Davidson College, my fear of
computers further evaporated. John
suggested that the term "computer" is
a misnomer. It implies that the pri-
mary function of these machines is to
compute but they are now used far
more frequently to write.
The following summer, 1 bravely en-
rolled in a two-week program of
"Computers, Communication, and
Technology."
The seminar leader, Victor McGee of
Dartmouth's Tuck School of Business,
began by teaching his skittish students
the history of computing. We then
learned about the parts of a computer
and how they work. Next, Vic taught
us the vocabulary of computing: the
difference between "bit" and "byte,"
"ROM" and "RAM." Since my own
field is literature, this approach was
particularly comforting. We also dis-
cussed ethical questions raised by
computers — illegal access to informa-
tion, the potential of covertly changing
data, and the implications of these is-
sues for academic settings. Finally, we
learned some Basic programming.
At the end of the two week seminar,
1 produced my final report using the
University of Richmond's VAX main-
frame computer. People who knew me
were astonished at the metamorphosis!
Subsequently, 1 used an IBM PC to
do all my scholarly work: writing lec-
tures, articles, preparing bibliogra-
phies and syllabi for classes. Now you
must understand that previously I had
done all my writing with a special
kind of white legal pad and a number
two pencil. Such tools for writing con-
stituted an almost religious ritual for
me as they were what enabled me to
finally finish my doctoral dissertation,
five years in the writing. I am a slow
writer, revising as I go, and abandon-
ing the reassuring tools of paper and
pencil was not easy. But gradually,
what I would never have predicted
happened: 1 became dependent on the
technology of the microcomputer for
my best writing.
With writing on the microcomputer,
there exists something between the
thoughts in the head and the final
copy. That something is words on a
screen which seem liquid, at some
state between thinking and writing.
These liquid words can be erased or
moved to another paragraph by push-
ing a button. As the process of writing
is provoking new thinking, earlier
ideas can be revised. The whole proc-
ess of writing becomes far more fluid
than with pencil or typewriter.
For me, this has resulted in far
greater productivity. I think about the
computer now as a machine which
helps me think, not as a machine to re-
ceive writing as the end product of my
thinking. Though higher education is
still in the early stages of actually
documenting how computers help stu-
dents learn, 1 am convinced from my
own personal experience what a trans-
formation can take place.
I had one final transition to make in
computing when I moved to WC in
1985 — to the Apple Macintosh. The
old fears reared their heads, but once I
learned what all the little pictures
("icons" in computer jargon) stood for
and how to "click" on them, I knew I
was home free. Now my Mac sits on
my desk, an indispensable tool.
This summer, administrative offices
at the College have been connected by
something called Intermail. I can com-
municate with people all over campus
by typing in a message and sending it
over the wires to their computer
screen. Such speedy transfer of infor-
mation eliminates the problem of
"telephone ping pong" and the cold
formality of the memo. Soon, students
will be able to join in this dialogue.
Yes, computers are expensive and
require a great deal of staff time for in-
struction and maintenance. Yes, it is
easy to sneer at them. Yes, we do not
yet have reliable data yet as to their
pedagogical efficacy. Nonetheless, I
will continue to be a strong advocate
for their use. My own experience has
convinced me of their value. Now, if
you'll excuse me, I'd like to check my
Intermail to see if I've gotten any mes-
sages this morning. . .
34
SPECIAL SUPPLEMENT
ANNUAL REPORT 1986-1987
The Caters: The First Five Years
REPORTS FROM THE OFHCERS OF THE COLLEGE
REPORT OF GIFTS
INTERVIEW
Douglass And Libby Cater:
The First Five Years
Sue De Pasquale '87
Q: In your inaugural address five years ago, you
talked about the fact that the small, independent lib-
eral arts college is an endangered species. However,
as time has passed here at Washington College dur-
ing that period, admissions rates have gone up and
the attrition rate has dropped. Wltat do you see as the
reason for this?
DOUGLASS CATER: I believe there has been a
re-awakening of a sense of what Washington
College is, what it stands for in history, and
what it can become. 1 believe that no one single
thing triggers all the rest, but a thousand inter-
actions indicate whether a college is alive and
blooming or whether it's gently declining.
LIBBY CATER: Haven't you described it as ser-
endipity at one point?
DC: A president has to realize that so many of
the good things that happen were not carefully
planned for, but that a leader takes advantage of
things that happen naturally. Right from my be-
ginning here, there were fortunate happenings.
Q: Wlwt do you mean?
DC: A college president who doesn't
have both skill and luck in attracting
support cannot be truly successful in
these hard scrabble times when costs are
providing a constant pressure on the in-
dependent college. So, willy-nilly, as I
frequently say, you have to live in a big
house and beg.
I learned early on that if I treated fund
raising as a burden it was going to de-
stroy me. Therefore I try to treat it as
the last of the genuine bloodsports — it
is fun to get up in the morning and go
ask somebody for a million dollars. You
have to believe in your cause, because if
you don't, that comes through very,
very quickly.
I've gotten so habituated to this that I
was at my prep school reunion in New
Hampshire a few weeks ago and some-
body at the dinner table asked about
Washington College. Before I finished
talking to him, two prep school class-
mates had each written me a check for
one hundred dollars. And that was on
my day off!
LC: I think it also helps to consider that
just because the College is situated on
the Eastern Shore in Maryland, that's
not the only place to look. You must
widen the horizon and look to other ar-
eas like New York and Chicago and try
to reach out and convince them that the
future of this historic liberal arts college
is important.
DC: She's dead right. The Trustees had
the wisdom to perceive that Washington
College was not telling its story widely
enough.
It was my good fortune to have had a
background in which I knew people in
a lot of places and I discovered that this
College does elicit interest and curiosity
wherever you go...
36
2've never worked harder, or, to be
frank, enjoyed a job more... I would
rather help lead Washington
College toward a better future than be
involved with a big, rich institution
that's resting on its laurels.
PHOTO: WILLIAM C DENISON 75
37
Q: Have you enjoyed your five years here?
DC: I've never worked harder, or, to
be frank, enjoyed a job more. It is excit-
ing to be able to tell you've made a
difference. I would rather help lead
Washington College toward a better
future than be involved with a big, rich
institution that's resting on its laurels.
Now it's even more exciting to par-
ticipate in helping plan where Wash-
ington College will be in the year 2000.
Q: You 've both made special efforts to
keep in touch with students. Over the last
five years, have you noticed a change in
student attitude or in the quality of stu-
dents?
DC: I understand the College has al-
ways had a group of students who
could match any students anywhere
and then a fairly large number of stu-
dents who were here for one reason or
another, but not primarily for what
one thinks that college is for.
I would like to think that the group
of students who are alive and curious
and excited about being in college has
gotten larger, and that there are fewer
students who are just along for the
ride. The attrition rate is a statistic I
watch even more closely than I do the
enrollments, because the real measure
of success is not how many did you
get to come in the front door, but how
many either walked or got kicked out
the back door.
I was excited to learn from the Dean
this morning that this year's attrition
figures are better than last year's. It's
actually just about 10 percent. That's a
remarkably good rate. As I remember,
it is only half of what it was five years
ago.
I do feel disappointments, however.
There are so many things happening
on campus that we would like to share
more widely. When you see some of
the exciting lecturers with only a smat-
tering of students attending and a lot
of townspeople, you begin to wonder,
who's really getting the education
here? Of course, this is not a condition
that is unique to Washington College.
LC: I think the O'Neill Literary House
is an example of how intellectual pur-
suits are becoming more the thing that
students are involved in and want to
do; you don't have to apologize for
studying or going to a lecture. They're
excited over the yeasty atmosphere
there.
It's more interesting psychologically
to have a speaker in a place like the
O'Neill Literary House that's smaller
and has such a welcoming atmosphere
than in a big, cold auditorium where
even a hundred students get lost.
That's one wonderful example of how
the students have gotten more en-
gaged.
DC: Well, that's a good example in a
variety of ways. One, there was for-
merly a Literary House that had to be
abandoned because it was not struc-
turally sound, so this was a return to a
tradition. Two, we have the good for-
PHOTO: 1. M. FRAGOMENI 'I
tune to have Professor Bob Day, who
genuinely knows how to make a house
into a home. In a remarkably short
time the O'Neill House has become a
catalyst on campus.
I would like to figure out creative
ways to do that in other places. I've
been actively talking to faculty and
students asking how can we best use
the Goldstein Chair in the social sci-
ences, particularly in the area of public
policy, to achieve something compa-
rable to what the Sophie Kerr funds
have done for literary activities. I'm
also asking the natural sciences divi-
sion, "how do we use the McLain
Chair?" If we could get three different
centers of energy going. ..then we re-
ally would have a lively mix.
Of course, there are so many things
going on on campus which we need
only encourage and help fund.
Q: Such as?
DC: Well, the William James Forum
series brings a special mix of visitors to
campus.
LC: ...And very lively drama and mu-
sic departments get many students in-
volved.
DC: The activity that grew out of its
own roots is the annual Elizabethan
Christmas Dinner... I get greater satis-
faction out of seeing things take root
without my having to dig them and
plant them and water and fertilize
them. That's the mark of a successful
college, if its president isn't trying to
be a jack-of-all-trades.
I've been enormously pleased with
the way the Dean and the faculty and
subsequently the students have taken
over the academic computing pro-
gram. The success of the Apple Con-
ference this summer is very gratifying.
Washington College now stands na-
Some of my finest ener-
gies have been devoted
to writing foundation
proposals which require
just as much creative
effort as a short story or
a poem. They just have a
different readership.
tionally as the model of how a small,
liberal arts college actively involves a
piece of technology and the latest soft-
ware in its curriculum. That's exciting.
I've found that the process of re-
thinking the curriculum of a college is
a much more complex and difficult
task than I imagined. There's some-
thing about basic curriculum that
makes it slow to change. And yet I'm
happy with the things that have been
done — the Honors Seminars, the Writ-
ing Program, the Freshman Common
Seminar, the President's Forums...
Q: A hallmark of your Administration has
been the desire to emphasize writing skills
across the curriculum. How successful
have efforts been ?
DC: The quality of writing that
reaches my desk, in different forms, is
much improved, but I don't know how
deeply the discipline in writing goes
on campus. We have writing seminars,
compulsory in some cases, that are
now being reviewed to see how well
they're doing.
In the long view of history it may be
that the written word is fighting a los-
ing battle. Electronics have made it so
much easier to spit it out, or to use
body language and hip talk. We may
38
be the last people who put words on
paper. I confess shamelessly that I've
devoted this summer to some serious
writing and this is my technique of
writing — on a legal pad and a hand-
held dictating machine. 1 write illegi-
bly and then I take a machine and
very slowly read what I've written, lis-
tening to it as I dictate into the ma-
chine. In the process I make a lot of
corrections, so that by the time the first
draft is typed, I've already gone
through two thought cycles.
Q: So you don't use the Apple computer?
DC: (chuckling) I've never touched
one. But this does not mean that 1 am
deprecatory of those who write on the
computer. Libby is strugghng with
her Apple — if 1 could find three weeks
of solid time to master it, 1 would turn
loose and do it...
Q; Have you been able to find the time to
write?
DC: In the course of a year, I would
hate to guess how many words I churn
out. Some of my finest energies have
I would like to make
Hynson-Ringgold House
more a place that brings
constituencies of the Col-
lege together. Bringing
together Board members
and alumni with faculty
and students — trying to
make it a vital part of the
college.
been devoted the last five years to
writing foundation proposals which
require just as much creative effort as a
short story or a poem. They just have a
different readership.
When I came here I recognized
very, very quickly that if I tried to
hold back a portion of my time and
energy for a separate world of vmting
that I was going to be pulled to pieces.
Either I was going to do the job time
and a half, or I was not going to do the
job at all. I do write short articles,
like op/ed pieces for The New York
Times. Now I've got a book in prog-
ress.
Q: As First Lady, Mrs. Cater, you have a
variety of roles to fill. Which of these have
you enjoyed the most?
LC: Of course, I've had a love affair
with this historic house. It has been ex-
citing to try to bring things home that
belonged to people who lived in the
early house and to work on restora-
tion. On this and other projects like
Washington College Friends of the
Arts and the Women's League, it is
very satisfying to have an enthusiastic
group of people in the community and
at the College to work with.
I think a high point has been when
students come to Hynson-Ringgold
House and we've had discussions and
dinners. When we first came here, eve-
rything was new and different. We
didn't know anybody. And then, fi-
nally, you get to know some students
well, and there's the sadness of having
them graduate. There's always this
feeling of having just left camp.. ..But
then the change and renewal each year
>h
t^
r
PHOTO: J. M. FRAGOMENI '88
is invigorating. The people are differ-
ent, the issues are different.
When I was hstening to Douglass, it
occurs to me that one of the things he's
really done is institution-building. He
has re-thought the administering of
the college and he has a fantastic team
in place that makes the college work at
this accelerated pace.
Q: Mr. Cater, the development effort does
seem invigorated. How did that happen?
DC: We built up the development
staff with competent people, and en-
listed the help of those in the business
community. Here I must mention
Alonzo Decker. He had been chairman
of the Johns Hopkins campaign and is
now co-chairman of our Campaign for
Excellence. He has more energy for a
man in his late 70s than any younger
man I've met, and more dedication.
I'd like to brag on Libby. I wouldn't
be here today if she weren't here. This
is not a one-person job. She makes up
for all my shortcomings, which 1 won't
bother to list...
Q: Wlmt do you see as the financial future
for the College? Are you feeling compla-
cent, optimistic, worried?
DC: The very last word I would use is
complacent. This was a year in
which — for a variety of reasons — we
had a liquidity crunch. We success-
fully turned what looked like a signifi-
cant deficit at the beginning of the year
into what will be a modest surplus. So,
on that score, we've done better than
our financial analysts predicted we
would do.
At the same time, the small, inde-
pendent college is floating on an un-
known sea. The decline in the number
of students coming out of high school
is inevitably forcing competition
among private colleges and with pub-
lic colleges. Eight hundred is very
small — very small for a successful col-
lege and we're looking hard at what
that means in terms of where we
should be five years from now. I cer-
tainly don't suggest that we should
ever be a large college, but we might
be a little larger small college. One-
thousand students is a nice, round
number, but even that would require
added dormitory facilities, so it's not
something you do lightly.
One thing I think interesting to note
is that many of my old friends have an
overly romantic view: isn't it wonder-
ful, they say. You live in an historic
little town where there is a real sense
of community and almost a picture-
book college. Life must be slow and
easy.
Life is never that easy, even in a
small community. We've discovered
there are pressures and stress, failures
of communication...
LC: There's not a buffer around you
here the way there would be in a
larger institution. Here, it's "hands-
on" always.
DC: But despite the fact that you
39
shouldn't romanticize the small com-
munity in America, this is a human-
sized job, unlike many of the jobs
we're watching people try to do in
New York and Washington. They pre-
tend that they're shaping events, and
most of the time, they're just hanging
on by the skin of their teeth....
From that perspective this is almost
idyllic. If the definition of what is living
is whether you feel like getting out of
bed every morning, this is a job where
you want to get out of bed. 1 delight in
going and meeting the community of
people, all the way from my associates in
Bunting Hall, to the faculty, the stu-
dents, the trus-
tees, the alums,
and then the
greater world
beyond...
LC; Some of my
friends say to
me, "What do
you do in Ch-
estertown? It
must be very
quiet." And I
think to my-
self, I've never
been busier in
my life. I've
never had a job
any more de-
m a n d i n g ,
frankly.
DC: Even when
I spent four and
a half years in
the White House, I didn't work as con-
centratedly as I do here.
Q: How would you describe your experi-
ences in working with the faculty?
DC: I've been involved in a variety of
colleges on the faculty side, not as an
administrator. So I've known the point
of view of the faculty member. Being a
full-time intellectual has its ups and
downs and so I try to be understand-
ing. As my wife will attest with great
vigor, when something seems to me
ridiculous, I'm apt to — by word or ges-
ture— indicate that I think it's ridicu-
lous, and this causes me some diffi-
culty. I think I've gotten better, more
humble than I was when I came here.
LC: More patient...
The thing I find really encouraging
is the number of faculty members who
are involved in specific initiatives. 1
think the Wye Faculty Seminar has
given us all a new perspective.
DC: I'm glad you mentioned that,
Libby, because that represents an
extension of my earlier life that has
worked — to gather around the table
and examine ideas and values beyond
each participant's specialty. This is the
basic purpose of the Wye Faculty
Seminars that convene at the Aspen In-
stitute at Wye each summer.
LC: When you are with the faculty in
that context, they shed their usual
academic robes and there's a lot of
give and take. You get to know a per-
son better. It allows a freeing of the
minds.
Q: Could each of you share the priorities
that you have set for yourselves in prepar-
ing for the next five years at Washington
College?
DC: Five years? At next October's
Board meeting, we're launching Phase
Two of the Campaign for Excellence
in which the campaign chairmen want
to raise our goal. They're gung-ho —
and certainly the need is there — for a
larger endowment, for a number of
things.
Reaching that goal is going to repre-
sent many ergs of energy on my part.
At the end of the day, it's the president
who has to go through the door and
shake hands.
LC: For the future, the thing that I re-
ally want to do is be more involved on
campus. I try to attend as many things
as I can. I'm sad every time I miss stu-
dent events: an interesting lecture, a
drama production, a game. I'd also
like to audit some classes. Off campus,
1 want to work with students on proj-
ects for the underpriveleged children
of Chestertown.
In the next few years, I would like to
make Hynson-Ringgold House more a
place that brings constituencies of the
College together. Bringing together
Board members and alumni with fac-
ulty and students — trying to make it a
vital part of the college. I want to put
an emphasis on getting many more
students down to the house; not just
for big receptions where you shake
hands and admire the garden but to
gather around the fire for an evening
of good talk
and music.
Q: Mr. Cater,
what, ultimately,
is your wish for
Washington Col-
lege?
DC: In the gal-
axy of little
colleges in
America — and
this country is
unique in hav-
ing so many
small, "inde-
pendent" col-
leges— every
once in a
^^_. ,^^_ while one col-
« ^P til^ lege moves
k. ^ ^^f ^^.i^A into a signifi-
PHOTO; ). M. FRAGOMENi 88 cantly higher
orbit and becomes more important in
the scheme of things.
You ask, what caused it to move into
a higher orbit? You discover it was a
combination of leadership and added
financial support. You can't have one
without the other. For some reason
that remains unexplainable to me,
Washington College went for 200 years
without that magic combination. Part
of the reason is that it was considered
remote, although, given our proximity
to the big cities of the Eastern Sea-
board, we are not at all a remote col-
lege.
I don't know for certain where I
will be five years from now, but I
hope that at that time, people will
say, "Yep, Washington College
moved into higher orbit." I hope it
will be more widely recognized as
one of the great little colleges in
America.
40
WASHINGTON COLLEGE
Annual Report
^ f%
From The Dean Of
The College
Elizabeth R. Baer
V^ontrary to the dire predictions of
statisticians, who said that enrollments
in colleges would decline precipitously
in the late 1980s, Washington College
will enjoy a student body of about 900
this academic year. This record high
enrollment can be attributed to any
number of things, depending on
whose opinion you might solicit: the
strength of our faculty, the small
classes, the academic computing pro-
gram, the Honors program, the effec-
tive advising program. Others might
cite the financial aid program, the
renovation of campus facilities, and
the athletic program. All have com-
bined to attract prospective fresh-
men— and perhaps even more impor-
tantly, to retain these students once
they enroll.
Five years ago, the College's attri-
tion rate hovered at 20 percent. Today
that rate has dropped to just 10 per-
cent, well below the national average.
Why are fewer students choosing to
leave? The assistant dean's position,
added when Alice Berry joined the ad-
ministration in 1984, is certainly one
reason. Dean Berry's work focused
solely on student academic concerns:
aiding those on academic probation by
directing them to academic support
services, and helping others make wise
choices regarding study abroad and
career planning.
Though Dean Berry has moved on to
take a faculty post in Louisiana, Lucille
Sansing's arrival will ensure continuity
for students who have come to depend
on the assistant dean's office for aca-
demic counseling.
In the classroom itself, students are
reaping the benefits of faculty develop-
ment programs. More than half of the
College's faculty participated this sum-
mer in independent research programs
funded by groups such as the Mary-
land Writer's Project, National Endow-
ment for Humanities, Faculty En-
hancement Fund, Mellon Faculty De-
velopment Program, CAPHE, and the
Wye Faculty Seminar. Imbuing faculty
members with new ideas and fresh
approaches to teaching, these summer
experiences have a very positive im-
pact on the curriculum.
I stated that Washington College
would "enjoy" its student body of 900.
Such a large number does have its ac-
companying difficulties. How do we
house these students? How do we pro-
vide an adequate selection of courses
for them? A sufficient number of sec-
tions of Freshman EngUsh? More
abstractly, how do we retain the char-
acter of the College to which faculty,
students, and alumni are fiercely
committed — that of a small, private,
liberal arts college? When we boast of
small classes, do we mean 15 students
or 30? When does a faculty member's
teaching load change the character of
his/her teaching?
No easy answers or yardsticks exist,
but these intangibles are the subject of
vital discussions in the Board of Visi-
tors and Governors meetings and col-
lege committees, in departmental re-
ports, and in the faculty lounge. To be
sure, accommodating increasing num-
bers of students at WC will pose a
challenge. But by acting upon the in-
put provided by the College's most
vital resources — its faculty, students,
administrators, alumni and Board
members — 1 am confident the chal-
lenge will be met.
From The Vice
President For
Finance
By Gene A. Hessey
In 1986-87 Washington College pros-
pered in many ways. We met our
financial goals and finished the year
well in the black. We moved to a fully
integrated administrative computer
system, our endowment continued to
rise, we made progress in implement-
41
ing the campus master plan for reno-
vation and new construction, we
launched a landscaping plan to beau-
tify our campus, and we improved fac-
ulty and staff salaries and benefits.
Our successes this year derive from
an extra effort in all areas of the ad-
ministration to contain cost and con-
trol spending.
Our financial goals for this year
were part of a new program through
which the Board and the Business Of-
fice carefully monitored monthly reve-
nues and expenses. The Business Of-
fice made strides in reporting data in a
timely manner. Efficiency will be fur-
ther enhanced as we move to the Da-
tatel Minicomputer System. This sys-
tem will integrate communications be-
tween the Registrar's Office, the Busi-
ness Office, and the Offices of Admis-
sions, Development, Alumni and Stu-
dent Affairs. It provides for auto-
mated billing while issuing flexible
and comprehensive reports. At the
same time, and perhaps most impor-
tant, as WC continues to expand its ef-
forts in all the areas linked by this sys-
tem, we will be able to process greater
amounts of data at high speeds.
Washington College continued its
commitment to student aid, and raised
$2 million in additional financial aid
endowment, as well as more than
$400,000 as part of a revolving fund for
direct student financial assistance.
This last year institutional expenses for
student aid climbed to $1,845,000
against tuition and fee revenues of
$5,650,000. This means that the Col-
lege was supplying 32% of tuition and
fee costs in the form of student aid.
Student aid expense now represents al-
most 187o of the current operating
budget. With this in mind we reevalu-
ated our student aid program and re-
worked the criteria for making finan-
cial aid awards. Now we are striving
to reward merit and a student's
commitment to his education, as well
as meeting need.
The President's efforts and the
extraordinary generosity of some of
our Board members combined to in-
crease the endowment from
$14,150,000 to $16,020,000— a growth
of 11.67%. An endowment drive is
now a priority in the Facilities Cam-
paign. When we consider that five
years ago we had an endowment of
only $9,295,000 and that we anticipate
an endowment of more than $25 mil-
lion within 3 years, we believe we are
properly positioning the College to
move into the 1990s with a strong fi-
nancial base.
Likewise, our capital improvement
program will permit us to compete
more effectively for the dwindling
pool of students anticipated in the
coming years. The first phase of the
campus master plan included a com-
prehensive program for the renovation
of our dormitories. We have com-
pleted the renovation of Minta Martin
Hall and have begun work on Reid.
We are also on schedule with the
Decker Science Center construction.
As we commit ourselves to campus
improvements, we are greatly encour-
aged by financial signs that indicate
we are moving in the right direction.
v^
From The Director of
Admissions
By Kevin Coveney
1 his has been a banner year for the
Washington College admissions pro-
gram. Of the 10,000-plus high school
seniors who identified themselves as
prospective candidates for admission
to the Class of 1991, 1,110 became ap-
plicants, 790 were offered admission
and 260 enrolled. The 1987 applicant
pool was, in fact, the largest in the his-
tory of Washington College. During
the '70s and early '80s the annual
freshman applicant pool averaged 665
students; this year's total represents a
67 percent increase over the most re-
cent ten-year average.
Steady growth in the number of
freshman applicants is a clear sign of
the College's increasing popularity.
National recognition in Peterson's
Guide to Competitive Colleges and in
Edward Fiske's Best Buys in College
Education has helped to inform a
wider audience about the College's
longstanding strengths and moderate
costs. The College also has enjoyed
considerable media attention due to
the success of President Cater's "Third
Century Initiatives" and the "Cam-
paign for Excellence." In addition, the
College has effectively utilized direct
mail to bring its recruiting message
into the homes of 40,000-plus college-
bound high school students through-
out the Eastern U.S. Interested stu-
dents are also encouraged to view an
eight minute videotape introduction to
Washington College which is currently
on display at over 1,000 high schools.
Not all of the "good news" about
Washington College is communicated
via video tape or the printed page.
The admissions staff meets personally
with several thousand students in the
course of their 600-700 annual high
school visits and interviews approxi-
mately 500 students during the aca-
demic year. Washington College fac-
ulty and alumni meet with many pro-
spective students during campus visits
or off-campus receptions and inter-
views. On yet another front, Washing-
ton College students and members of
the Parents Council frequently call
prospective applicants to provide in-
formation and encouragement. Ulti-
mately, it is both the frequency and
quality of these varied personal con-
tacts that lead many promising young
students to cast their lot with WC.
A major benefit of the recent in-
creases in the applicant pool has been
the opportunity to exercise greater se-
lectivity in the admissions process and
thus bring about qualitative enhance-
ments in the student body. SAT
scores have increased by 10-15 points
over the past five years. More signifi-
cantly, the percentage of enrolled stu-
dents ranking in the top two-fifths of
their high school class has increased by
20 percent over the past decade.
Among members of the Class of 1991,
86 percent ranked in the top half of
their class and 92 percent scored be-
tween 800-1600 on their SAT tests.
Strengthening the student body has
helped reduce the attrition rate to a
figure well below the national norm.
Consistent with the College's enroll-
ment profile throughout most of the
'70s and '80s, the Class of 1991 is geo-
graphically diverse. Twenty states and
seven foreign countries are repre-
42
sented in the Class, with one-half of
this year's freshmen coming from
Maryland (20 percent from Baltimore
and Anne Arundel counties). Women
outnumber men among freshmen 56
percent-44 percent and students from
public high schools edge out their in-
dependent school counterparts by a
similar margin, 55 percent-44 percent.
Among the programs most frequently
cited as intended fields of study by
members of the Class of 1991 were
English, business management,
premed, pre-law, international studies
and psychology.
Despite demographic forecasts that
point to a decline in the college-bound
population, this Class is not likely to
stand as the highwater mark of new
student enrollments for the rest of this
century. In response to a student mar-
ketplace that is becoming increasingly
competitive and complex, Washington
College has moved to complement its
traditional assets of a dedicated teach-
ing faculty, a challenging liberal arts
curriculum, an attractive location and
comfortable campus with a variety of
programmatic, facility and student aid
initiatives. The result will be a College
that is prepared to pursue and achieve
excellence in all of its endeavors.
From The Vice
President For
Development And
College Relations
By F. David Wheelan '80
Xlonorary alumnus Roger Mudd,
speaking on campus at the official an-
nouncement of the $26.4 million Cam-
paign for Excellence in March 1985,
reminded his audience: "Washington
College is not fooling around."
Nothing could have been closer to
the truth. Within 13 months of Mr.
Mudd's announcement and 18 months
sooner than expected, Co-Chairmen
Alonzo C. Decker, Jr. and W. James
Price IV, with the help of Vice Chair-
man George Wills, raised $26 million
in gifts and pledges. Complementing
this remarkable achievement, alumni
participation rose from 30 to 50 per-
cent, and, for the first time in the his-
tory of the College, annual giving ex-
ceeded $1 million.
This has been a labor involving
many hands and hearts. The energetic
leadership of alumni and friends,
paced by the Board of Visitors and
Governors, provided the critical cata-
lyst. Numerous foundations and cor-
porations, witnessing the vital support
of these important individuals, joined
with them to preserve and protect
Washington College's future. We are
grateful.
Our progress has produced visible
results. In February 1987, ground was
broken on the Alonzo G. Decker, Jr.
Science Center. Meeting one of our
most critical needs, this modern cen-
tralized facility will house eight labo-
ratories and six research units. An an-
nex next to Dunning Hall will contain
laboratories for chemistry and biology.
The Dunning Science Building will be
renovated to meet needs of physics,
psychology and mathematics and will
provide lecture rooms for chemistry
and biology. Projected cost for the en-
tire renovation and construction proj-
ect is $3.5 milhon with an additional $1
million necessary for equipment and
endowment of the expanded facilities.
After site visits, the Pew Memorial
Trust of Philadelphia and the State of
Maryland have made challenge grants
for this project. Additional support for
the project has come from Alex. Brown
& Sons, AT&T Foundation, the
Campbell Soup Fund, the Crystal
Trust, Equitable Bank Foundation,
Olin Corporation Charitable Trust, the
Starr Foundation and the Surdna
Foundation. Construction is on sched-
ule, and the bids have come in under
the estimated budget. We expect the
facility to be completed and ready for
occupancy by the fall semester of 1989.
Other projects on campus we point
to with pride this year include the
renovation of Minta Martin Hall, the
start of work on Reid hall, and con-
struction of a press room and porch at
the O'Neill Literary House. In addi-
tion, a master landscaping plan has
been developed, and many new plant-
ings now adorn the campus.
1986 also will be remembered for the
creation of the highly successful Stu-
dent Scholarship Assistance Fund.
Developed in response to a $1 million
challenge from trustee Mrs. Eugene B.
Casey and the Beneficial-Hodson
Trust, the Fund raised $2.1 million in
endowment and current scholarship
aid. A revolving fund, designed to off-
set current costs of financial aid, at-
tracted 43 donors contributing
$481,431. The endowed fund attracted
$1.7 million from three donors: Mrs.
Casey, the Beneficial Hodson Trust,
and The Starr Foundation.
Within the Washington College fam-
ily, 1986-87 will be remembered as the
first year that over 50 percent of its
alumni supported the College's annual
giving campaign. Not only is this a
significant accomplishment for the
alumni, but it also places Washington
College within an elite group of col-
leges and universities, totalling less
than 25 nationally, able to boast of
such loyalty and commitment.
It seems fitting that in the same year
the alumni exceeded the College rec-
ord in gift participation, the first
Washington College alumni magazine
was produced with exceptional results.
The magazine, a product of almost two
years of planning among volunteers,
notably Brien Kehoe '69, Kevin
O'Keefe '75, and staff consultant Mary
Ruth Yoe '74, was produced by our
College Relations staff to serve as an
important bridge between Washington
College and its alumni.
This past year has also been one of
strengthening the network of alumni
activity both on and off campus. In
March the Alumni Association Council
approved the appointment of Patricia
Trams '75 as Alumni Director while re-
taining Mackey Streit as Associate Di-
rector. Progress is continuing on the
organization and rebuilding of alumni
chapters throughout the mid-Atlantic
region, with major alumni activities
taking place in Washington, Salisbury
and Baltimore.
We are justifiably proud of this past
year's accomplishments and look for-
ward to working with you in the year
to come as we continue to support the
mission of Washington College.
43
WASHINGTON COLLEGE
Report of Gifts
THE 1782 SOCIETY of WASHINGTON COLLEGE
William Smith Fellows
Mr. Homer Gudelsky
Mrs. William G. Duvall '30
Mr. Mark A. Schulman '67
$10,000 or more
Mr. John D. Hall '70
Mr. & Mrs. Henry A. Earp Jr.
Ms. Shelley V, Sharp '78
Mr. & Mrs. James N, Juliana
Mrs. Dorris D. Eiker
Mr, & Mrs, John P, Sherman '77
Mr, Henry C. Beck Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Arthur Kudner
Lt. Col. & Mrs. Joe S. Elliott Jr. '40
Mr, Norman W, Shorb '38
Mr. & Mrs. August Belmont
Ms. Kathleen Markey-Perdue
Mr. & Mrs, William R. Essig
Mrs, Jouett Shouse
Mrs. Eugene B. Casey '47
Mr. & Mrs. William A. McAdams '40
Mrs, Charlotte Fletcher
Ms, Thelma B, Smith '34
Mr. & Mrs. Henry E. Catto Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Frederick S. Micari '40 '38
Mrs, Margaret Welsh Frailey '66
Mr, & Mrs, Dietrich Steffens '43 '46
Mr. Israel Cohen
Mrs. Dorothy W. Myers '24
Mr. & Mrs. Stanley B. Giraitis '30
Mr. Edward W. Stewart '52
Mr. & Mrs. Alonzo G. Decker Jr.
Mr. Glen R. Shipway '65
Hon. & Mrs. Louis L. Goldstein '35
Mr. & Mrs. Eric E. Stoll '74 '78
Mr. & Mrs. Robert W. Duemling
Mr. & Mrs. Edmund A. Stanley Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Ettore H. Grassi
Mrs. Lawrence W. Swanstrom '69
Mrs. Harry Duffey
Mr. & Mrs. Alexander Trowbridge
Mr. Hermen Greenberg
Mr. John L. Tansey '73
Mr. & Mrs. William Ellinghaus
Mr. & Mrs. Harry K. Wells
Mrs. Ann Watts Grieves
Miss Elizabeth R. Thibodeau '36
Miss Hazel Ann Fox
Mr. F. David Wheelan '80
Mr. & Mrs. David M. Griffith '72
Mr. & Mrs. Benjamin C. Tilghman
Mr. & Mrs. Benjamin Griswold III
Mr. & Mrs. Howard Wood '68
Mr. Frank C. Gunderloy '52
Mr. & Mrs. Wylie F.L. Tuttle
Mr. Avery Hall
Mr. & Mrs. Charles S. Hague '38 '41
Mr. & Mrs. George J. Usuka
Mr. Christian Havemeyer
Founder's Club
Mr. & Mrs. George D. Harris, Jr.
Mrs. John A. Wagner
Mr. & Mrs. Horace Havemeyer
$1000 - $2,499
Mr. & Mrs. Peter M. Hart
Mrs. Lucille F. Wallop
Mr. & Mrs. E. Ralph Hostetter
Mr. & Mrs. Gene A. Hessey
Mr. Thomas R. Waylett
Mr. & Mrs. William B. Johnson '40
Mr. & Mrs. Raouf Sa'd Abujaber
Mr. & Mrs, Robert M. Hewes III
Mr. Lavirence S. Wescott '51
Mrs. Sterling Larrabee
Mrs. Dale P. Adams '65
Mr. & Mrs. Philip A. Hickman '38 '38
Dr. & Mrs, Clifton F, West
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas J. Maher
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas A. Adams II
Mr. & Mrs. Alexander H. Hoon
Mr, & Mrs, Frederick Wick
Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth F. Montgomery
Mr. & Mrs. E. Stanton Adkins '49
Mr. & Mrs. William G. Hupfeldt
Mr, & Mrs, George S, Wills
Mr. & Mrs. W. James Price IV
Mr. & Mrs. William F, Andrews
Mr. & Mrs. Daniel W. Ingersoll '33 '71
Dr. & Mrs. Phillip J. Wingate '33
Mr. & Mrs. William R. Russell '53 '56
Mr. & Mrs. James Barrett
Mr. Peter W. Jenkins '82
Mr. & Mrs. G. Van Velsor Wolf
Mr. & Mrs. B. F. Saul 11
Mr. & Mrs. William Bauknight
Mr. & Mrs. Dwight H. Johnson
Dr. & Mrs. Frederick S. Wyman
Ms. Lillian Solomon
Mrs. Rollison H. Baxter
Mr. & Mrs. Alexander G. Jones '51
Mr. & Mrs. Leonard A. Yerkes
Mr. Jay F. Spry '37
Drs. Maria Boria & James Berna
Mr. Brien E. Kehoe '69
Dr. & Mrs. George M. Young
Mrs. John Campbell White
Mr. & Mrs. Peter Black
Mrs. Arthur A. Knapp
Mr. Caiman J. Zamoiski Jr.
Mr. Thomas G. Wyman
Mr. & Mrs. Robert R. Bowie '33
Dr. & Mrs. William O. LaMotte Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Walter C. Brandt '43 '43
Mr, & Mrs. Theodore Landksroener
1782 Corporate Listing
The President's Council
Mr. & Mrs. Harrison C. Bristoll Jr.
Mr, & Mrs, Robert Liles '80
$5,000 - $9,999
Mr. & Mrs. William J. Brogan '52 '50
Mr, & Mrs, Winslow Long
Centreville National Bank
Mr. David G. Burton
Mr, & Mrs. John M. Lord
C & P Telephone Company
Mr. H. Furlong Baldwin
Mr. & Mrs. Donald F. Campbell '50 '52
Mrs. Avis R. Maddox '27
Chestertown Bank of Maryland
Mr. Walton Beacham
Mr. & Mrs. Charles Carroll
Mr. Holt L. Marchant '63
Delmarva Power
Mr. & Mrs. A. T. Blades
Capt. & Mrs. R. Lee Clark '40
Mr. Davy McCall
Delmarva Sash & Door
Mr. & Mrs. Peter Boggs '72 '73
Mr. & Mrs. Robert N. Cleaver '58 '57
Mr. & Mrs. James W. McCurdy Jr. '52
Dixon Valve & Coupling Company
Mr. & Mrs. Douglass Cater
Mr. & Mrs. William J. Collins '40
Mr, & Mrs. Donald F, McHugh '53
Dukes-Moore Insurance Agency
Mr. & Mrs. William B. Cater
Dr. & Mrs. John A. Conkling '65 '65
Mr, & Mrs. Frederick W. Milbredt
Reetwood, Athey, Macbeth &
Mr. & Mrs. Charles Covington '56 '54
Mr. & Mrs. Ernest S. Cookerly '49
Mr. & Mrs. Karl E. Miller
McCovm Insurance
Mr. & Mrs. George Dean
Mr. & Mrs. Henry V. Crawford '40
Mr. & Mrs. Michael Miller
G.S.M.,Inc.
Mr. & Mrs. William D. Geitz Jr. '44 '50
Mr. & Mrs. Wilham F. Creager
Mr. & Mrs. John A. Moag '77
Imperial Hotel
Colonel Cecil Carey Jarman
Mr. & Mrs. George Cromwell '55 '53
Mr. & Mrs. Robert A. Moore '59
K.R.M., Inc.
Mr. & Mrs. George D. Olds III
Dr. Ivon E. Culver '35
Mr. & Mrs. J. Judson Morgan
Kent Printing Corporation
Mr. & Mrs. Edward Shaprro '37
Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth H. Daly '38
Mr. & Mrs. James G. Nelson
Kentronics
Mr. Howard S. Turner
Mr. & Mrs. John H. Davie, Jr. '58
Mr. & Mrs. Gregory J. North
LaMotte Chemical Products Company
Mr. Albert L. Watson
Mr. & Mrs. Henry G. Davis '35
Mr. Kevin M. O'Keefe '74
Loyola Federal Savings & Loan
Mr. Robert Day
Dr. & Mrs. Albert H. Owens
Maryland National Bank
George Washington Club
$2,500 - $4,999
Mr. & Mrs, Raymond K. Denworth Jr.
Lt. Col. William K. Perrin '31
North and Parker, Inc.
Eileen Desmond
Dr. & Mrs. James M. Potter '59
Peoples Bank of Kent County
Mr. Vernon F. Dowling '44
Mr. & Mrs. Richard A. Reilly '58 '59
Quail Run Nursery
Mr. & Mrs. Samuel C. Dudley '36 '36
Mr. Guenther K. Drechsler
Dr. & Mrs. Harry C. Rhodes '35
Shoreman Stick Supporters
Mr. & Mrs. Robert P. Fuller
Mr. & Mrs. William A, Dunphy Jr. '73
Dr. & Mrs. William F. Rienhoff
White Swan Tavern
44
Dean's List
$500 - $999
Mr. B. Dunkin Adams '60
Mrs. Margaret Jean Africa '49
Mr. Thurman H. Albertson '57
Mr. Michael Alteri '43
Dr. Roy P. Ans '63
Dr. Frank Ayers Jr. '21
Mr. Robert G. Bailey
Mr. John E. Barnes Jr. '47
Mr. Walton Beacham
Mr. Glen Beebe '81
Mrs. Victoria L. Blake '69
Mr. H. W. Bloomfield '54
Mr. and Mrs. John L. Bond '30, '30
Mrs. Margaret R. Bradd
Mr. J. S. Bryan III
Mr.& Mrs. Wm. Buckingham '41, '42
Ms. Anne E. Burris '48
Mrs. Margaret W. Carroll '38
Colonel Clifford S. Case '49
Mr. Douglas R. Casey
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene S. Casey
Mrs. Grace S. Chaires '27
Dr Charles B Clark '34
Mrs. Daphne DeGuere '71
Mr. Julian A. Dorf '49
Honorable Robert C. Earley '52
Mrs. Therese A. Faby '79
Mr. Richard R. Farrow '57
Mr. Edward A. Fogel
Mr. & Mrs. James P. Gibney
Mr. & Mrs. Albert P. Giraitis '34, '34
Mr. William E. Griffith '24
Mr. John B. Haines '52
Mr. Najeeb E. Halaby
Mr. George H. Hanst '56
Mr. Stephen G. Harper '65
Mr. Landon Hilliard III
Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Hoffman
Mr. and Mrs. Richard V. Holmes
Ms. Sally Hopkins
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J. Hutchison
Mr. Richard M. Johnson '33
Douglass Cater and Betty B. Casey
Mrs. Nancy H. Jones '50
Mr. and Mrs. Ferdinand Kelly
Mr. Harold B, Kennerly '35
Mr. & Mrs. William O. Leonard'70, '69
Mrs. Sara M. Lilienthal '70
Mr. John M. Lord '35
Dr. Henry Maguire '42
Mrs. Jean McFadden '67
Mr. and Mrs. Lockhart McGuire
Mr. Howard Medholdt
Mrs. Joseph M. Messick
Mr. and Mrs. David Metz
Mrs. Joan C. Moore '53
Mr. William M, Nagler '42
Mr. Theodore F. Parker '64
Mr. L. Franklin Phares '55
Mr. Earl W. Price '35
Judge George B. Rasin '37
Mr. William A. Robinson '30
Mr. & Mrs. Robert H. Roy
Dr. Erika Salloch
Mr. Stephen Sandebeck '73
Mr. Austin M. Taliaferro
Mrs. Eleanor H. Taylor '44
Mr. & Mrs. Robert Thawley '45, '45
Mr. George Visnich
Mr. & Mrs. Melvin W. Walker '64, '65
Mr. & Mrs. Charles F. Ward
Mr. Ivan A. Winnick '62
Century Club
$100 - $499
Mr. Donald Abbott
Mr. Stephen Abramson '47
Mrs. Myrtle B. Adkins '64
Mr. & Mrs. Charles E. Albers
Mr. Donald E. Alt '83
Mr. & Mrs. Steven H. Amick '69, '69
Mr. C. Allen Amos '66
Mr. Charles F. Anderson '39
Mr. Owen R. Anderson '40
Mrs. Elizabeth D Andrew '28
Mr. Ormond L Andrew '63
Mr. Thomas B. Andrews '43
Mr, James T. Anthony '34
Mr. Robert H Appleby '54
Mr. B. Lyle Appleford '29
Mrs. Kathryn W. Argentieri '72
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas P. Arthur '70
Mr. Edward L. Athey '47
Mr. Gary K. Atkinson '83
Mr James M. Aycock '43
Dr. Chester C. Babat '62
Mr Jesse C. Bacon '82
Mr John Bacon Jr. '52
Mr. Roland J. Bailey Jr. '35
Mr. George B. Bailey Jr. '68
Mr. & Mrs. George T. Baker
Senator Walter M Baker '60
Mr. & Mrs. Robert N. Bakley
Mr. Allen R. Baldwin '48
Ms. Christine M. Baldwin
Mr. John C. Bankert '25
Mr. James W. Barcus '35
Mrs. Patricia S. Barkdoll '66
Mr. Wilbur P. Barnes '49
Mr. & Mrs. William A. Barnett '55, '59
Mr. Frank K. Barnhart '35
Mr. & Mrs. Almon C. Barrell '67, '66
Reverend Charles E. Barton Jr. '56
Mrs. Nola H. Basil '35
Ms. Sara H. Beaudry '64
Mr. Charles C. Benham '38
Mr. John E. Benjamin '42
Dr. William F. Bennett '49
Mrs. Susan Jo Berman '66
Mr. Charles W. Bernstein '58
Mr. Charles R. Berry '36
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas H, Berry '66, '66
Mrs. William M. Bertles
Mr. & Mrs. Edwin H. Besson '50, '51
Mrs. Alice M. Betley
Mr. & Mrs. Henry O. Biddle '68, '70
Rev. & Mrs. James G. Birney
Mr. & Mrs. George C. Boehm
Mrs. Holly B. Bohlinger '62
Dr. Norton Bonnett '40
Mr. & Mrs, Martin Boor Jr.
Mrs. Elizabeth H. Booth '39
Mr. & Mrs. Madison B. Bordley '38, '41
Mr. & Mrs. George Boumazian
Mr. & Mrs. Elmer W. Boyles '34
Mr. S. Russell Bozman '27
Mr. Franklin M. Bradley '62
Mr. Robert A. Bragg '59
Mrs. Dorsey H. Bramble '74
Lieut. Gregory H. Brandon '78
Mrs. Ella B. Brandt '35
Mr. Ronald D. Brannock '65
Mr. Joseph Bringhurst '33
Mrs. Kathryn S. Brinsfield '29
Mr. & Mrs. Hugh F. Brookhart
Mr. Frank W. Brower Jr. '51
Mr. James P. Brown Jr. '50
Mrs. Karen M. Brown '69
Mr. Michael B. Brown '73
Mrs. Rene T. Brown '74
Mr. Ridgely T. Brown '63
Ms. Patricia A. Broume '56
Mr. David S. Bruce '70
Col. Paul E. Bruehl '37
Mrs. Elizabeth W, Bryan '38
Mrs. Cindy P. Bryant '71
Mr & Mrs. Cornelius Buchler
Mr. George L. Buckless Jr. '69
Mr. & Mrs. William J. Burk '30, '30
Mr. William E. Burkhardt '34
Mr. George B. Burns '57
Ms. Jennifer A Butler '79
Mr. & Mrs. Robert L Byrd
Mrs. Margaret S. Cadell '40
Mrs. Louise M. Calary '31
Dr. William H. Caldwell '60
Mr. Richard B. Callahan '60
Mrs. Charlton Campbell-Hughes '75
Mr. F. Gerald Caporoso '57
Mrs. Elise L. Caragine '74
Mr. George F. Carnngton '29
Mrs. Beulah C. Carter '30
Mr. Robert E.Carter '42
Mr. Robert L. Gary '32
Mr. & Mrs. James G. Chalfant '67, '71
Mr. & Mrs. Theodore H. Chase
Miss Lee A. Chearneyi '81
Ms. Ruth E. Chisnell '83
Mr & Mrs. Arthur M. Christie '50, '50
Mr. & Mrs. George Churchill '73, '73
Mr. Robert Cigala '73
Mr. Walter W, Claggett '40
Captain Charles M, Clark '33
Mr. & Mrs. Garry E. Clarke '75
Mr. Donald R. Clausen '59
Mr. & Mrs. Kendall C. Clement '67, '68
Mr. & Mrs. Alday M. Clements '35, '37
Mrs. Frances S. Clendaniel '35
Mr. Timothy N, Cloud '83
Mrs. Elizabeth H. Clough '33
Mr. & Mrs William P. Gofer
Mr. & Mrs. John L. Coker '65, '66
Drs. Thomas & Virginia Collier
Mrs. Susan B. Collins '63
Mr. Norris W. Commodore Jr. '73
Mr. & Mrs. Daniel G. Conant '47, '48
Mr. John P. Consaga '62
Mr. & Mrs. Bryson L. Cook
Mr. & Mrs. Edward W. Cooper '41, '46
Mr. William F. Copenhaver '60
Mr. John A. Copple '40
Mr. Clinton W. Corbin '18
Mr. Robert N. Corddry '44
Mr. & Mrs. Richard E Cote Sr.
Mr. & Mrs. Plato Coundjeris
Mr. Robert M. Cox Jr. '69
Mr. Warren J. Cox
Mrs. Mary R. Craggett '61
Ms. Judith B. Craine '63
Mr. Roger N. Craine '62
Dr. Robert K. Crane '42
Mrs. Alice T. Cranor '60
Mrs. Carolyn Cridler-Smith '66
Mr. W. Edwin Crouch Jr. '49
Mr. Thomas C. Crouse Jr. '59
Mrs. Alfred E. Culley' 25
Mrs. Adrienne R. Dahlke '28
Mr. AndrewJ. Daillir55
Mr. & Mrs. Donald Davenport '60, '60
45
Ms. Deborah S. Davis
Mr. James D. Davis '34
Mr Robert Day
Mr. & Mrs. Michael J. DeSanits 74, '77
Dr. Pamela M. DeWeese '67
Mr. James N. Deaconson '42
Or & Mrs. Antohny J. Delano
Mr. James S. DelPriore '64
Mr. George H. Dengler '57
Mrs. Susan T. Denton '69
Mr. Donald M. Derham '48
Mr. & Mrs. Andrew T. Devine
Mr & Mrs Donald DiChiara
Dr. & Mrs. A. C. Dick
Mr. & Mrs. Arthur Dickerson
Mr. & Mrs. Arthur Diefendorf
Dr. & Mrs. Robert E. Dinker
Mrs. Margaret D, Dixon '47
Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Doherty
Ms. Margaret G. Donald '72
Mr. David E. Dougherty '55
Mr Jay M Dove III '65
Mr. Vachel A. Downes Jr. '45
Mr David M. Dressel '66
Mr. John D. Dressel '69
Ms. S. Kimble Duckworth '73
Mrs. Sylvia M. Dunning '70
Mr. & Mrs. Frank H. Durkee '65, '65
Mr. Mareen L. Duvall '62
Mrs. Carmeta R. Dykes '17
Mr. David Z. Earle '49
Mrs. Deborah K. Eaton '68
Mrs. Diantha R. Eaton '28
Mrs. Katherine Y. Eaton '63
Mr. William D, Eaton Jr. '75
Mrs. William E. Eberlein
Mr. John A. Edson
Mr. John L. Eigenbrot 11 '75
Dr. George M. Eisentrout '39
Mr. & Mrs. Julius W. Eldridge
Mr. Jay H. Elliott '75
Mr. & Mrs. 5. J. Emerson
Lieutenant Gail A. Emow '78
Mr. Richard H. Evans '65
Mr. Robert L. Everett '40
Dr. Robert W. Farr '29
Mrs. Susan L. Fast '66
Mrs. Linda P. Fenwick '74
Mr. & Mrs. Dean S. Ferris '67, '67
Mr. Thomas J. Finnegan '65
Mr. Joseph W. Fisher '51
Mr. & Mrs. Robert M. FitzGerald
Mr. & Mrs. Peter R. Fitzgerald '60
Mr. Richard V. Fitzgerald '60
Mr, John R. Flato '69
Mrs. Marion R. Fleck '48
Mr. & Mrs. Robert Fleetwood '33 ,'44
Mrs. Sue S. Flory '55
Mr. Samuel F. Ford '40
Mr. William H. Ford '40
Mr. & Mrs. Robert L. Forney
Ms. Linda A. Foster '83
Mr. & Mrs. Norman E. Fox
Mr. & Mrs. Richard S. Frank '62 '64
Mrs. Mary Lu Freeman '45
Mr. W. Edwin Freeny '31
Ms. Phyllis E. Frere '73
Mrs. James R. Friel '33
Mrs. Catherine S. Fronheiser '66
Mr. & Mrs. William L. Gaines
The Rev, Charles R, Gale '53
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas H. Gale
Mrs, Elizabeth B, Gamber '32
Mr, Eamie L. Gardner '72
Mr. & Mrs. Donald G. Garratt '72, '72
Mr. & Mrs. Mortimer Garnson '42, '43
Ms. Sarah T. Gearhart '75
Mr, Thomas K, George '73
Mr, & Mrs. William B. Gerwig Jr.
Mrs, Ethel PGibbs' 11
Mr Mordecai T, Gibson Jr, '36
Mr, Ralph T. Gies '48
Mr. Lee S. GiUis '35
Mr. Jonathan M. Glazer '80
Mrs. Claire M, Golding '80
Ms. Elizabeth J. Gordon '59
Mr. Alwood C. Gordy '23 (deed)
Ms. Ann S. Gordy
Mr. Wilmer M. Gott '46
Mrs. Mary W. Gould '37
Mrs. Suzanne D. Greene '66
Mrs. Esther K. Greer '28
Dr. & Mrs, James S, Gregory
Mr, & Mrs, Tillman J, Gressitl '49, '47
Ms, Sandra V, Griffin '67
Mr, & Mrs, John F. Grim '53, '55
Mr Drew N, Gruenburg '76
Sir Kenelm & Lady Guinness
Dr, & Mrs. Eleftherios Halivopoulos
Ms. Elizabeth W. Hall '37
Mr, Fletcher R, Hall '63
Mr, Gerard D, Hall
Mr. & Mrs. Richard W. Hall '34, '33
Mr. Stephen D. Halla '85
Mr. William L. Hallam '76
Mr. James R. Halpin '58
Dr. W. Dorsey Hammond '61
Mr. & Mrs. William F. Haneman
Mr. & Mrs. Scott B. Hansen '82, '82
Ms. Virginia H. Hansen
Mr. Bernard O. Hardesty Jr. '62
Mr. & Mrs. Vaughn Hardesty '65, '66
Mr, A, Powell Harrison '49
Mr, Rodney L. Harrison '58
Mrs. June W. Harshaw '35
Mr. Norris S. Haselton '68
Mr. & Mrs. Grover B. Hastings '34, '30
Mrs. Helen J. Hastings '36
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas W. Heald '70, '68
Mrs. Mary F. Heeg '33
Dr. Mark R. Hellberg '79
Dr. Harry C. Hendrickson '41
Mr. James W. Henley Jr. '60
Mr. John T. Henry Jr. '55
Mr. & Mrs Rodney D. Henry
Mr. Peter C. Herbst
Mr. & Mrs, Ogle W, Hess '41, '42
Mrs, Joan M, Hill '69
Mr, Landon Hilliard 111
Ms. Sandra Hiortdahl '85
Mrs. Barbara C. Hobson
Mr. Oswald W. Hodges '34
Mr. Alfred S. Hodgson '34
Mrs. Miriam F. Hoffecker '36
Mr. & Mrs. Franklin T. Hogans
Mr. Laurence G. Holland '26
Mr. Robert A. Holland '55
Mr. Colin P, Hollingsworth '33
Mr, G, Vickers Hollingsworth Jr, '31
Dr. Richard E. Holstein '68
Mr. & Mrs. Adrian S. Hooper
Mr. & Mrs. Roy Hoopes
Mr. Robert D. Hopkins '83
Mr. John H. Hoppejr. '40
Dr & Mrs Charles M. Horan
Mr. Archie H, Homer '47
Mr, Wilbur R. Hubbard
Mr. Scott E. Huber '79
Mr. Daniel F. Hudson '80
Dr. James B. Huggins '68
Mr. John C. Huntington Jr. '49
Mr. & Mrs. William G. Hupfeldt
Mr. Charles G.lnsh Jr. '49
Mr. & Mrs. Francis P. Jackman
Mr. & Mrs, Grant L. Jacks '79 '79
Ms. Anne R. Jaeger
Mr. H, Daniel James '67
Mrs. Miriam N, Janney '40
Mr. & Mrs. David B. Jenkins
Ms. Martha W. Jewett '60
Mrs. Grace N. Johnson '45
Mr, Peter B, Johnson '70
Mr, Robert M. Johnson '66
Mr. Warren D. Johnson '33
Dr. George W. Jones Jr. '37
Mrs. Patricia M. Jones '83
Mr. William I. Jones Jr. '43
Mrs. Virginia S. Kaiser
Mrs. Marjorie R. Kaper '75
Mr. & Mrs. Michael Kardash '41, '43
Mrs. Eloise H. Kauffman '35
Dr. Maurice Kaufman '39
Mrs. Elsie W. Kehler '38
Mrs. Minor S. Kelley '42
Mr. Curtis L. Kiefer '73
Mrs. Alice W. Kiendl '40
Mr. William E. Kight '36
Mr. & Mrs. Bnan S. Kimerer '69 ,'72
Mr. Allen R. Kirby '42
Mr. John P, Kirwan '42
Ms. Mary C. Kirwan '37
Mrs. T. H. Owen Knight '25
Mr. Louis P. Knox III '60
Mr. Walter S. Koons '42
Dr. Bruce Komberg '74
Dr. Phyllis B. Kosherick '72
Mr. & Mrs. Charles V. LaMotte
Mr. & Mrs. Fredenck E. LaWall '52, '53
Mr. Warren C. Lane
Dr. Ernest M. Larmore Jr. '42
Mr. & Mrs. Roland Larrimore '62, '86
Mrs. Virginia M. Laumeister '55
Mr. & Mrs. John D. Lawrence '82, '83
Mrs. Louise C, Layton '31
Ms. Victoria P. Lazzell '74
Dr. Phillip G, LeBel '64
Dr, & Mrs. William M. Leach
Mrs. Beth Leaman '73
Mr. Jeffrey A. Lees '72
Mr. Robert E. Lehman Jr. '70
Mr. & Mrs. Edward Lehmann '67, '68
Mr. Lewis C. l,eigh Jr. '51
Mr. & Mrs. Robert E, Leitch '62, '65
Mr. & Mrs. Mortimer Lenane '60, '59
Mr. W. Rex Lenderman '58
Mr. Edward F. Leonard Jr, '51
Mr. & Mrs. Laurence Leonard '52, '53
Mr. William O. Leonard Jr. '70
Mr. Richard Lester '58
Mr. Howard Levenh>erg '52
Mr, Martin S, Levin '59
Ms, Sara M. Lilienthal '70
Mr, & Mrs, George E, Linthicum
Mr, & Mrs, Oliver W. Littleton '42, '45
Mr. John C, Lonnquest '81
Mr. & Mrs. Robert Loock
Dr. & Mrs. John R. Loughead
Mr. Desmond Loughman
Mr. S. C. Loveland Jr,
Dr. & Mrs, James L, Luke
Mr, Thornton G, Lynam '78
Mr, William M, MacHale '48
Mrs, Ann W Macielag '48
Mr, Mark R. Madden '69
Mrs. Marjorie J, Madera '69
Dr, Sherry Magill
Mr, & Mrs. J. William Maisel '79, '78
Mr. & Mrs. Walter B. Mangels '76, '76
Mrs. Ida May Mantel '62
Mr. & Mrs. Henri L. Marindin '61, '60
Mr. Walter A. Marschner '63
Mrs. T. L. Marsh
Mr. Thomas S. Marshall '68
Mrs. Karen S. Matheson '71
Mr. Edwin C. Mattison' 54
Mr, & Mrs, Stanley Matus
Dr, John W. Maun '61
Mr, William R, May '77
Mr, & Mrs, Laurence McCalley '41, '41
Mr, R, Bruce McCommons '63
Mr. Harold W. McCrone '35
Mr. Andrew M. McCuUogh Jr. '71
Mr. Jack D. McCuIlough '52
Dr. Raymond O. McCuIlough Jr. '32
Mrs. Taylor C. McGee '78
Mrs. Elizabeth S. McGinniss'33
Mrs. Alice C, Mc-Guire '38
Mr, & Mrs. Maytor T. McKinley
Mr. & Mrs. James McKinney '59, '68
Ms. Deborah McKnight '57
Mr. & Mrs. Lee G. McKnight
Mrs. Ann H. McLain '40
Ms. Audrey McMahan
Mrs. Sharyn C. McQuaid '66
Mrs. Margaret Meade-Bogguss '74
Mr. Ira D. Measell Jr.' 35
Mr. & Mrs. David H. Meehan
Miss Molly A. Meehan '81
Mr. & Mrs. Herbert A. Meier
Mrs. Margaret N. Melcher '69
Mrs. Eileen S. Menton '72
Dr. & Mrs. Charles J. Merdinger
Mr. & Mrs. Robert G. Merrick
Mrs Roxanna D. Merriken '46
Mrs, Dorothy M, Messick
Mr, James M, Metcalf '54
Mr, & Mrs, Dean Michals
Major Stephen A. Mires '71
46
Mr. Walter K. Moffett '34
Mrs. Mary G. Money '39
Mr. Scott K. Monroe '61
Mr. Herbert J. Morgan Jr. '47
Mr. & Mrs. William H Morgan '64, '66
Ms. Isabel Morley
Mrs. Martha L. Morris '46
Dr. & Mrs. Bayard Morrison
Mrs. Frank B. Mortimer
Mr. George M. Mowell 73
Mr. & Mrs. Ronald P. Mrstik '64, '64
Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth C. Muccino
Mrs. Sarah C. Mulligan '78
Mr. James M. Murphy '59
Mrs. Norma R. Murphy '39
Mrs. Paula D. Murphy '68
Mr. Charles B. Nairn Jr. '46
Mr. Robert A. Nass '83
Dr. David J. Newell
Mrs. Margaret R. Newlin
Mr. Zung T. Nguyen '77
Mr. Joseph M. Nichols Jr. '70
Mr. David A. Nimick
Mr, HenryH.Nocke'40
Mr. Conlyn E. Noland Jr. '51
Mr. C. Frederick Norris '28
Mr. & Mrs. John Nostrant
Mrs. Barbara E. Oelschlaeger '48
Mr. & Mrs. Fred. W. Ohrenschal'75,'74
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Osborne '67, '71
Mr. Charles D, Osteen '49
Mr. Anthony Oswald '59
Ms. Rondie F. Overton '86
Mrs. Jane L. Owen '43
Ms. Chris A. Owens '74
Mrs. Rebecca B. Owens '25
Mr. Donald S. Owings '55
Mrs. Barbara B. Pace '46
Mr. William R. Pacula '72
Mr. John F. Panowicz Jr. '38
Mr. Dean Parker '77
Mr. John R Parker '55
Mr. Wilbert T. Patterson '42
Mr. R. Allan Payne III '68
Philip Pear, Esq.
Mr. John A. Pederson '75
Mr. Clarence G. Peregoy '23
Mrs. Miriam S. Perkins '42
Mrs. Deborah D. Perry '70
Mr. Frederic S. Peyser '36
Mr. Douglas B. Pfeiffer '75
Mr. Norman A. Phillips Jr.' 60
Mr. William H. Phillips '53
Mr. Robert W. Pierce '48
Mr. James G. Pieme '73
Mr. & Mrs. George J. Pinto '42
Mr. & Mrs. Harry W. Piper
Mr. Howard K. Plummer '32
Ms. Joyce E. Poetzl '60
Mr. Richard J. Portal '79
Dr. Robert W. Powell '56
Dr. George T. Pratt '36
Mr. & Mrs. S. L. Prendergast
Mrs. Anne M. Preston '36
Mr. William B. Purcell '62
Ms. Patricia B Putnam '75
Mr. & Mrs. George M. Radcliffe
Dr. & Mrs. Joseph O. Rainwater
Dr. Jay S. Raksin '76
Mr. & Mrs. Harold Ramsey
Mr. Robert R, Ramsey '77
Mrs. Margaret H. Randazzo '68
Mrs. Mirian H. Rankin '28
Mrs. Henrietta B. Rasin '36
Mr. & Mrs. William E. Ray
Mr. Robert L. Reck '63
Mr. George W. Reed '75
Dr. William M. Reed '73
Mr. Walter H.Rees '33
Mr. William A. Remhart 36
Ms. Cynthia Renoff '70
Mrs. Helen W. Reustle '76
Mr. & Mrs. Hal K. Reynolds
Mrs. Ruth S. Rich '43
Mr. Paul A. Riecks '64
Mr. David M. Ritz '69
Mr. David C. Roach'71
Mrs. Bonnie K. Robbins '69
Mr. F. Spencer Robinson '43
Mr. Mark C. Robinson '69
Mr. & Mrs. Oliver E. Robinson '32, '31
Mr. & Mrs. Dudley G, Roe
Mr. & Mrs. H. Eugene Rook '46, '48
Dr. Peter J. Rosen '68
Mrs. Diana D. Rosenberg '74
Mr. David G. Roth '61
Mr. James S. Royer '74
Mr. & Mrs. Robert A, Ruff '44, '46
Reverend Dale L. Ruth '50
Mr. & Mrs. Hubert F. Ryan '33, '34
Dr. Rita Mary D. Ryan '51
Mr. Victor G. Ryan '59
The Rev. Wesley L. Salder '35
Mrs. Jean D. Sanders '79
Mr. John SantuUi '53
Mr. C. Daniel Saunders '68
Mr. James N. Saunders '27
Mr. Richardson W. Sayler '35
Mr. Charles L. Schelberg '49
Mr. William C. Schmoldt '69
Dr. Nathan Schnaper '40
Mrs. Ellen B. Schottland '42
Mr. Frederick W. Schroeter '47
Mr. & Mrs. R. Ford Schumann '73, '71
Mr. & Mrs. H. D. Schwaab
Dr. & Mrs. B. B. Schwartz
Mr. Ray R. Schwartz '64
Mr. David H. Scott '76
Mr. James H. Scott III '59
Mr. & Mrs. John W. Selby '41, '44
Mrs. Terri T. Selby '78
Mr. & Mrs. Joseph W. Sener Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Thackray D. Seznec '69,'70
Mr. John T. Shannahan '65
Mr. Alan R. Sharp '57
Mr. Hal B. Shear '64
Mr. & Mrs. John B. Shehan
Mrs. Gladys C. Shifflett '33
Mr. & Mrs. Robert V. Shriver '73, '79
Dr. Joseph E. Shuman '49
Mr. & Mrs. Hugh B. Silcox '75, '75
Mr. Gordon M. Silesky '51
Dr. & Mrs. Warren B. Silliman
Mrs. Gene H. Simkins '48
Mr. Mark G. Simpson '82
Mr. & Mrs. Raymond Sinclair '47, '48
Mr. Emerson P. Slacum '36
Mr. HarryM. Sladejr. '43
Dr. John P. Sloan '66
Mrs. Grace C. Smith '32
Mr. Irving R. Smith '42
Mr. & Mrs. Kirby L. Smith '48, '46
Mr. Oden L, Smith '51
Dr. Ronald E. Smith '64
Mr. & Mrs. Watkins V. Smith
Dr. John R, Smithson '34
Mr. & Mrs. Elwood F. Snyder '68, '68
Mr. Roger S. Soo '72
Mr. Robert Sparre
Mr. Jonathan 1. Spear '73
Mr. Abraham D, Spmak
Mrs. Jane B. Sprinkle '48
Mrs. Mary K. Spurlin '42
Dr. Jessie D. Stahl '70
Mr. Robert D. Staiger '67
Mrs. Georgianna R. Startt '30
Mr. & Mrs. Arnold J. Sten '58, '60
Dr. W Jackson Stenger Jr. '49
Mr. Edgar L. Stephenson '52
Mr. & Mrs. David E. Stevens '65, '65
Mr. James A. Stevens Jr. '43
Mr. H. G. Stevenson
Mrs. Elizabeth T. Stillman '30 (deed)
Mr. Parker W. Stone '39
Mrs. Betty V. Story '44
Mr. T. Allan Stradley '32
Mrs. Henrietta C. Starughn '27
Colonel Arthur H. Streeter '57
Mrs. Mackey M. Streit '51
Dr Patrick J. StroUo '76
Mrs. Barbara M. Sullivan '65
Mrs. Marjorie S. Summers '42
Mr. Russell Q. Summers Jr. '62
Mr. & Mrs. William L. Susen
Mr. & Mrs. David J. Svec '66, '68
Mrs. Betty P. Sylvester '49
Mr. Peter E. Takach '76
E)r. Norman Tarr '48
Mrs. June W. Tassell '55
Dr. Carol F. Taylor '69
Mr. & Mrs. W. Roland Taylor '40, '43
Mr. & Mrs. Walter F. Terry III
Mrs. Donna M. Thompson '57
Dr. Ralph R Thornton '40
Mr. & Mrs, Robert C. Tiehel
Mr. Cornelius A. Tilghman '53
Mrs. Betty W. Tillinghast
Mr. Wilton R. Todd '29
Mr. Constantine N. Topnian '53
Mr. Jonathan M. Topodas '68
Mr. & Mrs. Michael J, Travieso
Mr. & Mrs. Peter C. Tsou '78, '79
Dr. & Mrs. Oguz Y. Turgut
Honorable B. Hackett Turner '30
Mr. James D. TwiUey '51
Mr. & Mrs. G. Robert Tyson '59, '57
Mr. Douglas E. Unfried '68
Mrs. Lucille D. Urbas '70
Mrs. Sara R. Valhant '37
Mr. & Mrs. Walter H. Van Buren
Dr. William C. Van Newkirk '38
Mrs Peggy Vandervoort '41
Mrs. Mary Frances H. Vartanian '66
Dr, Deborah G, Ventis '70
Mrs, Kathryn C, Verbanic '81
Mr, Bohn C, Vergan '71
Mr, & Mrs, Norberto Viamonte '73, '74
Miss Lynn M, Virgilio '75
Mr, & Mrs G, Gerard Voith '47, '47
Mr. Charles Waesche '53
Mrs. John A. Wagner
Mr. & Mrs. Lawrence Wagner '83, '84
Mr. William P. Walatkus '40
Mr. John D. Walk '44
Mr. & Mrs. John V. Walker '70, '70
Mr. Roderic B. Ware '54
Mr. Peter A. Wastie '61
Mr. Keith P. Watson '69
Mr. William J. Watson '35
Mr. & Mrs. Graham W. Watt '49, '51
Mr. & Mrs. Willis I. Weldin '59, '61
Ms. Estelle B. Wesley '37
Mrs. Jean M. Wetzel '66
Mr. Graydon A. Wetzler '63
Mr, F, David Wheelan '80
Dr, PhilipJ, Whelan'61
Mr, Royall B, Whitaker '76
Mr, James B, White '37
Mrs. Leslie T. White '74
Mr. & Mrs. Jon M. Wickwire
Mrs. Christie H. Wiggins '79
Mr, Frank B, Wildman 111 '64
Mr, & Mrs. Judson T. Williams'48, '44
Mr. William N. Williams '76
Mr. & Mrs. George S. Wills
Mrs. Eleanor T. Wilson '32
Mr. George B. Wilson '30
Mr. & Mrs. Joseph P. Wilson
Mr. Robert J. Wilson '59
Mr. Bruce H. Winand '82
Mr. F, Kirwan Wineland '83
Mr. John E. Winkler '56
Mr. Anthony S. Wiseman '73
Mr. Robert Y. Witter '77
Mr. Henry Wittich Ul
Mr. Murray L. Wolman '50
Mrs. Gail F. Wolpin '64
Mr. L.Ray Wood '51
Mr & Mrs. Richard D. Wood Jr.
Mr. George Woodfield '29
Mr. & Mrs. Carroll Woodrow '39, '42
Mr, & Mrs. William Woznuk
Mr. David C. Wright '79
Dr. James R. Wright '48
Ms. Mary Ruth Yoe '73
Mrs. Henrietta H. Zahrobsky '64
Mr. Llewellyn E. Zuck '62
Alumni Donors
1911
Class Chair:
Total of all Contributions: $100
Number of Class Members: 3
Number of Contributors; 1
Participation: 33%
Ethel P. Gibbs
47
1913
Class Chair:
Total of all Contributions: $25
Number of Class Members: 4
Number of Contributors: 1
Participation: 25%
M. C. Stokes
1915
Class Chair:
Total of all Contributions: $50
Number of Class Members: 1
Number of Contributors: 1
Participation: 100%
]. F. Connelly Jr.
1917
Class Chair:
Total of all Contributions: $100
Number of Class Members: 2
Number of Contributors: 1
Participation: 50%
Carmeta R. Dykes
1918
Class Chair:
Total of all Contributions: $1 00
Number of Class Members: 7
Number of Contributors: 1
Participation: 14%
Clinton W. Corbin
1921
Class Chair:
Total of all Contributions: $ 500
Number of Class Members: 6
Number of Contributors: 1
Participation: 17%.
Frank Ayres Jr.
1923
Class Chair:
Total of all Contributions: $250
Numberof Class Members: 8
Number of Contributors: 2
Participation: 25%
Alwood C. Gordy
Clarence G. Peregoy
William H. Ruark (memorial)
W. Skirven Startt (memorial)
1924
Class Chair: Dorothy W. Myers
Total of all Contributions: $3,045
Number of Class Members: 6
Number of Contributors: 6
Participation: 100%
William E. Griffith
Ermyn J. Heck
Helen M. Johnston
Elmer L. Kaiser (memorial)
David McMenamin
Dorothy W. Myers
Enoch Nuttle
1925
Class Chair: Rebecca B. Owens
Total of all Contributions: $900
Number of Class Members: 6
Number of Contributors: 6
Participation: 100%
John C. Bankert
Alfred E- Culley (memorial)
Leroy S. Heck
T. H. O. Knight (memorial)
Rebecca B. Owens
James E. Spear Jr. (memorial)
1926
Class Chair:
Total of all Contributions: $300
Number of Class Members: 20
Number of Contributors: 3
Participation: 15%
Lida L. Blake
Laurence G. Holland
Leslie E. Timmons
1927
Class Chair: Avis R. Maddox
Total of all Contributions: $2,575
Number of Class Members: 19
Number of Contributors: 7
Participation: 37%
S. R. Bozman
Grace S. Chaires
Anna P. Cooke
Frederick W. Dumschott (memorial)
Cora M. Green
Avis R. Maddox
James N. Saunders
Henrietta C. Straughn
1928
Class Chair:
Total of all Contributions: $1,275
Number of Class Members: 18
Number of Contributors: 10
Participation: 56%
Elizabeth D. Andrew
Adrienne R. Dahlke
Diantha R. Eaton
Esther K. Greer
A. C. Moore
C. F. Norris
Philip E. Nuttle
Marian H. Rankin
Jacob D. Rieger (memorial)
Baker O. Shelton
Charles E. Smith
1929
Class Chair: B. L. Appleford Jr.
Total of all Contributions: $6,855
Number of Class Members: 45
Number of Contributors: 21
Participation: 47%
John M. Alderson
B. L. Appleford Jr.
A. T. Bnce
Kathryn S. Brinsfield
George F. Carrington
Lewis M. Cross
Robert W. Farr
Visiting
Committee
John Bacon, Jr. '52
William C. Miller '59
Jeannie P. Baliles '62
John Moag '77
Peter L. Boggs '72
Kevin M. O'Keefe '74
Donald L. Denton '70
Thomas J. Regan '76
Julian A. Dorf '49
Charles E. Scarlett III '75
David E. Dougherty '55
Mark A. Schulman '67
Jay H. Elliott '75
Shelly V. Sharp '78
Charles E. Eshman, Jr. '61
Hal B. Shear '64
Richard R. Farrow '57
John P. Sherman '77
Peter C. Gentry '79
Glen R. Shipway '65
John D. Hall 70
Alfred P. Shockley '55
William R. Jester '50
Dietrich H. Steffens '43
James N. Juliana '44
Thomas W. Sutton '76
Holt L. Marchant, Jr. '63
Robert J. Wilson '59
Donald F. McHugh '53
Anthony S. Wiseman '73
Frances R. Gillespie
Albert J. Glover
Dorothy K. Gray
Margarett C. Henderson
Louise S. Lloyd
Charles T. Mahoney
Laura F. Massey
Walter T. Morris Jr.
Thomas J. Purcell
Audrey S. Schreiber
Carolyn WingateTc^dd (memorial)
Wilton R, Todd
Miriam E. White
George W. Woodfield
Paul A. Zizelman Jr.
1930
Class Chair: William J. Burk
Total of all Contributions: $4,240
Number of Class Members: 29
Number of Contributors: 20
Participation: 69%
Virginia W. Badart
John L. Bond
Naudain M. Bond
William T. Boston
Helen R. Burk
William J. Burk
Beulah C Carter
Ehzabeth S. Duvall
Stanley B. Giraitis
Howard F. Griffin
Bemice W. Hastings
Catherine A. Litchfield
E. G. Rees
William A. Robinson
Georgianna R. Startt
Elizabeth T. Stillman
B. H. Turner Jr.
Helen A. Wagner
Thomas V Warthen
George B. Wilson
Eric Wood (memorial)
1931
Class Chair: W. Edwin Freeny
Total of all Contributions: $2,845
Number of Class Members: 30
Number of Contributors: 22
Participation: 73%
Geraldine H. Biles
Louise M. Calary
Dorothy V. Copper
Elizabeth H. Dietrich
Kenneth Douty
Bernard Dubin
Elizabeth M. Farver
W. E. Freeny
Carter M. Hickman
G. V. Hollingsworth Jr.
Louise C. Layton
Edwin T. Luckey
Louisa B. Matthews
W. Kennon Perrin
Joseph E. Phillips
Edith Rees
Percy N. Reese
Sara L. Richardson
Dorothy S. Robinson
Margaret R. Van Gilder
Catherine U. White
Eari T. WilHs
1932
Class Chair: T. A. Stradley
Total of all Contributions: $1,283
Number of Class Members: 27
Number of Contributors: 16
Participation: 59%
Frank A. Badart
Charles N. Bradley
William H. Brady
Robert L. Cary
John H. Dixon
Charlotte H. Furman
Elizabeth B. Gamber
G. Emmett C, Kauffman (memorial)
Raymond O. McCullough Jr.
Howard K. Plummer
Oliver E. Robinson
Raymond H. Simmons
Grace C. Smith
T. A.llan Stradley
James B. Williams
Eleanor T. Wilson
Helen M. T. Wilson
48
1933
Class Chair:
Total of all Contributions: $6,460
Number of Class Members: 48
Number of Contributors: 29
Participation: 60%
Helen S. Auer
Theodosia C. Bowie
Joseph Bringhurst
Charles M. Clark
F. DeWitt Clarke (memorial)
Elizabeth H, Clough
Joseph B. Dickerson
Albert W. Dowling (memorial)
Robert T. Fleetwood
James R. Friel
D. R. Furman
Lois B. Hall
Catherine H. Harris
Mary F, Heeg
Colin P, Hollingsworth
Gertrude C. Howard
Erdman C. Jones
Daniel W. Ingersoll
Ethel H. Jaeger
Richard M. Johnson
Warren D. Johnson
Elizabeth S. McGinniss
Helen Janet Paff
Walter E. Pierce
Walter H. Rees
Hubert F. Ryan
Gladys C. Shifflett
Philip C. Sterling Jr.
Mary L. Taylor
Margaret B. Thornton (memorial)
Emily J. Webb
Phillip J. Wingate
1934
Class Chair James T. Anthony III
Total of all Contributions: $3,879
Number of Class Members: 35
Number of Contributors: 25
Participation: 71%
Earl B. Capel
William T. Jackson
James T. Anthony III
Marie P. Bowdle
Elmer W. Boyles
John T. Bruehl
William E. Burkhardt
Omar J. Carey
Charles B. Clark
James D. Davis III
Albert P. Giraitis
Marion E. Giraitis
Richard W.Hall
Grover B. Hastings
Alfred S. Hodgson
Erwin L. Koerber
Lucile R. Meek
Kathryn M. Michaels
Walter K. Moffett
Paul W. Pippin
Frederick W. Reinhold Jr.
Dorothy K. Ryan
Thelma B. Smith
John R. Smithson
Samuel C, Walls
1935
Class Chair: Alday M. Clements
Total of all Contributions: $15,604
Number of Class Members: 54
Number of Contributors: 34
Participation: 63%
Roland J. Bailey Jr.
James W, Barcus
Frank K, Barnhart
Nola H. Basil
Ella B, Brandt
Alday M. Clements
Frances S. Clendaniel
William O. Cornelia
Richard W. Cooper
Ivon E. Culver
Henry G. Davis
Ellis C. Dwyer
E- C. Fontaine
Alfred W. Gardiner
Lee S. Gillis
Louis L. Goldstein
June W. Harshaw
W. F.JarrellJr,
Eloise H. Kauffman
Harold B. Kennerly Jr,
John M- Lord
Harold W. McCrone
Ira D. Measell Jr.
Virginia B. Menkel
Mary E. Montroy
Eari W. Price
Howard D Rees Jr.
Harry C- Rhodes
Wesley L. Sadler Jr.
Richardson W. Sayler
Wilma D- Schuellein
Mildred L. Skinner (memorial)
Catherine H. Vaughn
William J. Watson
Ray A. Wilson
1936
Class Chair: Charles R. Berry
Total of all Contributions: $10,338
Number of Class Members: 55
Number of Contributors: 41
Participation: 75%
Charles R Berry
Jane Y. Brougham
Laurence E. Cain Jr.
J. M. Chambers
Dorothy C. Clifford
Carl M. Cochran
Calvin L, Compton
Ruby L. Dickerson
Mabel S. Douglass
Gladys A, Dudley
Samuel C. Dudley
Don T.Falls Jr.
Elizabeth M. Fontaine
Mordecai T. Gibson Jr.
William C. Grieb
Martha R. Harrison
Helen J. Hastings
Elizabeth D. Hoffecker
Miriam F. Hoffecker
Ernest G. Holland
William E. Kight
Blanche Z. Kirchner
Doris M. Kolar
James S. Kreeger
John M. Littell
J. N. McCoy
William B. Nicholson
Leah F. Perry
Frederic S. Peyser
Edna C. Powell
George T. Pratt
Anne M. Preston
Henrietta B. Rasin
William A. Reinhart
Emerson P. Slacum
Carolyn ]. Strangmann
Priscilla G. Swartz
Lucile L. Taylor
Elizabeth R. Thibodeau
Ralph Weinroth
Charles S. Wells Jr.
1937
Class Chair:
Total of all Contributions: $31,550
Number of Class Members: 42
Number of Contributors: 26
Participation: 62%.
Robert L. Adamson
Paul E. Bruehl
Katherine A. Clements
Margaret S. Dolan
Ann W. Edge
Robert K. Fears Jr.
Mary W, Gould
Elizabeth W. Hall
Irma H. Highfield
Anne S. Hope
Clifton Hope
George W. Jones Jr.
M. C. Kirwan
Members of the Class of 1937 at Reunion.
Elizabeth S. Knouse
Joseph H. McLain (memorial)
Olga S. McMahon
Fedon G. Nides
George B. Rasin Jr.
Nancy P. Shapiro
Eleanor S. Skinner
Marvin H. Smith
Jay F. Spry
Sara R. Valliant
Estelle B. Wesley
James B, White
Robert B. White
Lawrence K. Yourtee
1938
Class Chair: Margaret W. Carroll
Total of all Contributions: $18,650
Number of Class Members: 61
Number of Contributors: 26
Participation: 43%-
Charles C Benham
Franklin A. Bolth
Madison B. Bordley Jr.
Elizabeth W. Bryan
Margaret W. Carroll
Ellwood T. Claggett
Dorothy W. Daly
William F. Doering
Leo A. Dolan Jr. (memorial)
Charles S. Hague Jr.
Margaret B. Hickman
Philip A. Hickman Jr.
Leon D. Horowitz
Audrey C. Johnson
John E. Jones
Elsie W. Kehler
Harold B. Kosowsky
R. D. McDorman
Alice C. McGuire
Hilda O. Micari
John F. Panowicz Jr.
Mary B. Sargent
Carrie E. Schreiber
Helen E. Shallcross
49
Norman W Shorb
Frederic H. Truitt
William C. VanNcwkirk
1939
Class Chair: Charles J. Leiman
Total of all Contributions: $1,733
Number of Class Members: 60
Number of Contributors: 33
Participation: 55%
Charles F- Anderson
Arthur W. Baker
John P. Blevins
Elizabeth H. Booth
Jean Davis
Mamie V. Davis
Bemice S. Dobson
George M. Eisentrout
Henry Etta B. Hedrick
Albert F. Herbst
Harry J. Hicks Jr.
Mary L. Humphreys
Maurice Kaufman
Clarence L. Kibler
Bissett F. Koesterer
Sarah L. D. Kroker
Charles J. Leiman
Maryanna R. Maguire
William S. Medinger 111
Mary G. Money
Mary B. Moore
Norma R. Murphy
Margaret S. Payne
Freida D. Shapiro
Parker W- Stone
Nathan N. Tattar
Melvin Toney
Basil Tully
Irving P. Vincent
John E. Wallen
Reuben M- Ware
Carroll C- Woodrow
H G. Young Sr.
1940
Class Chair: William H. Ford
Total of all Contributions: $30,624
Number of Class Members: 70
Number of Contributors: 46
Participation: 66%
Owen R. Anderson
Charlotte S. Blevins
Norton Bonnett
Margaret S. Cadell
Walter W. Claggett
R. L. Clark Jr.
William J. Collins
John A. Copple
Henry V. Crawford
William B. Cronin
Edward P. Davis
Joe S. Elliott Jr.
Robert L. Everett
Samuel F. Ford
William H. Ford
Walter A. Glass
Milton F. Clock
Gerry N. Groupe
John H. Hoppe Jr.
Evelyn W. James
Miriam N. Janney
William H. Jones
Alice W. Kiendl
William A. Kolar
Dorothy J. Kraus
Donald E. Matthews
William A. McAdams
Edward L. McCabe
Ann H. McLain
Helen L. Mead
William E. Medford
Frederick S. Micari
Mark P. Morse Jr.
Dorsey C. Nelson
Henry H. Nocke
Edv^an A. Ohler (memorial)
Ester Jane V. O'Neill
Grace W. Phillips
A. N. Riedy
Louisa H. Royer
Nathan Schnaper
Omar W. Scott
James F. Shryock
Benjamin R. Stevens
W. R. Taylor
Ralph R. Thornton
William P. Walatkus
1941
Class Chair: Helen W. Baker
Total of all Contributions: $4,983
Number of Class Members: 55
Number of Contributors: 36
Participation: 65%
Helen W. Baker
George W. Baldwin
Lydia M. Bordley
Frank J. Brady
Margaret K. Bramble
Joseph G. Bremer
William A. Buckingham
James O Bush Jr.
Asher B Carey Jr.
David Clarke
R. J. Cooke
Edward W. Cooper
Evelyn D. Dinsmore
Albert T. Foley
Virginia N. Hague
Harry C. Hendrickson
Ogle W. Hess
Alice S. Hopkins
Ralph W. Hopkins
Michael Kardash
Jean W. Keyser
Anne T. Landry
Dorothy V. Leonard
Charlotte R. McCalley
Laurence E. McCalley Jr.
Vivian D. Odell
Martha S. Ogden
Agnes Z. Orban
Joseph D. Palmer
Helen G. Patterson
John D. Phillips
Harold J. Rayne Jr.
Ellen Virginia F. Richards
John W. Selby
John Stack (memorial)
Peggy B. Vandervoort
Albert W. Wharton
1942
Class Chair: John P. Kirwan
Total of all Contributions: $9,223
Number of Class Members: 76
Number of Contributors: 49
Participation: 64%
Margaret P. Bailey
David Bartolini
John E. Benjamin Jr.
William C. Ben)amin Jr.
Sarah S. Buckingham
Shirley D. Bush
Robert E. Carter
Basil C. Clark
Alice Johanns Clarke (memorial)
Robert K. Crane
James N. Deaconson
Dorothy A. Disbrow
Henry A. Earp
Thomas W. Eliason Jr.
Virginia H. Eliason
Mortimer Garrison
Robert G. Garrison
Marian T. Gildersleeve
Sara B. Hannan
Virginia S. Hargreaves
John A. Harris
Mildred B. Hess
Minor S. Kelley
Atlee C. Kepler
Allen R. Kirby
John P. Kirwan
Walter S. Koons
August A. Krometis
Ernest M. Larmore Jr.
Oliver W. Littleton Jr.
Henry F. Maguire
Mary H. Moorshead
William M. Nagler
William W. Paca Jr.
Wilbert T. Patterson
Miriam S. Perkins
George J. Pinto
Rebekah P. Pinto
Wilson L, Riedy
Ellen B. Schottland
Donald W. Smith
Irving R. Smith
Mary K. Spurlin
William M. Sterling
Marjorie S. Summers
William O. Sutton
Virginia P. Tarbutton
Frances Tully
Janet S. Woodrow
Robert H. Wright
1943
Class Chair: Eleanor R. Kardash
Total of all Contributions: $4355
Number of Class Members: 82
Number of Contributors: 47
Participation: 57%
Michael Alteri
Thomas B Andrews Jr.
James M. Aycock
Elinore H. Bergner
Edwin R. Boyer Jr.
Frances H. Brandt
Walter C Brandt
Phillip L. Dudley
Charies W. Dulin Jr.
Judith Fairchild-Fue
Margaret A. Fenderson
Louis J. Galullo
Jean W. Garrison
Robert N. Hitch Jr.
Elizabeth P. James
William I. Jones Jr.
Eleanor R. Kardash
Mary C. King
Walter E. McCauley
Donald S. McClellan
Virginia C. McLemon
Charles H. Meiser Jr.
Jane L. Owen
James L. Partis
Phyllis J. Peters
Edith B. Pierre
Helen C. Reed
William H.Revelle Jr.
Ruth S. Rich
F. Spencer Robinson
William M. Roe
Hilda H. Shotwell
Harry M. Slade Jr.
Emilie S. Spencer
Dietrich H. Steffens
James A. Stevens Jr.
Robert A. Stockbridge
Francis Taylor Jr. (memorial)
Naomi Taylor
Frances J. Teal
Kathryn T. ToUey
Robert H. Thawley
Mildred Thomas
Clarence E. Valentine
Rachel H. Weedman
Betty B, Welton
John W. Williams Jr.
Mary N. Zimmerman
1944
Class Chair: James N. Juliana
Total of all Contributions: $8,234
Number of Class Members: 49
Number of Contributors: 22
Participation: 47%
James E. Anthony Jr.
Anne R. Brandt (memorial)
Leslie G. Callahan Jr.
Robert N. Corddry
Vernon F. Dowling
Dola S. Dukes
Claire C. Fleetwood
Laura R. Geitz
50
Elizabeth B. Gomez
James N. Juliana
Annabelle S. Kepler
Alice D. Klar
Irma R. Lore
Theodore Lytwyn
Ruth B. Mahaffy
Henri D. Pole
Robert A. Ruff Jr.
Margaret W, Selby
Betty V. Story
John D. Walk
Betty H. Wharton
Dorothy R. Williams
Wallace Williams Jr.
1945
Class Chair;
Total of all Contributions: $1,61 1
Number of Class Members: 40
Number of Contributors: 18
Participation: 45%
Joseph R. Arnold
Ellwood W. Cursey
Vachel A. Downes Jr.
Merhle M. Fox
Mary Lu Freeman
Anna Ruth L- Gerken
Grace N. Johnson
Morton C. Katzenberg
Valentine W. Lentz Jr.
Dorothy R. Littleton
Marie Moreland
Grace S. Murphy
Manana E. Nuttle
Anne B. Rienhoft
Dorothy L. Skocz
Ellen E. Thawley
Kenneth L. Wilkinson
Lewis A. Yerkes
1946
Class Chair: Margaret Smith
Total of all Contributions: $2,218
Number of Class Members: 55
Number of Contributors: 24
Participation: 44%
Ellen K. Auodoun
Paul L. Blawie
Barbara C. Cawley
David R. Cheli
Jean G. Cooper
Wilmer M. Gott
Mary J. Hendrickson
M. Celeste P. Herbert
Miriam K. Kieffer
Dorothea M, Linley
Carl F. List
Robert J. Marzicola
Roxanna D. Merriken
Ruth N. Mink
Martha L. Morris
Charles B. Nairn Jr.
Barbara B. Pace
H. E. Rookjr.
Betty B. Ruff
Margaret Smith
Margaret Steffens
Sophie J. Sterling
Sara W. Towers
Lewin A. Wheat
1947
Class Chair: Edward L. Athey
Total of all Contributions: $2,704
Number of Cla^.s Members: 57
Number of Contributors: 33
Participation: 58^(
Stephen Abramson
Edward L. Athey
John E. Barnes Jr.
Betty B. Casey
Daniel G. Conant Jr.
Alice R. Cook
Margaret D. Dixon
James E. Doherty
Lillian W. Elzey
Sue F. Ford
Virginia W. Garner
Patricia B. Gressitt
Marie W. Hanson
Barbara B. Hodges
Archie H- Horner
Mary B. Landt
Gordon B. Lane
Fred G. Livingood
Willard H. McDaniel
Herbert J. Morgan Jr.
Elizabeth H. Murray
Thayer P. Porter
Frederick W. Schroeter
Francis A. Shinnamon
Raymond G. Sinclair Jr.
James M. Steele Jr.
Elmer C. Thomas Jr.
G. Gerard Voith
Gloria B. Voith
Catherine C Walbert
John G.Walters
Mary R. Warfield
Helen A. Winship
1948
Class Chair: Anne E. Burris
Total of all Contributions: $3,923
Number of Class Members: 94
Number of Contributors: 56
Participation: 60%
Allen R. Baldwin
Katherine B. Bucher
Anne E. Burris
Wayne A. Cawley
Raymond B. Clark Jr.
Vivian B. Clow
Nancy M. Conant
Margot A. Connellee
Roland R. Corey
William E. Crim
Donald M. Derham
Jacqueline H. Feeley
Marion R. Fleck
Charles L. France
Ralph T. Gies
Frances L. Gill
William F. Gray
lesse \\. Green Jr.
Lillian B. Grieb
Arnold L. Hayes
Phyllis M. Heberling
Edwin J. Homey
Ellen C. Howard
Harriet Hunter
Maryland C, James
Elaine T Jones
Kathryn M. Kelly
Barbara Ann H. Leith
Louise H. Littleton
Jackie C. Llewellyn
Paul Llewellyn
Lester E. Loder
William M. MacHale
Ann W. Macielag
Louise A. Merryman
James G. Metcalfe Jr.
Howard W. Miller
Mary B. MiUs
Howard C. Nesbitt
Barbara E. Oelschlaeger
Robert W. Pierce
M. 1. Roberson
Lois K. Rook
John W, Russell Jr.
Gene H. Simkins
Marilou C. Sinclair
Kirby L. Smith
Jane B. Sprinkle
Wayne R. Stewart
Ernestine S. Stringfellow
John W- Sutton
Norman Tarr
Mary Virginia G. Truax
William A. Tynan
Judson T. WiUiams
James R. Wright
1949
Class Chair: Louis E. Smith
Total of all Contributions: $7,916
Number of Class Members: 124
Number of Contributors: 54
Participation: 44%
Ellen C. Adkins
Margaret Jean U. Africa
Wilbur P. Barnes
William F. Bennett
Louis R- Bieretz
James M. Brasure
Clifford S. Case
Frances Chaikin
Ernest S. Cookerly
William H. Cooper
W.E. Crouch Jr.
Mary L. Davis
Frances S. Doherty
Julian A. Dorf
Robert E. Drapatin
David Z. Earle
H. C. Davidson Fait
John J. Feeley Jr.
Joseph W. Feldman
Doris S. Forster
Lillian H. Forster
Beverly S. Gilbert
Robert W. Greene Sr.
Tillman J. Gressitt
A. P. Harrison
Sarah G. Hastings
Jean S. Hebert
Herbert A. Hohenhaus
Joan S. Huber
John C. Huntington Jr.
Charles G. Insh Jr
William N. Jackson
Laura J. Judge
Patricia L- Konecny
Thornton G. Lynam
Natalie M. McCarthy
Thelma N. O'Grady
Charles D. Osteen
Lois P. Parker
Flora Mae B. Russell
Charles L. Schelberg
Kenneth E. Schomborg
Joseph E. Shuman
Louis E. Smith
Janice B. Spitzer
W. Jackson Stenger Jr.
Catherine H. Stevens
Margaret K. Stierstorfer
Clifton Estreat jr.
Maxine B. Streat
Betty P. Sylvester
Herbert F. Ward Jr.
Graham W. Watt
Edwin C. Weber Jr.
1950
Class Chair: Paul W, Nicewarner
Total of all Contnbuhons: $8,220
Number of Class Members: 141
Number of Contributors: 66
Participation: 47%
Vincent L. Bacchetta Jr.
Edwin H. Besson
Walter H. Blake
Charles L. Brandenburg
Herman G. Brant
Margaret M. Brogan
Frederick R. Brown
James P. Brown Jr.
Bertil V. Bystrom
Donald F. Campbell
James M- Campbell
Jerome P. Chambers
Arthur M. Christie
Pauhne E. Chnstie
Joseph P. Corrigan III
Leslee T. Corrigan
James W. Duncan
George R. Elder Jr.
William D. Geitz Jr.
William G. Greenly
Daniel A. Hall
Barbara L. Hallam
Henry A. Fiighland
Walter R. Hitchcock
Margaret P. Hollis
Raymond O. Hollis
51
Geraldine F. Jackson
John H. Jackson
William R. Jester
Dorothy S. Joiner
Nancy H. Jones
William H, Kenworthey Jr.
Leonard S. Krassner
Frank H Kuhn
Dorothy K. Land
Barbara S. Larimore
E. R. Lusby
Margaret B. McHale
James McLernon
Patricia E. Meeker
Robert E. Meeker
Edward J. Miller
James D- Mitchell
William W. Mulligan
Paul W. Nicewamer
Norma J. O'Brien
A. P Ransone
Dale L. Ruth
Shirley S. Sandler
Mary F. Scallion
Samuel R. Seibel
Wesley C- Seward
Richard E. Shenk
Henry T. Shetterly
Nancy S. Shetterly
John G. Shoemaker
Marion W Smith
Ralph D, Smith Jr.
Anthony D, Tall
Nancy N. Tawes
William C. Tomlinson
William D. Trone
W. L. Walbert
William E. Warther
Robert E. Williams Jr.
Murray L. Wolman
1951
Class Chair:
Total of all ContribuHons: $9,079
Number of Class Members: 1 26
Number of Contributors: 65
Participation: 52%
June W, Atkin
Ruth T. Barrows
Henry O Benedict
Pauline K Besson
Mary Jane W. Bien
John S. Brandt
Frank W. Brower Jr.
C. D. Case
Lee C. Cook
Charles W Coss
Jane A. Corey
Ries E. Daniel
Sara C, Douglas
Frank W. Draper ni
Donald Duckworth
Joseph W. Fisher
Don C. Freeman
Arley B. Golden
Harland R. Graef
Robert E. Greer Jr.
Nancy S. Hafer
Eugene B. Handsberry
Sarah W. Higdon
Barbara H. Hill
Alexander G. Jones
Harry F. Kabemagel
E. J. Kane
William M. Kemp Jr.
Gayle N. Kimmel
Bertha A. Kircher
Alanson L. Larimore
Lewis C. Leigh Jr.
Edward F Leonard Jr.
Richard C Lewis
Raymond D. Lingo
Robert M. Linkins
Burton G. McCarthy Jr.
James R. Miller
C. L. Messick
Nancy G. Nicewamer
Fred W. Nickerson
Conlyn E. Noland Jr.
Raymond R. Pomeroy
William M, Reed
Orem E. Robinson
Willard L. Robinson Jr.
Rita Mary D. Ryan
S. P. Sadick
Gordon M. Silesky
Annette O. Slasman
M. R. Smith
Oden L. Smith
Mackey M. Streit
Irvin A. Sutton
James D. Twilley
Eugene P. Vigna
Jane G. Warther
Mary 1. Watt
Richard D. Welde
Lawrence S. Wescott
Emily L. Whitman
Daniel M. Wilson
L R Wood
George R. Wright
1952
Class Chair: Jack D. McCuIlough
Total of all Contributions: $7,062
Number of Class Members: 98
Number of Contributors: 48
Participation: 49%
John Bacon Jr.
William V. Bell
Cecil D. Billings
Wilbur D. Billings
Marian J, Brennan
Robert H Brink Jr
William J. Brogan
Nancy C. Campbell
Edwin D. Cook
Suzanne H. Duckworth
Robert C. Earley
Joseph M. Gallo Jr.
James C. Haebel
John B. Haines
Robert C Hicks
Washington College
extends a special
thank you
to the Class Chairmen
for making the
1986-87 Annual Fund
a huge success.
Dolores R. Highland
Esten W, Hungerford
Richard Janigian Jr.
Robert O, Johnson
John W. Kleinll
Frederick E. LaWall
Laurance A. Leonard
Howard Levenberg
Betty I. Libert
William R. Lilley
William M. Lloyd
Charles P. Lohmann Jr.
Jean S. Longobardi
Joseph Longobardi
Henry Louie
Jack D, McCuIlough
James W. McCurdy Jr.
W. W. Ortel
Alexandra M. Reeder
Mary A. Rollins
Robert M. Rouse
Nicholas]. Scallion
Benjamin F. Shimp Jr.
Jacques P. Smith
Jacqueline G. Stauss
Edgar L. Stephenson Jr.
Edward W. Stewart
Arthur H. Sullivan III
Agnes S. Torossian
Rolph Townshend Jr.
James R. Waddell
Eleanor W. Welde
Grafton E. Young Jr.
1953
Class Chair: Charles Waesche
Total of all Contributions: $15,210
Number of Class Members: 93
Number of Contributors: 39
Participation: 42%
Donald W. Brill
Elaine Y. Chambers
Edward E, Cinaglia
George Cromwell Jr.
Grace I. Curtis
Isabelle C. Daniels
C. R. Gale
John F. Grim Jr.
Joel Guandolo
Frank S. Henry
L. B. Hornstein
Alexander Kansak
Jessie D. Kealey
Virginia H. Kenworthey
Jesse E. Kiosiewicz
Stephen Kosiak
Shirley H. LaWall
Margaret B. Leonard
Jane B. Lowe
Donald F. McHugh
N. W. Millner
Joan C. Moore
William H. Phillips
A. J. Proutt
Margaret P. Pruitt
Clarence H. Rollins
Philip H. Ross Jr.
William R Russell Jr.
John SantuUi Jr.
Miriam N. Smith
Herman A. Spanagel Jr.
Cornelius A. Tilghman Jr.
Constantine N. Tonian
Arthur A. Vinyard
Charles Waesche
Patricia B. Ward
John B Wheeler
Doris S. Young
Alfred Zaloski
1954
Class Chair: Robert W. Lipsitz
Total of all Contributions: $5,483
Number of Class Members: 64
Number of Contributors: 22
Participation: 33%
Robert H. Appleby
H. W. Bloomfield
Marilyn D. Covington
George F. Daniels
Patricia Dryden
George W. Dulany
George C. Eichelberger
Henry J. Flynn Jr.
Joseph J. Geissler 111
Cynthia J. Hodges
Saylee U. Kerr
Spencer B. Latham
Margaret W. LeRoy
Robert W. Lipsitz
Edwin C. Mattison
James M. Metcalf
John P. Newbold
Janice P. Nicholson
Donna W. Rolls
Douglas S. Tilley
52
Roderic B. Ware
Signd V. Whaley
1955
Class Chair: Kenneth R. Boum Jr.
Total of all Contributions: $5,940
Number of Class Members: 84
Number of Contributors: 49
Participation: 58%
Robert F. Altmaier
William A. Bamett
Mary Ellen B. Benson
John P. Bergen
Thomas L. Bounds
Kenneth R. Bourn Jr.
Martha G. Cooley
Barbara T. Cromwell
Andrew J. Dail lU
William Dore
David E. Dougherty
Constance W. Fasset
Sue S. Flory
Joan V. Grim
Wayne H. Gruehn
Evelyn Hamilton
Robert A. Holland
John T. Henry Jr.
Thaddeus C. Ichniowski
William A. Land
Virginia M. Laumeister
Charles R. Leary
Ethel K. Ix>evy
Alfred P. Lohmann U
Roy E. MacDonald Jr.
Roy E. Macdonald Jr.
Calvert C. Merriken
Donald S. Owings
John C. Palmer
John R. Parker
Stuart T. Perkins (memorial)
L. F. Phares
Joseph P. Pokrzywka
Jerome M. Proutt
Helen M. Yurso
John L. Murdoch
Barbara J. San Gabino
Laimdota Sausais
Alfred P. Shockley
Rodgers T. Smith
Jane G. Sparks
George J. Stanton
J. G. Stapleton
William S. Stranahan
June W. Tassell
K.H.Turk Jr.
August F. Werner
H. T. Williams
William C. Winterling
Richard B. Wolfe
1956
Class Chair: Barbara M. Reed
Total of all Contributions: $17,306
Number of Class Members: 90
Number of Contributors: 49
Participation: 53%
Edgar M. Bair
Charles E. Barton Jr.
Leslie W. Bell Jr.
Cora Lee D. Benhoff
William A. Benhoff
Melvin E. Benson
Patricia A. Browne
Charles P. Covington Jr.
Edgar G. Cumor Jr.
Hilary R. Curtiss
John K. Daniel
Samuel D, Davis Jr.
Hugh S. Delano
James D. Edwards
Peter A. Eddison
David P. Fields
Barbara L. Frumkin
Richard E. Gorsuch
George H. Hanst
Lvnne R. Hastings
John D. Howard
Priscilla D. Hutchinson
Esther G. Jones
Ebe L.Joseph Jr.
Lloyd S. Kellmg
Carol O. LaMotte
Marie P. Ledford
Janet M. Macera
Norman E. McPherson
Anne G. McKown
John H. Mead
Marion W, Moore
Howard D, Morrison
Marie R. Mullen
Donald M. Nuetzel
John E. Oxley Jr.
Sarah T. Parker
Robert T. Pickett Jr.
Robert W. Powell
Sondra D, Read
Barbara M. Reed
Emily D, Russell
Eleanor H. Savage
Ronald C. Sisk
John D. Sparks Jr.
William A- Stem
William T Warner
John E- Winkler
Jerome F. Yudizky
1957
Class Chair: Donna M. Thompson
Total of all Contributions: $4,&84
Number of Class Members: 102
Number of Contributors: 43
Participation: 42%
Thurman H. Albertson
Peter M. Bartow
W. O. Bealljr.
Louis Borbely
Dorothy R. Bounds
George B. Bums
F. G. Caporoso
Elizabeth H. Cleaver
Jessie M. Coleman
George L. Darley Jr.
William G. Davis
Elizabeth W. Dejong
George H. Dengler
Richard R. Farrow
George C. Froebel
Beverly B. Keating
Charles W. King
Michael J. Kochek
Richard E. Lent
Barbara H. Long
Samuel M. Macera
Janice E. Manley
Richard F. McGrory Jr.
Deborah McKnight
Donald B. Messenger
Carol K. Morrison
Eveline B. Noyes
Romie H. Payne
Roy D. Pippen Jr.
Philip G. Riggin
Antonio Rovira
Jeanne B. Scampoli
Sarah S. Seivold
Alan R. Sharp
Carolyn A. Silverie
Edward L. Silverie
Achille Silvestri
Arthur H. Streeter
Donna M. Thompson
Helen H. Tyson
Warren A. Wasson
Nancy J. Wooldridge
Beverly W. Wright
1958
Class Chair: William C. Litsinger Jr.
Total of all Contributions: $5,989
Number of Class Members: 86
Number of Contributors: 37
Participation: 43%
Barbara L. Bailer
Kenneth M. Barrett
Bruce E. Beddow
Carolyn W. Beddow
Charles W. Bernstein
Robert N. Cleaver
Robert J. Colbom Jr.
Gloria W. Cordera
John H. Davie Jr.
Helen P. Fields
Charles A. Foley 11
Gail H. Friedberg
James A. George Jr.
Robert T. Gillespie
Beatrice C. Griffith
James R. Halpin
Joseph M. Harasta
Rodney L. Harrison
James E. Hughes
James D. Jones
Mary Lou V. Joseph
W. R. Lenderman
Richard Lester
James W. Lewis
William C Litsinger Jr.
P. C. Massey 111
John A. McKenna
Susan E. Murphy
Treeva W, Pippen
Richard A. Reilly
Henrv E. Riecks
Janet G. Riecks
Joseph Seivold Jr.
Arnold J. Sten
Jesse W. Terres Jr.
Luther Vaught
Kathleen B. White
1959
Class Chair: Judith M. Yoskosky
Total of all Contributions: $9,243
Number of Class Members: 135
Number of Contributors: 66
Participation: 49%.
Anne F. Barnett
Rena K. Beall
Robert L. Belsley
Robert A. Bragg
Wilbur S. Brandenburg Jr.
Emily B. Carey (memorial)
Herbert J. Castellani
Donald R. Clausen
Sally Ann G. Cooper
Thomas C. Crouse Jr.
53
Thomas C. Cullis
H. H Deringer
Betty N, Dolliver
William F- Ditman Jr.
Ronald H Doub
Charles F- Downs
Edgar A. Dryden
Mary N. Dryden
Robert N Emory
M D Gates
Elizabeth J. Gordon
Nancy M. Greenberg
Carolyn H. Hamer
James W. Hind
C J Holloway Jr.
Helen L. Horrocks
John R. Jennings
Robert G Kelly
William A. Kogok
Shirley S. Law
Robert H LeCates
Antonia S. Lenane
Martin S. Levin
Ellen Jo S. Litsinger
Walton T. Loevy
Jane R. Massey
Ann B. McKellips
Judith H. McKinney
James L. Meyers
William C. Miller
Bernice H. Mitchell
Edward Mitnick
Herbert L. Moore
Robert A. Moore
Donald A. Morway
Phyllis B. Morway
James M. Murphy
Ronald G. O'Leary
Anthony Oswald
John Q. Parsons
James M. Pickett
Joan R. Pilcher
James M. Potter
Ellen GReilly
Charles T Rittenhouse
Victor G. Ryan
James L. Sauter
Robert A Schumann
James H. Scott III
Ralph G. Skordas
Dorothy S. Sweet
G. R. Tyson
Patricia J. Wasson
Wilhs 1. Weldin II
Robert J. Wilson
Judith M. Yoskosky
Elizabeth Young
1960
Class Chair: B. Dunkin Adams
Total of all Contributions; $4,643
Number of Class Members: 135
Number of Contributors: 56
Participation: 41%
B. D. Adams
Jane S. Aldridge
Robert B. Aldridge
Virginia B. Bailey
Paul M. Baker
Walter M, Baker
Beverly B. Barrett
Joanne B. Bassett
Martha C. Bennett
George Boyd Jr.
William H. Caldwell
Richard B. Callahan
Virginia G. Collins
Beverley B. Connolly
Eva D. Conu'ay
Vanderlip Conway
William F. Copenhaver
Alice T. Cranor
Arthur G. Crisfield
Donald C. Davenport
Susan W. Davenport
Warren G. DeFrank
Paul A. Deysenroth Jr.
Robert E. Eissele
Constance K. Firmey
Richard V. Fitzgerald
S. D. Foxx
Joseph C. Gary
David A. Gillio
Katherine R. Gregory
Tama W. Hashorva
James W. Henley Jr.
Henry H. Horrocks HI
Janice K. Illick
Martha W. Jewett
Louis P. Knox III
David W. Leap
Mortimer V. Lenane
John C. Leverage
Douglass S. Livingston
Edward L. Mantler
Deborah S. Manndin
Irma M. Miller
Norman A. PhiUips Jr.
Joyce E. Poetzl
Wayne C. Ragains
David S. Remington
Jeannette S. Rezai
Sandra M. Robertson
Carl R. Scheir
Freeman S. Sharp
Joyce S, Sten
Robert W. Stewart
Carl E. Tamini
Carole V. Tamini
George D, White
1961
Class Chair: Basil Wadkovsky Jr.
Total of all Contributions: $2,920
Number of Class Members: 102
Number of Contributors: 41
Participation: 40%
Lawrence J. Acchione
Linda F. Berkowitz
Mary W. Brandenburg
Frances T, Brown
John A. Buchanan
Robert D. Cheel Jr.
Thomas A. Cleaveland
Mary R. Craggett
Robert J. Doran
Edward R. Emerson
Bessie E. Engle
Jackson P. Esham
Joan S. Ewing
W. D. Hammond
Brenda K. Harder
Wilma K. Harman
Richard D. Irvin
Richard M. Jacobs
David W. Lance
Robert M. Lentz
Henri L. Marindin
John W. Maun
Janet M. MacGillvary
H. B. Messenger
Scott K. Monroe
John B. Osborne Jr.
Dolores M. Pannell
Paula D- Parsons
David G. Roth
Richard G- Skinner
James E. Smith Jr.
Susan T. Smith
Ralph Snyderman
Harold P. Spedden
Dale G. Tyler
Eugene A. Wagner
Peter A. Wastie
Sarah M. Weldin
Philip J. Whelan
Charles M. Woolston
Christina T. Wright
1962
Class Chair: Arthur E. Leitchjr.
Total of all Contributions: $3,387
Number of Class Members: 106
Number of Contributors: 50
Participation: 47%
Kenneth H. Arnold
Chester C. Babat
Ray H. Bendiner
Holly B, Bohlinger
Frankhn M. Bradley
Constance N. Brown
Nancy T. Cherry
John P. Consaga
Mary Lou S. Coss
Roger N. Craine Jr.
Patrick C. Cullen
Nancy K. Denges
Thomas A, Dixon
Georgia H. Duffee
Mareen L. Duvall Jr.
Barbara B. Ferri
James C. Flippin
Richard S. Frank
Daniel L. Greenfeld
Bernard O. Hardesty Jr.
J. G. Harwood
Stephen A. Hoenack
Joyce B. Kent
Roland T. Larrimore
Charles E. Lawson Jr.
Arthur E. Leitch Jr.
Robert E. Leitch
Joan G. Leonard
John P. Littlejohn
Paul A. Luttkus
Ida May H. Mantel
David G. McGlothlin
Warren H. Milberg
Christine O. Pabon
Joyce W. Pepper
Richard D. Porter
William B. Purcell
George L. Raine
Florence N. Rieken
Alton T. Scarborough Jr.
Charles J. Sebastyan Jr.
Stanley M. Smith
Russell Q. Summers Jr.
Chikao Tsubaki
Linda L. Umbach
R.J. Valhant
Howard B. Wescott
Theodore R. Wilson
Ivan A. Winnick
Llewellyn E. Zuck
1963
Class Chair: Stephen B. Levine
Total of all Contributions: 55,713
Number of Class Members: 115
Number of Contributors: 52
Participation: 45%
Barbara F. Agnew
Ormond L. Andrew Jr.
Roy P. Ans
Andrea Amaud
Juliann M. Blazsek
Leslie B. Breakstone
Ridgely T. Brown
Robert M. Caldwell
Terry L. Caler
Robert Y. Clagett
Ernest E. Clarke
Susan B. Collins
Judith B. Craine
J. T. Cumiskey
Richard S. Curry
Katherine Y. Eaton
Jacques R. Gaucher
Thomas M. Graves
Carolyn D. Gray
Fletcher R. Hall
Judith C. Hogan
David C. Honigstock
Gordon N. Jarman Jr.
Lynnda W. Johnson
Margaret C.Jones
Martin I. Kabat
Nancy H. Kay
Roberta P. Kutlik
Stephen B. Levine
Chariotte W. Mackey
HoltL. Marchantjr.
Walter A. Marschner
Susan B. Mast
R. B. McCommons
Margot B. Miozzi
Bonnie M. Orrison
54
Michael L. Pema
Robert L. Reck
Carolyn M. Reynaud
Elise A. Ruedi
Anne L. Sebastyan
Nanci P. Sharp
F. W. Sieiinglll
Mary C. Skinner
Thomas A. Smoot
George L Stellges
Cynthia P. Stillinger
Pamela B. Titus
Betty K. Wagner
Thomas R. Wessells
Graydon A. Wetzler
Frances Dee M. Williamson
1964
Class Chair: Elaine C Holden
Total of all Contributions: $4,586
Number of Class Members: 150
Number of Contributors: 56
Participation: 37%
Irvin D. Abelman
Myrtle B. Ad kins
Cynthia T. Aebischer
Sara H. Beaudry
Page K. Brenner
Elizabeth S. Brown
Margaret M. Clarke
George C. Charuhas
Roger S. DeVore
James S. Del Priore
Franklin H. Everett Jr.
Nancy D. Frank
W. G. Gaumnitz
Suzanne C. Green
Katherine W. Griffin
Sylvia B. Hesson
Elaine C. Holden
Marilyn H. Huit
Stanley Israel
Kay D. Jones
Phillip G.LeBel
Larry J. Manogue
Robert], McCarthy
Nancy R. Martin
Paul F. Mason
John D. Miller
William H. Morgan
Margaret W. Mrstik
Ronald P. Mrstik
Theodore F. Parker
Carol L. Pippen
Margaret M. Rich
Paul A. Riecks
William E. Rittmeyer
Diana R. Roche
Roy R. Schwartz
Jane R. Sharrow
Hal B. Shear
William P. Short Jr.
Adela R. Sisk
Ronald E. Smith
Thelma A. Smullen
Susanne B. Sutphen
Carolyn R. Tilghman
Philip L. Tilghman
Nancy S. Townsend
Ann M. Trout
Gerald P. Tyson
Melvin W, Walker
Alta F. Weiss
Linda S. Wessells
Patncia G. White
Judith R. Whitington
Frank B. Wildman III
Gail F. Wolpm
Henrietta H. Zahrobsky
1965
Class Chair; Gerald P. Jenkins
Total of all Contributions: $8,338
Number of Class Members: 124
Number of Contributors: 51
Participation: 41%
Dale Adams
Elizabeth M, Ames
Mary Ellen P. Barasch
Cammy E. Blanch
Jeffrey S. Blitz
Ronald D. Brannock
John L. Coker
W. T. Collins
Linda K Daly
Pamela K. Docherty
Jay M. Dove 111
Frank H. Durkee ITI
Kathleen O. Durkee
Robert S. Englesberg
Richard H. Evans
Starke M. Evans
Thomas J. Finnegan
John E. Flynn
Eileen A. Grabenstein
Vaughn A. Hardesty
Stephen G. Harper
Edgar D. Harrington
Haydon M. Harrison
William M. Hesson Jr.
Osu^ald W. Hodges
Ann Hosmer
Frances C. Johnson
Carol M, Kendrigan
Diana D. Leitch
Susan H. McCarthy
Timothy L. McMahon
Andrew T. Nilsson
Charles K. Paxson
Donald C. Rosenberg
Sue T. Rourke
Beverly C Rudolph
David E. Scanlan
Patrick C. Seeley
John T. Shannahan
Glen R. Shipway
David E. Stevens
Elizabeth C. Stevens
Barbara R. Streeter
Barbara M. Sullivan
William A. Tanner
Adah S. Walker
Robert C. Warner
Frederick B. Weiss
Elizabeth Wells
William E, Wilkmson
I E. Wilmer
1966
Class Chair: Patricia S. BarkdoU
Total of all Contributions: $5,979
Number of Class Members: 122
Number of Contributors: 60
Participation: 49%
C. A. Amos
Patricia S. Barkdoll
Karen W. Barrell
Susan Jo S. Berman
Mary Ann D. Berry
Thomas H. Berry
Pamela B. Bitner
Susan A. Burgess
Anthony M. Clements
Barbara K. Coker
Doris A. Crafton
Carolyn Cridler-Smith
John B. Daly
Elizabeth H. DeStefano
Nicholas J. DeStefano
Sally M. Dobbs
David M. Dressel
Allan D. Eisel
Sandra N. Eisel
Carol H. Evans
Susan L. Fast
Margaret W, Frailey
Catherme S, Fronheiser
Eugene M. Fusting
Suzanne D. Greene
Phoebe M. Hardesty
William E. Harrington
C. N. Harrison
Christina S. Harrison
David C. Hayden
Paul E. Hubis
Franklin W. Hynson Jr.
Robert B. Jaeger
Robert M. Johnson
David M. King
Joseph W. Lewis
Carole F. Livingston
Sarah V. Lizbinski
Sara M. McGarvey
Sharyn C. McQuaid
Linda G. Middlestadt
Margaret A. Morgan
Mary G. Nichols
Barbara P. Nilsson
John R. Payne Jr.
Evin H. Phillips
Paul F. Phillips
Wilham B. Prendergast
Eric S. Purdon
Vincent D. Rudolph
Leonard G. Schrader Jr.
Jonathan B. Segal
John P. Sloan
David J. Svec
Linda H. Tamasi
Bonnie A. Travieso
Michael J. Travieso
Mary Frances H. Vartanian
Jean M. Wetzel
J. R Wolfe
1967
Class Chair: Almon C. Barrell, III
Total of all Contributions: $4,241
Number of Class Members: 1 54
Number of Contributors: 55
Participation: 36%.
Mary Alice H. Aguilar
George C. Ambrose
John H, Barkdoll
Almon C Barrell III
Joanna C. Bendiner
Mary S. Burke
Richard J. Carrington
James G. Chalfant
Kendall C. Clement
Joseph M, Coale 111
Pamela M. DeWeese
Debra V. Ewing
Dean S. Ferris
Joan K. Ferris
Ann C. Fey
Alan G. Figgs
Walter L. Grabenstein
Bryan H. Griffin
Sandra V. Griffin
Samuel L. Heck
Lorraine P. Hedrick
Ann R. Heitz
H. D. James
Susan B. Kreckman
Thomas G. Lacher
Edward J. Lehmann
Patricia Lewis
Richard C. Louck
Harriet B. G. Martin
Jean S. McFadden
John W. McGinnis
Jane W. Myers
Carolyn K. Nissley
Daniel Nuzzi
Thomas W. Osborne
Alda M. Peterson
Alan C. Ray
Judith L Reynolds
David A, Rosenstock
Robert S. Ruskin
Miriam H. Scheck
Mark A. Schulman
Carol W. Seeley
Lawrence D. Smith
Carolyn C. Sorge
Robert D. Staiger
Philip J. Stein
Lawrence Swanstrom (memorial)
Charles W. Thomas
Judith R, Thompson
Ruth H. Walker
Helen K. Ward
A. E. Webb Jr.
Sally D. Welch
Stephan Y. Werba
Phyllis M. Wright
55
1968
Class Chair: Richard E. Jackson
Total of all Contributions: $7,859
Numberof Class Members: 165
Number of Contributors: 71
Participation: 43%
Mara T. Ambrose
Carol K. Askin
George B. Baily Jr.
Henry O Biddle
George Ann P. Birkhofer
John M, Bloom
Timothy D. Bohaker
Linda Jean T. Cades
Charlene G. Clement
Robert C- Clift
Joan H. Clifton
John H. CUfton
Deborah K- Eaton
M. P, Eliassen
Michael B. Fineberg
Judith S. Fusting
John E. Gadsby
Nancy L. Galloway
Anthony D. Gilmourjr.
Elizabeth M- Glenn
Michael A. Grover
Norris S. Haselton
Judith J. Heald
Richard E. Holstein
James B. Huggins
Richard E. Jackson
Harold D. Jopp
Cynthia P. Lehmann
Kathryn L Lewis
Marjorie H, Long
Susanne Long (memorial)
WiUiam C. Manning
Thomas S. Marshall
James C. McKinney
Julia B. McLean
Ira D. Measell III
John R. Mendell
John L. Merrill
Donald B. Miller
Charles A. Mock
Donald S. Munter
Mary Sue B. Munter
Paula D. Murphy
Mary S- Nuzzi
Susan S. O'Connor
R. A. Payne III
Roy). Plunkett
Margaret H. Randazzo
Karen L. Reilly
Peter J. Rosen
Barbara J. Rosenstock
Philip A. Rousseaux
C. D. Saunders
Cynthia B. Saunders
Janet Smith
Elwood F. Snyder
Jeannette S. Snyder
Julie H. Snyder
Kenneth S. Stein
Margaret M. Svec
Cathy B. Tarbart
William R, Thompson
Jonathon M. Topodas
Mary M. Trumbauer
Douglas E. Unfricd
Robert J. Van Der Clock Jr.
Karen B. Wandel
Susan K. Wells
Benjamin T, Whitman
Rose E. Wolford
Mary D- Wood
Paula E. Wordtt
1969
Class Chair: Linda J. Sheedy
Total of all Contributions: $12,178
Number of Class Members: 198
Number of Contributors: 101
Participation: 51%
H. L. Amick
Steven H. Amick
Sanford E. Ayers
Linda L. Ayres
Jaia Barrett
Deirdre G. Blain
Victoria L. Blake
David F. Boulden
David A. Brown
Karen M. Brown
Peter W. Brown
David W. Bryden
George L. Buckless Jr.
Judith C. Buinicki
Martin T. Buinicki
Richard L. Campbell
Katherine D- Carrington
William P. Carter
Patrick W. Chambers
Christopher B, Clements
Peggy H. Cole
Shirley J. Collins
Robert W. Cooke
Robert M. Cox Jr.
Christina B. Davies
Susan T. Denton
John D. Dressel
Michael D. DuMontier
Andrew W. Dyer
Shannon E. Dyer
Cecelia M. Eastburn
Karen A. Eichelberger
Diane D. Ewan
John R. Flato
Thomas B, Fulweiler II
WilHam M. Goff
Theodore D. Goldman
David A. Goldscher
Steven R. Graeff
William F. Grey
Richard L. Harrington
Granville H. Hibberd
Joan M. Hill
Carol J. Hynson
Charles F. Ilgenfritz
Mary M. JelHson
Brien E. Kehoe
Brian S. Kimerer
Eric G. Koehler
Diane C. Lantz
Bonnie S. Leach
Elizabeth J. Leichner
Eleanor D, Leonard
Keith A. Levinson
Frances L. Longo
Mark R. Madden
Marjorie J. Madera
Joseph S. Massey
Maryland M. Massey
Mary June M. McGinnis
James H. McGrath
Margaret N. Melcher
Victoria Murphy
Gary A. Myers
Pamela S. Narbeth
Antoinette U. Neally
Dee M. Newnam
Joanne H. Nitsch
Elizabeth T. Nordquist
Patricia G. Nottingham
John Overington
Theodore G. Parks
Lorraine K. Polvinale
Ronald K. Regan Jr,
David M. Ritz
Bonnie K. Robbins
Mark C. Robmson
Dominic M. Romano
Nicholas J. Samaras
William C. Schmoldt
Thackray D. Seznec
Linda J. Sheedy
Carol L. Simmons
Raye H. Simpson
William C. Stallings
Patricia D. Stein
Larry S. Sterling
David D. Stokes
Albert T. Streelman
Becky R. Sutherland
Daryl L. Swanstrom
Carol F. Taylor
Ellen S. Thompson
Virginia A. Vassar
Sharon S. Vogel
Keith P. Watson
William H. Wilson Jr.
Elizabeth K. Winship
Steven T. Wrightson
Judith O. Yoppi
William Zimmerman III
1970
Class Chair: Peter C. Herbst
Total of all Contributions: $13,999
Number of Class Members: 165
Number of Contributors: 67
Participation: 41%
Christina H. Anderson
John H. Anderson
Virginia C. Arthur
Susan C. Bailey
Annette L. Banulski
Kathleen A. Biddle
David S. Bruce
Michael T. Callahan
Jacqueline W. Clements
J. B. Cocoziello
Linda G. Deis
Sylvia M. Dunning
Priscilla V. Ely
T. C. Ely
Sarah W. Flowers
Donna G. Flynn
Joseph C. Flynn
Linda E. Forlifer
John C. Franco
Frederick A. Gorgone III
Sherry L. Graham
John D. Hall
Thomas W. Heald
Peter C. Herbst
Louis B. House Jr.
Peter B. Johnson
Raymond W. Keen
Maryanna L. Kieffer
Becky H. Kirwan
Robert E. Lehman Jr.
William O. Leonard Jr.
Sara M. Lilienthal
Peter S. Maryott
Edward B. McKay
Michael R. McMullan
Barbara H. Measell
Karen G. Miller
Mary F. Miller
P. J. Mueller
Robert T. Murphy
Joseph M. Nichols Jr.
Stephen H. Ogilvy Jr.
Linda S. Ormsby
David J. Pagliughi
Deborah D. Perry
Richard W. Pyles
Cynthia Renoff
Donald W. Rogers
Alison L. Romano
Linda W. Roth
Karen L. Ruffell
Jean F. Seznec
Linda H. Sheldon
Dean G. Skelos
John S. Snyder
Eileen R. Spillane
Jessie D. Stahl
William L. Thompson
Lynne Tobin
Lucille D. Urbas
Barbara M. VanZandt
Deborah G. Ventis
Jean H. Walker
John V, Walker
Peter Wettlaufer
Taylor L. Wilde
Evelyn M. Yokos
1971
Class Chair:
Total of all Contributions: $4,017
Number of Class Members: 153
Number of Contributors: 63
Participation: 41%
Charles E. Andrews
56
Annual Support Breakdown
Bequests 1%
Matching Gifts 8%
Companies 4%
Associations
andTnists 2%
Conrmiunity 3%
Friends 24%
Alumni 26%
Parents 4%
Marsha M. Blann
Deles E. Boardman
Ellen P. Boardman
Elaine D. Brown
Cindy P. Bryant
Rosemary T. Callahan
BettyeC.Chalfant
Judith J. Cheston
Linda B. Cooke
John R. Davies P^
Edward J. Deasy
Daphne DeGuere
Laura I. EhiMontier
Sarah J. Everdell
John-Walter S. Foster III
Sharon S. Fritts
Carol P. Gadsby
Marjorie G. Garbutt
Elizabeth S. Gorgone
Elaine M. Gott
Marilyn S. Guarino
Richard B. Holloway
H. S. Hopper
Clare S. Ingersoll
Michele M. Kane
Wendy F. Keller
Harry T. Kilpatrick
Rebecca M. Krasomil
Barbara E. Maddex
Phyllis D. Marsh
Alan J. Matas
Karen S. Matheson
Andrew M. McCullagh Jr.
John P. McDowell
Stephen A. Mires
Sarah S. Mueller
Ellen H. Mullan
Brooke M. Murphy
Thomas G. Narbelh
Robert P. Orr
Lynn W. Osborne
Susan L. Perr)'
Mary J. Ramsey
Judith D. Rattner
David C. Roach
Christopher L. Rogers
Board 28%
H. F. Ruwet
Nestor Sanchez
Edward S. Schulman
Mary W. Schumann
Nancy M. Skelos
Janet F. Smoot
Richard C. Thompson
Sharon G, Thompson
Nancy L. Thurrott
Bohn C. Vergari
John H. Way
Carolyn K. Webber
Carol B. Weisel
Rexford L. Welch
Melinda B. Wrightson
Teresa T. Young
1972
Class Chair: Geoffrey W. Anderson
Total of all Contributions: $8,041
Number of Class Members: 144
Number of Contributors: 65
Participation: 45%
Geoffrey W. Anderson
Kathryn W. Argentieri
Harmon J Baker III
Janet T. Barnard
Brooks B. Bergner
Peter L. Boggs
Edward ]. Brennan
Robert E. Burkholder
Helen P. Campbell
Lester A. Cioffi
Christopher B. Combs
Barry H. Conner
Katherine W. Cooke
Darryl M. Deibert
Margaret G. Donald
Glenn T. Dryden
Barbara H. Fenderson
Eamie L. Gardner
Donald G Gan'att
Sandra P. Garratt
Carole B. Geronimo
Stephen T. Golding
Patricia R. Goldman
Martha S. Gound
Judith N. Grey
David M, Griffith
Allison C. Hyland
Margaret I. Johnsen
Charles S. Johnson
Mary D. Joyner
John W. Keenan
Kenneth A. Kiler
l^uren M, Kimerer
Paul D. Knowles Jr.
Phyllis C. Kornprobst
Phyllis B. Kosherick
Jeffrey A. Lees
Ann H. Lilly
Mark W. Lobell
Susan G. Luster
Susan W. Lyons
Eileen S. Menton
Robert K. Metaxa
Thomas H. Murphy
Gina A. OHva
Kathleen C. Owens
William R. Pacula
David B Pratt
J. F. Price
Guy M. Reeser HI
Barbara E. Richmond
David L. Ripley
Gretchen S. Roth
Constance G. Rothman
Roger S. Soo
John T. Steinhart
Emmy Lou S. Swanson
Dale W. Tnjsheim
F. G. Vansant
Deborah A. Veystrk
C. C. Virts
Marcia T. Virts
Christine R. Wesp
Loretta M. West
Wendy B. Wolf
1973
Class Chair: Elizabeth A. Barry
Total of all Contributions: $1 1 ,840
Number of Class Members: 214
Number of Contributors: 80
Participation: 37%
Elizabeth A. Barry
Steven Bartalsky H
Franklyn W. Berry
Gail M. Boggs
Leroy T. Bortmes
Edward H. Brighman
Joanna Brown
Michael B. Brown
William F. Buckel
J. P. Cann
Alexander Casler
George Churchill
Susan H. Churchill
Robert J. Cigala
Norris W. Commodore Jr.
John F. Copeland Jr.
Susan Creamer
John H. Dimsdale III
John A, Doran Jr.
S. K. Duckworth
William A, Dunphy Jr.
Jan W, Dunwoody
Mary J. Eavenson
Paul S. Eldridge
Elizabeth C. Fisch
Phyllis E. Frere
Jean A. Gelso
Thomas K. George
Barbara M. Gleason
Louise A. Goddard
James A. Guthrie
Meredith L. Horan
Charles F. Horstmann Jr.
Elaine S. Hovell
Jennifer L. Hyatt
W. E. K. Ivie
Stewart F. Kay
David A. Kelly
Curtis L, Kiefer
William R.Kier Jr.
Margaret L. Kratzer
Alan D. Lambert
Gordon R. Lattu
Elizabeth N. Lauhoff
Beth Leaman
Margaret M. Learmouth
Mary A. Leekley
Putnam MacLean
Michael Macielag
Margaret C. Mangels
Michael B. Mann
George M. Mowell
Sheila W. Nau
George W. Nickel III
Janet L. Noble
Packard L. Okie
Chris A. Owens
A. S. Park
James G. Pierne
J. W. Pitcher
Jonathon J. Powers
Cathy L. Prager
Karen G. Price
Polly J. Quigley
Lana C. Rogers
Stephen Sandebeck
Robert F- Schumann Jr.
Robert V. Shriver
Stephen R. Slaughter
Matthew J. Snyder
Jonathan L. Spear
John L. Tansey
Richard L. Taylor Jr.
Norberto Viamonte
Nancy G.Walsh
John S, Wayne
Andrew B. Williams III
Martin J. Winder
Anthony S. Wiseman
Mary R. Yoe
1974
Class Chair: Kevin M. O'Keefe
Total of all Contributions; $6,1 1 1
Number of Class Members: 210
57
Number of Contributors: 74
Participation: 37%
Amanda Adams
Christopher R. Ahalt
Mary M. Andrews
Robert J. Atkinson
Wendy B. Bartel
Cynthia E. Behn
Virginia V. Bowerman
Dorsey H. Bramble
Rene T. Brown
Clara M. BuUen
Elise L. Caragine
Tami P Daniel
Sandra S. Darling
Joyce M. Davis
Michael J. DeSantis
Stephen B. Etris
Lois H. Evans
Douglas S. Ewalt
Robin A. Faitoute
Robert D. Farwell
Linda P. Fenwick
Ehrdley Fetzer
Kathleen L. Ford
Robert E. Fredland
Joseph M. Getty
Carolyn E. Golding
Robert A. Greenberg
Albert S. Grzech
Richard A Headley
Joanne R. Hogg
Ronald R. Hogg
Katherine W. Igusky
David D. Isherwood
Lewis Israelite
Rosanne J. Jarrell
Richard C. Kaste
Michael E. Kennedy
Bruce Komberg
Gregory Lane
Thomas A. Larsen Sr.
Robert W. Lazzaro
Victoria P. Lazzell
Patricia A. Lesho
Melissa S. Lourie
Mary B. Mack
Sylvia S. Maloney
Photo: Edward Deasey 73
Deborah S. Martin
Christine D. Matteo
Barbara K. McKay
Margaret M. Meade-Bogguss
Elizabeth T. Morgera
Joan S. Myer
Richard A. Norris
Kevin M. O'Keefe
Kathleen A Ohrenschall
Rosemary A. Orthmann
Nancy E. Osbom
Ruth E. Parry
Harold W. Rafter
Diana D. Rosenberg
James S. Royer
Susan A. Scheidle
Lynn K. Schlossberg
Judith F. Seip
Michael P- Slagle
Catherine B. Small
Ann E. Smith
James W. Smyth Jr.
Enc E. StoU
Lisa P. TiuTier
Patricia A. Viamonte
John A. Wagner Jr.
Robert B. Warner
Cynthia T. Weinmann
June E. West
Leslie T. White
Christine H. Withers
1975
Class Chair: Melissa N. Clarke
Total of all Contributions; $3,927
Number of Class Members: 244
Number of Contributors: 90
Participation: 37%
James W. Akin
Deborah J. Anderson
Carol L. Baker
Louis R. Barber
Adelaide N. Berry
Rebecca L. Besson
David M. Burton
Charlton G. Campbell-Hughes
Mary G. Caperton
Claire Center
Michael A. Channing
Matthew K. Clark
Melissa N. Clarke
Richard G. Colbert Jr.
William R. Collings
Joseph P. Connor
Robert J. Cook
E. W. Denison
David W. Doelp Jr.
Keith W. Dranbauer
Kathryn E. Draper
William D.Eaton Jr.
John L. Eigenbrot II
Jay H. Elliott
Peter R. Fitzgerald
Kathleen D. Fitzgerald
Andrew L. Foster
Jenn A. Fredland
Scott D. Friedman
Bronwyn T. Fry
Sarah T. Gearhart
James T. George IT
Robin C. Gettier
Barbara C. Gorrow
Donald H. Green
Benjamin H. Inloes
Mary B. Ivie
George Johnston
Julia B. Johnson
Marjorie R. Kaper
Richard Killough
Robert W. Larson Jr.
Roy R. Larson
Betsy C. Leibson
June L. Main
Bryan L. Matthews
Susan D. Matthews
J. T. Middleton
Curtiss H. Miles
Kevin W. Nelson
Betsy Jo D. Norris
Frederick W. Ohrenschall
Laura P. Oliver
Diane Parks
Nathaniel L. Parks Jr.
William F. Paugh
John A. Pederson
Gregory P. Penkoff
Douglas B. Pfeiffer
Susan F. Pippin
Patricia B. Putnam
George W. Reed
Vara L. Reeser
Beverly H. Reid
Paula P. Rengel
Douglas W. Richards
Nancy S. Riley
Gwendolyn B. Rohn
Louise A. Sargent
Barbara P. Silcox
Hugh B. Silcox
Mary M. Silvestri
Susan B. Slaughter
Lynette B. Smith
Vesna T. Somers
Carole Strausburg
Josephine H. Strippel
Lucinda Stude
Mary M. Sworsky
Joseph E. Teti
James F. Thompson
Jeffrey R. Timm
Phebe T. Tinker
Patricia K. Trams
Lynn M. Virgilio
Helen P. Vansant
Philip W. Vogler Esq.
William J. Walls Jr.
Martin E. Williams
W. L. Yerkes
1976
Class Chair: Thomas J. Regan
Total of all Contributions: $4,702
Number of Class Members: 224
Number of Contributors: 71
Participation: 32%
Tracy P. Allsion
Christina A. Beaven
James R. Bowerman
Douglas F. Bowman Jr.
Kathleen C. Bums
J. T. Campbell
Lynn K. Channing
Karen Colbert
Laura B. Condon
Mary A. Cornell
Kerry F. Crocken
Melinda M. Darbee
Marie Delcher
Michal H. Dickinson
Susan L. Duffin
Christopher J. Eastridge
Deborah Feeley
Henry S. Fehlman
Deborah S. Finley
Donald A. Ford
Margaret S. Goldstein
Drew N. Gruenburg
Andrew D. Graver
Gerard D. Hall
William L. Hallam
Karen L. Hamemik
John R. HoUand UI
Beverly D. Horn
Murray K. Hoy
Charles G. Irish HI
Christine A. Jadach
Bruce I. Katz
Heidi M. Katz
Catherine S. Keiter
Kenneth L. Klompus
Diane M. Landskroener
Linda J. Mangels
Walter B. Mangels III
Marie Louise W. Meats
Jane E. Mitchell
Hollis D. Mooney
Joseph A. Mooney in
Mary H. Munnikhuysen
Pamela D. Naplachowski
David T. Owens
L. S. Patrick
Barbara Jo H. Pion
58
Louis A. Prindpato jr.
Melinda A. Rachlin
Jay S. Raksin
Thomas ]. Regan
Helen W. Reustle
Barbara M. Richardson
Cynthia B. Rief
Albert C. Romanosky
Constance J. Rue
David H. Scott
Jessica K. Siegel-Jamner
Susan B. Smith
Diane M. Spry
Patrick J. Strollo Jr.
Peter E. Takach
Franklin B. Thomas
James B. Thomas II
Richard G. Thompson Jr.
Amy S. Warner
Nancy W. Wayne
Dean M. Wem
Royall B. Whitaker
Richard C. Williams
William N. WiUiams
1977
Class Chair: Zung T. Nguyen
Total of all Contributions: $5,311
Number of Class Members: 241
Number of Contributors: 64
Participation: 27%
Anne E. Bailey-Spruance
Gail R. Barber
Maryellen Bennett
Michael S. Buchanan
John C. Cheek
Nancy T. Collins
Mark T. Condon
Robert M. Copp
Andrew W. Crosby
Sandra L. Dennison-James
Jane A. Dermey
Dawn A. DeSantis
Jody A. EXidderar
Margot F. Eliason
John T. Elkins
Douglas C. Errington
Donald M. Fisher
Diana D. Grunow
Marcia G. Hammett
Thomas L. Herr
Katherine W. Johnston
Jonathan L. Jones
E. B. Joseph
Lawrence S. Kligerman
Nancy C. Knuth
Nancy K. Kroh
Barbara A. Kurgansky
Kenneth R. Larsen
Jane E. Libby
April L. Lindevald
Kevin E. Madden
William R. May
James S. McBride
Joan C. Merriken
John A. Moag
Mary J. Morett
Peter M. Moulder
William M. Mullen
Lois J. Nardi
Zung T. Nguyen
Paul J. Noto
Albert H. Owens
Sarah L. Owens
Dean Parker
Robert R. Ramsey
Eileen A. Reddy
Kathleen). Riefe
Margaret C. Sigrist
Mary J. Smith
John P. Sherman
Margaret M. Smith
Denise F. Smyth
Dan Solomon
Glen P. St. George
Margaret Taylor
Lydia S. Thomas
Bruce G. Tobin
Mary Ellen G. Trusheim
Keith G. Twitchell
Barbara G. Wagaman
Susan Wilkerson
Lucille Anne K. Williams
Robert Y. Witter
Judith H. Yocum
1978
Class Chair: John P. Habermann
Total of all Contributions: $5,251
Number of Class Members: 222
Number of Contributors: 81
Participation: 36%
Mary R. Allen
William F. Andrews III
Bonnie M. Anthony
Scott R. Ayres
Caryn L. Balamaci
Mary B. Beaston
Terri A. Beatty
Helen P. Blackwell
Gregory H. Brandon
Sue Briggs
B. K. Byron
Ann W. Causey
Howard S. Comstock 111
Paige P. Coombs
Richard A. Creamer
Sandra G. DeVan
Richard C. Denison Jr.
James C. Devol
Jane R. Dhue
David P. Douglass
Gail A Emow
David N. Eske
Karen W. Eske
R. C. Evans
Cheryl A. Fenner
H B. Funk
L. M. Gaines 111
Jonathan H. Gifford
Gretchen M Gillen
Gordon S. Gorab
John P. Habermann
Philip A. Hoyt Jr.
JoAnn D. Jackson
Linda L. Johnson
James L. Karl
Ashton M. Kelley
Frances C. Klapthor
Ann T. Laverty
Mark C. Luff
Anne F. MacGlashan
Katherine M. Maisel
Gary A. Mance
John F. Marshall 111
Taylor C. McGee
Amy N. Miller
Matthew A. Morris
Sarah C. Mulligan
Cynthia A. MuUinix
George C. Mullinix Jr.
James P. Naul
J. S. Neuberth
Gary P. Norris
Jenny M. Pacy
Cynthia C. Pepper
Lee C. Peterson
Claire I. Pula
Albert W Ro
Allison Robson-Bateman
Barry D. Rollins
Mary D. Rollins
Walter A. Romans Jr.
Carol N. Rufolo
Kimberly A. Samperton
Terri T. Selby
Leslie R. Shaffner
Shelley V. Sharp
John M. Simpson
Catherine S. Siperko
Bruce L. Smith
Elizabeth B. Stephenson
Deborah G. Stoll
Christopher J. Strauss
J. S. E. Tatnall
David A. Treasure
Peter C. Tsou
Denise M. Walton
Beverly C. Williams
Carlos E. WUton Jr.
Thomas M. Wood
Karen A. Young
Gary H. Zom
1979
Class Chair: Grant L. Jacks
Total of all Contributions: $4,915
Number of Class Members: 195
Number of Contributors: 75
Participation: 39%
Joarme T. Aheam
Cynthia A. Brown
Teresa M. Brown
James H. Buchanan
Christine A. Butler
Jennifer A. Butler
M. K. Carouge
Lu Ann S. Cicci
Cynthia D. Comstock
Marian V. Cooper
Robert A. Crooks
June D, Curnnder
James H, Demarest
Patricia A. Douglas-jarvis
Lisa J. Durbin-Scott
Mary A. Espenshade
Therese A, Faby
Susan D- Farace
Marcia L. Femandez-Hermo
Mary W. Games
Virginia H. Hansen
Susan G. Harter
John W. Hawkins
Mark R. Hellberg
Scott E. Huber
Andrew J. Hundertmark III
Grant L. Jacks
Margaret S. Jacks
Anne K. Jelich
John M. Jelich
Priscilla E. Klipstein
Robert C. Lewis
Joseph Lill
Gorton P. Lindsay
Douglas C, Lippoldt
Kevin P. Lynch
J. W. Maisel
David L. Malone
George W. Martin Jr.
Martha K. Martin
Joseph B. McCardell
Barbara W. Mead
Dorothy F. Medicus
Bennie M. Milton
W. F. Molali
George L. Morris
Julie M. O'Brien
Maria J. Paslick
Donald A. Pennington
Anne L. Pitt
Richard J. Porta!
Margaret G. Quimby
Roger J. Rebetsky
Valerie L. Reindollar
Maura-Ellen K. Rogers
Joseph Salgado Jr.
Jean D. Sanders
Cathy B, Schwartz
Sara W. Sherman
Jasmine M. Shriver
Michelle A. Simpson
William J. Skelton III
Marianna Smith
Betsy A, Sobolewski
Emil A, Sueck Jr.
Karen M. Sweezey
Laura G. Treuth
Jerri R. Tsou
Jack A. Upchurch Jr.
Katherine E. Wagner
Christine H. Wiggins
Steven L. Wilkinson
Stuart G. Williams
Joseph M. Wilson
Mary L. Wood
David C. Wright
59
1980
Class Chair: Paul D, Drinks
Total of all Contributions: $2,875
Number of Class Members: 199
Number of Contributors: 11
Participation: 36%
\\ B. Abbott
William C. Anderson
Loren C. Bairn
ludith A, Beshel
jeanette M. Bonsack
T. j. Bradley
Frederic M, Bryant IV
Joan E. Burn
Debra R. Campbell
Timothy H. Connor
John N, Coulby III
Ralph M. Dashner
Daniel J. DeCarlo
Mary C. DeMoss
Darlene C. Debnam
Douglass T. Delano
Mark H, Devins
Danette B. Dickerson
Paul D Drinks
F M Dugan Jr.
Nubian L. Duncan
Joyce Evans
Evelyn S. Felluca
Jane J. Fox
Nancy L. Gerling
Jonathan M- Glazer
Claire M. Golding
Charles W. Gregory Jr.
Rafael J. Guastavino Jr.
Linda G. Hamill
Northmore W. Hamill
Robert M. Hawkridge
Patricia S. Helvitson
Donna S, Hink
Ann D. Homer
Nancy C. Horstman
JoAnn Hoyt
Daniel F. Hudson
Robert J. Jarrell
Felisbela O. Joseph
Jane A. Kerns
Dwight D. Latham
Anne M. Liles
Lynn A, Lyke
Denise E, McEachem
Rita M. McWiliiams
Sallie L, Miller
Elizabeth A. Montcalm
Jonathan D. Mueller
Jacob W. Parr Jr.
Steven F. Perry
Dennis D, Porter
Beverly L. Powers-Jones
Jonathan R, Price
Tracy L. Royston
William R. Russell III
Gregory F. Schaffner
Brian P. Siegel
Laura P. Siegel
Amanda S. Simons
Amy J. Skelton
Susan W. Skelton
Carol A. Smillie
Janet A. Sparre
Margaret H. St. jean
William S. Steelman
Leah E. Truitt
Richard P. Vanderwende
Joy C. Wemmer
Fairfax David Wheelan
Vivian Young
Peter J. Zekonis
1981
Class Chair: Glen E, Beebe
Total of all Contributions: $2,375
Number of Class Members: 189
Number of Contributors: 48
Participation: 25%
C. D. Altvater
Elizabeth A. Anger
Glen E. Beebe
Daniel R. Beime
Susan L. Bennett
Gordon B. Browning
Margaret O. Burke
Ruth A. Christenson
John F. D' Amanda
Diana T. Farrell
Daphne Fogg-Siegal
Kirk J. Folk
Walter E. Foraker
Geoffrey R. Garinther
Peter V. Gottemoller
Susan L. Handy
Diana B. Hastings
William D. Herring
Gene A. Hessey II
Shirl Hundertmark
R. B. Kelley
Christopher P. Kiefer
Craig H. Langwosl
John C. Lonnquest
Patricia B. Losey
Allyson T. McCormick
Patricia K. McGee
Molly A. Meehan
Kenneth M. Merz Jr.
Sandra E. Meyers
Barnett R. Nathan
Ronald W. Norvell
Charlotte R. Parker
Mary Parr
Catherine C. Quillman
Stuart H. Quillman
Deborah A. Risberg
Marian D. Rock
Linda D, Runge
Julie S. Shepard
John B. Stea
Robert H. Strong Jr.
Melanie F. Struve
M. C. Treuth
Joan M. Tynan
Kathryn C. Verbanic
Katherine S. Waye
Ronald K. Wright
1982
Class Chair: Scott B. Hansen
Total of all Contributions: $7,549
Number of Class Members: 237
Number of Contributors: 72
Participation: 30%
Francis T, Adams III
Jennifer R. Ahonen
Jesse C, Bacon
Robin L. Bauer
Kara A. Beal
David Bealmear
Leslie L. Bobik
Linda M. Bragg
Tamara E. Brown
Michael F. Carpenter
Catherine E. Carrier
Roberta E. Chaffin
Susan R. Chase
Eileen M. Clark
W.J. Clark jr.
Joseph E. Comely
P. L. Day
Kathleen DeFlaun
Carol A. DeMoss
Pamela J. DriscoU
Ehzabeth D. Edgeworth
Elizabeth K. Edwardsen
Susan M. Ericsson
Vincent J. Filliben Jr.
John H. Fout
Jessica M. Fowler
Thomas J. Galione
Julie Gartland
Mary E. Glascock
Deborah F. Hansen
Scott B. Hansen
Arlene L. Hawkridge
Suzanne C. Henderson
Lee C. Holliday
Paul Hooper
Jeffrey H. Horstman
Peter W. Jenkins
Lorraine M. June
Brian B. Kane
Emily E. Kaufman
Anne T. Kelly
Danielle Kennedy-Lippold
Kevin T. Kroencke
Elizabeth C. Kuensell
Virginia 1. Kurapka
Mary L. Laferriere
John D. Lawrence Jr.
Lisa C. Leonard
Robert W. Leonard
Valerie Marsh
Leland W. McCollough
Harry D. McEnroe
Cathy L. McGuire-Groff
Brian F, Meehan
William W. Mortimer
Ann C. Most
Edward P. Nordberg Jr.
Kevin J. O'Connor
Yvonne M. O'Neill
David A. Pointon
Julia Price
Christina F. Ragonesi
Thomas E. Roof
Russell A. Schilling
Deborah K. Schlette
John W. Sharp
Mark G. Simpson
Kathleen T. Tynan
Roger D. Vaughan
Virginia A. Walczak
John Willis
Bruce H. Winand
1983
Class Chair: F. K. Wineland
Total of All Conhributions: $3,464
Number of Class Members: 215
Number of Contributors: 68
Participation: 32%
Caran S, Aikens
William J. Alderson
Lynda W. Allera
Michael P. Allera
Donald E. Alt
James C. Apple
Gary K. Atkinson
Heather E. Baltovich
Linda M. Benson
J. T. Blackwood
Paul G. Blumberh
David G. Burton
William A. Camp
Ruth E- Chisnell
Timothy N. Cloud
Andrea D. Colantti
James H. Corddry
Jeffrey B. Donahoe
Christopher Ellinghaus
Richard K. Esherick
Timothy G. Fagan
Linda A. Foster
Gary W. Frye
Glenn M. Gillis
Mary Ellen Gillis
Michele Hartnett
Phihp A. Heaver Jr.
Debra L. Herring
Joseph L. Holt
Robert D. Hopkins
Patricia M. Jones
Susan F. Kepner
Louise Q, Kling
Benjamin G. Kohl Jr.
Kimberley Kohl
Lisa A. Laird
Douglas J. Landry
Brian B. Lawrence
John J. Lloyd Jr.
Barbara O. Lort
Carol L. McCollough
Thomas V. McCoy
Robert A. Nass
Joneen E. Nielsen
Deborah J. Ortl
R. G. Proffitt
Christia J. Raborn
Stephen K. Radis
Virgil P. Randolph IV
60
Romie Q. Robinson II
Julia S. Schilling
Catherine A. Schreiber
Saan S. Simon
Mark A. Slater
Gerald A. Smith
Karin E. Smith
Thomas M. Summers
George C. Sutherland
David E. Tabor
Doreen M. Ulichney
Lawrence K. Wagner Jr.
Bryon E. Welch
Douglas D. West
Clifton D. White
Christopher J. Whitney
F. K. Wmeland
Roxanne Wolf
Kathryn A. Wurzbacher
1984
Class Chair: Karen M. Perkinson
Total of all Contributions: $1,240
Number of Class Members: 239
Number of Contributors: 62
Participation: 26%
Thomas A. Adams
Patricia A. Alt
Anne W Bailey
Daniel ]. Bakley
Elizabeth A. Beard
Mark R. Beatty
Robert L. Besse
Linda D. Blow
Melissa A. Booth
A.J.Bradley
T. S. Brooks
Natalie J. Brown
Matthew T. Burke
Frances N. Burnet
Irwin G. Burton
Moira E. Buzby
Nina C. Casey
Judith H. Coleman
Hugh A. Collie
David K. Collins
Kathleen Connelly
Brian F. Corrigan
Virginia A. Danner
Marc L. Doucette
Jesse A. Downey
Patrick A. Edeline
Jeanmarie F. Fegely
Franz D. Fleishman
Deborah L. Furgueson
Christopher T. Gale
Todd A. Harman
Fannie C. Hobba
Margaret C. Hoffman
Kevin J. Keily
Georgeanna Linthicum
Lisa A. McClellan
Timothy C. McGrath
Michele E. McKay
Lynn McKenna
Christopher McKnight
David W. Michalski
Christopher Nelson
Margaret E. Newsome
Lisa A. Nichols
Stephanie E. Paup
Karen M. Perkinson
Joshua S. Pessin
Lois A. Ramponi
B. H. Saville
Michael S. Shwed
Judith S. Skelton
Matthew E. Smith
Scott B. Spurrier
Wayne P- Spurrier
Michael P. Stevens
Patricia A. Stille
Audrey E. Sutherland
Scott F. Vogel
Lucie Wagner
Quincy G. Williams
Kenneth S. Wohner
Margot A. Woods
1985
Class Chair: Melissa Combes
Total of all Contributions: $1,569
Number of Class Members: 177
Number of Contributors: 59
Participation: 33%
Jonathan E. Adams
Belinda A. Bair
Martha M. Blose
Patrice A. Burdalski
Carol D. Callaway
Cheryl D. Clagett
Jocelyn A. Clark
Melissa Combes
Susan A. Comfort
Virginia M. Conner
Stephanie A. Crockett
Kelly L. Cupka
Amy L. D'Ablemont
Janice C. Daue
Ellen A. Davis
Jill A. DelConte
Carolyn E. Ellis
Tern L. Everett
Robert W.Gaddis Jr.
Cecilia G. Goldstein
Polly T. Goode
Elizabeth A. Guastavino
Linda T. Guccione
Stephen D. Halla
Denise Hernandez
Sandra M. Hiortdahl
Mary M. Hussman
Barbara P. Jackson
Sharon K. Jaqua
Monica A. Jarmer
Richard T. Kircher
Lisa D. Kosow
Katharine M. Krauss
Michele J. Lacher
Diana K. Lipford
Denise N. Lipman
Arthur W. Littman
Cecily W. Lyle
Jonathan A. McKnight
Lisa A. Mendelson
Michele B. Moon
Laura T. Mooney
Elizabeth M. Muntzing
Mary J. Perticone
Teresa E. Porter
Sarah L. Reines
Kimberly Ruark
Amy J. Seifert
Mary B. Siemen
Donald G. Sparks
Shannon L. Stewart
Jack N. Stout Jr.
Thomas P. Tansi
Deborah A. Thebaud
William A. Thomas
Marybeth Van Fossen
Patrick J. Walsh
Stephen C. Woods
Andre-Philippe Yon
1986
Class Chair: Tommy E. Moore Jr.
Total of all Contributions: $1,390
Number of Class Members: 202
Number of Contributors: 60
Participation: 30%
Barbara A. Abram
Stephanie L. Adams
Cynthia A. Allen
Lynn M. Attias
Richard H. Bagby
GeneG. Blades
Lawrence W, Boehm
Barbara A. Brown
Paula M. Carlson
Christine A. Charmak
Susan J. Colhns
Maximillian K. Conover
Catherine R. Cooper
Richard E. Cote Jr.
David M. Crowley
Paul W. Eichler
Andrea F. Erving
Edward T. Fitzgerald
Kathleen M. Flanagan
Waverly R. Ford
Kathi D. Glenn
Timothy R. Goode
Daria A. Hamlin
John J. Harrison
Karen E. Hartz
Russell D. Hetzer
Lynda M. Hill
Lyle B. Himebaugh III
John R. Ruber
Richard A. Kaier
Lincoln S. Kamoff
Kurt E. Keller
Linda Kennedy
Nancy M. KIos
Charles W. Kruse
Mary E. Larrimore
Robert B. Loock
Charles D. Macleod
Anne E. Magrath
Geoffrey Marshall
Brian L. Martucci
Ann C. Mawhinney
Brian A. McLelland
Paula F- Miller
Tommy E. Moore Jr.
Joyce P. Morales
Suzanne L. Niemeyer
Michelle P. Nolan
Rondie F- Overton
John H- Robinson
Karen A. Rollin
Raymond T. Rowley
Patricia A. Schiazza
Laura L. Snyder
Susan F. Summers
Lisa D. Thomas
Tamara A. Tiehel
ZoeLynne E. Weil
Katherine L. White
Timothy E. Whiting
1987
Class Chair: Irene Nicolaidis
Total of all Contributions: $448
Number of Class Members: 127
Number of Contributors: 81
Participation: 64%
Gregory J. Anderson
Catherine T, Beck
Dina L. Beck
Judith A. Beckmann
61
Jennifer A. Billings
MaryGrace Brickley
Laura L. Brown
Mary E. Brown
Scott A. Butler
Kelly S. Callaway
Edmund C. Cammack
Laura S. Chase
Wendy C. Clarke
David R. Coleman
Kim M. Coulbourne
Catherine A. Coundjeris
Walter H. Cox
Kevin T. Crowell
Todd R DelPriore
Susan M. De Pasquale
Christopher V. DiPietro
James B. Donahue
Daniel F. Ducar
Donald A. Duhadaway
Lauren C. Ebaugh
Cathy A. Engle
John F- Flavin III
Donald R. Giblin II
Jon W. Gonella
Patrick H. Gordinier
Melissa L. Harter
William S. Hayes
Lars K, Henriksen
Russell W. Hertler
David S. Milliard
Donna M. Horneman
Charles H. Joiner
Joyce L. Jones
Christine C. Kane
Brian S. Katsef
John R. Kelly
Ronald M, Knox
Susan M. Kolls
Linda H. Kruse
Kevin P. Lauricella
Anthony N. Lazzaro Jr.
Jacqueline A. Loughman
Pamela M. Loughman
Brownyn A. Maguire
Bridget B. McElroy
Janet P- Mcjilton
Donna L. McMahan
Patrick J. McMenamin Jr.
Frederick Middleton III
Juan C. Mora
David K. Morris
John L. Musachio
Irene Nicolaidis
Katharine W. Norris
Kimberly A. Phillips
RoberiJ. Polk
Lucinda L. Prettyman
Mark D. Rappold
David M. Repko
Suzanne A. Ruppert
Stephen M. Schmidt
Callie J. Sessions
Karen G. Smith
Amy J. Steigleman
Joseph K. Stokes
Christopher R. Strong
Russell Q. Summers 111
Scott Taliaferro
Richard C. Taylor
William B. Thompson Jr.
Allyson M. Tunney
Margaret E. Virkus
Harris L. Whitbeck
Richard J. Williams
Bruce A. Yancey
Claire J. Yaniga
Parents
Mr. & Mrs. Raouf Sa'd Abujaber
Mr. & Mrs. Lynn R. Adams
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas A. Adams
Mr. & Mrs. Robert L. Aiken
Mr. & Mrs. Charles E. Albers
Ms. Margaret G. Albertsen
Mr. & Mrs. Constantin G. Alio
Mr. & Mrs. James E. Almony
Mr. & Mrs. William Amey
Mr. & Mrs. George M. Anderson
Mr. & Mrs. Linwood P. Anderson
Mr. & Mrs. Lloyd J. Andrew Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Clarence E. Andrews
Mr. & Mrs. William F, Andrews
Mrs. Estelle Arnold
Mr, & Mrs. Thomas P, Arthur Sr.
Mr. & Mrs. Frederick C. Back
Mr. & Mrs. James A. Bacon
Mr
& Mrs. Hugh K. Bailey
Mr
& Mrs George T, Baker
Mr
& Mrs Robert N Bakley
Mr
& Mrs Richard G, Baldwin
Mr
& Mrs. Samuel C. Baldwin
Ms
. Eleanor D. Baize
Mr
& Mrs Emmitt Banks
Mr
s. Doreen Bardell
Mr
& Mrs. John Ban-
Mr
Richard H. Bate
Mr
& Mrs. Glynn R. Baugher
Dr
& Mrs. C. G. Baumann
Mr
& Mrs. Peter Beach
Mr
& Mrs. William F. Beal
Mr
& Mrs Lloyd F Beard Jr.
Mr
& Mrs Philip E Beaston
Mr
& Mrs. Bruce B. Beatty
Mr
&Mrs. Harry G. Beck Jr.
Mr
& Mrs. William Beekman
Mr
s. June M. Behm
Mr
& Mrs Arthur Beneckson
Mr
s. Patricia Beneckson
Mr
& Mrs. Richard T. Bentley
Mr
& Mrs. Carl D. Bergenholtz
Dr
& Mrs. George Bernstein
Mr
s. William M. Bertles
Mr
s. Alice M. Betley
Mr
& Mrs. Ervin R. Seville
Mr
& Mrs. Leonard H. Billingslea
Mr
& Mrs. George T. Bishop IV
Mr
s. Senie Bloys
Ms
Darlene L. Boak
Mr
s. Patricia Boatner
Mr
& Mrs. Bernard Bodt
Mr
& Mrs George C. Boehm
Mr
& Mrs Duane G Boggs
Mr
& Mrs Martin Boor Jr.
Mr
& Mrs. William Bors
Mr
& Mrs. George Bournazian
Mr
& Mrs. Brian H. Bowne
Mr
& Mrs. John H. BozicJr.
Mr
& Mrs. Edwin L. Bradley
Mr
& Mrs. J. M. Bradley
Mr
& Mrs. Charles B. Brenton
Mr
& Mrs. Alfred M. Brittingham
Mr
& Mrs. Vincent J. Brocato
Mr
& Mrs. Hugh F. Brookhart
Mr
& Mrs. George W. Brown
Mr
& Mrs. Wayne C. Brown
Mr
& Mrs. William H. Brown
Mr
& Mrs. William L. Brown
Mr
& Mrs. Wayne N. Brumbley
Mr
& Mrs. Donald D. Brumstead
Mr
J. S. Bryan III
Mr
s. DorisM. Buchanan
Mr
& Mrs. Cornelius Buchler
Mr
& Mrs. Brian B. Bucklee
Mr
& Mrs. Leonard M. Burcham
Mr
& Mrs. Frank N. Burnet
Mr
s. June L. Bumside
Mr
& Mrs. Robert J. Byrne
Mr
& Mrs. Charles E. Carlson
Mr
& Mrs. William F. Carouge Jr.
Mr
& Mrs. Charles Carroll
Mr
& Mrs. Wayne M. Carter
Mr
& Mrs. Michael B. Casey
Mr
& Mrs. Robert T. Cassady
Mrs. Dianne Cavolo
Mr. & Mrs Jon L. Chandler
Mr. & Mrs. Paul F. Charlebois
Mr. & Mrs, Robert S. Chase Jr.
Mr, & Mrs, Theodore H. Chase
Mr. & Mrs, Mogens E. Christiansen
Mr, & Mrs, Ronald L, Christopher
Mrs. Eleanor Clark
Mr. & Mrs, Hugh K, Clark
Mr, & Mrs, W, J, Clark
Mr, & Mrs, George L. Clayville
Mr, & Mrs, Wallace Cohn
Dr. & Mrs, Stan Coleman
Mr, & Mrs, Daniel V. Collins
Ms. Nancy D. Collins
Mr. & Mrs, Jerome J. Connell
Mr. & Mrs, Philip G. Conner
Mr. & Mrs, George Q. Conover
Mrs. Helen P. Costello
Mr, & Mrs, Richard E, Cote Sr.
Mr, & Mrs, Robert M, Coulboum III
Mr, & Mrs. Plato Coundjeris
Mr, & Mrs. Edwin T. Cox
Mr. & Mrs. Harry J. Cranston
Mr. & Mrs. Jesse G. Cunningham
Mr, & Mrs, David Danner
Mrs, Ella Danowski
Mr. & Mrs. Frederick W, Dauch
Mrs, Dorothy S. Daue
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas G. Davis Jr.
Mrs. Audrey DeBaugh
Mrs. E. C. deGast
Mr. & Mrs. James E. DeLancey
Mr. & Mrs. Joseph F. De Pasquale
Mr. & Mrs. Saverio DeRienzo
Mr. & Mrs. Ecle L. DelConte
Mr. & Mrs. John H. Demarest
Mr. Oswald E, Denney II
Mr. & Mrs. Raymond K. Denworth Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Andrew T. Devine
Mr. & Mrs. Donald DiChiara
Mr. & Mrs. Joseph DiPietro
Mr. & Mrs. Arthur Dickerson
Mr, & Mrs, Arthur Diefendorf
Mr, & Mrs, Joseph A, Dillow
Mr, & Mrs, David Dingus
Dr. & Mrs. Robert E, Dinker
Mr. & Mrs. Robert Dodson
Mr. & Mrs. James F. Doherty
Mr. Charles Donahue
Mr. & Mrs. James A. Doucette
Mr. & Mrs. Arthur L, Douglas Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas L. Douglas Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Charles A. Downey
Mr. & Mrs. Guenther K. Drechsler
Mr. & Mrs. John T. Dressel
Mr. & Mrs. Bartholomew H. Driscoll
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64
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Crompton & Knowles
Foundation, Inc.
Dehotte Haskins & Sells Foundation
Digital Equipment Corporation
R.R. Donnelley & Sons Company
Dynalectron Corporation
E.F. Hutton
Eaton Corporation
The Equitable Life Assurance Society
Exxon Education Foundation
Federal National Mortgage Assn.
Federated Department Stores,
Inc. Foundation
First Bank System Foundation
First Boston Matching Gifts Program
Ford Motor Company Fund
Gannett Foundation
The General Electric Foundation
The General Foods Fund, Inc.
The Gilbert Spruance Company
Grumann Corporation
The Guardian Life Trust
Harris Foundation
The Hartford Insurance Group Fdn.
Hercules Incorporated
Home Life Charitable Trust
Honeywell Foundation
Houghton Mifflin
J. M. Huber Corporation
ICI Americas, Inc.
International Business Machines Corp.
Fred S. James & Company, Inc.
Jefferson-Pilot Corporation
John Deere Foundation
Johnson & Johnson
TTie Kiplinger Foundation
Koppers Company Foundation
Levi Strauss Foundation
Lincoln National Cor]X)ration
Marsh & McLennan, Inc.
Maryland Casualty Company
The May Stores Foundation, Inc.
McDonnell Douglas Foundation
The Merck Company Foundation
Merrill Lynch & Company, Inc.
Mobil Foundation, Inc.
Morgan Bank
Morton Thiokol Incorporated
National Life Insurance Company
Nationwide Foundation
New Jersey Bel!
New York Telephone Company
Nordson Corporation
Norfolk Southern Corporation
North American Philips Corporation
Northesast UtiHties
Northwest Airlines, Inc.
Occidental Petroleum Foundation, Inc.
Owens-Illinois
PHH Group Foundation
Pennwalt Foundation
Rockwell International Corporation
Rohm & Haas Company
Rohr Industries, Inc.
Salomon Brothers, Inc.
Sara Lee Foundation
Scott Paper Company Foundation
Shell Companies Foundation, Inc.
The Singer Company Foundation
SmithKJine Beckman Foundation
Sonny's Creek Builders, Inc.
Sovran Foundation, Inc.
Sperry Corporation Foundation
The Standard Oil Company
The Stanley Works Foundation
State Farm Companies Foundation
J. P. Stevens & Company Inc. Fdn.
Sun Company, Inc.
T. Rowe Price Association Fdn,, Inc.
Texaco Philanthropic Foundation, Inc.
Time Inc.
Towers, Perrin, Forster & Crosby, Inc.
Twentieth Century Fox
United Fidelity & Guaranty
United Technologies Corporation
The Upjohn Company
Venable, Baetjer and Howard
Warner-Lambert Company
Waste Management, Inc.
Westinghouse Educational Fdn.
Whittaker Corporation
Wiley & Rein
The Xerox Foundation
Gifts-in-Kind
American Association for Adult &
Continuing Education
Dr. Tai S. An
Mrs. Sherman Anderson
Mrs. Carl H. Asmis
Mr. Walton Beacham
Mrs. Geraldine H. Biles '31
Ms. Doris J. Brooks '83
Mr. Jonathon C, Burton '76
Ms. Constance B. Campbell '73
Mrs. Betty B. Casey '47
Mr. & Mrs. Douglass Cater
Mr. William J. Chaffin
China Cultural Service
Mr. & Mrs. Hugh Clark
Mr. Robert C. Clift '68
Mr. & Mrs. John A. Conkling '65, '65
Ms. Mary K. Courtney '86
Mr Robert Day
Mr. & Mrs. Alonzo G. Decker
Mr. Donald M, Derham '48
Mr. & Mrs. William Essig
The Finishing Touch
Mr. Jack Foehrenbach
Mr. & Mrs. Gregory B. Gabell '75, '73
Mrs. Daniel Z. Gibson
Mr. Tom Gross
Dr. Charles Halstead
Mr. Merle A. Handy '60
Mr. Rodney L. Harrison '58
Ms. Mary H. Holzgang '86
Dr. Patricia E. Home
Dr. Margaret W. Horsley
Mr. Edwin P. Hoyt
Ms. Joan Hynson
Ms. Margaret H. Jones
Mrs. Elizabeth S, Kane
Mr. Brien E. Kehoe '69
Kent County Public Library
Kentronics
Mrs. Mary S. Knight '51
Mr. & Mrs. Benjamin G. Kohl
Mrs. Sterling Larrabee
Ms. Joan Lieber
Mr. & Mrs. Donald Martone
Mr. John D. McAlpine
Mr. & Mrs. John E. Nunn
Mr. & Mrs. Richard C. Ordeman
Mr. & Mrs. Robert F. Pntzlaff '65, '66
Radcliffe Mill, Inc.
Mr. Louis W. Reedt'73
Mr. William Rodgers
Dr. Erica Salloch
Schauber's Lumber & Sawmill, Inc.
Mr. Russell A. Schilling '82
Dr, Joachim J. Scholz
Mr. Edward Serle
Dr. & Mrs. Robert Siegel
Mr. & Mrs. Charles W. Sommers
Mr. Robert Sparre
Mr. & Mrs. Jane Sprinkle '48
Dr. Ralph R. Thornton '40
Mr. Frederick Tilp
Dr. Jack Van Geffen
Mr. George Wholgemuth
Rev. Richard H. Wilmer
Ambassador Stanley Woodward
Dr. & Mrs, Fred Wyman
In Memory
Anne R. Brandt '44
Rose Vickers Brooks
J. Medford Brooks, Sr.
J. Lewin Burns '12
Emily B. Carey '59
Eugene B. Casey
Alice Johanns Clarke '42
F. DeWitt Clarke '33
Alfred E. Culley '25
Leo A. Dolan, Jr. '38
Albert W. Dowling '33
Frederick W. ("Dutch") Dumschott '27
John French
Daniel Z. Gibson
Upton Gladhill
Jane H. Goodfellow
Frank M. Jarman
Richard M. Johnson, Jr.
Elmer L. Kaiser '24
G. Emmett C. Kauffman '32
J. Thomas Kibler
T. H. Owen Knight '25
Prudence Wise Kudner
Susanne Long '68
Thomas Hunter Lowe
Edward W. Markey
Joseph H. McLain '37
Lynelte M. Nielsen
Edwin A. Ohler '40
Stuart T. Perkins '55
Robert Pippin
Jacob D, Rieger '28
William H.Ruark '23
Henry Salloch
Leo Schmidt
Mildred L. Skinner '35
James E. Spear Jr. '25
John Stack '41
W. Skirven Startt '23
Pearl Griffin Stewart '05
Elizabeth Titsworth Stillman '30
Lawrence Swanstrom '67
Francis Taylor '43
Margaret B. Thornton '33
Carolyn Wingate Todd '29
Douglass Wallop
Clarence C. White '16
Eric Wood '30
Pauline Grimes Wright
Student Assistance Fund
Individual Donors
Mrs. Dale Patterson Adams
Mr. John M. Alderson
Mr. H. Furlong Baldwin
Mr. & Mrs. James Barrett
Mr. & Mrs. Robert R. Bowie
Mr. J. S. Bryan
Mr. Charles Carroll
Mr. & Mrs. Douglass Cater
Mr. & Mrs. Henry E. Catto, Jr.
Dr. Charles B. Clark
Mr. Warren J. Cox
Am.r & Mrs. Robert W. Duemhng
Mrs. Harry J. Duffey
Mr. Robert W. Fuller
Mr. Thomas H. Gale
The Hon. & Mrs. Louis L. Goldstein
Mr. Homer Gudelsky
Mr. & Mrs. Najeeb E. Halaby
Mr. Avery W. Hall
Mr. & Mrs, Wilham G, Hupfeldt
Mr. Brien E. Kehoe
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas J. Maher
Ms. Kathleen Markey-Perdue
Mr. Kevin M. O'Keefe
Mr. & Mrs. W. James Price
Mr. George M. Radcliffe
Mr. & Mrs William R. Russell, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Edward Shapiro
Mr. Glen R. Shipway
Mrs. Jouett Shouse
Mr. Abraham D. Spinak
Mr. Robert Sparre
Mr. & Mrs. Edmund A. Stanley
Mr. & Mrs. Alexander B. Trowbridge
Mrs. John C. White
Mr. & Mrs. George S, Wills
Mr. & Mrs. Howard Wood
Corporate Donors
Naomi & Nehemiah Cohen Fdn.
Monica and Hermen Greenberg Fdn.
The Hechinger Foundation
Waste Management, Inc.
66
Facilities Campaign
Aim Management, Inc.
AT&T Foundation
Baltimore Gas & Electric
Black & Decker Manufacturing Co.
The Brown Foundation
Campbell Soup Company
Chevy Chase Savings & Loan
Mr. & Mrs. Alonzo G. Decker
Delmarva Power
Jessie Ball duPont Fund
First Maryland Foundation
Charles A. Frueauff Foundation
The Jacob and Annita France Fdn.
Mr. & Mrs. Benjamin Griswold
The Maryland National Fdn., Inc.
Dr. & Mrs. David Mathews
The Pew Memorial Trust
PHH Group Foundation
Preston Trucking Company
The Frederick W. Richmond Fdn.
Ms. Elizabeth Thibodeau
Union Trust Charitable Trust
United States Fidelity & Guaranty
Trust Life Company
Mr. & Mrs. Harry K. Wells
Mr. & Mrs. George S. Wills
Mrs. Mary D. Wood
Parents Library Fund
Mr. & Mrs. Charles E. Albers
Mr. & Mrs. Linwood P.Anderson
Mrs. Estelle Arnold
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas P. Arthur
Mr. & Mrs. Robert N. Bakley
Mr. & Mrs. William Beekmen
Mr. & Mrs. Arthur Beneckson
Mr. & Mrs. Richard T. Bentley
Mrs. William M. Bertles
Mr. & Mrs. Leonard Billingslea
Ms. Eleanor D. Blaze
Mr. & Mrs. Duane G. Boggs
Mr. & Mrs. William Bors
Mr. & Mrs. John H. Bozic
Mr. & Mrs. Edvdn L. Bradley
Mr. & Mrs. Charles B. Brenton
Mr. & Mrs. Vincent J. Brocato
Mr. & Mrs. Cornelius Buchlcr
Mrs. June L. Burnside
Mr. & Mrs. Wayne M. Carter
Mr. & Mrs. Jon L. Chandler
Mr. & Mrs. Theodore H. Chase
Mr. & Mrs. Ronald L. Christopher
Mr. & Mrs. W. J. Clark
Dr. & Mrs. Stan Coleman
Mr. & Mrs. George Q. Conover
Mrs. Helen P. Costello
Mr. & Mrs. Jesse G. Cunningham
Mrs. Ella Danowski
Mr. Oswald E. Denney
Mr. & Mrs. Andrew T. Devine
Mr. & Mrs. Joseph A. Dillow
Mr. & Mrs. David Dingus
Dr. & Mrs. Robert E. Dinker
Mr, & Mrs, Richard J, Earnshaw Jr.
Mr & Mrs. Wilton A Elbum
Mr. & Mrs. Julius W. Eldridge
Mr. & Mrs. Michael J. Enright
Mr. & Mrs. Ian Ferguson
Mr. & Mrs. Robert N. Floyd
Mr. & Mrs. Sylvester Foley Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Roland C. Frankton
Mrs. Deidre J. Gehrke
Mr. & Mrs. Richard O. Gerhardt
Dr. & Mrs, John Green 111
Mr, & Mrs. Zelic Gresser
Lady Guinness & Sir Kenelm
Mrs. John M, Haight
Mr. Jack D. Hammer
Mr. & Mrs. William F. Haneman
Mr. & Mrs. B. H. Heckscher
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas L. Hennessey
Mr. & Mrs. Roderick L. Hickey
Mrs. Kirke Higgins
Mrs. Barbara C. Hobson
Mr. & Mrs. Edwin K. Hoffman
Mr. & Mrs. Robert Hogmaster
Mr. & Mrs. William C. Hopkins
Mr. & Mrs. H. Denis Hormes
Mr & Mrs. J. E. Hoxter
Ms. Margo T. Huard
Mr. & Mrs. Robert C. Ingram
Ms. Anne R. Jaeger
Mr. & Mrs. Ronald E. Jayne
Mr. & Mrs. George Jewsbury
Mr. & Mrs. Michael E. Johnson
Mr. & Mrs. Richard J. Kehoe
Mr. & Mrs. Arthur Y. Kim
Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth J. Kircher
Mr. & Mrs. Raymond J. Kloiber
Mr. & Mrs. Dean R. Koth
Dr. & Mrs. Pelagio E. Layug
Mr. & Mrs. James D, Lott
Mr. & Mrs. Patrick H. Loy
Ms. Simone F. Lucero
Mrs. Mary R. Maregold
Mr. & Mrs. Stanley Matus
Mr. & Mrs. Harry A. McEnroe
Dr. &. Mrs. Gerard J. McGarrity
Mr. & Mrs. Daniel McGinniss
Mr. & Mrs. Albert J. McHenry
Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth W. McKenna
Mr, & Mrs, F, Audrey McMahon
Mr, & Mrs. Dean Michaels
Mr, & Mrs, Joseph E Michalski
Mr & Mrs. John S. Milford
Mr. & Mrs. Earl J. Mills
Dr. & Mrs. John L. Morgan II
Dr. & Mrs. Baynard Morrison
Mr. & Mrs. Albert S. Mullican
Dr. & Mrs. Thomas A. Murphy
Mr. & Mrs. John C. Naff
Mr. & Mrs. Russell A. Nasteff
Mr. & Mrs. William E Orser
Ms, Diane M, Osworth
Mr. & Mrs. Norman D. Paget
Mr. & Mrs. Marland W, Parsons
Mr. & Mrs. Phelps
Mr. & Mrs. Richard W. Phoebus
Mr. & Mrs. Douglas Poldmae
Rev. & Mrs. W. E. Polk
Mr. & Mrs. S. Lawrence Prendergast
Mr. (& Mrs. David C Quinn
Mr & Mrs. Joseph O. Rainwater
Mrs. Elaine S, Ralph
Mr. & Mrs. Harold Ramsey
Mr. & Mrs. W. C. Reece
Mr. & Mrs. Louis G. Sarris
Mr. & Mrs. Franz von Schilling III
Mr. Carroll H. Seeley
Mr. & Mrs. Frank A. Serra
Mrs. Sara J. Sheer
Mr. & Mrs. John B. Shehan
Mr. Luther Short
Mr. & Mrs. Gene P. Siegel
Mr. & Mrs. William B. Sill
Mr. & Mrs. Donald Smith
Mr. & Mrs. Michael T. Smokovich
Mr. & Mrs. Paul Snow
Mr & Mrs. Wayne Spencer
Mr, & Mrs, Jerome Stewart
Mrs, Kathryn H, Stewart
Mr, & Mrs. John Stief
Mr. & Mrs. Jack N. Stout
Mrs. Helen W. Suppes
Mr, & Mrs. Daniel P. Taylor
Mr. & Mrs. Jon A. Teeple
Mr. & Mrs. Walter F. Terry 111
Mrs. Martha J. Thomason
Mr. William B. Thompson
Mr. c& Mrs. Daniel L. Traber
Ms. Sheila M. Traver
Dr. & Mrs. Oguz Y. Turgut
Mr. & Mrs Uija Turkalj
Mr. & Mrs. Walter H. Van Buren
Mrs. B. A. Vaughan
Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Vovchik
Mr. Harold W. Warren
Mrs. Roger C White
Mr. & Mrs. Jon M. Wickwire
Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth J Winschel
Mr. & Mrs. Richard D. Wtxid Jr.
Bequests
Albert W. Dowling
Lynette M. Nielsen
Jacob C. Rieger '28
Phonathon Volunteers
Student Volunteers
Came Blackburn '41
David R.Capel '90
Jodi Caraceni '90
Vickey Carroll '91
Sherri Christopher '91
Tracey Coleman '91
Adrienne Cupka '90
Jeanne King '91
DianneTreuth '90
CrissyWiant '91
Alumni Volunteers
Hilda Micari '38
Frederick Micari '40
Helen Baker '41
Allen Kirby '42
Charles Dulin '43
Peggy Smith '46
Frederick Schroeter '47
Anne Burris '48
Ann Macielag '48
Kirby Smith '48
James Twilley '51
John Bacon '52
Robert Lipsitz '54
Barbara Cromwell '55
Marian Moore '56
Marie Mullen '56
Particia Barkdoll '66
George Buckless '69
Kevin O'Keefe '74
John Wagner '74
Guillermo Arrivillaga '78
Peter Gentry '79
Tad Jacks '79
Robert Lewis '79
David Wright '79
Daniel DeCarlo '80
Paul Drinks '80
Lain Hawkridge '80
Robert Strong '81
A. Jay Young '81
Scott Hansen '82
Cathy McGuire-Groft '82
Kevin O'Connor '82
Juliet Savage '82
Coca Yon '82
Steve Groft '83
67
Arlene Hawkridge '83
Brian Lawrence '83
Kirk Wineland '83
Karen Perkinson '84
Melissa Combes '85
Carle Conway '85
Amy D'Ablemont '85
Janice Daue '85
Thami El-Glaoui '85
Mary Hussmam '85
Mary Beth Pohlman '85
Sarah Reines '85
Paige Rolfus '85
Andre-Philippe Yon '85
Class Chairs
Mrs. Dorothy Woodall Myers '24
Mrs. Rebecca Brown Owens '25
Mrs. Avis R. Maddox '27
Mr. B. Lyie Appleford '29
Mr. VViUiam J Burk '30
Mr. W. Edwin Freeny '31
Mr. T. Allan Stradley '32
Dr. Phillip J. Wmgate '33
Mr. James T. Anthony '34
Mr. Alday M. Clements '35
Mr. Charles R. Berry '36
Mr. Philip A. Hickman '38
Dr. Charles Leiman '39
Mr. William H. Ford '40
Mrs. Helen Westcott Baker '41
Mr. John P. Kirwan '42
Mrs. Eleanor R. Kardash '43
Mr. James N. Juliana '44
Mrs. Peggy Smith '46
Mr. Edward L. Athey '47
Ms. Anne E. Burns '48
Mr. Louis E. Smith '49
Mr. Paul W. Nicewarner '50
Mr. Lawrence S. Wescott '51
Mr. Jack D. McCullough '52
Mr. Charles Waesche '53
Mr. Robert W. Lipsitz '54
Mr. Kenneth R. Bourn '55
Mrs. Barbara M Reed '56
Mrs. Donna M. Thompson '57
Mr. William Litsinger '58
Mrs. Judy Yoskosky '59
Mr. B. Dunkin Adams '60
Mr. Basil Wadkovsky '61
Mr Arthur E. Leitch '62
Dr. Stephen Levine '63
Mrs. Elaine C. Holden '64
Mr. Gerald P. Jenkins '65
Mrs. Patricia Barkdoir 66
Mr Almon C Barrell '67
Mr. Richard E. Jackson '68
Ms. Linda J. Sheedy '69
Mr. Peter C. Herbst '70
Mr. Geoff Anderson '72
Mrs. Elizabeth Murray Barry '73
Mr. Kevin M. O'Keeefe '74
Mrs. Melissa N. Clarke '75
Mr. Thomas J. Regan '76
Mr. Ziing Nguyen '77
Mr. John P. Habermann '78
Mr. Tad Jacks '79
Mr. Paul D. Drinks '80
Mr. Glen E. Beebe '81
Mr. Scott Hansen '82
Mr. Kirk Wineland '83
Ms. Karen Perkinson '84
Ms. Melissa Combes '85
Mr. Tommy E. Moore '86
Ms. Irene Nicolaidis '87
Ms. Sylvia Maloney - Masters
Board of Visitors and
Governors 1986-87
Dale Patterson Adams '65
H. Furlong Baldwin
Henry C. Beck
Theodore Chapman Bowie '33
Josiah Bunting 111
Betty Brown Casey
Douglass Cater
Jessica Hobby Catto
Charles B. Clark '34
Gerret van S. Copeland
Alonzo G. Decker, Jr.
William M. Ellinghaus
Robert P Fuller
William D. Geitz '50
Louis L. Goldstein '35
Christian Havemeyer
Sally Hopkins
William B. Johnson '40
Alexander G. Jones '51
Brien E. Kehoe '69
Arthur H. Kudner, Jr.
Laurance A. Leonard '52
Michael Madelag '73
Hilda Ott Micari '38
James G. Nelson
W. James Pnce IV
William R. Russell, Jr. '53
Abraham D. Spinak
W. Jackson Stenger, Jr. '49
Elizabeth R. Thibodeau '36
Howard S. Turner
Lav^ence S. Wescott '51
George S. Wills
Phillip J. Wingate '33
Mary D. Wood '68
Thomas G. Wyman
Emeriti
W. Howard Corddry '08
Avery W. Hall
Wilbur Ross Hubbard
Mrs. James N. Hynson
Mrs. W. Alton Jones
Howard Medholdt
Robert Roy
Washington College
Alumni Council 1986-87
President
Karen Gossard Price '73
Is( Vice President
Charles Waesche '53
Community Campaign
Atlantic Fire & Security
Dr. Arthur T Keefe
Bay Craft
Loyola Federal Savings & Loan
Bennett Brothers
Kent County News
Dr. Norton Bonnett
Kent County Public Library
Bowdle Insurance Company
Kent Printing Corp.
David A. Bramble, Inc
Kent Savings & Loan Association
Brambles Traditional Menswear
Kentronics
Larrimore's Ins. Co.
LaMotte Chemical Products Co.
J. T. Campbell, Photographer
Maryland National Bank
The Centreville National Bank
Milt's Auto Specialty Garage
Chesapeake & Potomac Telephone
North and Parker Inc.
Chesapeake Associated Architects
P.J.'s Hallmark
Chesapeake Home Center, Inc.
Pardoe's Lawn & Tree Service
Chester River Realty
Park Rug & Dry Cleaners Corp.
Chestertown Bank of Maryland
Paul's Shoe Store
Chestertown Brick Company, Inc.
Dr. Michael R. Pelczar
Chestertown Shorgas Company
Peoples Bank of Kent County
Chestertown Travel Agency
The Pilot
Classic Chevrolet-Buick, Inc.
Pip's Liquors
College Heights Barber Shop
Procolino's Pizza
Corsica Bookshop
Quail Run Nursery
Creative Cookery
Radcliffe Mill Inc.
D & R Supply Co.
Ramsey Pontiac-Olds-GMC, Inc.
Delmarva Sash & Door Co.
Remington Farms
Dr. A. C. Dick
River Press
Dickinson Construction
Schauber's Lumber & Sawmill, Inc.
Dixon Valve & Coupling Co.
Shore Pizza Hut, Inc.
Dukes-Moore Insurance
Shoreman Stick Supporters
E.S. Adkms Co.
Dr William J. Sieffert
Elbum's Florist & Greenhouses
The Sly Horse
F & G Construction, Inc.
Via Waye Travel Bureau
Fair Hill Farms
W. N. Cooper & Son
Farmers National Bank of Maryland
White Swan Tavern
The Finishing Touch
Willis Wells Funeral Service
Fleetwood, Athey, Macbeth &
Dr. Frederick N. Wyman
McCown
Dr. Arnold E.Zaks
Forney's Jewelry
Kent County Bar Association
G & G Distributors, Inc.
R. Stewart BarroU, Esq.
GSM, Inc.
Philip W. Hoon, Esq.
Georgetown Yacht Basin, Inc.
G. Mitchell Mowell, Esq.
Gillespie & Son Concrete
Ernest S. Cookerly, Esq.
Great Oak Landing
C. Daniel Saunders, Esq.
Imperial Hotel
Arthur M. Wright, Esq.
KRM
David C. Wnght, Esq.
2nd Vice President
Robert W. Lipsitz '54
Past President
William J. Collins '40
Decade Members
Iffs Dorothy W. Myers '24
aCs Charles B. Clark '34
40's Anne Burris '48
50's Barbara Cromwell '55
60's John Hato '69
70's Cynthia Weinmann '74
80's Jay Young '81
Members at Large
Melissa Combes '85
Avis Richardson Maddox '27
Robert L. Chamberlin '48
Kathryn Wurzbacher '83
Maura Kelly Rogers '79
Board Representatives
Brien Kehoe '69
Laurance Leonard '52
Mary Wood '68
Chapter Presidents
Annapolis - governed by a board
Baltimore - Lynn Bergen '79
Kent and Queen Anne's -
Robert A. Moore '59
Mardel - Steve Slaughter '73
Washington - Arlene Hawkridge '83
SCA
Chris Doherty '87
Senior Class President
Irene Nicolaidis '87
Alumni Director
Mackey Metcalfe Streit '51
68
Jampus Events
September 20
D.C. Alumni Chapter cookout and
crab feast.
September 25
Concert Series presents Peabody
Ragtime Ensemble, Gibson Fine Arts
Center, 8:00 p.m.
September 26
The Alumni Association's evening at
the National Aquarium in Baltimore,
7:30 pm. For reservations contact
Mackey Streit, 778-2800 ext. 237.
September 30
Music Department's "Bach's Lunch,"
Miller Library Terrace, 12:30 p.m.
October 7
Walter Carrington, U.S. diplomat and
Director of the Department of
International Affairs at Howard
University, will give a public lecture,
Hynson Lounge, 8:00 p.m.
October 10
Decade Party for alumni from the
1970s. Hosted by Shelley Sharp in
Bethesda, MD. RSVP to 640-5715.
October 16
The Athletic Hall of Fame Banquet.
John Bankert, Lee Curry, Ellis
Dwyer, Turner Hastings, Skip
Rudolph, John Sloan, Louis Thi-
bodeau and Hobart Tignor will be
inducted. The 1929-30 baseball, 1951
lacrosse and 1964 soccer teams will
be honored.
October 17
and lacrosse games, tennis matches
and crew races. Lunch on the
campus lawn, cocktails and oysters at
the Pavilion.
October 23-25
Wildlife Show, Cain Athletic Center.
October 30
Concert Series presents violinist
Todor Pelev, Gibson Fine Arts
Center, 8:00 p.m.
November 1
Early Music Consort, Norman James
Theatre, 4:00 p.m.
November 5
Jazz Band, Gibson Fine Arts Center,
8:00 p.m.
November 7
Parents Day
November 8
Freshman Literary Colloquy
O'Neill Literary House, 3:00 p.m.
November 14
Testimonial Dinner: "A Tribute To
Ed Athey" (see story, page 25, Cain
Gym.; 6:00 p.m.. Cocktails 7:00 p.m..
Dinner, 8:30 Program. For ticket
information/reservations, call
Student Affairs, 778-2800 ext. 210.
November 23
Concert Series presents pianist
Robin McCabe, Gibson Fine Arts
Center, 8:00 p.m.
December 4, 5
Music and Dance Departments'
Elizabethan Renaissance Dinner,
Hynson Lounge, 7:00 p.m.
December 5
Alumni Council meeting.
December 6
Jazz Concert, Gibson Fine Arts
Center, 4:00 p.m.
December 11, 12
Wild Goose Classic Basketball
Tournament, Cain Athletic Center.
December 12
Christmas Concert, Gibson Fine Arts
Center, 8:00 p.m.
Baltimore Alumni Chapter Oyster
Feast. Time and place to be an-
nounced.
December 13
Baltimore Alumni Chapter, Oyster
and Bull Roast, Oregon Ridge, Hunt
Valley.
December 18
Kent and Queen Anne's Alumni
Chapter Christmas Party, Geddes-
Piper House.
March 19
The Philadelphia Alumni Chapter
premieres at the University of
Pennsylvania Museum,
5:30-10:30 p.m.
May 20-21
Reunion Weekend. Please mark
your calendars.