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WASHINGTON COLLEGE MAGAZINE
Celebrating 100 Years of Coeducation
ASAnrARl
1nc;ton( ()i I r( .m \i
»Y 1991 SOPHIE KERR Wl
Education By
Tradition
In a recent discussion I heard it
said that Washington College was
somewhat deficient in its lack of
traditions. 1 presumed this to mean
rites and rituals along the rather
trivial lines of freshman beanies and
conceded that some customs lend a
sense of continuity to life on campus.
But I did not feel that Washington
College was lacking in traditions. I
think this issue of the Wasliiiigtou
College Magazine helps prove that
point.
According to Webster's, tradition is
first of all "the handing down of
information, beliefs, and customs by
word of mouth or by example from
one generation to another without
written instruction." Suddenly it
seemed quite profound to me that in
an age where information can be an
electronic impulse, transmitted in a
nanosecond, we still learn the lessons
of tradition in a way that pre-dates
language: by example.
This fall Washington College
kicks-off a year-long celebration of
one of its most significant traditions:
the education of women alongside
men. We should be most proud that
this traditional belief in the intellect,
ability, and keen spiritedness of
young women has been passed down
for a century. And primarily by
example.
In researching her story on the
history of coeducation. Sue De
Pasquale found no record of the
specific accomplishments of Bertha
Stiles, the first woman on the
Washington College faculty, or of
those first female recipients of their
bachelor's degrees. But we can know
something of their impact on the
intellectual life of the College by
reading about professors Margaret
Horsley, Gerda Blumenthal, and
Esther Dillon, and then-student
Christine Olpin Pabon in the 1950s
and 60s. They are all part of the
proud continuum of tradition here at
Washington College and we are still
learning by their example.
Another, newer, tradition flour-
ishes here at Washington College
thanks to the generosity and example
of honorary degree recipient Sophie
Kerr. Her gift now inspires a
tradition of excitement about good
writing on campus, passed on, not
only by Sophie Kerr "winners" but
by the enthusiasm and creativity of
our students, faculty, and visiting
writers who all share ideas thanks to
her legacy. Robert J. Thompson's
story on page 22 proves that the
tradition is alive and well.
Sadly, we had to report in these
pages the death of an important
symbol on our campus landscape.
The venerable Washington College
Elm succumbed to Dutch elm disease
and is gone. By tradition we had
celebrated under this great tree and
had embraced it as a living symbol
that our school was rooted and tied to
some of history's most distinguished
events. This was a seedling of the elm
tree in Cambridge, Massachusetts,
under which George Washington had
taken command of the American
Army.
Even so, the death of the Elm is not
the death of tradition at Washington
College. Though the tree is gone, our
veneration for the College's
distinguished past thrives. We will
mark it with ceremonies but most
importantly we will celebrate it
by example.
—MDH
WASHINGTON COLLEGE MAGAZINE
^a
VOLUME XL NO. 1
FALL 1991
USPS 667-260
STAFF
Editor, Meredith Davies Hadaivay
Managing Editor, Marcia Landskroener
Editorial Assistant, Joanne Fairchild '84
Editorial Consultant, Kevin O'Keefe 74
Contributing Writers, Pat Trams 75 (Class
Notes).
Printing and Mailing, American Press, Inc.
Typesetting, layout, and paste-up were
done at Washington College using the
Macintosh II, Apple LaserWriter Plus,
and PageMaker software. Camera copy was
produced on the Linotype Linotronic L300
at Spectrum Arts in Baltimore, Maryland.
Washington College Magazine (USPS 667-260)
is published quarterly in May, August,
November, and February. Second class
postage paid at Gordonsville, Virginia
22942, an additional mailing office.
POSTMASTER: Send address changes to
Washington College Magazine, Chestertown,
Maryland 21620-1 197Xopyright 1991
Washington College.
Address correspondence to Washington
College Magazine, Bunting Hall, Washington
College, Chestertown, MD 21620.
(Telephone: 301-778-2800.)
FEATURES
Lunch With Maria Luisa 10
A Washington College professsor takes his daughter into
the hills of Guatemala to meet her "foster child" where life
itself is the only luxury.
Professor Daniel L. Premo
The Changing Role of Women At WC 16
As Washington College kicks off a year-long celebration of
the centenary of coeducation, alumnae and women faculty
reminisce about experiences spanning six decades.
Sue De Pasquale '87
Excerpts From 'Teef 22
Fiction from this year's Sophie Kerr Winner.
Robert }. Thompson '91
DEPARTMENTS
The Reporter 2
Will Baker addresses the Class of '91. Washington College
bids a sad farewell to The Elm. Donna White '91 wins a
Fulbright. Casey Academic Center is dedicated.
Alumni Reporter 26
Four alumni join WC's Board of Visitors and Governors.
Class Notes
27
About the Cover: Washington College's
women faculty participate in "Faculty Stunt
Night" in 1959. From left to right are Dr.
Martha Van Hoesen Taber, Dr. Minnie
Bruning Knipp, Dr. Margaret W. Horsley,
Lois M. Hall, Dean of Women. Photo from
WC Public Relations archives.
Currents 32
Kevin "Sparky" Kelly '92 calls for student involvement in
shaping WC's future.
ANNUAL REPORT 1990-91
33
WASHINGTON COLLEGE
The Reporter
A Tribute To
Leaders Of
Today And
Tomorrow
You will be remembered as the
class that made the sun shine,"
President Charles H. Trout told
the 203 members of the Class of 1991
and 22 master's degree candidates on
their graduation day. hi a bold move
that cool and cloudy May morning,
Trout had aborted the commencement
set-up in Cain gymnasium. His
gamble paid off as the sun broke
through precisely 68 minutes into a
ceremony that paid tribute to the posi-
tive contributions made to society by
students, alumni, board members and
others not so closely connected to the
College.
This Commencement took on a de-
cidedly socially responsible tone in the
keynote address of William C. Baker,
the president of the Chesapeake Bay
Foundation, as well as in the selection
of other honored guests — the recipi-
ents of Alumni Citations and honorary
degrees. And that tone was echoed in
the remarks of President Trout, who
pointed to a new spirit of volunteerism
flourishing on campus.
In his address Baker said: "Every
one of us falls into one of three classifi-
cations: 1) those who watch what hap-
pens; 2) those who wonder what will
happen; and 3) those who make things
happen. A leader is someone who
makes things happen. I want, I expect,
all of you to be leaders. Our planet is
too small, too fragile, and too popu-
lated to survive much longer without
more people who dedicate their lives
to making things — good things —
happen."
Baker told the graduates not to con-
fuse leadership with power. True
leaders, he said, do not seek power but
have a confidence in their abilities and
self-worth that encourages others to
confer authority upon them. "Leaders
set examples by their own actions, and
people follow.
"These days," he continued, "ambi-
tion is back in vogue as compared to
when I graduated from college [in
1976]. And ambition is a desirable
quality if it is directed properly. Direct
that personal ambition outward, to-
ward the good of society, rather than
inward for personal gain. Do this and
you will achieve high reward."
He also encouraged the audience to
conserve energy, to make due with
less, and "to leave your campsite
cleaner than you found it." With the
highest standard of living in the world,
he said, Americans represent 5 percent
of the world's population yet consume
25 percent of the world's total energy
usage. Nevertheless, we are quick to
Honored guests Clara Adams-Ender,
William C. Baker, and Richard T. Feller
pause with Provost Elizabeth Baer, Board
chairman Louis L. Goldstein '35, and
President Trout.
blame others for the world's environ-
mental crises. "One of the most gall-
ing examples of this is to lay the blame
for global warming on third world
countries cutting their rain forests,"
Baker said. "Sounds reasonable, on the
face of it, but consider the fact that
most of these countries are just barely
keeping their heads above water in a
world economv driven by America's
standard of living.
"Clearly, this is not to suggest that
we should keep cutting rain forests,
but any solution that seeks to save the
world on the backs of those \vho have
the least is not only morally indefen-
sible but doomed to failure. True lead-
ers do not point to blame in others.
True leaders point to solutions."
Baker offered the Class of I'J'^l three
challenges: end po\'ertv and human
Washington College Magazine/fo// 2993
College Recognizes
Two For Good
Works
The bestowing of honorary de-
grees is one method by which a
college shows its appreciation for
services rendered, either to the
school or to society at large.
This year, Washington College
chose to look beyond its confines for
two whose selfless good works
could inspire others.
Honorary degrees were presented
to Clara Adams-Ender, a black
woman who carved her own way
through the ranks of the U.S. Army
to become Brigadier General, and
Canon Richard Tabler Feller, a civil
engineer with a love of art who de-
voted his life to the construction of a
"modern" Gothic cathedral.
It was a second appearance at the
College for both. General Adams-
Ender spoke before a large audience
last year on "Diversifying Leader-
ship for the 21st Century." And
Canon Feller, former national
Knight Commander of the Kappa
Alpha Order, was a guest speaker 20
years ago, when he gave an illustrated
talk for the William James Forum on
the building of a Gothic cathedral in
the 20th century.
Adams-Ender made her way to the
top by seizing the only opportunities
presented to a poor black girl from ru-
ral North Carolina, and then by creat-
ing new opportunities for herself
within the system. After earning a
nursing degree and joining the Army,
she took additional training in military
service school to become in 1976 the
first nurse, black and female, to earn
the Master of Military Art and Science
Degree and in 1982 the first black
Army Nurse Corps Officer to graduate
from the U.S. Army War College. In
1987 she was appointed Chief of the
United States Army Nurse Corps and
made a Brigadier General in the U.S.
Army.
Adams-Ender lectures across the
country on professionalism and lead-
ership, racial and cultural diversity,
substance abuse and prevention, and
medical ethics. In recognition of the
example her worthy life sets for others
and her selfless contributions to causes
ranging from the NAACP to the
Friends of the Kennedy Center, she
was presented with the Doctor of
Public Service.
Clerk of the Works at the National
Cathedral in Washington, D.C.,
since 1957, Canon Feller coordinated
and supervised the cathedral con-
struction to its conclusion last fall.
The sixth-largest cathedral in the
world has been lauded as a master-
piece of hand-crafted stone and
wood and stained glass. Through-
out his years of choosing materials
and craftsmen, and while blending
the best of the past with the best the
modern age has to offer, he has
chronicled the evolution of the struc-
ture that stands as a national, ecu-
menical house of worship and inspi-
ration. His book. For Thy Greater
Glonj, is a tribute to the many hands
that built it and an interpretation of
the singular power of a 14th-century
Gothic edifice.
For his role in the completion of
the Gothic edifice that "embodies
computer technology and a piece of
the moon," and his documentation
of this inspired task. Canon Feller
was awarded the honorary Doctor of
Letters.
suffering, save the environment, and
stop the population explosion.
"Does such talk overwhelm you?
Do you feel incapable of knowing
where, how to begin? Don't worry —
those feelings are to be expected on
this day. It might help to remember
the expression which grew out of
Earth Day — think globally, act lo-
cally. This applies to all that we do.
As you strike out to make things hap-
pen, your horizons may only be as far
as the next block. There's nothing
wrong with that. It just might be that
working at the local level is the great-
est challenge a leader can face and the
best place a leader can be found."
President Trout awarded Baker the
honorary Doctor of Public Service for
his role in saving the bay. "Under the
leadership of William Clayton Baker,
the Foundation wields a trident of ad-
vocacy that could restore the Chesa-
peake Bay to pristine health: environ-
mental defense, land conservation, and
environmental education." By spon-
soring and encouraging local action.
Trout said. Baker and CBF have estab-
Hshed a model plan of action that oth-
ers might use to protect their threat-
ened ecosystems.
Alumni Citations were presented to
two alumni dedicated to making the
world a better place.
R. Ford Schumann '73, founding di-
rector of Infinity Recycling, Inc., and
M. Douglass Gates '53, director of
Queen Anne's County's Alcohol, Drug
Abuse and Prevention Services, were
both awarded Alumni Citations for
Public Service.
What began as one man's effort to
find alternatives to brimming landfills
and the environmental hazards of
mass incineration has grown into a
not-for-profit company dedicated to
making recycling work for hundreds
Christine Pabon, lecturer in modern lan-
guages since 1964, and Nathan Smith,
professor of history and a member of the
faculty since 1956, shared the Sears-
Roebuck's 1990-91 Teaching Excellence
and Campus Leadership award. WC urns
selected last spring to participate in the
Sears-Roebuck Foundation's teacher
recognition program, which makes awards
to more than 700 of the nation's private
liberal arts colleges and universities.
of Eastern Shore residents and busi-
nesses. Schumann, who began his re-
cycling crusade by following garbage
trucks in his battered VW van to col-
lect recyclable papers, cans, and bottles
his neighbors had set aside, says he
dreams of the day when he will have a
big recycling truck and the trash col-
lectors will make do with a van.
By the end of this year, Infinity will
have recycled more than three million
pounds of paper, glass, aluminum and
steel.
Washington College Magazine/fa// 2992
The second alumni citation went to
Washington College's former alumni
director who in the early 1980s began
a new career as an alcoholism coun-
selor and accepted the directorship of
Queen Anne's County's Alcohol Ser-
vices program in 1982.
The man responsible for lifting pro-
hibition at Washington College in 1967
had a change of heart when he saw
how damaging alcohol could be to
some. He has since devoted his hfe to
helping these people learn they can
enjoy more productive lives if they are
substance-free.
Under Douglass Gates' leadership,
the Alcohol Services program has
evolved into a comprehensive sub-
stance abuse and prevention program
that helps addicts and promotes an
anti-drug message to school children.
High Achievers
Recognized At
Commencement
In his remarks to the graduating
Class of 1991, senior class president
Steven C. Bruchey urged his class-
mates to reflect on their Washington
College experience and thank those
"who touched our lives in significant
ways."
As a gesture of thanks, Kevin
"Sparky" Kelly, president of the Stu-
dent Government Association, then
presented Dean Elizabeth R. Baer and
Dr. Sherry Magill, with departing gifts.
"This year Washington College will
celebrate the 100th anniversary of co-
education," said Kelly. "I believe the
two women standing on the platform
today epitomize the best of that tradi-
tion."
Bruchey, who was graduated cum
laudc with a degree in political science,
was later awarded the Catlin Medal,
given annually to the senior man
voted by the faculty to be "outstanding
in the qualities of scholarship, charac-
ter, leadership, and campus citizen-
ship." He is pursuing his master's de-
gree in politics this fall at Rutgers
University's Eagleton Institute of Poli-
tics on a full tuition scholarship.
Tamara-Diana Braunstein took
Washington College's top honor — the
George Washington Medal and Award
— as well as the Political Science
Award and the Modern Language De-
partment Prize for her study of French.
The Washington Medal goes to the se-
nior who shows the "greatest promise
of understanding and realizing both in
life and work the ideals of a liberal arts
education." Braunstein, who was
graduated sumnm cum laude, fifth in
her class, won departmental honors in
both political science and English.
The College's most lucrative award,
worth $24,950 this year, was pre-
sented to Robert J. Thompson. The
Sophie Kerr Prize, awarded for ability
and promise for future fulfillment in
the field of literary endeavor, is
America's largest undergraduate
prize. Thompson, an English major,
won the prize for his collection of short
stories and magazine features (see
pages 22-25).
Donna Lynn White and Renee
Necole King, both of whom are biol-
ogy majors, shared the Jane Huston
Goodfellow Memorial Prize, given to
graduating science seniors who have
an abiding appreciation of the arts and
humanities and have shown scholastic
excellence. King, who was graduated
cum laude with departmental honors in
biology, also won the Alpha Chi
Omega Music Award. White, who
was graduated ma^tia cum laudc with
departmental honors in biology and a
minor in English, was presented with
the Eugene B. Casey Medal, given to a
senior woman voted by the faculty to
be outstanding in the qualities of
scholarship, character, leadership and
campus citizenship, and the Senior
Athletic Award.
The Clark-Porter Medal was
awarded to Maria Elizabeth Karukas.
The Medal is given annually by
Charles B. Clark '34, in memory of
Harry P. Porter '05, to the student con-
sidered by the faculty to have most
clearly enhanced the quality of campus
life. She was graduated magna cum
laude with departmental honors in in-
ternational studies and a minor in
Spanish.
The Gold Pentagon Awards for
meritorious service to the College were
presented by Omicron Delta Kappa to
senior John F. Herring and Dr. Sherry
Magill.
The Lindback Award for Distin-
guished Teaching went to Kevin M.
Brien, professor of philosophy. The
award, given annually to recognize
high quality in teaching and adherence
to rigorous standards, was initiated in
1964 by the Christian R. and Mary F.
Lindback Foundation of Philadelphia.
Lindback Aivard winner Kevin M. Bricn.
Science Student
Wins Fulbright
Donna Lynn White, an outstand-
ing student-athlete who was
graduated magna cum laudc with de-
partmental honors in biology and a
minor in English, is one of 13 Ameri-
can students who have been awarded
Fulbright Fellowships to study in the
United Kingdom this vear.
White left her Baltimore home in
August to studv microbiologv in
Manchester, England. She has de-
ferred her admittance for graduate
study at the Johns Hopkins University
to spend a year \vorking with Dr.
Richard Atwell at Manchester Poly-
technic Institute. After her fellowship,
she intends to pursue her doctoral de-
gree in molecular and cellular biologv.
During an internship at University
of Maryland's Center for Marine Bio-
technologv last summer, White exam-
ined the effect of nutrient deprivation
on marine bacteria. Her successful
Fulbright application proposed to in-
vestigate how similar deprivation
would affect actinomvcetes, a particu-
lar form of bacteria.
White is one of six Washington Col-
lege students who in the past decade
have received a Fulbright Fellowship
for studv in Europe. Her Fellowship is
the first ever awarded to a science stu-
dent from Washington College.
Washington College Magazine/Fn// 1991
The Washington
Elm, 1928-1991
After 63 years, the living symbol
of Washington College is dead .
The Washington Elm fell victim to
Dutch elm disease this
summer, and after life-
saving efforts failed, the
tree was removed from
the center of the campus
lawn in early August.
Ironically, the Mary-
land Department of Natu-
ral Resources recently had
certified the Elm to be the
"champion" red elm in
the state. With a height of
129 feet and a 20-foot
girth, the Elm was
Maryland's largest speci-
men. Reed Raudenbush,
superviser of buildings
and grounds at the Col-
lege, says that despite its
demise the Elm will re-
main on the DNR's list of
"champion" trees until its
dimensions are eclipsed
by another red elm.
Efforts were made in
July to salvage the once-
stately giant which
crowned the College's
front lawn. By trimming
its dead growth, officials
hoped that the Elm could
hold on another year or
two, or at least until stu-
dents returned for classes
in late August. The tree, however, did
not respond and the disease spread
quickly to the crown of the tree.
Finally, consideration for the
safety of students and other pass-
ersby, and concern about the possi-
bility of spreading of the disease,
led the college administration to de-
cide to remove the skeleton of the
Elm before students returned.
Tree surgeons who arrived to be-
gin dismantling the Elm branch by
branch found a poem pinned to the
tree. It began: "Dear Old Tree, Try.
Please fight for your life." But the
Elm had given up the fight weeks
before.
As Pat Trams, Director of Alumni
Affairs, reported to the Alumni
'"ouncil on July 23rd: "For a short
time we had a very lean but green Elm.
And then it just seemed to give up the
ghost. The Elm turned brown and
withered before our eyes. I suspect
that if our Elm were really human, and
not just anthropomorphized by 6,500
alumni the lines on the EKG would
have gone flat sometime last week."
The Washington Elm was a descen-
dent of the elm tree in Cambridge,
Massachusetts, under which General
George Washington took command of
the American Army on July 3, 1775.
The tree, a gift to the College from the
Old Kent Chapter of the Daughters of
the American Revolution, was planted
as a seedling on April 26, 1928. In Oc-
tober 1930 the student body voted to
change the name of the campus news-
paper from The Collegian to The Wash-
ington Elm.
For generations of students, the Elm
had been a campus landmark. It sym-
bolized the historic beginnings of
Maryland's oldest chartered college
that General George Washington sup-
ported. General Washington
headed the list of subscribers to the
endowment for the new college and
gave his permission to use his
name. He served on the Board of
Visitors and Governors until his
election as first President of the
United States, and accepted the
honorary degree of doc-
tor of laws in 1789.
The tree also con-
veyed a sense of belong-
mg, a sense of place.
Students sprawled un-
der its branches for the
first outdoor classes of
spring, seniors gathered
around the Elm on the
evening before their
graduation for a cham-
pagne toast, and par-
ents yearly sought cool
relief from the heat on
graduation dav. Many
Washington College
students received their
first kiss under the Elm,
or wrote their first lines
of poetry in its shade. It
also was a point around
which students could
rally in times of sorrow:
the Elm had presided
over memorials for the
dead and gatherings to
remember soldiers of
war.
"The death of this
glorious and wonderful
tree is terribly sad,"
President Charles H.
Trout said. "At the
same time, the life of the College
goes on, and I am confident that in
time we will find another symbol to
represent the great spirit of Wash-
ington College."
The Elm (top) during the glory days of
the 1970s and (above) as tree surgeons
brought it down in August.
Washington College Magazine/fa/; 1991
Salisbury Woman
Endows Fund For
Eastern Shore
Scholarships
Anew scholarship for deserving
Eastern Shore students has been
estabhshed at Washington College.
Edna Jones Scheck, of Salisbury, Mary-
land, has endowed the Elwood M.
Jones Scholarship Fund with a gift of
$250,000 in memory of her late hus-
band, an Eastern Shore businessman.
The Elwood M. Jones Scholarship is
available to Eastern Shore residents
who have demonstrated academic
promise and who have need of finan-
cial assistance.
"We are grateful to Mrs. Scheck for
her extraordinary contribution, and we
are honored that she has selected
Washington College as the recipient of
this memorial fund," said College
President Charles H. Trout. "This
scholarship will help us continue our
time-honored tradition of providing an
outstanding education to the area's
young people."
For 26 years Elwood M. Jones was
president of Rubberset Company, a
manufacturer of paint applicators. The
company, located in Crisfield, Mary-
land, since 1966, is a division of the
Sherwin-Williams Company.
Jones joined Rubberset Company as
a sales representative for the Pacific
Coast division in 1937 and transferred
to the Newark, New Jersey, office in
1943 as an assistant sales manager. He
was promoted to vice president and
general sales manager in 1946, was
named executive vice president in
1947, and became president in Decem-
ber 1948. Under his leadership the
company grew from 50 to 450 employ-
ees by the time he retired in 1974. At
that time the company was the single
largest employer in Somerset County.
Mr. Jones was a member of the
Board of Visitors of Salisbury State
College from 1969 until 1975, and a di-
rector and member of the Executive
Committee of Peninsula Bank in
Salisbury from January 1971 until his
death in October 1981.
Raised in Culver City, California,
Jones attended college on a scholarship
during the Great Depression, graduat-
ing in 1935 with a degree in business
administration from the University of
Southern California. His widow says
she is establishing the scholarship
fund at Washington College to give
needy students the same opportunity
her husband had, and to give some-
thing back to the people of the Eastern
Shore.
Her husband was "a dear, dear
friend" and a hunting and fishing
companion of Alexander G. "Sandy"
Jones, Jr., a retired lawyer from Prin-
cess Anne and a Washington College
alumnus who for 25 years has served
on the College's Board of Visitors and
Governors. Through him, she said,
they came to know many Washington
College alumni and learn more about
the school. "If the alumni we met
were representative of the caliber of
people who come out of Washington
College, we surely wanted to help that
tradition continue," Mrs. Scheck said.
College Self-Reports
Possible Violations
To NCAA
Washington College this summer
reported to the National Colle-
giate Athletic Association the results of
an internal investigation that indicate
possible violations of NCAA regula-
tions. The suspected violations oc-
curred in the College's tennis program,
on both the men's and women's teams.
The possible violations involve
NCAA by-laws regarding provision of
housing and meals and the use of tele-
phones and automobiles. The NCAA
had not yet responded to the report at
presstime.
College President Charles H. Trout
said in a memorandum to the
College's Board of Visitors and Gover-
nors, "I have been advised by counsel,
who has reviewed the files of the ten-
nis program, that the College is re-
quired to self-report the existence of
possible NCAA violations in the tennis
program. My personal review of the
files does not indicate that there was
intentional wrong-doing on the part of
any former or current student."
The tennis program, which in the
past few seasons has achieved national
prominence, has seen a number of
changes in recent months. In June, the
College did not renew the contracts of
the men's and women's tennis
coaches, Fred Wyman and Holly
Bramble. The decision was based on
recommendations resulting from an
athletic department self-study and an
external review by a team of consult-
ants which called for all head coaching
positions to be filled by full-time em-
ployees in order to ensure greater in-
stitutional control over intercollegiate
programs. The College had recently
moved accordingly to full-time head
coaches in crew, soccer, and swim-
ming.
The decision to change the coaching
staff raised questions from some about
the College's continued commitment
to the tennis program.
Athletic Director Geoff Miller em-
phasized that the College plans to
maintain a competitive tennis pro-
gram. "We definitely want to provide
opportunities for our student-athletes
to be challenged by the schedule they
play," he said.
Miller has appointed Tom Finnegan
and Todd Helbling to take over coach-
ing responsibilities for men's and
women's tennis. Finnegan will serve as
head coach for both the men's and
women's teams and Helbling will
serve as assistant coach for both teams,
beginning this fall.
Tom Finnegan, a 21 -season basket-
ball coach veteran who has built one of
the finest Division III programs in the
country, is no stranger to tennis. He
served as head coach for the men's ten-
nis team from 1975-85 and for the first
women's team in 1975-76. For the past
19 years Finnegan has spent his sum-
mers as a teaching tennis pro at private
clubs in Baltimore, Maryland, and in
Madison, New Jersey.
Finnegan graduated in 1965 from
Washington College where he was an
All-American basketball player and a
stand-out in soccer and baseball as
well.
Todd Helbling will take over assis-
tant coaching responsibilities for both
tennis teams in addition to his recent
appointment as head soccer coach.
Helbling joined the athletic depart-
ment of Washington College in the fall
of 1990 as Cain Athletic Center coordi-
nator. He played four years of varsity
tennis at Millsaps College, serving as
team captain his senior vear. He was
ranked as high as 30th in the nation by
the Intercollegiate Tennis Coaches As-
sociation and third in the Southern Re-
gion in both his junior and senior
years. Helbling has worked as an assis-
tant teaching pro at the Vicksburg
Country Club in Mississippi.
Washington College Magazine/ffl// 2992
Academic Building
Is Dedicated to
Memory of Eugene
B. Casey
Hundreds of friends of the College
gathered in late April to dedicate
the new academic center to the
memory of philanthropist Eugene B.
Casey and witness the unveiling of a
bronze bust of his likeness presiding
outside the forum on the second floor.
The grandeur of the structure, with
its high ceilings, marble, and brass, is a
tribute to a most unusual man who en-
joyed many professions and whose
life-long commitment to excellence
will inspire generations of students
who walk through its doors. Casey's
widow, Betty Brown Casey '47, played
an important role in seeing that the
building was completed as her hus-
band would have wished.
"Eugene Casey did more than con-
tribute money and materials," Board
chairman Louis L. Goldstein com-
mented. "He offered inspiration, vi-
sion, positive attitude, and enthusi-
asm. By pledging a donation for this
new campus facility before his death in
1986, Eugene Casey, along with Al
Decker, Jim Price, and a few others,
initiated a campaign that successfully
raised $43.7 million during the past
five years. Their contributions are a
mark of excellence and an outstanding
example of service above self."
Eugene Bernard Casey strove for ex-
cellence in all his endeavors. Over the
Louis Goldstein and President Trout assist
Mrs. Casey at the ribbou-cutting for the
Eugene B. Casei/ Academic Center. The
SGA and the Alumni Association
presented Mrs. Casey with a drawing of
the structure by James Crawford '93.
span of 82 years he was an engineer, a
lawyer, a master plumber, a financier,
a farmer, a developer, a philanthropist,
a loving husband and a devoted father
to his six children and 11 grandchil-
dren. He cared about many things:
his family, his community, his country,
history, architecture, and education.
Born June 13, 1904 to Rose O'Neill
and Michael B. Casey of Washington,
D.C., Casey began to set goals early in
life. By the age of 10 he had his first
job delivering bread before and after
school. While attending the old Cen-
tral High School he wrote stories about
high school and college sports for both
the Washington Post and the Washing-
ton Star. He studied mechanical engi-
neering at Pennsylvania State Univer-
sity and law at Georgetown Univer-
sity. While still at Georgetown, he
started the Casey Engineering Com-
pany, which played an important role
in the building of several major struc-
tures in the Washington area.
Active in local and national Demo-
cratic politics, he was a supporter of
President Franklin D. Roosevelt and
his New Deal. He served as an official
of the Farm Credit Administration in
1940 and 1941 and as a farm policy ad-
viser to President Roosevelt in the
White House before entering the Navy
during World War II.
Even before the war, Casey had ex-
panded his interests from engineering
into real estate and farming. During
the 1950s and 1960s Casey pioneered
low-cost housing in the Rockville-
Gaithersburg area and was one of the
first to build large apartment projects
in Montgomery County.
Casey, who was one of the largest
landholders in upper Montgomery
County during the years after World
War II, was also one of the most gener-
ous philanthropists. A history enthu-
siast, he financed the restoration of
Red Hill, the last home of Virginia pa-
triot Patrick Henry, in Brookneal, Vir-
ginia. He donated the Darnall Farm in
Dawsonville, built in 1755, as well as
several other parcels of land, to Mont-
gomery County. He gave 204 acres in
Urbana to the Maryland Sheriffs Boys'
Ranch, which provides a home for
troubled boys.
Mr. Casey is doubtless well remem-
bered for his philanthropic deeds in
his home community, Montgomery
County, MD, but he has left an indel-
ible mark on Washington College as
well. His generous contributions have
changed the course and reshaped the
physical configuration of the school.
Before cutting the ribbon, Betty
Brown Casey '47 suggested that stu-
dents remember her late husband by
emulating his spirit of generosity.
"Please consider giving one day a
year, eight hours, back to your campus
in some way, whether it's work in the
library or cleaning up the lawn —
whatever it is your college needs. Do
it for yourself and do it for my late
husband, and call it Casey Time."
Washington College Magazine/ffl// 1991
CBF Interns Do
Their Part To Save
The Bay
Senior Tom Leigh, who grew up on
the Eastern Shore's Wye River, had
a vague notion he might be interested
in marine biology as a career. His
Pennsylvania suburbanite classmate,
Karen Brady, did not know much
about the Chesapeake Bay or its tribu-
taries until she attended a few lectures
sponsored by the Chesapeake Bay
Foundation in her sophomore year.
Today, both biology majors are well-
versed in soft-shell clamming regula-
tions, variations in water quality on
the Chester River side of Eastern Neck
Island, and the varieties of sea grasses
found growing on the flats of the is-
land. Both are confident that the work
they are doing can lead to a better un-
derstanding of how the Bay is faring
under duress. And both have a better
idea of the role they might play in
helping save the Bay.
As the first participants in the joint
Chespeake Bay Foundation /Washing-
ton College Environmental Internship
Program supported by a grant from
the Jessie Ball duPont Religious, Chari-
table, and Educational Fund, Leigh
and Brady are examining the effects of
soft-shell clamming on the shallow
water environment, submerged
aquatic vegetation (SAV) and the
benthic community (the river bottom)
on the eastern side of the Eastern Neck
Island Wildlife Refuge. The internship
is sponsored by the Joseph H. McLain
Program in Natural Sciences and di-
rected by biology professor Donald A.
Munson.
Beginning their internships last Feb-
ruary, the students took photographs
and made field observations to choose
five sites for study. They observed the
clamming sites and mapped the area
with state restrictions they learned
about in the CBF office in Annapolis.
They also studied CBF's aerial photo-
graphs that for the past decade have
chronicled beds of sea grasses and
clamming activity in the area.
"We have met so many people and
come into contact with several differ-
ent organizations," says Leigh. "The
people with Fisheries and Wildlife
(Administration] have been very help-
ful, loaning us equipment and a jeep to
get around in the Eastern Neck Island
Refuge, and we hope to use the Envi-
ronmental Protection Agency's com-
puter system to work on the technical
aspects of our study. The internship
experience has really opened my eyes
as to the number of study and work
opportunities."
Brady has been drawn particularly
to the Chesapeake Bay Foundation's
environmental education programs.
CBF takes groups of schoolchildren
aboard its skipjack and introduces
them to the Bay. "If children are intro-
duced to environmental programs
early, they'll have a better idea of what
conservation and preservation are all
about," she says.
This summer Leigh and Brady com-
pleted much of their field work. They
also observed clamming activity,
looked for diversity of life forms in the
river bottom samples, and identified
beds of submerged aquatic vegetation.
This fall, the two young scientists
will complete their field data and lab
work (the big bloom of grasses occurs
in late August) and submit their find-
ings to CBF. What they are document-
ing will be incorporated into a ten-vear
study of the Bay's submerged aquatic
vegetation being conducted by the
Fisheries and Wildlife Administration
and the Chesapeake Bav Foundation.
"We are a part of that, and it feels
good to be helping," says Brady.
Above: Tom Leigli shozvs that sea grasses
are thriving, at least on the island flats.
Right: Leigh and Karen Brady take a core
sample of the river bottom to check for
organisms.
Washington College Magazine/FaH 1991
Where Emus And
Wildebeests Roam
by Andrea Kehoe '89
As a boy growing up near the
Choptank River in Cambridge
Maryland, Dr. James M. Potter '59
played with fish, turtles, frogs, and
snakes the way other youngsters
took to model airplanes or baseball.
Even now the 54-year-old patholo-
gist does not join his colleagues on
the golf course.
As part owner of an ex-
otic animal zoo in
Pensacola, Florida, he
spends his free time with
gorillas and rodents, os-
triches and jaguars.
A chemistry major at
Washington College, he
earned his medical de-
gree at the University of
Florida in 1963. Even as
he began his career in
pathology, he continued
his interest in animals
with bird watching and
occasional study trips to
Africa. In the late 1960s
he helped build a small
non-profit zoo in
Pensacola, which even-
tually closed due to lack
of funding.
Sitting by a river-
bank in Kenya one
night in 1982 with a zo- Dr. ]nmes M
ologist friend. Potter
decided to make another try at
opening a zoo. They found four
other investors, took out a loan, and
began building in 1984. After a
name selection contest was held, the
facility was dubbed "The Zoo."
Animals were brought in from all
over the world. Several hundred
species of birds — parrots, tall
cranes, emus, swans, ducks, geese —
make up the largest animal popula-
tion at the facility. The Zoo also
houses wildebeests, bongos, and ze-
bras, and an array of gibbons, chim-
panzees, orangutans, pygmy mar-
mosets, and mandrill baboons.
"We get regular compliments,"
says Potter. "People compare us fa-
vorably to other zoos, but we still
have a lot of growing and develop-
ing we want to do. There's more we'd
like to do than we'll probably be able
to get to."
The Zoo welcomes about 140,000
visitors annually. The 50-acre park in-
cludes a children's petting zoo and a
30-acre wilderness area that a small
train loops through to show animals in
the wild. Designed to be wheelchair
accessible, the Zoo strives to reach out
to all segments of the population and
recently won an award for its work
with disadvantaged children.
"Zoos probably get higher atten-
dance than any other recreational ac-
Potter with wife Nell and parrot friend.
dvity, including professional football,"
says Potter. "They make for a good
outdoor family activity."
The privately held corporation lost
money in its early years, and even now
the profits that come in are channeled
into expansion plans. The real motiva-
tion behind the Zoo is not to make
money, but to inform the public of the
aesthetic value of animals, as well as
their ecological role.
"We make an effort to educate
people, to show that an animal has
value just because you see it," he says.
"If visitors come away just feeling bet-
ter by having seen a variety of species
they wouldn't ordinarily see, that's
good."
Potter and his partners focused on
exotic species, since other parks in the
area already offered native species.
Although some animal rights activ-
ists criticize zoos for removing ani-
mals from the wild, Potter points out
that they play a vita! role in main-
taining a gene pool for endangered
species, holding out the hope that
the animals might someday return
to their natural habitats. Further, he
argues, zoos raise public conscious-
ness about endangered wildlife.
"1 don't have any illusions that
people leave the park with an evan-
gelical zeal to save the animal
world," he says. "But if we can con-
tinue to make people
more aware of the vari-
ety of animals that ex-
ist, they stand a
chance."
When people com-
pete with animals for
food, as in many of the
emerging Third World
countries so frequently
native to endangered
species, the Western
ideal of animal preser-
vation seems like a
luxury, he explains.
Unstable political cli-
mates also place ani-
mals in jeopardy; goril-
las, for example, may
be among the casual-
ties of the revolution
that began in Rwanda
two years ago.
"It would be nice if
future generations
could go to Africa and
see gorillas in the wild," Potter says.
"But we won't know how many are
left until the fighting settles down."
The Zoo houses some endangered
species, such as red wolves and Ara-
bian and Scimitar-horned oryxes,
which participate in breeding pro-
grams.
Potter, who lives in Pensacola
with his wife Nell, usually goes to
the Zoo one day a week to pull
weeds or to help prepare for a new
exhibit. Sometimes he just looks
over the animals, though he has no
particular favorites.
"1 find them all fascinating," he
says. "Saying which one you like the
best is like saying which child you
love the best. You love each for
what it is."
Washington College Magazine/fa// 1993
FACULTY PERSPECTIVES
Lunch With Maria Luisa
by Professor Dniiiel L. Premo
It didn't take long for my daughter Alison to
find Maria Luisa's name among the tags attached
to the makeshift bulletin board. They were
arranged in alphabetical order by family name
and color-coded by sex. At almost six feet,
Alison could scan the names at eye-level, while
the Guatemalan secretary responsible for
maintaining the children's roster for the Cuxlikel
Project had to resort to a chair to reach the upper
rows.
The family name "Ramirez" was where Alison
expected to find it. "What surprised me," she
said later, "were the other cards that had
"FALLECIDO" typed in capital letters below the
name." With three years of Spanish behind her,
she knew that "FALLECIDO" meant "deceased,"
but, at sixteen, she was not prepared to accept
the mortality of children half her age.
Alison seemed consoled by my own
expression of concern, although, in
truth, the number of deaths recorded
in the village of Chuculjuyup did not
surprise me. Unlike Alison, for whom
it was her first trip abroad, I had
worked for the U.S. Government in
Guatemala for five years. Moreover, I
had read and written about infant
mortality, malnutrition, and other in-
dicators of suffering among the
country's large Indian population for
much longer. I could have explained
to her that all the relevant measures —
income, health, educational standards,
and access to pubUc services — sug-
gest that only a very small percentage
of Guatemala's rural population does
not suffer from the ravages of poverty.
However, the mosaic created by the
number of "FALLECIDOs" was a far
more persuasive indicator than any ex-
planation or statistics 1 could give her
that death is a constant companion of
the young in Chuculjuyup.
No prolonged visits nor lengthy ex-
planations were necessary for Alison
to realize that Guatemala's medical
and public health services are woefully
inadequate, especially in the rural ar-
eas where most of the children like
Maria Luisa live. Even where facilities
have been established, the benefits of
modern treatment and prevention of-
ten are thwarted by the women's tradi-
tional reliance upon curanderas (mid-
wives) and herbal medicine. The in-
tern who tends the modest health
clinic at the Cuxlikel Project two morn-
ings a week told us that the vast major-
ity of children's deaths were from
"easily preventable diseases." What
he didn't say was that the cures for in-
testinal infections, pneumonia, and
malnutrition depend ultimately upon
a fundamental change in the state's so-
cial and economic priorities. And no
Washington College Magazine/Fii// 1991
Jt was apparent that the Ramirez family
enjoyed a certain status within the
neighborhood. Their three-room adobe
house had cement floors and a tile roof instead
of straw. An equally sturdy animal shelter, and
above all, the cow and chickens it housed,
suggested a less precarious existence than that
shared by most of the villagers.
Alison Premo and Maria Luisa {third and
fourth from right in back) with the
Ramirez family.
Washington College Magazine/ffl// 1991
reformer has occupied Guatemala's
presidential palace since Jacobo
Arbenz was overthrown in 1954.
Alison was in the fourth grade when
we made our first contact with the
Christian Children's Fund and the
Ramirez family. It had been in
Alison's name that we undertook the
monthly sponsorship of a child in
Guatemala. Before Maria Luisa, it had
been her older brother, Carlos, who
corresponded with Alison and duti-
fully acknowledged our contribution
that provided the family with a
monthly supplemental food basket
and support for the project's health
clinic, store, and pre-school.
At the time 1 rationalized that it
would be "educational" for Alison to
contribute part of her allowance to
someone less fortunate and perhaps
learn something about the value of
sharing and the existence of other cul-
tures. It might also have been a ratio-
nalization to soothe my own con-
science. After all, what had 1 really
done to combat the abuses and social
injustice the Indians suffered under a
succession of brutal military regimes
after 1 left Guatemala in the early
1960s? As an academician, writing
about such problems in scholarly jour-
nals is relatively cost-free, unless, of
course, you happen to be Guatemalan.
For that matter, signing a monthly
check can also be relatively painless,
hardly in keeping with the self-sacri-
fice expected from an orthodox Meth-
odist childhood. On the other hand, it
is the typical North American ap-
proach to problem-solving. And, as
we learned during my 1991 spring sab-
batical, the Christian Children's Fund's
contact with almost 30,000 children in
Guatemala has produced some benefi-
cial outcomes.
During the months prior to our de-
parture, 1 had hoped that the trip to
Guatemala would represent for Alison
more than the possibility of a visit with
Maria Luisa. 1 wanted her to experi-
ence something about the life I had led
before what in our family circle is
known as "B.C." — "Before Chester-
town." For years my daughter had
heard me talk about my work and
friendships in Guatemala, and, in par-
ticular, my affection for a fellow
worker, Gonzalo Dardon, and his wife
Graciela.
I did not share with Alison my fear
that Gonzalo would be skeptical when
I first wrote to him about the work of
the Christian Children's Fund and our
desire to visit Maria Luisa's village.
Nor did 1 know how to convey to her
my feeling that, more than anyone, it
had been Gonzalo who taught me
about the subtleties of interventionism,
and who continues to remind me,
whenever necessary, of my political
naivete and Yankee arrogance. Like
so many of his generation who took to
the streets in the 1944 October Revolu-
tion, Gonzalo still resents the CIA's
role in orchestrating the downfall of
Guatemala's first democratic govern-
ment. Oxer the years he has become
tions exist. Gonzalo volunteered to ac-
company us and to make arrange-
ments through the Christian
Children's Fund's national office in
Guatemala City for the visit.
On our arrival, Gonzalo presented
Alison with an itinerary appropriately
titled "Trip to Totonicapan," prepared
by him primarily, I suspect, for her
amusement. We were to travel by car
to Chuculjuyup crossing on the high-
way that goes from "Seven Roads" to
Totonicapan on March 18. There, the
project director for Cuxlikel would
meet us "between ten and eleven in
my best example to my students of a
Latin American intellectual struggling
with the problems of development in a
Third World country that dared to
challenge U.S. hegemony. And 1
hoped that he would provide a similar
example to Alison.
Alison shared my delight when
Gonzalo replied with unexpected en-
thusiasm to my initial inquiry about
the feasibility of our visiting an Indian
family in a remote part of the country.
It turned out that Maria Luisa's village
is in the district of Chuisuc,
Totonicapan, literally on "the other
side of the mountain" from where he
was born. One of Guatemala's 24 "De-
partments," Totonicapan is located in
the western highlands, where most of
the country's indigenous population
lives. It is 95 percent Indian, com-
pared to 45-50 percent for the country
as a whole. Quiche is the principal in-
digenous language spoken throughout
the Department, although local varia-
( Above, from left to right) Mr. Ramirez,
Alison Premo, Dan Premo, ami Gonzalo at
the Ramirez home. (Opposite page, from
left to right) Maria Luisa Ramirez with
Alison Premo.
the morning" to guide us to the vil-
lage. Gonzalo informed us that the In-
dians from Totonicapan are very for-
mal when they receive guests in their
home, but they "might possibly offer
us something to eat." He predicted,
quite accurately, as it turned out, that
Maria Luisa's mother would have al-
ready "picked out the chicken that we
will have for lunch."
The day after our arrival in Guate-
mala City we left for Totonicapan. Un-
fortunately, it was not long enough for
Alison to reco\'er fullv from the effects
of the dreaded "turista" that she had
brought with her from Yucatan.
Alison gamely insisted that with an ex-
tra dose of Lomotil, she would "tough
Washington College Magazine/Fa// 1991
it out." She spoke little during the
drive from our hotel to Gonzalo's
house and politely declined the
Dardons' offer of breakfast.
Gonzalo insisted on driving the
rental car, with no objections on my
part. Alison quickly fell asleep in the
back seat and stirred only occasionally
when our conversation or a sharp
curve disturbed her. Once free from
the capital's early morning traffic,
Gonzalo began talking nostalgically
about his childhood and the hardships
that had fallen on so many of the In-
dian villages in the region, especially
one million were uprooted from their
traditional lands and relocated in
army-controlled "model villages." The
military's strategy was simple and
devastatingly effective: to "dry up the
sea" in which, according to Mao, guer-
rilla insurgencies survived.
The landmarks of Rios Montt's
scorched earth policy were still visible
as we drove through Solola Depart-
ment. Gonzalo's comments confirmed
most of what 1 had read about the situ-
ation in the highlands. Although the
food supply in the model villages is in
general more secure, in many cases In-
after the military's counterinsurgency
offensive of the early 1980s. Few vil-
lages in the western highlands have
been spared the crossfire of violence
spawned by the guerrillas, who rely
upon them for information and sup-
plies, and the army, who have de-
pleted their youth for conscripts and
punish those remaining for collabora-
tion. Under the "rifle and beans"
policy of General Rios Montt, who
seized power in 1982, an estimated
30,000 Indians were killed and over
dians have not been allowed to return
to their former lands. The model vil-
lages, and the "development poles" of
which they formed part, have suc-
ceeded as a form of social control, but
they are not economically viable.
Gonzalo summed up the situation suc-
cinctly when he said, "The army's pro-
gram is virtually all security and no
development."
As we approached Lake AHtlan, ar-
guably one of Guatemala's natural
wonders, I told Alison about the 13 In-
dians from nearby Santiago Atitlan
who were killed by the army last De-
cember. Ironically, they were demon-
strating against abuses by soldiers
from the local military base. The com-
bination of pressure from Interna-
tional Human Rights Groups and In-
dian petitions persuaded the govern-
ment to order the removal of the base
from the outskirts of town. Gonzalo
remarked that it was the first time in
his memory that a base had ever been
removed by popular demand.
A few hours into the trip we
stopped to stretch our legs at a road-
side lookout where one can admire the
three volcanoes that dominate Lake
Atitlan. Unfortunately, haze obscured
all but San Pedro's perfect cone.
Alison had revived and tried to con-
verse with the Indian children who ap-
proached us from the bush for a hand-
out. I told her that 30 years ago they
were more subtle, and perhaps less
desperate. Rather than ask you di-
rectly for money, they would offer to
pose for pictures for a few centavos.
At the time, our respite seemed inno-
cent and serene. Neither Alison nor 1
saw any reason to dwell on Gonzalo's
warning that we travel only by day-
light because of recent assaults on the
road to Totonicapan. Four months
later, we were to look back on our brief
stop with more solemn reflection. A
news item in one of the Guatemalan
papers reported that a German tourist
had been robbed and fatally shot at
that very site.
An hour later we stopped to view
the valley surrounding the provincial
capital of Totonicapan. We were in the
land of Gonzalo's childhood and he
eagerly pointed out and named for us
the mountains that remained his land-
marks for the area. The effects of de-
forestation and soil erosion were vis-
ible everywhere. We ate the bologna
sandwiches that Gonzalo's wife had
prepared. No doubt Graciela remem-
bered my limited taste for native food,
and perhaps assumed that Alison suf-
fered from similar culinary myopia.
The project director for Cuxlikel,
Federico Tzul, was waiting for us by
the roadside when we arrived at
Chujuljuyup crossing. A personable
young man in his early thirties,
Federico suggested that we follow him
the rest of the way. His jeep kicked up
dust clouds as we snaked our way up
the mountainside past clusters of
adobe houses. We followed at a pru-
Washington College Magazine/Fa// 3992
dent distance, annoyed by the dust,
but thankful that our visit coincided
with the dry season. Mud sHdes
would make the road impassable for
most vehicles once the rains began.
The Indians we passed ignored
Federico's jeep and focused their atten-
tion on the strangers trailing behind.
Those in the vicinity of Maria Luisa's
village had probably been alerted that
her "godmother" was arriving that
day. Shortly after we parked, Alison
asked Federico, "How often do spon-
sors visit Chuculjuyup?" He replied
that sponsors' visits were not uncom-
mon at project sites located near the
capital, but became less frequent in the
more remote Departments like
Totonicapan because of the distance
and poor roads. We had traveled for
over three hours to meet up with him,
and our ascent to Chuculjuyup took an
additional 30 minutes.
Maria Luisa met us on the road as
we walked from the project store to-
ward her house. Alison told me after-
wards that she had "recognized her in-
stantly." I confessed that I would have
walked past her, although her smile
and exquisitely embroiderecf blouse
should have alerted me. Indian
women still wear the colorful dress of
their native village, while most men
have discarded their traditional whites
for western style clothes. The transi-
tion has been in progress for some
time. During my first visit to the mar-
ketplace in Chichicastenango in 1960, 1
observed an Indian mother bargain for
a pair of blue jeans for her young son
clad in white. When 1 returned to
Chichicastenango in 1978, both the
number of foreigners and the variety
of western dress had proliferated to
the point where the marketplace
seemed geared more to accommodate
the tourist trade than the Indians
whom it had originally served.
After brief introductions in Spanish,
which included a formal embrace from
Maria Luisa for Alison and me, she es-
corted us along the path to her house.
The girls studied each other cii route,
trying not to stare, but tongue-tied by
the uncertainty and emotion of the
moment. Mr. Ramirez and his wife,
Maria, greeted us in the dirt courtyard
and introduced several of their older
children. The younger ones remained
partially hidden, waiting for reassur-
ance that it was safe to approach these
pallid intruders. The family dog was
more certain of its role and had to be
forcefully restrained and silenced by
our host. Alison dwarfed the entire
family and self-consciously strained to
minimize the height differential that
had always seemed such an advan-
tage. Among the first to overcome
their shyness were the twins, Santos
and Santa. The former's smile,
whether induced by fear or delight,
made him an instant favorite with
Alison.
It was apparent that the Ramirez
family enjoyed a certain status within
the neighborhood. Their three-room
adobe house had cement floors and a
tile roof insteacf of straw. An equally
sturdy animal shelter, and, above all,
the cow and chickens it housed, sug-
gested a less precarious existence than
that shared by most of the villagers.
The fresh milk no doubt accounted in
part for the remarkable survival of all
11 of the Ramirez children. At 13,
Maria Luisa is the statistical "median."
Although electricity is available in the
village, water must still be retrieved
from public taps. The reliance on "rus-
tic latrines" (the Christian Children's
Fund's euphemism for a ditch behind
the house) remains one of the principal
hazards to public health.
A weaver by trade, Maria Luisa's fa-
ther demonstrated his skill on a loom
occupying one end of the room that
serves as a workshop and dining area
by day, and a sleeping area at night.
Mrs. Ramirez and the older children,
including Maria Luisa, supplement the
family income by weaving, pottery
making, and domestic work. The fam-
ily also has access to a plot of land
where it grows some of its own corn
and beans.
Mr. Ramirez orchestrated our visit
with earnest solicitude. He conversed
with us while his wife and Maria Luisa
attended to matters in the kitchen. At
one point he called our attention to a
collage of family pictures framed on
the wall, including several of Alison
dating back to elementary school. He
spoke with special pride about his two
oldest sons, both of whom are in the
army, one of them a non-commis-
sioned sergeant. I recognized the dis-
tinctive uniform of a "kaibil" — the
special forces unit responsible for most
of the counterinsurgency operations in
the western highlands. 1 wondered
how many villages they had helped to
destroy and if the army's repression
ever conflicted with family or tribal
loyalties. Guatemala's recent history
would suggest that a Quiche-speaking
Maya from Totonicapan can be trained
to overcome any compunction in kill-
ing Indians who speak one of the
lesser dialects.
We were seated on assorted
wooden chairs around a knee-high
table that reminded me of kindergar-
ten. Before long, Mrs. Ramirez
brought in fresh milk and rolls. My in-
stinct was to forego the milk, but there
was no way to tactfully decline.
Alison gave it no thought and had the
cup to her lips while I was still fretting.
Her first sip elicited a jQue buena la
leche! (great milk!) and settled the is-
sue. Although my cup seemed bot-
tomless, 1 drank it with feigned gusto
and accolades for the cow i\Que vaca
maravillosal). At one point I
suggested that Alison offer to help
Maria Luisa in the kitchen. Ferocious
barking greeted her departure from
the room. Mr. Ramirez surprised me
with his agility, leaping to the door-
way and calming the family dog be-
fore it could attack. His timely inter-
vention was not without cost, how-
ever; he broke his chair in the process.
Before the milk had time to settle,
the women served us lunch: chicken,
rice, corn tamales, and a piece of beef-
steak. Meat in any form is not part of
the Indians' regular diet. Even chicken
is reserved for special occasions. We
were treated to a meal the Ramirez
family might otherwise have eaten for
Easter or the birthday of the x-illage's
patron saint.
It became evident that Mr. Ramirez
had not intended for Maria Luisa or
her mother to sit with us for lunch.
Alison seemed uncomfortable with the
former's prolonged absence from the
room, so I asked that thev be allowed
to join us. During the meal thev re-
sponded to our questions, but, for the
most part, thev maintained the passiv-
ity expected of Indian women in the
presence of men.
I noticed that Gonzalo had the same
difficulty I did trving to cut the beef
with the utensils pro\'ided in our be-
half, so 1 followed his lead and at-
tacked it mano a imiuo (hand-to-hand
combat). On the wa\' home he con-
fided that the struggle had loosened a
tooth. It both amused and surprised
me when Alison said the meal was
"the best she had eaten since leaving
the States."
Alison, Maria Luisa, and I had a
brief time together after lunch. The
Washington College Magazine/fo// 1991
girls' efforts at communication ap-
peared strained, not so much because
of language, but from the natural awk-
wardness originating from distinct cul-
tures. Moreover, Alison's sponsorship
gave her an official status that their
slight difference in ages could not
overcome in a matter of hours. Smiles
substituted for words, while Maria
Luisa's infant nephew provided a fo-
cus for sharing and conversation. I
wondered how much longer it would
be before she had a child of her own.
We had decided in advance that any
special gifts for either Maria Luisa or the
family should be made through the
CCF. We had no wish to insult the ,
family by bringing them something
that might suggest need. Gonzalo
had taught me long ago that money
is not universally accepted as an
expression of gratitude or friend-
ship. Indians maintain a sense of
self-esteem and personal honor in
the midst of their poverty — a char-
acteristic that a materialistic society
hke ours finds difficult to compre-
hend. The Spanish call it "dignidad,"
for which the customary English
translation of "dignity" is inad-
equate. Despite my presumed sen-
sitivity to such matters, the coloring
books and crayons we brought for
the children seemed incongruous
with the surroundings. So did the
rag doll we had for Maria Luisa.
Seeing her clutch it on her lap, I
could not imagine her having either
the time or the frivolity to play with
dolls. For children like Maria Luisa
there is no adolescence. Puberty
burdens them immediately with the
responsibilities of adulthood.
Unlike many villages in Guate-
mala, there is an elementary school
in Chuculjuyup. The teachers are
hired by the government and com-
mute daily from the provincial capi-
tal of Totonicapan. In addition, the
CCF operates a pre-school in the
village and plans to open a second
one in the district. Maria Luisa's
fourth grade class meets in the after-
noons so, after lunch, we insisted
that she not miss school on our ac-
count. Federico said we could visit
her class on the way out of town.
Before leaving, Maria Luisa
gave Alison a tapestry and two
belts, including one we had ad-
mired on a small loom in the
courtyard when we arrived. I
asked Mr. Ramirez if we might
take some pictures of the family. In-
dian women and children are often re-
luctant to allow themselves to be pho-
tographed. They believe the camera
robs them of their spirit. The more su-
perstitious among them will also avoicf
the "evil eye" cast by foreigners.
However, no one in the Ramirez fam-
ily objected. The only difficulty was
getting everyone assembled in the
courtyard. Mr. Ramirez miscounted
the children twice, but eventually ev-
eryone except the dog made it for a
family portrait.
We heard the school before we saw
SANTOS Y SANTA
Santos y Santa
Identical images of
a lopsided grin
missing two front teeth.
Brown — their skin
under smudges of dirt and dust
aroused by the patter
of tiny bare feet.
Their screams
today of laughter,
tomorrow for their people.
Their voices someday
silenced
by those who think they understand.
Their cries
full of delight,
soon will be of anguish.
The tragic death of a childhood
that lasted but a moment.
Santos y Santa,
society's newest
sacrifice
to the Mayan Gods.
— Alison E.M. Premo
it, and it wasn't yet recess. I asked
Federico to obtain the teacher's con-
sent for us to visit her classroom. She
greeted us at the doorway and bristled
momentarily when the children
strained noisily to inspect the foreign-
ers. She apologized, adding that it was
difficult to maintain order with 53 stu-
dents. However, 1 noted their instant
response when she rapped for silence.
Gonzalo tactfully mentioned that we,
too, were educators, and for many
years we had worked with and ad-
mired the dedication of the country's
rural teachers. 1 asked her to excuse us
for Maria Luisa's tardiness and the
disruption our arrival had already
created. It was difficult to tell if
Maria Luisa was pleased or em-
barrassed by the attention from
her classmates. Perhaps a little of
both.
At the teacher's invitation, 1
greeted the children from the
people in our "village in Mary-
land," and added how pleased we
were to visit them. They were
more intrigued by Alison than by
my remarks. She was momen-
tarily flustered when I told the
children that she also had greet-
ings for them. Her "Hola" (Hi!)
and "Mucho gusto de conocerles"
(Pleased to meet you!) conveyed a
sense of the day's accumulation of
feelings. The youngsters closest to
me seemed impressed that "any
girl that tall" could speak at all.
The teacher gave Maria Luisa
permission to accompany us to the
car for a final, private goodbye.
She and Alison walked together as
they had earlier in the day, al-
though this time their arms were
around each other's waist.
During the ride back to Gua-
temala City, I asked Alison how
much longer she thought it would
be before Maria Luisa, like her
brother before her, would be con-
sidered too old for us to continue
our sponsorship. "Not to worry,"
she said: "I already have my eye
on Santos and Santa."
Dr. Premo is Goldstein Professor in
Public Affairs and chair of the De-
partment of Political Science and In-
ternational Studies. He has traivled
widely in Central America, and pub-
lished numerous articles on civil-mili-
tary relations, terrorism, and guerrilla
movements in the region.
Washington College Magazine/fa// 1991
15
PIECES OF THE PAST
Coeducation And The Changing
Role of Women At WC
by Sue De Pnsqimle '87
This fall, Washington College begins a year-
long celebration of the centenary of coeducation.
With much fanfare, Washington College will pay
tribute to women scholars — writers and
lawyers, artists and historians, musicians and
theologians, politicians and philosophers,
scientists and businesswomen. Throughout the
year, women who have made significant
contributions in their fields will visit Washington
College to share their knowledge and, perhaps,
inspire our current student population, male and
female, to greater heights. And, mirroring the
50th anniversary of coeducation celebrated in
1941-42, the College will award honorary degrees
to noted women of our day.
Just as importantly, though, is the second
objective of this anniversary celebration — that is,
to stimulate discussion of the relationships
between women and men, and to consider how
those relationships might be improved. Just how
far from equal treatment are we?
To help launch the coeducation celebration,
Washington College Magazine asked Sue
DePasquale, Washington College alumna and
journalist, to explore how attitudes towards
women in education, and women's roles as
educators and students, have changed during the
course of the past century at Washington College.
How was Professor Proctor to know,
when he boarded the Chestertown
steamer bound for Baltimore, that his
trip this day in early September 1891
would set off such an unexpected
chain of events? He had been teaching
biology and chemistry at Washington
College now for several years, and
making the daily ride to Baltimore to
visit relatives whenever time and the
weather permitted. As the steamer
pulled away from the dock, he sat
down on his customary bench to bask
in the sunlight, his mind contentedly
drifting off. But today's journey was
not to prove as smooth as he had
hoped. Jarred from his reveries by the
rustle of petticoats, he opened one eye
to see a band of young women clus-
tered about.
Did he teach at Washington College?
they inquired. Why, yes. Proctor re-
sponded pleasantly. Their next ques-
tion was not as easy: Why aren't
women allowed to attend classes at the
College? Proctor had no ready answer.
He knew the College's charter did not
deny them the opportunity. Yet up to
now, Washington College, like manv
other colleges of the day, was the un-
challenged realm of the "stronger" sex.
(Gettysburg College had enrolled its
first women only six years earlier. The
College of William and Mary would
not follow suit until 1918.)
Sensing the professor's hesitation,
the young women jumped in with a
friendly barrage of reasons as to why
they should be able to enroll at Wash-
ington College. They were sincere,
their arguments well-executed, and
Proctor found himself unwittinglv
warming to their cause. He promised
to take their case before College Presi-
dent Charles Reid once he got back to
Chestertown.
Reid, too, was easily won over. On
Washington College Magazine /Fa// 1993
Today's coed would laugh in disbelief
if told she coidd not run for SGA,
that she had to be in by 10 p.m. and get
written permission to leave campus for the
weekend, eveyi though her male classmates
could do as they pleased. But it wasn't so long
ago that such inequities were inextricably
woven into the social fabric of the times.
The 1911 Pegasus sophomore class
picture showed only tioo women in the
"Academic" program. The majority of
women students enrolled at that time were
studying to be teachers in the "Normal"
program.
Washington College Magazine/fa// 1991
September 18, 1891, he proposed to the
Board of Visitors and Governors that
"females be admitted to classes and
lectures of Washington College as day
students." The Board adopted the
resolution (mostly for pecuniary rea-
sons, historians speculate today), and
the first 1 1 young women became
members of the student body at Wash-
ington College.
In the 100 years that have passed
since that day in 1891, the College has
seen a succession of strong-willed
women, both students and faculty
members, push for continued progress
for the "fairer" sex. Like their prede-
cessors on the Chestertown steamer,
these women have been guided by a
steely determination to speak up, and
to continue speaking up, until their
voices are heard.
Today's coed would laugh in disbe-
lief if told she could not run for SG A,
that she had to be in by 10 p.m. and get
written permission to leave campus for
the weekend, even though her male
classmates could do as they pleased.
But it wasn't so long ago that such in-
equities were inextricably woven into
the social fabric of the times.
Maggie Horsley, professor of sociol-
ogy, had her work cut out for her, both
in the classroom, and in Reid Hall dor-
mitory, where she spent a stint from
1960 until 1965 as Dean of Women. "I
tried to get the young women to con-
sider that life is not just getting en-
gaged and then getting married, rais-
ing a family and having your husband
looking after you for the rest of your
life. But it was difficult," she recalls
today, from her home in Washington,
D.C. "They thought I was crazy."
Horsley's students were not the first
to have that reaction. Her adviser at
Berkeley was shocked when he
learned that she yearned to do gradu-
ate work in anthropology. His advice?
Give up the idea and get married.
Horsley ignored the first part of his
suggestion and went on to earn her
Ph.D. from Columbia University. She
taught at Hofstra University before
coming to Washington College in 1956;
she would remain until her retirement
30 years later.
Horsley came on board around the
same time as modern language profes-
sors Gerda Blumenthal and Esther
Dillon, names well-known to a genera-
tion of Washington College students.
The three women became fast friends
and quickly established themselves as
leaders within the predominantly male
faculty. All three would go on to serve
as department chairs.
"Anytime we spotted a bright
woman, we would encourage her to go
on to an M.A. or a Ph.D., or to any-
thing else she felt inclined to do,"
Horsley says of the late 1950s. "The
problem was, that was not considered
a proper female role." Women were
supposed to be "passive, sweet, and
not too bright," she recalls. "If you
wanted a date, you'd better keep quiet
that you were getting A's."
During those years, few of her fe-
Margaret Hoi-^L i/ (aboL'c, left) and E^thci
Dillon (right) initiated impoitant
curricular reform m the 1960s, according
to Christine Olpin Pabon '62 (ahoi'e,
right), now on the faculty.
male students joined in class discus-
sions. It often was not until the
semester's first blue book exam that
she would discover "that young
woman in the corner who kept her
mouth shut really did know what was
going on." Even then, grades could be
deceiving. "Sometimes very intelligent
girls would get D's and F's, rather than
A's. They weren't going to be bothered
with studying — there was no point to
it. It wouldn't get you a date. It
wouldn't get you a man. So they
would settle for a nice, ladylike C."
Academically, women too often had
a low opinion of themselves, says the
sociologist. They needed encourage-
ment, and Horsley tried her best to
give it to them. Together with English
professors Bob Kirkwood and Nancy
Tatum, for example, she helped estab-
lish an honor society for women in the
senior class.
There were exceptions, of course —
women who would not have dreamed
of hiding their scholarly light under a
barrel — like Christine Pabon '62. She
is now director of Washington
College's Study Skills Program.
"I knew there were other women
who were holding back," she recalls,
"but I was an aberration. I was vocal
from the moment I walked into the
College. I had my hand up all the time
— you couldn't shut me up. You still
can't," says Pabon, who graduated sec-
ond in her class.
\
Speaking up was not always easy,
however. In her freshman year, Pabon
tied for the class's top spot with friend
and classmate Patrick Cullen '62. Since
the two had identical GPA's, thev both
received the customary Fox Medal at
Fall Convocation award ceremonies.
After thev had left the stage and re-
turned to their seats, Cullen showed
her the check that accompanied his
medal. He was appalled to find she
18
Washington College Magazine/fa// 1991
had not gotten one too.
"You might ask, ~Why didn't you go
in and raise the roof?'" she says. "Well,
part of it was the atmosphere of the
times. Somehow, women weren't as
conscious of those abuses. I knew that
it hurt, but I didn't feel I could go and
raise a ruckus."
Despite the incident, she pushed
ahead in her study of Spanish and
French, thanks in large part to the in-
fluence of professors Dillon and
Blumenthal. "They were my two men-
tors, the women who formed me, the
ones I admired. They had a lot to do
Miss Bertha M. Stiles, instructor of
English, mathematics, and German,
was the very first woman to grace the
faculty of Washington College, in 1893.
Not surprisingly, she became the
College's first housemother, when
Normal Hall opened in the spring of
1897. By establishing a Normal Depart-
ment to train women as public school
teachers, the College could justifiably
ask the Maryland General Assembly to
underwrite the cost of building the
dormitory (known today as Reid Hall).
The sum agreed upon was $6,000. Nor-
mal Hall "sat on a hill, ninety feet
Becky Brown Owens '25 (second from left
in front) with other members of the 1923-
24 women's hasketball team.
with my intellectual development."
Blumenthal, who taught French and
world literature, would be the first re-
cipient of the College's Lindback
Award for Distinguished Teaching in
1964. Dillon, together with Horsley
and history professor Nate Smith, was
a "prime mover" for curricular change,
Pabon says. "She was one of the prin-
cipal architects of the Four Course
Plan. Her leadership affected the fac-
ulty, the curriculum, and the student
body in a profound way."
Horsley recalls sharing a special ca-
maraderie with Dillon and the other
female members of the faculty. "One
of the great myths in American culture
is that women are isolated and
unsupportive of each other," she says.
"Women who went into higher educa-
tion at that time had been through the
mill. They all stuck together."
above tidewater," from which there
was "a beautiful view of the town,
Chester River, and the surrounding
country," according to a 1897-98
course catalog. The basement held a
dining room, kitchen, and pantry. On
the first floor were apartments for fe-
male faculty. The upperfloors could
accommodate up to 32 students.
With the dormitory's construction
came a set of rules, draconian by
today's standards, which forbade "so-
cial intercourse between gentlemen
and lady students except in the pres-
ence of one or more teachers." Only on
Friday evenings, between 8 and 10
p.m., could the young women host a
reception for their male classmates.
During those early years of coeduca-
tion, most women opted to take the
two-year Normal Course, which en-
abled them to earn a certificate to teach
in Maryland's elementary schools. By
the spring of 1911, Washington Col-
lege had awarded normal certificates
to 132 women. By contrast, only 14
women had earned bachelor's degrees.
(One went on to earn her Ph.D. from
Johns Hopkins University, another to
be head of a Maryland junior college.)
The Normal curriculum's popularity
ultimately proved to be its undoing.
Fearing that the College's liberal arts
curriculum was being overshadowed,
the administration discontinued the
department that same year. The
program's demise, coupled with the
increasing "disciplinary problem" of
housing men and women on the same
campus, prompted the closing of Nor-
mal Hall as well. The few women who
continued to enroll at Washington Col-
lege were day students.
The windows of Normal Hall re-
mained darkened until 1919, when the
Board of Visitors and Governors af-
firmed its commitment to assuring
"equal provisions" for the education of
both sexes. In those intervening years,
women had worked alongside men in
factories during World War I, and had
earned the right to vote. When they re-
turned that fall to renew their role as
boarders, they came this time expect-
ing to share fully in the liberal arts ex-
perience.
Becky Brown Owens '25 enrolled at
Washington College during the same
decade that Normal Hall was enlarged
and renamed to honor Charles Reid,
the faculty head who had pushed co-
education through.
"We kept our rooms very clean, be-
cause the Dean of Women had her
suite there," recalls Owens. "We
would sit in her living room and have
nice, friendly chats about whatever
might be bothering us. From four until
six o'clock in the afternoon, the boys
would come over and we would dance
to records. In the evening, we'd sit out
on the front porch and talk a while." A
New Jersey teacher for 40 years,
Owens currently lives in Florida,
where she coordinates a program for
the aged.
If the 87-year-old's memory serves
correctly, the Class of '25 consisted of
about 25 students, seven of whom
were women — an "excellent percent-
age," she says. "We could be so
choosy. It was delightful. We didn't
have to sit around wondering if we'd
get asked to the cotillion."
A political science major, Owens
played intramural tennis and was
president of the women's student
council. Later, as the first female presi-
dent of Washington College's Alumni
Council, she was instrumental in es-
Washington College Magazine/Fa// 2991
tablishing the Alumni House. "When I
was president, the Alumni Council
had the best attendance ever," she
says, laughing. "All the men came to
watch me so 1 wouldn't put anything
over on them."
The octogenarian's years as a stu-
dent at Washington College were pep-
pered with amusing escapades. There
was the winter evening she and some
classmates snuck out of the dorm to go
sledding — and got caught. And the
time a group of women (chaperoned
by the Dean of Women, of course) ac-
companied the men's basketball team
to Baltimore. On the steamboat ride
back to Chestertown, the Dean's hat
blew off, taking her wig with it. "We
told her she looked much better with-
out it," says Owens, chuckling.
When basketball games were held at
Cain Gymnasium, everyone gathered
afterward for a bonfire rally. "The
boys would stand on boxes and make
speeches around the bonfire. When it
was time to go home, they would sing
'Goodnight, Ladies' and start putting
the fire out. Do you know how they
did that?" she asks, her voice lowering
conspiratorially. "They would all pee
on it! That's when we knew it was
time for us to go."
No one questioned obvious differ-
ences in the way men and women
were treated, Owens says. "In those
days, you didn't think about male
chauvinism. It never entered our
minds," she says. "Men were presi-
dents of all the clubs, but that didn't
worry us. We were allowed to be in
the clubs and plays. And we sup-
ported them in sports as cheerleaders."
The situation hadn't changed all that
much by the mid-1930s, says Miriam
Ford Hoffecker '36. Men fielded the
varsity sports teams that traveled to
other colleges, while women remained
at home to compete in intramural bas-
ketball, tennis, archery, and field
hockey. "We recognized that money
was scarce and there was no way in
the world they could support any
more varsity teams, so we enjoyed
what we had," she says.
Hoffecker couldn't help feeling glee-
ful, though, when her field hockey
team challenged the football men to a
hockey match — and won. Or when
tennis great Jean Harshaw Lesko '37
became the first woman ever named to
a men's varsity team. "That was one of
our victories," says Hoffecker. "She
could beat all the men."
Her junior year, Hoffecker and some
friends decided the time had come to
breach the all-male bastions of the Stu-
dent Council. They selected Dorothy
Clarke Clifford '36, blessed with a flair
for the dramatic, to make their case be-
fore the council's faculty advisor. Dean
Jones. As Hoffecker tells it, the meet-
ing didn't last long. To the suggestion
that women be allowed to run for of-
fice, he replied, "Why, Miss Clarke,
that is impossible."
"But ivin/ is it impossible?" she
pressed.
"Because there has never been a
cation, the 1942 celebration remains a
model. "In addition to honoring
women who have accomplished a
great deal in America," says Kathy
Mills, associate professor of music and
chair of the centennial committee, "the
committee hopes to stimulate discus-
sion on the broader topic of gender re-
lations." (See sidebar)
Gender relations today, of course,
are a world apart from what they were
100, 50, even 20 years ago. "It was in
the late 1960s," says Horsley, "that you
started to see a real difference in atti-
tudes. Women grew more talkative in
fenn Hnrshazv Lesko '37 (abmv with
Men's Tennis Team) was the first woman
to play on a men's varsity team at
Washington College, as recalled by
Miriam Ford Hoffecker '36 (right).
woman on the student council," he
said in dismissal.
Just a few years later in 1942,
Eleanor Roosevelt, the nation's First
Lady, came to Washington College to
speak at Commencement on May 25th.
Her address, carried nationwide by the
Mutual Broadcasting System, was the
crown jewel in the College's celebra-
tion of its first 50 years of coeducation.
For the first time ever, three women
were chosen to receive honorary de-
grees at a Washington College Com-
mencement; Roosevelt, Mary Adele
France, the 1900 graduate who was
principal of St. Mary's Seminary and
Junior College, and writer Sophie Kerr
Underwood, a Denton native.
As the College gears up to com-
memorate an entire century of coedu-
class, and more interested in doing
something with their li\'es beyond get-
ting married."
America was gripped in the throes
of social uphea\'al, and the times, they
definitely were a changin'. Student
handbooks of the era show just how
quickly. Up until 1966-67, men were
not allowed to cross Route 213 to the
Washington College Magazine/fa// 1993
women's dormitories after 6:30 p.m.
That changed a year later when "open
house hours" went into effect. Mem-
bers of the opposite sex (provided they
were dressed in "good taste") could
visit up until midnight on weekend
nights. Doors, however, had to remain
open and rooms kept "neat and or-
derly." The next year, doors could be
closed as long as the lights remained
on. In 1971 the floodgates of permis-
siveness opened wide, washing away
enforced morality and leaving behind
a 24-hour visitation policy.
Washington College students of the
1990s enjoy a freedom from social re-
strictions that would have made their
predecessors blanch. Men and women
think nothing of sharing dorms, even
bathrooms. Housemothers have been
replaced by resident assistants, stu-
dents themselves, who must be pre-
pared to deal with such issues as alco-
hol abuse, "safe sex," and date rape.
Women routinely serve as class
presidents and Elm editors, and are
standouts on playing fields and in sci-
ence labs. No longer restricted to
teaching, they prepare for careers in
law, medicine, and engineering. There
has even been an interest in establish-
ing a women's studies program.
"Women are definitely less docile,"
says Nancy Tatum, an English profes-
sor at the College since 1960. "Over the
years, there have been some pretty
outspoken and able women who have
really made themselves felt on cam-
pus." Tatum believes that there is still
room for improvement, however, par-
ticularly within the faculty. Only one
department chair is currently filled by
a woman; just three have reached the
rank of full professor. Many more fill
the lower and middle ranks, but in-
ducing them to stay has been a prob-
lem, she says.
"In those years [the mid-1980s],
when we were being told how aggres-
sively the College was pursuing equal-
ity, women seem to have lost ground
rather than gained it," says Tatum. Re-
cently launched faculty enhancement
grants, designed to stimulate and sup-
port research, may help to brighten the
picture a bit, she says.
To be sure, there are obstacles that
remain to total equality between the
sexes, both at Washington College and
throughout the nation. "But the bias
today is much more subtle," says
Christine Pabon. "Sometimes I don't
think we realize how far we've come."
Living Together: Men and Women in
America — Past, Present and Future
A year-long celebration marking the centenary of coeducation at
Washington College, 1891-1991
August 29: OPENING CONVOCATION:
Keynote address: "Toward Modernity:
Washington College and The Cult of
True Womanhood," by Charles H. Trout,
President of the College. Honored guest:
Helen Gibson, a founder of the Washing-
ton College Concert Series.
ART EXHIBIT: Recent works by Mary-
land artist Allyn Massey. First of a series
of five exhibits featuring the work of re-
gional women artists, including later ex-
hibits by Carol Wood and Stephanie
Sove-Ney.
September II: ART LECTURE: "Regional
Women Artists," by Dr. Leslie King
Hammond, Director of Graduate Studies
at the Maryland Institute, College of Art.
September 19: LECTURE: "Samuel
Beckett and Women," by Linda Ben-Zvi,
Professor of English at the University of
Michigan.
October 18: CONCERT SERIES: The
Peabody Trio, performing a piece by
Shulamit Ran, winner of the I99I
Pulitzer Prize for Musical Composition.
October 19: ALUMNI PANEL DISCUS-
SION: "Common Ground," a panel dis-
cussion featuring alumnae from the past
seven decades discussing the environ-
ment for women in higher education and
its effect on their subsequent careers.
October 21: LECTURE: "Charlotte
Bronte, Elizabeth Gaskell and Disap-
pointment," by Christopher Ricks, Pro-
fessor of English at Boston University.
October 23: LECTURE: "Women in Poli-
tics: The State and Local Level"
November 15: CHORUS CONCERT: Mu-
sic of Women Composers performed by
the Washington College Community
Chorus.
November 18: LECTURE: "The Status of
Women in National Political Life"
November 22: SYMPOSIimi: Women in
Middle Eastern History and Culture
December 3: CONCERT SERIES: Chris-
tine Ciesinski, Soprano.
January 23: LECTURE: Theologian Rose-
mary Reuther discussing liberation theol-
ogy and women's rights.
January 31: CONCERT: A concert of mu-
sic by American women composers, in-
cluding Mrs. H. H. A. Beach, Barbara
Kolb, Ruth Seegar, and Judith Lang
Zaimont, by Kathleen Mills, piano, associ-
ate professor of music at Washington Col-
lege.
February 22: CONVOCATION: Honored
guests: Martine van Hamel, Artistic Di-
rector of the New Amsterdam Ballet;
Marian Wright Edelman, President of the
Children's Defense Fund, and Linda
Koch Lorimer, President of Randolph-
Macon Woman's College.
March 20 (tentatively scheduled date):
PERFORMANCE: British actress Billie
Whitelaw performs readings from
Samuel Beckett
May 17: COMMENCEMENT: Honored
guests include Barbara Mikulski and
other noted American women.
For more information about these and other events to be scheduled throughout the year, contact
the Campus Events Coordinator (SOO-422-1782 ext. 402).
Confusion exists among men, she says.
"The poor things aren't sure whether
to hold the door for us, or slam it in
our faces."
Women, too, are being forced to re-
define their roles. "Young women are
being pulled in several directions,"
says Horsley. "They want marriage
and children, but they're also bright
and want to fulfill themselves with a
career. Combining the two isn't easy.
"It's always more comfortable to live
in a society where you are told what to
do and what to think," says the soci-
ologist. "In a society where you must
define your own role, you may not be
happy, but you're better off."
Note: The early historical information in
this article relies on research completed by
Fred W. Dumschott, Washington Col-
lege (1980), and Dr. ]. S. Jones, The
Washington College Bulletin (April
1942).
Sue De Pasquale '87 is managing editor of
Johns Hopkins Magazine.
Washington College Magazine/fa// 3991
STUDENT FICTION
Excerpts From Sophie- Winning
Fiction: Teef
by Robert /. Thompson '91
I'd grow old, my children would visit me, my
grandchildren would love me, and Westinghouse
would keep me at work until I'd retire. That's
what I figured, but I was wrong.
My only wife died at home while I was in
North Africa, and my only son died while he was
in Vietnam, but Westinghouse had plenty of
business and gave me work until I was 65. Then
I had money to retire in 1983. Now I have a
Winnebago and time to drive it, slowly and
everywhere.
Soon after I retired, I started driving around,
and on the East Coast I drove through a town
less than two stories tall. It sat next to Birch
Creek and was called Incline, Maryland. The
first time I passed through, I saw a little girl
about six years old pulling a blue plastic
toboggan across this front yard. It was too flat
for sledding there. I was too old for sledding, so
I didn't dwell on the kid. I'm sure she had fun.
I niade a point of returning to Incline every
once in a while. I spent my nights in my
Winnebago in the parking lot of a warehouse that
looked like it must have been used for something
back in the 1920s, and I spent my days drinking
coffee in Noreen's, the only restaurant. Since I
retired, seeing sights became like a job to me, and
visiting Incline, a town with nothing to see,
became a vacation of sorts.
The second time I visited Incline, in
1984, 1 met this gentleman on the shoul-
der of Route 174 outside of town. He
stood next to his beige Dodge Dart with
its bald flat rear left tire. When I pulled
over and offered him a ride to the gas
station he just looked at me and looked
at my mobile home and said, "I don'
need no ride to no gas station, I need a
tar patch an' a air pump." He must've
known that he didn't need to say
"please" to me.
I watched him peel the tire off the
rim with a crow bar and I muttered
something about the tire being bald and
maybe he needed a new one. He said,
"Why don't ya go inta that house a
yours an' I'll tell ya when I'm done,
okay?" So I did. I was dozing off in the
driver's seat a half hour later when he
rapped on the window, shouting, "Hey
you. Yea you! Git up." 1 rolled down
the window. "Lemme show you mv
house," he said. He knocked the side of
my Winnebago with his fist and added,
"Leave this damn thing here, will ya?
Wassyername?"
"Paul Evinrude," I said. He rolled
his eyes.
"Oliver Putz," he replied. "Come
on."
We went to his falling house near the
river. He poured me a water from the
kitchen sink and started asking me all
about the places I'd been in that "thing
you call home." 1 told him about
Canada and Mexico and all the states in
between. He told me he ne\'er went
anywhere because he could take care of
himself right where he was, thank vou
very much. Then he pointed to a
workboat tied to his dock and told me
how he built it in his shed out back dur-
ing the same time that 1 was busv
"traipsin' around the worl'."
"When I finished buildin' the boat
about two years ago," he said, "I
Washington College Magazine/Fn// 1991
This year's winner of the Sophie Kerr
Prize, Robert J. Thompson spent the
summer in Alaska reading and painting
fishing boats (while the fishermen were on
strike). He plans to return to Alaska next
spring.
Washington College Magazine/fa// 1991
painted her. And in the end, right on
the bow there, I needed a name an' I
can't read, so I used them letters there
on the 'frigerator — copied 'em real
good." He showed me the logo on the
refrigerator — G.E.
"So you named it G.E.?" I asked.
He rolled his bottom lip under his
top lip like he just heard some bad
news. "Is 'at what it said? Well 1 al-
most named it that, but right after I
painted . . . wha'd you say. Gee Eee . . .
on the bow, it rained real hard and the
paint ran. The nex' day a guy come
over askin' me stuff. Said he was from
a paper. He assed what the name of
the boat was an' I didn't know, so I
just pointed to the letters on the bow.
He squinted his eyes like this when he
saw 'em an' he said, 'What?' I said,
'Yea, it's The Wlmt? So that's what I
call her: The Wlmt? 1 didn't know
what to say."
He told me other things. He was
proud of his boat. He had others be-
fore it, but this was his beauty (and it
was). He made a living tonging for
oysters. When he wasn't tonging for
oysters he was in his shed, making
things. He showed me the shed.
It was actually a barn. It was twice
as large as his house and full of open-
ings — doors, windows, broken planks
here and there in the sides — all of
them for a purpose. He had it full of
unfinished cabinets, smaller boats, fur-
niture, anything that he could made
with his hands. He said he decided
which project to work on by the time
of day. If there was a patch of sunlight
shining through the hole in front of the
unfinished cabinet, he would work on
the cabinet. If in the afternoon the sun
flooded through the window next to
the rowboat, he's work on that, and
slowly these things were made.
After I met Oliver, 1 made a point of
returning to the town once in a while.
The only time he'd come into Noreen's
was when he'd see my Winnebago on
the parking lot. I was the only person
he ever talked to, when he did talk,
and 1 think that made me proud. He'd
usually sit across from me at a table
next to the front window where the
"SORRY, WE ARE CLOSED" sign
faced us. Sometimes we didn't talk at
all. Sometimes we'd pass the after-
noons on trivial matters. Oliver could
tell you what phase the moon would
be in on any given date or he could tell
you when the high and low tides
would be, all off the top of his head.
His world was as small as mine was
big, and for a time at least, each of us
thought we had it the right size.
♦ ♦ ♦
Ken Jameson, 1 found out, was the
reporter who asked him the name of
his boat. Oliver showed me a picture
of him. He looked like Alan Alda. . . .
Oliver told me about him. "Ken
wrote for some paper," he said, "in a
town 'cross the bay called Big . . . Big, I
don't remember. He stayed in a hotel
a half hour north of Incline for two
days, then he stayed at my house for
His world was as small
as mine was big, and for
a time at least, each of us
thought we had it the
right size.
one day, and then he left. What was
the name of that town he come from?
Somewhere near D.C. called Big ... 1
'on' 'no', named fer a feesh, wadn't it.
Big su-um, su-um big . . . wif teef, I
'on' 'no'.
"Anyway, Ken lived in Big Su-um
Wif Teef outside a D.C. Said it was
only two hours away. He had this
bright red car. I'm still waitin' ta git
that story he wrote," he said. "It's
been two years."
"D.C. still seems like 11,000 miles
away to me wherever 1 am," I told
him. "Maybe it got lost in the mail."
Three weeks later, on a cold Febru-
ary afternoon, Oliver came into
Noreen's from the post office with his
mail. . . . [He] sat across from me at
the table with [his dog] Dirt belly up
by his right foot, ordered a coffee,
handed me some papers and said,
"Read'm to me," so I did. It was a
manuscript of the story that Mr. Ken
wrote about Oliver for his Big Su-um
Wif Teef paper. Oliver said it was
about time. It read like this:
Oliver builds fenrlessh/ — boats. Every
liny, small wavelets chop across the water,
throwing themselves in vain against the
bow of his boat, named The Wliat? No
harm done, she will reach the oyster shoal
before first light.
"Before first light, the finest time.
Two hours between 3 and 5 a.m. Two
hours, the width of the edge on the
dull axe which splits nights from days.
"The oysters will be there. They've
been waiting, attached to the now
open shells of the oysters that lived be-
fore them. It's calm down there. They
don't know about wind or snow or
waves. If they could hear, they would
hear drowned noises, consonants re-
duced to vowels, enunciated shouts
softened into murmurs, except for the
staccato click of the oysterman's hard
metallic tongs across the shoal.
"And if the oysters could look up
and see through the murky surface of
their brackish world, they might see
Oliver on the other end of those tongs,
his fat face swimming with the waves
on the restless surface. They would
see him and the bottom of his boat
built of Cyprus patiently coaxed into
the form of a floating shell.
"Oliver Putz is the last of a dying
breed of men who practice an
unteachable craft, a great dinosaur,
The What? a piece of art . . . ."
That's the sort of thing Ken wrote
for a living. . . .
"Ga-awd," he took a deep breath
with his tongue between his teeth so
that he hissed "Dammit. Why don' he
jist up an' call m' boat a piece a shit . . .
. Dinosawr." That was February. It
was the only time anyone had seen
him get offended. 1 decided to stay in
Incline longer than usual that time.
When the months in 1984 stopped
having "r's" in them, Oliver started
coming into Noreen's more often, usu-
ally carrying one or two thin books in
his hands each time. "I'm gonna
read," he'd say. Few people paid at-
tention to him when he said this. Few
people paid attention to him at all.
♦ ♦ ♦
By August, things had changed for
him. He was a smart man before his
mind began failing him. One after-
noon, when there was a lull in the con-
versation, 1 asked him, "When is the
next spring tide?"
He shifted in his chair, and said,
"That depends on the next new moon,
which is, lemme see here." His lips
parted into the first grin he ever made
as he pulled a newspaper from a back
pocket and rustled it open to the tide
tables and moon phases. "It says here,
the 25th, high tide at 11:46 a.m." 1 was
surprised and told him so and con-
gratulated him. He read aloud from
the newspaper until I was bored.
Something was lost from the top of his
head.
Washington College Magazine/Fa// 1991
I came back a week before Labor
Day, 1988. ... He was thin. The same
blue pants ballooned like a Zoot Suit.
His bald spot shined. His hair stood
nearly on end in places. In others, it
fell to his ears and shoulders. He re-
minded me of pictures I saw of
Lyndon Johnson during his last days
on the ranch. The dog wasn't with
him, but she was still alive. He pursed
his lips when he saw me, and he said,
"Come with me." We rode in his
Dodge Dart to his house.
When Oliver opened the front door.
Dirt saw me, started barking and ran
in circles around this small plastic toy
dolphin. As I stooped down to pick it
up and throw it for her she growled a
growl from the deepest depths of hell.
"Drop it," Oliver warned me, so I
dropped it. He had told me what hap-
pened when Ken tried to pet the dog
years ago, but this was worse. "If you
throw that dolphin, "he said, "you'll
need stitches in your leg. Let me tell
you why."
Oliver was waxing eloquent. He
scared me.
"You see," he said, "Dirt somehow
decided at some point that she had
gotten pregnant and had given birth to
this squeaky toy. She 'nurses' it. Day
before yesterday, she found a stray cat
playing with it outside. She broke into
a barking howl like beagles do when
they curse and she started running
circles around the clawing thief. The
cat turned around and around to keep
its face to the dog, you know, but kitty
couldn't keep it up and Dirt finally
dove, just like that, at the cat's neck,
sunk her teeth into it, shook her head
twice, and the cat went dead limp with
a broken neck. Dirt dropped the car-
cass, sniffed it once, picked up the dol-
phin and wobbled over to a tree where
she sat down and tenderly licked the
dolphin's plastic coat until it was
shiny. I named the dolphin Whaley.
Don't touch the dolphin. Now, I have
something to show you."
We walked around the back to the
pier where The What? rocked in a light
breeze, making "plip, plip/ plip"
sounds. "I've been doing things," he
told me as we stepped into the boat's
cabin. He reached under what was left
of a seat, pulled out a tackle box,
opened it, pulled out a manila folder,
opened it, pulled out a notebook,
opened it to page one, and handed it to
me. "Read this," he said.
In blue ink in painfully steady letters
was the title How I Built The Wliat? by
Oliver Putz, and it began: "Remember,
you're building a boat, not a watch, so
relax, okay?"
While I flipped through it, he told
me about loneliness and life at the side
of Birch Creek. He was only 53 and he
started to fear the stairs, and then he
started to fear his age, and when Dirt
had Whaley, he came as close as he
would to having a family. I never
thought he was lonely. "I need more
now," he said. "I can't have some
chicken necker call me a dinosaur in
front of all his readers. I can read
The instructions were as
clear as a bell. They were
so clear they made me
laugh. They were lonely
directions, four years in
the making.
now." And he could write. The in-
structions were as clear as a bell. They
were so clear they made me laugh.
They were lonely directions, four years
in the making.
"I'm sending this to that son of a
bitch tomorrow," he said as if Ken had
just left yesterday. "Did you know that
the Latin name for a canvasback is
aythya valinisera? It means 'wild cel-
ery.'"
♦ ♦ *
He sat on a chair that was a stool be-
cause somehow the back had been bro-
ken. Lying on its side on the floor was
a half-assembled Habitrail, a fancy
hamster cage full of orange tubes.
There were books about computers
stacked next to the refrigerator, next to
piled boxes of model cars and air-
planes. On the dining room table there
were games — boxes and boxes of old
and new games from big toy compa-
nies, games I'd never seen before. In
front of him, on the kitchen table, was a
machine dissected into a million tiny
parts. He was skinny, and when he
spoke, he sounded like somebody else.
"Oh, hello Paul," he said for the first
Hme, without looking up.
"What the hell are you doing?"
"Just a bit of catching up." As I
watched over his shoulder, he screwed
a tiny screw into a tiny hole with a tiny
Phillips head screwdriver lost in those
big, rough, oyster tonging hands of his.
He scribbled some notes on a pad.
"I said, 'What The Hell Are You Do-
ing?'"
He looked up and smiled at me like
he did the first time he looked up the
tides in the newspaper. "1 write In-
struc-tions," he said.
"For what?"
"For everything. Did you know I'm
a genius? This is a CD player. Alpine
needs an up-dated, simp-lified manual
for their repairmen, so they're having
me write it."
Through the kitchen window, 1 saw
an empty dock. "Where's The WJiat?" I
asked.
He looked at me, then at the dining
room, then the ceiling, then at me
again and whispered, "1 'on'no'," and
giggled like old men never do.
I looked around one more time. The
games, the toys, the machines, they all
amounted to much less than The WImt?
They cluttered the house. 1 didn't
come here enough to really care, but
somehow I felt that a cruel joke was be-
ing played on me. A dose of some-
thing I needed every few years was
gone. 1 was being tricked. He told me
he never went upstairs. I don't think
he slept. He just picked apart these
things he received in the mail or possi-
bly from an armored delivery van. He
explained them and put them back to-
gether again. He told me he made
more than most Harvard graduates. I
said, "hmmph."
There was a silence — a difficult si-
lence unlike the ones with which we
used to pass the afternoons at
Noreen's.
Finally, he found something to say.
"You hate this," he said. "You hate
this because (a) you can't do this, (b)
I'm not a dinosaur anymore, (c) you're
jealous, and (d) you just don't under-
stand it." He put the screwdriver
down and looked at the refrigerator.
"Please don't bother trying to under-
stand me, you just keep driving
around and around, okay?" There was
anger.
I nodded, especially for (d). This
wasn't why I came here.
♦ ♦ ♦
Next Fourth of July I came back.
Noreen told me Oliver Putz died of
natural causes. I'm sure these terror-
ists came up with new bombs to make
his directions obsolete. He never got
around to rewriting the directions to
Monopoly, and I never got back
around to Incline.
Washington College Magazine/fa// 1991
WASHINGTON COLLEGE
Alumni Reporter
Four Alumni
Join Board of
Trustees
Three alumni were elected to the
Board of Visitors and Gover-
nors in May, and a fourth was
appointed bv the governor this sum-
mer. William B. Johnson '40 and
Karen Gossard Price '73 won the
alumni election, Dietrich H. Steffens
'43 was elected by the Board, and
Michael Macielag '73 was appointed to
a new term.
Johnson, a native of Salisbury, Mary-
land, and chairman emeritus of
Whitman Corporation (formerly IC In-
dustries), first served on the board
from 1964 to 1969. He was elected
again in 1984 and has served continu-
ously since. He established the Rufus
Johnson Scholarship Fund at the Col-
lege and provided the lead gift for the
Benjamin A. Johnson Lifetime Fitness
Center now under construction.
Johnson holds a law degree from the
University of Pennsylvania and was
awarded an honorary doctor of laws
from Washington College in 1975. He
is former president and chief executive
officer of the Illinois Central Railroad,
and former chairman and chief execu-
tive officer of IC Industries.
Karen Price of Chestertown is a
President Trout (second froiii ri^^ht)
congrntidatcs alumni rininers on their
finish in the Alamo Aluunii Rnn. Those
who ran five mUcs for their alma mater
were (left to right) Ken Oeldlcers '64, fane
Breene Kenney '77, Kevin Kroencke '82
and Greg Anderson '87.
newcomer to the board, but no
stranger to College service. Active in
many community organizations, she is
past presitient of the Alumni Associa-
tion and was a member of the 1989-90
Presidential Search Committee.
She holds a bachelor of arts degree
and a master's degree in psychology
from Washington College and is an
equal employment opportunity spe-
cialist with the Maryland State High-
way Administration.
Dick Steffens is president of D. H.
Steffens & Company, a land engineer-
ing firm in LaPlata, Maryland. He has
been a member of the Visiting Com-
mittee, is active with the Alumni
Council, and serves as Class Agent.
Honored by the Maryland Society of
Surveyors in 1989, Steffens studied en-
gineering at Purdue University and
the Johns Hopkins University. He and
his wife, Peggy '46, live in
Bryantown, Maryland.
Michael Macielag, president and
chief executive officer of Chesapeake
Bank & Trust Co. in Chestertown, has
served on the Board as an alumni rep-
resentative since 1984. He has been ap-
pointed by Governor Schaefer to a five
year term.
Macielag is former assistant to the
president and acting director of devel-
opment at WC and past president of
the Alumni Association.
Two New Alumni
Chapters Celebrate
Two new alumni chapters debuted
with events this spring.
In May the New York chapter cel-
ebrated "The Best of Both Worlds:
Friends from Chestertown, Food from
Zabar's." Alumni picnicked in Central
Park and cheered WC runners in the
Alamo Alumni Run.
Later that month Boston alumni
gathered at Fenway Park to watch the
Orioles beat the Red Sox.
Presidents of the new chapters are
Bill Mortimer '82 and Francie Bumet
'84, New York, and Tom Tansi '85,
Boston.
Washington College Magazine/Fu// 1991
WASHINGTON COLLEGE
Class Notes
J 1 Elizabeth "Pet" Mace Farver is
"grateful to be a healthy octogenarian," liv-
ing for the last 50 years in the house that
was built for her in Cambridge, MD. Her
interests are projects that involve education,
church work, local history, and family
geneology. For 25 years she was a member
of the board of the Children's Home Foun-
_ dation of the Eastern Shore. Pet also enjoys
reading, keeping scrapbooks on numerous
subjects, traveling, and watching television,
especially Orioles baseball games.
Orr Omar James Carey retired from the
U.S. Navy in 1973 as a commander. He also
worked for the Defense Department and
the U.S. Treasury. He spends summers in
his childhood home, a Federal style house
located next to the Teackle Mansion/Mu-
seum, in Princess Anne, Md. He spends
winters at the Indian River Colony Club, a
mihtary retirement community, in
Melbourne, FL.
\DU Maryland State Comptroller Louis
L. Goldstein was presented the first Steven
Muller Award for Distinguished Policy
Leadership by the Maryland Independent
College and University Association in rec-
ognition of his contributions to the strength
of higher education in Maryland.
OK) Ernest G. Holland reports that
"nothing has changed in the last few years.
Still live in the same house, 45 years, still
have the same wife, 54 wonderful years,
still the same number of grandchildren, 0.
Only 1 have changed. My hearing is going
down and my golf handicap is going up."
OO Bill Doering has recovered from a
hip replacement operation in July and is
again busy with his retirement hobbies of
wine, food, and jazz music.
Hilda Ott Micari is first vice president of
the Baltimore District of General Federation
of Women's Clubs. She serves on the ex-
ecutive committee of the Over 60 Employ-
ment Counseling Service, plus tutors
middle school students in the inner city.
Fred '40 and Hilda are building a chalet m
Berkley Springs, WV.
rr^ Mortimer Garrison, educator, psy-
chologist, and research consultant, has
served on the U.S. Children's Bureau and
the President's Commission on Mental Re-
tardation. In 1992 he will begin his tenth
year of "well-enjoyed retirement." Mort
and his wife, Jean Wood '43, plan to return
on Reunion Weekend '92 for "whatever
Ginny, John, and Bob Carter plan."
Robert Garrison is "still trying to win the
Kentucky Derby and the Preakness."
John Smith is executive assistant to the
chairman and CEO of Taylor Energy Com-
pany, an oil and gas production company
in New Orleans. He is also executive direc-
tor of the Patrick F. Taylor Foundation. "My
responsibilities include dealing with offi-
cials at the highest national and state levels.
In addition to his oil and gas business, my
employer is active in civic endeavors, espe-
cially in education." Both 60 Minutes and
Time magazine have profiled Mr. Taylor
and the student programs he funded. These
programs were coordinated by John Smith.
t:v3 Don McClennan, aboard Marie Eleua, is
catching his breath in St. Thomas, VI, before
continuing down the Leewards and Wind-
wards to Venezuela, Panama, and, depend-
ing on his resolve which has a tendency to
dissolve during unpleasant weather, into
the South Pacific and home the other way.
D\J Donald Campbell, retired in Balti-
more, is interested in thoroughbred racing.
In our last "Notes," classmate Daniel
"Alkie" Hall invited alumni to visit his
thoroughbred farm in Cecil County.
~OZ. Suzanne Horn Duckworth, vice
president of human resources for Capitol
South, found alumnus Richard Heyman
sharing her church in Charleston, SC.
Ot This fall Robert Lipsitz begins his
second year as the president of the Wash-
ington College Alumni Association. He
lives with his wife, Roxy, in Baltimore and
"commutes" to Chestertown.
OD Robert Altmaier has retired after 37
years of service in the DuPont Company.
He lives in Wilmington, DE.
Rodgers Smith is provost of San Diego
Community College. He lives in California
and enjoys hunting and fishing.
DO John Richey has settled in Surrey,
England, where he is doing executive
search work in the financial sector.
OO James W. Lewis has been named se-
nior vice president for outplacement and
consulting services for People Management
-North Central. James joined the firm in St.
Paul, MN, m 1987 as a vice president. Prior
to that he was with Control Data Corp.
OU Robert Aldridge and his wife, Jane
Smith, live in Leonardtown, MD. Bob is a
pilot for United Airlines and Jane is the
owner of Calvert's Choice, an antique shop.
\jO Carolyn "Dunnie" Gray is a quality
consultant for Eastman Kodak in Rochester,
NY. "Here's to life-long alumni ties! On re-
cent business trips 1 caught up with Tony
Parker '64 in Boston, Steve Levine in Atlan-
ta, and Jerry Jenkins '65 in DC. This adds
some fun to a rigorus travel schedule!"
Cynthia Stillinger has completed a two-year
course in drug and alcohol rehabilitation
and plans to work with VISTA on Native
American reservations.
OO Marilyn Davis Girard's son,
Geoffrey '90, graduated from Washington
College the weekend of her 25th Reunion.
She and her husband, John, live in Cherry
Hill, NJ, and keep their boat on Worton
Creek near Chestertown. Eight months a
year they sail the Bay on weekends.
OO Christina "Bonnv" Schilling
Harrison lives in Raleigh, NC. Bonny is
Washington College Magazine/ffl// 2991
writer-in-residence with the United Arts
Council of Raleigh. She also conducts work-
shops in poetry and fiction.
Dr. Benjamin Troutman is deputy superin-
tendent of the Portsmith Public Schools (af-
ter serving 18 years with the VA Beach Pub-
he Schools). He directed a nationally recog-
nized curriculum reform project and his
staff development operation was named an
exemplary program by the American Asso-
ciation of School Administrators in 1983.
D / Pamela Marshall DeWeese, Ph.D.,
MSW, adjunct professor of social work at
Wayne State Univ., practices psychotherapy
in Birmingtham, Ml, where she lives with
her husband and two teenaged children.
After college, Dave Fegan went to Mary-
land Law School. He has worked for the
Office of Chief Counsel at the IRS ever
since. "Recently a friend at the office men-
tioned a fellow he knew who had been a
basketball standout, although he wasn't
tall. It was Marty Smith! In fact, Marty and 1
had attended a recent birthday party for
our common friend and did not recognize
each other. In April the friend got Marty,
myself and our wives together for dinner.
Marty looks 25 years older, but 1 can't un-
derstand why he didn't recognize me."
Jim James left WC in his sophomore year
and returned to Michigan to enter the real
estate business. He specializes in "high
end" residential properties in Grand Rap-
ids. Jim would like to hear from Dan James
and Dick Louck before Reunion in May.
Tom Lacher received his M.P.A. from State
University of NY in 1971 , He has worked
for the Center for Disease Control since
1967. This summer Tom is busy as CDC
Softball league commissioner: "14 teams,
lots of fun, lots of work. Remember that the
1996 Olympics are in Atlanta. Hope to see
alumni at the games." Tom would like to
hear from John Martin, Carl Ortnian, Jim
Chalfont, and Judith Lynn Thompson.
Jean Stirling McFadden received her MBA
from Rice University in 1989 and works as a
product manager for mutual funds at
Transamerica Fund. Travel and languages
remain strong interests. She hopes to hear
from Vicky Hoagland, Karen Berger Wun-
derlich. Bob McMahon, and Marty Smith.
Alan C. Ray formed his own investment
brokerage, Oxford Investment Group in Co-
lumbia, MD in January 1991 after 11 years
in senior management with a national firm.
Judy Lynch Reynolds is associate director
in the graduate admissions office at Suffolk
University in Boston, MA. She spends her
leisure time working out and reading.
OO Harold D. Jopp, former acting asso-
ciate executive director of the Maryland
State Board for Community Colleges and
former dean of the University of Delaware,
has been named director of the graduate
studies program at the College of Notre
Dame of Maryland in Baltimore.
Alan C. Perry is manager of executive de-
velopment for Sears Roebuck and Co. in
Chicago, IL. He has finished two Chicago
marathons, "best time 3:40," and will race
in the 1991 version of Chicago to Mackmac
Yacht Race, the world's longest freshwater
race. He will be crew aboard a 43' Beneteau
named Paramount, which is rated the fast-
est in its class in North America.
Benjamin T. Whitman is associate director
for the Secondary School Admission Test
Board (SSATB) in Princeton. He recently
completed the oral defense of his doctoral
dissertation at Teachers College, Columbia
University. That same day he was elected to
a three-year term as member of the Board
of Education of Lawrenceville Township in
New Jersey. In May he paid tribute to
Chatty at his retirement dinner in C-town.
A Planned Gift
Lasts Forever
'69
Lindsay A. Arrington lives in
Asheboro, NC, and works with the state
prison system. "Great job security as the
prison population does nothing but rise."
Antoinette "Toni" Neally has been pro-
moted to director of marketing for Virginia
Beach Psychiatric Center. She joined the
Center in 1988 as community relations coor-
dinator. Before that she was a social worker
with the Department of Social Services.
/ \J Robert "Beef" Lehman is a senior
commercial account underwriter for State
Farm Fire and Casualty Co. in Greeley, CO.
He and his wife, Dottie, will be relocating
this September when State Farm opens a
new regional office in the New York area.
/ J. Christopher Rogers is a banker for
Citibank N.A. He lived in Paris for the past
eight years, after having spent ten years in
Africa. Chris is in charge of Africa for the
global private bank and his wife, Lana,
does some freelance real estate work in
Paris. Their three children are bilingual.
/ \D Michael Brown is still living in San
Francisco "and loving it." Michael and his
wife, Mary, fly DC-lOs out of Honolulu.
Dr. Constance Campbell is director of pupil
services for the Wallingford-Swarthmore
School District in Pennsylvania.
Michael Macielag has been appointed to the
Independant Bankers Association of
America's federal legislative committee.
The IBAA is a national organization of 6,200
Since the Roaring Twenties, the an-
nual cost of a Washington College edu-
cation has been equivalent to the pur-
chase price of a new automobile. Car
fashions and technology have changed
— from Ford Model T's to Mazda
Miatas — but the ingredients of a hb-
eral arts education have staved the
same. Today, Washington College of-
fers a committed teaching faculty, a
formal curriculum which encourages
students to reason and value their cul-
tural inheritance, first-rate facilities in a
beautiful campus setting, and the tradi-
tions of a noble mission.
Washington College is a part of vou:
a shining memory of your youth, and
one of the principles around which you
built your life. Now more than ever,
the College needs your support as it be-
gins its third century. Our future de-
pends upon alumni and friends who
make provisions in their estate plans.
Scholarships, faculty enhancement
funds, and book endowments are all
urgently needed, but cannot be pro-
vided by tuition payments alone.
Won't you help? Unlike a car, an edu-
cation lasts a lifetime. A planned gift
lasts forever.
For information about estate and tax
planning for Washington College (in-
cluding ways in which you can donate
your car), write Martin Williams, Direc-
tor of Development, Washington Col-
lege, Chestertown, MD 21620. Phone
1-800-422-1782, e\t. 398.
community banks, locally owned and oper-
ated, dedicated to meeting community
needs. Mike is president and CEO of
Chesapeake Bank and Trust Co., a S43 mil-
lion community bank in Chestertown.
/ O Jeanna Gallo asks if anyone ever
hears from Tom Middleton? "I lived with
him, Jane Meilink, Wvnne Wooley, and
Karen Thompson in New ^'ork in the late
1970s. We've all lost touch with Tom since
he moved to Hoboken. I just attended T.J.
Finkbinder's '74 surprise 40th birthday
Washington College Magazine/Fn// 1991
party. He is a drama and English teacher
now, still directing and acting. Nancy
Knuth '77 is getting married and moving to
Canada. Karyn Thompson '78 became a
film/video editor and married and moved
to Tennessee. Joel Elins is a Broadvi'ay
stage manager (he worked on the last play
DeNiro did on B'way). I'd love to hear
from John DiAmico. The last time 1 saw
Linda Hamilton -78 was at my surprise
birthday party in NY before she went out to
'the coast.' James Cameron has turned her
into an absolute amazon for Terminator 2."
Phil Vogler, an attorney specializing in civil
litigation with Montgomery, McCracken,
Walker & Rhodes in Philadelphia, has tried
cases in Kansas City, San Francisco, Wash-
ington, DC, Denver, and Seattle. He keeps
a 28' sailboat on the Bohemia River.
/ O Jonathan C. Burton was activated in
the U.S. Coast Guard in June. He is on duty
at Headquarters in Washington, DC, work-
ing in pollution control and enforcement.
Andrew Gruver is a dentist in Glen Burnie,
MD. He recently returned from a short
missionary trip to Costa Rica. Andy and
nine other Baltimore dentists rendered sur-
gical care to Costa Ricans and Nicaraguan
refugees and migrant workers.
/ y Victoria Gadsden Marsh studied
acting in New York with actress Geraldine
Page and director Terry Schreiber. Victoria
is currently an actress and director in Cam-
bridge, MA. She recently played Josie in A
Moon for the Misbegotten at Pennsylvania
Stage Co. and produced Agnes of God for
the Cambridge Theatre Company.
'80
Carolyn Choate-Turnbull was
named 1991 Environmental Achievement
Award winner by the Nashua, New Hamp-
shire Earth Day Association for a five-part
television series she wrote and produced
about protecting New Hampshire wetlands.
Jeffery Hazlett, is a financial consultant for
Shearson Lehman Brothers, Inc. in
Chambersburg, PA. "Having fun and
achieving more than I thought possible dur-
ing my college years. Best wishes to all."
O 1 John D' Amanda is a partner in the
law firm of D' Amanda, Oppenheimer and
Greenfield. He is the third generation of
D' Amanda in the firm, his grandfather
joined in 192L John and his wife, Kathrvn,
had a third child in January.
'82
Leslie Bobik is studying to become
an ultrasound technician. She will com-
plete her internship and graduate in Octo-
ber. She hopes to specialize in echocardi-
ology. She would like to hear from Mark
Simpson before Reunion in May.
Douglas Brown and his wife JoAnn are
happy to be back in the Washington area af-
ter almost two years in Chicago. Doug is
property manager for Oakwood apartments
in Falls Church, VA.
Patricia Leslie Day graduated from Mary-
land General Hospital's School of Nursing
in 1987 and became a registered nurse. She
spent two years working at the Johns
Hopkins Hospital as a staff nurse on a liver
and kidney surgical transplant floor. Since
1989 she has worked for the Johns Hopkins
School of Medicine as a research nurse with
a group of patients that have a rare genetic
illness know as Huntingtons Disease. She
would like to hear from Kathleen DeFlaun.
Roberta Baumann GarduUo and her two-
year-old son, Alexander, traveled to Tokyo
last spring. The fall found her family in
East and West Germany and this summer
they traveled to Cancun and Ixtapa,
Mexico. "When my husband, Mike, can get
away from his job at Standard Charter Bank
in Baltimore, he comes too. 1 encourage
parents to travel with their children. It has
never been a burden, rather, fun, fun, fun.
Travel makes me a better social studies
teacher too." Roberta would like to hear
from Linda Maddox, Rick Norvell '81, Col-
leen O'Neill '78, and Kimberly Harquail be-
fore Reunion in May.
After graduation Virginia "Ginger"
Kurapka spent a year working in the library
at Johns Hopkins University. She then re-
turned to WC for a year as assistant to
president Douglass Cater. An extremely
cold winter drove her to California where
she entered graduate school in international
studies at the Monterey Institute. Before
completing her studies she was offered a
position as a foreign service officer with the
U.S. Department of State. Since joining the
Foreign Service she has served in Haiti
(when they kicked out the Duvalier), Indo-
nesia, and Hamburg, Germany. "I was for-
tunate enough to be here when the wall
came down. What a rush!"
Anne Kelly Laynor graduated from the
University of Maryland Law School in 1987
and is currently in private practice with an
eight-attorney firm in Baltimore. Her work
is primarily general civil litigation, includ-
ing contract claims, professional malprac-
tice, family law, and personal injury. She
would like to hear from Charles Bradley '81
and Becky Harris '85 before Reunion.
Suzanne DeRienzo Mannix is living "in the
country" on Long Island, NY, with her hus-
band, Dennis, and their daughter, Brittani.
Suzanne plans to come to Reunion in May
and hopes that Susan Chase, Beth Glascock
Wyrough, Elizabeth Gowen, Vincent
Filliben, and Joseph Crivelli will join her.
Sarah Mawson has received her M.S. de-
gree in cognitive development from the
University of Pennsylvania. She lives in
Wilmington, DE, with Tinsley Belcher '83
and Vanessa Hoopes '84.
William McCain received his MBA from the
Franklin P. Perdue School of Business at
Salisbury State University in 1987. The next
year he founded W.R. McCain Appraisals, a
firm that conducts real estate appraisals
throughout the Delmarva Peninsula.
Lori Murphy works as local programming
manager for Alpha Cable Communication.
Her most recent production and profes-
sional credits include first place award in
the New England Cable Television Public
Affairs Recognition and service as a judge
in the Earth Peace International Film Festi-
val. She and Joe Davison live in Williston,
VT, and would like to hear from Christy
Holt Chesser and Sarah Mawson.
Tom Roof has his own home inspection
business, Under One Roof Home Inspec-
tions, in Alexandria, VA.
John W. Sharp has been appointed princi-
pal of Rock Hall Middle School. John
taught social studies at Queen Anne's
Countv High School and was the assistant
principal and athletic director there.
Jack Willis is "still working hard to improve
the image of lawyers" while his wife, Betzv
Deaconson '85, is finishing her Master's in
counseling. They report that Terri Delancey
is a lieutenant in the Navv stationed in New
Orleans. Heather McAlpin Barnes '85 is a
science teacher and lives near Pia Bonaparte
Boyer '85 in Los Angeles. "Happy birthday
to all in the 30-2 club!"
Ov3 Linda Foster Beach has joined the
Fogarty International Center at the National
Institutes of Health as the volunteer ser-
vices coordinator. She assists NIH foreign
scientists and their families as they learn to
adjust to a new cultural environment.
James Corddry is manager of defined con-
tribution software development for a com-
puter technology firm called ACTl. He and
his wife. Colleen Miller '81, own a Sunbird
motorboat which replaced the '58 Whirl-
wind. They do a lot of boating on the
Chesapeake. "We bumped into Court
Trueth '81 and Laura Miller '79 with their
baby on Tilghman's Island last year and
visited with Andy '84 and Liz Bate in
Florida last winter." Colleen has switched
to human resources and is now an assistant
with Aspen Systems while pursuing a
master's degree at the Univ. of Maryland.
Melanie G. Gness is in charge of the na-
tional lobbying program for the National
Washington College Magazine/Fa// 1991
Births
Louis '73 and Doris Brooks '83 Reedt, a
daughter, Elizabetli Eleanor, June 18, 1991.
Laurie Honan Hogans '76, a son, Michael
Dennis, on April 22, 1991. He joins sister
Samantha, three.
Rebecca Williams '76, a daughter, Rebecca
Branson, on March 8, 1991.
Andrew W. Crosby '77, a son, Andrew
Reiley, on March 28, 1991.
Richard C. Denison '78, a son, Christopher
Cole, on April 26, 1991.
Lisa Martin Cameron-Koch '79, a daugh-
ter, Devon Rathlyn Koch, on March 16,
1991 . She joins sister Gillian Mary, four.
Victoria Gadsden Marsh '79, a son, Clay-
ton Gabriel Gadsden, September 7, 1990.
Thomas V. Goode '79 and Jane Ditman
Goode '85 a daughter, Victoria Anne, on
June 13, 1990.
Margaret Handle St. Jean '80, a daughter,
Mary Elizabeth, on February 23, 1991. She
joins brother Peter, two.
John R. Townsend '81, triplets, John R. Jr.,
Sophie Rein, and Anna Leigh.
John F. D' Amanda '81, a son, Louis, on
January 30, 1991.
Debby Florv Hansen '82 and Scott Hansen
'82, a son, Bryan Samuels, on June 3, 1991.
Mark Simpson '82, a son, Patrick William,
September 1990.
Gwyn Hekking Heaver '83 and Philip
Heaver '83, a son, Philip Appleton 111, on
April 16, 1991.
Karen Perkinson McGee '84, a son, Conor
Russell, on April 9, 1991.
Maria Jose Vanegas-Pessoa '84, a daughter,
Estefania, on July 22, 1991. Estefania's god-
mother is Laura Fahsbender '81.
Kristin Sichelstiel Sackman '85, a daughter,
Margaret Jean, on June 9, 1991. She joins sis-
ter Lee Ann, two.
Susan Summers Gaddis '86 and Robert
Gaddis '85, a son, Matthew, May 1 6, 1 991 .
Michele Bieza Moon '85 a daughter, Caitlin
Louise, on March 12, 1991.
Kristin Thomas Ritchie '87, a son, Austin
David, May 18, 1991. He joins sister Jordan.
Marriages
Philip Vogler '75 to Patricia McKay, March
1990.
Dr. Carol Lynn Baker '75 to Dr. Andrew
Brent Rudo on June 2, 1991.
Verna A. Wilkens '79 to Kevin Stewart
Hensley on June 1, 1991.
W. Frank Molali '79 to Nancy Ann Manfre
on May 25, 1991.
Coleen Curry '81 to Paul D. Mawicke on
April 27, 1991.
William R. McCain '82 to Teresa Bunting,
January 1990.
Anthony John Villani '82 to Suzanne L.
Woodfinonjuly 20, 1991.
Vanessa Haight '84 to Randall S. Hoopes on
May 18, 1991. Sarah Mawson '82, Tinsley
Belcher '84, Jane Mawson '85, Nancy Gillio
'86 and Sarah Luke Taylor '89 were there.
Anne Mane Plumer '85 to Joseph Neal
Fisher, August 12, 1989. Lorraine Sexton
'84 was maid of honor; Kelly Cupka '85,
Scott Brewster '85 and Beth Wolf '88 at-
tended.
Stephanie Ann Callow '84 to Michael Ri-
chard Sherman on May 4, 1991.
Dianne M. Maloney '84 to Christopher
Long Stovall on February 15, 1991.
Monica Ann Perera Jarmer '85 to Gary
Wayne Knuckles on Mav 11, 1991.
Alan G. Piazzi '86 to Chantal Marie
Permuy on August 10, 1991.
M. Joanna Wilson '88 to William M. Aus-
tin, May 11, 1991. Clay Eichelberger '91
was there.
Amy Boor '88 to Bryce Chase, Jr. '89 on
September 29, 1990. Kathy Brookhart '88
and Pete Salit '86 were attendants. Paige
Yates '88, Irene Nicolaidis '87 and Rene
Jerome '88 were guests.
Matthew Weir '89 to Ann Keating Luskey
on June 8, 1991.
Michael G. Greig '89 to Jeen Marie Brown
on April 27, 1991.
Carolyn (Carrie) Naff '89 to Michael Scott
Johnson '90 on December 29, 1990. Mike
McGinniss '90 was best man , Maureen
McCaffrey '91, Brian KroII '89, Kim Harb
'88 and Chris Schanno '89 attended.
Michele Hartnett '90 to Sean T. Andersen
'91 on May 25, 1991.
Jerry Peden '90 to Danielle Hoageson, Au-
gust 3, 1991. Stefan Strein '90 was best
man. Chris Martin '90, Curtis Hollister
'90, Wendy Snow '90, and Jim Findlay '92
attended.
Food Processors Assoc, a scientific associa-
tion of food manufacturers in Washington,
D.C. She lobbies state legislators. "Dr. Tay-
lor, those agonizing Political Sci courses
paid off!" She and her husband just built a
house on the water in Annapolis.
'84
Stephanie Paup received her
master's degree in library science from the
Catholic University of America in 1990 and
works for the law firm of Arent, Fox, Kint-
ner, Plotkin & Kahn in Washington, DC.
'85
Daniel Coon, currently assigned to
the vice and narcotics division of the How-
ard County Police Department, received
Officer of the Year Awards in 1987 and 1990
and has received outstanding service
awards from Mothers Against Drunk Driv-
ing (MADD) for three years in a row.
Henry "Larry" Culp graduated from
Harvard Business School in 1990 and has
relocated to Simsbury, CT, where he is now
the director of marketing, environmental
products, for Veeder-Root Company.
Jane Ditman Goode is membership coordi-
nator for the Audubon Society of the Cen-
tral Atlantic States. Jane and her husband,
Tom '79, live in Hyattsville, MD.
Bonnie Garr Hoffman is busy writing her
fourth novel while she works on publishing
her second. She lives with her husband and
two voung children in Chicago.
Michele Breza Moon and her husband,
Steven, own and run Moon Services, Inc., a
commercial refrigeration, heating, and air
conditioning company, in Elkton, MD. She
is a freelance writer in her spare time.
Marie "Plum" Plumer-Fisher has given up
coaching Division II volleyball at New-
Hampshire College to pursue a manage-
ment career in retail. Now she is the store
manager for Eagle Outfitters in Portland,
ME. Plum and her husband, Joe, have re-
cently moved to Limerick, "the boonies,"
for some peace and quiet. In the first week
Washington College Magazine /Fu// 19.93
they were there their apartment burned to
the ground and Plum lost all of her WC
yearbooks and photos. She would love to
hear from any old Zeta pals or team mem-
bers who might have memories to spare.
OO William Fasssett has moved to Se-
attle and is working for the Municipal
League of King County, a non-profit agency
that handles public education on growth
management, governance, and other public
policy matters for the region.
In April, Charles "Chip" McLeod became
administrator for Kent County Commis-
sioners. Chip is conducting the day-to-day
management of county offices, while listen-
ing to public requests.
Bill Quinn lives in Denton, MD, and works
at the Caroline Counseling Center as a drug
prevention coordinator.
Doug Rose is assistant director of publish-
ing at the American Counsel for the Arts in
New York. "WC alumni who care about
the arts in America are invited to contact
me at ACA, (202) 245-4510, for advocacy
and membership information."
Rick Sowell, who moonlights as an assistant
lacrosse coach at Georgetown University,
spends most of the year as a professional la-
crosse player for Baltimore Thunder, a ma-
jor indoor lacrosse league team. In June, he
played in the STX Lacrosse Classic. Sowell,
who scored three goals and was credited
with the game-winning assist, was selected
as the team's most valuable player.
O / Russell Mark Nasteff moved to
Salisbury in September 1990 and is an attor-
ney for Robert A. Eaton P. A. He saw Pat
McMenamin and Lauren Ebaugh at Lincoln
Karnoff's '86 wedding.
Kristin Ritchie is teaching English to Gifted
and Talented seventh graders at Northern
Middle School in Calvert County.
^88
John Steven McAuliffe, an associate
in the Rockville law office of Miles and
Stockbridge, lives in Gaithersburg, MD.
Joanna Wilson Austin works at the Dela-
ware State Museum. She and her new hus-
band. Bill, plan to build a Victorian Revival
cottage as soon as they can wade through
all the necessary paperwork.
O^ Anne Andrews and Adrienne
Cupka have recently moved to Ellicott City.
Susan Armour Coulston, one of the first
four women inducted into Easton Rotary
Club in 1990, is now the assistant secretary.
Martin Haberl was named Teacher of the
Year at Perryville Middle School in Mary-
land. Martin, who received his master's
from WC, has been a sixth grade English
teacher for 13 years.
Cynthia J. Keighton has been promoted to
state director for Children's Choice of Dela-
ware, Inc., a private, non-profit foster care
agency.
Peter Mailer is assistant tennis coach at
Florida State while he is attending the
university's MBA program.
Recently married, Carrie Naff and Michael
Johnson are living in Newark, DE. Carrie is
pursuing her degree in clinical psychology
and Mike in business administration.
^90
Michael S. McGinniss is attending
Law School at William and Mary.
Deaths
Gilbert V. Byron '23, one of the Chesa-
peake Bay's most prolific and well-
known authors, died of congestive heart
failure on June 25, 199L His best known
work. The Lord's Oyster, is about growing
up in Chestertown in the early 1900s. He
was the author of 11 books, the last pub-
lished in 1990. He had no family.
Samuel S. Nicholson '29 of Riva, MD,
died of a heart attack on February 3, 1991.
He is survived by his wife, Dorothy.
Louisa Bowen Matthews '31 of Baltimore
died on July 12, 1991. She is survived by a
sister. Bunny Bowen Rasin '36.
William Edwin Freeny '31 of Seminole,
FL, died on April 25, 1991 . He was a past
chairman of the mathematics department
at Woodlawn Senior High School in Balti-
more County.
Joseph Bringhurst '33 of near Wilming-
ton, DE, died on April 7, 1991. Active in
banking for 40 years, Mr. Bringhurst re-
tired as president of the Artisan's Savings
Bank of Wilmington in 1972. He was ac-
tive on the board of directors and its ex-
ecutive committee until his death. He is
survived by 2 daughters, one brother, 7
grandchildren, and 5 great-grandchil-
dren.
Richard W. (Joe) Hall '34 of Ocean Pines,
MD, died on June 20, 1991 . Hall taught at
Chestertown HS for eight years before he
was commissioned a lieutenant jg in the
Navy. Mr. Hall then returned to the Eastern
Shore and taught at Deal Island, served as
principal at Preston and was supervisor of
plant operations for Caroline County Board
of Education. He is survived by his wife,
Lois Baxter Hall '33, one daughter, one son,
7 grandchildren, 2 sisters, and 4 brothers.
Philip J. Skipp '36 of Chestertown, MD died
July 22, 1991. He served as an officer in the
Army during World War II and had been a
practicing attorney for almost 50 years. He
was States Attorney for Kent County for
seven years and was active in civic affairs.
He also was a director, past president and
chairman of the board of Kent Savings and
Loan Association. He is survived by his
wife, Harriet Louisa Rogers Skipp '36, one
daughter, one son, and 3 grandsons.
Benjamin H. Vandervoort '38 of Hilton
Head Island, SC, died November 18, 1990.
During World War 11, as a battalion com-
mander with the Army's 82nd Airborne Di-
vision, Vandervoort was one of a few sol-
diers to be awarded two Distinguished Ser-
vice Crosses for bravery in combat. In the
movie adaptation of Cornelius Ryan's book.
The Longest Day, John Wayne portrayed Lt.
Col. Vandervoort. He also served for 20
years in the CIA. He is survived by his wife,
one daughter, and one son.
George A. Engelbert '39 of Baltimore, MD
died July 4, 1991. Mr. Englebert retired
about 20 years ago as manager of technical
publications for Bendix Radio and then
was a partner for several years in a busi-
ness and public relations firm. He is sur-
vived by a brother and a sister.
Samuel R. Seibel '50 of Brooklyn, NY, was
killed in an attempted robbery in Brook-
lyn on April 20, 1991. Sam was physian in
charge of employees and occupational
health at Brookdale Hospital Medical Cen-
ter in Brooklyn. He is survived by his wife
and one daughter.
Janet F. Parks '55 of New York City died
July 20, 1991. She is survived by her
mother and four sisters.
Henry C. Whitescarver '56 of La Paz,
Mexico, died March 16, 1991. After serv-
ing in the Marine Corps he entered the fi-
nancial planning field in California, even-
tually starting his own financial services
firm. He is survived by one daughter, one
son, a sister, and two brothers.
Thomas G. Narbeth '71 of Easton, PA,
died May 20, 1991. He was head of techni-
cal services at Skillman library, Lafayette
College. Previously he worked in the li-
braries at SUNY and at George Washing-
ton University. He is survived by his wife,
Pamela Seneff Narbeth '69, one son, and
one sister.
Washington College Magazine/fn// 3993
WASHINGTON COLLEGE
Currents
Students
Should Play A
Role In The
Master Plan
by Krciii "Sparky" Kdhj '92
When asked to write my opin-
ion on what the Campaign
for Excellence has meant to
me, I remembered the first time I ar-
rived at Washington College on a hot
August day in 1988. My initial impres-
sion was: "Look at all this mud!" It
was everywhere!
I later wondered where the "excel-
lence" was to be found in this quag-
mire. After a while 1 got used to it. It
seemed to become as much a part of
the College as the Elm. The mud was
something that was always there, and
could be enjoyed sometimes — after
particularly hard rains we would slide
about in it for fun.
There comes a time, however, when
the freshman's view on things changes
as he trudges his way through the
years and the mud. The mud starts to
represent less of an inconvenience and
becomes a sign of change. To me mud
will always be an indication of
progress, of a new beginning. Where
there is mud there is one facet of the
Master Plan on its way to completion.
Some facets are completed more
slowly than others, but the fact of the
matter is that something is taking
place — something that is new and
that is bound to make this college
more dynamic.
The Master Plan has given us more
than just mud. It has given us the
Decker Science Center, where students
use the modern lab facilities to explore
and learn. It has given us the Casey
Academic Center, where students use
language and computer classrooms to
further enhance these most necessary
skills. This year the mud and the Mas-
ter Plan will bring forth the Johnson
Lifetime Fitness Center, a place for stu-
dents to practice the art of being fit
and healthy. Soon, when the new Stu-
dent Center is completed, students will
have a larger place to relax, recreate,
and socialize. And of course we cannot
forget the stately Cater Walk or the
new grassy mall behind Bill Smith,
both the result of efforts to continue to
beautify the campus.
It is a shame, though, that this Cam-
paign for Excellence that has so im-
pacted the students has not encour-
aged them to have more of a say about
its plans or direction. As these very
projects were taking shape, the stu-
dents were expected to appreciate, or
at least to accept, the changes to their
environment. While some changes
may indeed benefit us, others have
simply confused us. For nine months
of the year, we consider this campus
our home. I, for one, would like to
know why my backyard, where 1 used
to play ball, was turned into a small
forest. I would like to be able to pre-
vent such things from happening
again. As students, we are able to give
valuable insights to the planning of
improvements to our surroundings.
Although the lack of student input
to the Campaign for Excellence thus
far can be attributed to lack of prior in-
volvement, to be fair, we students
have not all been ready or anxious to
make the effort to communicate our
feelings to the administration.
Throughout last year I attended sev-
eral well-publicized open campus fo-
rums about the renovations to the Stu-
dent Center and other projects and
was disappointed to see only a few fel-
low students there. While the input of
these few was good, it was embarrass-
ing to have so few peers interested in
and attending something that directly
affected them.
The administration and students
both have been negligent in this mat-
ter. The administration has failed to
include students in the planning
stages. Students have failed because,
once presented with the opportunitv
to make an impact, we have displayed
our apathy. Both failures have robbed
us all of potential ideas and the chance
to work together.
Fortunately, this negligence may not
last. The Student Government Asso-
ciation saw the need to have student
representation in the Campaign for Ex-
cellence and other future changes.
The Board of Visitors and Gover-
nors' Buildings and Grounds Commit-
tee has eagerly agreed to add a student
to its membership. This student will
be able to inform the student body of
the changes being considered and pro-
vide feedback to the Board regarding
student opinion.
The administration has made its first
move toward including the students.
Now the students must respond by
seeking and providing feedback to the
issues at hand. It is their chance to be-
come more invohed and to act instead
of react.
The Master Plan is not complete.
There are still many opportunities for
students to have their sav. The Cam-
paign for Excellence has been paid for
through the generous efforts of Jim
Price and Alonzo G. Decker. Perhaps
their efforts will inspire the student
body to actively and energetically be-
gin to make their contributions.
Washington College Magazine/ Fi;// 1991
SPECIAL SUPPLEMENT
ANNUAL REPORT 1990-1991
President Trout's Year In Review
FACULTY ACHIEVEMENTS
REPORT OF GIFTS
WASHINGTON COLLEGE
Annual Report
The State Of
The College:
1990-91 In
Review
by President Oiarlcs H. Trout
When I came to Washington
College on July \, 1990, 1 be-
gan with a 7:30 a.m. break-
fast for all members of the buildings
and grounds staff, and later in the day
I hosted a luncheon for secretarial,
clerical, and technical employees. One
year to the day, I held an anniversary
breakfast and luncheon for these same
colleagues, and a day later I dined
with all members of the administrative
staff. On each of these occasions, I
asked how many of my guests either
had been married or were presently
married. Most raised their hands.
Why this exercise? The answer is
simple. If one has been married, one
knows about honeymoons. One
knows about the idealized version,
and one knows about actualities. In
the idealized version, all is sweetness
and light — roses (at least) and maybe
even magnolia blossoms. In the more
realistic version, there tends to be a
certain, shall we say, unevenness —
e.g. "Why are you using my razor?"
So it is with presidential honey-
moons, which brings me closer to the
point. It is said that all presidents are
accorded honeymoons, and 1 eagerly
looked forward to mine. What I dis-
covered, though, was that your 24th
president's first year more closely re-
sembled not the idealized romantic
love nest of fiction but the ups and
downs ("Where did you put my tooth-
brush?") that most people experience.
("And by the way, why can't I order
beluga caviar without looking at the
right-hand side of the menu?")
Authors are not supposed to give
away their punch line at the very out-
set. Mine, as you will see shortly, is
that 1990-91 was a great year for the
College. Before I reach this point,
however, let me say in all candor that
there were some not-so-great mo-
ments. In sharing them with you, I am
assuming that all readers of the Wnsh-
ini^ton College Mngnzliie are of stronger
fibre than Mrs. General in Charles
Dickens' Little Dorritt. Mrs. General,
as Dickens fans among you will recall,
was the sort of person who mastered
an elaborate method for insulating her-
self from all unpleasant aspects of Vic-
torian life.
Mrs. General was not to be told of
anything shocking. Accidents, miser-
ies, and offenses were never to be
mentioned before her. Passion was to
go to sleep in the presence of Mrs.
General, and blood was to change to
milk and water. The little that was left
in the world, when all these deduc-
tions were made, it was Mrs. General's
province to varnish. In that formation
process of hers, she dipped the small-
est of brushes into the largest of pots
and varnished the surface of every ob-
ject that came into consideration. The
more cracked it was, the more Mrs.
General varnished it.
Assuming that there are few Mrs. or
Mr. Generals among you, I am encour-
aged to mention some of the brushfires
that disrupted my blissful honeymoon
— and then a few verv much more sig-
nificant concerns I gradually began to
identify.
Although the testimony of security
officers, local police, and those who
work in Student Affairs was unani-
mous in expressing their conviction
that substantial progress was made in
reducing substance abuse among our
undergraduates (something to which I
am wholly dedicated), we were not
immune. Late on an autumn night,
visitors from another college crashed a
party in Dorchester Hall, a fight broke
out, and a student lost part of his ear.
"The Night of the Great Ear Bite" now
belongs to College lore.
And then there was the lacrosse inci-
dent. On the way home in late Febru-
ary from scrimmages with Duke and
North Carolina State universities , ten
varsity players, seven of them starters,
loaded beer into their van. A high-
speed chase (the clocking was 93
m.p.h.) with North Carolina State Po-
lice ensued. To make a long story
short, none of the ten played for Wash-
ington College thereafter, and a verv
likely national championship went
down the drain. I recei\'ed 125 letters
on the subject, and 123 of them were
supportive. Still, 1 felt \'erv badiv for
the players and for all who had pinned
their hopes to what was to have been a
great season.
Toward the end of mv first 12
months, another athletic issue erupted,
and this one pertained to the tennis
program. Despite the extraordinary
records the men's team achieved un-
Washington College Magazine/.4ii(?i(i!/ Ri'pcrt 1991
der Coach Fred Wyman and the
women's squad amassed under Holly
Bramble, 1 received and accepted a rec-
ommendation that we move to coaches
who are full-time members of the Ath-
letic Department. As many of you
know, in the late 1980s an extended re-
view team recommended that as re-
sources might permit, we should move
in this direction, anci we have done so
in crew, swimming, and soccer. Now
we have taken that step in tennis. At
the core of the matter, institutional
control over our varsity programs was
a crucial consideration in shifting to-
ward full-time staff. Indeed, the
issue of institutional control
bubbled to the surface when the
tennis program was reviewed:
it seemed appropriate to take a
look at the program, because
the College in 1989 received so-
called "secondary sanctions"
from the National Collegiate
Athletic Association's Commit-
tee on Infractions. The current
files were turned over to legal
counsel, and I was informed that we
were required to self-report further
possible violations. This has now been
done, and at press time we await the
NCAA's assessment. My own exami-
nation of the files leads me to the con-
clusion that no past or present student
knowingly violated NCAA rules.
Whether the NCAA will see it this way
is something we cannot now know.
There were still other not-so-great
moments. On October 15th Dave
Wheelan, our estimable Vice President
for Development and College Rela-
tions, accepted a position with The Na-
ture Conservancy, and we were out
one Vice President. Sherry Magill, the
President's Deputy, accepted a posi-
tion with the Jessie Ball duPont Foun-
dation, and we were out a second Vice
President. After six years at the helm
as Dean of the College and Provost,
Elizabeth Bear elected to take a termi-
nal sabbatical, and we were out a third
Vice President. Some honeymoon!
There were even more important
disruptions to conjugal bliss, and they
remain as long-term issues for the Col-
lege. The State of Maryland's fiscal
woes are no secret, and our Christmas
present from Annapolis was a $100,000
cut in state aid. Happily, even deeper
cuts were forestalled, but as we look to
the future the prospects for robust
state and federal aid do not look prom-
ising. Income from endowment was
also down, and for a scary 30 days the
possibility of spilling red ink looked all
too real: clearly, attention must be
given in the future to the management
of our endowment portfolio, now close
to $20,000,000.
To add to the fun, the initial yield on
accepted students for the Class of '95
was under target, and the presidential
palms began to perspire.
To cap the year, June was featured
by the first appearance of brown
leaves on the great ceremonial Elm,
descendant of the tree under which
George Washington stood when he
The entering class . . . shows ability
levels as high as ever, and it is also
worth noting that 10 percent of the
class consists of minorities, the high
est figure in the College's history.
be O.K. — not smug, but in reasonable
shape. As a nation we are, as most of
you know, at the bottom of a demo-
graphic trough, and the next four years
are going to be challenging, to say the
least. When the number of college-age
students recovers in the 1990s, we will
be able to breathe a sigh of relief, but
probably not until then. The entering
class, incidentally, shows ability levels
as high as ever, and it is also worth
noting that 10 percent of the class con-
sists of minorities, the highest figure in
the College's history. Since diversifica-
tion of the student body is one of our
most important priorities, this is
a happy outcome. It should be
added that in the year ahead we
intend to take further initiatives
in respect to minority recruit-
ment, and we also intend to em-
bark upon a quest for students
from abroad.
took command of the Continental
Army. As Pat Trams reported to the
Alumni Council, it was not long before
the Elm registered a flat EKG. In early
August, the remnants of the tree were
toppled. So much for honeymoons.
But not to worry! In so many ways
it was, in fact, a wonderful year, and
one needs not to be an incurable ro-
mantic to come to this conclusion.
"What, Mr. President, is your evi-
dence?" A fair question.
The budget balanced. Stanford's
deficit was a rollicking $95,000,000,
Yale's was $11,000,000, and the Ameri-
can Association of Colleges recently re-
ported that more than half of all aca-
ciemic institutions ended fiscal year
1990-91 in arrears. Washington Col-
lege, in contrast, ended the year with a
surplus — a very small surplus, to be
sure, but positive numbers nonethe-
less. No fiscal sleight of hand was in-
volved. For instance, we fully funded
our plant renewal and replacement ac-
count, and even though budget man-
agers were asked to defer certain pur-
chases from mid-May through June
30th, the prevalent view is that no one
was truly crippled.
At press time, it appears we will be
welcoming 218 new students to Wash-
ington College and that we will begin
the year with an undergraduate count
of roughly 850. Given that our budget
target is 840, 1 believe we are going to
I would also claim that in gen-
_ eral, 1990-91 was a year most
faculty will remember favorably.
Recruitment of new colleagues went
extremely well, and our ability to hire
our first choices, which in most cases
we did, is a salient measure of where
we stand among national liberal arts
colleges.
Moreover, the scholarly productivity
of the faculty strikes me as impressive
(see "Faculty Achievements," page 37),
and so does the recognition my col-
leagues have received from outside —
a second Fulbright for Professor
Michael Malone, an NSF grant to Pro-
fessor Rosette Roat, PEN membership
for Professor Robert Day, a
Dumbarton Oaks fellowship for Pro-
fessor Jeanette Sherbondy, a National
Endowment for the Humanities sum-
mer grant to Professor Kevin Brien,
and invitations to our faculty from a
number of learned societies to give pa-
pers. This list is too long to include
here. Indeed, the scholarly bent of the
faculty is reflected by a vote that re-
placeci the old Faculty Handbook
statement to the effect that "properly
understood, scholarship is an adjunct
to teaching," to a bold statement that
scholarship is "important." In short,
Washington College seeks teacher-
scholars of high quality.
In addition, the faculty was heart-
ened by the successful resolution of a
long-simmering donnybrook over pro-
posed changes in the trustee By-Laws.
These changes pertain to two matters
Washington College Magazine//4nHi/(!/ Report 1991
that most readers will find arcane but
that are of considerable importance to
those who teach at Washington Col-
lege — namely, what procedures
would be followed in the event that
the College, for reasons of financial
exigency, would have to reduce the
size of the faculty, and what proce-
dures would be followed should the
time come when an entire program, or
department, would be axed? Again to
make a long story short, these bar-
nacles on the Ship of State have been
removed. Furthermore, proposals to
institute written annual evaluations,
rigorous review after three years of
teaching, and the extension to six years
of the probationary period prior to ten-
ure were overwhelmingly approved
by votes of the faculty.
It is my belief that the faculty, and
students as well, found stimulating the
programmatic riches that Washington
College's wildly successful Campaign
for Excellence made possible. There
was a time when lectures, concerts,
dramatic productions, and symposia at
Washington College occurred once a
week at best. With the advent of the
McLain endowment (nine lectures and
two symposia), the Goldstein Program
in Public Affairs (26 activities in all),
and the inauguration of the
Wingate and Goodfellow lec-
tures, the weekly calendar was
chock-a-block full. When one
factors in our ambitious concert
series (soon to launch its 40th
season with the Juilliard String
Quartet), the ever-successful
William James Forum, the al-
ways ambitious College Theater
productions, the activities of
various theme houses (Interna-
tional House in particular), and
various departmental lectures, the cul-
tural riches that have come our way re-
semble those of a college many times
our size.
The year also witnessed a number of
positives among our undergraduates
— a Fulbright, a strong record in ad-
mission to graduate school, and an ex-
tremely effective Student Government
Association. The S.G.A. played a role
in establishing a more responsible re-
cycling program, set up a Council on
Undergraduate Research to fund stu-
dent academic projects of particular
distinction, and supported a daily
newsletter, WAC Happenings, that im-
proved campus communication. The
Senior Class officers were marvelous
to work with, and the Senior Class
Council raised $4,000 for their alma
mater. To my delight, students
plunged pell-mell into volunteer ser-
vice in record numbers, facilitated in
part by the establishment of an um-
brella organization called Hands Out.
In addition, approval of a new, long-
sought position, namely a Director of
Student Activities, augurs well for the
future, and in the year ahead we will
work to make Washington College less
of a suitcase college on weekends. Fi-
nally, it is worth noting that at least at
this writing, our retention rate for the
classes of 1992, 1993, and 1994 has in-
creased.
Although there were administrative
losses, there were also administrative
gains. Significant newcomers have
given us great strength — Shawn
Lyons, our Vice President for Develop-
ment and College Relations; John Tay-
lor, our Acting Dean of the College for
1991-92; our new Director of Financial
Aid, Ellyn Taylor (soon to be Ellyn
Levine); Joseph Holt, (Washington
College '83) my new Executive Assis-
tant; Mary Lee Creager, our new Di-
rector of Continuing Education; and
Steven Johnson, a welcome addition to
Kevin Coveney's admissions staff.
The year also witnessed a number of
positives among our undergraduates
— a Fulbright, a strong record in
admission to graduate school, and
an extremely effective Student
Government Association.
Thanks to reorganization in Gene
Hessey's office, we at last have created
a position for a personnel officer —
about time in an institution with some
297 employees! The post has been
filled by Susan Davis.
Although it could be argued that
these many changes are disruptive, my
sense is that the balance between conti-
nuity and change is just about right.
Meanwhile, I am grateful to have
found on board so manv good people
who are staying on with renewed en-
thusiasm.
The past year has also seen further
strides in the implementation of our
Master Plan and in additions to the
physical plant. Even as I write, Gibson
Avenue and the mammoth parking lot
behind Bunting and Bill Smith, both of
them gone, are being landscaped. The
new parking lot contiguous to Kibler
Field is finished. Moreover, we moved
into the wondrous new Casey Aca-
demic Center back in mid-January, and
construction of the Benjamin A. John-
son Lifetime Fitness Center is on sched-
ule.
Thanks to the work of Tai Soo Kim
Associates, we have an impressive new
three-dimensional model of the campus
with recommendations for the renova-
tion of William Smith Hall and the con-
struction of a new, 25,000 square foot
classroom building. The Committee on
Buildings and Grounds has been hard
at work on this potential project and
will report to the Board in September.
Then, too, there were ceremonial as-
pects to the year that further contrib-
uted to good feelings — Professor
Nathan Smith's Fall Convocation Ad-
dress before a packed house, the Octo-
ber 6th inauguration festivities. Kirk
Johnson's memorable remarks about
his grandfather at the Johnson Lifetime
Fitness Center groundbreaking cer-
emony, Washington's Birthday Convo-
cation, the joyous dedication of the
Casey Academic Center, and thanks to
Will Baker's inspiring address
and miraculous break with the
weather, a perfect Commence-
ment.
To top it off, we ended the
year with gifts that totaled $4.7
million, the third highest amount
in the College's history — and
this is the first post-campaign
year and in a sluggish economv.
Best of all, the number of alumni
who contributed increased bv
more than 200: WE BEAT
PRINCETON!!! For the few of you who
are wondering about this reference, our
final appeal of the vear centered on
Washington College's standing among
the 3,300 institutions of higher educa-
tion in the United States. Top 20 rank-
ing, yes, but there was Princeton, four-
tenths of a percentage point above us.
Could we beat them? Absolutely! With
55.3 percent of all alumni standing up
to be counted, we solidified our top 20
ranking and moved ahead of the
dreaded Tigers. Who will be the next
victim? Stay tuned.
Yes, on balance, it was a gciod year.
As it turns out, honeymoons Chester-
town-style are special. How I hope that
1991-92 will give me yet another!
Washington College Magazine/z^/iinw/ Report J991
GARRY E. CLARKE, professor and chair
of the music department, played
Mozart's Piano Concerto No. 27, K.595
with the Talbot Chamber Orchestra in
Easton and Salisbury. He published two
articles in the magazine Design for Arts in
Education: "Essential American Music:
A Little List" (May/June 1990) and "Our
Middle Ages; A View of Today" (May/
June 1991.) This summer, Clarke studied
"Jazz in American Culture" at M.I.T.
THOMAS COUSINEAU, professor of
English, received a faculty enhancement
grant to attend a Samuel Beckett
Colloquium hosted by the Principality of
Monaco in the Princess Grace Irish Li-
brary. He read his paper "Beneath Rep-
resentation: On Staging Beckett's Plays"
in Monaco and is at work on a book
about Beckett's trilogy of novels.
ROBERT DAY'S short story, "My Father
Swims His Horse At Last," was pub-
lished as part of the Best American Short
Story Award Collection in Tri-Quarterly
Magazine last fall. Several of Day's es-
says on travel and education were pub-
lished by the Washington Post Snnclay
Magazine, and several are forthcoming in
Smithsonian , Modern Maturity , and the
Kansas Quarterly. He traveled exten-
sively through the West this summer,
and is at work on an essay on the demise
of the American bison. He received a
prestigious nomination to attend the
PEN International conference this fall in
Vienna.
COLIN C. DICKSON has been promoted
to full professor of French. His article,
"Theorie et pratique de la cloture:
I'example de Maupassant dans 'La
Maison Tellier,'" was published in the
October 1990 issue of The French Review.
ROBERT FALLAW, professor and chair
of history, delivered two addresses —
one on "The Civil War Era" before a
group of Princeton alumni of the Eastern
Shore, and another on "Indians of the
Eastern Shore" before the Upper Eastern
Shore Geneological Society.
GERALDINE FISHER, ALICE B.
GOODFELLOW, and GAIL TUBES, Col-
lege writing tutors, presented a panel on
the College's Sophomore Writing Obli-
gation at the April meeting of the Mid-
Atlantic Writing Centers Association.
Tubbs' article, "A Case for Teaching
Grammar to Writers," was published in
The Writing Lab Newsletter.
Faculty Achievements
ROSEMARY FORD, assistant professor of
biology, has been granted tenure. With a
faculty enhancement grant from Washing-
ton College and support from Crop Genet-
ics International, she studied symbiotic bac-
teria in grasses this summer. She presented
a paper on "Recovery of Clavibacterxyli
supsp. cynodontis from overwintering
parts of Bermuda grass" at the Potomac Di-
vision meeting of the American Phyto-
pathological Society.
DAVY McCALL published a report of the
archaeological investigations of his Cannon
Street home, the former house of free black
laborer Thomas Cuff, in North American Ar-
chaeologist. Wade P. Catts of University of
Delaware co-authored the article.
J. DAVID NEWELL's article, "Assisted Sui-
cide and the Ethics of Self-Preservation," is
scheduled to appear in the December 1991
issue of the interdisciplinary journal on hos-
pital ethical and legal issues HEC Forum. A
second article on "Ethical Issues in Prison
Administration" was published in the
spring 1991 issue of Federal Prison Bureau
Journal.
SEAN O CONNOR has designed a model
humanities program for use throughout the
Maryland school system entitled "Educat-
ing for Democracy in the Modern World."
The model program, developed for the
Maryland Humanities Council, is based on
the high school faculty seminars O Connor
conducted at Washington College. The
program explores values in American life
through critical reading of texts and analyti-
cal discussion, and is designed to assist
Maryland educators in relating their profes-
sional lives and teaching to the broad issue
of the responsibihties of citizenship.
O Connor will present a two-hour demon-
stration of the model at the Maryland Hu-
manities Council conference in December,
and again for a small group of teachers and
administrators in February.
JASON RUBIN, lecturer in drama, has been
awarded his Ph.D. from New York
University's Department of Performance
Studies in February 1991.
JOACHIM J. SCHOLZ, associate professor
of German, has been awarded an $8,000
grant to continue his archival research on
the German writer August Scholtis in Ger-
many. He spent two months this summer
at the archives in Dortmund. The project
will result in a four-volume edition of the
author's selected works.
This spring, JEANETTE SHERBONDY,
assistant professor of anthropology, pre-
sented her paper, "Water Ideology in
Inca Enthnogenesis," at the annual meet-
ing of the American Ethnological Soci-
ety. She traveled to New Orleans in July
to attend a meeting of the International
Congress of Americanists, where she
presented a paper on Archaeoastronomy
of Incas. She was awarded a Fellowship
in Pre-Columbian Studies for 1991-92 at
Dumbarton Oaks in Washington, D.C.
In a joint project with JEANETTE
SHERBONDY, GEORGE R. SHIVERS,
professor of Spanish, is working on a
translation of a 16th century Spanish
chronicle by Juan de Betanzos entitled
Si(»!« 1/ Narracion de los Incas. Shivers'
translation of Ariel Dorfman's collection
of literary essays was published in May
by Duke University Press under the title
Someone Writes to the Future. He also at-
tended the International Congress Of
Americanists meeting this summer.
In August, KAREN LYNN SMITH, asso-
ciate professor of physical education,
presented two workshops at the Interna-
tional Congress of Health, Physical Edu-
cation, Recreation and Dance in Limer-
ick, Ireland, and then attended the Inter-
national Olympic Academy in Olympia,
Greece. Earlier, she attended the U.S.
Olympic Academy XV in Fort Collins,
Colorado.
GEORGE SPILICH, chair of the psychol-
ogy department, has been promoted to
full professor. He continues to conduct
research on the effects of smoking, the
effects of industrial solvents, and the ef-
fects of diabetes on memory and cogni-
tion. He authored three articles related
to his research projects and made several
lecture/presentations throughout the
year, including two student co-authored
paper presentations at the Eastern Psy-
chological Association's Annual Meeting
in April. He was in Germany in March
presenting "Cognitive Change in
Alzheimer's Disease: New Perspectives"
before the Department of Psychiatry at
the University of Wurzburg, and in April
he was keynote speaker with a talk en-
titled "Memory Research in the Real
World" at the second annual
Intercollegiate Undergraduate Research
Day at St. Joseph's University in Phila-
delphia. He spent the summer working
on the computerized brain mapper and
editing a book, Ncurodcoelopmicnt , Cogni-
tion, And Dementia, for publication by
Berkhauser-Boston.
Washington College Magazine/ Annual Report 1991
Meet The Volunteers
LOUIS L. GOLDSTEIN '35
Chairman, Board of Visitors and
Governors
ALONZO G. DECKER, JR. W. JAMES PRICE IV
Co-Chairman, Campaign for Excellence Co-Chairman, Campaign for Excellence
CHRISTIAN HAVEMEYER
Chairman, 1782 Society
ROBERT W. LirSITZ '54
President, Washington College
Alumni Association
ZUNG T. NGUYEN '77
Chairman, Washington College Eund
THOMAS J. MAHER
Chairman, Parents Fund
Washington College Magazine / Aimucil Report 1991
WASHINGTON COLLEGE
Report of Gifts
THE 1782 SOCIETY of WASHINGTON COLLEGE
THE 1782 SOCIETY recognizes a group of benefactors committed to the stewardship of Washington College. Carrying on a tradition established
in 1 782 by George Washington, who donated the generous sum of fifty guineas, members of the 1 782 Society provide the leadership and financial
support that is critical to the continuing vitality of the College.
Individual membership in the 1782 Society is awarded in one of four gift clubs ranging from the $1 ,000 entry level to $1 0,000 and up. Corporate
and foundation donors of $1,000 or more are also extended membership in the Society.
The College extends its deepest appreciation to the members of the 1782 Society for their generosity.
William Smith Fellows
$10,000 or more
Dr. & Mrs. William A. Barnett '55 '59
Mrs. Eugene B. Casey '47
Mr. Thomas C. Chisnell
Mr. & Mrs. George T.
Cromwell, Jr. '55 '55
Mr. & Mrs. George W. Dean
Mr. & Mrs. Alonzo G. Decker, Jr.
Ms. Hazel A. Fox
Hon. & Mrs. Louis L. Goldstein '35
Mr. John D. Hall '70
Mr. Christian Havemeyer
Mr. & Mrs. Landon Hilliard III
Mr. & Mrs. LeRoy Hoffberger
Mr. & Mrs. David B. Jenkins
Mr. & Mrs. William B. Johnson '40
Mr. Thomas E. Kidwell
Dr. Bryan E. Marshall
Mr. James Bernard Merrick
Mr. John M. Peterson
Mr. & Mrs. W. James Price IV
Mr. William Redding
Mr. & Mrs. William R. Russell '53 '56
Mrs. Edna Scheck
Mr. &: Mrs. L. Clifford Schroeder
Mr. Carl A. Thoma
President & Mrs. Charles H. Trout
Mrs. John Campbell White
President's Council
$5,000 - $9,999
Mrs. Dale Patterson Adams '65
Mr. Henry C. Beck, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Alva T. Blades
Mr. Roger L. Blaine
Mr. & Mrs. Peter L. Boggs '72 '73
Mr. & Mrs. Walter C. Brandt '43 '43
Mr. & Mrs. Charles P.
Covington '56 '54
Hon. & Mrs. Robert W. Duemling
Mrs. Horace Havemeyer
Mr. & Mrs. Peter W. Jenkins '82
Mrs. Ferdinand LaMotte III
Mr. Michael Macielag '73
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas J. Maher
Mr. Whitney M. Maroney '91
Mr. & Mrs. Jerry B. Matyiko
Mr. Kevin M. O'Keefe '74
Mr. George D. Olds 111
Mr. & Mrs. James S. Schaefer
Mr. & Mrs. J. Brian Searles
Mr. & Mrs. Edward Shapiro '37
Mr. Glen R. Shipway '65
Mr. & Mrs. Dietrich Steffens '43
Mrs. Patricia J. Taylor '68
Miss Elizabeth R. Thibodeau '36
Mr. & Mrs. Harry K. Wells
George Washington Club
$2,500 - $4,999
Mrs. Ellen C. Adkins '49
Mr. & Mrs. Donald Anderson
Mr. & Mrs. Edward L. Birkmire
Mr. & Mrs. George L. Buckless, Jr. '69
Captain & Mrs. R. Lee Clark '40
Dr. & Mrs. John A. Conkling '65 '65
Mr. & Mrs. Robert L. Davis, Jr. '74
Mr. & Mrs. John J. Downs, Jr. '78
Mr. & Mrs. Guenther K. Drechsler
Mr. & Mrs. Samuel C. Dudley '36
Mr. & Mrs. William D. Geitz '50 '44
Mr. & Mrs. Charles S. Hague '38 '41
Mr. Oswald W. Hodges '65
Mr. & Mrs. Daniel W. Ingersoll '33 '71
Mr. & Mrs. John M. Lord '35
Mr. Harvey Meyerhoff
Mr. & Mrs. William C. Miller '59 '60
Mrs. Dorothy Woodall Myers '24
Dr. & Mrs. James M. Potter '59
Mr. & Mrs. Vincent Raimond
Mr. & Mrs. Stephen Sandebeck '73
Dr. Mark A. Schulman '67
Mr. & Mrs. Edmund A. Stanley, Jr.
Mr. Bruce E. Villard
Mr. & Mrs. Clarence M. Willis, Jr. '29
Dr. & Mrs. Phillip J. Wingate '33
Founder's Club
$1,000 -$2,499
Anonymous
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas A. Adams
Mr. Owen R. Anderson '40
Roy P. Ans, M.D. '63
Mr. & Mrs. Sydney G. Ashley
Mr. & Mrs. Ronald F. Athey
Mr. & Mrs. Edward L. Athey '47
Mr. & Mrs. Edward M. Athey '67
Mr. & Mrs. William C. Baker
Mr. John E. Barnes, Jr '47
Mrs. Rollison H. Baxter
Mr. & Mrs. Walton Beacham
Mr. August Belmont
Mr. Brooks B. Bergner '72
Mr. Charles R. Berry '36
Mr. & Mrs. W. Dennis Berry '88
Mr. & Mrs. Peter Black
Mr. & Mrs. David A. Bramble '41
Mr. & Mrs. Harrison C. Bristoll, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Curtis Brockelman
Mr. William J. Brogan '52
Mr. & Mrs. Robert L. Bryan '38
Mr. D. Tennant Bryan
Mrs. J. Taylor Buckley
Mr. & Mrs. David G. Burton '83
Mr. & Mrs. Calvin Cafritz
Dr. & Mrs. Charles B. Clark '34
Mr. & Mrs. Robert N. Cleaver '58
Mr. & Mrs. Wilham J. Collins '40
Mr, Timothy H. Connor '80
Mr. Bryson L. Cook
Mr. & Mrs. Ernest S. Cookeriy '49
Dr. Ivon E. Culver '35
Mr. & Mrs. Alexander T. Daignault, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth H. Daly '38
Mr. & Mrs. John H. Davie, Jr. '58
Mr. & Mrs. Henry G. Davis '35
Mr. & Mrs. T. Crawley Davis, Jr.
Mr. Kevin F.T. Decker '91
Mr. & Mrs. Frederick T. DeKuyper
Mr. David M. Demers
Mr. Richard C. Denison, jr. '7?<
Mrs. Susan T. Denton '69
Mr. & Mrs. Vernon F. Dowling '44
Mr. & Mrs. William A. Dunphy, Jr.'73
Mr. & Mrs. Henry A. Earp '42
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas W.
Eliason, Jr. '42 '42
Lt. Col. Joe S. Elliott, Jr. '40
Miss Mary Beth Enright '91
Mr. & Mrs. Louis F. Farina
Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth Fisher
Mr. Richard F. Flaherty
Ms. Charlotte Fletcher
Mr. & Mrs. William M. Flook
Mr. & Mrs. Ermon N. Foster
Mr. Charles D. Fox IV
Mr. & Mrs. Eric Geringswald '86 '88
Mrs. Daniel Z. Gibson
Mr. & Mrs. Edward S. Gillespie
Ms. Erin M. Gillespie '91
Mr. & Mrs. Richard L. Goodall
Mr. &. Mrs. Douglass Goodall
Mr. & Mrs. Richard B. Goodall
Mr. & Mrs. Ettore H. Grassi
Mr. & Mrs. Jack S. Griswold
Mr. Stephen G. Harper '65
Mr. & Mrs. Peter M. Hart
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas W. Heald '70 '68
Mr. & Mrs. C. Wolcotl Henry
Mrs. Nancy C. Henry
Mr. Daniel J. Herlihy
Dr. & Mrs. Stephen L. Hershey
Mr. iSc Mrs. Gene A. Hessey
Mr. & Mrs. Robert M. Hewes
Mr. & Mrs. Philip A.
Hickman, Jr. '38 '38
Mr. Frank M. Huggins, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. John C.
Huntington, Jr. '49 '88
Mr. & Mrs. William G. Hupfeldt
Mr. Bradford F. Johnson '83
Mr. Kirk B. Johnson
Ms. Kathleen M. Johnson
Mr. & Mrs. William R. Johnston
Mr. & Mrs. Alexander G. Jones '51
Mr. John R. Kelly '87
Ms. Marion B. Ketcham
Mr. Maynard M. Kirpalani '75
Washington College Magazine / Annual Repwrt 1991
THE 1782
SOCIETY
Mr. & Mrs. Stephen J. Kleberg
Mr. John F. Panowicz, Jr. '38
Mrs. Martha G. Werle
Fleetwood, Athey, Macbeth &
Mrs. Arthur A. Knapp
Lt. Col. W. Kennon Perrin '31
Dr. & Mrs. Clifton F. West, Jr.
McCown
Dr. Theodore Kurze '43
Mr. & Mrs. George G. Phillips, Jr.
Mr, F, David Wheelan '78
Jefferson L. Ford 111 Memorial Fund
Mr. & Mrs. David H. LaMotte
Mr. & Mrs. Robert A. Pilkington
Mr, & Mrs, Latham E. Wheelan
Carl Forstmann Memorial
Mr. & Mrs. Theodore W.
Mrs. Anne M. Preston '36
Mr. & Mrs. Frederick J. Wick
Foundation, Inc.
Landskroener
Mr. & Mrs. J. Frederick Price '72 '73
Ms, Mary E. Wildemann '76
Foundation for the Carolinas
Mrs. Constance Stuart Larrabee
Mr. & Mrs. Lawrence J. Radice
Mr, Howard E, Wille
G.S.M. Industries, Inc.
Mr. Gordon R. Lattu 73
Mr. & Mrs. Philip J. Rauch
Mr, Martin E. Williams '75
Gillespie & Son, Inc.
Ms. Beth K. Leaman 73
Mrs. Doris Brooks Reedt '83
Mr, William N. Williams '76
The Henry Foundation
Mr. & Mrs. Brit Le Compte
Mr. & Mrs. Richard A, Reilly '58 '59
Mr, & Mrs, John E, Winkler '56
The Elizabeth S. Hooper Foundation
Mr. & Mrs. Norman Ledwin
Dr. & Mrs. Harry C. Rhodes '35
Mr, & Mrs, Anthony S, Wiseman '73
House of Delegates
Mr. & Mrs. Craig Lewis
Mr, & Mrs. Francis C. Rienhoff
Mr, & Mrs, Howard Wood '68
Independent College Fund of Md.
Dr. David E. Litrenta '58
Dr. & Mrs, William F, Rienhoff
Mr. & Mrs. Richard D. Wood, Jr.
Kent County Arts Council, Inc.
Dr. Frederick T. Lohr, M.D.
Mr, & Mrs. F. Spencer Robinson '43
Mrs. N, Page Worthington
Kent Island American Legion
Mr. & Mrs. Winslow N. Long
Mr. & Mrs. H. Eugene Rook, Jr. '46 '48
Mrs, Leonard Yerkes, Jr.
Kent Printing Corporation
Mr. & Mrs. Shawn J. Lyons
Miss Jennifer E, Rowe '91
Kent & Queen Anne's Alumni
Mrs. Avis R. Maddox '27
Mr, & Mrs, Stanley Schottland '42
Chapter
Mr. Holt L. Marchant, Jr. '63
Mr, L, Cliff Schroeder, Jr. '91
Corporate and
Kent Research and Manufacturing
Mr. & Mrs, C. R, Maroney
Dr. Edward S. Schulman '71
Foundation Donors
Company
Mr. David H, MarshairSS
Mr, & Mrs, John W, Selby '41 '44
The Kresge Foundation
Mr. Loren D. Martin
Mr, & Mrs. Joseph W, Sener, Jr,
E.S. Adkins Company
LaMotte Chemical Products Co.
Dr. Davy H. McCall
Miss Shelley V, Sharp '78
Alex. Brown tSc Sons, Inc.
The Legg & Company
Mr. Robert V. McCurdy
Captain & Mrs, Norman W. Shorb '38
American Railroad Institute
Foundation, Inc.
Mr. Bruce A. McFadden
Dr. Joan K. Short
Baltimore Alumni Chapter
John J. Leidy Foundation
Mrs. Joseph H. McLain '40
Mr. & Mrs. Philip J. Skipp '37 '36
Baltimore Gas & Electric Company
Christian R. & Mary F. Lindback
Mr. & Mrs. W. Dukes
Ms. Thelma B. Smith '34
Black & Decker Corporation
Foundation
Meeks, Jr. '79 '79
Mr. & Mrs. Elwood F. Snvder '68 '68
Borkee-Hagley Foundation
The Loyola Federal Foundation
Mr. & Mrs. Frederick S.
Mr. & Mrs. John B. Spry III
C & P Telephone Company
Maryland Humanities Council
Micari '40 '38
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas F.
The Campbell Foundation
Mercantile Safe-Deposit & Trust Co.
Mr. & Mrs. Geoffrey M. Miller
Stevenson '72 '72
The Eugene B. Casey Foundation
The Rebecca Meyerhoff
Mrs. Karl E. Miller
Mr. & Mrs, Edward W, Stewart '52
Cheapeake Bank & Trust Company
Philanthropic Fund
Ms. Sara S. Miller
Mr. & Mrs. Eric E. Stoll '74 '78
Chestertown Bank of Maryland
National Science Foundation
Mr. & Mrs. George B. Moore
Mr. Marcus J. Suppo '91
Coca-Cola Foundation U.S.A.
The Noxell Foundation
Mr. & Mrs. Robert A. Moore '59 '56
Ms. Daryl L. Swanstrom '69
College Park Contracting, Inc.
Peoples Bank
Mr. Eugene L. Mowerer
Mr. & Mrs. John L, Tansey '73
Ernest S. Cookerly, Esq.
Rogers & Skipp
Mr. & Mrs. Ronald P. Mrstik '64 '64
Mr, & Mrs, Raymond Tarrach
Davis Real Estate
The Schluderberg Foundation, Inc.
Mr. & Mrs. Charles F. Murphy
Mrs. Eleanor H. Taylor '44
Delmarva Sash & Door
The Sears-Roebuck Foundation
Mr. William M.Nagler '42
Mr. & Mrs, Robert H. Thawley '43 '45
Dixie Container Corporation
TA Instruments, Inc.
Mr. & Mrs. James G.Nelson
Mr. & Mrs, Sprague Thresher
Dixon Valve & Coupling Company
United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co.
Mr. Edward P. Nordberg, Jr. '82
Mr. & Mrs. Anthony C. Thurston
Jessie Ball duPont Fund
University of St. Andrews
Mr. & Mrs. Zung T, Nguyen '77
Mr, & Mrs, Michael J. Travieso '66 '66
The Eastern Shore Society of
White Swan Tavern
Mr. & Mrs. Roy Owens
Mr, & Mrs, R, Austin Walmsley
Baltimore City
Women's League of Washington
Mr. Donald S. Owings '55
Mr, Willis 1. Weldin II '59
First Maryland Foundation
College
Dean's Club
$500 - $999
Anonymous (2)
Mr. Michael Alteri '43
Mr. & Mrs. James T, Anthony III '34
Mr. & Mrs. John Bacon, Jr, '52
Mr. George B. Baily, Jr. '68
Mrs. Patricia S. Barkdoll '66
Ms. Susan O, Barnes
Dr. William F, Bennett '50
Mr. & Mrs, Delos E. Boardman '71 '71
Mr. & Mrs. Robert R. Bowie '33
Mrs. Dorsey H. Bramble '74
Lieutenant Gregory H. Brandon '78
Mr. J. Stewart Bryan III
Ms. Anne E. Burris '48
Mr. & Mrs, Donald F. Campbell '50 '52
Mr. & Mrs. Charles Carroll III
Ms. Margaret Carroll '38
Colonel Clifford S, Case '49
Mrs. Grace S. Chaires '27
Mr. & Mrs, James G. Chalfant '67 '71
Mr. & Mrs, George Churchill '73 '73
Mr. Robert J, Cigala '73
Drs. Thomas & Virginia Collier
Mr. & Mrs, Robert B, Congdon
Mr. Richard Creighton '74
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas C. Grouse, Jr. '59
Mr. & Mrs. Raymond K, Denworth
Mr. David M. Eliason '49
Mr. & Mrs. Richard R. Farrow '57
Mr. Richard V. Fitzgerald '60
Mr. Thomas M. Graves '63
Mr. William G. Greenly '50
Mr. & Mrs, Scott B, Hansen '82 '82
Dr. Harry C. Hendrickson '41
Mr. & Mrs. Ogle W. Hess '41 '42
Mr. Peter B. Johnson '70
Mrs. Nancy H. Jones '50
Ms. Lynn Keller '76
Mr. & Mrs. Harold B. Kennerly, Jr, '35
Mr. William E. Kight '36
Dr. Walter J. Lentz
Mr. & Mrs. William O.
Leonard, Jr. '70 '69
Mr. & Mrs. Oliver W,
Littleton, Jr. '42 '45
Mr, & Mrs, James W, McCurdy, Jr. '52
Mr, & Mrs, Howard A, Medholdt
Mr, William H, Morgan '64
Mrs. Joanne S. Morschauser
Mr. Nimrod Natan '85
Mr. Anthony Oswald '59
Mrs. Rebecca B. Owens '25
Mrs. Barbara B Pace '46
Mr, L, Franklin Phares '55
Ms. Polly J. Quiglcy '73
Mr. & Mrs. Robert H. Roy
Dr. Nathan Schnaper '40
Mr, Roy R. Schwartz '64
Mr, 6z Mrs. Raymond G.
Sinclair, Jr. '47 '48
Dr. Ronald E. Smith '64
Judge Marvin H. Smith '37
Mr, Oden L. Smith '51
Mr, & Mrs, Abraham D, Spinak
Mr, & Mrs, T. Allen Stradley '32
Mr, & Mrs, Joseph Strong
Mr. Thomas W. Sutton '76
Mrs. Nancy Walsh-Tashman '73
Mr, & Mrs. Ferdinand Thun
Mr. & Mrs. Howard S, Turner
Mr. & Mrs. Melvin W. Walker '64 '65
Mr. William J. Watson '35
Dr PhilipJ. Whelan'61
Mr. & Mrs. Sydney M. Williams
Mr. & Mrs. Clifton A. Woodrum III
Mr. Richard L, Wunderlich '67
Mr, & Mrs. Roslyn D. Young
Third Century Club
$250 - $499
Mrs. Myrtle M. Adkins '64
Mrs. Margaret Jean Africa '49
Mr. Robert H, Appleby '54
Dr, Frank Ayres, Jr. '21
Mr. John E. Benjamin, Jr. '42
Mr, John P, Bergen '55
Mrs. Susan Jo Berman '66
Mr. Robert A. Bragg '59
Mrs. Ella B. Brandt '35
Mr. Ronald D. Brannock '65
Dr. & Mrs. Neil W. Brayton
Ms. Sue Briggs '78
Colonel Paul E. Bruehl '37
Mr. & Mrs. William Buckingham '41 '42
Mr. William E. Burkhardt '34
Mr. B, Kimball Byron '78
Dr. & Mrs. William H. Caldwell '60 '62
Mr. Richard W. Carrell '65
Ms. M. Lynne Christenson '77
Mr. Charles B. Clark, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Garry E. Clarke '75 '88
Miss Victoria J. Colgan '70
Mr, & Mrs, Bernard M. Conway
Mr. & Mrs. Henry V. Crawford '40
Mrs. Adrienne R. Dahlke '28
Mr, & Mrs. Mark A, De Santis
Mr, & Mrs. John G. Dejong '57
Mr, Donald M. Derham '48
Mr, H. Hurtt Deringer '59
Mr. & Mrs. Colin C. Dickson
Mr. John M. Dove 111 '65
Mrs. Diantha R. Eaton '28
B. Gen. & Mrs. Raymond W.
Edwards '53 '55
Lt. Gail A. Emow '78
Mr. Clint Evans
Mr. Robert L, Everett '40
Mrs. Linda H. Fenwick '74
Mr. Nicholas J. Ferrara III '86
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas J. Finnegan '65
Mr. David A. Fitzsimons '80
Mrs. Mary Margaret Forney
Mr. Eamie L. Gardner '72
Washington College Magazine//lfnii((i/ Report 1991
Mr. M. Douglass Gates '59
Ms. Carolyn D. Gray '63
Mrs. Esther K. Greer '28
Dr. & Mrs. James S. Gregory
Mr. & Mrs. Tillman J. Gressitt '49 '47
Dr. Andrew D. Gruver '76
Mr. John B. Hames '52
Mr. Fletcher R. Hall '63
Mr. Gerard D. Hall '76
Dr. W. Dorsey Hammond '61
Mr. & Mrs. A. Powell Harrison '49 '48
Mrs. Mary F. Heeg '33
Mrs. Marv E. Hilliard
Mr. Ernest G. Holland '36
Mr. & Mrs, Allan D. Housley
Mrs. Jennifer L. Hyatt '73
Mr. & Mrs. Grant L. Jacks '79 79
Mr. & Mrs. Gerald P. Jenkins '65
Mr. & Mrs. William R. Jester '50
Mr. Robert M. Johnson '66
Dr. George W. Jones, Jr. '37
Mrs. Eloise H. Kauffman '35
Mr. & Mrs. John P. Kirwan '42
Mr. Walter S. Koons '42
Dr. Bruce Kornberg '74
Dr. Phyllis B. Kosherick '72
Mr. Robert H. LeCates '59
Mr. L. Bert Lederer '57
Mr. Edward F. Leonard, Jr. '51
Mr. Howard Levenberg '52
Col. & Mrs. Joseph W. Lewis '66 '67
Mrs. Sara M. Lilienthal '70
Mr. David J. Lipinski
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Lloyd
Mr. Christopher N. Luhn '74
Ms. Anne F. MacGIashan '78
Mrs. Ruth C. Macnamara '83
Mrs. Ida May Mantel '62
Mr. & Mrs. Bryan L. Matthews '75 '75
Dr. John W. Maun '61
Mr. Laurence McCalley, Jr. &
Mrs. Charlotte McCalley '41 '41
Mrs. Elizabeth S. Mc-Ginniss '33
Mr. & Mrs. Ira D. Measel 111 '68 '70
Mr. & Mrs, David H. Meehan
Mr. John R. Mendell '68
Mr. & Mrs, Peter P, Miller, Jr,
Mr. W. Frank Molali '79
Mrs. Joan C. Moore '53
Mr. Matthew A. Morris '78
Mrs. Sarah C Mulligan '78
Mrs. Molly A. Nicol '81
Mr. & Mrs. George A. Noble
Mr. Conlyn E. Noland, Jr. '51
Dr. & Mrs, Gerard S, O'Connor
Dr. David T. Owens '76
Mr. William R. Pacula '72
Mr. & Mrs. Theodore F. Parker '64
Mr. Charles L. Parks '72
Mr. & Mrs. Jacob W. Parr, Jr. '80 '81
Mr. R. Allen Payne 111 '68
Mr. & Mrs. William S, Penick
Mr. Norman A. Phillips, Jr. '60
Mr. Robert T. Pickett, Jr. '56
Mrs. Alice M. Piper
Mr. Jonathan J. Powers '73
Mr, Earl W, Price '35
Mr, & Mrs, Robert R.
Pritzlaff, Jr, '65 '66
Mr, & Mrs, Kyle D. Pruett
Mr. Robert R. Ramsey '77
Mr. Alan C. Ray '67
Mr. & Mrs. David Riddiford, Sr.
Mr. & Mrs. Robert K. Robson
Dr. Peter J. Rosen, M.D. '68
Ms. Susan A. Scheidle '74
Mr. & Mrs, Robert F,
Schumann, Jr. '73 '71
Mr. & Mrs. William A. Seal III
Mr. Donald L. Schafer 111 '86
Mr. & Mrs. John T. Shannahan, Sr. '65
Mr. Alan R. Sharp '57
Mr. & Mrs. Robert V. Shriver '73 '39
Mr. & Mrs. Hugh B. Silcox '75 '75
Mr. HarryM.Slade,Jr. '43
Mrs. Mary K. Spurlin '42
Dr. Jessie D. Stahl '70
Dr. & Mrs. W. Jackson Stenger '49
Dr. PatrickJ. StroIlo.Jr. '76
Ms. Lucinda Stude '75
Mr. Russell Q. Summers, Jr. '62
Mr. Thomas P. Tansi '85
Dr. Benjamin 1. Troutman, Jr. '66
Mr. & Mrs. Liebert S, Turner
Dr. William C. VanNewkirk '38
Ms. Frances V. Verstandig
Mr. & Mrs. Norberto Viamonte '73 '74
Mr. & Mrs. Charles S. Waesche '53
Mr. John A. Wagner, Jr, '74
Mrs, Mary Beth Walker '85
Mr, & Mrs. Glenn L. Warner
Mrs. Leslie T. White '74
Mr. Timothy E. Whiting '86
Mr. D. Leonard Wise '57
Mr. & Mrs. Robert Y. Witter '77
Mr. & Mrs. Carroll C. Woodrow '39 '42
Century Club
$100 - $249
Mrs. Ruth C, Abramson
Mr. Lawrence J. Acchione '61
Mr. Francis T. Adams 111 '82
Dr. Scott W. Browning & Ms. Joanne
T. Ahearn '79 79
Mr. & Mrs. Francis XT. Albert, Jr.
Mr. Thurman H. Albertson '57
Mrs. Adele M. Allison
Mr. Donald E. Alt '83
Mr. Robert F. Altmaier '55
Mr. & Mrs. Steven H. Amick'69 '69
Mr. Charles F, Anderson '39
Mrs, Elizabeth D. Andrew '28
Mr, Ormond L, Andrew, Jr, '63
Mr, & Mrs, Clarence E, Andrews
Mr, Thomas B, Andrews, Jr. '43
Dr. & Mrs. Charles E. Andrews '71 '74
Mr, James E, Anthony, Jr. '44
Mr. B. Lyie Appleford, Jr. '29
Mr. John F. Armstrong, Jr. '77
Dr. Virginia C. Arthur '70
Mr. Gary K. Atkinson '83
Mr. James M. Aycock '43
Ms. Linda L. Ayres '69
Dr. Chester C. Babat '62
Mr. Roland J. Bailey, Jr. '35
Mr. Harmon J. Baker III '72
Mrs. Helen W. Baker '41
Mr. Daniel J. Bakley '84
Mr. & Mrs. A. Stuart Baldwin
Mrs. Sigrid B. Balmer '70
Mrs. Marilouise K. Bane '59
Mr. Wilbur P. Barnes '49
Mr. Frank K. Barnhart '35
Ms. G.Jaia Barrett '69
Mrs. Wendy B. Bartel '74
Rev. Charles E. Barton, Jr. '56
Mrs. Allison M. Bateman '78
Mr. & Mrs, Michael J. Batza, Jr,
Mr, John F, Bauder '66
Mr, & Mrs, Robert Beaton '57 '57
Ms. Sara H. Beaudry '64
Mr. James B. Beavan, Jr. '70
Ms. Katherine D. Beavers
Mr. Jack Becker '57
Mr. Glen E. Beebe '81
Mr. CarlM. Behrens,Jr. '83
Ms. Laura E. Beider '69
Mr. & Mrs. Charles W. Bell
Mr. Charles C. Benham '38
Mrs. Elinore Hubbard Bergner '43
Board of Visitors and Governors
1990-91
Mrs. Dale Patterson Adams
65 Mr. W. James Price IV
Mrs. Ellen C. Adkins '49
Mr. John J. Roberts
Mr. John Bacon, Jr. '52
Dr. Mark A. Schulman '67
Mr. William C. Baker
Mr. L. CLifford Schroeder
Mr. Henry C. Beck, Jr.
Mr. Walter Sondheim
Mr. Peter L. Boggs '72
Mr. Abraham D. Spinak
Mr. Josiah Bunting III
Mr. Dietrich H. Steffens '43
Mrs. Eugene B. Casey '47
President Charles H. Trout
Dr. John A. Conkling '65
Mr. Lawrence S. Wescott '51
Mr. Bryson L. Cook
Mr. George S. Wills
Mr. Charles P. Covington, Jr
■56
Mr. Alonzo G. Decker, Jr.
Trustees Emeritus
The Honorable Louis L.
Dr. Charles B. Clark '34
Goldstein '35
Mrs. Barbara T. Cromwell '55
Mr. John D. Hall '70
Mr. Wilbur Ross Hubbard
Mr. Christian Havemeyer
Mrs. James N. Hynson
Ms. Sally Hopkins
Mrs. W. Alton Jones
Mrs, Clare S. Ingersoll '71
Mr. Arthur H. Kudner, Jr.
Mr, William B, Johnson '40
Mr. Howard A. Medholt
Mr. Alexander G. Jones '51
Mr. James G. Nelson
Mr. Brien E. Kehoe '69
Mr. William R. Russell, Jr. '53
Mr. Michael Macielag '73
Mr. Robert H. Roy
Mr. Thomas J. Maher
Dr. W. Jackson Stenger, Jr. '49
Mr. John A. Moag '77
Mr. Kevin O'Keefe '74
Honorary Member
Mrs. Karen G Price '73
Mrs. Lillian C. Solomon
Mr. Peter Bertram '80
Dr. & Mrs. Edwin H. Besson '50 '51
Ms. Rebecca L. Besson '75
Mrs. Alice M, Betley
Mr. & Mrs. Henry O. Biddle '68 '70
Mr. Charles F. Black '77
Mrs. Lida L. Blake '26
Mr. Jeffrey S. Blitz '65
Mr. & Mrs. Louis G. Blizzard '50 '51
Dr. & Mrs. Humberto E. Bogado
Ms. Hollv B. Bohlinger '62
Mr. William F. Bollinger, Sr. '71
Mr. & Mrs. John L. Bond '30 '30
Mrs. Elizabeth H. Booth '39
Mr. & Mrs. Madison B.
Bordley, Jr. '38 '41
Mr. William R. Bors, Jr. '89
Mrs. Teresa Wiltbank Bostic '71
Mr. & Mrs. George Bournazian
Mr. & Mrs. K. Bournazian
Mr. & Mrs. William F. Bowdle
Mr. George Boyd, Jr. '60
Mr. Edwin R. Boyer, Jr. '43
Mr. Elmer W.Boyles '34
Mr. Franklin M. Bradley '62
Mr. & Mrs. Wilbur S.
Brandenburg, Jr. '59 '61
Mrs. M. Stephen Bremer
Mr. & Mrs. Bruce T. Briggs '59 '59
Dr. & Mrs. Rodney L. Brimhall
Mrs. Eilene K. Brocenos '79
Dr. Mitchell S. Bronson '69
Mr. & Mrs. Frank Brower, Jr. '51
Mrs. Rene T. Brown '74
Mrs. Karen M. Brown '69
Mr, Ridgely T, Brown, Jr, '63
Mr, & Mrs, Roger D, Brown
Mr. Douglas E. Brown '82
Mr. James P. Brown, Jr. '50
Ms. Patricia A. Browne '56
Mr. David S. Bruce '70
Mrs. Cindy P. Bryant '71
Mr. David W. Bryden '69
Mr. & Mrs. Malcolm A. Buckey, Jr.
Miss Clara M. Bullen '74
Mr. & Mrs. Josiah Bunting 111
Ms. Barbara E. Burdette '79
Mr. & Mrs. William J. Burk '30 '30
Mrs. Mary S. Burke '67
Ms. Frances N. Burnet '84
Mr. George B. Burns '57
Ms. Jennifer A. Butler '79
Mr. & Mrs. Douglas R. Byrne '79 '82
Mrs. Margaret S. Cadell '40
Mr. Richard B. Callahan '60
Mr. & Mrs. Anthony E.
Cameron '61 '61
Mr. James M. Campbell '50
Mrs. Charlton G.
Campbell-Hughes '75
Mr. ]. Parker Cann '73
Ms. Sandra F. Cannon 'S7
Mr. & Mrs. Francis G. Caporoso '57
Mrs. Elise L. Caragine '74
Mr. & Mrs. Clayton C. Carter
Mrs. Beulah L. Carter '30
Mr. Robert E. Carter '42
Mr. & Mrs. Michael B. Casey
Mr. William A. Cassidy
Mr. »Sc Mrs. S. Douglass Cater, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Theodore H. Chase
Mr. Dana S. Chatellier '78
Mr. & Mrs. Arthur M. Christie '50 '50
Mr. Robert Y. Clagett '63
Mr. Walter W. Claggett '40
Captain Charles M. Clark '33
Mr. Howard E. Clark '37
Mrs. Louise H. Clarke '44
Mr. & Mrs. Michael F. Clarke '88 '69
Mr. Donald R. Clausen '59
Mr. & Mrs. Alday M. Clements '35 '37
Mrs. Frances S. Clendaniel '35
Mr. & Mrs. John H. Clifton '68 '68
Mr. Joseph M. Coale III '67
Mr. & Mrs. Edward Colantti
Mr. Robert J. Colborn, Jr. '58
Miss Diana G. Coleman '85
Ms. Heidi E. Collier '87
Mrs. Susan B. Collins '63
Mr. William O. Comella '35
Dr. & Mrs. Thomas P. Conaty
Mrs. Beverley B. Connolly '60
Mr. & Mrs. Peter T. Connolly
Mr. John P. Consaga '62
Reverend Raymond J. Cooke '41
Ms, Linda B. Cooke '71
Mr. & Mrs. Jeffrey L. Coomer '77 '77
Mr. & Mrs. Edward W. Cooper '41 '46
Washington College Magazine / Annual Report 1991
Mr. & Mrs. William H. Cooper '49
Mr. William F. Copenhaver '60
Mr. John A. Copple '40
Mr. & Mrs. Timothy C. Coss
Mr. & Mrs. Charles Costa
Mr. & Mrs. Ronald E. Council
Ms. Doris A. Crafton '66
Mrs. Marv R. Craggett '61
Ms. Judith B.Craine '63
Mr. Roger N. Craine, Jr. '62
Dr. Robert K. Crane '42
Ms. Alice T. Cranor '60
Mr. William F. Creager
Mr. & Mrs. Michael D. Crosier
Mrs. Virginia W. Culley '25
Mr. Andrew J. Dail III '55
Miss Tami P. Daniel '74
Mr. George L. Darley, Jr. '57
Mr. & Mrs. Donald C.
Davenport '60 '60
Mr. Michael L. Davenport
Ms. Carole F. Davidson
Miss Ruth F Davidson '88
Colonel William G. Davis '57
Mr. James D. Davis III '34
Mr. Charles L. Davis III '79
Mr. Warren G. DeFrank '60
Dr. & Mrs. Nicholas J.
DeStefano '66 '66
Dr. Pamela M. DeWeese '67
Mr. James N. Deaconson '42
Mr. Sz Mrs. James S. DelPriore '64
Mr. Douglass T. Delano '80
Mrs. Marie A. Delcher '76
Mr. Harold K. Dell III '66
Mr. George H. Dengler '57
Mrs. Sandra L. Dennison-James '77
Ms. Carole B. Denton '73
Mr. & Mrs. Gerard F. Devlin
Mr. Paul A. Deysenroth, Jr. '60
Mr. Francis A. DiMondi, Jr. '85
Ms. Nancy M. Dick
Mr. & Mrs. Arthur R. Dickerson
Miss Camille L. Dickerson '88
Mr. & Mrs. Michal H.
Dickinson '76 '84
Mr. Donald S. Diefendorf '90
Mr. William T. Dippel '67
Mr. & Mrs. John N. Dirks
Mr. William F. Doering '38
Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Doherty
Mr. & Mrs. James E. Doherty '47 '49
Mr. & Mrs. Gerald P. Doherty
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas J. Donahue
Mrs. Margaret G. Donald '72
Mr. & Mrs. Robert J. Doran '61
Mr. Julian A. Dorf '49
Mr. David E. Dougherty '55
Mrs. Mabel S. Douglass '36
Mr. Kenneth Douty '31
Mr. David M. Dressel '66
Mr. John D. Dressel '69
Miss Susan K. Duckworth '73
Ms. Suzanne H. Duckworth '52
Ms. Jody A. Dudderar '77
Mrs. Miriam S. Dumschott '28
Mrs. Sylvia M. Dunning '70
Mr. Mareen L. Duvall, Jr. '62
Mr. Ellis C. Dwver '35
Mr. David Z. Earle '49
Hon. Robert C. Farley '52
Mr. Richard J. Earnshaw III '87
Mr. Christopher J. Eastridge '76
Mrs. Katherine Y. Eaton '63
Mrs. William C. Eberlein
Mr. James D. Edwards '56
Mr. Paul W. Eichler '86
Dr. George M. Eisentrout '39
Mr. George R. Elder, Jr. '48
Captain Robert M. Elder '51
Mr. & Mrs. Jay H. Elliott '75
Mr. & Mrs. Starke M. Evans '65 '66
Mr. Richard H. Evans '65
Mrs. Sarah J. Everdell '71
Lt. Col. William B. Ewing, Jr. '71
Mr. H. C. Fait '49
Mr. Don T. Falls, Jr. '36
Dr. Robert W. Farr '29
Mrs. Susan L. Fast '66
Mr. & Mrs. George W. Fellows
Ms. Margaret A. Fenderson '43
Mr. & Mrs. Joseph S. Fisher '51
Mr. & Mrs. David C. Fisher '34 '34
Mr. Anthony C. FitzGerald '84
Mr. & Mrs. Robert FitzGerald
Mr. & Mrs. Peter R. Fitzgerald '75 '75
Mr. John R. Flato '69
Mrs. Marion R. Fleck '48
Mrs. Sue S. Flory '55
Mr. & Mrs. John D. Floyd
Mr. Samuel F. Ford '40
Mr. French Shriver Foster
Mr. & Mrs. C.T. Foster
Mr. Jerome Frampton, Jr. '29
Mr. & Mrs. Richard S. Frank '62 '64
Mrs. Mary Lu Freeman '45
Mrs. Marion T. Freeny
Mr. W. Edwin Freeny '31
Ms. Phyllis E. Frere '73
Dr. Scott D. Friedman '75
Mrs. Mary P. Friel '33
Mrs. Christina R. Frvman '82
Mrs. Leigh Barnard Furda '70
Mr. & Mrs. Robert W.
Gaddis.Jr. '85'86
Mr. Thomas M. Gaines '86
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas H. Gale
Mrs. Ellen T. Gale '56
Dr. & Mrs. Jairo E. Garcia
Mr. Geoffrey R. Garinther '81
Dr. & Mrs. Mortimer Garrison '42 '43
Mr. William B. Gerwig III '82
Mr. & Mrs. Paul A. Gianquinto '76 '74
Mr. Mordecai T. Gibson, Jr. '36
Mr. Ralph T. Gies '48
Mr. & Mrs. Stephen W. Gieser
Mr. John L. Gill '50
Dr. & Mrs. Albert P. Giraitis '34 '34
Mr. Milton F. Clock, Sr. '40
Miss Louise A. Goddard '73
Ms. Claire M. Golding '80
Ms. Margaret S. Goldstein '76
Mrs. Alice B. Goodfellow '57
Ms. Elizabeth J, Gordon '59
Mr. Frederick A. Gorgone III '70
Mrs. Mary C. Green
Mrs. Nancy M. Greenberg '59
Mr. Daniel L. Greenfeld '61
Mr. Stephen P. Gregory '90
Mrs. Ann W. Grieves
Mr. & Mrs. John F. Grim, Jr. '53 '55
Mr. Joseph E. Grove '53
Mr. Michael A. Grover '68
Mr. Wayne H. Gruehn '55
Dr. & Mrs. Oskar Gulbrandsen
Mr. John P. Habermann '78
Mr. & Mrs. James F. Hackett
Mr. & Mrs. George D. Haddow '74 '76
Mr. & Mrs. E. Halivopoulos
Mr. Richard W. Hall '34
Mrs. Lois B. Hall '33
Ms. Elizabeth W. Hall '37
Mr. William L. Hallam '76
Mr. Michael R. Halperin '63
Mr. James R. Halpin '58
Dr. Merle A. Handy '60
Mr. & Mrs. Richard J. Hannum
Dr. & Mrs. Christian M. Hansen
Dr. & Mrs. Vaughn A. Hardesty '65 '66
Mr. Bernard O. Hardesty, Jr. '62
Mr. & Mrs. Robert S. Harner
Mr. Edgar D. Harrington '65
Mr. William E. Harrington '66
Mr. & Mrs. Samuel D. Harris, Jr.
Mr. Rodney L. Harrison '58
Mr. & Mrs. Haydon M.
Harrison '65 '66
Mrs. Sarah S. Harrison
Mr. & Mrs. Richard Harwood
Mr. & Mrs. Grover B. Hastings '34 '30
Mr. & Mrs. Edward Hatfield
Ms. M. Susanne Hayman '73
Mr. & Mrs. Harry J. Haynsworth, IV
Mrs. Ermyn J. Heck '24
Mr. & Mrs. Samuel L. Heck '67
Mr. Thomas L. Hederman '53
Dr. Mark R. Hellberg '79
Mr. James W. Henley, Jr. '60
Mr. Peter C. Herbst '70
Dr. & Mrs. Janairo F. Hernandez
Mr. Carter M. Hickman '31
Reverend Robert C. Hicks '52
Cdr. Harry J. Hicks, Jr. '39
Mr. Lyle B. Himebaugh III '86
Mr. Walter R. Hitchcock '50
Mr. & Mrs. George H. Hocker
Mrs. Miriam F. Hoffecker '36
Mr. Thomas C. Hofstetter '54
Mr. Robert A. Holland '55
Mr. Laurence G. Holland '26
Mr. Colin P. Hollingsworth '33
Mr. & Mrs. Alen HoUomon
Mr. Richard B. Holloway '71
Dr. Richard E. Holstein, D.M.D. '68
Mr. Joseph L. Holt '83
Mr. & Mrs. Alexander H. Hoon
Mr. & Mrs. David Hoopes
Ms. Sally Hopkins
Mr. Thomas C. Hopkins, Jr. '48
Mr. John H. Hoppe, Jr. '40
Mr. H. Samuel Hopper '71
Mr. & Mrs. Joshua L. Horner '40 '38
Mr. Archie H. Horner '47
Mr. Leon D. Horowitz '38
Mr. Charles F. Horstmann, Jr. '73
Mrs. Gertrude C. Howard '33
Mr. Philip K. Howard
Mrs. Joan E. Huber '49
Mr. John R. Huber '86
Mr. Scott E. Huber '79
Mr. & Mrs. J. Stephen Huebner
Ms. Jane V. Humbertson '53
Mr. Robert J. Hunter '69
Mrs. Priscilla D. Hutchinson '56
Captain & Mrs. Frank W. Hynson
Mr. Charles G.Irish, Jr. '49 "
Mrs. Margaret M. Isherwood '72
Mr. & Mrs. David D. Isherwood '74 '72
Mr. & Mrs. Francis P. Jackman
Mr. & Mrs. Richard E. Jackson '68
Mr. Robert C. Jacobs '65
Mr. Daniel T. Jankelunas, Jr. '76
Mr. & Mrs. Lester K. Jenkins
Mrs. O. Willis Jennings'76
Mr. John R. Jennings '59
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas W. Jerardi
Mr. Darrell Jester '81
Mr. & Mrs. David S. Jewett
Mrs. Audrey C. Johnson '38
Dr. Karen A. Johnson '68
Mr. & Mrs. Jeffrey W. Johnson '85 '85
Ms. Sandra E. Johnson '76
Ms. Kathleen G. Jones '77
Mr. & Mrs. Jonathan L. Jones '77 '80
Mr. L. Ray Jones '49
Mr. Patrick G. Jones '84
Mr. William I. Jones, Jr. '43
Mrs. Patricia M. Jones '83
Mr. & Mrs. Otto P.J. Jons
Mr. & Mrs. James N. Juliana '44
Mr. Harry F. Kabernagel '51
Mr. Richard A. Kaier '86
Mrs. Virginia S. Kaiser
Mrs. Margaret T. Kane
Mr. & Mrs. Michael Kardash '41 '43
Mr. Richard D. Karpe '70
Mr. Richard C. Kaste '74
Mr. & Mrs. Julian A. Katchadurian
Mr. & Mrs. Bruce 1. Katz '76 '76
Dr. Maurice Kaufman '39
Dr. & Mrs. Arthur Keefe, Jr.
Mrs. Elsie W. Kehler '38
Ms. Wendy F. Keller '71
Mrs. Minor S. Kelley '42
Dr. Kris E. Kennedv '76
Mr. & Mrs. William H.
Kenworthey, Jr. '50 '53
Dr. & Mrs. Atlee C. Kepler '42 '44
Mr. Clarence L. Kibler '39
Mrs. Miriam K. Kieffer '46
Ms. Maryanna L. Kieffer '70
Dr. & Mrs. Arthur Kiendl '40
Mr. & Mrs. Brian S. Kimerer '69 '72
Mrs. Mary C. King '43
Mr. Jeffeiy S. King '73
Mr. & Mrs. Allen R. Kirbv, Sr. '42
Mr. Richard T. Kircher '85
Mrs. Becky H. Kirwan '70
Mr. Donald T. Kirwan '50
Ms. M. Catherine Kinvan '37
Mr. Lawrence S. Kligerman '77
Mrs. Priscilla H. Klipstein '79
Mr. & Mrs. Robert H. Koehler
Mr. & Mrs. David Koenigsberg
Dr. Max D. Koenigsberg '75
Dr. Terumi S. Kohwi '71
Dr. Leonard S. Krassner '50
Mrs. Dorothy Jones Kraus '40
Mrs. Elizabeth C. Kuensell '82
Mr. & Mrs. Geoffrey Kurtzman '77 '83
Dr. & Mrs. William'o. LaMotte
Mr. Patrick J. LaMoure '85
Mr. & Mrs. Frederick E. LaWall '52 '53
Mr. & Mrs. William A. Land '55 '50
Mr. & Mrs. Richard A. Larkin, Jr. '74
Dr. Ernest M. Larmore, Jr. '42
Mr. Roland T. Larrimore '62
Mr. Robert W. Larson, Jr. '75
Miss Patricia A. Latham '82
Mr. Spencer B. Latham '54
Mrs. Virginia M. Laumeister '55
Mrs. Ann T. Lavert^' '78
Mr. & Mrs. John La\vrence, Jr. '82 '83
Mrs. Barbara P. Lawrence '75
Mrs. Anne K. Laynor '82
Mrs. Louise C. Layton '31
Mr. Robert W. Lazzaro, Esq. '74
Ms. Victoria P. Lazzell '74
Dr. Phillip G. LeBel '64
Mrs. Marie P. Ledford '56
Mr. Robert E. Lehman, Jr. '70
Mr. & Mrs. Edward J. Lehmann '67 '68
Ms. Leslie A. Lehrkinder '78
Dr. Charles J. Leiman '39
Mr. Arthur E. Leitch, Jr. '62
Dr. & Mrs. Robert E. Leitch '62 '65
Mr. & Mrs. Maurice Lennon
Mrs. Carolvn B. Lense '51
Mr. Laurance A. Leonard '52
Miss Dorothv V. Leonard '41
Mr. & Mrs. John J.B. Lerch III
Mr. Richard Lester '58
Mr. (& Mrs. Elvin J. Lewis '49 '49
Mr. Walter R. Lewis '71
Mr. Richard C. Lewis '51
Mr. & Mrs. John P. Lippke
Mr. & Mrs. Robert W. Lipsitz '54
Mrs. Catherine A. Litchfield '30
Mr. Arthur W. Liftman III '85
Dr. John K. Livingood '49
Mr. & Mrs. Rawson Lizars, Jr.
Dr. & Mrs. Gordon N. Lockhart
Mrs. Irma R. Lore '44
Mr. & Mrs. J. C. Loveland, Jr.
42
Washington College Magazine//4)i?i»(j/ Report 1991
Mr. E. Rankin Lusby '50
Ms. Susan G. Luster '72
Mrs. Lisa L. Luther '83
Ms. Cecily W. Lyle '85
Mr. Thornton G. Lynam '49
Mrs. Susan W. Lyons '72
Mrs. Mary L. Lyons '66
Mr, Theodore Lytwyn '44
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas MacFarlane
Mr. Roy E. Macdonald, Jr. '55
Mr. & Mrs. Samuel M. Macera '57 '56
Mrs. Ann E. Macielag '48
Mrs. MarjorieJ. Madera '69
Ms. Kimberly A. Madigan '87
Dr. Henry F. Maguire '42
Mr. & Mrs. Thompson A.
Maher '83 '85
Mr, & Mrs. J, Wilham Maisel '79 '78
Dr. Houchidar C. Maneche
Ms. Bayley E. Marks
Mr. Walter A. Marschner '63
Mr, Thomas S. Marshall '68
Ms. Mary E. Martindale '66
Mr. Paul F. Mason '64
Mr. Joseph S. Massey '69
Mrs, Karen Sammis Matheson '71
Mr, Edwin C, Mattison '54
Mr, Vincent J, Maximo '90
Dr, & Mrs, Daniel D, Maxwell
Mr, John G, McCarthy, Jr,
Mr, R, Bruce McCommons '63
Ms, Lauren S, McCoy
Mr, & Mrs, Jack D, McCullough '52
Dr, Raymond O, McCullough, Jr, '32
Mr, Harry D, McEnroe '82
Ms, Jean S, McFadden '67
Ms, Patricia K, McGee '81
Mr. & Mrs. John W. McGinnis '67 '69
Mr. & Mrs. Donald F. McHugh '53
Mr. & Mrs. Edward B. McKay '70 '74
Mr. John A. McKenna '58
Mr. J. Scott McKenney '29
Mr. & Mrs. James C. McKinney '68 '69
Mr. & Mrs. C. James McKnight '84 '84
Mr. & Mrs. Lee G. McKnight
Mr. Brian A. McLelland '86
Mrs. Sharyn C. McQuaid '66
Mr. John C. Mead '38
Mrs. Margaret M. Meade-Bogguss '74
Mr. William E. Medford '40
Mrs. Dorothy F. Medicus '79
Mrs. Lucile R. Meek '34
Dr. & Mrs. Hector C. Mendez
Ms. Eileen S. Menton '72
Mr, & Mrs. Stuart C. Mercereau
Dr. & Mrs. Charles Merdinger
Mrs. Roxanna D. Merriken '46
Mr. Donald B. Messenger '57
Mr. James M. Metcalf '54
Mr. Allan Meyers
Mrs. Clarence W. Miles
Ms. Nancy M. Miller
Lt. Col. Stephen A. Mires '71
Mr. Charles A. Mock '68
Mr. Walter K. Moffett '34
Mrs. Elizabeth G. Money '39
Mr. Scott K. Monroe '61
Mr. & Mrs. Robert Montenegro
Mr. & Mrs. Leonard E. Moody
Mr. Taryn S. Moody '76
Mr. & Mrs. Roger Mooney
Mr. & Mrs. Tommy E.
Moore, Jr. '86 '89
Mrs. Mary B. Moore '39
Mr. Frank A. Moorshead
Mr. Herbert J. Morgan, Jr. '47
Mrs. Martha L. Morris '46
Mr. & Mrs. John W. Morrison
Mr. Stephen P. Morse '80
Ms. Ann C. Most '82
Mr. & Mrs. John A. Mouracade
Mr. George M. Mowell '73
Mr. & Mrs. James R. Moxley, Jr.
Mr. Brian L. Mueller '83
Mrs. Diane L. Muhlfeld '67
Mrs. Paula S. Murphy '68
Dr. Harry L. Myer '43
Mrs. Pamela D. Naplachowski '76
Mr. J. Stephen Neuberth '78
Mr. Joseph M. Nichols, Jr. '70
Mr. Fred W. Nickerson '51
Mr. & Mrs. C. Frederick Norris '28
Dr, Richard A, Norris '74
Mr, Paul J, Noto '77
Mr, & Mrs, Richard D,C. Noyes '73 '76
Mr, Donald M. Nuetzel '56
Mr. & Mrs. John E. Nunn III '80 '79
Mr. & Mrs. Peter C. O'Connor
Mr. Kevin J. O'Connor '82
Mr. Kenneth G. Oehlkers '64
Mrs. Barbara E. Oelschlaeger '48
Mr. & Mrs. Frederick W.
Ohrenschall '75 '74
Mrs. Madie M. Oliveras '56
Mr. John C. Olson '89
Dr. N. Elizabeth Osborn, O.D. '74
Mr. & Mrs. Edward H, Osborne
Mr. Charles D. Osteen '49
Ms. Chris A. Owens '73
Mr. William W. Paca, Jr. '42
Mr. John C. Palmer '55
Mr. John F. Panasci '83
Mr. John R. Parker '55
Dr. Dean Parker 11
Ms. Ruth E. Parry '74
Mr. L. Stephen Patrick '76
Mr. Wilbert T. Patterson '42
Mr. & Mrs. Tilford H. Payne
Mr. Clarence G. Peregoy '23
Mrs. Miriam S. Perkins '42
Mr. Gordon L. Perry '75
Ms. Ethel J. Pettit '70
Mr. & Mrs, John R, Petz
Mr, Frederic S, Peyser '36
Mr, Douglas B, Pfeiffer '75
Mr, William H, Phillips '53
Mr, Robert W. Pierce '48
Mr, & Mrs, George J, Pinto '42 '42
Miss Laura C. Plantin '75
Ms, Joyce E, Poetzl '60
Mr, Raymond R, Pomeroy '51
Mr, Richard J, Portal '79
Mr, & Mrs, William B. Potter '87
Dr, George T, Pratt '36
Mr, William B. Prendergast '66
Dr, & Mrs, Charles T, Pridgeon
Mr, & Mrs, Eric S, Purdon '66 '69
Mr. & Mrs. Michael G. Puskar
Mrs. Patricia B. Putnam '75
Mrs. Margaret G. Quimby '79
Mrs. Melinda A. Rachlin '76
Dr. Stanley Z. Raksin '69
Mrs. Marian H. Rankin '28
Mrs. Henrietta B. Rasin '36
Ms. Marjorie A. Rawie '75
Mrs. Christine A. Raymond '79
Mr, Robert L, Reck '63
Dr, William M, Reed '51
Mrs, Helen C, Reed '43
Mrs, Virginia H, Reed '79
Dr, & Mrs, Louis W, Reedt' 73 '83
Mr, Walter H, Rees '33
Mr, & Mrs, Thomas J. Regan '76
Mr, James H, Reinhardt '86
Mrs. Gladys R. Reinhart '37
Ms. Cynthia Renoff '70
Mrs. Helen W. Reustle '76
Mr. & Mrs. Stephen C. Rexford
Mr. Allan P. Reynolds '73
Mr. & Mrs. Hal K. Reynolds
Mrs. Ruth S. Rich '43
Dr. Margaret M. Rich '64
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Mrs. Dale P. Adams '65
Mr. James E. Anthony, Jr. '44
Ms. Anne E. Burris '48
Dr. Ivon E. Culver '35
Mr. Charles F. Downs '59
Mr. George R. Elder, Jr. '48
Ms. Sally Hopkins
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Mrs. Arthur A, Knapp
Mrs. Constance Stuart Larrabee
Dr. Daw McCall
Ms. Margaret B. Melcher '69
Mr. William M. Nagler '42
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Judge Marvin H. Smith '37
Mr. Stanley M. Smith '62
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Ms. Elizabeth R. Thibodeau '36
Dr. William C. VanNewkirk '38
Mrs. Clarence C. White
Mr. Clarence M, Willis, Jr, '29
Mr, Douglas W, Richards '75
Mrs, Ellen Virginia F, Richards '41
Mr, John C, Richey '56
Mr, & Mrs, Henry E. Riecks '58 '58
Mr, Paul A. Riecks '64
Mr, & Mrs, A, Noble Riedy '40 '46
Miss Deborah A, Risberg '81
Mr, David M. Ritz '69
Dr. Albert W. Ro '78
Mr. David C. Roach '71
Mrs. Bonnie Kerr Robbins '69
Mr. John B. Robins IV '73
Mr. William A, Robinson '30
Mr. & Mrs. Oliver E. Robinson '32 '31
Mr, Orem E, Robinson, Jr, '51
Mr, & Mrs, Christopher Rogers '71 '73
Mr, & Mrs, Robert A, Ruff, Jr, '44 '46
Reverend Dale L, Ruth '50
Dr, Rita Mary D, Ryan '51
Mrs. Dorothy K. Ryan '34
Mr. & Mrs. Donald G. Rypka
Reverend Wesley L. Sadler, Jr. '35
Mr. Nicholas J. Samaras '69
Mrs, Jean Dixon Sanders '79
Mr, James N, Saunders '27
Mr, & Mrs, C, Daniel Saunders '68
Mrs, Jeanne B, Scampoli '57
Mr, CarlW, SchallerIII'89
Mr, & Mrs, Kenneth E. Scheck '63 '84
Mr, Charles L, Schelberg '49
Mr, Paul R. Schlitz '75
Dr, &: Mrs, Bradford Schwartz
Mrs, Virginia K, Sclarenco '51
Mr, James H. Scott III '59
Mr. & Mrs. William P. Scully
Mr. & Mrs. Patrick C. Seelev '65 '67
Mrs. Terri T. Selby '78
Mr. & Mrs. John G. Semmes
Mr. Robert W. Sharbaugh '79
Mrs. Jane R. Sharrow '64
Mr. & Mrs. Arthur E. Shaw
Mr. Hal B. Shear, Jr. '64
Ms. Linda J. Sheedy '69
Ms. Julia R. Shepard '81
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas R. Shepherd, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Eugene J. Sheppard
Mr. & Mrs. Jolin P. Sherman '77 '79
Dr. Frederick W. Shillinger '47
Mr. & Mrs. Alfred P. Shockley '55
Mr. A. Patrick Shockley '84
Mr. Andrew L. Shorter '78
Mr. & Mrs. Samuel H. Shriver, Jr.
Mrs. Reynold C. Siersema, Jr.
Mr. Gordon M. Silesky '51
Mr. & Mrs. RaymondG.Simkins '48 '48
Mr. David H. Singer '57
Mr, & Mrs, Ronald C. Sisk '56 '64
Senator Dean G. Skelos '70
Mr. »Sc Mrs. Louis Skidmore, Jr.
Mr. Emerson P. Slacum '36
Mr. & Mrs. Charles S. Smith '46 '42
Dr. & Mrs. David J. Smith
Mr. Donald W. Smith '42
Mr. James R. Smith '52
Admiral John W. Smith '42
Mr. & Mrs. John W. Smith
Mr. & Mrs. Kirby L. Smith '48 '46
Mr. M. Rogers Smith '51
Mrs, Margaret M, Smith '77
Mr, Stanley M, Smith '62
Dr, John R, Smithson '34
Reverend Thelma A. Smullen '64
Dr, Ralph Snyderman, M.D, '61
Ms. Vali M. Somers '75
Mr. Roger S. Soo '72
Mr. & Mrs. John D. Sparks, Jr. '56 '55
Captain James S. Spielman '41
Mrs. Eileen R. Spillane '70
Mrs. Jane B. Sprinkle '48
Mrs. Georgianna R. Startt '30
Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth S. Stein '68 69
Mr. Philip J. Stein '67
Mr. & Mrs. Arnold J. Sten '58 '60
Mr. Edgar L. Stephenson, Jr. '52
Mrs. Elizabeth A. Stephenson '78
Mr. & Mrs. Billy Stevens
Mr, & Mrs, David E. Stevens '65 '65
Mr, James A, Stevens, Jr, '43
Mr, H, G, Stevenson
Mrs, Kathryn H. Stewart
Mr. J. Kenneth Stewart '26
Mrs. Henrietta C. Straughn '27
Mr, Albert T, Streelman '69
Col, Arthur H, Streeter '57
.Mr, Emil A, Sueck, Jr, '79
Mr, Paul C, Sullivan '74
Mrs, Marjorie S, Summers '42
Mr, & Mrs, William L, Susen
Mr, & Mrs, David J, Svec '66 '68
Dr. Cathy W. Swan '70
Mrs. Emmy Lou Swanson '72
Ms. Mary M. Sworsky '75
Mrs. Betty P. Sylvester '49
Mrs. Irma T. Symons '41
Mr. Peter E. Takach '76
Mr. & Mrs. Ricky Takai '75 '74
WasJiington College Magazine//4n)!i/fl/ Report 1991
Dr. A. Donaldson Tall '50
Mr. & Mrs. Theodore T. Tansi
Dr. Norman Tarr '48
Mrs. June W. Tassell '55
Mr. Nathan N.Tattar '39
Dr. Carol F. Taylor '69
Mrs. Susan D. Taylor '79
Mr, Jay D. Tebo '54
Mr. Franklin B. Thomas '76
Mr. James F. Thompson '75
Dr, Ralph R. Thornton '40
Mr. & Mrs. Robert C. Tiehel
Mr. Cornelius A. Tilghman, Jr. '53
Mr. Douglass. Tillev '54
Mr. & Mrs- C. Howard Tilley '50 '51
Mrs. Betty W. Tillinghast
Mr, William C. Tomlinson '50
Mr. Constantine N. Tonian '53
Mr, Jonathan M. Topodas '68
Mrs. Deborah S. Tormey '78
Mrs, Sara W, Towers '46
Judge B. Hackett Turner, Jr. '30
Dr. Lisa P. Turner '74
Mr. & Mrs. G, Robert Tyson '59 'bl
Mr. Douglas E. Unfried '68
Mrs. Lucille D Urbas '70
Mrs. Sara R. Valliant '37
Mr. Charles B. P. VanPelt
Mrs, Peggy B, Vandervoort '41
Mrs, Mary F. Vartanian '66
Dr. & Mrs. Andrew H. Vendeiis
Mrs, Kim M. Venterea-Zonenshine '80
Mr. & Mrs. Larry Ventis '70
Ms. Deborah A. Veystrk '72
Mr. & Mrs, Harrv E, Victor
Mr. & Mrs, C, Clifton Virts III '72 '72
Mr. Frank C- Vogel Jr. '75
Mr. Philip W. Vogler, Esq. '75
Mr. & Mrs. G, Gerard Voith '47 '47
Mr. & Mrs. Eilert C. von Voss
Mr. & Mrs. Lawrence K.
Wagner, Jr. '83 '84
Mr. Richard A, Wagner III '79
Mr. John D. Walk '44
Mr, Earl E.Walker '29
Mrs. Lucille F, Wallop
Mr. & Mrs. William Walls, Jr. '75 '11
Captain Samuel C. Walls '34
Dr, Harry M. Walsh '48
Mr, Reuben M. Ware '39
Mr. John M, Warther '43
Ms, Penelope B. Wasem '70
Mr, Keith P. Watson '69
Mr. & Mrs. Graham W. Watt '49 '51
Mr, John H. Way '71
Mr. A. Edward Webb, Jr. '67
Mr. & Mrs, John Weikart
Mr. & Mrs. Lawrence S. Wescott '51
Dr, Howard B, Wescott '62
Ms. Estelle B. Wesley '37
Ms. Loretta M. West '72
Alumni from the 1920s reunite in May at
Broivn Cottage.
Mr. Peter Wettlaufer '70
Mrs. Jean M. Wetzel '66
Mr. Graydon A. Wetzler '63
Mr. John G. Wharton, Jr. '80
Miss Julie A, Wheeler '81
Rev, John B. Wheeler '53
Mr, James B, White '37
Mr, Robert B. White '37
Mr. & Mrs, James P White
Mr. & Mrs. Charles M, Whiteford
Dr. Benjamin T, Whitman '68
Dr. & Mrs, Joseph Wiesenbaugh
Mrs. Christine H, Wiggins '79
Mr. & Mrs, Frank B. Wildman 111 '64
Mr. Andrew B. Williams III '73
Dr. George C. Williams '71
Mr. & Mrs. Judson Williams III
Mr. & Mrs. Robert T. Williams '51 '51
Mr, & Mrs. T. Evan WilHams, Jr. '82
Mr, & Mrs, Thomas C, Williams
Mr. & Mrs, Jack Willis '82 '85
Mr. & Mrs. John H. Willock
Mrs. Eleanor T. Wilson '32
Mr. William H. Wilson, Jr. '69
Mr, F, Kirwan Wineland '83
Miss Jesse F, Winston '89
Mr, & Mrs. Robert B. Wolfe
Mr, L, Ray Wood '51
Ms, Ann W, Woodruff '69
Mrs, Nancv J. Wooidridge '51
Dr. James R. Wright '48
Mr, David C. Wnght '79
Mr. & Mrs. Phillip L. Wright
Ms. Kathryn A, Wurzbacher '83
Mr. W. Lee Yerkes '75
Ms. Mary R. Yoe '73
Mrs. Sarah Voder Yost
Mr, Albert). Young '81
Mr, Lawrence K. Yourtee '37
Mr. Jerome F. Yudizki '56
Mrs. Henrietta H. Zahrobsky '64
Mrs, Christie M. Ziolkowski
Corporations
E.S, Adkins & Company
Alex Brown & Sons, Inc.
Alger Oil, Inc.
American Pyrotechnics Association
Automatic Leasing Service, Inc.
Baltimore Gas & Electric Company
Black and Decker Corporation
Brambles Traditional Clothing
C & P Telephone Company
Chesapeake Bank & Trust
Chester River Food Service
Chesterlown Bank of Maryland
Chestertown Physical Therapy
College Park Contracting, Inc.
W. N. Cooper & Son, Inc.
Corsica Bookshop
Crop Genetics International
Davis Real Estate
Dixon Valve & Coupling Co., Inc.
Eastern Shore Animal Hospital
Fleetwood, Athey, Macbeth &
McCown
Feast of Reason
The Finishing Touch
First National Bank of Maryland
G.S.M. Industries, Inc.
Georgetown Yacht Basin, Inc,
Gillespie and Son, Inc.
Hercules, Inc.
Hicks Chevrolet
Hiller Investments, Inc,
Hoon & Barroll
C. Dodd Distributing Company
Jewell's Chevron Station
& L Building Materials, Inc,
Kent Island American Legion
Kent Printing
Kent Savings & Loan Association
LaMotte Chemical
Bucky Larrimore Insurance
Legg Mason Wood Walker, Inc.
Loyola Federal Savings & Loan
Association
Maryland National Bank
Mercantile Safe Deposit & Trust Co.
Mobile Cab & Baggage Company
Pardee's Lawn & Tree Service
Park Rug & Dry Cleaners Corp.
Paul's Shoe Store
Peoples Bank
Pip's Discount Liquors, Inc,
Rea Brothers, Inc,
Second National Bank
A Shear Design
Shore Distributors, Inc.
The Sly Horse
The St. Michaels Bank
Standard Fusee Corporation
Sutton's Towne Stationers
TA Instruments, Inc,
The Talbot Bank
The Thompson Building
University of St, Andrews
United States Fidelity & Guaranty
VIA Waye Travel Bureau
Video Visions, Inc.
The Watkins Auto Supply Co.
Widow's Walk Inn
Foundations
Borkee-Hagley Foundation
The Campbell Foundation
Foundation for the Carolinas
Eugene B. Casey Foundation
Coca Cola Foundation, U.S.A.
First Maryland Foundation
Jefferson L. Ford III Memorial Fund
Carl Forstmann Memorial Fdn., Inc.
The Henry Foundation
Elizabeth S. Hooper Foundation
Jessie Ball duPont Fund
The Kresge Foundation
John J, Leidy Foundation
Christian R. and Mary F. Lindback
Foundation
The Loyola Federal Foundation
The Rebecca Meyerhoff
Philanthropic Fund
National Science Foundation
The Noxell Foundation
The Schluderberg Foundation, Inc.
The Sears-Roebuck Foundation
W. Paul Starkey Foundation
Associations
Actors Community Theatre
Baltimore Alumni Chapter
Chestertown Rotary Club
DC. Alumni Chapter
The Eastern Shore Society of
Baltimore City
House of Delegates
Independent College Fund of
Maryland
Kent & Queen Anne's Alumni Chapter
Kent County Arts Council, Inc.
Maryland Humanities Council
Pennsylvania Horticultural Society
Women's League of WC
Friends of the Arts
Mrs, James A. Brown
Mr, and Mrs. Robert B. Congdon
Mr. and Mrs. Alonzo G. Decker, jr.
Hon, and Mrs. Robert W. Duemling
Carl Forstmann Memorial
Foundation, Inc.
Mr. Christian Havemeyer
Hoon & Barroll
Mrs. Constance Stuart Larrabee
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J. Maher
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence J. Radice
Mr. Robert R. Ramsey '77
Mrs. Sarah Yoder Yost
Mr. and Mrs. Rosyln D. Young
Trusts
Peggy and Yale Gordon Trust
The Hodson Trust
Report of
Class Giving
1924
Class Chair: Dorothy Woodall Myers
Total Contributions: $4,300.00
Members: 4
Contributors: 2
Participation: SC^c
Mrs. Ermyn J. Heck (Jewell)
Mrs. Dorothy Woodall Mvers
1925
Class Chair: Mrs. Rebecca B. Owens
Total Contributions: $ 700.00
Members: 5
Contributors: 4
Participation: 80%
Mrs. Virginia W. Culley
Dr. Leroy S. Heck
Mrs. Rebecca B. Owens
Mrs, James E. Spear, Jr.
1926
Class Chair: Mr. Leslie E. Timmons
Total Contributions: $475.00
Members: 13
Contributors: 9
Participation: b9%
Mrs. Mary C. Andrews (Camper)
Ms. Naomi B. Baxter
Mrs. Lida L. Blake (Leaverton)
Mrs. Shirley T. Goodrich (Touchton)
Mr. Laurence G. Holland
Mr. William L. Ryon
Ms. Mary E. Starkey
Mr. J. Kenneth Stewart
Mr. Leslie E. Timmons
Washington College Magazine / Annual Rtyort 1991
1927
Class Chair: Mrs. Avis R. Maddox
Total Contributions: $2,040.00
Members: 10
Contributors: 6
Participation: 60%
Mrs. Grace S. Chaires (Strickland)
Mrs. Anne P. Cooke (Perkins)
Mrs. Cora M. Green (McWhorter)
Mrs. Avis R. Maddox
Mr. James N. Saunders
Mrs. Henrietta C. Straughn (Crane)
1928
Class Chair:
Total Contributions: $ 1,475.00
Members: 13
Contributors: 10
Participation: Tl%
Mrs. Elizabeth D. Andrew (Dukes)
Mrs. Adrienne R. Dahlke (Richards)
Mrs. Miriam S. Dumschott (Shriver)
Mrs. Diantha R. Eaton (Roe)
Mrs. Esther K. Greer (Kauffman)
Mr. A. Crawford Moore
Mr. C. Frederick Norris
Mrs. Marian H. Rankin (Hunter)
Mr. Baker O. Shelton
Mr. Charles E. Smith
1929
Class Chair:
Total Contributions: $ 3,520.00
Members: 29
Contributors: 21
Participation: 72%
Mr. B. Lyle Appleford, Jr.
Mrs. Nell S. Bennett (Saunders)
Mrs. Kathryn S. Brinsfield (Smith)
Mr. Lewis M. Cross
Dr. Robert W. Farr
Mrs. Dorothy K. Gray (Knotts)
Mrs. Margaret C. Henderson (Cooper)
Mr. Jerome Frampton, Jr.
Mrs. Louise S. Lloyd (Startt)
Mrs. Laura F. Massey (Fields)
Mr. J. Scott McKenney
Mr. Walter T. Morris, Jr.
Mrs. Audrey S. Schreiber (Sard)
Mr. Wilton R. Todd
Mr. Earl E, Walker
Miss Miriam E. White
Mr. Clarence M. Willis, Jr.
Mr. William F. Willson
Mr. George W. Woodfield
Mr. Paul A. Zizelman, Jr.
1930
Class Chair: Mr. William J. Burk
Total Contributions: $1,590.00
Members: 23
Contributors: 15
Participation: 65%
Mr. John L. Bond
Mrs. Naudain M. Bond (Moore)
Mr. William T. Boston
Mrs. Helen R. Burk (Russell)
Mr. William J. Burk
Mrs. Beulah L. Carter (Clopper)
Mr. Howard F. Griffin
Mrs. Bernice W. Hastings (Wooters)
Mrs. Catherine A. Litchfield (Ayres)
Mrs. Ruth G. Parris (Gabler)
Miss E. Gertrude Rees
Mr. William A. Robinson
Mrs. Georgianna R. Startt (Robinson)
Judge B. Hackett Turner, Jr.
Mrs. Helen A. Wagner (Ashley)
The Class of 1 931 at their 60th reunion.
1931
Class Chair:
Total Contributions: $2,020.00
Members: 28
Contributors: 18
Participation: 64%
Mrs. Dorothy V. Copper (VanLenten)
Mrs. Elizabeth H. Dietrich
Mr. Kenneth Douty
Mr. Bernard Dubin
Mrs. Elizabeth M. Farver (Mace)
Mr. Carter M. Hickman
Mr. G. Vickers Hollingsworth, Jr.
Lt. Col. W. Kennon Perrin
Mrs. Louise C. Layton (Grouse)
Mr. Edwin T. Luckey
Mr. Joseph E. Phillips
Miss Edith S. Rees
Rev. Percy N. Reese
Mrs. Sarah L. Richardson (Linthicum)
Mrs. Dorothy S. Robinson (Simmons)
Mrs. Margaret R. Van Gilder (Russell)
Mr. Earl T. Willis
1932
Class Chair: Mr. T. Allen Stradley
Total Contributions: $ 980.00
Members: 20
Contributors: 11
Participation: 55%
Mr. Allan H. Bonwill
Mr. Charles N. Bradley
Mr. John H. Dixon
Mrs. Charlotte H. Furman (Holloway)
Dr. Raymond O. McCullough, Jr.
Mr. Howard K. Plummer
Mr. Oliver E. Robinson
Mr. T, Allen Stradley
Mr. James B. Williams
Mrs. Eleanor T. Wilson (Titsworth)
Mrs. Helen T. Wilson (Towers)
1933
Class Chair: Dr. Phillip]. Wingate
Total Contributions: $9,271.45
Members: 34
Contributors: 21
Participation: 62%
Mrs. Theodosia C. Bowie (Chapman)
Mrs. Elise K. Chapin (Kalb)
Captain Charles M. Clark
Mrs. Elizabeth H. Clough (Hepburn)
Mrs. Evelyn W. Conyers (Walbert)
Mrs. Mary P. Eriel (Parks)
Mr, D. Robert Furman
Mrs. Lois B. Hall (Baxter)
Mrs. Catherine H. Harris (Hepbron)
Mrs. Mary F. Heeg (Farr)
Mr. Colin P. Hollingsworth
Mrs. Gertrude C. Howard (Chaney)
Mr. Daniel W. Ingersoll
Mrs. Ethel H. Jaeger
Mrs. Arlene G. McLain (Gale)
Mrs. Elizabeth S. McGinniss (Schmidt)
Mr. J. Milton Noble
Mrs. Elizabeth W. Orem (Walbert)
Mr. Walter H. Rees
Mrs. Emily J. Webb (Jewell)
Dr. Philip]. Wingate
1934
Class Chair: Mr. James T. Anthony III
Co-Chair: Mr. James D. Davis III
Total Contributions: $5,726.00
Members: 33
Contributors: 27
Participation: 82%
Mr. James T. Anthony HI
Mrs. Sarah B. Bonwill (Byrn)
Mrs. Marie P. Bowdle (Poole)
Mr. Elmer W, Boyles
Mr. John T. Bruehl, Jr.
Mr. William E. Burkhardt
Mr. Omar J. Carey
Dr. Charles B. Clark
Mr. James D. Davis III
Mr. David C. Fisher
Mrs. Harriet R. Fisher (Ragan)
Dr. Albert P. Giraitis
Mrs. Marion E. Giraitis (Emmord)
Mr. G. Bert Hastings
Mr. Alfred S. Hodgson
Mr. Erwin L. Koerber
Mrs. Lucile R. Meek (Rasin)
Mrs. Kathryn M. Michaels
(McKenney)
Mr. Walter K. Moffett
Mr. Paul W. Pippin
Mr. Frederick W. Reinhold, Jr.
Mrs. Dorothy K. Ryan (Kimble)
Ms. Thelma B. Smith
Dr. John R. Smithson
Mrs. Patience P. Usilton (Pyle)
Cpt. Samuel C. Walls
1935
Class Chair: Mr. Alday M. Clements
Total Contributions: $109,182.81
Members: 46
Contributors: 28
Participation: 61%
Mr. Roland J. Bailey, Jr.
Mr. J. Walsh Barcus
Mr. Frank K. Barnhart
Mrs. Ella B. Brandt (Berkley)
Mr. Aldav M. Clements
Mrs. Frances S. Clendaniel (Silcox)
Mr. William O. Comella
Mr. Richard W. Cooper
Dr. Ivon E. CuK'er
Mr. Henry G. Davis
Mr. Ellis C. Dwyer
Mr. E. Clarke Fontaine
Mr. Alfred W. Gardiner
Hon. Louis L. Goldstein
Mrs. Eloise H. Kauffman (Hepburn)
Mr. Harold B. Kennerly, Jr.
Mr. John M. Lord
Mr. Alday M. Clements
Mr. Ira D. Measell, Jr.
Mr. Earl W. Price
Mr. Howard D. Rees, Jr.
Dr. Harry C. Rhodes
Rev. Wesley L. Sadler, Jr.
Mr. Richardson W. Sayler
Mrs. Wilma D. Schuellein (Dahn)
Dr. Leiand B. Stevens
Mr. William J. Watson
Mrs. Martha H. Williams (Hall)
Mr. Ray A. Wilson
1936
Class Chair: Mr. Charles R. Berry
Co-Chair: Ms. Elizabeth R, Thibodeau
Total Contributions: $17,065.00
Members: 49
Contributors: 36
Participation: 73%
Mr. Charles R. Berry
Mr. Laurence E. Cain, Jr.
Mrs. Dorothy C. Clifford (Clarke)
Mr. Carl M. Cochran
Mrs. Mabel S. Douglass (Smith)
Mrs. Gladys A. Dudley (Aldridge)
Mr. S. Charles Dudley
Mr. Don T. Falls, Jr.
Mrs. Elizabeth M. Fontaine (Morgan)
Mr. Mordecai T. Gibson, Jr.
Ms. Martha R. Harrison
Mrs. Helen J. Hastings (Jervis)
Mrs. Elizabeth D. Hoffecker (Dill)
Mrs. Miriam F. Hoffecker (Ford)
Mr. Ernest G. Holland
Mr. William E. Kight
Mrs. Blanche Z. Kirchner (Zittel)
Mrs. Doris M. Kolar (Metcalfe)
Mr. James S. Kreeger, Jr.
Mr. John M. Littell
Mr. William B. Nicholson
Mrs. Leah F. Perry (Frederick)
Mr. Frederic S. Peyser
Mrs. Edna C. Powell (Comegys)
Dr. George T. Pratt
Mrs. Anne M. Preston (McKenney)
Mrs. Henrietta B. Rasin (Bowen)
Mr. William A. Reinhart
Mrs. Harriett R. Skipp (Rogers)
Mr. Emerson P. Slacum
Mrs. Carolyn J. Strangmann (Jewell)
Mrs. Priscilla G. Swartz (Grainger)
Ms. Elizabeth R. Thibodeau
Mr. EUery J. Ward
Dr. Ralph Weinroth
Mr. Charles S. Wells, Sr.
1937
Class Chair: Colonel Paul E. Bruehl
Total Contributions: $8,485.00
Members: 38
Contributors: 23
Participation: 61%
Mr. Robert L. Adamson
Colonel Paul E. Bruehl
Mr. Howard E. Clark
Mrs. Katherine A. Clements
(Anthony)
Mr. Robert K. Fears, Jr.
Ms. Elizabeth W. Hall
Mrs. Irma H. Highfield (Harrington)
Dr. George W. Jones, Jr.
WasJiington College Magazine/ Annual Report 1991
Ms. M. Catherine Kirwan
Mrs. Elizabeth S. Knouse (Short)
Mrs. Olga S. McMahon (Shortess)
Captain Fedon G. Nides
Mr. John W. Perry, Jr.
Judge George B. Rasin, Jr.
Mrs. Gladys R. Reinhart (Riggins)
Mrs. Nancy P. Shapiro (Post)
Judge Marvin H. Smith
Mrs. Sara R. Valliant (Roe)
Ms. Estelle B. Wesley
Mr. James B. White
Mr. Robert B. White
Mr. Lawrence K. Yourtee
1938
Class Chair: Mrs. Hilda O. Micari
Total Contributions: $14,110,50
Members: 56
Contributors: 33
Participation: 59%
Mr. Charles C. Benham
Mr. Franklin A. Bolth
Mr. Madison B. Bordley, Jr.
Mrs. Elizabeth W. Bryan (Westcott)
Mrs. Margaret W. Carroll (Walters)
Mr. Ellwood T. Claggett
Mrs. Dorothy W. Daly (Williams)
Mr. William F. Doering
Mr. Charles S. Hague, Jr.
Mr. Philip A. Hickman, Jr.
Mrs. Margaret B. Hickman (Bell)
Mrs. Mary T. Horner (Taylor)
Mr. Leon D. Horowitz
Mrs. Audrey C. Johnson (Clough)
Reverend John E. Jones
Mrs. Elsie W. Kehler (Wharton)
Mr. Harold B. Kosowsky
Mr. R. Donald McDorman
Mrs. Alice C. McGuire (Crawford)
Mr. John C, Mead
Mrs. Hilda O. Micari (Ott)
Mrs. Betty S. Orme (Smith)
Mr. John F. Panowicz, Jr.
Mrs. Mary B. Sargent (Breeding)
Ms. Carrie E. Schreiber
Ms. Helen E. Shallcross
Cpt. Norman W. Shorb
Mrs. Hazel L. Smith (Lynch)
Dr. William W. Thompson
Mrs. Dolly M. Thornton (McCool)
Mrs. Grace M. Tinley (Morris)
Reverend Frederic H. Truitt
Dr. William C. VanNewkirk
1939
Class Chair: Dr. Charles J. Lciman
Total Contributions: $2,160.00
Members: 53
Contributors: 26
Participation: 49%
The Class of 1936 at its 55th reunion.
Mr. Charles F. Anderson
Mrs, Ruth H. Bartlett
Dr. John P. Blevins
Mrs. Elizabeth H. Booth (Baldwin)
Mrs. Jean R. Davis (Richardson)
Dr. George M. Eisentrout
Cdr. Harry J. Hicks, Jr.
Mrs. Bernice S. Holsinger (Smith)
Mrs. Mary L. Humphreys (Knotts)
Dr. Maurice Kaufman
Mr. Clarence L. Kibler
Mrs. Bissett F. Koesterer (Eraser)
Mrs. Sarah D. Kroker (Dodd)
Dr. Charles J. Leiman
Mrs. Maryanna R. Maguire (Reed)
Mr. William S. Medinger 111
Mrs. Elizabeth G. Money (Groves)
Mrs. Mary B. Moore (Brown)
Mr. Archie A. Morrison
Mrs. Freida D. Shapiro (Dorf)
Mr. Nathan N. Tattar
Dr. Basil Tully
Mr. William A. Urie
Mr. Reuben M. Ware
Mr. Carroll C. Woodrow
Mr. Herbert G. Young, Sr.
1940
Class Chair: Mr. WilHam H. Ford
Total Contributions: $34,220.00
Members: 64
Contributors: 41
Participation: 64%
Mr. Owen R. Anderson
Mrs. Charlotte S. Blevins (Shaull)
Mrs. Margaret S. Cadell (Spry)
Mr. Walter W. Claggett
Cpt. R. Lee Clark, Jr.
Mr. William J. Collins
Mr. John A. Copple
Mr. Henry V. Crawford
Mr. William B. Cronin
Mrs. Mary Margaret Ellwanger
(Gardner)
Mr. Robert L. Everett
Mr. Samuel F. Ford
Mr. William H. Ford
Mr. Milton R Clock, Sr.
Mrs. Gerry N. Groupe (Nash)
Mr. Walter B.Harris, Jr.
Mr. John H. Hoppe, Jr.
Mr. Joshua L. Horner
Mrs. Evelyn W. James (White)
Mr. William B. Johnson
Mr. William H. Jones
Mrs. Alice W. Kiendl (Williams)
Mr. William A. Kolar
Mrs. Dorothy Jones Kraus (Jones)
Mr. Donald E. Matthews
Mr Edward L. McCabe
Mrs Joseph H. McLain
(Hollingsworth)
Mrs Helen L. Mead (LosKamp)
Mr William E. Medford
Mr Frederick S. Micari
Mr Mark P. Morse, Jr.
Dr Dorsey C. Nelson
Mrs Grace W. Phillips (Willis)
i 'r Clarence G. Rawley
Mr A Noble Riedy
Mrs Louisa H. Royer (Hall)
I t Col Joe S.Elliott, Jr.
Dr Nathan Schnaper
Mr Omar W. Scott
Mr Benjamin R. Stevens
Dr Ralph R. Thornton
1941
Class Chair: Mrs. Helen W. Baker
Total Contributions: $8,340.00
Members: 54
Contributors: 33
Participation: 61%
Mrs. Helen W. Baker
Mr. George W. Baldwin
Mrs. Lydia M. Bordley (Mooney)
Dr. Frank J. Brady
Mrs. Margaret K. Bramble (Kintner)
Mr. William A. Buckingham
Mr. James O. Bush, Jr.
Dr. Asher B. Carey
Mr. David Clarke
Reverend Raymond J. Cooke
Mr. Edward W. Cooper
Mrs. Ellen Virginia F. Richards (Foley)
Mrs. Virginia N. Hague (Nock)
Dr. Harry C. Hendrickson
Mr. Ogle W. Hess
Rev. Ralph W. Hopkins
Miss Mary E. Jefferson
Mr. Michael Kardash
Mrs. Jean W. Keyser (Wheatley)
Ms. AnneT. Landry (Turner)
Miss Dorothy V. Leonard
Mr. Laurence E. McCalley, Jr.
Mrs. Charlotte R. McCalley (Russell)
Cmdr. Henry S. Morton, Jr.
Mr. John D.Phillips
Mr. Harold J. Rayne, Jr.
Mr. John W. Selby
Mr. F. Auvan Smith
Captain James S. Spielman
Mrs. Irma T. Symons (Taylor)
Mrs. Peggy B. Vandervoort (Branham)
Mr. Albert W. Wharton
Mrs. Priscilla B. Zwitzer (Brown)
1942
Class Chair: Mr. John P. Kirwan
Co-Chair: Mr. Robert E. Carter
Total Contributions: $11,200.00
Members; 87
Contributors: 45
Participation: 52%
Lt. Col. August A. Krometis
Mrs. Margaret P. Bailey (Pitt)
Mr. David Bartolini
Mr. John E. Benjamin, Jr.
Mrs. Sarah S. Buckingham (Spcicher)
Mrs. Shirley D. Bush (de Guzman)
Mr. Robert E. Carter
Dr. Robert K. Crane
Mr. James N. Deaconson
Mr. Henry A. Earp
Mr. Thomas W. Eliason, Jr.
Mrs. Virginia H. Eliason (Hoopes)
Dr. Mortimer Garrison
Cdr. Robert G. Garrison
Mrs. Marian T. Gildersleeve (Thomas)
Mrs. Sara B. Hannan (Blackwood)
Mr. John A. Harris
Mrs. Mildred B. Hess (Brooks)
Mr. Donald H. Homer
Mrs. Minor S. Kelley (Steele)
Dr. Atlee C. Kepler
Mr. Allen R. Kirby, Sr.
Mr. John P. Kirwan
Mr. Walter S. Koons
Dr. Ernest M. Larmore, Jr.
Mr. Oliver W. Littleton, Jr.
Dr. Henry F. Maguire
Mr. William M. Nagler
Mr. William W. Paca, Jr.
Mr. Wilbert T. Patterson
Mrs. Miriam S. Perkins (Sewell)
Mr, George J. Pinto
Mrs. Rebekah P. Pinto (Patterson)
Mr. Wilson L. Riedy
Mrs. Ellen B. Schottland (Bordley)
Mr. Donald W. Smith
Mrs. Jean L. Smith (Leland)
Admiral John W. Smith
Mrs. Mary K. Spurlin (Kintner)
Mrs. Marjorie S. Summers (Starr)
Mr. William O. Sutton
Mrs. Virginia P. Tarbutton (Primrose)
Mrs. Margaret P. Titus (Pritchard)
Mrs. Frances K. Tully (Kreeger)
Mrs. Janet S. Woodrow (Scott)
1943
Class Chair: Mr. Dietrich H. Steffens
Total Contributions: $16,370.00
Members: 78
Contributors: 44
Participation: 56%
Mr. Michael Alteri
Mrs. Mary D. Anderson (Dunn)
Mr. Thomas B. Andrews, Jr.
Mr. James M. Aycock
Mrs. Elinore Hubbard Bergner
(Hubbard)
Mr. Edwin R. Boyer, Jr.
Hon. Elroy G. Boyer
Mrs. Frances D. Brandt
Mr. Walter C. Brandt
Mrs. Mary Jeanne Comegys (Strong)
Mr. Phillip L. Dudley
Mr. Charles W. Dulin
Ms. Judith Fairchild-Fue (Fairchild)
Ms. Margaret A. Fenderson
Mrs. Jean W. Garrison (Wood)
Mrs. Elizabeth P. James (Peters)
Mr. William \. Jones, Jr.
Mrs. Eleanor R. Kardash (Rieck)
Mrs. Mary C. King (Campbell)
Dr. Theodore Kurze
Mr. Walter E. McCaulev
Mr. Donald S. McClellan
Members of the Class of 1941 at their 50th
Wasliington College Magazine/^niiM?/ Rcfcrt 1991
Mrs. Virginia C. McLernon (Cooper)
Mr. Charles H. Meiser, Jr.
Mr. Jean F. Messick
Dr. Harry L. Myer
Mr. James L. Parris
Mrs. M. Edith Pierre (Bishop)
Mrs. Helen C, Reed (Culver)
Reverend William H. Revelle, Jr.
Mrs. Ruth S. Rich (Smith)
Mr, F. Spencer Robinson
Mr. William M. Roe
Mrs. Hilda H. Shotwell (Hotchkiss)
Mr. HarryM, Slade,Jr.
Mrs. Emilie S. Spencer (Skirven)
Mr. Dietrich H. Steffens
Mr. James A. Stevens, Jr.
Mr. Robert H. Thav/ley
Mr. Clarence E. Valentine
Mr. John M. Warther
Mrs, Rachel H. Weedman (Hess)
Mr. John W.Williams, Jr.
Mrs. Mary N. Zimmerman (Nardi)
1944
Class Chair: Mr. James N. Juliana
Total Contributions: $7,100.00
Members: 43
Contributors: 19
Participation: 44%
Mr. James E. Anthony, Jr.
Dr. Leslie G. Callahan, Jr.
Mrs. Louise H. Clarke (Hammond)
Mr. Vernon F. Dowling
Mrs. Dola S. Dukes (Sylvester)
Mrs. Laura R. Geitz (Rainey)
Mr. James N. Juliana
Mrs. Annabelle S. Kepler (Sunderland)
Mrs. Alice D. Klar (Doukas)
Mrs. Irma R. Lore (Rogers)
Mr. Theodore Lytwyn
Mrs. Ruth B. Mahaffy (Broadwater)
Ms. Mary Lou Pontius (Truslow)
Mr. Robert A. Ruff, Jr.
Mrs. Margaret W. Selby (Wolcott)
Mrs. Eleanor H. Taylor
(Harnischfeger)
Mr. John D. Walk
Mrs. Betty H. Wharton (Hill)
Mr. Wallace Williams, Jr.
1945
Class Chair: Mrs. Dorothy R. Littleton
Total Contributions: $2,050.00
Members: 38
Contributors: 14
Participation: 37%
Mr, Joseph R. Arnold
Mr. Vachel A. Dou'nes, Jr.
Mrs. Mary Lu Freeman (Lumpkm)
Mr. Morton C. Katzenberg
Mrs. Anna Ruth L. Gerken (Logan)
Mrs. Dorothy R. Littleton
Mrs. Marie T. Moreland (Thornton)
Mrs. Mariana E. Nuttle (Everngam)
Mrs. Eleanor N. Oeser (Newton)
Mrs. Anne B. Rienhoff
Mrs. Dorothy L. Skocz (Lewis)
Mrs. Ellen E. Thawley (Edwards)
Mr. J. Arthur Wood
Mr. Lewis A. Yerkes
1946
Class Chair: Mrs. Margaret B. Smith
Total Contributions: $5,730.00
Members: 49
Contributors: 19
Participation: 39%
Mrs. Barbara C. Cawley (Cooper)
Mrs. Jean G. Cooper (Gill)
Ms. Mary J. Hendrickson
Mrs. M. Celeste Herbert (Pigg)
Dr. Dorothea M. Linley (Francis)
Mrs. Jean W. Meredith (Williams)
Mrs. Roxanna D. Merriken (Detwiler)
Mrs. Ruth N. Mink (Nichols)
Mrs. Martha L. Morris (Lumpkin)
Mrs. Barbara B. Pace (Brown)
Mrs. Helen B. Riedy (Brice)
Mr. H. Eugene Rook, Jr.
Mrs. Betty B. Ruff (Blackway)
Mr. Charles S. Smith
Mrs. Margaret B. Smith
Mrs. Margaret C Steffens (Smith)
Mrs. Sara W. Towers (Whaley)
Dr. Lewm A. Wheat
1947
Class Chair: Mr. Edward L. Athey
Total Contributions: $12,580.00
Members: 63
Contributors: 24
Participation: 38%
Mr. Edward L. Athey
Mr. John E. Barnes, Jr.
Mrs, Eugene B. Casey (Brown)
Mr. Daniel G, Conant, Jr.
Mrs. Alice R, Cook (Richards)
Mr, James E, Doherty
Mrs, Lillian W. Elzey (Wurzbacher)
Mr. James D. Emerson
Mrs. Patricia B. Gressitt (Bacon)
Mr. Archie H. Horner
Mrs. Mary B. Landt (Burns)
Mr. Frederick G, Livingood
Mr. Herbert J. Morgan, Jr.
Mr. Frederick W. Schroeter
Dr. Frederick W, Shillinger
Mr. Francis A, Shinnamon
Mr. Raymond G, Sinclair, Jr.
Mr. James M.Steele, Jr.
Mr. Joseph A. Sutton
Mr. Elmer C. Thomas
Mr. G. Gerard Voith
Mrs. Gloria B. Voith (Buschman)
Mr. John G.Walters
Mrs. Helen A. Winship (Almy)
1948
Class Chair: Ms. Anne E. Burris
Co-Chair: Robert L. Chamberlin, Jr.
Total Contributions: $5,470.00
Members: 90
Contributors: 50
Participation: 56%
Mrs. Katherine B. Bucher
Ms. Anne E. Burris
Mr. Wayne A. Cawley, Jr.
Mr. Robert L. Chamberlin, Jr.
Mrs. Nancy M. Conant (Moran)
Mrs. Margot A. Connellee (Albinson)
Dr. R. Reece Corey, Jr.
Mr. William E. Crim
Mr. Donald M. Derham
Mr. George R. Elder, Jr.
Mrs. Jacqueline H. Feeley (Heck)
Mrs. Marion R. Reck (Raynor)
Mr. Ralph T. Gies
Mrs. Frances L. Gill (Long)
Mr. William F. Gray
Mr. Jesse H. Green, Jr.
Mrs. Lillian B. Grieb (Ballard)
Mrs. Louise A. Harrison (Merryman)
Mr. Arnold L. Hayes
Mr. Thomas C. Hopkins, Jr.
Mrs. Harriet D. Hunter (Deibel)
Mrs. Maryland C. James (Cronin)
Mrs. Elaine T. Jones (Taylor)
Mrs. Louise H. Littleton (Hancock)
Rev. Lester E. Loder
Mr. John M. MacHale, Jr.
Mrs. Ann E. Macielag (Waterman)
Dr. Clayton E. McGran, Jr.
Mr. James G. Metcalfe
Mrs. Mary Jane Metcalfe (Ervin)
Rev. Howard W. Miller
Mrs. Mary B. Mills (Bartlett)
Dr. Howard C. Nesbitt
Mrs. Barbara E. Oelschlaeger (Evans)
Mr. Roberi W. Pierce
Miss M. Isabel Roberson
Mrs. Lois K. Rook (Koontz)
Mr. John W. Russell, Jr.
Mrs. Gene H. Simkins (Harmon)
Mr. Raymond G. Simkins
Mrs. Marilou C. Sinclair (Chenowith)
Mr. Kirby L. Smith
Mrs. Jane B. Sprinkle (Brooks)
Colonel Maurice G. Steele, Jr.
Mr. Wayne R. Stewart
Mrs. Ernestine S. Stringfellow (Short)
Dr. John W. Sutton
Dr. Norman Tarr
Dr. Harry M. Walsh
Dr. James R. Wright
1949
Class Chair: Mr. Louis E. Smith
Total Contributions: $11,710.00
Members: 115
Contributors: 53
Participation: 46%
Mrs. Ellen C. Adkins (Corddry)
Mrs. Margaret Jean Africa (Urffer)
Mr. Wilbur P. Barnes
Mr. George D. Bartram
Mr. Edward J. Bennett
Mrs. Hilda C. Bennett (Cohen)
Mr. James M. Brasure
Ms. Margaret B. Bray (Novak)
Hon. J. Robert Brown
Col. Cliffords. Case
Mr. Ernest S, Cookerly
Ms. Mary L. Davis
Mrs. Frances S. Doherty (Steffens)
Mr. Julian A, Dorf
Mr. David Z, Earle
Mr. David M, Eliason
Mr. H. C. Fait
Mr. John J. Feeley, Jr.
Mrs. Doris S. Forster (Sinclair)
Mrs. Bevedy S. Gilberi (Smith)
Mr. Robert W. Greene, Sr.
Mr. Tillman J. Gressitt
Mr. A. Powell Harrison
Mrs. Joan E. Huber (Sawyer)
Mr. John C. Huntington, Jr.
Mr. Charles G. Irish, Jr.
Mr. L. Ray Jones
Mrs. Laura J. Judge (Justus)
Mrs. Patricia L. Konecny
Mr. John W. Leonard, Jr.
Mr. Elvin J. Lewis
Wall Brandt '43. Don Derhatn '48, and
Bill Collins '40 reminisce al the Reunion
picnic.
Mrs. Gloria E. Lewis (Ellison)
Dr. John K. Livingood
Mr. Thornton G. Lynam
Mrs. AnneG. Mathieu (Golt)
Mrs. Anita S. Moore (Starlings)
Mrs. Thelma N. O'Grady (Nickerson)
Mr. Charles D. Osteen
Ms. Lois P. Parker (Proctor)
Mrs. Flora Mae Russell (Barrett)
Mr. Charles L. Schelberg
Mr. Kenneth E. Schomborg
Mr. Lewis E. Smith
Mrs. Janice B. Spitzer (Burgess)
Dr. W. Jackson Stenger, Jr.
Mrs. Catherine H. Stevens (Hurst)
Mrs. Margaret K. Stierstorfer
(Kishbauch)
Mr, Clifton E.Streat, Jr.
Mrs. Maxine B. Streat (Brown)
Mrs. Betty P. Sylvester (Payne)
Mr. Graham W. Watt
Mr. Edwin C. Weber, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. William H. Cooper
1950
Class Chair: Mr. Paul W. Nicewarner
Total Contributions: $8,300.00
Members: 174
Contributors: 64
Participation: 37%
Mr. John R. Althouse
Mr. Vincent L. Bacchetta, Jr.
Dr. William F. Bennett
Dr. Edwin H. Besson
Mrs. Rosemary W. Betts (Wright)
Mr. Walter H. Blake
Mr. Louis G. Blizzard
Mr. Henry G. Bosz
Dr. Charles L. Brandenburg, Jr.
Dr. Herman G. Brant
Mr. James P. Brown, Jr.
Mr. Frederick R. Brown
Mr. Donald F. Campbell
Mr. James M. Campbell
Mr. Jerome P. Chambers
Mr. Arthur M. Christie
Mrs. Pauline E. Christie (Evans)
Mr. Joseph P. Corrigan III
Mrs. Leslee T. Corrigan (TuU)
Mr. William C. DeVilbiss
Mr. James W. Duncan
Mrs. Jean T. Eyler (Turner)
Mr. William D. Geitz, Jr.
Mr. John L. Gill
Mr. William G. Greenly
Mr. Daniel A. Hall
Mr. Walter R. Hitchcock
Mr. John H. Jackson
Washington College Magazine / Annual Report 1991
Mr. William R. Jester
Mrs. Nancy H. Jones (Horner)
Mr. George Riggs, Jr.
Mr. William H. Kenvvorthey, Jr.
Mr. Donald T. Kirwan
Mr. T.H. Owen Knight
Dr. Leonard S. Krassner
Mr. Frank H. Kuhn
Mrs. Dorothy K. Land (Kelm)
Mr. E. Rankin Lusby
Mrs. Margaret B. MacHale (Butler)
Mr. James McLernon
Mr. Abraham H. Mendenhall
Mr. James D. Mitchell
Mr. William W. Mulligan
Mr. Paul W. Nicewarner
Mr. James W. Parker, Jr.
Mr. A. Price Ransone
Rev. Dale L. Ruth
Mrs. Shirley S. Sandler (Schnitzer)
Mrs. Mary 1. Scallion (Ivory)
Mr. Richard E. Shenk
Dr. Henry T. Shetterly
Mrs. Nancy L. Shetterly (Smith)
Reverend John G. Shoemaker
Mrs. Doris N. Stern (Naiman)
Mrs. Julia P. Stewart (Baker)
Dr. A. Donaldson Tall
Mrs. Nancy N. Tawes (Nuttle)
Mr. C. Howard Tilley
Mr. William C. Tomlinson
Mr. William D. Trone
Dr. Donald T. Walbert, D.V.M.
Mr. William E. Warther
Mr. Robert E. Williams, Jr.
1951
Class Chair: Mr, Lawrence S. Wescott
Total Contributions: $6,890.00
Members: 130
Contributors: 62
Participation: 48%
Mrs. June W. Atkin (Williams)
Mrs. Ruth T. Barrows (TeafO
Mr. Henr\' O. Benedict
Mrs Pauline K. Besson (Koumjian)
Mrs. Mary Jane Bien (Watson)
Mrs. Ruth R. Blizzard (Roe)
Mr. Frank W. Brower, Jr.
Mr. Lee C. Cook
Mrs. Jane A. Corey (Amann)
Dr. Rita Mary D. Ryan (Donahoe)
Mr. Ries E. Daniel
Mr. Frank W. Draper 111
Mr. Donald Duckworth
Captain Robert M. Elder
Mr. Joseph S. Fisher
Mr. Robert M. Fox
Mr. Harland R, Graef
Mrs. Nancy S. Hafer (Stephenson)
Mr. Eugene B. Handsberry
Mr. Robert L. Herrman, Jr.
Mrs. Barbara H. Hill (Huntley)
Mr. Daniel Hoffman
Mrs. lola R. Johnson (Russell)
Mr. Alexander G. Jones
Mr. Harry F. Kabernagel
Ms. Gayle N. Kimmel (Kimmel)
Mr. Lewis C Leigh, Jr.
Mrs. Carolyn B. Lense (Brant)
Mr. Edward F. Leonard, Jr.
Mr. Richard C. Lewis
Mr. Raymond D. Lingo
Mr. Robert M. Linkins
Mr. C. Lee Messick
Dr. James R. Miller
Mrs. Nancy G. Nicewarner (Gray)
Mr. Fred W. Nickerson
Mr. Conlyn E. Noland, Jr.
Mr. Raymond R. Pomeroy
Dr. William M, Reed
Mr, Orem E. Robinson, Jr.
Dr. Willard L. Robinson, Jr.
Dr. S. Paul Sadick
Mrs. Virginia K. Sclarenco
(Kruelle)
Mr. Gordon M. Silesky
Mr. M. Rogers Smith
Mr. Oden L. Smith
Mrs. Dorothy H. Spadoni (Halsted)
Mrs. Patricia N. Steele (Nairn)
Ms. Mackey M. Streit (Metcalfe)
Mr. Stanley E. Sweeney
Mrs. JoAnn U. Tilley (Urffer)
Mr. James D. Twilley
Mr. Eugene P. Vigna
Mrs. Jane G. Warther (Galloway)
Mrs. Mary 1. Watt (Irish)
Mr. Richard D. Welde
Mr. Lawrence S. Wescott
Mrs. Emily L. Whitman (Larimore)
Mrs. Anna L. Williams (Martin)
Mr. Robert T. Williams
Mr. L. Ray Wood
Honorable George R. Wright
1952
Class Chair:
Total Contributions; $7,320.00
Members: 120
Contributors: 48
Participation: 40%
Mrs. Cecil D. Billings (Deems)
Mrs. Marian J. Brennan (Jones)
Mr. William J. Brogan
Mrs. Nancy C. Campbell (Crabtree)
Lt. Col. Wi'lbur D. Billings
Ms. Suzanne H. Duckworth (Horn)
Hem. Robert C. Earloy
Mr. Raymond L. Evans, Jr.
Mr, Edward E. Gunning
Mr. James C. Haebel
Mr. John B. Haines
Reverend Robert C. Hicks
Mr. Kenneth E. Howard
Mr. Sidney Bare III
Mr. Robert O. Johnson
Mr. John Bacon, Jr.
Mr. RoIphTownshend,Jr.
Mr. John W, Klein II
Mr. Frederick E. LaWall
Mr. Laurance A. Leonard
Mr. Howard Levenberg
Mr. William M. Lloyd
Mrs. Jean S. Longobardi (Shenten)
Mr, Joseph J. Longobardi
Mr. Henry Louie
Mrs. Mary B. Martin (Brundage)
Mr. Jack D. McCullough
Mr. James W. McCurdy, Jr.
Mr, William C. McDonnell
Mr. K. Graeme Menzies, Sr.
Mr. Paul G. Miller
Mr. W. Walter Ortel
Ms. Alexandra M. Reeder
Mrs. Mary A. Rollins (Applegarth)
Mr. Robert M. Rouse
Mr. Nicholas]. Scallion
Mr. Benjamin F. Shimp, Jr.
Mr. Jack P. Smith
Mr. James R. Smith
Mr. Edgar L. Stephenson, Jr.
Mr. Edward W. Stewart
Mr. Kenneth W. Sullivan
Mr. James E. Taylor
Ms. Agnes S. Torossian
Mr. James R. Trader
Mr.J.RobertWaddell
Mrs. Eleanor W. Welde (Watson)
Mr. Grafton E. Young, Jr.
1953
Class Chair Charles S Waesche Jr
Total Contributions: $26,160.00
Members: 89
Contributors: 41
Participation: 46^e
Dr. Donald W. Brill
Mrs. Elaine Y. Chambers (Young)
Mr. Edward E. Cinaglia
Mr. George T. Cromwell, Jr.
Mrs. Grace I. Curtis (Isele)
Mrs. Isabelle C. Daniels (Cooke)
Mr. Paul M. Desmond
B. Gen. Raymond W. Edwards
Mr. John F, Grim, Jr.
Mr. Joseph E. Grove
Mr. Benjamin F.Hearn III
Mr. Thomas L. Hederman
Mr. Frank S. Henry
Mrs. Susan W. Hockadav (Weber)
Ms. Jane V. Humbertson
Mr. Vincent Hungerford
Mr. Alexander H. Kansak
Mrs. Virginia H. Kenworthey
(Hughes)
Mr. Stephen Kosiak
Mrs. Shirley H. LaWall (Hand)
Mrs. Jane B. Lowe (Bradley)
Mr. Stephen J. McHale, Jr.
Mr. Donald F. McHugh
Mr. N. Wayne Millner
Mrs. Joan C. Moore (Hill)
Mr. William R. Murray
Mr. William H. Phillips
Mrs. A. Jane Proutt (Carr)
Mr. Clarence H. Rollins
Mr. Phihp H.Ross. Jr.
Mr. Michael R.Rossi, Jr.
Mr. William R.Russell, Jr.
Mrs. Miriam N. Smith (Nichols)
Dr. Herman A. Spanagel
Mr. Cornelius A. Tilghman, Jr.
Mr. Constantine N. Tonian
Mr. Arthur A. Vinyard
Mr. Charles S. Waesche, Jr.
Rev. John B. Wheeler
Mr. Charles E. Whitsitt
Mr. Alfred Zaloski
1954
Class Chair: Mr. Robert W. Lipsitz
Co-Chair: Mr. Robert H. Appleby
Total Contributions: $6,936.00
Members: 61
Contributors: 26
Participation: 43%
Mr. Robert H. Appleby
Mr. Theodore G. Beddow
Mr. H. William Bloomfield
Mrs. Marilyn D. Covington (Diana)
Mr. George F. Daniels
Mr. George W. Dulany
Mr. George C. Eichelberger
Mr. Joseph J. Geissler III
Mr. Donald B. Heverly
Mr. Thomas C. Hofstelter
The Class of 2951 meet in Hynson Lounge.
Mrs. Saylee U. Kerr (Uhe)
Mr. Spencer B. Latham
Mrs. Margaret W. LeRoy (Wilding)
Mr. Robert W. Lipsitz
Mr. Vito M. Loia
Mr. Edwin C. Mattison
Mr. James M. Metcalf
Mr. John P. Newbold
Mrs. Janice P. Nicholson (Palmer)
Mr. Glenn W. Pippin
Mrs. Donna W. Rolls (Wood)
Mr. Jay D. Tebo
Mr. Douglas S. Tilley
Mr. Roderic B. Ware
Ms. Sigrid V. Whaley
1955
Class Chair: Mr. Kenneth R. Boum, Jr.
Total Contributions: $31,745.00
Members: 84
Contributors: 42
Participation: 50%
Mr. Robert F. Altmaier
Dr. William A. Barnett
Mrs. Marv Ellen Benson (Baildon)
Mr. John P. Bergen
Mrs. Betty A. Clarke (Ayres)
Mrs. Barbara T. Cromwell (Townsend)
Mr. Andrew J. Dail III
Reverend William Dore
Mr. David E. Dougherty
Mr. Gary J. Dunton
Mrs. Leila Lee Edwards {Da\is)
Mrs. Constance W. Fasset (Whalev)
Mrs. Sue S. Flory (Samuels)
Mrs. Joan V. Grim (Vanik)
Mrs. Paula S. Grimaldi (Taylor)
Mr. Wayne H. Gruehn
Mr. Allan T. Hanitee. Sr.
Mr. Robert A. Holland
Mr. John M. Lambdin, Jr.
Mr. William A. Land
Mrs. Virginia M. Laumeister (Marsh)
Reverend Charles R. Leary
Mrs. Ethel K.Loe\-\-(KniII)
Mr. RoyE. MacdonaId,Jr.
Mr. John L. Murdoch
Mrs. Martha K. Nelson (Kohout)
Mr. Donald S. Owings
Mr. John C. Palmer
Mr. John R. Parker
Mr. L. Franklin Phares
Mr. Jerome M. Proutt
Ms. Laimdota Sausais
Mr. Alfred P. Shockley
Mrs. Jane G. Sparks (Golt)
Rev. J. Gordon Staplelon
Mr. William S. Stranahan
Lt. Col. Rodgers T. Smith
Mrs. June W. Tassell (Walls)
Dr. Omro M.Todd
Mr. K. Herbert Turk, Jr.
Mr. August F. Werner
Mr. William C. Winterling
Washington College Magazine / Annual Report 1991
1956
Class Chair: Mrs. Barbara M. Reed
Co-Chair: Emily D. Russell (Dryden)
Total Contributions: $20,964.10
Members: 99
Contributors: 46
Participation: 46%
Col. Edgar M. Bair
Rev. Charles E. Barton, Jr.
Mr. Leslie W.Bell, Jr.
Mr. Melvin E. Benson
Ms. Patricia A. Browne
Dr. Kenneth E. Bunting
Mr. Charles P. Covington, Jr.
Mr. Edgar G. Cumor, Jr.
Mr. Hilary R. Curtiss
Mrs. Jennifer F. D. Shaalan (Dobbs)
Mr. John K.Daniel
Mr. Samuel D. Davis, Jr.
Mrs. Claire L. Deickman (Talbott)
Mrs. Cvnthia S. Doerzbach (Stewart)
Mr. Peter A. Eddison
Mr. James D. Edwards
Mr. David P. Fields
Mrs. Barbara L. Frumkin (Locker)
Mrs. Ellen T. Gale (Thomas)
Mr. Richard E. Gorsuch
Mrs. Adelaide B. Griffin (Brinsfield)
Mr. George H. Hanst
Dr. John D. Howard
Mrs. Priscilla D. Hutchinson
(Dumschott)
Mr. Ebe L. Joseph, Jr.
Mrs. Marie P. Ledford (Pasquarello)
Mrs. Janet M. Macera (Middleton)
Mrs. Anne G. McKown (Grim)
Mr. John H. Mead
Mrs. Marion L. Moore (Waterman)
Mrs. Marie A. Mullen (Rutkowski)
Mr. Donald M. Nuetzel
Mrs. Madie M. Oliveras (Marquez)
Mrs. Sarah T. Parker (Taylor)
Mrs. Barbara M. Reed
Mr. Robert T, Pickett, Jr.
Mrs. Sondra D. Read (Duvall)
Mr. John C. Richey
Mrs. Emily D. Russell (Dryden)
Mrs. Eleanor Hempstead Savage
(Hempstead)
Mr. Ronald C. Sisk
Mr. John D. Sparks, Jr.
Mr, William T. Warner
Mr. John E. Winkler
Mr. Dean H. Wood
Mr. Jerome F. Yudizki
1957
Class Chair: Mrs. Helen H. Tyson
Total Contributions: $7,152.50
Members: 116
Contributors: 47
Participation: 41%
Mr. Thurman H. Albertson
Mr, Peter M. Bartow
Mr. W. Oliver Beall, Jr.
Mrs. Joanne P. Beaton (Plowden)
Mr. Robert R. Beaton
Mr. Jack Becker
Mrs. Myra Bonhage-Hale (Bonhage)
Mr. Louis Borbely
Mrs. Doris H. Burke (Hall)
Mr. George B. Burns
Mr. F. Gerald Caporoso
Mr. Joshua A. Carey
Mr. William G. Clarke
Mrs. Elizabeth H. Cleaver (Hurst)
Mr. Joseph M. Connell
Mr. George L. Darley, Jr.
Colonel William G. Davis
Mrs. Elizabeth A. Dejong (Wilson)
Mr. George H. Dangler
Mr. Richard R. Farrow
Mr. John S. Fredericks
Mrs. Alice B. Goodfellow (Bowdoin)
Ms. Joy Greenberg
Mrs, Beverly B. Keating (Bowden)
Mr. L. Bert Lederer
Mr. Richard E. Lent, Esq.
Mr. Samuel M. Macera
Mrs. Janice E. Manley (Edwards)
Mr. Donald B. Messenger
Mr. Antonio Rovira O.
Mr. Roy D. Pippen, Jr.
Mr, Philip G. Riggin
Mrs. Jeanne B. Scampoli (Brymer)
Mrs. Sarah S. Seivold (Sachse)
Mr. Alan R. Sharp
Mrs. Barbara D. Shockley (Dew)
Mrs. Carolyn A. Silverie (Andrews)
Mr. Edward L. Silverie
Mr. AchilleSilvestri
Mr. David H. Singer
Col. Arthur H. Streeter
Mrs. Donna M. Thompson (Miller)
Mrs. Helen H. Tyson
Mr. James D. Walker
Mr. D. Leonard Wise
Mrs. Nancy J. Wooldridge (Jalbert)
Mrs. Beverly W. Wright (Woodward)
1958
Class Chair: William C. Litsinger, Jr.
Total Contributions: $7,010.00
Members: 88
Contributors: 39
Participation: 44%
Mr. Kenneth M. Barrett
Mr. Bruce E. Beddow
Mrs. Carolyn W. Beddow (Walls)
Mr. Robert N. Cleaver
Mr. Robert]. Colborn, Jr.
Mr. John H.Davie, Jr.
Mr. Harry R. Dundore
Mrs. Leslie H. Dundore (Hoffman)
Mrs. Helen P. Fields (Phelps)
Mr. Charles A. Foley II
Mr. James A. George, Jr.
Mr. Robert T. Gillespie
Mrs. Beatrice C. Griffith (Clarke)
Mr. James R. Halpin
Mr. Rodney L. Harrison
Dr. James E. Hughes
Mr. James D. Jones
Mrs. Mary Lou Joseph (Verdon)
Mr. Joseph Seivold, Jr.
Mrs. Henrietta S. Lemen (Stenger)
Mr. W. Rex Lenderman
Mr. Richard Lester
Mr. James W. Lewis
Dr. David E. Litrenta
Mr. William C Litsinger, Jr.
Mr. P. Curtis Massey III
Mr. John A. McKenna
Mrs. Treeva W. Pippen (Wishart)
Mrs. Mary E. Pratt (Brunk)
Mr. Richard A. Reilly
Mr. Henry E. Riecks
Mrs. Janet G. Riecks (Gill)
Mr. Robert H. Shockley
Reverend Thomas C. Short
Mr. Henry Covington, Sr.
Mr. Arnold J. Sten
Mr. Jesse W. Terres, Jr.
Mrs. Flora W. Todd (Wheatley)
Mrs. Kathleen J. White (Brackett)
1959
Class Chair: Mr. Ronald G. O'Leary
Total Contributions: $27,242.60
Members: 135
Contributors: 61
Participation: 45%
Mr. Stanley C. Bailey, Jr.
Mrs. Marilyn B. Bandel (Boston)
Mrs. Marilouise K. Bane (Kuethe)
Mrs. Anne F. Barnett (Funkey)
Mrs. Rena K. Beall (Knickerbocker)
Mr. Robert L. Belsley
Mr, Robert A. Bragg
Mr. Wilbur S. Brandenburg, Jr.
Mr. Bruce T. Briggs
Mrs. Joan S. Briggs (Samuels)
Mr. Donald R. Clausen
Mrs. Nancy W. Clayton (Wayson)
Dr. William H. Coleman
Mrs. Sally Ann Cooper (Groome)
Mr. Thomas C. Grouse, Jr.
Mr. H. Hurtt Deringer
Dr. William F.Ditman, Jr.
Mr. Ronald H. Doub
Mr. Charles F. Downs
Dr. Edgar A. Dryden
Mrs. Mary N. Dryden (Norton)
Dr. Robert N. Emory
Mrs. Joan W. Fountain (Waldeck)
Mr. M. Douglass Gates
Mr. C. Robert Gordon
Ms. Elizabeth J. Gordon
Mrs. Nancy M. Greenberg (Mullikin)
Mrs. Carolvn H. Harner (Hottenstein)
Mr. C. James Holloway, Jr.
Ms. Helen L. Horrocks (Latimer)
Mr. John R. Jennings
Mr. A. Clark Johnson, Jr.
Mr. Robert H. LeCates
Mrs. Antonia S. Lenane
Mrs. Ellen Jo Litsinger (Sterling)
Mr. Walton T. Loevy
Mrs. Jane R. Massey (Rayner)
Mrs. Ann B. McKellips (Branch)
Mr. William C Miller
Mr. Herbert L. Moore
Mr. Robert A, Moore
Mr. Donald A. Morway
Mrs. Phyllis B. Morway (Burgess)
Mr. F. Richard Moser
Mr. L. Bayne Norris, Jr.
Mr. Ronald G. O'Leary
Mr. Anthony Oswald
Mr. John Q. Parsons
Mr. James M. Pickett
Mrs. Joan R. Pilcher (Russell)
Dr. James M. Potter
Mrs. Ellen G. Reilly (Green)
Mr. Charles T. Rittenhouse
Mr. James H. Scott III
Mr. Ralph G. Skordas
Mr. G. Robert Tvson
Mr. Willis I. Weidin II
Mr. Robert J. Wilson
Rev. Thomas D. Woodward
Mrs, Judith M. Yoskosky (McCready)
Ms. Elizabeth Young
I960
Class Chair: Ms. Joyce E. Poetzl
Total ContribuHons: $5,895.00
Members: 133
Contributors: 51
Participation: 38%
Mrs. Jane S. Aldridge (Smith)
Mr. Robert B. Aldridge
Mr. Thomas G. Allen
Ms. Virginia B. Bailey (Bonhage)
Mr. Paul M. Baker
Mrs. Beverly B. Barrett (Blood)
Mr. Carroll M. Beck
Mr. James G. Belch
Dr. William H. Caldwell
Mr. Richard B. Callahan
Honorary alumnae Gail Waescheand
Becky Clark meet again at Reunion.
Mrs. Virginia G. Collins (Gilmore)
Mrs. Beverley B. Connolly (Burge)
Mr. William F. Copenhaver
Ms. Alice T. Cranor (Torovsky)
Dr. Arthur G. Crisfield
Mr. Donald C. Davenport
Mrs. Susan W. Davenport (Weyer)
Mr. Warren G. DeFrank
Mr. Paul A. Deysenroth, Jr.
Lt. Mark W. Diashyn
Mr. Kenneth F. Dollenger
Mr. Robert E. Eissele
Mr. David C. Fenimore
Mr. Richard V. Fitzgerald
Mrs. Janet D. Furman (Disney)
Dr. David A. Gillio
Mrs. Katherine R. Gregory (Rayne)
Dr. Merle A. Handy
Mr. James W. Henley, Jr.
Mrs. Janice K.Illick(Kush)
Mr. George Boyd, Jr.
Mr. David W. Leap
Mr. Mortimer V. Lenane
Mr. John C. Leverage
Mr. Douglass S. Livingston
Mr. Edvi'ard L. Mantler
Mrs. Deborah S. Marindin (Sherin)
Mrs. Jane W. McWilliams (Wilson)
Mrs. Irma M. Miller (McMahan)
Mr. J. Donald Miller
Mr. Gary D. Nichols
Mr. Norman A. Phillips, Jr.
Mrs. Joyce E. Poetzl
Mr. Wayne C. Ragains
Dr. Albert R. Rayne
Mr. Carl R. Scheir
Mrs. Joyce S. Sten (Smith)
Mr. Carl E. Tamini
Mrs. Carole V. Tamini (Vuono)
Mr. William A. Tweed
Mr. George D. White
1961
Class Chair: Mr. Basil Wadkovsky, Jr.
Total Contributions: $2,970.00
Members: 137
Contributors: 43
Participation: 31%
Mrs. Nancy H. Abbe (Hyams)
Mr. Lawrence J. Acchione
Mrs. Linda F. Berkowitz (Feinsilver)
Mrs. Mary W. Brandenburg (Warthen)
Mrs. Jane L. Brice (Lawton)
Mrs. Frances T. Brown (Townsend)
Mr. John A. Buchanan
Mr. Edward W. Burch
Mr, Anthony E. Cameron
Mrs. Lydia H. Cameron (Harvey)
Mr. Robert D. Cheel, Jr.
Mr. Thomas A. Cleaveland
Washington College Magazine/ Annual Report 1991
Mr. G. Davidson Collins II
Mrs. Mary R. Craggett (Roberts)
Mr. Lee M. Curry
Mr. Ronald H. Defelice
Mr. Robert J. Doran
Mrs. Katherine G. Doub (German)
Mr. Jackson P. Esham
Mr. Alex D. Fountain, Jr.
Mr. Daniel L. Greenfeld
Dr. W- Dorsey Hammond
Mrs. Brenda K, Harder (Kaiser)
Mr. Richard D. Irvin
Mr. Richard M. Jacobs
Mr. David W. Kolb, Jr.
Mr. John P. Leimbach
Dr. Ralph Snyderman, M.D.
Mr. Henri L. Marindin
Dr. John W. Maun
Mr. Scott K. Monroe
Mrs. Ann C. Norris (Crouse)
Dr. John B. Osborne, Jr.
Mrs. Dolores M. Pannell (Marquiss)
Mrs, Paula D. Parsons (Dentz)
Mr. Rafael Sarmiento
Major Richard G. Skinner
Mr. James E. Smith, Jr.
Mrs. Susan T. Smith (Tomalino)
Rev. Harold P. Spedden
Mr. Dale G. Tyler
Dr. PhilipJ. Whelan
Mrs. Christina T. Wright (Tarbutton)
1962
Class Chair: Mr. Arthur E. Leitch, Jr.
Total Contributions: $3,975.00
Members: 133
Contributors: 45
Participation: 34%
Dr. Chester C. Babat
Ms. Ann K. Bailey (Kane)
Dr. Carl F. Bauer'
Mr. Ray H. Bendiner
Ms. Holly B. Bohlinger (Burke)
Mr. Franklin M, Bradley
Mrs. Barbara H. Caldwell (Hart)
Mr. John P, Consaga
Mr. Roger N. Craine, Jr.
Dr, Patrick C. Cullen
Ms. Nancy K. Denges
Mr. Thomas A. Dixon
Dr. Georgia H. Duffee (Habicht)
Mr. Mareen L. Duvall, Jr.
Mr. James C. Flippin
Mr. Richard S. Frank
Mr. Bernard O. Hardesty, Jr.
Commander J. Glenn Harwood
Dr. Stephen A. Hoenack
Mr. W. Paul Kesmodel, Jr.
Mr. Roland T. Larrimore
Mr. Geoffrey F. Lawrence
Mr. Charles E. Lawson, Jr.
Mrs. Katherine D. Leimbach (Davis)
Mr. Arthur E. Leitch, Jr.
Dr. Robert E. Leitch
Mr. John P. Littlejohn
Mrs. Ida May Mantel (Heinz)
Mr. Warren H. Milberg
Mrs. Christine A. Pabon (Olpin)
Mr. Mansoor A. Parmoon
Mrs. Joyce W. Pepper (Walmsley)
Mr. William B. Purcell
Dr. George L. Raine
Ms. Florence N. Rieken (Nash)
Mr. Dorsey C. Rudolph
Mr. Alton T. Scarborough, Jr.
Mr. Charles J. Sebastyan, Jr.
Mr. Stanley M. Smith
Mr, Russell Q. Summers, Jr.
Mr. Chikao Tsubaki
Mrs. Linda L. Umbach (Lucas)
Mrs. R. Joyce Valliant (Matulaitis)
Dr. Howard B. Wescott
Dr. Bruce B. Wright
1963
Class Chair: Dr. Stephen B. Levine
Total Contributions: $5,268.00
Members: 111
Contributors: 42
Participation; 38%
Ms. Barbara F. Agnew (Frey)
Mr. Ormond L. Andrew, Jr.
Roy P. Ans, M.D.
Mrs, Juliann M. Blazsek (Melli)
Mr. Ridgely T. Brown, Jr.
Mrs. Susan H. Burch (Hollinger)
Mr. Robert Y. Clagett
Mrs. Susan B. Collins (Burt)
Ms. Judith B. Craine (Baetzner)
Mr. J. Terence Cumiskey
Mrs. Katherine Y. Eaton (Yoder)
Dr. Eva E. Gardiner (Penkethman)
Mr. Jacques R, Gaucher
Dr, Lawrence H. Golub
Mr, Thomas M, Graves
Ms. Carolyn D, Gray (Dunne)
Mr, Fletcher R, Hall
Mr, Michael R. Halperin
Mr. Michael K. Henry
Mrs. Judith C. Hogan (Clayton)
Mr. Gordon N. Jarman, Jr.
Mrs, Lynnda W. Johnson (Whitlock)
Ms. Nancy H. Kay (Hastings)
Mrs. Jo Ansley Kendig (Bridge)
Mr. Stephen B, Levine
Mr. Holt L. Marchant, Jr.
Mr. Walter A. Marschner
Mrs. Susan B. Mast (Burke)
Mr. Robert L. Matzuga
Mr. R. Bruce McCommons
Mrs, Margot B. Miozzi (Bruck)
Ms. Bonnie M. Orrison
Mr. Thomas S. Osmanski
Mrs. Catherine M. Rayne (Mottu)
Mr. Robert L, Reck
Ms. Elise A. Ruedi
Mr. Kenneth E. Scheck
Mrs. Anne L. Sebastyan (Lovel)
Mr. F. William Sieling III
Mrs. Mary C. Skinner (Coleman)
Mr. Thomas R. Wessells
Mr, Graydon A. Wetzler
1964
Class Chair: Ms. Elaine C. Holden
Total Contributions: $7,635.00
Members: 149
Contributors: 55
Participation: 37%
Mr. Irvin D. Abelman
Mrs. Myrtie M. Adkins (Bozman)
Members of the Class of '51 pick up their
party favors at the Alumni House. Shozvu
are lola Russell Johnson, Don Duckworth,
Ruth Roe Blizzard, Lou Blizzard '50. and
Duke Case.
Mrs. Cynthia T. Aebischer (Trisler)
Ms. Sara H. Beaudry
Mr. George C. Charuhas
Mrs. Barbara B. Coles (Butz)
Mr. Glenwood D. Conner
Mrs. Helen B. Cooney (Bullock)
Mr. James S. Del Priore
Mr, Alexander C. Dick
Mr. Franklin H. Everett, Jr.
Mrs. Gail Fisher-Wolpin (Fisher)
Mrs. Nancy D. Frank (Dempster)
Mr. Michael W. George
Mrs. Sylvia B. Hesson (Bushong)
Ms, Elaine C. Holden
Mrs. Kay D. Jones (Davison)
Dr. Phillip G. LeBel
Mr. Larry J. Manogue
Mr, Paul F. Mason
Dr, Robert J, McCarthy
Mr. John D. Miller
Mr, William H, Morgan
Mrs. Margaret W. Mrstik (Wescott)
Mr, Ronald P. Mrstik
Ms. Patricia A. Novak
Mr. Kenneth G. Oehlkers
Mr. Theodore F. Parker
Mrs. Linda G. Parmoon (Grafton)
Mrs. Carol L. Pippen (Lawson)
Mr. Louis B. Rappaport
Mr. Emil Regelman
Dr. Margaret M. Rich (Matthews)
Mr. Paul A. Riecks
Mrs. Diana R. Roche (Roomy)
Mr. Roy R. Schwartz
Mrs. Jane R, Sharrow (Reynolds)
Mr. Hal B. Shear, Jr.
Mr. William R Short, Jr.
Mr. William H. Siemon
Mrs. Adela R. Sisk (Roberts)
Dr. Ronald E. Smith
Rev. Thelma A. SmuUen (vonBehren)
Ms. Susanne B. Sutphen (Bolton)
Mrs. Carolyn R. Tilghman (Ryan)
Mr. Philip L. Tilghman
Mrs. Nancy S. Townsend (Sanger)
Mrs. Ann M. Trout (McCauley)
Mr. Melvin W, Walker
Mrs. Alta F. Weiss (Focht)
Mrs. Linda S. Wessells
Mrs. Patricia G. White (Godbolt)
Mrs. Lynn P. Wigton (Phillips)
Mr. Frank B, Wildman III
Mrs. Henrietta H. Zahrobsky
(Himmer)
1965
Class Chair: Mr. Gerald P. Jenkins
Total Contributions: $20,994.94
Members: 121
Contributors: 58
Participation: 48%
Mrs. Dale P. Adams
Mrs. Elizabeth M. Ames (Mumford)
Mrs. Karen A. Bescher (Tucciarone)
Mrs. Gammy F. Blanch (Felt)
Mr. Jeffrey S. Blitz
Mr. John B. Boddie
Mr. Ronald D. Brannock
Mr. Richard W. Carrell
Mr. John L. Coker
Dr. John A. Conkling
Mrs. Sandra M. Conkling (Murray)
Mrs, Linda K. Daly (Kosek)
Dr. Pamela A. Docherty (Kaminsky)
Mr. John M. Dove III
Mr. Frank HDurkee 111
Mrs. Kathleen O. Durkee (Oakley)
Mr. Richard H. Evans
Mr. Starke M. Evans
Mr. Thomas J. Finnegan
Mr. John E. Flynn
Mrs. Marilyn D. Girard (Davis)
Mrs. Eileen A. Grabenstein (Altobell)
Dr. Vaughn A. Hardesty
Mr. Stephen G. Harper
Mr. Edgar D. Harrington
Mr. Haydon M. Harrison
Mr. William M. Hesson, Jr.
Mr, Oswald W. Hodges
Mr. Robert C. Jacobs
Mr, Gerald P. Jenkins
Ms. Carol M. Kendrigan
Mrs. Diana D. Leitch (Dibble)
Mr, Donald V. Lewis
Mrs. Susan H. McCarthy (Spire)
Mr. Andrew T. Nilsson
Mrs. Susan R. Osmanski (Rice)
Mr. Robert F. Pritzlaff, Jr.
Mr, George A. Reddish
Ms. Barbara C. Roden (Coles)
Mr, Donald C. Rosenberg
Mrs, Sue T. Rourke (Thelin)
Mr. David E, Scanlan
Mr. Patrick C. Seeley
Mr. John T. Shannahan, Sr.
Mr. Glen R. Shipway
Mr. Charles E. Sparks
Mr. David E, Stevens
Mrs. Elizabeth C. Stevens (Clough)
Mrs. Barbara R. Streeter (Ravnes)
Mrs. Barbara M. Sullivan (Derby)
Mr. William A. Tanner
Mrs. Mary P. Vinje (Pappas)
Mrs. Adah S. Walker (Simmons)
Mr. Robert C Warner
Mr. Frederick B, Weiss
Ms. Elizabeth Wells
Mr. William F. Wilkinson, Sr.
Miss J. Eileen Wilmer
1966
Class Chair: Mrs. Patricia S. Barkdoll
Total Contributions; $7,846.94
Members: 121
Contributors: 61
Participation: 50%
Mr. Harry G. Baker
Mrs. Patricia S. Barkdoll
Mrs. Karen W. Barrell (Willett)
Mr. John F. Bauder
Mrs. Susan Jo Berman (Silverman)
Mrs. Pamela B. Bitner (Baker)
Ms. Susan A. Burgess (Achom)
Mr. Kenneth S. Cohen
Mrs. Barbara K. Coker (Keehan)
Washington College Magazine / Annual Report 1991
Ms. Doris A. Crafton (Abel)
Mrs. Carolyn Cridler-Smith
Mrs. Elizabeth H. DeStefano
(Herrschafn
Dr. Nicholas J. DeStefano
Mr. Harold K. Dell 111
Ms. Sally M. Dobbs
Mr. David M. Dressel
Mr. Allan D. Eisel
Mrs. Sandra N. Eisel (Newton)
Mrs. Carol H. Evans (Hornick)
Mrs. Susan L. Fast (LaRocca)
Mr. James C. Francis
Mr, Eugene M. Fusting
Mrs. Phoebe M. Hardesty (Mote)
Mr, William E. Harrington
Mr. C. Norris Harrison
Mrs. Christina S. Harrison (Schilling)
Mrs. Alice M. Henry (Moreno)
Mr. Paul E. Hubis
Mr. Franklin W. Hynson, Jr.
Mr. Robert B. Jaeger
Mr. Robert M. Johnson
Mr. David M. King
Mrs. Jane C. Lewis (Clapper)
Colonel Joseph W. Lewis
Mrs. Carole F. Livingston (Faherty)
Mrs. Sarah V. Lizbinski (VanDyke)
Mrs. Mary L. Lyons (Gibson)
Ms. Gerladine J. Maiatico (Maiatico)
Ms. Mary E. Martindale
Mrs. Sara M. McGarvey
(Mahoney Brown)
Mrs. Sharyn C. McQuaid (Carney)
Ms. Lmda G. Middlestadt
Mr. Richard A. Natwick
Mrs. Barbara P. Nilsson (Presson)
Mr. John R, Payne, Jr.
Mrs. Evin H. Phillips (Hirsch)
Mr. William B. Prendergast
Mrs, Deborah E. Pritzlaff (Evans)
Mr. Eric S. Purdon
Mr. H. Douglas Roden
Mrs. Gail L, Remain (Strong)
Mr. Leonard G. Schrader, Jr.
Mr. Jonathan B. Segal
Dr. John P. Sloan
Mr. David J. Svec
Mrs. Bonnie A. Travieso (Abrams)
Mr. Michael J. Travieso
Dr. Benjamin 1. Troutman, Jr.
Mrs. Mary F. Vartanian (Hickman)
Mrs. Jean M. Wetzel (Rusack)
Mr. J. Robert Wolfe
1967
Class Chair; Dr. Mark A. Schulman
Total Contributions: $7,430.00
Members: 155
Contributors: 50
Participation: 32%
Mr. George C. Ambrose
Mr. Edward M. Athey
Mrs, Margaret M, Baker (Meyer)
Mr. Almon C. Barrell 111
Mrs. Joanna C. Bendiner (Cades)
Mrs. Mary S. Burke (Stillman)
Mr. James G. Chalfant
Mr. Joseph M. Coale 111
Dr. Pamela M. DeWeese (Marshall)
Mr. William T. Dippel
Mrs. Dehra V. Ewing (Van Nostrand)
Mr. David C. Fegan
Mrs. Ann C. Fey (Compton)
Ms. Nancy L. Galloway
Ms. Evalyn K. Garvin
Mr. Walter L. Grabenstein
Mr. Bryan H. Griffin
Mrs. Mary Alice H. Aguilar
(Hampson)
Mr. Samuel L. Heck
Mrs. Lorraine P. Hedrick
Mrs. Ann R. Heitz (Rothenhoefer)
Mr. Michael J. Henehan
Ms. Susan B. Kreckman (Ballard)
Mr. Thomas G. Lacher
Mr. Edward J. Lehmann
Mrs. Patricia H. Lewis (Hibberd)
Mr. Richard C. Louck
Mr. John W. Martm 111
Ms. Jean S. McFadden (Stirling)
Mr. John W. McGinnis
Mrs. Diane L. Muhlfeld (Lamb)
Mrs. Jane W. Myers (Ward)
Mrs. Nena O. Nanfeldt (O'Lear)
Mr. Daniel Nuzzi
Mr. Carl E. Ortman
Commander Thomas W. Osborne
Mr. Alan C. Ray
Miss Judith L. Reynolds
Dr. Robert S. Ruskin
Mrs. Miriam H. Scheck (Huebschman)
Dr. Mark A. Schulman
Mrs. Carol W. Seeley (Wilton)
Mr. Lawrence D. Smith
Dr. Marvin M. Smith
Mr. Philip J. Stein
Ms. Joan C. Weaver (Weaver)
Mr. A. Edward Webb, Jr.
Mrs. Judith S. Woike (Scullin)
Mr. Richard L. Wunderlich
Mrs. Karen B. Yeagle (Berger)
1968
Class Chair: Mr. Richard E. Jackson
Total Contributions: $15,455.00
Members: 162
Contributors: 67
Participation: 41%
Mrs. Mara T. Ambrose (t'Kint de
Rooden)
Mrs. Carol K. Askin (Killen)
Mr. George B. Baily, Jr.
Mr. Henry O. Biddle
Mrs. Margaret M. Boddie (Mclntyre)
Dr. Timothy D. Bohaker
Dr. Linda T. Cades (Towne)
Mrs. Susan S. Clark (Scheulen)
Mrs. Joan H. Clifton (Hill)
Mr. John H. Clifton
Miss Nancy M. Coch
Dr. Michael B. Fineberg
Mrs. Truth Ann Francis (Melvin)
Mrs. Judith S. Fusting (Steele)
Mr. John E. Gadsby
Mr. Anthony D. Gilmour, Jr.
Judge William O. Gray
Mr. Michael A. Grover
Mrs. Judith J. Heald(Javor)
Dr. Richard E. Holstein, D.M.D.
Dr. James B. Huggins
Mr. Richard E. Jackson
Dr. Karen A. Johnson
Dr. Harold D. Jopp, Jr.
Mrs. Suzanne P. Kalan (Pelkey)
Mrs. Cynthia P. Lehmann (Peddicord)
Dr. Kathryn E. Lewis
Mrs. Marjorie H. Long (Holzapfel)
Mr. Thomas S. Marshall
Mr. James C. McKinney
Mr. Ira D. Measell 111
Mr. John R. Mendell
Mr. John L. Merrill
Mr. D. Bruce Miller
Mr. Charles A. Mock
Mr, David T. Moreland
Mr. Donald S. Munter
Mrs. Mary Sue Munter (Blevins)
Mrs. Paula S. Murphy (Deschere)
Mrs. Patricia I. Noonan (Leslie)
Mrs. Mary S. Nuzzi (Simpson)
Mrs. Susan S. O'Connor (Smith)
Mr. R. Allen Payne III
Mr. Alan L. Perry
Mrs, Karen L. Reilly (Uux)
Dr. Peter J- Rosen, M.D.
Mrs. Barbara J. Rosenstock (Johnson)
Mr. Philip A. Rousseaux
Mr. C. Daniel Saunders
Dr. J.KingSeegarlll
Mrs. Janet E. Smith (Elmer)
Mr. Elwood F. Snyder
Mrs. Jeannette S. Snyder (Shipway)
Mr, Kenneth S. Stein
Mrs, Margaret M. Svec (MacKillop)
Mrs. Cathy B. Tarbart (Barnes)
Mrs. Patricia J. Taylor (Johnson)
Mr. William R. Thompson
Mr. Jonathan M. Topodas
Mrs. Mary M. Trumbauer (McKay)
Dr, Michael Tucker
Mr. Douglas E. Untried
Ms. Patricia E. Wegner (EHassen)
Dr. Benjamin T. Whitman
Ms. Rose E. Wolford
Mrs. Mary D. Wood (Daugherty)
Ms. Paula E.Wordtt
1969
Class Chair: Ms. Linda J. Sheedy
Total Contributions: $10,457.50
Members: 190
Contributors: 82
Participation: 439(
Mrs. H. Louise Amick (Masten)
Mr. Steven H. Amick
Ms, Lindsay A. Arrington
Mr. Sanford E. Ayers
Ms. Linda L. Ayres
Ms. G. Jaia Barrett
Ms. Laura E. Beider
Mr. James F. Bland ford
Dr. Mitchell S, Bronson
Mr. David A, Brown
Mrs. Karen M. Brown (McCahill)
Mr. David W. Bryden
Mr. George L. Buckless, Jr.
Mr. Patrick W. Chambers
Hon. Stephen L. Clagett
Mrs. Joanne H. Clarke (Heinefield)
Mr. Christopher B. Clements
Mrs. Peggy H. Cole (Holler)
Mr. Peter H. Conovich
Mr. Robert W. Cooke
Mr. Robert M. Cox, Jr.
Mr. Peter B. Cushman
Mrs. Susan T. Denton (Thomas)
Mr. John D. Dressel
Mr. Michael D. DuMontier
Mr. Andrew W. Dyer
Mrs. Sharmon E. E)yer (Ellis)
Ms. Diane D. Ewan (DiLuzio)
Mr. John R. Flato
Mr. William M. Goff
Dr. Theodore D. Goldman
Ms. Frances R. Greenbaum
Mr. William F. Grey
Mr. Richard L. Harrington
Mrs, Joan M. Hill (Martin)
Mr, Robert J. Hunter
Mrs. Mary M. Jellison (Milkovich)
Mr. Brian S. Kimerer
Mr. Eric G. Koehler
Mrs. Diane C. Lantz (Cymbaluk)
Mrs. Bonnie S. Leach (Strayer)
Mrs. Elizabeth J, Leichner (Jeffers)
Mrs. Eleanor D. Leonard (Davidson)
Mrs. Marjorie J. Madera (Jones)
Mr. Joseph S. Massey
Mrs, Maryland M. Massey (Miles)
Mrs. Mary McGinnis (Maryanov)
Mrs. Judith H. McKinney (Hughlett)
Ms. Priscilla Medford
Mr. Gary A. Myers
Mrs. Pamela S. Narbeth (Seneff)
Mrs. Antoinette U. Neally
Mrs. Dee M. Newnam (Matthews)
Mrs. Elizabeth T. Nordquist (Turoczi)
Ms. Patricia G. Nottingham (Green)
Mr, John Overington
Mrs. Lorraine K. Polvinale (Kenton)
Ms. Cheryl T. Purdon (Tillotson)
Dr. Stanley Z. Raksin
Mr. David M. Ritz
Mrs. Bonnie Kerr Robbins (Blom)
Mr. Nicholas J. Samaras
Mrs. Thackray D. Seznec (Dodds)
Ms. Linda J. Sheedy
Mrs. Raye H. Simpson (Harris)
Mr. William C. Stallings
Mrs. Patricia D. Stein (Dorsey)
Mr. Larry S. Sterling
Mr. David D. Stokes
Ms. Chesley Stone (Gamba)
Mr. Albert T. Streelman
Mrs. Becky S. Sutherland (Simpson)
Ms. Daryl L. Swanstrom (Lynch)
Dr. Carol F. Taylor
Mrs. Ellen S. Thompson (Squeri)
Mr. Keith P. Watson
Mr. William H. Wilson, Jr.
Mrs. Elizabeth K. Winship
(Kohlerman)
Ms. Ann W. Woodruff
Mr. Steven T. Wrightson
Mrs. Judith O. Yoppi (O'Neill)
Mr. Michael R. Young
Music for all generations: a graduating
senior and her grandfather boogy to the
swing sound of "Cowboy Jazz."
Washington College Magazine/ Annual Report 1991
1970
Class Chair: Mr. Peter C. Herbst
Total Contributions: $18,048.50
Members: 161
Contributors: 78
Participation: 48%
Mrs. Christina H. Anderson (Hoppe)
Mr. John H. Anderson
Dr. Virginia C. Arthur (Colfelt)
Mrs. Rosemary R. Ayers (Roswell)
Mrs. Sigrid B. Balmer (Ben-Avi)
Mrs. Annette L. Banulski (LaMent)
Mr. James B. Beavan, Jr.
Mr. Bradley Benedict
Mrs. Kathleen A. Biddle (Agnew)
Mr. David S. Bruce
Mr. Michael T. Callahan
Miss Victoria J. Colgan
Mr- Joel T. Cope
Mrs. Martha S. Cushman
(Shrewsbury)
Mr. Robert B. Drew
Mrs. Sylvia M. Dunning (Millhouse)
Mrs. Priscilla V. Ely (Valliant)
Mr. T. Christopher Ely
Mrs. Sarah W. Flowers (Pardee)
Mrs. Donna G. Flynn (Gray)
Mr. Joseph C. Elynn
Mrs. Leigh Barnard Furda (Barnard)
Mr. Frederick A. Gorgone 111
Mrs. Sherry L. Graham (Hilliard)
Mr. John D. Hall
Mr. Thomas W. Heald
Mrs. Cynthia S. Heller (Stafford)
Mr. Peter C. Herbst
Mr. Louis B. House, Jr.
Mr. Peter B. Johnson
Mr. Richard D. Karpe
Mr. Raymond W. Keen
Ms. Maryanna L. Kieffer
Mrs. Becky H. Kirwan (Hainsworth)
Mr. Robert E. Lehman, Jr.
Mr. William O.Leonard, Jr.
Mrs. Sara M, Lilienthal (Moniot)
Mr. Frank]. Marion
Mr. Samuel C, Martin
Mr. Peter S. Maryott
Mr. Edward B. McKay
Ms, Michael R, McMulian
Mrs. Barbara H. Measell (Harbaugh)
Mrs. Karen G. Miller (Guglielmetti)
Mrs. Mary F. Miller (Francis)
Dr. Paul H. Naylor
Mr. Joseph M. Nichols, Jr.
Mr. Stephen H. Ogilvy, Jr.
Mrs. Linda S. Ormsby (Phinney)
Ms. Ethel J. Pettit
Mr. Thomas J. Polvinale
Mr- Richard W. Pyles
Ms. Cynthia Renoff
Dr. Donald W. Rogers
Ms. Martha K. Rose
Ms. Karen L. Ruffel!
Mr. Jean F. Seznec
Sen. Dean G, Skelos
Mrs. Eileen R. Spillane (Rice)
Ms. Colleen Spivey-Ireland (Spivey)
Dr. Jessie D. Stahl (Doukas)
Dr. Cathy W. Swan (Wood)
Mr. David L. Thompson
Mr. Steven E. Thompson
Mr. William L. Thompson
Ms. Lynne Tobin
Mrs. Lucille D. Urbas (Daly)
Dr. Deborah G. Ventis
Mr, Frank W. Veri
Mrs. Jean H. Walker (Hays)
Mr. John V. Walker
Ms. Penelope B. Wasem
Mr. Peter Wettlaufer
Mrs. Nancy B. Whelan (Brunner)
Mr. Taylor L. Wilde
Dr, Harold W. Woodcock
Mrs. Mary B. Xenakis (Boddie)
Mrs. Evelyn M. Yokos (Manolis)
1971
Class Chair: Ms. Linda B. Cooke
Total Contributions: $11,039.55
Members: 150
Contributors: 62
Participation: 41%
Lt. Col. Stephen A. Mires
Dr, Charles E. Andrews
Lt, Col. William B. Ewing, Jr.
Miss Judith K. Barnes
Mrs, Marsha L. Blann (Millette)
Mr. Delos E. Boardman
Mrs. Ellen P. Boardman (Patterson)
Mr. William F. Bollinger, Sr.
Mrs. Teresa Wiltbank Bostic
(Wiltbank)
Mrs. Cindy P. Bryant (Peper)
Mrs. Rosemary T. Callahan (Tidball)
Mr, Michael J, Carew
Mrs. Bettye C. Chalfant (Cunningham)
Ms. Linda B. Cooke
Mrs, Jerry S. Cox (Swartz)
Mr, John R, Davies IV
Mrs, Laura L DuMontier (Ir\'ing)
Mrs, Sarah J, Everdell (Jayne)
Mr. Thomas J. Finn
Mr. John W. Foster III
Mrs. Carol P, Gadsby (Payne)
Mr. Thomas M. Galloway
Ms. MarjorieG. Garbutt
Mr. Vernon T. Gott, Jr.
Mrs. Barbara P. Harrison (Price)
Dr. Barbara E, Herrington (Maddex)
Mr. Richard B. Holloway
Mr. H, Samuel Hopper
Mrs. Clare S. Ingersoll (Stevens)
Mrs. Michele M. Kane (Magri)
Ms, Wendy F. Keller (McCullam)
Mr, Harry T. Kilpatrick
Dr, Terumi S. Kohwi (Shigematsu)
Mr. Walter R. Lewis
Ms. Dorothy A. Lindstrom
Mrs. Phyllis D. Marsh (DondorO
Mrs. Karen Sammis Matheson
(Sammis)
Mr. James A. McCosh
Mr. Andrew M. McCullagh, Jr.
Mrs. Calvert D. Necker (Daiger)
Mr. Robert P. Orr
Mrs. Lynn W. Osborne (Wetzel)
Dr. Susan L. Perry
Ms. Mary J, Ramsey (Johnson)
Mrs. Judith D. Rattner (Dowler)
Mr. David C, Roach
Mr. Christopher L. Rogers
Mr. H. Eraser Ruwet
Dr. Edward S. Schulman
Mrs. Mary W. Schumann (Wilson)
Mrs. Janet F. Smoot (Freni)
Mr. Mark A, Svec
Mrs. Patricia Thompson (Schatt)
Mr. Richard C. Thompson
Mrs. Sharon G. Thompson (Garratt)
Mr. Bohn C. Vergari
Mr. John H. Way
Mrs. Carolyn K. Webber (Koelle)
Dr. George C. WilHams
Mrs. Melinda B. Wrightson (Bergner)
Mrs. Teresa T. Young (Teasdale)
1972
Class Chair: Geoffrey W. Anderson
Total Contributions: $8,490.00
Members; 149
Contributors: 67
Participation: 45'7t
Mr. Geoffrey W. Anderson
Mr. Harmon). Baker III
Mrs. Janet T. Barnard (Thomas)
Mr. Brooks B. Bergner
Mr. Peter L. Boggs
Dr. Robert E. Burkholder
Mrs. Helen P. Campbell (Perley)
Mr. Bradford G. Carney
Mrs. Gail H. Carney (Hasson)
Mr. Lester A. Cioffi
Mr. Christopher B. Combs
Mrs. Margaret G. Donald (Bradford)
Mr. Glenn T. Dryden
Mrs. Janet S. Eveleth (Stidman)
Mrs. Marcia A. Gallahue (Invernizzi)
Mr. Michael L. Gallahue
Mr. Earnie L. Gardner
Mr. Donald G. Garratt
Mrs. Sandra P. Garratt (Pelkey)
Mr. Eric W. Goedeke
Dr. Patricia R. Goldman (Robison)
Mrs. Martha S. Gound (Schilpp)
Mrs. Judith N. Grey (Noon)
Mr. Thomas O. Hodgson
Mr. James S. Hogg
Mr. Michael T. Hoopes
Ms. Susan E. Hoover
Mrs. Allison C. Hyland (Cooksey)
Mrs. Margaret M. Isherwood
(Magoun)
Mrs. Margaret I. Johnsen (Irwin)
Mr. Charles S. Johnson III
Mr. Kenneth A. Kiler
Mrs. Lauren M. Kimerer (Moon)
Mr. P. David Knowles, Jr.
Mrs. Phyllis C. Kornprobst (Collins)
Dr. Phyllis B. Kosherick (Blumberg)
Mrs. Ann H. Lilly (Hillard)
Ms. Susan G. Luster
Mrs. Susan W. Lyons (Wilson)
Ms. Eileen S. Menton (Shelley)
Mr. Robert K. Metaxa
Mrs. Lynn L. Mielke (Leonhardt)
Ms. Kathleen C Owens
Mr. William R. Pacula
Mr. Charles L. Parks
Mr. David B. Pratt
Mr. J. Frederick Price
Mr. Guv M. Reeser III
Mr. David L. Ripley
Mrs. Constance G. Rothman (Gratz)
Mr. Roger S. Soo
Mrs. Katherine A. Springmann
(Williams)
Mrs. Ellen R. Stevenson (Rohrbacher)
Mr. Thomas G. Stevenson
Mrs. Emmy Lou Swanson (Spamer)
Pat and Jim Henley '60 chat icith the Hon.
Frederick ]. Price '72.
Mr. Dale W. Trusheim
Mr. F. Goldey Vansant
Ms. Deborah A. Vevstrk
Mr. C.Clifton Virtsin
Mrs. Marcia T. Virts (Tressler)
Mrs. Karen D. Weatherholtz
(Dembinskv)
Mrs. Lynn P. Wentzell (Puritz)
Mr. Stephen D. Wentzell
Mr. Richard K. Wesp
Ms. Loretta M. West
Mr. Randolph S. White
Ms. Wendy B. Wolf
1973
Class Chair: Mrs. Elizabeth M. Barry
Total Contributions: $20,350.50
Members: 206
Contributors: 89
Participation: 43%
Ms. Leslie Alteri
Mrs. Elizabeth M. Barry
Mr. David E. Beaudouin
Dr. David M. Boan
Mrs. Gail M. Boggs (McPherson)
Mr. Michael B. Brown
Mr, William F. Buckel
Ms. Constance B. Campbell
(Burczynski)
Mr. J. Parker Cann
Mr. George R. Churchill
Mrs. Susan H. Churchill (Hodgman)
Mr. Robert J. Cigala
Mr. Norris W. Commodore, Jr.
Mr. Robert L. Constantine
Mr. John F. Copeland, Jr.
Ms. Carole B. Denton
Mr. John H. Dimsdale HI
Dr, John A. Doran, Jr.
Mrs. Michal G. Dorman (George)
Miss Susan K. Duckworth
Mr. William A. Dunphy, Jr.
Mrs. Michelle K. Everett (Kiikka)
Ms. Phyllis E. Frere
Dr. Jean A. Gelso (Carter)
Mr. Thomas K. George
Ms. Barbara M. Gleason
Miss Louise A. Goddard
Mr. James A. Guthrie
Ms. M. Susanne Hayman
Mr. David T. Heimbach
Miss Meredith L. Horan
Mrs. Nancy R. Homer (Rowens)
Mr. Charles F. Horstmann, Jr.
Mrs. Elaine S. Hovell (Swanekamp)
Washington College Magazine/ Anuual Report 1991
Dr. Rebecca E. Hutchins
Mrs. Jennifer L. Hyatt (Lucke)
Mr. W. Kendall Ivie
Mr. Stewart F. Kay
Mr. William R. Kier, Jr.
Mr. Jeffery S. King
Mr. Lawrence J. Kopec
Ms. Beth K. Leaman (Kahn)
Ms. Mary A. Leekley
Mr. Thomas A. Lilly
Miss Pamela J. Locker
Mr. Ronald Lokos
Mr. Jon M. Ludden
Mr. Putnam MacLean
Mr. Michael Macielag
Mrs. Margaret C. Mangels (Chalmers)
Mr. Michael B. Mann
Mr. Robert M. Maskrey
Mr. Weldon S. Monsport
Ms. Diane L. Morawski
Mr. George M. Mowell
Mr. Joseph T. Mulvenny, Jr.
Mrs. Sheila W. Nau (Woznuk)
Mr. Richard D.C. Noyes
Mr. Packard L. Okie
Ms. Chris A. Owens
Mr. A. Stephen Park
Mr. J. William Pitcher
Mr. Jonathon J. Powers
Ms. Cathy L. Prager
Mrs. Karen G. Price (Gossard)
Ms. Polly J. Quigley
Mr. Michael S. Raynor
Mr. Louis W. Reedt
Mr. Allan P. Reynolds
Mr. John B. Robins IV
Mrs. Lana C. Rogers (Crawford)
Mr. Stephen Sandebeck
Mr. Robert F. Schumann, Jr.
Mr. Robert V. Shriver
Mr. Stephen R. Slaughter
Mr. Matthew J. Snyder
Mrs. Gretchen K. Starling (Kratzer)
Mr. John L. Tansey
Mr. Richard L. Taylor, Jr.
Mr. Norberto Viamonte
Mrs. Nancy Walsh-Tashman (Walsh)
Mr. John S. Wayne
Mr. James A. Wentzel
Mr. Andrew B, Williams 111
Mr. Marvin V.Williams, Jr.
Mr. Martin J. Winder
Mr. Anthony S. Wiseman
Ms. Susan F. Womelsdorf (Fowler)
Ms. Mary R. Yoe
1974
Class Chair: Mr. Richard A. Larkin, Jr.
Total Contributions: $16,432.00
Members: 203
Contributors: 84
Participation: 41%
Ms. Amanda B. Adams
Mr. Christopher R. Ahalt
Mrs. Mary M. Andrews (Mineur)
Mr. Robert J. Atkinson
Mr. John C. Balentine
Mrs. Wendy B. Bartel (Bartlett)
Miss Cynthia E. Behn
Mrs. Deborah C. Blanton (Coile)
Mrs. Virginia V. Bowerman
(Valentino)
Mrs. Dorsey H. Bramble (Hutton)
Mrs. Rene T. Brown (Tabb)
Miss Clara M. Sullen
Mrs. Elise L. Caragine (Lawrence)
Dr. Eric F. Ciganek
Mrs. Theresa W. Commodore (Wood)
Mr. Richard Creighton
Miss Tami P. Daniel
Mrs. Sandra S. Darling (Wohlschlegel)
Mr. Michael J. DeSantis
Mrs. Elizabeth H. Drew (House)
Mr. Stephen B. Etris
Miss Robin A. Faitoute
Mr. Robert D. Farwell
Mrs. Linda H. Fenwick (Pelke)
Mr. Gary W. Ford
Mr. Robert E. Fredland
Mr. Joseph M. Getty
Mrs. Christine M. Gianquinto
(Murray)
Mrs. Barbara D. Gnaedig (Daly)
Mrs. Kathryn M. Goedeke
(McDougall)
Mr. Robert A. Greenberg
Mr. George D. Haddow
Mr. Gerald J. Harrington
Mr. Richard A. Headley
Mr. John L. Hekking
Mrs. Joanne R. Hogg (Renda)
Mr. Ronald R. Hogg
Mr. David D. Isherwood
Mr. Larry Israelite
Mrs. Rosanne J. Jarrell (Johnson)
Mr. Richard C. Kaste
Mr. Michael E. Kennedy
Mrs. Kim B. Kluxen (Burgess)
Dr. Bruce Kornberg
Mr. Gregory Lane
Mr. Richard A. Larkin, Jr.
Mr. Thomas A. Larsen, Sr.
Mr. Robert W. Lazzaro, Esq.
Ms. Victoria P. Lazzell
Ms. Patricia A. Lesho
Miss Melissa S. Lourie
Mr. Christopher N. Luhn
Mrs. Mary B. Mack (Bendt)
Ms. Mary S. Maisel (Maisel)
Mrs. Christine D. Matteo (Dirschauer)
Mrs. Barbara K. McKay (Kerney)
Mrs. Margaret M. Meade-Bogguss
Mr. Joseph G. Millward
Ms. Rachel A. Monks
Mrs. Frances K. Mudd (Kelly)
Dr. Richard A. Norris
Mr. Kevin M. O'Keefe
Mrs. Kathleen A. Ohrenschall (Acito)
Ms. Rosemary A. Orthmann
Dr. N. Elizabeth Osborn, O.D.
Ms. Ruth E. Parry
Mr. Richard M. Pollitt, Jr.
Ms. Susan A. Scheidle
Mrs. Lynn K. Schlossberg (Kiselik)
Ms. Judith F. Seip (Dennis)
Mr. Michael P. Slagle
Mr. Michael W. Smith
Mr. James W. Smyth, Jr.
Mr. Eric E. Stoll
Mr. Paul C. Sullivan
Mrs. Sandra R. Takai (Richter)
Dr. Lisa P. Turner
Mrs. Patricia A. Viamonte (Perry)
Mr. John A. Wagner, Jr.
Mr. Robert B. Warner
Mr. Samuel L. Webster, Jr.
Mrs. June E. West
Mrs. Leslie T. White (Tice)
Mrs. Christine H. Withers (Hayes)
1975
Class Chair: Mr. Paul L. Boertlein
Co-Chair: Miss Laura C. Plantin (Case)
Total Contributions: $8,578.00
Members: 237
Contributors: 97
Participation: 41%
Ms. Deborah J. Anderson
Dr. Richard A. Baratta
Ms. Elsa A. Bennett
Ms. Rebecca L. Besson
Mr. Warren L. Blanton
Mr. M. Nelson Bond HI
Mr. Bryan C. Byrne
Mrs. Charlton G. Campbell-Hughes
Ms. Mary G. Caperton
Mr. Michael A. (Thanning
Mrs. Melissa N. Clarke (Naul)
Mr. Joseph P. Connor
Mrs. Katherine M. DeProspo (Myrick)
Mr. E. William Denison
Mr. Kim C. Dine
Mr. David W. Doelp, Jr.
Mr. Keith W. Dranbauer
Mrs. Katharine H. Draper (Hoban)
Mrs. Gail H. Eckert (Hoover)
Mr. Jay H. Elliott
Ms. Josephine H. Elliott
Mrs. Kathleen D. Fitzgerald (Dix)
Mr. Peter R. Fitzgerald
Mrs. Jenn A. Fredland (Abbott)
Dr. Scott D. Friedman
Mr. Robin C. Gettier
Mrs. Barbara C. Gorrow (Cooper)
Mr. Robert W. Hickman
Mrs. Cynthia A. Hildreth (Morton)
Mrs. Michelle R. Hoverson (Runyon)
Mr. Benjamin H. Inloes
Mrs. Mary B. Ivie (Bruel)
Mr. Craig T. Jackson
Ms. Julia B. Johnson
Mr. Maynard M. Kirpalani
Dr. Max D. Koenigsberg
Mr. Robert W. Larson, Jr.
Mrs. Barbara P. Lawrence (Parris)
Mrs. Betsy C. Leibson (Cook)
Dr. Barbara E. Lewis
Mr. John 1. Lord
Mrs. June L. Main (Laurentiev)
Mr. Bryan L. Matthews
Mrs. Susan D. Matthews (Dunning)
Mr. Curtiss H. Miles
Mrs. Nancy S. Miller (Sutton)
Ms. Barbara A. Mowbray
Mr. Jeremiah E. Moye, Jr.
Mrs. Laurie S. Mucciardi (Strauss)
Mr. Kevin P. Murphy, Esq.
Mr. Marc Muser
Mr. Kevin W. Nelson
Mrs. Lynn M. Ogilvy (Virgilio)
Mr. Frederick W. Ohrenschall
Mr. Arthur L. Pease 111
Mr. John A. Pederson
Mr. Mark L. Pellerin
Mr. Gregory P. Penkoff
Mr. Gordon L. Perry
Mr. Douglas B. Pfeiffer
Miss Laura C. Plantin (Case)
Mrs. Patricia B. Putnam (Bolz)
Ms. Lisa C. Rasmussen (Crooks)
Ms. Marjorie A. Rawle
Mrs. Vara L. Reeser (Lehrkinder)
Mrs. Paula P. Rengel (Pheiffer)
Mr. Douglas W. Richards
Mrs. Nancy S. Riley (Skinner)
Mrs. Sarah G. Rogers (Gray)
Mrs. Gwendolyn B. Rohn (Bunting)
Ms. Kimberley Sands
Ms. Louise A. Sargent
Mr. Paul R. Schlitz
Mr. Christopher B. Shaw
Mrs. Barbara P. Silcox (Powell)
Mr. Hugh B. Silcox
Mrs. Mary M. Silvestri (Moyer)
Mrs. Susan B. Slaughter (Brett)
Mrs. Carole S. Smith (Strausburg)
Ms. Vali M. Somers
Ms. Lucinda Stude
Ms. Mary M. Sworsky (McNulty)
Mr. Ricky T. Takai
Mr. Joseph E. Teti
Mr. Harold W. Thompson, Jr.
Mr. James F. Thompson
Mr. Jeffrey R. Timm
Ms. Patricia K. Trams
The Visiting Committee, an alumni
advisory group, met with President Trout
and administrators last spring in the
Cflst'v Academic Center. Standing left to
right (first row): Peter C. Gentry 79,
Elizabeth Kreamer, Charles H. Trout, and
jane B. Lowe '53. (Second row): Barbara
O. Kreamer 70, Dale Scarlett 78,
Andrew Scarlett, and Charles E. Scarlett
111 75. (Third row): Zung T. Nguyen 77,
Beth K. Leaman 73, and John Tansey 73.
(Fourth row): David E. Dougherty '55,
Robert N. Frederick '67, Jay Marchant, jr.
'63, and Bonnie A. Travieso '66. (Fifth
row): Tad L. Jacks '79, Glen R. Shipway
'65, Stephen T. Golding 72, Thomas W.
Heald '70, and Michael ]. Travieso '66.
Washmgtoi\ College Magazine / Annual Report 1991
53
Mrs. Helen P. Vansant (Perkins)
Mr, Frank C. Vogel, Jr.
Mr, Philip W, Vogler, Esq.
Mr. William J. Walls, Jr.
Mr. Christopher G. Wetherhold
Mr. Martin E. Williams
Mrs. Cathy A. Winslow (Eberspacher)
Ms. Wynne E. Wooley
Mr. W. Lee Yerkes
1976
Class Chair: Mr. Thomas J. Regan
Total Contributions: $8,738.50
Members: 224
Contributors: 85
Participation: 38%
Mr. Gary Balliet
Miss Christina A, Beaven
Mr. James R. Bowerman
Dr, Douglas F- Bowman, Jr.
Mrs, Kathleen C. Burns (Cowell)
Mr. Jonathan C. Burton
Mr. Craig C. Butcher
Mr. J. Tyler Campbell
Mrs. Lynn K. Channing (Kosak)
Mrs. Laura B. Condon (Bochenski)
Mr. James A. Cordes
Ms. Vicki P. Cordes (Peterson)
Mrs. Melinda M. Darbee (Murray)
Mrs. Marie A. Delcher (Annechino)
Mr. Michal H. Dickinson
Mrs. Linda B. Drawsky
(Brettschneider)
Ms. Susan L. Duffin
Mr. Christopher J. Eastridge
Mrs. Suzanne B. Ebbert (Beery)
Mr. Henry S. Fehlman
Mr. Donald A. Ford
Mr. Paul R. Franz
Mr. Paul A. Gianquinto
Ms. Margaret S. Goldstein
Mrs. Mary Beth Goll (Sanders)
Mr. Drew N. Gruenburg
Dr. Andrew D. Gruver
Mrs. Kim T. Haddow (Stierstorfer)
Mr. Gerard D. Hall
Mr. William L. Hallam
Dr. Karen L. Hamernik
Mrs. Mary J. Haxter (Appenzeller)
Mrs. Laurie Honan Hogans
Dr. Murray K. Hoy
Ms. Christine A. Jadach
Mr. Daniel T. Jankelunas, Jr.
Mrs. O. Willis Jennings (Willis)
Ms. Sandra E. Johnson
Mr. Bruce \ Katz
Mrs. Heidi M. Katz (Marcus)
Ms. Lynn Keller (Hayhurst)
Dr. Kris E. Kennedy
Mr. Kenneth L. Klompus
Mr. David R. Knepler
Mrs. Diane D. Landskroener
(D' Aquino)
Ms. Melissa M. Lankier
Mrs. Susanne E. Mason (Embert)
Mr. James A. Mayhew
Mrs. Marie L. Mears (Watson)
Mrs. Jane E. Mitchell
Mr. Taryn S. Moody
Mr. Joseph A. Mooney III
Mrs. Hollis A. Mooney (Dubbert)
Mrs. Pamela D. Naplachowski (Davis)
Mrs. Ellen T. Noyes (Plummer)
Dr. David T. Owens
Mr. L. Stephen Patrick
Mrs. Barbara Jo Pion (Henry)
Mrs. Melinda A. Rachlin (Zucker)
Ms. Karen R. Ramsing
Mr. Thomas J. Regan
Mrs. Helen W. Reustle (Wenzel)
Paul Boertlein '75 "still polishing that
apple" with Professor Bennett Lamond.
Mrs. Barbara M, Richardson
(McAllister)
Mrs. Cynthia B. Riet (Burker)
Mrs. Christie Robinson
Mr. Jonathan N. Rockwell
Mr. Albert C. Romanosky
Mrs, Constance J, Rue (Jones)
Mr. Daniel N. Scharf
Mrs. Julie O. Shaw (Otto)
Ms. Blythe A. Shelley
Mrs. Jessica K. Siegel-Jamner (Siegel)
Mrs. Susan E. Simms
Ms. Susan B. Smith
Mrs. Diane M. Spry (McDanolds)
Dr. PatrickJ. Strollo,Jr.
Mr. TTiomas W. Sutton
Mr. Peter E. Takach
Mr. Franklin B. Thomas
Mrs. Amy S, Warner (Schultz)
Miss Nancy W. Wayne
Mr. Dean M. Wern
Mr, Royall B. Whitaker
Ms. Mary E. Wildemann
Mr, William N. Williams
1977
Class Chair; Mr. Zung T, Nguyen
Total Contributions: $5,692.00'
Members: 237
Contributors: 76
Participation: 32%
Mr. John F. Armstrong, Jr.
Mr. Stephen J. Baker
Miss Kathleen Barr
Mr. Charles F. Black
Mr. Michael S. Buchanan
Mr. John C. Cheek
Ms. M. Lynne Christenson
Mrs. Carolyn J. Ciocca (Williams)
Mrs. Nancy T. CoUins (Travers)
Mr. Mark T. Condon
Mr. Jeffrey L. Coomer
Mrs. Susan A. Coomer (Aiken)
Mr- William C. Cooper
Ms. Dianne L. Copp (Grubb)
Mr. Robert M. Copp
Mrs. Lindl W. Costello (Wiederholdt)
Mr. Andrew W. Crosby
Mrs. Dawn A. DeSantis (Avery)
Mrs. Jane G. Denney (Gentile)
Mrs, Sandra L. Dennison-James
Ms. Jody A. Dudderar
Dr. Douglas C. Errington
Mr. Thomas A. Eskey, Jr.
Miss Barbara D. Faulkner
Mr. Donald M. Fisher
Mr. Frank R. Gray
Mrs. Diana W. Grunow (Duvall)
Mrs. Marcia G. Hammett (Gibson)
Mr. Thomas L. Herr
Ms. Jill A. Hessey
Mrs. Nancy S. Horsefield
,Ms. Shen R. Hubbard (Robinson)
Miss Hillary K. Hyman
Mr. Jonathan L. Jones
Ms. Kathleen G. Jones
Mrs. Jane B. Kenney (Breene)
Mr. Lawrence S. Kligerman
Mrs. Barbara A. Kurgansky (Green)
Mr. Geoffrey S. Kurtzman
Mrs. Amy R. LaMotte (Rhett)
Mr. David H. LaMotte
Dr. Kenneth R. Larsen
Mrs. Jane E. Libby (Elliott)
Ms. April L, Lindevald
Ms. Kevin E. Madden
Mr. Charles V. Main II
Reverend James S. McBride
Mrs. Joan C. Merriken (Culver)
Miss Judith R. Mills
Mr. William M. Mullen
Mr. Christopher T. Mundy
Mr. Kevin J. Murphy
Mr. Zung T. Nguyen
Mr. PaulJ. Noto '
Dr. Dean Parker
Mrs. Patrice P. Preston (Price)
Mr. Robert R. Ramsey
Ms. Melinda G. Rath'
Miss Eileen A. Reddy
Mrs. Roberta S. Rengarts (Smith)
Mr, and Mrs. Robert Y. Witter
Mrs. Leslie K. Rock (Kitchen)
Mr. John P. Sherman
Dr. Bryan A. Simmons, Jr.
Mrs. Margaret M. Smith (Alexander)
Mrs. Denise F. Smyth ( Franco- Velez)
Mr. Dan Solomon
Mr. Glen P. St. George
Ms. Laurie L. Stepp
Ms. Lydia S. Thomas
Mrs. Marlene M. Tribbitt (Mays)
Mrs, Mary Ellen Trusheim (Gentry)
Mr. Keith G.Twitchell
Mr. David O. VanWyck
Mrs. Catherine M. Walls (McTernan)
Mr. M. Stephen Zak
1978
Class Chair: Mr. John P. Habermann
Total Contributions: $8,116.00
Members: 222
Contributors: 83
Participation: 37%
Mr. Ralph G. Ackerman
Ms. Mary R. Allen
Mr. William F Andrews III
Mr. William F. Andrews
Mr. Guillermo Arrivillaga
Mrs. Allison M. Bateman (Robson)
Mrs. Mary Anne Beasten (Bruther)
Mr. David H. Beatty
Mrs. Terri A. Beatty (Adams)
Cdr. Arthur E. Bilodeau
Mrs. Helen P. Blackwell (Paca)
Mrs. Renee M. Bloom (Miller)
Lieutenant Gregory H. Brandon
Ms. Sue Briggs
Mrs. Robin C. Byrd (Cooper)
Mr. B. Kimball Byron
Ms. Gail Oakes Carta (Oakes)
Mrs. Ann W. Causey (Wilford)
Mr. Dana S. Chatellier
Mr. Richard A. Creamer
Mrs. Sandra G. DeVan (Green)
Mr. Richard C. Denison, Jr.
Mr. James C. Devol, Jr.
Lt. Gail A. Emow
Mr. David N. Eske
Mrs. Karen W. Eske (West)
Ms. Cheryl A. Fenner
Mr. L. Myrton Gaines III
Ms. Margaret E. Gamboa
Mr. John P. Habermann
Mr. Philip A. Hoyt, Jr.
Mrs. Andrea D. Jackson (Dunleavy)
Mrs. JoAnn D. Jackson (DriscoU)
Ms. Ashton M. Kelley
Mrs Frances C. Klapthor (Klapthor)
Mrs. Ann T. Laverty (Taylor)
Ms. Leslie A. Lehrkinder
Mr. Mark C. Luff
Ms. Anne F. MacGlashan
Mrs. Katherine M. Maisel (Macielag)
Mr. Gary A. Mance
Mr. John F. Marshall III
Ms. Taylor C. McGee (Connor)
Mr. Matthew R. McKelvy
Mrs. Donna R. Mills (Robinson)
Mr. Matthew A. Morris
Mrs. Sarah C. Mulligan (Coyle)
Mr. George C. Mullinrx, Jr.
Mrs. Cynthia A. Mullinix (Patchen)
Mr. J. Stephen Neuberth
Mr. Gary P. Norris
Mr. Neal R. Oldford
Mr. Lee C. Peterson
Ms. Denise Pendleton
Mrs. Karyn F. Powell (Thompson)
Mrs. Claire I. Pula (Wilton)
Mr. Andrew P. Rengarts
Dr, Albert W. Ro
Mr. Barry D. Rollins
Mrs. Mar>' D. Rollins (Duke)
Mr. Walter A. Romans, Jr. ^
Ms. Sandra K. Scholar
Mrs. Terri T. Selby (Taylor)
Miss Shelley V. Sharp
Mr. Andrew L. Shorter
Mrs. Cathenne S. Siperko
(Schumacher)
Mrs. Colleen A. Slade (O'Neill)
Mr. Bruce L. Smith
Mrs. Elizabeth A. Stephenson (Butler)
Mrs. Deborah G. Stoll (Gitt)
Mr. Christopher J. Strauss
Mr. Michael E. Tarquini
Mr. J. Edward Tatnall
Mrs. Deborah S. Tormey (Straus)
Mr. Collis O. Townsend
Ms. Denise M. Walton (Trevisan)
Mr. F. Da\'id Wheelan
Mr. John C. Wiegard
Mrs. Beverly C. Williams (Carter)
Reverend Carlos E. Wilton, Jr.
Mr. Thomas M. Wood
Mrs. Karen A. Young
Mr. Gary H. Zom
1979
Class Chair: Mr. Grant L. Jacks
Total Contributions: $5,923.00
Members: 193
Contributors: 80
Participation: 41 "^c
Ms. Joanne T. Ahearn
Mr. Robert E. Akeson
Mr. Howard C. Bauer
Dr. Kenneth A. Belmore
Ms. Lynn L. Bergen
Mrs. Eilene K. Brocenos (Koenigsberg)
Miss Cynthia A. Brown
Dr. Scott W. Browning
Mr. James H. Buchanan
Ms, Barbara E. Burdette
Ms. Jennifer A. Butler
Mr. Douglas R. Byrne
Mrs. Lisa M. Cameron-Koch (Martin)
Mr. M. Kevin Carouge
54
Washington College Ma'^azine / Annual Rcp\^rt 1991
Mrs. Sandra C. Cochran
Dr. David R. Cummiskey
Mr. Charles L. Davis III
Mrs. Patricia A. Douglas-Jarvis
Ms. Lisa J. Durbin
Ms. Mary A. Espenshade
Mrs. Mary W. Gaines (Walsh)
Mr. Thomas V. Goode
Mr. Ric H. Groff
Mrs. Linda L. Hague-Crew
Mr. Timothy J. Hart
Mrs. Susan W. Harter (Watters)
Dr. John W. Hawkins
Dr. Mark R. Hellberg
Mr. Scott E. Huber
Mr. Andrew J, Hundertmark III
Mr. Grant L. Jacks
Mrs. Margaret S. Jacks (Stevens)
Mrs. Anne K. Jelich (Bartlett)
Mr. John M. Jelich
Mrs. Priscilla H. Klipstein (Haack)
Mr. Robert C. Lewis
Mr. Joseph R. Lill
Mr. Gorton P. Lindsay
Mrs. Valerie L. Lippincott (Reindollar)
Mr. Douglas C. Lippoldt
Mr. J. William Maisel
Mr. David L. Malone
Mr. Joseph B. McCardell
Mrs. Dorothy F. Medicus
Mr. W. Dukes Meeks, Jr.
Mrs. Barbara A. Meeks (Smith)
Mr. W. Frank Molali
Mrs. Marian C. Molinaro
Mr. George L. Morris
Mrs. Nancy K. Nunn (Kostar)
Mrs. Julie M. O'Brien (Mitchell)
Mrs. Teresa B. Pascal (Brown)
Mrs. Maria J. Paslick (Johnson)
Mr. Richard J. Portal
Mrs. Saralisa T. Prange (Thiermann)
Mrs. Margaret G. Quimby (George)
Mrs. Christine A. Raymond (Butler)
Mr. Roger J. Rebetsky
Mrs. Virginia H. Reed (Hansen)
Mrs. Jean Dixon Sanders (Dixon)
Mr. Stephen M. Schaare
Mrs. Cathy B. Schwartz (Bauermann)
Mr. Robert W. Sharbaugh
Mrs. Sara W. Sherman (Woodward)
Mrs. Jasmine M. Shriver (Mehrizi)
Mr. WilliamJ.Skeltonin
Mr. Bruce V. Sopp
Mr. Emil A. Sueck, Jr.
Mrs. Karen M. Sweezey (Morris)
Mrs. Susan D. Taylor (Farace)
Mr. Jack A. Upchurch, Jr.
Ms. Betsy Lee Van Culin
Mr. Richard A. Wagner III
Dr. Matthew G. Wagner
Ms. Nancy Fahrenkopf Whiteley
Mrs. Christine H. Wiggins (Hellwig)
Ms. Verna A. Wilkins
Mr. Stuart G. Williams
Mrs. Mary L. Wood (Gugerty)
Mr. David C Wright
1980
Class Chair: Mr. Paul D. Drinks
Total Contributions: $4,396.00
Members: 190
Contributors: 11
Participation: 41%
Mr. H. Bruce Abbott
Mr. Peter G. Abronski
Mr. William C. Anderson, Esq.
Dr. Loren C. Baim
Mrs. Carol A. Baxter (Hood)
Mr. Peter Bertram
Dr. Jeanette M. Bonsack, O.D.
Mr. T. James Bradley
Mr. Frederic M. Bryant IV
Ms. Joan E. Burri
Mrs. Debra R, Campbell (Rider)
Mr. Timothy H. Connor
Mr.JohnN. Coulby III
Mr. Daniel J. DeCarlo
Mrs. Mary C. DeMoss (Currier)
Mrs. Darlene C. Debnam (Coleman)
Mr. Foster L. Deibert, Jr.
Mr. Douglass T. Delano
Mr. Paul D. Drinks
Miss Evelyn S. Felluca
Mr. Allen F. Findley
Mr. David A. Fitzsimons
Mrs. Jane J. Fox (Jarrett)
Miss Nancy L. Gerling
Mr. Dallas D. Gilbert
Ms. Claire M. Golding (Mowbray)
Mr. Rafael J. Guastavino, Jr.
Mrs. Linda G. Hamill (McCauley)
Lt. Northmore W. Hamill
Mr. Robert M. Hawkridge
Mr. Steven P. Henke
Mrs. Donna S. Hink (Scioli)
Mrs. Kathleen B. Hock (Baumann)
Mrs. Ann D. Horner (Dorsey)
Mrs. Beth C. Horstman
Miss Dana L. Houser (Hock)
Mrs. JoAnn Hoyt (Beebe)
Mr. Robert J. Jarrell
Mrs. Carla J. Johnson (Fletcher)
Mrs. Beverly Powers Jones
Mrs, Felisbela O. Joseph
Mrs. Jane A. Kerns (Johnson)
Mr. Steven F, Kinlock
Mr, Dwight D. Latham
Mrs. Denise E. McEachern (Belmore)
Ms. Rita M. McWilliams
Mr. David A. Miller
Mrs. Sallie T.L. Miller (Lewis)
Ms. Elizabeth A. Montcalm-Mazzilli
Mr. Stephen P. Morse
Mr. Lawson F. Narvell, Jr.
Mr. John E. Nunn III
Mrs. Lizabeth S. O'Mahoney
(Strohecker)
Mr. Jacob W, Parr, Jr.
Mr. Frank M. Pascal
Mr, Steven F. Perry
Mr. Dennis D. Porter
Mr. Jonathan R. Price
Ms. Valerie Restifo
Mr. William R. Russell III
Mrs. Susan U, Schwing (Ulrich)
Mr. Brian P. Siegel
Ms. Laura P. Siegel (Polk)
Mrs. Amanda S. Simons (Scherer)
Mrs. Susan W. Skelton (Wooden)
Miss Carol A. Smillie
Mrs. Lynn L. Smith (Lyke)
Mrs. Margaret H. St. Jean (Handle)
Mr. William S. Steelman
Mrs. Doris R. Valliant
Mr. Richard P. Vanderwende
Mrs. Kim M. Venterea-Zonenshine
Mr. David L. Wagner
Mrs. Nancy J. Waldvogel (Heady)
Mr. John G.Wharton, Jr.
Mrs. Leah T. Woodbury (Truitt)
Miss Vivian Young
1981
Class Chair: Mr. Glen E. Beebe
Total Contributions: $2,952.50
Members: 188
Contributors: 56
Participation: 30%
Mrs. Nancy J. Adams (Eaton)
Ms. Elizabeth A. Anger
Top Twenty Colleges
Alumni Participation in Annual Giving, 1990-91
1.
Centre
73.5
2.
Williams
62.1
3.
Dartmouth
61.0
4.
Hamilton
59.0
5.
Amherst
58.7
6.
Wilson
58.5
7.
Bowdoin
58.1
8.
Whitman
58.0
9.
10.
11.
Wellesley
Holy Cross
Beloit
57.3
56.9
56.8
13.
Lehigh
Swarthmore
56.8
56.5
15,
Gustavus-Adolphus
VMl
56.5
56.0
16,
Lawrence
55.9
17,
WASHINGTON
55.3
18,
Princeton
54,9
19,
Davidson
52,8
20.
Union (NY)
Da\a providcii by Ccnlic Collect-.
52,0
Mr, Glen E. Beebe
Mr. Daniel R, Beirne, Jr.
Mrs. Lori A. Bocrie (Moritz)
Mr. Charles R, Bradley
Miss Lee A. Chearneyi
Mr. Charles S. Cordovano
Mr. Patrick Cosgrove
Mrs. Ellen B, Crawford (Bauer)
Mr. John F. D'Amanda
Miss Laura G. Fahsbender
Ms, Daphne R. Fogg-Siegal
Ms. Elisabeth B, Gallagher (Gunning)
Mr. Geoffrey R. Garinther
Mr. Peter V. Gottemoller
Dr. Susan L. Handy
Ms. Diana B. Hastings
Mr. Gene A. Hessey II
Mrs. Deborah S. Hoyes (Mohney)
Mr. Darrell Jester
Mr. F. Tyler Johnson
Mr. Merrill C, Johnson
Mr. Robert B. Kelley
Mr. Christopher P. Kiefer
Mr. Gwynn X. Kinsey
Ms. Eileen M. Lenz
Mr. John C. Lonnquest
Mr. Timothy A, McCarter
Ms. Patricia K. McGee
Dr. Kenneth M. Merz, Jr.
Mrs. Sandra E. Meyers (Evans)
Mr. David E. Mills
Mrs. MarjorieT, Morani
Mr. Barnett R, Nathan
Mrs. Molly A. Nicol (Meehan)
Mr. Timothy D, Norris
Mr, Ronald W, Norvell
Mrs. Ruth C. O'Brien (Christenson)
Mr, David J. Panasci
Mrs. Chariotte R. Parker (Roberts)
Mrs. Mary Parr (Pohanka)
Miss Margaret L. Phillips
Mrs. Patricia L. Pratt (Losey)
Miss Deborah A. Risberg
Mrs. Billie-Lynn Roberts
Ms. Julia R. Shepard
Mrs. Nancy T. Sprynczynatyk
(Trinquero)
Mrs. Melanie F. Struve (Foster)
Miss Carol B. Sullivan
Mrs. Andrea M. Tuckerman (Seeley)
Mrs. Nancy G. Walker (Nuttle)
Ms. Katharines, Waye
Miss Julie A. Wheeler
Mr, Ronald K. Wright
Mr, Albert J. Young
1982
Class Chair: Mr, Scott B. Hansen
Total Contributions: $10,146.00
Members: 237
Contributors: 81
Participation: 34%
Mr. Francis T. Adams III
Mr. Jesse C. Bacon
Mrs. Robin L. Bauer (Miller)
Mr. Christopher A. Beach
Mrs. Jennifer L, Bradley (Hammond)
Mr. Douglas E. Brown
Mr. Andrew J. Bucklee
Mrs. Jani G. Byrne (Gabriel)
Mr. Michael F. Carpenter
Miss Catherine E, Carrier
Ms. Susan R. Chase
Mr. Richard O. Cookerly
Mr. Joseph X. CrivelH
Ms. P. Leslie Day
Mrs. Carol A. DeMoss (Andrew)
Mrs. Dorothy E. Dick (Schwarz)
Miss Elizabeth K. Edwardsen
Mr. Vincent J. Filliben, Jr.
Dr. Rebecca H. Fincher-Kiefer
Mrs. Christina R, Fryman (Ragonesi)
Mr. Thomas J. Galione
Mrs. R. Baumann Gardullo (Chaffin)
Mr. William B. Gerwig III
Mrs. Elizabeth E. Goddm (Edgeworth)
Mrs. Deborah F. Hansen
Mr. Scott B. Hansen
Miss Kimberly W. Harquail
Mrs. Arlene L. Hawkridge (Lee)
Mr. LeeC. HolHday
Mrs. Nanette B. Holmes (Bouline)
Mr. Jeffrey H. Horstman
Mrs. Margaret C. Howard (Chatfield)
Washington College Magazine/ Annual Report 1991
Mr. Peter W. Jenkins
Mrs, Lorraine M. June
Mr. Brian B. Kane
Miss Emily E. Kaufman
Ms. Susan F. Kepner
Mr. Michael A. Kersteter
Mrs. Patsy G. Kersteter (Hill)
Ms. Kimberley M. Kohl (Libercci)
Mrs. Elizabeth C. Kuensell (Gowen)
Miss Patricia A. Latham
Mr. John D. Lawrence, Jr.
Mrs. Anne K, Laynor (Kelly)
Mrs. Danielle J. Lippoldt (Kennedy)
Mr. Richard S. Macaulay
Mrs. Jean M. Maddux (Merrick)
Mr. Stephen C. Martz
Mr. William R. McCain
Mr. Leiand W. McCollough
Mr. Harry D. McEnroe
Mr. Kenneth G. Menzies, Jr.
Mr. James W. Merriken, Jr.
Mrs. Janene K. Miller (Beyer)
Ms. Ann C. Most
Mr. Curt A. Nass
Mr. Edward P, Nordberg, Jr.
Mr. William H. Norris III
Mr. Kevin J. O'Connor
Mrs. Yvonne M. O'Neill (Montanye)
Mr. Christopher C. Perry
Mrs. Jennifer A. Phillips (Ahonen)
Mr. David A. Pointon
Mrs. Claire P. Prescott (Paduda)
Mrs. Joyce G. Quinn (Grinvalsky)
Mr. Thomas E. Roof
Dr. Russell A. Schilling
Ms. Deborah K. Schlette (Kole)
Mr. John W. Sharp
Mr. G. Mark Simpson
Mrs. Cheryl L. Streett (Loss)
Mr. Peter D. Turchi
Ms. Kathleen T. Tynan
Mrs. Karen L. VanWyck (Ver Wys)
Mrs. Jessica M. Vaughan (Fowler)
Mr. Roger D. Vaughan
Miss Sarah J. Wagaman (Gohn)
Mr. T. Evan Williams, Jr.
Mr. John Willis
Mr. Bruce H. Winand
Ms. Elizabeth G. Wyrough (Glascock)
1983
Class Chair: Mr. F. Kirwan Wineland
Total Contributions: $5,86L00
Members: 211
Contributors: 72
Participation: 34%
Mrs. Lynda W. Allera (Webster)
Mr. Michael P, Allera
Mr. Donald E. Alt
Mr. James C. Apple
Mr. Gary K. Atkinson
Mrs. Linda A. Beach (Foster)
Mr. Kevin L. Beard
After the reutuoii Softball game pitting odd
years against evens, odds say "they
cheated."
Mr. Carl M. Behrensjr.
Mr. J. Temple Blackwood
Mr. Paul G. Blumberh
Ms. Kathleen M. Burke
Mr. David G. Burton
Mr. William A. Camp
Mr. Timothy N. Cloud
Ms. Andrea D. Colantti
Ms- Denise K. Dankert
Mr. Jeffrev B. Donahoe
Mr. Howard S. Edson
Ms. Sylvia J. Edwards
Mr. Christopher Ellinghaus
Mr. Carl B. Fornoff
Mr. Glenn M.Gilhs
Mrs. Mary Ellen Gillis (Elburn)
Ms. Melanie P, Gness
Mrs. Linda E. Green
Mr. Bryan S. Hall
Ms. Rebecca L, Harris
Ms. Michele A. Hartnett
Mr. Philip A. Heaver, Jr.
Mrs. Gwyn H. Heaver (Hekking)
Ms. Debra L. Herring
Mr. Joseph L, Holt
Mr. Paul G. Hvnson
Mr. Bradford F. Johnson
Mrs. Patricia M. Jones
Mrs. Louise Q. Kling
Mr. Richard Y. Ko
Mr. Benjamin G. Kohl, Jr.
Mrs. Laura C. Kurtzman (Chase)
Mrs. Bria B. Lawrence (Beckman)
Mrs. Lisa L. Luther (Laird)
Mrs. Ruth C. Macnamara (Chisnell)
Mr. Thompson A. Maher
Mrs. Carol B. McCollough (Baldwin)
Mr. Thomas V. McCoy
Mrs. Catherine S. McNally (Schreiber)
Ms, Elizabeth A. Miller
Mrs. Rebecca C. Mitchell (Chambers)
Ms. Sarah G. Motycka
Mr. Brian L. Mueller
Mr. John F. Panasci
Mr, R. Glenn Proffitt
Mrs, Kann S. Quantrille (Smith)
Mr, Stephen K. Radis
Mrs. Doris B. Reedt (Brooks)
Mr. Frank B. Rhodes, jr.
Mrs. Holly L. Rhodes (Ferguson)
Mr. Romie Q. Robinson II
Ms. Sarah M. Robinson (McAlpine)
Mr. Cabot M. Rohrer
Mrs. Julia S. Schilling (Strieker)
Mr. Steven W. Shaw
Mr. David W. Singer
Mr. James H. Stevenson
Mr. George C. Sutherland
Mr. David E. Tabor
Ms, Virginia A. Vanderpool
Mr, Lawrence K. Wagner, Jr.
Mr. Douglas D. West
Mr, Christopher J. Whitney
Mr, F. Kirwan Wineland
Ms. Kathryn A. Wurzbacher
1984
Class Chair: Mrs. Karen P. McGee
Co-Chair: Mrs. Lucille H. Wagner
(Hughes)
Total Contributions: $2,791.00
Members: 235
Contributors: 72
Participation: 31%
Mr. Thomas A. Adams
Miss Jodi L.Albright
Ms. Jeanmarie F. Alls (Fegely)
Mrs. Patricia A. Alt
Mr. R. Clayton Aulebach
Mr. Daniel' J, Bakley
Mr. W. Streett Baldwin
Mr. Andrew H, Bate
Mr. Robert L. Besse
Ms. Georgeanna Linthicum Bishop
Mrs. Linda D. Blow
Mrs. Susan B. Boone (Baker)
Mr. Scott T. Brewster
Mrs, Karen M, Bucklee (Morgan)
Ms. Frances N, Burnet
Mr. Irwin G. Burton III
Mrs. Christina D, Cappelluti
(DeNayer)
Mr. Hugh A. Collie
Mr. Brian F, Corrigan
Mr. Gregory M. Dargan
Mr. John J. Darlington III
Mrs. Lacey Ellinghaus (Merriman)
Ms. JoAnn Fairchild
Mr. Anthony C. FitzGerald
Mr. Franz D. Fleishman
Mr, Harris B. Friedberg
Mrs. Elizabeth T. Friedemann (Taylor)
Ms, Marcella M. Hall (McAlpm)
Mr, Todd A. Harman
Ms, Elyse B, Harris
Mr. Bradford C. Harrison, Jr.
Miss Virginia D. Henkel
Ms. Margaret C. Hoffman
Ms. Kathleen Holiday
Mr. Patrick G. Jones
Mr. Thomas P. Keefe
Mrs. Margot A. Kenzie (Woods)
Ms. Anya E. Lipnick
Mr. Frederick C. McDonald
Mrs. Karen P. McGee
Mr. Timothy C. McGrath
Ms. Michele E. McKay
Ms, Elizabeth B. McKee
Mr, C. James McKnight
Dr. Natalie J. McKnight (Brown)
Mr. Peter J. Morgan
Ms. Lisa A. Nichols
Ms. Stephanie E. Paup
Mrs, Kelly H. Phipps (Hardesty)
Mrs. Franchesa Profaci-Dickinson
Mrs, Lois I. Ramponi (Ireland)
Mr, B, Hagen Saville, III
Mrs. Margaret S. Scheck (Newsome)
Mrs. Fannie C. Shenk (Hobba)
Mr. A. Patrick Shockiey
Mrs. Beth G. Short (Greenwalt)
Ms. Judith S. Spann (Skelton)
Mrs. Nedra B. Spry (Butler)
Mr. Wayne P. Spurrier
Mr. Joseph R. Stallings
Mrs. Kathryn H. Stallings (Engle)
Ms. Patricia A. Stille
Mrs. Elizabeth B. Stillings (Beard)
Mrs. Audrey E. Sutherland (Latham)
Mrs. Victoria W. Tague (Williams)
Mr. Benjamin A. Tuckerman
Mrs. Maria Vanegas-Pessoa (Vanegas)
Mr. Scott F. Vogel
Mrs. Lucille H. Wagner (Hughes)
Mr. Henry Wittich
Mr. Avery K. Woodworth
Mr. James R. Worsham
1985
Class Chair: Ms. Melissa N. Combes
Co-Chair: Mr. William D. Knight
Total Contributions: $3,960.00
Members: 176
Contributors: 68
Participation: 39%
Mr, Paul A. Amirata
Ms. Belinda A. Bair
Mrs. Heather M. Barnes (McAlpine)
Mr. Bryon A. Bodt
Mr. Daniel J. Brumsted
Ms. Patrice A. Burdalski (Miller)
Ms. Carol D. Callaway
Miss Diana G. Coleman
Mrs. Eleanor T. Collyer (Horine)
Ms. Melissa N. Combes
Ms. Susan A. Comfort
Mr. Marc Cooke
Ms. Stephanie A. Crockett
Ms. Kelly L. Cupka
Ms. Janice C. Daue
Ms, Ellen A. Davis
Mrs, Mary Jo Determan (Perticone)
Mr, Francis A. DiMondi, Jr. ^
Ms. Gwendolyn Dirks
Ms. Carolyn E. Ellis
Ms. Terri L. Everett
Mr. Robert W.Gaddis,Jr
Mr. Kevin R. Giblin
Mrs, Jane D. Goode (Ditman)
Mrs. Michele J. Groseclose (Lacher)
Ms, CyndaTHill
Mrs. Bonnie C. Hoffman (Garr)
Mrs. Kelly M. Houston (McKenney)
Ms, Monica A. Jarmer
Mr, Jeffrey W. Johnson
Ms. Margaret L. Johnson
Dr. Blair A. Jones
Mrs. Cheryl D. Keller (Clagett)
Mr. Richard T. Kircher
Mr. William D. Knight
Ms. Lisa D. Kosow
Mr. Patrick J. LaMoure
Mr. David B. Lewis
Miss Diana K. Lipford
Ms. Denise N, Lipman
Mr, Arthur W. Littman III
Ms, Cecily W. Lyle
Mrs. Lone H. Maher (Hjelde)
Mr, Christopher Santa Maria
Mr. James S. McAuliffe III
Mr, John A. McDanolds
Mr. Jonathan A. McKnight
Mr. Daniel C, McNeese
Mr. Nimrod Natan
Mr. Thomas C. Nugent, Jr.
Mrs. Anne M. Plumer-Fisher
Mrs. Kimberly Ruark (Herrmann)
Mrs. Kristin L. Sackman (Sichelstiel)
Mrs. Mar\' B. Siemen
Mrs. Anne S. Singer (Friedman)
Mr. Donald G. Sparks
Ms. Shannon L. Stewart
Mr. Jack N. Stout, Jr.
Mr. Thomas P. Tague
Mr. Thomas P. Tansi
Mr. William A. Tliomas
Mrs. Jill D. Vimelson (DelConte)
Mrs. Amy Seifert Vizzi (Seifert)
Washington College Magazine/-4;zni((?/ Report J991
Ms. Angeline G. Wagaman
Mrs. Mary Beth Walker (Pohlman)
Mrs. Elizabeth A. Wilk (Guastavino)
Mrs. Elizabeth D. Willis (Deaconson)
Mr. Stephen C Woods
1986
Class Chair: Mr. Tommy E. Moore, Jr.
Total Contributions: $4,328.50
Members: 204
Contributors: 79
Participation; 39%
Mr. William Q.Allen, Jr.
Mrs. Ellen H. Arthur (Hennessey)
Miss Lynne M. Attias
Mr. Stephen S. Beville
Mr. Bryan A. Bishop
Mr. GeneG. Blades
Ms. Barbara A. Brown
Ms. Debbie L. Burcham
Ms. Joan R.Burke (Miller)
Mrs. Elizabeth E. Burnham
Ms. Amy S. Coleman
Mr. Stephen F. Corso
Lt. Richard E. Cote, Jr.
Mrs. Erin B. Courtney (Back)
Ms. Mary K. Courtney
Mr. Kevin T. Crowell
Mr. David M. Crowley
Mrs. Cynthia Ann Dill (Allen)
Mrs. Karen L. Durm-Owen
Mr. Paul W. Eichler
Ms. Andrea C. Erving (Clayville)
Mr. Thomas M. Eucker
Mr. Nicholas J. Ferrara 111
Mr. Edward T, Fitzgerald
Mrs. Waverly W. Ford (Wickes)
Mrs. Susan F. Gaddis (Summers)
Mr. Thomas M, Gaines
Mr. Scott B. Gasiorek
Mr. Eric Geringswald
Ms. Nancy L. Gillio
Mr. Timothy R. Goode
Mr. Timothy K. Gray
Mr. J. Jeffrey Harrison
Mrs. Karen E. Hayes (Hartz)
Mr. Leslie W, Hewett 111
Mrs. Lisa T. Hewett (Thomas)
Mr. Roderick L. Hickey
Mr. Lyle B. Himebaug'h III
Mr. Benjamin T.Hopkins 111
Mr. John R. Huber
Mr. Mark M. Jenkins
Mr. Richard A. Kaier
Mr. Kurt E. Keller
Ms. Linda Kennedy
Ms. Nancy M. Klos
Mrs. Mary Ellen Larrimore
Ms. Julie P. Loesch
Mr. Robert B. Loock
Mr. Charles D. MacLeod
Mr. Brian A. McLelland
Ms. Paula F. Miller
Mr. Tommv E. Moore, Jr.
Ms. Diana Morgan
Ms. Suzanne L. Niemeyer
Ms. Kathleen A. O'Donnell
Mr. Shawn T. Orr
Ms. Laura J. Paul
Mr. James H. Reinhardt
Ms. Karen A. Rollin
Mr. Douglas M. Rose
Ms. Rebecca S. Rothenhoefer (Smith)
Mr. R. Todd Rowley
Mrs. Patricia A. Schiazza
Mr. Kevin M. Schultz
Mr. Donald L.Shafer 111
Ms. Valarie A. Sheppard
Mr. Ricky L. Sowell
Mrs. Kelly M. Stout (Welsh)
Mrs. Zoe Lynne Sursock (Weil)
Mr. Richard L. Taylor III
Mrs. Christine A. Thompson
(Charmak)
Ms. Tamara A. Tiehel
Ms. Ruth A. Vaeth
Ms. Kimberly M. Ward
Mr. Hugh H. Weeks
Mrs. Kathleen M. Wheeler (Flannigan)
Mr. Richard T. Wheeler
Ms. Katherine L. White
Mr. Timothy E. Whiting
1987
Class Chair; Ms. Bridget B. McElroy
Total Contributions: $2,225.00
Members: 133
Contributors; 55
Participation; 41%
Ms. Leslie C. Beard
Ms. Judith A. Beckmann
Ms. Jennifer A. Billings
Mr. Lawrence E. Brandt, Jr.
Ms. Mary Grace Brickley
Mr. Christopher L. Brown
Ms. Mary E. Brown
Ms. Sandra F. Cannon (Freeman)
Ms. Heidi E. Collier
Mrs. Lisa M, Cote (Ledwin)
Mrs. Kim M, Coulbourne (Faulkner)
Ms, Catherine A, Coundjeris
Mr. Todd R. Del Priore
Mr. Christopher V. DiPietro
Mr, Richard J. Earnshaw III
Ms. Lauren C, Ebaugh
Mrs. Cathy A. Engle (Adams)
Ms. Amy M. Forest
Mr, Daniel ]. Forzano
Mrs. Suzanne A. Gray (Ruppert)
Mr. William S. Hayes
Mr, Lars K. Henriksen
Miss Donna M. Horneman
Mrs. Jill Anne Jenkins (Wagner)
Miss Joyce L. Jones
Mr, John R. Kelly
Mrs. Susan M. King (McHenry)
Ms. Kimberly A, Madigan
Ms, Bridget B. McElroy
Ms. Janet P, Mcjilton
Ms, Donna L. McMahan
Mr. Patrick J. McMenamin, Jr.
Mrs. Brownyn A. McNeese (Maguire)
Ms, Lorna K, Moloney
Mr, David K, Morris
Mr, R, Mark Nasteff
Ms. Irene Nicolaidis
Mrs. Marcia W. Patchan (Waynant)
Mrs. Dina L. Pizolato (Beck)
Mr. Robert J, Polk
Mrs. William B. Potter
Mr, David W, Quinn
Mr. Stephen M. Schmidt
Ms. Alison M, Shorter
Mr. Antone G. Silvia III
Ms. Karin G. Smith
Ms. Amy J, Steigleman
Mr. J. Kerwin Stokes
Mr. Richard C. Taylor
Mr. Richard C. Taylor
Mr. William B. Thompson, Jr.
Ms. Allyson M. Tunney
Ms. Margaret E. Virkus
Mr. Jere W. Wallace
Ms. Claire J. Yaniga
1988
Class Chair: Cecilia L. Kosenkranius
Total Contributions; $4,303.83
Members: 169
Contributors: 73
^''-$4
-I 1 .
[^',v*"«'
L
AS
Bj^l^
i
m*m
i
But the ei^ens had a ample of ringers.
Participation: 44%
Mr. John P. Albert
Mr. Robert M. Alexander
Mr. Michael P. Amey
Ms. Joanna Austin (Wilson)
Mr, Rvan B, Bailey
Reverend Carl H, Beasley 111
Mrs. Judith T, Berry (Taylor)
Mr, John C, Bridgeman
Miss Rita E, Brigman
Ms. Katy M. Brookhart
Miss Micia A, Burgard
Miss Alden E. Caldwell
Mrs. Amy B. Chase (Boor)
Mr. Robert A. Chmiel
Mr. Michael F. Clarke
Miss Brenda L. Conner
Mr, Stephen L. Corrado, Jr.
Miss Paula B. Cunningham
Miss Ruth F. Davidson
Mr. Frank A, Davis
Mr. Edward A. DeWaters III
Miss Camille L. Dickerson
Mr. Christopher D. Dollar
Miss Sarah L. Dunning
Mr. Christopher M. Fascetta
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1989
Class Chair: Miss Helen E, MacMahon
Total Contributions: $2,460.50
Members: 218
Contributors; 84
Participation; 38%.
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1990
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Total Contributions: $1,433,00
Members: 185
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Participation: 33%
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1991
Class Chair:
Total Contributions: $7,820.96
Members: 224
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Participation: 50%
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WASHINGTON COLLEGE ALUMNI COUNCIL
1990-1991
Officers
Council Members Emeriti
President
William J. Collins '40
Robert
Lipsitz '54
Avis R. Maddox '27
Vice President
Kathryn Wurzbacher '83
Members at Large
Margot A. Connellee '48
Douglass S. Livingston '60
Past President
Charles Waesche '53
Nancy McCloy M'74
Decade Members
Karen Gossard Price '73
1920s
Dorothy W. Myers '2^
Marvin Smith '67
1930s
Charles B. Clark '34
Dietrich Steffens '43
1940s
Anne E. Burris '48
Mackey Metcalfe Streit '51
1950s
Barbara T. Cromwell
55
1960s
Ed Athey '67
Chapter Presidents
Baltimore — Richard Denison '78
1970s
Paul Boertlein '75
1980s
Joseph L. Holt '83
Kent & Queen Anne's —
1990s
Steve Attias'90
Doris Brooks Reedt '83
Mardel — Louis Smith '49
Board
'Representatives
PItiladelijIna —
John Conkling '65
Philip A. Heaver, Jr. '83
Brien Kehoe '69
South jersey — Glen E. Beebe '81
Michael Macielag '73
Waslwiflon — Scott B. Hansen '82
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Ms. Brenda L. Cole
Mr. & Mrs, Daniel V. Collins
Mr. L. Rodney Compton
Dr. & Mrs. Thomas P. Conaty
Mr. & Mrs. John M. Connell
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Mr. & Mrs. Bernard M. Conway
Mr. & Mrs. Russell T. Cooke
Mr. & Mrs. Peter C. Coombs
Mr. & Mrs. Timothy C. Coss
Mrs. Helen P. Costello
Mr. & Mrs. Ronald E. Council
Mr. & Mrs. Clifton R. Coursey
Mrs. Richard L. Cover
Mrs. Linda J. Coyne
Reverend & Mrs. John D. Crandall
Mr. &L Mrs. Michael J. Cronin
Mr. & Mrs. Stephen T. Cropper
Mr. &: Mrs. Michael D. Crosier
Mr. & Mrs. Walter M. Czechowski
Mr. & Mrs. Alexander T. Daignault, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Calvin N. Damron
Mrs. Euia M. Danner
Mr. & Mrs. William I. Darling
Ms. Carole F. Davidson
Mr, & Mrs. Moulton Davis III
Mr, & Mrs. Mark A. De Santis
Mr. & Mrs. Frederick T. DeKuyper
Mr. & Mrs. Joseph R. DeVries '
Mr. & Mrs. Clarence T. Dean
Mr. & Mrs. Vernon F. Decker
Ms. Jeannine Dell
Mr. & Mrs. Vincent H. Demma
Mr. & Mrs. Raymond K. Denvvorth
Mr. & Mrs. Gerard F. Devlin
Mr. & Mrs. Arthur R. Dickerson
Mr. & Mrs. Colin C. Dickson
Mr. & Mrs, William E. Diefenderfer
Mr. & Mrs. Paul E, Dietz
Mr. & Mrs. John N. Dirks
Mr. & Mrs. Jean-Michel L. Dittmann
Mr. & Mrs. Gerald P. Doherty
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Mr. Charles J. Donahue
Mr. & Mrs. James A. Doucette
Mr. & Mrs. Milton D. Douglas
Mr. & Mrs. Gary E. Doyle
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Mr, & Mrs. James L. Drinks
Dr. &: Mrs. Robert W. Driscoll
Mr. & Mrs. Joseph D. Duffy
Mr. (Si Mrs. James E. Duklewski
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Mrs. William C- Eberlein
Mr. & Mrs. Wilton A, Elburn, Sr.
Mrs, Carole A. Ellis
Mr. & Mrs. Stanton R. Erickson
Mrs, Marlin A. Espenshade
Mr. & Mrs, Riley W. Evans
Mr. & Mrs. William Faloni
Mr. &Mrs. R.J. FarrelLJr.
Mr. & Mrs. Robert C, Farwell
Dr. & Mrs, James E, Fassett
Mr. & Mrs, Stuart E. Faust
Mr, & Mrs. Richard Feeney
Mr. & Mrs. George W. Fellows
Ms. Cheryl P. Fidler
Mr. & Mrs. Robert FitzGerald
Mr. & Mrs. Robert H. Forste
Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Forzano
Ms. Carolyn M. Foster
Mr. French Shriver Foster
Mr. & Mrs. Bruce C. Frame
Mr. & Mrs. Lawrence A. Frank
Mr. & Mrs. Paul E. Franz
Mr, & Mrs. William L. Gaines
Mr. J. R. Galloway
Mr. & Mrs. Edwin F. Gamboa
Dr. & Mrs. Jairo E. Garcia
Dr. Marie A. Garcia-Zamor
Mr. & Mrs. Eugene H. Gardiner
Mrs, Gretchen A. Garman
Lt. Col. & Mrs. David T. George
Mr. & Mrs. William Gerwig, Jr,
Mr. & Mrs. Theodore L. Gessner
Mr. & Mrs. Stephen Gifford Jr.
Mr. & Mrs, James G, Giller
Mr. & Mrs. Edward M. Gillern
Mr. & Mrs. Bruce A. Gimelson
Ms, Barbara R. Ginns
Mr. & Mrs. Vincent A. Golden
Mr. & Mrs. Lawrence Goldenberg
Mr, & Mrs. Harold Gordinier
Mr. & Mrs. John B. Grafton
Mr. & Mrs. Richard ]. Graham
Mr. & Mrs, Emmett L, Graham
Dr. & Mrs. John Green III
Mr. & Mrs. David A. Green
Mrs. Kathryn B. Green
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas W. Greene
Dr. & Mrs, James S. Gregory
Mrs. Ann W. Grieves
Mrs. Dorothy H. Griffin
Mr. & Mrs. Gerald J. Grindle
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Mr, & Mrs, Charles W. Groh
Mr, & Mrs, Raphael Guastavino
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Sir & Lady Kenelm Guinness
Mr & Mrs. James F. Hackett
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Mr. & Mrs. Thomas W, Hall, Jr,
Dr. & Mrs. Peter V, Hamill
Mr. & Mrs. Stephen D, Hamlin
Mr. & Mrs. Henry D. Hammond, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Richard J, Hannum
Dr, & Mrs, Christian M, Hansen
Mr. & Mrs. Philip E. Hansen
Mr. & Mrs. Robert S. Harner
Mr. & Mrs. Herbert B. Harris
Mr. & Mrs. Samuel D. Harris, Jr,
Mr. & Mrs. Roy R. Harrison, Jr,
Mrs. Sarah S. Harrison
Mr, & Mrs, Eugene C. Harter
Lt. Col. & Mrs. John G. Hathaway
Mr. & Mrs. Paul E. Hausmann
Mr, Gregory E. Hay
Mr, & Mrs. Harry J. Haynsworth, IV
Mr, & Mrs. Osmar G. Hebert
Mr, & Mrs. William J. Held
Mr. & Mrs. Roger M.W. Hendrickson
Mr. & Mrs. Fred G. Henkel
Mr. & Mrs. Ole Henriksen
Mrs, Doris C. Hensler
Dr, (Si Mrs. Janairo F, Hernandez
Mr, & Mrs Joseph D, Herring
Dr. (Si Mrs, Stephen L, Hershev
Mr, & Mrs. Gene A, Hessev
Mr. & Mrs. R. L. Hickey, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas A, Hickman
Mrs. Kirke Higgins
Mr. & Mrs. Landon Hilliard 111
Mrs. Marv E, Hilliard
Mr. & Mrs, John C, Hiortdahi
Mr. & Mrs. George H. Hocker
Mr. & Mrs, LeRoy Hotfberger
Mr. & Mrs, David R, Holden
Mr. Harold L. Holladay
Mr. & Mrs, Raymond C. Holton
Mr. & Mrs. David Hoopes
Mr, & Mrs, William C. Hopkins
Dr, & Mrs, Charles M. Horan
Mr. (Si Mrs H. Dennis Hormes
Mrs. Arthur Houghton, Jr.
Mr, & Mrs. Luke V. Howard
Mr. (Sc Mrs. John Hozik
Ms. Margo T. Huard
Mr, & Mrs. Ronald L, Huber
Mr, (Sc Mrs. J. Stephen Huebner
Ms. Donna L. Huettner
Mr. William G. Hupfeldt
Mr. & Mrs. Richard H. Hutchison
Mr. & Mrs. Felice P. lacangelo
Mr. & Mrs. Calvin M. Israel
Mr. & Mrs. E. K. Warren Ivie
Mr. & Mrs. Francis P. Jackman
Mr. & Mrs. Edward M. Jecelin
Mr, & Mrs. David B. Jenkins
Mr. & Mrs. Lester K. Jenkins
Ms, Helga S. Jensen-Ruopp
Mr. (Sc Mrs, Thomas W^ Jerardi
Mr. & Mrs. David 5. Jewett
Mr. (Si Mrs. Charles N. Johnson
Mr, (Si Mrs. Gerald S. Johnston
Mr. (§c Mrs. Wilham R. Johnston
Mr, & Mrs. Charles Joiner, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Otto P.J. Jons
Ms. Anita J. Judge
Mrs. Margaret T, Kane
Ms. Maureen A. Karns
Mr. & Mrs. Juhan A. Katchadurian
Mr. & Mrs. James F. Kelleher
Mr. & Mrs. Patrick J. Kenny
Mr. William T. Ken-
Mr. &: Mrs. Walter Kirby
Mr. & Mrs. Sheldon Kiselik
Mr. & Mrs. Stephen J. Kleberg
Ms. Linda C. Klein
Mr. & Mrs. Ned S. Kodeck
Mr. & Mrs. Robert H. Koehler
Mr. & Mrs. David Koenigsberg
Mr. & Mrs. Danny J. Koskuba
Mr. & Mrs. Robert J. Kubick
Mr. P. James Kurapka
Dr. & Mrs. William O. LaMotte
Mr. &: Mrs. Paul D. Lack
Mr. & Mrs. Larrie W. Laird
Mr, & Mrs. Gar>' V. Lane #
Mr. James R. Larrimore, jr.
Mr, & Mrs. Keith R. Latham
Mr, & Mrs. A. N. Lazzaro, Sr.
Mr, & Mrs, Stephen Le Gost
Dr. (St Mrs, William M. Leach
Mr. & Mrs. Norman Ledwin
Mr. &z Mrs. Maurice Lennon
Mr. & Mrs. John J.B. Lerch III
Mr. & Mrs. Larry J. Lester
Ms. Patricia E. Lewis
Mr. & Mrs. WilHam E. Liebig
Mr. (Si Mrs. Albert C. Limbrick
Mr. Sz Mrs. Harr\' Limons
Mr. Michael J. Linehan
Mr. & Mrs. John H. Link
Mr. David J. Lipinski
Mr. & Mrs. John P. Lippke
Mr. & Mrs. Rawson Lizars, Jr.
Mr. &: Mrs. Thomas Lloyd
Dr. & Mrs. Gordon N. Lockhart
Mr. & Mrs, Dennis R. Loftus
Dr, & Mrs. Bruce W. Lownev
Mr, (Si Mrs. Thomas A. Lucas
Mr. (Si Mrs. Frederick MacLean
Mrs. Joyce K. Mace
Mr. & Mrs. James W. Madigan
Mr. & Mrs. Richard C. Maenner
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas J. Maher
Mr. & Mrs. Michael L. Mahoney
Dr. Houchidar C. Maneche
Mr. & Mrs. Roger N, Mangels
Dr. & Mrs. Barrv D. Mangum
Mr. & Mrs. Charles R. Maronev
Ms. Helen M. Marshall
Mr. &L Mrs. Maurice R. Marshall
Mr. (Si Mrs. Wa\Tie C, Marshall
Mr. (Si Mrs. Robert L. Martino
Mr. (Si Mrs. Ronald F. Mathias
Mr, John B, Mathis
Mr, (Si Mrs. Fred L. Mauser
Dr. (Si Mrs. Daniel D. Maxwell
Mr, & Mrs, Thomas W. Mavr
Mr. & Mrs. Harold A. McBee, Sr.
Mr. & Mrs. Patrick McCabe
Mrs. Catherine B. McCahill
Washington College Magazine / An}iual Report 1991
Mrs. Norah A. McCarthy
Mr. John G. McCarthy, Jr.
Dr. & Mrs. Dino E. P. McCurdy
Ms. Marion M. McDermaid
Mr. &: Mrs. Kenneth E. McElroy, Jr.
Mr. &; Mrs, Harry A. McEnroe
Mr. & Mrs. Daniel McGinniss
Mr. & Mrs. Bernard L. McKay
Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth W. McKenna
Mrs. Kathryn K. McKenney
Mr. & Mrs. Lee G. McKnight
Mr. & Mrs. John McLelland
Mrs. Lee D. McMahan
Mr. & Mrs. Francis D. McNamara
Mr. & Mrs. James R. McNesby
Mr. & Mrs. David H. Meehan
Mr. & Mrs. Robert H. Mendelson
Dr. & Mrs. Hector C. Mendez
Mr. & Mrs. Stuart C. Mercereau
Mr, & Mrs. Richard C. Meyer
Dr. & Mrs. Roger H. Michael
Mr. & Mrs. Stuart R. Miller
Mr. & Mrs. Charles Miller
Dr. &: Mrs. William F. Moffett
Mrs. Barbara M. Mohler
Mr. & Mrs. Robert Montenegro
Mr. & Mrs. George Montgomery
Mr. & Mrs. Leonard E. Moody
Mr. & Mrs. George B. Moore
Captain & Mrs, Hugh T. Moore
Mr. Keith A. Moorehead
Dr. & Mrs. John L, Morgan
Mrs. Molly A. Morgan
Dr. & Mrs. John F. Morrall III
Mr. & Mrs. Melvin B. Morris
Mr. & Mrs. John W. Morrison
Mrs. Joanne S. Morschauser
Mr. »Si Mrs, John W, Moses
Dr, John A, Most
Mr. & Mrs. David L. Motycka
Mr. & Mrs. John A. Mouracade
Mr. & Mrs. James R. Moxley, Jr.
Ms. Margaret G. Mucha
Mr, & Mrs. Robert N, Mueller
Mrs. Mary Ella Mullin
Mr, & Mrs. Robert F, Murphy
Mr, Dennis Murray
Dr. & Mrs. Alberto Nasjletti
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Mr. & Mrs. Lewis E. Nicholson
Mr. & Mrs. Jorn Nielsen
Mr. & Mrs. George A. Noble
Mr. Si Mrs. Edward P. Nordberg
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Mr. & Mrs. Tracy A. Page
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Mr. & Mrs. William S. Penick
Mr. & Mrs. Abe Perez
Mr. & Mrs, Charles M. Peterson, Jr.
Mr. John G. Petrie, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. John R. Petz
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Ms. Paula A. Phipps
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Dr. Mary A. Renzi
Mr. & Mrs. Stuart C, Reppert
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Mr. & Mrs. Francis C. Rienhoff
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Mr. & Mrs. Herbert T. Rively
Mr. & Mrs. Charles R. Rogers
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Reverend & Mrs. Rod L. Ronneberg
Mr. & Mrs. George R. Ruhl III
Mr. & Mrs. George A. Rummell
Mr. & Mrs. Gary G, Rupert
Mr. & Mrs. Ronald M. Sail
Mr, & Mrs. Alfonso P. Sanchez
Mr. & Mrs. A. H. Santa Maria
Mr. & Mrs. Vincent Sanudo
Mr. & Mrs. James S. Schaefer
Mr. & Mrs. Carl W. Schaller
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Mr. & Mrs. L. Clifford Schroeder
Ms. Katherine L. Schumann
Dr, & Mrs. Bradford Schwartz
Mr, (Sc Mrs. Jeffrey Schwartz
Mr. Paul C, Scott, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. William P. Scully
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Mrs. Reynold C. Siersema, Jr.
Ms. Edris M. Silva
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Mrs. Carolyn A. Skinner
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Mr. & Mrs. Peter C. Spellar
Mr. & Mrs. Donald B. Spencer
Mr. & Mrs. Robert D. Spencer
Mr. & Mrs. Wayne Spencer
Mr. & Mrs. Gerard P. Spezio
Community Campaign
E.S. Adkins & Company
J.C. Dodd Distributing Company
Aiger Oil, Inc.
Jewell's Chevron Station
American Pyrotechnics Association
Dr. and Mrs. Arthur T. Keefe
Kenneth Beasley
Kent Printing
Dr. and Mrs. Norton Bonnett
Kent Savings & Loan Association
Brambles Traditional Clothing
LaMotte Chemical Products Co.
C & P Telephone Company
Bucky Larrimore Insurance
Chesapeake Bank & Trust
Legg Mason Wood Walker, Inc.
Chester River Food Service
Loyola Federal Savmgs & Loan
Chestertown Bank of Maryland
Association
Chestertovvn Physical Therapy
Maryland National Bank
William Norris Clark, Realtor
G. Mitchell Mowell, Esq.
W. N. Cooper &z Son, Inc.
Dr. Gerard S. O'Connor
Corsica Bookshop
Old Wharf Inn
Davis Real Estate
Pardoe's Lawn & Tree Service
Dr. and Mrs. Alexander C. Dick
Park Rug & Dry Cleaners Corp.
Dixon Valve & Coupling Co., Inc.
Paul's Shoe Store
Dukes-Moore Insurance
Dr. and Mrs. Michael R. Pelczar
Eastern Shore Animal Hospital
Peoples Bank
Feast of Reason
Pip's Discount Liquors, Inc.
The Finishing Touch
Second National Bank
Fleetwood, Athey, Macbeth &
A Shear Design
McCown
Shore Distributors, Inc.
G.S.M. Industries, Inc.
William ]. Sieffert, D.D.S.
Georgetown Yacht Basin, Inc.
The Sly Horse
Gillespie and Son, Inc.
Sutton's Towne Stationers
Dr. and Mrs. O.S. Gulbrandsen
The Thompson Building
Dr. Robert L. Henderson
Dr. Albert S. Townshend
Hogans Agency, Inc.
VIA Waye Travel Bureau
Hoon & Barroll
The Watkins Auto Supply Co.
Mayor and Mrs. Elmer E. Horsey
Widow's Walk Inn
Ms. Elizabeth C. Sprouse
Ms. Nellie M. Spry
Mr. & Mrs. Joseph A. Spurrier
Mr. & Mrs. Edgar Steigleman
Mr. H. G. Stevenson
Mrs. Kathryn H. Stewart
Mr. & Mrs. Ronald T. Stickney
Mr. & Mrs. Robert M. Strayer
Mr. & Mrs. Robert Strong, Sr.
Mr. & Mrs. John S. Sturges
Mr. & Mrs. Robert L. Tabb
Mr. & Mrs Paul E. Taibl
Mr. & Mrs. Theodore T. Tansi
Miss Dale Taper
Mr. & Mrs. Daniel R. Taylor
Mr. & Mrs. Richard Taylor, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Issac F. Thomas
Mr. & Mrs. John C. Thuman, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Anthony C. Thurston
Mr. & Mrs. Robert C. Tiehel
Mr. & Mrs. Henry R. Trapnell
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas J. Trently
Mr. & Mrs. Liebert S. Turner
Dr. & Mrs. Thomas Unger
Mr. & Mrs. Joseph M. Van Name
Mr. & Mrs. Banks W. Vaughn
Dr. & Mrs. Andrew H. Vendelis
Ms. Frances V. Verstandig
Mr. &: Mrs. Harry E. Victor
Mrs. Eugene Virgilio
Mr. & Mrs. Eilert C. von Voss
Mr. & Mrs. Edward K. Wadsworth
Mrs. Nora E. Wagner
Mr. & Mrs. James s. Walker
Mr. & Mrs. Richard F. Walsh, Jr.
Dr. & Mrs. Kenneth D. Wantling
Mr. & Mrs. Tom S. Ward, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Glenn L. Warner
Mr. & Mrs. Stephen P. Warner
Mr. Thomas Waters
Dr. Louise F. Waynant
Mr. & Mrs. Harold A. Webb
Mr. & Mrs. Robert ]. Webb
Mr. & Mrs. Robert A. Weber
Mr. & Mrs. Michael Weiser
Mr. & Mrs. Walter D. Welsh
Mr. & Mrs. Joseph B. Wennik
Dr. & Mrs. Clifton F. West, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Edward R. Westing
Mr. & Mrs. A. Glenn White
Mr. (St Mrs. Francis S. White
Mrs. Harriet E. White
Mr. & Mrs. James P. White
Ms. Margaret J. White
Mr. & Mrs. Charles M. Whiteford
Mr. & Mrs. Ellis G. Whiteman
Mr. & Mrs. Richard A. Whiting
Mr. & Mrs. James A. Wiant
Ms. Judith B. Wiater
Dr. & Mrs. Joseph Wiesenbaugh
Mr. Augustine H. Wiest III
Mr. & Mrs. Sydney M. Williams
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas C. Williams
Mr. & Mrs. Harold P. Wilmerding
Mr. & Mrs. Joseph P. Wilson
Captain & Mrs. Robert W. Witter
Mr. & Mrs. Robert B. Wolfe
Mr. & Mrs. Miles K. Wolfson
Mr. & Mrs. Richard D. Wood, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Clifton A. Woodrum III
Mrs. N. Page Worthington
Mr. & Mrs. Phillip L. Wright
Dr. & Mrs. Warren Wurzbacher
Dr. & Mrs. Frederick N. Wyman
Mr. & Mrs. John Yost, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Rodney G. Young
Mrs. Christie M. Ziolkowski
Lifetime Fitness Center
Contributors
Anonymous
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas A. Adams
Alex. Brown & Sons, Inc.
Mr. & Mrs. James T. Anthony '34 '34
Mr. Robert H. Appleby '54
Mr. & Mrs. Edward L. Athey '47
Mr. & Mrs. Edward M. Athey '67
Mr. & Mrs. A. Stuart Baldwin
Wasliington College Magazine / Annual Report 1991
Baltimore Gas & Electric Company
Mr. John E. Barnes, Jr. '47
Mr. Brooks B. Bergner 72
Mr. Charles R, Berry '36
Mr. & Mrs. W. Dennis Berry '88
Mr. & Mrs. Peter L. Boggs '72 '73
Mr. & Mrs. William F. Bowdle
Mr. & Mrs. John H. Boyden
Mr. William Boykin
Mr. T. James Bradley '80
Mrs. Dorsey H. Bramble '74
Dr. Charles L. Brandenburg, Jr. '50
Dr. & Mrs. Neil W. Brayton
Mr. WilliamJ. Brogan'52
Mr. & Mrs. George L. Buckless, Jr. '69
Ms. Anne E. Burris '48
Mr. B. ICimball Byron '78
CSX Corporation
Mr. Robert H. Caldwell '90
The Campbell Foundation
Mr. & Mrs. Bradford G. Carney '72 '72
Mr. M. Kevin Carouge '79
Mr. & Mrs. John C. Cheek '77
Chesapeake Bank &: Trust
Mr. Charles B.Clark, Jr.
Dr. & Mrs. Charles B. Clark '34
Coca Cola Foundation, U.S.A.
Mr. & Mrs. William J. Collins '40 '40
Mrs. Marv Jeanne Comegys '43
Dr. & Mrs. John A. Conkling '65 '65
Mr. Charles S. Cordovano '81
Mr. & Mrs. Charles P.
Covington, Jr. '56 '54
Mr. & Mrs. George T.
Cromwell, Jr. '53 '55
Mr. George L. Darley, Jr. '57
Mr. & Mrs. Alonzo G. Decker, Jr.
Mr. H. Hurtt Deringer '59
Dr. & Mrs. Alexander C. Dick
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas J. Donahue
Mr. & Mrs. Robert B. Drew '70 '74
B. Gen. & Mrs. Raymond W.
Edwards '53 '55
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Eliason, Jr. '42 '42
Mr. Jay H. Elliott '75
Lt. Col. Joe S. Elliott, Jr. '40
The Equitable Life Assurance Society
Fleetwood, Athey, Macbeth &
McCown
First Maryland Foundation
Mr. & Mrs. John D. Floyd
Mr. & Mrs. Donald G. Garratt '72 '72
Mr. & Mrs. William D. Geitz, Jr. '50 '44
Mr. & Mrs. Eric Geringswald '86 '88
Mr. & Mrs. Stephen W. Gieser
I-Jon. & Mrs. Louis L. Goldstein '35
Grace Foundation, Inc
Dr. Andrew D. Gruver '76
Mr. & Mrs. Edward Hatfield
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas W. Heald '68 '70
Mr. & Mrs. Samuel L. Heck '67
Dr. & Mrs. Stephen B. Hitchner
Mr. Oswald W. Hodges '65
The Hodson Trust
Mr. & Mrs. LeRoy Hoffberger
Mr. cSc Mrs. Alexander H. Hoon
Mr. & Mrs. Philip W. Hoon
Mr. Christopher C. Huebner '89
Mr. & Mrs. Charles L. Ill
Mr. & Mrs. Daniel W. Ingersoll '33 '71
J & L Building Materials, Inc.
Mr. & Mrs. Grant L. Jacks '79 '79
Mr. & Mrs. David B. Jenkins
Mr. & Mrs. Gerald P. Jenkins '65
Mr. & Mrs. Peter W. Jenkins '82
Ms. Kathleen M. Johnson
Mr. Kirk B. Johnson
Mr. Merrill C. Johnson '81
Mr. Robert M. Johnson '66
Mr. & Mrs. Alexander G. Jones '51 '51
Mrs. Nancy H. Jones '50
Mrs. Margaret T. Kane
Mr. Maynard M. Kirpalani '75
Mr. & Mrs. P. David Knowles '72
The Kresge Foundation
Mrs. Barbara A. Kurgansky '77
Mr. & Mrs. Wilson A. Landis
Dr. Walter J. Lentz
Lincoln National Corporation
Mr. David J. Lipinski
Mr. & Mrs. Robert W. Lipsitz '54
Dr. Frederick T. Lohr, M.D.
Mr. & Mrs. John M. Lord '35
Mr. & Mrs. Roger N. Mangels
Mr. Holt L. Marchant, Jr. '63
Mr. & Mrs. Bryan L. Matthews '75 '75
Mr. & Mrs. Jerry B. Matyiko
Mr. Laurence McCalley, Jr. & Mrs.
Charlotte McCalley '41 '41
Mrs. Joseph H. McLain '40
Mr. & Mrs. Samuel L. McSorley
Mrs. Marie L. Mears '76
Mr. James B. Merrick
Mr. Donald B. Messenger '57
Mr. & Mrs. Geoffrey M. Miller
Ms. Sara S. Miller
Mr. & Mrs. William C. Miller '59 '60
Mr. William H. Morgan '64
Mr. Matthew A. Morris '78
Mrs. Dorothy Woodall Myers '24
Mr. William M. Nagler '42
Mr. Richard A. Natwick '66
Mr. Edward P. Nordberg, Jr. '82
Mr. & Mrs. Edward P. Nordberg
Mr. Gary P. Norris '78
Dr. Richard A. Norris '74
Mr. Timothy D. Norris '81
Dr. & Mrs. Gerard S. O'Connor
Mr. Kevin M. O'Keefe '74
Ms. Chris A. Owens '73
Mrs. Rebecca B. Owens '25
Mr. Jonathon J. Powers '73
Mr. Jonathan R. Price '80
Mr. & Mrs. W. James Price IV
Mr. James H. Reinhardt '86
Mr. & Mrs. F. Spencer Robinson '43
Mr. Walter A. Romans, Jr. '78
Ms. Rebecca S. Rothenhoefer '86
Mr. & Mrs. William R.
Russell, Jr. '56 '53
Mr. & Mrs. Stanley Schottland '42
Mr. & Mrs. L. Clifford Schroeder
Mr. & Mrs. J. Brian Searles
Mr. & Mrs. John W. Selby '41 '44
Mr. Glen R. Shipway '65
Mr. & Mrs. Robert V. Shriver '73 '79
Mr. & Mrs. Edward H. Smith
Mr. & Mrs. Dietrich Steffens '43 '46
Mr. Thomas W. Sutton '76
Mr. & Mrs. John L. Tansey '73
Mr. Thomas P. Tansi '85
Mr. & Mrs. Evans Taylor
Mrs. Patricia J. Taylor '68
Ms. Elizabeth R. Thibodeau '36
Time, Inc.
Dr. & Mrs. Charles H. Trout
Dr. & Mrs. Basil Tully '39 '42
Ms. Jessie L. Vaughan
Mr. & Mrs. Bohn C. Vergari '71
Mr. & Mrs. Charles Waesche '53
Mr.JohnA. Wagner, jr. '74
Mr. & Mrs. Lawrence K.
Wagner, Jr. '83 '84
Mrs. Mary Beth Walker '85
Mr. John S. Wayne '73
Mr. James A. Wentzel '73
Mr. & Mrs. John B. Widdup
Mr. & Mrs. Donald F. Wierda
Mr. & Mrs. Judson Williams III
Mr. Martin E. Williams '75
Mr. William N. Williams '76
Mr. Richard L. Wunderlich '67
Student Assistance Fund
Mr. Robert E. Akeson '79
Mr. Thurman H. Albertson '57
Mrs. Adele M. Allison
Dr. & Mrs. Tai Sung An
Mr. Charles F. Anderson '39
Mr. & Mrs. Harold E. Anderson
Mr. & Mrs. Clarence E. Andrews
Mrs. Mary L. Auchincloss
Baltimore Alumni Chapter
Mrs. Ruth H. Bartlett '39
Mr. Henry O. Benedict '51
Reverend & Mrs. Francis Benson
Mr. & Mrs. Alva T Blades
Mr. & Mrs. K. Bournazian
Mr. & Mrs. Robert R. Bowie '33
Mr. Charles N.Bradley '32
Mr. & Mrs. Curtis Brockelman
Mr. J. Stewart Bryan III
Mrs. Doris M. Buchanan
Mrs. J. Taylor Buckley
Mr. & Mrs. Clayton C. Carter
Mrs, Patricia E. Clarke
Mr. & Mrs. Edward Colantti
Mr. Patrick Cosgrove '81
Mr. & Mrs. Charles Costa
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas C. Crouse, Jr. '59
Dr. Ivon E. Culver '35
Mr. & Mrs. Mark A. De Santis
Mr. Michael R. Denworth '90
Mr. & Mrs. John N. Dirks
Mr. & Mrs. Guenther K. Drechsler
Mr. & Mrs. Samuel C. Dudley '36 '36
Mr. James W. Duncan '50
Mr. & Mrs. William A. Dunphy, Jr. '73
Dr. & Mrs. W. Robert Fallaw
Mr. & Mrs. Raul F. Felipa '89 '89
Mr. & Mrs. William M. Hook
Ms. Carolyn M. Foster
Mr. & Mrs. Harold Gordinier
Mr. William E. Gould
Judge William O. Gray '68
Mrs. Kathryn B. Green
Mr. Rafael J. Guastavino, Jr.'80
Mr. & Mrs. E. Halivopoulos
Mr. William L. Hallam '76
Mrs. Sarah S. Harrison
Dr. Harrv C. Hendrickson '41
Mr. & Mrs. Fred G. Henkel
Mr. & Mrs. John C. Hiortdahl
Mr. & Mrs. LeRoy Hoffberger
Mrs. Nanette B. Holmes '82
Mr. Charles F. Horstmann, Jr. '73
Mr. William G. Hupfeldt
Mr. & Mrs. E. K. Warren Ivie
Mr. & Mrs. Francis P. Jackman
Miss Anne L. Johnson '88
Ms. Kathleen G. Jones '77
Kent Island American Legion
Mr. & Mrs. William H.
Kenworthey, Jr. '50 '53
Mrs. Edwin G. Kephart
Mr. William H. Kerbin, Jr. '90
Mrs. Louise Q. Kling '83
Mrs. Ferdinand LaMotte III
Mrs. Mary B. Landt '47
Reverend Charles R. Leary '55
Mr. & Mrs. Craig Lewis
Mr. & Mrs. Joseph P. Linduska
Mr. & Mrs. Douglas C. Lippoldt '79 '82
Mr. Joseph J. Longobardi '52
Mr. William N. Macindoe '90
Mr. & Mrs. James W. Madigan
Mrs. Ida May Mantel '62
Mr. Walter A. Marschner '63
Mr. R. Bruce McCommons '63
Mr. & Mrs. John McLelland
Mrs. Clarence W. Miles
Mr. & Mrs. William C. Miller '60
Mr. & Mrs. Charles Miller
Mr. Walter K. Moffett '34
Mr. & Mrs. Leonard E. Moody
Mrs. Joan C. Moore '53
Miss Mae W. O'Neill
Mrs. Elizabeth W. Orem '33
Mr. & Mrs. Phihp Pear, Esq.
Mr. John A. Pederson '75
Mr. & Mrs. Robert A. Pilkington
Mrs. Alice M. Piper
Mrs. Faye C. Polillo
Miss Sarah L. Pyle '90
Mr. &Mrs. Phil'ipJ. Rauch
Rev. Percy N. Reese '31
Mrs. Sarah L. Richardson '31
Mr. Philip G. Riggin '57
Mrs. Bonnie Kerr Robbins '69
Mr. & Mrs. Robert K. Robson
Mr. & Mrs. Russell Rollin, Jr.
Dr. Peter J. Rosen, M.D. '68
Ms. Karen L. Ruffell '70
Ms. Kimberley Sands '75
Mr. & Mrs. Carl W. Schaller
Miss Doris Shea
Mrs. Beth G. Short '84
Mr. William C. Stallings '69
Reverend J. Gordon Stapleton '55
Mrs. Georgianna R. Startt '30
Mr. H. G. Stevenson
Mrs. Kathryn H. Stewart
Mr. & Mrs. Richard S. Sutton
Dr. Cathy W. Swan '70
Mrs. Betty P. Sylvester '49
Mr. Jay D. Tebo '54
Mr. Harold W. Thompson, Jr. '75
Mr. & Mrs. Ferdinand Thun
Mr. Cornelius A. Tilghman, Jr. '53
Mrs. Betty W. Tillinghast
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas J. Trentlv
Mr. & Mrs. Liebert S. Turner
Mrs. Lucille F. Wallop
Mr. & Mrs. John Weikart
Ms. Estelle B. Wesley '37
Mrs. Jean M. Wetzel '66
Ms. Sigrid V. Whaley '54
Mr. Royall B. Whitaker '76
Mr. Robert E. Williams, Jr. '50
Mrs. Martha H. Williams '35
Mrs. Gertrude Williamson
Mr. William G. Willis
Mr. & Mrs. Clarence M. Willis, Jr.
Dr. & Mrs. Warren Wurzbacher
Matching Gifts
ARCO Foundation
AT&T Foundation
ATOCHEM North America
Foundation
Adria Laboratories
Aetna Life & Casualty Foundation
Allied Corporation Foundation
Allstate Foundation
Amoco Foundation, Inc.
Baltimore Bancorp
Baltimore Gas & EJectric Company
Bank of New York
Beatrice Companies, Inc.
Bell Atlantic Corporation
Beneficial Management, Inc.
BF Goodrich Companv
Black & Decker Corporation
Boise Cascade Corporation
C & P Telephone Company
CIBA-GEICi Corporation
CSX Corporation
Chase Manhattan Bank
Chesapeake Bank «Si Trust
Cigna Foundation
Conestoga Muletrain Heritage
Connecticut Mutual
Crestar Bank
Washington College Magazine/.Aiiiind/ Report 1991
Delta Airlines, Inc.
Diamond State Teleplione
Digital Equipment Corporation
Equitable Bank Foundation, Inc.
Equitable Life Assurance Society
Exxon Education Foundation
Federal National Mortgage Assoc.
Federated Department Stores, Inc.
First Bank System Foundation
First Boston Matching Gifts Program
Ford Motor Company Fund
Fred S. James & Company, Inc.
GEC-Marconi Electronic Systems
Gannett Foundation
General Accident Insurance
General Electric Foundation
General Foods Fund, Inc.
Gilbane Building Company
Grace Foundation, Inc.
Graco Foundation
Guardian Life Trust
Harry Frank Guggenheim Foundation
Harris/3M
Hercules, Inc.
Hoechst Celanese Corporation
IBM Corporation
ICI Americas, Inc.
IDS Financial Services, Inc.
J.M. Huber Corporation
James S. Copley Foundation
Jefferson-Pilot Corporation
Joseph E. Seagram & Sons, Inc.
Kiplinger Foundation
Levi Strauss Foundation
Lincoln National Corporation
Marsh & McLennan, Inc.
Martin Marietta Corporation
May Stores Foundation, Inc
McCormick & Company, Inc.
McDonnell Douglas Foundation
Mellon Bank Corporation
Merck & Company, Inc.
Meridian Bancorp, Inc.
Merrill Lynch & Company, inc.
Metropolitan Life Foundation
Mobil Foundation, Inc.
Morgan Guaranty Trust Company of
New York
Morton Thiokol, Inc.
N.C.N.B. Corporation Corporation
Nationwide Foundation
New Jersey Bell
New York Telephone Company
Norfolk Southern Corporation
Occidental Petroleum Foundation, Inc.
Owens-Illinois
P.H.H. Group Foundation
PQ Corporation
PRI Associates, Inc.
Phoenix Mutual Life Insurance Co.
Polaroid Foundation, Inc.
Provident National Bank
R. R. Donnelley & Sons Company
R.H. Macy and Company
Reynolds Metals Co. Foundation
Rohm & Haas Company
Rohr industries. Inc.
Scott Paper Company Foundation
Sentry Foundation, Inc.
Shav/mut National Corporation
Sovran Foundation, Inc.
Standard Oil Company
Stanley Works Foundation
State Farm Companies Foundation
Sun Company, Inc.
T. Rowe Price & Associates
Tenneco, Inc.
Texaco Philanthropic Foundation, Inc.
Time, Inc.
Towers, Perrin, Forster & Crosby, Inc.
Transamerica Foundation
United States Fidelity & Guaranty
United Technologies Corp.
United Telecommunications
Foundation
Vanguard Group, Inc.
Venable, Baetjer and Howard
Warner-Lambert Company
Westinghouse Educational
Foundation
Wheat First Securities, Inc.
Whittaker Corporation
Willamette Industries, Inc.
Xerox Foundation
Z-A Foundation
Sho'Men Club
Mrs. Ruth C. Abramson
Mr. Geoffrey W. Anderson '72
Mr. William C. Anderson, Esq. '80
Mr. Robert H. Appleby '54
Mr. & Mrs. Ronald F. Athey
Mr. Robert J. Atkinson '74
Miss Eugenia W. Auchincloss '89
Mr. Vincent L. Bacchetta, Jr. '50
Mr. & Mrs. Eric W. Bachinsky
Mr. James A. Bacon
Col. Edgar M. Bair '56
Mr. Paul M. Baker '60
Mr. Wilbur P. Barnes '49
Dr. & Mrs. William A. Barnett '55 '59
Mr. Almon C. Barrel! Ill '67
Mr. & Mrs. William J. Basel
Mrs. Carol A. Baxter '80
Mr. & Mrs. David H. Beatty '78 '78
Mr. Eric F. Becker '89
Mr. Leslie W. BeU, Jr. '56
Mr. John E. Benjamin, Jr. '42
Mr. John P. Bergen '55
Mr. Charles R. Berry '36
Mr. & Mrs. W. Dennis Berry '88
Dr. & Mrs. James S. Bershon
Mr. Stephen S. Beville '86
Ms. Jennifer A. Billings '87
Mr. John R. Bodnar '89
Dr. & Mrs. Humberto E. Bogado
Mr. Louis Borbely '57
Mr. & Mrs. James R. Bowerman '76 '74
Mr. T. James Bradley '80
Mrs. Dorsey H. Bramble '74
Mr. & Mrs. Richard N. Bramble
Mr. & Mrs. Wilbur S.
Brandenburg, Jr. '59 '61
Mr. & Mrs. Walter C. Brandt '43 '43
Mr. Ronald D. Brannock '65
Dr. & Mrs. Neil W. Brayton
Ms. Mary Grace Brickley '87
Ms. Sue Briggs '78
Dr. &. Mrs. Vernon J. Brightman
Dr. & Mrs. Rodney L. Brimhall
Mr. & Mrs. Curtis Brockelman
Mr. David S. Bruce '70
Mr. James H. Buchanan '79
Mr. George L. Buckless, Jr. '69
Mr. William E. Burkhardt '34
Ms. Joan E. Burri '80
Mr. Jonathan C. Burton '76
Mr. Charles A. Butler
Mr. & Mrs. Douglas R. Byrne '79 '82
Drs. Steven & Linda Cades '68
Mr. William A. Camp '83
Mr. & Mrs. Donald F. Campbell '50 '52
Mr. Joshua A. Carey '57
Mr. Richard W. Carrell '65
Mr. & Mrs. Frank W. Carroll
Mr. & Mrs. James G. Carver
Mr. & Mrs. Michael B. Casey
Mr. & Mrs. S. Douglass Cater, Jr.
Mrs. Ann W. Causey '78
Mr. & Mrs. James G. Chalfant '67 '71
Mr. Edward E. Cinaglia '53
Captain Charles M. Clark '33
Mr. & Mrs. Alday M. Clements '35 '37
Mr. Timothy N. Cloud '83
Mr. & Mrs. John L. Coker '65 '66
Mr. & Mrs. James R. Colbeck
Ms. Brenda L. Cole
Mr. William J. Collins '40
Mr. & Mrs. Norris W.
Commodore, Jr. '73 '74
Mr. Thomas P. Conaty IV '89
Dr. & Mrs. Thomas P. Conaty
Dr. & Mrs. John A. Conkling '65 '65
Mr. Joseph M. Connell '57
Mr. & Mrs. Bernard M. Conway
Mr. John A. Copple '40
Mr. & Mrs. Joseph W. Corcoran
Lt. & Mrs. Richard Cote, Jr. '86 '87
Mr. & Mrs. Ronald E. Council
Mr. & Mrs. Michael J. Cronin
Mr. Thomas C. Crouse, Jr. '59
Mr. Lee M. Curry '61
Ms. Janice C. Daue '85
Mr. & Mrs. Donald C.
Davenport '60 '60
Mr. & Mrs. Michael J. DeSantis '74 '77
Mrs. Darlene C. Debnam '80
Mr. Donald M. Derham '48
Mr. H. Hurtt Deringer '59
Mr. Paul M. Desmond '53
Mr. & Mrs. Gerard F. Devlin
Mr. James C. Devol, Jr. '78
Dr. & Mrs. Alexander C. Dick
Mr. Alexander C. Dick '64
Ms. Nancy M. Dick
Mr. Kim C. Dine '75
Dr. Wilham F. Ditman, Jr. '59
Mr. & Mrs. Jean-Michel L. Dittmann
Mr. DavidW. Doelp,Jr. '75
Mr. & Mrs. Anthony F. Dougal
Mr. & Mrs. Gary E. Doyle
Mr. Donald Duckworth '51
Mr. Charles W. Dulin '43
Mr. Mareen L. Duvall, Jr. '62
Mr. Ellis C. Dwyer '35
Mr. & Mrs. Andrew W. Dyer '69 '69
Mr. James D. Edwards '56
Mr. Paul W. Eichler '86
Mr. & Mrs. Allan D. Eisel '66 '66
Mr. Robert E. Eissele '60
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Eliason, Jr. '42 '42
Lt. Col. Joe S. Elliott, Jr. '40
Mr. & Mrs. T. Christopher Ely '70 '70
Dr. Robert N. Emory '59
Mrs. Cathy A. Engle '87
Mr. Clint Evans
Amy McClean/ (#14), second on the
si}uad in goals scored, helped lead the 1991
Shorewomen to their first ever Middle
Atlantic Conference playoff berth.
Mr. & Mrs. Starke M. Evans '65 '66
Mr. Robert L. Everett '40
Mr. Don T. Falls, Jr. '36
Mr. & Mrs. Louis F. Farina
Mr. Vincent J. Filliben, Jr. '82
Mr. Christopher Kiefer &
Dr. Rebecca Fincher-Kiefer '82 '82
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas J. Finnegan '65
Mr. & Mrs. Peter R. Fitzgerald '75 '75
Mr. Richard F. Flaherty
Fleetwood, Athey, MacBeth &
McCown
Mr. Gary W. Ford '74
Mr. William H. Ford '40
Mr. Carl B. Fornoff '83
Mr. John W. Foster III '71
Mr. & Mrs. Robert E. Fredland '74 '75
Mr. Harris B Friedberg '84
Mr. & Mrs. Leonard M.
Gaines III '78 '79
Mr. Thomas M. Gaines '86
Mr. & Mrs. William L. Gaines
Mrs. Gretchen A. Garman
Mr. & Mrs. Donald G. Garratt '72 '72
Mr. Thomas K. George '73
Mr. & Mrs. Eric Geringswald '86 '88
Mr. William B. Gerwig III '82
Mr. & Mrs. Theodore L. Gessner
Mr. Robin C. Gettier '75
Mr. & Mrs. James G. Giller
Mr. & Mrs. Glenn M. Gillis '83 '83
Mr. William F. Gray '48
Mr. & Mrs. David A. Green
Mr. Robert A. Greenberg '74
Mrs. Ann W. Grie\'es
Mr. Howard F. Griffin '30
Mr. Drew N. Gruenburg '76
Mr. John P. Habermann '78
Mr. Cawood Hadaway
Mr. William P. Halagarda, Jr.
Mr. Daniel A. Hall '50
Mr. Gerard D. Hall '76
Mrs. Lois B. Hall '33
Mr. Richard W. Hall '34
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas W. Hall, Jr.
Mr. Allan T. Hanifee, Sr. '55
Dr. & Mrs. Christian M. Hansen
Mr. Bernard O. Hardesty, Jr. '62
Mr. Gerald J. Harrington '74
WasJtington College Magazine//4»!n(a/ Report 1991
63
Mr. Richard L. Harrington '69
Mr. & Mrs. Edward Hart, Jr.
Mr. R. Michael Hart
Mr. & Mrs. Edward Hatfield
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas W. Heald VO '68
Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth A. Heath
Mr. & Mrs. William ]. Held
Mr. & Mrs. Roger M.W. Hendrickson
Mr. Michael J. Henehan '67
Mr. Albert A. Hepting, Jr. '88
Dr. & Mrs. Janairo F. Hernandez
Mr. Thomas L. Herr '17
Ms. Debra L. Herring '83
Mr. & Mrs. Robert M. Hewes
Mr. & Mrs. Philip Hickman, Jr. '38 '38
Mr. Walter R. Hitchcock '50
Mr. James S. Hogg '72
Ms. Elaine C. Holden '64
Mr. Richard B. Holloway '71
Mr. & Mrs. Alexander H. Hoon
Mr. & Mrs. David Hoopes
Mr. & Mrs H. Dennis Hormes
Mr. Kenneth E. Howard '52
Dr. Murray K. Hoy '76
Dr. James B. Huggins '68
Mr. Vincent Hungerford '53
Mr. & Mrs. John C.
Huntington, Jr. '49 '88
Mr. & Mrs. Richard H. Hutchison
IBM Corporation
Mr. & Mrs. Felice P. lacangelo
Mr. FUchard D. Irvin '61
Mr. & Mrs. Grant L. Jacks '79 '79
Mr. & Mrs. Craig T. Jackson '75 '78
Mr. John H. Jackson '50
Mr. Robert B. Jaeger '66
Mr. Daniel T. Jankelunas, Jr. '76
Mr. & Mrs. Edward M. Jecelin
Mr. Gerald P. Jenkins '65
Mr. & Mrs. Lester K. Jenkins
Mr. Peter W. Jenkins '82
Mrs. O. Willis Jennings '76
Mr. Charles S. Johnson III '72
Mrs. Kathleen Evans Johnson
Mr, Robert M. Johnson '66
Mr. & Mrs. Steven G. Johnson
Mr. & Mrs. Jonathan L. Jones '77 '80
Mrs. Kay D. Jones '64
Mr. & Mrs. Otto P.J. Jons
Mr. & Mrs. Michael Kardash '41 '43
Mr. & Mrs. Bruce I. Katz '76 '76
Mr. Morton C. Katzenberg '45
Dr. & Mrs. Arthur Keefe, Jr.
Mr. Thomas P. Keefe '84
Mr. & Mrs. Kurt E. Keller '86 '85
Mr. & Mrs. Donaldson N. Kelly
Mr. Matthew E. Kelly '90
Ms. Linda Kennedy '86
Mr. Michael E. Kennedy '74
Mrs. Margot A. Kenzie '84
Mr. William E. Kight '36
Mr. Kenneth A. Kiler '72
Mr. & Mrs. Allen R. Kirbv, Sr, '42
Mr. & Mrs. Walter Kirby'
Mr. Richard T. Kircher '85
Mr. & Mrs. Stephen J. Kleberg
Dr. Bruce Kornberg '74
Mr. & Mrs. Edwin Kuechler, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Geoffrey S.
Kurtzman '71 '83
Mr. David H. LaMotte '71
Mr. John M. Lambdin, Jr. '55
Mr. Richard A, Larkin, Jr. '74
Dr. Kenneth R. Larsen '17
Mr. Robert W. Larson, Jr. '75
Mr. Charles E. Lawson, Jr. '62
Mr. L. Bert Lederer '57
Mr. & Mrs. Norman Ledwin
Mr. & Mrs. Mortimer V. Lenane '60 '59
Mr. & Mrs. Maurice Lennon
Mr. Richard E. Lent, Esq. '57
Mr. Edward F. Leonard, Jr. '51
Mr. Laurance A. Leonard '52
Dr. Stephen B. Levine '63
Mr. James W. Lewis '58
Mr. & Mrs. Harry Limons
Mr. David J. Lipinski
Mr. Robert W. Lipsitz '54
Mr. & Mrs. Dennis R. Loftus
Mr. Robert B. Loock '86
Mr. John M. Lord '35
Mr. & Mrs. James E. Loughridge
Dr. & Mrs. Bruce W. Lowney
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas MacFarlane
Mr. Charles D. MacLeod '86
Miss Helen E. MacMahon '89
Mrs. Avis R. Maddox '27
Ms. Kimberly A. Madigan '87
Dr. Henry F. Maguire '42
Mr. Frank J. Marion '70
Mr. tSc Mrs. Charles R. Maroney
Mr. & Mrs. Robert L. Martino
Mr. James A. Mayhew '76
Mr. John J. McAleer IV '88
Mr. & Mrs. Harold A. McBee, Sr.
Mr. John G. McCarthy, Jr.
Mr. James W. McCurdy, Jr. '52
Mrs. Karen P. McGee '84
Dr. Clayton E. McGran, Jr. '48
Mr. Brian A. McLelland '86
Merrill Lynch & Company, Inc.
Mr. & Mrs. Geoffrey M. Miller
Mr. P. Paul Miller III
Mr. & Mrs. Peter P. Miller, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. William C. Miller '59 '60
Mr. N. Wayne Millner '53
Mr. & Mrs. Charles H. Moloney
Captain & Mrs. Hugh T. Moore
Mr. & Mrs. Roger Mooney
Mr. & Mrs. Robert A. Moore '59 '56
Mr. Peter J. Morgan '84
Dr. & Mrs. John F. Morrall III
Mr. David K. Morris '87
Mr. Archie A. Morrison '39
Mr. & Mrs. John A. Mouracade
Mr. George M. Mowell '73
Mr. & Mrs. James R. Moxley, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. James L. Mumford
Mr. William R. Murray '53
Mr. William M. Nagler '42
Mrs. Pamela D. Naplachowski '76
Mr. & Mrs. Peter E. Newcomb
Mr. Zung T. Nguyen 'T7
Mr. Edward P. Nordberg, Jr. '82
Mr. & Mrs. John E. Nunn III '80 '79
Dr. & Mrs. Gerard S. O'Connor
Mr. Kevin J. O'Connor '82
Occidental Petroleum Foundation, Inc.
Mr. Kenneth G. Oehlkers '64
Mr. Stephen H. Ogiivy, Jr. '70
Mr. William W. Paca, Jr. '42
Mr. John R, Parker '55
Mr. & Mrs. John Q. Parsons '59 '61
Lt. Col. W. Kennon Perrin '31
Mr. Christopher C. Perry '82
Mr. & Mrs. John R. Petz
Mrs. Jennifer A. Phillips '82
Mr. Norman A. Phillips, Jr. '60
Mr. & Mrs. Robert A. Pilkington
Mrs. Anne M. Plumer-Fisher '85
Mr. Howard K. Plummer '32
Mr. David A. Pointon '82
Mr. & Mrs. J. Frederick Price '72 '73
Mr. & Mrs. Anthony G. Proakis
Mr. & Mrs. Kyle D. Pruett
Mr, A. Price Ransone '50
Mr. & Mrs. Alex P. Rasin III
Ms. Melinda G. Rath '77
Dr. & Mrs. Albert R, Rayne '60 '63
Mr. Robert L. Reck '63
Ms. Patricia G. Reddish
Miss Carole L. Reece '90
Mr. & Mrs. William C. Reece
Mr. & Mrs. Stephen C. Rexford
Mr. & Mrs. Roger R. Rice
Mr. F. Spencer Robinson '43
Mr. & Mrs. Christopher L.
Rogers '71 '73
Mrs. Gwendolyn B. Rohn '75
Mr. Thomas E. Roof '82
Drs. Harry & Susan Ross
Mrs. Constance J, Rue '76
Mr, & Mrs, Robert A. Ruff, Jr, '44 '46
Mr, & Mrs, Gary G. Rupert
Mr. & Mrs. William R.
RusselLJr. '53 '56
Mr. & Mrs. Alfonso P. Sanchez
Mr. Frederick W. Schroeter '47
Ms. Katherine L. Schumann
Mr, & Mrs, Robert F.
Schumann, Jr, '73 '71
Mr, & Mrs, John M, Scott
Scott Paper Company Foundation
Mr, & Mrs, Terrence H, Scout
Mr, & Mrs. WiUiam P. Scully
Mr. & Mrs. William A. Seal III
Mr. & Mrs. John W. Selby '41 '44
Mr. & Mrs. John G. Semmes
Mr. & Mrs. William A. Seubert
Mr, John T. Shannahan, Sr, '65
Mrs, Fannie C, Shenk '84
Mr, & Mrs, Richard A, Shepherd
Mr. Glen R. Shipway '65
Ms. Alison M. Shorter '87
Mr. & Mrs. Robert V. Shriver '73 '79
Mr. & Mrs, Samuel H, Shriver, Jr,
Mrs, Amanda S. Simons '80
Mr, & Mrs, Raymond G,
Sinclair, Jr, '47 '48
Mr, & Mrs, Ronald C, Sisk '56 '64
Mr, & Mrs, Robert Slomkowski
Mr, & Mrs, Kirby L, Smith '48 '46
Dr. Ronald E. Smith '64
Dr. Ralph Snyderman, M.D. '61
Ms. Judith S. Spann '84
Mr. & Mrs. William R. Speer
Mr. Wayne P. Spurrier '84
Mr. Larry S. Sterling '69
Mr. James A. Ste\'ens, Jr. '43
Ms. Patricia A. Stille '84
Mr. Albert T. Streelman '69
Mrs. Cheryl L. Streett '82
Ms. Mackey M. Streit '51
Mr. Russell Q. Summers, Jr. '62
Mr. & Mrs. William L. Susen
Mr. & Mrs. David J. Svec '66 '68
Mr. Mark A. Svec '71
Mr. & Mrs Paul E. Taibl
Mr. Peter E. Takach '76
Mr. John L. Tansey '73
Mr. James E. Taylor '52
Ms, Elizabeth R, Thibodeau '36
Mr, & Mrs, Anthonv C, Thurston
Mr, & Mrs, Robert C, Tiehel
Ms, Tamara A, Tiehel '86
Mr, & Mrs, C, Howard Tilley '50 '51
Mr, & Mrs. Michael J. Travieso '66 '66
Mr. James D. Twilley '51
United States Fidelity & Guaranty
Miss Ann M. Urban '90
Mr. William A. Urie '39
Mrs. Maria Vanegas-Pessoa '84
Mrs. Jessica M. Vaughan '82
Mr. & Mrs. Bohn C. Vergari '71
Mr. & Mrs. Norberto Viamonte '73 '74
Mr. Eugene P. Vigna '51
Mr. & Mrs. Eilert C. von Voss
Mr. John A. Wagner, Jr. '74
Dr. & Mrs. Donald T. Walbert '50 '89
Mr. James D. Walker '57
Mr. EUery J. Ward '36
Mr. & Mrs. Tom S. Ward, Jr.
Mr. Roderic B. Ware '54
Mr. & Mrs. Glenn L. Warner
Mr. William J. Watson '35
Mr. John H. Way '71
Mr. Lawrence S. Wescott '51
Miss Julie A. Wheeler '81
Mr. & Mrs. James P. White
Mr. & Mrs. Charles M. Whiteford
Ms. Nancy Fahrenkopf Whiteley '79
Dr. Benjamin T. Whitman '68
Dr. & Mrs. Joseph Wiesenbaugh
Mr. Augustine H. Wiest III
Mr. William F. Wilkinson, Sr. '65
Mr. & Mrs. Jack Willis '82 '85
Mr. & Mrs. John H. WiUock
Mr. & Mrs. Joseph P. Wilson
Mr. Matthew L. Wilson '89
Dr. Phillip J. Wingate '33
Mr. & Mrs. Anthony S. Wiseman '73
Mr. Henry Wittich '84
Mr. L, Ray Wood '51
Ms. Paula E. Wordtt '68
Mr. James R. Worsham'84
Mr. W. Lee Yerkes '75
Mr. Lewis A. Yerkes '45
Mr. Paul A. Zizelman, Ir. '29
In Memory
M. Stephen Bremer
James M. Cain
Max Chambers
Alfred E. Culley '25
Elizabeth S. Duvall '30
Martha Everett
W. Edwin Freeny '31
Guy F. Goodfellow
Elizabeth and George Gorsuch
Avery Hall
Horace Havemeyer
Elmer L. Kaiser
G. Emmett C. Kauffman
Lorraine Keefe
Katharine S. Knight
Susanne Long '68
Joseph H. McLain '37
Mar}^ E. Moorshead '42
Karl" E.Miller
Catharine Olds
Stuart T. Perkins '55
Bruce C. Rhoads
Dr. Samuel R. Seibel '50
Eleanor R. Shri\'er
Willard and Hallie Smith
Jay F. Spry '37
W. Skinner Startt
Mrs. Ruth Tapke
Margaret B. Thornton
Sharon Strausser Vogel '69
Miriam Wilby
Mary M. Wrech
Donations to Miller
Library
Mrs. Grace S. Chaires '27
Mr, Charles D. Fox IV
Mr. and Mrs. Winslow N. Long
Women's League of WC
Apolc
logia
While the lists of donors represent
our staffs best efforts for accuracy,
mistakes do occur. If vou notice
something amiss with a list, please
notify Shawn I. Lvons. Vice
President for Development and
College Relations, or call 800-492-
1782.
Washington College Magazine//l/i(mu/ Kcpori 1991
College Events
August 29
Opening Convocation: Keynote
address: "Toward Modernity:
Washington College and The Cult of
True Womanhood" by Charles H.
Trout, President of the College.
Honored guest: Helen Gibson. Tawes
Theatre, 7:30 p.m.
Recent works by Maryland artist
Allyn Massey. Opening Reception
8:30 p.m. following Convocation.
Tawes Gallery.
September 11
"Regional Women Artists," lecture
by Dr. Leslie King Hammond, Direc-
tor of Graduate Studies at the Mary-
land Institute, College of Art. Casey
Academic Center Forum, 7:30 p.m.
September 14
All alumni off-campus reunion.
Reception at the Brandywine
Museum, Chadd's Ford, Pennsylva-
nia. For more information call the
Alumni Office, (800) 422-1782.
September 19
"Samuel Beckett and Women,"
lecture by Linda Ben-Zvi. Sophie
Kerr Room, Miller Library, 5 p.m.
For a complete schedule of Fall
Washington College Athletic
Events call (800)422-1782 ext. 238.
"Power in Washington: A View From
the Hill," lecture by Wayne
Gilchrest, First District Congress-
man. Hynson Lounge, Hodson Hall,
7:30 p.m.
September 24
"Dutch Architecture," lecture by
Jorge Guillermo, Casey Academic
Center Forum, 7:30 p.m.
September 25
"Bach's Lunch," chamber music by
members of the Washington College
Music Department, Miller Library
Terrace, 12:30 p.m.
September 30
The Juilliard String Quartet, in the
opening concert of the 40th Season of
the Washington College Concert
Series. Tawes Theatre, 8 p.m.
General Admission SIO.
October 4
2nd Annual Alumni and Friends
Golf Tournament, Turf Valley,
EUicott City, Maryland.
For more information call John
Tansey '73, (301) 532-2538.
October 5
South Jersey Alumni Chapter Party,
Avalon, New Jersey. For more
information call Lynn Diana '54 and
Chuck Covington '56, (609) 368-5848.
October 18-20
Alumni Fall Weekend. Athletic Hall
of Fame Dinner and Induction
Ceremony. Alumni Association
Symposium, "A Centennial of
Coeducation; We've Come A Long
Way Alumnae." For information
call the Alumni Office, (800) 422-1782
October 18
The Peabody Trio. Tawes Theatre,
8 p.m. General Admission SIO.
October 21
"Charlotte Bronte, Elizabeth Gaskell
and Disappointment."- Lecture by
Christopher Ricks, Professor of
English at Boston University. Sophie
Kerr Room, Miller Library, 8 p.m.
November 14
Philadelphia Alumni Chapter
Luncheon at the Maryland Society of
Pennsylvania, Philadelphia Racquet
Club. President Trout will address
the Society. For more information
call Phil Heaver '83, (800) 762-1155.
November 15
The Washington College Community
Chorus Fall Concert, Norman James
Theatre, 8 p.m.
November 24
Baltimore Alumni Chapter Oyster
and Bull Roast, Oregon Ridge,
Maryland. For more information call
Rich Denison '78, (301) 366-7145.
WASHINGTON COLLEGE MAGAZINE
VOLUME XL NO. 1
FALL 1991
USPS 667-260
DONOR' S PROFILE
ED NORDBERG '82
HOME: Washington, DC.
GIVING LEVEL: 1782 Society.
PROFILE: Armed with an MBA from Loyola
College in Baltimore and a JD from Georgetown
University, Ed is an attorney with the DC law firm
of Williams & Connolly, practicing in the areas of
corporate and securities law.
ON THE WC EXPERIENCE: "We live and work
in a complex and rapidly changing world — one that
demands continual growth and learning. Washing-
ton College combines a balanced grounding in the
liberal arts with myriad opportunities for interper-
sonal development, an educational process which
yields graduates who are well prepared to succeed
in today's world. It also, I think, broadens one's
view of what it means to be successful."
COLLEGE YEARS: "There is not one specific
memory I could pin down as being the 'best,' al-
though the 1982 lacrosse season — highlighted by
WC's first ever victory over Navy — was very
special. I had a lot of good times at WC and I made
some great friends with whom I am still in close
contact. I think that is the most memorable reflec-
tion of my college years."
WHY OTHERS SHOULD GIVE: Washington
College provides the foundation for a lifetime of
learning. We should all be concerned with ensuring
its continued vitality."
t ^