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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 

Mr.  &  Mrs.  Edward  Ducar 

Dr.  &  Mrs.  F.  M.  Dugan 

Dr,  &  Mrs.  Robert  J,  Dunning 

Mr,  &  Mrs.  Richard  J,  Earnshaw  Jr. 

Mr.  &  Mrs.  George  R.  Eberle 

Mrs,  William  C,  Eberlein 

Mr.  John  A.  Edson 

Mr.  William  H.  Eisberg 

Mr.  &  Mrs.  Wilton  A.  Elbum  Sr. 

Mr.  &  Mrs.  Julius  W.  Eldridge 


62 


Mr.  &  Mrs.  William  M.  Ellinghaus 

Mr.  &  Mrs.  T.  K.  Ellis 

Mr.  &  Mrs.  S.  J.  Emerson 

Mr.  &  Mrs.  Michael  J.  Enright 

Mr.  &  Mrs.  E.  G.  Ericsson 

Mr.  &  Mrs.  Martin  Ersts 

Mr.  &  Mrs.  Marlin  A.  Espenshade 

Mr.  &  Mrs.  William  Faloni 

Mr.  &  Mrs.  Robert  C.  Farwell 

Dr.  &  Mrs.  James  E.  Fassett 

Mr.  Peter  S.  Feliceangeli 

Mr.  &  Mrs.  Frank  T.  Felter 

Mr.  &  Mrs.  Ian  Ferguson 

Mr.  &  Mrs.  Robert  M.  FitzGerald 

Mrs.  Theodosia  G.  Fitzgerald 

Mr.  &  Mrs.  Avrom  Reishman 

Mr.  &  Mrs.  Robert  W.  Floyd 

Admiral  &  Mrs  S  R  Foley  Jr. 

Mr.  &  Mrs.  Zane  F.  Folk 

Mr.  John  A.  Forest  Jr. 

Mr.  &  Mrs.  Joseph  Forzano 

Ms.  Carolyn  M.  Foster 

Mrs.  Kenneth  W.  Fowler 

Mr.  &  Mrs.  Roland  C.  Frankton 

Mr.  &  Mrs.  Paul  E.  Franz 

Mr  &  Mrs.  Robert  J.  Frederick 

Mr.  &  Mrs.  Cornelius  Furgueson 

Mr.  &  Mrs.  William  L.  Gaines 

Mr.  &  Mrs.  J.  R.  Galloway 

Mr.  &  Mrs.  Edwin  F.  Gamboa 

Ms.  Beatrice  Gardella 

Mr.  &  Mrs.  Catherine  Gash 

Mrs.  Deidre  J.  Gehrke 

Mr  &  Mrs.  Richard  O.  Gerhardt 

Mr.  &  Mrs.  William  B.  Gerwig  Jr. 

Mr.  Walter  F.  Gies 

Mr.  &  Mrs.  John  S.  Gitt 

Mr.  &  Mrs.  Stuart  Godwin 

Mrs.  Jean  H.  Goetz 

Mrs.  Jean  A.  Goode 

Eh-.  &  Mrs.  John  Green  III 

Mrs.  Kathryn  B.  Green 

E)r.  &  Mrs.  James  S.  Gregory 

Mr.  &  Mrs.  Zelic  Gresser 

Mrs.  Ann  W.  Grieves 

Mr.  &  Mrs.  Aloysius  Grogan 

Mr.  &  Mrs.  Rafael  J.  Guastavino 

Sir  Kenelm  &  Lady  Guinness 

Mrs.  Juliette  M.  Habermann 

Mrs.  John  M.  Haight 

Dr.  &  Mrs.  Eleftherios  Halivopoulos 

Dr.  &  Mrs.  Peter  V.  Hamill 

Mr.  &  Mrs.  Wilham  F.  Haneman 

Mr.  &  Mrs.  Michael  J.  Harrington 

Mr.  &  Mrs.  James  F.  Harris 

Mr.  &  Mrs.  Joseph  R.  Harris  Sr. 

Mr.  &  Mrs.  Eugene  C.  Harter 

Mr.  &  Mrs.  Herbert  H.  Harwood 

Mr.  &  Mrs.  David  Healey 

Mr.  &  Mrs.  B.  H.  Heckscher 

Mr.  &  Mrs.  Fred  G.  Henkel 

Ms.  Mary  K.  Henneman 

Mr.  &  Mrs.  Thomas  L.  Hennessey 

Mr.  &  Mrs.  Walter  R.  Hertler 

Mr.  &  Mrs.  Gene  A.  Hessey 

Mr.  &  Mrs.  James  Hetzer 

Mr.  &  Mrs.  Roderick  L.  Hickey  Jr. 


Mrs.  Kirke  Higgins 

Mr  Landon  Hilliard  111 

Ms.  Arlene  G.  Hitchcock 

Mrs.  Barbara  C.  Hobson 

Mr.  Charles  E.  Hoffman 

Mr.  &  Mrs.  Edwin  K.  Hoffman 

Mr.  &  Mrs.  Robert  E.  Hogmaster 

Mr.  &  Mrs.  Richard  V.  Holmes 

Mr.  &  Mrs.  Ben  F.  Holt 

Mr.  &  Mrs.  John  Hooper 

Mr,  &  Mrs.  William  C.  Hopkins 

Dr.  &  Mrs.  Charles  M.  Horan 

Mr.  &  Mrs.  H.  D.  Hormes 

Mr.  &  Mrs.  Arthur  A.  Houghton  Jr. 

Mr.  &  Mrs.  Luke  V.  Howard 

Mrs.  Pat  Howell 

Mr.  &  Mrs.  J.  E.  Hoxter 

Ms.  Margo  T.  Huard 

Mr.  &  Mrs.  Andrew  J.  Hundertmark 

Mr.  &  Mrs.  Willian)  G.  Hupfeldt 

Mr.  &  Mrs.  Robert  C.  Ingram 

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Mr.  &  Mrs.  Francis  P.  Jackman 

Ms.  Anne  R.  Jaeger 

Mr.  &  Mrs.  Ronald  E.  Jayne 

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Mr.  &  Mrs.  Charles  J.  Kane 

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Mr.  &  Mrs.  Richard  J.  Kehoe 

Mr.  &  Mrs,  Arthur  Y.  Kim 

Mrs.  Joyce  J.  Kintz 

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Mr.  &  Mrs.  Raymond  J.  Kloiber 

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Mr.  &  Mrs.  Carl  Lang 

Mr.  &  Mrs.  Richard  A.  Larkin 

Dr.  &  Mrs.  Pelagio  E.  Layug 

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Mrs.  Theodore  A.  Legates  Sr. 

Mr.  &  Mrs.  Harry  Limons 

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63 


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64 


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Mr.  &  Mrs,  Edmund  A  Stanley  Jr. 

Mrs,  Byam  F.  Stevens 

Mr.  &  Mrs,  Lee  Stiles 

Dr.  J,  T,  Sturgis 

Mrs.  Helen  W,  Suppes 

Mr.  &  Mrs,  William  L.  Susen 

Mr.  &  Mrs.  Robert  L.  Sutherland 

Dr.  Nancy  R.  Tatum 

Mr.  John  B.  Taylor 

Mr.  &  Mrs.  Benjamin  C.  Tilghman 

Mrs.  Betty  W,  Tillinghast 

Mr.  Frederick  Tilp 

Ms.  Ann  M.  Tippit 

Mr,  &L  Mrs.  Alexander  B,  Trowbridge 

Mr.  &  Mrs.  Archibald  M.  Tulloch 

Mr.  &  Mrs.  Wylie  F.  L,  Tuttle 

Mr.  &  Mrs.  Marvin  D.  Tyndall  Jr, 

Dr.  Jack  Van  Geffen 

Mr.  &  Mrs.  G.  Van  Velsor  Wolf 

Mr.  &  Mrs.  Eli  Velder 

Ms.  Marjorie  K.  Vick 

Mr.  &  Mrs.  Harrison  W.  Vickers  III 

Mr.  George  Visnich 

Mrs.  Lucille  F,  Wallop 

Mr.  David  Warshawsky 

Mr.  Albert  L.  Watson 

Mr.  &  Mrs,  Harry  K.  Wells 

Mr.  Jim  White 

Mrs.  John  C.  White 

Mr.  George  Wholgemuth 


Mr.  &  Mrs,  Frederick  J,  Wick 
Mr.  &  Mrs,  John  B,  Widdup 
Ms,  Miriam  C,  Wilby 
Mr  &  Mrs,  John  Willock 
Mr.  &  Mrs,  William  W.  Willock 
Rev.  &  Mrs.  Richard  H.  WUmer  Jr. 
Mrs.  William  B.  Wise 
Dr,  &  Mrs.  John  C.  Wood 
Ambassador  Stanley  Woodward 
Mr,  &  Mrs,  Frederick  N,  Wyman 
Mr,  &  Mrs,  Leonard  Yerkes  Jr, 
Dr,  &L  Mrs.  George  Young 

Foundations 

AT&T  Foundation 
Barclays  American  Foundation,  Inc. 
The  Brown  Foundation,  Inc- 
Carnegie  Endowment  for  International 

Studies 
Naomi  and  Nehemiah  Cohen  Fdn. 
Container  Corp,  of  America  Fdn. 
Jessie  Ball  duPont  Fund 
Exxon  Education  Foundation 
First  Maryland  Foundation 
Jefferson  L.  Ford  III  Memorial  Fund 
FMC  Foundation 
The  Jacob  and  Annita  France  Fdn. 
Charles  A.  Frueauff  Foundation 
Monica  and  Hermen  Greenberg  Fdn, 
The  Hechinger  Foundation 
Hein  Family  Philanthropic  Fund 
The  Hodson  Trust 
Legislative  Study  Group,  Inc, 
The  John  J,  Leidy  Foundation 
Christine  R.  &  Mary  F,  Lindback  Fdn. 
Maryland  Elementary  &  Secondary 

Public  Education 
The  Maryland  Nahonal  Foundation 
The  McGraw-Hill  Foundation,  Inc, 
Mercantile-Safe  Deposit  &  Trust  Co. 
The  Joseph  Meyerhoff  Fund,  Inc. 
Middendorf  Foundation 
Polaroid  Foundation,  Inc. 
The  Frederick  W.  Richmond  Fdn. 
The  Schluderberg  Foundation,  Inc, 
The  Sears-Roebuck  Foundation 
The  Starr  Foundation 
State  of  Maryland 

Summerfield-Baldwin,  Jr,  Foundation 
Surdna  Foundation,  Inc, 
Texaco  Philanthropic  Foundation,  Inc. 
Lucy  and  Eleanor  S,  Upton  Charitable 

Foundation 
Venable,  Baetjer  and  Howard 

Companies  and 
Associations 

Aim  Management,  Inc. 
Alex.  Brown  &  Sons,  Inc. 
Black  &  Decker  Manufacturing  Co. 
Chesapeake  &  Potomac  Telephone 
Campbell  Soup  Company 
Chesapeake  Publishing  Corporation 
Chevy  Chase  Savings  &  Loan 
Delmarva  Power 


Exxon  Education  Foundation 

FMC  Foundation 

Farmers  National  Bank  ot  Marvland 

Goex,  Inc. 

Goucher  College 

Goucher  College  Psychology  Dept. 

Great  Neck  North  High  School 

Handel  Choir  of  Baltimore 

Hogans  Agency,  Inc. 

Independent  College  Fund  of  MD 

Kent  County  Arts  Council,  Inc. 

Keystone  Fireworks  Mfg,  Co. 

The  Language  Schcwl 

Maryland  House  of  Delegates 

MCA  Inc. 

The  McGraw-Hill  Foundation,  Inc. 

Mid-Atlantic  States  Arts  Consortium 

Mount  Vernon  Club 

North  &  Parker,  Inc. 

Peacock  Fruit  and  Cattle  Corporation 

Pelican  Yacht  Club 

Pepper  Steppers  Square  Dance  Club 

PHH  Group  Foundation 

Polaroid  Foundation,  Inc. 

Preston  Trucking  Company,  Inc. 

The  Talbot  Bank 

3M  Center 

Trojan  Fireworks  Company 

Union  Trust  Charitable  Trust 

United  States  Fidelity  and  Guaranty 

Washington  College  Alumni  Assn. 

Washington  College  Class  of  1987 

Washington  College  SGA 

Wye  Institute,  Inc. 

Trusts 

Albert  W.  Dowling  Trust 
The  Hodson  Trust 
Peggy  and  Yale  Gordon  Trust 
Union  Trust  Charitable  Trust 

Matching  Gifts 

A.S,  Abell  Company  Foundation 

AT&T  Foundahon 

Aetna  Life  &  Casualty  Foundation 

Allied  Corporation  Foundation 

Arthur  Andersen  &  Company  Fdn. 

Atlantic  Richfield  Foundation 

Baker,  Watts  &  Company  Fdn.,  Inc. 

Baltimore  Gas  &  Electric 

Beatrice  Companies,  Inc, 

Bell  Communications  Research,  Inc. 

The  Boc  Group,  Inc. 

The  Boeing  Company 

The  Boston  Company,  Inc. 

Burroughs  Corporation 

The  Chase  Manhattan  Bank 

Chesapeake  &  Potomac  Telephone  Co. 

Chrysler  Corporation 

CIBA-GEIGY  Corporation 

Citibank,  N.A. 

CPC  International  Inc, 

Campbell  Soup  Company 

Carrier  Corporation 

Carter- Wallace,  Inc. 

Celanese  Corporation 


65 


Chubb  &  Son,  Inc. 
Cigna  Foundation 
Colonial  Penn  Group,  Inc- 
Condor  Chemical  Company,  Inc. 
Container  Corporation  of  America 

Foundation 
Cooper  Industries 
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.