PRINCETON DAY SCHOOL JOURNAL WINTER 1995
B
oard of
T
rustees
PRINCETON DAY SCHOOL JOURNAL
Daniel J. G raziano, Jr. Chairman Peter G. Gerry Vice Chairman L. Thom as W elsh, Jr. Treasurer
Winter 1995
Vol. 32, No. 2
Lila B. Lohr H ead o f School Robert E. Dougherty '43 M arlene G. Doyle Christina Bachelder D ufresne ’77 Shawn W. Ellsworth '75 Tina Greenberg John L. Griffith, Jr. M arilyn W. Grounds Randall A. Hack Christine Grant Halpern Barbara Mills Henagan '77 John T. M cLoughlin John A. Pinto Robert A. Revelle Joyce Sinkler Robinson Llew ellyn G. Ross Alison M. Shehadi Jane Aresty Silverman '63 Robert B. Stockman Kalle Gerritz Weeks J. Thomas W elsh, Jr. Trustee Emeriti Elizabeth C. Dilworth Samuel W. Lambert III
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lu m n i
C o u n c il
Christina Bachelder D u fresn e'77 President Thomas R. Gates '78 Vice President Laura Farina '79 Secretary/Treasurer Nellie Oliphant Duncan '51 M arjorie W allace Gibson '84 Jam es J. Groom e '80 Caroline Erdman Hare '75 Molly Sword McDonough '75 Kirk W. Moore '72 Howard F. Powers, Jr. '80 Markell Meyers Shriver '46 Carl S. Taggart '82 Hilleary T. Thomas '84 Karen Turner '72 Laura M errick W inegar '72
Editor: Linda Maxwell Stefanelli '62
Printed by Cotttempo Press luc.
Contents F a ll H i g h l i g h t s ........................................................................................................................................ 1 I n s t a ll a t io n C e r e m o n i e s R e f le c t S c h o o l H i s t o r y ..................................................2 E d u c a ti n g fo r T o m o r r o w ,
Jacquie A splundh .............................................................. 4
A C o n v e r s a ti o n w ith S h ir le y D a v is ,
Jacquie Asplundh ....................................... 5
In M e m o r i a m .........................................................................................................................................10 S k a tin g E x tr a v a g a n z a to B e n e f it P D S R i n k ........................................................ 12 A lu m n i B u lle tin B o a rd ....................................................................................................13 C la s s N o t e s ............................................................................................................... 14, 35-48
P h o to g ra p h s : The cover and all photographs of the installation ceremony are by Eileen Hohmuth-Lemonick. Other photos provided by Jacquie Asplundh, Erin Belanger '96, Bonnie Hunter, Holly Marvin and Wendy Varga. O n th e c o v e r: Head of School Lila Lohr (seated on left) chats with juniors
Reed Black, Brandice Osborne-Gwynn and Mariana Sparre about their art projects and is introduced to Wolf (second from left), created by Emily Churchill '96. Princeton Day School com plies with all fed eral and state laics prohibiting discrim ination in its adm issions, em ploym ent and adm inistrative policies.
Attention Alumni! Please read the inside back cover to find out the deadline for sending your news to your class secretary. Thanks!
K indergarten "aiigels" D elysse Leonard and Jam es Cole.
Ju dy M ichaels, upper school E nglish teacher and p oet-in r e s id e n c e , zvas a w a r d e d a $ 7 ,0 0 0 fello w s h ip from the Nexv jersey State C ouncil on the Arts. F ifth g r a d e r s G e n e v i e v e Lescroart, A lyssa B r i o d y and E le a n o r O a k es u n p a c k a n ew c o m p u t e r
IRK:
p u r c h a s e d w ith m oney their Girl Scout T roop #160 raised. The low er s c h o o l c o m p u te r lab zoas fitte d with - 1 5 n e w P o iv e r M acs a n d fiv e LC 580s thanks to d o n a t io n s fr o m p a ren ts, g r a n d parents and lower school facu lty .
The ju n io r foo tb a ll team celeb ra tesa n excitin g, un defeated season. V arsity fo o tb a ll urns very co m p etitiv e, in sp ite o f bein g o u tn u m b ered and o u tw eighed in m ost o f their con tests. In the last g am e o f the season , this close-kn it, sp irited team played a pow erfu l P enn ington P rep on even term s before P enn ington scored in the last m inutes o f the gam e. Boys soccer p layed som e close gam es and had a solid 7-2 record again st its Prep B rivals. C ross cou n try h ad a sm all squad but w as led by A aron Beim who won the Prep B C ham pionship.
Photo credit: Holly Marvin
Photo credit: Holly Marvin
FALL HIGHLIGHTS
G alete Levin '96 and friend.
G irls in tersch olastic team s, led by a very a th letic sen ior class, shon e throughout the fall. Field hockey (14-2-6) had a fan ta stic season that included v ictories over local rivals Stu art and L aw ren ceville. The team w ent on to win the P rep A State C ham pion ship (above) in a beau tifu lly played and highly skilled gam e again st B lair A cadem y. G irls soccer (15-3-4) played a g ru elin g sch ed u le that com prised som e o f the top team s in the state. PDS, form erly in the Prep B division , elected to play in the m ore co m p e titiv e P rep A S ta te T ou n am en t w h ere, h a v in g beaten L aw ren ceville in a hard fa u g h t, rain dren ched sem i-fin al m atch, it lost to top-ran ked P eddie in a closely con tested fin al gam e, 2-1. The tennis team , althou gh rebu ildin g, en joyed a solid season w ith 8 w in s, 4 losses.
A photog rap h er with The N eio York Tim es takes a pictu re o f D ayna H ollim an '99 and M ahida T ahir ’98 fo r a story the paper ran on the SE E D S program w hich helps fin a n cia lly disad v an tag ed stu den ts prep are fo r adm ission to N] in depen den t schools. Five SE E D S stu den ts at PDS w ere in terview ed fo r the article.
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INSTALLATION CEREMONIES
H ead o f School Lila Lohr and T rustee E m erita E lizabeth C. D ihoorth fo r w hom the low er school w ing was nam ed in D ecem ber.
G uest Speaker Barbara Chase.
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On S e p t e m b e r 17, 1 9 9 5 , e x a c t l y 30 y e a r s a f te r Princeton Day School first opened its doors, it cele brated the installation of Lila Boyce Lohr as the fifth head of school. The past, present and future of the school were highlighted in the w elcom ing speeches and represented by close to 600 participants and spectators at the ceremony, from the youngest junior kindergarten stu d e n t to the f o u n d e rs of P rin c e to n Day School. Former and current students, trustees, faculty members and parents attended, as well as the friends and family of Ms. Lohr. T h e c e r e m o n i e s w ere o p e n e d by T h e R e v e r e n d Ophelia Laughlin, a 1977 alum na and 1992 Alumni Award winner. Board of Trustee C hairm an Daniel J. Graziano, Jr. welcomed Ms. Lohr on behalf of the trust ees. He then introduced Elizabeth C ushing Dilworth, trustee emerita, saying, M At the crucial time (of the school's merger), it was Mrs. Dilworth to whom all turned for leadership - a leadership that was im m edi ately forthcoming and which everyone respected and soon admired." Mrs. Dilworth painted a vivid picture of Miss Fine's and Princeton Country Day at the time of the merger, pointing out the difficulties and com prom ises as two distinct entities accepted the need to become one. "All that could be done in the way of enlargem ent had al ready been done, and yet the facilities of both schools were woefully inadequate. There was no way out: two new schools were absolutely essential. However, for the two schools to consider consolidation and build a new campus together was a totally horrendous, scandalous thought to all but a handful of trustees. The loss of identity, separate traditions, and reputation were im portant to each. Bear in mind that coeducation was not in fashion at that time for independent day schools. It was not until 1969 that even Princeton University be came coed. We were ahead of the times. . .The school now has a nationwide reputation. It is to all who were, and are, involved - trustees, faculty, administration that we all owe our very great thanks. "We hand over to you, Lila, this outstanding school. You are a strong leader and there is no doubt you and PDS were made for each other. . . The entire PDS family stands behind you as you undertake this challenging, but supremely im portant, task." Ms. Lohr was welcomed by speakers representing the v a r i o u s c o n s t i t u e n c i e s : D ean of F a c u lty C h a r le s Burdick, C om m unity Council President Justin Krebs '96, Alumni Association President Christina Bachelder Dufresne '77, and Parents Association President Kalle Gerritz Weeks. Barbara Landis Chase delivered the installation ad d re ss . S h e b e c a m e h ead of P h il li p s A c a d e m y in Andover, Massachusetts in 1995. Previously, she was head of The Bryn Mawr School in Baltimore where she worked closely with Ms. Lohr who was her assistant head of school. Ms. Chase has served on the Board of Directors of the National Association of Independent Schools (NAIS) where she chaired its Public Issues and G overnment Relations Com m ittee and was a m em ber of
REFLECT SCHOOL HISTORY the Executive and Finance Committees. She received an A.B. in history from Brown University and a master's degree from Johns Hopkins University. She serves as a member of the Corporation of Brown University as a Fellow of the University. Ms. C hase said, "Beyond the body of know ledge and the skills we are committed to teaching, one of the most im portant things we can impart to our students is the lo ve of le a rn in g and the will to c o n tin u e le a rn in g throughout their lives. If we teach them the habits of mind and heart to seek out new knowledge, we should also teach them to reach out to people around them. America grows increasingly more diverse. The globe grows smaller in terms of economics. Around the world, hatreds grow all too frequently into armed conflict. Given these realities, the im perative to shift our thinking away from the parochial is profound. . . In schools like ours, we are often aw are that a tension exists between excellence and high academic standards on the one hand and com passion and care for our students on the other. We worry about those for w hom the attainment of those high standards exacts a high personal price. We want to affirm our students in the uniqueness of the gifts each brings and, at the same time, we understand that the ultimate power of education is transformation." Ms. Chase went on to speak of her 16-year friendship with Ms. Lohr. ". . . Her lodestar has always been the well-being of her students. . . She was a teacher in the beginning and she has never stopped being one, whether she is in the classroom or not. Your leader . . . u nd er stands and honors the hard work and the magic and mystery of teaching. And, of course, there is that which comes before all else, Lila is a person of rock solid ch ar acter. She is a good and strong and com passionate per son; you don't have to be around her for more than five minutes to know that. Finally, your leader has the clear vision that comes from never having stopped learning herself. . . The gifts she brings you are gifts of the heart as well as the mind. For an institution to grow in greatness, the relationship between the com m unity and its leader must grow in closeness and trust. To achieve this, a leader must lead with heart, as well as mind. And that is the kind of leader you have found." Mr. Graziano read the following citation: "On behalf of the Board of Trustees of Princeton Day School, and with the support of all those gathered here today, Who are connected to PDS in a variety of ways and who have contributed their w isdom and guidance to our very spe cial school - it is with great pleasure that I entrust to you, Lila Boyce Lohr, the principal leadership of our school and I pledge to you our collective su pport as you u nd er take this most important of all endeavors. I present to you this replica of our school’s mascot as a reminder of that pledge. We all wish you the greatest success." Ms. Lohr accepted a sparkling crystal panther and spoke of her goals for PDS. "Today independent schools across our cou ntry face en o rm o u s ch allen ges as we struggle to prepare our students for the 21st century. Even schools such as PDS that are bolstered by a strong enrollment, im pressive college acceptance lists, a loyal con tinned on page 8
B oard C hairm an Dan G razian o p resen ts Lila Lohr w ith a crystal panther, represen tin g the school m ascot.
A cting on b eh alf o f the low er school, fou rth g rad e stu den ts, A llegra A splu n dh-S m ith and N icholas Sm ith, presen t their new H ead o f School w ith a bouquet o f flow ers.
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EDUCATING FOR TOMORROW: THREE SCHOOL HEADS - AND FRIENDS - DISCUSS THEIR VISION by Jacqu ie Asplundh, A s s o c ia te D irector o f C om m u n ication s
The morning o f Lila Lohr's installation, she and two o f her good friends - Barbara Chase, Head o f Phillips Academy in A ndover, M assachusetts, and Arlene Gibson, Head o f Kent Place School in Summit, New Jersey - got together for a relaxed breakfast before the afternoon festivities. In a candid, w ide-ranging discussion, punctuated with both laughter and passion, these three accomplished educators talked about their longstanding professional friendship, balancing work and parenthood, and the changes in public and independent school education. Q: Give us a b rief h istory o f your career and your e v o lu tion fro m teaching to becom ing h ea d s o f schools. L ila : I worked at Bryn Mawr School teaching part time for quite a while when my children were little, and I had decided that I really did want to go into administration. When the job of head of middle school opened up there, I was chosen, and so I started working full time. My children were young, so that was a big decision for me. Barbara came to Bryn Mawr the following year, which was terrific, because she helped me find ways that I could stay there and also be sensitive to the fact that my daughter was there. 1 stayed for a lot longer than 1 thought I was going to, and I moved around. I was head of the middle school and then I went to the upper school, and did some different pieces there, which was nice. As far as my decision to leave Bryn Mawr, primarily it had to do with my daughter, and feeling that I needed to give her some more space. So I took a year off and wasn't sure what I was going to do. But I knew that
"
,
We've got to find ways to improve education across this country not just in isolation Lila Lohr
eventually I wanted to be the head of a school, so I went to John Hopkins and took some courses in business, which was im portant since 1 needed more of that experience. Then the opening came up at St. Paul's to be head of school, and it was a great way to move forward and also stay in Balti more. And it was a great experience. It was a very different kind of school from Bryn Mawr, and I learned a great deal and really grew there. Then, after I had been there for nine years and things had gone very well, I decided that it was time for me to move on and to do something else.
A rlene: 1 went to work at The Bryn Mawr School in Baltimore because of Barbara. I was living and working in Washington DC, and had met someone who said I should take a look at Bryn Mawr, as they had an opening for the 4
head of middle school. So 1 drove from Washington up to Baltimore, and as 1 was driving I thought, "This is just insane. Why would I ever do this co m m u te?" Then I met Barbara, and I drove hom e considering it. She called me a few days later and said, " I would rather have you for as long as you are willing to stay than anybody else that I've interview ed," which was very compelling. So I took the job and commuted back and forth from W ashington to Balti more for the next three years. Then 1 went to Holton Arms as head of the primary school there, and then to Kent Place, where I am now in my ninth year. As far as the future is concerned, I have submitted my resignation at the end of this year and I'm going to take som e time off. Then I want to go back and do som ething in the public school reform m ovement.
B a r b a r a : I becam e head of Bryn Mawr in 1980, and prior to that I had taught a lot of different things in a lot of different places. I started as third-grade teacher at an inde pendent school in Providence, Rhode Island called Moses Brown. But after my husband was drafted during the V iet nam War we went all over the place. I did some substitute teaching, and we had a family. Later, after we moved back to Providence, I taught at the Wheeler School. And while I was there I decided for some crazy reason that I wanted to be a school head, and my head of school was som eone who believed I could do that. I became a finalist in one ind epen dent school's search for a head but did not get the job. Then Bryn Mawr came along and turned out to be absolutely the right place for me. I was very young when I went there. They took a tremendous chance on me. I was thirty-five years old, with a young family and a husband who was good-hearted and large-spirited enough to leave a job that he liked. So I became the head of Bryn Mawr, and I loved the school and I loved the students. It was just an extraordi nary place and continues to be. Lila was head of the middle school and moved on to the upper school a year later. Arlene cam e to head the middle school, in much the way she describes. She was clearly the perfect person for the job, living in the wrong city. Q: Even though you a ll live in different pa r ts o f the co u n try now, do you still rely on one a n o th e r f o r a d v ice and support? B a r b a r a : One of the things that keeps me going is my relationship with people like Lila and Arlene - knowing that I can pick up the phone and at the other end find
som ebody who will instantly understand. It really is an amazing network, particularly when you are dealing with a crisis of som e kind, and are so im mersed in it that the challenge is to be able to pull out and get perspective. And 1 think geographically w herever we are it d o esn't matter, because the telephone is really our lifeline. So for me that's been a tremendously important continuity. Other school heads, like those two, absolutely understand the feeling of profound responsibility for these places we all have.
Arlene: In addition, we spend time talking about things other than school. All of us had young children at the time we got into this, and a lot of what we talk about is how you balance family life in a dual-career family, w hich is very complex, especially when one moves for a job and the other one has to move. Or having your own children in your school. In the past all of us had our own children at the schools where we worked, and we lived with the daily c o m p l e x i t y of that. And so you w ork
through
these issues together.
from w here they have come? Families are spending a large portion of their in com e to send their children to these schools, and so therefore, their expectations are, under standably, just enormous. That creates more tension for all of us as teachers in these institutions, and I find that very worrisome. And while there is lots of interesting conversa tion and some im provem ents in the public sector, there are too many places (and Baltimore is where I have seen this happening) where people have left the public school sys tem in hordes over the last five or six years. So I am afraid w hat's happened is that those families who in another co m munity would have been in the public sector, and pressing the schools to be responsive to their needs, are now miss ing. I think the other piece is that we at independent schools have a responsibility to find ways to do things with the public sector, and not to go off and say, "Well, that is not our problem ." I think that's where private school fami lies need to continually be educated. We need to be careful not to fall into the feeling of "Well, I got my family out of that, and I'm here now and I only want to fo cus on th is." W e've got to find ways to improve ed u cation across this country, not just in isolation. W e are all very fortunate to be in these schools but this is not where most of the world is ed u ca ted . We need to r e m e m ber that.
L ila : It's great t h a t no m a t t e r w h ere we are or how lo n g it has been, we can pick up a b s o l u t e l y right back w here we left off. I think that is very co m f o rtin g . You can m ove anyw here and still call each other up and it's the same as when we all worked to A rlen e: I do gether. But there t hi nk p aren tal is also an ad van E njoying a m in i-reu nion before the in stallation cerem on ies in S eptem ber are (from left) A rlene concerns are dif tage that we are in G ibson, Lila Lohr and B arbara Chase. ferent now. The d iffe re n t p laces biggest difference betw een w hen I began at Kent Place and for we can give each other some perspective. It helps to now, I think, is the enorm ous tension parents find them discuss a concern with people who know what the issues selves under, and the enormous pressure they feel to help are, who know the environment. When you talk to som eone their children succeed. And the fear som ehow , that if their w ho is in another profession, some of what seems to them child steps off the right track they'll never get back onto it. so simple is not simple. Schools do not work like the corpo The "Harvard or Homeless Syndrome," as someone has rate world, for example. I d o n't have to explain that to called it. Arlene or Barbara, and they will always approach an issue with expertise and sensitivity. B a r b a r a : I went to public schools my whole life, and I was struck the other day, when we were having all our Q: E nrollm ent in independent s c h o o ls h as risen nearly school opening cerem onies filled with fanfare and pag eantry, by the memory of an article my mother had sent me ten p ercent in the la s t ten years. Why do you think this is from our hom etow n paper in Lancaster, P ennsylvania, happening? A lso, do you fin d t h a t p a ren ts h a v e d ifferen t about the first day of school in the one-room Amish schoolconcerns a b o u t their children's e d u ca tio n n ow than fifteen or tw enty years ago? houses there. I was absolutely struck with the incredible diversity of K-12 education in this country. I mean, here are these little kids carrying their lunch pails, having brought L ila : The part I find very discouraging are the num ber of in the corn and tobacco harvest, and going to school with families who are leaving the public sector disgusted and twenty children and an Amish teacher who is probably no unable to keep their children there. I don't think there is an more than 18 or 19 years old herself, learning the three Rs independent school in the country that is happy about that. and hearing Bible scriptures every morning and here we Our (enrollment) num bers are up, but who wants to have were in a nine through twelve boarding high school of 1100 this parade of people who are unhappy and dissatisfied con tin u ed on page 6
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E ducating f o r T o m o rro w - continued from page 5 students. It made me think about diversity in education, and how one of the valuable things that independent schools have done for American education is to tell the story of how schools can be various and independent and autonomous. We are able to m aneuver more quickly than public schools, to meet the needs of different kinds of kids who have differ ent needs in terms of learning. And I suspect that's part of the story behind the ten percent rise in private school en rollment, and I think it is a story that people who are think ing about public schools and how they should operate are beginning to understand, and that is all to the good, be cause I absolutely agree with Lila. We don't want to take our strength from the weakness of public schools. I don't see it as a zero-sum game, and I think that this notion of diversity and autonomy and maneuverability is something that independent schools have to offer as a model.
Q: Did having children influence your w o r k ? L ila : Having my own children changed my approach astronomically. When I think back to when I first started teaching, before I was a parent, I was outrageous. I can remember thinking, "W hy don't their parents shape these kids up?" It has been the single most dramatic change in how I am both as a teacher and as an administrator. Because you know what it’s like to be in the other seat. Of course, it is important to have children who have had some problems along the way. Then you know how it feels to get called up because Susie isn't doing X. And I think that is critical when you sit down to talk with parents - to know how much they have emotionally invested in this situation, and what their expectations are, how hurt they may be, and how co n cerned they are for their children's welfare. I went through a period where I almost wasn't sure you could be a good administrator unless you had known that feeling. Now I realize that is not true, and that there are people out there who are naturally good at empathizing, but boy, it changed me. Arlene: When parents come in they may bring with them so much pain, so much fear, even when their children are very well-behaved and achieving beautifully, that the parent-teacher conference can be a very frightening thing. Teachers need to understand and be sensitive about how much power they have. Often our teachers feel that parents have all the power. But once you've been a parent and know how threatening it is, it really changes everything. B a r b a r a : Lila w on't say this about herself, so I'll say it. She is really the best person as a school head I have ever seen at articulating and working with parents on parent issues. She does it absolutely beautifully, and it comes I think, from that sense of empathy that she has described. Supporting parents, really m aking them part of the process, is so vital, and Lila is great at it. Q: T w enty-six percent o f independent s c h o o l h ea d s are n ow w om en, accord ing to the la tes t s ta t is tic s fro m the N a tio n a l A s s o c ia tio n Independent S chools. W hat w ou ld you s a y to young w om en considering becom in g h ea d s o f independent sch o o ls ? A rlene: I don't think women heads of schools spend enough time saying to other w om en how much fun it is to 6
be a head of school. Som ehow we d o n 't take the time to say to other women, "This is a great job. You learn every day; you grow every day. The frustrations, when you solve them, are rewarding." Barbara has been the master at turn ing out heads of schools. She showed us that it really is a great job. It is fun and you really can make a difference.
Lila : I agree. At Bryn Mawr we learned that you could have a wonderful time doing this. We had a great group of people, and Barbara was, at the risk of em barrassing her, the kind of person everybody would want to work for. She trusted people to do their jobs well, and she listened to whatever it was they needed to say, and would give some advice if that was what they w anted. She em pow ered people by making them feel confident about their abilities. So we were always open to growing and learning new things, and there was always another piece of school a d ministration which she was more than happy to share with us. I think that was exciting, and it kept you feeling that you
,
"When you do work like ours you fre bound to get intense pain along with intense pleasure because you are doing something that matters deeply." Barbara Chase
wanted to stay. As stressful as it was, we had a great time together, and I know that sounds very simple, but that was a lot of the attraction. And Arlene and I taught together, which was terrific fun. That is part of the whole concept of team teaching, that you learn from each other and get to enjoy the students together. Remaining a teacher while working as an adm inistrator is something which has really stayed with me. I think it is an important part of why people like myself are willing to, and want to, stay adm inis trators. We are the kind of people who want to be with the kids and not be removed from that piece of it.
B a r b a r a : I was talking to a physician about this recently, about how, when you do work like ours, you're bound to get intense pain along with intense pleasure, because you are doing something that matters deeply. There is nothing that is more im portant to people, most of them, than the lives of their children. And because they care so deeply, they are not always completely rational. And when every thing that you do matters so m uch, it means the highs are an awful lot higher and the lows can be much more trying and lower, than in some other professions. So I think that when you decide to do this kind of work, you must buy into that. You realize that you are going to pay for the pure unadulterated joy of seeing people - both young people and adults - grow and change over time, and feeling that you are part of that positive change. You are going to pay for that with the pain that comes along w hen something goes off track and you have to deal with it. So to me it has been, and continues to be, absolutely and completely worth the price. It's intense, it's meaningful and it's really very important.
A CONVERSATION WITH SHIRLEY DAVIS by Ja c q u ie Asplundh, A s s o c ia te D irector o f C om m u n ication s A fter in terview in g Lila Lohr, Barbara Chase and A rlen e Gibson on independent school education in the 1990s, zee thought it w ould be en lightening to also speak w ith Shirley Davis w ho served as headm istress o f M iss Fine's School from 1943 until it m erged with Princeton C ountry Day School to becom e P rinceton Day School in 1965. A 1935 gradu ate o f Sw arthm ore College, M iss Davis cam e to M iss Fine's from the Baldwin School in Bryn M aw r, P en nsylvania, and the su bsequent 22 years o f her leadership brought unparalleled invigorntion and grow th to the school. When she arrived, en rollm en t at M iss Fiiie's had dropped to 133 students, less than h a lf the num ber in 1929; there w ere no heads o f low er and m iddle schools, no facu lty salary scale, pension plan or contracts; there was an an ticipated deficit, a debt o f unpaid tuition bills, and the school's accreditation had been perm itted to lapse. Ten years later, under Miss D avis' g u idan ce, accreditation had been reinstated, en rollm en t had reached 268 and the school's incom e stream had tripled. She had also in itiated a com prehen sive revision o f the cu rricu lu m , including new courses in science, health, art history, m usic, geography, current even ts, the Bible, Russian and the arts. T here ivas also a su bstantial im provem ent in facu lty salaries in this period. During a phone interview this fa ll, M iss Davis talked fon d ly about her tim e at M iss Fine's, describing the educational issues o f the day and the con tribu tion s to the school o f w hich she is m ost proud. Q: H ow did you com e to apply fo r the position o f headm istress o f M iss Fine's School? A: It all happened when I was 30 years old, which was young! The head of the Baldwin School, Miss Croft, had a letter from the Board of Trustees, asking whether I would consider the position. Evidently they had heard of me through a faculty m em ber at the Law renceville School, whom I had met at a conference in Buck Hill Falls, PA. I was awed at first. I wasn't searching for a new job. But my headmistress had confidence in me and so I said, "Well, why not?" I went to see the trustees, which in those days were a group of very nice ladies who had me to tea. It was perfectly fascinating. My im m ediate concern was for the school accreditation, which had been allowed to lapse, to save money, they said, and faculty salaries, which were negligible. I told them I co u ld n ’t be expected to hire teach ers for what they were paying, and one w oman said teach ers would be attracted to the school for the culture of Princeton. But I said that after all, you ca n ’t eat culture, can you? Another wanted to know whether I liked alumnae. I didn't know what that had to do with the price of peanuts, but I told her that of course I loved alumnae. There was so much to be done, but the quality of the faculty was out standing, and I suppose I liked the idea of the challenge. Also, the students were really wonderful, of many different nationalities, whose parents were at Princeton University or the Institute for Advanced Study. It was a wonderful base to build upon. Q: What are som e o f you r m em ories from you r years at M iss Fine's? A: My primary concerns in the first few years had to do with the issues I described before. Since I had com e from a very dem ocratic school where teachers were part of the budget process and planning, I knew a lot more about running a school than you might generally expect. As I reminded my trustees once, it is a 25-hour a day job, de manding the wisdom of Solomon, the patience of Job, the strength of Samson, a faith to move mountains, a love of people, an open mind and a sense of humor. I wished I could have given more to teaching. In my first year I didn't have time to teach, but later I always found a way to teach, usually a ninth grade French class. The librarian used to
call it "Shirley's Happy Hour." Those first few years were very busy but pleasant as well. They were war years, of course, and many of the parents were quite involved with the war effort and did not have time to think about the school. Gradually, as the war ended, parents became more involved, which I considered so important. And since m any of the fathers worked at the university, they often would discuss various aspects of the curriculum with me, which was often help ful. A lth o u g h I rem em ber one father w ho was upset becau se one of our clas sics t eachers assigned
the
re a d i n g of a G r e e k tr a g e d y to her students. "Y o u c a n ’t e x pect my d au g h ter to read this im m oral trash," he said to me. And tim e,
another Robert
O p p e n h e im e r, who was at the In stitu te at the time, cam e in to say h e d i dn ' t like the way chemistry was being taught. I offered him the chance to take over a few classes, but he never took me up on it. Princeton absolutely was and is a God-given co m m u nity for a school. The resources were amazing, especially for young faculty. I really enjoyed bringing along new teachers. I often hired the wives of graduate students be cause I didn't have a lot of money to pay. I would persuade them to teach and then nurse them along, so to speak. Som etim es I felt as though I had 14 grades at the school, but the time I spent with them contributed to the family feeling of the place that we all valued so highly. They were a stalwart group; the quality of teaching at Miss Fin e’s was outstanding. I still get letters from many of them. con tin u ed on page 10
7
Installation - continued from page 3 and extraordinarily talented faculty, and a beautiful campus, must recog nize that we will need to establish pri o ritie s and m ak e d ifficu lt choices. Burdened by deferred m a intenan ce costs, continually escalating tuitions that could limit access to all but a handful of families, and recognizing our need to retain and attract the very best teachers in the country, we will need to be creative and pragmatic as we plan for the next decade. "Led by our Board of Trustees, we will spend this year crafting a Long Range Plan that will be shaped by the priorities we set and the choices we make. But as we struggle with those choices, we must not lose sight of our primary focus: we are a community of learners, both children and adults. We strive to graduate self-learners who know how to make inform ed d ec i sions and live with and assume re s p o n sib ility for their ch o ices. O ur students deserve clear standards with predictable consequences for their be havior. We recognize the value of rigorous debate and discussion, but we also expect the members of our community to treat each other with respect and civility.” F o l lo w in g Ms. L o h r 's r e m a r k s , lower school students sang two songs and presented the new head with a b o u q u e t of flo w e r s . R ab b i S u s a n Schnur, from the class of 1969, per formed the benediction, and a bless ing was sung by seventh and eighth grade singers. A reception followed in the Wallace Amphitheater.
8
Betty Wold Johnson, Edith Eglin am i A nne Gips.
R em iniscing after the cerem on ies are form er and current low er school heads, M adelin e W eigel (left) and Sara Schw iebert.
THE MELODY REMAINS: REMEMBERING MAG GILBERT
One cannot help but smile as one w a lk s by the s p a c io u s new m u sic room in the lower school wing and hears the voices of y ou n g children putting their hearts into a fam iliar song. Many of those songs, and much of that enthusiasm, are the result of Mag G ilb ert’s career at Princeton Day School. For more than three decades she taught music in the lower school and made it part of the everyday lives of hundreds of students. When Mrs. G ilb e r t passed a w a y this fall, the school lost a gifted teacher and friend. During her 33 year career - begin ning in 1949 at Miss Fine's School Mrs. G ilbert cajoled her co lleagu es into sh o w in g off hid d en talents in
four faculty musicals and created and pro d u ced 33 orig inal o p erettas for students. Her former students can still rem em ber every word, every motion of their operettas. She wrote original work because she felt that m ost of the material available for young children was an insult to their intelligen ce. Alumni rem em ber fondly productions s u c h as T he G reat B u tterm ilk F lats Robbery, A esop's Fables and The King Who Had a Problem , and songs such as Sum m er Work and that perennial favorite, PDS Is the Best. In addition to le arning to love music and singing, Mrs. Gilbert's students learned about all f a c e t s o f mo u n t i n g a m u s ic a l production. Mrs. Gilbert also put on the w o n der ful C h r is t m a s p a g e a n t, a tra ditio n brought over from Miss Fine's School which she later expanded to show case holiday celebrations from all parts of the world. Her religious convictions led her to respect the beliefs of others and she instituted the first Hanukkah celebration for lower schoolers. Mrs. Gilbert had a lively sense of fun and a theatrical flair that she com m unicated to her students. Middle School music teacher Regina Spiegel rem em bers, "She w ro te very clever w o rd s and stretched her students with intelligent surprises in melody lines."
Upon her retirement in 1983, Mrs. Gilbert said, "I've had a wonderful ca reer. There are very few people who can write their stuff and be able to see it performed right away. I am very fortunate." She would be glad to know that the fourth grade operetta contin ues to be a high point of the lower school experience. Mrs. Gilbert will be missed by all w h ose liv es she to u ch ed . Our sympathy goes out to her husband, Dick, and to her daughters, Allison Gilbert Kozicharow '70 and Virginia Gilbert '80. They have requested that those wishing to send contributions do so th r o u g h P D S d e v e l o p m e n t o ffic e to b e n e fit the lo w e r sch o o l music program. Mrs. G ilbert's teaching influenced hundreds of students and her legacy is acknow ledged in the lower school music room where a plaque by the en trance reads: "This room echoes the m u sic of M ag G ilb e rt w h o tau g ht lo w er sch o o l m u sic at M iss Fine's School and Princeton Day School from 1949 to 1983. She wrote and produced 33 original operettas for second and fourth graders, and brought style and variety to the holiday programs. Her creativity and belief in her students established a tradition of excellence that continues today."
CURTAIN RISES ON THEATER’S 30TH SEASON It has been 30 years since the first dramatic production, Our Town, came to life on the PDS stage with C hristo pher Reeve '70 in the role of Wallv, Broadway producer and parent Stuart Duncan as Mr. Webb, and actor and director Herbert M cAneny as Profes sor Willard. That coalition of talent set a standard for the years to come. On N ovem ber 17 a special benefit performance celebrated the theater's history and built toward its future by raising funds for new seats and equip ment. Before the curtain rose, m e m bers of the M cAneny family were in troduced, and Barbara Johnson read a le t t e r fro m h e r s o n , C h r i s t o p h e r Reeve, reflecting on the impact of PDS theater in his life and w ishing the cast well. Contributions to the M cAneny Theater Cam paign will be used to pro vide a fitting setting for the superb productions that do so m uch to enrich student life at PDS.
N ick Pinto '96, as Tony C aven dish, and M att W eber '98, as M cD erm ott, show o ff their sw ordsm an ship in T he Royal Fam ily.
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Shirley D avis - continued from page 7 Q: What educational attributes o f Princeton Day School are you particularly happy to see today? A: I’m happy to see community service such a part of PDS; I always felt it was very im portant that the students feel a part of the world and realize they must contribute to it. I’m also glad the school has such an active educational exchange program since having students of different na tionalities is so wonderful for a school. And, of course, the fact that the scho o l’s student body is interracial. In my day there was still segregation which preyed on my mind and which I worked hard to eliminate. The H an nans invited '95 alu m n i atten din g colleg e in the Boston area to d in n er this fall. E njoying the opportu n ity to catch up’are (from left) M ari H arm an, G rant G ould, T ristan LeG rand, A rcher H arm an, Joel M elendez, Jon G razian o, Carolyn Sivitz and M issy W oodruff.
IN MEMORIAM We w ish to extend our deepest sym pathy to the fam ilies and frien ds o f the follozving alum ni. Joan Prentice Charlton MFS '26 Mary Alice Sinclair Schwartz MFS '33 Mary Baldwin Smith Stoner MFS '34 Thomas M atthews PCD '43 Florence Miller Hunter MFS '45 Thomas J. Moore PCD '45 Abigail Rickert Hershey MFS '57 Ted Churchill PCD '59 Emily Sachs PDS '94 Marianne Vaughan - member of the PDS Business Office from 1969 to 1975
Q: What advice w ould you g iv e to Ms. Lohr and other heads o f schools today? A: I would tell them not to get too distracted by the mechanics. One of the trustees I worked with over the years used to joke about "Shirley and her integrity." He thought we ought to be going for a big splash, som ething that would get attention and bring in a grant for something. But I alw ays maintained that the most im portant thing for a school to have is integrity - educationally and ad m inistra tively - and I still do. Also, since I would have loved to teach even more than I did, I would say, "D o n ’t let too many things distract you from your true love, the love of teaching."
From the Archives
In Search of All PDS Alum ni Have you ever tried to get in touch with an old classmate, only to find that the last address you have in your tele phone directory is eight years old? That problem is over. Soon an im pressive directory of our a lu m n a e /i will be available to help you locate your old friends. The new Princeton Day School Alumni Directory, sched uled for release in the fall of 1996, will be the most up-todate and complete reference of over 3,200 PDS a lu m n a e /i ever compiled. This com prehensive volume will include current name, address and telephone number, academic data, plus business information, if applicable, bound into a classic, library-quality edition. The Alumni Association has once again contracted with Bernard C. Harris Publishing Company, Inc. to produce our directory. They will begin researching and compiling the information to be printed in the directory by mailing a questionnaire in the spring. If you prefer not to be listed in the directory, please contact the PDS alumni office in writ ing as soon as possible. T he new PDS D ire cto ry will soon m ak e fin d in g an a lu m n a /u s as easy as opening a book. 10
The varsity field hockey team in 1969: (stan din g, from left) N ell B ushnell, Pam W oodworth, C hris Sm ith, C indy Shoem aker; (going up slide) Kathy M cC lu re, Lit Lyn ess, Linda M cC an dless, Lin dsey H icks, F ran cin e B arlow , B etsy N icholes, C aptain Karen H offm an.
CARPENTER HONORED WITH 1996 ALUMNI AWARD by Nancy M. Young, Alumni Director The alumni of Princeton Day School take trem endous pride in adding the PDS Alumni Award to the long list of honors already bestowed upon singer, so n gw rite r Mary C hap in C arp en ter '76. G iven an n u a lly to an a l u m n a / u s w ho has attained excellence in his or her chosen field, and who has m ade a co m m itm e n t to helping others, Ms. C arpenter is recognized for her ex traordinary acco m p lish m en ts in the e n terta in m e n t field, as well as her ready w illingness to su pport an en d less num ber of charities through ben efit concerts. Inspired by music teacher Mag G il bert, Ms. C arpenter's love of music and so n g b lo s s o m e d in the lo w er school. Ms. Gilbert was the first per son Ms. C arpenter called when she was awarded the 1992 G ram m y for best female country perform ance with her spirited Doivn At The Tzvist And
Shout. Follow in g her so p h o m o re year at PDS, Ms. C arpenter went on to Taft and B ro w n w h e re sh e m a jo red in American civilization. After grad ua tion, she made her home in W ashing-
ton, DC and began performing some of her original songs at o pen-m ike nights around the city while working for R.J. R e y n o ld s, a p h ila n th r o p ic fo u n d a tio n co n cern ed with hum an rights issues in South Africa and C en tral America. Several years of playing background music in smoky bars fol lowed, and finally, a basem ent- re c o r d e d ta p e led to a C o l u m b i a Records' contract and her first album, Hometown Girl, in the su m m er of 1987. Today Ms. Carpenter has received ma n y a cc o la d es i n c l u d i n g six G ra m m y a w a rd s and in n u m e r a b le country music awards for her songs, albums and vocal performances. Her songs are hardly limited to country, however, as they incorporate a range of styles from folk to bluegrass to rock 'n roll. Ms. Carpenter has been called "a songw riter of uncommon wisdom, clarity and craft." Her music is po pu lar, yet intensely personal. She sings eloquently of life's darker moments as w ell as its jo y s. As o n e r e v ie w e r noted, "S h e 's an artist who u n d e r stands the range of human emotions: love, rejection, loss, gain and trying to make sense of it all."
Intent on m aking a difference in the world around her, Ms. C arpenter has performed benefit concerts in support o f E a r th D a y , A I D S p r e v e n t i o n , w om en's health and ailing children. In 1990 she performed at Richardson A u d ito riu m to b e n e fit P rin c e to n Day S ch oo l’s faculty endow m ent. Her cu r rent Stones In The Road tour celebrates
continued on page 12
ROSSMASSLER CITED FOR SERVICE TO SCHOOL by C h ristin e B a ch e ld er D u fresn e '77, Alumni A s s o c ia t io n President When she heard the news that Peter Rossm assler PCD '47 was the recipi e n t o f th e 1 9 9 6 A l u mn i S e r v i c e Award, the reaction of former Board of T ru ste e C hairm an Ma r i l y n Grounds captured it all, "Absolutely the perfect choice!" The Alumni Service Award was es tablished in 1995 to honor an a lu m n a / us w hose efforts to give back to the community a n d / o r to Princeton Day School reflect the highest ideals of the school. T h e co m b in a tio n of P eter's deep com m itm ent to PDS, the extraor dinary length of that com m itm ent and his warm personal manner, m ade him the unanim ous choice of the Alumni Association. M r. R o s s m a s s l e r ' s s e r v i c e to Princeton Day School officially began in 1981 when he became a m ember of
the Board of Trustees. In 1989, at the com pletion of two terms, he had served on virtually ev ery Board com m ittee at least once, and served as Vice C hairm an of the Board for two years. C ontinu ing as a key m e m b e r of b o th th e F in a n c e and
Investment
Committees,
Mr .
Rossm assler is credited with his fore sight on issues ranging from faculty salaries to the need for science renova tion. His wisdom has also been critical to the resolution of the future of Pretty Brook Farm. Concurrent with his committee re sp o n sib ilities, Mr. R o ssm a ssle r has also taken on im portant positions in the Annual Fund, serving as chairman of leadership giving for alumni, PCD a lu m n i and form er trustees. A part
continued on page 12 11
C a r p e n t e r - co n tin u e d fr o m p a g e 72 the 50th a n n iv e rsa ry of the C A R E Foundation, with all proceeds from the sale of her tour book directly ben efiting world hunger. The fourth grade operetta, in which she sat with her legs dangling over the edge of the stage, belting out a song on her guitar, was just the beginning for this d ouble platinum recording ar t i st . S h e h a s p e r f o r m e d at the Clinton White House and played to en th u sia stic au d ien ces all over the country and as far away as Australia. Mary Chapin Carpenter's reflections about the forces at work in her life will be an inspiration to PDS students and the many alumni who precede them. "I think it's not so much about chang ing the world, but how your world changes. In the midst of chasing the golden ring, you get back-slapped and
you start to question your priorities. The further you go, the more you see...and in the end, it all comes down to the basics - time for yourself, your family, honest relationships and giv ing to each other. The time you give is
the most precious thing there is." If her busy schedule allows, Ms. C ar penter will return to PDS on May 18, Alumni Day, where the Alumni Asso ciation will take great pleasure in hon oring their "H om eto w n Girl."
R o s s m a s s l e r - co n tin u e d fro m p a g e VI
consensus. The long length of his ser vice to the school is matched only by the rem arkable and infectious enthu siasm Mr. Rossm assler has for PDS. Once asked about his livelihood, he replied with a wry sm ile, "W h y , I work for PDS !" The Alumni Association looks for ward to thanking and honoring Peter Rossmassler at the alumni breakfast on Saturday, May, 18 for his effort, enthu siasm and incalculable contributions to improving the life of our school.
fro m all his P D S a c t i vi t i e s , Mr. R o ssm a ssle r has been a re sp ec te d coach and avid supporter of Princeton Pee Wee ice hockey.
The
people
who
know
Mr .
Rossmassler the best, admire him the most. His quiet, deeply insightful and humorous manner have brought criti cal support to the m anagem ent of the school. In particular, he is respected for his skill in bringing difficult issues to the table and leading the group to
SKATING EXTRAVAGANZA BENEFITS PDS RINK The ice at Baker Rink sparkled with a dazzling display of talent on D ecem ber 18th as world-class skaters perfor med for the b en efit of the rink at Princeton Day School. Professionals such as Olympic Silver Medalist Paul Wylie and National and World Cham-
weekly skating sessions. As Trustee Emerita Elizabeth Dilworth noted at the installation cerem onies, when the tw o s c h o o l s m e r g e d , p a r e n t s felt strongly that skating should remain a part of the school tradition. C o n se quently, a rink was built on the PDS campus in 1967. Now, alm ost 30 years later, it needs major renovations. A cam paign to raise funds for an en clo sed fa c ilit y has bee n la u n ch e d
among skating enthusiasts. The Holiday Skating Gala marked the first time professional skaters had perform ed in Princeton. It also e x tended a long association with PDS, P r i n c e t o n U n i v e r s i t y a n d t he Princeton Skating Club. The extraor d in ary q u a lity of the p e rfo rm a n c e captivated the audience and added to the magic of the holiday season.
Lisa M cG raw W ebster '44 with her protege, Pint I W ylie.
pion Rosalyn Su m ners joined d a re devil stunt skaters, Olympic pairs and m e m b e rs of the P rin c e to n S k atin g Club in a show produced and choreo graphed by JoJo Starbuck, an O ly m pian and National Pairs Cham pion. Lisa McGraw W ebster '44 served as h o n o r a r y cha i r of t he e v e n t wi t h Martha Sullivan Sword '73 and Marie Matthews as co-chairs. P rin ceton U n iversity first offered Baker Ri nk to benefit the school's skat ing program in 1926 when they made it available to boys at Princeton Junior S c h o o l for ice h o ck ey . L ater Miss F ine's Schoo l used the facility for 12
M em bers o f the H oliday Skatin g G ala C om m ittee g a th er ou tside B aker Rink. They in clu de (first row, left to right) Lois R ow e, T rish D on aldson, M artha Sullivan Sw ord '73, Lisa M cGraxo W ebster '44, M arie M atthew s, Joan Josefson ; (secon d row) Barbara V ahlsin g, D ede Shann on , A lix G erry, M artha T attersall G iancola '77, M illie King, Linda M axw ell S tefan elli '62; (third row ) H illeary Thom as '84, Gail D enise, G inger W elsh, Leslie Straut Ward '80; (back row ) Ludw ig K oerte, Bob Stckm an , A ndrew H am lin, A u brey H uston '64.
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION BULLETIN BOARD
Alumni Day f96 is Saturday, May 18
T he U n d e r g r a d u a te A lu m n i B o a r d is m ade up o f 30 m em bers o f the sen ior class w ho help w ith alu m n i even ts and in crease aw aren ess o f alu m n i a citiv ities am on g their classm ates. T hey in clu de (kn eelin g from left) B ecky R ubin, G alete L evin , Sylvia Lim m , Erin B elan ger, C h an d ler P lohn , (stan din g) M att Z arzecki, Liuba Shapiro, Kathy Knapp, Sonal M ahida, P ete Suom i, A n n m arie C h o la n k eril, R achel G lat, D an ielle P eters, Jen n ifer W alsh, Jessica B arson, M ark C hatham , Sarah W eeks, Kate Jam ieson , N ancy Young. M issin g from plw to are Eric Boyd, T racy E rshow , John G ardn er, T ravis G illiam , Sarah G reen , M erritt Jan son , Ju stin K rebs, Robert Lee, Sara Lott, R ebecca N em iroff, R oopa P u ru shotham an , D ana V etricin, D an ielle W arren.
M em b er s o f th e A lu m n i B o a r d seek to provide opportu n ities to p erp etu ate the ideals and frien d sh ip s estab lish ed at M FS, PCD and PDS. P ictu red abov e are B oard m em bers (front row from left) Cary B achelder D ufresne '77, p resid en t; M arkell M eyers Shriver '46; C arolin e Erdm an H are '75; L au rie M errick W inegar '72; Karen T urn er; (back row ) M olly Sw ord M cD onough '75; Laura Farina '79, secreta ry /treasu rer; M argie W allace G ibson '84; Kirk M oore '72; Jim G room e '80; Carl T aggart '82;T om G ates '78, vice p residen t. M issing from pictu re are P etie O liphant D uncan '57, H ow ie P ow ers, Jr. '80, H illeary T hom as '84.
M an y s tu d e n ts a t PD S t o d a y a r e c h ild r e n o f a lu m n a e /i. In Septem ber H ead o f School Lila Lohr hosted a reception fo r those fam ilies who have m ade PDS a tradition fo r tzoo and even three gen eration s. G athered ou tside the low er school are (front row from left) Paula Levy, A llison Levy, A m anda Levy '08, A rt Levy '73, Don M illn er '71, D aniel M illn er '00, Judy M illn er, P eter R ulon -M iln er' 03, Lila Lohr, R ebecca M an tell '08, M ike M an tell '76 with M atthew M an tell, Ann M an tell, M ario L auren ti '07; (secon d row ) B etsy Starkey '04, Em ily Starkey '03, Sam S tarkey '72, Sam Starkey '09 (hidden ), M arian n e R eyn olds, Ian R eyn olds '03, Tom R eyn olds '60, C arolin e Buck '09 w ith P ete Buck '77, H enry Buck '08, John O 'H ara '99, Em ily O 'H ara '00, C yndy C oom bs O 'H ara '69, M ary W oodbridge Lott '67, Sara Lott '96; (back row ) H arry R u lon -M iller '51, Laurie B ushn ell, Jesse B u shn ell, John B ushn ell '73, K endal B ushn ell '05, H ilary R ichards '05, N ancy Buck, H arrison Buck '04, M ax R ichards '08 (hidden ), T aylor Kenyon '08, Kevin Kenyon, B radley D ickerson '04, Jill W illiam s D ickerson '73, Yuki M oore L au ren ti '75, Jill G oldm an '74, B ailey R ichards.
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ALUMNI NEWS MISS FINE'S SCHOOL Publications Office Princeton Day School P.O. Box 75 Princeton, NJ 08542
’
C. Lawrence Norris Kerr 43-02 Meadow Lakes Hightstown, N) 08520
20-25 ’26
Joan Prentice Charlton passed away on June 16,
1995. W e send our sympathy to her family. Joan lived in Lawrencevilleand Princeton before mov ing in 1980 to Medford Leas, a retirement com munity. She graduated from Bryn Mawr College and attencied Radcliffe College to prepare for a career in museum work. She worked at the Phila delphia Museum of Art and became curator of their Department of Decorative Arts. From 1947 to 1949, she wrote articles on art and served as chargee de mission in the Decorative Arts De partment at the Louvre Museum in Paris. Joan was very active as an advisor, trustee, curator and consultant for Historic Fallsington, Inc., an orga nization formed to preserve the 17th century Quaker village in Pennsylvania. Publications Office Princeton Day School P.O. Box 75 Princeton, NJ 08542
’
28
27-29
Betty Dinsm ore Chick writes from her retire ment home in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida, "This is my permanent home until I move to Denmark to live with daughter, Ann, and her 12-year-old, Ida, (pronounced Eeda) which might be within a year or so. I have a nice double, windowed room with a private bath and large desk, with look-out into large, old trees. Pale pink building with maroon trim and low shrubbery with pink blooms. Nice!"
Margaretta Cowenhoven 442 Heron Point Chestertown, M D 21620
’30
Wilhelmina Foster Reynolds 508 Ott Road Bala Cynwyd, PA 19004
’34
W e are sorry to report the death of M ary Baldw in Smith Stoner on April 9, 1995 at her home in Tempe, AZ. Her late husband, Richard G. Stoner, was Chairman of the Department of Physics at Arizona State University. W e send our sympathy to her daughter, Susan; ancJ her two sons, Richard and Gordon; her sister, Susan Baldwin '57; and her brothers, Lacey Smith PCD '37 and Nathaniel Smith PCD '50. A memorial service was held July 3 in Greensboro, VT. Needs Secretary
’
35-’37
60th REUNION Barbara Kennedy Bremer 304 Knoll W ay Rocky Hill, NJ 08553 Theresa Critchlow 11 Westcott Road Princeton, NJ 08540 Needs Secretary
’38 ’39 ’40
Phyllis V and ew ater Clement writes that she has
moved to Sebastopol, CA to be nearer her daugh ter and grandchildren. "W e're still close enough to Berkeley to keep up with activities there, and will continue to summer at Clear Lake." Dorothea Kissam 26 Taylor Street Amherst, MA 01002
’41
Summertime is here once again. During the past months I have had news of M o lly G ro ve r Shal
low. She and I had planned a late August barge trip on the Shallow barge, to meander through some of the Dutch waterways, and see art on our port tie-ups. Alas, after years of faithful service, the barge christened Ineke contracted irreparable engine trouble. Molly and I are now setting our sights on domestic travel. Early in July of this year I attended a wedding in Marin County, California and during the time was fortunate enough to see Phyllis Vandewater Clement '40. She and her husband, Bob, have just moved from Berkeley, California to a handsome place in Sebastopol, not too far from the Russian River. I had not seen Phyllis for over fifty years, and without hesitation we picked up where we had left off all those years ago. Phyllis looked as I had remembered her, except for white hair. She was full of energy and interest in living. W e had much to share about family and friends and remembrances of our childhood playing together in Princeton. I spoke on the telephone to M a ry G re ey Woody. Mary and her husband are taking a trip to France shortly. Mary has promised to send an update of her activities for the PDS Journal. Mary is one of the two members of our class who went through MFS from first to twelfth grades. The other class mate is Anne Condit who has become an expert in growing day lilies and advises the Denver Colorado Botanical Gardens. Anne also said she would send along a description of her life and activities. This lournal will reach everybody in December, 1995 most probably. The spring of 1996 will mark our 55th. Do plan to come. It would be wonderful to see everyone again. Be fore closin g I must ack n o w le d g e A g n e s C ritch lo w 's card mentioning her planned Sep tember cruise with her sister, Theresa, '39. Mary Roberts Woodbridge 703 Sayre Drive Princeton, NJ 08540 Marjorie Libby Moore 17 Forest Lane Trenton, NJ 08628
’42 ’43
Franny B rice Sturges moved the end of February
from her house in Naples, FL to a retirement community in Naples. She still plans to spend August and September in the cool mountain air of Highlands, NC where she has summered for many years. Needs Secretary
32
’
Hooked On Fishing!
31-’33
M argaret Russell Edmondson was kind enough to give us this brief, but welcome update: "Twochildren, five grandchildren, 5 great-grand children - all well and happy!"
33
A lice Sinclair Schwartz passed away on February 3, 1995 at her home on John's Island, SC. Our sympathy goes out to her husband, Peter, her three children, seven grandchildren and her sister, Elizabeth Sinclair Flemer '43.
Connie Kuhn Wassink '44 in front of an exhibit she created for the Great Alaskan Sportsman Show.
14
THE ANNUAL REPORT 1994-1995
D ear Readers, O n behalf of the students and teachers at Princeton Day School, I would the en o rm o u s support the school received from our alumni, parents and year. The A nnual Fund crossed the $500,000 m ark for the first time in its grow n a w h o p p in g 39% , w hich speaks volu m es about both our past and
like to extend m y sincere gratitude for friends during the 1994-1995 academic history. In the last three years, it has future strength.
In addition to the most successful A nnual Fund in the school's history, gifts to the en d o w m en t and for capital purposes reached to nearly $1 million. M uch of this support w as for the renovation of our upper school science program. H ow ever, the school also received gifts for financial aid, faculty salaries and benefits, low er school com puters, the libraries, our athletic teams and facilities, and a host of other areas. W ithout this support our school simply could not maintain its position in the forefront of A m erican secondary education. M y thanks go out to the literally hund red s of volunteers in the Parents Association and the A lum ni Association and to all those w ho give their time and energy to help us reach our goal. The w ork they have done provides im m easurable strength to our endeavors here on campus.
Sincerely,
A nd rew C. Ham lin Director of A dvan cem en t
Summary of Gifts and Pledges
Parents A ssociation Support
% Increase
1 9 9 3 -1 9 9 4
1 9 9 4 -1 9 9 5
$187,336 $111,287 $137,450
$203,270 $115,823 $181,565
9% 4% 32%
$ 4 3 6 ,0 7 3
$ 5 0 0 ,6 5 8
15 %
Capital Projects E nd ow m ent Gifts
$327,992 $155,412
$757,463 $173,488
131% 12%
Total Support
$ 8 9 7 ,4 7 7
$ 1 ,4 3 1 ,6 0 9
63 %
Annual Fund P arents A lum ni O ther
A nnual Fund T o ta l
N early N ew Shop
$50,000
Rah Rah Rah Party
$ 3 9 J2 2
Sports Sale
$1,979
Science Series
$1,292
Student Photos
$1,934
Used Book Sale
$250
Book Fail-
Total
$5,869 $ 1 0 0 ,6 4 6
15
The Colross Society of Princeton Day School D EA N M A T H EV F E L L O W S Named in honor of Dean Mathey whose generosity and vision laid the groundwork for Princeton Day School, this level recognizes those individuals who contributed gifts of $10,000 and above to Princeton Day School.
H EA D M A ST ER FELLO W S Named in honor o f the distinguished men and women whose leadership through the years has perpetuated the school's commitment to excellence, this level of giving recognizes gifts between $2,000 and $4,999.
Anonymous Mr. & Mrs. John C. Bogle Bristol-Myers Squibb Company Mr. & Mrs. N. Harrison Buck '77 The Bunbury Co., Inc. Mrs. James G. Campbell, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Shawn W. Ellsworth '75 Mr. & Mrs. Randall A. Hack The Gladys & Roland Harriman Foundation Betty Wold Johnson J. Seward Johnson, Senior Charitable Trust Mr. & Mrs. Samuel W. Lambert III Mr. and Mrs. Harvey J. Levine David Mathey '47 MacDonald Mathey '44 Nearly New Shop Newington-Cropsey Foundation Mr. & Mrs. Bernard Ozarowski Mr. & Mrs. John D. Wallace '48 Mrs. Robert C. Whitlock Marina von Neumann Whitman '52 Mary Roberts Woodbridge '42 Mr. Greg Wyatt
Mr. & Mrs. Lewis T. Barringer Mr. & Mrs. Michael Blitzer Mr. & Mrs. Robert E. Bostrom Mr. Henri Carpeni & Ms. Regina Meredith-Carpeni Ms. Amy K. Clark Agnes Agar Coleman '40 Helen Coleman Trust Mr. & Mrs. Lantz S. Crawley Mr. & Mrs. Norman J. Critchlow Mr. & Mrs. J. Richardson Dilworth Mr. & Mrs. Robert E. Dougherty '43 Dr. & Mrs. Aiden Doyle Mr. & Mrs. Michael E. France Mr. & Mrs. Lee W. Gladden Mr. & Mrs. Daniel J. Graziano, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. John L. Griffith, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Roman T. Gumina Mr. & Mrs. Gordon Gund Mr. & Mrs. Michael D. Halpern Mr. & Mrs. Winthrop S. Headley Mr. & Mrs. Michael P. Helmick Mr. & Mrs. Joseph H. Highland J. Robert Hillier '52 Dr. & Mrs. Timothy M. Hosea Dr. & Mrs. Charles B. Howard Mr. & Mrs. Stephen F. Jusick Mr. & Mrs. Ludwig M. Koerte Mr. & Mrs. Max L. Kuniansky Mr. & Mrs. James E. Landry Mr. & Mrs. Emmett Lescroart Mr. & Mrs. Robert J. Maguire Dr. & Mrs. Winton H. Manning Mr. & Mrs. Michael Mantell '76 David H. McAlpin, Jr. '43 Mary Kathryn Black McKenzie Charitable Trust Mr. & Mrs. David E. Miller Mr. Harold J. Miller Mr. & Mrs. Michael Miron Mr. & Mrs. Dale F. Morrison Mr. & Mrs. Willard D. Nielsen Jane Campbell Perkins '57 Mr. & Mrs. James S. Regan Dr. & Mrs. Leon F. Rosenberg Dr. & Mrs. Albert Rosenthal Mr. & Mrs. Peter R. Rossmassler '47 S. Forest Company, Inc. Mr. & Mrs. Richard G. Scott Mr. & Mrs. Andrew J. Shechtel Mr. & Mrs. James F. Shoaf Jane Aresty Silverman '63 Mr. & Mrs. Richard W. Smith Mr. Dennis Stattman & Ms. Sarah Ringer Mr. & Mrs. Edward D. Thomas Mr. & Mrs. Kilin To Mr. & Mrs. Paul J. Van der Grift Mrs. John H. Wallace (Margaret Cook '27) Dr. & Mrs. George B. Weathersby
1899 FE L L O W S This level o f giving commemorates the founding year of Princeton Day School when Miss Fine's School first opened its doors to young women. It recognizes those individuals who have contributed gifts between $5,000 and $9,999. Anonymous Mr. & Mrs. Richard W. Beatty Mr. & Mrs. Alexander K. Buck James E. Burke Foundation, Inc. Mr. & Mrs. James E. Burke Citibank Mr. & Mrs. Peter G. Gerry Mr. & Mrs. Peter M. Grounds Sally Campbell Haas '63 Mr. & Mrs. Randall A. Hack Samuel M. Hamill, Jr. ’53 Mr. & Mrs. William F. Henagan (Barbara Mills '77) Mr. & Mrs. Robert F. Johnston Mr. & Mrs. Elliot Kotzker The Curtis McGraw Foundation Dean W. Mathey '43 Mr. & Mrs. Edward E. Matthews Mr. & Mrs. Fowler Merle-Smith Merrill Lynch & Co., Inc. Mr. Stephen Modzelewski & Ms. Deborah Sze Prof. & Mrs. John A. Pinto Pocumtuck Company S. Forest Company, Inc. Mr. & Mrs. Edward W. Scudder III Dr. Marjorie Shaw '70 & Mr. Barney Rush Dr. & Mrs. John S. Sierocki Mr. & Mrs. Sydney Sussman Mr. & Mrs. Peter J. Travers Elizabeth McGraw Webster '44
16
FA C U L T Y F E L L O W S By far the greatest strength of Princeton Day School is its dedicated faculty whose patience and wisdom have guided countless students through the learning process. Contributors to this level o f giving have made gifts between $1,000 and $1,999. Anonymous Mr. & Mrs. Bruce Ackerman Mr. Richard M. Altman Mr. Richard A. Anderman The Bank of New York Drs. David & Sheila B. Befeler Mr. James & Dr. Gail Breslin Mr. & Mrs. Kevin M. Briody Mr. & Mrs. Henry P. Bristol II '72 Mrs. Lee H. Bristol, Jr. Mrs. R. Manning Brown, Jr. Dr. & Mrs. William P. Burks Mr. & Mrs. Franco Camevale Dr. & Mrs. James J. Chandler Dr. & Mrs. Paul Chew Dr. & Mrs. Barry Concool Dr. & Mrs. Leon N. Costa Mr. & Mrs. Jack A. Cuneo Mr. & Mrs. Ronald D'Argenio Mr. & Mrs. Robert Davidson Mr. & Mrs. Dennis J. DeCore Mrs. Thomas W. Eglin Mr. & Mrs. Craig Eisenacher Katharine Walker Ellison '62 Mr. & Mrs. Michael Faigen Mr. & Mrs. Alfred F. Fasola Dr. Keith J. Fishbein & Dr. Nancy L. Feldman Drs. Michael V. & Praabhavathi B. Fernandes Susan Stix Fisher '72 Mr. & Mrs. Thomas E. Gardner Mr. Vincent E. Gentile & Ms. Patricia Pickrel Girl Scout Troop #610 Dr. & Mrs. Norman Glassner Mr. & Mrs. Daniel Goldenson Mr. & Mrs. Peter S. Goldman Mr. & Mrs. William S. Greenberg Mr. & Mrs. William H. B. Hamill ’62 Mr. & Mrs. W. E. Headley John R. Hickling ‘77 Mr. & Mrs. James S. Hill Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth Horowitz Mr. & Mrs. Peter Hyman Mr. Robert Jordan ‘80 Mrs. Sidney Jordan Mr. & Mrs. E. Michael Joye Mr. Peter R. Kellogg Mr. & Mrs. Kevin W. Kennedy ’63 (Karen Andresen '67) Mr. & Mrs. Kevin R. Kenyon (Jane Henderson '79) Mr. & Mrs. Randal Langdon Drs. Dennis & Susan Langer Mr. & Mrs. James B. Laughlin '43 (Julia Gallup '55) Dr. & Mrs. Joseph P. Leddy Mr. & Mrs. Francisco Lorenzo Mr. & Mrs. Joseph S. Makrancy Mrs. H. DeHaven Manley Dr. & Mrs. Leo Masciulli Mr. & Mrs. Paul W. Masters Mr. & Mrs. Richard S. Maxwell Mr. & Mrs. Lester R. Mayer III Mr. & Mrs. W. Barry McCarthy, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. John T. McLoughlin The Merck Company Foundation
Arthur E. Mittnacht III '72 Mobil Foundation, Inc. National Westminster Bancorp Dr. Thomas J. Newman & Ms. Linda S. Materna Drs. Daniel A. & Robyn B. Notterman Mr. & Mrs. John C. O'Hara, Jr. (Cynthia Combs ’69) Mr. & Mrs. Thomas H. Paine, Jr. '60 Mr. & Mrs. John O. Parker, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Charles L. Peifer Mr. & Mrs. Charles J. Plohn, Jr. Howard F. Powers, Jr. '80 Mr. & Mrs. Timothy D. Proctor Ms. Sandra S. Purdy Mr. & Mrs. Deepak D. Raj Dr. & Mrs. Sol I. Rajfer Mr. Donn Rappapport The Reverend Carl Reimers Mr. & Mrs. Robert M. Revelle Mr. & Mrs. Stephen J. Riepenhoff Mr. & Mrs. W. Ronald Roach Mr. & Mrs. Stanley Robinson Mr. Christopher R. P. Rodgers James C. Rodgers '70 Mr. & Mrs. Michael L. Rosenberg Mr. Llewellyn G. Ross Mr. & Mrs. Herbert S. Ruben Dr. & Mrs. Marc Rubin Mr. & Mrs. James E. Russell Salomon Brothers Inc. Dr. & Mrs. Lewis G. Sandy Mr. & Mrs. Laurence H. Sanford III (Helen Behr ’68) Mr. & Mrs. Ramakrishnan Sermadevi Mr. & Mrs. Donald V. Smith SmithKline Beecham Foundation Mr. & Mrs. Stanley C. Smoyer Mr. & Mrs. Christi J. Stanko Mr. & Mrs. Samuel Starkey '72 Mr. & Mrs. C. Barnwell Straut Mr. & Mrs. Donald C. Stuart III '56 Mr. Jeffrey Sussman & Ms. Patricia Adell Mr. Vincent M. Tarduogno & Dr. J. P. Vincelette Patricia Smith Thompson '45 Clark G. Travers '55 United Jersey Banks USA Group Mr. & Mrs. James R. Utaski Mr. & Mrs. Frederick Vahlsing III Mr. & Mrs. Ramsay Vehslage Mr. & Mrs. Alan D. Webb Mr. Frank C. Weed Mr. & Mrs. L. Thomas Welsh, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Bruce J. Westcott Mr. & Mrs. H. Allen White III Mr. & Mrs. James W. Wickenden Mr. & Mrs. Anthony L. Willard Anne A. Williams '74 Mr. & Mrs. Thomas J. Williams Mr. & Mrs. David Woffindin Donald E. Woodbridge '64 Ms. Carla Wragge Dr. & Mrs. David Yarian Mr. & Mrs. Robert B. Zagoria Mr. & Mrs. Charles M. Zarzecki
Other Annual Fund Recognition Levels THE PAG O D A GROUP Gracious colonial architecture in a natural wooded setting provide a tranquil environment for teaching and learning. Contributions to The Pagoda Group range between $500 and $999. Dr. & Mrs. Manuel T. Amendo American Express Corporation Mr. & Mrs. Marvin Anzel
j s
J
..- ..
e
taSSfll
SIT
,
Dr. & Mrs. Melvin S. Babad Graham K. Barnett '84 Mr. & Mrs. Karl H. Behr Dr. & Mrs. Robert B. Berger Mr. & Mrs. Robert J. Blanche Mark F. Blaxill '76 Dr. & Mrs. Steve Borros Mr. & Mrs. Peter Bronsteen Mr. Douglas F. Bushnell Drs. John R. & Elizabeth S. Bussard Chemical Bank Mr. & Mrs. Martin A. Chooljian Mr. & Mrs. David Chow Connaught Foundation Dr. & Mrs. Anil S. Deshpande Mr. David E. Dunnavant & Ms. Barbara Larsen Dr. & Mrs. Leonard Ershow Mr. Mark Goldfus & Ms. Beverly Rubman Mr. & Mrs. William Grant Mr. Thomas L. Gray, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Lawrence I. Green Mr. & Mrs. Harleston J. Hall, Jr. Mrs. Samuel M. Hamill Mr. & Mrs. Roby Harrington IV IFF Inc. Mr. & Mrs. Peter Jacques Mr. & Mrs. George L. James III The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Mr. Peter R. Kann & Ms. Karen E. House Dr. & Mrs. Alan G. Kelsey Dr. & Mrs. Regan Kenyon John H. Kilgore '70 Mr. & Mrs. John K. Kim Mr. & Mrs. Maurice P. Knapp Mr. Harold J. Kramer Dr. & Mrs. Uday Kunte Mr. & Mrs. Peter O. Lawson-Johnson Mr. & Mrs. Guy F. Leonard Mr. & Mrs. William T. Lifland Anne MacNeil '63 Dr. & Mrs. Robert T. Maguire Mr. & Mrs. Joseph J. Mezrich Mr. & Mrs. Frank W. Miller Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth E. Moll Morgan Guaranty Trust Company Morgan Stanley & Co., Inc. Mr. & Mrs. Richard F. Ober, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Edward R. Palsho Mr. & Mrs. Mark Pollard Mr. & Mrs. Herman Ratner Christopher Reeve '70 Mr. & Mrs. Thomas C. Roberts J. Andrew Sanford '78 The. St. Paul Companies, Inc. Schering-Plough Foundation Mr. & Mrs. David J. Scholes Mr. & Mrs. Arthur L. Shearer Mr. & Mrs. Michael J. Southwick '81 (Deborah Burks ’81)
Mr. & Mrs. Robert G. Stephens Dr. Alan G. Stem Mrs. Caren Sturges Dr. & Mrs. William H. Thompson Mr. & Mrs. Sennen U y Mr. William L. Warren & Ms. Jan Trenholm Mr. Richard E. Whittaker & Dr. Margaret McCann Drs. T. Frank & Rosie B. Wong Mr. & Mrs. Joseph R. Young III Mr. Charles J. Zapiec & Ms. Mary Alice Roberts
TH E B LU E & W H ITE GROUP Recognizing the spirit o f the students, faculty/staff, alumni, trustees, parents, past parents, grandparents and friends of Princeton Day School, contributions to The Blue & White Group range between $100 and $499. Anonymous Dr. Alexander M. Ackley, Jr. Drs. Jai & Nalini Agarwal Mr. & Mrs. Duncan W. Ailing Allied-Signal Foundation Inc. American Home Products Corp. Drs. Rao & Vani Andavolu Mrs. Barbara Anderman Glenna Weisberg Andersen, M.D. '73 Elizabeth Lyness Anderson '72 Mr. & Mrs. Gary M. Anderson Mr. & Mrs. Ellis B. Anderson Mr. & Mrs. Julian J. Aresty Stratos G. Athanassiades '80 Andrew J. Atkin '77 Ms. Mary Jane Augustine Ms. Pamela Babbitt Mr. & Mrs. Reginald K. Bailey Mr. & Mrs. Philip L. Baker Mr. & Mrs. Richard W. Baker, Jr. '31 Susan Smith Baldwin '57 Mr. & Mrs. Lewis Barish Mr. William E. Barish
Mr. & Mrs. Robert S. Bennett, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. William G. Bergh (Linda Staniar '66) Mr. & Mrs. Richard L. Berkman Dr. & Mrs. Sheldon S. Berkman Mr. & Mrs. Lloyd Bezar Prof. Tushar & Dr. Gopa Bhattacharjee Mr. & Mrs. Eugene D. Biddle, Jr. Dr. & Mrs. Douglas J. Binder Mr. & Mrs. G. Reginald Bishop (Alice Elgin '50) Dr. & Mrs. Ira B. Black Mr. & Mrs. Keith C. Blair Mr. & Mrs. Thomas J. Blanchet Mr. Jan S. Blazewski Mrs. Alden S. Blodget Daniel B. Blum '73 James P. Bonini '81 Mr. & Mrs. Robert Bordeman Mrs. Ann Boyd Mr. & Mrs. Stephen R. Braddock Mr. & Mrs. Matthew Breitenberg Claire Treves Brezel '77 Dr. & Mrs. Gary R. Brickner Mrs. Theodora Brickner Mr. Gunther T. Bright, Sr. Carl G. Briscoe II '75 Mr. & Mrs. Howard Bromwich Mr. & Mrs. Avery F. Brooks Mr. Kenneth D. Brown Ralph M. Brown III '75 Wilhelmus B. Bryan III ’39 Alexander K. Buck, Jr. '74 The Buffalo News Katharine Bryan Bulkley '47 James C. E. Burke '80 Mr. & Mrs. Dan R. Burns Elissa I. Burr '94 Mrs. Richard Burr Christopher Burt '73 Rebecca Bushnell '70 Jodie Platt Butz '71 Caron Cadle '75 Mr. Roque J. Calvo Helen R. Cannon '44 Dr. & Mrs. Robert D. Capinpin Barbara Spalholz Cappello '74 Mr. & Mrs. Jeffrey E. Carleton Blythe Scott Carr '45
Mr. & Mrs. Robert Carr Mr. & Mrs. Michael Caruso Mr. & Mrs. Michael A. Caruso, Jr. Nancy Chen Cavanaugh '78 Mr. & Mrs. Paul Celler Mr. & Mrs. Harsh Chadha Mr. & Mrs. Ronald Check Victoria C-P. Chen '84 Thomas D. Chubet '61 Chester Cleaver '69 Community Foundation of Western North Carolina Mr. Richard M. Conley Mrs. John J. Conroy Dr. Larissa Conway Mrs. Peter G. Cook John F. Cook '56 Dr. & Mrs. Stephen S. Cook '59 CoreStates NJ National Bank Corning Incorporated Foundation Gail Cotton '62 Sandra Benson Cress '77 Mr. & Mrs. Mark J. Cunningham Mr. & Mrs. Harry L. Curtis III Mr. & Mrs. Robert A. Curtis Ms. Liz Cutler & Mr. Tom Kreutz Mr. & Mrs. Thomas A. D'Altrui Mr. & Mrs. Arnold Dadian Mr. Jack David Mr. & Mrs. Swep Davis Mr. Warren A. Davis Herbert B. Davison ’31 Mr. & Mrs. Anthony L. DeGisi Mr. & Mrs. David P. DeMuth Mr. & Mrs. Robert Denby Anne Carples Denny '53 Dr. Donald F. Denny, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. John H. Denny Mr. & Mrs. Ricardo DeSenna Mr. & Mrs. Romeo DeVilla Stephen B. Dewing '35 Mr. & Mrs. Salvatore DiBianca Mr. & Mrs. Thomas F. DiBianca Phyllis Boushall Dodge '40 Mr. & Mrs. Richard J. Donahue Mr. & Mrs. Coleman D. Donaldson, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Coleman D. Donaldson, Sr. Dr. & Mrs. John Dorazio Mr. & Mrs. Jeffery H. Douglass
Noeline Hargrave Baruch '72 Steven Bash '72 Dr. & Mrs. Gerald Batt Mr. & Mrs. Gaetano T. Battaglia Mrs. Harriet Baxter Mr. Daniel Bedesem Drs. Daniel & Pamela Beim James H. Bennett '79
Blues cheer on their teammates at Blue/W hite Field Day. The intramural com petitions are still as fiercely contested as those that started at PCD.
17
Other Annual Fund Recognition Levels Mr. Clifton W. Draper Creigh Duncan '76 Kathleen Sittig Dunlop ’63 Mr. Howard S. Dunn The Reverend & Mrs. Craig R. Dykstra Richard H. Eckels 62 Susan Ecroyd '72 Dr. & Mrs. Norman H. Edelman Mr. & Mrs. Charles F. Elbot Dr. & Mrs. James L. Elmore Mr. & Mrs. Esmail Emami Mr. & Mrs. David Erdman '46 Mr. & Mrs. Harold B. Erdman '39 Mr. & Mrs. Peter E. Erdman '43 William P. Erdman '76 Ericsson Mr. & Mrs. George Exter Mrs. R. Kenneth Fairman Mr. & Mrs. Robert J. Farina Dr. & Mrs. Stephen M. Felton E. Robert Femholz '55 Mrs. John V. A. Fine
John Olaf Haroldson ’77 Dr. & Mrs. Olaf Haroldson, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. David P. Harper Dr. & Mrs. Robert H. Harris Anne Harrison-Clark '56 Mr. & Mrs. Charles J. Hatfield Mr. & Mrs. Maurice F. Healy (E. Sylvia Taylor ’45) Elizabeth C. Healy '69 Mr. & Mrs. John J. Heins II Mr. & Mrs. James T. Heisler Mr. Curtis W. Helm Daniel J. Helmick ’90 Mr. & Mrs. Clifford J. Hemphill Ms. Jill Henderson Mr. & Mrs. Richard J. Henkel
Mr. & Mrs. Mark Husik Louise Hutner '70 Nathaniel C. Hutner '65 Mary Hobler Hyson '68 Mr. & Mrs. Madan Inamdar Mr. & Mrs. John N. Irwin II Mr. John Z. Jackson & Ms. Ann Maria Vaurio Alice Jacobson '63 Mr. & Mrs. Charles L. Jaffin Mr. & Mrs. Daniel H. Jamieson, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Marius B. Jansen Mr. Peter D. Johnsen Johnson & Higgins Mr. & Mrs. Hallett Johnson, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Livingston Johnson ’75
Dr. & Mrs. Jay D. Kuris Ms. Saundra B. LaFranco Mr. & Mrs. Lee K. Lam Laura Lamar '69 Mr. & Mrs. Craig M. Lamb Mr. & Mrs. Arthur S. Lane (Sally Kuser '42) Mr. Paul A. Lanzotti Dr. & Mrs. Bartley Larsen Ms. Yuki Moore Laurenti '75 & Mr. Jeffrey Laurenti Prof. & Mrs. Chung K. Law Mr. & Mrs. Mark W. Lehmann Eleanor Vandewater Leonard '44 Mr. & Mrs. Shalom Levin Mr. & Mrs. Harvey L. Levine
Mr. David R. First Ellen Fisher '73 David S. Fitton '79 Dr. & Mrs. John A. Fizer Barbara Russell Flight '77 Drs. Edwardo and Belen Rores Nancy Shannon Ford '54 Thomas M. Ford '65 Lauren Adams Fortmiller '65 Mr. & Mrs. Elon Foster, Jr. Dr. & Mrs. Michael A. Fragoso Ms. Eleanor N. Funk Mr. & Mrs. Joseph A. Gallagher Mr. & Mrs. Victor Garber Julia Penick Garry '77 John Gaston '62 Mr. & Mrs. Moore Gates, Jr. '42 General Mills Foundation Mr. & Mrs. Frank Gentempo Mr. & Mrs. John M. Gentempo Donald H. Gips '78 Mr. & Mrs. Walter F. Gips, Jr. Ms. Jill L. Goldman '74 & Mr. Lawrence A. Richards Paul E. Goldman '75 Prof. & Mrs. Robert J. Goldston Mr. & Mrs. George S. Gordon Mr. & Mrs. Jerem M. Gordon '72 Mr. & Mrs. William P. Graff '75 Mr. & Mrs. J. Stewart Graham Mr. & Mrs. Milton H. Grannatt Mr. & Mrs. Howard L. Green Dr. & Mrs. Leslie Greenberg Beatrice Zenzie Gregory '83 Mr. & Mrs. Alan R. Griffith Kevin J. Groome '81 Mr. Peter Gruen & Ms. Anne Elliott GTE Foundation Drs. Elliot Gursky & Joyce Glazer Katharine Burks Hackett '75 Mr. & Mrs. David Hall John P. Hall 111 '79 Mr. Andrew C. Hamlin & Ms. Kathleen Deignan Mr. Glen G. Hansford Mr. & Mrs. Nixon Hare '59 (Caroline Erdman '75) Mr. & Mrs. Archer Harman, Jr.
18
Archer and M ari Harman (seated, center) returned to campus in O ctober to visit with friends they made here last year. They were treated to dinner with adm inistrators at the Head o f School's house: (standing, left to right) Charles Elbot, Andrew Hamlin, Janet Baker, Kathleen Jamieson, Sara Schiviebert, Tom Stadulis, Lila Lohr, Cindy Shapiro and Chuck Burdick. Mr. C. Ryman Herr, Jr. Mrs. Marilyn R. Herr Joanne Sly Hicks '40 Dr. & Mrs. Harold Highland Dr. & Mrs. Gavin Hildick-Smith Mrs. Lois B. Hilimire Michael Hill '75 Mr. & Mrs. Ronald E. Hill Joanne Kind Hinton '76 Dr. & Mrs. Stuart Hirsch Dr. & Mrs. Kent M. Hochberg Jonathan L. Hochman '80 Mr. David H. Hofmann Hoffmann-La Roche Inc. Mr. & Mrs. F. Patrick Holmes, Jr. Julia Cornforth Holofcener '61 Mr. & Mrs. Paul K. Honey Mr. & Mrs. William N. Hoover Mr. & Mrs. John B. Howe Richard Huber 11 '72 Dr. Kirk D. Huckel
Mr. & Mrs. J. Grey Jones, Jr. Richard B. Judge, Jr. '69 William R. Kales II '55 David R. Kamenstein '56 Mr. & Mrs. John J. Kane Margaret DeVries Kane 71 Mr. & Mrs. Raman Kapur Mr. & Mrs. George Kelsey Mr. & Mrs. Stanton C. Kelton III Nancy Kendall-McCabe '74
Mr. Louis S. Levine '69 Mr. Richard T. Levine & Dr. Kathy L. Ales Mr. & Mrs. Tobin V. Levy Mrs. Margaret B. Leyman Mr. & Mrs. Henry A. Lieberman Carol Lifland '73 David T. Lifland '79 Mr. & Mrs. Clement Liu Mr. Richard R. Lloyd
C. Lawrence Norris Kerr '26 Nancy Hudler Keuffel '58 James Kilgore '63 Dr. & Mrs. Young W. Kim Carol Furman Kirkwood '40 Dorothea Kissam '41 Lewis C. Kleinhans III '46 Ms. Toby G. Kleinman & Mr. Robert J. Adler Mr. Kevin C. Kruse Ms. Irene Kurakina
Dr. Brian Logan Barbara Quick Lomdale '46 Lisa Borie Lovett '79 Mr. Michael A. Lowrie Dr. & Mrs. Christopher Macdonald Mr. James E. Mackinson Sheila Newsome Maddox '76 Dr. & Mrs. Lon R. Maletta Mr. & Mrs. Rajiv Malhotra Jennifer Brannon Manning '80 Jay R. Marcus '80
Other Annual Fund Recognition Levels Richard G. Marcus '62 Mrs. Robert Marquis Mr. & Mrs. Joseph P. Marshall, Jr. Linda Mullaly Masten ’58 Mr. & Mrs. Michael S. Mathews Mr. & Mrs. Richard W. Matthes Douglas L. Matthews '80 Louise S. Matthews '83 Rosamond Earle Matthews '44 Mr. & Mrs. Lester R. Mayer, Jr. Colin C. McAneny '45 Dr. & Mrs. Gerald E. McCaffrey Ann McClellan '68 Jo Schlossberg McConaghy '67 Jon T. McConaughy '85 Molly Sword McDonough '75 Susan Shea McPherson '62 Randolph Melville ’77 Arthur D. Meritt ’50 Margaret F. Merle-Smith '83 Mr. & Mrs. Edwin H. Metcalf '51 Dr. Matthew Milestone Barbara R. Miller ’70 Mr. & Mrs. Blair A. Miller Mr. & Mrs. G. Nicholas Miller Lawrence W. Miller II '84 Mr. & Mrs. Lawrence E. Miller Mrs. Robert C. Miller Mr. & Mrs. Steven Miller Milliken & Company Donald J. Millner '71 Mills Foundation, Inc. Mr. David Mironov Jennifer Powers Mitchell '82 Kirk W. Moore '72 Marjorie Libby Moore '43 Mr. & Mrs. Norman Morgenstem Mr. & Mrs. David G. Morris Ann Wittke Morrissey '76 Chessye Hill Moseley '71 Dr. & Mrs. William J. Mullally Drs. Sanjeeva N. & Meena S. Murthy Mr. & Mrs. Glen D. Myers Mr. & Mrs. W. Creed Myers Carolyn Morse Nants '32 Marcia Goetze Nappi '52 Mr. Alexander Nehamas & Ms. Susan D. Glimcher Dr. & Mrs. Mark S. Nemiroff Elizabeth Nicholes-Lavin '69 Mary Butler Nickerson '53 Mr. Kris R. Nielsen Dr. & Mrs. Vincent C. Noonan, Jr. Robert A. Norman '71 W. W . Norton & Company, Inc. Mr. & Mrs. Sidney Nulman Dr. & Mrs. Roger F. O'Connor Mr. & Mrs. Peter M. O'Neill Dr. & Mrs. Adeoye Olukotun Mr. & Mrs. Stanley Oppenheim Mr. & Mrs. Richard Ordowich Mr. & Mrs. Ian M. Orr Mr. & Mrs. Leonard S. Ostfeld Mr. & Mrs. Marc J. Ostro Mr. & Mrs. Robert J. Paci Mr. & Mrs. W. Charles Paik Mr. Thomas H. Paine Wallace C. Palmer, Jr. '49 James Kent Paterson ’74 Mr. & Mrs. James E. Patrick
Mr. Henry S. Patterson II Jeffrey R. Patterson '78 Mr. & Mrs. Gary O. Patteson Dr. Harold Paz & Dr. Sharon H. Press Mr. & Mrs. John M. Peach Mrs. Janet H. Perkins Mr. R. Edward Perkins Prof. & Mrs. Michael L. Perlin Jeffrey F. Perlman ’82 Mr. & Mrs. Jeffrey Persky Mr. & Mrs. Brian E. Peters Mr. & Mrs. Richard Pine Mr. & Mrs. Victor Piscopo Mr. & Mrs. R. Jonathan Pitman Charles H. Place III '73 Bruce A. Plapinger '70 Mr. & Mrs. S. George Podurgiel Ms. Diane Poletti-Metzel Kathrin Poole '71 Mr. & Mrs. Richard J. Potter William K. Power, Jr. '70 Mr. Samson Premkumar & Dr. Aruna Rao Dr. & Mrs. H. London Press Joseph Punia '71 Joan Thomas Purnell '42 Russell B. Pyne '73 Elwyn B. Quick '41 Mr. & Mrs. David M. Quinlan Mr. & Mrs. Richard A. Ragsdale Mr. & Mrs. Carmen Randazzo Mr. & Mrs. William E. Rankin Robert Rathauser '69 Reader's Digest Foundation The Reebok Foundation Ann Tomlinson Reed '40 Mr. John M. Reilly III Thomas B. Reynolds '72 Dr. & Mrs. Yale Richmond Ruth Pessel Riedel '59 Gail Petty Riepe ’64 Alice Northrop Robbins ’40 Dr. & Mrs. F. Edward Roberts, Jr. Mrs. David A. Robertson, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Stuart Robson David C. D. Rogers '47 Mr. & Mrs. Harold T. Rose Mr. & Mrs. Michael L. Rosenberg Mr. & Mrs. David S. Rosendorf Elizabeth D. Ross '74 D. Collins Roth ’88 Wendy Gartner Rowland ’53 Mr. Paul R. Rubincam III Sumner Rulon-Miller III '53 Anne G. Russell '75 Mr. & Mrs. Norman F. S. Russell, Jr. Sabatino A. Russo III ’74 Dr. & Mrs. Jan N. Safer Mr. & Mrs. Marc Sanders Mr. & Mrs. George B. Sanderson Sandoz Pharmaceuticals Corp. Dr. & Mrs. Teodoro V. Santiago Allison Jjams Sargent '78 Mr. & Mrs. William S. Sayen ’65 (Elizabeth Sayen '69) Mr. & Mrs. Paul F. Schmucker Mr. & Mrs. George Schmucki Dr. & Mrs. David Schor Drs. Stuart Schwartz & Roberta Huberman
Mr. & Mrs. Marc Schwarz Mr. & Mrs. Ernest Schwiebert, Jr. David C. Scott '56 Mr. & Mrs. Edward W. Scudder Mr. & Mrs. Jack L. Seelig Mr. & Mrs. Lars A. Selberg '75 (Julia Sly ’74) Mr. Perry D. Sensi Nina Shafran '71 Dr. & Mrs. Rajnikant S. Shah Mr. & Mrs. Abe Shannon Mr. & Mrs. Fima Shapiro Mr. & Mrs. Roger Shapiro Harriet Sharlin '70 Mr. & Mrs. Surinder P. Sharma Mr. & Mrs. Stanley Shatz Mr. & Mrs. Edwin D. Shaw, Jr. Dr. & Mrs. Lawrence Shendalman Dr. Yoshiaki Shimizu Mr. David J. Shipper Mrs. Denise Shipper A. Markell Meyers Shriver '46 Mr. & Mrs. L. Allan Shuke Mr. & Mrs. Gerald Siegel Mr. & Mrs. John C. Sienkiewicz Mrs. Elizabeth Sierocki Steven L. Silverman '72 Karen Hamel Simas '84 Mr. & Mrs. John Skeehan The Reverend & Mrs. Daniel J. Skvir (Tamara Turkevich '62) Ann A. Smith '56 Mr. & Mrs. Thomas P. Smith Timothy E. Smith ’71 Christine Smith-Hamburg '71 David B. Smoyer '56 Jean Osgood Smyth ’31 Mr. Pete Soloway & Ms. Bette I. Soloway Robert Wade Speir, Jr. ’81 Emily Vanderstucken Spencer '58 Mr. & Mrs. Albert M. Stark Mr. & Mrs. Amel Stark Austin C. Starkey, Jr. '69 Mr. James W. Steen Linda Maxwell Stefanelli '62 Dr. & Mrs. J. D. Stein, Jr. Carroll Stephens '72 Jean Samuels Stephens '52 Dr. & Mrs. Gerald P. Sternberg Dana H. Stewardson '80 Mr. John E. Stoddard III Mr. Kenneth B. Stoddard Mr. & Mrs. W. A. Stoltzfus, Jr. David B. Straut ’74 Dr. & Mrs. Telechery Sudhakar Austin P. Sullivan, Jr. '54 Mr. & Mrs. Marvin J. Suomi Mr. & Mrs. William M. Swain, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Keith B. Sweatt Dr. & Mrs. William Sweeney Lanwrence Tan ’69 Mr. Robert J. Tanguay Mr. & Mrs. Suresh S. Tata Cecelia Manning Tazelaar ’78 Mr. & Mrs. Lewis T. Teffeau Tenacre Mr. Jonathan B. Tesser Edward C. Thomas ’74 Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Thornton
Anne Prather Tirana '58 Time Warner, Inc. Mr. & Mrs. Frederic deP. Todd Drs. Philip M. & Marge I. Torrance Mr. & Mrs. Albert S. Toto Mr. & Mrs. Stephen W. Townsend Mr. & Mrs. Gerald J. Troglio Jay G. Trubee '76 Susan McAllen Turner '53 United States Trust Company NY Unocal Foundation Drs. Rogelio L. Valencia & Linda O. Valencia Stephen Vine '70 Joan S. Wadelton '68 Diane Baker Wagner ’53 Susan Barclay Walcott '57 Mr. & Mrs. H. George Walker III Mr. & Mrs. James W. Walker L. Kelly Lambert Walker '83 Cynthia Walsh '70 Mr. & Mrs. Kevin Walsh Dr. & Mrs. Ching-Jen Wang Leslie Straut Ward '80 Scot K. Ware '76 Warner-Lambert Company Joseph Warren '28 Lisbeth Warren '71 Mr. James E. Wavle, Jr. Mr. John W. Weber & Ms. Marguerite E. Sheehan Mr. & Mrs. David F. Weeks Mr. Leonard R. Weisberg Mrs. Leslie T. Welsh Dr. & Mrs. John J. White, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Robert A. White Robert Whitlock, Jr. '78 Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth C. Whitney Dr. & Mrs. Michael D. Widlitz Dr. & Mrs. D. Henry Wijaya Mr. & Mrs. William Wilde Ann M. Wiley '70 Mr. & Mrs. Larry Wiley Mrs. Lee A. Wiley Mr. & Mrs. Alex C. Wilkinson Leonard J. Williams, Jr. ’76 Mr. & Mrs. Lucius Wilmerding III Jean Gorman Wilson ’69 Mrs. John G. Winant John G. Winant, Jr. '64 Mr. & Mrs. Edwin Winstanley Mrs. Brenda Wislar Mr. & Mrs. David Woffindin Dr. & Mrs. Evan R. Wolarsky Mr. Arthur M. Wood Martha Borie Wood '76 Newell B. Woodworth III ‘73 Mr. & Mrs. Newell B. Woodworth Peter J. Wright ’60 Mr. & Mrs. V. Gerald Wright Peter B. Yocom '81 Laurie Bryant Young '71 Mr. & Mrs. Owen D. Young, Jr. Mr. Benjamin & Dr. Lisa Zablocki Mr. Richard J. Zane Dr. & Mrs. Joseph P. Zawadsky Mr. & Mrs. Henry Zenzie Mr. & Mrs. Theodore P. Ziaylek Linda Gates Ziff '48 Mr. & Mrs. Sheldon Zucker
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Annual Fund Contributors 1994-1995 MISS FINE'S SCHOOL ALUMNAE C lass of 1918 Emilie Stuart Perry
C lass of 1941 Agnes Critchlow Dorothea Kissam Anne Reynolds Kittredge Matilde Wood Nanni Mary Greey Woody
C lass of 1926 Dorothy Weaver Decker C. Lawrence Norris Kerr
C lass of 1927 Margaret Cook Wallace
C lass of 1942 Jane M. Cooper Sally Kuser Lane Joan Thomas Purnell Mary Roberts Woodbridge Martha Heath Yerkes
C lass of 1928
Class of 1943
B.
Olive Schulte Brown Marjorie Libby Moore Julie Sturges O'Connor Marie Frohling Rawlings Margaret Wicks Spicer
Adelaide Banks Evers
C lass of 1929 Margaret Lowry Butler Anne Mitchell Dielhenn Virginia Myers Hurkamp
C lass of 1944 C lass of 1930 Margaretta Cowenhoven Barbara Reeves Dunn
Helen R. Cannon Lorna McAlpin Hauslohner Adele Harmon Heffer Eleanor Vandewater Leonard Rosamond Earle Matthews Elizabeth McGraw Webster
Class of 1931 Jean Osgood Smyth Margaret Brooks VanDusen Sarah Stevens Watson
C lass of 1945
E. Margaret Russell Edmondson Carolyn Morse Nants
Blythe Scott Carr Mary Gardner Fenton E. Sylvia Taylor Healy Sesaly Gould Krafft Claire Grover Parsells Patricia Smith Thompson
Class of 1934
C lass of 1946
Catharine J. Loughran Rita Smith McAlister Wilhelmina Foster Reynolds
Joan Daniels Grimley Barbara Quick Lorndale Kathryn Cosgrove Netto Philena Locke Richards Hedl Dresdner Roulette A. Markell Meyers Shriver
C lass of 1932
C lass o f 1935 Mary Cowenhoven Coyle Florence Dell Macomber
C lass of 1947 C lass of 1938 Joan Taylor Ashley Katharine Eisenhart Brown Helen M. Crossley
Katharine Bryan Bulkley Barbara Pettit Finch Eugenia Warren Herbert Nancy Hurd Norris Alice Roberts Pierson Adelaide Comstock Roberts
C lass of 1939 Therese Critchlow Catherine Rodwell Hill
C lass of 1940 Mary-Lucile Peterson Ager Phyllis Vandewater Clement Agnes Agar Coleman Phyllis Boushall Dodge Joanne Sly Hicks Carol Furman Kirkwood Ann Tomlinson Reed Alice Northrop Robbins
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C lass of 1948 Dorothy Fleming French Joan Smith Kroesen Joan McGeoch Perry Linda Gates Ziff
C lass of 1949 Kirby Thompson Hall Mary Byrd Platt Ann Chivers Stevens Lucy Law Webster
C lass of 1950
C lass of 1956
C lass o f 1962
Alice Elgin Bishop Wendy McAneny Bradburn Mary Jamieson Meara Donata Coletti Mechem Jean Milholland Shriver
Anne Harrison-Clark Elizabeth Alsop Hinchman Elizabeth Thomas Peterson Ann A. Smith
C lass of 1951
Susan Smith Baldwin Jane Campbell Perkins Susan Barclay Walcott
Jane L. Cormack Gail Cotton Katharine Walker Ellison Martha Sichel Kelley Susan Shea McPherson Tamara Turkevich Skvir Linda Maxwell Stefanelli Dorothea Shipway Webster Katharine Elsasser Worthington Kleia Raubitschek Zuckner
C lass of 1958
C lass of 1963
Beverly Stewart Almgren Mary Fenn Hazeltine Marcia Goetze Nappi Jean Samuels Stephens Marina Von Neumann Whitman
Beverly Ward Docter Ann Eichelberger Hall Nancy Hudler Keuffel Linda Mullaly Masten Sarah Adams Model Emily Vanderstucken Spencer Anne Prather Tirana
C lass o f 1953
C lass of 1959
Llewellyn Hall Alden Anne Carples Denny Elaine Polhemus Frost Hilary Thompson Kenyon Hope Thompson Kerr Caroline Savage Langan Mary Butler Nickerson Wendy Gartner Rowland Jane Gihon Shillaber Susan McAllen Turner Diane Baker Wagner
Ann Kinczel Clapp Anne Goheen Crane Lucy James Cecilia Aall Mathews Patricia Kemey Odden Ruth Pessel Riedel Wendy Yeaton Smith
Patience Outerbridge Banister Joan Knapp Crocker Wylie OHara Doughty Kathleen Sittig Dunlop Sally Campbell Haas Alice Jacobson Anne MacNeil Polly T. Miller Valerie Wicks Miller Gretchen Southard Sachse Pamela Sidford Schaeffer Jane Aresty Silverman
C lass of 1957 Gordon McAllen Baker Nellie Oliphant Duncan Margo Williamson Litt Barbara Johnston Rodgers
C lass of 1952
C lass of 1954 Sarah Hart Brodsky Katherine Webster Dwight Nancy Shannon Ford Agnes Fulper Susan Creasey Gertler Lynn Prior Harrington Leslie McAneny I. Letitia Wheeler Ufford
C lass of 1955 Jo Comforth Coke Barbara Benson Crowther Joyce Friend Everett Ellen Jamieson Franck Louise Chloe King Julia Gallup Laughlin
C lass of 1960 Susan Carter Avanzino Martha Thompson Eckfeldt Catherine Otis Farrell Deri Bush Jeffers Louise Scheide Marshall
C lass of 1961 Mahala Busselle Bishop Fiona Morgan Fein Anne Ramus Gray Julie Fulper Hardt Julie Comforth Holofcener Deborah Moore Krulewitch Jane W. Smith Margaret Smith-Burke Barbara Pearce Williams Lucia Norton Woodruff Ann Davidson Zweede
C lass o f 1964 Jettie Edwards Cary Smith Hart Elisabeth Aall Kaemmerlen Gail Petty Riepe Susan Moulton Snyder
C lass of 1965 Lauren Adams Fortmiller Alison Hubby Hoversten Doritha Bishop Palmer
Annual Fund Contributors 1994-1995 PRINCETON COUNTRY DAY SCHOOL ALUMNI
C lass o f 1928 Joseph Warren
C lass of 1944 Alfred W. Gardner Markley Roberts Robert F. Warren
C lass of 1945 Colin C. McAneny
C lass of 1931 Richard W. Baker, Jr. Herbert B. Davison A. F. Robertshaw
C lass o f 1932 Sanders Maxwell
C lass o f 1946 David Erdman G. Allan Forsyth Mark A. Heald Lewis C. Kleinhans III Robert R. Piper Martin Stevens
C lass o f 1947 C lass of 1934 Robert L. Terry
C lass of 1955 John F. Bales III Philip W. D'Arms Guy K. Dean III E. Robert Fernholz William R. Kales II Frederick S. Osborne, Jr. Jackson Sloan Clark G. Travers
C lass o f 1956 John F. Cook Andrew Godfrey David R. Kamenstein David C. Scott Hugh W. Sloan, Jr. David B. Smoyer Donald C. Stuart III
David C. D. Rogers Peter R. Rossmassler
C lass o f 1959 Joseph N. Coffee, Jr. Stephen S. Cook Richard D. Crawford Nixon Hare Howard McMorris II
C lass of 1960 Brock Putnam II G. Thomas Reynolds, Jr. Peter J. Wright
C lass of 1961 Thomas D. Chubet J. Regan Kerney J. Ward Kuser John R. Sheehan, S.J. Edward G. Warren III
C lass of 1957 C lass of 1935 John L. Bender Stephen B. Dewing Donald R. Young
C lass of 1937 William Flemer III Arthur P. Morgan
C lass of 1948 Alexander S. Burnstan James W. Donnelly John T. Law Charles F. Mapes, Jr.
C lass of 1958 C lass o f 1949 Wallace C. Palmer, Jr.
C lass of 1939
C lass o f 1950
Wilhelmus B. Bryan III Harold B. Erdman
Michael P. Erdman Arthur D. Meritt William C. Wallace
C lass of 1940 John J. Hemphill, Jr. James K. Meritt
C lass of 1941 Elwyn B. Quick Walter Van B. Roberts, Jr.
C lass of 1942 Moore Gates, Jr. Frederick N. Roberts Detlev F. Vagts
Edward S. Barclay, Jr. James Carey, Jr. Stephen Crawford Stafford W. Keegin Robert O. Smyth
Richard W. Baker III Gordon Knox, Jr. John M. Tassie, Jr.
C lass of 1963 C. William Edwards, Jr. David L. Frothingham, Jr. Kevin W. Kennedy James Kilgore F. Charles Samson Frederick H. Wandelt III
C lass of 1964 Brian B. Considine Aubrey Huston III Wilson H. Kehoe A. Stephen Lane, Jr. J. Fraser Macleod Roy D. Meredith William F. Ring Michael D. Simko Robert L. Strong John G. Winant, Jr. Donald E. Woodbridge
C lass of 1962 John C. Baker Walter Brower Richard K. Delano Coleman duP. Donaldson, Jr. Richard H. Eckels John Gaston William H. B. Hamill Richard G. Marcus David L. Tibbals William H. Walker III
C lass of 1965 Thomas M. Ford Nathaniel C. Hutner Archibald S. Reid William S. Roebling Hugh W. Samson William S. M. Sayen
C lass o f 1951 William R. L. Dorman Douglas G. G. Levick III Edwin H. Metcalf Henry Rulon-Miller
C lass o f 1953 Henry B. Cannon III Peter B. Cook G. Grenville Cuyler Samuel M. Hamill, Jr. Sumner Rulon-Miller III Kenneth C. Scasserra
C lass of 1954 C lass of 1943 Robert E. Dougherty Peter E. B. Erdman James B. Laughlin Dean W. Mathey David H. McAlpin, Jr. John A. Schluter
J. Clifton Elgin, Jr. Henry J. Huff Lance Odden Austin P. Sullivan, Jr.
21
Annual Fund Contributors 1994-1995 PRINCETON DAY SCHOOL ALUMNAE/I C lass of 1966 Participation: 19% Class Agent: Linda Staniar Bcrgh Class Secretanf. Lynn Wiley Ludwig Linda Staniar Bergh Andrea Hicks Sarah M. Jaeger Sally Lane Patience Morgan-lrigoyen Margery Cuyler Perkins
C lass of 1967 Participation: 29% Class Agent: Mary Woodbridge Lott Class Secretary: Julia D. Lockwood Patricia Sly Chamberlain Susan Fritsch Faber Karen Andresen Kennedy Sheila Hanan Lathrop Pamela Erickson MacConnell Jo Schlossberg McConaghy Laura B. Peterson Polly Smock Marta Nussbaum Steele Carolyn Johnson Walton
Elizabeth Bristol Sayen Margery Burt Smith Austin C. Starkey, Jr. Lawrence Tan Brent Vine Jane Wiley Robert D. Wilmot Jean Gorman Wilson B. Philip Winder
C lass o f 1970 Participation: 61 % Class Agents: Marjorie D. Shaw Class Secretary: Ann M. Wiley Naurene Donelly Antoniotti Thoms J. Berger Lewis C. Bowers II Rebecca Bushnell M. Nicole Sarett Demming Frederica Cagan Doeringer M. Ann Wiser Fries Heidi Remer Hesselein Louise Hutner Hallett Johnson III John H. Kilgore Allison Gilbert Kozicharow Brita Light-Lookner J. Allyn Love, Jr. S. Pamela Orr Marck Hilary Martin Janet M. Masterton Linda McCandless
James C. Rodgers Leslie Grey Schneider Harriet Sharlin Marjorie Shaw Cynthia A. Shoemaker Laurie D'Agostino Stoumen Stephen Vine Cynthia Walsh William E. White Ann M. Wiley Joan Williams Pamela Woodworth Donald R. Young, Jr.
C lass of 1971 Participation: 32% Class Agent: Laurie Bryant Young Class Secretary: Louise Broad Lavine John Battle Dorothy Pickering Bossidy Francine Barlow Bryant Richard L. Bryant Jodie Platt Butz M. Daniel Cantor David T. Claghorn Elizabeth Mills Hardie Margaret DeVries Kane Richard B. Kramer Louise Broad Lavine Paul Lyman Kevin McCarthy Tania Lawson-Johnston McCleery
Lisbeth Warren Thomas C. Worthington Laurie Bryant Young
Diana E. Walsh Laurie Merrick Winegar Jordan M. Young
C lass of 1972 Participation: 40% Class Agents: Anne Robinson Karen Turner Class Secretary: Jan Hall Burruss
C lass of 1973 Participation: 33% Class Agent:
Elizabeth Lyness Anderson Jacqueline Webster Armiger Jane Gaman Banfield Noeline Hargrave Baruch Steven Bash Henry P. Bristol II Jan Hall Burruss Ellen Prebluda Chilton Jonathan Chilton Katherine Constable Susan Ecroyd Michael Englander Judith Erdman Giovanni Ferrante Susan Stix Fisher Jean Beckwith Funk PaulM . Funk Jerem M. Gordon Lucinda Herrick Katherine Gulick Hoffman Richard Huber II Fairfax Hutter Alexander D. Laughlin
C lass of 1968 Participation: 26% Class Agent: A. Richard Ross Class Secretary: Mary Hobler Hyson Michael Hart Butler Andrew J. Fishmann Mary Hobler Hyson Ellie Armstrong Kehoe Sue Kleinberg Ann McClellan Peyton Brewster Rutledge Helen Sanford Beth Schlossberg Joan S. Wadelton
22
Joseph M. Abelson Pamela Tegarden Allen Glenna Weisberg Andersen Margaret Erdman Becker Cynthia Bishop-Webster Elizabeth Pratt Bliss Daniel B. Blum Hugh M. Boyd John Bushnell Angela Jill Williams Dickerson Robin Maltese Dintinger Mark A. Ellsworth Anne Bishop Faynberg Michael F. Felder Ellen Fisher William Flemer IV Louise Whipple Gillock Erica Klein Carol Lifland John B. Mittnacht Peter J. Moore F. Robert Palmieri III Charles H. Place III Russell B. Pyne Elizabeth Sanford Brenda J. Scott Martha Sullivan Sword William L. Warren A. Anne Macleod Weeks Newell B. Woodworth III
C lass o f 1974 Participation: 31% Class Secretary: Keith D. Plapinger
C lass of 1969 Participation: 38% Class Agent: Jean Gorman Wilson Class Secretary: Susan Denise Harris Robert S. Bayer, Jr. Susanna Bailey Brooks William A. Chalverus Chester Cleaver Kathleen Gorman Colket Charles M. Franklin III Molly Hall Elizabeth C. Healy Richard B. Judge, Jr. Barbara Thomsen Kerckhoff Laura Lamar L. Blair Lee Louis S. Levine Elizabeth Nicholes-Lavin Bertina Bleicher Norford Cynthia Combs O'Hara Thomas H. Paine, Jr. Grace B. Ramus Robert Rathauser
Angela Jill Williams Dickerson
Class Secretary: Anne Macleod Weeks
Cintra Huber McGauley Shelby Brewster McMahan Margaret Meigs Barbara R. Miller Robin L. Murray John Parrott Jonathan U. Paynter Barbara Sturken Peterson Victoria Johnson Pickering Bruce A. Plapinger William K. Power, Jr. Christopher Reeve Elizabeth Hamid Roberts Eve Robinson
Donald J. Millner Chessye Hill Moseley Robert A. Norman Thomas N. O'Connor John K. Paine Kathrin Poole Joseph Punia Rebecca Ramsey William Remsen Nina Shafran Timothy E. Smith Christine Smith-Hamburg Elizabeth Tomlinson George Treves
John Lockette James MacAfee Arthur E. Mittnacht III Kirk W. Moore Anthea Burtle Orlando Cynthia Morgan Pastuhov Wistar Williams Rawls Thomas B. Reynolds Steven L. Silverman Elizabeth Sinnott-Armstrong Samuel Starkey Carroll Stephens Karen Turner Henry T. Vogt
Dianan Lewis Abbott Kemp Battle Theodore Brown Alexander K. Buck, Jr. Barbara Spalholz Cappello Melinda Cragg Challener Anne Chooljian Maureen Creamer-Ramirez Cynthia Hill Dopp Samuel C. Finnell III Wendy Frieman Jill L. Goldman Mary Bayard Hunter John H. Hutter Cathy Cipolla Isom James F. Jennings III Nancy Kendall-McCabe Laura Mali-Astrue James Kent Paterson Nicole Pellaton Keith D. Plapinger Elizabeth D. Ross Sabatino A. Russo III Eleanor Funk Schuster Julia Sly Selberg Michael S. Stix Edward C. Thomas Francis D. Treves Palmer B. Uhl Terry L. Ward Katrina Kassler Waters Anne A. Williams
Annual Fund Contributors 1994-1995 C lass of 1975 Participation: 36% Class Secretary: Yuki Moore Laurenti David S. Beckwith John A. Bonini John E. Brinster Carl G. Briscoe II Ralph M. Brown III Caron Cadle Ruth Barach Cox Shawn W. Ellsworth Alexandra Shoemaker Enterline R. Grayson Ferrante William P. Graff Alexandra Smith Gunderson Katharine Burks Hackett Caroline Erdman Hare Michael Hill Livingston Johnson John B. Joyce Yuki Moore Laurenti Peter Lawson-Johnston II Sandra Lamb Leong Alison Hopfield Lifland Charles C. Lifland Molly Sword McDonough Peter C. McLoughlin Susan Vaughan Meade Christopher W. Miller Pamela Herrick O'Brien Elliot D. Pilshaw William R. Plapinger Christina Pritchard Janet L. Quigley Janet L. Rassweiler Anne G. Russell Lars A. Selberg Anne E. Tate Marjorie C. Williams Gay Wilmerding Hilary A. Winter
C lass of 1976 Participation: 48% Class Agents: J. Creigh Duncan Sheila Newsome Maddox Class Secretary: J. Creigh Duncan Steven F. Baicker Eleanor J. Barnes Jennifer Horton Benichou Mark F. Blaxill John Burns Leslie Ring Burns Eve R. Cagan Lucy D'Agostino Crowe James P. Daubert Alyssa O. Davidson J. Creigh Duncan Carleton P. Erdman William P. Erdman Orren Weisberg Falk Deborah Fath Joseph M. Feller Mary Murdoch Finnell Joanne Kind Hinton Laurie LaPlaca Holladay Julia Stabler Hull J. Stephen Judge Allison Wislar Krochmalny Alison Barlow Loats Sheila Newsome Maddox Michael Mantell Gregory E. Matthews
Dana L. Miller Ann Wittke Morrissey Rhoda Jaffin Murphy Richard W. Olsson Virginia Rodgers Emily Rothrock-Kastler John Segal Cornelia Fischer Sertl Carl W. Spataro Jonathan A. Stein Sandra Shaw Strong Chris S. Szuter Peter B. Taggart Jay G. Trubee Scot K. Ware Cintra Eglin Willcox Leonard J. Williams, Jr. Murray Wilmerding Donna Bauer Zimble
C lass of 1977 Participation: 37% Class Agent: Julia Penick Garry Class Secretary: Alice Graff Looney Andrew J. Atkin Elizabeth Burks Becker Christina Black Hope R. Blackburn Claire Treves Brezel N. Harrison Buck Annabelle Brainard Canning Sandra Benson Cress Christina Bachelder Dufresne Anne Dennison Fleming Barbara Russell Flight Julia Penick Garry John O. Haroldson Barbara Mills Henagan John R. Hickling Andrew Hildick-Smith Carol R. Katz Ophelia Laughlin J. Kerin Lifland Diane Yokana Longobardo Alice Graff Looney Robert N. McClellan Quinn W. McCord Sabrina Plante McGurrin Randolph Melville Tamar Pachter Karin Morgenstem Papp Michael V. Patterson Edward A. Stabler Keith S. Usiskin Jennifer Weiss George M. Zoukee
C lass of 1978 Participation: 34% Class Agents: Cecelia Manning Tazelaar Class Secretanj: Thomas R. Gates J. Keith Baicker David A. Barondess Susan M. Blaxill-Deal Lucy Englander Brinster Nancy Chen Cavanaugh Wells P. Coalfleet, Jr. Robert Cottone, Jr. Elizabeth Mason Cousins Pamela Macleod Daigle Patrick deMaynadier Jennifer Eddy
Suzanne Pritchard Radd Thomas R. Gates Donald H. Gips Alice Lee Groton Claire Jacobus Timothy Johnston William W. Kain Sue Fineman Keitelman Elizabeth Murdoch Maguire Sheila Mehta Susan N. Packard Jeffrey R. Patterson Lise A. Roberts Leland H. Ross III Steven R. Rowland J. Andrew Sanford Allison Ijams Sargent Jon A. Spiegel Cecelia Manning Tazelaar Lydia duP. Thompson Kenneth Trock Nancy Hollendonner Turner Robert C. Whitlock, Jr.
Jonathan L. Hochman Winifred Stoltzfus Host Melissa Phares Jacobson Karen Fein Kelly Samuelle Klein-Von Reiche Jennifer Brannon Manning Jay R. Marcus Douglas L. Matthews Abigail Stackpole McCall Timothy R. Murdoch Vincent Pocino Howard F. Powers, Jr. Richard E. Ramsey William Ross John J. Scott, Jr. Sophie Carpenter Speidel
C lass of 1982 Participation: 21% Class Agent: Carl S. Taggart Class Secretary: Suzanne Haynes Halle David C. Bogle, Jr. Robert M. Bowen, Jr. Alantha Carter Wendy Donath Mark A. Egner Alice N. Ganoe Lauren Goodyear Suzanne Haynes Halle Lorraine M. Herr Jennifer Powers Mitchell Laura Stifel Murphy
C lass o f 1979 Participation: 35% Class Agent: Laura Farina Class Secretaries: Nicholas R. Donath Evan R. Press John Ager III James H. Bennett Caroline I lartshorne Bush Vance G. Camisa Miriam Chilton Katrina Jannen Donnelly David E. Edelman Laura Farina Douglas A. Fein David S. Fitton Edward B. Foley Erica Frank Delia Smith Gardiner John P. Hall III Anne Merrick Kellstrom Jane Henderson Kenyon Martha Hicks Leta David T. Lifland Lisa Borie Lovett Philip Maltese II David M. McCord Catherine White Mertz Cornelia Powers Christopher W. H. Price Eric S. Reichard Cynthia Tregoe Richetti A. Vernon Shannon III Jackson W. Smart III Ward S. Taggart Martha C. Tanner Harriette Brainard Willis Austin Wilmerding Henry H. Zenzie
C lass o f 1980 Participation: 30% Class Agent: Howard F. Powers, Jr. Class Secretary: Jennifer Dutton Whyte Stratos G. Athanassiades James C. E. Burke Sara E. K. Cooper Anthony G. Dell William B. Haynes
First graders Shelley M eredith-Carpeni, Kimberly Narol and Alexandra Fizer take a break on the playground. Lynn Shapiro Starr Dana H. Stewardson Timothy B. Thomas Susan P. Vaughn Jennifer Dutton Whyte
C lass of 1981 Participation: 23% Class Secretaries: Kristine Anastasio Manning Cameon Carrington Levy Julia Rodgers Alpert David B. Blair James P. Bonini Jonathan H. Brush Sarah Burchfield Carey Sean Clancy Rosalind Waskow Corper John H. Denny, Jr. Jonathan W. Drezner John F. Furth Kevin J. Groome Cameon Carrington Levy Kristine Anastasio Manning John S. Marshall Kirsten E. Meister Eva Mantell Noden Jeffrey P. Olsson Jeffrey M. Rodney Andrew’ A. Ross Deborah Burks Southwick Michael J. Southwick Robert W. Speir, Jr. William R. Strugger Daniel F. Thompson Peter B. Yocom
Kang Na Leslie G. Pell Jeffrey F. Perlman William R. Rossmassler III Charles H. Shehadi Susan M. Stoltzfus Carl S. Taggart Linda Lin Tsai
C lass of 1983 Participation: 20% Class Agent: L. Kelly Lambert Walker Class Secretaries: Noelle Damico Rena A. Whitehouse Sherri L. Benson Gerrit F. Besselaar Janet Zawadsky Cleaves Andrew R. M. Cross Noelle Damico Jonathan D. Erdman Suzanne Utaski Gibbs Daniel P. Goldman Beatrice Zenzie Gregory Andrew F. Hawkes Katherine Lonergan Main LouiseS. Matthews Margaret F. Merle-Smith Craig A. R. Phares Kathryn Bowen Poole Loma Mack Sheridan Caroline C. Stewardson Rita Sweeney Andrew Smythe Thornton L. Kelly Lambert Walker Rena Whitehouse
23
Annual Fund Contributors 1994-1995 C lass of 1984 Participation: 24% Class Agent: Hilleary T. Thomas Class Secretaries: Adrienne Spiegel McMullen Edward ]. Willard Graham K. Barnett Gregg A. Bevensee Andrew D. Bing Melinda M. Bowen Wendy White Brockelman Victoria C-P. Chen Caroline P. Dougherty Meredith L. Eppel Marjorie Wallace Gibson Gregory j. Gigliotti Daniel R. Herr Suzanne E. Lengyel Lisa Richardson Leonard Lawrence W. Miller 11 Phoebe Vaughn Outerbridge Whitney B. Ross Edith C. Schulz-Ogden Karen Hamel Simas Hilleary Thomas Edward J. Willard Evan J. Williams Daniel I. Zuckerman
C lass of 1985 Participation: 26% Class Secretaries: Louise Hall Larsen Andrew }. Schragger Robin Trend Baughan Laura S. Bennett Brenda W. Burman Eric M. Bylin Patrick L. Courtney Thomas R. Foster Fredric A. Freese, Jr. Stephanie Lazer Guterl John W. Hartmann Gabriella Horvath Kathryn T. Jennings Hei-ock Kim Louise Hall Larsen Jon T. McConaughy William T. Noonan Tresa McBee Riha Stephen M. Sinaiko Jared L. Stark Adam W. Sternberg Rebecca C. Stoltzfus Jamison D. Suter Stephen B. Szuter Kim Thornton Taggart David A. Taylor Karen Callaway Urisko Leslie A. Vielbig
C lass of 1986 Participation: 8% Class Agent: Susan Franz Class Secretary: Susan Franz Andrew C. Bushnell Jaye Chen Leslie S. Elmore Susan Hockings Timothy S. Howard Kelly Noonan O'Shea Thomas B. S. Rossmassler Elizabeth C. Zenzie
C lass of 1987 Participation: 16% Class Agerits: William D. Schafer Rachel Stark Class Secretary: Andrew D. Blechman Craig C. Stuart David S. Albert Jennifer Bonini Jeffrey N. Brown Jill M. Campbell Robin Cook Karen Cunningham Elizabeth Fulmer John P. M. Gallagher Sheara Ginsberg Erik Johansen Jennifer Namm Tracy Needle Sheila Mackay Power Stephanie Richman William D. Schafer Rachel Stark Michele Sternberg Craig C. Stuart
Marc A. Collins Helene Feldman Katherine Greenberg Christine Grounds Julia Herr Erika Palsho Jessie Robertson Arianna Rosati D. Collins Roth James D. Strugger Rebecca Tilden Benjamin H. Travers Amy L. Venable Lily S. Wise
C lass of 1989 Participation: 10% Class Agent: Nicole J. Dunn Class Secretaries: Christina Frank Lauren B. French Doria L. Roberts Alicia M. Collins Nicole J. Dunn Gregory P. Gordon Sang Ji Heather A. Roberts Hardy S. Royal Carlos A. Sagebien Lauren H. Stuart
C lass of 1990 Participation: 20% Class Agents: Lylah M. Alphonse Stephanie Gendler Jason M. Hollander David A. Ragsdale Class Secretaries: Deborah A. Bushell Jonathan P. Clancy
C lass o f 1992 Participation: 16% Class Agents: Benjamin W. Frost Rebecca Grounds Katherine Marquis Class Secretaries: Meghan Bencze Nicole Cargulia Blair Young
Douglas Adderley Lylah M. Alphonse Ellis Avery Christopher J. Baker Robert F. Biro Eric D. Carlson David Carugati Joseph E. Espaillat Stephanie Gendler Daniel J. Helmick Won Suk Kim Erik L. Oliver Rodrigo S. Philander Lien-hua R. Price David A. Ragsdale Edith H. Roberts Laura R. Welt Velma Wong
Meghan Bencze Sarah Berkman Jason Bilanin Kevin Capinpin Patricia Frank Benjamin Frost Jonathan Getty James M. Graziano Rebecca Grounds Elizabeth Lake Michael Laudenberger Katherine Marquis Arthur Rotberg John Stitzer David Wise Eric Wolarsky
C lass of 1991 Participation: 8% Class Agents: Elisabeth A. Knhora Jennifer A. Kim Class Secretaries: Timothy C. Babbitt Sarah E. Beatty Irene L. Kim Dany A. Cheij Ronald A. DeVilla John Grothendieck Elisabeth A. Kahora Stuart M. Katzoff Campbell Levy Amy R. Livingston Cynthia Wu
C lass of 1993 Participation: 13% Class Agents: Anne Marie Bernhard Emily S. Miller David R. Muccino David F. Weeks Class Secretaries: Darcey Carlson Adam D. Pet rick Anne Marie Bernhard Darcey Carlson Karen Emeta Scott J. Feldman Benjamin B. Kuris David A. Mason Emily S. Miller Daniel A. Ragsdale Joshua R. Siegel David F. Weeks
C lass of 1994 Participation: 23% Class Agents: Veronica M.S. White Whitney /. White Class Secretaries: C. Justin Hillenbrand Marika Sardar Elissa I. Burr Stacy P. Feinstein Charles E. P. Flores Mariah J. Howe Mina S. Kim Elizabeth K. Marquis Julia K. Ober Daniel J. Oppenheim Matthew E. Perkins M. Ryan Purdy Elizabeth Schlossberg Margaret D. Seidel Lauren M. Silk Sarah J. Silverman Jeffrey L. A. Wasserman Veronica M. S. White
The Class o f 1995.
24
C lass of 1988 Participation: 16% Class Agent: Helene Dawn Feldman Class Secretaries: Elizabeth B. Hare Amy L. Venable
^ itney J- ^ i t e
Christina Williams Cornelia W u
Annual Fund Contributors 1994-1995 PARENTS Mr. & Mrs. Bruce Ackerman Drs. Jai & Nalini Agarwal Dr. & Mrs. Manuel T. Amende Dr. & Mrs. Melvin S. Babad Ms. Pamela Babbitt Mr. David T. Beale Dr. & Mrs. Charles D. Boyd Mr. Kenneth D. Brown Mr. Eduardo Cadava Mr. & Mrs. Norman J. Critchlow Mr. & Mrs. Ricardo DeSenna Mr. & Mrs. Joseph A. Gallagher Dr. & Mrs. Norman Glassner Mr. & Mrs. Daniel Goldenson Mr. & Mrs. Daniel J. Graziano, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Michael P. Helmick Mr. & Mrs. Joseph H. Highland Dr. & Mrs. Stuart Hirsch Mr. & Mrs. John J. Kane Mr. & Mrs. Lawrence Kaplan Mr. & Mrs. Lee K. Lam Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth J. Manka Mr. & Mrs. Norman Morgenstern Mr. & Mrs. Dale F. Morrison Dr. & Mrs. Roger F. O'Connor Mr. & Mrs. Mark Pollard Mr. & Mrs. David M. Quinlan Mr. & Mrs. Harold T. Rose Mr. & Mrs. Ramakrishnan Sermadevi Mr. & Mrs. Abe Shannon Mr. & Mrs. L. Allan Shuke Mr. & Mrs. Donald V. Smith Dr. & Mrs. Gerald P. Sternberg Mr. & Mrs. Kilin To Mr. & Mrs. Albert S. Toto Mr. & Mrs. Dominique Touzet Mr. & Mrs. Stephen W. Townsend Mr. & Mrs. James R. Utaski Mr. & Mrs. Sennen Uy Mr. & Mrs. Frank W. Walter Mr. & Mrs. Robert A. White Dr. & Mrs. D. Henry Wijaya Mr. & Mrs. William Wilde Mr. & Mrs. Anthony L. Willard Drs. T. Frank & Rosie B. Wong Mr. & Mrs. Thomas H. Yam Mr. Charles J. Zapiec & Ms. Mary Alice Roberts Mr. & Mrs. Sheldon Zucker
Dr. Eleanor N. Funk Dr. Walter B. Funk Mr. & Mrs. Thomas E. Gardner Mr. & Mrs. John M. Gentempo Dr. & Mrs. Mark Glat Mr. & Mrs. Terence A. Golda Mr. Thomas L. Gray, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Howard L. Green Mr. & Mrs. Howard Greenfeld Mr. & Mrs. James T. Heisler Mr. & Mrs. Mark Husik Mr. & Mrs. Daniel H. Jamieson, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. J. Grey Jones, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Gary M. Kalmus Mr. & Mrs. Maurice P. Knapp Prof. & Mrs. Eric Krebs Ms. Irene Kurakina Mr. & Mrs. James E. Landry Mr. & Mrs. Shalom Levin Mr. & Mrs. Edward R. Leydon Mr. & Mrs. Clement Liu Mr. & Mrs. Manhar R. Mahida Dr. & Mrs. Leo Masciulli Dr. & Mrs. Gerald E. McCaffrey Mr. & Mrs. Norman Morgenstern Dr. & Mrs. Mark Nemiroff Mr. & Mrs. Peter M. O'Neill Mr. & Mrs. Richard F. Ober, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Jeffrey Persky Mr. & Mrs. Brian E. Peters Prof. & Mrs. John A. Pinto Mr. & Mrs. Charles J. Plohn, Jr. Dr. & Mrs. Sol I. Rajfer Mr. Donn Rappaport Mr. & Mrs. Frederick Rothstein Dr. & Mrs. Marc Rubin Mr. & Mrs. Jack L. Seelig Mr. & Mrs. Fima Shapiro Mr. & Mrs. Gerald Siegel Dr. ALan G. Stem Mr. & mrs. Marvin J. Suomi Mr. & Mrs. Jan O. Svoboda Mr. & Mrs. Sennen Uy Ms. Susette Vetrecin Mr. & Mrs. Alexander B. Vincent, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Kevin Walsh Dr. & Mrs. Ronald L. Warren Ms. Kathryn Watterson & Mr. Ronald Sitts Mr. & Mrs. David F. Weeks Mr. Benjamin & Dr. Lisa Zablocki Mr. & Mrs. Charles M. Zarzecki
11th G rad e
10th G rad e
Mrs. Diane Altman Mr. Richard M. Altman Mr. & Mrs. Ray Barson Drs. Daniel & Pamela Beim Mr. & Mrs. David G. Belanger Mr. & Mrs. Keith C. Blair Drs. John & Elizabeth Bussard Mr .& Mrs. John S. Chatham Dr. & Mrs. John Cholankeril Mr. Ernest Cruikshank Mrs. Lila Cruikshank Mr. & Mrs. Thomas A. D'Altrui Mr. Jack David Mr. & Mrs. Robert Denby Mr. & Mrs. Romeo DeVilla Mrs. Patricia DeVito Mrs. Tanya Distol Mr. & Mrs. Richard J. Donahue The Rt. Rev. & Mrs. Joseph M. Doss Dr. & Mrs. Aiden Doyle Mr. & Mrs. Elem H. Eley Mr. & Mrs. Esmail Emami Dr. & Mrs. Leonard Ershow
Anonymous Mr. & Mrs. Angel S. Alvarez Mrs. Barbara Anderman Mr. Richard A. Anderman Dr. & Mrs. Melvin S. Babad Prof. Tushar & Dr. Gopa Bhattacharjee Dr. & Mrs. Ira B. Black Dr. & Mrs. Steve Borrus Mr. & Mrs. Matthew Breitenberg Mr. & Mrs. Howard Bromwich Mrs. Kelei Carter Mr. & Mrs. Peter Desch Mr. & Mrs. Michael Faigen Mr. Mark Goldfus & Ms. BeverlyRubman Prof. & Mrs. Robert J. Goldston Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Griffith Mr. & Mrs. David P. Harper Dr. & Mrs. Robert H. Harris Mrs. Lois B. Hilimire Dr. & Mrs. Timothy M. Hosea Mr. & Mrs. John B. Howe Mr. & Mrs. Curtis R. Irvin
12th Grade
Dr. & Mrs. Daniel K. Jass Mr. & Mrs. Robert F. Johnston Mr. & Mrs. John J. Kane Dr. & Mrs. Alan G. Kelsey Mr. & Mrs. John K. Kim Mr. & Mrs. A. Mohsen Koly
Philip DeGisi '98. Mr. & Mrs. James E. Landry Ms. Eliza S. Lee Mr. & Mrs. Young H. Lee Mr. & Mrs. Shalom Levin Mrs. Robert Marquis Mr. Przemyslaw Nowicki Mr. & Mrs. John O. Parker, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Charles L. Peifer Dr. & Mrs. Sol I. Rajfer Mr. & Mrs. Stanley Robinson Mr. & Mrs. Shakti Routh Dr. & Mrs. David Schor Drs. Stuart Schwartz & Roberta Huberman Dr. & Mrs. Rajnikant S. Shah Mr. & Mrs. Stanley Shatz Dr. & Mrs. Willie J. Smith Mr. Pete Soloway & Ms. Bette I. Soloway Mr. & Mrs. Eric W. Sparre Mr. Nicholas & Dr. Georgia Stramandi Mrs. Caren Sturges Mr. Sheldon Sturges Mr. & Mrs. Dominique Touzet Mr. James E. Wavle, Jr. Ms. Marcianne E. Wavle Mr. & Mrs. Robert B. Zagoria Mr. & Mrs. Charles M. Zarzecki
9th G rad e Mr. & Mrs. Bruce Ackerman Mr. & Mrs. Stephen Bailey Mr. & Mrs. Robert J. Blanche Mr. & Mrs. Michael Blitzer Mr. & Mrs. Robert Bordeman Mr. & Mrs. Robert E. Bostrom Mr. & Mrs. Avery F. Brooks Mr. & Mrs. Michael A. Caruso, Jr. Dr. & Mrs. John Cholankeril Mr. & Mrs. Michael P. Collins Mr. Richard M. Conley Mr. & Mrs. Norman J. Critchlow Mr. & Mrs. E. Martin Davidoff Mr. & Mrs. Guy K. Dean III '55 Mr. & Mrs. Anthony L. DeGisi Mr. & Mrs. Ricardo DeSenna Mr. & Mrs. Richard Dickson Mr. & Mrs. Douglas Forer Mrs. Judith Gaylord Mr. & Mrs. David Hall
Dr. & Mrs. Kent M. Hochberg Mr. John Z. Jackson & Ms. Ann Marie Vaurio Mr. R. Hal Johnson & Ms. Ave M. Poliak Ms. Toby G. Kleinman & Mr. Robert J. Adler Mr. & Mrs. Ludwig M. Koerte Dr. & Mrs. Uday Kunte Mr. Louis S. Levine '69 Mr. & Mrs. Richard S. Maxwell Ms. Brenda McDuffie-Fail & Mr. Joseph Fail Dr. Matthew Milestone Mr. & Mrs. Willie D. Moore Dr. & Mrs. Mark S. Nemiroff Dr. Thomas J. Newman & Ms. Linda S. Materna Mr. & Mrs. Deepak D. Raj Dr. & Mrs. Marc Rubin Mr. & Mrs. Marc Schwarz Mr. & Mrs. Ramakrishnan Sermadevi Mr. & Mrs. Fima Shapiro Dr. Yoskiaki Shimizu Mr. David S. Spiro & Ms. Rose Mary Schwarz Mr. & Mrs. Thomas J. Thornton, Jr. Mr. Gregory D. Torchio Mr. William L. Warren & Ms. Jan Trenholm Dr. & Mrs. George B. Weathersby Mr. & Mrs. James E. Webb Mr. John W. Weber & Ms. Marguerite E. Sheehan Mr. & Mrs. Joseph R. Young III Mr. & Mrs. Charles M. Zarzecki Mr. & Mrs. Theodore P. Ziaylek Mr. & Mrs. Sheldon Zucker
8th G rad e Dr. & Mrs. Robert B. Berger Mr. & Mrs. Mark J. Cunningham Mr. Wieslaw Czyzewski & Ms. Gail Hunton Mr. & Mrs. David P. DeMuth The Rt. Rev. & Mrs. Joseph M. Doss Mr. & Mrs. Timothy Doyle Mr. & Mrs. Shawn W. Ellsworth '75 Drs. Michael V. & Prabha B. Fernandes Drs. Edwardo & Belen Flores Mr. & Mrs. Michael E. France Mr. & Mrs.Peter G. Gerry Mr. & Mrs. Lawrence I. Green Mr. & Mrs. John L. Griffith, Jr. Mr. Peter Gruen & Ms. Anne Elliott Mr. & Mrs. Roman T. Gumina Mr. & Mrs. Theodore S. Heineken Mr. & Mrs. F. Patrick Holmes, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Daniel H. Jamieson, Jr. Dr. & Mrs. Regan Kenyon Mr. Richard T. Levine & Dr. Kathy L. Ales Mr. & Mrs. Michael S. Mathews (Cecilia Aall '59) Mr. & Mrs. Lawrence E. Miller Mr. & Mrs. Steven Miller Mr. & Mrs. John C. O'Hara, Jr. (Cynthia Combs ’69) Mr. & Mrs. Ian M. Orr Prof. & Mrs. Michael L. Perlin Mr. & Mrs. Brian E. Peters Mr. & Mrs. Richard Pine Mr. Donn Rappaport Mr. & Mrs. Stephen J. Riepenhoff Dr. & Mrs. Frank Rusciano Mr. & Mrs. Marc Sanders Dr. & Mrs. David Schor Mr. & Mrs. James F. Shoaf
25
Annual Fund Contributors 1994-1995 Drs. Eric & Marlene Sigman Mr. & Mrs. John Skeehan Mr. & Mrs. Marvin J. Suomi Mr. & Mrs. Frederick Vahlsing III Mr. & Mrs. H. George Walker III Mr. & Mrs. Kevin Walsh Dr. & Mrs. Ching-Jen Wang Mr. & Mrs. L. Thomas Welsh, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Bruce J. Westcott Mr. & Mrs. Robert A. White Mr. Richard E. Whittaker & Dr. Margaret McCann Mr. & Mrs. Thomas J. Williams Mr. Thomas E. Wiskowski
7th G rad e Drs. Rao & Vani Andavolu Ms. Mary Jane Augustine Mr. & Mrs. Stephen Bailey Dr. & Mrs. Gerald Batt Drs. David & Sheila B. Befeler Mr. & Mrs. Robert E. Bostrom Dr. & Mrs. Gary R. Brickner Mrs. Theodora Brickner Mr. & Mrs. Robert Carr Mr. & Mrs. Harsh Chadha Dr. & Mrs. Paul Chew Mr. & Mrs. Lantz S. Crawley Mr. & Mrs. Mark J. Cunningham Mr. & Mrs. E. Martin Davidoff Dr. & Mrs. Anil S. Deshpande Mr. & Mrs. Thomas F. DiBianca Dr. & Mrs. John Dorazio Mr. & Mrs. Charles F. Elbot Mrs. Joan M. Elliott Mr. & Mrs. Robert J. Farina Ms. Frances Fox Mr. Stephen Fox Mr. & Mrs. Lee W. Gladden Mr. & Mrs. Gilbert Harman Dr. & Mrs. Olaf Haroldson, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Roby Harrington IV Dr. Rachel Harris Mr. & Mrs. Theodore S. Heineken Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth Horowitz Mr. & Mrs. John B. Howe Mr. & Mrs. Peter Jacques Mr. & Mrs. Ludwig M. Koerte The Rev. & Mrs. Richard A. Kunz Mr. & Mrs. Craig M. Lamb Drs. Dennis & Susan Langer Mrs. Magdalena Laoudji Prof. & Mrs. Chung K. Law
Dr. & Mrs. Joseph P. Leddy Mr. Richard T. Levine & Dr. Kathy L. Ales Dr. Brian Logan Mr. & Mrs. Paul W. Masters Mr. & Mrs. Richard S. Maxwell Mr. & Mrs. Glen D. Myers Mr. Kris R. Nielsen Drs. Daniel A. & Robyn B. Notterman Mr. & Mrs. Richard Ordowich Mrs. Janet H. Perkins Mr. R. Edward Perkins Prof. & Mrs. John A. Pinto Mr. & Mrs. R. Jonathan Pitman Mr. & Mrs. Richard J. Potter Mr. & Mrs. Deepak D. Raj Mr. & Mrs. William E. Rankin Dr. & Mrs. Leon F. Rosenberg Mr. & Mrs. David A. Saar Mr. & Mrs. Paul F. Schmucker Dr. & Mrs. Willie J. Smith Mr. Pete Soloway & Ms. Bette I. Soloway Drs. Philip M. & Marge I. Torrance Mr. & Mrs. John C. Varga Mr. & Mrs. Alan D. Webb Mr. John W. Weber & Ms. Marguerite E. Sheehan Mr. & Mrs. Larry Wiley Ms. Carla Wragge
5th G rad e 6th G rad e Anonymous Dr. & Mrs. Brent Bridgeman Mr. & Mrs. Paul Celler Dr. Larissa Conway Dr. & Mrs. John M. Cotton Mr. & Mrs. Purnell Cropper Mr. & Mrs. Swep Davis Mr. David E. Dunnavant & Ms. Barbara Larsen Mr. & Mrs. Denis A. Erwin Ds. Keith J. Fishbein & Dr. Nancy L. Feldman Dr. & Mrs. John A. Fizer Mr. & Mrs. Michael E. France Dr. Eleanor N. Funk Dr. Walter B. Funk Mr. & Mrs. Randall A. Hack Mr. Samuel M. Hamill, Jr. '53 Mr. & Mrs. George L. James III Mr. & Mrs. Livingston Johnson ’75 Dr. & Mrs. Bartley Larsen
Joanna Woodruff, Skye Gruen and Andrew Doss starred in last year's eighth grade musical, The Wizard of Oz.
26
Mr. & Mrs. Guy F. Leonard Mr. & Mrs. Emmett Lescroart Mr. & Mrs. Robert J. Maguire Mr. W. Miles Me Peek & Ms. Carol A. Dwyer Mr. & Mrs. Lawrence E. Miller Mr. & Mrs. Dale F. Morrison Mr. & Mrs. E. James Mullaly 111 Mr. & Mrs. Willard D. Nielsen Mr. & Mrs. Stephen J. Riepenhoff Mr. & Mrs. Marc Sanders Mr. & Mrs. David Sardar Mr. & Mrs. David J. Scholes Dr. & Mrs. David Schor Mr. & Mrs. Edward W. Scudder III Mr. & Mrs. Rafael H. Sharon Mr. & Mrs. Stanley Shatz Mr. & Mrs. Arthur L. Shearer Mr. & Mrs. John Skeehan Dr. & Mrs. Telechery Sudhakar Mr. & Mrs. Frederic D. Todd Mr. & Mrs. Frederick Vahlsing III Drs. Rogelio L. Valencia & Linda O. Valencia Mr. Frank C. Weed Mr. & Mrs. L. Thomas Welsh, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth C. Whitney Mr. & Mrs. David Woffindin Dr. & Mrs. David Yarian
Mr. & Mrs. Lewis Barish Dr. & Mrs. Gerald Batt Mr. & Mrs. Gaetano T. Battaglia Mr. & Mrs. William G. Bergh (Linda Staniar ’66) Mr. & Mrs. Lloyd Bezar Dr. & Mrs. Douglas J. Binder Mr. Gunther T. Bright, Sr. Mr. & Mrs. Robert Carr Mr. & Mrs. Ronald Check Mr. & Mrs. David Chow Ms. Amy K. Clark Dr. & Mrs. Barry Concool Dr. & Mrs. Leon N. Costa Mr. & Mrs. Harry L. Curtis III Mr. & Mrs. Craig Eisenacher Dr. & Mrs. Michael A. Fragoso Dr. & Mrs. Milton H. Grannatt Mr. & Mrs. William S. Greenberg Dr. & Mrs. Leslie Greenberg Mr. and Mrs. Michael D. Halpern Mr. and Mrs. William H. B. Hamill '62 Mr. & Mrs. E. Michael Joye Dr. & Mrs. Kenneth Kassler-Taub Mr. and Mrs. Ludwig M. Koerte Dr. and Mrs. Joseph P. Leddy Mr. & Mrs. Francisco Lorenzo Mr. and Mrs. Rajiv Malhotra Mr. & Mrs. Glen D. Myers Mr. and Mrs. Marc J. Ostro Mr. and Mrs. Edward R. Palsho Mr. & Mrs. James E. Patrick Mr. & Mrs. Gary O. Patteson Prof. & Mrs. Michael L. Perlin Mr. and Mrs. Victor Piscopo Mr. & Mrs. Shakti Routh Mr. & Mrs. James E. Russell Mr. & Mrs. William S. M. Sayen ’65 (Elizabeth Bristol ’69) Dr. & Mrs. John S. Sierocki Mr. and Mrs. Thomas P. Smith Mr. David S. Spiro & Ms. Rose Mary Schwarz Mr. J. Stahmer & Ms. F. Calderone-Steichen Mr. & Mrs. Christi J. Stanko
Mr. Jeffrey Sussman & Ms. Patricia Adell Drs. Philip M. & Marge I. Torrance Drs. Rogelio L. & Linda O. Valencia Dr. & Mrs. Michael D. Widlitz
4th Grade Anonymous Mr. & Mrs. Kevin M. Briody Mr. & Mrs. Paul Celler Dr. & Mrs.Anil S. Deshpande Mr. & Mrs. Charles F. Elbot Mr. Vincent E. Gentile & Ms. Patricia Pickrel Mr. and Mrs. Lee W. Gladden Mr. and Mrs. Randall A. Hack Mr. Andrew C. Hamlin & Ms. Kathleen Deignan Mr. & Mrs. Winthrop S. Headley Mr. & Mrs. Joseph H. Highland Mr. & mrs. Ronald E. Hill Ms. Jill Hugick Mr. Lawrence Hugick Mr. & Mrs. Raman Kapur Mr. & Mrs. Elliot Kotzker Mr. & Mrs. Craig M. Lamb Mr. & Mrs. Emmett Lescroart Mr. & Mrs. Edward R. Leydon Dr. & Mrs. Christopher Macdonald Mr. & Mrs. Joseph P. Marshall, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Paul W. Masters Mr. & Mrs. Richard W. Matthes Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth E. Moll Mr. & Mrs. Bernard Ozarowski Mr. & Mrs. Richard Pine Mr. & Mrs. Robert M. Revelle Mr. & Mrs. Henry Rulon-Miller ’51 Mr. & Mrs. William S. M. Sayen ’65 (Elizabeth Bristol ’69) Ms. Lisa Schmucki Mr. & Mrs. Edward W. Scudder III Dr. & Mrs. John S. Sierocki Mr. & Mrs. Samuel Starkey '72 Mr. & Mrs. Robert G. Stephens Mr. & Mrs. Keith B. Sweatt Mr. & Mrs. Peter J. Travers Mr. John W. Weber & Ms. Marguerite E. Sheehan Mr. & Mrs. Alex C. Wilkinson
3rd Grade Mr. & Mrs. Gaetano T. Battaglia Drs. David and Sheila B. Befeler Dr. & Mrs. Robert B. Berger Mr. & Mrs. Eugene D. Biddle, Jr. Mr. James & Dr. Gail Breslin Mr. & Mrs. Andrew Buchsbaum Mr. & Mrs. N. Harrison Buck '77 Ms. Amy K. Clark Dr. & Mrs. Leon N. Costa Mr. & Mrs. Harry L. Curtis III Ms. Angela Dickerson (Angela Williams '73) Mr. & Mrs. Coleman Donaldson, Jr. ’62 Mr. & Mrs. Victor Garber Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth Horowitz Mr. & Mrs. Daniel H. Jamieson, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. E. Michael Joye Drs. Dennis & Susan Langer Mr. & Mrs. Lester R. Mayer III Mr. & Mrs. Marc J. Ostro Mr. & Mrs. Thomas H. Paine, Jr. ’69 Dr. Harold L. Paz & Dr. Sharon H. Press Mr. & Mrs. John M. Peach Mr. Samson Premkumar & Dr. Aruna Rao Mr. & Mrs. Michael L. Rosenberg
Annual Fund Contributors 1994-1995 Mr. & Mrs. Laurence H. Sanford III (Helen Behr '68) Mr. & Mrs. David J. Scholes Mr. & Mrs. Surinder P. Sharma Mr. & Mrs. Richard W. Smith Mr. Roy T. Smith & Ms. Jacqueline Asplundh Mr. & Mrs. Samuel Strakey '72 Mr. Vincent M. Tarduogno & Dr. Joyce P. Vincelette Mr. & Mrs. L. Thomas Welsh, Jr.
Mr. Timothy J. Seeley Mr. & Mrs. Roger Shapiro Mr. & Mrs. Surinder P. Sharma Mr. & Mrs. Andrew J. Shechtel Mr. & Mrs. David J. Shipper Mr. & Mrs. Christi J. Stanko Mr. William A. Stoltzfus & Ms. Alison L. Baxter Mr. Jeffrey Sussman & Ms. Patricia Adell Mr. & Mrs. Paul J. Van der Grift Mr. & Mrs. Alan D. Webb
Mr. & Mrs. W. Barry McCarthy, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. James T. Medick Mr. & Mrs. Blair A. Miller Mr. & Mrs. Michael Miron Mr. Stephen Modzelewski & Ms. Deborah Sze Mr. Alexander Nehamas & Ms. Susan D. Glimcher Mr. & Mrs. Gary O. Patteson Mr. & Mrs. Andrew J. Shechtel Mr. Dennis Stattman & Ms. Sarah Ringer
2nd G rad e Mr. & Mrs. Peter Bronsteen Mr. & Mrs. Dan R. Burns Mr. & Mrs. John Bushnell 73 Mr. & Mrs. Franco Camevale Dr. & Mrs. Stephen S. Cook '59 Dr. & Mrs. Leon N. Costa Mr. & Mrs. Jack A. Cuneo Mr. & Mrs. Robert A. Curtis Mr. & Mrs. Jeffery H. Douglass Mrs. Frances Fox Mr. Stephen Fox Ms. Jill L. Goldman 74 & Mr. Lawrence A. Richards Mr. & Mrs. Raman Kapur Mr. & Mrs. Rajiv Malhotra Ms. Barbra S. Martin Mr. Peter S. Martin II Mr. & Mrs. Paul W. Masters Mr. Stephen Modzelewski & Ms. Deborah Sze Dr. & Mrs. William J. Mullally Drs. Daniel A. & Robyn B. Notterman Mr. & Mrs. Edward R. Palsho Drs. A. Rali & M. Ramalingam Ms. Christy Ross Mr. Llewellyn G. Ross Dr. & Mrs. Lewis G. Sandy Dr. & Mrs. Rajnikant S. Shah Mr. & Mrs. Richard W. Smith Ms. Hilary Winter 75 & Mr. John L. Thurman
1st Grade Anonymous Mr. & Mrs. Gary M. Anderson Mr. & Mrs. Gaetano T. Battaglia Mr. & Mrs. Michael Blitzer Mr. & Mrs. Kevin M. Briody Mr. Henri Carpeni & Ms. Regina Meredith-Carpeni Mr. & Mrs. Merkle Cherry Dr. Larissa Conway Mr. & Mrs. Ronald D'Argenio Mr. & Mrs. Robert Davidson Mr. & Mrs. Alfred Fasola Mr. & Mrs. Jerem M. Gordon 72 Mr. Andrew C. Hamlin & Ms. Kathleen Deignan Mr. & Mrs. Madan Inamdar Dr. & Mrs. Kenneth Kassler-Taub Mr. & Mrs. Mark W. Lehmann Mr. & Mrs. Emmett Lescroart Mr. & Mrs. Gerard J. Meara Mr. & Mrs. James T. Medick Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth E. Moll Drs. Sanjeeva N. & Meena S. Murthy Dr. Robert M. Olson & Ms. Megan E. Thomas Mr. & Mrs. Brian E. Peters Mr. & Mrs. R. Jonathan Pitman Mr. & Mrs. Carmen Randazzo Mr. Donn Rappaport Mrs. Elise G. Seeley
First grader Meagan M edick awaits her cue.
K in d ergarten Mr. & Mrs. Kevin M. Briody Mr. & Mrs. Dan R. Burns Mr. & Mrs. Jeffrey E. Carleton Mr. & Mrs. Franco Camevale Dr. & Mrs. Leonard Ershow Mr. & Mrs. Victor Garber Mr. Vincent E. Gentile & Ms. Patricia Pickrel Ms. Jill Henderson Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth Horowitz Mr. & Mrs. Peter Hyman Mr. Peter R. Kann & Ms. Karen E. House Mr. & Mrs. Randal Langdon Ms. Yuki A. Laurenti 75 & Mr. Jeffrey Laurenti Mr. & Mrs. Emmett Lescroart Mr. & Mrs. Lester R. Mayer III
Dr. & Mrs. Telechery Sudhakar Mr. & Mrs. Suresh S. Tata Mr. & Mrs. Gerald J. Troglio
Ju n io r K in d erg arten Dr. & Mrs. Gerald Batt Mr. & Mrs. N. Harrison Buck '77 Mr. & Mrs. Harry L. Curtis 111 Mr. & Mrs. George Exter Ms. Jill L. Goldman '74 & Mr. Lawrence A. Richards Mr. Andrew C. Hamlin & Ms. Kathleen Deignan Mr. & Mrs. Kevin R. Kenyon (Jane Henderson '79) Mr. & Mrs. Laurence H. Sanford III (Lynn Behr ’68) Mr. & Mrs. Peter J. Travers
FACULTY AND STAFF Mr. & Mrs. James G. Atkeson Mr. & Mrs. Stephen Bailey Miss Janet L. Baker Mr. & Mrs. Philip L. Baker Mr. John W. Baldwin Mr. Seth L. Baranoff Mr. & Mrs. Michael Brent Mr. & Mrs. Charles M. Burdick Mr. & Mrs. Charles B. Carroll Mr. & Mrs. Harry L. Curtis III Ms. Liz Cutler & Mr. Tom Kreutz Ms. Susan Daly-Rouse & Mr. Charles B. Rouse Mr. & Mrs. Horton Davies Mr. & Mrs. Roger Dillow Mr. & Mrs. Charles F. Elbot Dr. & Mrs. James L. Elmore Mr. & The Rev. Mrs. Paul EpplySchmidt Ms. Phillis Finn Mr. David R. First Ms. Maryann Forcina Mr. & Mrs. Alexander Forsyth Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Griffith Ms. Jane Grigger Mr. Todd Gudgel & Ms. Colleen Foy Mr. Andrew C. Hamlin & Ms. Kathleen Deignan Mr. & Mrs. Archer Harman, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. John B. Howe Ms. Bonnie Hunter Mr. & Mrs. Daniel H. Jamieson, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. David LaMotte Mr. & Mr. Jack Madani Mr. Yves Marcuard & Ms. Cheryl Whitney Mrs. Robert Marquis Ms. Patricia McStravick Mr. & Mrs. William Michaels Mr. & Mrs. Frank W. Miller Mr. & Mrs. David G. Morris Dr. & Mrs. Vincent C. Noonan, Jr. Ms. Elizabeth & Mr. John O'Brien-Prager Mrs. J. Dean Pierson Mr. & Mrs. Thomas J. Quigley The Rev. Julie Raino Mr. David C. Reeve Mr. & Mrs. Peter M. Reichlin Mr. & Mrs. Frank A. Rizzo Mr. Damian Robertson Mr. & Mrs. Henry Rulon-Miller '51 Carlos A. Sagebien '89 Mr. & Mrs. George B. Sanderson Mr. & Mrs. Roger Shapiro Dr. & Mrs. Lawrence R. Siegel The Reverend & Mrs. Daniel J. Skvir (Tamara Turkevich '62) Mr. Roy T. Smith & Ms. Jacqueline Asplundh Mr. & Mrs. Thomas P. Smith Ms. Bette Soloway & Mr. Pete Soloway Mr. & Mrs. Anthony Stefanelli (Linda Maxwell '62) Mr. William A. Stoltzfus & Ms. Alison L. Baxter Hilleary Thomas '84 Ms. Jill L. Thomas Mr. & Mrs. John C. Varga Mr. & Mrs. Stanford von Mayrhauser Mr. & Mrs. James W. Walker Prof. & Mrs. Richard Wheeden Ann M. Wiley '70 Ms. Dolores Wright Mr. & Mrs. Owen D. Young, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Charles M. Zarzecki
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Annual Fund Contributors 1994-1995 GRANDPARENTS
(Grandparent gifts are made in honor of their grandchildren.) Mr. & Mrs. Louis V. Aronson II
Suzanne Caruso '98 Mr. and Mrs. Reginald K. Bailey
David Bailey '98 Melissa Bailey '00 Mrs. Harriet Baxter
Amelia Baxter-Stotltzfus '06 Mr. and Mrs. Karl H. Behr
Laurence Sanford '04 Brody Sanford '08 Mr. & Mrs. Ruby Binder
Caroline Binder '02 Mr. and Mrs. Sam Bogorad
Margo Smith '99 Mrs. Lee H. Bristol, Jr.
Marlee Sayen '02 Elizabeth Sayen '03 Mr. and Mrs. Alexander K. Buck
Harrison Buck '04 Henry Buck '08 Mr. & Mrs. Michael Caruso
Suzanne Caruso '98 Mrs. Eugenie L. Condrillo
Michael Randazzo '06 Mrs. Peter G. Cook
Matthew Cook '05 Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Dadian
Mian Dadian '98 Johanna Dadian '02 Elizabeth Dadian '06 Mr. and Mrs. Salvatore DiBianca
Allison DiBinca '00 Richard DiBianca '02 Mr. & Mrs. Coleman D. Donaldson, Sr.
Colie Donaldson '04 Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Dougherty
Laura Paine '04 Sarah Paine '04 Mrs. Jean Farina
Robert Farina '00 Mr. and Mrs. Alexander Forsyth
Leslie Shapiro '06 Mr. & Mrs. Frank Gentempo
David Gentempo '96 Mr. and Mrs. Peter S. Goldman
Hilary Richards '05 Max Richards '08 Mr. & Mrs. J. Stewart Graham
Marin Blitzer '98 David Blitzer '06 Mr. & Mrs. William Grant
Jeremy Seeley '06 Mrs. Samuel M. Hamill
Natalie Hamill '01 William Hamill '02 Dr. and Mrs. Harold Highland
Rebecca Highland '95 Michael Highland '03 Mr. and Mrs. Frank Homcha
Richard Crowley '01 Michael Crowley '04 Mr. and Mrs. Paul K. Honey
Morgan Perkins '00 Mr. & Mrs. Hallett Johnson, Jr.
Courtney Johnson '01 Mr. & Mrs. George Kelsey
Melissa Kelsey '97 Mr. and Mrs. Max L. Kuniansky
Matt Clark '02 Julianna Clark '04
28
Mr. & Mrs. Harvey L. Levine
Matthew Levine '01 Kathryn Levine '04 Mrs. Margaret B. Leyman
Llewellyn Ross '05
PARENTS OF ALUM NAE/I FORM ER FACULTY FORM ER TRUSTEES FRIENDS
Mr. and Mrs. j. Paul Marshall
Allison Marshall '03 Mr. and Mrs. Lester R. Mayer, Jr.
Colin Mayer '04 Derek Mayer '07 Mr. Harold J. Miller
Emily Exter '08 Ms. Ai Constance Handa Moore
Mario Laurenti '07 Dr. Nathan W. Nemiroff
Rebecca Nemiroff '96 Joseph Nemiroff '98 Mrs. Alfred O. Norris
John Griffith '99 Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Nulman
Alex Stanko '02 Becky Stanko '06 Mrs. Hugh J. O'Neill
Kate Jamieson '96 Anne Jamieson '99 Molly Jamieson '04 Mrs. Richard F. Ober
Margaret Ober '96 Mr. Thomas H. Paine
Laura Paine '04 Sarah Paine '04 Mr. & Mrs. Herman Ratner
Jeff Kurtz '98 Mr. and Mrs. Albert Rosenthal
Peter Hugick '03 Mr. and Mrs. A. David Russell
Lily Stockman '01 Hope Stockman '03 Phoebe Stockman '06 Mrs. Laurence H. Sanford, Jr.
Laurence Sanford '04 Brody Sanford '08 Mr. and Mrs. George Schmucki
Eleanor Oakes '03 Mr. and Mrs. Edward W. Scudder
Ford Scudder '01 Shelby Scudder '03 Mrs. Elizabeth Sierocki
Jillian Sierocki '02 John Sierocki '03 Mr. & Mrs. Eugene R. Steinberg
Caroline Binder '02 Mr. & Mrs. W. A. Stoltzfus, Jr.
Amelia Baxter-Stoltzfus '06 Mr. & Mrs. Sydney Sussman
Elyse Kotzker '03 Alexander Sussman '02 Adam Sussman '06 Dr. & Mrs. Sidney Tabershaw
Andrew Davidson '06 Mr. and Mrs. Harry Warren
Adam Varga '00 Mrs. Leslie T. Welsh
Lauren Welsh '99 Allison Welsh '01 Betsy Welsh '04 Col. and Mrs. Ernest H. Winter, Jr.
Win Thurman '05 Mr. Arthur M. Wood
fane Egan ‘97 Timothy Egan '00
Anonymous Mr. & Mrs. Jonathan Achinstein Dr. Alexander M. Ackley, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Duncan W. Ailing Mr. & Mrs. Ellis B. Anderson Mr. & Mrs. Marvin Anzel Mr. & Mrs. Julian J. Aresty Mrs. Yolan G. Arlett Mr. Conant Atwood Mr. & Mrs. Joseph A. Baicker Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Bailey Mr. & Mrs. Philip L. Baker Mr. & Mrs. Richard W. Baker, Jr. '31 Susan Smith Baldwin '57 Mr. & Mrs. John F. Bales Mr. William E. Barish Mr. & Mrs. Kemp Battle '74 Mr. Daniel Bedesem Mr. & Mrs. Karl H. Behr Mrs. Elisabeth Bennett Mr. & Mrs. Robert S. Bennett, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. David C. Berends Mr. & Mrs. Richard L. Berkman Dr. & Mrs. Sheldon S. Berkman Dr. & Mrs. Alan Bilanin Mr. & Mrs. G. Reginald Bishop (Alice Elgin ’50) Mr. & Mrs. Thomas J. Blanchet Mr. Jan S. Blazewski Mr. E. C. Bleicher Mrs. Alden S. Blodget Mrs. Ann Boyd Mr. & Mrs. Stephen R. Braddock Mr. & Mrs. Gerald Breese Mr. & Mrs. Michael Brent Mr. & Mrs. Henry P. Bristol II '72 Mrs. Lee H. Bristol, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Henry S. Broad Mr. & Mrs. Walter Brower '62 Mrs. R. Manning Brown, Jr. Olive Schulte Brown '43 Mr. & Mrs. Kirk Bryan Mr. Charles W. Bryant Mr. & Mrs. Alexander K. Buck N. Harrison Buck '77 Dr. & Mrs. William P. Burks Mrs. Richard Burr Mr. Douglas F. Bushnell Rebecca Bushnell '70 Mr. & Mrs. Peter V. Buttenheim Mr. Roque J. Calvo Mrs. James G. Campbell, Jr. Dr. & Mrs. Robert D. Capinpin Dr. & Mrs. Thomas J. Capotosta Dr. & Mrs. David Carlson Dr. & Mrs. James J. Chandler Mrs. Hayward H. Chappell Prof. & Mrs. Theodore Chase, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Martin A. Chooljian Mrs. Philip J. Cobb Mrs. John J. Conroy Mrs. Peter G. Cook Mr. & Mrs. John F. Cook '56 Mr. Douglas L. Corlette Mr. & Mrs. Jeffrey P. Cutts Mr. & Mrs. Henry T. Davis Mr. Warren A. Davis Mr. & Mrs. Herbert B. Davison '31 Mr. & Mrs. Guy K. Dean III Mr. & Mrs. Robert Denby Dr. Donald F. Denny, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. John H. Denny
Mr. Donald T. Dickson Anne Mitchell Dielhenn '29 Mr. & Mrs. Coleman D. Donaldson, Sr. Mr. & Mrs. Coleman D. Donaldson, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Robert E. Dougherty '43 Mr. Clifton W. Draper Mr. & Mrs. Douglas A. Dreisbach Mrs. Frank S. Dudley, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Stuart Duncan II (Nellie Oliphant ’51) Mr. Howard S. Dunn The Reverend & Mrs. Craig R. Dykstra Mr. & Mrs. Peter B. Eaton Dr. & Mrs. Norman H. Edelman Mrs. Thomas W. Eglin Mark A. Ellsworth '73 Dr. & Mrs. James L. Elmore Mr. & Mrs. David Erdman '46 Mr. & Mrs. Harold B. Erdman '39 Michael P. Erdman '50 Mr. & Mrs. Peter E. Erdman '43 M r & Mrs. Modesto Erneta Mrs. R. Kenneth Fairman Mrs. Jean Farina Dr. & Mrs. Stephen M. Felton Drs. Michael V. & Prabhavathi B. Fernandes Mr. & Mrs. E. Robert Fernholz '55 Barbara Pettit Finch'47 Dr. Jeremiah S. Finch Mrs. John V. A. Fine Mr. & Mrs. Samuel C. Finnell III '74 (Mary Murdoch '76) Dr. & Mrs. Arthur H. Firester Ellen Fisher '73 Dr. & Mrs. Louis Fishman Mr. & Mrs. David S. Fitton, Sr. Mr. & Mrs. William Flemer III '37 Mr. & Mrs. Jeremiah Ford 111 Nancy Shannon Ford '54 Mr. & Mrs. Elon Foster, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. H. Jonathan Fox Mr. & Mrs. Alan Frank, Jr. Dorothy Fleming French '48 Mr. & Mrs. David L. Frothingham, Jr. '63 Mr. & Mrs. Thomas S. Fulmer Mr. Peter Gabbe Mr. & Mrs. John Gallagher Mr. & Mrs. Charles S. Ganoe Alfred W. Gardner '44 Mr. & Mrs. Thomas E. Gardner Mr. & Mrs. Moore Gates, Jr. '42 Rabbi & Mrs. Albert Ginsburgh Mr. & Mrs. Walter F. Gips, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Peter S. Goldman Mrs. Christine C. Goodridge Dean & Mrs. Ernest Gordon Mr. & Mrs. George S. Gordon Mr. & Mrs. William P. Graff '75 Anne Ramus Gray ’61 Mr. & Mrs. William S. Greenberg Mr. & Mrs. Alan R. Griffith Ms. Priscilla Grindle Mr. & Mrs. Peter M. Grounds Mrs. Wilson M. Gulick Mr. & Mrs. Robert Gum Mr. & Mrs. Gordon Gund Drs. Elliot Gursky & Dr. Joyce Glazer Mr. & Mrs. Harleston J. Hall, Jr. Mrs. Samuel M. Hamill Mr. Glen G. Hansford Mr. & Mrs. Nixon Hare '59 (Caroline Erdman '75) Dr. & Mrs. John F. Hartmann Mr. & Mrs. Charles J. Hatfield Mr. & Mrs. R. Dixon Hayes Mr. & Mrs. Maurice F. Healy (E. Sylvia Taylor ’45)
Annual Fund Contributors 1994-1995 Mr. & Mrs. John J. Heins II Mr. Curtis W. Helm Mr. & Mrs. Clifford J. Hemphill Mr. & Mrs. Robert B. Hendler Mr. & Mrs. Richard J. Henkel Mr. C. Ryman Herr, Jr. Mrs. Marilyn R. Herr Dr. & Mrs. Gavin Hildick-Smith Mr. & Mrs. Herbert W. Hobler Mr. David H. Hofmann Mr. & Mrs. Philetus Holt III Mrs. Ingeborg Holzinger Mr. & Mrs. William N. Hoover Mr. & Mrs. Walter Hosey Dr. & Mrs. Charles B. Howard Dr. Kirk D. Huckel Virginia Myers Hurkamp '29 Mr. & Mrs. John N. Irwin II Mr. & Mrs. Charles L. Jaffin Mr. John Jameson Mr. & Mrs. Marius B. Jansen Mr. Peter D. Johnsen Mrs. Barbara L. Johnson Betty Wold Johnson Mr. & Mrs. Hallett Johnson, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Robert F. Johnston Mrs. James Jones Mrs. Sidney Jordan Mr. & Mrs. Stephen F. Jusick Mrs. Barbara K. Kahora Mr. & Mrs. Theodore G. Kane Jane Henderson Kenyon '79 Dr. & Mrs. Young W. Kim Dr. & Mrs. John A. Kinczel Mr. & Mrs. Bernat Klein Mr. & Mrs. Seymour Kleinberg Mr. & Mrs. Allen J. Korenjak Mr. Harold J. Kramer Mr. Kevin C. Kruse Prof. & Mrs. Robert E. Kuenne Mrs. Georgia Kunz Dr. & Mrs. Jay D. Kuris Mr. & Mrs. Samuel W. Lambert III The Hon. & Mrs. Arthur S. Lane (Sally Kuser '42) Mr. Paul A. Lanzotti Sheila Hanan Lathrop '67 Mr. & Mrs. James B. Laughlin '43 (Julia Gallup ’55) Yuki Moore Laurenti '75 Mr. & Mrs. James G. Lawler Mr. & Mrs. Peter 0. Lawson-Johnston Dr. & Mrs. Philip L. Lebovitz Mr. & Mrs. Tobin V. Levy Mr. & Mrs. Henry A. Lieberman Mr. & Mrs. William T. Lifland Mr. & Mrs. Samuel A. Livingston Mr. Richard R. Lloyd Dr. Judith R. Logue Mr. Michael A. Lowrie Mrs. Irene G. MacDonald Mr. & Mrs. John D. Mack Mr. James E. Mackinson Mr. Donald Macleod Elizabeth Murdoch Maguire '78 Dr. Robert T. Maguire Dr. & Mrs. Lon R. Maletta Mr. Peter W. Maloney Mr. & Mrs. Frederick Mann Mr. & Mrs. Charles F. Mapes '48 Mr. & Mrs. John R. Martin Mr. & Mrs. Ronald Mason Mr. & Mrs. Henry H. Matelson Mr. & Mrs. Edward E. Matthews Mr. & Mrs. Sanders Maxwell '32 David H. McAlpin, Jr. '43 Dr. & Mrs. Bruce McClellan Mr. & Mrs. Quinn R. McCord
Mr. & Mrs. John T. McLoughlin Randolph Melville '77 Mr. & Mrs. Fowler Merle-Smith Mr. & Mrs. Edwin H. Metcalf '51 Mr. & Mrs. David E. Miller Mr. & Mrs. Frank W. Miller Mr. & Mrs. G. Nicholas Miller Mrs. Robert C. Miller Polly T. Miller '63 Mr. David Mironov Mr. & Mrs. James R. Moeller Mr. & Mrs. Ronald Moonin Ms. Ai Constance Handa Moore Mr. & Mrs. A. Perry Morgan, Jr. Arthur P. Morgan '37 Mr. & Mrs. William F. Murdoch, Jr. Robin L. Murray ’70 Mr. & Mrs. W. Creed Myers
Ms. Margaret B. Riccardi Dr. & Mrs. Yale Richmond Mr. & Mrs. W. Ronald Roach Dr. & Mrs. F. Edward Roberts, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Frederick N. Roberts ’42 (Adelaide Comstock ’47) Mr. & Mrs. Thomas C. Roberts Mrs. David A. Robertson, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Stuart Robson James C. Rodgers '70 Mr. & Mrs. David S. Rosendorf Dr. & Mrs. Albert Rosenthal Mr. & Mrs. Peter R. Rossmassler '47 Mr. & Mrs. Eugene Rotberg Mr. & Mrs. Peter F. Rothermel Mr. Paul R. Rubincam III Mr. & Mrs. Norman F. S. Russell, Jr. Dr. & Mrs. Jan N. Safer
First graders Jason Kami, Jameson Cumsky, Michael Costa and Derek Mayer show their support for their school - and each other.
Dr. & Mrs. Vincent C. Noonan, Jr. Mr. Przemyslaw Nowicki Mr. & Mrs. David C. Noyes Mr. & Mrs. Roger Nussbaum Mr. & Mrs. Richard F. Ober, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Richard K. Olsson Dr. & Mrs. Adeoye Olukotun Mr. & Mrs. Stanley Oppenheim Mr. & Mrs. Leonard S. Ostfeld Mr. & Mrs. Robert J. Paci Mr. & Mrs. W. Charles Paik Mr. Thomas H. Paine Mr. Henry S. Patterson II Mr. & Mrs. S. George H. Philander Alice Roberts Pierson '47 Ms. Diane Poletti-Metzel Dr. & Mrs. H. London Press Mr. & Mrs. Timothy D. Proctor Ms. Sandra S. Purdy Prof. & Mrs. Theodore K. Rabb Mr. & Mrs. Richard A. Ragsdale Mr. & mrs. David G. Rahr Ann Tomlinson Reed '40 Mr. & Mrs. James S. Regan Mr. John M. Reilly III The Reverend Carl Reimers Prof. & Mrs. George T. Reynolds
Mr. & Mrs. Rene L. Sagebien Dr. & Mrs. Alvin J. Salkind Mrs. Laurence H. Sanford, Jr. Dr. & Mrs. Teodoro V. Santiago Kenneth C. Scasserra '53 Mr. Gerald Seid Mr. Perry D. Sensi Ms. Rita Serotkin-Getty Mr. & Mrs. Donald P. Shaffer Mr. & Mrs. Jonathan Shahn Mr. & Mrs. Edwin D. Shaw, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Fadlou A. Shehadi Dr. & Mrs. Lawrence Shendalman Jane Gihon Shillaber '53 A. Markell Meyers Shriver '46 Dr. & Mrs. Lawrence R. Siegel Mr. Stuart Siegel Mr. & Mrs. John C. Sienkiewicz Mr. & Mrs. Harvey A. Silk Dr. & Mrs. Benjamin K. Silverman Jane Aresty Silverman ’63 Mr. & Mrs. Jerry Silverman Ms. Justine Skalba The Reverend & Mrs. Daniel J. Skvir (Tamara Turkevich ’62) Mr. & Mrs. Eric S. Smith Mr. & Mrs. Stanley C. Smoyer
Jean Osgood Smyth ’31 Dr. & Mrs. Sang W. Song Dr. David L. Spanel Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Spataro Mr. & Mrs. Albert M. Stark Mr. & Mrs. Amel Stark Mr. James W. Steen Dr. & Mrs. J. D. Stein, Jr. Jean Samuels Stephens '52 Mr. John E. Stoddard III Mr. Kenneth B. Stoddard Mr. & Mrs. W. A. Stoltzfus, Jr. Mr. William A. Stoltzfus & Ms. Alison L. Baxter Mr. & Mrs. C. Barnwell Straut Mrs. K. Bonsall Strong Mr. & Mrs. Donald C. Stuart III '56 Mr. & Mrs. William M. Swain, Jr. Dr. & Mrs. William Sweeney Martha Sullivan Sword ’73 Mr. & Mrs. William H. Sword Mr. & Mrs. Charles L. Taggart Mr. Robert J. Tanguay Mrs. Earl C. Tanner Mr. & Mrs. Lewis T. Teffeau Mr. & Mrs. William H. Tegarden Mr. Jonathan B. Tesser Mr. & Mrs. Edward D. Thomas Dr. & Mrs. William H. Thompson Mr. & Mrs. Lester Tibbals Mr. & Mrs. Kilin To Mrs. Eugene Toth Clark G. Travers '55 Susan McAllen Turner '53 Mr. & Mrs. Charles W. Ufford, Jr. (I. Letitia Wheeler '54) Mr. & Mrs. Ramsay W. Vehslage Mr. & Mrs. Brent Vine '69 Dr. & Mrs. Irvin Vine Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Vivona Mrs. Kirby G. Vosburgh Mr. David J. Waks Susan Barclay Walcott '57 Mr. & Mrs. James W. Walker Margaret Cook Wallace '27 Mr. & Mrs. Frank W. Walter Mr. & Mrs. Frederick H. Wandelt, Jr. Dorothea Shipway Webster '62 Elizabeth McGraw Webster '44 Mrs. Erica H. Weeder Dr. & Mrs. William H. Wegner Dr. & Mrs. Fong Wei Mr. Leonard R. Weisberg Mr. & Mrs. H. Allen White III Dr. & Mrs. John J. White, Jr. Mr. Robert A. White Mrs. Robert C. Whitlock Mr. & Mrs. James W. Wickenden Mrs. Lee A. Wiley Ms. Beverly A. Williams Prof. & Mrs. David L. Williams Mr. & Mrs. Lucius Wilmerding III Mrs. John G. Winant Mr. & Mrs. Edwin Winstanley Col. & Mrs. Ernest H. Winter, Jr. Mrs. Brenda Wislar Mr. & Mrs. Ronald C. Witt Dr. & Mrs. Evan R. Wolarsky Mary Roberts Woodbridge'42 Mrs. Cynthia B. Woodger Mr. & Mrs. Newell B. Woodworth Mr. & Mrs. Donald R. Young '35 Mr. & Mrs. Owen D. Young, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Howard Zagorin Mr. Richard J. Zane Dr. & Mrs. Joseph P. Zawadsky Mr. & Mrs. Henry Zenzie
29
Honorary and Memorial Gifts 1994-1995 IN M EM ORY OF CHARLES ARTANDI Mrs. Stephen H. Gilman
IN M EM ORY OF DAVID C. BOGLE Association of Delaware Valley Independent Schools (ADVIS) American Express Corporation Ms. Ellen G. Anderson Mr. & Mrs. Bill Baer Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Bailey Mr. & Mrs. Robert Baldwin Mr. Charles M. Barclay Ms. Lisa S. Barker Mr. Benjamin H. Barnett Mr. John E. Bart Dr. & Mrs. Alan Bilanin Mr. & Mrs. John C. Bogle Mr. & Mrs. John J. Brennan Mrs. Edith Bristol & Mr. Michal Bristol Mrs. Lee H. Bristol, Jr. Mrs. R. Manning Brown, Jr. Mr. Anthony J. Brown Mr. William P. Brown Mr. & Mrs. Graham M. Brush, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. N. Harrison Buck '77 Mr. & Mrs. Arthur M. Bylin Contempo Press Inc. Mr. & Mrs. Frank E. Curran Mr. & Mrs. Horton Davies Mr. & Mrs. Robert J. Davis, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. J. Richardson Dilworth Mr. & Mrs. Robert A. DiStefano DKM Development Corporation Mrs. Patricia S. Echeverria Eden Institute Mr. & Mrs. J. Rodney Edwards Mrs. Thomas W. Eglin Mr. & Mrs. Shawn W. Ellsworth '75 Dr. & Mrs. James L. Elmore Ellen Fisher '73 Mr. & Mrs. William W. Fortenbaugh Mr. Brace B. Foster Mr. & Mrs. Charles S. Ganoe Mr. & Mrs. Gordon Gund Lynn Prior Harrington '54 Ms. Ann B. Harris Mrs. Edward E. Hastings Lorraine M. Herr '82 Ms. Diana W. Higham Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth Horowitz Dr. & Mrs. Timothy M. Hosea Mr. & Mrs. John J. Irish Melissa Phares Jacobson '80 Betty Wold Johnson Mr. & Mrs. Robert F. Johnston Mr. & Mrs. Stephen F. Jusick Madeline Katz '81 Ms. Elizabeth I. Kellogg Mr. Peter R. Kellogg Mr. & Mrs. John F. Kelsey III Ms. Vickie A. Leinhauser Mrs. Barbara Littlejohn Mr. Ian A. MacKinnon Mr. & Mrs. Bruce K. MacLaury Mrs. H. DeHaven Manley Mr. & Mrs. Winton H. Manning Mr. & Mrs. Thomas G. Marshall III Mr. & Mrs. Edward E. Matthews Mr. & Mrs. Sanders Maxwell '32 Ms. Heather A. Maylander Leslie McAneny '54 Ms. Patricia McStravick Mr. & Mrs. Paul F. Miller, Jr. Miss Janet L. Baker Mr. & Mrs. Nicholas J. Mingone
30
Mr. & Mrs. Michael J. Myers Dr. & Mrs. Vincent C. Noonan, Jr. Mr. Thomas H. O ’Brien Mr. & Mrs. Richard K. Olsson Ms. Sheila M. Pardoe Ms. Joni N. Praplaski Prof. & Mrs. Theodore K. Rabb Dr. & Mrs. John A. Ramsdell Gail Petty Riepe '64 Mr. & Mrs. Andrew K. Rooke Mr. & Mrs. Peter R. Rossmassler '47 Mr. Toms B. Royal Rebecca Royal '87 Hardy S. Royal ‘89 Mr. & Mrs. Patrick Rulon-Miller '55 Mr. John C. Sawhill Mr. & Mrs. Frederic J. Schragger Mr. & Mrs. Fadlou A. Shehadi Mr. & Mrs. William Sherrerd Mr. & Mrs. David Sherrerd-Smith Mr. & Mrs. John J. Sherrerd A. Markell Meyers Shriver '46 Mr. & Mrs. John C. Sienkiewicz Jean Osgood Smyth '31 Mr. & Mrs. Joseph E. Snyder Rachel Stark '87 Jared L. Stark '85 Mr. & Mrs. Anthony Stefanelli (Linda Maxwell '62) Mr. G. Barnes Stevenson Ms. Merrily C. Stilwell Mrs. Esther M. Stovall Mr. & Mrs. Stephen Stovall William R. Strugger '81 Mr. & Mrs. Donald C. Stuart III '56 Mr. & Mrs. William E. Studdiford Mr. & Mrs. Charles L. Taggart Mr. & Mrs. Carl S. Taggart '82 (Kim Thornton ’85) Mrs. Elizabeth Trapp Palmer B. Uhl '74 Mr. & Mrs. George A. Vaughn Mr. & Mrs. Baxter Venable L. Kelly Lambert Walker '83 Margaret Cook Wallace '27 Mr. & Mrs. Harold M. Warendorf Mr. James O. Welch, Jr. Ms. Zoe V. A. Wells Mrs. Robert C. Whitlock Mrs. Sarah Whitehouse Ms. Christine C. Wilder Ann M. Wiley '70 Ms. Beverly A. Williams Mr. & Mrs. J. Lawrence Wilson Ms. Dolores Wright Mr. & Mrs. Owen D. Young, Jr. Dr. & Mrs. Joseph P. Zawadsky Mr. & Mrs. Dick Zuver
IN MEMORY OF JAMES G. CAMPBELL Mrs. James G. Campbell, Jr. Sally Campbell Haas '63 Jane Campbell Perkins '57
IN MEMORY OF STEVEN LEVINE Mr. & Mrs. Harvey L. Levine
IN MEMORY OF STEPHANIE MANN '92 Mr. & Mrs. Lowell E. Mann
IN MEMORY OF CHRISTINE GIBBONS MASON ’26 Mr. & Mrs. Joseph E. Bachelder III (Louise Mason '54) Mr. & Mrs. Robert H. Bolton
Mr. & Mrs. Carl Breuer Mr. & Mrs. Stuart Carothers Dr. & Mrs. James J. Chandler Miss Shirley Davis Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Dresner Ms. Margaret G. Fish Mr. & Mrs. Robert Gilpin Ms. Jennifer L. Hochschild Dr. & Mrs. Steven P. Kahn The Hon. & Mrs. Arthur S. Lane (Sally Kuser '42) Leslie McAneny'54 Mr. & Mrs. Peter R. Rossmassler '47 Mr. & Mrs. John C. Sienkiewicz Mary Tyson Thompson '28 Mr. & Mrs. Robert Tucker Mr. & Mrs. Charles W. Ufford (I. Letitia Wheeler Ufford '54) Dr. & Mrs. Fong Wei
IN MEMORY OF STEPHEN L PACKARD '75 Mr. & Mrs. John E. Brinster '75 (Lucy Englander ’78) Caron Cadle '75 Ruth Barach Cox '75 Jane C. Farley '75 Katharine Burks Hackett '75 Mr. & Mrs. Nixon Hare '59 (Caroline Erdman '75) Yuki Moore Laurenti '75 Maria J. Myer Lynch '75 Mary Sword McDonough '75 Pamela Herrick O'Brien '75 Mr. George Packard Janet L. Rassweiler '75 Robert O. Smyth '57 Marita L. Sturken '75 Mr. & Mrs. Peter L. Vielbig Harvey M. Wiener '75 Sally A. Wright '75
IN MEM ORY OF MARGE WHALEN Mr. & Mrs. Zam Atiram Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Bailey Mr. & Mrs. Philip L. Baker Miss Janet L. Baker Dr. & Mrs. Ralph C. Bencivengo Mr. & Mrs. Michael Brent Mr. & Mrs. Horton Davies Dr. & Mrs. James L. Elmore Mr. & Mrs. Stuart Ferguson Ms. Philis Finn Mr. & Mrs. Alexander Forsyth Mr. Mark Goodman & Ms. Esther Nichol Ms. Jane Grigger Ms. Katharine Kraus & Mr. Stuart Rosse Mr. Michael D. Lemonick & Ms. Eileen Hohmuth-Lemonick Mr. & Mrs. Gary M. C. Lott Mrs. Robert Marquis Ms. Patricia McStravick Mr. & Mrs. Frank W. Miller Dr. & Mrs. Vincent C. Noonan, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. John T. Osander Ms. Janice Osborne PDS Maintenance Department Mrs. J. Dean Pierson Mr. & Mrs. Peter M. Reichlin Mr. & Mrs. Peter J. Rizza, Jr. Dr. John Ross Mrs. Edward Sharapoff The Reverend & Mrs. Daniel J. Skvir (Tamara Turkevich ’62) Mrs. Arlene H. Smith
Mr. Pete Soloway & Ms. Bette Soloway Mr. & Mrs. Anthony Stefanelli (Linda Maxwell ’62) Mr. William A. Stoltzfus & Ms. Alison L. Baxter Mr. & Mrs. John C. Varga Mr. & Mrs. Douglas R. Webb Prof. & Mrs. Richard Wheeden Ann M. Wiley '70 Mr. & Mrs. Charles P. Williams Ms. Dolores Wright Mr. & Mrs. Owen D. Young, Jr.
IN MEMORY OF ROBERT C. WHITLOCK Carl W. Akerlof '53 Andrew J. Atkin '77 Mr. Seth L. Baranoff Mr. & Mrs. David C. Berends David H. Blair 111 '63 David C. Bogle, Jr. '82 Mr. & Mrs. Henry P. Bristol II '72 Theodore Brown '74 Elissa I. Burr '94 Mr. & Mrs. Horton Davies Ms. Christiane Fabricant Michael Ferry '92 Ms. Phillis Finn Mr. Andrew Franz John P. Hall III '79 W. Andrew C. Harris ’57 Jennifer Chandler Hauge '78 Rachel Abelson Hickson '77 J. Robert Hillier '52 Mr. & Mrs. Marius B. Jansen Mr. & Mrs. J. Parry Jones Jane Henderson Kenyon '79 Philip Kopper '52 J. Ward Kuser '61 Laura Mali-Astrue ’74 Jay R. Marucs '80 Mr. & Mrs. Thomas G. Marshall III '82 (Lea Erdman '82) Mr. & Mrs. Wesley McCaughan Mr. & Mrs. William Michaels Faneen Murray-Cieslinski '67 Mr. & Mrs. John T. Osander Ms. Bente Ott John I. Pearce, Jr. '54 David W. Petito '61 Charles H. Place III '73 Douglas Rampona '57 Archibald S. Reid '65 The Reverend Carl Reimers Mr. & Mrs. Stuart Robson Dr. John Ross Henry L. Savage, Jr. '56 David B. Smoyer '56 Jean Osgood Smyth '31 Robert Wade Speir, Jr. '81 James D. Strugger '88 Donald C. Stuart III '56 Catherine Suter '87 Lawrence Tan '69 Mr. & Mrs. Douglas R. Webb Miss Madeline Weigel Ms. Janet A. Westrick & Mr. Fred Schott Mrs. Robert C. Whitlock Rena Ann Whitehouse '83 E. John White III '53 Gay Wilmerding '75 Jason Winstanley '86 Pamela Woodworth '70 Mary Roberts Woodbridge '42
Honorary and Memorial Gifts 1994-1995 IN M EM ORY OF JANE M. W ILM ERDIN G Ms. Ai Constance Handa Moore
IN M EM ORY OF MARK WINSTANLEY ’90
.V V v v ♦ V vv- ■
Mr. & Mrs. Jerry Kohrherr Mr. & Mrs. Edwin Winstanley
IN M EM ORY OF FREDERICK D. W O O DBRIDG E '78 Steven R. Rowland '78
IN HONOR OF JOHN BALDWIN Mr. & Mrs. David M. Quinlan
IN HONOR OF BETTE SOLOWAY Mrs. R. Kenneth Fairman
IN HONOR OF ANNE B. SHEPHERD Mr. & Mrs. Peter V. Buttenheim Marina von Neumann Whitman '52
- 5 J W orld-renowned sculptor Greg Wyatt donated a replica o f his "Peace Fountain" to the school at the Colross Society dinner in October. He is shown here (second from left) with Art Department Head Jerry H irniak (far left), Head o f School Lila Lohr and Board o f Trustees Chairman Daniel Graziano. The 40-foot original is located in the children's sculpture garden at The Cathedral Church o f St. John the Divine in Nezv York City.
Endowment Gifts 1994-1995 CLASS OF 1994 FACULTY ENRICHMENT
LIBRARY ENDOWED BOOK FUND
JOHN WALLACE ENDOWMENT
Mr. & Mrs. Michael D. Halpern Mr. & Mrs. Jerome M. Katz Mr. & Mrs. Richard F. Ober, Jr.
Prof. & Mrs. John A. Pinto
Mr. and Mrs. John D. Wallace '48
LINCOLN CENTER
FREDERICK D. W OO DBRIDG E '78 FUND
Mr. & Mrs. Samuel W. Lambert III
1975 CLASSROOM CHALLENGE
OZAROW SKI SCHOLARSHIP
Shawn W. Ellsworth '75
Mr. & Mrs. Bernard Ozarowski
DEAN MATHEY SCHOLARSHIP
NOEL STACE SCHOLARSHIP Pocumtuck Company
The Bunbury Co., Inc. Pocumtuck Company
SUM M ER STUFF ELIZABETH C. DILWORTH SCHOLARSHIP Mr. & Mrs. J. Richardson Dilworth
Mr. & Mrs. Ronald F. Angarone James E. Burke Foundation, Inc. Bristol-Myers Squibb J. Seward Johnson, Sr. Charitable Fund Mr. & Mrs. Fowler Merle -Smith The Reverend Carl Reimers
Mary Roberts Woodbridge '42
UNRESTRICTED ENDOWMENT Mr. & Mrs. Richard W. Beatty Bristol-Myers Squibb Mr. & Mrs. Lee W. Gladden Mr. and Mrs. John L. Griffith, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Randall A. Hack David H. McAlpin, Jr. '43 Mr. & Mrs. Bernard Ozarowski Jane Aresty Silverman '63
ERIC HARING '77 SCHOLARSHIP Mr. & Mrs. Howard R. Haring
FACULTY SALARY FUND
STUART VON WILLSON '77 SCHOLARSHIP Mr. & Mrs. Edward E. Matthews
Mr. & Mrs. Samuel W. Lambert III
31
Special Gifts 1994-1995 Mr. & Mrs. Hugh Samson Mr. & Mrs. Laurence H. Sanford HI (Helen Behr '68) Mr. & Mrs. John C. Sienkiewicz Mr. & Mrs. William H. Sword Mr. & Mrs. Edward D. Thomas Dr. & Mrs. William H. Thompson Mr. & Mrs. Paul E. Vawter, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Ramsay Vehslage Mr. & Mrs. John D. Wallace '48 Margaret Cook Wallace '27 Dr. & Mrs. John J. White, Jr. Mary Roberts Woodbridge '42
ALUMNI BOARD Mr. & Mrs. Robert E. Dougherty '43 Christina Bachelder Dufresne '77 Nellie Oliphant Duncan '51 Laura Farina '79 Thomas R. Gates 78 Marjorie Wallace Gibson '84 James Y. Laughlin '80 Kirk W. Moore '72 Howard F. Powers, Jr. '80 Susan Barclay Walcott '57 Anne A. Williams '74 Gay Wilmerding '75
ATHLETIC PROGRAM Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr.
& & & &
BRICK WALL FUND Dr. & Mrs. Leon N. Costa Mr. & Mrs. Michael Hnath Mr. & Mrs. Daniel H. Jamieson, Jr. PDS Parents Association Mr. & Mrs. Peter R. Rossmassler '47
LOWER SCHOOL COMPUTER FUND Mr. & Mrs. Zam Atiram Mr. & Mrs. James G. Atkeson Mr. & Mrs. Michael Blitzer Ms. Sara T. Boyd Mr. & Mrs. Kevin M. Briody Mr. & Mrs. Alexander K. Buck Mr. & Mrs. N. Harrison Buck '77 Mr. & Mrs. Jeffrey E. Carleton Mr. & Mrs. James D. Carty Dr. & Mrs. Stephen S. Cook '59 Mr. & Mrs. Aram Dadian Mr. & Mrs. Robert E. Dougherty '43 Mr. & Mrs. Stuart Ferguson Mr. & Mrs. Alexander Forsyth Mr. & Mrs. John F. Gallagher PDS Girl Scout Troup #610 Mr. & Mrs. W. E. Headley Mr. & Mrs. Winthrop S. Headley Mr. & Mrs. Joseph H. Highland Mr. & Mrs. Benjamin F. Houston Mr. & Mrs. E. Michael Joye Mr. Peter R. Kann & Ms. Karen E. House Mr. & Mrs. Elliot Kotzker James Y. Laughlin '80 Mr. & Mrs. Emmett Lescroart Mr. & Mrs. Michael Mantell '76 Mr. & Mrs. Rhody Mazda Mr. & Mrs. W. Barry McCarthy, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. James T. Medick Mr. Harold J. Miller Nancy B. Miller '57 Mr. Stephen Modzelewski & Ms. Deborah Sze Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth E. Moll Ms. Bente Ott Mr. & Mrs. Bernard Ozarowski Mr. & Mrs. Edward R. Palsho Ms. Karen Pike Mr. & Mrs. Peter J. Rizza, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Michael L. Rosenberg Dr. & Mrs. Albert Rosenthal Mr. & Mrs. Ernest Schwiebert, Jr. Mr. David J. Shipper Dr. & Mrs. Lawrence R. Siegel
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6th ANNUAL GOLF TOURNAM ENT
Mrs. Archer Harman, Jr. Mrs. Robert Howe Mrs. Corrington S. Hwong Mrs. James E. Landry
Victor M orales helps his friend, Andre, with an assignm ent for P D S ' Summer Stuff Program. Dr. & Mrs. John S. Sierocki Mr. Dennis Stattman & Ms. Sarah Ringer Dr. & Mrs. Telechery Sudhakar Mrs. Elizabeth Trapp Mr. Ron Unterman & Ms. Dorothy Finnerty Mr. & Mrs. Paul J. Van der Grift Ms. Janet A. Westrick & Mr. Fred Schott Mr. & Mrs. Charles P. Williams
PARENTS A SSO CIA TIO N FUND Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr.
and and and and
Mrs. Michael Blitzer Mrs. Kevin M. Briody Mrs. Robert A. Curtis Mrs. Peter M. Grounds
PERFORMING ARTS PROGRAM Madeline Katz '81 Mr. & Mrs. Stanton C. Kelton 111 Mr. & Mrs. Frederic J. Schragger
PHOTOGRAPHY Mr. & Mrs. Albert M. Stark
POST-PROM FUND Mr. & Mrs. Bruce Ackerman Dr. & Mrs. Manuel T. Amendo Drs. John R. & Elizabeth S. Bussard Mr. & Mrs. Robert Denby Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Dille, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Stanislaw Drabiuk Mr. & Mrs. Daniel Goldenson Mr. & Mrs. Daniel J. Graziano, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Howard Greenfeld Mr. & Mrs. Michael P. Helmick Dr. & Mrs. Louis LaBosco Mr. & Mrs. James. E. Landry Mr. & Mrs. Daniel J. Lyons, Jr. Prof. & Mrs. John A. Pinto Mr. & Mrs. Peter J. Rizza, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Harold T. Rose Mr. & Mrs. Frederick Rothstein Mr. & Mrs. Gerald Siegel Mr. & Mrs. Stephen W. Townsend Mr. & Mrs. James R. Utaski
Mr. & Mrs. Kevin Walsh Mr. & Mrs. Frank W. Walter Ms. Kathryn Watterson & Mr. Ronald Sitts Mr. & Mrs. Anthony L. Willard Mr. & Mrs. Charles M. Zarzecki
PRETTY BROOK FARM Dr. Alexander M. Ackley, Jr. Mr. Charles B. Atwater Mr. & Mrs. Stanley C. Baron Dr. & Mrs. Alan Bilanin Mr. & Mrs. G. Reginald Bishop (Alice Elgin ’50) Mr. & Mrs. Alexander K. Buck Mr. & Mrs. James E. Burke Dr. & Mrs. William P. Burks Mrs. James G. Campbell, Jr. Dr. & Mrs. James J. Chandler Mr. & Mrs. Martin A. Chooljian Mr. & Mrs. J. Richardson Dilworth Mrs. Thomas W. Eglin Mr. & Mrs. Harold B. Erdman '39 Mr. & Mrs. Charles S. Ganoe Mr. and Mrs. James S. Hill Dr. & Mrs. David P. Jacobus Betty Wold Johnson Tristam B. Johnson '34 Mr. & Mrs. Stephen F. Jusick Mr. & Mrs. Samuel W. Lamber III Mrs. Frederick P. Lawrence Mr. & Mrs. Winton H. Manning David Mathey '47 Dean W. Mathey '43 MacDonald Mathey '44 Mr. & Mrs. Edward E. Matthews David H. McAlpin, Jr. '43 Mr. & Mrs. George H. McLaughlin II Mr. & Mrs. John T. McLoughlin Mr. & Mrs. Neal W. O'Connor Mr. & Mrs. Elwood W. Phares II Mr. & Mrs. Charles J. Plohn, Jr. Princeton Area Commmunity Foundation Mr. & Mrs. John H. Rassweiler Mr. & Mrs. W . Ronald Roach Markley Roberts '44 Mr. Christopher R. P. Rodgers Mr. & Mrs. Peter R. Rossmassler '47 Mr. & Mrs. Herbert S. Ruben Mr. & Mrs. Norman F. S. Russell, Jr. S. Forest Company, Inc.
Anonymous Alexander & Alexander Inc. Mr. Duncan W. Ailing Mr. John F. Baker Mr. Proctor B. Baker, Jr. Mr. Gaetano T. Battaglia Dr. and Mrs. Ralph C. Bencivengo Mr. Robert E. Bostrom N. Harrison Buck '77 Burke's Supply Company, Inc. Dr. & Mrs. William P. Burks Dr. Thomas J. Capotosta Carnegie Bank N A Mr. & Mrs. Michael A. Caruso, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. David Chow Circle System Group Commodities Corporation CoreStates NJ National Bank Mr. Robert Davidson Mr. & Mrs. Dennis J. DeCore Delsea Sanitation Service Inc. Mr. John Dunlop Mr. Craig Eisenacher Ellsworth's Wine & Liquors, Inc. Ewing Sports Center Mr. & Mrs. Michael Faigen Frito-Lay, Inc. Mr. Matthew P. Gardner Graphic Packaging Corporation Mr. Daniel J. Graziano, Jr. Nixon Hare '59 Mr. & Mrs. Archer Harman, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Michael P. Helmick Mr. Harold D. Herbert Mr. Edward W. Horstmeyer ICI Finishes Mr. Stephen F. Jusick Mr. William Keeping Dr. Regan Kenyon Kleen and Fresh Carpet Systems Mr. & Mrs. Elliot Kotzker Lenox, Incorporated Mr. Thomas C. Mackay Bob Maguire Chevrolet Mr. Stephen Modzelewski Mr. Kenneth E. Moll Mr. Dale F. Morrison Nexus Properties Dr. Vincent C. Noonan, Jr. Mr. Edward R. Palsho PDS Booster Club Dr. J. Dean Pierson Mr. John A. Quisenberry Mr. Jack Z. Rabinowitz Mr. James S. Regan Rick Bus Company William Roebling ’65 Mr. Edward Rolandelli Mr. Harold T. Rose Mr. Llewellyn G. Ross
Special Gifts 1994-1995 Saturn of Bordentown Ms. Lisa Schmucki Mr. Stephen H. Shaffer Dr. & Mrs. John S. Sierocki SSATB Sameul Starkey '72 Mitchell Sussman '71 Tucker Anthony Inc. University Orthopaedic Associates Mr. Frederick Vahlsing III Wickenden Associates, Inc. Mr. Charles M. Zarzecki
25th ANNUAL INVITATIONAL HOCKEY TOURNAMENT Mr. & Mrs. Bruce Ackerman John Ager 111 '79 Dr. & Mrs. Manuel T. Amendo Ms. Pamela Babbitt Drs. David & Sheila B. Befeler Dr. & Mrs. Alan Bilanin Mr. & Mrs. Thomas A. Bracken Dr. & Mrs. Gary R. Brickner Ralph M. Brown III '75 Jonathan H. Brush '81 Mr.& Mrs. Alexander K. Buck Mr. & Mrs. N. Harrison Buck '77 Mr. & Mrs. Michael A. Caruso, Jr. Mrs. Hayward H. Chappell Mr. & Mrs. David Churchill Dr. & Mrs. Stephen S. Cook '59 Mr. Ernest Cruikshank Mr. & Mrs. Thomas A. D'Altrui Mr. & Mrs. Dennis J. DeCore Mr. & Mrs. Richard J. Donahue The Reverend & Mrs. Craig R. Dykstra Mr. & Mrs. George Eckardt Mr. & Mrs. John E. Egner, Jr. Mark A. Egner '82 Dr. & Mrs. James C. Elmore Mr. & Mrs. Robert G. Esposito Mr. & Mrs. Michael Faigen Pieter Fisher '72 Paul M. Funk '72
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas E. Gardner Dr. & Mrs. Norman Glassner Mr. & Mrs. George S. Gordon Mrs. Mary C. Gray Mr. Thomas L. Gray, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Huson R. Gregory Mr. & Mrs. John L. Griffith, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Harleston J. Hall, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. John T. Henderson, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. William N. Hoover Mr. & Mrs. Francis G. Janson J. Stephen Judge '76 Mr. & Mrs. Maurice P. Knapp Mr. & Mrs. Peter R. Knipe '53 Alexander T. Lamar '74 Mr.& Mrs. Samuel W. Lambert III Mr. & Mrs. James E. Landry The Hon. & Mrs. Arthur S. Lane (Sally Kuser '42) Alexander D. Laughlin '72 Louis S. Levine '69 Campbell Levy ’91 Mr. & Mrs. Tobin V. Levy Mrs. Alice Lustig Paul Lyman ’71 Mr. & Mrs. Terrance J. Lynam Mr. & Mrs. Michael S. Mathews (Cecilia Aall ’59) Douglas L. Matthews '80 Mr. & Mrs. Frank A. McDougald, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Robert J. Meehan Mr. & Mrs. Edwin H. Metcalf '51 Mr. & Mrs. Dale F. Morrison Mr. & Mrs. Joseph M. Nanfara Dr. & Mrs. Mark S. Nemiroff Dr. & Mrs. Vincent C. Noonan, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Neal W. O'Connor Kelly Noonan O'Shea '86 Mr. & Mrs. Richard K. Olsson Mr. & Mrs. Neill P. Overman Mr. & Mrs. W. Charles Paik Mr. & Mrs. R. Jonathan Pitman Mr. & Mrs. Charles J. Plohn, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Richard J. Potter Lawrence S. Pyne '78
Mr. Christopher R. P. Rodgers James C. Rodgers '70 Mr. & Mrs. Peter R. Rossmassler '47 William R. Rossmassler III ’82 Mr. Gerald Seid Mr. & Mrs. Edward G. Seidel Mr. & Mrs. Donald P. Shaffer Mrs. A. Vernon Shannon Dr. & Mrs. John S. Sierocki Bradley R. Smith '85 Mr. & Mrs. Dudley R. Smith Mr. & Mrs. Stanley C. Smoyer Mr. & Mrs. Robert B. Stockman Mrs. Caren Sturges Mr. & Mrs. Jan O. Svoboda Hilleary Thomas ’84 Mr. & Mrs. Thomas J. Thornton, Jr. University Orthopaedic Associates Mr. Ron Unterman & Ms. Dorothy Finnerty Mr. & Mrs. Frederick H. Wandelt, Jr. Dr. & Mrs. Ronald L. Warren Newell B. Woodworth III '73 Mr. & Mrs. Newell B. Woodworth Donald R. Young, Jr. '70 Mr. & Mrs. Donald R. Young '35 Dr. & Mrs. Joseph P. Zawadsky
SCIENCE FUND Anonymous Mr. & Mrs. Michael E. France Mr. & Mrs. Peter G. Gerry Mr. & Mrs. Daniel Goldenson Mr. & Mrs. Daniel J. Graziano, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. William S. Greenberg Mr. & Mrs. John L. Griffith, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Michael D. Halpem Samuel M. Hamill, Jr. '53 Gladys & Roland Hardman Foundation Mr. & Mrs. William F. Henagan (Barbara Mills '77) Mr. & Mrs. Joseph H. Highland Mr. & Mrs. Robert F. Johnston Mr. & Mrs. Harvey L. Levine
Mr. & Mrs. Marc J. Ostro Mr. William A. Stoltzfus & Ms. Alison Baxter Mr. & Mrs. James W. Wickenden
TROPHY CASE Mr. and Mrs. Dennis J. DeCore
US-U SSR EXCHANGE Mr. & Mrs. James S. Regan
GIFT IN KIND Mr. and Mrs. Duncan W. Ailing American Cyanamid Company Mr. & Mrs. Lewis T. Barringer Carpet Factory Outlet Coastal Copy Systems Mr. & Mrs. Robert Davidson Mr. & Mrs. Horton Davies Mr. & Mrs. Anthony L. DeGisi Mr. & Mrs. Shawn W. Ellsworth '75 Mr. Charles S. Ganoe Prof. & Mrs. James L. Gould Mr. & Mrs. William S. Greenberg The Hillier Group Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth Horowitz Ms. Bonnie Hunter Mr. & Mrs. Ludwig M. Koerte Mr. & Mrs. James E. Landry Mr. & Mrs. Winton H. Manning Mr. & Mrs. Fowler Merle-Smith Ms. Anna Olecka Mr. & Mrs. Bernard Ozarowski Mr. & Mrs. Thomas H. Paine, Jr. '69 Prof. & Mrs. Theodore K. Rabb The Reverend Julie Raino Dr. & Mrs. Sol 1. Rajfer Mr. & Mrs. Peter R. Rossmassler '47 Mr. & Mrs. Richard G. Scott Mr. & Mrs. Roger A. Shapiro Mr. & Mrs. Stanley Shatz Mr. & Mrs. James R. Utaski Ms. Carla Wragge
MATCHING GIFT COMPANIES AND FOUNDATIONS Benjamin & Elizabeth Abrams Foundation, Inc. Allied-Signal Foundation Inc. American Express Corp. American Hom e Products Corp. The Aresty Foundation Bank of Boston Charitable Foundation The Bank of N ew York Boeing Company Bristol Fund Inc. Bristol-Myers Squibb Chemical Bank Chubb & Son, Inc. Citibank Comm unity Foundation of Western North Carolina, Inc. CoreStates N J National Bank Corning Incorporated Foundation Eastern Enterprises Foundation The Ellerslie Fund Ericsson General M ills Foundation The Highland-Mills Foundation
Hoechst Celanese Corp. Hoffmann-La Roche Inc. IB M IF F Inc. IM O Industries Inc. Johnson. & Higgins The Robert W ood Johnson Foundation W . S. Johnston Foundation The Robert Johnston Fam ily Educational Ventures Foundation Karen & Kevin Kennedy Foundation Harold Kramer Foundation LO S A M Fund The Curtis W . M cG raw Foundation Merck Company Foundation Merrill Lynch & Co., Inc. M illiken & Company M ills Foundation Mobil Foundation, Inc. Morgan Guaranty Trust Company Morgan Stanley & Co. Inc. W . W . Norton & Company, Inc. The Roger & Joyce Nussbaum Foundation
The PepsiCo Foundation Laura H. Petito Foundation Pfizer Inc. Philip M orris Companies, Inc. The Princeton Area Foundation, Inc. R. H. M acy & Co., Inc. Reader's Digest Foundation S. Forest Company Inc. Salomon Brothers Inc. Sandoz Pharmaceuticals Corp. Sandy Fam ily Foundation, Inc. Sm ithKline Beecham Foundation St. Paul Companies, Inc. The Thomas Foundation Time W arner Inc. United Jersey Banks United States Trust Company N Y United Technologies Corp. Unocal Foundation The W R G Foundation Warner-Lambert Company Marina & Robert Whitm an Foundation
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Thanks to All Our 1994-1995 Volunteers ANNUAL FUND COM M ITTEE
ANNUAL FUND CLASS PARENTS
DEVELOPM ENT COM M ITTEE
Shawn W. Ellsworth, Co-Chair Andee Kotzker, Co-Chair Robert E. Dougherty '43 Nancy Beatty Richard Beatty Patricia Paine-Dougherty Robert E. Dougherty ’43 Creigh Duncan '76 Nellie Oliphant Duncan '51 Sally Campbell Haas '63 Timothy M. Hosea Peter R. Rossmassler '47 David L. Tibbals '62
Jan and Art Bird Paul Chew Robbie and Shawn Ellsworth '75 Bonita and Jeff Douglass Creigh Duncan '76 Dottie and Joe Highland Lucy and Mike Joye Petie Oliphant Duncan '51 Marcy and Bob Maguire Mike Halpern Ken Moll Joyce and Stan Robinson Ruthellen and Marc Rubin Nita and Suresh Tata Robin and Peter Travers
Susan Blitzer Cary Bachelder Dufresne '11 Shawn Ellsworth '75 Dan Graziano John Griffith Marilyn Grounds Jane Henderson Kenyon '79 Andee Kotzker Susan Levy Bernie Ozarowski Lew Ross
CLASS AGENTS Linda Staniar Bergh ’66 Mary Woodbridge Lott '67 A. Richard Ross '68 Jean Gorman Wilson '69 Marjorie Shaw '70 Laurie Bryant Young '71 Anne Robinson '72 Karen Turner '72 Angela Jill Williams Dickerson '73 Shawn Ellsworth '75 J. Creigh Duncan '76 Sheila Newsome Maddox '76 Julia Penick Garry '77 Cecelia Manning Tazelaar '78 Laura Farina ’79 Howard F. Powers ’80 Carl Taggart ’82 Erik Schwiebert ’83 Kelly Lambert Walker '83 Hilleary Thomas '84 Kathryn Jennings '85 Leslie Vielbig '85 Susan Franz '86 William Schafer '87 Rachel Stark ’87 Helene Dawn Feldman ’88 Nicole Dunn ’89 Lylah Alphonse ’90 Stephanie Gendler '90 Jason Hollander '90 David Ragsdale '90 Elisabeth Kahora '91 Jennifer Kim '91 Benjamin Frost '92 Rebecca Grounds '92 Katharine Marquis '92 Anne Marie Bernhard '93 Emily S. Miller '93 David F. Weeks '93 t Emily Sachs '94 Veronica White '94 Whitney White '94
Trustee and form er Board Chairman M arilyn Grounds receives the Robert M. M arquis Award for outstanding volunteer service from Director o f Advancement Andrew Hamlin at the Colross Society dinner in October.
The Princeton Day School Annual Report is a publication o f the advancement office. Every effort has been made to ensure the accuracy and completeness o f this report. Please accept our apologies for any errors or omissions and report them to the advancement office at 609-924-6700, ext. 221.
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Eleanor Vandewater Leonard 2907 Sunset Drive Golden, C O 80401 Julie Lee writes that she found the reunion most worthwhile, and it was truly rewarding to catch up with her classmates, and to do so in some depth since there were not too many of us. She writes, "I am continuing my studies at Juilliard in the piano and enjoying them as much as ever. The classes and performances are very stimulating and exciting and serve as a great incentive to keep on working hard." She also expresses her appre ciation to Betsy H o w e Smith for her efforts to round us all up and house us over reunion. A note from Connie Kuhn Wassink brings the following information. "Recently I sent Eleanor V and ew ater Leonard a black and white photo of my static displays, recently designed (by me) and fabricated by local vendors for the Great Alaskan Sportsman Show. The Saturday at the show at tracted more people, at the Sullivan Arena, than had ever been in the building on one day since its opening about eight years ago." She spent the cold and snowy Alaskan winter literally and figu ratively keeping the home fires burning while her husband, Harry, was in Florida. Their daughter, Melody, accepted a position as environmental scientist with Cargill, in Bartow, FL. Harry spent three months there helping with the children, the move and painting the house. On the professional side, Connie prepared exhibits for the Great Alas kan Sportsman Show. She sent a picture showing her in front of "Hooked on Fishing" which she created. She also oversaw the fabrication of that exhibit. Ben and I, Vandy V and ew ater Leonard, continue to enjoy Idaho in the summer and at Christmas, and Colorado the rest of the time. Though officially retired, Ben continues working on reports in an emeritus position and I am a "volunteer for science" when he needs a field assistant. W e are just back from a week of camp ing and mapping for his current project. The nicest thing about car camping is that you can take along a chair.
Sylvia Taylor Healy P.O. Box 1535 Princeton, NJ 08542 Our 50th reunion was a lot of fun! 50 years - can we believe it? I was proud that of the eight actual living graduates; of a class of 1 1, four came! That's a great percentage. Long distance went to Blythe Scott Carr from Arizona. Then Pat Smith Thompson from Ohio, janet H ill Hurst from Titusville, NJ and Mo and myself from Princeton. For all day Saturday, we were joined by Sesaly G ould Kraftt, who actually graduated from M a deira, and Ted, and at dinner, Claire G ro ve r ParsalIs, who graduated from Rosemary Hall. W e missed Dorothy, Florie, M a ry and Sheila, but we toasted them. W e also remembered our late dear classmates Kaye Cottingham , Barbara Field and Betty Row land. Saturday morning dawned bright and clear as we met at Colross for a marvelous breakfast with straw hats and a 50th emblem. After a very well run alumni meeting and nice toasts to the wonderful acting Headmaster, Archer Harman, and his wife, Mari, and the introduction of the new and charming Head of School, Lila Lohr, the business was completed. Our whole group went on the extensive tour of the school, since N O N E of them had ever seen it! MFS -remember! All agreed it was fabulous! Thus we completely missed the parade. But we ended up with a great box lunch in the pagoda on the playing fields. After deploying for the afternoon, we all met, and Ray Hurst too, for delightful cocktails and then dinner with the Harmans out side the Anne Reid Gallery. W e all felt caught up! Blythe stayed on and was a big winner in Atlantic City (thanks to driver and hostess Hedl Dresdner Roulette, '46) and Mo and I had a wonderful
The Class of 1945 reunited at PD S to celebrate their 50th reunion in May. They are (left to right) Pat Smith Thompson, Sylvia Taylor Healy, Janet Hill Hurst, Claire Grover Parsells, Sesaly Gould Krafft and Blythe Scott Carr. dinner for two, thanks to Pat, who won it at the raffle and willed it to us. Thank you for all your happy support! Blythe's picture shows we all look wonderful! Amen. W e have just learned of the death of Florence M ille r Hunter in February 1994. W e send our sympathy to her family and friends.
45th REUNION 50th REUNION Joan Daniels Grimley 189 Mabie Court Mahwah, NJ 07430
Petie Oliphant Duncan 549 The Great Road Princeton, N) 08540
J
Our sympathy goes out to M ickey M eyers Shriver whose ex-husband, Jim, died in July after a battle with cancer. Although divorced years ago, the two remained great friends and often traveled abroad together. Barbara Pettit Finch Pour les Oiseaux Monmouth Hills Highlands, NJ 07732 Joan Smith Kroesen 1-1 7 Shirley Lane Lawrenceville, N| 08648-1922 I've moved into a town house in Lawrence and am secretary at the Hopewell Presbyterian Church as well as working as a real estate broker in Pennington. Four of my five sons are married and I have eight grandchildren. Kirby Thompson Hall 63 Centre Street Concord, NH 03301-4260 Lucy Law Webster writes, "I continue to work at the United Nations as a political affairs officer. M y older son, Daniel, is the managing editor of a Tampa, FL TV station and my other son, Alex, is manager of the coffee shop at the Guggenheim Museum. Both have Swedish wives - two inde pendent events - and Daniel's' two children are going to Sweden this summer for a month with their other grandmother. M y mother, Myra Law, is happy and well in California, a 40-minute drive from my brother, John Law PCD '48 of Palo Alto."
Jean Samuels Stephens 16 Stonerise Drive Lawrenceville, N) 08648 M a rcia G oetze Nappi writes, "Bob has retired so we enjoy our second home at Haig Point in South Carolina during the winter, and trips here and there, and our life in Shelburne, VT."
Anne Carples Denny 1230 Millers Lane Manakin-Sabot, VA 23103 A late post card received after the last Journal deadline from Susan M cA lle n Turner says that the "|une '94 attempt at Mt. Hood was cancelled due to too much fresh snow (8'-10' at Timberline Lodge - and 24" at summit - 11,234'), so we'll return in |une '95 to try again and then spend around 10days visiting with sisterGordon McAllen Baker '51 and exploring the Oregon coast. O r egon has incredible diversity of climate/terrain as well as fascinating history. W e're really hooked on it! Older daughter Katherine is engaged - no date set yet. Spent Christmas in Portland, Maine with younger daughter Nell - 52 degrees and had a great walk on the beach Christmas day!" Katherine Webster Dwight 115 Windsor Road Tenafly, Nj 07670 The class records with sadness the death of Chris tine Este Mason, mother of Louise M ason Bachelder, in February 1995. I remember Mrs. Mason as a quiet and gracious lady, and had not known that her life had begun rather colorfully. According to an article in Town Topics she was born in an American refugee camp in Turkey
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"during the massacre of Armenians" in 1909 and as a newborn was taken out of that country with her family to Paris where she grew up. After returning to the U.S. she taught at several schools, including Miss Fine's, and as I recall she started our class off on its studies of French in the third grade. Our sympathy goes to Louise and her family. And speaking of Town Topics, I enjoyed a short piece by Leslie McAneny which appeared there Feb. 8, 1995. Noting that consolidation of the Borough and Township of Princeton will never fly, and displaying the satire for which she is justly known, Leslie makes suggestions as to how "to bring about a more livable Princeton." News for the next issue would be gratefully ap preciated! Louise Chloe King 64 Carey Road Needham, MA 02194 Four members (one quarter of our graduating class!) of the MFS Class of 1955 had a super time together at PDS in May. Jeannie Crawford, Bar bara Kohlsaat Von Oehsen, Laura Travers Pardee and I had wonderful fun re-living our MFS days which seem far less than 40 years ago! Our beloved history teacher, Connie Rohr Reiter, joined us for breakfast at PDS and lunch at Barb's. It was a special treat for us to catch up with her after so many years. Several members of our class wrote me before the reunion explaining that they would be unable to join us in Princeton, but their thoughts would be with us. W e missed them! Miss Campbell, Mrs. Cobb and Miss Cohan all contacted me to say how much they would like to join us, but couldn't. It was fun to hear from so many old friends from those happy days at MFS. You'll see our photo nearby - hope you recognize us after all these years!
was lots of fun and so will leave a big hole in our lives, especially since our children have scat tered: Stephen, wife and three daughters live in CT, and Julie is studying at the University of New Mexic o in Albuquerque. Most ties to Princeton are gone now, but I still have very happy memo ries of the years there and good times shared with dear classmates." W e send our deepest sympa thies to Marina Turkevich Naumann whose mother, Ludmilla B. Turkevich, died on April 14, 1995. She was an expert in Russian language and literature and was the first woman to teach at Princeton. She later spent 18 years as Chairman of the Russian Department at Douglass College of Rutgers University. In May, Marina had happier news to report. Her daughter, Kristin PDS '82, was engaged in March to her beau of long stand ing, Matthew E. Juros, of Bloomfield, CT. Kris is an architectural designer with Arrowstreet Inc. in Somerville, MA. In June I received a card from Marina who was in Provence where Bob con ferred at a nuclear physics meeting. "W e ’ve clam bered through the Roman arena and ambled up and down the rues (I was first here in 1960). Today we'll be taken south into the Phone delta, which is a famous wildlife preserve with African flamingoes, etc." Susan Barclay Walcott 41 Brookstone Drive Princeton, NJ 08540
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Susan Smith Baldwin writes, "I have an active practice here in Princeton, raising energy, con sciousness and well-being through breathing and hypnosis and the laying on of hands." W e send our sympathy to Susan on the death of her sister, Mary Baldwin Smith Stoner '34 this spring. W e have also learned of the death of Abigail Rickert Hershey who passed away on April 18, 1995. Our sympathy goes out to her family and friends. Linda Ewing Kriegel 2 Mary Street Monmouth Junction, Nj 08852
40th REUNION
Sasha Robbins Cavander 8 Plympton Street Cambridge, MA 021 38
’58 ’59 ’60
Ann A. Smith 1180 Midland Avenue Bronxville, NY 10708
Joan Nadler Davidson 329 Hawthorn Road Baltimore, M D 21210
i he ( lass extends its condolences to Carol Harris Bradley whose mother died in Bermuda just be fore Christmas 1994. "She sold our house in Princeton two and a half years ago and had been living with us in Granville, O H since then. She
It was a great 35th reunion, dining ana dishing within the kind hospitality of Penny Hart Bragonier's family home. Seven of us (Penny Hart, Nancy Davis Sachner, Louise Scheide Marshall, Martha Thompson Eckfeldt, Cathy Otis
The class of '55 celebrated their 40th reunion: (L. to K.) jeannie Crawford, Chloe King, Laura Travers Pardee and Barbara Kohlsaat von Oehsen.
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Farrell, Liza Guttman Sevin and Mel shared fam ily stories, trials, tribulations and dreams, and read letters from Anne Kales Howson, Deri Bush Jeffers, Harriet Gaston Davison and Eileen Baker Strathnaver. Anne reports on life overseeing a remodel in San Francisco, "dealing with rent control laws, building inspectors and codes, car penters and painters." Son Rusty graduates from Brown in marine biology and then to medical school. Daughter Erica is finishing her sopho more year at Brown. Eileen is busy with policy launches and press conferences in the House of Commons. Daughters, Rosie in law school and Rachel in a video-engineering and technology company, are doing big things. Deri reports her love of the horsey life keeps her fit and feisty and invites all to the "always-made guest beds" on the Eastern Shore.
35th REUNION Fiona Morgan Fein 10 West 66th Street, #25D New York, NY 10023-6212 Before divulging all the class news, I want to remind everyone again about our approaching 35th reunion year. W e've always met in Princeton in the spring. I'm happy to continue the tradition, but Polly, for instance, has always wanted to host
Representing the class of '60 at their 35th reunion are (first row, L. to R.) Penny Hart Bragonier, Nancy Davis Sachner, loan Nadler Davidson, Louise Schiede Marshall; (back row) Maratha Thompson Eckfeldt, Liza Guttman Sevin and Cathy Otis Farrell.
a reunion on the Cape and there may be other ideas out there as well. How practical are they and how do we get the most people to show up? Think about it, write me, call me! Cherry Raymond spent several days in New York for a conference on dreamwork, putting our guest room to good use, and we had wonderful visits over breakfast and even one dinner together. Cherry is working through an organization called The Dreamwheel which offers training in dreamwork for lay people and professionals through semester courses of weekly meetings or day-long workshops. These are designed to support the development of dreamwheels as well as the networking of resources among dreamworkers. Although therapeutic in effect, these training sessions are educational in purpose. Their leaders honor and introduce a range of approaches while seeking to share a core set of principles and practices that will support further explorations of dream con sciousness, ranging from analysis to lucid dream ing. Dreamwheels are circles of dreamworkers who gather to learn and practice the art of dreamwork as a way of cultivating inner wisdom and clear mind, and of strengthening communal wisdom. Dreamworkers draw on a variety of theories and techniques to support the work of exploring dreams analytically and experientially, and of bringing the fruits of this work into creative acts in daily life. If you want to know more, contact Cherry at (508) 371-1906. Sheila Long reported in from the Abbaye Ste. Marie de Maumont that the abbey has been asked "to found a monastery in Guinea, and we've accepted. Our abbess and the future prioress left with an architect on June 7. Everything went well until Mere Abbessefell and broke her hip and had to be flown back to Paris. Meanwhile, back here (Maumont is near Angouleme - F.M.F.), the jobs were reshuffled. I was shuffled out of bookbindery and into desserts, which at this time of year also involves dealing with hundreds of pounds of fresh fruit from the orchard: so far raspberries, strawberries, cherries, peaches and currants, with plums, kiwis, figs, pears and quince to come. I'm also getting an existential feel for why the French eat so well, even in monasteries, where the cui sine is theoretically austere: They spend an enor mous amount of time and effort preparing their meals. Yesterday two of us spent three hours making a fruit salad for last night's dessert. (It took that long because we serve 60 at every meal.) I would have spent half an hour distributing fresh cherries to everyone in order to finish faster, but I wasn't the one in charge. I'm also working on my Latin book for the novices - currently on chapter 10, dealing with fourth declension nouns and deponent verbs (don't ask me, I took Latin I twice and even so, barely passed - F.M.F). I have one very gifted African student at the moment, and a decidedly ungifted French novice. And I've started teaching Hebrew to one of the African sisters who is with us for a year. W e 've spent most of the year doing remedial French, since she didn't go to school as a child and only learned to read in her late 20's. The thought processes of someone who wasn't formed by elementary school are fascinat ing to me. Anyway, I thought that learning H e brew would boost her morale, and so it has." Julia Cornforth Holofcener faxed her news from the Isle of Wight. "Much has been happen ing; I don't know where to begin. On M ay 2, Princess Margaret unveiled Larry's sculpture, A l lies, on Bond Street. He says it's the longest run of one of his works he'll ever see. People are enjoy ing it, taking pictures on shoulders. Hello! maga zine called it the latest tourist attraction. I am so pleased for him. But nothing could ever be as exciting as Olivier embracing Larry after unveil ing his Faces of O livier in '85. It was such a
special occasion, especially since theater is so much part of his life's work. His musical, I Don't Live Here Anymore is going to be produced again at a theater in a South Carolinian town near the Savannah River Plant, the subject of the musical. W e thought we would let another director see what he could do. - On the home front, we are moving at the end of July to a house overlooking the Channel and the pastures of the island. W e both need the tranquillity the property presents. It may not be our final resting place, but it's darn close. There is a guest room, so I expect visitors from the class o f'61. If I were a Forbes, I would fly everyone all over for our 35th! M y new company, Island Partners, will be producing a CD-ROM of the Isle of Wight. When I made the presentation to the IO W Council, they were amazed at the potential. After we move, I'm going to enter the world of Internet. Such exciting times we live in. I am also producing the IO W International Oboe Competition and Music Festival scheduled for 1997. It has already achieved a distinguished reputation in the music world after only two competitions." Julie says, "anytime for reunion." I'm taking that to mean that she'll find a few other good reasons to be in the US when we pick a date and will be there. Right, Julie? I spoke to Cynthia Weinrich briefly the other day and she'd just returned from a wonderful camping/bread-andbreakfast trip to eastern Canada. She said it was beautiful, clean, relaxed and trafticless; that many campsites were actually on the ocean. She was still floating on hervacationcloud atterafewdays back in the Big Apple -a very good measure of the success of the holiday site. Cynny continues to work as a choir leader and organist in New York area churches in addition to free-lancing singing jobs. Tucky Ramus Gray and I almost went to a concert together in the spring. Hope we can get it together before reunion. You owe me a phone call, Tucky. Sandy Sidford Cornelius wrote, "Grace (daugh ter #1) has graduated and has accepted a job at Goldman Sachs in NYC. Sara (daughter #2) will be a junior at the University of Pennsylvania. W e work and go on strenuous trips. The latest, a high mountain course in Bhutan." (WOW!-ed.). Polly Busselle Bishop sent a card advertising her 16th show of Spindrift Pottery which took placeon July 23rd. "I'm about to do this big deal, trying to stay calm! So far I'm succeeding...All the same here lots of guests, pots and mediation. Not any recre ation, but that's okay. Have discovered listening to books on tape - solves my loneliness problem at the shop.'' Harvey and I are well. W e've been lucky enough to take two scuba diving trips in the last six months and are now technically good enough at diving to concentrate on learning about the incredible universe that exists underwater. Above water, I'm doing an on-going project at Lincoln Center and finishing the renovation of our house at Culver Lake, NJ where we'd love to have visitors. I was reunion chair for my W ells '30th reunion. Only 12 of the 96 we graduated came which meant that we hung out together all the time and it was wonderful - very intimate and heart-warming. I was excited and encouraged by what I saw at Wells. The faculty, administration and curriculum impressed me very much; and the pendulum seems to be swinging back in terms of public opinion about the validity of single-sex education, especially for women. If any readers know young women who would be interested in hearing about it, please ask them to contact me. I'll close where I started. Think about our 35th reunion and how to make it as much fun as the 30th. Let me know, for instance, what it would take to get you to come this time. Can't wait to see you again. Mrs. Shepherd (the best news source around!)
Julia Cornforth Holofcener '6 7 and her husband, Lawrence, at the dedication of his sculpture of W W II ",Allies" on London's Bond Street. wrote to say that Debbie Moore Krulewitch took a writing seminar while vacationing on a ranch in Mexico. She enjoyed it tremendously and dis covered that one of the participants was Ellen Sussman PDS '72. (For more on Ellen, see '72 notes.) Jane L. Cormack P.O. Box 5027 Larkspur, CA 94977 News hasn't been forthcoming this time around. Jane Cormack reports that she took a great trip by train to the midwest and visited relatives in Iowa. She also bought some land in Oregon and is contemplating a move - maybe. When last heard from, she was preparing to welcome a Sonora garden tour. Her garden specializes in plants that don't need much water, but this spring was very wet in northern California so I hope the garden survived. Linda Maxwell Stefanelli is hurrying to finish these class notes so she can leave for the shore for two weeks in August. She's also plan ning a barge trip down the canals of the Loire Valley for a week this fall. Her second grandchild is expected in mid-August so it may get to spend its early days at the beach as well. Maybe it will squeak in under the deadline. Hey! If an editor can't stretch deadlines for herself, what fun is it? On behalf of the class, we want to express our sympathy toTassie Turkevich Skvir and Sonia Bill Robertson who lost their mothers recently. Both women were professors in the Russian depart ment of Princeton University and dynamic, fasci nating women. W e will miss them. Alice Jacobson 431 1 N.E. Hoyt Street Portland, OR 97213 Months ago, I heard from Ginny Elmer Stafford. She said she'd enjoyed my musings (several jour nals ago) about turning 50. As I recall, I said something mature about being the youngest per son in the class and the last one who will turn 50 (in January of 1996). Perhaps it began, "N ya, nya, nya, nya, nya..." I'm not sure. Anyhow, Ginny responded: "As the old lady of the class, I passed that mark in January and find it very liberating. I find myself saying, 'Look, you're 50 so if you
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don't want to do it, don't.'" Right on, Ginny! Ginny was enthusiastic about becoming a grand mother inMayofthisyear. I gatherthegrandchild's parents live in Spain because Ginny was wonder ing how she could spend time there with the new baby. Two other pieces of old news, one from Kathy Sittig Dunlop and one from Laurie Rogers. Kathy wrote about a year ago that she had taken a few seminary classes, but her new plans were to take clinical pastoral education classes at a local Salt Lake City hospital instead. She had gone whitewater rafting and had been playing a lot of golf. Laurie's Christmas note brought news that
she was working for the CFO of Smith Corona in New Canaan, CT. She was very upbeat about her life, her new job, and her new apartment. Sorry, Kathy and Laurie, that it took so long for me to get this news in print! I'm doing well. Nothing really new in my life: same job, home, outside activities. All is well in Portland. Please take a moment and send me your news. Please do not let the lack of post cards stop you from jotting me a note. By the time you read this, I'll be even that much closer to 50, and I intend to follow the Ginny-Elmer-Schoolof -Turning-50! Hope each of us is doing the same...
Barbara Rose Callaway 149 Hodge Road Princeton, N) 08540 Alison Hubby Hoversten 1183 Cabin Circle Vail, CO 81657
30th REUNION
PRINCETON COUNTRY DAY SCHOOL PDS Publications Office ^ P.O. Box 75 Princeton, NJ 08542
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30-36
Last winter Alfred Robertshaw wrote a wonderful letter to PCD Annual Fund Chairman David Tibbals '62. W e thought it would be a great way to kick off the PCD class notes and have reprinted most of it below with the author's per mission. "I arrived at Princeton junior School (PJS) in 1927 with J. Howard Murch as headmaster, Mr. Dill (a Canadian by birth) as English teacher and as the coach of soccer, hockey and baseball. PjS was in a house back-to-back to Miss Dill's girl's school. "I think I had never before (or since) relative to my age, learned as much as I did at PJS. By the fifth (and final) form, we had moved to PCD. Mr. Dill was an excellent skater and my idol. "W e used to eat lunch at PJS in a restaurant at the head of the street, and at recesses, have piggyback contests in the yard or, in season, have in the backyard by the bike racks, basebal I catches. My best friend was Ed Reeves, a fellow blue in the Blue/White school contests. (Does anyone know his whereabouts? - Ed.) Several years ago I mo tored through Princeton and contacted John Scoon and Kink Sayen. "I have recovered from a heart bypass and a TURP of about seven years ago, and go jogging or biking daily as well as strenuous exercise in my little (heated) pool which I had built for my wife who has two artificial knees." The class will be saddened to learn of the death of John Scoon this spring. He graduated from Lawrenceville and Princeton University after PCD and had the dubious distinction of becoming one of the first people to undergo modern brain sur gery for the removal of a brain tumor in 1938. John's first career was in publishing and he be came an editor with several academic and trade presses. In 1948 he joined the foreign service as a cultural affairs attache and served around the world in that capacity. He was assistant director of the University of New Mexico Press from 1966 until 1971 when he retired and returned to Princeton. Our sympathy goes out to his four children and five grandchildren.
60th REUNION 38
Harold B. Erdman 47 Winfield Drive Princeton, NJ 08540 James K. Meritt 809 Saratoga Terrace Turnersville, NJ 08012 Needs Secretary
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E.B. Quick writes that he's Board Chairman of Publishers' Storage and Shipping Corporation, "Providing fulfillment services for over 200 pub lishers worldwide. Books! Books! Books!" Detlev F. Vagts 29 Follen Street Cambridge, MA 021 38 Peter E.B. Erdman 219 Russell Road Princeton, N) 08540
’42 ’43
Thomas Matthews passed away this spring at his home in Cavendish, Suffolk, England. He gradu ated from South Kent School and Princeton U n i versity where he won the Dickenson Prize for excellence in logic. For three years following that, he read philosophy at New College, Oxford. In 1972 he spent a year at Cambridge University, earning his teaching certificate. Tom taught lit erature at the Castle Manor School in Suffolk from 1973 to 1981 and acted as an exchange teacher at the Williston-Northampton School in Massa chusetts and then at Gill/St. Bernard's in Gladstone, NJ. He returned to England and taught at the Edward VI School from 1985 to 1989 when illness forced his retirement. He played six differ ent instruments and sang in various choirs. Our sympathy goes to his family and friends. Needs Secretary
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Markley Roberts has livened up this column for several years and retires with the following re port. On behalf of the class, we thank him for his enthusiasm and effort. Anyone interested in tak ing up the slack should call the publications office. From Massachusetts, David Barlow reports that his son, Stuart, is recently married and living in Albany, NY. Dave and his wife, Anne, have another son, Craig, who lives in Worcester. After PCD Dave went to Deerfield and Yale, then spent three years in the Navy. He got an M.B.A. at Wharton in 1956 and became a C.P.A. in Massa chusetts in 1963. For the past 10 years, Dave has been the owner of an electroplating company in
Worcester. Dave sings bass in various choral groups in Boston and Cambridge. He and Anne married 43 years - have given up grass cutting and backyard gardening for a condo in Grafton, but Dave keeps in shape with tennis, indoors in the winter and outdoors in the summer. John R. Heher Rosedale Lane Princeton, NJ 08540
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It is with sorrow we report the death of Tom Moore. Our thoughts are with his family and friends.
50th REUNION David Erdman 4259 Province Line Road Princeton, NJ 08540
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A note from Robert Patterson says "U p to my wazoo as secretary of Lawrenceville '49, so ap preciate your news need. The last three winters, I've snowbirded to England, two to three months annually, trying to work out why and how people who count decided what history deserved to be taught about 100 years ago. Pete Lindborg is raising' what he calls 'gourmet popcorn' in California." Peter R. Rossmassler 149 Mountain View Road Princeton, NJ 08540 John D. W allace 90 Audubon Lane Princeton, NJ 08540 Needs Secretary
W illiam C. W allace 25 Barnsdale Road Short Hills, NJ 07078
’47 ’48 ’49 ’50
45th REUNION
Edwin H. Metcalf 23 Toth Lane Rocky Hill, NJ 08553 Philip Kopper 4610 DeRussey Parkway Chevy Chase, M D 20815 Kenneth C. Scasserra 2 Chippen Court Robbinsville, Nj 08691-9252
’51 ’52 ’53
Gren Cuyler writes, "This past season I played President Franklin Roosevelt in the sequel to the musical, Annie, entitled Annie Warbucks, at the Chiswick Park Theater, Sudbury, MA. It was lots of fun." Fred M. Blaicher Construction Data Corporation 2770 Indian River Blvd. Vero Beach, FL 32960 Guy K. Dean III 11 Lemore Circle Rocky Hill, Nj 08553
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John Bales was kind enough to bring us up to date on his life in the following note. "I live in Jenkintown, PA with my wife, Jane. W e have three college-age daughters. One is a senior at Princeton. I am a partner with the Philadelphia law firm of Morgan, Lewis and Bockins. My family enjoys any outdoor activity and plan this summer to ride the open range looking for stray cattle."
40th REUNION Donald C. Stuart III Town Topics P.O. Box 664 Princeton, NJ 08542 James Carey, Jr. 545 Washington Street Dedham, MA 02026 C.R. Perry Rodgers, Jr. 106 Pennington-Rocky Hill Road Hopewell, NJ 08525
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Toby Knox was the lone correspondent, saving this class from the blank spaces of many before it. W e're sure he'd like to read about some of the rest of you next time. How about it?? Toby writes, "The 1994-1995 year has been an active one for the Knox family. Amanda iscompleting her junior year at the Holderness School in Plymouth, NH. One of her dorm mates has been John Gaston's '62 daughter, Hope. Next year Amanda will co captain the field and ice hockey teams. Andrew completes second grade soon. His goal is to be the first native Vermonter on the NY Giants. He enjoys hockey as well, and again is attending the U VM summer hockey camp. The Knox Group is doing well, providing qualitative market and re search services and communications consulting. I travel frequently around the country, moderat ing focus groups." Stephen S. Cook 566 River Road Belle Mead, NJ 08502
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The class suffered a great loss with the death of Ted Churchill on June 17. He was killed in a car
accident in Maine, near his home in Rockport where he taught photography. Ted was an artist and noted cinematographer. He pioneered the use of the Steadicam and worked on many major feature films in the US and Europe. Ted will J)e remembered for his infectious enthusiasm and love of life. W e send our deepest sympathy to his mother and his twin brother, Jack. Karl D. Pettit III 6 Buttonwood Street Lambertville, NJ 08530 and G. Thomas Reynolds 34 Pin Oak Road Skillman, NJ 08558
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From Karl: Steve Crawford writes that he's run ning for Congress again in western Maryland, "as a Centrist, pro-choice Democrat against an ex tremely conservative Republican incumbent. W ill win March 5 primary, but face tough general election contest. "
35th REUNION J. Ward Kuser 11 74 Bear Tavern Road Titusville, NJ 08560-1505
’61
I think I just wait too long putting this column together. Gee, I thought that after the PD S Journal arrived two weeks ago, around Independence Day, that my phone would be ringing off the wall and my mail lady would be using a wheelbarrow to haul the stuff to my box. I mean, every one was asked to send in all their latest tales and stories and whatnot. I just had this idea at any moment I was going to hear some terrific stuff from some body. Maybe I thought that Hy Young and Dave Petito would finally let me in on their annual nocturnal outings to certain entertainment spots they frequent in Florida. I mean...! thought that I'd at least hear from Bob Leventhal about my crass comments concerning his "Dream Machine Activity" or Bob Griggs that I turned around everything that he said or that Peter Katzenbach wouldn't need his computer to "boot" me up! Alas, nothing like that happened. Meanwhile over at The Great Road, Publications Director Linda Maxwell Stefanelli MFS '62 is probably wondering why her most voluminous class writer has not yet cranked out and delivered the latest article by today'sdeadline, as explicitly instructed. Do I dare call her and blame it on "W ild B ill" Wyman who hasn't returned any of my phone messages to his infamous North Cahuenga Hollyweird digs? Can I suggest that Richard Aaron has not yet informed me of his latest exploits from too chic Santa Barbara? Maybe I can blame it all on "Always Busy Ed" W arren and his telephone constantly being in use! Hm-m...Maybe I better quit day-dreaming and get to work...W ell, after calling around fora bit, I finally reached someone and that was Joe Riker. W e had a fine talk on his latest happenings, which all seem to be quite good. Actually, I interrupted him in the process of his moving from his Cos Cob, Connecticut home to better surroundings in the state. He was be tween packing his dinner plates and wondering where to find his missing stack of Junior Journals...Yes, Joe, you did receive terrific re views for your performance as Queen Guenivere in "A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court." I did not ask him if he still had his Hightstown rug
company sample from March 20th, 1956, but I did ask why the move. He casually mentioned there was going to be a bit of change in his life. Fine, fine, go on! W ell, on September 23rd Joe's getting married...finally...for the first time -and I thought that I took my time waiting til my fortieth birthday. Hey, great news, Joe! He didn’t get into many particulars, such as would Brother John Sheehan jet over from Afrique to say a few kind words or was Bill Shea providing some choice Maine crustaceans for the reception or even the lovely lady's name. Ok, that's fine. So we spoke a little about I’CD and he got going about his days at Lawrenceville and the number of our class mates that were there, i.e. David Johnson, David Tyler, Rob French, Robert Ayers, etc. After Lville, he went to Trinity College in Hartford and majored in economics. Upon graduation, Joe was "prime meat" for Uncle Sam, so he enlisted in the Navy to see the world and didn't regret the four years at all. I think that he enjoyed it, especially the two years in London. W ell, when he was discharged, Joe enrolled at the Wharton School and gained his M.B.A. W hile there, he developed a real interest in economic history and develop ment. Upon graduation, he signed on with a management consulting company dealing with truck and rail transportation and stayed for nearly twenty years. Recently, he made a change and is now the financial director of a non-profit organi zation that deals with people's commuting habits and alternate forms of transportation. By this time, I was getting a bit fidgety to hear some good old tales, but none came. As Joe said, it's been a long time and you just don't remember much about grammar school...Maybe so. He finished by saying that he wanted to express his admira tion of Bill Ackley as "one of his most interesting teachers." OK, I was on a roll and again grabbed the horn, but as usual Warren's phone was busy. How about "Call/Waiting," Ed? So I looked to the West tor inspiration, the Land West of the Pecos, the Land of the Setting Sun, the land where Dick Griggs and Wes McCaughan triumphantly led Westward Ho II in 1956, and whom did I find at home in Albuquerque but none other than Hank Tomlinson who was just about to step out and lineblade a bit. W ell, actually no, he was knee deep in diapers. Hank's been busy lately. Brother,
Hank Tomlinson '61 with his wife, Kathy, and their children, two-year-old twins Sarah and Julia, Peter, 4, and Annie, 5.
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what a reception I received from him! He imme diately let loose about what a rotten tennis player I was and gave as an example our infamous and only doubles effort against the W ardlaw School in May of 1961 when we were annihilated! W ell, I was "ready for bear." So, I clued him in that he should talk, and I well remembered that he was the sole loser in our first team match that year against Trenton Junior Three, taking it on the chin by the score of 0-6, 6-8. W e were heading for further verbal blows when a truce was called due to his twin two-year-olds, Sarah and Julia, need ing Daddy's help. After much hemming and haw ing, Hank settled down and gave me the scoop. After PCD, his educational junket went to Taft for four years, then Hun as a P.C., then the University of Pennsylvania for two and one-half years and then out of the country. When asked if he had been run out for his dastardly deeds, he practi cally went apoplectic and began spouting en francais and then singing the Marseillaise. Finally after the third verse, Hank explained that he went to France and gained a degree from the University of Grenoble. Apparently, his efforts were a first, as his "major" was in ski area management, teach ing and coaching! C'est incroyable, Monsieur Henri! So then, he returned to the USA and got into a slew of activities from ski instructor and realtor in Aspen to regional coordinator for Saloman North America, dealing in winter sports equipment and now as a manufacturers' rep for outdoor equipment. In other words, jock socks and such. Hank met his wife, Kathrynn, in Denver where she was a special education teacher...He was her wind-surfing instructor...Yes! They were married in 1987 and besides the twins, there is Annie, age five, and Peter, age four. Hank says that he regularly sees Peter Kirkpatrick - now we've got your number, Peter! - on his business circuit and used to see Dave Petito and Hy Young in Florida. As to pastimes, Hank's a full-time father who works out of his home and only a parttime skier and wind-surfer. He asked information about Towny Blodget and John Becker - as do I and heavily praised The Reverend Bob Smythe and Frank Gorman for their teaching talents. In parting, one of his greatest concerns is the educa tion of his children, particularly in comparison to PCD. Amen, Brother.
This column marks the end of my second year as class secretary. As time passes, I learn more about who we were and hear more of what we are. A lot of ideas have come out for further writings, besides just covering what people have done and are doing. One subject that I had planned for a later date, after much research now seems necessary to at least mention. There were at least 43 of us that were at some time or another members of the PCD Class of 1961. Actually, that number can be debated because later Bruner Dielhenn became a member of the Class of '62, but did start out with us. Regardless of the num ber, there are at least three of our class that are no longer with us, Teddy Hollman, Guy Vicino and now W ard Jandl. Unfortunately, I have had little success so far in learning much of two of these men. Ted Hollman died in 1978 as stated in the Trenton Times obituary for his father. Guy Vicino died a few years ago as stated in Lawrenceville School's Laurentian. And now comes the news of Ward Jandl dying on March 18, 1995. Ward graduated from the Hotchkiss School and Yale University. He spent two years in the Peace Corps teaching English in Ankara, Turkey. In 1971, he received a graduate certificate in historic preser vation from Columbia University. His entire pro fessional career was spent in the US Department of the Interior, National Park Service, beginning as an architectural historian for the National Register of Historic Places. W ard led the Department's Rehabilitation Tax Incentive Pro gram from its inception in 1976. The program has claimed more than 25,000 historic buildings throughout the United States and is the recipient of a Presidential Design Award. At the time of his death, Ward was the chief appeals officer for cultural resources and deputy chief of the Preser vation Assistance Division. He coauthored The Secretary of the Interior's Standards for Archeol ogy and Historic Preservation and two books, Houses by M ail: A Guide to Houses from Sears, Roebuck and Company (1986) and Yesterday's Houses of Tomorrow: Innovative Homes: 18501950 (1991). During his memorial service in Washington, DC, a former associate director for cultural resources for the Park Service said "Our loss is beyond measure...Ward Jandl contributed more than any other individual to getting historic
rehabilitation tax incentives into the Reagan tax bill, and to conceiving, designing and administer ing the program." Ward was a volunteer at the Arena Stage, the Society of Friends Meeting House and the Whitman-Walker Clinic. He is survived by his father, Henry Anthony Jandl of Richmond, Virginia, and his sister, Margaret Marie Jandl of Cambridge, Massachusetts. Truly, a real gentle man that gave so much of himself. I regret ending on this sad subject, especially as this magazine will be coming out at the Christmas holiday season. Still, I know that you will have some interest in what has happened to all the members of the class. Please consider sending in some stories, any photos and whatever good tales about what you were a while ago and are today. If you are out of the Princeton area and do visit, please give a call (609-737-7873) and I'm sure a number of us locals will get together and talk about...the Boys from Broadmead. W illiam H. W alker III P.O. Box 346, Hawk Pine Hil Norwich, VT 05055 Kevin W . Kennedy 280 Green way Road Ridgewood, NJ 07450 William Ring 3581 Mountain View Avenue Los Angeles, CA 90066 and Donald E. Woodbridge RR I, 48 Depot Hill Road Amenia, NY 12501 Nathaniel C. Hutner 205 Warren Street Brooklyn, NY 1 1201
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30th REUNION
PRINCETON DAY SCHOOL
Lynn W iley Ludwig 33 Cold Soil Road Lawrenceville, NJ 08648
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Margery Cuyler writes, "W atch for my new book in October - lnvisil)le in the Third Grade, pub lished by Henry Holt!" Congratulations, Margery. W e 're going to have to clear a whole shelf in Colross' alumni bookcase for your work! Julia Lockwood P.O. Box 143 South Freeport, ME 04078
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Another author, Pam Erickson McConnell, was published in the Managed Care Competitive Network with an article on "Preparing for the Medicaid Managed Care Market." She writes, "I have also been invited to be on the editorial board of Aspen Publishers' new periodical, In side M edicaid Managed Care. "Congratulations! Marta Nussbaum Steele writes that her daughter, Liza, will enter George School as a ninth grader in the fall. The family had a great visit to Disney World in March.
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Mary Hobler Hyson 1067 W olf Hill Road Cheshire, CT 06410
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The women in these early PDS classes seem to share a love of writing. Your class secretary (having honed her skills with this column!) has had her first children's story published. The Pip squeak Private Eye and the Case of the Missing Silver Spoon appeared in the May/June issue of the Special Juniors Edition of the Writers' Interna tional Forum. Our congratulations, Mary! -Ed. From Mary: A single item of news for this column, but of such proportion that it could fill an entire page... Newsofa first grandchild for Susan Koch LaTulippe!! Alister (Alec) Craig Marble was born to Jeffry and Becca (Susan's daughter) on June 29th weighing in at about eight pounds. Reports are, of course, that he is beautiful. Congrats!! If there are any other grandparents in the class, do let me know. I don't want anyone to feel left out. Hope everyone had a good summer. Susan Denise Harris 324 South Bald Hill Road New Canaan, CT 06840
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Ann W iley 33 Cold Soil Road Lawrenceville, NJ 08648
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W e are all terribly devastated by Chris Reeve's riding accident this spring. Our thoughts and prayers are with Chris and his family as he recovers. W e had a terrific 25th reunion with a great turnout. For those of you who didn't come, you missed a wonderful time. Make sure you plan on returning for our 30th. The weekend began with dinner at Meg Brinster Michael's house Friday night and ended with dinner and dancing under the tent behind Colross on Saturday. Three cheers for Laurie D'Agostino Stoumen who was the women's winner in the 10K race! You will see a picture nearby of our class. Unfortunately not everyone who attended is in the picture, but here is a list of those who appeared at some point (I hope I haven't left anyone out): Naurene Donelly Antoniotti, Lucy Stover Ashton, Rebecca Bushnell, Nicki Sarett Demming, Ann W iser Fries, |udi Migliori Gavin, Grace Taylor Harris, Erik Heggen, Heidi Flemer Hesselein, Lindsey Hicks, Louise Hutner, Jack Kilgore, Brita Light-Lookner, Janet Masterson, Linda McCandless, Shelley Brewster
Susan Bdiley Brooks '69 (lett) and Meg Brinster Michael '70 ran into each other at a convention in Acapulco last March. McMahan, W endy Lawson-Johnston McNeil, Margaret Meigs, Meg Brinster Michael, Linda Mihan Robin Murray, Bob Peck Bill Power, Eve Robinson, Bob Salup, Leslie Grey Schneider, Marjorie Shaw, Peter Smoluchowski, Laurie D'Agostino Stoumen, Bob Sullivan, Ann W iley, and Pam Woodworth. It you want to catch up on what people are doing and didn't get a copy of the class of '70 questionnaires, call me and I'll send you one. Special thanks to Meg, Janet, Louise, Brita, Heidi, Rebecca, Marjorie and Calvin (where were you?) for getting so many of us there. I would like to publicly thank Marjorie Shaw for her excellent work as class agent. She is the perfect volunteer: she meets deadlines, she does more than she's asked, and she picks up on those rare(?) occasions when I make a mistake. And what's more, because of her work, the class of '70 ended the year with 61 % participation -the highest by far of all PDS classes. So next year when you get a letter from Marjorie, please respond quickly. Not only will we continue to lead the pack, but it will make her life a whole lot easier. From other sources we've learned that Sarah Brett-Smith. an associate professor of the history of art department at Rutgers University, won the Arnold Rubin outstanding publication award in African arts (1992-1995) for her recent book, The Making ofBamana Sculpture: Creativity and Gender(New York: Cambridge University Press, 1994). The award is given by the Arts Council of the African Studies Association to the book that has contributed the most to the understanding of Afri can art over a three-year period. Meg Brinster Michael and Susan Bailey Brooks '69 bumped into each other during a Merrill Lynch conference in Acapulco last March. It seems they've been on the same trips before, but never "discovered" each other until now. Chris Reeve has come to be known as much for his volunteer efforts as for his professional accomplishments. I le has devoted a large part of his time to championing causes and people who need support. As Co-President of The Creative Coalition, Chris had a letter published in The New York Times on March 16th. Frank Rich, in his Sunday Times column, lournal, praised the artists who are fighting to defeat the cut in appro priations for the National Endowment for the Arts and quoted Chris' letter: "'It's not in the bag by a long shot,' rightly cautions Christopher Reeve, the most persistent show-biz lobbyist for the endow ment.'' It was just that kind of commitment that made Chris the recipient of the 1990 Alumni Award for outstanding service to others, and prompted the class of 1995 to invite him to be their commencement speaker.
25th REUNION
The 25th Reunion Under the Tent: (Front row left to right) Bob Peck, Bob Salup, Rosalind Salup, Linda Mihan, Robin Murray; (Secondrow left to right) Laurie D'Agostino Stoumen, Carol Power, Jack Kilgore, Pam Woodworth, Linda McCandless, Marjorie Shaw, (Back row left to right) Bill Power, Ann Wiley, Barney Rush. Louise Broad Lavine 2016 West Club Blvd. Durham, NC 27705 Our big news this month isfrom Lisa W arren who had a baby daughter, Rachel Alison Cantlay, born on May 29, 1995, weighing eight pounds. Lisa says she is doing great and teaching her parents a new life. Lisa plans to return to work in the fall. Congratulations, Lisa and Bob! Earlier this spring I saw Lisette Mills. I was very im pressed with her many accomplishments as a veterinarian. It was nice to see Lizette. From other sources we learn that Richard Kramer's daughter, Laurie, and son, Michael, both graduated from high school this year. "Michael heads off for college in the fall and Laurie hasn't decided what she wants to do. W e're expanding our business this summer and plan to be open by the beginning of August at our new location." A note from Tim Smith reads, "I have left MacNeil/Leher where I was a producer for 12 years, to head west to San Francisco. My new job is general manager, programming for IVN Communications, a video/CD-ROM com pany. So after 42 years in the northeast - Califor nia, here I come . . Jan Hall Burruss 69 Forest Street Sherborn, MA 01 770
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I was sorry not to hear from anybody this time. So I'll tell you what's happening here in Sherborn. W e're completing construction of a new garage and remodeling the old garage into living space for John, me and our three children. No project is simple when your house is 300 years old. This spring I started a new hobby - raising chickens and guinea fowl. Our yearbook said I'd end up on a farm. I did! Many of ourclassmatesare still listed as lost. If you could let me know where they are, I'll try to contact them and let the rest of you know where they are. Those who are listed as lost are Barbara Abram s, Ruth Anderson, Ledlie Borgerhoff, Elizabeth Foster Conforti, Diane Ely, Cheryl Holcombe Gates, Cameron Gregg, Lucien Yokana Guthrie, Miriam (Jerry) Hafitz, Wendy Haynes, Susan Heyniger, William Hilton, An drew Houston, Linda Gail Malsbury, Maria Kelleher Rathbone, Stephanie Shoemaker Leckie, Lydia Lennihan, Katherine Maloney. From other sources we learn that Steve Bash moved to Charlotte, NC in January. He's still in international banking, now with First Union Bank. "Spending many hours watching two daughters
swim and the third daughter dive competitively. No tennis players in the family. They are all water rats - and doing very well (proud father com ment!)." Casey Constable and her husband had a little girl on April 26th. Her name is Hadley Constable Nugent and she weighed eight pounds, eight ounces and was 21" long at birth. Casey says, "She's great fun and looks more like her dad than her mom." Mrs. Shepherd reports that Ellen Sussman attended a writing seminar in Mexico recently where she met Debbie Moore Krulewitch MFS '61. Ellen is living in California, is married, has two children and teaches writing at Berkeley. Many of her short stories have been published and she has just submitted a novel for publication. Ann Macleod Weeks Oldfields School P.O. Box 697 Glencoe, M D 21 I 52
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Hopefully the Class of '73 is enjoying its summer, so let's get lots of responses for the next lournal about your travels and families and careers. Art Levy writes that he1continues his law practice with offices in Lawrenceville and Newtown, PA. "My wife, Paula, and our children, Amanda, age 5, and Allison, age 3, are excited about Amanda starting kindergarten at PDS this fall!" As for myself, I received an alumnae award for excellence in teaching (congratulations! - Ed.) and have contin ued to do some work for the College Board. My husband completed his master's in creative writ ing this spring, and my son, Jed, age 10, began horseback riding and piano. He's presently in a junior lifeguard program in Bethany Beach, DE. I spoke rec ently with Tuckey Fussell, Hilary Mor gan, Robin Maltese Dintinger, Susan Ross Cusack and Daryl Janick Kent. W e are all trying to arrange a reunion in Boston this fall. Should be fun. A note from Beth Sanford reads, "I still go by my maiden name except for calls to the pediatrician and the plumber. Now have two children: Nick, age 3, and Annie, age 14 months. I have gone out on my own as a marketing consultant in the media and entertainment industries. So far, so good. I'm busy, I love getting to have breakfast and lunch with my kids." Keith D. Plapinger 25 Joy Street Boston, MA 02 l 14 Nancy Kendall McCabe writes, "I am back to work as a television development executive with Viacom Productions, hoping to unearth the next
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A spec ial memorial service was held for Stephen Packard '75 on Alumni Day and a tree was planted on the Colross lawn in his name. In this picture, his sister, Cynthia '76, presents Headmaster Archer Harman with one of her paintings entitled "Boy, Book, and Dog," which she gave to the school in honor of her brother. It will hang in the library because of Stephen's love of reading. Cosby Show! Son, W ill, 6, daughter Katie, 4, and husband Pat are all doing great." More news came in from Palmer Uhl: "I started a new career as a hypnotherapist. Just completed an advanced course, and am currently conducting workshops, private sessions and teaching self-hypnosis." Yuki Moore Laurenti 464 Hamilton Avenue Trenton, N) 08609 There was a good turnout at our 20th reunion in May thanks to the efforts of the reunion commit tee and the alumni office. It seemed hard to believe that so many years had passed since we had walked the halls of our alma mater. The writer apologizes in advance for not recounting what all of the attendees are occupying their time doing these days -being a nudge (for information) only works well for short periods of time! In addition, apologies for any names left out. The evening before our reunion, Caroline Erdman Hare hosted a supper at her home. The Interim I Jeadmaster, Archer Harman, and his wife, Mari, stopped by to greet those in attendance. The group that gathered included Alex Smith Gunderson, John Brinster, Kathy Burks Hackett, Molly Moynahan, Ruth Barach Cox, Kip Herrick O'Brien, Grayson Ferrante, )ody Myer Lynch, and Jane Farley. Talk about a coincidence: this fall Caroline, )ohn and Kathy will each have a child in kindergarten in the Montgomery Town ship school system! M olly Moynahan recently moved to Dallas, TX from London, where her husband had been working for The_Wall Street Journal. Currently he is the paper's Dallas office bureau chief. Molly, who initially could not imag ine herself living in Texas, now teaches fiction at the University of Texas at Dallas. Her second novel was recently published in Europe. Molly was joined at the Saturday festivities by her young daughter. Ruth Barach Cox lives in Raleigh, NC with her husband and two children. She restores oil paintings and does contract work for muse ums in the southeast. The volume of work is tremendous since there are very few profession als in her field who live in the southeast region. Jody Myer Lynch has been in Wisconsin for over 15 years. She has a son, Sam, who is 5, and a daughter, Lydia, who is almost 3. jody, who is a graphic designer, works on education projects in the cooperative extension at the University of Wisconsin. In her free time, jody weaves Navajo rugs! Lars Selberg, his wife, Julie Sly '74, and their two children came on Saturday from their home in a small Connecticut town. Lars is an optical engineer. Grayson Ferrante, his wife, Dee, and thier two boys participated in the Panther Parade. He is living in Princeton Junction and working as a database consultant. Eric Dunn was in town to visit his grandfather and stopped by. He works for Intuit, a Palo Alto based software company. Oth
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ers on the athletic fields for the picnic included Keith Thomas and his two sons; Molly Sword McDonough and her two children and Ellen Albert with her husband and two children. Ellen still lives in New York City where she is an architect for MTV. The discussion eventually turned to schooling, which seemed normal given the number of Class of 1975 children that were crowded onto the blankets, and Ellen talked about the challenge of going through the admis sions process for NYC private schools. Her daugh ter had been accepted at one, thankfully. W e commented that things were easier when we were young - nostalgia fora time past. Those who attended the evening cook-out (and are not al ready noted) included Chuck Segal, Sally Wright, Hilary W inter (who is book editor at the Trenton Times), Janet Rassweiler, Ralph Brown, Chris Miller, Marjorie Williams, and Shawn Ellsworth. Much to his surprise, at the alumni brunch in the mOrning, Shawn had been awarded the first Alumni Award for service to PDS! Congratula tions for all your work and assistance to the school. Lucy Gorelli MacDonough was in atten dance at the baby shower for Claire Treves Brezel '77, held the same day as the reunion. She regretted not having been at the 20th and sends her regards to the class. Lucy gave birth to twins on January 16, 1995 and has had a hectic sched ule ever since, which is probably an understate ment! Other news: Mary Lane McNamara writes that she is living in a historic house in Concord, MA. Her three children, Peter, 8, Sarah, 7 and Henry, 5, all attend Nashoba Brooks, a private school, which is right around the corner from their home. "Best wishes to Lila Lohr!" "I heard it through the grapevine:" Anne Tate lives in Cam bridge, MA and is teaching architecture. Jim Meigs is in a senior position at US Magazine. One of our classmates reported being stunned at see ing him being interviewed on television! So that is where the editorship of The Observer (the underground paper started by our class) took him! If the writer left out any news, please correct the omission by sending in your notes for the next issue. Ciao! A note from Sally Schluter Tardella brings the following welcome update. "I am a painter now and have my work in an occasional show. I teach design etc. at the College of Architecture/Design of Lawrence Technological University. I am mar ried and have two young children we adopted from South America. And that's about it for the past 20 years!"
mute - what a relief.)" Caren Ludmer Perich also wrote to say, "W ell, after two years of trying, Walter and I finally succeeded in becoming preg nant! W e know that it's a boy, and he's due July 18th. It's very exciting. I'm still working as the director of an adolescent mental health program. I don't know what I'll do after the baby's born. His name will be Antonio Judah Perich." Jonathan Stein managed to make good use of the small space on the post card with this lengthy letter. "O ne evening last fall the phone rang and a voice said, 'Do you know who this is?' I said, 'Keep talking.' After a moment more, I said, 'Are you in Virginia?' And Tim Frey said, 'No, I'm at the exit for Reading.' After an hour of being lost, I went out and found Tim and brought him back to the house. He was wearing a dark blue business suit and driving a Lincoln Town Car (can you believe it?), albeit it rented for business. W e talked for a couple of hours and in the morning he headed to New Jersey to do an audit. W hile there he saw Carl Spataro. Then he vanished back to Virginia and I don't expect he'll pop up for another 7 1/2 years. M y news isn't much; I'm still recovering from complications from surgery in December. Three-and-a-half-year-old Remy wrote her name this week - twice, and I got started on another book for Automobile Quarterly." Two more notes tell us that Sandy Shaw Strong is still living in Ketchum, ID. She spends most of her time "trying to keep up with my son, Sam, who is 1 1/2 years old." And Virginia Rodgers lives in Lake Placid, NY with her three daughters, Andrea, 13, Hanna, 11 and Brittany, 8. She is a licensed practical nurse and works at the Adirondac Medical Center in Saranac Lake. From the local papers we learn that Carl Erdman, son of Hal Erdman PCD '39, was married on June 3rd. His bride, Debra Bridgman, has a degree in journalism from the University of Colorado and works for Joan & David Helpern, Inc. in Ardmore, PA. Carl is a certified financial analyst and is vice president of the Pardee Resources Company in Philadelphia. The couple were married in EcJgartown, M A and honeymooned in France. Alice Graff Looney 19010 Gallop Drive Germantown, M D 20874 Claire Treves Brezel and her husband, Ted, an nounced the birth of theirdaughter, Emma Rachel, on May 25, 1995. Claire writes, "She arrived a month early on our moving day. W e moved to Port Washington on the North Shore of Long Island. I am currently exploring a new land and post-corporate career options. Finally, I have news!" <
20th REUNION Creigh Duncan 549 The Great Road Princeton, NJ 08540 This first batch of news was gathered last fall, so while it may be a bit dated, it's still most w el come. A note from Cory Fischer Sertl reads, "Mark and I are parents - Katya Josephine Sertl, born February 22, 1994 - almost one year now! Still living, working in Rochester, NY. Ski a lot in the winter, sail a lot in the summer." Eleanor Barnes has a new job as the principal software engineer for Jurisoft in Cambridge, MA She says, "I'm working on a systems development team in a PC network. Jurisoft is an arm of LEXIS/NOXIS (the legal database people) which, in turn, was sold by Mead (the paper people) to Reed-Elsevier (the European publishers)." Sheila Newsome Maddox writes, "Winston and I have a 10-monthold daughter, Rac hel. I just started working again as assistant general counsel for the Copeland Companies in East Brunswick. (A 15-minute com
Mason Gray Dufresne, son of Cary Bachelder Dufresne ’77, was born October 2, 7994. Here he models the PDS bib that is sent to alumni newborns.
Thomas R. Gates 8 Weidel Drive Pennington, NJ 08534 Nicholas R. Donath 4165 Gibraltar Street Las Vegas, NV 89121 and Evan R. Press 1116 1/2 South Rexford Drive Los Angeles, CA 90035 Congratulations to Laura Farina who opened her own law offices at 418 W all Street in Princeton. Her practice is in the area of general business litigation and counseling. Previously she was associated with the law firms of Paul, Weiss etals. in New York and Crummy, Del Deo et als. in Newark, N|. Jennifer Dutton W hyte 990 Singleton Avenue Woodmere, NY 11 598 Hard as it is to believe, our 15th reunion has come and gone. All who were in attendance would have to agree that it was great to catch up with old friends. Our class had quite a good turnout through out the day's activities. I enjoyed touring the school for the first time in 15 years. I was very much impressed with the new additions and im provements and would urge you all to check out the school at your next opportunity. The highpoint of the tour had to be Jim Laughlin's kindergarten classroom. He had a great set-up and I know that his students are lucky to have him as a teacher. My husband, Dennis, and I enjoyed a delicious lunch at Stephanie Trock's restaurant, Santa Fe Express. Joining us were several classmates: Liz Wexler, Jennifer Brannon Manning, Jay Marcus and Jodi Kamer Howard and her husband, Chris. Liz has just finished her first year of law school in Ohio and is looking forward to a summer off. Jennifer and Jay still live in Atlanta and see each other fairly often. Jodi and her husband live in Natick, MA where Jodi is a buyer of children's apparel for BJ's. Great job, considering Jodi is expecting her first child in early January. Jodi was one of several pregnant classmates at the reunion. Janie Phares Jacobson is expecting her first child in September. Lolli Dennison Leeson will have her second child this fall as well. John Banse and his wife have probably welcomed their first child by now, al though I did not hear any news from them. I am eagerly awaiting the arrival of my first child at the
The Whitlock famiily viewed alumni displays at the Robert C. Whitlock Alumni Architecture and Design Exhibit in February. The family, (from left) Da vid '80, Harriet, Catherine and her husband, Rob '78, were presented with an album of written tributes by Bob Whitlock's former students. end of August. (Janet Chaplin Whyte was born August 30. Congratulations! — Ed.)Not at the reunion, but also expecting in September, is Vir ginia Ferrante Iqbal. Virginia, husband Manzar and daughter Alexandra continue to enjoy life in Hong Kong. (Sorry for the misprint last issue. Virginia does have a daughter not a son.) The evening's festivities included a cocktail party and dinner dance. As I was not taking notes and received no written news, I will have to rely on my memory for this column. Please forgive me if I have neglected to mention you. Please write me with your news for the next issue! Jon Hochman, his wife and their adorable baby daughter were in attendance. They live in Manhattan where Ion is an attorney. It was good to see Dave Whitlock and his wife. They live on Long Island where Dave is a Cadillac representative servicing dealerships on Long Island. Tom von Oehsen is preparing for his tripout to San Francisco at the end of August. Tom will visit Adam Barton, wife Dana and their new baby boy. Adam and his family will be going down to Costa Rica for about nine months where he will design and build a home for a client. Sounds very exciting! Sally Fineburg came out to PDS from Manhattan where she lives and works. Tim Thomas, his wife and two lovely daughters en
joyed the day's activities. I briefly saw Tim Murdoch and his wife who traveled down from Montreal where they make their home. Carl Reimersand his wife, Pam, were there with their daughter, Grace. The Reimers live in Manhattan where Carl is a general practitioner. Abby Stackpole Me Call, hus band Dave, daughters Katharine and Ann also came out from Manhattan. Amy Stackpole Brigham, husband Tim, daughters Emma and Molly, enjoyed the parade and daytime festivities. Kara Swisher came up from Washington, DC where she continues to write for The Washington Post. Also present at the evening affair were: Sophie Carpenter Speidel, Leslie Straut Ward and husband Grant, Treby McLaughlin Williams, Tony Dell, Jim Walcott, John David, Joy Power, Howie Powers, Alex Frostega, Billy Rossand wife Norma. Certainly a good time was had by all. Please write with your news. Sophie Carpenter Spiedel writes, "I loved see ing everyone at our 15th and would welcome any visitors to our new home in Charlottesville! I'm working part-time and staying home with sons Chapin, 3, and Carter, 1, while husband Rusty works in electronic publishing. Stay in touch!" Tim Murdoch is "enjoying life in Montreal with Pascale. Helping my company expand in the US. Spent two months in Boca Raton, FL recently
The class of '80 had a good showing on Alumni Day. Shown here from left are Stephanie Trock, jenny Dutton Whyte, John Banse, Jodi Kamer Howard and her husband, Chris (in back).
Treby McLaughlin Williams and Liz Wexler (right) at their 15th reunion.
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Catching up over dinner at their 75th reunion are (left to right) Carl Reimers, )ay Marcus and Sally Fineburg. helping to manage Astraltech Americas, our plant which manufactures CDs for Latin music labels and CD-ROMs for major computer firms. The taxes in Canada are very high, but I've found the quality of life (no guns, peaceful streets) to be good."
15th REUNION Cameon Carrington Levy 2212 Weymouth Moscow, ID 83843 and
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Kristine Anastasio Manning 1711 Smith Level Road Chapel Hill, NC 27516 From Kristy: Here I am in Chapel Hill, NC, where my husband, Michael, and I recently relocated in search of a more civilized lifestyle. W e have not been disappointed. I have been working as an environmental communications and fundraising consultant - phoning, faxing and e-mailing from my office at home. I've just begun writing a book on planning for sustainable communities which will be published by Island Press in the fall of 1996. Since I have received not one piece of correspondence from fellow PDS alumni, and because I am determined not to head up yet another empty Class of '81 column, I recently took it upon myself to create my own alumni adventure. And what better place for a high school reunion than a rock concert? W ith this in mind, I headed up to the DC area a few weeks ago, where I met up with Susannah Goodman '82 and Kevin Johnson, who is back from a year in Ethiopia, where he has been working for the National Democratic Institute. Susannah works for Public Citizen, the Ralph Nader group dedi cated to consumer protection. W e piled into a bomb of a car - borrowed from a co-worker of Susannah's and plastered with anti-NAFTA stick ers, but bearing a slight resemblance to Kevin's old Nova - and road-tripped out to Gainesville, VA to see my brother, Trey Anastasio '82, and his band, Phish, at the Nissan Pavilion. W e had our own backstage mini-reunion with Stephen Tho mas, Tom and Lea Lea Erdman Marshall '82, and Marc Plante '82. It was great to see everyone. I can't decide which experience was more nostal gic: reminiscing about high school days or hear
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ing over 20,000 Phish phans chanting "Wilson, W ilson" -the opening to a ditty originally penned by Trey, Tom and Aaron W oolf '82 back in the eighth grade. This same song opens the second set of "A Live One,'' Phish's new double CD, which just hit the stores. It is filled with characters and lyrics originally created in the back row of many a PDS classroom, as well as references and thanks to several PDSers, including Pete, Rog, Dave and Daubs. Anyway, after the show we hit the highway where we encountered a brokendown carload of three, shall we say, slightly "clueless'' Phish phans who seemed completely uninterested in where they were going, how they were going to get there, and what to do with their abandoned car. Fortunately, Public Citizen Susannah took charge, stuffing them in the car with us and finding them a phone, a wrecker and a home (her own!) for the night. It was the first time I had been out past 3:00 a.m. in a long time - a fitting ending to my high school alumni experience. The only major departure from those crazy PDS days was that 1) we were unable to find a W a W a at any time during our travels, and 2) it took me three days to recover from the whole experience. From other sources we learn that Rosalind Waskow Corper is living in Denver and teaching at Colorado Academy and coaching field hockey and lacrosse. She's also teaching in the Hall of
A wind-whipped ocean and the setting sun pro vided a dramatic backdrop for the marriage of Kristen Elmore '8 1 and Neil Meister last Novem ber on Fripp Island, NC. Life at the Museum of Natural History in Denver. Jonathan Brush considers himself "still a newly wed 'til August 27, 1995. M y wife and I bought a house in Lawrenceville last year, been extremely busy cleaning up the jungle the previous owner left us! Started a new job with a commercial real estate company in June. Looking forward to our 15th reunion - wow - 15 years!" Suzanne Haynes Halle 5310 East Sanford Circle Englewood, CO 80110
} /^v U
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just after midnight on March 22nd, Henri became a proud big brotherto Curtis Haynes Halle. W e're all beginning to settle in to life in Denver which has been pretty interesting with swimsuits one day and snowsuits the next. The locals claim the temperature fluctuates to extremes all winter, and, except for a few "bonks" to the head, Henri seems to be accepting his little brother, for the most part. Leslie Pell stopped in for a quick visit while en route to Vail where she had a few runs with Kitty Ijams, among others. M y brother,
Michael '81 and Jennifer Paine Leahy '82 captured their children in a quiet moment: Amanda, 8, Christie-Lee, 7, Mikey, 4, and Morgan, 6 months.
David '85, is planning to marry Deli Beardsley, whom we adore, this August in Denver. M y heart goes out to David Bogle. It is a tragic loss for him and for all of us who knew his father during our school years and beyond. Mr. Bogle was a won derful man who will always be remembered fondly. Between the move and the new addition to her family, Suzi has been busier than usual. She did, however, send in the report above and she forwarded the following post cards. Kang Na writes, "Hey, there! Hope all's well with you. I am now a happily married man. On December 4th Amy Visco and I had a wonderful wedding (at Miller Chapel on the Princeton Theo logical Seminary campus) and a wonderful re ception. Ira Shull and his wife, Anne, were there to represent the PDS crowd. Married life is great!" Cam Johnson has "just celebrated the two-year anniversary of the Red Elephant Saloon. Biz is good and should get better as soon as Bruce W illis' bar (The Mint) opens directly across the street from my place. Hailey, ID is still pretty sleepy at 4,000 people, but the mountains con tinue to have their firm grasp on me..." Jeff Perlman writes, "Spent New Year's with John Vine, a dermatology resident in Houston, his wife, Kimberly, and my wife, Sharon. As usual, we ended up on the floor laughing. The only thing that was different was that staying up past midnight gets harder each year. The Frankie K. Alumni Basketball Tournament was the usual spectacle: old men living in the past." Jennifer Paine Leahy writes, "O ur exciting news this year is the birth of our daughter, Morgan Elizabeth. That makes four! Amanda is now 8 1/2, ChristieLee is 7, Michael 4 1/2 and Morgan 7 months. I am obviously very busy taking care of my clan! W e are still in Lawrenceville and see PDS alumni fairly often." Dan Beskind has finished his resi dency in emergency medicine at the University of Arizona and is working in Tucson at the University Medical Center. He's married to Vicki Borsheim. Kristin Naumann is engaged to Mat thew Juros, a master's candidate in architecture at Rice University. They plan to be married early in 1996. Noelle Damico 54-1 3 Ravens Crest Drive Plainsboro, NJ 08536 and
tional, doing marketing, business development, and public relations for architects and engineers, has kept me rather busy. Unlike me, some of you have been good about communicating. The fol lowing is news from all over and may be some what dated -so sue me. I drank some W ild Turkey with Steve Schluter, who was in Princeton last Thanksgiving. He is now a Vice President with Minet Inc. Financial Services in New York. Bonnie Bershad Zinn writes (July 1994), "Flaving suc cessfully (and painlessly— more or less) weath ered my first year of marriage, my husband, George, and I are living in northern New Jersey. It's been a bit of a culture shock - lots of high density population, high hair, and smog. I am nearly finished with my self-imposed service do ing corporate defense work at a large law firm in Newark. W e hope to make a move back to Maine sometime soon. I'd like to get a job with The Sierra Club and make amends for my past two years as a defender of large corporate polluters." You go girl. Tom Haroldson writes (July 1994), "I graduated from Harvard Law School in June. I take the bar exam at the end of July. In Septem ber/October, I will take time to travel, primarily in India. I'm especially looking forward to the trip, because an Indian friend of mine will be showing me around. In October I start work at a law firm in New York City. I hope to find an apartment in SoHo." Jon Firester writes (April and August 1994), "Niederhofer, Firester, & Co., has opened a Bos ton office and we are eyeing an office in Atlanta. I have been busy commuting between NYC and Boston. W e have successfuIly melded computers and accounting software to build our niche. I am traveling to Israel with my family this summer." Janet Zawadsky Cleves writes (January 1995), "W e've been enjoying our new daughter, Kelly. She was born on September 26th. She really is a lot of fun. I haven't seen a lot of PDSers, but Lisa Heins is moving to the next town over so I hope to see more of her. She is having a baby in April.'' Katherine Lonergan Main writes (March 1995), "W e've been in Cincinnati about a year and really love the city. W e're expecting our second bebeon April 1st. Alexander will be three in June. I'm enjoying being home with him and my many projects. Jon Erdman and his new wife, Nathalie, have settled in Crested Butte, Colorado. Erdie writes (February 1995), "I'm selling real estate in Crested Butte now and skiing whenever possible. Things are great in the Rockies."
Squeezing in just under the publication deadline was the new addition to the Willard family. Young Christopher is shown here with his proud parents, Courtney and Ted '84. Adrienne Spiegel McMullen 1201 Braddock Place #305 Alexandria, VA 22314 and Edward J. Willard 7321 Elm Court Monmouth Junction, NJ 08852 W e hear from Andrew Chooljian that after too many years in banking, he's finally broken loose and is now working in sales for a local home builder in Dallas while his wife, Laurel, has taken a new position as a technical writer for Northern Telecom. They both look forward to their visits to Princeton and hope, possibly, to run into some former PDSers while in town for the week be tween Christmas and New Year's. A final note is that they presently have both one dog and cat, but with any luck they'll catch up to W endy W hite Brockelman soon. From other sources we learn that Melinda Bowen has announced her engagement to Chris topher Hansot, a managing marketing consultant with Truelson, Unger, Associates in San Fran cisco. Flegraduated from Montclair High School, Georgetown University and the American Gradu ate School of International Management. Melinda is an assistant vice president with Callan Associ-
Rena Ann Whitehouse 799 Piedmont Avenue, #8 Atlanta, G A 30308 From Rena: OK. I'm guilty of not writing a column for the past year. I have to admit that I have been busy, but that's a lame excuse. Exactly what have I been upto, you ask? W ell, forstarters, I founded Atlanta's first Women's Lacrosse Club. W e coach the Emory University Women's Club team on a volunteer basis and are trying to get the sport started at some of the high schools and colleges in the area. As you can imagine, we don't have a lot of competition down here, so we need to create some. Our club has a schedule that includes collegiate club teams at Emory, Vanderbilt, Duke, Clemson, and the University of Georgia. W e even won a tournament hosted by Vanderbilt last spring, where we beat the Chi cago Women's Club 6-2— their first loss in three seasons. O f course, we are always looking for financial sponsors. Anyone interested? I am also now a ref - in fact, the first locally rated women's lacrosse official in the Southeast. I never realized how difficult a job that was. Looks like I won't be screaming at any umpires anytime soon. I've also just completed my first year on the executive board of a statewide pro-choice organization. That, in addition to a new job at Rosser Interna
Louise Matthews '83 graduated from Georgetown M edical School on M ay 27. She is shown after the ceremonies at the Kennedy Center with her family: Ann and Doug Matthews '80; her mother, Marie Matthews; Louise; her father, Ed Matthews; her grandmother, Mrs. Matthews, Sr.; Greg '76 and Ann Elise Matthews; and (kneeling) Russell Matthews '86. Louise will be an O B/GYN intern/resident for the next four years at Albert Einstein M edical Center in the Bronx.
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cites, a financial consulting firm in San Francisco. They plan to be married next June in Sonoma. Laura von Seldeneck writes, "Lots of changes have taken place in my life . . . I got married (October '94) to my college boyfriend of seven years. W e moved to California immediately after our honeymoon and currently are residing in Orange County - Dana Point, CA. The weather is great and the active lifestyle suits us perfectly. Dan is an international broker for a computer memory chip company and I am working in prom otions/marketing for Kim berly-Clark. (Huggies, Kleenex, New Freedom, etc.) So far we both love our jobs. Anybody who finds them selves in sunny California, OrangeCounty, please give us a call!" A late-breaking news flash...Your class secre tary is the proud father of Christopher Stuart Willard, born at exactly 4:00 p.m. on July 17th, weighing in at eight pounds, one and a half ounces, and 21" long. He's the first grandchild for both sets of grandpa rents, who were all present at Princeton Medical Center for the great event. Congratulations to Ted and Courtney! Louise Hall Larson 7237 S W 53rd Avenue Portland, OR 97219 and Andrew J. Schragger 50 Lochatong Road Trenton, NJ 08628 From Andrew: It is hard to believe that it has been 10 years since we've graduated, and it was great seeing all of those who made it to the reunion in May. I was pleasantly surprised to see many more classmates than I expected, and as I reiterate what was told to me, I hope I do not forget anyone. Before I write my longest column yet, I apologize in advance if I have forgotten what you've told me. Tonya Elmore Faulkenburg is married and living with her husband in North Carolina. Her mother has retired from PDS and it seems the whole family will be living in NC from now on. As previously reported, Kate Reavey is also married and living in Washington state. She is writing poetry and teaching English. Robin Trend Baughan joined the married ranks and she works for US Healthcare and is living in CT. Teresa McBee Riha is living in Fayetteville, AR. DanielleCoppola is in her second year of residency at Thomas Jefferson H ospital in P h ila d e lp h ia . Jon McConaughy is also living and working in Phila delphia, but will be moving to Korea for two years in a few months. Good luc k, Jon! Jared Stark is teaching at Yale. Pat Courtney works as a spokes man in public relations for Major League Base ball. He has a lot of work to do in light of the strike, etc . Jack Cook continues to work in NYC. Sean Fisher is studying art history and will be studying in England by the time this column is published. Kevin Cragg was there also. Adam Sternberg continues his studies for his master's in psychology. Jennifer Taback continues to work in LA in the movie business. She has worked on various films as the assistant director and was recently admitted to the Director's Guild. Alex Zega and Kate Fulmer joined her at the reunion. Jamison Suter is working at the W orld Bank in Washington, DC. However, he reports that he will probably be traveling back to Africa at some point. Eric Bylin and Rick Freeze were also at the reunion. W hile on the home front, Lynch Hunt is work ing in Newark for Dow Jones while his cohort in crime, Steve Szuter, continues working as a c omputer graphics artist in Princeton. He and his wife recently purchased a house in Hamilton. Marisa Petrella Lenz showed up with her hus
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band, Jim, and her baby. She is living in Ewing Township and has another baby on the way. Bob Zimmerman will be leaving the employ of the State of New Jersey, Department of Labor to return to school for his M.B.A. He is leaning towards the University of Texas in Austin. I am sure he will feel right at home in horse country. Mike Rorro is working towards his Ph.D. in communications at NYU and playing with Charlie Holtzman in a band. Ted Power is living in Princeton and work ing in Flemington and I, despite being told, can't remember what Brad Smith is doing. Sorry, Brad! Karen Callaway Urisko recently had a baby girl and will be returning to the real estate business at least on a part-time basis in the near future. Congratulations! On the legal front, John Hartmann has put politics behind him for now, and is practicing law in East Brunswick. Paul Van Horn is a law clerk for a judge in San J^iego and will be clerking in the fall for the Ninth Circuit. Steve Sinako is with Paul, Weiss, Rifkin and so on in New York City. Tom Foster is living in Princeton and Tulsa with his wife and is practicing law out of an office in Oklahoma. I do not know how he does it, but if it works, so be it. I (Andy) am practicing in Lawrenceville for the time being. As I write this, David Taylor is completing his third year of law school and is studying for the bar exam, while Brenda Burman completed her sec ond year at Arizona and will be working in Kansas City for the summer. Missing in action: It was my understanding that )im Hall and Alan Gunshor were also supposed to be there. W hile Jim lives in Flemington with his wife, Brice, Alan is in San Francisco working as a consultant in the com puter industry. In addition, the report from Bob is that Kemal Gulterreze is living in Turkey and, after a stint in the Turkish army, working in his father's business. For those of you who did not make it in May, I still expect to hear from you. It gets tiring writing about the same people all the time.
10th REUNION Susan E. Franz 910 Canal Road Princeton, NJ 08540 Thanks to those who sent in news last winter...as you may have noticed, I failed to make yet another deadline and, as a result, some of this news may be outdated by now ...M y excuse? I was too busy following every detail of O.J....and that, as you may know, can take up a lot of time, especially if you buy the supermarket tabloids. Mollie Roth writes, "I have trekked back from Oregon and am in my second year of law school at Vermont Law. I have done better than I ever thought I would and am run ragged with my responsibilities at Law Review and Moot Court. I will be in NYC this summer working for one of those huge law firms - Kaye, Scholer, Firman, Hayes and Hendler of all places! I never thought I would end up in NYC! Though it will be a little unnerving after spending the last five years in places where I can leave my car keys in the ignition without hesitation. I am looking forward to it. I'd love to know if anyone had an apartment I could sublet for the summer or would like an apartment mate." (Mollie's address is P.O. Box 627, S. Royal ton, VT 05068, phone: 802-7638469). Andrew Bushnell writes, "I am living in Syracuse, NY doing an emergency medicine resi dency program which I started last June after receiving my M.D. from the University of Mary
land. In November I married Kathryn Hankins of Columbia, M D who is a graduate of the Univer sity of Maryland School of Nursing and who I've been dating for the past four years, since our meeting in Baltimore. W e are very happy here in the great northeast and our door is open to anyone who may pass this way." (Apt. #422D Kings Park Drive Ext., Liverpool, NY 13090). Catherine Barone was promoted to Captain in the US Army and also got engaged over Christ mas to Capt. David Short of Springfield, IL, a helicopter pilot. Catherine and Dave live in Fayettesville, NC where they will be attached to the 82nd Airborne Division. They met in Ger many where they were both stationed for three years. Amy Kohut was back in the area for a few months, working at Princeton Survey Research Associates and even managed to snowboard past the pagoda onto the baseball diamond in what little snow we had this past winter. W hile in town, Amy began scanning some of her artwork onto the computer and hopes to generate this undertaking into a business when she returns to Boulder. Amy also spent time with Ann Miller, who is working in the Princeton W hole Earth Center. I got a call from Liz W hite over the winter. W e tried to find time to get together before she returned to Conneticut, but couldn't quite get it together. I met Cathy Jones, her husband, Brent, and their daughter, Katie, at the Rocky Hill Grand Union over the winter. Cathy and Brent were expecting their second child at any time (this was winter '95). Evan Alter's note just got here. He writes, "Things are good up here (Boston). I'm working, trying to break into the newspaper businessand going to school. Big News! Brian Thorner was married June 11 to Stacey Murgo. The affair was held on the Cape and was attended by, among others, Alan Yang, Eric Tamm, Mark Burman and myself. A rockinggood time was had by all...the H.O.R.D.E. tour is coming to Great Woods in a few weeks. Rumored to be on the bill, Lo Faber's '84 band, God Street W ine. I saw them a few times in NYC with Tony Faber and Brian Lebowitz. Excellent band!" Rumor has it Andy Smith is back in L.A. attending graduate school after a prolonged tour of English taverns. Also, could it be true? Cary Paika commodities broker? (I hear this from my younger brother, Robert '91, who has been known to tell his own special version of the truth on occasion.) Jon DeRochi s company, Terrabiotics, was featured in Business for Central N ew Jersey over the winter. The reporter (female, of course) told me he was "very suave"... now this isthejon w eall knowand love! From the local papers I've learned that Chris McCabe is engaged, Blair Hopkins is newly mar ried, as is Tim Karcher. I (Susi) continue to live in Griggstown where I have had a very successful summer of organic gardening. (Although the reason all the many bikers who fly by my house in a corporate frenzy compliment me on my flowers is, however, purely chem ical...M y geraniums live and die by the Miracle Grow spray.) Aside from gardening, I have been going to school and serving as the Hopewell-Montgomery area's shortest (though most popular) roaming bartender. M y retirement from this profession is, it seems, imminent...I just feel I lack the proper psychological training and qualifications necessary to the vocation, so after all these years I'm throwing in the towel. I guess Peer Leadership training just wasn't enough! I am halfway through a master's program in education at Trenton State College and am once again penniless (though rich in vegetables).. .This should account for my poor performance as class agent. I have not succeeded in raising A N Y money for PDS and face the sad reality of being the all-time worst agent in PDS history. Only YO U , fellow alumni, can save me from this fate. So if you won't send news, why not send money? Our class is down there at the bottom of the barrel as far as contributions go, so this year please send in your nickels and dimes to the Annual Fund! That's all
my news this time around, unless of course you wereexpectingvicious, Enqu/rer-likegossip.That can be easily arranged for the next time around. Hope to see you all in the spring! Congratulations to Tim Howard who gradu ated from medical school and is living in Balti more while doing an internship. He'll be going to Syracuse for radiology soon and writes, "I can't believe it's been almost 10 years since gradua tion!" Congratulations also to Tim Karcher who was married to Melody Williamson on June 24 in Chapel Hill, NC. Both Tim and his wife hold a B.A. in dramatic art from UNC-Chapel Hill. Tim went on to complete the American Repertory Theatre Institute program at Harvard in 1993 and plans to attend Rutgers Law school in Newark in the fall. Andrew D. Blechman 347 Wendover Drive Princeton, NJ 08540 and
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Sofia Xethalis 182 Stockton Street Hightstown, NJ 08520 Elizabeth Hare 149 Hodge Road Princeton, Nj 08540
’88
and Amy L. Venable 10 Monroe Avenue Lawrenceville, NJ 08648 Long Beach Island was the location of an im promptu reunion of classmates Jim Strugger, Hillary M iller and Rich Schragger in July. (See photo nearby.) Jim, who has been working for Toys R Us since graduation from college, will be attending an M.B.A. program at Columbia Uni versity in the fall. Hillary, who has been living and working as a newspaper reporter in San Francisco, will be returning east to attend law school. Rich will be entering his third year at Harvard Law School. He's spending the summer working for a law firm in Washington, DC. From the papers we learn that Roland Dreier was awarded the Earl C. Anthony Fellowship for gradu ate study in mathematics at the University of California at Berkeley where he's a Ph.D. candi date. He graduated magna cum laude from Harvard in 1992. David Sinniger backed some ducks in the annual race down Stony Brook on Alumni Day. He was unable to watch his favor ites compete, but wrote, "I am deployed on board the USS Nashville and am floating around off the coast of Spain. Exciting, but definitely not Princeton." W e 've heard from Ben Travers who is working for Nicholas Applegate, a money management firm in San Diego, as a mutual fund wholesaler. He writes, "I have been living here for a little over a year and everything is going really well." Christina Frank 3642 Belmont Avenue Portland, O R 97214 and
The second annual Kim Bedesem Memorial Alumnae Lacrosse Game was once again an impressive display of talent as alumnae battled the PD S varsity. Players included (left to right, back row) Robin Cook '86, Hilleary Thomas '84, Nika Skvir '90 (who assisted with the PDS varsity this spring), Sophie Carpenter Speidel '80, Liz Bylin '90, Coach lill Thomas, Julie Howard '90, Jenny Myers '90, Laura Farina '79, M olly Dwyer '94, Kyra Skvir'94, (front row) Margie Wallace Gibson '84 (who coached PD S JV lacrosse this spring), Cynthia Griffin Thompson '84, Rena Whitehouse '83 and Dan Bedesem. School in May of 1996 and start a judicial clerk ship at the United States Tax Court in Washing ton, DC during the summer of 1996." Deborah A. Bushel I 261 12th Street, Apt. 2A Hoboken, NJ 07030 and
’90
Jonathan P. Clancy 74 North Greenwood Avenue Hopewell, NJ 08525
5th REUNION
Timothy C. Babbitt 575 Snowden Lane Princeton, NJ 08540 and
’91
Sarah E. Beatty 104 Bouvant Drive Princeton, NJ 08540 and Irene L. Kim 10 Stockton Court East Brunswick, NJ 08816 W e've learned that Joanna Korenjak graduated from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute after finish ing her high school education at Exeter. An upbeat note from Dany Cheij reads, "H i! I am doing really well. I am graduating in June with a degree in mechanical engineering. I spent my holiday break (Christmas and January) at home in
’89
Lauren B. French 507 East Buffalo Street. #7 Ithaca, NY 14850 and L. Doria Roberts 14 W iley Avenue Trenton, NJ 08638 Sang )i saves this column from being blank with the following news. "I will be a summer associate at White & Case in New York beginning in May of 1995. I plan to graduate from Columbia Law
Long Beach Island saw the reunion of '88 classmates, Jim Strugger (left), Hillary M iller and Rich Schragger this summer. Jim has been working for Toys R Us since college and will enter Columbia's business school this fall. Hillary has been working as a newspaper reporter in San Francisco and will return east to enter law school. Rich is entering his third year of Harvard Law School after a summer spent in a Washington, DC law firm.
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Beirut, working in our store and water skiing in 50 degree water. It was unbelievable. Hope ev eryone is okay."
gious energy." On Stephanie's birthday in Octo ber, her parents plan to plant a tree on the PDS campus to serve as a living memorial.
Meghan Bencze 8 Holly Lane Lawrenceville, NJ 08648
Darcey Carlson J 1 Buckingham Drive Princeton, NJ 08540 C A R LSO N @ H W S.ED U (school e-mail)
and Nicole Cargulia 150 Montadale Drive Princeton, NJ 08540 and Blair Young 339 Mountain View Road Skillman, N| 08558 Blair Young has had a busy summer as an intern, painting murals for a Columbus, O H firm called X Design. Her work can be seen in such stores as Victoria's Secret and The Limited. She plans to spend the fall semester at the LaCoste School of Art in Provence, France. Blair has been in touch with Meg Bencze who remained in Ithaca for the summer waitressing at night and assisting in the anthropology department by day. Susie Dolan and Alex Woodford are sharing an apartment with Julie Satow in NYC. Susie has been intern ing as a research assistant in the neurobiology department at Mount Sinai hospital and Alex has a "plum" internship at Sotheby's. Joey Scott and Blake Hogan are sharing a house in Washington DC - joey graduated cum laude from bartending school, but "alas" has not found gainful employ ment in her field! Deepa Purushothaman writes, "I am returning to Wellesley after a year at Georgetown. I spent my summer at Berkeley and have just received the W oodrow W ilson Fellowship to get my master's in public policy or international rela tions." Congratulations! W e hear that after gradu ation, Eric Guinta and Todd Hovanec spent a year in California. Eric then went to the Univer sity of Pennsylvania for a semester, then trans ferred to Berklee College of Music to study his first love, music. Trisha Frank writes, "I'm spending the spring semester at the University of Stockholm, Sweden. I've had the opportunity to travel to Denmark, Norway, France, England and Italy. I'll be spend ing this summer in Portland, Oregon, where my sister, Chris '89, is now living. Then back for senior year at Brown, where I'm majoring in educational studies." Carin Moonin writes, "I just returned from spending my junior year in Eng land which turned out to be one of the best decisions I've ever made. It was incredible! I learned lots, got to travel and was even in an English fashion show. I'm now packing up again to spend the summer in Burlington, VT with some friends I met while I was abroad." As of April I 1th, Mark Trowbridge had scored 12 goals in seven games for Boston College, according to the local papers. The papers (and the sharp eyes of squash coach Dede Shipway Webster MFS '62) bring the news that Chris Sheldon is doing well on the Denison squash team. Playing on the college's new international courts, Chris won the Columbus SRA's City B Championship by defeat ing a senior from Barcelona, Spain. The class is still recovering from the shock of losing a dear friend; Stephanie Mann passed away in April after a battle with cancer. She was in her junior year at George Washington Univer sity where she was a member of AEPhi Sorority. An award has been established at PDS in her memory. Known as the Stephanie Mann Award for Excellence as a Member of the Chorus of the Eighth Grade Play, it will honor students who share her love of music and "who have demon strated outstanding commitment, artistic vision, dedication to the rehearsal process and conta
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and Adam Petrick 1776 Yardley Road Yardley, PA 19067 From Darcey: W alter Hosey is doing very well at Morehouse College. He is double majoring in English and Spanish and is on the Dean's List. He plans on spending his junior year at the Universidad de Acala' de Henares in Madrid, Spain, studying the Spanish language and litera ture. Although Dan Bushell is reportedly having a wonderful time at Michigan University, he plans on spending fall '95 abroad in Israel. Dan Sinaiko (Snake) has moved to California. Last Christmas he and Dennis DeCore got together to see the Rose Bowl and the San Diego Chargers playoff game. Otherwise, they watched the rain drops and consumed their time with Sega. I'll have to wait and see what happens. I hope that all is well with everyone and I hope to hear from you soon! Vassar Col lege keeps us abreast of Jeff McKay's activities. He portrayed Gareth O'Donnell in the college production of Philadelphia, Here I Come! by Brian Friel in March. Julie Morgan writes, "So far my col lege career has gone wel I. Last semester I carried 19 credits and my G.P.A. was high enough for me to be on the Dean's List. I plan to graduate in '97 and then to go to veterinary school." And from Akai W hitt, "I'm headed back to Cleveland after six months off due to knee surgery. I will be returning to track competition. I'd love to hear from you guys, so send me some e-mail (
[email protected]). "Matt Dickson spent the summer at a camp in the Poconos, teaching climbing and ropes courses. He'll be going back to Lehigh as an orientation coordinator for the fraternity system. Justin Hillenbrand "W illow Bend" Beden's Brook Road Skillman, NJ 08558 and Marika Sardar 9 Braemar Drive Princeton, NJ 08540
[email protected] (school e-mail) From Marika: Hi there! I have to say that my first year in Texas was a good one, though more than just a bit steamy. Luckily for me, New Jersey's weather has been equally hot and humid this summer, so I have not suffered any withdrawal. When I am not sitting around my house sweating, I have been slaving away at an internship at Berlitz this summer, in the corporate marketing department. Basically, I have been stuffing enve lopes for the last two months - fun for me! But the summer has not been wasted in complete bore dom - I see some of you around the same old places (Small World) in town. I had a couple of friends visit me (for some unknow n reason, they came all the way from North Carolina and Colo rado to see Princeton) and I'm off to India for a few weeks in August. W ell, those of you who wrote get precedence, so here goes, my one big letter. Andrew Sicora writes, "The traveling man interned this summer at the Bank of Central America in Honduras. In September, he heads for France to spend his sophomore year abroad." Michele Kalafer is doing travelingof herown this
summer, spending a month in India (popular this summer), and will be moving on to Emory in the fall. W ho else have I seen? Josh Anzel who I hear is moving to UVA; W hitney White, who seems ecstatic to be heading back to Hamilton for another fun-filled year: Alex Harris, who seems to have enjoyed his spring semester at Brown much better after (literally) throwing his room mate out. (You might want to ask him about this personally.) Janina Washington is a student assis tant at Robert W ood Johnson, working at chang ing the patient charting system in between trips to Dallas; Marina Gershman is back at the YM CA where she lovingly (I'm sure) takes care of little kids whose unsuspecting parents leave them with her every day. Back at Bucknell she will be a Junior Fellowatthe HumanitiesCollege, and will be living at the Bucknell Scholars' House. She reports (this means I cannot be blamed if this information is wrong) that Elizabeth Schlossberg is spending the summer in Chicago taking classes and helping one of her professors in his studio. Mariah Howe had a good year at Macalester where she was on the volleyball team and now has the enviable job of selling Corning W are at Forrestal Village, and Julie Ober, Amherst ski team member extraordinaire, is a counselor at a Bimiji, Minnesota camp. Finally I hear that Stacey Feinstein and Janna Levin are working at Stacy's aunt's inn in New England. Hope to hear from you all this year. M y e-mail address (hint, hint) is
[email protected]. Stop by next time you're in Houston! Congratulations to Jason Irby for making the Deans's List with a 4.0 G.P.A. his second semes ter at Emerson. The class was shocked and saddened by the sudden death of Emily Sachs on May 24th from an asthma attack. W e send our deepest sympathy to her family and many friends. Emily was an ac complished ballet, lyrical and modern dancer and received many awards and scholarships. In 1993 they included the Miss Teen DEA Pennsyl vania, the DEA Scholarship, the D M A New York City Scholarship Award (third place), the Stars of Tomorrow Regional Competition (first place), Starpower Regional Competition (first place), and Dance Spectrum (first place) Senior Division. In 1994 she was honored with the DM A Miss Dance New York City, Chapter 26, the DM A New York City Scholarship Award (second place, ballet) and the 1994-1995 Scholarship Recipient, "Dance Excellence." She also participated in "Dance Excellence, Los Angeles" and was a soloist and company singer and dancer. In addition, she appeared in a television commercial with basket ball great Patrick Ewing. Emily was a sophomore at the University of Pennsylvania and a member of Chi Omega Sorority and the Arts House. She loved beauty and brought it to many others through her talent. She will be missed. Eric S. Schorr 11 Francis Drive Belle Mead, NJ 08502
}
and Melissa J. Woodruff Box 252, 43 Partridge Run Belle Mead, NJ 08502 Welcome to our newest class secretaries. W e look forward to their column in the next issue. For now, we have bits of information gleaned from college address cards. Wes Steffens urges classmates to stay in touch and sends his e-mail address:
[email protected]. Sarah Critchlow spent the sum mer traveling in the Poconos, Great Britain and Puerto Rico, while Samantha Utaski worked as a day camp riding instructor. The rest of you, please let us know your college address so we can send you special mailings and CARE packages.
ATTENTION ALUM NI! New deadlines f o r class notes!
The class notes in this issue are great, and the new method of collecting news went very well. We thank you for responding so promptly and regret that it took so long for the rest o f the magazine to be completed. Using the
Journal to
announce deadlines for sending news to your class secretary seem s to be an efficient m ethod for gathering news and one we'd like to continue. Simply fill out the form below (or use your own card) and send it to your class secretary at the address listed at the top of your class column. If you have no class secretary, send your news to the PDS Publications Office, P.O. B ox 75, Princeton, New Jersey 08542, or you can send e-mail to
[email protected]. You can send your news at any time, but the deadline for the next issue is
March 15, 1996. Remember, the class notes are fun to read because alumni contribute. Is it your turn? How long has it been since you brought us up to date with your life? Even if you don't have a new job, a new baby or an exciting trip planned, your classm ates want to hear your "voice." So drop a line to your class secretary w ho's just waiting for som ething to fill his/her column!
ALUMNI NEWS FOR THE '96 SPRING JOURNAL DEADLINE: MARCH 1 5 th
CLASS:
NAME: ADDRESS, IF NEW: NEWS:
This is not a post card. Please mail in an envelope.
PRINCETON DAY SCHOOL P.O. Box 75 Princeton, NJ 08542
NON-PROFIT ORG. U.S. Postage
DON'T MISS ALUMNI DAY — SATURDAY, MAY 18,1996
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