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The Brooklyn College Foundation Annual Report, 2005–2006
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Page 1: The Brooklyn College Foundation Annual Report,2005–2006 · 2018-06-14 · Annual Report for 2005–2006 and to report to you about the ... period 2005–2010, was prepared in consultation

The Brooklyn College Foundation

Annual Report, 2005–2006

Page 2: The Brooklyn College Foundation Annual Report,2005–2006 · 2018-06-14 · Annual Report for 2005–2006 and to report to you about the ... period 2005–2010, was prepared in consultation
Page 3: The Brooklyn College Foundation Annual Report,2005–2006 · 2018-06-14 · Annual Report for 2005–2006 and to report to you about the ... period 2005–2010, was prepared in consultation
Page 4: The Brooklyn College Foundation Annual Report,2005–2006 · 2018-06-14 · Annual Report for 2005–2006 and to report to you about the ... period 2005–2010, was prepared in consultation
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Dear Friends of Brooklyn CollegeThe 2005–2006 Brooklyn College Foundation Annual Report appears

just as Brooklyn College completes one five-year strategic plan and

embarks on a new one. We have therefore taken the opportunity to

look back on the last five years and reflect on the progress the College

has made toward its goals and to glance ahead as our work continues,

governed still by the same ideals.

Brooklyn College serves three important constituencies: its

students, its faculty, and its borough. It does so by attracting the best

graduating high school students of the borough and giving them a

sound liberal education and preparation for a career in a helpful and

supportive setting; by recruiting highly qualified new members

to its faculty and supporting their efforts in the classroom and their

professional advancement; and by opening its gates and its campus to the surrounding community

and dedicating its resources in inquiry, knowledge, and skills to the interests and advantage of

the borough.

Brooklyn College performs these services by maintaining and improving its academic quality,

making students the center of its endeavor, and taking its civic responsibilities seriously. This annual

report examines how the College has done these things during the last five years and describes the

results in concrete detail.

The College’s achievements, which are real, result from a concerted effort by our students, faculty,

staff, and administration; our elected officials in the borough of Brooklyn, the city of New York,

and the state of New York; and the perennially loyal and generous alumni and friends of the College.

I thank you all most sincerely and look forward to our continuing work together.

Christoph M. KimmichPresident

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Dear Alumni and FriendsIt is a great pleasure to present the Brooklyn College Foundation

Annual Report for 2005–2006 and to report to you about the

exciting developments at both the College and the Foundation

over the past year.

I am proud to serve as chairman of the Foundation at a time

when the College is undergoing a tremendous renaissance, including

a major campaign to rebuild and revitalize our beautiful campus

and a renewed commitment to academic excellence. All of us at the

Foundation are grateful to President Christoph M. Kimmich for

his leadership and vision.

The Brooklyn College Foundation supports the College in many

ways, not the least of which is to raise and steward private funding.

During the past year we have hired professional fundraising staff, established a new active committee

structure for the board, and developed new programs in major gifts and planned giving.

These efforts have already paid off, enabling the Foundation to substantially increase its

commitment to scholarships, faculty development, and major capital projects.

We recognize that quality higher education is a critical prerequisite for success: Brooklyn College

makes a huge difference in the lives of students today, as it did for my generation and yours. I encourage

you to join us in our mission of providing affordable quality higher education to successive generations

of BC students.

Your gift ensures that the College will continue to provide scholarships, attract and retain

outstanding faculty, and build and maintain a beautiful campus, making us all proud of the College

that has meant so much to us.

Marjorie Magner, ’69ChairmanBrooklyn College Foundation

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borou

student-c

academic q

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ugh of Brooklyn

In 2005, the first five-year strategic plan of President Christoph

Kimmich’s administration concluded, and a second plan, for the

period 2005–2010, was prepared in consultation with the College

community and promulgated by the president. This annual report

looks back on the College’s achievements under President Kimmich’s

first strategic plan and, briefly, ahead to the aspirations of his

second, with respect to three goals of particular interest to the friends

and benefactors of Brooklyn College:

1. Maintaining and improving the academic

quality of the College,

2. Creating a student-centered campus, and

3. Strengthening the College’s relations with

the borough of Brooklyn.

-centered campus

c quality

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The academic quality of Brooklyn College results from the

College’s sound academic programs, from its well-prepared and

highly motivated students, and from its growing faculty of

ambitious young teacher-scholars.

Academic ProgramsThe Brooklyn College core curriculum, a general education

program of eleven required courses, brought the College to national

prominence when it was adopted twenty-five years ago, at the

outset of a great back-to-basics movement in American higher

education. The core, which became our signature program, owes

its long life to a series of adjustments, modifications, and reforms

over the years. Recently, in the most extensive rethinking to date,

we divided the curriculum into two tiers, one for each half of a

four-year undergraduate course of study, and gave greater depth

and concentration to its natural science component.

The College’s M.F.A. programs are the most prestigious of its

graduate offerings, and, among these, the creative writing program

is particularly outstanding. An endowment created by a gift of

Irwin and Carole Lainoff, both of the Class of 1953, and another

generous gift by Himan Brown, ’34, enable Michael Cunningham,

Pulitzer Prize–winning novelist and coordinator of the fiction

program, to sponsor public readings, invite writers-in-residence,

award an annual student literary prize, and offer scholarships

to a select group of talented candidates. The program has attained

national stature and attracts young poets, playwrights, and

novelists of unprecedented quality.

StudentsAs a matter of policy, Brooklyn College recruits the best students

graduating from the borough’s high schools. To that end, we have

raised the academic standards of our entering freshman class every

year since fall 2000, recently appointed a new enrollment services

officer, and strengthened our recruitment effort. In fall 2006, the

average SAT score of regularly admitted first-time freshmen was

1137 and their mean high school academic average was 85.5.

Incoming freshmen at Brooklyn College have the highest SAT

math scores in the University. Honors College students entering

Brooklyn College this fall were the most highly qualified in the

University, with an average SAT score of 1412 and a mean high

school academic average of 94.8.

Academic Quality

Philanthropy and Strategy

Barry Feirstein, ’74, head of Feirstein Capital

Management, saw that creating an endowment for

our Presidential Scholarships, the College’s most

prestigious and most generous undergraduate

award, would free up funds that could then be

applied to the College’s many other needs. He

stirred his fellow Brooklyn College Foundation

trustees to action by offering a matching grant of

up to $100,000. The fund thus inaugurated has

grown to $805,000 and supports eight Presidential

Scholarships in perpetuity.

“Endowing scholarships so that the College can

dispose more freely of its scarce public funds is one

of the great services that members of the Foundation

board can perform for their alma mater,” says

Feirstein. Presidential Scholarships attract top-quality

students, and the public funds thus released go to

raising standards and improving programs.

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To improve the quality of its programs in the natural sciences

and extend opportunities to talented students, Brooklyn College

participates actively in a number of national initiatives. Minority

Opportunities in Research, for example, a program of the National

Institutes of Health, has awarded the College $430,000 in annual

support for its Research Initiative for Scientific Enhancement,

intended for underrepresented minorities. In 2006, the Brooklyn

College science faculty won a coveted $3.2 million Support of

Continuous Research Excellence grant that will fund opportunities

for students in new biomedical research for the next five years.

Since 2000, there has been a leap in the number and prestige

of postgraduate scholarships awarded to graduating seniors.

Brooklyn College students have won Fulbright, Beinecke, Mellon,

Gates Millennium, National Science Foundation, Salk, Truman,

and Rhodes scholarships.

FacultyAfter an interval of nearly twenty-five years, Brooklyn College

resumed academic hiring in the late 1990s, and young teacher-

scholars of exceptional quality appointed since fall 2000 now

make up 37 percent of our full-time

teaching faculty. They have

revitalized our academic

departments, improved the quality

of our teaching, introduced new

programs, and, together with senior

faculty, won over $10 million in

research grants in 2006. To give

new faculty a solid foundation at

the College, we have established a

full orientation program that focuses

on pedagogy and professional

development, and, with the help of

the Brooklyn College Foundation,

we offer our faculty travel funds

and remunerated time for research.

All these efforts have brought

Brooklyn College to the attention

of the Princeton Review, whose

2005 edition of America’s Best Value Colleges ranked the College

third of seventy-seven colleges and praised its “rigorous” academics,

offered at a “ridiculously affordable” tuition fee.

Quality Academic quality is anchored in a commitment to the highest standards in teaching and learning, in the creative arts, in research and scholarship.

—From the 2005–2010 Brooklyn College Strategic Plan

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Brooklyn College prepares its students not only by offering them

sound, well-taught academic programs, but also by supporting and

enriching their college careers and easing their way at critical passages.

We are especially attentive to the needs of entering freshmen

and of upperclassmen choosing careers and seeking employment,

and to a general embellishment of all our students’ lives.

SupportThe introduction of entering freshmen to college life is a moment

of great consequence to our students’ academic success and general

well-being. Effective freshman orientation contributes to

the quality of our students’ course work, their stamina

and resilience over the long term, and their

preparedness for a second great transition

at graduation.

The First College Year, a prize-

winning orientation program

inaugurated in 1998, intends to create

a sense of belonging and of solidarity

and an ethos of mutual support

among the members of each entering

class. During the summer before

matriculation, each class of newly

admitted freshmen reads one book of

particular interest. This common reading—

Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close by Jonathan

Safran Foer in summer 2006—becomes a subject of discussion

during orientation, when the author appears on campus. At

orientation, entering students are invited to join cohorts of

approximately twenty-five that remain together for freshman

core and composition courses and for attentive counseling by

our academic advisement office, which has been reorganized to

gain our students’ trust and to intervene swiftly and effectively

when students fall into difficulties. This protracted effort to

foster an admitted class raised our first-year retention rate from

75.5% in 2000 to 83.4% two years later.

Brooklyn College students, famously, are career-minded, and

as they advance through their course of study, their minds turn

toward choosing a career, preparing themselves, and finding work.

The Magner Center for Career Development and Internships,

a gift of Marjorie Magner, ’69, chairman of the board of the

Brooklyn College Foundation, advises students about careers,

prepares them for interviews, places them in internships, matches

them with alumni mentors, and supports them psychologically as

they are about to leave college and take up full-time employment.

It is one of the most sought-after and most effective sources of

support on campus.

EnrichmentOur students’ lives are enriched most notably by the expansive

academic and cultural offerings of the Brooklyn College Honors

Academy. These offerings were further enlarged and

improved in 2003 by our first endowed professorship,

a gift to the Honors Academy by Carol Zicklin, ’61.

The professorship rotates at two-year intervals

and attracts particularly accomplished scholars

to the faculty.

Our Honors Academy gives students

New York City and all its endless resources

and possibilities; our stipends and scholarships

for travel and study abroad give them the world.

Gifts made since 2000 by Roy Furman, ’60,

and by Leonard and Claire Tow, ’50 and ’52,

respectively, have created a fund of nearly $40,000

from which our students draw stipends that take them to

every continent for travel, laboratory and archival research,

language instruction, and archaeological digs. They return to

the College transformed by the experience, like their benefactors

years ago.

New Physical PlantThe pride of the current administration is the physical

transformation of the campus by renovation and new construction

and its contribution to our students’ lives and the life of the

entire community.

• The new library, renovated and greatly enlarged in a particularly

happy marriage of new architecture and old and furnished

through generous gifts from our alumni, opened in 2001.

Student-Centered Campus

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Beautiful, habitable, and technologically preeminent, the library

is the joy of our student body and a showpiece of the campus.

• The Topfer Library Café and its courtyard, made possible

by a gift of Morton, ’59, and Angela Topfer, opened in 2000

and met with such demand that it was doubled in capacity

five years later, with the help of the New York City Council.

• The West Quad building for athletics and student services was

a dream in 2000; in 2006, it is an enormous construction site

moving, without substantial delay, toward completion in 2009.

• Roosevelt Hall, which will be vacated when athletics moves to

the West Quad building, is to become a desperately needed,

long-overdue new science facility, for which preliminary

financing has been procured and concrete planning has begun.

• A performing arts center, with theater, chamber music, and

gallery space, will rise between Whitman and Gershwin halls.

The capital campaign for a combination of public and private

funding, led by a challenge grant of $10 million by Leonard,

’50, and Claire, ’52, Tow and joined by many members of the

Brooklyn College Foundation Board, is well advanced, and

architects are about to be retained.

Campus Brooklyn College measures its success to no small extent by its ability to attract and retain top quality students and, in due course, launch themconfidently into the future. Students stay and graduate if they study in a setting that is welcoming and hospitable and that helps them becomepart of the College community through interaction with their instructors,their advisers, and their peers.

—From the 2005–2010 Brooklyn College Strategic Plan

An Exemplary Benefactor

Don Buchwald, ’59, who majored in speech and

theater, runs one of the leading voice and talent

agencies in the country and knows about show business.

He extends his generosity, sponsorship, and protection

not only to celebrities but also to Brooklyn College

students, whom he has taught, coached, and engaged

as interns. Buchwald has pledged $1.3 million toward

the new performing arts center and thus toward the

training and the successful careers of generations of

Brooklyn College students in theater and music.

“I am proud to support the campaign for a

performing arts center at Brooklyn College and, with

my gift, to express my gratitude to the College for its

immense contribution to my career in the

entertainment industry,” Buchwald says. “I want

future generations of talented and ambitious students

to enjoy, as I did, the inspiration, the dedicated

teaching, and the vital practical experience that lead

to rewarding careers in this exciting field.”

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Brooklyn’s College Since 2000, as a matter of explicit policy, Brooklyn College has

undertaken to enlarge and improve its presence in the borough.

In a new initiative, the College makes its campus welcoming and

its facilities available to the surrounding community at little or

no cost. It vigorously extends the services and resources of its

School of Education to schools throughout the borough, opens

its highly respected Speech and Hearing Center to the public,

explores the history and current affairs of the borough at an

institute dedicated to that purpose, and contributes to

Brooklyn’s economic development.

The School of Education, in cooperation with New Visions

for Public Schools, a project of the Bill and Melinda Gates

Foundation, and greatly assisted by Brooklyn College Foundation

trustee George Friedman, ’56, has worked to strengthen Wingate,

Bushwick, Erasmus Hall, Thomas Jefferson, and Prospect Heights

high schools. At Erasmus, for example, the College sponsors a

Science, Technology and Research High School that prepares

students interested in science and technology for college.

The Speech and Hearing Center of the College’s Department

of Speech Communication Arts and Sciences, one of the oldest

and most respected clinics in the country, conducts important new

research, trains speech pathologists, and provides clinical services

for the general public. Thousands of children and adults with

developmental and acquired disorders of articulation, phonology,

language, and voice come to the center for diagnostic evaluation

and therapy.

The Center for the Study of Brooklyn, founded in 2005,

is the only public policy research center devoted exclusively to

the borough. The center has sponsored a conference on housing

displacement in Brooklyn, the dark side of the borough’s economic

revival. It is exploring the economic future of Nostrand Avenue at

the Junction and

studying Coney Island

Avenue near the College,

where Orthodox Jews

and Sunni Muslims live

together peacefully and

run prosperous small

businesses in a reviving,

thriving neighborhood.

The College’s interest

in the economic revival

of Brooklyn expresses

itself concretely in the

Flatbush-Nostrand

Business Improvement

District, established by

the College and others

in May 2006. The

Junction BID comes as a

new Target store is being

constructed at the corner

of Nostrand and Avenue I and as negotiations begin for a Barnes &

Noble bookstore nearby—just as the borough’s economic revival

reaches central Brooklyn and our doorstep.

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College

In Retrospect and ProspectBrooklyn College has renewed and revived itself hand-in-hand

with the borough of Brooklyn. It is our ambition to be and

remain the preeminent institution of our class: a well-run,

productive, and expanding public urban college that gives its

upwardly mobile students a sound undergraduate education and

preparation for a career, fosters the professional development of an

ever stronger faculty, and contributes importantly to the life of the

surrounding community and the borough at large. Realizing this

ambition depends not only on efforts within our walls but also,

and importantly, on the loyalty, generosity, and support of alumni

and friends of the College. Their contribution is large, obvious,

and indispensable in everything we do.

Brooklyn College is respected beyond its walls as an educational andcultural resource, a source of continuing education programs on and offcampus, a partner in community development, and an exemplar of serviceand volunteer activities.

—From the 2005–2010 Brooklyn College Strategic Plan

The Cost of Keeping Current

Diana Rogovin Davidow, ’66; M.A., ’73, earned her

undergraduate degree in speech and her graduate

degree in education with specialization in speech and

hearing of the handicapped. She then returned to the

College’s diagnostic speech labs as adjunct lecturer

and clinician. She remained interested and engaged

in our Speech and Hearing Center after she moved

to Los Angeles, where she continued to practice as

a speech pathologist. In response to an appeal by

Professor Gail Gurland, deputy chairperson of the

Department of Speech Communication Arts and

Sciences, Diana Davidow made a major gift that has

enabled the center to build a state-of-the-art “smart

classroom” and a research laboratory for faculty and

students, and to purchase all the necessary materials

and equipment.

“The gift I was given at Brooklyn College set me

on a course for life,” Davidow says. “The Brooklyn

College Speech and Hearing Center is second to

none, a position it can maintain only if it can

anticipate and acquire the physical resources necessary

to serve the center’s educators and clients. Therefore,

instead of targeting my gift to a new program that

might be more visible, I have chosen to contribute to

the purchase of resources for an established program

that continues to change the lives of students and

clients alike.”

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Individual Donors$500,000 and overMorton L. Topfer, ’59Anonymous (1)

$250,000–$499,999Donald Kramer, ’58

$100,000–$249,999Willard, ’68, and Eleanor, ’67,

ArchieHiman Brown, ’34James Fantaci, ’68Irwin, ’56, and Concepcion S.

FedermanBarry R. Feirstein, ’74Roy L. Furman, ’60Michael S. Gardner, ’61Murray Koppelman, ’57Michael Lynne, ’61Marjorie Magner, ’69Alexander M. Tanger, ’01Leonard, ’50, and Claire, ’52, TowHoward Wohl, ’64

$50,000–$99,999Donald Buchwald, ’59Diana Davidow, ’66Herbert Kurz, ’41

$25,000–$49,999Sam E. Beller, ’59Milton Blander, ’50Richard, ’68, and Rosanne, ’69,

GaccioneBernard H. Garil, ’62Ilene Gold, ’62Harold HaidtPatricia HassettAlice P. HenkinIrwin Schneiderman, ’43Peter Thorner, ’65

$10,000–$24,999Fran Schwartz, ’73, Belasco, and

Steven, ’67, BelascoJoseph S. Fisher, ’52Clifford J. Friedman, ’48Robert M., ’59, and Arlene

Jagoda, ’64, GoldbergMarshall G. Kaplan, ’49Christoph and Flora KimmichGloria Itzkowitz Levy, ’64Marcia Kramer MayerRonald B. Milch, ’55Paul Z. Miles, ’59Vincent J. Motto, ’38Marvin L. Schwartz, ’43Eli Shapiro, ’36John, ’41, and Florence, ’41,

SolomonZachary Solomon, ’57Jay W. Wertheimer, ’53

$5,000–$9,999Marcus Alexis, ’53Oheneba Boachie-Adjei, ’76Lynda Tepfer Carlson, ’65Tamara CaseyJonathan A. Chanis, ’81Albert and Eleanor CostantinoGeorge Edelman, ’42 Charles, ’52, and Estelle, ’52,

FeigenbaumBarbara Leslie Gerber, ’62Shirley Raphael Imber, ’45Myron, ’52, and Thelma, ’54,

KandelSaul B. Katz, ’60Michael, ’66, and Michelle, ’68,

KwatinetzNeal, ’67, and Marilyn, ’68, LeleikoMorris Mark, ’61Maria Catalano Rand, ’93, and

Archie RandSteven RothE. Gary Villanueva, ’88Stanley Zimmering, ’47

$2,500–$4,999Stephen M. Bernstein, ’62Joseph, ’66, and Nita Becker, ’68,

GottesmanHelen M. Snyder Granatelli, ’36Michael Gustave, ’64Frances A. HessMarlene HessRobert M. Kaufman, ’51Pamela Kendall, ’76Stuart Kessler, ’50Julian, ’56, and Kay, ’57, KienLes KrugerJohn S. LevyNorman and Constance LevyAdelay Liss, ’43Michael MinikesSidney W. Mintz, ’43Edward and Pamela PantzerAlan, ’67, and Enid, ’68, ParnessMadelon Leventhal Rand, ’64, and

Lawrence RandJames, ’45, and Gloria, ’58, RiordanGerald, ’43, and Ruth, ’45,

RosenbaumJames J. RossDonald, ’49, and Doris Freed, ’49,

ShafferHenry SheinkopfElliot Tannenbaum, ’72Jeff TarrAdele M. Towbin, ’37Elisabeth WeisCarol L. Zicklin, ’61Joel, ’62, and Candice Zwick

$1,000 –$2,499Catha Abrahams, ’56Elsie L. Adler, ’53Alan and Arlene AldaHope Finegold Alper, ’72William Aron, ’52Selma AronsonMartin, ’48, and Cecile, ’65, BalserPhylis S. Bamberger, ’60Rhoda Wasserman Baruch, ’44Frances Bauer, ’43Michael B. Becker, ’66Sidney Beinfest, ’38Paul BormanStewart, ’61, and Barbara, ’62,

BoxerSeymour Brandwein, ’44Nathan Cedars, ’39Philippe G. Charles, ’78Hilliard Charner, ’42Edwin H. Cohen, ’62Albert E. Dazzo, ’60Jerry Della Femina, ’57R. Bruce, ’63, and Madelyn, ’64,

DonoffMichael EisenbudPeter and Lorinda EzerskyJeffrey D. Fleigel, ’67Floyd A. Fried, ’57Ann Merker Gold, ’56Saul Grey, ’52Ira, ’51, and Roberta, ’51, HarkavyCarl, ’56, and Frances, ’59, HarnickJay R. HarrisSally HenryCaroline Hirsch and Andrew FoxIra Hirschbach, ’67Selna L. Kaplan, ’48Roger Karlebach and Elaine

WhitmanSeymour Katz, ’52George S. KaufmanEmanuel Kelmenson, ’50Leonard Kelson, ’55, in memory of

Selma Lurie Kelson, ’54Francine S. KittredgeSamuel A., ’48, and Myrna KleinMilton L. Kleinman, ’38Ronald KoneckyLynn R. Kruger, ’53Irwin, ’53, and Carole, ’53, LainoffRichard and Barbara LaneVernon E. LattinRoslyn Perluck Latto, ’42Frank M. Lavadera, ’76Gregor LazarcikJudith LittleJoseph G. Lombardino, ’54Anna London, ’33Daniel M. Lyons, ’39Bruce MacIntyreStuart MacLelland, ’87Lester J. Mantell, ’58James S. MarcusHedvig Mayer

Thank You!The Trustees of the

Brooklyn College

Foundation

gratefully

acknowledge the

donors whose gifts

received between

July 1, 2005, and

June 30, 2006,

helped the College

achieve its mission.

Their generosity has

contributed to new

construction, a

growing endowment,

additional

scholarships for

deserving students,

and continuing

recruitment of an

ever stronger faculty.

We are especially

gratified that our

alumni and friends

give in growing

numbers. Your gifts

perpetuate a

tradition of high-

quality, affordable

education for well-

prepared, ambitious,

dedicated students.

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Bert Melnick, ’56Wilma, ’69, and Charles MooneyRichard A. NaimoliEllen, ’64, and Gerald, ’63, PrinceIda Quina, ’43Samuel, ’49, and Dorothy, ’51,

RabinoffRichard, ’65, and Wilma, ’66, RappMikail RolingSylvia Rothchild, ’44Barry, ’66, and Ronnie, ’68,

RothenhausEdith Pemberton Sancroft, ’59Maurice Schaller, ’37Tomasina P. Schiro, ’69Priscilla Schube, ’64George Schwartzman, ’40Hank Seiden, ’45Alan Sheldon, ’63Spencer E. Sherman

Bruce H. Simon, ’56Alan, ’71, and Sharon, ’73, SingerPaul Skittone, ’90Sam, ’38, and Myrna SkurnickMorton, ’57, and Nancy, ’61,

SpitzerElmer D. SpragueJerry Stahl, ’62George Sternlieb, ’50Anna R. Sullivan, ’69Cora E. TangneyRonald and Adele TauberRobert TrippJean and Raymond TroubhGary W. Tydings, ’83

Charles S. Vizzini, ’56Thomas, ’57, and Anita, ’69, VolpeRoberta Rose Wallach, ’53Murray, ’47, and Phyllis Ratner, ’47,

WarschauerEllen Tremper WayneJack, ’43, and Evelyn, ’43,

WeinsteinMorris, ’42, and Shirley, ’45,

WeinsteinStephen H. Weinstein, ’68Verne M. Weisberg, ’74Lottie K. Weldon, ’86Andrew D. Weyman, ’73Charlotte A. Wingate, ’53Margaret E. Winters, ’67Abraham Wolf, ’56Rosalind Wolfson, ’49Leo Zanderer, ’60Anonymous (1)

$500–$999Anthony F. Amante, ’50Arienne S. Balser, ’50Martin BandierVictor, ’62, and Sherry, ’64, BardackEvelyn Bishop, ’43H. Spencer BlochPrudence CarlsonArthur W. Chester, ’61Mildred Clinton, ’34Samuel Cohen, ’56Joseph L. Davis, ’67Anthony, ’01, and Susan EllisJeffrey S. Farbman, ’86James, ’56, and Sondra

Silverman, ’59, Farganis

Lori Feiner-Scott, ’72Robert A. Feldman, ’62Morton Foelak, ’53Agnes Ford, ’69S. Dorothy Metzger Fox, ’51Eli A. Friedman, ’53Lauren Diamond Friedman, ’67Fred M., ’71, and Roben

Genison, ’72, GersonHenry, ’66, and Barbara, ’66,

GinsbergMarlene Ginsberg-DiChiacchioHelen GinsburgSteven GoldenbergLeon GortlerSara Gronim, ’92Marjorie Gruverman, ’55Leonard, ’56, and Susan, ’72,

GugickNancy M. Hager

Penny E. Horowitz, ’71, and Michael E. Horowitz, ’71

Adelaide S. Hurst, ’72Ira H. Inemer, ’61Eleanor Wicentowski Jaffe, ’56Reuel M. and Julia V. JordanMartin P. Juvelier, ’62Edwin Kaplan, ’55Howard and Ellen KatzLeanora B. Katzman, ’53Judith S. Kerner, ’67Béla K. KirályRonald, ’65, and Barbara

Kobrin, ’65, KleinGeorge, ’53, and Lillian, ’53, KnightSteven F. Kruger

Claire A. Lambkin, ’53Randi Leavitt, ’72Mitchell, ’62, and Sherlyn LippmanJay K. Lucker, ’51Aaron LuktonSusan D. Lutwak, ’70Archie MacGregorTheodore Malek, ’60Renee Meyer Margulies, ’55Elaine Marsh, ’73Herbert, ’40, and Estelle K., ’48,

MeislichElizabeth, ’61, and Melvin, ’61,

MillerMartin and Madge MillerGeorge Neuman, ’74Estelle Perry, ’53Beverly Heiden Peterkofsky, ’53Ruth H. Phillips, ’39William Poel, ’37Betty Popper, ’43Deborah Poritz, ’58Gerald J. Post, ’64Harriet, ’65, and Lawrence RaderStuart A. Rice, ’52Cynthia Pincus Rothstein, ’64Teofilo F. RuizSol Sackel, ’47Dennis, ’69, and Regina, ’69,

SantellaLawrence SaperHal Schaffer, ’56Eugene, ’62, and Eleanor, ’67,

SchlossPaul Schulder, ’34Natalie Schwartzberg, ’60Barry B., ’68, and Linda

Namer, ’68, SeidelMarilyn C. Shavel, ’55C. Julie Siegel-Kotler, ’60Gloria, ’64, and Ira, ’61, SlutzkySidney, ’42, and Bertha, ’43, SteinKathryn N. SteinbergSatish P. TandonIrene TseJoel, ’74, and Ellen, ’74, WaksmanZelda Warner, ’56Courtney Williams, ’83Alexander D. WohlCarol T. Wolowitz, ’58Marion Zapolin, ’69

$100–$499Ervand AbrahamianBlanche Wohl Abramov, ’61Nicole AbramsAlan and Karen AdlerBeryl Adler, ’67Vita Brucia Alaimo, ’35Craig J. AlbertMarie F. Alexander, ’73Philip, ’67, and Rosalie, ’71, AlfieriBetty C. Allen, ’86Lee Alperin, ’55Debra A. Alpert, ’80Naomi Alpert, ’52

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Roberta J. AmbrosinoMarvin, ’56, and Joan AndermanTimothy AngleSally Antman-Gleicher, ’69Jeffrey Appel, ’70Phyllis Applebaum, ’65Debby Applegate and Bruce Tulgan,

in memory of Gertrude Rod Tulgan

Eneas Arkawy, ’48Alfred Arnold, ’49Irving Aronow, ’59David, ’50, and Joan, ’56, AskinasiPeter A. Atkins, ’65Dorothy AuerbachEdmund T. Austin, ’61Lucia AvanyMichael E. Avidon, ’77Fred Badalamenti, ’67Diane Gitlin Baden, ’68Laurence Baker, ’62Kenneth, ’68, and Linda, ’68, BallanTzvi and Marion BarakMelvin, ’50, and Rita, ’53, BaraschElaine Gordon Bard, ’51Harriet Barnett, ’51Alan Baron, ’52Harry Baron, ’50Reuben M. Baron, ’57Catherine Barron, ’75Richard BaschAnte, ’90, and Maria Leone BasicNancy Baskin, ’63Emil L. Battaglia, ’42Shel BattermanKenneth Batzar, ’59Seymour, ’44, and Fay BaumHoward Becker, ’65Jeffrey A. BeckerRuby Gold, ’56, and

Eugene H., ’58, BeckerBernard Beitel, ’52Lila T. Belanoff, ’56Allen Beldock, ’40Warren Belmar, ’63Marilyn Belous, ’56Anthony Benfatti, ’83Fannie S. Benson, ’39Michael H. Bergen, ’94Lance, ’65, and Dorothy, ’65,

BergerPaul M. Berger, ’82Rita Berger, ’48Morton Berlan, ’52Sally and Paul C. BermanzohnAlice Bernstein, ’82Bebe Bernstein, ’48Judith K. Bernstein, ’56Juliet R. Bernstein, ’33Susan D. BernsteinSara BershtelCatherine A. Best, ’82Roslyn D. Bienenstock, ’58Reva Frumkin Biers, ’47Grace E. Bileta, ’84

Linda Binkow, ’57Irwin, ’56, and Arlene BirnbaumRetta Blaney, ’87Arnold Bleiweis, ’58Neil L. Blitz, ’72Jacob, ’56, and Harriet Luft, ’61,

BlockAllen, ’65, and Jackie, ’66, BloomRobert G. Blumenthal, ’63Sheila Bock, ’73Sylvia Bokser, ’41Dawn Bolt, ’71Richard S. Boneville, ’69Ray BotvinickTerry Bovin, ’67Pola Bradman, ’74Harriet Brathwaite, ’59William H. Brawley, ’52Ralph Bray, ’42Chanah Brenenson, ’94

Nancy Berlin Brilliant, ’55Neal A. Brilliant, ’93Max Brimberg, ’54Marjorie Lewis Brotman, ’65Joseph Brownman, ’63Myrtle E. Brunson, ’85Omer Buldan, ’89Perry Burkett, ’62James F. Burns, ’74Elias Burstein, ’38Florence Buschke, ’66Jacqueline Bellows Bzostek, ’66, and

Barry Bzostek, ’66Victor L. CalabreseMaria DeBartoli Campagna, ’68Mathilda Bushel Canter, ’43Sherwood R. Cantor, ’65George D. Carroll, ’43Paul, ’50, and Elaine Carter

Pietra Candela Castelli, ’03Lucille Castori, ’49Charles CatalanoPatricia CatalanoStella L. M. Cerruti, ’73Linda Scheer Chalfin, ’56, and

Bernard ChalfinWilliam Kinwah ChanKay J. Charles, ’04Ivan CharnerBarbara Charton, ’58Maurice Chayt, ’49Chone Naing Chen, ’81Helen ChenutArkady ChercheverSandra Lebowitz Cherniack, ’56Jeffrey Chernow, ’90Barbara Chiarello, ’67Helene, ’65, and Mark, ’63,

Chinowsky

Thomas F. Chisena, ’65Barry Chiswick, ’62Jamile Choopani, ’52Arthur Chotin, ’65Laura Chunosoff, ’52Jay S. Cinamon, ’57Adrienne Dinkowitz Citrin, ’65Florence Morrison Clark, ’51Helen Cleary-Brennan, ’61Jennie Vincenza Clementi, ’56Vita Clementi, ’40David ClurmanTrudi Coakley, ’50Arnold Cohen, ’54Betty J. Cohen, ’52Douglas H. CohenFran W. Cohen, ’54Gary Cohen, ’56Gloria Cohen, ’53

Harvey, ’61, and Sandra, ’64, CohenIrwin A. CohenJerome, ’64, and Sherry

Shulman, ’67, CohenKatherine Alexander Cohen, ’58Leonard Cohen, ’59Martin A. Cohen, ’65Ruth L. Cohen, ’87Stanley Cohen, ’43Susan Lovinger Cohen, ’63, and

Arthur Cohen, ’63Emma L. Coles, ’76Anthony Columbia, ’55Laura S. Conte, ’52Frances Grande Conti, ’51 and

John ContiJay Cooper, ’69Estelle Coppersmith, ’46Michael, ’53, and Rosemary, ’54,

Coraggio

Roger W. Corley, ’56Lawrence J. Corneck, ’68Margaret Costa-Ricciardi, ’73Ronald Cowen, ’62Francis S. Coyle III, ’55Antoinette Crapanzano, ’72Thomas Cuffaro, ’98Arnold M. Cukier, ’67Debra E. Cumberbatch-Howard, ’73James Curran, ’65Michael Cynamon, ’66William L. Dahut, ’54Steven V. Daniels, ’63Michael L. Dantziger, ’66Leila R. Dardick, ’40Louise Davino, ’59Deborah Toback Davis, ’46Mark L. Davis, ’67

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Melvin, ’44, and Beatrice Greenapple, ’46, Davis

Irene, ’52, and Jack, ’49, DeitchEllen Kitzes Delfiner, ’61Frank Deluca, ’63Geraldine DeLucaVictor D. Dembrow, ’43Peter Denaro, ’62Edith Denny, ’39Norma DeRuggiero, ’66Dr. and Mrs. Allan DeutschHarolyn J. Devlin, ’66Beverly K. Diamond, ’68Andrew S. Dibner, ’48Jacalyn Diesenhouse, ’67Valerie, Victor, and Vivian DiMaria

Richard A. Dimentstein, ’69Gitta Nesis Diner, ’44Ronald, ’73, and Fran, ’73, DiPietroRichard P. Dober, ’53Elaine Martini Donlin, ’71Lawrence K. Dorf, ’53Victoria R. Dorf, ’62Herbert, ’51, and Esther, ’52,

DorfmanJoan Minnette Dorfman, ’63Melody Dorfman, ’76Arlene M. Doshi, ’66Judith S. Douw, ’46Stephen Dratch, ’70Madeline Park Dreifus, ’66Joan O’Connor Duffy, ’56, and

Donald Duffy

Pearl Dweck, ’64Florence Edelman, ’54Joyce Edelman, ’50Laurie EdelmanRobert, ’63, and Diane, ’68,

EdelmanMartin A. Edelstein, ’77George Edlin, ’49Marjy N. Ehmer, ’47Ellen Heit Ehrig, ’65Morton R. Eichel, ’42Rose Eiselman, ’36Alice R. Eisenberg, ’72Harvey and Roberta EisenbergMeyer, ’53, and Carolyn

Schoen, ’54, Eisenberg

Kenneth B. Eisenthal, ’54Mervyn L. Elgart, ’53Yaffa Eliach, ’67Phyllis Elman, ’65Saul, ’48, and Charlotte

Pruzansky, ’49, EngelbourgHerbert L. Ennis, ’53Anita Epstein, ’64Sylvia H. Epstein, ’57Susan Erben, ’89Doris Ercolani, ’74Howard, ’58, and Jacquelyn, ’61,

ErtelAhmet EskiciogluMr. and Mrs. José B. EspinalGloria Britton Evans, ’57Robert, ’65, and Karen, ’68, Falk

Randi S. Farber, ’81Michael Feder, ’57Beverly Feigelman, ’65Gerald, ’58, and Roberta, ’59,

FeigenMarjorie W. Fein, ’63Gary Feinberg, ’63Stephen, ’66, and Marci

(Milett), ’68, FeinbergRichard T. Feiner, ’99Kenneth S. Felder, ’72Floralee H. Felsenthal, ’44Odette N. Feltman, ’57Philip J. Feuer, ’55Milton Fidel, ’50, and Shirley Rubin

Fidel, ’56Ada Weintraub Finifter, ’59Bernard M. Fink, ’57Robert S. Fink, ’65Norma Finkelstein, ’41Steven J. Finkelstein, ’80Ted H. Finkelstein, ’75William J. FioreFrank A. Fischer, ’57Harry, ’38, and Norma, ’37,

FishbeinStephen FisherJoseph Fishman, ’49Neal, ’69, and Adrienne, ’72,

FishmanJames Flaherty, ’01Estelle Fleischmann, ’72Ellen M. Fleishman, ’72James Patrick and Teresa FocarileJoe FodorStanley, ’56, and Leah, ’57, FoodimGerald M. Forlenza, ’47Rina Forlini, ’57Robert Fox, ’59Marylin H. Frank, ’57Jeffrey S. Freed, ’66Rita Finkelman Frey, ’67Sharon A. Friedberg, ’66Albert E. Friedman, ’49Anne, ’65, and Al, ’68, FriedmanArthur, ’62, and Susan, ’62,

FriedmanClaire, ’49, and Irwin FriedmanEmanuel Friedman, ’47, and E.

Judith Friedman, ’45 Renée Cohen Friedman, ’56, and

Bernard Friedman, ’64Samuel Arthur Friedman, ’50Sidney Friedman, ’65Frank Friuli, ’55Mark Froimowitz, ’68Harold Fromm, ’54Bella FrutkinHerbert I. Fusfeld, ’41Cheryl M. Gaimon, ’77Anthony P., ’58, and Florence

GalatolaMichael Galatola, ’54Annette Morgan Galbreith, ’72Elizabeth Ludovico Gallagher, ’98

Philip F. GallagherSue S. Gallen, ’52Sam Galowitz, ’56Andrew T. GardnerLynne Furman Garelick, ’58, and

Marvin Garelick and FamilyElvia P. Gastelo, ’93Emilio P. Gautier, ’61Amy Geffen-Shapiro, ’70Joseph Gelbfish, ’76Lenore Koffler Gensior, ’56, and

Arthur GensiorFredric Gerewitz, ’80Charles Gering, Jr, ’68Susan Mirsky GersonyJosephine M. Giallombardo, ’75Peter W. Gibbs, ’60Allan Gibofsky, ’69Alan S. Gilbert, ’83Michael J. Gillen, ’58Muriel E. Gilman, ’44Harry, ’63, and Susan, ’82, GindiWilliam GinellMichele M. Ginsberg, ’66Felicia R. Gironda, ’91Frederick, ’75, and Erica, ’75,

GirshickSandra Gottesman Glassman, ’56,

and Robert Glassman, ’48Florence, ’51, and Edward, ’50,

GlickAllan E. Glickman, ’71Ira R. Globerman, ’63Marcine A. GloudonHerbert Goetz, ’88Lawrence Goetz, ’97Jeanne B. Gold, ’63Sylvia Gold, ’50Bernice Goldberg, ’50David E. GoldbergSheila R. Goldberg, ’58Alice Yaker Goldfeder, ’62Dolores Goldfinger, ’56Barry Goldin, ’63Alan, ’52, and Cynthia, ’54,

GoldmanMarcia I. Goldman, ’57Frances Klass Goldman-Levy, ’56Wayne, ’74, and Laura, ’75,

GoldnerBarry, ’66, and Rachelle, ’68,

GoldsmithGerald, ’44, and Sylvia

Dombrow, ’42, GoldsteinIrwin P. Goldstein, ’59Isabel Goldstein, ’56Marc Goldstein, ’68Ralph J. Golub, ’62Benna March Golubtchik, ’67Mary Bleakney Goodacre, ’78Muriel Goodfriend, ’45Abraham I. Goodman, ’36David, ’60, and Judith, ’60,

GoodsteinSheila Sandman Gordon, ’61

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Samuel H. Gottlieb, ’39Andrea J. GrantGeraldine S. Grant, ’65Adrienne Gray, ’56Meryl Green, ’52Vivian J. Greenberg, ’72Benn J. Greenspan, ’68Alfred J. Gregoritch, ’63Henry Grinberg, ’52Robert, ’55, and Marilyn GritzDennis P. and Sara GronimMichael GrossJay Grossman, ’63Ruth Grossman, ’42Else Grotefendt, ’56Paul, ’65, and Marilyn, ’66,

GustmanFrank Gutierrez, ’59Harold Haber, ’60Ira HaironsonLaura L. Hamilton-Ewing, ’01Marcia J. Hanfling, ’56Flavian HanleyLinda Broyde Haramati, ’82Joanne HarkinAlice Follender Harris, ’65Seymour J. Harrison, ’56Malcolm, ’53, and Adele, ’53, HastMarilyn Gitelson Hazan, ’55Anna Hecht, ’37Goldee Hecht-Meyer, ’82Florence Hedwall, ’69Leo H. Heiden, ’51Maxine M. Heiman, ’33Mona Heinze-Barreca, ’93Leon, ’51, and Rosalie, ’52, HellerRobert, ’55, and Selina Trieff, ’55,

HenryGilbert, ’75, and Nellie, ’79,

HernandezLinda Herring, ’96Ruth Klein Hersh, ’56, and

Frederick HershEdith Hersher, ’57Sadelle Hershey-Miller, ’73Lloyd Hezekiah, ’66Hal and Barbra HigginbothamCharles G. HillManny Hillman, ’49Lee B. Hilsenrath, ’56Edgar, ’57, and Barbara, ’57, HinesJudith Hirsch, ’45Fred, ’65, and Harriet, ’68,

HirschenfangEleanor M. Hirschfeld, ’36Michael Hirschklau, ’65Jules M. Hirsh, ’55Kenneth Hochman, ’63Gerald F. Hoffer, ’53Susan D. HoffmanEthel Holland, ’60Betty K. Holpert, ’44Frederic Holtzberg, ’46Evelyn Cohn HonigJohn Hoovert, ’73

Everett Hor, ’40Kenneth Horn, ’65, and Paula HornPhilip Horn, ’59Suzanne S. Horn, ’63Zoia Horn, ’39Florence HorowitzGeorge Horowitz, ’36Herbert, ’41, and Kayla, ’42,

HorowitzSylvia Teich Horowitz, ’43Mildred E. Huberman, ’45Amy Hughes, ’97Syed Husain, ’03Janet Hutter, ’78David N. Hyman, ’65Richard C. Iannuzzi, ’70Carrie Idler, ’98Leonard Ingber, ’74Joan Israel, ’65Susan Israel, ’66Michael T. Ivone, ’56Henry, ’51, and Judy JacobsMarion Kramer JacobsSusan Schwartz Jacobs and

Barry E. JacobsLeslie S. Jacobson, ’54Hildy E. Jacoby, ’80Allen, ’64, and Susan, ’64, JacowitzArnold, ’51, and Anne, ’53, JaffeChester S. Jakubowski, ’55Enez T. James, ’47Bernard M. Janklow, ’36William A. Jasulaitis, ’56Christina Jean-Baptiste, ’06Frances Roberta Jellinek , ’56, and

Hal O. Schaffer, ’56Ralph Joglar, Jr., ’94Sherwood JohnsonLisa JosephJohn C. Kabat, ’61Carole S. Kahana, ’67Eileen Kamil, ’66Arthur Kaplan, ’59Blanche Kaplan, ’51Charlotte B. Kaplan, ’51Edna Kaplan, ’70Melvyn, ’56, and Carol, ’57, KaplanRuth Ellen KaplanSusan Orent Kaplan, ’63Teddy Kaplan, ’49Rhoda Hendrick Karpatkin, ’51Allan G. Kass, ’74Seymour Kass, ’48Bessie Goodson Katz, ’33Rose Ducor Katz, ’58Benita S. Katzenellenbogen, ’65Christopher and Jennifer Zeller

KaufmanSeth G. KaufmanTerri KaufmanSivia Kaye, ’56Elizabeth KeathleyLawrence Keith, ’52Herbert C. Kelman, ’47Lillian Jaffee Kent, ’36

Claire Kerman, ’56David Kerner, ’58Peg Kershenbaum, ’72Arlene Kershnar, ’62Helen Kesner, ’59Howard Kessler, ’63Renée Chernoble Kibel, ’61Esther M. KimStellar Yoon KimRobert, ’75, and Regina, ’76, KinneyMarlene S. Kirson, ’56

Steven Kirson, ’73Shirley Kirton, ’48Carol L. Klapper, ’43Doris Feinman Klein, ’56, and

Sheldon Klein, ’54Fred Klein, ’51, and Frances KleinHarriet A. Klein, ’60Marilyn Klein, ’55Regina Klein, ’47Morton Kleiner, ’50Allen, ’70, and Fran, ’72, KlenetskySelma Klett, ’50Lynne D. Knippler, ’57William C. Knoop, ’90Arne Knutsen, ’43Thelma Kocivar, ’38Pamela Love Koepf, ’92

Lillie Koeppel-Elgart, ’42Barbara D. Fisher Kolchin, ’63April R. Koral, ’72David, ’62, and Wilma, ’62, KossIra KovelHarry Kovsky, ’55Emma Kraidman, ’53Joseph Kramer, ’47Jay, ’65, and Joann, ’64, KranisEzra S. Krendel, ’45Paul A. Kronenberg, ’64

Harold M. Krouse, ’59Edna G. Krusch, ’46Elaine Smorack Kurtzer, ’42Abraham Lackow, ’50Gordon LaferFlorence Laitman, ’46Lucille F. Landers, ’35Lynn C. Landman, ’42Norma Friedman Lang, ’49Robert Langer, ’52Daniel, ’63, and Lynn, ’63,

LangmeyerZena, ’63, and Michael, ’63,

LapidusMalcolm G. Largmann, ’53Edward S., ’56, and Marilyn

Cohen, ’58, Lashen

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Albert, ’51, and Stephanie LasherDavid Lasky, ’54Sharon, ’82, and Kwan, ’82, LauMartin A. Lave, ’52Margaret M. LawrenceRichard A. Lawrence, ’71Suzanne G. Laychock, ’71Sylvia Lazarnick, ’69Rochelle Lazoff, ’56Thomas, ’53, and Jean, ’48, LeachEmma Leaf, ’47Jacob Lebowitz, ’57Bruce A. Lederman, ’60Elaine L. Lee, ’34Hali H. LeeHenry S., ’39, and Sylvia R., ’41,

Leff

Stuart G. LehrmanArthur S. Leibowitz, ’75Ephraim K. Leibowitz, ’51, and

Estelle Leibowitz, ’56Charles J., ’65, and AliceRosenkranz LeidnerNaomi Leiter, ’56Steven H. Leleiko, ’63Gloria P. Lemme, ’55Tania J. LeónJay B. Leonard, ’65Leslie, ’50, and Lawrence, ’48,

LernerWarren LesserHelen LeungMei-Ling Leung, ’89Amy E. Levine, ’65Augusta Flieg LevineRenée Shai, ’52, and Theodore, ’52,

LevineGloria, ’50, and Mitchel, ’51,

LevitasPhyllis Levitas, ’68

Arnold D. Levitt, ’58Frederick Levitt, ’41Jacob L. Levy, ’56Sharona A. Levy, ’81Sherita LevyShirley LevyStephen L. Levy, ’58Stuart H. Levy, ’74Sondra Lewis, ’56Warren F. Lewis, ’59Helen Lieber, ’39Annabelle Lieberman, ’75Marjorie T. Lieberman, ’56Sally T. LiebermanJoel F. Liebman, ’67John C. LieffScott S. Linder

Leon Lipner, ’40Babette Kahn Lipsky, ’58Jack L. Lipson, ’53Adele Lipman Schwartz LiptonSteve G. Little, ’77Sonya Singer Livingston, ’66Harvey G. Lockhart, ’62Gail J. Loeb, ’66Phyllis G. Long, ’67Moses, ’43, and Pearl LorentzLawrence Lubin, ’50Edward, ’70, and Ruth, ’69, LubitzEllen Roemer Lucchetti, ’66Fran S. Luckom-Nurnberg, ’67Steven M. LukesA. V. Lukosevicius, ’67John D. Lupiano, ’81Richard, ’53, and Joy, ’54, LupolettiRuth Emmer Lutnick, ’56, and

Jerome LutnickT. S. MaJoseph F. MacDougall, ’62

Madeline MacMillan, ’71Frank J. Maffa, ’75Harvey T., ’56, and Ruth Wohl, ’72,

MalakoffFred B. Malamet, ’63Lotte Mandel, ’59Seth O. Mankes, ’72Judith R. Manowitz, ’67Leonard, ’53, and Ruth, ’52,

MarcusRichard B. Marcus, ’58Sara, ’36, and Alexander, ’34,

MarcusMildred Margolies, ’49Bruce L. Margolis, ’65Hannah Sue Margolis, ’56Karl L. Margolis, ’37

Arnold P. Markowitz, ’64Marty Markowitz, ’70Burton H., ’53, and Emily MarksMarvin Markus, ’69Marguerite L. Marra, ’69Richard F. Marsh, ’52Gloria Marshall, ’60Harriet Zuckerman Martin, ’57Paul J. Mason, ’53Lillian Massave, ’56Doris L. MasterJulian Mates, ’49Roberta S. MatthewsPaul Mazursky, ’51Mary Ann McCarthy, ’38Jean B. McHughSean F. McLoughlin, ’80Samuel T. McSeveney, ’51Paul McSweeney, ’92Mary E. McWilliams, ’49Murray Meisels, ’60Sara E. Melendez, ’67Marc R. Mellon, ’74

Beatrice Melnick, ’41Florence Sternlieb Menchel, ’45Harvey, ’47, and Frances MendelowLouis I. Mendelsohn, ’50Martin, ’63, and Syma

Rossman, ’64, MendelsohnJoan C. Meyer, ’74Laurie Michaels, ’02Sheldon Michaels, ’64Judith M. Michaelson, ’56Lisa C. Milazzo, ’75Beatrice Miller, ’55Seymour W. Miller, ’35Sandra Cohen Milles, ’54Sophie Halabi Minkoff, ’38Michele Minter-Yuan, ’87Filippa Modesto, ’82Gertrude Fox Mokotoff, ’38Leda Molly, ’79André Molnar, ’51Salvatore P. Monaco, ’73Wanda MontaluoIvonne Morales LopezMarie Moran, ’64Leila MorrelliLeon Morse, ’36Janet Greenberg Moskowitz, ’56,

and Harold MoskowitzMarilyn Miller Moskowitz, ’50Paul Moskowitz, ’59Robert A. Moss, ’60Emma C. Mueller, ’39Diana Grappone Mule, ’45Carol A. Mullings, ’83Carol Hornbeck Murphy, ’51Mr. and Mrs. J. Michael MurrayStephanie Mykietyn, ’77Ruthe Galler G. Nadel, ’41Conrad, ’57, and Meryl, ’60, NadellLeslie, ’54, and Rhoda, ’57, NaglerNancy R. Nagourney, ’90Kathy NapoliWayne A. Nast, ’72Harold C. Nelson, ’68Immanuel NessEllen G. Neuhaus, ’72Sandra, ’68, and Neal NevittAnni Newbeck, ’53Frederick, ’45, and Claire, ’45,

NewmanHarvey H. Newman, ’57Michael NewmanBarbara Bennett Nolan, ’77William B. Norden, ’67Deborah J. Nosowsky, ’58Milton Novak, ’35Norman A. Ohrwashel, ’56Christine E. Olsen, ’65Ricki OlshanMartin J. O’Reilly, ’53Irwin Oreskes, ’56Alan Osterweil, ’59Barbara Benjamin Ostrow, ’56, and

Harvey OstrowLester Packer, ’62Loretta-Rae Packer, ’85

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Norman, ’57, and Evelyn, ’61, Padnos

Michael E. Paris, ’81Matthew ParkJudith Parmet, ’61Barbara PassikoffPaul J. Patané, ’57Naomi Raben Patlis, ’49James PatrickWilliam E. Paul, ’56Perry Pazer, ’52Adele J. Peak, ’46Anita T. Pearlman, ’55Fran Penner, ’68Robert Penner, ’52Rebecca A. Penso, ’65Jesus PerezHilda PergamentFrancine B. Perler, ’72Hilda Perlitsh, ’56Martin A. Perlzweig, ’75Joan L. Pfau, ’66Michael M. Phillips, ’62Guillermo Pieras, ’72Shelley Pilberg, ’66Jay Plafker, ’74Gerald M. Platt, ’55Frances M. Plotkin, ’55Charlotte Weiner Plotnick, ’56, and

Stanley PlotnickAdele R. Poldrugo, ’80Irwin, ’56, and Sheila Stern, ’56,

PolishookKatha PollittCharles, ’74, and Diane, ’76, PomoVilma R. Potter, ’43Ruth Press, ’66Anthony J. Prevete, ’87Christina L. Procopio, ’52Neil Proshan, ’54Diane R. Provenz, ’65Steven, ’64, and Marsha, ’63, PuroVivian S. Ramalingam, ’59Chanté C. Ramsey, ’98Lenore Rand, ’43Noel RappaportHenry Rattner, ’56Saul D. Raw, ’68Sarah A. Raymond, ’70Suzanne Cantor Raymond, ’58, and

Lawrence RaymondMaxwell O. Reade, ’36Howard A. Reed, ’48Susan M. Reid, ’65Charles V. Reilly, ’69Rita M. Reilly, ’72Arlene, ’56, and Calvin, ’55, ReingArnold Reisman, ’53Adina Venit Reshotko, ’53Noble and Elizabeth RichardsBarry Richter, ’57Victoria L. RichterCarol Rifkin, ’55Elaine A. Riley, ’83

Marcia T. Rivin, ’58Leonardo Rizzi, ’93Stephen Robb, ’60, in honor of

Professor Mary W. Graham Shelley B. Roberts, ’95Edward A. RobinJessica Hill RobinValerie B. RobinEdna Robinson, ’73Tess D. RobinsonSeymour, ’49, and Renée RogoffReuben D. Rohn, ’67Anne W. Rosberger, ’53Joan Rose, ’67Irving Rosen, ’47Martin, ’45, and Sally ’48, RosenLewis H., ’57, and Marlene

Fishbane, ’59, RosenbaumHarriet P. RosenblumMartin P. Rosenblum, ’42

Roberta Chalfin, ’74, and Joseph, ’73, Rosenblum

Sally Spilton Rosenblum, ’43Henry J., ’60, and Annette

RosenfeldNanette Ross, ’51Roslyn Ross, ’57Alice S. Rossi, ’47Sheldon, ’60, and Cora, ’60, RothNorbert H. Rotter, ’61Janette Roush, ’99Marjorie Wasch Rubenson, ’45Deborah S. Rubenstein, ’57Hugo T. Ruberg, ’59Arline M. Rubin, ’61Howard Rubin, ’59Morris Sabbeth, ’33Arthur C. Sadoff, ’70Richard G. Safran, ’58Renel Saint-Amour

Maxine F. Salamon, ’55Mel and Anita SalbergRonald Salovey, ’54Susan C. Saltzman, ’60James and Julia SamartiniArnold W. Sametz, ’40Roslyn Samuels, ’36Ramon and Toby SanchezAlvin Sandberg, ’61Deloris Sanders, ’58Samuel Santiago, ’76Phyllis Sarachik, ’51Helen S. SarettJoseph, ’41, and Norma F., ’43,

SattenAndrea Savage, ’68Anthony M. Scala, ’86Don L. Scarborough, ’85Stuart SchaarPhyllis Schaffer-Cohen, ’86

Barbara Scharfstein, ’52Bob D. Scharin, ’79Paul H. Jr., ’56, and Kathleen

Scheerer Leon A. ScheinIrma S. Scherz, ’56Linda M., ’95, and William, ’95,

SchickDaniel L. Schiffer, ’64Larry P. Schiffer, ’76Lawrence B. Schlachter, ’69Barbara Zucker Schlactus, ’57Phoebe Schlanger, ’43Estelle R. Schlenger, ’56Sheldon Schmertzler, ’91Frances Schnall, ’70Linda M. Schoenberg, ’65Irvin S. Schonfeld, ’69Ellen Goldstein Schorsch, ’59Moshe Schuldinger, ’53

Ruby Schultz, ’56Theodore, ’56, and Dona, ’56,

SchwabAnthony W. Schwally, ’60Iris Schwartz, ’51Samuel, ’69, and Daria, ’65,

SchwartzJerome Schwortz, ’71, and Fern

Schwortz, ’72Murray Seeman, ’34Irving Seidman, ’38Raymond, ’63, and Arlene

Levin, ’64, SenzerIrving Shafran, ’65Matthew Shakter, ’64Reba Sukenick Shapiro, ’56, and

Arnold Shapiro, ’55Ruth Katz ShapiroHannah L. Shear, ’67Allen A. Sher, ’41

Bruce J. Sherman, ’93Joshua D. Sherman, ’02Alvin, ’63, and Sandra, ’65, SiegartelMarilyn Stock Siegel, ’56Stephen F. Siegel, ’81Andrew Sillen, ’74Marilyn, ’70, and Stanley, ’69, SilverShirley Silver, ’67Ira T. Silvergleit, ’72Mildred Arbeit Silverman, ’43Stephen Silverstein, ’72Jeffrey V. Simon, ’65Marcia Simon, ’59Shirley Cohen Simon, ’56Sheldon SinettJoseph, ’67, and Barbara, ’67, SklarHerbert S. Skovronek, ’56Neilan Sleven, ’49Helene S. Sloan, ’48

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Dimitri, ’80, and Violetta, ’81, Smaragdas

Gerald W. Smith, ’53Peter Harold Smith, ’65Shirley A. Smith, ’47Louis S. Smolensky, ’68Sylvia SmolenskyElaine V. Solomon, ’50Charles Sommerfield, ’53Lawrence Sonders, ’52Jacob SonenshineEric C. Spector, ’72Zoe Jane Spielman, ’56David, ’47, and Rosalind Spielsinger

Myron Spitz, ’62Rosalind, ’50, and Irwin, ’48,

SpivackLarry Spruch, ’43Sally Stamper, ’52Sarah Staubus, ’46Constance C. St. Cyr, ’55Robyn StecherFrancine Steger, ’60Anita Stein, ’59Franklin, ’56, and Jennie SteinJeanne, ’70, and Peter SteinSydney Steinhardt, ’95Marion Steininger, ’49David P. Steinmann

Eileen Steinvurzel, ’65Beverly Stern, ’50Eugene Stern, ’56Giselle Stevens, ’51Susan Yasner Stock, ’59Fred, ’64, and Bonnie, ’65, StoneMargot Stone-CondryElaine Stoner, ’61Philip Stopol, ’47Aaron H. Stovitz, ’43Terrance C. Stroud, ’98Claudia Stryker, ’42Milton, ’52, and Ferne SturmCelina Su

Herbert Sufit, ’38Michael Sulman, ’52Edward I. Sumber, ’64Neil SumnerAlan, ’70, and Ellen, ’76, SussmanEdward Sussna, ’50Kathleen K. Swift, ’82Roslyn Tannenbaum, ’65Eli I. Taub, ’60Harlan and Lynn, ’63, TaubPhyllis Taub, ’48Norman Teitel, ’42Fran E. Teller, ’74Michael W. Teller, ’71Karen J. Tenenbaum, ’80

Paul R. Tetreault, ’91Barbara Thomas, ’65Susannah and Michael ThompsonPhilip Thomsen, ’44Gerald Thorner, ’44Ben ThylanSelma S. Toback, ’56Jackson Toby, ’46Jennifer TomaioloJanice Towers, ’53Leah Trachten, ’58Christine L. Tralongo, ’74Febo Troilo, ’64Theodore Tuller, ’36Therea S. TullochMarguerite R. Tumminio, ’64Iris J. Turkenkopf, ’65Mimi Turque, ’59Alba, ’56, and Robert, ’56, TutnauerAlan, ’72, and Susan, ’74, UllmanNancy Umanoff, ’84Alayne Finkelstein Unterricht, ’73,

and Sam Unterricht, ’73Doris Van Alen, ’49Richard L. Varriale, ’57Alex Vergilis, ’93Stephen B. Vine, ’65George S. and Annemieke M. VlastoJay L. Vodofsky, ’75Joseph R. Volpe, ’59Andrew E. Wagner, ’91Colette A. WagnerGayle WaldSusan Lee Walling, ’66Wendi A. WalshWhitney WaltonAdele Werner Wasko, ’46David Wasserman, ’37Frances D. Wasserman, ’33Pauline Watt, ’61Stanley Wax, ’63 and Vicki WaxRobert S. Wechsler, ’71Edward H. Weinberg, ’51Harvey Weinberg, ’65Richard Weiner, ’59, and Rose

Weiner, ’62Bruce L. Weininger, ’59Rosalind WeinmanJill C. Weinstein, ’68Max Weinstein, ’41Marilyn Weinstock, ’55Howard M. Weintraub, ’78Marcia E. Weiser, ’58Andrew, ’68, and Ronnie WeissAaron Weisstuch, ’59Harvey Weitz, ’51Gertrude Weker, ’39Irving Welfeld, ’59Edward P. Wendel, ’63Renée L. Wenger, ’48Joseph, ’41, and Shirley, ’43,

WershbaSandra Weseley, ’56Lennard WhartonGerald S. Whitehorn, ’79

Thelma WickersFredrica, ’56, and Harvey, ’54,

WidellAudrey H. Wiesenfeld, ’42Dorothy WilliamsGayle C. Williams, ’73Linda G. Williams, ’83Lise J. WilliamsNatalie Williams, ’99Nettie R. WilliamsRoyal O’H. Willie, ’61Eleanor WilligKeith H. Wilson, Jr., ’90Jason Wingreen, ’41Harold M. WitkowBernard Witt, ’49Joel F. Wolf, ’75Stanley, ’49, and Irene Paskow, ’47,

WolfEugene A. Wolkoff, ’53Ronald Woodroffe, ’77Doris E. Woodward, ’46Marvin and Mary WrennRobert P. Yavel, ’56Elissa Yellin, ’48Hailin YinMarilyn B. YoungIra L. Zankel, ’66Lillian Zelnick, ’40Philip, ’54, and Christina, ’54,

ZimbardoEllen B. Silverman Zimiles, ’80Jerome I. Zimmerman, ’82Mae Zlotnik, ’35Martin Zuckerbrod, ’52Alan, ’66, and Roberta Susan, ’68,

ZuckermanLawrence H. Zuckerman, ’53Leo Zuckerman, ’42Marjorie E. Zuckerman, ’48Audrey Zuckernick, ’50Sharon ZukinMauro Zulli, ’57Marilyn Zwerdling, ’63Alan H. Zwiebel, ’59Anonymous (8)

Up to $99Arbak A. AbdalianDoukoure Aboubakar, ’05Janet Abrahamson, ’57Eileen B. Abramoff, ’75Shirley Eisner Abrams, ’40Margaret Abrines, ’68Joan Ackerman, ’61Marie Adanuncio, ’72Adewale AdeboHossam AdhamJesus R. AdiaIsobel H. Adinolfi, ’59Herbert, ’59, and Ruby, ’54,

AdlerbergVinu Aggarwal, ’03Alice Galton Agran, ’57Saied Ahmad

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Shehzad AhmadEdward AhrensVictoria A. AibangbeeAnn L. Aibel, ’46Lee, ’53, and Stanley, ’56, AigesJames V. Albanese, ’77Angelo, ’65, and Sharon, ’77,

AlbanoRose Alcott, ’40Francis L. Alexander, ’03Alexei AlexeevMiriam AllenVirginia M. Alonso-Rainsford, ’95Frances H. Alper, ’50Andrew E. Alpine, ’64Edward Alterman, ’52Selma L. Altman, ’48Sandra I. AlveloFrances Ames, ’41Gilbert Amgott, ’40, and Julia

Sultan Amgott, ’40Benjamin M. Aminoff, ’85David A. Amir, ’98Bonnie S. AndersonMarilyn Apelson, ’47Marilyn Backinoff Appelson, ’53Joyce ApplebyEdidiye ArabovIsak E. Arbus, ’71Judi Aronowitz, ’57Michelle ArringtonLeo, ’39, and Beatrice, ’36,

AschenbrennerHerbert, ’55, and Renée, ’53,

AshermanSau-fong AuAndrew, ’68, and Diane, ’70,

AuerbachNatalie Auerbach, ’50Regina M. Auerbach, ’62Sylvia Petigrow Auskern, ’55Vivian N. Avery, ’56Elizabeth Axtell, ’57Elaine Grassi Azzoli, ’59William and Catherine BachrachBertram Backinoff, ’41Renée C. Bader, ’73Tayybah BaigEllen S. Bailin, ’72Eugene Balzer, ’48Zelda Band, ’57Aleksey V. Barinov, ’04Allison Knight BarlowJack Barocas, ’63Roslyn Perlin Barouch, ’52Joyce Barrett, ’79Max Barris, ’63Phillip J. BarrishS. BartashevskaSuparna BaruaLibby Baskin, ’49Russ BassaniAnn BatsonHarvey M. Batter, ’56Sarah Bauman

Lenore Beaky, ’67Jacqueline S. Beaver, ’40Joseph BebermanBernard Beck, ’58Laurence BeckFrederick W. Becker, ’36Phyllis Becker, ’60Rosalie BeilisSheila Bellamy, ’55Sylvia, ’64, and Sam, ’42, BellovinCynthia M. Beltzer, ’55Shirley Benigsohn, ’46Cecile Benson, ’62Mae Benson, ’62Jeffrey Berger, ’66Marc A., ’69, and Nancy Roth, ’70,

BergerRichard H. Berger, ’61Sara S. Berger, ’54Stewart Berger, ’65Daniel Bergman, ’41Leticia C. Thomas BreretonRonald H. Berkenblit, ’59Annette Berkowitz, ’44Sharon F. Hammer BerkowitzTillie Fogelbaum Berlant, ’35Ruth Berlin, ’43Marilyn Bernhard, ’52Alan, ’53, and Elaine, ’52, BernsteinJoel H. Bernstein, ’71Marilyn Bernstein, ’69Rachel K. Gordon Bernstein, ’85Rosalind Geffner Bershatsky, ’62Andrean T. Bertok, ’73Eleanor Betz, ’58Frank Bialostozky, ’72Richard G. Bieber, ’71Michael BielMarylynn A. BienaimeMarc I. Bienenstock, ’71Esther G. Bierman, ’47Harvey Binder, ’65Marilyn N. Gaynes and Alexander

BinikPhyllis Birne, ’67Yevgeniy BirzhMeyer Bishansky, ’44Howard BlackDavid, ’62, and Susan Pike, ’65,

BlackmanAlbert A. Blank, ’44Marlene Lissauer Blank, ’63Joel BlattFlorence Geiger Blaustein, ’43Joan Bless, ’55Jeffrey S. Blinder, ’72Barry P. Bloch, ’71Sydney Bluestone, ’56Joel L. Blumenfeld, ’65Irving, ’45, and Gladys BlumenthalTerri Bobrow, ’64Yehoshua BochnerTerence W. BolgerRandi R. Bondy, ’05Celia Lidzki Borenstein-Gamm, ’64,

and Stephen Gamm

Marion R. Boroff, ’40Jay Bosworth, ’66Miriam Bouvier, ’60Gary BouzyBarbara BowenJamesetta H. BoyceStacey A. BradburyJessica BradleyMichael and Jill BradyJohn BrandifiniPenelope Brathwaite, ’95Sylvia H. Breddan, ’61Martin L. Bregman, ’65Leticia C. Thomas BreretonNeil A. Breslau, ’68Abe Bressler, ’50

Gerald BrettsAlice Rof Brezak, ’65Jacob S. Brinen, ’56Patricia Briscoe, ’78Mark Brodsky, ’70Mildred K. Brodsky, ’45Elaine M. Brody, ’42Judith T. Brook, ’60Barbara Broslaw, ’63Ann F. BrownLinda Brown, ’66Deborah D. Bruce, ’68

Araceh BryamLydia, ’70, and Charles, ’67, BryanMiriam Budowsky, ’47Frances Bunyan, ’48Richard T. Buonato, ’67Norman Burstein, ’63Ann M. BurtonRuomei CaiEmanuel J. Campisi, ’66Philip J. Canciglia, ’54Lorraine Cande, ’64Thomas W. Canny, ’90Rafet Canovic, ’02Susan Cantor, ’59Margot CapellMary Carbonaro

Maren Lockwood CardenLeo Caridi, ’65Pearl S. CarterMuriel C. Carty, ’61Victoria Caruvana, ’66Anne M. Casey, ’59Virginia Castillo, ’99Miriam E. Castle, ’63Salvatore, ’52, and Ida CataniaPhilip and Patricia CaufmanDaniel, ’57, and Mary, ’57,

Caulfield

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Martha Cember, ’47Raymond Chung ChanYan-Ping Chan, ’89Claudette M. ChangLenora R. Chapman, ’44Madonna N. Charles-Johnson, ’95Eleanor H. Chasdi, ’48Richard S. Cherlin, ’68Sharon S. Chiaet, ’55Angelo Chiapperino,, ’72Irwin Chimerine, ’68Yok-Seung ChiuCheryl Chomali, ’98Felix M. Choy, ’86Donal ChristianBeatrice Christoffersen, ’53Carmela Cipriano, ’58Nicholas C. Ciraulo, ’81Teresa E. Ciurleo, ’62Jean W. CivilMarcia Clarke, ’92Daniel S. Claster

Christopher F. Clemens, ’04Joseph A. Clemente, ’66David Cohen, ’67Doris Goldman Cohen, ’46Evelyn Starker Cohen, ’55Josepha L. Cohen, ’37Norman Cohen, ’63Thomas and Janette CohenJohn Cohn, ’52Edward ColkerMorton B. ComerJohn W. Conwell, ’91Leon Cooper, ’49Lila Sandler Cooper, ’52Ruth Drucker Cooperman, ’44Betty A. Copeland, ’66Gail Corcoran, ’94

Sylvia K. Corwin, ’41Annalise F. Cottone, ’77Rebecca Coven, ’39Janet CowheyLillian CowheyJosephine Y. Bennardo Cristy, ’46Patrick I. Croff III, ’95Elaine Crovitz, ’56Angel R. Cruzado-MirandaHorace R. Cudjoe, ’83Emmanuel CuencaDoris H. Curchack, ’52Frances, ’70, and Edward, ’70,

CushmanRobert Cutler, ’60Norma T. Cybul, ’48Abigail Davis, ’39Anne R. Davis, ’83Helen Davis, ’75Henry K. Davis, ’43Karen D. Davis, ’82Mildred Dawes

Lynda R. DayPhyllis Stern Dayboch, ’55Josephine and Gilbert DeciccoJoseph B. Deleo, ’55Robert P. DeMarcoKausika DesaiEdith Deutsch, ’42Anthony DeVito, ’76Daniel DiBlasi, ’46Judith Dichter, ’68Saralyn Dicker, ’60Natalie R. Dickstein, ’52Louise M. Diehl, ’37Geraldine A. Dinneen, ’48Elliott J. Dombroff, ’64Seymour Dombroff, ’38Helen Dondy, ’42

Rosalie DeGiovanni Donnelly, ’47Renée Dorman, ’49Eugene F., ’74, and Barbara

DoughertyTara M. Dowd, ’97Theodore M., ’55, and Annette

DrangeMarguerite M. Driscoll, ’33Ruth W. Dropkin, ’39Myron P. Druxserman, ’66Lester Dubnick, ’52Rose G. Boliscar DuvalBridget M. Dwyer, ’84Danielle Dybiec, ’99Mervyn E. DyerNadire DzhalturovaPatrick EckelmannAdele L. Eckstein, ’55Shirley Eckstein, ’52Lila, ’71, and Steven EdelkindDiane Edell, ’65Charles Edelman, ’65

Leah Edelson, ’43Lois H. Edwards, ’50Robert A. Eidelberg, ’62Charles, ’61, and Sondra, ’62,

EisemanMary Eisenbach, ’41Elaine Rabbiner Eisenberg, ’62Jeanette Eisenmesser, ’61Judith Eliezri, ’65Heather ElliottSheldon Ellish, ’64Marsha Zirn Elowsky, ’56, and

Joseph ElowskyPaul Elstein, ’65Selma Emanuel, ’40Peter A. Emelianchik, ’72Marie Emmanuel

Beatrice Emmer, ’42Miriam Russo EndersAlexa Endes, ’64Judith N. Engel, ’54Trudy Ennis, ’51Alvin J. Epstein, ’59Edward and Ruth S. EpsteinLila A. Epstein, ’42Marilyn Epstein, ’58Judy H. Erde, ’66Madeline Etkin, ’74Helen Henry Evanson, ’58Sandra F. Ezersky, ’76Louis Marc FabreAnn E. Fagan, ’75Philip Fagin, ’54Muhammad FahimuddinHarriet Fakhery, ’61Lillian Falcone, ’44Hy FarberSamuel FarberMarshall I. Farkas, ’68Muzhahid FarooqiSeymour K. Fass, ’45Edythe Fastow, ’41Barbara Ulbricht Feddern, ’57Jeanette Fein, ’60Sean C. Fein, ’91Muriel S. Feinbloom, ’56Robert P. Feinland, ’89Eve Gellerman Feinstein, ’54Sheila Feld, ’53Larry H. Feldman, ’62Steven A. FeldmanSydney and Esther FeldmanLibby Lent Feldmesser, ’40Andrew Felkay, ’61Alan Feller, ’69Henry, ’60, and Diana

Milgram, ’60, FenichelLucille T. Ferbel, ’65Elton Ferdinand, ’78Dorothy P. Ferguson, ’36Robert Ferrandiz, ’51Tyrone FerraraMatilda S. Feuer, ’51Martin FeuermanBerta Field, ’50Marie FigaroAnne Levine FilardoMuriel Gelfand Filman, ’47Bruce Filosa, ’94Arnold J. Finamore, ’59Marilyn E. Findlay, ’67Selma Fine, ’50Susan Mandel Fingerman, ’68William D. Fireman, ’63Marie M. Firenze, ’49Theda Kerner Firschein, ’53, and

Oscar FirscheinHenry, ’59, and Goldie, ’61, FisherPhillip, ’77, and Roberta, ’78,

FishgoldDenise A. FlanaganGilbert S. Fleischer, ’37

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Julius A. Fleischer, ’68Tatiana FleyshmanRochelle Levy Fogel, ’68Sherman Pun Hung FooBarbara Alberts Forman, ’65Berthyle FortunatYvan FortunatMary K. Foster, ’69Salvatore F. Foti, Jr., ’59Florence Fox, ’52Mirel H. Frank, ’72Rena Frankle, ’60Martin, ’49, and Shirley, ’49, FrantHarry L. Frazer, ’60Daniel J. Freedberg, ’73Selma, ’49, and Arnold, ’48,

FreedmanWalter Freedman, ’57Joshua B. FreemanMilton and Marcia FreibaumPhyllis Stern Frenkel, ’75, and

Mel FrenkelRita Frey, ’46Igor FridmanAbraham Fried, ’42Anita J. Fried, ’34Eugene, ’49, and Muriel, ’49, FriedStanley, ’52, and Frances, ’53,

FriedlandAbraham S. Friedman, ’43David Friedman, ’64Theodore R. Friend, ’70Alice R. Friman, ’54Joseph Frohlinger, ’80Cynthia Frumhoff, ’45Barbara N. Furman, ’55Carol Lash Gabow, ’50Jean R. Gabriel, ’01Liana GabrielLinda M. GaimanRobert M. Gair, ’51Audrey M. Galligen, ’50Shari Ganz, ’40Stephen Gappelberg, ’68Marcella Garber-Katz, ’45Donna Garmendi, ’80Yetta Gelber, ’51Anita GelbergNelly GeneralovaShirley Genn, ’58Sylvia Lotenberg Georgiou, ’41Sidney Gerchick, ’46Arthur L., ’47, and Phoebe GermanSheldon, ’48, and Doreen, ’54,

GertnerGisele GhirlandaIlka R. Giges, ’53Evelyn Gilbert, ’38Ilsa Gilbert, ’55Martin L. Gillman, ’49Brunel GillotPanet GillotSy Ginsberg, ’40Dorothy Gittelson, ’55Jennifer Gitto

John and Deborah GladyszJesse Glassberg, ’56Sarah E. Glasser, ’34Deanna, ’59, and Marvin, ’57,

GlassmannKenneth B. Gleicher, ’76Kenneth A. Glidewell, ’05Rakhimova GlubachorPhyllis G. GluckNorma, ’59, and Martin, ’53, GoetzAnne F. Gold, ’49Doris Bauman Gold, ’46Linda Gold, ’04Mindy Gold, ’79Bobbie Goldberg, ’50Florence Goldberg, ’41Gail E. Goldberg, ’67Rebecca A. Goldberg, ’77Sharon Goldberg, ’71Tillie A. Goldberg, ’83

Helen Goldfinger, ’57Fred Goldhaber, ’68Louis Goldowitz, ’47Eugene Goldstein, ’51Everett, ’39, and Edith GoldsteinLenore F. Goldstein, ’54Samuel M. GoldsteinSheila Dank Goldstein, ’56, and

Stuart GoldsteinFrederick Goldstein-Gretan, ’51Shirley Goldwag, ’42Myron GolombRuth Posnak Golub, ’47Yana GolubetskayaCarl and Jennifer GoodmanLila V. Goodman, ’55Hugh GoodridgeJack Goor, ’47Mikhail Gorbal

Francesca Gordon, ’59Lillian Gordon, ’56Abbott Gorin, ’73Pearl Gorin, ’48Elena GorkhovskiArin Frome GornsteinClifford GottliebLawrence A. Gould, ’52Webster Graham, ’87Jeffrey D. Grant, ’74Wilbur, ’48, and Marian, ’52, GrantMary P. Gergen Gray, ’94Raquel GraysonLawrence Green, ’66Maureen GreenVannessa E. GreenBonnie L. Greenbaum, ’78Brenda J. Greenberg, ’61Howard E. Greenberg, ’66Jeffrey Greenberg, ’70

Loretta Greenberg, ’57Marilyn B. Greenberg, ’72Susan Greenberg, ’68Susan I. Greenberg, ’63Toby GreenbergMarilyn Silverman Greenspan, ’53Pamela P. Greenspan, ’77Judith Greenwald, ’63Paul Gretch, ’63Seymour Grodstein, ’51Beatrice Gross, ’42Edna A. Gross, ’49Marcia G. Grossman, ’57Barbara Gruber, ’00Barbara Bluth Gruber, ’49Leonard, ’58, and Barbara, ’65,

GrundtShirley Grynbal, ’55Yvone Guirguis

Ganna GurevichFrederick J. Gutter, ’43Mary GylesAudrey R. Haimowitz, ’79Shirley HallSteven J. Halpern, ’56Gertrude Hames, ’59Danielle N. HamptonAlbert Hann, ’59George Hantgan, ’40Dorothy Bodner Harris, ’47Miriam Glass Harris, ’41, and

Robert Lee HarrisRobert Harriston, ’77Keith Harrow, ’69Rachel Hartig, ’60Anna J. Haupt, ’73Jean I. Hecht, ’45Patrick J. Herbst, ’73Harold Herskowitz, ’38

Rosalynd Hertz, ’56Ellen Hesterman, ’59Joseph Heyliger, ’04Juanita HillSydelle Flaxberg Hirsch, ’53Albert I., ’54, and Carol Levine, ’60,

HirschbergRonald, ’61, and Ethel, ’62, HirshonDorothy Hoberman, ’46Tabitha HollandShannon L. HollidayShlomo HoltzbergLois Honig, ’65Nathan L. Honigbaum, ’58Robert, ’59, and Sheila, ’58, HordonJosephine Brown Horn, ’46Lilian D. Horn, ’57Fraidy HorowitzPerry M. Horowitz, ’70

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Florence W. Houser, ’44Allison Houston, ’01Sanda Htyte, ’04Stephen and Dena HubscherLouis Huertas, ’61Bernard Hulkower, ’50Lila Green Hunnewell, ’56Johanne HyppoliteGreta Immerman, ’48Maurice E. Indig, ’56Michael Israel, ’54Edward Isseks, ’53Norma P. Jablon, ’47

Lester JacksonIrwin Jacobs, ’48Renée Jacobs, ’38Marcia Orshansky Jacobson, ’56, and

Bernard JacobsonSidney S. Jacobson, ’51Joan James, ’59Elizabeth F. JavellanaMarjorie Jean-Baptiste, ’03Mcnamary JeannoelBernard Jeffrey, ’46Steven A. JervisRaminder JitAndrew, ’56, and Mona Johnson

Lorene K. Johnson, ’90Constance C. Jones, ’71Sara L. JonesGloria Jordan, ’46Belle M. Joseph, ’35Dolores Rebecca Joseph, ’49Tessie Josephson, ’70O. Joshua, ’57, and Judith JurmannBeverly L. Just, ’48Shirley W. Kale, ’45Steven Kalka, ’74Howard Kamin, ’51Ariel J. Kaminer

Jack Kamins, ’75Arline B. Kanson, ’41Gloria Katcher Kanter, ’53Diana KantorSelma L. Kapatkin, ’51Alan, ’67, and Ruth, ’65, KapiloffBeatrice Schreckinger Kaplan, ’56Berton Kaplan, ’53Deborah Kaplan, ’62Joseph Kaplan, ’90Lawrence, ’37, and Jeanne, ’44,

KaplanAnatole, ’51, and Myrna, ’50,

Karmen

Harry S. and Zeena L. KasselTheodore KastenbaumLeonard, ’58, and Gail KatcherGregory KatsBlanche Katz, ’43Deana Katz, ’61Reuben M. Katz, ’41Rhoda D. Katz, ’59Anna, ’45, and Clarence KaufmanElaine, ’55, and Harold, ’55,

KaufmanNancy J. Kaufman, ’65Paramjit KaurIrving A. KayeSusan Pachaneck Kaye, ’60Karine KazazyanGerald, ’52, and Estelle KeitelDona Lee KellyElisa M. Kennedy, ’56George L. Kennedy, ’71Gerald B. Kent, ’43Larry Kerman, ’77Laura S. Kershner, ’68Susan Kessler-SklarEric KhamitovAbdul Fatah KhanAbdurrab KhanJamshed Khan, ’00Elina KhodjayevaKhawar KhurshidStephen E. KiddLois Magner KimVirginia Kirch, ’49Donna Silverstein Kirell, ’80Phebe A. Kirkham, ’99Arthur KirmssStanley, ’50, and Esther Green, ’50,

KirschnerKeiji KitaniMarion Klar, ’66Naomi Klarreich, ’90Earl J. and Sally D. KleinHannah R. Klein, ’45Joel, ’65, and Arlene, ’66, KleinBelle Kleinberg, ’38Janet Kleinman, ’53Larry Kluge, ’73Tania Trabitz Klugman, ’59Herbert L. KobreMarlene Broder Kohavy, ’66Alan F. Kohuth, ’85Yola Kolber, ’59Steven, ’91, and Belinda, ’87,

KonigsbergFrances Konoff, ’53Harriet Green KoppClaire Korn, ’57Susan R. Kornblau-Frankle, ’83Elan Kornblum, ’99Stuart Kornblum, ’50Morris Kornbluth, ’69Blanche Rauch Korngold, ’50Igor KorostyshevskyDavid KossowDiana S. Krameisen, ’55

Alvera Paull Kramer, ’46Stanley Kramer, ’52Susan J. Kramer, ’94Thomas Kramer, ’94William W. Kramer, ’41Barry KrantzFrances Kranz, ’42Phyllis Krasnick, ’54Dorothy Novick Krasnoff, ’47Arthur Krass, ’58Janet M. Krebs, ’75Rose, ’60, and Joseph KriegerFlore Krigsman, ’60Miriam Krinick, ’71Edward, ’42, and Helen, ’42, KroopIrene KrugerSaul Kruger, ’39Simeon J. Krumbein, ’56Svetlana KupershtokhFrank Kushin, ’55Charissa N. KwanReginald LabossiereMyra Lahn, ’60John Lamicella, ’04Elliott I. Landowne, ’83Roy, ’60, and Rita, ’62, LangerHelen, ’39, and Martin, ’39,

LanniganJoseph G. Lannon, ’05Carol L. Lassen, ’53Vivian Lassman, ’50Myra J. Lavelle, ’76Jennifer M. Lawson, ’04William G. Lawson, ’52Herman Lazaar, ’41Joan R. Lea, ’53Seena, ’48, and Fred, ’74, LeavittSally Ann Rossi Lederman, ’57Catherine D. Lee, ’37Elaine Choy LeeRobert LeeWendy Lee, ’78Barry Lefkowitz, ’85Harold, ’56, and Marilyn, ’59,

LefkowitzIrwin R., ’55, and Joan LegonShirley H. Leiba, ’44Samuel L. Leiter, ’62Maryann Bernstein Leitner, ’53, and

Pincus LeitnerJennie N. L. LeungWilliam LeungRobert, ’58, and Phyllis, ’71,

LeventhalReuben Levin, ’41Seymour Levin, ’43Sharon P. Levin, ’70Adele Levine, ’62Anne F. Levine, ’47Bernice Tansman Levine, ’44Edith Levine, ’49Ethel Levine, ’54Mark LevineBert, ’50, and Alice, ’51, LevinsonSusan Levkovitz

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Herbert L. Levy, ’48Martin Lewis, ’50Nordica B. Lewis, ’84Batya Lewton, ’56Yue Yi LiDoris M. Lichtenstadter, ’44Alan LichtensteinBarbara Lichtig, ’56Eleanor Lidofsky, ’48Stephen Liebman,, ’72Ella LightnerEnkelejda Limani, ’04Sayeeda Rahman LipiBenjamin and Loretta Lipka, ’56Michael, ’75, and Arleen, ’76,

LipsteinNathan Litman, ’67Frances Mintz Litvin, ’61Marilyn Litwak, ’79Chi Liu, ’98Frederick A. Lizzi, ’72Ben, ’47, and Frances, ’47, LockeMarcia J. Loeb, ’53Yuriy LoginovMalgorzata Los, ’01John LotardoMarjorie Louer, ’59James N. LoughranCynthia Abowitz Lowenheim, ’52Jeffrey N. Lubin, ’74Betty Baum Lubitz, ’45Francine Luft, ’64Lesley A. Lull, ’81Helen Lumerman, ’70Gale D. Lurie, ’67Yue Qun MaRobert, ’88, and Gloria, ’70,

MacDonaldElizabeth MacronMarilyn MacronBenjamin MagarikBernice Mahler, ’57Marion Maitlin, ’59Natalya MakarenkoSandra Chenenko Malinak, ’49Christopher Malwitz, ’06Henrietta G. Mandel, ’49Carole Mandelkorn, ’65Stuart L. Mandell, ’46Bette Mandl, ’61Thomas F. Manera, ’66Barbara Brooke Manning, ’74Stephen P. Maran, ’59Kishore B. MaratheLouis R. MarcelinJosephine M. Marchesano, ’77John Marcinek, ’57Norma Marcus, ’56Gerrie Mardenfield, ’50Phyllis Margolis, ’50Elliott F. Marinstein, ’50Edith S. Marks, ’67Phyllis Marks, ’71Merle B. Markus, ’60Rochelle F. Marmorek, ’62

Anne C. Marshall, ’35John H. Martin, ’46Dewayn Marzagalli, ’70Ryszard Masiulanis, ’63Corey Mass, ’72Felix Masucci, ’46Natalie C. Matlin, ’43Joseph M. Mattera, ’58Luis G. Maurentt, Jr., ’96Edith, ’63, and Michael MavorFerne G. Maycock, ’94Helen Sloane Maye, ’47Pamela P. Mayeda, ’65Roberta McBride-Robinson, ’87Wray McBurnie, ’04Kathleen T. McCabe-Chokel, ’74Mary E. McCarthy, ’86Mary T. McCarthyKenneth P. and Ellen A. McCueNancy Melucci McInerney, ’67Shirley E. McLean, ’45

John McLoughlin, ’00Michael J. McPartland, ’87Katherine A. McSweeney, ’80Anthony C. Meade, ’58Arlene Mehlman, ’63Mark Melnick, ’79Muriel Klein Meltzer, ’42Alvin J. Melveger, ’59Salomon Menache, ’92P. Gary MennittRomain MeristilAnn Messinger, ’80Harriet Morantz Meyer, ’60Barbara S. Meyers, ’56Elinore B. Meyers, ’73Ronald Meyers, ’57Al Meyerson, ’53Vera Man Michaelson, ’38

Helen Solomon, ’42, and Joseph, ’47, Midler

Goldie Miller, ’46Lillian D. Miller, ’47Yetta Wolodarsky Milner, ’41Eugenie R. Mirelowitz, ’48Jerrold Mirotznik, ’70Isaac Mizrahi, ’67Ralph Mizrahi, ’74Patrick Mohan, ’99Stephen, ’66, and Marilyn, ’66, MohrArthur G. MonesMilga Morales, ’70Gerald Mordfin, ’47Godsfavour S. MorganShirley Morrison, ’52Paul B. Moses, ’75Gladyce G. Moseson, ’46David Moskowitz, ’87Gertrude Honigbaum Moskowitz, ’50,

and Norman Moskowitz

Carolyn MoteHubert MoteMr. and Mrs. Floyd W. MottPeter Moy, ’79Vicky Y. MoyEduard MulchametdinovPaul MurphySally A. Murphy, ’80Leighton A. Myrie, ’04Ruby Nachwalter, ’61Alan M. Nadel, ’69Mark E. Nadel, ’66Sylvia B. Nadel, ’81Kuniko Nagafuku, ’02Marvin NaidorfRuth Guidone Naley, ’59Sharon and Ron Nash, ’72Zachary NatafRoni Natov, ’65

Aurora Maria Natt, ’44Irwin J. Nayman, ’84Martin S. Needelman, ’66Helen G. Nemes, ’70Inessa NepomnyashchayaCharles, ’44, and Rosalind, ’45,

NeusteinDonald B. Neuwirth, ’67Amy M. Newman, ’43Brian Newman, ’78Carol Newman, ’62Sallie Newman, ’53Duc D. Nguyen, ’99Paul NicholasHerman J. NissenbaumCordelia C. Njoku, ’04Regina NontrevilRobert Norrdin, ’58Arthur S. Nowick, ’43Christine Nucci, ’81Immacula Numa

Harvey Nussbaum, ’56Larry S. NussbaumSuze ObasGerard W. O’Brien, ’79Joy OdetaMartin R. and Joyce OestreichKevin, ’99, and Jane O’HanlonJocelyn H. OlcottTheresa Oliveri, ’02Madeline J. O’NeillLois Oppenheimer, ’68Jerald Ordover, ’48Anna OreslkinRosalind Missy Dorfman Orner, ’58Dorothy Ornstil, ’53Theresa J. Osborne, ’82Cyd C. Ostrovsky, ’65Max OstrovskyJack Otis, ’46

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Priscilla OttahHoward K. Ottenstein, ’51Anthony PalloneJonathan Palmer, ’74Elliot Palter, ’68Richard C. Palumbo, ’62Edward PapierJeanne Krakower ParkerRobert P. Parmett, ’55Adelaide Pashin-Rosen, ’48Irwin Pass, ’52Elizabeth Farrell Passman, ’41Renée S. Pasternack, ’42Vivian M. Patraka, ’68

Marilyn PearceLouise Pecoraro, ’54Richard T. PecoraroJoan Pedersen, ’74Laura Penn, ’49Audrey Perel, ’59Gerald H. Perkus, ’59Robert Perla, ’55Jay R. Perler, ’69

Wallace and Ellen PerlickFlorence PerlsteinTerry Perperis, ’68Arlene Phillips, ’62Rhoda A. Phillips, ’51Francine S. Pickus, ’81Caterina Y. Pierre, ’94Eustef PierreLany PierreHoward Pierson, ’43Beatrice Pill, ’44Paula K. Pinchevsky, ’77Milton Pincus, ’51Lyubov Pinskaya, ’97

Maria Pisani, ’60Stanley Pitkowsky, ’52Gerald M. Plevin, ’57Julia S. Plotkin, ’61Cleveland O. Plunkett, ’94Harvey Pobiner, ’48Marlene Steinberg Podell, ’65Seymour Polansky, ’42Catherine Polese, ’39

Leonard E. Polikoff, ’77Mary T. Politano, ’72Dorothy Pollack, ’63Peter PoonAbraham Popish, ’49Harriet Posner, ’54William P. Posner, ’48Joseph Post, ’50Gail Postal, ’64Johanna Zalkin Poster, ’61Robert PottingerIris J. Prager, ’65Martin S. Price, ’55Abraham Prosky, ’54Ethel N. Purnell, ’40Genevieve M. Querin, ’57Myra Buchalter Quint, ’47Alma Raab, ’51Myrna A. (Haber) Rabinowitz, ’59Burton, ’48, and Elizabeth RaffelKenneth S. Ragan, ’77Larry, ’57, and Carol, ’57, RaisfeldJean Rappaport, ’56Rana G. Rappaport, ’69Selma Rappaport, ’51Shirley Raps, ’56Ethel Ratner, ’41David Rayfiel, ’47Nellya RazzakovaJerome M. Rehr, ’45Holly Reichlin, ’81David Reid, ’92, and Jacqueline ReidDorothy Krasnoff Reider, ’53Jane Kaner Reifler, ’60Ellen A. Reiss, ’56Myron Reissman, ’39Peter I. Reiter, ’65Abraham Rennert, ’58Harvey Resnick, ’67Lucille Resnick, ’50Makhmood ReznikJoseph V. Ricapito, ’55Judith Rimberg, ’53Carmen RinaldiAlice M. RivasDesiree R. RoachGary A. RoachBeatrice Robin, ’52Bernard M. Robin, ’59Gabriela RobinFlorence Robinson, ’43Valentina M. Robinson, ’82George RodmanJack L. Roemer, ’56Julia Rojano, ’05Leonard, ’42, and Evelyn RokawSimione RokolaqaLois C. Roland, ’64Vincent S. Romano, ’53Martino RosalvaDiane, ’58, and Robert, ’64, RosenEmanuel Rosen, ’51Gladys Rosen, ’43Linda, ’67, and Ronald, ’66, RosenRona F. Rosen, ’73

Selma Rosen, ’39Sheldon A. Rosen, ’56Ronald L. Rosenbaum, ’67Alan RosenbergLibby Rosenberg, ’52Shirley Rosenberg-Law, ’47Goldie L. Rosenblatt, ’69Barbara RosenfeldClaire Rosenfeld, ’73, and Irving

RosenfeldBetty A. Rosenstock, ’67Arkady RosentsvaygPhilip Rosler, ’52Kendra RossKenneth L. Ross, ’66Donald and Sandra RothPhyllis Roth, ’48Rachel RothSandra K. Roth, ’57Sidney Roth, ’49Ethel Rothenberg, ’45Robert A. Rothman, ’91Helen Kurz Rothstein, ’60Gladys L. Rubenfeld, ’56Bernice Rubin, ’54Charles L. Rubin, ’58Davina L. Rubin, ’66Meyer I. Rubin, ’45Renée Hartz Rubin, ’46Shiela R. Rubinson, ’56Edith R. Rubinstein, ’47Selma Rubinstein, ’46Elsie Ruchlis, ’33Martin Rudman, ’55Matthew V. Rudorfer, ’72Samuel A. Ruello, ’54Evelyn Rypins-Kaplan, ’36Murray Ryss, ’36Dee A. Sachs, ’81Kay M. Sackman, ’57Elaine Sacks, ’45Evelyn Sacks, ’43Irving, ’48, and Irene, ’48, SacksFlorence R. Saffer, ’50Harriet S. Safian, ’41Jacq Safina-HamadaniMireille M. Sainvil, ’93Joan Herman Salb, ’55Esther Sales, ’61Sharon E. Saltzman, ’72Mozelle M. Sammell, ’70Arlyne Samuels, ’54Gloria A. Santino, ’47Geraldine Saull, ’48Anita S. Sax, ’55Robert Joseph ScanlonBarry SchachterRita Tiero Schaffer, ’67, and Barry

Schaffer, ’68Dorothy W. Schaffner, ’35Howard Schare, ’62Irwin Schechter, ’68Joel M. Scheer, ’72Sheila Scheingold, ’61Shari A. Scher, ’68

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Daniel Scherr, ’65Leon Schertzer, ’48Ety Schinazi, ’73Joseph SchlangerSylvia Kuchinsky Schleimer, ’42Betty Schlissel, ’53Anita L. Schloss, ’68Monroe Schneider, ’37David M. Schoen, ’65Harvey, ’65, and Carole Sue, ’63,

SchoenbergDavid Schoenfeld, ’44Robert Anders SchonbeckIra Schor, ’72Marcia Schorr, ’55Esther W. Schraub, ’84Dorothy F. Schreiber, ’55Martin P. Schreibman, ’56Frances SchultzRichard and Karen SchultzDebbie Schwartz, ’45Eugene I. Schwartz, ’39Francine E. Schwartz, ’61Herva Lenore Schwartz, ’65Ira SchwartzJay H. Schwartz, ’77Judith Schwartz, ’63Louis P. Schwartz, ’43Michael A. Schwartz, ’70Rosalie Schwarz, ’93Robert Scott, ’96Otis Searcy, Jr., ’63Judith A. Sedore, ’71Ezra D., ’56, and Minna Fox, ’65,

SeltzerElizabeth SergileAlejandro S. Serrano, ’82Gloria SerranoAndre and Stefanie SetyonJohn B. Sganga, ’61Arnold Shak, ’72Ellen R. Shapiro, ’71Harriet Shair Shapiro, ’65Irada ShapiroDebbie M. Sharon, ’97Roslyn L. Shaw, ’64Gary Shelton, ’75Gail A. Sherain, ’63Yakov SherkNatalya ShevyakovaEdna Shostak, ’35Iosif ShpitsJay Shuldiner, ’65Avraham SianovMiriam Sidran, ’42Beatrice Siegel, ’32Ethel Siegel, ’38Frank Siegel, ’56Norman H. Sigman, ’04Morris D. Silber, ’01Anthony F. SiliatoDanny SilitongaRobert N. Silver, ’66Jacob Silverman, ’56Judith Silverman, ’60

Martin Silverman, ’50Gerald Silverstein, ’72Ilene Joy Simon, ’83Sylvia R. Sipress, ’59Phyllis J. Sirota, ’45Edith Sirvint, ’48Thelma Slutsky, ’77Albert, ’41, and Sylvia, ’42, SmallDavid S. and Jill I. SmithEleanore Smith, ’60Marianne Cantirino Smith, ’77, and

Timothy SmithMichael H. Smith, ’65Richia Smith, ’99Myrna Brooks Soast, ’57Lynda A. SobieskiArlene B. Soifer, ’49Beverly Sokoloff, ’41Rima Sokoloff, ’83Helen Kurzweil SolAnne Ritt Solar, ’56Harvey, ’40, and Miriam SoloffJeffrey J. SolomonSheldon G. Solomon, ’62Mitchell Solomowitz, ’67Maxine A. Soloway, ’83Zvi Leo SoltzEduardo Somoza, ’96Myra Sorin, ’62Frances L. Spaeth, ’48Ruth Spar, ’39Marcia Sparrow, ’56Cecile Spector, ’58Shirley M. Spector, ’41Janet E. Spirer, ’72Jules L. Spodek, ’50Harriette W. Springer, ’34Irving F. Stacy, ’41Roberta Standish, ’58Sheila Diamond Stark, ’55Claire Rutman Starr, ’57Philip Starr, ’57Phyllis Steen, ’52June, ’56, and Norman, ’58, SteinGertrude Steinberg, ’78Diane Steiner, ’69Andrew SteketeeLynn M. Stember, ’67Alex StepenskyBeatrice S. Stern, ’36Gerald Stern, ’58Sylvia W. Stern, ’52Mildred Sternlicht, ’51Alice Mills Stewart, ’49Kerry J. Stewart, ’69Andral St. FleurMarlene Stifelman, ’57Anne K. Still, ’79Randy F. Stills, ’69Salvatore L. Stingo, ’65Charles M. Stipelman, ’69Joseph St. JusteStuart P. Stoller, ’77Harriet E. Stollman, ’67Janice L. Stoneham

Arthur L. Storch, ’77Larry Stotz, ’93Mitchell Strauss, ’52Warren Strober, ’58Joyce Strom, ’58Leonard I. Strom, ’63Enid Stubin, ’74Sandra Stumbo, ’03Helen Jochnowitz Stutman, ’35Eugene Sucov, ’43Edwin Sultan, ’53Florence Lubin Surkin, ’43

Harold, ’41, and Elaine SussEvan Swartz, ’82Frieda C. Tabak, ’34Gabriel TabakDavid Talmas, ’49Claire Tanabe, ’88Laura TanenbaumRhoada Kuhlik Tanenbaum, ’49Adele Tannenbaum, ’42Leonard Taubenblatt, ’48Joan DiPalma Taurisano, ’61Herman J. Teitler, ’54Leontine Slavin Temsky, ’52Elayne TendrichMyra J. Teplitzky, ’62

Howard TepperGeorge Tessler, ’57Martin M. Tessler, ’58Gary TestaRalph P. Testa, ’63Delores I. Theobald, ’74Erwin K. Thomas, ’72Maria Thomas, ’02Marie Hein Thompson, ’81Edith, ’45, and Paul, ’42, ThornerRonald S. Tikofsky, ’52Cynthia C. Tingue

Natalie Tinkelman, ’42Sergi Tolokolnikov Janet Tonkonow, ’48Leonardo Torres, ’01Elisa ToveyMichelle TrabandPhilip Trauber, ’70Maurice, ’72, and Mildred, ’63,

TrebachThelma H. Triant, ’69Frank Tripoli, ’62Frank T. Trippi, ’49Edith Phyllis Tuber and Joel Tuber, ’85Henry and Norma TulganAudrey F. Tumpowsky, ’63

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Phyllis Tureen, ’50Edith Levine Turetsky, ’44James Turner, ’03Mary P. Turner, ’88Olga TzoyBernice Agines UllmannRosalind Aronowitz Unterman, ’45,

and David UntermanJacob M., ’39, and Janna UsadiJoan Edzant VegosenLena VellaSondra Victor, ’71Fred H. Vidro, ’52Enerlie B. VillamorSara VipSemyon Volman

Angelo A. Volpe, ’59Theodore J. Von Zwehl, ’60Warren D. Wacholder, ’82Harvey Wachtell, ’61Theodore Walden, ’53Robert, ’79, and Robin, ’80, WallachJane, ’69, and Barry, ’68, WallackDonald, ’56, and Lynne WarrenSonja Z. Waschitz, ’61Phyllis WassermanSusan A. WatinsArthur S. Watnick, ’53Howard M. Wayne, ’65Evelyn Weber, ’59Thelma Feinstein Weinberg, ’59Aaron D. Weiner, ’40Myrna G. Weiner, ’51Harvey WeingartenMichael Weinick, ’72Leo Weinreich, ’74Beatrice D. Weinstein, ’48

David Weinstein, ’64Murray Weinstein, ’49Stephen P. Weinstein, ’64Irwin WeintraubJanet Weintraub, ’70Arlene L. Weisbach, ’67Richard S. Weisbroat, ’53Claire Weisel, ’46Rhoda Shapiro Weisel, ’43Elaine WeisenbergBurton J., ’51, and Eleanor

Naphtali, ’62, WeiserNathan Weisman, ’90Barry D. Weiss, ’71Martin WeissMorton Weiss, ’57

William A. Weiss, ’55Julian Weissgold, ’52Harriet Weitzenfeld, ’43Diana Weller, ’54Rochelle H. Welsh, ’72Eleanor Wenger, ’40Donald WenzAudrey Whitman, ’64Susan Wien, ’79, and Larry WienRita Wiepert, ’56Harriet B. Williams, ’48Jacqueline C. WilliamsJocelyn WillsJulene Wilson, ’05Georgene R. Winick, ’71Marsha Winston, ’67Josephine Wise, ’43Phyllis J. Wit, ’47Baruch WolhendlerFred Wolodiger, ’77William Won, ’62

Amy N. WongMichael Woodman, ’43Michael WorthLeon S. Woskoff, ’53Joanne Santoro Wright, ’75Lucille L. Wright, ’88Pundat WuPenina Wunderlich, ’78Amy Wynn, ’86Harvey Allen Yablonsky, ’54Kazuo Yamazaki, ’06Marvin Yanofsky, ’64Maryna YarotskaNatalia YazigiBarbara Kromberg Yellowitz, ’58Michael Yosha

Betty Young, ’45Royce Younger, ’56Philip Yuen, ’79Roberta Y. Zacker, ’60Tatyana ZagoruychenkoSusanna Zakon, ’63Jean Wohl Zamore, ’40Lorraine and Joseph ZarconeMoishe and Goldie, ’68, ZelcerBrenda Russin Zimmerman, ’59Toby Zucker, ’63Leo Zwell, ’34Jacob W. Zwick, ’55Anonymous (20)

Corporate andFoundation Donors$250,000 and overMrs. Giles Whiting Foundation

$100,000–$249,999Hearst Foundation, Inc.Andrew W. Mellon FoundationThe Woodrow Wilson National

Fellowship Foundation

$50,000–$99,999Kiver Foundation

$25,000–$49,999Hammer Family Charitable

FoundationHess Foundation, Inc.Charlotte W. Newcombe FoundationThe New York Community Trust

$10,000–$24,999Aetna, Inc.American Council of Learned SocietiesBarnes & Noble College BookstoresThe George Backer Family

Foundation, Inc.The Bank of New YorkBrooklyn College Alumni AssociationThe City University of New York

Chancellor’s OfficeColgate-Palmolive CompanyCRC Management Co., LLCExxonMobil FoundationFeirstein Capital ManagementO'Melveny & Myers LLPMay and Samuel Rudin Family

Foundation, Inc.TimeWarnerWilliam Morris Agency

$5,000–$9,999BCAA Palm Beach ChapterCommunity Counselling Service

Co., LLCCourtroom Television Network LLCHarperCollins Publishers Inc.ICMIowa Foundation for Education,

Environment, and the ArtsJobs For The Future, Inc.JPMorgan ChaseKramer, Levin, Naftalis &

Frankel LLPThe Charles A. Mastronardi

FoundationThe National Italian American

FoundationRich Foundation for Education,

Culture, and Welfare

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$2,500–$4,999Alliance AtlantisAllied Advertising AgencyAmerican Express FoundationAmerican International GroupThe Ant FarmBCAA Broward-Dade ChapterBCAA Northern Metro ChapterCinram International Inc.The City Gardens Club of

New York CityCreative DomainFotoKemGraphic Alliance CorporationING FoundationIntralinkJohnson & JohnsonmOcean, LLCNoble, Inc.Park Strategies LLCPicturehouseProfessional Staff Congress/CUNYTerry Hines & AssociatesTheatrical Distribution ServicesWodell, Iltis, Sherman AssociatesXerox CorporationAnonymous (1)

$1,000–$2,499Altavera Realty CorporationThe Bay and Paul Foundations BCAA Long Island ChapterBCAA Manhattan ChapterBCAA Southwest Brooklyn Chapter BNS Afterschool ProgramCingularClean FunCon EdisonDeloitte, Haskins & SellsDow Jones & Company, Inc.Evaluation AssociatesGeorgica Advisors LLCThe Graduate Center of the

City University of New YorkGranoff Family FoundationIBM, Matching Gift FoundationInstitute for Retirees in Pursuit

of EducationKPMG Peat MarwickLincoln Financial Group FoundationLithographixLoews CorporationM.D. Sass Associates, Inc.Metropolitan Food Service, IncNew Wave EntertainmentState of New YorkPerlbinder RealtyPfizer, Inc.Picture Head, LLCShoolery DesignTarrytown House

Triangle Equities Management Company LLC

Village RoadshowWinston Davis & Associates

$500–$999Barnes & NobleBCAA/BCMFABCAA Phoenix ChapterBunge CorporationElectro-Miniatures CorporationLinden Alschuler & Kaplan, Inc.Margo Lion Ltd.Marx Realty AgentMellon BankNew York Times Company

FoundationPearsonPrudential FoundationUBS Foundation USA Matching

Gift ProgramZubatkin Owner Representation,

LLC

$100–$499Afrank Inc.Allagash Property TrustAltria Employees Involvement

ProgramsAXA FoundationBank of AmericaBC Member OrganizationsBCAA Campus ChapterBCAA Tucson ChapterBelair Real E. CorporationBelcrest Realty CorporationBelmar Realty CorporationBelport Realty CorporationBelrose Realty CorporationBelshire Realty CorporationBelterra Realty CorporationBrazos Property TrustChancy Memorial FoundationCimmaron Property TrustCombined Jewish PhilanthropiesDeerfield Property TrustEli Lilly and CompanyElkhorn Property TrustGlaxoSmithKline FoundationGuardian Life TrustThe HartfordIndependence Savings BankInvestors Bank & Trust CompanyLevy Ratner, P.C.Marsh & McLennan IncorporatedMassachusetts Mutual Life Insurance

CompanyMeyner and Landis LLPMilliman, Inc.National Starch & Chemical

FoundationNew York Life Foundation

Northrop Grumman FoundationOlder Women's League

Brooklyn ChapterPPG Industries FoundationPrinceton UniversityR.D. Executive & Employees

Service, Inc.Ranchhod Krupa, Inc.

Silvercup Studios AssociatesTelcordia TechnologiesTexas Instruments FoundationTrizec Properities, IncThe Vanguard Group FoundationWilliam H. Anderson Foundation, Inc.Wyeth

Up to $9916 Beaver Street CorporationBlack Alumni Association of

Brooklyn College, Inc.CNA Insurance CompaniesThe Dabah Family Foundation, Inc.

Eisenberg & MargolisFlatbush Federal Savings BankKimco Realty CorporationLeumi USA Investment CorporationLittle LeagueM. H. LeBlang, Inc.Merck Company FoundationMetropolitan Life Foundation

Morgan Stanley & CompanySun MicrosystemsW.W. Norton & Company, Inc.Wolf Maryles & Associates, LLC

BequestsEstate of Sara BrickmanEstate of Henrietta A. CromeEstate of Edith S. GolombEstate of Gisela GrossEstate of Paul Andreas Rasmussen

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Betty L. Allen, ’38Marilyn Apelson, ’47Willard, ’68, and Eleanor, ’67,

ArchieMillicent Aronoff, ’44Daniel Baker, ’57Kelvin A. Barry, ’00Lawrence E. Behr, ’56Sam E. Beller, ’59Lorna R. Bernard, ’47Fannie K. Beyer, ’43Roslyn D. Bienenstock, ’58Irwin E. Blum, ’34Philip J. Canciglia, ’54Nathan Cedars, ’39Jules Chametzky, ’50Sui Kuk Cheng, ’99Edwin H. Cohen, ’62Herbert L. Ennis, ’53

Joseph S. Fisher, ’52George Friedman, ’56Barbara Leslie Gerber, ’62Stanley Goldstein, ’59Meri Seinfeld Goodman, ’64,

and Robert GoodmanRobert, ’62, and Phyllis, ’63,

HechtmanMary HowardEva Hubschman, ’40Leanora B. Katzman, ’53Stuart Kessler, ’50Murray Kofkin, ’49Murray Koppelman, ’57Donald Kramer, ’58Claire A. Lambkin, ’53David Langmeyer, ’63Jacob Lebowitz, ’57Sandra R. Leiblum, ’65

Samuel I. Levey, ’35Elliot Levine, ’46Fred Levine, ’56Helen Lieber, ’39Walter Lipiner, ’48Lesley A. Lull, ’81Daniel M. Lyons, ’39Philip Medvin, ’43Joan B. Meer, ’58Philip N. MelnickFlorence Sternlieb Menchel, ’45Rita Meyer, ’60Sophie Halabi Minkoff, ’38Nathan, ’55, and Laura G., ’49,

NeuerRuth Oppenheim, ’42Samuel Phillips, ’52Saul G. Poss, ’34Belle Rothberg, ’58

Betty J. Rowen, ’41Irene Ruotolo, ’59Joan Herman Salb, ’55Gloria A. Santino, ’47Irwin Schneiderman, ’43George Schwartzman, ’40Mel Silverman, ’42Shirley Cohen Simon, ’56Ronnie L. Simons, ’66Gerald Stein, ’59Kate M. Tuchman, ’34Brendelle B. Walden, ’47Anne S. Wax, ’39Robert,’49, and Doris Weisberg Abraham Wolf, ’56Ethyle R. Wolfe and Coleman H.

Benedict

Brooklyn College Legacy Society

Legacy SocietyThe Legacy Society is a select group of alumni and friends who have named the Brooklyn College Foundation in their wills, trusts, life income gifts, insurance policies, or retirement plans. It is our pleasure to acknowledge their extraordinary commitment to securing the future of the College.

“I have never lost sight of the fact that my profession and my satisfying retirement were due, in large part, to the excellent education I received at Brooklyn College. In gratitude, I hope that this gift will help others achieve their goals.”

Gloria Santino, ’47Retired schoolteacher

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The Brooklyn College Foundation, Inc.

BALANCE SHEETJUNE 30, 2006

(with summarized financial information for June 30, 2005)

2006 2005

ASSETSCash $ 2,087,094 $ 1,003,734

Investments (includes $1,086,221 in 2006 and $1,150,620 in 2005held in split interest agreements) 50,266,377 44,673,967

Interest receivable 15,264 19,217

Contributions receivable (net of allowance of $250,000 in 2006 and 2005) 7,029,861 5,326,737

Beneficial interest in remainder trusts 956,022 1,017,417

Prepaid expenses and other receivables 56,671 60,170

Artwork 215,320 197,720

Total assets $60,626,609 $52,298,962_________ _________

LIABILITIES AND NET ASSETS

Liabilities

Accounts payable and accrued expenses $ 83,462 $ 83,567

Annuity obligations 529,320 $ 524,218

Total liabilities 612,782 607,785

Net assets Unrestricted

General 141,595 144,357

Board designated endowment 5,080,685 3,870,554

Total unrestricted net assets 5,222,280 4,014,911

Temporarily restricted 18,986,292 14,486,133

Permanently restricted 35,805,255 33,190,133

Total net assets 60,013,827 51,691,177

Total liabilities and net assets $60,626,609 $52,298,962_________ _________

More detailed information is available in the independent auditor’s report.

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Gifts that Support Brooklyn CollegeBrooklyn College relies on the generosity of individuals, foundations, and corporations to support our mission of providing a

high-quality, affordable education for deserving students. There are many ways that donors can help us achieve our mission.

The Annual FundAnnual gifts by alumni and friends to the Brooklyn CollegeFoundation underwrite current needs that cannot be fundedby state assistance, tuition, or fees. Unrestricted gifts to theAnnual Fund support scholarships, facilities, cocurricularstudent-learning opportunities, equipment for classrooms and laboratories, special seminars, and faculty developmentinitiatives. As public funding dwindles, the College must relymore and more on private contributions.

For more information about the Annual Fund pleasecontact Phillip Ammonds, Associate Director of the AnnualFund, at (718) 951-5074, or [email protected].

The Legacy Society: Planned Gifts and BequestsMembers of the Brooklyn College Legacy Society have made a provision for the College in their estate planning. TheBrooklyn College Foundation offers several future-orientedinvestment opportunities for those who want to carry forwardthe spirit of excellence at Brooklyn College, including lifeincome trust, charitable lead trust, life insurance, and gifts ofstock or real estate. Legacy Society members may also make aplanned gift in the form of a bequest.

For more information about the Legacy Society ormaking a planned gift, please contact William Healy, Senior Philanthropic Adviser, at (718) 951-5074, [email protected].

Gifts OnlineYou may now make a tax-deductible gift to Brooklyn Collegeby logging on to the Brooklyn College Foundation Web site,www.brooklyncollegefoundation.org, and using our secureconnection. We accept credit or debit cards with aMasterCard or Visa logo.

Establishing a Scholarship, Award, or PrizeThe Brooklyn College Foundation offers more than sixhundred scholarships and awards—valued at nearly $2 millionannually—that help our best and most ambitious studentsmeet the expenses of their education. Within limits, ascholarship, award, or prize may reflect the specific wishes of adonor. Many funds have been established to honor a formerstudent or faculty member or to encourage students in aparticular academic area. Establishing a scholarship, award, orprize can also perpetuate the memory of a loved one.

For more information about establishing a scholarship,award, or prize, please contact Michelle Arrington, DeputyDirector of Development, at (718) 951-5074, [email protected].

Tributes and MemorialsThe Tribute and Memorial Program of the Brooklyn CollegeFoundation was created at your request. This fund receivesgifts made in tribute to a friend, business associate, or lovedone on the occasion of a birthday, anniversary, or retirement.It also receives memorial gifts.

For more information about tributes and memorials,please contact Phillip Ammonds, Associate Director of the Annual Fund, at (718) 951-5074, [email protected].

Matching Gifts: Double the Impact of Your DonationEvery year, more than seven thousand corporations providematching funds to educational and cultural organizationsacross the country. If you are affiliated with such a company,you may be eligible to have your gift to the Brooklyn CollegeFoundation matched. Your company’s human resourcesdepartment or personnel office is the most likely source ofspecific information. Complete the matching-gift formprovided by your employer and send it with your gift. TheFoundation will process the company form and notify youwhen the match is received.

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Sam E. Beller, ’59

Oheneba Boachie-Adjei, ’76

Donald Buchwald, ’59

Edwin H. Cohen, ’62

Jerry Della Femina, ’57

James Fantaci, ’68

Irwin Federman, ’56

Barry R. Feirstein, ’74

Bertram Fields, ’42

Agnes Ford, ’69

Roy L. Furman, ’60

Richard F. Gaccione, ’68

Bernard H. Garil, ’62

Ilene Gold, ’62

Jules Haimovitz, ’71

Frances A. Hess

Myron Kandel, ’52

Saul B. Katz, ’60

Christoph M. Kimmich

Murray Koppelman, ’57

Donald Kramer, ’58

Herbert Kurz, ’41

Michael Lynne, ’61

Daniel M. Lyons, ’39

Marjorie Magner, ’69

Morris Mark, ’61

Madelon Leventhal Rand, ’64

Jack Rimmer, ’46

Martin D. Sass, ’63

Irwin Schneiderman, ’43

Zachary Solomon, ’57

Alexander M. Tanger, ’01

Morton L. Topfer, ’59

Leonard Tow, ’50

Howard Wohl, ’64

Carol Zicklin, ’61

Brooklyn College Foundation Board of Trustees

Phillip J. AmmondsAssociate Director, Annual Fund

Michelle ArringtonDeputy Director of Development

Joe FodorAssociate Director, Research

William Healy, ’99Senior Philanthropy Adviser

Larisa KholodenkoAccountant

Larry KnightDatabase Manager

Beth Farryn LevineDirector of Development

Farah Naz, ’05Office Assistant

Patricia PalermoOffice Manager

Katy SchlesingerFoundation Officer

Andrew Sillen, ’74Executive Director

Brooklyn College Foundation Staff

Page 40: The Brooklyn College Foundation Annual Report,2005–2006 · 2018-06-14 · Annual Report for 2005–2006 and to report to you about the ... period 2005–2010, was prepared in consultation

The Brooklyn College Foundation, Inc.Brooklyn College

2900 Bedford Avenue

Brooklyn, New York 11210-2889

Nonprofit Org.U.S. PostagePAIDBrooklyn, N.Y.Permit No. 492

FOUNDATION


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