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PRINCETON DAY SCHOOL JOURNAL

Fall 1987 Editors: David C. Bogle PRINCETON DAY Linda Maxwell Stefanelli '62 SCHOOL JOURNAL

Vol. 19 No. 1 Fall 1987

C o n t e n t s

From the Headmaster, Duncan W. Ailing ...... 1 Aaronson Odyssey Ends at PDS ...... 2 New Realities in Education: Princeton Day School in 1987, Winton H. Manning ...... 3 Sandy Bing at Princeton Day: Eighteen Memorable Years, Craig Stuart '87 ...... 6 Land Transactions at PDS: An Update, Peter R. Rossmassler '47 . . . 10 The Board of Trustees ...... 12 Report from the President of the Alumni Association, Lesley Loser Johnston'66 ...... 13 Report from the President of the Parents Association, Judith E. Feldman ...... 13 Alumni Weekend 1987 ...... 14 Lower School Final Assembly ...... 16 8th Grade Graduation Address, Jane Fremon ...... 17 Commencement ...... 19 College Choices ...... 20 Class of 1987 Alumni Children ...... 21 O n Cam pus ...... 22 Jan Baker Named Athletic Director ...... 23 Grandparents' D ay ...... 23 Former Faculty ...... 24 Wes McCaughan, Daniel J. Skvir ...... 24 Barbara and Graham Cragg, Kathleen Webb & Linda Stefanelli ... 25 Tom Malsbury, James W. Walker ...... 25 Virginia Reynolds, Kathleen Webb ...... 26 Sports ...... 2 7 -2 8 Development Report ...... 29 Class Notes ...... 49

Contributing photographers: Eileen Hohmuth-Lemonick, Susan Neider, Will Schafer '87.

It is the policy of Princeton Day School to admit boys and girls of any race, color, religion, national and ethnic origin to all the rights, privileges, programs, and activities generally accorded or made available to students at the school. The school does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, religion, national and ethnic origin in employment or in administration of its educational policies, scholarship programs, athletic and other school-administered programs. FROM THE HEADMASTER

by Duncan W. Ailing

During the summer Cynthia and I spent a few restful weeks in Char­ lottesville, Virginia, home of the University of Virginia, where we lived during the decade of the 1970's. Our return allowed us to make compari­ sons between the past and present; for changes had occurred, slow as they were to happen in certain areas of the community. And, as we observed the obvious physical changes in Charlottes­ ville, read about new procedures, and heard about current issues, we wondered how our friends and acquaintances of the '70's had responded or were responding to these transformations. Their reactions for the most part reflected understanding of why the changes were necessary and a sense of pride about the community's look to the future. To be sure, some people lamented a change in a specific area which would alter things from the way they were, but not to the extent that they doubted the overall need for goals and planning for their community. Our visit also prompted compari­ sons with Princeton, for it is clear to us after one year here, that the commun­ ity and the surrounding communities have faced and are facing the forces of change. Princeton Day School, as part of the greater Princeton Community, is affected by internal and external and needed space for the excellent aca­ be cited, but one that deserves men­ change. Some internal changes occur demic and extracurricular programs tion here is the work of those who led when teachers retire or move on to (see pg. 3). the Annual Fund. Pam Kelsey and new challenges; others occur as a Effective change requires the setting Tom Gardner, Co-chairs of the drive, result of new directions for programs of goals and planned implementation recruited a superb group of workers and procedures. During the 1986-1987 steps. To that end PDS developed a who exceeded their goal (see pg. 29). To school year teachers did make deci­ new Long Range Plan to guide it dur­ them PDS is indebted for their enthu­ sions about new directions (see pg. 24), ing the next five years. This document, siastic commitment, and the same is and the past academic year also marked along with the results of the self- true for Kathy Jamieson, Director of a critical point for the future of PDS. evaluation in 1987-1988 in preparation the Annual Fund, and David Bogle, After two years of thoughtful discus­ for reaccreditation by the Middle Director of Development, with great sions and careful evaluation of chang­ Atlantic States Association, will pro­ assistance from Jan Noonan, Linda ing real estate patterns, PDS succeeded vide direction for the school. As we Stefanelli and Ann Wiley. Their sup­ in increasing its acreage and laying the undergo any change, we want it ac­ port was invaluable. groundwork for construction of faculty complished within a meaningful On this foundation of enthusiasm housing on the campus (see pg. 10). In framework, not at random, for PDS and effective planning, and retaining addition, the Trustees committed and the extended community. the best from the past, PDS will shape themselves and the school to expand­ My first year at PDS was exhilarat­ its future direction. I anticipate that ing the financial resources at PDS. ing and fulfilling. A great deal was students, parents, alumni, and friends This important commitment will pro­ learned about the excellent qualities of will understand why we are changing vide for improved faculty salaries, a PDS and the enthusiasm of its many and will have a sense of pride about sustained, healthy financial aid program constituencies. Many examples could PDS's look to the future.

1 AARONSON ODYSSEY ENDS AT PDS

Dr. Arthur Aaronson has spent his well as hiring, supervising, evaluating world geography, United States his­ life learning from those he teaches. His and scheduling teachers in the secon­ tory, and political theory. His other work in other countries and his belief dary school of 460 in grades six through responsibilities included developing the in the value of understanding different twelve. academic and student activities pro­ cultures has led to a fascinating career. believes the challenge of teach­ grams, serving as advisor to the Stu­ As he takes on the role of Assistant ing abroad lies in taking advantage of dent Government Association and act­ Headmaster and Head of the Upper cross-cultural differences, and that ing as a liaison to the Randolph Parents School at PDS, he brings with him a furthering an appreciation of those dif­ Association. He also directed the Ran­ wealth of experience that promises to ferences will broaden a student's out­ dolph School summer programs. enrich the school. look. The reward is that teachers and The Aaronsons are living on campus After receiving his B.A. in political students learn from each other. with their son, Hayden, who is a fifth science from Ohio State University, Before coming to PDS, Art was the grader at PDS. He has already made a Art joined the Peace Corps and served Head of the Upper School at Randolph place for himself in Princeton, playing in Western Samoa from 1967-1969 in School in Huntsville, Alabama, an his way to the semi-finals of Princeton the areas of health and community independent school with six hundred Community Program's 12 and development. He also taught Middle students in kindergarten through under tournament in July. His parents School English and science — in twelfth grade. Many of them are chil­ will have little difficulty adapting to Samoan! dren of scientists and engineers sta­ their new environment with their love He enjoyed teaching so much that tioned at the nearby NASA complex. of new places and challenges. We wel­ he enrolled at Antioch College to get At Randolph Art taught study skills, come them to PDS. his Master's of Arts in Teaching. He taught US history and government at a school in Connecticut but when the opportunity arose to teach social science in Paraguay, he packed his bags again. That move was a lucky one for it was in Paraguay that he met his wife, Kristina. She arrived as a librar­ ian at the American School in Ascun- cion about six months after Art. Their marriage turned out to be as peripa­ tetic as their work, for after a cerem­ ony in New Haven, where Art's par­ ents lived, they were married again in Mexico City where Kristina's father was posted in the foreign service. It wasn't long before the Aaronsons were renewing their passports, this time for Chile. Art started at the International School in Santiago as chairman of the social science depart­ ment and became principal of the high school in 1976. In 1978 he came back to the US to take a graduate teaching assistantship at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and earn a Doctor of Educa­ tion degree. The next stop for the Aaronsons was Costa Rica where Art served as Middle and Upper School principal for the Lincoln School. It is a bi-national school established for dependents of US government and business personnel working in the country as well as Costa Rican children and those of the international com­ munity. His responsibilities included developing the extra-curricular activi­ ties program which encompassed athletics and student government as Kristina, Hayden and Art Aaronson 2 NEW REALITIES IN INDEPENDENT SCHOOL EDUCATION: PRINCETON DAY SCHOOL IN 1987

by Winton H. Manning Chairman, Board of Trustees

Only eighteen months ago, Prince­ ton Day School completed a successful search for a new Headmaster of the School. The search process engaged the Trustees in an intensive examina­ tion of the strengths of our school and the areas in which it needs to improve. This introspective analysis of our situation was a healthy one and it greatly contributed to the ability of the Board of Trustees to understand the needs of the school and to seek out the right leadership for the coming decade. We succeeded in our search because the school took the first step necessary for sound development: to understand itself and to set its objectives for the future in light of that understanding. The unanimous selection of Duncan Ailing as the new Head of Princeton Day School was greeted with broad support among the school's several constituencies. Especially gratifying has been the enthusiasm of the faculty and partents for the choice of Duncan and Cynthia, and the growing sense of excitement and expectation that is evi­ dent in all parts of the school com­ munity. We are now about to embark on a much needed Campaign for Princeton Day School, aimed at improving faculty salaries, increasing scholarship funds, and providing some critically impor­ tant improvements in the school's physical facilities. 1 should like to discuss the question of why we should each make as great a commitment to this campaign as we are able. But in examining this ques­ tion, 1 would like to look at it less from the perspective of a Trustee of PDS, and more from the standpoint of a person who has spent over 30 years in f * * \ education, and who — as a citizen — is concerned about the state of education amount of money, less than 7% comes pupils. In other words, less than 1% of in our nation. That may seem a some­ from federal sources; state and local the students in our country are enrolled what roundabout or indirect approach funding of public schools is still domi­ in schools in the same category as but I think it may be worth examining nant. Independent schools, however, Princeton Day School — non-profit the question of why PDS needs your are but a tiny part of this eduational independent day and boarding schools support as it faces the new realities picture. They constitute only 7% of the that are also non-sectarian. confronting independent school total enrollment in schools in the We shall call these schools independ­ education. private sector. Indeed, the total private ent because they are generally inde­ Elementary and secondary educa­ sector (mostly composed of religious pendent of public or religious control. tion in the United States is a $130 bil­ schools) enrolls only 15% of the nation's Policy authority is vested in their trus­ lion enterprise. Of this immense elementary and secondary school tees and faculty who, working with 3 parents and students, decide what to salary of all public school teachers in Princeton now exceeds $350,000 teach, how to teach it, and who is to despite substantial in­ serves as a deterrent to younger teach. Independent schools survive and creases in salary levels at PDS in teachers with families as well as to prosper only when the collective will of each of the past two years. Today, as the single, beginning teacher who their constituency supports their in an earlier time, many persons choose might otherwise wish to come to actions, their goals, and their achieve­ to teach in an independent school PDS to work. We are beginning to ments. Independent schools, therefore, because of the excitement and free­ address the housing problem at PDS in my personal judgment approach the dom of their environments; that is through the recent plan to develop ideal of a school that is created, man­ still a powerful, attracting force, but faculty housing. (Another article in aged, shaped and developed by its own .the sacrifice of earnings has now this magazine discusses some of community and not by government or become, I feel, much too great to be these plans.) religious authorities. This being the allowed to continue. Erosion of this — Financial Aid: Over 50% of the case, independent schools have almost commitment to independent educa­ nation's college students receive unlimited possibilities. They can hire as tion will become inevitable if salaries financial aid and this is exclusive of teachers whomever they wish; they at PDS are not brought into line federal guaranteed loans. Many may offer whatever courses they with those of the best public and more parents are therefore coming choose; and classroom arrangements, private schools. to independent schools with an schedules, and requirements may be —Recruitment: There is a little known expectation of financial aid, in some decided freely by the school commun­ and less well publicized teacher form. Independent schools, includ­ ity, without bureaucratic controls. The shortage in the offing, which will in ing PDS, have very inadequate important consequence of this free­ a few short years exacerbate the financial aid funds. For an independ­ dom is that they can be as good and as salary problem just mentioned. Al­ ent school to be great, it cannot different as their resources and creativ­ ready the supply of able teachers of permit itself to become merely an ity permit them to be — truly a com­ mathematics and science — eagerly enclave for the children of the munity of learners that charts its own sought by higher paying private wealthy; it must be able to ensure course in a vessel of its own con­ industry — is fast dwindling. In diversity in its student body through struction. some public schol systems especially access to scholarship assistance for Intellectual and procedural freedom is in the sun-belt, prospective science academically able students whose the soul of independent education. In and math teachers are offered families cannot afford to pay full tui­ today's world many independent bonuses of $1,000 to $2,000, simply tion. Insuring diversity in our stu­ schools (though not all) come closer to for signing a contract to teach! Inde­ dent body is not just a good thing to realizing the historic ideal of a school pendent schools are already feeling do, it is essential that students — all created by the parents and friends of the problems of recruiting good students — experience the pulls and the children in a community than does young teachers in several critical tugs of studying and playing with nearly any other type of educational fields — not just science and math­ students of different backgrounds, institution operating today in our ematics — and this problem is likely races, and values. Without this country. As a consequence, I believe to worsen. diversity it is education itself that is that independent schools will more Another problem, and one that is impaired. PDS badly needs, there- and more become the laboratories in keenly felt at PDS, is the tremen­ fore^ to increase its scholarship which new educational innovations dous rise in the cost of housing — funds. will be developed and the vehicles rental or purchase — in the Prince­ — Tuition Resistance: Many families through which the intellectual free­ ton area. Even the publicity sur­ who can afford to pay full tuition dom of our educational system is nour­ rounding the fact that the average charges are nevertheless very ap­ ished and preserved. sales price of a single family home in prehensive of rising colleg e costs. When an undergraduate degree may "Independent schools survive and require $100,000 in tuition and fees over four years — as it surely will prosper only when the collective will only a few year down the road — of their constituency supports their some ask whether they should not actions, their goals, and their invest the money they would have achievements." spent on independent school tui­ tions, in order to meet what, for many young families, seem like ter­ Sadly, however, this potential may rifying future college costs. Inde­ not be fully realized despite the bright pendent schools are therefore future for independent education that caught in a "tuition undertow" as my observations suggest. This is a crit­ the tide of rising college costs rolls ical time for Princeton Day School and on. The effect of this problem is to other independent schools. Here are place further limits on the capacity some of the reasons why I believe this of an independent day school — is so. including PDS — to fund its educa­ — S alaries: Teachers at independent tional programs on a current tuition schools are even less well paid than basis. Consequently, increased an­ are public school teachers. At PDS nual and endowment income are our median salary is several thou­ essential to the task of holding sand dollars less than the median future tuition rises to a modest level.

4 “Now is one of those times in the life of a school, as in our own personal lives, when we have to make deci­ sions that will affect our capability to shape the future."

—Facilities: There are many needs at of our educational programs will be faction which needs no adventitious PDS for improved or expanded made extraordinarily difficult in the gilding to recommend it; and that it teaching facilities, renovation of future. It is absolutely certain that we bestows upon its alumni the gift of a facilities, specialized space and will be unable to bring the school to childhood recollected, not as a pas­ equipment, the relieving of some the position of greatness that the sage of time hurried through on the crowding in the Upper and Lower children of our community deserve way to more profitable engage­ Schools, and the other space needs. unless there is a renewed commitment ments, but, with gratidude, as an Of particular importance, also, is the of funds by the school's many friends. enjoyed initiation into the mysteries improvement and expansion of Now is one of those times in the life of of the human condition: the gift of science facilities. Our students know a school, as in our own personal lives, self-knowledge and of a satisfying that science and technology are when we have to make decisions that intellectual and moral identify." growing in importance in all aspects will affect our capability to shape the If this is the kind of school you seek, of our economy. More and more future. In this case we have the oppor­ then your support of Princeton Day they look toward careers that will tunity to enhance that most precious School is earnestly desired. involve them in the use or creation and imperishable of all our resources of scientific knowledge. They see — our children. computers, and other technological Fundamentally the question before developments as essential tools for us is: "What sort of school do we working, learning and living. Science want?" Some years ago I read what is, course enrollments have increased to me, perhaps the best description I over 50% in the past three years at have of what a school ought to be. It is PDS. We badly need to capitalize worth sharing I think. upon our students' desires for ex­ "The ideal 'School' is that of an his­ panded programs in science, includ­ toric community of teachers and ing the space and facilities for stu­ learners, neither large nor small, dents at all grades to participate in with traditions of its own, evoking the excitement and discovery of loyalties, pieties and affections, scientific experimentation. devoted to initiating successive gen­ Princeton Day School is an out­ erations of newcomers to the human standing indepen^nt school. It is poised scene into the grandeurs and servi­ on the threshold of becoming a great tudes of being human; an Alma school. Our goal of increasing annual Mater who remembers with pride or giving and endowment income is indulgence and is remembered with essential to the school's future sound­ graditude. The marks of a good ness. Without increased funds the task school are that in it learning may be of maintaining the present high level recognized as, itself, a golden satis­

5 SANDY BING AT PRINCETON DAY: EIGHTEEN MEMORABLE YEARS____

His Thoughts on His Long Career at PDS, His Plans for Educational Resource Center

The following article appeared in The Spokesman, December 19, 1986.

by Craig Stuart '87

Whistling as he walked through the Cites PDS's Strengths and Weaknesses main office, Mr. Bing entered his On the subject of PDS's strengths, office. As he closed the door, he Mr. Bing readily identified "the peo­ explained his whistling by saying that ple." In using the word "people," Mr. he was happy. "There's no reason not Bing means both the student body and to be," he added. the faculty. He calls the student body a Mr. Bing may generally be happy, decent group of people, and said that but he doesn't feel happy about leaving the faculty "is an extremely profes­ the people at PDS. After spending 18 sional group of people who care about years at PDS, he will not be returning what they do." He referred to PDS as a after Christmas vacation (1986). Last people center where the needs of the year he arranged to take a leave of individual are paramount, and some­ absence during the second semester of times placed above other priorities. this year, but decided this fall, through a mutual agreement with Mr. Ailing, "We are a school for young people, that he would not return. However, so the needs of the individual should Mr. Bing does say that he's leaving be [placed above other priorities]." He with a good feeling. "I feel good about said that PDS has never tried to turn what I've accomplished at PDS." out a product; instead there is a feel­ Mr. Bing arrived at PDS in the ing, "that we're a part of something summer of 1969 from The Hun School, that's important." Mr. Bing is also glad and immediately assumed the position that financial aid exists for PDS stu­ of Head of the Upper School. He also dents who need it. He feels that After eighteen years at PDS Sandy taught Upper School chemistry for the anyone who wants to attend a school Bing officially left the school in June of first few years, and later taught third such as PDS should have that oppor­ this year. The many festivities through­ grade and eighth grade science classes. tunity. He would like to see PDS con­ out the year honoring Sandy and Iris He stopped teaching, however, when tinue to work hard to provide financial culminated in a family on Friday, he was appointed acting headmaster in aid for students who need it. May 29th. Custom "aproned" at The 1982 and has not taught any classes With the shelves on one wall filled Pagoda and in the Bing tradition we since. At the moment, he sits back in with books, Mr. Bings appears comfor­ have all grown to love, Sandy and Iris his chair behind a desk across which table in his small yet personal office. cooked hot dogs and hamburgers and many important and meaningful con­ But while he may be satisfied with his greeted — not farewelled — every versations have occurred and thinks office, Mr. Bing continues to believe student, teacher, administrator and about the past 18 years. solving the space problem is a neces­ staff person in the school. The Board Respectively, he has only good things sary improvement for PDS. He said of Trustees also honored Sandy and to say about those years; he considers the present space crisis can be viewed Iris at a dinner at Colross on June 18th. his associations with students and two ways; although it is difficult to put All those who were privileged to know faculty members the most significant. so many people in a corridor, it's or work with Sandy during his time at "I really consider it a privilege to work remarkable that people deal with it as PDS will miss him greatly, but he where I can be with people." he said, well as they do. Two problems with leaves the school a far better and adding that he especially appreciates the current space situation in the stronger place than when he arrived. working with young people. "That's Upper School are the lack of a student We wish him all the best in his new the most important thing about the center and the need for additional venture, The Princeton Educational job." classrooms. Resource Center. That it will be Mr. Bing is also glad that he was able While he does not believe that the successful with Sandy as the Director to work at PDS while his two children, faculty is poorly paid, Mr. Bing would is only a matter of to what degree. Hilary '81 and Andrew '84, attended also like to see the school continue to D avid C. Bogle school here. His desk is adorned with work to improve faculty salaries. "The photo cubes of his family, and he faculty are here for the right reasons; commented that it's rare for a parent they are here to teach and be with to go through so many years of teach­ young people, but it is difficult to raise ing along with his kids. "It's kind of a family on a faculty salary," he nice to have experienced that." continued.

6 With PDS at a turning point in its can and should be considered a valu­ tion, and sometimes helping with history, Mr. Bing shared some of his able end in itself, but, he said uncer­ secondary school and college place­ perceptions about the school's future. tainly, that he is not sure that eveyone ment. Mr. Bing added that a private He feels that while PDS may be under does. foundation has come forth to provide new leadership and new direction, financial aid to those families and stu­ Plans Educational Resource Center some changes are inevitable and dents who require the services of the desirable. However, PDS must not After leaving PDS, Mr. Bing will be center, but cannot afford it. "That's forget its strong points, such as the working hard on his newest endeavor, important to me," he said, obviously concern for the individual. With regard The Princeton Educational Resource quite happy. "That pleased me very, to change of any kind, Mr. Bing feels Center. The center, scheduled to open very much." that there are important considera­ its offices on July 1, 1987, will address While he admits that this change tions to be made first. and focus on the comprehensive edu­ will mean that he is no longer directly “You have to determine where you cational needs of children, adolescents involved in a school setting, he em­ are, where you want to be, what it and young adults. By combining the phasizes that he will still be involved takes to get there, and what you gain expertise of educators, physicians, psy­ with education. "It's a departure and a and lose in the process." He added that chologists and others, Mr. Bing is hop­ change, but I'm looking forward to it. sometimes there is a tendencey to see ing that the center can provide a It's exciting." only the positive side of change, but number of different services through After 27 years of teaching, 18 of supports evaluation of PDS as it is cur­ evaluating how and why children them at PDS, Mr. Bing has developed a rently. "I think [evaluation] is healthy." learn. general philosophy which he tries to At the same time, he says that there is Mr. Bing talked enthusiastically follow in any situation. "I try to be a lot in the school to be proud of. about the center, saying that he sees it honest, fair, consistent, positive, and A change in the student body that supplying schools with information, as constructive." He said that he has tried Mr. Bing has seen develop over the well as helping individual clients such to do this with students at PDS. He past few years is that more and more as students and their families. These said he has always tried to remember students appear to view their high services would include helping people that kids are kids, and that they always school education as a preparation for who don't achieve their potential, make mistakes. He added that it's all college. "Most people are here for the assessing the needs of those with right for kids to make mistakes at a right reasons and really do want to learning disabilities and providing young age, and that doing so becomes work hard," he said. He believes that a remediation, working with parents part of the learning process. Mr. Bing PDS education in the Upper School and students over conflicts of expecta­ said that he always tried to bring all of these qualities into the classroom to Watching the Lower School Hallo­ by Kathleen Webb create a learning environment where ween parade in his Miss Piggy outfit. kids would want to learn. Arranging faculty trips to Atlantic A character in LeCarre's Little He had just a few additional words City (for education purposes, of course). Drummer Girl is described as playing to add as advice for others: "Always Following the fortunes and misfor­ an instrument — the telephone. The tell your parents and the people you tunes of the and St. telephone is Sandy Bing's instrument, care for most that you love them. Louis Cardinals. too. Make every day in your life an impor­ Spectating (but really vicariously I think of him leaning against the tant one. Appreciate and be sensitive participating) at numerous PDS sport­ windowsill or frame, telephone against to differences among people." ing events. his ear, chin on hand, staring out, Smiling, Mr. Bing said that he had Talking about favorite restaurants sometimes focused and aware of what too many memories of PDS to tell, and cultural events. is happening before him, sometimes adding that most are tied up with indi­ Reminiscing about growing up in only gazing into the distance, listening, viduals. "1 can't help but think of peo­ Jersey City. talking, as he concentrates on the prob­ ple. Associations with people are the Frequent trips to Newark. lem he is trying to solve. most rewarding and personally satisfy­ Leading Upper School academic I will miss his help in solving prob­ ing part of the 18 years I've been here." meetings in the late afternoon, with a lems. Sandy is a genuinely kind person, Emphasizing that he is leaving with a wonderful expression as Tony or devoted to PDS and to its students and good feeling, he said that he is going to Alberto cruise by the window on open- faculty. He was extremely kind to me miss a lot of things, but he believes throttled lawn mowers. when I came to be interviewed for my that his change is good. Ecstasy as Lafayette beats Princeton current job, sensing my nervousness, As he gazes thoughtfully out the in football or . trying to help me feel at ease. window, the sounds of Lower School­ Mentally searching for an exact His awareness and concern for oth­ ers screaming and laughing as they word or phrase to delicately yet pre­ ers' feelings make him an effective lis­ played just outside filled the office. cisely describe a person or situation. tener, a thoughtful dispenser of disci­ "What 1 will miss," he said, "are the Chunky Bars. pline, and a genuinely helpful guide for kids." Watching his kids — and ours — and students, parents and faculty. He will everyone's — grow up at PDS. be most effective in his future role as But no verbal pastiche can ade­ educational counselor, but I will miss quately depict those traits which we seeing him staring out of his office will all miss on a daily basis: Sandy's window at me as 1 pass by. warm friendship and advice, his robust humor, and most of all his genuine interest, concern and love for people, especially young people. by David Bogle

Administrator, teacher, cheerleader, advisor, coach, parent, hamburger- by Frank Walter flipper, litter picker-upper, colleague, and friend. All of the above fit Sandy I came to PDS one year after Sandy, Bing very well, and during his so 1 believe 1 qualify as having known seventeen-plus years at PDS, many him for a good length of time. other roles might doubtless be added. During most of those years, we had In the ten years I have known by Dan Skvir an interesting dual relationship. Sandy, Sandy, I've been fortunate to see from as Head of the Upper School, super­ a parent's point of view his influence as A novel the length of War and Peace vised me, as Chairman of the Science a teacher, and to feel from a colleague's would not suffice to describe the many Department, and at the same time, I point of view his influence throughout memorable experiences Sandy Bing was Sandy's supervisor when he taught the entire school. Sandy's quick and and 1 have shared over the last 18 science. My inability to get him to honest understanding of almost any years. The photographer in me makes attend as many of my meetings as 1 situation has helped to strengthen me wish 1 had a snapshot of the follow­ attended his was a standing joke. At both student and faculty unity, in the ing pieces of a collage featuring our least it gave me an insight into the end building a stronger school. He beloved Head of the Upper School: many hats Sandy had to wear and the understands each of his roles extremely Standing, with phone to ear, looking varied demands on his time. well and because of that has main­ out his office window. I am grateful to Sandy for giving me tained deep respect from students, Lustily singing Christmas carols in the opportunity to move into an admin­ faculty and parents alike. He has an South Commons. istrative position and for his support as extraordinary talent and he is justly In the field hockey goal, attired in 1 learned. admired for it. the requisite armor, trying to figure The quality of Sandy's leadership My days at Princeton Day School out the reasons for all those whistles. and his ability to handle crisis situa­ have been enriched because of Sandy Jogging around campus in off hours. tions definitely stand out in my mind. Bing and my career has benefitted Talking with students and/or par­ He has always been people-oriented from his thoughtful advice and help. I ents, delivering stern messages with and accessible to anyone in need. I wish he and Iris enormous success and firmness, humor, and compassion. wish him well in his future endeavors. happiness in their new venture.

8 by Anne Shepherd fled. But Mr. Bing remained at his post, deft and quick and cheerful to the I doubt if there is any other member end. of the faculty or administration whose We owe a debt of gratitude to Mr. mind and heart are as intensely tuned Bing for his work as acting headmaster to PDS as Sandy Bing's. His every for the two interim years that is incal­ nerve vibrates to the concerns of the culable. That he could carry the roles school as a whole and to the needs of of both headmaster and head of the individual students and teachers. Upper School last year is little short of Warmth and kindness and genuine miraculous. He will always have a firm concern radiate from him. Although in place in the hearts of all who knew order to ease an individual teacher's him. load, Mr. Bing limited the number of advisees anyone could have to fifteen, he himself has had twenty students or more over the years with no dimuni­ by Gary Lott tion of affection or attention for any of those fortunate young people. But any I sat down to write a short piece student in the Upper School with any about my association with Sandy Bing kind of problem has found it easy to go over the past several years and began by Steve Lawrence to Mr. Bing, knowing that he would be by recalling my eighth grade year in treated as an individual, whose circum­ school at which time I was most fortu­ I suppose it is true that no one is stances were peculiar to him alone. nate to have been taught by a man indispensable. Still, it is hard to imagine Equally forutunate have been the who was a gifted teacher and a won­ PDS without Sandy Bing. If one were members of the Upper School faculty, derfully warm individual. Not only did to try to characterize the school to an whose time was often brightened by he teach us in most subjects, but he outsider, much of what one would say some word of praise or thanks from showed that he cared about us in other might serve as a description of Sandy. Sandy. Hardly a day goes by that he ways. He read to us during the last One might talk about learning in an doesn't appear for a brief, benign period of the day. Imaging reading The atmosphere of trust, or discipline in an moment at my office desk, often just W ind in the W illow s aloud to eighth atmosphere of friendliness and real to say hello. If accident or illness or graders today! He taught us some concern, or objective criticism in an death overhwelms the family of a stu­ drawing and encouraged us to become atmosphere of supportiveness. dent or teacher, Sandy is on the scene interested in nature; he showed us When I think of Sandy, I think of his immediately, a source of great strength. how to plant a vegetable garden and all pleasure in the job, his optimism that Another trait of Mr. Bings which sorts of things which were not neces­ problems can be solved, his obvious has been the happy cause of much sarily academic but served to enlarge and genuine love of kids. The images enrichment for PDS is his enthusiasm our vision and whetted our appetitite that come to my mind are of his cheer­ for the performing arts, especially for the world — "beyond eighth grade!" ful demeanor as he walks the halls, ballet, theater and opera. Few people I guess I have come to view Sandy in picking up pieces of paper that the rest realize that it is thanks to him that we somewhat the same way that I saw my of us have ignored, lovingly teasing a have the Lincoln Center connection eighth grade teacher. Sandy has read student into moving an inappro- and programs. He discovered the pos­ us a few stories over the years but priately-placed bookbag or stopping an sibility of our schools' involvement more often, delivered admonitions to infomal wrestling match, or smooth­ eight years ago, when Lincoln Center us as teachers to become the best — to ing a back affectionately as he passes worked with only a few public schools do the best that we are capable of not the time of day or inquires about one's and ever since, as Mrs. Michaels only for the school but for ourselves as well-being. strongly affirms, he has supported the well. He has encouraged us to become Or I hear the sound of his whistling; development of the program at PDS. interested in nature — human nature some insanely speedy, impossible-to- Mr. Bing brings the same zest and — to become more caring about our whistle Beethoven scherzo. Or I think active participation to every school students and colleagues. Not only has of Sandy on the theater stage talking event, especially if it involves an out­ he encouraged us in this but above all, to some 400 Upper Schoolers about a door cookout. It is mind-boggling to he has shown himself to be a man of theft from a locker — but what I'm think of the thousands of hamburgers sincere compassion in crisis times imagining particularly is that intimate, he must have grilled for us in his time. affecting the school community. He personal way he has of talking to a Last May at our famous Blue-White has exhorted us to expand our vision crowd as if he is talking to one individ­ Field Day, my assignment was to stand and bring fresh approaches and per­ ual. I truly believe that those "fireside next to Mr. Bing in the lunch assembly spectives to our teaching. As for whet­ chats" have worked and that students line, and after he deposited a serving of ting our appetites, well, there were the have been called to their best. When chicken on a paper plate, I was to plop a faculty breakfasts with lox and bagels! someone cares as much as Sandy bundle of carrot and celery sticks on it Good friends are hard, to come by in obviously does, is committed as much and pass it on. I knew we had over a this life, I think we would all agree. as Sandy obviously is, others want to thousand people to feed, but some­ And I think that the universal senti­ do their best for him. where around the five hundred and ment within the school community Yes, of course, we'll go on after thirty-ninth plate I began to fade: my amongst students and teachers is that Sandy leaves us — I know it in my mind hazed, my hands numbed. I Sandy is truly our good friend. Per­ head. But I'll have to see it be believe it. greeted my relief with rapture and haps, we won't find a better one.

9 THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES

At the June meeting of the Board of • There are 24 members: 8 are the Trustees three new members were women; 16 are men elected or appointed to serve three • 16 are present parents of a total of year terms. New officers were also 23 children elected. This annual rotation on the • 5 are parents of 11 alumni Board serves to bring new ideas and • 34 are alumni (1 also a parent) expertise to the governing body of the • Occupations and professions school. include: University Professor, Market­ Winton H. Manning was elected ing Executive, Financial Analyst, chairman. He had previously served as Housewife, Lawyer, Banker, Educa­ vice chairman of the Board, chairman tion Specialist, Venture Capitalist, Col­ of the long range planning committee, lege President, Accountant, and U.S. and chairman of the headmaster search District Judge. committee in 1985-1986. He is the The chief concern of the Board of senior scholar at Educational Testing Trustees is to maintain the preeminent Service and serves on the board of stature of Princeton Day School, set trustees of both the Foundation for school policy and oversee the financial Chairman Winton H. Manning Books to China and the National Chi- management of the school. The Board cano Council on Higher Education. meets nine times annually at the James S. Regan was elected vice chair­ school, hearing and discussing reports man and Marilyn W. Grounds, secre­ and activities from the various com­ tary. John J. Southwick was re-elected mittees of the Board: Finance, Invest­ treasurer. ment, Buildings and Grounds, Plan­ The three new trustees are Thomas ning and Educational Policy, Nomi­ E. Gardner of Princeton, Lesley Loser nating, Plans and Resources (Devel­ Johnston of Pennington, and Howard opment), and any other committees F. Taylor of Trenton. active during the year. Mr. Gardner is president of Consu­ In addition to his or her regular mer Publishing Group of Simon & duties, each trustee serves on two or Schuster, Inc. Having served as co- more committees each year. From time chairman of the successful 1986-1987 to time the Heads of Schools, faculty PDS Annual Fund, he has assumed members, administrators and other responsibility for the 1987-1988 guests are invited to attend Board Annual Fund. Mr. Gardner is the meetings to keep the trustees cur­ director and founding president of the rently and well informed on all phases LEAD Program in Business, Inc. and is of the school's life. also a member of the Young Presi­ Thomas E. Gardner dents Organization. The school starts its 1987-1988 aca­ Mrs. Johnston is a 1966 alumna of demic year with a faculty and student Princeton Day School, and will serve body which are strong and enthusias­ as alumni representative on the PDS tic, and with our finances streng­ board. She is a member of the Junior thened and under control. League of the Central Delaware Val­ Our prospects for the future are ley, the Princeton Wheaton Club, and exciting. The opportunity exists to the Greenfingers Garden Club. make Princeton Day School the out­ Prof. Taylor has been a member of standing school of its type in the coun­ the Sociology try. Our commitment is to remain at Department since 1973 and directs the approximately 850 students in size, University's Afro-American Studies while emphasizing not only excellence program. He serves on the board of in academic skills but also recognition trustees of Hiram College, Ohio, and is of the need to prepare students for a member of the advisory boards of leadership roles in the interdependent the National Civil Rights Hall of Fame world which they will have to deal and the New Jersey Historical Com­ with in a productive lifetime. Princeton mission. Day School's traditional recognition of A profile of the Board as it is now the importance of community service constituted is highlighted by the fol­ and world affairs is a proper step in Howard F. Taylor lowing facts: that direction.

12 REPORT FROM THE PRESIDENT OF THE ALUMNI ASSOCIATION.

by Leslie Loser Johnston '66 The 1986-1987 school year has been Parents Association President Judy a busy one for the PDS Alumni Asso­ Feldman, the kick-off party for The ciation. Alumni Day was successfully Campaign for Princeton Day School. expanded to two days, Friday and Sat­ I would like to take this opportunity urday, May 29th and 30th. On Alumni to thank our Class Agents for their Day the Alumni Award, given in remarkable success in fundraising this recognition of achievements reflecting year. As of June 30, 1987, 17% of our the highest ideals of the school, was alumni had given to the Annual Fund. awarded to Polly Miller Miller MFS This represents an increase of 4% over '63. the past year and is the highest figure Alumni gatherings were held in for alumni giving in the history of the New York, Washington and Boston. school. During the coming year we plan to arrange reunions in Los Angeles, I would also like to thank Martha Denver, and New York again when Sullivan Sword, Bloxie Baker and Duncan Ailing visits these cities. Roger Williams for their support and Last December we sold Christmas commitment to the Alumni Council trees and sponsored a reunion during throughout their terms. We are espe­ the alumni and basketball cially grateful to Meg Michael for lead­ games. ing us in three highly productive years As alumni representative to the as president of the Alumni Associa­ Board of Trustees, Meg Brinster tion. We welcome Molly Sword Michael '70 participated in the drafting McDonough, Kathy Burks Hackett of the Long Range Plan for the school. and Archie Reid as our new council In the same capacity I have also worked members and look forward to the on this plan and will co-chair, with 1987-1988 school year.

REPORT FROM THE PRESIDENT OF THE PARENTS ASSOCIATION

by Judith E. Feldman

I am happy to return for a second make significant contributions to the In the spirit of cooperation we envi­ year as President of the Parents' Asso­ school's libraries and Scholarship Fund sion a New PDS Fair, one which taps ciation. I have enjoyed working with respectively. the talents of our students, parents the many responsive administrators, We are particularly proud to have and faculty. We hope this all-school, faculty and board members, and am presented the school with a portrait of non-fundraising, fun event will retain grateful for the continued support of Sandy Bing which now hangs in Col- the best of past fairs with the added innumerable parent volunteers. ross. We wanted to honor Sandy and dimension of joint venture. The 1986-1987 school year offered a acknowledge his sixteen years of ser­ We will continue our efforts to be broad variety of Parents' Association vice to Princeton Day School. responsive to and supportive of the activities. We opened with a special In the coming school year we hope PDS faculty. We are committed to benefit night at the Squibb Gallery to follow the lead of our Headmaster their financial support through faculty which generated $15,000 for the in attempting to take a fresh approach study grants. We also encourage par­ school's Faculty Endowment Fund. We to the tasks at hand. Keeping in mind ents to join us in hosting our monthly presented a Spring Fashion Show at the ideals of communication, coopera­ faculty breakfasts, a small way to say the Hyatt Hotel which featured stu­ tion, understanding, support and en­ thank you to an outstanding group of dent and faculty models and a fabulous richment, we set out to achieve some people who do so much for our children. brunch feast. Many Lower School par­ lofty goals. Enrichment will come in the form of ents organized yet another successful In the area of communication we monies allocated for special projects Science Series at school, demonstrat­ will be making new strides to reach and programs, but equally important, ing our sincere commitment to educa­ parents efficiently and effectively. We in the willingness of parents to share tional enrichment. Of course, the Book will continue to afford opportunities to themselves with each other and the Fair and Outgrown Shop continued to meet and exchange ideas and concerns. greater school community.

13 ALUMNI WEEKEND '87

On May 29th and 30th, over 200 alumni returned to campus for two days of parties, tours and reminiscing. On Friday former students from MFS '41 to PDS '77 came "back to school" to attend classes in session and see the faculty. After checking the schedule with Director of Studies Beverly Williams, they joined the classes of their choice and toured the building. For lunch, they joined the rest of the school at the Pagoda for a picnic in honor or Sandy and Iris Bing. (See story on Sandy Bing.) On Saturday morning alumni from the 25th reunion class of 1962 made a nostalgic visit to the former PCD building on Broadmead. Under the guidance of Herbert McAneny they poked through old classrooms that are now being used to house a nursery school, a day care center and various University offices. 25 years later, the Class of '62 gathered outside PCD for a class portrait. Front row: Mr. McAneny, Rod Meyers, Rick Eckels, ]ohn Baker. Back row: Bill Walker, jack McCarthy, John Gaston.

Polly M iller M iller '63 accepts the Alumni Award from Meg Brinster Michael '70.

The MFS Class of 1962 at their 25th reunion: (L. to R., back row) Kitty W alker Ellison, Susan Shew Jennings, Linda Clark Gooder, Susan Shea McPherson, Gail Cotton, Susan Mathews Heard, Tassie Turkevich Skvir, Cindy Brown Haas, Janice M illner Levy, Sonia Bill Robertson. (Front rowI Dede Shipway Webster, Linda Maxwell Stefanelli, Janie Cormack, Mary Liz Keegin Colley, Barclay Baldridge MacRae, Carol Estey, Kate Sayen Leader. 14 At 12:30 lunch was served in Col- ross. Close to 50 people were intro­ duced to Headmaster Duncan Ailing and outgoing Alumni Council Presi­ dent Meg Brinster Michael '70. Anne Shepherd reached into her extensive memory and regaled the group with marvelous stories from the past. (We caught this on tape for those of you who missed it!.) The cocktail party took place on the Colross lawn under a gaily striped pink and white tent. Meg Michael pre­ sented the 1987 Alumni Award to Polly Miller '63 who made a lovely speech thanking the school for all it had meant to her and her family. Festivities continued into the night as several classes extended their reun­ ions at private parties. Plan now for next year's Alumni Weekend, May 20th and 21st.

Tht' Class of 1977 was well represented for their 10th reunion.

Duncan Ailing chats with Barbara Russell Flight 77, Holly Buries Becker '77, Monty Brower '77 and Bahette M ills '77.

ALUMNI DAY '88 Saturday, May 21st

MAKE PLANS NOW! PDS '82 was represented by Roger Holloway, Dave Bogle, Leslie Pell and Alice Ganoe, among others.

15 LOWER SCHOOL FINAL ASSEMBLY

16 8th GRADE GRADUATION ADDRESS

by Jane Fremon

jane Fremon joined Princeton Day ton Friends School will open this September jane's remarks at the Middle School Final School in 1981 as n teacher of English anti with jane as its first Director. This new Assembly this past june follow, particu­ history in the Middle School. She leaves us school is fortunate to have such a gifted larly for all those who were not present to this year to bring to fruition a dream she teacher as its leader, and all of us at PDS hear them. has nurtured for a number of years. Prince­ wish Jane every success in her new venture. — D avid C. Bogle

Last week I was standing in line at their symphony in the trees that pulls April 6th. "The cheerleaders all hate the supermarket. There were two high everything down here on the ground me," I wrote on April 27th. school students behind me, and one of into sharper focus. I love it that they As much as I looked forward to the them said to the other, "We didn't do are totally disengaged from people; summer after eighth grade, it turned anything in history today. Mr." whoever they do what they do, with no regard out to be a fairly rocky time as well. it was— I didn't catch the name — for us, and yet they don't purposefully One of my friends at the time was "spent the whole period talking about damage anything. But for me person­ Stevie. We had met during the summer 17 years ago when the cicadas were ally, the timing of their cycle is what is before eighth grade at a pool we both last out and what he was doing then." most meaningful. Their last appear­ belonged to, and then we went off to I was amused by this, just that ance was exactly half my life ago; I was different schools. On July 10th, when afternoon I had discussed my memory born in the winter before their arrival we saw each other for the first time of the cicades with my own eighth in 1953. Their presence marks the again I reported, "Stevie has changed grade study hall. I'd spoken to them passing of time in my life. for the worse." On July 16th, "Stevie about June of 1970, and the little In the same way, seventeen years hates me." On July 18th, "Maybe Ste­ known fact that Bob Dylan was from now you eighth graders will be vie doesn't hate me." And on the 19th, awarded an honorary degree from able to say, "The last time the cicadas "Stevie has been so nice these past Princeton University that year. Some­ were out, I was graduating from couple of days. I now understand why time later he wrote and recorded a eighth grade at PDS." In preparation I liked him so much last summer." Well song about the occasion. Bob Krueger for this event, I've been thinking a lot ...interestingly...Stevie — now known dug it out of his album collection for lately about my own eighth grade year. as Stephen — is still a friend of mine. me the other day, and I listened to it I've been particularly hooked on a 60's We run into each other about once a for the first time. The words of the oldies station on the radio, and recently year, and occasionally we spend some chorus go like this: I unearthed my eighth grade diary for time together. We have known each the first time in about ten years. Hear­ other for 22 years. And yet...even The locusts sang, ing those songs and reading the diary now...I'm never quite sure whether They give me a chill, take me right back to that time of life. Stephen likes me or not. I left a mes­ The locusts sang, The diary reminds me of the priori­ sage on his answering machine about a Such a sweet melody. ties in the life of a thirteen year old. In week ago, and it took him days to The locusts sang, 365 entries I mention school only once. return the call. My feelings were hurt, With their high-winding trill, From January 4th I began keeping just as they were when I was thirteen. The locusts sang, track of the days until summer. 170 it Some things, I've learned from readng They were sanging for me. was, on January 4th. Because I was a this diary, don't change. Apparently Bob Dylan didn't know serious athlete at the time — a compet­ And yet, of course, things do change. what wc all know — that locusts and itive swimmer — many of the pages Or at least we do. While I am still cicadas aren't the same thing. Never­ are filled with reports of state meets struggling with the same issues that theless, the song speaks to me, just as and pronouncements upon various plague my students who are twenty the cicadas themselves have during coaches. I mentioned hassles with par­ years younger — with the need to feel these past few weeks. ents — most of them centering on the part of a group, with hurt feelings in Granted, I haven't had to deal with use of the phone. But by far most of friendships, with not knowing how to them crawling all over my front porch, the writing documented who liked act around certain people — I feel for­ or rotting in my backyard, as I know whom, and who called, and who was tunate to have the thirteen year old in many of you have. I can hear their sweet each day, and who was mean. me to look back to, to learn from, and whirring in the woods beyond an Friends were everything, even though to move beyond. Although it certainly orchard near my house, and I've en­ at times I felt totally alienated and wasn't clear to me as an eighth grader, joyed driving through the sections of alone. As I wrote one day, "I just don't enmeshed in the struggles of daily town where their noise is most deafen­ fit in with the crowd at school." People survival and always wanting to be a ing. From inside my car, I can appre­ were often giving parties and not invit­ year older so that all these problems ciate them in the abstract. I'm awed by ing me. "Michelle was heartless" on would go away, I now know that life 17 isn't linear at all. We grow in cycles, or nomenon. This year, though, because I rather in spirals, coming around to the what line it was. No doubt experience their arrival as a return same lessons with a deeper under­ by now, more than a week instead of an isolated occurence, their standing year after year after year. later, they have forgotten lesson for me is different. Seventeen Our perspective shifts, and the signifi­ the secret, years they have prepared for these two cance of the same events changes. And weeks in the sun, when they leave the the line, the name of thank goodness our lives are long, shells of their old selves behind and the poem. I love them because these spirals of learning take climb into the trees to fly and sing and for finding what so many many years. mate. In the same way, we often expe­ I can't find, There's a poem by Denise Levertov rience our breakthroughs and insights that I first read in college. 1 keep com­ and for loving me after long periods of darkness and ing back to it, so often that my book for the line I wrote, unconscious preparation. But — unlike opens right to it, because it conerns and for forgetting it the cicades — we as individuals live itself with this theme, with the way we so that through many cycles, moving beyond keep coming around to the same les­ ourselves with each round. And as we a thousand times, till death sons of our lives. It's called “The grow, we come to recognize more and find them, they may Secret." It goes like this. more the repeating patterns of our discover it again, in other lives, the sameness and the difference lines Two girls discover existing together. the secret of life in other And so we come to the end of in a sudden line of happenings. And for another year. All of us are moving on, poetry. wanting to know it, some into the Upper School, others for into sixth or seventh or eighth grade. I who don't know the Some of us will embark on adventures secret wrote assuming there is away from PDS. As hard as this mov­ the line. They such a secret, yes, ing on can be for all of us at times, it's told me for that comforting to know that it's all right to most of all. (through a third person) let go, because everything we think we they had found it Seventeen years ago I regarded the are leaving behind, in fact we are tak­ but not what it was cicades as a fascinating natural phe­ ing with us. not even

18 COMMENCEMENT COLLEGE CHOICES Class of 1987

Student College Student College

Elias Abud...... Lehigh Christopher Large...... Jenny Altman...... Clark Lisa Lavinson...... Jessamyn Bagley ...... Wellesley Jane Lee...... Andre Barros...... Rutgers Michele L o ...... Brad Batcha ...... Lehigh Matthew Lustig...... Peter B iro...... Duke Sheila MacKay...... Lisa Blackburn...... Princeton Sarah Mannino ...... Andrew Blechman...... Vassar Anne McDougald ...... Jennifer Bonini...... Princeton ...... Jeffery Brown...... Purdue Scott Miller...... Jon Bylin...... Brown Sophie Miller...... Heather Campbell...... U. of Vermont Beth More ...... Catholic U. of America Jill Campbell...... Howard Jin Na...... Michele Colodney...... Brandeis Jennifer Namm ...... Robin Cook...... Trinity Tracy Needle ...... Karen Cunningham ...... NYU Jane Podurgiel ...... Donamari D'Andrea...... Temple Peter Pritchard...... Lucy Dejames...... San Jose State Stephanie Richman...... Jody Faller...... U. of Virginia Courtney Richmond...... Mark Fedorov...... Lafayette David Roach...... Shana Fineburg...... Northwestern Rebecca Royal ...... David F o x ...... Johns Hopkins Willie Schafer...... Beth Fulmer...... Wooster Don Shaffer...... John Gallagher...... Franklin & Marshall Amy S h a w ...... Michelle Gans ...... Cornell Melanie Shendalman...... Katie Gellenbeck...... U. of Colorado Abby Shull...... Sheara Ginsberg ...... U. of Pennsylvania Liimu Simms ...... NYU Steven Giuli...... Rutgers Judy Sm ith ...... Yale Sandy Glickman...... Washington U. Lisa Somerstein...... Joy Glover...... Oberlin Rachel Stark...... Keith G riffee...... U. of Colorado Michele Sternberg...... Debbie Hahn ...... Boston U. Craig Stuart...... Rachel Haidu ...... Columbia U. Kerry Sullivan...... Alyson Henschel...... Catherine Suter...... Lisa Herbert...... NYU Dafna Tapiero...... Tracy Hofmann...... Trinity Carla Taylor...... Elizabeth Hoover...... Year off John Taylor...... Sterick Ivey...... Rutgers Steven Thom as...... Betsy Jaffee...... Northwestern Ashley Thompson...... Erik Johansen...... Earlham Alison Ufford...... Stephen Kent Jusick...... Johns Hopkins Randy Walter...... Janice Katz ...... U. of New Hampshire James Weatherill ...... Morris Kimble...... Washington & Jefferson Kiki Wolfkill...... Allan Kyle...... Hamilton Alex Wolfson...... Sofia Xethalis......

20 CLASS OF 1987 ALUMNI CHILDREN

Craig and Jeb Stuart PCD '56. There arc three generations of Stuart alumni representing all three of our schools since Craig's grandmother, Emily Cowenhoven Stuart, graduated from MFS in 1 932. Craig has inherited his father's flair for writing, and did an excellent job as editor of the school newspaper. He was also an invaluable part of the lighting crew for PDS stage productions.

Robin and John Cook PCD '56. Robin upholds the Cook tradition in two arras. She plans to pursue art in college and one of her sculptures was the winner of the school's Purchase Award. She starred on the girls' ice hockey team and played varsity field hockey and as well.

Scott and Polly M iller M iller M FS '63. Scott played varsity football, ice hockey and lacrosse and was honored by the Delaware Chapter of the National Football Foundation and the Mercer County Chamber of Commerce with a Scholar/Leader/ Alixand Letitia Wheeler Ufford MFS '54. Alix was a member of the varsity Athlete Award this spring. In addition he was a Peer Croup Leader and the president team for four years, played varsity basketball for two and varsity soccer for three years. of Safe Rides. She was voted Most Valuable Player on the soccer team. 21 ON CAMPUS

Several new teachers have joined the Greenhills School in Dallas, TX our staff and should expand our hori­ and spent two summers as the leader zons with their diverse backgrounds of biking trips through Nova Scotia. and expertise. We'd like to introduce Carolyn was a three season athlete at them to you. PDS and should feel right at home Jamie Atkeson will teach Middle coaching the JV field hockey team. School history and coach football, fenc­ Gail Jackson will assume responsi­ ing and lacrosse. He's a graduate of bility for Judy Michael's English classes Ithaca College and has completed an while Judy is on sabbatical this year. intern year at New Canaan Country Gail taught at Sidwell Friends School Day School in Connecticut. in Washington, D.C. for ten years and Seth Baranoff will also join the his­ will help with our Community Service tory department and coach tennis. He program. Lr Hammett Nawrotazki graduated from Georgetown Univer­ Howard Jacobson comes to us from sity and has just returned from a three Princeton University as a member of from Boston University and received year state diploma program in Paris. our new intern program. He will be her M.A. from Penn State. She has He has participated in exchange pro­ teaching history and spent his junior worked in the education field for nine­ grams in Denmark and Japan and tra­ year at Hebrew University in Jerusa­ teen years. veled extensively. lem. He is interested in music, drama Catherine Miller joins the library Paul Bernstein will teach English and sports. staff. She received her B.A. and M.A. and drama. He received his Master's of Ellen Kuris is an art teacher who from Indiana University. Fine Arts in Flaywritin g fr o m th e Uni­ has worked with the Mercer County William Minter will teach history. versity of California and has been a Association for the Gifted and Tal­ He was a Peace Corps volunteer in teaching assistant at the Lincoln Cen­ ented and the same program in the Gabon, West Arica where he taught ter Institute. Princeton regional schools. She also English and building techniques. He Tim Binford will teach Spanish. He founded and directed the Princeton speaks French as well as two African taught 4th, 5th and 6th graders at the Teacher Center, a weekly Saturday languages and was on the Amherst Covenant School in Charlottesville, workshop for teachers, administrators varsity ice hockey and soccer teams. VA and has also taught at Sweetbriar and parents on innovative teaching Lee Hammett Nawrotazki will be College. He will help coach football and methods. our new athletic trainer. She gradu­ assist with the Upper School's winter Lee is the new leader of the ated from and musical production. Peer Group Leadership Training Pro­ worked as an engineer's assistant in Jeffrey Bond filled in for us on a part gram and will teach math as well. He Aix-en-Provence, France. She has also time basis last year and will join the was a math teacher and Dean of Stu­ taught swimming and French. history department as a full time dents at the Canterbury School in Gwendolyn Reed will teach English teacher this fall. He will also be coach­ Connecticut for ten years, in the Upper School and one elective ing football and or softball. He for Ciba-Geigy in Colorado. He has each semester. Her son, James, is in is nearing completion of is Ph.D. in po­ also been a sales consultant for a New seventh grade at PDS. litical science from the University of York pharmecuticai company and Michael Ritter will teach math and Chicago. taught in Florida. science. He graduated from the Uni­ Steve Czelusniak joins the physical Elizabeth Rizza will be teaching versity of Colorado and has worked as education department. He received his English and history. She graduated an analytical chemist in quality control Master's from the University of Mary­ land and has coached football, lacrosse and swimming. He's a certified scuba diver and founded a SADD chapter while teaching at the Bullis School in Potomac, MD. Betsy Dykstra will take on a section of the fourth grade. She has returned to teaching after serving as Head of the Middle School at Stuart Country Day. She taught in Louisville, KY and at the Sharon School in New Jersey. She also has some knowledge of older students, being the mother of Peter PDS '88 and Andy PDS '89. Carolyn Erdman is a 1975 graduate of PDS and has come back to teach first grade. She taught kindergarten at

22 JAN BAKER NAMED ATHLETIC DIRECTOR

Jan Baker has been named Athletic Director at PDS. For fifteen years, she was the Director of the Girls' Physical Education Department, working with Tom Malsbury who ran the Boys' P.E. department. With Tom's departure (see separate story), the department has been reorganized and Jan will be the sole Director of Athletics. Cheryl Silva will be the Acting Head of the Physical Education Department, plan­ ning and overseeing the daily gym classes. Jan came to PDS in 1969 and has been responsible for hiring P.E. teachers and coaches, scheduling games and officials, and running the P.E. pro­ ]an Baker has become the third female athletic director in New jersey. gram. As Athletic Director, she will be in charge of a program that fields leges, Jan has managed to retain some Coaches are the backbone of any almost 50 teams from grades VII rare values. She believes strongly in sports program and Jan hopes to through XII. sportsmanship and team play. In an improve communications and consis­ Since girls have become eligible for effort to encourage team participation, tency by reducing the need for outside the college athletic scholarships pre­ seventh and eighth graders who try coaches and using more teachers from viously reserved for boys, girls' inter­ out for two or more teams a year are school. Backed by Jan's administrative scholastic sports have become very guaranteed a place on one. This philo­ skill and a strong coaching staff, PDS competitive. While PDS coaches do all sophy seems to work as PDS has had sports can look forward to an exciting they can to help their players with col­ great success with its teams. and successful year.

GRANDPARENTS' DAY MAY 1,1987______

Lower School children welcomed their grandparents to school on May 1. Over 115 guests were entertained with a reception in the midst of the annual Student Art Exhibit and with a lively musical assembly. After a rous­ ing sing-along, which included "Take Me Out To The Ballgame" and "Let Me Call You Sweetheart," everyone enjoyed the traditional Maypole Dance on the Colross Lawn. Sara Schwiebert, Head of the Lower School, and the faculty appreciated the attendance of so many grandparents and special family friends. They hope that all involved enjoyed the song and dance, as well as the classroom visits, on the third PDS Grandparents Day!. 23 FORMER FACULTY

Doug McClure has accepted a posi­ the poor and disadvantaged. The Crisis tion as Head of the Upper School at Ministry was founded in 1970 as a the Blake School in Minneapolis. Pete joint venture of the Nassau Presbyter­ Jaq u es is a member of the history ian and Trinity churches. M elissa department at Stuart Country Day M agee has been named the Director of School and has enjoyed coaching there Physical Education at Lawrenceville with Nancy Hatfield. Peter Butten- School and is keeping in close touch heim has become Director of Annual with PDS to schedule the first girls' Giving and Assistant Director of athletic competitions. Herbert McAn- Alumni Relations at Williams College. en y announced his retirement from For the last seven years he was Princi­ the board of the Princeton Commun­ pal of Berkshire Country Day School. ity Players which he founded and Mitchell Bronk is now the Business which he has served as publicist, direc­ Manager of in Con­ tor and actor for many years. He was necticut. Alan Taback is the new honored at the opening night perfor­ Athletic Director at the Solebury mance of the Players' production of "A School in Pennsylvania. Lois Dowey is Funny Thing Happened on the Way to working through the Crisis Ministry the Forum" last February. At a tribute to intitiate a volunteer program to after the show, "Mr. Mac" was given a funnel the skills of Princeton residents standing ovation and the thanks of all to organizations in Trenton that serve whom he had helped and entertained.

WES McCAUGHAN

by Daniel J. Skvir With the retirement of Wes involved in his real passion, putting McCaughan, Princeton Day School with an extension-handle putter that loses its forerunner and leadoff batter. otherwise served as part of an ashtray As the Director of Admissions (1966- for the ever-present pipe on his desk. 1979) and as the instructor of the Thousands of prospective parents and freshman course in ancient history, applicants received sound admissions Wes served as an introduction to PDS advice in his compact office, and all his for more than a generation of families decisions were delivered with grace and Upper School students. A native and a smile. Princetonian and product of the local In his Colross classroom, Mr. public school system and two nearby McCaughan was a genial taskmaster colleges (Trenton State and Rutgers), of the details of Egyptian and Greek his service extends back to the days of civilization. While early students will PCD where he taught history, English remember his history "bees" and objec­ and reading as well as coached baseball. tive tests, his later pupils were aided by A genuine outdoorsman, Wes also led slide/lectures which were the result of some trips of PCD boys to the Ameri­ his trip to Greece and Egypt. His non­ retirement will allow him more time can West along with his colleague, teaching duties included serving as the with family (wife Judy, three daugh­ Dick Griggs. PDS team coach (naturally), as the ters and grandchildren) and opportuni­ Wes moved over to PDS at the time supervisor of fire drills, and as the ties for travel. Leaving the 3 R's of the of the merger and served as the first head class advisor for freshmen in his classroom, after more than 20,000 lec­ admissions director on the new cam­ final year. tures in his 32-year PCD/PDS career, pus. Teaming up with Jean Smyth, he A great teller of stories, Wes uses his Wes is bound to enjoy the 3 P's of his was a fixture in the administrative historical talents for recent as well as extended vacation: the pipe, the putter wing: the trim, nattily attired gentle­ ancient times, regaling any audience of and photography, his most recently man with a fringe of white hair and a friends and colleagues with tales about acquired interest. We hope he con­ barely perceptible trace of an Eng­ the days at PCD, exploits on local tinues to share all three with his lish/Scottish accent, most evident in a greens and fairways, strolls along Red former students and colleagues, for his trilled "r." An unscheduled visitor to Sea beaches or in the shadows of the warm friendship continues to be valued his office might have caught him Sphinx and pyramids. His early by everyone. 24 BARBARA AND GRAHAM CRAGG

by Kathleen Webb and Linda Stefanelli

Barbara and Graham Cragg have the past few years worked with the After their marriage, Graham became retired after many years at PDS. Gra­ Lower School students, developing a Director of Athletics and Hockey ham started teaching here in 1968 and wide knowledge of children's litera­ Coach for the Grosse Point University Barbara in 1974. They have been an ture. She is an accomplished crafts- School in Michigan. At PDS he coached integral part of the school as teachers woman, always making something hockey as well as golf and taught and as parents of five alumni; Melinda attractive. The outstanding bulletin Upper Shool math. His students were '74, Christine '75, Steven '78, Sarah '83 boards in the Lower Library are the also apt to run into him on weekends and Kevin '85. Watching their children result of her creativity. Her atistic tal­ when he refereed hockey games for progress through PDS (the youngest ent has been passed on to son Steven, various leagues. Graham was admired two from kindergarten through twelfth a fine cartoonist, and daughter Sarah both for his ability to clarify complex grade), involved them in a very per­ who just graduated from Skidmore math formulas and for his sense of sonal way and the school benefited with a degree in art. humor. from the experience of their dual role. They came to know students at every Barbara grew up in Ann Arbor, The Craggs plan to enjoy their level and were held in great affection Michigan. She met Graham when he retirement although Graham admits by them. worked for her father as one of the six that it won't seem real until September As a library assistant, Barbara started concurrent jobs he juggled to pay his comes and he doesn't have to go to by splitting her time between the way though the University of Michi­ school. They are thinking of moving to Upper and Lower Libraries. She was a gan. He was an ice hockey player from a warmer climate but we hope they warm and gentle disciplinarian and for Saskatchewan on a sports scholarship. plan to return to Princeton often!

TOM MALSBURY

by James W. Walker

new assistant coaches to introduce to wrap ankles, play in student-faculty the players, to the offense and defense, games, and be a fan, whenever time and to our competitors, but that has permitted, of every boys' team at been the norm during my years of school. He helped schedule the games, coaching at PDS. There will however, order the buses, dispense the equip­ be a great difference for me and for ment and uniforms, and make sure that others this year: I will not start the it was reconditioned or replaced with season by handing out equipment with new when needed. In his straight for­ the aid of Tom Malsbury, nor will 1 find ward way, he was a doer whose influ­ him by my side during our games, giv­ ence affected all of us in so many ways ing his quiet support and expertise that as players and coaches. I have come to depend on. Tom has Tom has seen state championship chosen to start a new career as a gen­ teams in football, soccer, basketball, eral contractor and has left the PDS lacrosse, and perhaps others. He has community with our best wishes, as also shared in the winless or near win- well as with our regrets, for we have less seasons in many of the same sports. lost a colleague who has played such a Regardless of the type of season, he has far-reaching role in our boys' athletic always espoused good sportsmanship program. and hard, disciplined play. He has I can think of few other people who helped coaches and players alike keep have been involved in as many different the proper perspective regarding inter­ aspects of athletics. Tom and I started scholastic athletics. teaching at PDS together over ten When a school loses a person like years ago. Throughout those years 1 Tom Malsbury, often it is not until he is have watched him in the role of gone that all the small things he has As 1 stand on the sidelines this foot­ teacher, trainer, coach, athletic direc­ done and taken care of are fully appre­ ball season, resuming the head football tor, and even on occasion as a stand-in ciated. We wish Tom well in his new coaching position after a year as assist­ referee. I've seen him sharpen skates, endeavor and thank him for all he has ant, much will seem familiar. I will have build lockers, line fields, keep score, done for the school and community.

25 VIRGINIA REYNOLDS

by Kathleen Webb

Since soon after Princeton Day Trained as a librarian at Douglass School came into existence, Virginia College, Virginia married George Reynolds has made children's litera­ Reynolds after her graduation and ture come alive for generations of immediately followed him to Los Ala­ Lower and Middle School children. mos, NM, where he was a junior Whether reading a picture book to member of the team developing the A- Lower Schoolers, or introducing Mid­ bomb. Her tales of those days are dle Schoolers to Encyclopedia Brown and sometimes funny, sometimes sad. Harriet the Spy, she has made reading Sand blew through the streets, it was important and fun. hot (and unairconditioned) and the Virginia worked hard to develop the men were preoccupied. knowledge of children's literature George Reynolds, Professor of Phys­ which made her such an effective ics of Princeton University, also retired teacher and librarian. Apocryphally, in June. He and Virginia have four she is reputed to have read every new sons, of whom Tom is a '72 PDS grad­ book added to the Lower Library. uate, and three grandchildren who Whether this is so or not, she certainly have given them great delight. For had read many. She read, attended many years they have maintained a professional meetings and workshops, house near Woods Hole on the Cape, national and international, devoted to where George has regularly done the field of children's literature, and research at the Oceanographic Insti­ met and got to know many children's tute and they plan to continue to split authors. On a number of notable occa­ their time between Princeton and sions, she organized workshops at Woods Hole with occasional travel, PDS for librarians and members of the especially to England where George New Jersey Reading Association, and has also done research at Oxford. regularly organized special programs Virginia came to PDS at the time of for Children's Book Week in the fall the merger to help then librarian, and National Library Week in the Dorothy Meyers, sort, catalog and spring. Her regular classes for the make sense out of the merged book children were varied and had recently collection of Miss Fine's School and outstanding collection which exists begun to include production of brief Princeton Country Day School. When today. videotapes based on a scene or two it became obvious that one library and Virginia and her love and knowledge from a children's classic. The fourth one librarian would not be enough to of books, her thoughtful comments on grade poetry reading contests and fifth serve the new school, she stayed on to various aspects of school life and the grade book review sessions were establish the new Lower Library and many special projects she developed greatly enjoyed. has carefully selected and nurtured the will be greatly missed.

JOURNAL EXPANDS TO QUARTERLY

The Journal will appear four times The Parents Newsletter, which was this year. In addition to this magazine, sent to parents seven times a year, will there will be three new issues in news­ be incorporated into the new publica­ paper form. They will be published in tions and information specifically for December, April and July. The April parents will be distributed in another issue will replace the Alumni Newslet­ form. This reorganization is intended ter but will continue to report alumni to provide our total constituency with news through Class Secretaries. All a fuller understanding of the school four Journals will offer in-depth arti­ and improve communications. cles on the programs and personalities at PDS.

2b SPORTS GIRLS

WON LOST TIED FALL Field Hockey Varsity 15 1 2 JV 8 0 2 Junior A Team 3 6 1 Junior B Team 2 2 4 Soccer Varsity 9 6 1 Junior 5 2 1 Tennis Varsity 13 6 JV 4 5 Junior 3 4 3rd Team 4 1 WINTER Basketball Varsity 3 9 JV 4 3 8th Grade 7 2 1 7th Grade 9 0 Varsity 7 8 JV 5 4

Ice Hockey 4 4 3 SPRING Lacrosse Varsity 15 1 1 JV 10 2 3rd Team 5 2 1 Junior A Team 5 2 1 Junior B Team 5 2 2

Softball 5 6

Varsity Field Hockey — Prep A State Champions Mercer County Champions

Varsity Lacrosse — Prep A State Champions (7th consecutive year)

Varsity Tennis — Mercer County Champions

Gold P Award — Rebecca Royal

Honorable Mention — Shana Fineburg, Michele Sternberg

Silver P Award — Rebecca Apollon, Joanne Korenjak, Laurie Waligunda

Honorable Mention — Emily Hopper, Rachel Mannino

27 SPORTS BOYS

WON LOST TIED FALL Soccer Varsity 17 6 ]V 1 9 Junior 6 4

Football Varsity 0 Junior

Cross Country Varsity 5 5

WINTER Basketball Varsity 4 9 JV 2 9 Junior 13 2

Ice Hockey Varsity 10 9

SPRING Baseball Varsity 8 5 JV 1 2 Junior 2 4

Lacrosse Varsity 3 11 JV 4 8 Junior 9 1

Tennis Varsity 10 4 JV 5 6 Junior 4 4 1

G olf 1 6

Varsity Soccer — Prep B State Champions

Varsity Tennis — 3rd in Prep B State Tournament

Gold P Award — Scott Miller & Andy Shaffer

Silver P Award — Tim Babbitt & Chris Jones

28 DEVELOPMENT REPORT

Parent Activities The Annual Fund allows students to VII, and Jay, Grade IV, will pass on the The Parents Association of Prince­ work in small classes, confer with advi­ chairmanship for the 1987-1988 ton Day School, presided over by Judy sors, receive individual instruction, and Annual Fund to Co-Chairman Tom Feldman, is a remarkable volunteer study unique courses with teachers Gardner, father of John, PDS Grade organization which contributes thou­ who motivate and inspire. IV. In addition to the 1987 Class sands of dollars to PDS each year by After three highly successful years, Agents, the committee will have more designing and managing numerous Pamela Kelsey, mother of Lisa, Grade than 90 members for this coming year. fundraising projects. In addition, the Association hosts many receptions for parents, friends and faculty. In 1987 then annual PDS Fair, its ad 1986-1987 Annual Fund Committee book and tuition raffle contributed over $8,300 to the school. The Out­ Pamela S. Kelsey, Thomas E. Gardner Co-Chairmen grown Shop, a tremendously success­ ful fine used clothing shop run by the Steve DeRochi Barbara Russell Flight '77 Wendy Payne Parents Association, increased the Upper School Chairman Mary Ann Florence Phyllis Pinder PDS Scholarship Fund by $40,000. Wendy Hopper '64 Wendy Frieman '74 Charles Plohn The Book Fair, staffed by parents, pro­ Middle School Chairman Carol Fulmer Joan Read vided $2,279 for the Library Fund and Bill King Tom Fulmer Thalia Richman Lower School Chairman Lauren Goodyear '82 Peter Roberts the PDS Fashion Show, featuring Karl Fa Her Rachel Gray Jim Rodgers '70 school families and faculty members, Phonathon Chairman Lisbeth Guerrero Perry Rodgers '58 raised over $3,100 for school projects. Barbara Rose Hare 'b4 Ad Hanan '62 Kathy Rolph The fifth annual Science Series Cathy White Mertz '79 Susan Denise Harris '69 Anne Russell '75 brought hundreds of families to the Toby Laughlin '64 Eric Hastings '84 Pat Sanders school and added almost $4,000 to the Alumni Co-Chairmen Sarah Hayes Phil Satow Marie Matthews Peter Hercz Hope Scherck Association budget. In addition, the Parents of Alumni & Andrew Hildick-Smith '77 Will Schafer '87 Parents Association sponsored the Friends Chairman Libet Hosea Sharon Scialli opening of a special exhibit at the Dan Skvir Mary Hobler Hyson '68 Don Shaffer Squibb Gallery in the fall, bringing Bob Whitlock Dan Jamieson Andy Smith '86 over $15,000 to the Endowment Fund Faculty Co-Chairmen Carol Jegou David Smoyer '56 for Faculty Enrichment. Ariel Abud Dickie Ann Johnson Jared Stark '85 Rachel Stark '87 Summer study for faculty members Sandy Ackley Grey Jones Kathy Bagley Janet Kerney Austin Starkey '69 is a major benefit provided by Parents John Boneparth Melissa Kohn '85 Sam Starkey '72 Association funds. Each year many Jennifer Bonini '87 Alain K ornhauser Linda Stone teachers pursue advanced degrees and Pete Buck '77 Debbie Lake Mitch Sussman '71 special interests, attend workshops Kathy Burks Hackett '75 Kelly Lambert '83 Ron Susswein '74 and professional conferences, with the Mary Ann Carlson Marion Lisko '73 Fran Treves '74 help of grants from the Parents Joan Denzer Mary Lott '67 Palmer Uhl '74 Colie Donaldson '62 Frank McDougald Ann Vehslage Association. Marlene Doyle Martha McDougald Candy Walsh Bob Dunn Doug Matthews '80 Roscoe White Ben Eckardt Elaine More Rob Whitlock '78 The Annual Fund Geoff Ferrante '72 Robin Murray '70 Lou Woodruff The 1986-1987 Annual Fund, led by Ellen Fisher '73 Renee Musa-Raines Deebs Young '70 PDS parent and Board member Pam­ Pamela Parsons ela S. Kelsey, raised a grand total of $270,985. Tom Gardner worked with Alumni Annual Giving Awards for PDS Class Agents Pam as Co-chairman. Increased partic­ ipation from parents, alumni and Highest Class Participation faculty members resulted in 1,354 Class of 1987 100% participation Agents: Jennifer Bonini, Will Schafer, gifts including the addition of 133 new Rachel Stark and donors. The committee's success is a direct benefit to the children studying Class of 1969 25% participation Agents: Susan Denise Harris, at Princeton Day School, so we extend 25% participation Agents: Austin Starkey our sincerest thanks to those who Largest Dollar Total Contributed by a PDS Class volunteered to serve on the 1986-1987 Class of 1975 $3,219 Agents: Kathy Burks Hackett, Anne Russell Annual Fund Committee. Alumni, parents, parents of alumni, Greatest Increase in Class Participation grandparents, faculty and friends are Class of 1969 17% to 25% in 1 year Agents: Susan Denise Harris, called on each year to support the Austin Starkey Annual Fund. The gifts made create exceptional education opportunities.

29 PRINCETON DAY SCHOOL ANNUAL FUND

1986-1987 ANNUAL FUND Unrestricted G ifts ...... $270,985 THREE YEAR GIVING COMPARISON Parent Participation (54% of $'s)...... $145,015 No. of Gifts (% of Participation) Alumni Participation (16% of $ 's )...... $ 44,712 All Others (30% of $'s)...... $ 81,258 1985 1986 1987 Parents 364 52% 438 60% 472 66% 1987-1988 ANNUAL FUND GOALS Alumni 323 10% 436 13% 523 18% Unrestricted G ifts ...... $310,000 Other 239 16% 248 14% 260 16% Parent Participation (60% of $ 's)...... $186,000 Alumni Participation (20% of $ 's ) ...... $ 62,000 Dollar Amounts All Others (20% of $ 's)...... $ 62,000

1985 1986 1987 Parents $101,888 $120,425 $145,015 Alumni $ 24,754 $ 34,290 $ 44,712 Other $ 78,769 $ 85,702 $ 81,258 Total $205,411 $240,487 $270,985

Financial Summary

O perations The total cost of operating Princeton Day School in 1986-1987 was $6,600,000. With tuitions ranging from $5,000 for a junior kindergartner to $6,800 for an Upper Schooler, only 86% of the total operating cost was covered. The balance was met by investment income and gifts to the Annual Fund. The division of expenses and income are shown in the charts below.

Endow m ent On June 30, 1987 Princeton Day School's capital funds (at cost) totalled $7 million. This was an increase of $2,300,000 from June 30,1986. These funds are currently invested in a portfolio of securities handled by the New York firm of Beck, Mack and Oliver.

OPERATING INCOME 1986-1987 OPERATING EXPENSES 1986-1987

30 Following is our 1986-1987 Annual Fund Donor List We are very grateful to everyone whose work and gifts drive, we will continue to work with dedication to preserv­ made it possible to raise in excess of $271,000. Beyond the ing Princeton Day School's leadership in independent edu­ important dollars raised is the strong message from parents, cation now and for the future. This list represents contribu­ alumni and friends of Princeton Day School that this school tions to Princeton Day School's Annual Fund from July 1, matters and that it is, and will be, cared for by them. 1986 to June 30, 1987. The strength of our Annual Fund organization and the Please call the Development Office with any errors or dedication of our volunteers are vital to our success. As we omissions. look ahead to the successful completion of this year's fund Miss Fine's School t Deceased 1915 1934 1947 1959 Lydia Taber Poe Catharine J. Loughran Katherine Bryan Bulkley Ann Kinczel Clapp 1918 Rita Smith McAlister Barbara Pettit Finch Anne Goheen Crane Wilhelmina Foster Reynolds Alice Roberts Pierson Margaret Fine Butler 1960 Gertrude Righter Snow 1919 1948 Susan Carter Avanzino Virginia McLean Weeks Sara Neher Sikes Ann Dickinson Dale Joan Nadler Davidson 1935 1923 Dorothy Fleming French Catherine Otis Farrell Mary Cowenhoven Coyle Martha Love Snow 1949 Louise Scheide Marshall Janet MacKenzie Kern Amanda B. Maugham 1925 Florence Dell Macomber Kirby Thompson Hall Helen Foster Highberger tMarion Rogers Walton Mary Byrd Platt 1961 Henry Hotchkiss 1936 1950 Julia Fulper Hardt (In M em ory of Mary Bell Deborah Moore K rule witch Frances Bright Rad Angeline Fleming Austin Clark Hotchkiss MFS '25) Margaret Smith-Burke Alice Elgin Bishop Susanne Blackwell Posey 1937 Carol Armstrong Tall Wendy McAneny Bradburn Florence Clayton Smith Margaret Greenland Fleenor Joan Woolworth Smith Cornelia Sloane McConnell 1951 Winifred Link Stewart 1938 Gordon McAllen Baker Dorothy Auten Sutton Joan Taylor Ashley Barbara Johnston Rodgers Helen M. Crossley 1926 1952 Charmian Kaplan Freund Joan Prentice Charlton Marcia Goetze Nappi Marjorie Munn Knapp t Nancy Goheen Finch Jean Samuels Stephens Roberta Harper Lawrence C. Lawrence Norris Kerr Marina Von Neumann Whitman 1927 1939 1953 Ruth Kemmerer Dorf Theresa Critchlow Hilary Thompson Demarest Katherine Mitchell Osborne 1940 Anne Carples Denny Margaret Stevens Stevens Mary-Lucile Peterson Ager Elaine Polhemus Frost Isabelle Hawke Trenbath Phyllis Vandewater Clement Hope Thompson Kerr Margaret Cook Wallace Phyllis Boushall Dodge Caroline Savage Langan Alice Northrop Robbins 1928 Wendy Gartner Rowland Elizabeth Dinsmore Chick 1941 Jane Gihon Shillaber B. Adelaide Banks Evers Agnes Critchlow Susan McAllen Turner Julie Fulper Hnrdt '61 Anne Reynolds Kittredge Ora Worden Hubball Virginia Meyers Villafranco Elizabeth G. MacLaren 1942 1962 1954 1929 Jane M. Cooper Gail M. Cotton Louise Mason Bachelder Margaret Lowry Butler Sally Kuser Lane Katharine Walker Ellison Sarah Hart Brodsky Anne Mitchell Dielhenn Margaret Frantz Wellington Winifred Dickey Kellogg Katherine Webster Dwight Mary Roberts Woodbridge Janice Millner Levy Agnes Fulper 1930 Martha Heath Yerkes Barclay Baldridge MacRae Lynn Prior Harrington Susan Shea McPherson Louise McNiece Cook 1943 Letitia Wheeler Ufford Linda Maxwell Stefanelli Margaretta Cowenhoven Olive Schulte Brown Dorothea Shipway Webster Barbara ».eeves Dunn Elizabeth Sinclair Flemer 1955 Margaret Froelick Hubbard Marjorie Libby Moore Jo Corn forth Coke 1963 Elizabeth Bissell Northcross Julie Sturges O'Connor Barbara Benson Crowther Wylie O'Hara Doughty Grace Cook Ramus 1944 Louise Chloe King Kathleen Sittig Dunlop In Memory of Helen R. Cannon Julia Gallup Laughlin Sally Campbell Haas Chloe Shear Smith Lorna McAlpin Hauslohner 1956 Colleen Coffee Hall Margaretta Cowenhoven Eleanor Vandewater Leonard Kingsley Hubby Gallup Bonnie Grad Levy Louise McNiece Cook Rosamond Earle Matthews Elizabeth Alsop Hinchman Ellen Ruth Levy Barbara Reeves Dunn Elizabeth McGraw Webster Elisabeth Thomas Peterson Anne MacNeil Elizabeth Wherry 1945 Sally Sikes Prescott Valerie Wicks Pilcher 1931 Mary Jo Gardner Fenton Ann A. Smith 1964 Jean Osgood Smyth Grace Turner Hazard 1957 Jettie Edwards Sylvia Taylor Healy 1932 Susan Smith Baldwin Barbara Rose Hare Patricia Smith Thompson Margaret Russell Edmondson Nancy B. Miller G»ry Smith Hart Emily Cowenhoven Stuart 1946 Nancy Hagen Spaulding Wendy Fruland Hopper Helen M. Watkins Jean Geisenberger Cranstoun Susan Barclay Walcott Susan Schildkraut W allach 1933 Barbara Quick Lorndale Helen C. Wilmerding 1965 Sarah Gardner Tiers Mary Lee Muromcew 1958 Lauren Adams Fortmiller Mary Howell Yard Market! Meyers Shriver Elizabeth Carter Bannerman Joan Wicks Gillette Ann Eichelberger Hall Marita Raubitschek Hopmann Nancy Hudler Keuffel Alison Hubby Hoversten 31 Princeton Country Day School

1925 James B. Laughlin 1956 1962 Jacob D. Beam Dean W. Mathey John F. Cook Coleman du Pont Donaldson, Jr. Samuel M. Hamill David H. McAlpin, Jr. David R. Kamerstein Richard H. Eckels 1927 John A. Schluter Daniel E. B. Quick William H. B. Hamill Churchill Eisenhart 1944 Robert M. Rubino C. Addison Hanan David C. Scott Robert W. Johnson IV Markley Roberts 1928 Hugh W. Sloan, Jr. Richard G. Marcus Joseph Warren 1945 David B. Smoyer Robert G. Maxwell 1929 George H. Gallup III Donald C. Stuart III John F. McCarthy III Thomas J. Moore David L. Tibbals Archibald R. Lewis 1957 William Maxwell William H. Walker III 1946 Edward S. Barclay, Jr. Edward M. Yard David Erdman James Carey, Jr. 1963 1931 Mark A. Heald William M. Morse Roy F. Coppedge III Richard W. Baker, Jr. Robert R. Piper Douglas Rampona Kevin Kennedy Nathaniel Burt 1947 1958 Frederick H. Wandelt III Herbert B. Davison Rowland Burnstan, Jr. Richard W. Baker III Thomas H. Norris Peter R. Rossmassler John G. H. Scoon 1959 1948 Charles Stuart 1932 Alexander S. Burnstan G. Ernest Dale, Jr. James W. Donnelly Benjamin F. Howell, Jr. Charles F. Mapes Sanders Maxwell John D. Wallace 1933 1950 Lawrence Heyl, Jr. Michael P. Erdman 1934 Arthur D. Meritt Robert L. Terry William C. Wallace 1935 1951 John L. Bender William R. L. Dorman Donald R. Young Henry Rulon-Miller James C. Kerney Toby biughliii '64 1937 Douglas G. G. Levick III William Flemer 111 Edwin H. Metcalf 1964 Thomas A. Budny 1939 1952 James F. Delano Wilhelmus B. Bryan III Peter H. Bauer Bloxy Baker ‘bQ Richard B. Hill Harold B. Erdman J. Robert Hillier Aubrey Huston III Edward S. Frohling Rensselaer W. Lee III 1960 Charles Katzenbach, Jr. Bradford B. Locke, Jr. A. Vernon Shannon, Jr. E. Bloxom Baker A. Stephen Lane, Jr. 1941 John C. Wellemeyer Roger S. Marcus Leighton H. Laughlin, Jr. Leighton H. Laughlin John H. Odden 1953 Michael D. Simko Mark S. Munn Brock Putnam II Samuel M. Hamill, Jr. John G. Winant, Jr. 1942 John E. Kerney, Jr. 1961 Donald E. Woodbridge Melville P. Dickenson, Jr. Peter R. Knipe Thomas D. Chubet 1965 Moore Gates, Jr. Kenneth C. Scasserra J. Regan Kerney Nathaniel C. Hutner William E. Schluter J. Ward Kuser 1955 T. Lincoln Kerney II Robert C. Leventhal 1943 Guy K. Dean III Mark H. O'Donoghue Joseph B. Riker Robert E. Dougherty William R. Kales II Archibald S. Reid Peter E.B. Erdman Patrick Rulon-Miller Hugh W. Samson John E. Kuser J. Taylor Woodward III Samuel M. Walker

t Deceased

Princeton iy School

1966 1968 Susan Bailey Brooks 1970 Linda Staniar Bergh Michael Linda Hart Butler William A. Chalverus Naurene Donelly Antonetti Barbara Yard Farling John W. Claghorn III Gale Colby Shelly Brewster Borden Lesley Loser Johnston Catherine A. Ecroyd Kathleen Gorman Colket Cynthia Walsh Bush Barbara Janet Sullivan Andrew J. Fishmann Karen Hoffman Friedlander Rebecca W. Bushnell 1967 Mary Hobler Hyson Susan Denise Harris Christopher M. Collins Elizabeth C. Healy M. Nicole Sarett Cramer Nancy King Carle ton Sue Kleinberg MacConchie Hallett Johnson III Alexandra Dilworth Alan Richard Ross Richard B. Judge, Jr. L. Blair Lee Wendy Lawson-Johnston McNeil Susan Fritsch Faber Lynn Behr Sanford Beth Schlossberg Elizabeth G. Nicholes Margaret Brinster Michael Karen Andresen Kennedy Robert Spears III Bertina Bleicher Norford Barbara R. Miller Julia D. Lockwood Robin L. Murray Jo Schlossberg McConaghy 1969 Grace B. Ramus Austin C. Starkey, Jr. John Parrott Sheila Ha nan Pa store Anonymous Jean Gorman Wilson Barbara Sturken Peterson Laura B. Peterson Elisabeth G. Borgerhoff B. Philip Winder Elizabeth Hamid Roberts

32 James C. Rodgers 1974 Ann B. Walcott Robert M. Salup Anthony J. Vine Diana Lewis Abbott Mark W. Zawadsky Stephen Vine Carl W'egner Evan K. Bash George M. Zoukee Cynthia F. Walsh Wendy Frieman 1982 William White Nancy Kendall-McCabe 1978 Peter Francis Cottone Ann M. Wiley James Morgan David A. Barondess Elizabeth G. Frank Ann McKee Wiser Keith D. Plapinger Nancy C. Chen Alice N. Ganoe Pamela Maxwell Woodworth Julia Sly Selberg Robert N. Cottone Jr. Beth Geter Donald R. Young, Jr. Eleanor Funk Schuster Thomas R. Gates Lauren M. Goodyear Donald H. Gips 1971 Barbara A. Spalholz Jeffrey B. Henkel Todd E. Miller William D. Hollister John M. Battle Michael S. Stix Robert H. Olsson Kate C. Murdoch Blythe Kropt David Straut Michele A. Plante Kang Na Chessye Hill Moseley Ronald Susswein Lawrence S. Pyne Leslie G. Pell Kathrin W. Poole Francis D. Treves Mischka Rizzo Jeffrey F. Perlman Joseph Punia Palmer B. Uhl Terry L. Ward John S. Rodgers William R. Rossmassler III Nina Shafran Leland Ross Mitchell L. Sussman Katrina Kassler Waters 1983 James H. Wittke J. Andrew Sanford Tania Lawson-Johnston Tassie Robert N. Stoner, Jr. Daniel P. Goldman George Treves 1975 Jeffrey L. Swisher Louisa Kelly Lambert Lisbeth A. Warren Ellen L. Albert Robert C. Whitlock, Jr. Louise S. Matthews Victoria Willock Gregory Bash In memory of Craig A. R. Phares Jean Schluter Yoder Ralph M. Brown III Frederick D. Woodbridge '78 Earl A. Rogers 1972 Eric Dunn Mr. & Mrs. Hallett Johnson Erik M. Schwiebert Mark Waks Henry P. Bristol II Shawn W. Ellsworth Mrs. Richard N. Pierson, Jr. Caroline B. Erdman Mary L. Warren Elizabeth Foster Conforti 1979 Ellen Sussman Croen Timothy M. Fabian 1984 R. Grayson Ferrante John Ager III Jean Beckwith Funk Nicholas R. Donath Victoria CiP. Chen Amy Stover Garofalo Paul M. Funk Andrew M. Chooljian Katharine Burks Hackett Benjamin D. Dubrovsky Robert L. Gips Christopher B. Dingle Pamela Herrick Linda Eglin Katherine Gulick Hoffman Daniel R. Herr Dafydd Jones Edward B. Foley Judith Kleinberg Whitney B. Ross Yuki Moore Laurenti John P. Hall III Diana Walsh Magnin Sally H. Snedeker Sandra Lamb Leong Christopher J. Horan Teresa Blake Miller David A. Supple William P. Graff Jane Henderson Kenyon John L. Moore III Phoebe H. Vaughn Mary Sword McDonough David T. Lifland Kate Erdman Prins Alison K. Lockwood Laura W. von Seldeneck William R. Plapinger Anne Robinson Lisa Borie Lovett Marjorie C. Wallace Caron Cadle Remshardt Susan Stix Catherine White Mertz Wendy L. White Sara Bristol Ritchie Laurie Merrick Winegar Cornelia R. Powers John T. Woodward IV Anne G. Russell John I. B. Pyne, Jr. James M. Zahner Lars A. Selberg Eric S. Reichard Davis Van R. Sherman 1985 Muna E. Shehadi Alexandra Smith Laura S. Bennett Eileen Carothers Wojahn 1980 Eric M. Bylin Danielle Coppola 1976 Suzanne Albahary Laura Dennison Lynne P. Erdman Mark BidxiII Jennifer Dutton William K. Griesinger III James P. Daubert Sally L. Fineburg Louise M. Hall Orren Beth Weisberg Falk Ellen Ginsburgh Tresa McBee Joseph M. Feller James J. Groome II William T. Noonan Joanne Kind Hinton Winifred Stoltzfus Host Elizabeth O'Leary Rhoda E. Jaffin Robert Jordan Bradley R. Smith Gregory Matthews James Y. Laughlin H. Elisabeth Socolow James Mulryan Jay R. Marcus Jared L. Stark Cintra Eglin Willcox Douglas Matthews Jamison D. Suter Murray Wilmerding C. Treby McLaughlin Martha Borie Wood 1986 1973 Timothy R. Murdoch Gregory S. Heins Glenna Weisberg Andersen 1977 Melissa J. Phares David W. Kaiser Elizabeth Pratt Bliss Elizabeth Burks Becker Joy Ellen Power Kelly L. Noonan Susan Ross Cusack Nancy M. Bonini Howard F. Powers, Jr. Thomas B. Rossmassler Mark A. Ellsworth N. Harrison Buck John J. Scott, Jr. Andrew B. Smith Margaret C. Erdman Annabelle Brainard Canning Elizabeth S. White Ellen McC. Fisher Anne P. Dennison Christian D. Wallace Carol M. Lifland Barbara Russell Flight Stephen M. Wheeler 1987 Anne Gulick MacCurdy John R. Hickling Elias Abud Peter J. Moore Andrew H. Hildick-Smith 1981 Jennifer Altman Charles H. Place III Ophelia Laughlin Keller James P. Bonini Jessamyn Bagley Deborah Burks Russell B. Pyne Robert N. McClellan Andre Barros Laura L. Carpi Hope S. Spiro Barbara L. Mills Bradford Batcha Ellen C. Gips Martha Sullivan Sword Sabrina K. Plante Peter Biro Michael J. Southwick Patti Seale Taxe Andrea Avery Renault Lisa Blackburn Robert Wade Speir, Jr. Brinton Taylor Karen Schuss Andrew Blechman Lindsay S. Stoner Newell B. Woodworth III Caroline W. Sherman Jennifer Bonini William R. Strugger Jeffery Brown 33 Jonathan Bylin Keith Griffee Sarah Mannino Judith Smith Heather Campbell Deborah Hahn Anne McDougald Lisa Somerstein Jill Campbell Rachel Haidu Benjamin Mezrich Rachel Stark Michele Colodney Alyson Henschel Sophie Miller Michele Sternberg Robin Cook Lisa Herbert Scott Miller Craig Stuart Karen Cunningham Tracy Hofmann Elizabeth More Kerry Sullivan Donamari D'Andrea Elizabeth Hoover Jin Na Catherine Suter Lucy Dejames Sterick Ivey Jennifer Namm Dafna Ta piero Joel Faller Elizabeth Jaffee Tracy Needle Carla Taylor Mark-Jason Federov Erik Johansen Jane Podurgiel John Taylor Shana Fineburg Stephen Kent Jusick Peter Pritchard Steven Thomas David Fox Janice Katz Stephanie Richman Ashley Thompson Elizabeth Fulmer Morris Kimble Courtney Richmond Alix Ufford John Gallagher Allan Kyle David Roach Randy Walter Michelle Cans Christopher Large Rebecca Royal James Weatherill Kathryn Gellenbeck Lisa Lavinson William Schafer Kiki Wolfkill Sheara Ginsberg Jane Lee Donald Shaffer Alexander Wolfson Steven Giuli Giles St. John Lever Amy Shaw Sofia Zethalis Claudia Gleiser Michele Lo Melanie Shendalman Sandra Glickman Matthew Lustig Abby Shull 1992 Joy Glover Sheila MacKay Liimu Simms Rebecca Grounds

Parent Donors

Dr. &. Mrs. Hamed M. Abdou Mr. & Mrs. Joseph M. Brush Dr. & Mrs. Richard E. Dixon Mr. & Mrs. Abe Abramovich Mr. & Mrs. Arthur M. Bylin Mr. & Mrs. William Terry Doan Dr. Alexander M. Ackley, Jr. Captain & Mrs. John T. Cahill Mr. & Mrs. William J. Dolan Mr. & Mrs. Bernard Adler Dr. & Mrs. David Carlson Dr. & Mrs. Aiden Doyle Drs. David & Dorothy Alexander Mr. & Mrs. James D. Carty Mr. & Mrs. Garrett B. Dreier Mr. & Mrs. Richard G. Alexander Dr. & Mrs. William B. Caskey Mr. & Mrs. Howard S. Dunn Mr. Richard Altman Mr. & Mrs. Emilio Castaneda Dr. & Mrs. Robert N. Dunn Dr. & Mrs. Ronald Altman Mr. & Mrs. Richard S. Caverly Mr. & Mrs. William M. Dwyer Mr. Richard A. Anderman Prof. & Mrs. Theodore Chase, Jr. The Rev. & Mrs. Craig R. Dykstra Dr. & Mrs. Warren J. Apollon Mr. & Mrs. Chia-Jan Chen Mr. & Mrs. Peter B. Eaton Mr. & Mrs. Conant Atwood Mr. & Mrs. I-jen Chen Mr. & Mrs. George Eckardt Mr. & Mrs. Robert J. Axelrod Dr. & Mrs. Robert H. K. Chen Mr. & Mrs. William C. Eckelman ) Mr. &. Mrs. James B. Babbitt Mr. & Mrs. David Chou Ms. Marilene Edrei Mr. & Mrs. Charles E. Badgett Dr. Ann P. Christian Mr. & Mrs. William C. Egan III Mr. & Mrs. J. Paul Bagley Mr. & Mrs. Walter B. Churchill Mr. & Mrs. Robert G. Esposito Mr. & Mrs. Joseph A. Baicker Mr. & Mrs. John Chypre Mr. & Mrs. Karl G. Faller Mr. & Mrs. E. Bloxom Baker (PCD '60) Mr. & Mrs. Henry F. Clancy Mr. & Mrs. Robert A. Farkas Mr. & Mrs. Italo Baldassari Drs. Barry & Sharon Cohen Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Farruggio Drs. ByungKee Bang & YoonHee Han Mr. & Mrs. Michael P. Collins Mr. & Mrs. Jeffrey L. Feldman Dr. Carlo J. Bari I Mr. & Mrs. Morton Collins Drs. Stephen M. & Judith Felton Mr. & Mrs. Stanley C. Baron Mr. & Mrs. D. David Conklin, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Alan Ferber Prof. & Mrs. Jose Barros-Neto Mr. & Mrs. Richard M. Conley Mr. & Mrs. James Ferry Mr. & Mrs. Francis E. Batcha Dr. & Mrs. John M. Connolly, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Dennis C. Fill Mr. & Mrs. Richard W. Beatty Dr. & Mrs. Richard G. Considine Mr. & Mrs. Richard W. Fineburg Mr. Stephen C. Becker Mr. & Mrs. Fredrick R. Cook Mr. & Mrs. Jud Flato Mr. & Mrs. Thomas M. Begel Mr. & Mrs. John F. Cook (PCD '56) Dr. & Mrs. Richard E. Fleming, Jr. Dr. & Mrs. John A. Belton Dr. & Mrs. Mark C. Croft Mr. & Mrs. Martin Fletcher Mr. & Mrs. Joseph J. Benedict Mrs. Gail P. Cropper Mr. & Mrs. John O. Florence Mr. & Mrs. Daniel B. Beresford Mr. & Mrs. Daniel E. Cullen Drs. Edwardo & Belen Flores Dr. & Mrs. Robert B. Berger Dr. & Mrs. Dominic Culotta Mr. & Mrs. Alan Frank, Jr. Dr. & Mrs. Sheldon S. Berkman Mr. & Mrs. Ronald Cunningham Mr. Andrew Franz Prof. & Mrs. Shyam Bhatnagar Mr. & Mrs. Eugene J. D'Andrea, Jr. Dr. & Mrs. Larry J. French Prof. & Dr. Tushar Bhattacharjee Mr. & Mrs. Gordon Darling Mr. & Mrs. Mark R. Friedman Dr. & Mrs. Alan Bilanin Dr. & Mrs. Pabitra Datta Mr. & Mrs. Barry W. Frost Mr. & Mrs. Steven I. Biro Ms. Patricia Davant & Dr. & Mrs. David H. Fulmer Mr. & Mrs. Lemuel H. Blackburn, Jr. Mr. Coleman Donaldson (PCD '62) Mr. & Mrs. Thomas S. Fulmer Mr. & Mrs. John F. Boneparth Mr. & Mrs. Michael V. Dawes Ms. Alice Fung Prof. & Mrs. William E. Bernini Mr. & Mrs. Guy K. Dean III (PCD '55) Mr. & Mrs. Ron N. Ganguly Mr. &. Mrs. Stephen R. Braddock Mr. & Mrs. Dennis J. DeCore Mr. & Mrs. Richard Gans Mr. & Mrs. James S. Braswell Mr. & Mrs. David P. DeMuth Mr. & Mrs. Anthony J. Garcia Mr. & Mrs. Michael Brent Mr. & Mrs. George C. Denzer, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Thomas E. Gardner Mr. & Mrs. Brian E. Brightly Cte. & Ctesse. Pierre F. deRavel Mr. & Mrs. Ritchie L. Geisel Mr. & Mrs. Michael Brodsky Mr. & Mrs. Steven F. DeRochi Mr. & Mrs. Fred Gendler Mr. & Mrs. Jim N. Brown Mr. & Mrs. Ricardo DeSenna Mr. & Mrs. Peter G. Gerry Prof. & Mrs. Jonathan M. Brown Mr. & Mrs. William M. Dickey Mr. & Mrs. David L. Gillis Mr. & Mrs. Philip M. Brown Mr. & Mrs. Richard Dickson Mr. Ted C. Ginsberg

34 Mr. & Mrs. Hyman Giuli Mr. & Mrs. Stephen F. Jusick Mr. & Mrs. James Moore-Russell Mr. & Mrs. Alan Glickman Drs. Y. &. C. Kamath Mr. & Mrs. Ivan Moradoff Mr. & Mrs. Lawrence Golden Mr. & Mrs. Jerome M. Katz Mr. & Mrs. William More Mr. & Mrs. Daniel Goldenson Dr. & Mrs. Norman Katz Mr. & Mrs. John L. Morino Mr. & Mrs. Jay 1. Goldfarb Mr. & Mrs. Charles Katzenbach, Jr. (PCD '64) Mr. Timothy Murphy Mr. & Mrs. Clifford A. Goldman Mr. & Mrs. John F. Kelsey III Mr. S l Mrs. Paul K. Murphy Mr. & Mrs. Grenville M. Gooder, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. John E. Kerney, Jr. (PCD '53) Mr. & Mrs. Michael J. Myers (Linda Clark M FS '62) Dr. & Mrs. Mark R. Killingsworth Dr. & Mrs. Joel Namm Dr. Elliot B. Gordon Mr. & Mrs. Edwin Y. Kim Mr. & Mrs. Bruce I. Nemirow Mr. & Mrs. Mark N. Gordon Dr. & Mrs. Jay H. Kim Mr. & Mrs. Yell Newhall Mr. & Mrs. William P. Graff (PDS '75) Mr. & Mrs. Nae-sup Kim Dr. Thomas Newman & Ms. L. Materna Mr. & Mrs. Milton H. Grannatt Dr. & Mrs. Young W. Kim Dr. & Mrs. Luis Nieves Mr. & Mrs. Charles A. Gray Mr. & Mrs. William F. King III Mr. & Mrs. Przemyslaw Nowicki Mr. & Mrs. Paul E. Gray Mr. & Mrs. Richard Kmiec Dr. & Mrs. Dennis M. Nugent Mr. & Mrs. Daniel). Graziano Mr. & Mrs. Peter R. Knipe (PCD '53) Mr. & Mrs. Richard F. Ober, Jr. Mr. Charles Greathouse Mr. & Mrs. Allen J. Korenjak Mr. & Mrs. S. Donald Oberfield Dr. & Mrs. Herbert M. Greenberg Prof. & Mrs. Alain L. Kornhauser Dr. & Mrs. Lawrence Oliver Mr. & Mrs. William S. Greenberg Dr. & Mrs. Frank Krai Mr. & Mrs. Stanley Oppenheim Mr. & Mrs. Alan R. Griffith Ms. Charlotte Kuh & Mr. Roy Radner Prof. & Mrs. Steven A. Orszag Mr. & Mrs. Peter M. Grounds Mrs. Georgia Kunz Ms. Catalina Ortiz Mr. & Mrs. R. Peter Gunshor Dr. & Mrs. Jay D. Kuris Mr. & Mrs. Leonard S. Ostfeld Dr. & Mrs. Elliot J. Gursky Ms. Marlene Kurtz Mr. & Mrs. Neill P. Overman Mr. & Mrs. Michael J. Guzik Mrs. Mary Kyle Mr. & Mrs. Robert J. Paci Mr. & Mrs. Robert T. Hall III Mr. Alec Kyle Mr. Edward R. Palsho, Jr. (Colleen Coffee M FS '63) Mrs. Alle A. Lamphier Mr. & Mrs. Shih-Hsie Pan Mr. & Mrs. Samuel M. Hamill, Jr. (PCD '53) Ms. Patricia L. Lang Mr. & Mrs. Dibakar Panigrahi Mr. & Mrs. C. Addison Hanan (PCD '62) Mr. G. Gordon M. Large Mr. & Mrs. Jon Parker Mr. & Mrs. William M. Hank Dr. & Mrs. Norman Lavinson Mrs. Pamela Parsons Mr. & Mrs. Lowen K. Hankin Mr. & Mrs. James G. Lawler Mr. & Mrs. John W. Pastore Mr. & Mrs. Charles Hardy Mr. & Mrs. Owen G. Leach (Sheila Hanan PDS '67) Mrs. Barbara Rose Hare (MFS '64) Dr. & Mrs. Philip L. Lebovitz Mr. & Mrs. Guy Payne III Mr. & Mrs. Leonard Harlan Dr. & Mrs. Joseph P. Leddy Mr. &. Mrs. Martin J. Payton Prof. & Mrs. Joseph P. Hart Dr. & Mrs. Manuel M. Lee Mr. & Mrs. Milton Pelovitz Mr. & Mrs. Thomas B. Harvey Dr. & Mrs. Mark B. Levin Mr. & Mrs. James L. Perhach, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. R. Dixon Hayes Dr. & Mrs. Richard L. Levine Dr. & Mrs. David M. Petrick Dr. James J. Hearney Mr. & Mrs. Tobin V. Levy Mr. & Mrs. S. George H. Philander Dr. & Mrs. Stephen Hefler Mr. & Mrs. . F. Lichtenstein Prof. & Mrs. George F. Pinder Mr. & Mrs. Peter W. Hegener Mr. & Mrs. Jack Lintner Mr. & Mrs. Charles J. Plohn, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. John J. Heins II Mr. & Mrs. Samuel A. Livingston Mr. & Mrs. Mark Pollard Mr. & Mrs. Michael P. Helmick Mr. & Mrs. William R. Lucas Mr. & Mrs. Neil R. Pope Mr. & Mrs. Clifford Hemphill Mr. & Mrs. Terrance J. Lynam Mr. & Mrs. Lewis J. Posnock Mr. & Mrs. John T. Henderson, Jr. Dr. & Mrs. John R. Macaulay Mr. & Mrs. Robert S. Powell, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Robert Hendler Mr. & Mrs. John B. MacKay Mr. & Mrs. William H. Powell Mr. & Mrs. George Hendricks Mr. & Mrs. Thomas C. Mackay Mr. & Mrs. David P. Prescott Mr. & Mrs. Peter Hercz Dr. & Mrs. Lon R. Maletta Mr. & Mrs. C. W. Price Mrs. Marilyn R. Herr Dr. & Mrs. Parvaiz Malik Mr. & Mrs. David M. Quinlan Mr. C. Ryman Herr, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Lowell E. Mann Prof. & Mrs. Theodore K. Rabb Mr. & Mrs. M. Roch Hillenbrand Mr. & Mrs. Roger S. Marcus (PCD '60) Mr. & Mrs. Jack Z. Rabinowitz Mr. & Mrs. David H. Hofmann Mr. & Mrs. Joseph P. Marshall, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Richard A. Ragsdale Mr. & Mrs. Thomas J. Hogan III Mr. & Mrs. Harry R. Marty Drs. A. Rali & M. Ramalingam Mr. Arthur Hohmuth Mr. & Mrs. Henry H. Matelson Mr. & Mrs. William Read III Mrs. Eileen Hohmuth-Lemonick Mrs. Virginia G. Mauney Mr. & Mrs. James S. Regan Mr. & Mrs. Michael E. Hollander Dr. & Mrs. Dennis M. Maziarz Mr. & Mrs. Alan F. Reiss Mr. & Mrs. William N. Hoover Mr. & Mrs. Joseph P. Mazzetti Mr. Peter B. Retzlaff Mr. &, Mrs. Arthur F. Hopper III Mr. & Mrs. Frank A. McDougald, Jr. Prof. & Mrs. T. Riccardi, Jr. (Wendy Fruland MFS '64) Mr. & Mrs. Thomas K. McNeil Mr. & Mrs. David Richman Dr. & Mrs. Timothy M. Hosea (Wendy Lawson-Johnston PDS '70) Dr. & Mrs. Yale Richmond Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Hovanec Mr. & Mrs. Donald F. Meade Mr. & Mrs. Stephen J. Riepenhoff Dr. & Mrs. Charles B. Howard Mr. & Mrs. Robert J. Meehan Mr. & Mrs. W. Ronald Roach Mr. & Mrs. Joseph P. Insana Mr. & Mrs. Arthur Meisel Dr. & Mrs. F. Edward Roberts, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Eiji Ishikawa Dr. & Mrs. Reuben S. Mezrich Mr. & Mrs. Peter V. Roberts, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Franklin P. Jacobson Mr. & Mrs. Edward D. Miller Prof. & Mrs. Raddyffe B. Roberts Mr. & Mrs. Peter Jacques Mr. & Mrs. G. Nicholas Miller Mr. & Mrs. Stanley Robinson Prof. & Mrs. Dwight M. Jaffee (Polly Miller MFS '63) Mr. & Mrs. Stuart Robson, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Daniel H. Jamieson, Jr. Dr. & Mrs. Lee H. Miller Mr. & Mrs. Robert Rodenbaugh Mr. & Mrs. Francis G. Janson Mr. & Mrs. Lawrence E. Miller Mr. & Mrs. S. Wyman Rolph III Mr. & Mrs. Peter Jegou Prof. & Mrs. Michael H. Miller Mr. & Mrs. Michael Rorer Mr. & Mrs. J. Chester Johnson Mr. & Mrs. Joshua Milstein Mr. & Mrs. Giacomo G. Rosati Mr. & Mrs. Robert F. Johnston Prof. & Mrs. Kurt Mislow Mr. & Mrs. Robert A. Rosenberg Mr. & Mrs. Todd D. Johnston Mr. & Mrs. James R. Moeller Mr. & Mrs. David S. Rosendorf (Lesley Loser PDS '66) Ms. Frances L. Mollett Mr. & Mrs. Frederick Rosenfeld Mr. & Mrs. J. Grey Jones, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Ronald Moonin Mr. & Mrs. Eugene Rotberg Mr. & Mrs. Percy Jones, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Willie D. Moore Mr. & Mrs. Donald C. Roth

35 Dr. & Mrs. Sheldon Rothfleisch The Rev. & Mrs. Daniel J. Skvir Mr. & Mrs. Ramsay W. Vehslage Mr. & Mrs. Toms B. Royal (Tamara Turkevich MFS '62) Mr. & Mrs. Baxter Venable Mr. & Mrs. Henry Rulon-Miller (PCD '51) Mr. &. Mrs. Joseph C. Small Mr. & Mrs. I. H. von Zelowitz Mr. & Mrs. Frederick j. Sabb Mr. & Mrs. Mr. & Mrs. Daniel Smith Mr. & Mrs. James W. Walker Dr. & Mrs. Jan N. Safer Mr. & Mrs. Dudley R. Smith Mr. & Mrs. Kevin Walsh Mr. & Mrs. Rene L. Sagebien Mr. & Mrs. Eric S. Smith Mr. & Mrs. Frank W. Walter Dr. & Mrs. Alvin J. Salkind Mr. & Mrs. Lawrence C. Smith Mrs. Jo Ann Walther Mr. & Mrs. Marc Sanders Mr. & Mrs. Andrew M. Smulian Mr. & Mrs. John P. Wang Ms. Patricia A. Sanders Mr. & Mrs. Joseph G. Solari, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. H. Brant Wansley, Jr. Dr. & Mrs. Teodoro V. Santiago Dr. & Mrs. Michael Somerstein Dr. & Mrs. Ronald L. Warren Mr. & Mrs. Sanjay Sathe Drs. Carlos & Myrna Soriano Mr. & Mrs. Theodore A. Wasserman Mr. & Mrs. Phillip M. Satow Dr. & Mrs. D. Loren Southern Mr. & Mrs. Derek T. Weatherill Mr. & Mrs. Archimede Scarlata Mr. & Mrs. John J. Southwick, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Richard R. Weaver Mr. & Mrs. John Schafer Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth Spear Mrs. Dorothea Webster Mr. & Mrs. Henry J. Scherck III Mr. D.S. Spiro & Mrs. R.M. Schwarz (Dorothea Shipway MFS '62) Dr. & Mrs. Peter M. Scholz Mr. & Mrs. Edward R. Stehle Mr. & Mrs. David F. Weeks Mr. & Mrs. Frederic J. Schragger Dr. & Mrs. Gerald P. Sternberg Mr. & Mrs. Earl R. Weiskittel Dr. & Mrs. Vincent T. Scialli Ms. Jaymi Stewart Dr. & Mrs. Howard Welt Mr. Gerald Seid Mr. & Mrs. J. David Stitzer Mr. & Mrs. Bruce J. Westcott Mr. & Mrs. T. Joseph Semrod Mr. & Mrs. Edward Stone Mrs. Arlene White Mr. & Mrs. Donald P. Shaffer Mr. & Mrs. John W. Stone Mr. & Mrs. H. Allen White III Mr. & Mrs. Stephen H. Shaffer Mr. & Mrs. Earl Strugger Dr. & Mrs. Roscoe B. White Mr. & Mrs. Donald B. Shafto Mr. & Mrs. Donald C. Stuart 111 (PCD '56) Mr. Richard Whittaker & Mr. & Mrs. Ajit P. Shah Mr. & Mrs. Leroy E. Sullivan III Ms. Margaret McCann Dr. & Mrs. Rajnikant S. Shah Mr. & Mrs. Lauren L. Suter Dr. & Mrs. D. Henry Wijaya Dr. & Mrs. Suresh N. Shah Mr. & Mrs. Albert H. Swanke, Jr. Dr. & Mrs. Richard H. Wildnauer Mr. & Mrs. Jonathan Shahn Mr. & Mrs. Adam Szyper Mr. & Mrs. Charles Williams Mr. & Mrs. A. Vernon Shannon, Jr. (PCD '52) Mr. & Mrs. Robert Tain Mr. & Mrs. David E. Williams Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Sharrard Dr. & Mrs. James Taitsman Mrs. Helen C. Wilmeiding (MFS '57) Mr. & Mrs. Andrew M. Sheldon Mrs. Judith Tapiero Mr. & Mrs. Barry W. Wilson Dr. & Mrs. Lawrence Shendalman Mr. & Mrs. Granville B. Taylor Mr. & Mrs. Edwin Winstanley Mr. & Mrs. Chan G. Shin Mr. & Mrs. Reynolds W. Thompson Mr. & Mrs. Harry H. Wise Mr. & Mrs. Jin Sik Shin Mr. & Mrs. Kilin To Mr. & Mrs. Ronald C. Witt Mr. & Mrs. L. Allan Shuke Mr. & Mrs. J. Burt Totaro Dr. & Mrs. Evan R. Wolarsky Mr. & Mrs. Gerald Siegel Mrs. Agnes Travers Mr. & Mrs. Grant F. Wolfkill Dr. & Mrs. Lawrence R. Siegel Mr. & Mrs. Jan Treilman Dr. & Mrs. Saul Wolf son Dr. &. Mrs. Howard W. Silbersher Mr. & Mrs. David E. Trend Mr. & Mrs. T. Frank Wong Mr. & Mrs. Ira Silverman Dr. & Mrs. Alfred J. Tria, Jr. Mr. J. Taylor Woodward III (PCD '55) (Jane Aresty (MFS '63) Mr. & Mrs. Charles W. Ufford, Jr. Mr. Thomas H. Yam Mr. & Mrs. Jerry Silverman (Letitia Wheeler MFS '54) Mr. & Mrs. Owen D. Young, Jr. Dr. Marylu Simon Mr. & Mrs. Michael K. Upton Dr. & Mrs. Ahsan U. Zafar Mr. & Mrs. John W. Simpson Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Van Dyke Mr. & Mrs. Howard Zagorin Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Sinniger Mr. & Mrs. John Varga Dr. & Mrs. Joseph P. Zawadsky Dr. & Mrs. Norman J. Sissman Mr. & Mrs. Frank C. Varone Mr. B. Zimmer & Ms. D. Dorfman Mr. & Mrs. William D. Sivitz Mr. & Mrs. John Vassar Mr. & Mrs. Alan B. Zublatt

Parents of Alumni, Grandparents and Friends tDeceased

Mr. & Mrs. Duncan W. Ailing Mr. & Mrs. Seymour Bogdonoff Mr. & Mrs. Edward F. Cavey Mr. & Mrs. Jack F. Andrews Mr. David C. Bogle L>r. & Mrs. James J. Chandler Mrs. Peter Angelo Mr. & Mrs. Rowan Boone Mr. & Mrs. John W. Claghorn, Jr. Mrs. Herman N. Archer Mr. & Mrs. William M. Boyd Mrs. J. Dudley Clark, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Julian J. Aresty Mr. & Mrs. Gerald Breese Mrs. George A. Cluett, Jr. Dr. & Mrs. Robert H. Arlett Mrs. Leslie Brown Mrs. Philip J. Cobb Mr. & Mrs. Leonard N. Arnold (Olive Schulte MFS '430 Mr. & Mrs. John J. Conroy Mr. & Mrs. Zam Atiram Mrs. R. Manning Brown, Jr. Mr. Douglas L. Corlette Mr. & Mrs. Joseph E. Bachelder III Mr. & Mrs. Kirk Bryan Mr. & Mrs. Graham S. Cragg (Louise Mason MFS '54) Mr. & Mrs. Alexander K. Buck Ms. Lee Crawford Miss Janet L. Baker Mr. & Mrs. James E. Burke Dr. & Mrs. Barrington Cross Mr. & Mrs. Richard W. Baker, Jr. (PCD '31) Dr. & Mrs. William P. Burks Ms. Liz Cutler & Mr. Tom Kreutz Ms. Susan Smith Baldwin (MFS '57) Mr. & Mrs. Nathaniel Burt (PCD '31) Mr. & Mrs. Jeffrey P. Cutts Mrs. Deirdre Bannon Mr. Douglas F. Bushnell Mr. & Mrs. Lawrence Danson Mrs. Elinor S. Barclay Mr. & Mrs. Peter V. Buttenheim Mr. & Mrs. Horton Davies Mrs. Hans G. Bauer Drs. V. & P. Byahatti Mrs. Barbara R. Delafield Mr. & Mrs. Daniel Bedesem Mrs. Darlene Byrne Mrs. Joseph L. Delafield Mr. &. Mrs. Karl H. Behr Mr. Norman T. Callaway Mr. & Mrs. Robert Denby Mr. & Mrs. David C. Berends Mr. & Mrs. James G. Campbell, Jr. Mrs. Joseph R. Dennen Mr. & Mrs. G. Reginald Bishop, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Jerome Campbell Mr. & Mrs. John H. Denny (Alice Elgin MFS '50) Mr. & Mrs. Carlos Cara Mr. & Mrs. Robert A. Devine Mr. &. Mrs. Thomas J. Blanchet Mr. & Mrs. James Carey Mr. & Mrs. J. Richardson Dilworth Mrs. Sidney Blaxill Mr. & Mrs. Alan W. Carrick Ms. Susan Neider & Mr. J. W. Donnelly Mr. & Mrs. Alden S. Blodget Mr. &. Mrs. Charles B. Carroll Mrs. Erling Dorf

36 (Ruth Kemmerer MFS '26) Mr. & Mrs. Alan J. Karcher Mr. David Reeve Mr. & Mrs. Eamon Downey Ms. Marie E. Kennedy Mr. & Mrs. John Reid Mrs. Lucia Hastings Dudley Dr. & Mrs. John A. Kinczel Mr. Carl Reimers Miss Jeanne M. Duff Mrs. C. D. Knapp Prof. & Mrs. George T. Reynolds Mr. Gardiner S. Dutton (Marjorie Munn MFS '38) Mr. & Mrs. Edward A. Ring Mr. & Mrs. John E. Egner, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Frederick W. Koberna Mr. Thomas C. Roberts Dr. & Mrs. James L. Elmore Mr. Harold J. Kramer Mr. & Mrs. Stuart Robson Mrs. Charles Erdman Mr. & Mrs. Frederic F. Kreisler Dr. & Mrs. David J. Rose Mr. David Erdman (PCD'46) Mr. & Mrs. Herbert C. Kropf Mr. & Mrs. Richard A. Rosenberg Mr. & Mrs. Harold B. Erdman (PCD '39) Prof. & Mrs. Robert E. Kuenne Mr. & Mrs. Peter R. Rossmassler (PCD '47) Mr. & Mrs. Michael P. Erdman (PCD '50) Mr. & Mrs. John E. Kuser (PCD '43) Mr. & Mrs. Peter F. Rothermel Mr. & Mrs. Peter E. B. Erdman (PCD '43) Mrs. Cynthia B. Lake Mr. & Mrs. Patrick Rulon-Miller (PCD '55) Mr. & Mrs. Charles A. Faden Mr. & Mrs. Samuel W. Lambert III Mr. & Mrs. Norman F. S. Russell, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Oreste Falco Mr. & Mrs. Arthur S. Lane Dr. Erwin P. Sacks-Wilner Dr. & Mrs. Jeremiah S. Finch (Sally Kuser MFS '42) Mrs. Laurence H. Sanford, Jr. t (Nancy Goheen MFS '26) Mr. & Mrs. Leighton H. Laughlin (PCD '41) Mrs. Charlotte M. Schluter Mrs. John V.A. Fine Mr. & Mrs. James Laughlin (PCD '43) Mr. & Mrs. Jack E. Schuss Ms. Phillis Finn (Julia Gallup MFS '550 Dr. & Mrs. Ernest Schwiebert, Jr. Dr. & Mrs. Louis Fishman Mr. & Mrs. William T. Lifland Mr. & Mrs. David R. Scott Mr. & Mrs. William Flemer III (PCD '37) Ms. Louisa L. Lockette Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth C. Scasserra (PCD '53) (Elizabeth Sinclair M FS '43) Mr. & Mrs. Thomas N. Loser Mr. & Mrs. William E. Schluter (PCD '42) Mr. & Mrs. Jeremiah Ford III Mrs. Irene G. MacDonald Mr. & Mrs. William A. Scott Mr. & Mrs. Elon Foster, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Roland M. Machold Mr. & Mrs. Atle Selberg tM r. Alfred Foulet Mr. & Mrs. John D. Mack Mr. & Mrs. Earl E. Shaffer Mrs. Ralph Freedman Mr. & Mrs. Frederick Mann Mr. & Mrs. Edwin D. Shaw, Jr. Ms. Jane Fremon Mr. Theodore Manning Mr. & Mrs. Fadlou A. Shehadi Mrs. David L. Frothingham Mr. & Mrs. Winton H. Manning Mrs. Anne B. Shepherd Mr. & Mrs. George H. Gallup III (PCD '45) Mr. & Mrs. Charles F. Mapes (PCD '48) Mr. & Mrs. Michael Sherman (Kingsley Hubby MFS '56) Mr. & Mrs. Jules W. Marcus Mr. & Mrs. Michael C. Shillaber Mr. & Mrs. Charles S. Ganoe Mr. & Mrs. Edward E. Matthews (Jane Gihon MFS '53) Mr. & Mrs. Moore Gates, Jr. (PCD '42) Mr. & Mrs. Sanders Maxwell (PCD '32) Mr. & Mrs. John Shock Rev. & Mrs. Richard R. Gilbert The Rev. and Mrs. David H. McAlpin, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Allan E. Shore Rabbi & Mrs. Albert Ginsburgh Mr. & Mrs. Herbert McAneny Mr. & Mrs. John C. Sienkiewicz Mr. & Mrs. Walter F. Gips, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Edward J. McCabe, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Harvey Silk Mr. & Mrs. Morton J. Goldman Mr. & Mrs. Thomas R. McHale Miss Cheryl Silva Mr. & Mrs. George S. Gordon Mr. & Mrs. G. H. McLaughlin, 11 Dr. & Mrs. Peter A. Sinaiko Miss Jane Grigger Ms. Patricia McStravick Mr. & Mrs. Robert W. Sinkler Ms. Priscilla Grindle Mr. & Mrs. Fowler Merle-Smith tM rs. Lincoln G. Smith Mrs. Wilson M. Gulick Mr. & Mrs. Edwin H. Metcalf (PCD '51) (Chloe Shear M FS '30) Mr. & Mrs. Gordon Gund Mrs. George R. Meyers Mr. & Mrs. Stanley C. Smoyer Mr. & Mrs. Harleston J. Hall, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Robert M. Meyers The Rev. & Mrs. Robert N. Smyth Mr. & Mrs. Dana A. Hamel tMrs. Morris Milgram (Jean E. Osgood MFS '31) Mr. & Mrs. Samuel M. Hamill (PCD '25) Mr. & Mrs. David E. Miller Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Spa taro Mr. & Mrs. John F. Hartmann Mrs. Robert C. Miller Mrs. L. Fenn Stafford Mr. & Mrs. Andrew J. Haumann, Jr. Mr. Bradford Mills Mr. & Mrs. Amel Stark Mrs. Dudley F. Hawkes Ms. Ai Constance Handa Moore Mr. William W. Starke Mr. & Mrs. Maurice F. Healy, Jr. Mrs. William Morris Dr. & Mrs. J. D. Stein, Jr. (Sylvia Taylor M FS '45) Mr. & Mrs. James F. Mrazek Mr. & Mrs. Wade C. Stephens Mr. & Mrs. Richard J. Hankel Ms. Lauren Muller (Jean Samuels M FS '52) Ms. Gayle Henkin and Mr. Thomas Smith Mr. & Mrs. Mark Munn (PCD '41) Mr. & Mrs. Howard Stepp Dr. & Mrs. Gavin Hildick-Smith Dr. & Mrs. Dana G. Munro Mr. & Mrs. Joseph B. Stevens, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. James S. Hill Mr. & Mrs. William F. Murdoch, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Roger Stewart Mr. J. Robert Hillier (PCD '52) Mr. J. Ken Newell Mr. & Mrs. William Stoltzfus Mr. & Mrs. Herbert W. Hobler Dr. & Mrs. Michael A. Newman Mr. Carl C. Storey Mr. & Mrs. Steve Holzinger Dr. & Mrs. Vincent C. Noonan, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. C. Barnwell Straut Mrs. Norman O. Hood Mr. & Mrs. Robert A. O'Leary Mrs. K. Bonsall Strong Mr. Henry Hotchkiss Mr. & Mrs. Richard K. Olsson Mrs. Donald Stuart Mr. & Mrs. Benjamin F. Houston Mr. & Mrs. John T. Osander Mr. & Mrs. John R. Supple Mr. & Mrs. William Howarth Mr. & Mrs. Frederick S. Osborne Mr. & Mrs. Malcolm L. Sutherland Mrs. Pauline H. Huntington (Katherine Mitchell MFS '27) Mr. & Mrs. William Sword Mr. & Mrs. Aubrey Huston, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Richard G. Osborne Mrs. Earl C. Tanner Mr. & Mrs. Corrington Hwong Mr. & Mrs. George F. Paci Prof. & Mrs. Josef S.M. Thanner Mrs. Selden Dunbar Ulick Mr. Christopher Page Mr. & Mrs. Edward D. Thomas Mr. & Mrs. John N. Irwin II Mr. Thomas H. Paine Mrs. Wentworth Thompson Mr. & Mrs. Charles L. Jaffin Mr. & Mrs. Frank R. Palmieri Dr. & Mrs. William H. Thompson Mr. John Jameson Mr. & Mrs. Deno D. Papageorge Mr. & Mrs. Lloyd Thorner Mr. & Mrs. Marius B. Jansen Mr. Henry S. Patterson II Mrs. Lindley W. Tiers Mrs. Betty W. Johnson Mrs. Jacqueline H. Pellaton (Sarah Gardner M FS '33) Mrs. Barbara L. Johnson Mr. & Mrs. Elwood W. Phares II Mrs. Louise Topp Mr. & Mrs. Hallett Johnson, Jr. Ms. Sibyl H. Phillips Mrs. Dagmar FI. Tribble Mr. & Mrs. J. Parry Jones Mr. & Mrs. Philip G. Pratt Mrs. Erna Trubee Mr. & Mrs. Sidney Jordan Mrs. Elizabeth S. Pyne Mr. & Mrs. John Turkevich Mr. & Mrs. David W. Kaiser, Sr. Mr. lnsley B. Pyne Mr. H. Kirk Unruh, Jr.

37 Mr. & Mrs. George A. Vaughn Miss Madeline Weigel Ms. Nancy Wilson & Mr. George Bassett Dr. & Mrs. Irvin Vine Mr. Leonard R. Weisberg Ms. Kate Winton Mr. & Mrs. Stanford vonMayrhauser Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Wellington Mr. & Mrs. Dudley E. Woodbridge Mr. David J. Waks (Margaret Frantz MFS '42) (Mary DeF. Roberts MFS '42) Mr. & Mrs. John D. Wallace (PCD '48) Ms. Jan Westrick Mrs. Helen A. Woodward Mr. &. Mrs. John H. Wallace, Jr. Mrs. Marge Whalen Mr. & Mrs. Newell B. Woodworth (Margaret Cook MFS '27) Mr. & Mrs. Keith Wheelock Mr. & Mrs. V. Gerald Wright Mrs. Fred S. Walter Dr. & Mrs. John J. White, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Edward M. Yard (PCD '29) Mr. & Mrs. Frederick H. Wandelt, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Robert C. Whitlock (Mary Howell MFS '33) Mr. & Mrs. Douglas Webb Prof. & Mrs. David L. Williams Ms. Anastasia Yonezuka Mr. & Mrs. George R. Webster Mrs. Beverly A. Williams Mr. &. Mrs. Donald R. Young (PCD '35) (Elizabeth McGraw MFS '44) Ms. Mary V. Williams Mr. & Mrs. Henry Zenzie Dr. &. Mrs. William H. Wegner Mr. & Mrs. Lucius Wilmerding III

Headmaster, Leadership and Colross Donors — Gifts of $1,500 and over

Mr. & Mrs. Thomas M. Begel Mr. & Mrs. Peter M. Grounds (Rachel L. Lambert MFS '29) Mr. & Mrs. Daniel B. Beresford Mr. & Mrs. Gordon Gund Mr. & Mrs. Edward D. Miller Dr. & Mrs. Alan Bilanin Mr. & Mrs. Dana A. Hamel Mr. & Mrs. John W. Pastore Mrs. Sidney Blaxill Mr. & Mrs. Samuel M. Hamill, Jr. (PCD'53) (Sheila Hanan PDS '67) Dr. & Mrs. William P. Burks Mr. & Mrs. Samuel M. Hamill (PCD '25) Mr. & Mrs. Charles J. Plohn, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Arthur M. Bylin Mr. & Mrs. John T. Henderson, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Jack Z. Rabinowitz Mr. Norman T. Callaway Mrs. Betty W. Johnson Mr. & Mrs. John Reid Mr. & Mrs. Morton Collins Mr. & Mrs. Robert F. Johnston Mr. & Mrs. James S. Regan Mr. & Mrs. Daniel E. Cullen Mr. & Mrs. J. Parry Jones Mr. & Mrs. Peter V. Roberts, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Dennis J. DeCore Mr. & Mrs. Stephen F. Jusick Mr. & Mrs. Peter R. Rossmassler (PCD '47) Cte, & Ctesse. Pierre F. deRavel Mr. & Mrs. John F. Kelsey III Mr. & Mrs. William D. Sivitz Dr. & Mrs. Aiden Doyle Mr. & Mrs. William F. King III Mr. & Mrs. John J. Southwick, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Peter B. Eaton Mr. & Mrs. Peter R. Knipe (PCD '53) Squibb Corporation Mr. Shawn W. Ellsworth (PDS '75) Prof. & Mrs. Alain L. Kornhauser Mr. & Mrs. Howard W. Stepp Mr. & Mrs. Jeffrey L. Feldman Mr. & Mrs. Samuel W. Lambert III Mr. & Mrs. Edward D. Thomas Mr. & Mrs. Dennis C. Fill Mr. & Mrs. Winton H. Manning Mr. & Mrs. George R. Webster Mr. & Mrs. Thomas E. Gardner Mr. & Mrs. Edward E. Matthews (Elizabeth McGraw MFS '44) Mr. & Mrs. Peter C». Gerry Mr. & Mrs. Robert J. Meehan Dr. & Mrs. John J. White, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. George S. Gordon Mr. & Mrs. Paul Mellon Dr. & Mrs. Joseph P. Zawadsky

Circle Donors — Gifts of $500 and over t Deceased

Mr. & Mrs. Bernard Adler Mr. C. Ryman Herr, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Phillip M. Satow Mr. Richard A. Anderman Mr. & Mrs. David H. Hofmann Mr. & Mrs. Donald P. Shaffer Ms. Susan S. Baldwin Mr. & Mrs. Arthur F. Hopper III Mr. & Mrs. Ira Silverman (Susan Smith M FS '57) (Wendy Fruland MFS '64) (Jane Aresty MFS '63) Mr. & Mrs. Thomas J. Blanchet Dr. & Mrs. Timothy M. Hosea tM rs. Lincoln G. Smith Mr. & Mrs. John F. Boneparth Mr. & Mrs. Charles L. Jaffin (Chloe Shear MFS '30) Mr. & Mrs. Alexander K. Buck Mr. & Mrs. J. Chester Johnson Dr. & Mrs. D. Loren Southern Mr. N. Harrison Buck (PDS '77) Mr. Robert W. Johnson IV (PCD '62) Mr. & Mrs. Edward Stone Mr. & Mrs. James G. Campbell, Jr. Mr. William R. Kales II (PCD '55) Mr. & Mrs. John W. Stone Mr. & Mrs. Michael V. Dawes Mr. & Mrs. Edwin Y. Kim Mr. & Mrs. C. Barnwell Straut Mr. & Mrs. David P. DeMuth Dr. & Mrs. Jay H. Kim Mr. & Mrs. Donald C. Stuart III (PCD '56) Mr. & Mrs. Howard S. Dunn Mr. Harold J. Kramer Dr. & Mrs. William H. Thompson Dr. & Mrs. Robert N. Dunn Mr. & Mrs. Owen G. Leach Mrs. Lindley W. Tiers Mr. & Mrs. George Eckardt Dr. & Mrs. Joseph P. Leddy (Sarah Gardner M FS '33) Mr. & Mrs. William C. Egan III Mr. & Mrs. Tobin V. Levy Mr. & Mrs. George A. Vaughn Mrs. Daniel Ellison Mr. & Mrs. S. F. Lichtenstein Mr. & Mrs. John H. Wallace, Jr. (Katherine Walker MFS 'o2) Mr. & Mrs. William T. Lifland (Margaret Cook M FS '27) Drs. Stephen M. & Judith Felton Mr. & Mrs. Thomas N. Loser Mrs. Fred S. Walter Dr. & Mrs. Richard E. Fleming, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Terrance J. Lynam Miss Helen M. Watkins (MFS '32) Dr. & Mrs. Larry J. French Mr. & Mrs. Roger S. Marcus (PCD '60) Mr. John C. Wellemeyer (PCD '52) Mr. & Mrs. Anthony J. Garcia Mr. & Mrs. Joseph P. Marshall, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Wellington Mr. Ted C. Ginsberg Mr. & Mrs. Donald F. Meade (Margaret Frantz M FS '42) Mr. & Mrs. Walter F. Gips, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. David E. Miller Mr. & Mrs. Bruce J. Westcott Mr. & Mrs. Daniel Goldenson Mr. Bradford Mills Mrs. Robert F. Whitman Mr. & Mrs. William S. Greenberg Mr. & Mrs. Richard F. Ober, Jr. (Marina Von Neumann M FS '52) Mr. & Mrs. Alan R. Griffith Mr. & Mrs. Leonard S. Ostfeld Mr. & Mrs. T. Frank Wong Mr. & Mrs. C. Addison Hanan (PCD '62) Mr. & Mrs. Lewis J. Posnock Mrs. Thomas Wood Mr. & Mrs. Lowen K. Hankin Mr. & Mrs. Robert S. Powell, Jr. (Martha Borie PDS '76) Mr. & Mrs. Leonard Harlan Mr. & Mrs. William Read III Mr. & Mrs. Newell B. Woodworth Mr. & Mrs. Thomas B. Harvey Mr. & Mrs. S. Wyman Rolph III Mr. B. Zimmer & Ms. D. Dorfman Mr. & Mrs. Peter W. Hegener Dr. & Mrs. Sheldon Rothfleisch Mr. & Mrs. John J. Heins II Mr. & Mrs. Rene L. Sagebien

38 Future Donors — Gifts of $250 and over

Dr. Alexander M. Ackley, jr. Mr. & Mrs. George F. Hendricks Mr. & Mrs. Sanjay Sathe Dr. & Mrs. Hamed M. Abdou Mr. & Mrs. M. Roch Hillenbrand Mr. & Mrs. John Schafer Mrs. Peter Angelo Mr. & Mrs. Hallett Johnson, Jr. Mrs. Anne B. Shepherd Dr. & Mrs. Warren J. Apollon Mr. & Mrs. Todd D. Johnston Mr. & Mrs. Dudley R. Smith Mr. & Mrs. Leonard N. Arnold (Lesley Loser PDS '66) Mr. & Mrs. Eric S. Smith Mr. & Mrs. Stanley C. Baron Mr. & Mrs. J. Grey Jones, Jr. Mrs. Robert N. Smyth Mr. & Mrs. Richard W. Beatty Mr. & Mrs. Richard Kmiec (Jean E. Osgood MFS '31) Mr. & Mrs. G. Reginald Bishop, jr. Mrs. Mary Kyle Drs. Carlos & Myrna Soriano (Alice Elgin M FS '50) Ms. Yuki Moore Laurenti (PDS '75) Ms. Hope S. Spiro (PDS '73) Mr. & Mrs. Jim N. Brown Dr. & Mrs. Manuel M. Lee Mrs. L. Fenn Stafford Mrs. R. Manning Brown, Jr. Dr. & Mrs. Richard L. Levine Mr. & Mrs. Edward R. Stehle Dr. & Mrs. William B. Caskey Mr. & Mrs. Thomas C. Mackay Ms. Susan Stix (PDS '72) Mr. & Mrs. 1-jen Chen Mr. &l Mrs. Fowler Merle-Smith Mrs. Agnes Travers Mr. & Mrs. Steven F. DeRochi Mr. & Mrs. Lawrence E. Miller Mr. & Mrs. J. Burt Totaro Mr. & Mrs. Garrett B. Dreier Dr. T. Newman & Ms. L. Materna Dr. & Mrs. Alfred J. Tria, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. William C. Eckelman Mr. & Mrs. Mark Pollard Mrs. Dagmar H. Tribble Mr. & Mrs. Robert G. Esposito Mr. & Mrs. Richard A. Ragsdale Mr. & Mrs. Charles W. Ufford, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Karl G. Faller Drs. A. Rali & M. Ramalingan (I. Letitia Wheeler MFS '54) Mr. & Mrs. John O. Florence Mrs. Peter A. Ritchie Mr. & Mrs. John D. Wallace (PDS '48) Mr. & Mrs. Alan Frank, Jr. (Sara Bristol PDS '75) Mr. & Mrs. Kevin Walsh Mr. & Mrs. Jay I. Goldfarb Mr. & Mrs. W. Ronald Roach Mrs. Jo Ann Walther Mr. & Mrs. Michael J. Guzik Dr. & Mrs. F. Edward Roberts, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Earl R. Weiskittel Mr. & Mrs. Harleston J. Hall, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Robert Rodenbaugh Mr. &. Mrs. Barry W'. Wilson Mr. & Mrs. R. Dixon Hayes Mr. & Mrs. Richard A. Rosenberg Dr. & Mrs. Evan R. Wolarsky Mr. & Mrs. Clifford Hemphill Mr. & Mrs. Frederick Rosenfeld

Decade Donors — Gifts of $100 and over t Deceased

Mr. & Mrs. Abe Abramovich Mrs. Lee D. Butler Mrs. Cleveland E. Dodge Mr. & Mrs. Richard G. Alexander (Margaret B. Fine MFS '18) (Phyllis Boushall MFS '40) Mr. & Mrs. Duncan W. Ailing Drs. V. & P. Byahatti Mr. & Mrs. William J. Dolan Mr. Richard Altman Captain & Mrs. John T. Cahill Mr. Robert E. Dougherty (PCD '43) Dr. & Mrs. Ronald Altman Miss Helen R. Cannon (MFS '44) Mrs. Richard G. Dunlop Mr. & Mrs. Julian J. Aresty Mr. & Mrs. James Carey (Kathleen Sittig MFS '63) Mr. & Mrs. Conant Atwood Mr. & Mrs. Emilio Castaneda Mr. Gardiner S. Dutton Mr. & Mrs. Robert J. Axelrod Dr. & Mrs. James J. Chandler The Rev. & Mrs. Craig R. Dykstra Mr. & Mrs. James B. Babbitt Dr. & Mrs. Robert H. K. Chen Mr. Richard H. Eckels (PCD '62) Mr. & Mrs. Joseph E. Bachelder III Mr. & Mrs. John W. Claghorn, Jr. Mr. Mark A. Ellsworth (J-’DS '73) (Louise Mason M FS '54) Mr. John W. Claghorn III (PDS '68) Mrs. Charles Erdman Mr. & Mrs. J. Paul Bagley Mrs. Harvey Clapp Mr. & Mrs. Harold B. Erdman (PCD '39) Mr. & Mrs. E. Bloxom Baker (PCD '60) (Ann Kinczel M FS '59) Mr. & Mrs. Peter E. B. Erdman (PCD '43) Mr. & Mrs. Richard W. Baker, Jr. (PCD '31) Mrs. J. Dudley Clark, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Charles A. Faden Drs. Byung Kee Bang & Yoon Hee Han Mrs. George A. Cluett, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Robert A. Farkas Dr. Carlo J. Baril Ms. Gale Colby (PDS '69) Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Farruggio Mr. & Mrs. Francis E. Batcha Mrs. Meredith B. Colket III Mr. & Mrs. Alan Ferber Mr. & Mrs. Karl H. Behr (Kathleen Gorman PDS '69) Mr. & Mrs. James Ferry Mr. & Mrs. Joseph J. Benedict Mr. Christopher M. Collins (PDS '70) Mrs. John V. A. Fine Dr. & Mrs. Robert B. Berger Mr. & Mrs. Richard M. Conley Mr. & Mrs. Richard W. Fineburg Ms. Linda Bergh Mr. & Mrs. John J. Conroy Miss Sally L. Fineburg (PDS '80) (Linda B. Staniar MFS '66) Dr. & Mrs. Richard G. Considine Dr. Andrew J. Fishmann (PDS '68) Dr. & Mrs. Sheldon S. Berkman Mr. & Mrs. Frederick R. Cook Mr. & Mrs. Jud Flato Prof. & Mrs. Shyam Bhatnagar Mr. Roy F. Coppedge III (PCD '63) Mr. & Mrs. Martin Fletcher Prof. & Dr. Tushar Bhattacherjee Ms. Gail M. Cotton (MFS '62) Drs. Edwardo & Belen Flores Mr. & Mrs. Lemuel H. Blackburn, Jr. Miss Margaretta Cowenhoven (MFS '30) Mr. & Mrs. Jeremiah Ford III Mr. Mark Blaxill (PDS '76) Mrs. Ellen Croen Mr. & Mrs. Elon Foster, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Adlen S. Blodget (Ellen Sussman PDS '72) tM r. Alfred Foulet Prof. & Mrs. William E. Bonini Dr. & Mrs. Dominic Culotta Mrs. Seelig Freund Mr. & Mrs. William M. Boyd Mr. & Mrs. Eugene J. D'Andrea, Jr. (Charmian L. Kaplan MFS '38) Mr. & Mrs. Stephen R. Bradock Mr. & Mrs. G. Ernest Dale, Jr. (PCD '32) Mrs. Gardner H. Friedlander Mr. Henry P. Bristol II (PDS '72) (Ann Dickinson MFS '48) (Karen Hoffman M FS '69) Mr. Ralph M. Brown III (PDS '75) Mr. & Mrs. Gordon Darling Mr. & Mrs. Mark R. Friedman Mr. & Mrs. Joseph M. Brush Mr. & Mrs. Horton Davies Ms. Wendy Frieman (PDS '74) Mr. Wilhelmus B. Bryan III (PCD '39) Mrs. Joseph L. Delafield Mrs. David L. Frothingham Mr. & Mrs. James E. Burke Miss Anne P. Dennison (PDS '77) Dr. & Mrs. David H. Fulmer Mr. & Mrs. Nathaniel Burt (PCD'31) Mr. & Mrs. John H. Denny Mr. & Mrs. Thomas S. Fulmer Mr. Douglas F. Bushnell Mr. Melville P. Dickenson, Jr. (PCD '42) Miss Agnes Fulper (MFS '54) Ms. Rebecca W. Bushnell (PDS '70) Mr. & Mrs. William Terry Doan Mr. & Mrs. George H. Gallup III (PCD '45)

39 (Kingsley Hubby MFS '56) Ms. Patricia L. Lang Mrs. Fed eric k Peterson Mr. & Mrs. Moore Gates, Jr. (PCD '42) Mr. G. Gordon M. Large (Elizabeth McC. Thomas MFS '56) Mr. & Mrs. David L. Gillis Mr. & Mrs. James B. Laughlin (PCD '43) Mr. & Mrs. Elwood W. Phares II Mr. & Mrs. Alan Glickman (Julia Gallup MFS '55) Mr. & Mrs. S. George H. Philander Mr. & Mrs. Lawrence Golden Mr. Leighton H. Laughlin, Jr. (PCD '64) Mrs. Marshall L. Posey Mr. & Mrs. Clifford A. Goldman Mr. & Mrs. James G. Lawler (Susanne Blackwell MFS '25) Mr. & Mrs. Morton J. Goldman Dr. & Mrs. Philip L. Lebovitz Mr. & Mrs. David P. Prescott Mr. & Mrs. Grenville M. Gooder, Jr. Mrs. Benjamin F. Leonard Mr. Joseph Punia (PDS '71) (Linda Clark MFS '62) (Eleanor Vandewater MFS '44) Mr. Russell B. Pyne (PDS '73) Mr. & Mrs. Mark N. Gordon Dr. & Mrs. Mark B. Levin Prof. & Mrs. Theodore K. Rabb Mr. & Mrs. Milton H. Gra nnatt Miss Ellen Ruth Levy (MFS 63) Mr. Archibald S. Reid (PCD '65) Mr. & Mrs. Charles A. Gray Mrs. S. Dean Levy Mr. Carl Reimers Mr. & Mrs. Daniel J. Graziano (Janice Millner MFS '62) Mr. & Mrs. Alan F. Reiss Mr. Charles Greathouse Ms. Carol M. Lifland (PDS '73) Mrs. Ralf Erik Remshardt Dr. & Mrs. Herbert M. Greenberg Mr. & Mrs. Jack Lintner (Caron P. Cadle PDS '75) Drs. Elliot Gursky & Joyce Glazer Mrs. W. Radford Lovett II Mr. & Mrs. David Richman Mrs. S. Haas (Lisa Borie PDS '79) Dr. & Mrs. Yale Richmond (Sally Campbell M FS '63) Mr. & Mrs. William P. Graff (PDS '75) Mr. & Mrs. Stephen J. Reipenhoff Mrs. Kirby Hall Dr. & Mrs. John R. Macaulay Mr. Joseph B. Riker (PCD '61) (Kirby D. Thompson MFS '49) Mr. & Mrs. John B. MacKay Mr. & Mrs. Edward A. Ring Mr. & Mrs. Robert T. Hall 111 Miss Anne MacNeil (MFS '63) Miss Mischka Rizzo (PDS '78) (Colleen Coffee MFS '63) Dr. & Mrs. Lon R. Maletta Mrs. Frederick C. Robbins Mr. & Mrs. William M. Hank Mr. Richard G. Marcus (PCD '62) (Alice H. Northrop MFS '40) Mr. & Mrs. Charles Hardy Mr. Dean W. Mathey (PCD '43) Mr. Thomas C. Roberts Mrs. Stan A. Harris Mr. Douglas Matthews (PDS '80) Mr. & Mrs. Stuart Robson (Susan Denise PDS '69) Mrs. Virginia G. Mauney Mr. & Mrs. Stuart Robson, Jr. Mrs. Dudley F. Hawkes Dr. & Mrs. Dennis M. Maziarz Mr. James C. Rodgers (PDS '70) Mr. & Mrs. Maurice F. Healy, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Joseph P. Mazzetti Mr. & Mrs. Michael Rorer (Sylvia Taylor MFS '45) Rev. & Mrs. David H. McAlpin, Jr. (PCD '43) Mr. & Mrs. Giacomo G. Rosati Mr. & Mrs. Michael P. Helmick Mr. John F. McCarthy III (PCD '62) Dr. & Mrs. David J. Rose Mr. & Mrs. Robert HendJer Mrs. Peter J. McDonough, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. David S. Rosendorf Mr. &. Mrs. Richard J. Henkel (Mary P. Sword PDS '75) Mr. & Mrs. Donald C. Roth Mr. & Mrs. Peter Hercz Mr. & Mrs. Thomas R. McHale Mr. & Mrs. Toms B. Royal Mrs. Marilyn R. Herr Mr. & Mrs. Thomas K. McNeil Mr. Robert M. Rubino (PCD '56) Mr. Lawrence Heyl, Jr. (PCD '33) (Wendy Lawson-Johnston PDS '70) Dr. Erwin P. Sacks-Wilner Mr. John R. Hickling (PDS '77) tM rs. Morris Milgram Dr. & Mrs. Jan N. Safer Mr. & Mrs. James S. Hill Dr. & Mrs. Lee H. Miller Mr. Robert M. Salup (PDS '70) Mr. J. Robert Hillier (PCD '52) Mrs. Robert C. Miller Mr. & Mrs. Marc Sanders Mr. & Mrs. Herbert W. Hobler Mr. & Mrs. Joshua Milstein Ms. Patricia A. Sanders Mr. & Mrs. Thomas J. Hogan III Prof. & Mrs. Curt Mislow Mrs. Laurence H. Sanford, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Michael E. Hollander Mr. John L. Moore III (PDS ’72) Dr. & Mrs. Teodoro V. Santiago Mr. & Mrs. William N. Hoover Mr. & Mrs. Ivan Moradoff Mr. & Mrs. Archimede Scarlata Mrs. Mary Hyson Mr. & Mrs. William More Mr. & Mrs. Henry J. Scherck III (Mary B. Hobler PDS '68) Mrs. William Morris Mrs. Charlotte M. Schluter Mr. & Mrs. John N. Irwin II Mr. & Mrs. James F. Mrazek Dr. & Mrs. Peter M. Scholz Mr. & Mrs. Peter Jacques Mr. & Mrs. William F. Murdoch, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Frederic J. Schragger Mr. & Mrs. Daniel H. Jamieson, Jr. Miss Robin L. Murray (PDS '70) Mr. & Mrs. Jack E. Schuss Mr. & Mrs. Francis G. Janson Dr. & Mrs. Joel Namm Dr. & Mrs. Ernest Schwiebert, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Peter J. Jegou Mrs. Robert A. Nappi Dr. & Mrs. Vincent T. Scialli Mr. Hallett Johnson III (PDS '70) (Marcia Goetze MFS '52) Mr. David C. Scott (PCD '56) Mr. Richard B. Judge, Jr. (PDS '69) Mr. & Mrs. Yell Newhall Mr. & Mrs. William A. Scott Mr. David R. Kamerstein (P C D '56) Dr. & Mrs. Vincent C. Noonan, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. T. Joseph Semrod Mr. & Mrs. Jerome M. Katz Mr. Mark H. O'Donoghue (PCD '65) Mr. & Mrs. Earl E. Shaffer Dr. & Mrs. Norman Katz Mr. & Mrs. Robert A. O'Leary Mr. & Mrs. Donald B. Shafto Mrs. Nancy Kendall-McCabe Mr. & Mrs. S. Donald Oberfield Mr. & Mrs. Ajit P. Shah (Nancy Ruth Kendall PDS '74) Dr. & Mrs. Lawrence Oliver Dr. & Mrs. Rajnikant S. Shah Mr. & Mrs. Kevin Kennedy (PCD '63) Mr. & Mrs. Richard K. Olsson Dr. & Mrs. Suresh N. Shah (Karen Andresen PDS '67) Mr. & Mrs. Stanley Oppenheim Mr. & Mrs. A. Vernon Shannon, Jr. (PCD '52) Mr. & Mrs. John E. Kerney, Jr. (PCD '53) Prof. & Mrs. Steven A. Orszag Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Sharrard Mr. T. Lincoln Kerney II (PCD '65) Mrs. Catalina Ortiz Mr. & Mrs. Edwin D. Shaw, Jr. Mr. J. Regan Kerney (PCD '61) Mr. & Mrs. Richard G. Osborne Dr. & Mrs. Lawrence Shandalman Mrs. James A. Kerr Mr. & Mrs. Neill P. Overman Mr. & Mrs. Chan G. Shin (C. Lawrence Norris MFS '26) Mr. Thomas H. Paine Mr. & Mrs. L. Allan Shuke Mrs. Gerd H. Keuffei Dr. & Mrs. Luis Nieves Mr. & Mrs. Gerald Siegel (Nancy Hudler MFS '58) Mr. Edward R. Palsho, Jr. Dr. & Mrs. Lawrence R. Siegel Dr. & Mrs. Mark R. Killingsworth Mr. & Mrs. Dibakar Panigrahi Mr. & Mrs. John C. Sienkiewicz Dr. & Mrs. Young W. Kim Mr. & Mrs. Deno D. Papageorge Dr. & Mrs. Howard W. Silbersher Dr. & Mrs. Frank Krai Mr. &. Mrs. Jon Parker The Rev. & Ms. Daniel J. Skvir Dr. & Mrs. Jay D. Kuris Mrs. Pamela Parsons (Tamara Turkevich MFS '62) Mrs. Alle A. Lamphier Mr. Henry S. Patterson II Miss Alexandra Smith (PDS '75) Mr. & Mrs. Arthur S. Lane Mr. & Mrs. Guy Payne III Mrs. Walter J. Smith (Sally Kuser MFS '42) Mrs. Jacqueline H. Pellaton (Florence Clayton MFS ’25)

40 Mr. & Mrs. Lawrence C. Smith Mr. & Mrs. Martin J. Payton Mr. & Mrs. Charles Williams Mr. & Mrs. Stanley C. Smoyer Mrs. Morley P. Thompson Ms. M iry V. Williams Mr. & Mrs. Andrew M. Smuiian (Patricia Smith MFS '45) Miss Victoria Willock (PDS '71) Mrs. William H. Snow Mr. & Mrs. Kilin To Mr. & Mrs. Lucius Wilmerding 111 (Gertrude Righter M FS '34) Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Van Dyke Mr. B. Philip Winder (PDS '69) Mr. & Mrs. Joseph G. Solari, Jr, Mr. & Mrs. Ramsay W. Vehslage Mr. & Mrs. Harry H. Wise Dr. & Mrs. Michael Somerstein Mr. & Mrs. Baxter Venable Mr. & Mrs. Grant F. Wolfkill Mr. & Mrs. Joseph B. Stevens, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. I. H. von Zelowitz Mr. & Mrs. Dudley E. Woodbridge Mr. Carl C. Storey Mrs. Kenneth Wallach (Mary DeF. Roberts M FS '42) Mr. & Mrs. Earl Strugger (Susan Schildkraut MFS '64) Mr. J. Taylor Woodward III (PCD '55) Mrs. Emily C. Stuart Mr. & Mrs. Frederick H. Wandelt, Jr. Mr. Newell B. Woodworth III (PDS '73) (Emily Cowenhoven M FS '32) Mr. & Mrs. H. Brant Wansley, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. V. Gerald Wright Mr. & Mrs. Leroy E. Sullivan III Mr. Joseph Warren (PCD '28) Mr. & Mrs. Edward M. Yard (PCD '29) Mr. & Mrs. John R. Supple Mr. & Mrs. Richard R. Weaver (Mary Howell MFS '33) Mr. Mitchell L. Sussman (PDS '71) Miss Madelne Weigel Mr. & Mrs. Donald R. Young (PCD '35) Mr. Ronald Susswein (PDS '74) Dr. & Mrs. Howard Welt Mr. & Mrs. Owen D. Young, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Malcolm L. Sutherland Mr. & Mrs. Keith Wheelock Dr. & Mrs. Ahsan U. Zafar Mr. & Mrs. Albert Swanke, Jr. Profs. Roscoe & Laura White Mr. & Mrs. Howard Zagorin Mrs. William Sword Mr. & Mrs. Robert C. Whitlock Mr. & Mrs. Henry Zenzie (Martha Sullivan PDS '73) Dr. & Mrs. D. Henry Wijaya Mr. & Mrs. Alan B. Zublatt Mr. & Mrs. William H. Sword Dr. & Mrs. Richard H. Wildnauer Dr. & Mrs. James Taitsman Miss Ann M. Wiley (PDS '70)

Friend and Panther Donors — Gifts of $5 and over tDeceased

Ms. Diana L. Abbott Miss Laura S. Bennett (PDS '85) (Annabelle Brainard PDS '77) (Diana True Lewis PDS '74) Mr. & Mrs. David C. Berends Mr. James Carey, Jr. (PCD '57) Mr. John Ager III (PDS '79) Mr. & Mrs. Steven I. Biro Mrs. C. Randall Carleton Mrs. M. Peterson Ager Mrs. Zenas F. Bliss (Nancy King PDS '67) (Mary-Lucile Peterson M FS '40) (Elizabeth A. Pratt PDS '73) Dr. & Mrs. David Carlson Miss Suzanne Albahary (PDS '80) Mr. & Mrs. Seymour Bogdonoff Miss Laura L. Carpi (PDS '81) Miss Ellen L. Albert (PDS '75) Mr. David C. Bogle Mr. & Mrs. Alan W. Carrick Dr. Glenna Andersen Mr. James P. Bonini (PDS '81) Mr. & Mrs. Charles B. Carroll (Glenna Weisberg PDS '73) Miss Nancy M. Bonini (PDS '77) Mr. & Mrs. James D. Carty Mr. & Mrs. Jack F. Andrews Mr. & Mrs. Rowan Boone Mr. & Mrs. Richard S. Caverly Ms. Naurene Antonetti Mrs. Shelly Borden Mr. & Mrs. Edward F. Cavey (Naurene Donelly PDS '70) (Shelly Brewster PDS '70) Mr. William A. Chalverus (PDS '69) Anonymous Miss Elisabeth G. Borgerhoff (PDS '69) Mrs. Edward J. Charlton Mrs. Herman N. Archer Mrs. Norman Bradburn (Joan Prentice MFS '26) Dr. & Mrs. Robert H. Arlett (Wendy McAneny MFS '50) Prof. & Mrs. Theodore Chase, Jr. Mrs. Taylor Ashley Mr. & Mrs. James S. Braswell Mr. & Mrs. Chia-Jan Chen (Joan M. Taylor MFS '38) Mr. & Mrs. Gerald Breese Miss Nancy C. Chen (PDS '78) Mr. & Mrs. Zam Atirani Mr. & Mrs. Michael Brent Miss Victoria C.P. Chen (PDS '84) Mrs. Angeline F. Austin Mr. & Mrs. Brian E. Brightly Mrs. John B. Chick (Angeline Fleming MFS '50) Mr. & Mrs. Michael Brodsky (Elizabeth Dinsmore MFS '28) Mrs. Kenneth C. Avanzino Mrs. Murray Brodsky Mr. Andrew M. Chooljian (PDS '84) (Susan Carter MFS '60) (Sarah Hart MFS '54) Mr. & Mrs. David Chou Mr. & Mrs. C. Edwin Badgett Mr. & Mrs. Edward P. Bromley, Jr. Dr. Ann P. Christian Mr. & Mrs. Joseph A. Baicker Mrs. Peter R. Brooks Mr. Thomas D. Chubet (PCD '61) Mrs. Guthrie Baker (Susan B. Bailey PDS '69) Mr. & Mrs. Walter B. Churchill (Gordon McAllen MFS '51) Prof. &. Mrs. Jonathan M. Brown Mr. & Mrs. John Chypre Miss Janet L. Baker Mrs. Leslie Brown, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Henry F. Clancy Mr. Richard W. Baker III (PCD '58) (Olive F. Schulte MFS '43) Class of 1987 Mr. & Mrs. Italo Baldassari Mr. & Mrs. Philip M. Brown Mrs. Robert C. Clement Mrs. David Bannerman III Mr. & Mrs. Kirk Bryan (Phyllis Vandewater MFS '40) (Elizabeth A. Carter MFS '58) Mr. Thomas A. Budny (PCD '64) Mrs. Philip J. Cobb Mr. Edward S. Barclay, Jr. (PCD '57) Mrs. James Bulkley Drs. Barry & Sharon Cohen Mrs. Elinor S. Barclay (Katherine Bryan MFS '47) Ms. Jo Coke Mr. David A. Barondess (PDS '78) Miss Deborah Burks (PDS '81) (Jo Cornforth MFS '55) Prof. & Mrs. Jose Barros-Neto Mr. Alexander S. Burnstan (PCD '48) Mr. & Mrs. Michael P. Collins Mr. Evan K. Bash (PDS '74) Mr. Rowland Burnstan, Jr. (PCD '47) Mrs. Raymond M. Conforti Mr. Gregory Bash (PDS '75) Mrs. Cynthia Bush (Elizabeth Foster PDS '72) Mr. John M. Battle (PDS '71) (Cynthia Walsh 'PDS '70) Mr. & Mrs. D. David Conklin, Jr. Mrs. Hans G. Bauer Mrs. Charles M. Butler Dr. & Mrs. John M. Connolly, Jr. Mr. Peter H. Bauer (PCD '52) (Margaret Lowry MFS '29) Mr. & Mrs. John F. Cook (PCD '56) Mr. Jacob D. Beam (PCD '25) Mrs. John M. Butler Mrs. Edward D. Cook Mrs. Paul Becker (Michael Linda Hart PDS '68) (Louise McNiece M FS '30) (Elizabeth Burks PDS '77) Mr. & Mrs. Peter V. Buttenheim Miss Jane M. Cooper (MFS '42) Mr. Stephen C. Becker Mr. Eric M. Bylin (PDS '85) Miss Danielle Coppola (PDS '85) Dr. & Mrs. John A. Belton Mrs. Darlene Byrne Mr. Douglas L. Corlette Capt. John L. Bender (PCD '35) Mrs. Douglas A. Canning Mr. Peter Francis Cottone (PDS '82)

41 Mr. Robert N. Cottone, Jr. (PDS '78) Miss Caroline B. Erdman (PDS '75) Mr. William K. Griesinger III (PDS '85) Mrs. Dan D. Coyle Mr. David Erdman (PCD '46) Miss Jane Grigger (Mary E. Cowenhoven MFS '35) Miss Lynne P. Erdman (PDS '85) Ms. Priscilla Grindle Mr. & Mrs. Graham S. Cragg Miss Margaret C. Erdman (PDS '73) Mr. James J. Groome II (PDS '80) Ms. Nicole Cramer Mr. Michael P. Erdman (PCD '50) Mrs. Wilson M. Gulick (M. Nicole Sarett PDS '70) Mrs. Donald Evers Mr. & Mrs. R. Peter Gunshor Mrs. Thomas R. Crane, Jr. (B. Adelaide Banks MFS '28) Mrs. William Hackett (Anne Goheen MFS '59) Mrs. Bruce Faber (Katharine S. Burks PDS '75) Miss Agnes Critchlow (MFS '41) (Susan Fritsch PDS '67) Mrs. Brinley Hall Miss Therese Critchlow (MFS '39) Mr. Timothy M. Fabian (PDS '75) (Ann Eichelberger M FS '58) Drs. Mark &. Roxanne Croft Mr. & Mrs. Oreste Falco Mr. John P. Hall III (PDS '79) Mr. & Mrs. Purnell Cropper Mrs. Harry S. Falk Miss Louise M. Hall (PDS '85) Dr. & Mrs. Barrington Cross (Orren Beth Weisberg PDS '76) Mr. William H. B. Hamill (PCD '62) Miss Helen M. Crossley (MFS '38) Mrs. John J. Farling III Mrs. William M. Hardt III Mrs. Francis B. Crowther (Barbara Yard PDS '66) (Julie Fulper M FS '61) (Barbara Benson MFS '55) Mrs. Gregory R. Farrell Mrs. Barbara Hare Mr. & Mrs. Ronald Cunningham (Cathy Otis M FS '60) (Barbara Rose M FS '64) Mrs. Paul Cusack Mr. Joseph M. Feller (PDS '76) Mrs. P. Harrington (Susan Ross PDS '73) Mrs. Richard Fenton (Lynn Prior M FS '54) Ms. Liz Cutler & Mr. Tom Kreutz (Mary Jo Gardner MFS '45) Mrs. Gary Hart Mr. & Mrs. Jeffrey P. Cutts Mr. R. Grayson Ferrante (PDS '75) (Cary H. Smith M FS '64) Dr. & Mrs. Pabitra Datta Mrs. David S. Finch Prof. & Mrs. Joseph P. Hart Dr. James P. Daubert (PDS '76) (Barbara Pettit MFS '47) Dr. & Mrs. John F. Hartmann Mrs. Joan N. Davidson Dr. & Mrs. Jeremiah S. Finch Mr. & Mrs. Andrew J. Haumann, Jr. (Joan Nadler MFS '60) t (Nancy Goheen Finch MFS '26) Mrs. Robert A. Hauslohner Mr. Herbert B. Davison (PCD '31) Ms. Phillis Finn (Loma McAlpin MFS '44) Mr. & Mrs. Guy K. Dean 111 (PCD '55) Ms. Ellen Fisher (PDS '73) Mrs. Jeffrey Hazard Mrs. Barbara R. Delafield Dr. & Mrs. Louis Fishman (Grace Turner MFS '45) Mr. James F. Delano (PCD '64) Mrs. Charles T. Fleenor Mr. Mark A. Heald (PCD '46) Mrs. Hilary Demarest (Margaret Greenland MFS '37) Miss Elizabeth C. Healy (PDS '69) (Hilary Thompson MFS '53) Mr. & Mrs. William Flemer III (PCD '37) Dr. James J. Hearney Mr. &. Mrs. Robert Denby (Elizabeth Sinclair M FS '43) Dr. & Mrs. Stephen Hefler Mrs. Joseph R. Dennen Ms. Barbara Flight Mr. Gregory S. Heins (PDS '86) Miss Laura Dennison (PDS '80) (Barbara Russell PDS '77) Mr. Jeffrey B. Henkel (PDS '82) Mrs. Collins Denny Mr. Edward B. Foley (PDS '79) Mr. Daniel R. Herr (PDS '84) (Anne Carples MFS '53) Mrs. Hubert C. Fortmiller Miss Pamela Herrick (PDS '75) Mr. & Mrs. George C. Denzer, Jr. (Lauren Adams MFS '65) Mrs. John K. Highberger Mr. & Mrs. Ricardo DeSenna Mrs. Hanna R. Fox (Helen Foster MFS '25) Mr. & Mrs. Robert A. Devine Miss Elizabeth G. Frank (PDS '82) Mr. Andrew H. Hildick-Smith (PDS '77) Mr. & Mrs. William M. Dickey Mr. Andrew Franz Dr. & Mrs. Gavin Hildick-Smith Mr. & Mrs. Richard Dickson Mrs. Ralph Freedman Mr. Richard B. Hill (PCD '64) Mrs. Mitchell Dielhenn Ms. Jane Fremon Mrs. David F. Hinchman (Anne Mitchell MFS '29) Mrs. Dorothy F. French (Elizabeth Alsop MFS '56) Miss Alexandra Dilworth (PDS '67) (Dorothy Fleming MFS '48) Mrs. Michael Hinton Mr. Christopher B. Dingle (PDS '84) Mr. Edward S. Frohling (PCD '39) (Joanne M. Kind PDS '76) Dr. & Mrs. Richard E. Dixon Mr. & Mrs. Barry W. Frost Mrs. Katherine Hoffman Mr. Coleman du Pont Donaldson, Jr. (PCD '62) Mrs. Edward E. Frost, Jr. (Katherine B. Gulick PDS '72) Mr. Nicholas R. Donath (PDS '79) (Elaine O. Polhemus MFS '53) Mrs. Eileen Hohmuth-Lemonick Mr. & Mrs. James W. Donnelly (PCD '48) Mr. & Mrs. Paul M. Funk (PDS '72) Mr. Arthur Hohmuth Susan Neider & J. W. Donnelly (Jean Beckwith PDS '72) Mr. William D. Hollister (PDS '82) Mrs. Erling Dorf Mr. & Mrs. Ron N. Ganguly Mr. & Mrs. Steve Holzinger (Ruth Kemmerer MFS '27) Miss Alice N. Ganoe (PDS '82) Mrs. Norman O. Hood Mr. William R. L. Dorman (PDS '51) Mr. & Mrs. Charles S. Ganoe Mrs. Philip T. Hopmann Mrs. Scott Doughty Mr. & Mrs. Richard Gans (Marita Raubitschek MFS '65) (Wylie O'Hara MFS '63) Mrs. Lucio Garofalo Mr. Christopher J. Horan (PDS '79) Mr. Benjamin D. Dubrovsky (PDS '79) (Amy N. Stover PDS '75) Mrs. Christian T. Host Mrs. Lucia Hastings Dudley Mr. Thomas R. Gates (PDS '78) (Winifred Stoltzfus PDS '80) Mrs. Harvey D.C. Dunn Mr. & Mrs. Ritchie L. Geisel Mr. Henry Hotchkiss (Barbara G. Reeves MFS '30) Mr. & Mrs. Fred Gendler Mr. & Mrs. Benjamin F. Houston Mr. Eric Dunn (PDS '75) Miss Beth Geter (PDS '82) Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Hovanec Miss Jennifer Dutton (PDS '80) Rev. & Mrs. Richard R. Gilbert Mrs. Philip Hoversten Mrs. Theodore W. Dwight Mrs. Jonathan H. Gillette (Alison Hubby MFS '65) (Katherine M. Webster M FS '54) (Joan Wicks MFS '65) Dr. & Mrs. Charles B. Howard Mr. & Mrs. William M. Dwyer Rabbi & Mrs. Albert Ginsburgh Mr. & Mrs. William Howarth Miss Catherie A. Ecroyd (PDS '68) Miss Ellen Ginsburgh (PDS '80) Mr. Benjamin F. Howell, Jr. (PCD '32) Mrs. Frank K. Edmondson Mr. Donald H. Gips (PDS '78) Mrs. James M. Hubball (E. Margaret Russell MFS '32) Miss Ellen C. Gips (PDS '81) (Ora Worden MFS '28) Ms. Marilene Edrei Mr. Robert L. Gips (PDS '72) Mrs. R. James Hubbard Miss Jettie Edwards (MFS '64) Mr. & Mrs. Hyman Giuli (Margaret Froelick M FS '30) Miss Linda Eglin (PDS '79) Mr. Daniel P. Goldman (PDS '83) Mrs. Pauline H. Huntington Mr. & Mrs. John E. Egner, Jr. Miss Lauren M. Goodyear (PDS '82) Mr. & Mrs. Aubrey Huston, Jr. Mr. Churchill Eisenhart (PCD '27) Dr. Elliot B. Gordon Mr. Aubrey Huston III (PCD '64) Dr. & Mrs. James L. Elmore Mr. & Mrs. Paul E. Gray Mr. Nathaniel C. Hutner (PCD '65)

42 Mr. & Mrs. Corrington S. Hwong Miss Alison K. Lockwood (PDS '79) Mr. & Mrs. Ronald Moonin Mrs. Selden Dunbar Illick Dr. Julia D. Lockwood (PDS '67) Mrs. A. Jerome Moore Mr. & Mrs. Joseph P. Insana Mrs. Robert G. Lorndale (Marjorie J. Libby MFS '43) Mr. & Mrs. Eiji Ishikawa (Barbara Quick MFS '46) Ms. Ai Constance Handa Moore Prof. & Mrs. Dwight M. Jaffee Miss Catharine J. Loughran (MFS '34) Mr. Peter J. Moore (PDS '73) Miss Rhoda E. Jaffin (PDS '76) Mr. & Mrs. William R. Lucas Mr. & Mrs. Willie D. Moore Mr. John Jameson Mrs. Sue K. MacConchie Mr. & Mrs. James Moore-Russell Mr. & Mrs. Marius B. Jansen (Sue Ellen Kleinberg PDS '68) Mr. James Morgan (PDS '74) Mrs. Barbara L. Johnson Mrs. Douglas MacCurdy Mr. & Mrs. John L. Morino Mr. Dafydd Jones (PDS '75) (Anne R. Gulick PDS '73) Mr. William M. Morse (PCD '57) Mr. & Mrs. Percey Jones, Jr. Mrs. Irene G. MacDonald Mrs. Frederick Moseley IV Mr. Robert Jordan (PDS '80) Mr. & Mrs. Roland M. Machold (Chessye Hill PDS '71) Mr. & Mrs. Sidney Jordan Mr. & Mrs. John D. Mack Ms. Lauren Muller Mr. & Mrs. David W. Kaiser, Sr. Miss Elizabeth G. MacLaren (MFS '28) Mr. James Mulryan (PDS '76) Mr. David W. Kaiser (PDS '86) Mrs. F. Allen Macomber Mr. & Mrs. Mark S. Munn (PCD '41) Drs. Y. & C. Kamath (Florence Dell MFS '35) Dr. & Mrs. Dana G. Munro Mr. & Mrs. Alan J. Karcher Ms. Barclay MacRae Miss Kate C. Murdoch (PDS '82) Mr. & Mrs. Charles Katzenbach, Jr. (PCD '6 (Barclay Baldridge MFS '62) Mr. Timothy R. Murdoch (PDS '80) Mrs. Ophelia Keller Mrs. Diana Magnin Mrs. Cyril Muromcew (Ophelia Laughlin PDS '77) (Diana Walsh PDS '72) (Mary Lee MFS '46) Mrs. Spencer Kellogg 111 Dr. & Mrs. Parvaiz Malik Mr. Timothy Murphy (Winifred Dickey M FS '62) Mr. & Mrs. Frederick Mann Mr. & Mrs. Paul K. Murphy Mrs. Kevin Kenyon Mr. & Mrs. Lowell E. Mann Mr. & Mrs. Michael J. Myers (Jane T. Henderson PDS '79) Mr. & Mrs. Charles F. Mapes (F’CD '48) Mr. Kang Na (PDS '82) Mrs. Henry F. Kern Mr. Jay R. Marcus (PDS '80) Mr. & Mrs. Bruce I. Nemirow (Janet KacKenzie M FS '35) Mr. & Mrs. Jules W. Marcus Mr. J. Ken Newell Mr. James C. Kerney (PCD '51) Mrs. Gordon M. Marshall Dr. & Mrs. Michael A. Newman Mrs. Clarence D. Kerr III (Louise Scheide M FS '60) Miss Elizabeth G. Nicholes (PDS '69) (Hope Thompson M FS '53) Mr. & Mrs. Harry R. Marty Miss Kelly L. Noonan (PDS '86) Mr. & Mrs. Nae-sup Kim Mr. & Mrs. Henry H. Matelson Mr. William T. Noonan (PDS '85) Dr. & Mrs. John A. Kinczel Mr. Gregory Matthews (PDS '76) Mrs. Leslie K. Norford Miss Louise Chloe King (MFS '55) Miss Louise S. Matthews (PDS '83) (Bertina C. Bleicher PDS '69) Mrs. Gifford Kittredge Mrs. Joseph O. Matthews Mr. Thomas H. Norris (PCD '31) (Anne Reynolds M FS '41) (Rosamond Earle MFS '44) Mrs. Elizabeth Northcross Ms. Judith Kleinberg (PDS '72) Ms. Amanda B. Maugham (MFS '60) (Elizabeth Bissell MFS '30) Mrs. Marjorie Knapp Mr. & Mrs. Sanders Maxwell (PCD '32) Mr. & Mrs. Przemyslaw Nowicki (Marjorie Munn MFS '38) Mr. William Maxwell (PCD '29) Dr. & Mrs. Dennis M. Nugent Mr. & Mrs. Frederick W. Koberna Mrs. Edwin McAlister Mrs. Robert H. O'Connor Mr. & Mrs. Allen J. Korenjak (Rita Smith MFS '34) (Julie Sturges MFS '43) Mr. & Mrs. Frederic F. Kreisler Mr. & Mrs. Herbert McAneny Miss Elizabeth O'Leary (PDS '85) Miss Blythe Kropf (PDS '71) Miss Tresa Me Bee (PDS '85) Mr. John H. Odden (PCD '60) Mr. & Mrs. Herbert C. Kropf Mr. & Mrs. Edward J. McCabe, Jr. Mr. Robert H. Olsson (PDS '78) Mrs. Deborah Krulewitch Mr. Robert N. McClellan (PDS '77) Mr. & Mrs. John T. Osander (Deborah Moore MFS '61) Ms. Jo McConaghy Mr. & Mrs. Frederick S. Osborne Prof. & Mrs. Robert E. Kuenne (Jo Schlossberg PDS '67) (Katherine Mitchell MFS '27) Mrs. Charlotte Kuh & Mr. Ray Radnor Mrs. E. Riggs McConnell Mr. & Mrs. George F. Paci Mrs. Georgia Kunz (Cornelia B. Sloane MFS '37) Mr. & Mrs. Robert J. Paci Mr. & Mrs. John E. Kuser (PCD '43 Mr. & Mrs. Frank A. McDougald, Jr. Mr. Christopher Page Mr. J. Ward Kuser (PCD '61) Mr. & Mrs. G. H. McLaughlin, II Mr. & Mrs. Frank R. Palmieri Mr. Alec Kyle Miss C. Treby McLaughlin (PDS '80) Mr. & Mrs. Shih-Hsie Pan Mrs. Cynthia B. Lake Mrs. Bruce McPherson Mr. John Parrott (PDS '70) Miss Louisa Kelly Lambert (PDS '83) (Susan Shea MFS '62) Miss Leslie G. Pell (PDS '82) Mr. A. Stephen Lane, Jr. (PCD '64) Mr. & Mrs. Arthur Meisel Mr. & Mrs. Milton I^elovitz Mrs. John J. Langar, Jr. Mr. Arthur D. Meritt (PCD '50) Mr. & Mrs. James L. Perhach, Jr. (Caroline W. Savage MFS '53) Mrs. Oscar E. Mertz III Mr. Jeffrey F. Perlman (PDS '82) Mr. James Y. Laughlin (PDS '80) (Catherine N. White PDS '79) Mrs. William Peterson Mr. & Mrs. Leighton H. Laughlin (PCD '41) Mr. & Mrs. Edwin H. Metcalf (PCD '51) (Barbara C. Sturken PDS '70) Dr. & Mrs. Norman Lavinson Mrs. George R. Meyers Miss Laura B. Peterson (PDS '67) Mrs. Merle Lawrence Mr. & Mrs. Robert M. Meyers Dr. &. Mrs. David M. Petrick (Roberta Harper MFS '38) Dr. & Mrs. Reuben S. Mezrich Mr. Craig A. R. Phares (PDS '83) Miss L. Blair Lee (PDS '69) Mrs. Geoffrey T. Michael Miss Melissa J. Phares (PDS '80) Mr. Rensselaer W. Lee III (PCD '52) (Margaret W. Brinster MFS '70) Ms. Sibyl H. Phillips Mrs. Sandra Leong Miss Barbara R. Miller (MFS '70) Mrs. Alice Pierson (Sandra }. Lamb PDS '75) Mr. & Mrs. G. Nicholas Miller (Alice Roberts MFS '47) Mr. Robert C. Leventhal (PCD '61) (Polly Miller MFS '63) Mrs. Paul S. Pilcher Mr. Douglas G. G. Levick III (PCD '51) Prof. & Mrs. Michael H. Miller (Valerie Wicks MFS '63) Mrs. Ammon Levy Miss Nancy B. Miller (MFS '57) Prof. & Mrs. George F. I’inder (Bonnie Grad MFS '63) Mrs. Teresa Miller Mr. Robert R. Piper (PCD '4o) Dr. Archibald R. Lewis (PCD '29) (Teresa Blake PDS '72) Mr. Charles H. Place III (PDS '73) Mr. David T. Lifland (PDS '79) Mr. Todd E. Miller (PDS '78) Miss Michele A. Plante (PDS '78) Mr. & Mrs. Samuel A. Livingston Miss Barbara L. Mills (PDS '77) Dr. Sabrina K. Plante (PDS '77) Rev. Bradford B. Locke, Jr. (PCD '39) Mr. & Mrs. James R. Moeller Mr. Keith D. Plapinger (PDS '74) Ms. Louisa L. Lockette Ms. Frances L. Mollett Mr. William R. Plapinger (PDS '75)

43 Mrs. Charles Platt III (Eleanor Pettit Funk PDS '74) Mr. & Mrs. Roger Stewart (Mary Byrd M FS '49) Mr. Erik M. Schwiebert (PDS '83) Mrs. F. Gilman Stewart Mrs. John P. Poe Mr. John G. H. Scoon (PCD '31) (Winnifred A. Link M FS '25) (Lydia Taber MFS '15) Mr. & Mrs. David R. Scott Mr. & Mrs. J. David Stitzer Ms. Kathrin Poole (MFS '71) Mr. John J. Scott, Jr. (PDS '80) Mr. Michael S. Stix (PDS '74) Mr. & Mrs. Neil R. Pope Mr. Gerald Seid Mr. &. Mrs. William Stoltzfus Mr. & Mrs. William H. Powell Mr. & Mrs. Atle Selberg Miss Lindsay S. Stoner (PDS '81) Miss joy Ellen Power (PDS '80) Mr. & Mrs. Lars A. Selberg (PDS '75) Mr. Robert N. Stoner, Jr. (PDS '78) Miss Cornelia R. Powers (PDS '79) (Julia N. Sly PDS '74) Mr. David Straut (PDS '74) Mr. Howard F. Powers, Jr. (PDS '80) Mr. & Mrs. Stephen H. Shaffer Mrs. K. Bonsall Strong Mr. & Mrs. Philip C. Pratt Miss Nina Shafran (PDS '71) Mr. William R. Strugger (PDS '81) Ms. Sally Sikes Prescott (MFS '56) Mr. & Mrs. Jonathan Shahn Mr. Charles Stuart (PCD '59) Mr. & Mrs. C. W. Price Mr. &. Mrs. Fadlou A. Shehadi Mrs. Donald Stuart Mrs. William G. Prins Miss Muna E. Shehadi (PDS '79) Ms. Barbara Sullivan (PDS '66) (Kate Erdman PDS '72) Mr. & Mrs. Andrew M. Sheldon Mr. David A. Supple (PDS '84) Mr. Brock Putnam II (PCD '60) Miss Caroline W. Sherman (PDS '77) Mr. Jamison D. Suter (PDS '85) Mrs. Elizabeth S. Pyne Mr. Davis Van R. Sherman (PDS '75) Mr. & Mrs. Lauren L. Suter Mr. Insley B. Pyne Mr. & Mrs. Michael Sherman Mrs. Fred P. Sutton Mr. John I. B. Pyne, Jr. (PDS '79) Mrs. Michael Shillaber (Dorothy Auten MFS '25) Mr. Lawrence S. Pyne (PDS '78) (Jane Gihon MFS '53) Mr. Jeffrey L. Swisher (PDS '78) Mr. Daniel E. B. Quick (PCD '56) Mr. & Mrs. Jin Sik Shin Miss Kara Swisher (PDS '80) Mr. & Mrs. David M. Quinlan Mr. & Mrs. John Shock Mr. & Mrs. Adam Szyper Mrs. Michael Rad Mr. & Mrs. Allan E. Shore Mr. & Mrs. Robert Tain (Frances Bright MFS '36) Mrs. Markell M. Shriver Mrs. Carol Tall Dr. Douglas Rampona (PCD '57) (A. Markell Meyers MFS '46) (Carol Armstrong MFS '61) Mrs. Michael Ramus Mrs. Gordon G. Sikes Mrs. Earl C. Tanner (Grace Bigelow Cook M FS '30) (Sara Neher MFS '19) Mrs. Judith Tapiero Miss Grace B. Ramus (PDS '69) Mr. & Mrs. Harvey A. Silk Ms. Tania Tassie Mr. David Reeve Mr. & Mrs. Jerry Silverman (Tania Lawson-Johnston PDS '71) Mr. Eric S. Reichard (PDS '79) Mr. Michael D. Simko (PCD '64) Mrs. Howard Taxe Mrs. Richard Renault Dr. Marylu Simon (Patti R. Seale PDS '73) (Andrea Avery PDS '77) Mr. & Mrs. John W. H. Simpson Miss Brinton Taylor (PDS '73) Mr. Peter B. Retzlaff Dr. & Mrs. Peter A. Sinaiko Mr. & Mrs. Granville B. Taylor Prof. & Mrs. George T. Reynolds Mr. & Mrs. Robert W. Sinkler Mr. Robert L. Terry (PCD '34) Mrs. William R. Reynolds Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Sinniger Prof. & Mrs. Josef S. M. Thanner (Wilhelmina Foster MFS '34) Dr. & Mrs. Norman J. Sissman Mr. & Mrs. Reynolds W. Thompson Ms. Margaret B. Riccardi Mr. Hugh W. Sloan, Jr. (PCD '56) Mrs. Wentworth Thompson Mrs. William B. Roberts Mr. & Mrs. Joseph C. Small Mr. & Mrs. Lloyd Thorner (Elizabeth Hamid PDS '70) Mr. Andrew B. Smith (PDS '86) Mr. David L. Tibbals (PCD '62) Mr. Markley Roberts (PCD '44) Miss Ann A. Smith (MFS '56) Mr. & Mrs. Jan Treilman Prof. & Mrs. Radclyffe B. Roberts Mr. Bradley R. Smith (PDS '85) Mrs. Gerald S. Trenbath Mr. & Mrs. John Vassar Mr. & Mrs. Daniel Smith (Isabell Hawke MFS '27) Miss Ann Robinson (PDS '72) Mrs. Frank J. Smith Mr. & Mrs. David E. Trend Mr. & Mrs. Stanley Robinson (Joan M. Woolworth MFS '25) Mr. Francis D. Treves (PDS '74) Mrs. John C. Rcxlgers Dr. Margaret Smith-Burke (MFS '61) Mr. George Treves (PDS '71) (Barbara Johnston MFS '51) Mr. David B. Smoyer (PCD '56) Mrs. Erna Trubee Mr. John S. Rodgers (PDS '78) Miss Sally H. Snedeker (PDS '84) Mr. & Mrs. John Turkevich Mr. Earl A. Rogers (PDS '83) Mrs. Richard B. Snow Mrs. Susan McA. Turner Mr. & Mrs. Robert A. Rosenberg (Martha Love MFS '23) (Susan McAllen M FS '53) Mr. Alan Richard Ross (PDS '68) Miss H. Elisabeth Socolow (PDS '85) Ms. Palmer B. Uhl (PDS '74) Mr. Leland Ross (PDS '78) Mr. Michael J. Southwick (PDS '81) Mr. H. Kirk Unruh, Jr. Miss Whitney B. Ross (PDS '84) Miss Barbara A. Spalholz (PDS '74) Mr. & Mrs. Michael K. Upton Mr. Thomas B. Rossmassler (PDS '86) Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Spataro Mr. & Mrs. John Varga Mr. William R. Rossmassler III (PDS '82) Mrs. Nancy Spaulding Mr. & Mrs. Frank C. Varone Mr. & Mrs. Eugene Rotberg (Nancy Hagen MFS '57) Miss Phoebe H. Vaughn (PDS '84) Mr. & Mrs. Peter F. Rothermel Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth Spear Mrs. Ronald Villafranco Mrs. Benjamin Rowland, Jr. Mr. Robert Spears III (PDS '68) (Virginia Meyers M FS '53) (Wendy Gartner MFS '53) Mr. Robert Wade Speir, Jr. (PDS '81) Mr. Anthony J. Vine (PDS '81) Mr. & Mrs. Patrick Rulon-Miller (PCD '55) Mr. & Mrs. Herbert S. Spiegel Dr. & Mrs. Irvin Vine Miss Anne G. Russell (PDS '75) Mr. D.S. Spiro & Ms. R.M. Schwarz Mr. Stephen Vine (PDS '70) Mr. & Mrs. Norman F. S. Russell, Jr, Mr. & Mrs. Amel Stark Mr. & Mrs. Stanford vonMayrhauser Mr. & Mrs. Frederick J. Sabb Mr. Jared L. Stark (PDS '85) Miss Laura W. von Seldeneck (PDS '84) Dr. & Mrs. Alvin J. Salkind Mr. William W. Starke Dr. David J. Waks Mr. Hugh W. Samson (PCD '65) Mr. Austin C. Starkey, Jr. (PDS '69) Mr. Mark Waks (PDS '83) Mr. I. Andrew Sanford (PDS '78) Mr. & Mrs. Anthony Stefanelli, Jr. Miss Ann B. Walcott (PDS '77) Mrs. Laurence Sanford III (Linda Maxwell MFS '62) Mrs. Susan Walcott (Lynn Behr PDS '68) Dr. & Mrs. J. D. Stein, Jr. (Susan Barclay MFS '57) Mr. &. Mrs. Kenneth C. Scasserra (PCD '53) Dr. & Mrs. Wade C. Stephens Mr. & Mrs. James W. Walker Miss Beth Schlossberg (PDS 'b8) (Jean Samuels MFS '52) Mr. Samuel M. Walker (PCD '65) Mr. John A. Schluter (PCD '43) Dr. & Mrs. Gerald P. Sternberg Mr. William H. Walker III (PCD '62) Mr. & Mrs. William E. Schluter (PCD '42) Mrs. Charles H. Stevens, Jr. Mr. Christian D. Wallace (PDS '80) Miss Karen Schuss (PDS '77) (Margaret C. Stevens MFS '27) Miss Marjorie C. Wallace (PDS '84) Mrs. Vladmic Schuster Ms. Jaymi Stewart Mr. William C. Wallace (PCD '50) 44 Mr. & Mrs. Frank W. Walter Mrs. Marge Whalen Ms. Ann McK. W'iser Ms. Cynthia F. Walsh (PDS '70) Mr. Stephen M. Wheeler (PDS '80) (Martha Ann Wiser PDS '70) Mrs. Charles R. Walton Miss Elizabeth W'herry (MFS '30) Mr. & Mrs. Ronald C. Witt (Marion E. Rogers MFS '35) Mrs. Arlene White Dr. James H. Wittke (PDS '74) Mr. Frederick H. Wandelt III (PCD '63) Miss Elizabeth S. White (PDS '86) Mrs. Eileen Wojahn Mr. & Mrs. John P. Wang Mr. & Mrs. H. Allen White III (Eileen H. Carothers PDS '75) Mr. Terry L. Ward (PDS '74) Miss Wendy L. W'hite (PDS '84) Dr. & Mrs. Saul Wolfson Miss Lisbeth A. Warren (PDS '71) Dr. William White (PDS '70) Ms. Alice Fung Miss Mary L. Warren (PDS '83) Mr. Robert C. Whitlock, Jr. (PDS '78) Mr. Donald E. Woodbridge (PCD '64) Dr. & Mrs. Ronald L. Warren Mr. R. Whittaker & Ms. M. McCann Mrs. Helen A. Woodward Mr. & Mrs. Theodore A. Wasserman Mrs. Wayne C. Willcox Mr. John T. Woodward IV (PDS '84) Mrs. Katrina Waters (Cintra Eglin PDS '76) Ms. Pamela Maxwell Woodworth (Katrina Kassler PDS '74) Prof. & Mrs. David L. Williams (Pamela C. Woodworth PDS '70) Mr. & Mrs. Derek T. Weatherill Mrs. Beverly A. Williams Mr. Thomas H. Yam Mr. & Mrs. Douglas Webb Mr. & Mrs. David E. Williams Mrs. F. William Yerkes Mrs. Dorthea Webster Mrs. Helen C. Wilmerding (MFS '57) (Martha Heath MFS '42) (Dorothea Shipway MFS '62) Mr. Murray Wilmerding (PDS '76) Mrs. Thomas B. Yoder Mr. & Mrs. David F. Weeks Mrs. William Wilson (Jean Schluter PDS '71) Mrs. Virginia McL. W'eeks (Jean Gorman PDS '69) Ms. Anastasia Yonezuka (Virginia McLean M FS '34) Dr. John G. Winant, Jr. (PCD '64) Mr. Donald R. Young, Jr. (PDS '70) Mr. Carl Wegner (PDS '81) Mrs. Jeffrey J. Winegar Mr. James M. Zahner (PDS '84) Dr. & Mrs. William H. Wegner (Laurie Merrick PDS '72) Mr. Mark W. Zawadsky (PDS '77) Mr. Leonard R. Weisberg Mr. & Mrs. Edwin W'instanley Ms. Jan Westrick Ms. Kate Winton

Foundations & Matching Gift Companies

Amerada Hess Corp. First Boston Mobil American Express Foundation S. Forest Company Mohawk-Hudson Community Foundation Aresty Foundation Goldman Sachs M G Foundation The Morgan Bank Bank of New York D.A. Hamel Family Charitable Trust Morgan Guaranty Trust Co. Beefeater Foundation The Emily & John Harvey Foundation Morgan Stanley & Co. Berkshire Hathaway, Inc. Houghton-Mifflin Co. NCR The Boc Group Jewish Communal Fund of New York Co. Foundation The Svend & Elizabeth Bramsen Foundation Karen A. & Kevin W. Kennedy Foundation Pullman-Peabody Co. The Bristol Fund Kraft, Inc. The Rockefeller Group Carter-Wallace Inc. Harold J. Kramer Foundation Salomon Inc. Chemical Bank Law School Admission Council Squibb Chubb & Son, Inc. Lenox, Inc. J.P. Stevens & Co., Inc. Foundation CIGNA Foundation Manufacturers Hanover Foundation Time, Inc. Citibank Marsh & McLennan Co., Inc. Transamerica Cluett, Peadbody & Co. Inc. May Stores Foundation, Inc. United Jersey Banks Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance Co. The Curtis W. McGraw Foundation United States Trust Co. Connecticut Saving Bank Merck Co. Foundation United Technologies Discount Corp. of New York Meredith Corp. Miriam & Ira D. Wallach Foundation The DLJ Foundation Merrill Lynch & Co., Inc. West Publishing Co. The Ellerslie Fund Milliken Fidelity Investments Bradford Mills Foundation

Gifts in 1986-1987 Other Than to the Annual Fund

Drs. David & Dorothy Alexander Mr. & Mrs. Daniel E. Cullen Dr. & Mrs. Robert M. Goldenson Melissa Dilworth Anderson (MFS '61) Dr. James P. Daubert (PDS '76) Mr. & Mrs. Clifford A. Goldman Mr. & Mrs. Jack F. Andrews Mr. & Mrs. Robert T. deGavre Mr. & Mrs. Peter S. Goldman Mr. & Mrs. C. Edwin Badgett Ms. Regina De Rosa Mr. & Mrs. Daniel J. Graziano Miss Janet L. Baker Mr. & Mrs. Ricardo DeSenna Mr. & Mrs. William S. Greenberg Mr. & Mrs. Philip L. Baker Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Dille, Jr. Mr. &. Mrs. Peter M. Grounds Mr. & Mrs. E. Bloxom Baker (PCD '60) Mr. & Mrs. J. Richardson Dilworth Mr. & Mrs. Gordon Gund Mrs. Sidney Blaxill Mr. B. Zimmer & Ms. D. Dorfman Drs. Elliot Gursky & Joyce Glazer Mr. & Mrs. William M. Boyd Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Dublin Mr. & Mrs. Richard W. Haitch Mr. & Mrs. Edward P. Bromley, Jr. Miss Jeanne M. Duff Mr. & Mrs. Harleston J. Hall, Jr. Mrs. Mary B. Brown Dr. & Mrs. Robert N. Dunn Ms. Eleanor P. Hamel Ms. Rebecca W. Bushnell (PDS '70) Ms. Marilene Edrei Mr. & Mrs. Samuel M. Hamill, Jr. (PCD '53) Mr. & Mrs. Arthur M. Bylin Mr. & Mrs. William C. Egan III Mr. & Mrs. Samuel M. Hamill (PCD '25) The Bunbury Co., Inc. Mr. & Mrs. John E. Egner, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Howard R. Haring Mr. & Mrs. Morton Collins Mr. & Mrs. Harold B. Erdman (PCD '39) Mr. & Mrs. Ronald Hauser Pocumtuck Company Mr. Eberhard Faber Mr. & Mrs. Maurice F. Healy, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. John F. Cook (PCD '56) Mr. & Mrs. Dennis C. Fill (Sylvia Taylor MFS '45) Mr. & Mrs. Theodore Cross Mr. & Mrs. Richard W. Fineburg Mr. & Mrs. John J. Heins II Mr. & Mrs. Raymond Crowther Mr. Frank Gil & Ms. Heidi Firtsch-Gil Mr. & Mrs. John T. Henderson, Jr.

45 Mr. & Mrs. John J. Southwick, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth Spear Mr. & Mrs. Albert M. Stark Mr. & Mrs. Peter B. Stevens Dr. & Mrs. William H. Thompson Mr. & Mrs. Reynolds W. Thompson Mrs. Lindley W. Tiers (Sarah Gardner MFS '33) Mr. & Mrs. J. Burt Totaro Mr. & Mrs. Clark G. Travers (PCD '55) (Susan Behr MFS '60) Mr. & Mrs. John D. Wallce (PCD '48) Mr. & Mrs. Frank W;. Walter Mr. John H. Walther Mr. & Mrs. Frederick H. Wandelt, Jr. Miss Madeline Weigel Dr. & Mrs. John J. White, Jr. Ms. Marina Von Neumann Whitman (MFS '52) Ms. Violet D. Wickenden Mr. & Mrs. Thomas E. Wiskowski Estate of Helen Woodruff Mr. & Mrs. Newell B. Woodworth Dr. & Mrs. Joseph P. Zawadsky

flu' Annual Fund's success was celebrated by parent volunteers.

Dr. &. Mrs. Charles B. Howard Dr. & Mrs. Vincent C. Noonan, Jr. Mr. Erik R. Jensen (PDS '82) Mr. & Mrs. Richard F. Ober, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Robert F. Johnston Mrs. N. C. Olmstead Mr. & Mrs. J. Grey Jones, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Guy Payne III Mr. J. Stephen Judge (PDS '76) Mr. Lawrence S. Pyne (PDS '78) Mr. & Mrs. Stephen F. Jusick Mr. & Mrs. David M. Quinlan Mr. & Mrs. John F. Kelsey III Mr. & Mrs. James S. Regan Ms. Anne Lise Kennan Mr. Carl Reimers Ms. Liz Cutler & Mr. Tom Kreutz Mr. & Mrs. W. Ronald Roach Mr. Alexander T. Lamar (PDS '74) Mr. Christopher R. P. Rodgers Mr. Samuel Wm. Lambert (PDS '86) Mr. John S. Rodgers (PDS '78) Mr. & Mrs. Samuel W. Lambert III Mr. & Mrs. Peter R. Rossmassler (PCD '47) Ms. Elizabeth Lancaster Mr. & Mrs. Toms B. Royal Mr. & Mrs. Arthur S. Lane Mr. & Mrs. Henry Rulon-Miller (PCD '51) (Sally Kuser MFS '42) Mr. C. A. Ryskamp Ms. Yuki Moore Laurenti (PDS '75) Ms. Viola Schiff Mr. & Mrs. Stephen A. Lawrence Mr. & Mrs. H. J. Schoennagel Dr. & Mrs. Richard Lehman Mr. & Mrs. Donald P. Shaffer Mr. & Mrs. Henry A. Lieberman Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Sharrard Mrs. Alice Lustig Ms. Marjorie D. Shaw (PDS '70) Mr. & Mrs. Winton H. Manning Mrs. Anne B. Shepherd 1986-1987 Annual Fund Co-Chairmen Pam Dr. Wendy S. Matthews Mr. & Mrs. Ira Silverman Kelsey and Tom Gardner with (on right) Middle Mr. & Mrs. Edward E. Matthews (Jane Aresty MFS '63) Sclwol Chairman Wendy Fruland Hopper '64 and Mr. & Mrs. Frank A. McDougald, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. William D. Sivitz Upper School Chairman Steve DeRochi. (Missing Mr. & Mrs. Edwin H. Metcalf (PCD '51) Mr. & Mrs. Stanley C. Smoyer from picture: Lower School Chairman Bill King.)

Grade XII Parent Class Gift Each year since 1984, the parents of seniors have presented the school with a gift to honor their children's years at PDS. The following parents of the Class of 1987 contributed funds to purchase special science equipment that will significantly enhance the programs offered at PDS.

Mr. & Mrs. Ariel F. Abud Mr. & Mrs. Sidney A. Colodney Mr. & Mrs. Richard Gans Mrs. Patricia A. Ainspac Mr. & Mrs. John F. Cook (PCD '56) Mr. & Mrs. Edward T. Gellenbeck Dr. & Mrs. Ronald Altman Mr. & Mrs. Eugene J. D'Andrea, Jr. Mr. Ted C. Ginsberg Mr. & Mrs. ). Paul Bagley Mr. Joseph Dejames Mr. & Mrs. Hyman Giuli Prof. & Mrs. Jose Barros-Neto Mrs. Loretta C. Duckworth Mr. & Mrs. Alan Glickmarf Mr. & Mrs. Francis E. Batcha Ms. Marilene Edrei Mrs. Dale K. Griffee Mr. & Mrs. Steven 1. Biro Mr. & Mrs. Karl G. Faller Mr. & Mrs. Howard Henschel Prof. & Mrs. William E. Bonini Mr. & Mrs. H. Jonathan Fox Mr. & Mrs. David H. Hofmann Mr. &. Mrs. Arthur M. Bylin Dr. & Mrs. David H. Fulmer Mr. & Mrs. William N. Hoover Mr. & Mrs. Robert W. Campbell Mr. & Mrs. John Gallagher Prof. & Mrs. Dwight M. Jaffee

46 Prof. & Mrs. Robert C. Johansen Mr. & Mrs. J. P. Miller Prof. & Mrs. Bernard Shull Mr. & Mrs. Stephen F. Jusick Mr. & Mrs. Frank A. McDougald, Jr. Dr. & Mrs. Michael Somerstein Dr. & Mrs. Norman Katz Dr. & Mrs. Joel Namm Mr. & Mrs. Albert M. Stark Mrs. Mary Kyle Mr. Edward S. Needle Dr. &. Mrs. Gerald P. Sternberg Mr. G. Gordon M. Large Mr. & Mrs. Martin J. Payton Mr. & Mrs. Donald C. Stuart III (PCD '56) Mrs. Alle A. Lamphier Mr. & Mrs. Milton Pelovitz Mr. & Mrs. John M. Sullivan Dr. & Mrs. Norman Lavinson Mr. & Mrs. S. George Podurgiel Mr. & Mrs. Lauren L. Suter Mr. & Mrs. Byung-Ik Lee Mrs. Nancy W. Pritchard Mrs. Judith Tapiero Mr. Lawrence K. Lustig Mr. & Mrs. David Richman Prof. & Mrs. Howard F. Taylor Mr. & Mrs. John B. MacKay Dr. & Mrs. Yale Richmond Mr. & Mrs. Reynolds W. Thompson Mr. & Mrs. Joseph A. Mannino Mr. & Mrs. W. Ronald Roach Mr. & Mrs. Charles W. Ufford, Jr. Mrs. Dietrich Meyerhofer Mr. & Mrs. Toms B. Royal (Letitia Wheeler MFS '54) Dr. & Mrs. Reuben S. Mezrich Mr. & Mrs. John Schafer Mr. & Mrs. Frank W. Walter Mr. & Mrs. G. Nicholas Miller Mr. & Mrs. Donald P. Shaffer Mr. & Mrs. Derek T. Weatherill (Polly Miller M FS '63) Dr. & Mrs. Lawrence Shendalmen Dr. & Mrs. Saul Wolfson

Frederick D. Woodbridge '78 Memorial Fund

Mr. & Mrs. Jack F. Andrews Mr. & Mrs. William H. Hausdoerffer Mr. Thomas C. Roberts Mr. J. Keith Baicker (PDS "78) Dr. & Mrs. Gavin Hildick-Smith Mr. & Mrs. Walter van B. Roberts Mr. David A. Barondess (PDS '78) Mr. & Mrs. Herbert W. Hobler (Alice Smith MFS '21) Borough of Princeton Mr. T. Peirce Hunter Mr. John S. Rodgers (PDS '78) Miss Nancy C. Chen (PDS '78) Mrs. Thomas Sargent Mr. Leland Ross (PDS '78) Mrs. Christopher Cole (Allison Ijams PDS '78) Mr. & Mrs. Sidney Rowland (Barbara Griffin PDS '78) Mrs. Betty W. Johnson Mr. Steven R. Rowland (PDS '78) Mr. & Mrs. Theodore L. Cross Mr. & Mrs. Stephen F. Jusick Mr. Kenneth Trock (PDS '78) Mr. & Mrs. Burton W. Davis Mrs. Sue Keitelman Mrs. Nancy Turner Ms. Margaret Dennis (Sue Fineman PDS '78) (Nancy Hollendonner PDS '78) (Margaret Woodbridge MFS '65) Mrs. Frederick McBride Mr. & Mrs. Keith W. Wheelock Mr. & Mrs. Edgar C. Felton Mr. & Mrs. Robert McE. Merritt Mr. & Mrs. Robert C. Whitlock Mr. & Mrs. Walter F. Gips Mr. & Mrs. Robert A. Nelson Mr. Donald C. Woodbridge (PCD '64) Mr. & Mrs. George S. Gordon Ms. Grace Poole Mr. & Mrs. Dudley Woodbridge Miss Kim Groome (PDS '78) Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Poole (Mary DeF. Roberts MFS '42) Mrs. John M. Groton III Miss Gail S. Reeder (PDS '78) (Alice Lee PDS '78) Mr. & Mrs. Thomas C. W. Roberts (PCD '41)

Lower Library Book Fund in Memory of Nancy Goheen Finch MFS '26

•Mr. Amos G. Allen, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Maurice F. Healy, Jr. Prof. & Mrs. George T. Reynolds Mr. & Mrs. Samuel D. Atkins (Sylvia,Tayl°r MFS '45) Ms. Nancy R. Sargeant Ms. Stephanie Bonica Mrs. Harold H. Helm Mrs. Richard Sater Mrs. R. Manning Brown, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Pendleton Herring Ms. Doris N. Schermerhorn Dr. Margaret Leitch Copeland Dr. & Mrs. Gavin Hildick-Smith Mrs. Anne B. Shepherd Mr. & Mrs. Richard Couper Mr. &. Mrs. Philetus H. Holt 111 Mrs. A. M. Sherwood Miss Margaretta R. Cowenhoven (MFS '30) Houghton Mifflin Company Mrs. Robert N. Smyth Mrs. Dan D. Coyle Mr. & Mrs. R. Ewing Jackson (Jean Osgood M FS '31) (Mary Cowenhoven M FS '35) Mrs. Carl Kavenagh Mrs. William M. Swain, Jr. Mr. Hiram J. Cuthrell, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Louis A. Landa (Gertrude Goheen MFS '61) Mr. & Mrs. Horton Davies Mrs. Madeline J. Ling Mr. Frank E. Taplin Mr. & Mrs. J. Richardson Dilworth Mrs. William W. Lockwood Mrs. Theresa D. Upjohn Mrs. William Dix Mr. &. Mrs. Henry R. Martin (Theresa T. DeLong MFS '30) Mr. & Mrs. Herbert I. Finch, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. John T. McLoughlin Miss Madeline Weigel Mr. Edgar M. Gemmell Mrs. Seymour Morris Mr. & Mrs. Raymond S. Willis Dr. & Mrs. Robert F. Goheen (PCD '34) Mrs. T. B. Penfield Mr. & Mrs. David C. Gordon Ms. Helen Posner Mrs. Frederick H. Harbison Mr. Carl D. Reimers

47 Giving Opportunities

In addition to the Annual Fund, tax deductible contributions may also be made to enhance any of the following funds that have been permanently established at Princeton Day School. More detailed information on any of them may be obtained by writing the Development Office. Class of 1984 Scholarship Fund Elizabeth C. Dilworth Scholarship Fund Eric Ha.ring '77 Memorial Scholarship Fund }oyce H. Johnson Memorial Scholarship Fund Robert Wood Johnson, Jr. Memorial Scholarship Fund Dean Mathey Scholarship Fund PDS Scholarship Fund Anne B. Shepherd Scholarship Fund Noel Stace '46 Scholarship Fund Frances Stratton Scholarship Fund Stuart Willson '76 Memorial Scholarship Fund Helen R. Woodruff Scholarship Fund Thomas Bencze Art Scholarship Fund Nancy Goheen Finch '26 Lower Library Book Fund Dale Griffee Student Center Memorial Fund Library Book Fund Lincoln Center Program Fund Harriette McLoughlin '72 Memorial Fund (Astronomy Hill) Anne Reid Art Gallery Memorial Fund John D. Sacks-Wilner Memorial Award Moyne Smith Lively Arts Memorial Fund Frederick D. Woodbridge '78 Memorial Fund

T h e Clnss o f 19S7 48 ALUMNI NEWS

from Boston to Anchorage. After a three day Camp Robin Hood visit to relatives on their 100 acre dairy farm, we circa 7927 flew to Kotzebue — 50 miles above the Arctic Circle. There and in Nome in the Eskimo towns on the treeless tundra we watched Eskimo dances and blanket toss, panned for gold and watched sled dog teams running on the Bering Sea beaches. A vista-dome train took us from Anchorage to Fairbanks through Denali Na­ tional Park where, after an overnight in rustic cabins, we drove 100 miles spotting grizzlies, moose, wild sheep and other wild life. Three days by bus through gold rush country with dramatic mountains on all sides. At Juneau we boarded the ‘Rotterdam’ for a glorious cruise through awe-inspiring Glacier Bay and down the Inside Passage to Vancouver. A treasury of memorable natural wonders and beauty."

Class Secretary 26 C. Lawrence Norris Kerr P.O. Box 227 Princeton, NJ 08540 Nini Duffield Dielhenn '33, the late Hetty Duffield Roe ’30 and Anne Mitchel Dielhenn '29 lined up left to right. 27 Needs Secretary

Class Secretary Virginia Myers Morgan ’29 28 Elizabeth Dinsmore Chick Sea Tower Apt. #309 2840 North Ocean Blvd. Fort Lauderdale, FL 33308

MISS FINE'S Class Secretary 29 Jean Herring Rowe SCHOOL New Age Mission Inc. P.O. Box 384, Takilma Road Cave Junction, OR 97523 25 Needs Secretary 30 Needs Secretary

A most welcome note from Winifred Link Stewart outlined her education from the time she graduated from MFS with nineteen other graduates, through Colby College to Smith where she earned a graduate degree. Joan Sally Gardner Tiers ’33 W oolw orth Smith now has ten great-grand­ children. Suzanne Blackwell Posey moved to Meadow Lakes in Flightstown last spring and Class Secretary says, “ M oving was horrendous to say the least. 31 Jean Osgood Smyth From our lovely house to a small temporary 321 Nassau Street apartment. My garden consists of one philo­ Princeton, NJ 08540 dendron, one small standard geranium I have been nurturing for several years, and seven begonias left over from Mitch’s 60th reunion — a stimulating and happy weekend with danc­ Needs Secretary ing which I love. I have just returned from a trip on the 'Argon' and to see Old Master and Impressionist painting from Rouen to Copen­ Good news from Margaret Russell Olson; hagen. Cold, wet weather but good company "Our primary news is two new great-grand­ and new friends. Exhusted temporarily.’’ Flor­ children, making three in all so far. Andrew ence Clayton Smith has also been traveling and Kenneth Melson, born August 20,1985, Daniel sends this report. "Walter and I enjoyed a ser­ Scott Melson, born May 31,1987, and Jennifer ies of adventures this summer during a two and Olson, born August 10,1987. There are all fine, a half week trip to Alaska. It began with a flight Hetty Duffield Roe '30 as are we.”

49 Wow, aren’t we envious?! Nini Duffield Diel- Nan Buchanan Agar and Cary Kennedy Bremer henn plans a trip to England for the month of have moved from their long-time home on September. She plans to visit a nephew sta­ Newlin Road to 304 Knoll Way, Rocky Hill, tioned in the Navy, also a British friend and 08553. They have bought a two-story condo then tour the countryside of the UK. which has "a small attic and a large basement.” Anne Armstong Hutchison plans to go North Nan has been retired from the Institute of to visit her children. She has settled in Vero Advanced Study for some time, but Cary is still Beach, FL in the same condo building as her working in the business office of Titles Unlim­ sister Jane Armstrong Schroeder '34. Her ited, a book and music store in the Princeton address is 1100 Ponce de Leon, Apt. 206, Vero Shopping Center. Beach, 32960. Martha Young Tholen, daughter Bette Hill Stretch is still involved with volun­ of Frad Lineaweaver Young, had a son last teer auxiliary hospital work at West Jersey Hos­ November. The grandparents gave me a pic­ pital. She was named 1986 "Auxilian of the ture of young William H. Tholen III to put in Year” by The New Jersey Hospital Association the Journal. Have you ever seen such a winning and "Woman of the Year” by the Camden William H. Thoren III, grandson of Frad Linea­ smile! As you know both Frad and George County Council of Girl Scouts. She does a lot of weaver Young '33. matriculated at Miss Fine’s. Your Scribe and public speaking on health care today. They husband, Lindley,are waiting and calling paint­ have bought a farm on Highland Lake in Bridge­ ers, plumbers, electricians etc. to come and ton,Maine (Bittersweet Farm),forthefamily to Class Secretary pep up our house. Being a great deal house enjoy summer and winter. 33 Sally Gardner Tiers bound on account of the above services to be June 1988 will be a big time for us. Plan to join 50 Pardoe Road rendered, we hope, I am dreaming "ski” by the party, and look for details by special mail­ Princeton, NJ 08540 sorting and repacking in duffle bags my ski togs ing soon. Well, it looks like the ink in the pens of my fora“cool” sojourn in Aspen next year—lYthe classmates has dried up or they have gone on a old legs hold up. That’s certainly thinking Class Secretary trip to far away places where mail cannot reach ahead! 39 Therese Critchlow them, particularly the note from PDS asking to As you have sent no pix of you and yours you 11 Westcott Road send me your news. Actually one doesn't have will have to stand seeing mugs of me and my Princeton, NJ 08540 to go to distant places for mail to get lost or families that dot this Journal. It seems odd on delayed. The higher the postage the worse the this, the hottest day so far this summer, to wish I have just retired (August 6th) as head of the mail delivery. We received a letter from Hong you a Merry Christmas but I do, and may health audio visual services and information services Kong mailed the same day as one from NYC! and happiness be yours and your families’ in librarian from Priceton Public Library. I enjoyed Five days!!! the New Year — and please, news and pix the itall very much and working with the Princeton Anyway, one classmate keeps me informed. next time. community and its diversity of ages and per­ Betty Menzies’ letter reached me in two days. sonalities. Looking forward to a trip to Nan­ She lives on the other side of Princeton! (We tucket and a possible cruise later in the fall. I are in Princeton for the summer.) Betty is Class Secretary plan to remain in our family home on Westcott remaining in town this summer and pretend­ 34 Wilhelmina Foster Reynolds Road with my sister, Agnes ’41. 508 O tt Road ing she’s in Maine by indulging in a lobster Bala Cynwyd, PA 19004 dinner occasionally. From what I gather, Class Secretary Maine’s weather has been poor so far (end of Frances Sinclair Salmon died on June 5th aftera 40 Phyllis Vandewater Clement July), rain, fog, cold with an occasional sunny long il I ness i n Jacksonville, FL. On behalf of the 1029 Keeler Avenue day. As for Princeton, it’s a steaming caldron. class we extend our deepest sympathies to her Berkeley, CA 94708 Take your choice — neither I bet! Back to husband and four daughters as well as her sis­ Betty. She is still making silver jewelry and sel­ ters, DOris Sinclair McAnerney '38 and Eliza­ ling it at "Full House” in Kingston, NJ the year beth Sinclair Flemer ’43. Needs Secretary round. She is busy making new flower beds. I 41 must ask her how she keeps rabbits and deer away. Maybe she tends her garden in the cool 35 Needs Secretary of the night by flashlight when the “deer and Agnes Critchlow writes that she’s continuing the antelope play,” I mean rabbits, and scares her study of music and composition. Peggy them away. Betty had her annual check-up and Longstreth Bayer's daughter, Peggy, has liter­ said she has the blood pressure of a teenager. Needs Secretary ally followed in her mother’s footsteps, danc­ 36 ing professionally. Last spring she toured for sixteen weeks in On the Twentieth Century starring Imogene Coca and she was appearing in a revival of One Touch of Venus at the God­ Class Secretary speed Opera House in East Haddam, CT in 37 Cornelia Sloane McConnel June. 279 Elm Road Princeton, NJ 08540 Class Secretary 42 Polly Roberts Woodbridge 233 Carter Road Princeton, NJ 08540

Class Secretary 43 Marjorie Libby Moore 17 Forest Lane Trenton, NJ 08628

50th REUNION Class Secretary 44 Eleanor Vandewater Leonard 2907 Sunset Drive Golden, CO 80401 Class Secretary Lorna McAlpin Hauslohner has added two new 38 Helen Crossley grandchildren to her family since January bring­ Frad Lineaweaver Voung ’33 and Nini Duffield 21 Battle Road ing the total number to six. She's keeping busy Dielhenn '33. Princeton, NJ 08540 with community activities.

50 would also be helpful to have secretarial school Class Secretary as a back-up as well. A smart move, I’m sure. Class Secretary 45 Sylvia Taylor Healy Son Sandy is still finishing up college — still 2 48 Joan Smith Wilson One Markham Road, #3B yearstogo — and trying to hit his direction. So New Road, RD 1 Princeton, NJ 08540 once again I’m back to my intimate family of 5 Box 198 Sesaly Gould Krafft reports that she and Ted (that includes my brother-in-law) again. Love Lambertville, Nj 08530 will move in August to 213 North Main Street, it, but here are some misgivings too. Federalsburg, MD 21632. Ted retired in July I found out — it's been a long time in coming and after a quick trip to see their grandchildren I guess — that I was over-doing things far too Class Secretary in Ithaca, they are off on a cruise from Norfolk much. Mother (who incidently is fine, and a 49 Kirby Thompson Hall and a few days in Williamsburg. I am off tom or­ dear), my travel agency and my bridal consult­ 12 Geddes Heights row, with the Princeton Art Museum, for a ing work were adding up to a lot of stress. The Ann Arbor, M l 48104 three week tour of Scandinavia and Russia, so avenue it took was weight gain, about 60 lbs of in somewhat of a rush! But no one wrote — it — and though I looked healthy enough, I was except Sesaly! What is the matter with the rest far from healthy and had to do something. Needs Secretary of you? Along with the weight gain came a currently 50 The Alumni Office received a note from chicdisease called sleep apnea, which in reality Mary Jo Gardner Fenton saying, "Just back isn’t chic at all, as it can be downright danger­ from a fabulous two week trip to Russia, — ous — one morning you don’t wake up. It Moscow, Odessa, Tallunn, Leningrad, the effects your respiratory system mainly,and one palaces and museums are breathtaking.” of the best things to do for it is — natch, loose Class Secretary weight, and do a lot of exercise. I love to exer­ 51 Petie Oliphant Duncan Class Secretary cise, and of course each pound away only 46 Leora Stepp Tower makes me feel 100% better and I look a lot 63 Parker Road South 9711 Cherry Street better too. Plainsboro, Nj 08536 Edmonds, WA 98020 In the early spring, Dave and I took a long weekend up in Newport, R.l. to celebrate our Hedl Dresdner Roulette announces the birth 25th wedding anniversary. I’ve always loved Class Secretary of her grandson, Emmart Sinclair Rauch III, Newport from the earliest time when I used to 52 Jean Samuels Stephens born on July 24,1987. Another announcement, visit the Comstocks there and during the 1940’s PO Box 6068 in the last issue of the Newsletter, was prema­ when I spent many happy years around it in Humphreys Drive ture. Jean Geisenberger Cranston’s son, Wil­ Naragansett, Rl. One of my main objectives Lawrenceviile, NJ 08648 liam, had to change his wedding plans and was during our stay was to visit Mrs. Comstock, not married in Feburary as reported. Adelaide Comstock Robert’s mother, who now Class Secretary lives there the year around, and who for many, Class Secretary 47 Barbara Pettit Finch many years was like a second m other to me. It 53 Anne Carples Denny "Pour les Oiseaux” took me a while to find the house, but I finally 1230 Millers Lane Monmouth Hills did and was rewarded by finding her in. Manakin-Sabot, VA 23013 Highlands, NJ 07732 Imagine my surprise when she greeted me with Greetings to all 53er’s from coast to coast... the words, "I’ve been thinking about you all there is good news tonight! Hilary Thompson Thanks to Blaikie Forsyth Worth, and Phoebe today and now you are here.” How’s that for Demarest was married on June 27th to avid Gulick Shaw, I am delighted to write that we ESP? It was such a joy to see her after all these sportsman Web Kenyon. Following the cere­ have a bit of news for this issue. years and to renew old memories, as well as mony, the newly weds left for a two week trip Blaikie very nicely forgave me my "boo- getting caught up on her current family news. to Mallorca and Madrid. Their new address is: boo” of not sending in her news for the last She’s everything I always remembered her to Mr. and Mrs. G. Webster Kenyon, 119 Sunset issue and has written that she and Bob were at a be, interested, interesting, outgoing, bubbly, Farms Rd., West Hartford,CT 06107. My daugh­ nuclear test site in Nevada Feb 5th where they and humorous. A delight in everyway, and a ter, Katharine, and I stopped by to visit the joined an American Peace Test Group protest­ very special person indeed. happy couple on our way to a junior year at ing against the US continuing to test nuclear She gave me some news on Adelaide DeLong Bowdoin. A note from Elaine Polhemous Frost war heads, when Russia quit eighteen months Bundy, none of which is good, but something tells that her daughter, Lisa, was married last ago. I’m sure you will all want to be aware of. You summer. Hope Thompson Kerr and Skip Phoebe and Carlton, as well as their family, may remember the two Addys were first cou­ attended the wedding as did Caroline Savage have been on the "move.” It started with sins. Addy D. is currently in a Bronx nursing Langdon and her husband, John. daughter Lydia and son Greg Leimbach mov­ home. Sadly she is not aware of anyone. (A ing to Seubersdorf, West Germany. Greg is an dear niece is the only person that seems to be army captain stationed in Hohenfels. Then son aware of and care for her.) She would probably Class Secretary Tad moved to California, where he is working not know any of us if we were to visit her. I'm 54 Katherine Webster Dwight for the jet propulsion lab in Pasadena. Last to not sure she even realized her husband, Reed 115 W indsor Road make the really big move were Phoebe and Bundy, fell down the stairs and was killed last Tenafly, NJ 07670 Carl themselves, who after eighteen years in year. It truly is horrifying to write such news of Valley Cottage, NY, moved to Sandy Hook, CT a friend who was so alive, outgoing, and Class Secretary — 13 Nutmeg Lane, Sandy Hook, CT06482. Carl wanted to please all that knew her. This state, 55 Louise Chloe King is still with IBM currently working in Danbury of course, all comes from a bad fall she took a 64 Carey Road and Phoebe is busy with the Welcome Wagon number of years ago that took her motor con­ Needham, M A 02194 Club of Newtown, the library book sale (a nine trol, speech and her mind. month project),and Fairfield County 4-H,all of I would also like to extend my wishes of which sounds very challenging and busy. I was condolence as well as yours, I'm sure, to the Class Secretary happy to read that Carl and Phoebe had taken family of Nancy Dignan whose death was 56 Ann A. Smith the time from all this moving for a little R and R reported in the last issue. As some of you have 1180 Midland Avenue by visitng Lydia in West Germany this spring. known, "Diggy” lived near me and I will always Bronxville, NY 10708 Incidently, my heart took a real leap when I remember her lovely smile, her fun loving Your Secretary lamented the fact that "for the read Sandy Hook in your p.c. Phoebe and it spirit, her charm and good looks. She was first time ever (she) received no news!” While wasn’t until an eye flicker later that I realized I wonderful, and will, I know, be missed by all she surmises you must all be on vacation, we was the one out of luck for it wasn’t the Sandy whose lives she touched. hope to make up for it next time around. Ann Hook, N.J. that I overlooked, but rather the Keep your news coming, if it doesn’t make also offered condolences on behalf of the class one in Connecticut that you referred one issue, it will make the next I promise, as I to Whitney Wing Oppersdorff, her sisters, to .. .much happiness to you all in your new honestly try not to overlook any of my great Faith Wing Bieler '58 and Lucinda Ziesing ’67, home. classmates. You mean too much to me.... on the death of their mother, Faith Ziesing, in As for myself, our children are still "trying Sometimes those little p.c.’s arrive late, or get May. Mrs. Ziesing was active in the merger of out their wings.” Abby, after graduating from misplaced. There must be a better way. Have a Miss Fine’s and PCD and served on many local college with a degree in graphic arts, decided it great fall. boards and committees.

51 Class Secretary the energies and hopes of the entire Cornelius mostly larger than she is! Andrea will be three 57 Susan Barclay Walcott family are concentrated on the 1988 Olympics. on August 21. Things on the farm are hot and 41 Brookstone Drive Good luck!). dry. We've had a month of record breaking Princeton, NJ 08540 I saw Nancy Smoyer in Princeton in June. She heat, so I spend a lot of time trying to keep had just returned from a trip to the Soviet things watered. My field of oats and natural Helen Wilmerding writes, “ I'm back in college, Union, and had seen some of our other class­ grasses really suffered, and I think I grew more Rutgers, hoping to graduate before my chil­ mates as well. She remarked that the exposure Canadian thistle than anything else! I really dren do, and become the Grandma Moses of to the Russian people offered no easy answers, enjoyed our reunion and hope we can do it poetry.” but she enjoyed it greatly. I left Legal Aid in again for our 30th. I’d really like a copy of the Trenton in June after four and a half years, and group picture — I’d run out of film by then. Am Class Secretary now work for the American Institute for sending my best pictures to those in them and a 58 Linda Ewing Peters Paralegal in Mahwah, NJ, which offers para­ copy of them all to Linda, who deserves lots of 2 Mary Street legal training on 80 campuses in 15 states. I am thanks and credit for all she did.” M onmouth Junction, NJ 08852 planning six new courses, as well as serving as Barclay Baldridge Welch and husband Nancy Hudler Keuffel writes: “ Hoping to see general maid of all work, and have a small Michael have had a summer filled with travel, more PDS alums as with a son. Will Keuffel, practice of my own. The combination of law including trips to the East Coast and Midwest, starting Princeton in September, I should be in and education is, for me, in the words of Gov­ and to Tucson to visit Barclay’s son, Kannyn. In the area from time to time. Anyone coming to ernor Kean, “ perfect together!” Miss Shirley between flights, they have driven around Cali­ Michigan, please contact me.” Davis lives quite near my office, and I recently fornia and Idaho, squeezing in as much fishing spent a delightful evening with her. She doesn’t and camping as possible. Missy Tomlinson had Class Secretary look any different either, and she is very her three sons home for the summer. During 59 Sasha Robbins Cavandar involved in the Westwood Library. Her address the school year, Richard, 16, attends The Hill 5700 Collins Avenue - 5L is 90 Hurlbut Street, Westwood, NJ 07656. A School and Christopher, 14, attends Eaglebrook Miami Beach, FL 33140 little closer to home, I have discovered that School. Tucker, 11, lives at home with Missy in Susan Shew Jennings, ’62 is a close neighbor, so Vero Beach. Linda Maxwell Stefanelli spent Ann Kinczel Clapp has “just returned from I have enjoyed renewing that acquaintance, two gorgeous weeks at the shore in August fabulous trip to the Orient with David (son), now a friendship as well. with her family. Yes, the ocean was clean and Harvey (husband) and some friends. Between Julia Cornforth Holofcener wrote in her warm. Her daughter, Debbie, and husband, trying to change my time clock and get caught inimitable style, “ So much continues to happen. Les, joined them with one of their three birds. up at our restaurant at home, I’m trying to get My new firm, Julia Holofcener, Inc., a public Daughter Wendy graduated from Boston Uni­ David ready to leave for Princeton Sept. 8. relations firm, will produce the 200th anniver­ versity in May and is working for a law firm in What fun it should be to relive my MFS and sary of the Princeton Fire Department. Great Boston. I have had a quiet summer in San Fran­ Harvey’s P.U. days by visiting David. He’s hop­ fun! Am involving everyone! The book and cisco, the highlight of which was a recent vaca­ ing to play freshman football. Sasha Robbins lyrics, Larry’s contribution to new musical, are tion visiting friends in Idaho. As the new Class Cavender: I have moved from Boston to Miami wonderful — and his composer is fantastic — Secretary (my term expires when Gail has her this winter. A huge and welcome culture shock. Wonderful place to live and work and was writing with Alan Lerner when he passed B.A. — she promised!), I am warning all of you feel you are abroad without really leaving away. The world continues to amaze me!” that if you don’t write and tell me about your America. Don Johnson and I both look forward The class will be saddened to learn that our lives, I will be forced to start making things up; to hearing more news from more of you!. Jean former AFS student, Christine Durand, died and since truth is always better than fiction, Schettino Conlon: "Am still in NY, never run­ this spring in France. Our deepest sympathies please keep in touch. Call if you find yourself in ning into Judy, Abby or Jennifer for that mat­ to her husband and sons, Simon, 8, and San Francisco. Or, if you are more likely to be ter, but would love to hear about them. My Guillaume, 11. visiting in Princeton, call Max at the PDS son, now 15, is graduating from Allen-Stevenson Carol Tall Armstrong is working as a training alumni office and give her your news. and will beentering RiverdaleCountry School’s coordinator in a CPA firm not as a CPA as 10th grade in the fall. I am still a photog­ reported in the News letter. Our apoligies. Her rapher’s/illustrator’s agent andambuildingup twin sons are now ten years old. a nice solid business. (Don’t miss the corporate Class Secretary life at all!)” 62 Jane Cormack Class Secretary 2128 Bay Street 60 Joan Nadler Davidson San Francisco, CA 94123 329 Hawthorne Road For those of you who may have missed the June Baltimore, M D 21210 16 letter about our 25th reunion, 17 of us returned (12 grads and 5 non-grads) out of a 25th REUNION On behalf of the class, we extend our condo­ total class of 28. They were: Barclay Baldridge lences to Louise Scheide Marshall, whose Welch, Sonia Bill Robertson, Cindy Brown mother died in August. Our sympathies are Haag, Linda Clark Gooder, Janie Cormack, Gail Class Secretary also with her sister, Bobbi Scheide Breger '63, Cotton, Carol Estey, Mary Liz Keegin Colley, 63 Alice Jacobson and her brother, John PCD ’63. Suzi Mathews Heard, Linda Maxwell Stefanelli, 1424 S.W. Davenport Street Janice Millner Levy, Kate Sayen Leader, Susan Portland, OR 97201 Class Secretary Shea McPherson, Susan Shew Jennings, Dede Sally Campbell Haas sent the nearby 61 V. Peggy W ilber Shipway Webster, Tassie Turkevich Skvir, Kitty picture to me during the winter. It was taken in 110 Phillips Avenue Walker Ellison. It was a wonderful gathering! August 1986 at a 'm ini reunion’ in Palo Alto, Lawrenceville, New Jersey 08648 Thank you again, Tassie and Dan, for inviting all California at the home of Lee Gardner Schulte. Cynthia Weinrich writes happily of her life as a of us to your home for dinner. The extra time Sally is on the left in the front row, and Lee is freelance musician in New York City — sing­ together gave us more of a chance to laugh and sitting next to her. Ginny Elmer Odien and ing, acting, conducting and church work. In chat about old times and to catch up on the Ellen Levy are in the back row. I had the same the middle of August she left for three weeks in intervening years. We missed those of you who reaction I always do when I receive a picture of Berlin to see friends — and plenty of music and weren’t there. How ’bout trying for the 30th? classmates from one of you: everyone looks drama. She has recently seen Tibby Chase Shortly after our wonderful May reunion, just the same, only better! Andy Updike Burt Dennis and Sheila Long. As Sheila is the only Gail Cotton and I had lunch in San Francisco. was the only person to send a card this time. North American in her abbey in France, she Gail was passing through town on her way to Andy now lives in Ann Arbor, M ichigan where received annual dispensation to visit thiscoun- the Napa Valley, then on to Monterey and she directs community relations for a 24-hour try. She has been involved in bookbinding and Carmel. In July she wrote,“ I am training volun­ crisis center. She writes: On this job “ I’ve continues her interests in music. Tibby’s library teers for the local Crisis and Information Help­ learned the ins and out of politics (remember work and writing continues. Sandy Sidford line in crisis intervention, which I love doing. the ‘dark horse’ candidate, Huey Long?) as I’ve Cornelius reports that her daughter Grace, has Have had more time to spend with my grand­ worked to establish an emergency shelter for made the Pan Pacific Swim Team and repre­ daughter, Andrea Gail, with school out. Her homeless families. I also write and publish a sented the USA in Brisbane thissummer. (“ The favorite excursion is going to City Park to feed newsletter on my Macintosh on affordable Pan Pacific is the Varsity, the Pan Am the JV.” so the geese and ducks. The Canadian geese are housing.” Andy is concerned about Central

52 America, and she went on a study tour to that professor in the doctoral program at Portland region whileshe wasworkingforthe American State and continue to consult with other col­ Friends Service Committee. About her chil­ leges and universities which are setting up dren, Andy writes that Heather will be a senior planning and evaluation processes. Please do at Westtown Friends School, Adrian a junior in send news of you. Ann Arbor’s high school, and Peter will be in fifth grade in the public alternative elementary school. Andy mentions that as her kids are £ 1 A Class Secretary experiencing high school, she keeps thinking w ■ Barbara Rose Hare back to our times. She plans on attending our 24 Hawthorne Avenue 25th reunion NEXT YEAR! I guess that means Princeton, NJ 08540 the Huey Long campaign had to be for the 1960 On behalf of her class and her many friends, we presidential campaign, and that would be 28 wish to express our deepest sympathy to Bar­ years ago that we paraded around with the bara Rose Hare and her sister Hope Rose Ang- signs, “ Don't Get Caught Short — Vote Long.” ier ’66 on the death of their father this summer. I dare say not one of us knew a thing about Mr. Rose lived in Princeton most of his life, Long or his views, but we sure liked the sound graduating from Lawrenceville and Princeton of the slogan! University. He was a kind man and a wonderful I’m enjoying the northwest, and I am just athlete who will be sorely missed. about to begin a new job establishing a plan­ Four ’63 classmates gathered in Palo Alto last ning process for the local community college. /7 C Class Secretary summer. Clockwise are Ellen Levy (in hat), Lee The title and other terms are still under negoti­ V# J Alison Hubby Hoversten Gardner Schulte, Sally Campbell Haas and ation, but I am pleased to report progress on Longwood Crossing Ginny Elmer Odien. the job front. I will continue to be an adjunct Lawrence, NY 11516

Edward M. Yard, your secretary, travelled to Tris Johnson is still working as a Vancouver for Expo, and then on through O ■ vice president of Paine Webber but PRINCETON Alaska and the Yukon. This led to correspon­ has made the study of local history dence with lan Bowman comparing notes his avocation, serving as historian COUNTRY about the Klondike, lan saying: “ I hope you of the Princeton Rotary Club. He has authored manage to visit Skagwya — famous for the Gold a series of five articles on the Constitutional DAY SCHOOL Rush and 'Soapy' Smith, and for the wonderful Convention which have appeared in the local W hite Pass.” Several thousand miles of the trip papers. were made with one foot perforce in a bed­ room slipper. The “ White” of White Pass is the O /T Chris Chapman writes, “After a ever present fog. The Alaska ferry ride from O O long career as a foreign service Class Secretary Skagway to Seattle is a vacation all by itself. officer, I left the Department of 25-29 Edward M. Yard '29 Most recently two of my articles have been State in 1983 and launched myself 110 Kensington Avenue published in Handloader's Digest. Two or three in a variety of activities — cultural and business. Trenton, NJ 08618 more may reach print later this year. Several Right now, I am principally involved in offering Some of us, such as Churchill Eisenhart, Ian are nearing completion. advice and assistance to American companies Bowman, Richard Graham Kirchner, and your wanting to establish themselvesin Europe,and secretary, seem always to be doing something Needs Secretary European ccompanies seeking American con­ in retirement. Maybe we really have not retired. 30-36 nections, and more recently in brokering the It is possible that mementum has simply carried sale and purchase of works of art of high qual­ us into different fields. Productivity has not Our thanks to George Shelton for ity. New worlds to conquer!” ceased, we are simply busy putting out some­ 1 taking the time to send the follow­ thing else. Maybe some of you other guys ing information. “ It's a pity we have Class Secretary would like to share with us your newest no Class Secretary for 1930-1936. I 37-39 Harold B. Erdman '39 activities. served for two years and then Sandy Maxwell 47 Winfield Road '32 took over. Perhaps in a couple of years I’ll Princeton, NJ 08540 Churchill Eisenhart has his work take it on if no one else want it but first I need J m i cut out for him. He heads the to go to next spring’s alumni reunion to meet at National Bureau of Standards least our local alumni. (Alumni Day will be May Alumni Association. He isTreasurer 21, 1988 so how about all of you '31s coming of the Kensington, Maryland, Historical Society. back to PDS to see George? Any takers for Class And he chairs a couple of committees of the Secretary should contact the Alumni Office. American Statistical Association. He says that -E d .) he gets some time for vacation trips in the “ As you know, I'm retired from my former summer. He plans to spend a week in Greens­ full time position but keep active as a director boro, VT this summer. of a Long Island bank, serving on committees 50th REUNION with the Rotary, the Elks, etc. Have two daugh­ O Q Archibald lan Bowman writes: "The ters and three grandchildren — two girls and a Class Secretary w/ older I get the more I value contact boy. One daughter lives near us on Long Island 40 James K. M eritt with PDS. It’s a good thing to have and the other is in Memphis, TN. My wife, 809 Saratoga Terrace even a tenuous connection with Doris, and I are in good health at present. Turnersville, NJ 08012 friends and places of my boyhood for whom “ I see from the latest PDS Newsletter that and which I have a lasting affection. Not long Barbara Anderson Rulon-Miller MFS ’37 was at I had the good fortune to see again three PDS ago I had a letter from Pete (Betty) Menzies. He the reunion recently. She was my first girl­ classmates at last June’s 40th Reunion of the is still active in Scottish historical and literary friend as I was growing up on Newlin Road in Princeton University Class of 1947. M ike Hall, interests.” Priceton. She lived on the same block. If you Professor of American History at the University Richard Graham Kirchner has been travel­ see her, say hello for me. Anne Pettit Bittel MFS of Texas was up from Austin for the occasion. ling extensively visiting his daughters, shop­ '35 (who died in October 1983) was another Incidentally, Mike’s book on Increase Mather ping in Denmark, and cruising the Panama later flame of mine but she was much too pop­ (father of Cotton Mather) should be out by the Canal. He stopped in Reykjavik, Iceland long ular and one dance at a party was the most I time this note is in print. Another of our aca­ enough to observe that buildings are of con­ could ever get. At the time she was the best demic luminaries, Ham Hazelhurst, was up crete, even the cathedral, because there is no dancer in Princeton — this was in the 30’s. Isn’t from Nashville where he is Chairman of the lumber or suitable stone. He said that Iceland's it fun to look back and reminisce? No, I’m not Dept, of Fine Arts at Vanderbilt University. Jack hydroelectric power isso plentiful that lights in senile, but enjoying my life, past and present. Hemphill, who lives in Victoria, British Colum­ hotel rooms were bright enough to read by. Best to everyone.” bia, was also back for the festive event. 53 Needs Secretary Class Secretary fish. The is in the nearby picture taken 15 41 52 John C. Wellemeyer miles out in the Atlantic off Long Beach Island. 429 East 52nd Street I trust other classmates are well and will send Class Secretary New York, NY 10022 their pictures when time permits. We would all 42 Detlev F. Vagts Bob Hillier writes that he’s "happily remarried like to see how you are getting along and hear 29 Follen Street — living right on Delaware River — running. of your current interests. Cambridge, M A 02138 My architecture firm, The Hillier Group, is now "Schluter’s Back” announced the bumper 5th largest firm in the nation. Recently awarded stickers, T- shirts and buttons promoting Bill ‘Award of Excellence’ as one of the best four Schluter’s campaign for the second Republi­ companies in New Jersey.” John Wellemeyer can nomination in New Jersey’s 23rd District has recently been transferred to London by Assembly primary. We’re delighted to report Morgan Stanley to set up an equity research that Bill won the nomination over four other department focusing on UK and continental candidates. With his experience as a former European companies. "If any alumni are travel­ assemblyman and state senator, the 23rd Legis­ ling to London, I would be delighted to see lative District is lucky to have him back in them. They can reach me at 709-3292 in politics. London.” In light of this development, John has asked to be replaced as Class Secretary by Class Secretary someone this side of the Atlantic. While we will 43 Peter E.B. Erdman miss his reports, we thank him for his efforts 219 Russell Road and hope that one of his classmates will be bold Princeton, NJ 08540 enough to volunteer to represent the class. PCD Class of 55 football stars celebrated their 25th reunion at Princeton University this June. Needs Secretary Class Secretary L. to R. joe Delafield, Roger Hoyt, John Bales, 44 53 Kenneth C. Scasserra and Bucky Kales. 8 Pine Knoll Drive Class Secretary Lawrenceville, NJ 08648 45 John R. Heher Rosedale Lane Princeton, NJ 08540 Class Secretary 46 David Erdman 60 North Road Princeton, NJ 08540 Class Secretary 47 Peter R. Rossmassler 149 M ountainview Road Princeton, NJ 08540 Class Secretary 48 John D. Wallace 90 Audubon Lane Princeton, NJ 08540 Class Secretary A bearded Andy Kerr '55 joins PCD and PU 49 Bruce P. Dennen classmate Bucky Kales at their 25th college 10 Dearfield Lane reunion. Greenwich, CT 06830 Class Secretary 50 W illiam C. Wallace Sumner Rulon-Miller '53 hoists daughter Tanya. 25 Barnsdale Road Short Hills, NJ 07078 I Class Secretary Class Secretary 54 Fred M. Blaicher, Jr. 51 Edwin H. Metcalf 18 Rolling Hill Road 23 Toth Lane Skillman, NJ 08558 Rocky Hill, NJ 08553 Class Secretary 55 Guy K. Dean III 11 Lemore Circle Rocky Hill, NJ 08553 Thispastyear wasa milestoneforourclass. Our 25th college reunion! The class was well repre­ sented by eight alumni at the Princeton Class of Beginner’s luck was with Guy Dean '55 on his ’62 reunion. Attending the weekend were four first fishing trip off Long Beach Island. of PCD’s six-man football team: Roger Hoyt, Bucky Kales, John Bales and Andy Kerr. Class­ mates Joe Delafield and Chip Woodward were Class Secretary also at the reunion tent while both Phil D’Arms 56 Donald C. Stuart II and Robert Fernholz were otherwise commit­ ted that weekend. (The local papers reported P.O. Box 664 that Chip had been named corporate secretary Princeton, NJ 8542 by Johnson & Johnson. He has been with the Robert Rubino was the lone correspondent company wince 1969 when he was a general this time. He writes, "During the past twenty attorney in the law department. — Ed.) odd years, I’ve been foster father to twenty- A partial gathering of the Rulon-Miller clan This summer your Class Secretary took a day one boys. I’m planning to buy a vacation home includes (L. to R.) Harry '57, Patrick '55, Lindley off from the bank for a first ever fishing trip in Florida and play golf! Still playing real estate Tiers, Sumner '53 and assorted children. —and actually returned with a couple of blue- in New York City.” 54 Class Secretary renceville and describe themselves as DINKs In addition to those who reunioned, Jack 57 James Carey, Jr. — Double Income, No Kids. Jock has stayed and I contacted a number of other clasmates 545 Washington Street active in the Naval reserve, is now a Com­ who sent their regrets along with news. Alan Dedham, MA 01026 mander and is Commanding Officer for the Agle now lives in Pittsburgh, or is it Washing­ It was fun to hear from Bill Morse who writes, reserve crew of the battleship, USS New Jersey. ton, DC? This year he is marrying a lady realtor "I have recently been named president of the A few years ago, Jock and his crew spent from Utah. Alan manages this jet set life style as Yale Graduate School Alumni Association and Christmas off the coast of Lebanon so the regu­ a pilot for Ransome Airlines. He attended have opened my own educational consulting lar crew could take home leave. Craig Battle Choate and has been flying professionally office in Westport, CT where I advise students attended the Rectory and Choate after PCD since he left Middlebury. I ran into Walter and families on school and college admissions and graduated from St. Lawrence. Married Brower and his wife, Elizabeth, at a party last planning and placement.” with kids, he now lives in Princeton where he fall. Walt has given up teaching high school owns an investment banking firm. His wife, English for the far more lucrative business of Class Secretary Anne PDS '67, is the head of the Familyborn teaching English to corporate executives. He 58 C.R. Perry Rodgers, Jr. Birth Center in town. Coley Donaldson and his also lives in Pennington but couldn’t come due 21 Mimosa Court wife are also in Princeton. Coley is Vice Presi­ to a trip to Chicago; business must be good. Lawrenceville, NJ 08648 dent for Commercial Real Estate at United Jer­ Sandy Edwards now lives in Flemington and sey Banks. He graduated from Taft and Boston sells telecommunications equipment to hospi­ Needs Secretary University and is still our perennial "jock.” He tals. His wife, Dale, has just started her own plays tennis regularly with Jack McCarthy and picture framing business and that consumes all 59 is a star on the Princeton Hockey Club. No, his extra time. They have two children — one in We "lo st” Ross Fullman for a while but now Rick Eckels is not an instructor at the Arthur high school and one in sixth grade. There wasa have the following information, thanks to his Murray Studios as predicted in the Class Proph­ paragraph on Warren Elmer's new outdoor parents. He livesin Green Bay, W l and worksas ecy. After graduating from Hun, Rick went education business, “ Cradlerock,” in the last the director of Heritage Hill, an outdoor living south to Southwestern at Memphis, fell in love issue of the Newsletter. Warren and his new history museum. Nicky Hare is now working in and never came back — until now. He won the Austrian girlfriend are doing well as is the busi­ Princeton in the Lower Pyne building on Nas­ Long Distance Award, but what an accent! Rick ness. But he can always use experienced sau Street. He is one of three individuals who is now Managing Director of Morgan Keegan instructors. I know because he keeps calling make up the principals of Founders Court and Company, Members New York Stock me. Bill Hamill lives in Princeton and is Chair­ along with the British merchant bank, Brown, Exchange. He married the boss’s daughter and man of the Board of Marion Manufacturing Shipley & Co. The firm specializes in arranging they have one daughter of their own. Tall and Company in New York. Ad Hanan, his wife, leveraged buy-outs for middle market com­ thin asever,John Gaston graduated fromTrin- Renee, and their family moved back to Prince­ panies with no public stock offerings and is ity University in San Antonio, Texas and is now ton a few years ago. Ad is with Salomon Bro­ determined to prove that a takeover can be a real estate developer in Cohasset, Massachu­ thers in New York and they are PDS parents. accomplished in a direct and honest manner. setts. John is married and has three kids, two Tom Knox has remarried and moved to Tuc­ boys, 14 and 6, and a girl, 10. Our host, Jack son, Arizona where he is in commercial real Class Secretary McCarthy, has never strayed far from home, estate with Coldwell Banker. I spoke with him 60 G. Thomas Reynolds, Jr. but that doesn’t mean life hasn't been a great briefly and learned that his brother, Hal, is now 201 Nassau Street success. Jack was a star at Lawrenceville both in in Alexandria, Virginia. I spoke with Hal who Princeton, NJ 08540 the classroom and in the soccer goal. (I believe said he’d try to make it. Also in Alexandria is he still holds some school records there.) At Graham “ Rusty” Matthews. Rusty works very Brock Putnam writes that he’s “finishing an Princeton he continued both pursuits before hard as a congressional aide for Jim W right and M.Ed. degree at Harvard, plan to relocate to going on to the University of Pennylvania Law didn’t think he’d be able to get away. Another western Connecticut and teach. Wife Deb is an School. He now works in his father's law office busy man is American Biltrite President, Rick artist and teacher — son Ben, 5 is an artist and in Princeton and is quite the entrepreneur. In Marcus, who now lives in Wellesley Hills, Mas­ student! ” addition to real estate development, Jack has sachusetts. I tried to persuade him to visit the also been involved in local cable TV, is the company plant in Trenton and write the reun­ Class Secretary author of Joyce’s Dublin — A Walking Guide to ion off as a business trip. Rob Maxwell lives 61 Peter H. Raymond Ulysses and is a documentary film producer. right across the river in Newtown, Pennsylva­ 54 Creighton Street Robin and Jack have one boy and one girl. Rod nia, but had a previous commitment. His Cambridge, M A 02140 Myers is now a real estate investor for the insur- brother, Lee, would have come, but he’s herd­ ance industry, is still single and lives in ing sheep in New Zealand. Also he had just Class Secretary Washigton, DC. Like Coley, Rod went to Taft. been in the States the month before and was 62 W illiam H. Walker III He was also in the Army reserve after graduat­ still suffering from jet lag. Jack spoke with Alan 11 Academy Court ing from the University of Virginia. Undoubt­ W ood so you’ll have toget the news from him. Pennington, NJ 08534 edly, Paul Vogel had the most varied academic Another South Kent graduate is David Tibbals, What a wonderful 25th reunion we shared this experience of any classmate. After PCD Paul a hero of hockey and tennis. Dave also gradu­ spring and what a turnout we had! Friday eve­ graced the halls of both Andover and Law­ ated from Rutgers and was working for the ning, Jack McCarthy and his lovely wife, Robin, renceville before getting down to work and Betterley Consulting Group in Boston. Last hosted a cocktail party at their place followed graduating from Hun. His college career year he moved his wife, Leslie, and their chil­ by dinner at the Bedens Brook Country Club. included time at Dartmouth, a degree from dren to Atlanta and is now considering starting In addition to nine classmates and one other Rutgers plus graduate work there and finally a his own company. On weekends Dave coaches spouse, we were also joined by faculty members law degree from Columbia. Paul has put all that youth sports, especially soccer. Herbert McAneny and Mr. and Mrs. Lester education to good use as Director of Corpo­ Although we weren’t able to reach them, we Tibbals. This was a great chance to get caught rate Labor Relations for Merck and Company were able to dig up some news on the follow­ up after 25 years. Saturday m orning, six of us, in Rahway. But his greatest pride and joy is his ing classmates. Norman Armour is reportedly plus Jock Baker’s father, Dick Baker '31, took a two year old son, Joshua, (just ask him). Paul living in London, England. Rick Delano was last tour of the old PCD building on Broadmead was as entertaining and outspoken as ever and reported to be in Brooklyn but we couldn’t conducted by “ Sir” McAneny. The most dras­ had some wonderful stories to tell. Your Class reach him there. Bruny Dielhenn, who is tic change there was the gym which has been Secretary was the ninth and final guest at the claimed by the class of ’61, works on the Punky divided into several spaces with a low ceiling McCarthy's. I went to South Kent with a Brewster TV show. Paul Ford has moved from and is now used to store University undergrad­ number of other PCD alumni and made a name California to Pawtucket, Rhode Island. Bill uate rental furniture. Surprisingly, only three for myself rowing crew. I was in the NROTC at Hereford was working for Oxfam International of us showed up for the formal reunion activi­ the University of Pennsylvania and spent more in Upper Volta, Africa but is apparently now ties at Colross on the PDS campus. than seven years in Naval Special Warfare living in the Boston area. Woody Johnson is Now the news from the nine who returned. including one year with the United Nations in president of his own company in New York and Jock Baker graduated from Groton and Rutgers Lebanon. Following the Navy, I was a Senior lives on Fifth Avenue. Last word on John before going into the Navy. Now he is senior Watch Officer at the Hurricane Island Outward “ Chip” Norton was that he was also living in Vice President of Mercer Savings and Loan in Bound School in Rockland, Maine. I'm cur­ Boston. Bob Otis, our previous Class Secretary, Trenton. He and hs new wife, Linda, (the "one rently living back in Pennington and working was living and working in Kingston. But as soon other spouse” mentioned above) live in Law­ in fund raising. as he heard we were looking for bodies for our

55 25th, he hopped on his motorcycle and took ing fun racing and cruising on our boat.” It is off for San Diego. Hopefully we can get him to with great sadness that we report the death of come to the 30th. John Poole teaches science John Roberts last February. He was killed in a and biology in the Baltimore public schools huntingaccidentand is survived by two daugh­ and his wife is a nurse. John is also a dedicated ters, Pierra, 8, and Eugenia, 6. marathoner and has competed in many races both alone and with hisfather. Peter Ramus has Class Secretary moved from Princeton to Yardley but we were 25th REUNION 65 Mark H. O’Donoghue unable to reach him there. Peter White last 414 Fifth Street reported that he was working for First National Brooklyn, NY 11215 City Bank in Zaire, Africa. Lincoln Kerney was featured in the local papers Class Secretary The follow ing members of the class of '62 Kevin Kennedy when he was named to the board of trustees of have vanished. Gerry Cameron, Daryl Good­ 63 the Pirnceton Education Center at Blairstown. rich, Terry Marzoni, John Petito, Henry Price, 10 Carleton Place Glen Rock, NJ 07452 He’s an associate at Peyton Realtors in Prince­ Peter Skillman, Griff Strasenburgh and David ton and also serves on the boards of the Kerney Wakelin. We would certainly appreciate any Foundation and theTrenton Area Soup Kitchen. information that would help us track them Class Secretary down. Finally, I am saddened to report that at 64 William Ring least one classmate has died. David Johnson 16126 Alcima Avenue died this past year of cancer. Dave graduated Pacific Palisades, CA 90272 from South Kent and Lehigh University. He was Rich Hill married Frances Williams Roberts on living with his wife in Bricktown, NJ when he December 27, 1986. He’s a yacht broker for died. He will be missed. Wells Yachts in Marblehead, MA and is “ hav­

Two alumni appeared in the local papers. Class Secretary Sandy Guthrie was married on April 25th to 69 Susan Denise Harris PRINCETON DAY Elizabeth Jennifer Ashcroft. Sandy’s the national 324 South Bald Hill Road sales and marketing manager for Sterling New Canaan, CT 06840 SCHOOL Extruder Corporation in South Plainfield. Ann Morgan Battle wrote a beautiful article for Your Class Secretary was on an Amish farm in Mother’s Day about her mother who was Middlebury, Indiana this summer and was Class Secretary instrumental in establishing Familyborn, the unable to write up the column but she sent this 66 Lynn Wiley Ludwig birth center that Ann runs in Princeton. news as well as a nice bunch of post cards. 33 Cold Soil Road Susan writes, “ In March we moved to New Lawrenceville, NJ 08648 Canaan, CT. June 4th, David Christian was born. We now have four boys and two girls! I Class Secretary still own my own shop, A Touch of Amish, in 67 Julia D. Lockwood Barrington, Illinois and will expand the busi­ P.O. Box 143 ness to New Canaan. This summer three of my South Freeport, ME 04078 Amish friends came to visit us in Connecticut I was delighted to hear from some new folks and now we are with them for a couple of this time around as well as from those faithful weeks — quilting, eating, and planning for the few who keep this column going. Weezie business for next year. I have had several Huntington writes that she is now divorced and 20th REUNION requests fora 20th reunion. Let’s start planning enjoying her single life again with her son, it now. Send me your ideas. We won two Paul, age four, and her real estate job. Linda D. awards for the Annual Fund; most improved Willis writes that she visited with Susan Fritsch Class Secretary and highest percentage of participation! Con- Faber during the summer of '85 and is anxious Mary Hobler Hyson tragulations!!" to get together for a reunion (I guess she never 68 1067 W olf Hill Road Susan Schnur writes, “ I’m on the faculty, received word of this year's). She is working Cheshire, CT 06410 teaching in the philosophy and religion depart­ and taking graduate courses and welcomes vis­ ment at Colgate University and commuting itors anytime to Dallas. Her parents raise cattle (This column arrived in April, too late for the back and forth from (Hopewell) NJ weekly. Still and horses on what sounds like a real Texan Newsletter — Ed.) writing freelance for New York Times and ranch. Beth Ann Levy writes that she has been “ No news is good news” but this saying does elsewhere. Am pregnant (have a five-yearold). ordained as an Interfaith Minister from the not apply to class notes! Please send news My most comforting news is that I’ve been New Seminary in New York City and is a certi­ items for the next issue. married eleven years to Lenny Fishman, a law­ fied graphoanalyst from the International I can report on my own news, however. I am yer in Trenton. I’d love to hear from Barbara GraphoanalysisSocietyfrom Chicago. Shegives in the process of applying for a group day care Thompson and Andrea Fishman — they appear astrological readings and does free lance pub­ home in Cheshire. Once I can get through the in my dreams.” “Greetings from the land of lic relations. stack of application forms the State Depart­ enchantment,” writesEd Purcell. “ We've been Susan Fritsch Faberand Laura Peterson write ment of Health has so generously given me, I living in New Mexico for nearly a year now. I’m that there was a “ small but spirited” turnout for hope to be in business by August. During an instructor of anatomy and physiology at the twentieth reunion. Highlights included a spring vacation I am hoping to get a chance to Santa Fe Community College and a biological guided tour of Colross by Mary Woodbridge, a visit with Ann McClellan in Washington, DC. consultant for Santa Fe Research. I’m also reception at Colross, and a barbecue at Franny Ann and I met briefly on the grounds of the working on the production of some educa­ Gorman’s house with Jennie and Ledlie '72 Smithsonian (where she remains employed) in tional film strips. We live in an adobe house Borgerhoff, Richard Ross ’68, Marta Nussbaum 1978. with a view of pinon covered hills and the Steele and Michael Steele. Susie got a postcard Have a good summer. Sangre de Cristo Mountains. Launi and I cele- from Francois Foassier who was travelling in The Alumni Office received a beautiful bro­ trated our 14th anniversary in June. Jennifer, Greece this summer. chure from an exhibition of art work by almost 13, is into punk and Heather,7, looks up Summertime in Maine is what we wait for, Fernanda D’Agostino and partner Dennis Kitsz to her for it. Our favorite pastimes are investi­ and we have had a beautiful one. Marc and I that was shown at the Yellowstone Art Center gating ancient cliff dwellings, hiking in the were able to go for a small cruise down the in Billings, Montana last October. The exhibit mountains and eating HOT green chili.” coast in our sailboat. As members of Physicians was entitled “ In Bocca Al Lupo,” (“ In the Ed Cole says, “ It seems like I send in some­ for Social Responsibility, we hosted a group of Mouth of the Wolf”), a title described by thing every six or seven years. Let’s see if I can American and Russian hikers who climbed Fernanda as "a scared precinct of an unknown bring you up to date! I just completed my Mas­ Mount Katahdin as part of a wilderness expedi­ culture, a shrine to culture, to man’s existence, ter’s degree at Carnegie Mellon University. I tion promoting peace. Rachel will be two this and to the fragility of that culture.” The show received a Master’s in Public Management fall and isn’t too terrible (yet). I am still practic­ included musical compositions by Mr. Kitsz from the School of Urban and Public Affairs. I ing pediatrics part time. Please keep writing. and a variety of art and sculptures by Fernanda. did this while maintaining my full-time employ­ 56 ment position as a management consultant for Due to a complicated set of events, my column sure, watch her share of Little League games! Pennsylvania Blue Shield. I’ve been with them never made the last spring Newsletter. For this, Howared Vine and his wife, Claudia, had a for the last twelve years. Indeed, that’s what I send my apologies to one and all, especially son, Chase Alexander, last March 15th. He was brought me to Pittsburgh. I’m still single (never Dede Pickering who was the only member of 9 V2 lbs. at birth and Howard believes that he been married).” And from Beverly Bevis; “ I’m our class to send in news to be included. So as would be a great addition to Coach Dan living in New York City and have been for the not to make, Dede’s news any later, I will put Barren’s team next season! Also from Howard: past four years. I am working at a retail store hers first in this column (some consolation, I "Washington being what it is, everyone either doing personnel and marketing. I bought a would say!) Dede wrote: “ I am still living and works for the government or has something to place here in January so I guess I’ll be around working in New York City and loving it! I had a do for or against the government, it was only a for a while. I see Beth Healy frequently and great experience in October (1986) trekking in matter of time before Nina Shafran and I Blair Lee. Beth and I have been going to the Bhutan, a kingdom in the Himalayas. What a crossed paths. Nina is Special Assistant to the beach together this summer and doing some wonderful contrast to New York!” Please write Deputy Assistant Secretary for Import Adminis­ volunteer work together. Would love to hear again soon, Dede. I promise to do better next tration. As it turn out, we have spent the past from others from the Class of '69. How about a time! month doing battle over pending trade reform 20th reunion?” Laura Lamar says that “ Max and Now to more up-to-date happenings in the legislation. I’m sure Nina would agree that it’s I have started our own business in San Fran­ world of ’71ers.... I saw Jodie Platt Butz, her been fun.” Thanks for asking, Howard. I seem cisco, graphic design and illustration called husband, Jim, and their two sons at Jim’s 15th to be still kicking! Laurie Bryant Young is now “ Max.” Business is great so far and we’re really reunion from Princeton University last June. living in Bangladesh. She wrote to say that yes, enjoying working together in our beautiful My husband, Thom, was in the same class, so it is as poor as you think and more corrupt than new studio downtown. Hello to everyone!” we saw a lot of Jodie. She looks just the same as you can imagine. She and her husband, Bill Skip King is“ with a new company. President of she did 16 years ago and seems to be enjoying (who is with the foreign service), are expecting Breakaway Presentations, Inc. — tradeshow her work at Dunn & Bradstreet in Murray Hill. theirsecond child New Years Day. Congratula­ exhibits, A.V. poresentations, corporate events, See you at the 20th, Jodie! Lizette Mills Hardie tions, Laurie! special effects. Spent the winter skydiving in dropped me a card from North Carolina. Last I received a wonderful letter from Natalie Florida and cross-country skiing and racing.” time we heard from her was two years ago, Huston Wiles last spring (did I ever answer you, Molly Hall received her doctorate in 1977 from from Georgia.... I think. This is what she had Natalie?) and all appeared to be fine with her. Cornell Medical College and has just com­ to say: “ 1986-87 has been a busy time for us. Rip She enjoys living on the west coast, but I would pleted the US Air Force military indoctrination and Francie (our 2 year old) spent all their time like to know when she is coming east so that we for medical service officers at Sheppard Air building us a house. We moved into our new could have a visit.... Force Base in Texas. post and beam palace two weeks ago before I really enjoy hearing from all of you, and I Ashby Adams has two news items. “#1 — Ian, our son, was born. We still have tons of send my thanks to everyone who has taken the Appearing as a regular on NBC soap, ‘Santa staining, finishing, and landscapig to do, but at time to drop me a line so that I am not in this Barbara.’ Character name, Steve Bassett. #2 — least we’re in. I’m working at NCSU teaching column all alone. But there are so many people Missing all of Class of ’69 very m uch.” surgery to vet students.” that we haven’t heard from in a while: you Robbie Holt is still living in Cambridge, MA know who you are. And, how about those of ^ Class Secretary and working in Boston for Zaldastani Asso­ you that enjoy reading about all of usand have / Ann Wiser ciates,an architectural and structural engineer­ never sent in a “ hello” or your own? Now is the 330 West 72nd Street, #10-C ing firm that specializes in air-rights projects perfect time to begin planning your entry in New York, New York 10023 which Robbie described as building buildings our column for next spring’s Newsletter! over highways and train tracks. He saw Tom From other sources we learned that Chessye No news is no news and there isn’t no news, O’Connor not long ago: please tell Tom to Hill Moseley moved from New York to Boston. but I can count the postcards on the wheels of send us some news the next time you run into She’s been married a year and a half and has a my tricycle (if I were so inclined). Anyway, him, Robbie! Diane Jass Ketelhut is keeping 2Vi month old baby boy. Congratulations! what we have is a birth: Elizabeth Vigelius extra busy in Charlottesville, VA. She said in Maxwell, born May 19, 1987 to Pam W ood- her card: “ I’m just finishing a Masters of worth Maxwellanda new address from the star Science Curriculum/Education at U. Va., and of last month’s column, Cintra Huber with two children (3 & 6!) and a travelling McGauley, 8 East 83rd Street, #3D, New York, spouse, it’s been a real challenge! I think New York 10028. they’ve all earned the degree as much as I. My The only postcard with any embellishment kids think that the answer to the question ‘what came from Meg Brinster Michael, your former do mommies do?’ is ‘homework!’. I start a part- secretary, who still remembers a thing or two time teaching/curriculum position this fall at a about writing an alumna note. She writes from private school here. But with time off for a Mantoloking where she is hard at working tan­ 12-year delayed honeymoon; Bill and I are ning and preparing for “ freedom in the fall” going to Hong Kong, Bangkok, and Singapore when Katie and Alexis will be in school. Her for two weeks. I can’t wait. We’re taking extra report is that on the very same day in June she empty suitcases along!” had calls from Allison Gilbert Kozicharow and From St. Louis, Ted McCluskey wrote that he Grace Taylor Harris. The former dropped in is finishing his Internal Medicine residency and with her two daughters, Maggie and Nicki.and in July 1988 he will start a cardiology Fellowship Leldie Borgerhoff '72and Cici Morgan Pastuhov the latter was having her children painted by in San Francisco. He sent greetings to Scott '72 on the dock in Kezar Lake, Maine. her uncle, Peter Cook. I’d like to make up Richardson and thanks to Mr. McCaughan more, but either the heat, the humidity, or with memories from II Form in 1964! When sloth have just called a halt to this. More news visiting in Massachusetts this past July, my "7 *} Class Secretary next time? daughter, Mandy, and I spent a crazy day with / Jm Miss Andrea Scasserra A little more news came into the Alumni Betsy Gorman Moyer and her two children in Box J-1164 Office. Bumper White and his wife, Caroline, Milford. It was great fun to catch up with Betsy. HJMHC are the proud parents of a daughter born April Sheand herfamilyaredoing well and really are Gainesville, FL 32610 23rd, 7 pounds, 4 ounces. Congratulations! enjoying living in New England. Tania Lawson- I was disappointed with the turn out, but here Robin Murray has opened a branch office for Johnston Tassie says that life is pretty quiet, is the news I received: Jane Gaman is living it Garrison Architects of Bala Cynwyd, PA in maybe because she has left the glamorous up in Hawaii. She is married to the manager of Hamilton. She moved to Trenton last year and world of New York commuters behind and is Maui's largest cattle ranch (35,000 acres). She is living along the Delaware River “so life now working on her own in Pennington. Her stays busy working as a bookkeeper for a surf revolves around the city now. Travelling a lot children, Brogann,11,and Mark,8,are terrific; shop and she is starting a T-shirt business with for new business.” they were both involved in Little League (how her own designs. Jane; you should send us about field hockey?). Tania hasn’t seen any some pictures and we can get some business " T Class Secretary members of our class except Katie Poole and going back on the mainland! Jane also takes / I Jean Schluter Yoder she wants to know where the rest of us are out trail riding tours across the ranch so all you 4302 San Amaro Drive hiding. Tania had plans to spend time on visitors to Hawaii be sure to look her up! Karin Coral Gables, FL 33164 Martha’s Vineyard in the summer, and, I am Grosz is well and still living in Lewes, Delaware.

57 She has been very busy working on illustrations won’t have anything to write about if you Pratt Bliss and husband Zenas have returned for a book entitled An Atlas of Delaware Bay. don’t. So get busy and drop me a line. East from the Rockies and have settled in She sent me a few examples of her work and I There is a bit more news from various Dover, MA. My husband and I will be spending was quite impressed. Karin wasso busy this summer sources. Kobby Ballard Hoffman wrote that another year here, but we are continuing to that she was unable to make a mini-reunion she’s in urban and environmental planning look into other possibilities. I’m looking for­ with Ledlie Borgerhoff, Cici Morgan Pastuhov, program at the University of Virginia. Nan Schluter ward to finishing my Masters and find the time and me. We met up in Maine at my family’s Thurston teaches English at Susquehanna Col­ with my son exciting. Please send in more news home on Kezar Lake and had a great time lege and her husband, Steven is at the Geisinger in the future! reminiscing. Ledlie was planning to go over to Clinic. They live on a 100 acre farm. Our sympa­ From other sources: Peter Moore writes that England for a week or two or who knows how thies to Peter McCandless whose mother died he’s a project manager for Alaska Fisheries long? She had many tales of her most recent May 1st in California. Development Foundation, a non-profit com­ trip to London where she was performing with mercial fishing industry research and devel­ a theater group. Cici and I decided that we had opment company. “Travel takes me to Kodiak, better take a trip over to London to visit those Cordova, Aleutian Islands and to Seattle, Bos­ sets that Ledlie so vividly described. Cici is liv­ ton, Atlanta and California. Focus on bottom ing in Stockton Springs, Maine and is expecting fish processing and maximizing efficinecy of her third child. She and her husband, Stefan, processors, thus eliminating the considerable have made great progress in restoring their waste in this industry. Love living here in beautiful old home. Although I have not Alaska. Still am able to go commercial fishing received word yet, I know that Kathy Bissell for salmon and halibut. Think about moving Maloney and her husband, Joe, were expect­ back to Maine every so often but haven’t yet. ing their first child sometime around August 15th REUNION Best wishes to Mr. McCaughan, one of my all- 10th. time favorite teachers.” Sarah Strong Parker Mardi Considine and I drove up to West­ and her husband, John, celebrated the birth of chester, New York this past summer, for Kathy’s their daughter, Katherine Bayard Parker, on baby shower and then we all had dinner in the Class Secretary November 21, 1986. The nearby article was city with Joe. We had a great time and I am / *3 Anne Macleod Weeks written by Erica Klein about her fiance, Ken­ anxiously awaiting news from them. I expect 100 Seminary Avenue neth Alan Kroll, president of Kroll Advertising, that by the next edition of the alumni news I’ll Pennsburg, PA 18073 a general and direct response advertising be able to fill you all in. Mardi has recently Everyone must be having a wonderful summer agency. Ken was born and raised in Chicago started working with Gillespie Advertising in in light of the very few responses I received and is a graduate of the University of Illinois. Princeton as a copywriter. She is still living in from this mailing! Congratulations go out to He is the author of The Freelancer’s Bible: Hopewell and is very happy being a home­ Martha Sullivan Sword on the birth of a baby Everything You Always Wanted To Know About owner. Anthea Burtle Orlando wrote that she girl on May 10, Hope Tynan Sword. We all seem Being An Advertising Freelancer.. .But Never was married to Frank Orlando, a sound engi­ to be busy building families lately. Margie Knew Anybody To Ask. Erica is a copywriter at neer, on June 6th. She is still employed at Erdman is living in Lebanon, NH. She has fin­ Direct Mail Corporation of America and a Thompson’s Recruitment Advertising and her ished a contract with the Vermont Agency of nationally published travel photojournalist. address is 14065 M oorpark Street #8, Sherman Environmental Conservation in solid waste Her article is inspiring and appeared in The Oaks, CA 91423. planning and is now considering new direc­ Riverfront Times of St. Louis in May. That's all the news for now. I sure do wish tions. She enjoyed the best ski season since that more of you would respond because I 1981, but welcomed the spring weather. Liz

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58 I got about20 responses— more than I thought I would considering I had put it "right on the line” and been very specific about the type of man I wanted. Ken was among those who responded. Hewrotea marvelous letter; warm, funny, honest, intelligent. FI is words practically leapt up off the page. The only paragraph that made me swallow hard was the one that described Ken’s physical disability and the limitations it imposed: There is one thing I want you to know from the start. I have a handicap, a spastic condition in one leg that prevents me from walking long distances. In these situations, such as when I’m out shopping at a mall, I use a wheelchair. I’ve had this condition since I was 12, and it doesn’t bother me a bit; I hope it won’t bother you. The same problem has also caused me to be a stutterer, so when you speak to me on the phone, don't get frightened off if I stammer a bit; it won't bother me if it doesn't bother you. But of course it did. Even though Ken had been utterly honest, I was still caught unprepared for our first tele­ phone conversation. The experimental brain operations that had been performed to relieve Ken's spastic condition when he was a teen­ ager had left him with a voice characterized by slurred words and difficulty enunciating con­ sonants. How could this ever work, I thought. We would be Beauty and the Beast together. Yet Ken’s extraordinarily upbeat per­ sonality and our shared outlook on life made me want to at least get together and meet him. And so we went out on our first date — breakfast at the Danielle Hotel. I can still remember how uncomfortable I felt. All I could think about was Ken’sdisability. That the waiters had trouble understanding him. That he needed a wheelchair to walk more than a block. That he walked with a strange gait as a result of the many operations. Everyone is looking at us, I thought. Everyone is thinking I must be desperate to go out with a man like this. And worst of all, I thought... If we get together, I’d be settling for "damaged goods.” More than three months have now passed since that fateful day. Fortunately for me, Ken is such a supremely confident person, so unaf­ fected by his disability, that he was able to listen to my most uncomfortable feelings and help me work them out. One of the toughest things I ever had to do was tell him how scared I A SPECIAL STORY: was that I would never stop identifying with the people who stared at us or looked away in An extraordinary couple meets through The Eligibles distaste. To the Riverfront Times: time I reached 30, the single life which had But I did. I stopped dwelling on what other What I’m about to share with you is the story of once seemed so exciting was starting to wear people thought and started realizing how lucky how I met my husband-to-be in that most thin. I started to long for something more I was to have found him. I began to see what unlikely of places — an Eligibles ad in The satisfying. Something with more substance. great happiness we two could share. And that Riverfront Times. But even more important, it’s Something enduring. with Ken there was the possibility of a real and the story of how a disabled man and an able- Suddenly, the woman who had always said lasting love. A life. A real life. A home. The bodied woman got together despite the fact marriage wasn’t her cup of tea started thinking disability just wasn’t important anymore. that I, like most people, had never seriously seriously about getting married. And then I discovered what I should have considered anyone with a physical disability as And so, despite the fact that my friends told me known all along. That "Mr. Right” or "Ms. a potential romantic partner. I was insane to mention my matrimonial inten­ Right” doesn’t always turn out to be the It would be easy to blame it on the 1980s preoc­ tions right up front, I placed the follow ing Elig­ embodiment of physical perfection. And that cupation with physical perfection. Or the un­ ibles ad in December, 1986: sometimes it is those "slightly imperfect” peo­ settling feeling that "There But For the Grace JEWISH MEN OVER 40 ARE WONDERFUL! It all ple who are the most rewarding in the long of God Go I.” Butfor whateverthe reasons, the depends on the man, of course, but I think run. handicapped and the disabled are still con­ they’re better at stable relationships, better at I am delighted to tell you that Ken Kroll and I sidered “ romantic pariahs” by most of society. resolving conflicts and better at knowing there’s will be married on May 1,1988 in the Japanese They are‘‘second choice partners” at the very more to life than chasing a dollar. If you're Garden of the Missouri Botanical Garden. To least. looking for someone totally out of the ordi­ borrow a phrase from comedian Whoopi I know, because I felt exactly the same way nary, and if you’d like to meet a loyal, loving, Goldberg, Ken may not have a "disco body,” before I met Ken Kroll. 30-year-old travel writer who’s looking for a but I believe our life together is a dance that is I was beginning to be an Eligibles veteran, close, mutually supportive relationship leading just beginning. actually. I had placed several ads over the years to marriage, I hope you’ll take a moment to Thanks for creating The Eligibles. and enjoyed the ego-boost of getting a large introduce yourself. Your letter will be read Erica Klein PDS ’73 number of responses, dating interesting men with genuine respect for the time, effort and and entering into several long-term relation­ courage it took to write it. P.S. Although I don’t Reprinted from The Riverfront Times May 6-72, 1987 ships. What I did not enjoy, of course, was the really want kids of my own, I enjoy them, and inevitable leave-taking and the emotional scar I'd be happy to raise or stepmother yours. A feature on this couple will appear in People tissue that was beginning to build up. By the Please reply to Box M-4539. magazine soon. 59 74 Needs Secretary ^ Class Secretary Kathy Burks, Molly Sword McDonough, and / J Yuki Moore Laurenti Caroline Erdman among others at Alumni Day. Diana Lewis Abbott has asked to be replaced as 464 Hamilton Avenue She reports that everyone looked terrific. She’s Class Secretary. We thank her for the wonder­ Trenton,NJ 08609 also been in touch with Ruth Barach Cox who ful columns over the years and hope that one Our news this month is full of tying the knot will be returning to NYC in September. Ruth of you will want to become the correspondent and baby makes three...(or four...) Kathy will be at the Metropolitan Museum of Art as for your class. Please call the Alumni Office if Burks was wed at Trinity Church to William the Fellow in painting’s con­ you’re interested. It’s fun — really! Hackett this summer. Bill and Kathy are both servation. What a prestigious position! She is Q uite a few post cards came in from the Class employed at Dun & Bradstreet — she is a man­ looking forward to working within this out­ of ’74. Chris Aall writes, "Again some news ager of budgets and financial analysis and he is standing institution and with its collection. from the Swiss Alps.. .Esther and I now have a vice president of marketing and planning for Molly Moynahan is an editor at Bantam Books two super kids. Chris is 2V2 and Nathalie .is one. Dun’s Marketing Service, a subsidiary of D&B. and living a block from Lincoln Center in the We are now living outside of Lausanne in the Contratulations! Among the guests was Anne Big Apple. She is divorced and wonders if she is French-speaking part of Switzerland where I Russell who writes that “ Kathy had quite a the first; anyone know? She thinks she should am attending the one-year M.B.A. program wedding and Bill is very funny!” Anne is off for get a prize if so. This summer M olly visited with (school is ‘IMEDE’). Who knows, maybe a new an exciting challenge.. .she is leaving the Gar­ Alison Hughes who is living in Madrid, Spain. job in December will bring us back to the States rison School and is off to work in Indonesia!! Alison is very happy there, Molly reports. The for a few years! M y last job involved setting the Now that’s exciting! She will be teaching eco­ writer unexpectedly saw Ridge Fell and his Microcomputer Consulting Group at Holder- nomics and ancient history at Jakarta Interna­ wife, Hilde, at a dinner at Curtis Webster’s. bank, now the world’s largest cement pro­ tional School in Jakarta. "M y challenging task Ridge still runs the family business, Cheney ducer (even in North America) but I’ll be look­ will be to be sure the cook prepares food Flashing, and enjoys some time off playing golf. ing for something more innovative and chal­ properly! And that the gardener tends to the Hilde teaches German in the Hamilton Town­ lenging next year.” Lisa Bennett Blue: "Richie things he should. It should be quite the adven­ ship schools. It is quite an experience. Curtis is and I have bought property in the Green ture — hopefully not quite a year of living involved in an unusual revue that has made its Spring Valley outside Baltimore where Richie dangerously.” Anne saw a number of class­ rounds from NYC to California to London. will have hisdream — asmall horsefarm — and mates this summer. Suzanne Bishop has chop­ Although difficult to describe, it features I won’t be too far away! We’re starting plans for ped her hair short, is still working at D&B and Marilyn Monroe back from the dead. Curtis building a house immediately. Am now mother living in Hoboken. Steve Mantell is enjoying plays the background music from a darkened of two: Alexie is 3V2 and Wendy is one.” cable TV conventions in Las Vegas. Hmmmm... spot on the stage. Sounds wild. Camilla Carpenter writes that “since graduat­ Anne also reports that our class brought in the Tidbits: Caron Cadle Remshardt asks: Where ing from Columbia Business School in January, highest amount of contributions among the is Marcia Weiner? The writer had her 8th anni­ I have been at Home Box Office where I am alumni! That is wonderful. Keep PDS in mind versary at US Trust in August. My private bank­ Manager of Home Video and Film Program­ when you make your charitable contributions ing department has grown from six women ming. I love it! I see Cole Harrop and Amy this year and every year. this past spring to nine people (this includes 2 Stanley occasionally.” And from Maureen Mary Lane McNamara and her husband, men — oh well, so much for the all female Creamer: “ I live outside of Santa Fe, NM. I Tom, welcomed their son, Peter Doelger, into department). Management certainly presents have two children, Bias, 6 V2, and Donaji, 4. I the world this winter. "He is an absolute joy new responsibilities. This summer I was appoint­ took four years off after school and traveled —can hardly wait for our next child.” Mary and ed to the Trenton School Board; the challenges between Mexico, Guatamala and New Mexico. Tom are living in an old New England farm­ in Trenton’s troubled public schools are cer­ Got married, spent three years as a stay-at- house in Littleton, which is west of Boston. tainly different and enormous compared to home mom and then went to nursing school. Sandi Davies Barada had a busy fall (’86). They those at PDS. So much for any free time. Best I’m now working in a pediatric intensive care put an addition on their house just in time for wishes for the fall and winter season. We hope unit, building a house (endless) and planning an addition to the family, Hunt Eastwick, born to hear from you even if the news is that "all is for the next vacation.” David Straut and his February 18,1987. Lars Anderson and his wife, well.” Ciao! wife, Maureen, "are still living on the Upper Maria, are living in Washington with their son, Since this column was written, Yuki’s father, West Side of on 102nd Street. I’m Gene, who was born in April 1986.1 understand Jim Moore, died. We know he will be missed working now for Eberstadt Fleming, Inc., an that he has blond hair and blue eyes — doesn't by his many friends in Princeton and we send investment bank, in corporate finance working Lars have red hair?! Maria is a banker and Lars is our deepest sympathy to Yuki. with health care and life sciences companies. a corporate (transactional) lawyer and likes it Molly Sword McDonough is a "handful of And the big news is that we just had a son! His very much. Kip Herrick is now selling fashion credits away from graduating from Rutgers name is Charles Barnwell and he was born advertising at Vogue Magazine. " It’s good to with my B.A.” (Not her M.B.A. as erroneously April 12th. We recently saw Kip Herrick, Cole be back at Conde Nast, having left Glamour reported in the last Journal — sorry, Molly, but Harrop, Terry Ward and Ralph Brown at a PDS two years ago to go to New Woman.” She saw congratulations! — Ed.) gathering in NYC.” Katrina Kassler Waters has just finished producing and directing a film series on the Eskimo oral tradition. Anne W illiams has joined N.T. Callaway Real Estate in Princeton as a sales representative and will be coaching JV tennis at PDS. Ted Brown has given us an update on his life in Venice."Thisyear I have been with my wife, Anne Munly, in Venice, conducting research, painting a little and doing some design work. Recently I was awarded the Prix de Rome in Architecture and will reside at the American Academy in Rome next year, starting in Sep­ tember. Prior to our current work, I was an associate in the Office of Michael Graves for five years, taught design at the Princeton Graduate School and taught design and theory at the Oregon School of Design. Brother Wil­ MAY 21, 1988 liam (Brown) pursues yet another degree at Stanford — this time in Modern Tought. He is is married to Diane Young who is finishing her dissertation in the English Ph.D. program. We both stay in touch with Palmer Uhl who is head­ ALUMNI DAY! ing toward the business woman of the decade award.”

60 Class Secretary 77 Alice Graff Looney 114 Longmeadow Lane State College, PA 16803-2957 Congratulations to all our newly weds! Karin Morgenstern was married to Michael Louis Papp on May 30th in West Stockbridge, MA. Karin is on the staff of Creative Pre-School in Las Vegas, NV where her husband works as a senior scientist for Lockheed Engineering and Management Services Company, Inc. Jennifer Weiss and Bruce Hamilton were married July 5th in Prospect Gardens by Rabbi Susan Schnur ’69. They are both Boston attorneys; Jennifer is with Brown, Rudnict, Freed and Gesmer and her husband is with Burns and Levison. Julia Penick is now Mrs. Timothy Howard Garry, having been married in Princeton in May. Her sister, Elizabeth Penick Graham '74. was the matron of honor. Julia has been attending law school at the University of California but will complete her third year of study in Manhattan where her husband is an associate with McKin- sey & Company. From the business world we hear that Chris­ tina Bachelder Dufresne has been named assistant vice president in Midlantic National Bank’s corporate banking department, New Jersey division. Karen Schuss relocated to Utah last year and is working for Fidelity Investments of Boston and skiing whenever she get the chance. Babette Mills is working full-time for ’76 Bradford Associates and going to Columbia Business School full-time. Sounds like a good A BAR SINGER HITS IT BIG trick! Sabrina Plante received her medical degree from the University of Medicine and Mary Chapin Carpenter (’76) had spent five "I burst into tears when CBS first called Dentistry of New Jersey on May 20th. years singing in bars, and was beginning to me,” she says. feel more like a sentence than a career. The original plan had been for Carpenter Getting work was a constant hustle, and to become a figure skater. But not long after when she did play, she was sometimes she moved here from Princeton, New Jer­ ignored, abused, or, because she had long sey, with her family in 1974, she found her­ hair and a guitar, asked to sing like Joni self skating less and playing her guitar M itchell. more. One night her father, tired of her She was ripe for a “straight job,” and singing in her room, suggested she go when an offer came to be a researcher with down to Gallagher's on an open-mike night. a consulting firm, it seemed an omen. That began her musical odyssey, sustained Maybe it was time for her to find her niche by her rich alto voice and more recently by 10th REUNION in the world where clocks set the thythms. her blossoming as a songwriter. Carpenter But at the last m inute Carpenter pulled wrote most of the songs on her album, back. She turned down the job, not yet which she first recorded with local musician Class Secretary ready to have her life as a singer fade out. John Jennings in his basement, then pol­ 78 Jennifer Chandler Hauge That was four years ago. Carpenter, 28, ished at the Bias Recording Studio in Spring­ 24 Pilgrim Court still plays in local bars and clubs — the field. Convent Station, NJ 07961 Birchmere, Galagher's Food for Thought, “ Everything has happened so fast,” says Apologies for the blank space under our class Kramerbooks & Afterwords Cafd— but her Carpenter, who is single and lives in Takoma colum last issue. I hope it is fair to assume that persistence is finally paying off. Last fall she Park. “ People tell me I have it made now. no news is good news. However, remember was chosen, somewhat ironically, "Best New But it's a whole new bag of tricks to deal that I’m practicing law now, so you have no Artist” at the Washington Area Music w ith.” right to remain silent. Everything you send in to Awards. And in January she signed a con­ Reprinted from The Washingtonian, March, 1987. the alumni column can, and will, be used tract with CBS Records, which will release People magazine also ran a feature on Chapin in against you. My usual sleuths having failed me, her first album, Hometown Girl, this year. September. I was grateful for the local papers to report news of our '78 classmates. Melanie Thomp­ son, RN, was recently elected to Sigma Theta Class Secretary & Rotnem, a public relations form in Chicago. Tau, an International Honor Society of Nurs­ 76 J. Creigh Duncan Paine Her husband-to-be graduated from Exeter and ing. Melanie will be working at St. Peter’s Hos­ 2316 Aspen Drive Colorado College and is working toward his pital in New Brunswick. With all the press cov­ Plainsboro, NJ 08536 M.B.A. at the Kellogg Graduate School of erage of the nursing shortage, it is comforting News of the class has been gleaned from var­ Management at Northwestern. Joanne Kind to know that Melanie and Hannah Felton, have ious sources. James Daubert has finished his was married to Michael Hinton and is back in chosen the nursing profession. residency in internal medicine at Duke and is Princeton, working at LaVake’s. William Uhl I didn’t hear from any of the MD’s in our starting a cardiology fellowship, also at Duke. and Anstes LaTourette married on June 13th. class, but Betsy M urdock certainly has “ Doc­ Chapin Carpenter has hit it big in the music William is completing his degree in architec­ tor, doctor” on her mind these days as she industry. (See box nearby). The rest of the news ture at Carnegie Mellon and his wife is a plans her January wedding to Dr. Hank C. is of marriage, still a popular institution, if this designer with Emotions, Ltd. in Pittsburgh. Maguire. Betsy is now living at 2518 8th Street, class is any indication! As these notes are being Scott Ware planned an August wedding to Charlestown, MA 92129, completing her typed, a beautiful white tent is being erected Sharon Serban, a secretary at Garrison Archi­ Master’s thesis with a project on masks and on the Colross lawn forRhoda Jaffin’s wedding tects in Hamilton. Scott is working in a com­ how children create and interact with them. reception. She will be married to Michael Ray mercial real estate brokerage and develop­ Other marital merriment; Lolly Tate started Murphy on September 5th in Lawrenceville. ment business in Princeton. Congratulations 1987 off with her marriage to Samuel Seward of Rhoda is an account executive for Ruder, Finn and best wishes to you all! Westwood, MA on New Year's Eve. Lolly and 61 Samuel are living, studying and working in This past year I have served on the Long was working as a foreign exchange corporate Austin, TX. August 29,1987 will be the big day Range Planning Committee, reporting to the advisor at Shawmut Bank in Boston. Laurie’s for Tom Cates and lovely Tracy W illis who will Board of Trustees of PDS. I am pleased to husband, Terry, we assume, is still president of be married on Long Island. Their honeymoon report that the school is stronger than ever the Timber Design company. plans may be interrupted if Will Kain swoops under the energetic and sensitive leadership of So, Mr. Mark Chibbaro, where are the them up and carries them off on his schooner Duncan Ailing and several new,excitingadmin- Porsche 928’s? Miriam and Seth, what’s up the bound around the world. We are waiting for a istrators at all three school levels. Expansion is last 7, 8 years? (The C hilton’s have been busy, progress report as Will 'rounds the Horn. Lee on the horizon as are exciting supplements to but modest. Miriam has been named a project Ross was married on September 19, 1987, to an already innovative curriculum. specialist for TMC, Inc., a computer software Denise DeCuglielmo. They reside at 52 Har­ . Please keep your notes and letter coming, development firm in Baltimore. Her work will vard St., Charlestown, M A 01929. everyone. Wishing you all the best. Jenny. include the design and implementation of Lise Roberts, our peripatetic architect, spent inform ation data bases for law firms. She is a January and February in India and Nepal. graduate of the Institute for Paralegal Training "Nepal is Paradise.” Lise wrote that while trek­ in Philadelphia. Meanwhile, Seth is a design king in the Himalayas she half expected to find engineer for Tyco Industries, Inc. in Moores- Betsy Murdoch leading an expedition. Back in town, NJ and planned to be married in July to New York, Lise has a new job and is awaiting Robin Ellen Hanna, a writer and public rela­ the results of her architectural licensing exam. tions consultant. -Ed) Mr. Mark Cozzarin is Don Cips, writing for the first time, caught us pretty good with toothaches, we hear. Dr. Press up on the last five years of his life during which has seen Mark on occasion at U. of Penn cam­ he graduated from Harvard, worked for Bill pus. M r, Ben Dubrovsky is still seeking 25 cents Bradley, received a fellowship for one year Ben claims Mr. David Edelman still owes him. with the CORO Foundation in NYC, and served To avoid this conflict David has gotten married as the cultural affairs directorof the92nd Street and moved to California. Y. He’s now attending the Yale School of Miss Allison Duncan? Miss Linda Eglin is sta­ Organization and Management. Suzanne Vine tioned in NYC looking trim and doing business graduated from Rutgers Law School last spring stuff. Miss Laura Farina is doing fine according and spent a wonderful vacation in the Pacific Lisa Lavinson '87 was congratulated on her to older brother Bob whom you may have seen Northwest with Don Gips. Her first legal job is graduation by her soccer and ice hockey coach, keeping order on the NJ Transit Railroad. We with a child advocacy group. Jeff Swisher wrote Meg Bailey ’78. Meg also teaches Middle all extend our best to the Farina family. from California that he’s in medical school and School history. Mr. Doug Fein... I miss you guy, wFiat’s up? was sorry to miss Allison Ijams when she was in Mr. Henry Fischer was spotted on the Upper California. West Side looking happy and blond. Mr. David Babies? Yes, folks. They have arrived. Bob Class Secretaries Fitton... where is that knuckle curve? Mr. Ned Habgood and Dawn are proud parents of / Nicholas R. Donath Foley is married, isn’t he? (Yes, and he has been Henry Elliot Habgood, born April 20,1987. We 10746 Frances Place #250 clerking for the past year for Chief Judge haven’t heard howtheirGolden Retrieversand Lost Angeles, CA 90034 Patricia Wald for the U.S. Court of Appeals for Stationwagon (or was that BMW?) have adjusted and the D.C. Circuit. He was scheduled to begin a to this milestone. Evan R. Press one-year clerkship for Justice Powell at the Supreme Nora Cuesta sends her regards to the class, 349 West 44th Street, #1FE Court in July. -Ed.) Mr. Jonathan Baker pursues and best wishes from her parents who cele­ New York, NY 10036 his theatrical career in NYC. “ J.B.” says to look brated their 30th wedding anniversary with a Greetings to the Class of '79 and those asso­ him up at Bloomies on the Upper East Side and cruise. Nora is currently enjoying a new hobby ciated with us. Mr. John Ager and Mr. Steve he would love to see the face of Sam Marti- — ceramics — when she is not acting as Safety Carter say hello to everyone and can be found nuzzi, especially right now! Coordinator for the Miami Herald. Liz Mason in the Annex, the Tap room, or Andy’s Tavern I believe Miss Debbie Ford was lifeguarding Cousins was able to spend some time with Tri- when they’re not working at their respective and now works for the state of NJ. Miss Katie cia Metzger Thomas while Liz and husband, jobs in the tri-state area. Nick and I wonder if Fox? Miss Erica Frank is pursuing her 47th Neal, were in England at the end of the school Miss Karen Albert grew up to be as cute as we graduate degree at Mercer in Georgia where year. Liz reports that Tricia is an insurance hoped. she heals people spiritually in her spare time. broker for Willis Faber, and her husband, Dan, Mr. Jacob E. Bardin transferred to Lawrence- (Actually, Erica has been chosen by the Am eri­ isanaccount managerforanad agency. Liz will ville ...so who cares? Miss Diane Barry has can Medical Association as the outstanding be studying for a Master’s degree, part-time, been spotted numerous times on the P-ton medical student communicator in the United starting in the fall. The school announced Dinky — we believe she lives there. We also States for 1987! -Ed.) recently that Graham Cragg, father of Steven believe Miss Gail Barsky is finishing her Temple Cragg, will be enjoying retirement these days Law School experience. Miss Candy Beagles rather than the intrigue of math problems (or works for a candy outfit in Massachusetts... students who have problems with math)! We ironic or what? Mr. Jim Bennett? Mr. Chuck wish him well. Meg Bailey is still teaching and Balke transferred to Lawrenceville.. .so who coaching women’s sports, including ice hockey cares? at PDS when sheand husband, Dan M alloy,are Mr. David Blaxill recently took his bar exam not renovating their house in the historic dis­ and will be relocating in NYC. Susan Blaxill trict of Philadelphia. After four years in a para- Deal ’78 is married and practicing law in rescue group in the United States Air Force, Florida. We all extend our best to the Blaxill Brian Trubee now works as a trainer and man­ family. ager for the California Air National Guard. Miss Lisa Borie was working in the Latin Brian is living in Santa Clara. His new address is American department of a prestigious Manhat­ Box 207, M offet Field, CA 94035. tan bank, but they inform us that Lisa left their I had the pleasure of co-chairing my Dart­ organization in mid-’86. Miss Judy Brainerd? mouth Fifth Reunion this past June with Rob (Judy was married to John Douglas Roth on Olsson who is currently living in Rochester, June 20th, the same day as Betsy Stephens. She New York, working for Lipton. Rob did a super is the direct service coordinator for Stamford job of keeping track of the many kegs of beer Domestic Violence Servicesand her husband is and a plethora of monetary details as any well- vice president of administration with Red Devil prepared treasurer should. Andy Sanford, Paints and Chemicals in Mr. Vernon, NY. -Ed.) recently graduated from the Wharton School Miss, Mrs. Michelle Broadway is married with of Business and on the cusp of a successful kids, isn’t she? career with Smith Barney in New York, Meg Mr. Sam Bryan is having a career struggle; Baily with husband, Dan Malloy, Doug Fitton earning megabucks in corporate America or and friend, and my husband, Steve Hauge, blowing it all racing sports cars (through The new Mrs. James S. Hebb IV, formerly Betsy were also present enjoying the New Hamp­ woods). Mr. Vance Camisa is married, isn’t he? Stephens '79, poses with her husband after shire weather, good food and friends. Last we heard, Mrs. Laurie Habgood Carpenter their June 20th wedding. 02 M r. Geoffrey T. George has decided to expe­ rience the sunny climes of Los Angeles. He left NYC on hopes, dreams, and on foot. Evan misses him, but seems to have gotten in much less trouble since G.T.G.’s depature. Regard­ less, Geoffrey has been living in our fair Donath’s “ coast” apartment with his girlfriend Theta, who will be attending UCLA (theatri­ cally speaking) in the fall. Geoffrey has had various jobs since his arrival in California. The mentionable ones are: working for the Vista Corporation and as a movie grip while he pursues his producing and directing career. He misses John Riggins very much. The Reception, from left to right: john Gutman '79, Mr. Andy Gerb? Mr. Adam Gibson? Miss Eric Reichard '79, Theta Pavis-Wyle, Geoff George '79, Ann Gillespie? Mr. Grant Goddard, alias Grant Evan Press '79, Jackie Donath, Katrina jannen '79, Dewey, is living in Manhattan in Soho where, Chris Horan ’79, Katie jeffers '79, Gordon Rubenfeld potentially, anywhere up to 47 difference peo­ '79, Nick Donath '79, Dave McCord '79, Ben ple may answer the phone on any given week­ Dubrovsky '79, Willie j. jacobus '79, the late Fred end. Mr. Steve Graff? Mr. Scott Green... Woodbridge '78, Sam Martinuzzi '79. Raiders!... Pirates!... Miss Suzy Greenberg? Mr. Lou Guarino was last seen at the 198? All-Star game at the Vet in Philly. Mr. John Gutman? Mrs. Hariette Brainard Hackney was recently accosted by Gordon “over the counter" Rubenfeld where he learned Harriette and Fain Hackney ’78 are liv­ ing in Philadelphia and Harriette is working at the Univ. of Penn Hockey Center. Mrs. Hack­ ney was also very pregnant. Mr. John Hall will be attending Law School program at NYU and then at Princeton Univer­ sity if he has survived the Atlantic City kidnap­ ping Nick and I have planned for him. John also recommends a blind masseur he found in his The Bachelor Party, from left to right (captioned by foreign travels. To this day, John still has little Bill jacobus ’79 is helped to a sample of Evan): Mr. Mini-Manhattan (Evan Press ’79), famed lateral movement in his neck! his wedding cake by his bride, Claudia paparazzi (Ben Dubrovsky ’79), Panama jerk (Nick Miss Jenny Hamel? I can’t believe we don’t Eppel. The wedding took place in May Donath ’79), Gordon “ Over the Counter” Rubenfeld, know what Mr. Gordon Harrower is up to. Miss 7986. THE MAN (Bill Jacobus ’79), Sid and Nancy (???). Caroline Hartshorne gave up writing to us somewhere along 1985 or so, but many PDS sarily in that order. Trina is working in Mass. for Robert W. Lamb who is the husband of 27 year alumni still see Caroline quite a bit and all is a large department store as a computer pro­ old Leslie MacLeod-Lamb. Leslie is currently well. Mr. Jeffrey Hirsch? Mr. John Hollister has grammer while attending Babson at night for working out of the Law Office of Francis R. officially picked more coffee in Nicaragua than her M.B.A. Miss Katie Jeffers, Manhattan artiste, Paternoster running his Title Abstracting he shall ever drink. can be found exploring Washington Sq. Park Corp.-Catskill Mountain Abstracting Corp. Miss Martha Hicks has been living in NYC on occasion. Is Mr. Andy Jensen still on ski “ Uncle" Evan will definitely drop by if in the where she studies and works as an actress. patrol in Colorado? Mr. Dudley Johnson? area. Martha supplements her income at the noto­ We assume Mr. Jeff Johnson is still ass’t Mr. “ Sudden Sam” Martinuzzi is rumored to rious Lone Star Cafe. Martha even deigned to hockey coach at Hobart. Mrs. Jane Henderson have returned to the P-ton area from Odessa, attend a production with Evan R. Press per­ Kenyon? Is Mr. Ken Keuffel still a musical Texas. Sam is pursuing, with relentless mania, forming ... obviously Martha's social life ain’t genius? Miss Laurie Knowlton, we believe is his broadcasting, TV career. Miss Betsy Mayer? too hot. Miss Lisa Hurowitz? still working at P.U. in the personnel dept, and Mr. David McCord was last known to be reno­ Mr. Chris Horan contemplates life. Alvin also misses Rollins as much as I. Miss Pam Kul- vating homes in the Mercer County area. Mr. actively keeps tabs on Chris Price and Katrina strud? M r. Victor Kuzmicz? Miss Teresa Lane? Chris Mele? Miss Annel Merrick was seen two Jannen.. .not necessarily in that order. (Chris Mr. Joe Lapsley’s father was spotted at New Year’s Eves ago at a party on the PU cam­ writes that he's getting married in September Davidson’s by Dr. and Mrs. Press. Joe ismarried pus. .. but it was New Year’s so who remembers in New Orleans to Barbara Brandon, a 1983 and living in California. His wife attends school anything? graduate of Princeton University. He’s living in and I, for one, would like to know your Mrs. Cathy White Mertz and Oscar have Piscataway, working in NYC for Drexel, Burn­ address, Joseph, and your phone number. Mr. been enjoying weekly weekends at the Cape ham, Lambert selling high-grade taxable fixed Jeremy Leader? M r. Brian Lee has played, which “ makes New Haven bearable during the income securities. -Ed.) Mr. Jeff Horrigan? We mostly eaten, with Evan and Nick this summer week.” Cathy says she is breaking new ground hope Miss Vicky Howard is doing well. Victoria in Manhattan. Brian is interning with Exxon and really enjoying herself in her new position had been hospitalized prior to finishing her while attending Tuck Business School at Dart­ at Connecticut Savings Bank, i.e. Human academic career at Harward. Mr. Jeff Hudgins mouth. Resources Officer/QualityTeam Program Coordi­ is the Production Manager of the Hubbard M r. Gerard Leo? M r. David Lifland is married nator. Whew! Oscar finishes school in a year Street Dance Company in Chicago. Jeff and and living in New Haven, we believe. Mrs. whereupon the Mertzs will relocate... Boston? "Company” have been travelling throughout Kassie Litz Devine, sister-in-law to Mrs. ... Princeton?... the midwest and plan to explore foreign lands Vivienne Pellettieri Washburn, is living on a An old rumor still circulates that Miss Anne soon. farm in Maryland with husband Bob and tod­ Nevius is married with a daughter. Yes? No? Mr. William Penman Jacobus was married in dlers Sean and Ian. Vivienne and Jeff may be Mr. Jake Nunes is living in NYC and teaching late May of ’86 in Blawenburg to Claudia Epple living in "a darling, little Victorian” they have kids in Harlem and truly loving it. Last we heard who attended Stuart a few years ahead of our been renovating in the Mill Hill neighborhood Mr. Jay Nusblatt was working in his father’s class. Claudia and Bill (the very nervous but of Trenton. Viv wants to hear from Kippy! clothing business. Miss Karen “ Kippy” Polcer blushing groom at the ceremony) are both Miss Alison Lockwood has been a staff RN at still works at Parfums Sterm in the sales admin­ continuing their educations in Indiana as Bill the Kennedy Hospital for children but may istration department while working towards contemplates the field of law. The photos have moved on to Boston’s Children’s Hospital her M.B.S. at NYU. Karen looks towards (courtesy of Ben Dubrovsky limited edition) of by now. Mr. Phil Maltese, Mr. Dave Mantell, improving on her NY City marathon time and the blessed even say it all. Miss Liz Mapes, where are you people? misses the old gang. Miss Katrina Jannen actively keeps tabs on Mr. Ian George Lamb is living in the Catskills Miss Cory Powers has really established her­ Chris Horan and Debbie Ford...not neces­ on a 15 acre hideaway. Ian is the 3 year son of self in the insane (believe me) world of stage

63 managing. Cory steadily works in DC but still ends. How is cousin Karen (?) from Rollins she simply replies, “ I’m in men’s underwear.” takes time out to lounge peacefully with Muna doing? She keeps herself busy weekending in New in Maine. Mr. Chris Price is living in East Ruther­ Mr. Andy Erdman '80 attended the Jacobus Hampshire with Club Med buddies and hang­ ford with Barbara Brandon of P.U. where then nuptials and looked good. Miss Mandy Katz ’81 ing out at Buff’s Pub. keep team-tabs on Chris Horan. is living in NYC with older sister Carol Katz ’77 Unless you want to hear about these same We assume Mr. Jay Pyne is still receiving while writing for a real estate firm. Mr. Jim people each time, please drop me a line. I’d honors in Bio-Chem at Duke Med. School. Burke ’80 and Evan are involved in the Theatre love to know what you’re doing. John Banse Would love to hear from Kelly, Jay’s black lab. Wings company in the city and recently per­ where are you? Mr. David Quigley? Mr. Tom Rebman... in­ formed Measure for Measure at Lincoln Center. From Liza: Hi, Classmates! Not much news terested in theatre? Mr. Eric Reichard has put •Mr. Nicholas Donath has been interning at this time around... Liz Segal wrote to say that his engineering degree from Duke to good use. Morgan Stanley in NYC. Nick will be returning she has one more semester at Harvard Divinity doing engineering stuff for engineering pla­ to UCLA to finish one more year of business School. She’s also working at Planned Parent­ ces. Eric was hiding behind Cordon in photo school. Nick recently survived a tripto Atlantic hood. No other news arrived via mail but I was #1. Miss Carrie Roeser? M r. Jay Rorty? Jay, Evan City with his father, the incomparable Erwin, at Camie Carrington’s ’81 wedding in Idaho. I saw M ickey S. at reunions last year and told all and his comparable friend Evan. saw Doug Matthews there. He still seems to be ...Mickey loved it! Nick has been working I want everyone to know Nick was of no help enjoying Denver. John Banse is beginning law with Mick all summer at Morgan Stanley. in the writing of this piece. I did it all myself. school at Northeastern University in Septem­ Coincidence or what? Unless of course you have a complaint of some ber. Tom Borden is also attending Northeast­ Miss Nancy Rosenberg no longer works in sort, in which case immediate notification ern; he’s got one year left! I suggest you all Manhattan learned Evan when he called Nan­ should be sent to Mr. Donath. As for me, I write to Jennifer Brannon for the next Journal. I cy's work number. Nancy does love the Man­ pursue my theatrical career with impatience, will be in northern Italy for the next three hattan Transfer though. Miss Drew Rosenberg bitterness, frustration, disbelief and my Walk­ months, cooking in various restaurants. I should recently assisted on a Woody Allen film and man. Please feel free to contact me via my be back by Thanksgiving. seems to be busy in her theatrical pursuits. Dr. answering service in Manhattan at area code From other sources we’ve learned that Dana Ross was spotted by those roving reporters Dr. 212-265-1370. To all, I wish good luck and good Stewardson has left Kidder, Peabody & Com­ and Mrs. Press at a local K-Mart. M r. Ralph life. Sincerely, Evan R. Press. pany to join Pennsylvania Merchant Group, Ross and sister Amy Ross ’82 were living in Ltd. in Radnor, PA. Suzanne Albahary “ was in Boston with Amy’s baby at last report. Q / \ Class Secretaries Princeton area for two months with my family Miss Juliette Roughy? Mr. Flip Ruben has OU Jennifer Brannon in March and April recovering from surgery. entered thecorporate world of Manhattan and 117 West 77th Street, #3R All okay now. Excited about starting Master’s Evan will call him to find out more if he ever program at Boston University in Public Relati­ finishes writing this thing. Mr. Gordon “over New York, NY 10024 ons/Mass Communications in September.” Jim the counter” Rubenfeld writes on a paper and Groome is managing the clean-up of napkin the following — “ Intern in internal Elizabeth L. Stewardson hazardous waste for the NJ Department of medicine at Duke. No time. No fun. Help me.” 25 Leicester Street Environmental Protection. Former Class Secre­ Gordon also claims he hears from Nick only Brighton, M A 02135 tary, Treby McLaughlin, is in London for the when Herr Donath fears illness. Mr. Nick From Jennifer: Well the deadline is here, and year. Russo? Miss Katherine Sachs? wouldn’t you know I haven’t collected much Mr. Richard Sacks-Wilner should have grad­ data from our fellow classmates. After a bit of uated from Med. School at the Univ. of Miami digging, I was able to come up with the follow­ O Class Secretaries by now...Miss Melanie vonderSchulenburg ing pertaining to Big Aple residents such as O I Kristine E. Anastasio was last headed to Kenya to work and get ideas m yself... 420 East 55th Street #6A for her artwork. Mr. Mike Shannon?.. .write! Amy Stackpole has announced her engage­ New York, NY 10022 Miss Muna Shehadi has decided to go back to ment to college beau Tim Brigham. The mar­ and school to pursue voicework i.e. her wonderful riage will take place in late September and then Cameon Carrington Levy singing. Muna doesn’t know precisely what the happy couple will move on to St. Louis. 324 East D Street this will lead to, but her future audiences are Unable to secure the “ right” man for a double Moscow, ID 83884 better for it. Mr. EricSlighton? Mr. Jack “ Action ceremony, Abi Stackpole will remain in New Submitted by Kristy Anastasio and Mandy Katz: Jackson’’ Smart? Miss Delia Smith? Miss Betsy York, in her new Upper East Side apartment. Hearsay, rumor, gossip — call it what you will, Stephens, presumably, is still very busy with the Abi is now Assistant Editor at William Morrow but we’re not liable. Rather than sue, write in Madeira School in Virginny. (However, she & Co. to enlighten your misguided chroniclers. found time to be married on June 20th to James Virginia Ferrante is vacationing in Portugal WHEN LAST WE HEARD: Taking Care of Busi­ Stephen Hebb IV in the Lawrenceville Chapel last I heard. While there, she will be a brides­ ness— Jon Brush serves ’em up fresh to Prince­ -Ed.) M r. Jeff “ Alan Brody did it, Sir” Sussna? maid at a friend’s wedding then she’s back to ton’s yuppies as manager of Nassau Seafood. Mr. John Sweeney... working in Trenton? New Jersey to be a bridesmaid in sister Fran- Stephen Thomas is raking it in as an Invisible Mr. Ward Taggart is sick and tired of running cesaca’s wedding. Enough wedding talk... Dog Fence magnate around Princeton. Lisa into Dr. and Mrs. Press wherever he goes. Miss Stephanie Trock is cooking up a storm. She Carpi is working on her Korean while market­ Martha Tanner? Miss Dawne Taylor? Miss Cyn­ and Jennifer Dutton prepared a marvelous ing Korean company, Goldstar’s appliances in thia Tregoe, we can’t remember what you’re feast for the PDS reunion party they hosted in the U.S. Recently graduated from Johns Hop­ doing. Call Nick and chew him out. Miss Ann Manhattan this past spring. Stephanie is one of kins, Ian Rothrock is painting houses. (It’s a Warner lived around the corner from Evan in the few people I know who is able to attract small world, Ian, but you wouldn’t want to Hoboken. When Evan made his trium phant men while pumping iron and aerobicizing, at paint it.) return to the city, apparently, it was more than least once a day, at the gym. Wouldn't Jan Far-Flung — Shaun Tobin was headed for a Ann could bear and now Miss Warner report­ Baker be proud? Other than her body, Ste­ comedy-writing job Down Under. Lindsay edly is looking to move to Manhattan. phanie also works on her jobs as Corporate Stoner was planning a second sojourn working Mr. David Weiner owns an ice cream distri­ Chef at Video Works and Chef at Calibans. She in Hong Kong. Mark Akselrad missed one buting company that ships Dove bars, Bon is planning a trip to Europe this September. flight to Sweden but made it there for the Bons, Ben & Jerry’s, Louis Sherry, et cetera to Sally Fineberg seems to have found her summer, nevertheless. He’ll return to U. of supermarkets, hotels, restaurants in the DC, niche in the advertising business at DFS Dor- Penn, for his final year in September. Wendi Maryland and Virginia areas. David...how land. If not at work she can be found on the Rottweiler toured Holland and Paris with Mandy much do you weigh? Miss Fran Weisberg? Miss volleyball court, slamming Cajan martini’s at in April and took up a new job in Princeton Susan Weiner? Mr. Kent Wilkinson? Mr. Chris Great Jones Street Cafe (Thursday nights only) early this summer. Often found in a French W illrich? As of late ’85. M r. Austin W ilm erding or simply hanging out in Central Park. library (in Boston), where she works, Kate Kil- was alive, working in P’ton and travelling. Miss As for myself, I’m sweating it out in Manhat­ bourne is eating well — she spends her time Sarah Woodworth? tan. I have a new job in investor relations with a with a chef. Janet McAlpin is a Parisian mime. In early ’86 Mr. Hazard Zenzie was living in closed-end mutual fund company. My dog Cracking The Books — Medill School of Jour­ Nashua, NH and working for the Laser Systems Maisie is great too. nalism is teaching Sarah Sword how to ask per­ group at Sanders Associates. Haz graduated News Flash from Boston: Jodi Kamer has sonal questions of presidential candidates. from Georgia Tech with an M.S. in optics and recently been promoted to buying at Jordan James Burrows is studying economics at has been skiing and playing in Boston on week­ Marsh. When asked what her line of work is, Rutgers. Gary Hatke is pursuing a degree in

64 chemical engineering somewhere in Pennsyl­ finds fulfilment working full-time (with Joyce vania. Look for Jurgen Jones at Rutgers or on a Travers ’82) as an Instructor-Counselor with Broadway stage. Chris Pey is in law school, as developmentally disabled criminal offenders are Mike Southwick () and at the North Princeton Developmental Center. David Blair, who’s at Cornell and spent the On top of that, she’s taken on a part-time posi­ summer working in New York. Those three can tion at a shelter for runaways. Sound like she’s bring their first malpractice suits against Sam doing enough good for all of us! Helping her Borden, who's at S.U.N.Y. Albany Medical out in that respect is Suzanne Spiegel, who’s a School. Jane Vawter no longer belongs in this nurse.. .out there.. .somewhere. 5th REUNION category, as she graduated this winter from Left Pennies for Mandy in the Bottoms of Tap Rutgers, but her future plans are undecided. Room Glasses — John Drezner, Jeff Olsson, Jon Did you choose business, Jane, or should be Brush, Stephen Thomas, Charlotte Erdman, put you down as a Ph.D. candidate? Marcus Maryk, Dan Thompson, Scott Egner, Wearing Ties/Tying One On — Roz Waskow Debby Burks, Sarah Sword, Lawrence Shan­ lives in Boston with Kirsten Elmore where they non, Megan Lamb, Jane Vawter, Shaun Tobin, see a lot of Andy Charen and John Denny, Marcus Maryk, Gary Hatke, Philip Ferrante, who’s with a Providence ad agency. Risking James Buttows and whoever we forgot to men­ inclusion in the “ Far Flung” column, Jayne tion — you were probably under the tables. Cerb is moving up the ranks at G.M. in Motown. Struggling — Your faithful writer/researcher Megan Lamb is apprenticing in the ways of team Kristy Anastasio and Mandy Katz ride hot, Wall Street in Mr. Vawter’s office. Scott Egner is dirty subways daily in New York, pursuing the minding his dollar signs in a NJ bank’s man­ American Dream.. .which weare"struggling” agement training program. to identify. Kristy’s taking on writing and pro­ In Training — Charlotte Erdman escaped Scott's duction responsibilities at Steve Gold Inc., a fate by throwing over the same program for video and film production company. Former her first love: horses. She’s a trainer outside hash-slinger Mandy finds time for Princeton. Steve W illrich has made a name for reporting for Real Estate Times between week­ himself as a windsurfing champion. Marcus end trips to Boston. Maryk writes: “ Marcus Maryk successfully From the papers we’ve learned that Kit Ager completed the Naval Aviation School’s Com­ has been competing in Iron Man Tiathlons for mand Aviation Officer Candidate School and the past two years. Even though she’s a com ­ has received hiscommission. Ensign Maryk will parative novice in the sport, she came in begin flight training in July at Whiting Field, second in the women’s division of a Philadel­ Tom Haroldson '83, winner of a Fulbright- Pensacola toward a career as a Navy pilot.” phia event, completing the half-mile swim, 12- Hayes grant. (What do you thing this is, Marcus, the Town mile bike race and four-mile run in one hour, Topics?) 15 minutes. Mike Dobkowski graduated magna Tuning In/Fact Finding — Ellen Gips is research­ cum laude from Berklee College of Music in Q O Class Secretaries ing graduate programs for Petersen's Guides. Boston with a B.A. in music production and 0 *3 Noelle Damico Nearby, Hilary Bing’s practicing sharp tele­ engineering. Lisa Carpi writes that “ after a year 33 Stamford Road phone techniques to gather info for a Prince­ working for KBS, a Korean TV station, and a Trenton,NJ 08619 ton consulting firm. Liz Gutman is living in newspaper in Seoul, Korea, I am now back in and England with her boyfriend, John, and re­ the States working in the marketing depart­ Rena A. Whitehouse searching arthitecture or Virginia Woolf (Laura ment of Goldstar, a Korean electronics com­ 12 Constitution Hill East J.’s not sure which). pany.” The word around town is that Camie Princeton, NJ 08540 Starving Artists — Former travel agent Mark Carrington’s wedding was a great event, with a Writing from Northwestern University, Steve Goodman nearly sold his soul to the god of rafting trip and horseback rides through the Ramsey says he is taking summer courses and rock ’n roll but is now considering film school, beautiful Idaho countryside. Camie and hus­ double majoring in both theater and fashion business school, venture capitalism or learning band, Lynn Levy, honeymooned in the San design as a career because there is more Japanese, but check back with him repeatedly Juanlslandsand Washington and will continue money in it! According to Steve, people in the for an updated list. Mark Sweeney traded in his living in Moscow, Idaho. fashion design world are great and he’s living T-square for a paint brush; look him up in with six guys in Evanston. And a personal note Princeton if you’re in the market for art. Lily O Class Secretaries to Mac: “ I hear MacDougald is now in the inte­ Downing may be working at the Whitney O m Lynne Freeman rior design business. I would love to get Museum. We thought Kevin Groome, who is a 69 Hemlock Circle together for a chuckle with him.” Simon freelance writer in San Francisco, would appre­ Princeton, NJ 08540 Weatherill hassurfaced after four long years in ciate appearing under this heading. and Burlington, Vermont where he’s currently pro­ Doing Good — Back to the pencils, back to the Cedric K. Harris gramming for a budding software develop­ books... the following are teachers: Kevin 209 Moreland Avenue ment company of only four people! Thisfall he Johnson (St. Alban’s); Debby Burks (the Pike Trenton,NJ 08618 will return to LJVM to finish his degree in com­ School, along with Mr. Frothingham); Matt and puter science with a minor in electrical engi­ Crocker (in Cambridge, MA). Barbara Zeitler’s Leslie G. Pell neering. also in the Boston area living in Somerville, 648 Amsterdam Ave. Lorna Mack informs us that she spent her working in early infant care and driving an Apt. #3B junior year studying in Sydney, Australia and “ expensive car and having a lot of problems New York, NY 10025 her senior year writing her thesis. Right now with it,” in Laura J.'s words. “ It talks to you From the papers we’ve learned that Bill Ross- she is living in “ the Vilage” in NYC working for when you open the door, y’know?” Laura massler received his B.S. in environmental stu­ a financial public relations firm called Adams added. “ She was totally busting on my Bug. dies from the University of Vermont on May and Rinehart. Rachel Leader is spending the You know, the Bug’s like a Flintstone-Mobile 23rd. Kate Murdoch was married to John summer as a teaching assistant at Phillips — you have to use your feet to start it.” Laura Worth Kern IV on August 8th at the Princeton Academy in Andover, MA, instructing her says to ask Barb if her car cooks dinner. Speak­ Theological Seminary. Her sisters, Mary Mur­ budding mathematicians in calculus and alge­ ing of Laura Jacobus, when Mayor Koch had a doch Finnell ’76 and Betsy Murdoch ’78 were bra II (she hopes Mr. Mig. and Mr. Romer stroke, rumor had it she topped the list of matron and maid of honor. John just graduated aren’t too worried by this!) as well as dance. replacements. It seems she’s had it with gar­ from UCLA Law School in May and will be She says it's a real 24-hour a day job for she lives dening at Gracie Mansion and has fixed her working in a Washington, DC law firm. Hilary in a dorm with 18 girls and another house- eyes on either the mayor’s office or a lesser city lllick was featured in the June issue of Harper’s counselor but she reports,“ it’s interesting see­ post. Seems she’s made quite a name for her­ Bazaar in an article entitled “Campus to ing school from 'the other side.’” Next year she self by doing a bang-up job with the mayor's Career” that interviewed recent graduates to plans to study German and some math at a garden. Alicia Williams thinks Rutgers course find out what entering the “ real world” is really German University (either Marburg, Freiburg, work for her Masters of Social Work is dull, but like. or Tubingen).

65 An anonymous postcard writer has leaked fall semester's dean’s list after a term in Austria. that Dan Goldman recently graduated from Class Secretaries Victoria Chen was elected president of ORSA, Cornell and will be studying for his MSc. at O b Adrienne B. Spiegel student section, for her senior year at Johns London School of Economics. At the moment, 6 Temple Terrace Hopkins. Dan isspending hissummerworkingatCornell Lawrenceville. NJ 08648 in the agricultural economics department on a and O J™ Class Secretaries state funded project. (Sounds pretty official Edward J. Willard 0 3 Kathryn T. Jennings Dan.) Beazie Zenzie just moved up to Boston 9 Fairway Dr. 61 Sycamore Court after graduating from the University of Dela­ Princeton, NJ 08540 Lawrenceville, NJ 08648 ware and has started her job with the Dana- Many of our classmates had a very exicting and Farber Cancer Institute as a biologist. She’s hav­ 1986. Eric Hastings spent last semester (spring Andrew J. Schragger ing a lot of fun and her new address is 219 1987) studying and traveling in Bogota, 50 Lochatong Road Aspinwall Ave., Brookline, MA 02146. Oops, I Columbia. He claims that he can now speak Trenton, NJ 08628 forgot to mention that Simon Weatherill also fluent Spanish. It’s too bad he couldn’t have has a new address: 52 Lakeview Terrace #2, gone in high school, where he used to get 48s From Andrew: And now for some news: Bill Burlington, VT 05401. with Senor Cuesta. After finishing up his last Griesinger is engaged and will be married as As for me (Noelle Damico), I’m coming year and a half at U.N.H., he plans to continue soon as he get off the slopes. Adam Sternberg home to Princeton. I graduated with High studying Latin American history. Good luck in and Chris Thanner were arrested when they Honors in the division of the humanities from grad school, Eric. Andrew Chooljian is working tried to cross into East Germany with a bunch Swarthmore and have been awarded a North for J.P. Morgan Securities again this summer of drunken West Germans during his six week American Ministerial Fellowship, a Bertha doing municipal bond trader support work, up tripthere. RobTuttle isthefatherof a beautiful Allgood Scholarship, and a Baxter, Roelfson, at 5 A.M. home at 6 P.M. Margie Wallace spent baby girl named Deidre. Paul Van Horn, Kevin Sands Scholarship to study at Princeton Theo­ the summer as a teaching intern at the Taft Cragg, and Sean Fisher have started their own logical Seminary. This fall I’ll begin work Summer School and loved it but is looking lama farm in India; no address given. Jim Hall towards my Masters of Divinity degree. Cur­ forward to return to her last year at Dartmouth. will be in England this fall trying out for the rently I'm working as the secretary to the Dis­ Whitney Ross lived in N.Y. during the summer World Cup team. Alan Gunshor started his trict Superintendent of the United Methodist while working for a large sales promotion own driving school called Crash n’ Burn. Church, Tree of Life Institute, and St. Paul agency. She claims not to be pursuing sales as a Danielle Coppola and Mike Rorro split up UMC for the remainder of the summer. (Yes! career but finds it interesting nevertheless. She sighting irreconcilable differences. I’ve (Andy) Three jobs in one!) Well, as this column is now made frequent trips to P-town to assist Sharon have grown a foot and a half and will be playing late and I’ll be grey before most of you write in, Powell with some Peer Leadership conferen­ basketball for the Utah Jazz next season, hope­ I’ll mention that Haleh Bakash graduated from ces, something she would possibly like to fully. Believe it or not. Swarthmore with Honors this past June and is pursue as a career. She spent a lot of time with Nice to hear from you. Hei-Ock Kim traveled in Washington, D.C. working as a paralegal. Lynne Faden, Shelley Straut and Phoebe around the Pacific with the Princeton Choral Some people have mentioned on their post­ Vaughan, while even running into Dave A., C. Group this summer and she’s declared philo­ cards that they’ve written to me with info but it Illick & A. Bing one weekend. sophy as her major. Sarah Wolf wrote (I don’t hasn't been seen in the Alumni News. Dis­ I have received an unsigned card explaining know why) and said she's working on a Ramaine counting the possibility that you’re lying in an how lucky a year 1986 was for Brooks Trubee. lettuce farm in California (This isn’t a joke). See attempt to assuage your guilt for not writing He survived two near fatal bicycle accidents. In you soon. sooner, the program may be that my address as March, while living with his brother, Brian ’78, From the Alumni Office: Louise Hall sounds listed is not precisely correct (though I do in California, he was catapulted off his bike and busy. She’s completed her sophomore year at receive mail with it as is). This is all to say that struck a fire hydrant, necessitating surgery. St. Lawrence and after a season at SLU, she'll perhaps if you write Mercerville instead of During the operation, he “ died” on the table move down to the shore. In September she Trenton, which is where I actually live, these but luckily revived. Then in December, while leaves for the University of Madrid for her cards will arrive timely upon my doorstep full with his other brother, Jay '76, he went out fora junior year. Tresa McBee transferred to Indi­ of mouth-watering, ear-tingling news about ride but was hit by a truck that went through a ana University in Bloomington after her fresh­ yourselves. Have a great test of summer! red light. He suffered a broken neck and man year and loves it. “ I am pursuing my Tidbits from the local papers include the fol­ severed ear. After wearing a Halo brace for theater and music — still!” Bill Noonan con­ lowing. Ben Hoorigan was awarded the Mar­ several months he seems to have recovered tinues to provide good copy for the local pap­ garet Ellen Clifford Memorial Prize in Theater with no major complications. He is now enrolled ers through his lacrosse skill. As a sophomore at Skidmore. Andrew Cross received his B.A. in at Rider, majoring in communications. As for and second-year varsity attack player, he geography and history from Macalester Col­ me, Ted, I spent my second summer at United became Colgate’s leading scorer with 25 goals lege and Erik Schwiebert graduated from Jersey Bank and enjoyed it even more than the for the year. Grinnell with a degree in biology. On the first. My position as fraternity rush chairman The death of Peter Merle-Smith was a great lacrosse scene, Louise Matthews was voted kept me extremely busy along with my fre­ blow to his classmates and friends and the Most Valuable Player at Dartmouth for her quent trips back to Virginia to visit friends. school community. He died on April 26, 1987 high-scoring lacrosse play. In addition, she I was really pleased to hear from Suzanne and a memorial service was held at Colross on played in the National Lacrosse Tournament in Lengyel. Her letter was so enjoyable. She June 5th. He will be deeply missed and we offer Ohio and made the US Squad and the 23 & thought the summer was long, hot & boring. our deepest sympathy to his family. under team which will tour in October. Luckily for her, her job got her through the Rena Whitehouse played defense for Connec­ summer like it does with so many of us. She O / T Class Secretaries ticut College while completing her work as a wrote about how excited she was when that OO Susan E. Franz history and philosophy major. On the boys’ small exotic lingerie store offered her that Pennington-Titusville Road side, Ebe Metcalf was a four-year letter winner chance she always wanted, to sell lingerie door Pennington, NJ 08534 and third leading scorer on the Colgate team to door. Suzanne — thanks for sharing this and where he was joined two years ago by Bill exciting news with us. I always knew an oppor­ Scott W. Fulmer Noonan '85. Ebe’s career totals added up to 39 tunity like this would soon be forthcoming. 674 The Great Road East goals and 33 assists. Suzanne Utaski graduated A few more bits of news came into the Princeton, NJ 08540 with honors from Carnegie Mellon. "After Alumni Office. Phoebe Vaughn writes, “Just and graduation I visited relatives in Arkansas, Bos­ spent an amazing semester in Florence. This M ollie D. Roth ton and New York, after which I packed my car summer will be interning at Guggenheim 37 Bayberry Road and drove to California where I now live. I am Museum in NYC.” Christopher Dingle is at Trenton, NJ 08618 working at Nordstrom selling clothes.” Joe Cornell with his brother, Mark. “Caught up From Susi: David McHale transferred mid-year Christen has announced his engagement to with Hastings, George, Lawrence and Susan from Columbia to Yale. I was in St. Louis in Joan Kenny. First in the class? He is assistant over break.” The local papers reported that February visiting Henry Clancy who was enjoy­ manager at Lahiere’s. Tom Haroldson has been Laura von Seldeneck played varsity field hockey ing the arch as well as his own radio show, and awarded a Fulbright-Hayes grant to study in for Trinity which ended their season unde­ all that Wash. U. has to offer. This summer he Germany on his graduation from Harvard. feated and the Northeast Intercollegiate spent countless months awaiting Buick parts He’ll study German literature and philosophy Athletic Conference champion. Lynn Faden from Detorit while working at Phares Studios in in Constance and live with a family in Freiburg also made the news after she was named a Princeton. Andy Smith returned from camp this year. Congratulations to all of you!! faculty scholar at St. Lawrence and made the California (alias, Pomona) to further conquer e>6 Eve! Cary was facing the trials and tribulations "American Alps”) where I patrol the back- of Princeton’s fences (again) with Sam Lambert country — and weather breaks. A beautiful and Tom. Anthony Milo Miller spent the place “ to be stranded.” Back to WPRB and the summer in Boston. Tania Schoenagel is work­ “ Prince” as graphics editor (and cartoonist) ing at Mobil Research. Rumor (according to come fall. my younger brother) has it that Kelly Bencze is David Kaiser writes, “ The captain of chaos was in Australia modeling. (She has been named a last seen prowling the bars of “ M ” Street with a semi-finalist in the Miss New Jersey/USA page­ Margarita in one hand and a daquiri in the ant! - Ed.) other.” Hmm. From the papers we’ve learned The majority of the road trips I took thisyear that Tom Rossmassler won the soccer award at ended in Philadelphia where I visited Greg Trinity-Pawling School and was named to the Heins at Penn. Greg had a great year in Philly all Select Team-Western New England by the where he succeeded in making the Penn Prep School Soccer Association. Another ex- Lacrosse team and surviving life as a FIGI PDSer, Russell Matthews will be going to pledge. This summer, you can find Greg at the Davidson College in North Carolina. Congratulations to the Class of '87! Mantoloking Yacht Club where he is the man­ ager. On weekends you can usually find me there too. After an insane year at Kenyon run­ Q 7 Class Secretaries ning a typing business and a car that didn’t O / Craig C. Stuart want to run, I am enjoying a relaxing summer 32 Nelson Ridge Road of babysitting, construction and waitressing. I Princeton, NJ 08540 spent six weeks in Germanyand Austria visiting and relatives and brushing up on my native lan­ Sofia Xethalis guage. Lastly, many thanks to Rad Roberts who 182 Stockton Street was the only one in the entire class of ’87 to Hightstown, NJ 08520 return one of those postcards way back in Jan­ The members of the class of 1987 seem to be uary. He wrote that he was enjoying life in enjoying their alumni status. California at Stanford. Thanks Rad. For Brad Batcha, one week in Princeton was a Oh. Rebecca Sugerman played a great game lot, and after Anne McDougald’s barn bash, he of Lacrosse at the Oberlin vs. Kenyon game. returned to the beach (where he spent most of (She is ranked third in the conference with 16 his senior year anyway) for the summer. As for goals and 3 assists. -Ed.) She is currently living Anne, she worked at a summer camp for on Long Beach Island where she worked unbe­ underprivileged children. lievable hours at a bakery in order to pay her Jerry Garcia writes that Lucy Dejames made rent. Happily, the night shift hours are over for it to every show on tour. Betsy Jaffee spent the the area’s landscaping market with his partner her and she is getting down to the real business summer in Italy on AFS, and wrote: “ It’s really John Derochi. Western Landscaping, the new of having fun at the beach. nice but also really boring... But I’m having a and improved Lawn Squad, is paving the way Well, until next time, Cheerio kids. If you are good time, so who’s complaining? CIAO!” for Jon and Andy’s first million. Among the driving west on route 70, take an extra hour in Unfortunately, James Weatherill didn’t enjoy company’s employees is Rich Pagano who, Ohio and come 30 miles north to visit John France quite as much, he claims that he was after a year at Cornell being chilly, returned to Totaro and me at Kenyon. We could enjoy the beat up by a gang, over a bottle of water. the position of "favorite untermenschen” in vast scope of activities the Central Ohio area Becca Royal and Lisa Lavinson also visited the Western Landscaping hierarchy. Rich has has to offer. If you’re not in the area why not France. They toured the country on their own, taken this week off however, and is warming write me and find out exactly what these activi­ and ran out of money within 2 weeks. Tracy up for this year’s soccer season by coaching ties are. Needle, as we suspected, worked at the Met young children at an area soccer camp. Jamie From Scott: Ann Miller writes, "I’m having a and lived in New York. Randy Walter worked at Mayer is working at a stable and part-time at great timeat Macalester” thisyearand says she Princeton Summer Theater as the master car­ the New Princeton Charcuterie. Erin Scott tells is planning to spend the summer here (in St. penter for all four plays. He also spent some of a great year at Swarthmore. In July she spent Paul, MN). Stephen Carpenter tells of his work­ time in MG country and loved it. Andrew two weeks in Italy with her parents while on ing in Paterson, NJ fora volunteer organization Blechman milked cows in Vermont and did vacation from her job at Squibb. Catherine called Habitat For Humanity. He is helping Outward Bound in Colorado and came back Barone suffered a painful back injury during construct four new town houses for low-income with a beard. His summation: “ Big Deal.’’ field hockey season at Bucknell but is continu­ families. Much of the labor and materials are Donamari D’Andrea performed in the Wizard ing to waitress (and break records in balancing donated and the mortgages are interest-free of Oz and worked full time this summer and coffee cups) at the Princetonian diner this (and last for 20 years). "I live at a Christian she a I ready has some dance audit ions set up for summer. Karl Chaing spent a long year at Col­ mission downtown.... having an interesting this fall. Jen Altman held four or five different gate. Last summer he travelled to Maine on time and wouldn’t trade it for anything." I, jobs this summer and is now at some unknown Outward Bound. This experience has led him Scott Fulmer, have been working this summer university. M ichele Colodney has been seen at to an active interest in outdoor education as (3 mos.) for the National Park Service (U.S. numerous parties this summer. Kiki Wolf kill? well as a position of counselor/trail leader at Dept, of the Interior) as a Park Ranger in the For those of you who don't see your name in camp in Blairstown. Brit Bromley and I recently North Cascades National Park in Washington. this column extraordinaire, but would like to, spent some time lost in the streets of Philadel­ I‘m stationed on Copper Ridge (known as the send a post card! — Love Sofia and Craig. And phia. Brit is looking forward to being an RA this for the grand finale, a few words from SKJ. year at Macalester. I also ran into Heather (Stephen Kent Jusick.) “ I continue to further D’Adamo who told me of the pros and cons of my academic and cultural education here at Bernard. Lael Marshall flew to Italy in May on a Pembroke College/Oxford University in U. Michigan program. This trip included a England. ... I've taken covert trips to Birming­ weekend run up to Munich, Germany where ham and London, as well as authorized ones. she refreshed herself with the best of Ger­ Curfew (ostensibly 11 pm) hasturned out to be many. Lael is looking forward to a road trip a joke.. .I’ve learned that drinking exists out­ ending in Oklahoma before returning to Mich­ side PDS (as I’ve intellectually known for some igan. Chris Osander is currently living in time) but not sampled any British brews event Provincetown where he is rumored to be though I am of legal age — 18 in England.” doing theater work for the summer. Our Erik Johansen writes, “This summer I've belated congratulations to Chris on his impres­ been working at M icrocon Computer Centers. sive theater debut at Brown. Cary Paik was last I plan to go to Earlham Colie in the fall. My seen in an extreme fit of boredom throwing family is moving to Granger, Indiana and both frogs into Tom Rossmassler’s pool and chasing The last of the Boninis graduated from PDS this my parents are going to teach at Notre Dame. them. He has only good things to say about year and her family was on hand for the Everyone, have fun in college. If you ever get to R. I. S. D. and its effect onhimisvisible. Hedida occasion. L. to R., Jamie '81, Jennifer '87, Nancy Indiana, stop in. Our new address is: 51385 great re-arrangement of plants on New Year’s '77 and Jack ’75. Hunting Ridge Trail, Granger, IN 46530.”

67 IN MEMORIAM

The Alumni Association extends its deepest sympathy to the families of the following alumni.

Francis Sinclair Salmon MFS '34 Christine Durand le Denmat MFS '61 John Roberts PCD '64 John Bragg PDS '74 Peter Merle-Smith PDS '85

PDS Calendar 1987-1988 Campaign Kick-Off Party ...... Thanksgiving Assembly...... Wednesday, November 25th, 11:00 a.m. Drama Club Fall Play ...... Christmas Tree Sales...... Lower School Christmas Program ...... Middle School Holiday Concert ...... Upper School Candlelight Service ...... Friday, December 18th, 11:00 a.m. Christmas Reunion ...... Alumnae Ice Hockey G am e ...... Alumni Ice Hockey G am e ...... Alumni Basketball G a m e ...... PDS Boys Ice Hockey Tournament...... Drama Club Musical ...... Sunday, March 6th, 2:30 p.m. Architecture Career D ay ...... Grandparent's D ay ...... PDS Fair...... Blue/White Field D a y ...... Alumni D a y ...... Commencement......

68 PRINCETON DAY SCHOOL BOARD OF TRUSTEES Winton H. Manning, Chairman Clifford A. Goldman James S. Regan, Vice Chairman William S. Greenberg John J. Southwick, Treasurer Peter W. Hegener Richard F. Ober, Assistant Treasurer Lesley Loser Johnston '66 Marilyn W. Grounds, Secretary Lynn D. Johnston Anne E. Thompson, Assistant Secretary J. Parry Jones Duncan W. Ailing, Headmaster Pamela S. Kelsey Arthur M. Bylin Samuel W. Lambert III Morton Collins Yuki Moore Laurenti '75 Judith E. Feldman Peter R. Rossmassler '47 Olivia C. Fill Ira Silverman Thomas E. Gardner Howard F. Taylor

PRINCETON DAY SCHOOL ALUMNI COUNCIL Lesley Loser Johnston '66, Katherine Burks Hackett '75 President Pamela Herrick '75 Leighton H. Laughlin, Jr. '64, Laurie P. LaPlaca '76 Vice President Mary Sword McDonough '75 William H. Walker '62 Archibald S. Reid '65 Secretary/T reasurer Joseph B. Stevens III '58 Gale M. Colby '69 Ann M. Wiley '70 Coleman D. Donaldson, Jr. '62 PRINCETON DAY SCHOOL P.O. Box 75 Princeton, NJ 08542 NON-PROFIT ORG. U.S. Postage PAID Permit No. 270 Princeton, NJ