The Bridge Society 2004

Transcription

The Bridge Society 2004
The HealthCare Chaplaincy 2004 Annual Report The
Next
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The Foundations have been pleased to support research
by The HealthCare Chaplaincy that is helping multifaith
certified healthcare chaplains improve the quality of
care they provide to patients by demonstrating the value
of pastoral care to their medical colleagues.
Jonathan T. Howe, Ph.D., Executive Director,
Arthur Vining Davis Foundations
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The HealthCare Chaplaincy stands at the head of its class in service delivery, education, and program effectiveness. Its progress and achievements over the past decade have been exceptional.
Edward W. Probert, Chairman,
Fannie E. Rippel Foundation
”
I am proud to serve on the front line as The Chaplaincy
takes on an expanded leadership role within the international pastoral care movement.
Frank J. Petrilli, Former President & CEO,
TD Waterhouse USA and Chair of The HealthCare
Chaplaincy’s Strategic Planning Initiative
“
“
”
We are pleased to support The Chaplaincy’s innovative post­doctoral fellowship program as it develops the next generation of researchers in spirituality and health.
John M. Templeton, Jr., M.D., President,
John Templeton Foundation
”
By developing innovative patient data­collection technologies like eChaplain™, The HealthCare Chaplaincy is raising the bar for the professional discipline of multifaith pastoral care and research.
Mona R. Ackerman, Ph.D., Psychologist and
Philanthropist
The Next Frontier
…Advancing Excellence and
Leadership in
Pastoral Care,
Education,
and Research The HealthCare Chaplaincy is a multifaith community of professionals from many cultures
dedicated to caring for persons in spirit, mind, and body.
We are committed to excellence and leadership in pastoral care,
education, and research.
2 From the Chairman and the President
18 Institutional Gifts
4 Treasurer’s Report
20 Individual Gifts:
The Bridge Society
5 Financial Statements
23 Individual Gifts
8 New Trustees
10 Pastoral Care
28 The Hope and Remembrance Society
12 Education
29 Board of Trustees
14 Research
30 Clinical Staff
16 The Wholeness of Life Awards Dinner 31 Administration
32 Partners in Healthcare 1
From the Chairman and the President
New frontiers. Some historians refer to the 15th and 16th centuries in Europe as the
“age of discovery,” a time of daring explo­
ration and migration into uncharted regions
and lands. As The HealthCare Chaplaincy
engaged its strategic planning process in
2004, it became clear that we were approaching
some important new frontiers. Would we
lead the multifaith spiritual healthcare move­
ment into its own age of discovery by helping
to improve, standardize, and measure the
quality and effectiveness of multifaith pastoral care and education? Or would we –
as some nations had done centuries ago –
turn inward rather than outward, closing our
eyes to new challenges and opportunities that exist within healthcare and spirituality,
pastoral education, and research?
By July 2004 when The Chaplaincy’s new
strategic plan was promulgated, the answers
to these questions were becoming clear. The HealthCare Chaplaincy had chosen the
path of change and growth. We would expand
upon our competencies and achievements in the three perennial arenas defined by our mission – clinical pastoral care, education, and research – creating new models in each of
these areas that would guide and inspire multi­
faith chaplains and chaplaincy organizations
throughout North America and beyond.
2
After 44 years of service and achievement,
The Chaplaincy is uniquely positioned to
undertake this pioneering journey, but we
also recognize that material resources and
professional expertise – though essential –
are not by themselves sufficient. Columbus,
Vasco De Gama, and Magellan did not
accomplish great feats of exploration because
they had the best­equipped ships or the most
advanced navigational technologies. Their
greater assets included vision, curiosity,
determination, and the support that comes
from being bound to a community that
enthusiastically shares one’s dreams.
The HealthCare Chaplaincy could not have
come this far had it not been supported by its own tightly knit community of stake­
holders. These loyal benefactors, zealous
board members, talented and committed chaplains and CPE faculty drawn together
from diverse religious and ethnic backgrounds,
and a very dedicated support staff, not only
believe spiritual care is integral to health but also trust that the multifaith mission of
The HealthCare Chaplaincy will sustain us in our own new age of discovery. Lawrence J. Toal Chairman
Walter J. Smith, S.J. President and CEO
3
Treasurer’s Report
The vision and commitment of its benefactors, trustees, and staff have
enabled The HealthCare Chaplaincy to become the largest and most
diverse resource for pastoral care clinicians, students, and researchers the
world over. Without the efforts of all of these individuals, The Chaplaincy
would not be the leader in multifaith pastoral care that it is today.
Roy E. Weathers
Treasurer 30.0
Net Assets 1990­2004 (in millions)
All Support & Administrative Costs
Administration
Fundraising
25.0
20.0
10.3%
8.7%
30.5%
15.0
All Education/
Research Programs & Clinical Services
Professional Education, Community Outreach, Research
10.0
50.5%
5.0
Patient/Family Care 0.0
’90 ’92 ’94 ’96 ’98 ’00 ’02 ’04
The Rev. George Handzo, director of clinical services for The HealthCare
Chaplaincy and president (2002­2004)
of the Association of Professional
Chaplains (APC), delivers the presiden­
tial address at the APC’s national meet­
ing in Dallas, Texas. Handzo and other
Chaplaincy staff were instrumental in bringing Islamic
leaders from all over the country to the 2004 conference, which focused
on the theme of “Bridging Diversity.”
4
2000 ­ 2004 Operating Results (in thousands)
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
Contributions
Corporations
Foundations & Trusts
Religious Organizations
Individuals & Estates
Benefit & Journal (net of expenses)
Total Contributions
238.2
787.1
76.7
527.4
839.2
2,468.6
271.8
1,071.2
58.5
809.9
766.0
2,977.4
341.8
1,278.2
51.2
906.3
921.5
3,499.0
195.3
1,275.3
66.5
663.5
1,056.0
3,256.6
493.9
1,000.3
34.6
858.4
938.9
3,329.1
Service Income
2,844.9
3,005.2
3,003.1
2,688.6
2,442.8
Other Income
Investment Income from Restricted Funds Utilized in Operations
Other Investment Income Utilized in Operations
Donated Goods & Services
Tuition, Student Fees, Miscellaneous
Total Other Income
Total Support and Revenue
121.1
0.0
18.0
92.0
231.1
5,544.6
144.3
0.0
36.2
95.5
276.0
6,258.6
180.5
0.0
51.9
101.6
334.0
6,836.1
230.9
150.0
55.7
99.4
536.0
6,481.2
299.9
200.0
22.3
108.4
630.7
6,402.6
Program Services
Patient/Family Care
Professional Education
Community Outreach
Research
Total Program Services
1,826.3
1,687.3
823.7
371.7
4,709.0
1,955.3
1,902.1
901.8
468.6
5,227.8
2,047.1
1,856.3
1,176.4
456.6
5,536.4
1,980.0
1,618.2
1,162.4
485.6
5,246.2
1,948.5
1,468.9
1,213.8
533.2
5,164.4
Support Services
Administration (including depreciation)
Fundraising, Annual
Total Support Services
Total Expenses
455.2
368.0
823.2
5,532.2
569.7
451.1
1,020.8
6,248.6
668.2
621.0
1,289.2
6,825.6
536.4
687.3
1,223.7
6,469.9
551.8
654.3
1,206.1
6,370.5
12.4
10.0
10.5
11.3
32.1
Support and Revenue
Operating Expenses
Revenue (Under)/Over Expenses
5
2000 ­ 2004 Statement of Financial Activities (in thousands)
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
Contributions
Corporations
Foundations & Trusts
Religious Organizations
Individuals & Estates
Benefit & Journal (net of expenses)
Total Contributions
139.8
978.7
88.7
522.6
864.2
2,594.0
208.5
1,672.4
66.5
767.9
1,244.3
3,959.6
273.1
631.9
76.1
1,316.2
1,021.5
3,318.8
264.4
1,657.0
88.5
750.2
1,056.0
3,816.1
113.8
340.3
34.6
808.6
885.9
2,183.2
Service Income
2,844.9
2,978.2
2,960.9
2,666.3
2,420.1
Other Income
Investment Income Utilized
Investment Income Not Utilized in Operations
Tuition, Student Fees, Miscellaneous
Total Other Income
Total Support and Revenue
121.1
2,547.5
110.0
2,778.6
8,217.5
144.3
2,147.5
95.5
2,387.3
9,325.1
58.1
0.0
87.5
145.6
6,425.3
230.9
5,643.3
80.6
5,954.8
12,437.2
299.9
3,455.9
108.4
3,864.2
8,467.5
Program Services
Patient/Family Care
Professional Education
Community Outreach
Research
Total Program Services
1,826.3
1,687.3
823.7
371.6
4,708.9
1,955.3
1,902.1
977.7
468.6
5,303.7
2,050.4
1,852.9
1,176.4
456.6
5,536.3
1,996.5
1,618.2
1,293.9
485.6
5,394.1
2,001.6
1,468.9
1,265.1
533.3
5,268.9
Support Services
Administration (including depreciation)
Fundraising, Annual
Total Support Services
Total Expenses
455.2
368.2
823.4
5,532.3
569.7
453.9
1,023.6
6,327.3
668.2
621.0
1,289.2
6,825.5
536.4
687.3
1,223.7
6,617.9
551.8
654.3
1,206.1
6,475.0
2,685.2
18,118.0
20,803.2
2,997.8
20,803.2
23,801.0
­400.2
23,801.0
23,400.8
5,819.3
23,400.8
29,220.1
1,992.5
29,220.1
31,212.6
Support and Revenue
Operating Expenses
Change in Net Assets
Net Assets, Beginning of Year
Net Assets, End of Year
6
2000 ­ 2004 Statement of Financial Position
(in thousands)
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
861.7
645.8
2,521.1
31.2
12,988.9
3,991.9
21,040.6
485.4
481.9
2,498.6
36.3
14,068.1
6,392.9
23,963.2
629.7
600.4
2,188.0
47.5
13,188.9
6,897.7
23,553.2
862.4
549.0
2,118.8
43.0
19,150.7
6,616.5
29,340.4
588.0
325.3
1924.9
55.7
22,224.6
6,246.3
31,364.8
237.4
237.4
162.2
162.2
151.4
151.4
120.4
120.4
150.1
150.1
Assets
Cash and Cash Equivalents
Accrued Income Receivable
Pledges and Grants Receivable
Prepaid Expenses and Deposits
Investments
Land, Buildings and Equipment
Total Assets
Liabilities and Net Assets
Liabilities
Accounts Payable and Accrued Expenses
Total Liabilities
Net Assets
Unrestricted
Net Investment in Land, Buildings, and Equipment
3,991.9
6,392.9
6,897.7
6,616.5
6,246.3
Designated
Long­Term Investment
Capital Improvements Fund
Undesignated
Total Unrestricted Net Assets
7,620.3
813.0
674.9
13,100.1
7,292.1
503.4
1,095.0
15,283.4
4,902.8
864.0
2,520.0
15,184.5
8,774.6
1,469.9
1,334.0
18,195.0
11,131.6
1,769.4
819.8
19,967.1
Temporarily Restricted
Permanently Restricted
Total Net Assets
Total Liabilities and Net Assets
5,763.1
1,940.0
20,803.2
21,040.6
6,434.5
2,083.1
23,801.0
23,963.2
5,409.5
2,806.8
23,400.8
23,552.2
7,153.7
3,871.4
29,220.1
29,340.4
7,359.5
3,888.1
31,214.7
31,364.8
Audited financial statements of The HealthCare Chaplaincy, Inc. are available by writing to The HealthCare Chaplaincy, Development Department,
315 East 62nd Street, New York, NY 10021, or to the Department of State, Office of Charities Registration, Albany, NY 12331.
7
New Trustees
Kathryn Christensen is vice president of television for The Wall Street
Journal. She directs the Journal and Dow Jones & Company’s relationship and provision of news content to CNBC in the U.S. and assists on editorial
matters for CNBC Asia Pacific and CNBC Europe, cable television operations
co­owned by Dow Jones and NBC. Kathy also serves as a director of CNBC Europe. She is a native of Nebraska and earned a bachelor’s degree in journalism from the University of Nebraska in Lincoln.
Kathleen M. Foley, M.D. is one of the world’s leading authorities in palliative medicine and end­of­life care. Her research centers on developing
rationales for the use of analgesic drugs to help patients with cancer pain,
including innovative dose schedules and drug delivery techniques. She was also the founding director of the Project on Death in America, which funded
research on end­of­life issues and improving the care of the dying in the United States. Kathy is currently an attending neurologist at Memorial Sloan­
Kettering Cancer Center and New York­Presbyterian Hospital.
Rochelle Hirsch is a myofunctional therapist – a speech therapist specializing
in tongue thrusting disorders. She has worked as a speech therapist for many
years, serving in various parochial schools in the Archdiocese of New York.
Rochelle is an active board member of the Fifth Avenue Synagogue and is the
founder of its Creative Playschool Nursery. She is currently writing a children’s
book. Rochelle was a member of the Women’s Auxiliary at Mt. Sinai Medical
Center, and has been involved with the Ramaz School and the original start­up
program for Jewish Healing and Hospice Partnership.
Jon Meacham is the managing editor of Newsweek and best­selling author
of Franklin and Winston: An Intimate Portrait of an Epic Friendship (Random
House, 2003), an account of the relationship between FDR and Churchill. Jon is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations and is a “Global Leader
for Tomorrow” of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland. At The University of the South, he is the chairman of the Regents Committee of the College of Arts and Sciences, a member of the subcommittee on honorary
degrees, and has served on the search committee for the dean of the School of Theology.
8
E. Joshua Rosenkranz is a shareholder in the law firm of Heller Ehrman.
He joined the firm in 2003, and his practice focuses on appeals and public poli­
cy advocacy. Josh has broad litigation experience in state and federal courts at
all levels across the country. Prior to joining Heller Ehrman, Josh was the
founding president and CEO of the Brennan Center for Justice at New York
University School of Law, one of the country’s foremost public interest firms. In
addition to helping create the Brennan Center, Josh founded the Office of the
Appellate Defender, a public defender office specializing in criminal appeals in
New York State courts.
Louis Scenti is executive director and senior learning & development cover­
age officer for the investment banking and equity research divisions of Morgan
Stanley. He has been working in the field of leadership/management develop­
ment, learning, and organization development for over 15 years. Prior to join­
ing Morgan Stanley, Louis worked in the global leadership development group
at Merrill Lynch where he was responsible for the design, development, and
implementation of the first global, enterprise­wide leadership development pro­
gram for senior managers.
Maria Theodore Spears is a real estate broker for Brown Harris Stevens.
She was born and raised in Chios, Greece and attended the University of Athens,
the University of Chicago, and the New York School of Design. Active in local
politics, Maria is a member of the New York Women’s Republican Club and
was a fundraiser for former New York mayor Rudolph Giuliani. Maria is also
active at the Chapin School on Manhattan’s Upper East Side.
Roy E. Weathers is a CPA and partner at PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP.
Roy joined the firm in 1991 and was admitted to partnership in 2002. He specializes in domestic and international bank taxation and is a member of the
American Institute of Certified Public Accountants, the National Association of Black Accountants, and the New York and South Carolina State Societies of Certified Public Accountants. Roy’s commitment to community involvement
is evident from his serving as a board member for the Partnership for the
Homeless and Career Opportunities in the Accounting Profession (COAP) and his service with INROADS, an organization dedicated to developing and
placing talented minority youth in the corporate world.
9
Certified healthcare chaplains are explorers in their own
right. Although they spend most of their time within the
walls of a medical facility, emotionally and spiritually they
venture much further than that. Each encounter with a
patient, grieving loved one, or overtaxed member of the
medical staff is a voyage into the uncharted, inner world of a person in crisis.
For the past 44 years, The HealthCare Chaplaincy has embraced the same pioneering spirit as the pastoral caregivers it employs and educates, continually expanding and diversifying its clinical services
programs to meet the evolving needs of its constituents. As a result, The Chaplaincy has become not only the largest multifaith chaplaincy
program in the world, but also an acknowledged leader in the international pastoral care movement. In 2004 The Chaplaincy extended its leadership role in the provision of pastoral care even further, devising new service options for clients
and new technologies that are helping improve and standardize spiritual caregiving among professional chaplains and chaplaincy
organizations everywhere.
The Rev. John Simon and board member Karen Smythe discuss the
many programs for patients, medical
staff, and community members that Rev. Simon has set in motion since he began service in August,
2004 at Vassar Brothers Medical Center in Poughkeepsie, New York,
one of The Chaplaincy’s newest partner institutions.
10
The Rev. George Handzo and Chaplaincy
COO Jeanne Lee go “on the road,”
establishing ties with prospective new
partner medical institutions. Expanding
beyond the previous full service model,
The Chaplaincy added a number of discrete service options in 2004 tailored
to meet the unique clinical needs and budgetary constraints of each partner institution.
Chaplaincy clinician Sr. Margaret
Oettinger, O.P., keeps track of her pastoral
care interventions using eChaplain™,
an Internet­based technology developed
by The HealthCare Chaplaincy for collect­
ing and analyzing patient care data.
Chaplain Yusuf Hasan offers a welcome
presence and astute pastoral care to pediatric cancer patients and their
parents at Memorial Sloan­Kettering
Cancer Center.
Advancing
Pastoral
Care
The Rev. A. Meigs Ross (middle) confers with two full­time residents
enrolled in The Chaplaincy’s supervisory residency program, the
Rev. Young­ki Eun (left) and Imam
Ramadan Zakat (right). Once certified,
Imam Zakat will become one of the
first CPE educators from the Islamic
faith in the world. Thus he will be well
positioned to encourage and mentor
other Muslims considering careers in
the field of professional multifaith pastoral care. Chaplain Eun, a native of Korea, will in a similar way expand
the small number of certified CPE supervisors working in Asia.
Leading
Education
Clinical Pastoral Education (CPE) does more than inform students; it transforms them as well. This highly experiential
form of post­graduate theological education helps chaplains­
in­training develop the maturity, skills, and expertise necessary to serve their patients, even when the patient
belongs to another faith tradition or subscribes to no religious practice at all.
The HealthCare Chaplaincy began offering CPE in 1971 and is now
considered the educator of choice for many students the world over
who desire a CPE experience that will expose them to a highly diverse
faculty and student body, and to an equally diverse array of healthcare
institutions where much of their pastoral care training will take place.
Building on its pioneering work in educational diversity, The Chaplaincy
took unprecedented efforts in 2004 to extend pastoral education to a
number of constituencies such as already­certified healthcare chaplains
in need of continuing education opportunities, physicians and medical
students, and community clergy.
Rabbi Shira Stern, director of The
Chaplaincy’s Center for Studies in
Jewish Pastoral Care, educates rabbinic
leaders, seminarians, and community
members from across the Jewish
denominational spectrum. Many Jewish
students who receive this form of continuing education become inspired
to pursue CPE, leading to careers as
professional chaplains.
The HealthCare Chaplaincy launched
PlainViews™ in early 2004. This free e­newsletter reaches many of the
10,000 multifaith certified healthcare
chaplains in North America. Many chaplains all over the world, such as the Rev. David Plummer of Hampton,
VA (pictured on left), are contributors as well as subscribers. The Rev. Martha
Jacobs (on right), formerly a staff chaplain, now serves as the publica­
tion’s managing editor.
Chaplaincy clinician the Rev. Arlinda
Derrick (standing on far right) educates
a class of pastoral care volunteers at
The Abyssinian Baptist Church in upper
Manhattan. Other Chaplaincy clinicians
conducted volunteer training programs
and other forms of community­based
education in healthcare institutions,
churches, mosques, and synagogues
throughout the New York area.
13
In a few short years, The Chaplaincy has succeeded in
establishing a strong pastoral research program and a first­rate pastoral care library. It has recruited professional
staff who possess the skills to address the challenge of
building a reputation for quality and excellence in research
and have practical knowledge about the profession of multifaith pastoral care and its practitioners.
The Spears Research Center and Library is integral to the present and future success of The Chaplaincy’s mission. Through innovative
research projects, it is pushing beyond traditional borders, reaching
physicians, research psychologists, and other academicians interested in exploring the role chaplains play in the arenas of spirituality and health.
In addition to meeting the information
needs of Chaplaincy clinicians,
faculty and students, librarian Helen
Tannenbaum (right) supports the
Chaplaincy Research staff on a variety
of original studies. With a collection of well over 3,000 books, professional
journals, audio and video recordings,
a comprehensive on­line database,
and numerous affiliations with other
academic libraries and specialized
library consortiums, the Spears library
has become a popular destination for pastoral caregivers and medical and mental healthcare professionals
from all over the world.
14
As part of a national grant funded by the Arthur Vining Davis Foundations,
Kevin Flannelly, Ph.D. (second from
right), associate director of research,
collaborated with Chaplaincy personnel
and students to develop first­of­its­kind
scales for discerning the spiritual needs
of hospital patients.
In a groundbreaking collaboration with the John Templeton Foundation,
Kathleen Galek, Ph.D. (right) became the first of two post­doctoral level
researchers to participate in a research
fellowship program administered by
The HealthCare Chaplaincy. Dr. Galek
educates and collaborates with
Chaplaincy clinicians and student chaplains like the Rev. Samuel Bryan
(pictured on left).
A Chaplaincy clinician gets acquainted
with eChaplain™, a proprietary patient
data collection technology recently
developed by The HealthCare Chaplaincy.
Using a handheld computer, chaplains
are able to record valuable information
about their patient interventions
moments after they occur. Once entered
onto the handheld, data can be easily
transferred to a personal computer
where it is accessible to other author­
ized hospital personnel. The data can
also be uploaded to The Chaplaincy’s
dedicated Internet server for further
analysis by approved Chaplaincy
administrators and researchers.
Pioneering
Research
The Wholeness of Life Awards Dinner
A Gathering of Friends – November 9th, 2004
The 2004 Wholeness of Life awards celebrated the compassionate
service of Jack Rudin, Anne M. Mulcahy, chairman and CEO of Xerox Corporation, and 14 dedicated patient care professionals
who were lauded by their hospital colleagues for their wholeness
of spirit, mind, and body.
Arlyn and Edward L. Gardner, designated
recipients in 2005 of The Chaplaincy
lifetime achievement Wholeness of Life award.
Chaplain Jane Mather next to Jeffrey T.
Berger, M.D., F.A.C.P., of Winthrop­University
Hospital, one of the evening’s 14 patient care honorees.
2004 Community Honoree
Anne M. Mulcahy, chairman of
the board and CEO of Xerox
Corporation. Reflecting on
Xerox’s strong commitment to philanthropy and community
service, Anne accepted the
Wholeness of Life award “on behalf of all of the
dedicated people at Xerox.”
Susan Rudin shares a gleeful moment with
her husband, 2004 lifetime achievement
honoree Jack Rudin.
Father Walter Smith alongside Bridge Society members
Janet Prindle and her husband Charles J. Seidler.
16
Jack Rudin received a special lifetime achievement Wholeness of Life
award for his years of support to The HealthCare Chaplaincy and
many other not­for­profit organizations, educational institutions, and
healthcare centers in greater New York.
Anne Mulcahy accepted this year’s community honoree Wholeness of Life award on behalf of the entire Xerox community, which, under her watch, has seen a dramatic increase in corporate philanthropy and volunteerism. Chris and Morton P. Hyman, chairman of the board of
trustees of Continuum Health Partners.
In an award ceremony at NYU Medical Center,
Chaplaincy vice chairman
Frank J. Petrilli presents a Wholeness of Life award
to Patricia Ferrer, C.S.W.
Similar ceremonies were
held at 13 other area
hospitals.
Former trustee Miriam K. Moran and her
son Walter Schwind.
Anne M. Mulcahy poses for a shot beside dinner co­chairman Vernon E. Jordan.
17
Institutional Gifts
$100,000 and above
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The Starr Foundation
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$10,000 ­ $24,999
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The Robertson Foundation
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May and Samuel Rudin Family Foundation, Inc.
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Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz
$25,000 ­ $99,999
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Chaplaincy trustees
Michael Smith and Frank
Petrilli alongside board
chairman Lawrence Toal
and Daniel Fitzpatrick,
president & CEO of
Goldman Sachs Trust
Company at a business
leaders’ breakfast.
Altria Group, Inc.
Citigroup, Inc.
The Hagedorn Fund
Lazard Frères & Co. LLC
The Henry Luce Foundation
Josiah Macy, Jr. Foundation
The Ambrose Monell Foundation
PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP
TD Waterhouse Group, Inc.
John Templeton Foundation
The Thomson Corporation
Washington Mutual, Inc.
Xerox Corporation
Anonymous (1)
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The Atlantic District, LC­MS
The Rose M. Badgeley Residuary Charitable Trust
Beth Israel Medical Center
The Blackstone Group
The Bristol­Myers Squibb Foundation, Inc.
The Winifred Masterson Burke Foundation
Fannie Mae
Goldman Sachs
Heller Ehrman White & McAuliffe
Hospital for Special Surgery
Invemed Associates, LLC
The Lucius N. Littauer Foundation
Metropolitan Life Insurance Company
The Henry & Lucy Moses Fund
The New York Physicians Foundation, Inc.
Pfizer, Inc.
Phillips­Van Heusen Corporation
Ripplewood Holdings
Saint Luke’s­Roosevelt Hospital Center
Alan B. Slifka Foundation, Inc.
Time Warner Inc.
Winthrop­University Hospital
United Health Foundation
Anonymous (1)
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■ Annual Fund Jim Hunt, managing
director of Hunt Howe
Partners LLC, next to Chaplaincy trustees
Mia Carbonell and Bud Johnson.
■ Benefit ■ Caring Partnerships
Capital Campaign
■ Carolyn and John Twiname Leadership Fund ■ Walter J. Smith, S.J. Professional Leadership Fund
$5,000 ­ $9,999
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American Express
Asbury Automotive Group
Bloomberg LP
The Winifred Masterson Burke Rehabilitation Hospital
Collegiate Church Corporation
Fisher Scientific International Inc.
GreenPoint Financial
Griffin Hospital
JPMorgan Chase & Company
Lawrence Hospital Center
Lenox Hill Hospital
Memorial Sloan­Kettering Cancer Center
Morgan Stanley
New York Hospital Queens
NYU Downtown Hospital
North Shore University Hospital
Rehab Institute of NY at Florence Nightingale Health Center
Saint Thomas Church Fifth Avenue
Sara Lee Corporation
$1,000 ­ $2,499
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J. Aron Charitable Foundation, Inc.
Cipriani 42nd Street
Congregation Shearith Israel
The Brick Presbyterian Church
The Leonard & Evelyn Lauder Foundation
The Vincent Mulford Foundation
Saint Luke’s Episcopal Church
Saint Michael’s Church
The Seth Sprague Foundation
Wyeth
$500 ­ $999
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Central Synagogue
Congregation Or Zarua
DuBrul Family Foundation
The Employment Line
Iona College
Muzak National Sales
The Parish of Christ the Redeemer
Park Avenue United Methodist Church Women
Varnum­DeRose Trust
$499 and Below
$2,500 ­ $4,999
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Congregation Emanu­El of the City of New York
The Constans Culver Foundation
Metzger­Price Fund, Inc.
North General Hospital
The Picower Foundation
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Christ Church (United Methodist Women)
The Church of the Epiphany
ExxonMobil Corporation
The First Baptist Church
The Robert G. Hayhurst, Jr. Family Foundation
Michael Podesta Graphic Design, Inc.
Saint Michael and All Angels Episcopal Church
Tele­Automation, Inc.
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The Bridge Society 2004
The Bridge Society is composed of generous individuals who have made
contributions in 2004 in support of The HealthCare Chaplaincy and its
major program areas including pastoral education, community
outreach, and research.
Partners in Healing Keepers of the Flame ($25,000 +)
($5,000 ­ $9,999)
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Phyllis Gelb
Catey and T. Michael Long
Diana D. and Frank J. Petrilli
Janet W. Prindle and Charles J. Seidler
Riklis Family Foundation
Laurance S. Rockefeller
Susan and Jack Rudin
Maria and Bill Spears
Sheila and Lawrence J. Toal
Anonymous (1)
Sustainers of the Spirit ($17,500 ­ $24,999)
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Lucy F. McGrath
Champions of Care ($10,000 ­ $17,499)
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Martine and Gerald A. Conway
David F. DeLucia
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Kathe and John S. Dyson
Charlotte M. Ford
Margaret M. Hill
Elaine and Kenneth G. Langone
Barbara S. Levinson
Anne Moore, M.D. and Arnold L. Lisio, M.D. Miriam K. Moran
Suzanne and Thomas S. Murphy
Carolyn and John Twiname
Susan and Edgar Wachenheim
William H. Wright II
Anonymous (1)
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Kathryn Christensen
Leisa S. and Charles G. Crane
Joan H. and Alfred C. DeCrane
Gladys and Carter J. Dinkeloo
to the Thelma A. Dinkeloo Pastoral Education Fund
Steve Dodge
William H. Donnell
Antonia B. DuBrul
Suzanne P. Fawbush and Christopher C. Grisanti
Arlyn and Edward L. Gardner
Monika and Charles A. Heimbold, Jr.
Rochelle and David Hirsch
Sherry Jacobson and Eugene I. Zuriff
Margaret Ann and Thomas S. Johnson
Mimi and Donald J. Keller
Jeanne and James Lee
Michele B. and Matthew M. Ludmer
Hope Bryce Preminger
Catherine A. Rein
in memory of Marie Kikkert
in honor of The Chaplaincy staff
Jill and Howard F. Sharfstein
Kimberly W. and Thomas J. Sheridan
The Rev. Dr. Walter J. Smith, S.J.
Maria T. Spears
Vera Stern
Donna and Alan N. Stillman
Sheryl and Daniel R. Tishman
Lisa Woods
■ Annual Fund Chaplaincy personnel
facilitated the participation of national Islamic clergy
leaders at the 2004 meeting of the Association of
Professional Chaplains.
Imam W. Deen Mohammed,
founder and president of The Mosque Cares (TMC),
is pictured in the front row,
second from left.
Torch Bearers ($2,500 ­ $4,999)
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Marilyn and Richard Blair
Drs. Jean B. and David B. Case
Dawna and Donald B. Christian
Susan L. Fischer
The Grove Creek Foundation
Candice and Terry W. Goodwin
Lynn and Bud Johnson in honor of the Rev. Dr. Walter J. Smith, S.J.
The Peter T. Joseph Foundation
Ethel LeFrak
Miriam F. Meehan
Ronay A. and Richard L. Menschel
Diane S. and Steven C. Parrish
Urvi and John Prunier
Karen and J.L. Nevill Smythe
David E. Stutzman
Linda R. and Thomas M. Taylor
Helen S. Tucker
in honor of Maria T. Spears
Marijke and William H. Webb
Suzanne and Stephen H. Weiss
Circle of Hope ($1,000 ­ $2,499)
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The Acorn Foundation
Barbara A. and Theodore B. Alfond
Roger C. Altman
Mary Jane and Edward F. Arrigoni
Bronwen and Louis Bastone
Kay Brover and Arthur C. Bennett
Virginia and Louis R. Benzak
Stephen Bermas
Robert L. Cahill, Jr.
■ Benefit ■ Caring Partnerships Capital Campaign ■ Carolyn and John Twiname Leadership Fund ■ Walter J. Smith, S.J. Professional Leadership Fund
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Rosamaria Carbonell
Louise Carter
Lyle and Warwick M. Carter, Jr. Mary W. Cashin
Donna S. and Derrick D. Cephas
Julie P. Cho, D.M.D.
Emy Cohenca
in memory of Jacques Cohenca
Marian H. Courtney
Lavonne and David A. Cowan
Ruth D. and Robert E. Diefenbach
Hanni Dinkeloo
to the Thelma A. Dinkeloo Pastoral Education Fund Judith A. and Daniel J. Donahue
in honor of the Rev. Dr. Walter J. Smith, S.J.
Christina E. Prunier and David A. Doss
Kathaleen M. Duffin
Jacquie and William T. Friedewald
Naomi Friedland­Wechsler and Rabbi Harlan J. Wechsler Linda and Ira Greenblatt
in honor of Rabbi Bernard Jacobson
Gretchen and Eugene P. Grisanti
Benjamin H. Griswold IV Angela and William Haines
Margaret and James D. Hemphill
Patricia Hill
Ellen M. and James E. Hillman
Chris and Morton P. Hyman
Shara and Rabbi David Israel
Joanne Jaffin Mason
Carolina Jaramillo­Johnson and James Johnson
Heather A. and Paul F. Jordan
in memory of Charles Jordan and Alfred Pisano
Francine and Samuel Klagsbrun, M.D.
John R. and Dorothy D. Caples Fund
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Janet Prindle, a Bridge Society member
and pioneer in the field of socially
responsible investing.
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David S. Lefkowitz, Esq.
Conna and John McGillicuddy
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Clare and Howard McMorris
Joseph W. Mullen, Jr.
Donna Nadler and Bob Gould
Paige B. and Jeffrey G. Neuberth
Diane A. Nixon
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Jonathan O’Herron
John J. O’Neil
Peyton R. Patterson
Catherine S. and Thomas J. Pierce
Patricia R. and F. Herbert Prem
The Resource Foundation
Julie M. and David P. Ricciardi
Catherine and Francis P. Rich, Sr.
Jane and Kevin Roche
to the Thelma A. Dinkeloo Pastoral Education Fund
Sydney and E. Joshua Rosenkranz
Lynn Rothstein, Ph.D.
Judy and T. Timothy Ryan
Nancy and Hank Schacht
Alan D. Schwartz
Chantal and James Sheridan
Abby Simpson and Todd Mydland
Kathleen and Michael J. A. Smith
in memory of Hope Ritter Smith
Ellsworth G. Stanton III
in honor of Carolyn and John Twiname
22
Rabbi Zahara
Davidowitz­Farkas (third from right) shares
her thoughts in an adult
education seminar,
“For Women By Women,”
designed to reach the
traditional women’s
community.
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Judith and Michael H. Steinhardt
Eugenia W. Stillman
to the Eugenia W. and P. Gordon B. Stillman Family Education Fund
Carolyn L. and William C. Stutt
David Teiger
B. Gayle Twiname, Ph.D.
in honor of Mrs. Sandy Boyd, Dr. James and Ginny Creed, Sandra Fowler, R.N.F.N.P., Ann FultonCurran, The Moss Family,
Margaret Phelan Reed, Dr. Eileen Tiedt, Mr. and Mrs. James D. Twiname
Janet S. and William N. Walker
Mary Katherine Wallace
Rebecca and Roy E. Weathers
Shelby White
Marcia Wilson
Individual
Gifts
$500 ­ $999
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The Rev. Stephen Harding
and Chaplaincy board
chairman Lawrence Toal
enjoy the annual holiday
staff luncheon hosted by Mutual of America at
their Park Avenue
corporate headquarters.
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Lilyan H. Affinito
Margaret and Edward H. Bragg, Jr.
The Rev. Canon George W. Brandt, Jr.
Margaret and Jeffrey Cianci
Joseph J. Cottrell
in honor of Allan H. Glick
Karen and David E. Cowan
The Rev. Dr. John S. Damm
in honor of Pastor Fredrick Erson
Peggy Funderburke
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Josephine and Herbert Hendin, M.D.
Harriet Huber
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Robert Jacobs
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Elizabeth and William R. Johnston
Shirley C. and David T. Kearns
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in honor of Jae­sook Kim
Burton Lehman
Janice B. and Charles R. Lloyd
Marian B. and Bernard P. Long
Martha and John D. Mabie
Leslie McCall and Boris Borozan
Christine and Joseph T. McLaughlin
Catherine M. O’Connor and Karl Schmidt
Alaleh and Ariel Ostad, M.D.
Judith A. and James P. Owens
to the Thelma A. Dinkeloo Pastoral Education Fund
Margaret Phelan Reed
in honor of Dr. B. Gayle Twiname
Ralph U. Price
in honor of Amanda Elizabeth Oehlert’s
graduation, in memory of Anthony Dwyer and Beth van Solkema
Suzanne and John Prunier, M.D.
■ Benefit ■ Caring Partnerships Capital Campaign ■ Carolyn and John Twiname Leadership Fund
■ Walter J. Smith, S.J. Professional Leadership Fund
Rabbi Shira Stern, D.D. and Rabbi Donald Weber
in honor of the Rev. Dr. Walter J. Smith, S.J.
Patrick J. Waide, Jr.
Julia and Laurie J. Warder
Mildred and George Weissman
$250 ­ $499
Robin L. and Peter A. Gish
Brian Kim
■ Annual Fund ■
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Philip J. Bergan
Elizabeth and Judge Edward Biester
Daryl F. and Joseph L. Boren
Michael Braun
in honor of Howard F. Sharfstein
James K. Brown
Cheryl A. Clarke and Larry Orrico
in memory of Cappy
Laura Delano Eastman
Eleanor T. and John Elliott
Jean M. and Colin Fergus
Dr. Susan Fitzpatrick and Thomas Wyman
in memory of Marion and Tom Wyman
Richard E. Ford
Candice and John Frawley
Suzan Habachy
Phyllis and Professor Joseph C. Hinsey
in honor of Carolyn and the Rev. John Twiname
Mary Jane and Frederick W. Gettler
Paula S. and Thomas N. Keltner
John J. Kindred
Alice Maloney
Betty and James R. Mitscher
Marjorie K. Nicodemus
Raymond A. O’Doherty
in memory of Margaret A. O’Doherty
Thomas H. O’Leary
Helen Ouerbacker
23
The Rev. Johnny Bush
educates a Clinical
Pastoral Education (CPE)
student in a unique
parish­based program
conducted at The
Riverside Church.
Rabbi Abraham Twerski,
M.D., an expert on
chemical dependency,
lectures to a group of
rabbinic leaders as part
of a week­long
continuing professional
education program
sponsored by The
Chaplaincy’s Center for
Studies in Jewish
Pastoral Care.
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Muriel Palitz
in memory of Joan Baron
Paul J. Powers, Jr.
Barbara A. Rosenfelt
in memory of Benjamin Rosenfelt
H. Cary Ross
Lynn W. and John L. Roy
Mary Anne and Douglas Schwalbe
in honor of Carolyn and the Rev. John Twiname
Mari and Kenneth Share
Liliane and José Soriano
Flora E. and G. Franklin South
Jean and Richard Swank
Joan and Nicholas J. Tortorello
in honor of Carolyn and the Rev. John Twiname, in memory of Verla Tortorello
Donald J. Toumey
Patricia Koo Tsien
in memory of Kaichi Tsien, Rose Yuan, and Mrs. Daisy Zau­Lan Shih
Susan H. and George J. Vojta
Joseph B. Walsh, M.D.
Barbara H. West
Ann L. Woodfield and Ralph E. Wood
L. Randall Yates
Marion P. and Salvatore D. Zaffino
$100 ­ $249
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Isa and Paul Allersmeyer
Gordon Wood Anderson, Ph.D.
The Rev. Canon John Andrew, D.D.
Margaret and the Rev. Mark Anschutz
Velma and Ted J. Balestreri
Andrea and Marvin Berger
Louise and Thilo H. Best
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Perry S. Boynton
in memory of Dr. Mary H. Boynton
Alyce and Norman Cannon
Lois F. and Daniel D. Chabris
in honor of Frank Petrilli
Ming­Yao Chang
Dorothy M. and Ralph W. Chapman
Carol Collins
Anne S. Connor
Gerald A. Conway, Jr.
Linda G. Conway
Allison G. and Daniel J. Costarene
Patricia and Donald T. Coughlin
Sylvia W. Crouter and J.D. Hodgson
Evan Jay Crane
The Rev. Carol C. Cruikshank
in memory of the Rev. Dr. John W. Pyle
Lucille F. DeLucia
in memory of Felicia and John Caporale, John Caporale, Jr., and Alfred Pisano
Monica and Michael Dimino
in memory of Peter Gordon Bradley Stillman
Sydelle E. Diner
in memory of Dr. Sanford Eisenberg
Jennifer and Paul Donahue
Jane I. and Larry D. Droppa
Louise Dunn
in memory of Paxton T. Dunn
Elizabeth A. and James J. Ebzery
Marilyn and Brian Ebzery
Annette and J. Donald Fairbanks
Anne and Dwight W. Fawcett
Renee and Fred Feuerbach
Catherine Y. and Harold B. Finn
Daniel M. Fitzpatrick
Elizabeth C. Forster
Trustee Louis Scenti,
director of learning and
development at Morgan
Stanley, helped set in
motion the most recent
strategic planning
process.
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Jeanne M. and Donald J. Fowley
in memory of Kathleen B. Fowley
Patricia A. and Robert J. Fox
Kathryn G. and Joseph F. Gagliardi
Frances A. and William A. Gay
Sandra Gering
in honor of Catey and Michael Long, Jane A. Long and Craig Gering
Kathryn and Erik Hanson
Jean Harper
Jeffrey D. Harris
Phyllis R. Hersch, Ph.D. and Charles Hersch, Ph.D.
in honor of the Rev. Dr. Walter J. Smith, S.J.
Margaret M. and Martin R. Hoffmann
Lesley B. and Joseph C. Hoopes
Patricia and Robert C. Hubbard
Gina and Joseph E. Jannotta
Nancy T. Jerome
Dorothy R. and Bruce Johnson
Margaret P. Jordan
Barbara Allen and William J. Kaiser
Laurie C. and Neil S. Kenagy
Rosalind Kim, M.D. and Sung Hou Kim, M.D.
in honor of Kaichi Tsien
Maureen and James Krinsley, M.D.
Ruth and Robert J. Lindner
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Rita Lynch
Betsy H. and Anthony P. Marshall
Mildred and Robert P. Marshall
Sherry and Raymond Mauer
Dorothy L. and William F. McDonald
Henry E. McGuire
Julia M. McNamara, Ph.D. and Richard J. Lolatte
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■ Annual Fund ■ Benefit ■ Caring Partnerships
Capital Campaign
■ Carolyn and John Twiname Leadership Fund ■ Walter J. Smith, S.J. Professional Leadership Fund
Keith and Jon Meacham
Susan J. Milamed and Jack L. Jacobs
Jennifer and Ken Missbrenner
Catherine L. O’Brien­Saynor, M.D.
Janice and Roger Oresman
Jo Lynne and the Rev. Stephen Overall
The Rev. Caroline S. Parkinson and James T. Parkinson
Dr. Anne and Dr. Raymond Pastore
Gregory J. Peterson
Sandra and Fred Pezzulli
Mr. and Mrs. Scott Pierce
Ann Pisano
in memory of Alfred Pisano
Helen M. Polak
in memory of Marie B. Polak
Nancy C. and Richard F. Quinn
Nina and Rabbi Yaacov Rone
Katryn Beeby and Louis Scenti
Stanley J. Scher
in honor of Sister Elaine Goodell, P.B.V.M.
Lynn and Homer D. Schoen
Aaron L. Schonbrun
in honor of Rabbi Mychal Springer
Betsy and Alfred L. Scott
Carol and Richard Selle
Jane M. and the Rev. David F. Sellery
in celebration of their first wedding anniversary, in honor of the birth of Katherine Cecilia DeSarno
Elizabeth and Paul Skudder
Richard and Jane Slagle
Sue Smart
Patricia C. and Charles T. Stewart
Suzanne and Craig M. Stirnweis
in honor of Rabbi Shira Stern’s completion of her doctorate
25
The Rev. Trudi Jinpu
Hirsch, a Zen Buddhist
priest and CPE supervisor
at NYU Medical Center,
provides pastoral
education both to
multifaith and Buddhist
groups of student
chaplains.
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Carol and Joel Thea
Livia and Thomas Thompson
in honor of Howard F. Sharfstein
Dr. Robert J. Timberger
Phyllis and Edward Toohey
Anne and John R. Torell
The Reverend Philippa A. Turner
Carolyn and Edward O. Wagner
Elizabeth and Cope B. Walbridge
Jo and Will Maitland Weiss
Ann S. and William G. Whitney
Dr. Barbara and the Rev. Fort Wilkerson
Bessie Wilson
Ying­Ying T. Yuan, Ph.D.
in memory of Kaichi Tsien and Letizia Bogart
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in honor of Rabbi Shira Stern's completion of her doctorate
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$99 and below
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in honor of Jeanne Lee
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Alayne Zatulove
Anonymous (2) ■
Chaplaincy trustee
Rochelle Hirsch looks on
as Oheneba Boachie­
Adjei, M.D. (far left) is
recognized by Hospital
for Special Surgery’s
President and CEO
John R. Reynolds as he receives the 2004
Wholeness of Life award.
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Albert Alexander, Ph.D.
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in honor of Sister Elaine Goodell, P.B.V.M. and in memory of Roslyn Alexander
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Maire Allik
in memory of Sister Viiu Allik
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Lucelle and Francis D. Auger
in memory of Joseph Stautner
Henny Baden
Marguerite S. Bedell
Isabelle and Neal Berglund
Edith E. Bishop
Betty G. Black
Watson Bosler
Dora and Russell Bourne
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Susan D. and Charles H. Boynton
Adrienne L. Brown
Mary L. Bundy
in memory of Francis B. Lothrop, Jr.
Mark R. Collins and Denton Stargel
Anne and Lyall Dean
Claire C. and Bipin B. Desai
in memory of Mrs. Rotanz
Gilda and Generoso R. DiChiara
Joe and Marie DiChiara
Ruth Drazen
Christina J. Eldridge
Norma L. Fischer
Margaret M. Flaherty
in memory of Harold Flaherty
Laura Flannelly, Ph.D. and Kevin J. Flannelly, Ph.D.
Loretta J. Franklin, R.N.
Sarah E. Friedewald, M.D. and John J. Friedewald, M.D.
Ann FultonCurran
Luiza and Daniel Georgescu
Anne H. Gerli
Fran and Gary Haber
Patricia and Joseph Hamilton
Carla and Theodore Hawryluk
Gigi and Stephen Hernandez
in honor of The Rye Record, for the recovery of Monia Progreske, and in memory of Ken Horne and Cesar A. Ugarte
Anne and G. Malcolm Holderness
Fred Taylor Isquith
in honor of Ursula Desimon
Barbara M. and Walter G. Korntheuer
Former board chairman
Eugene Zuriff, board
treasurer Roy E.
Weathers, and Vincent
Colman, co­chairman of
the 2004 benefit dinner at
a kickoff reception at the
New York City home of
Josie and Julian
Robertson.
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Betty Kranzdorf
Florence Krondes
Adrianne and Leon Lebensbaum
Naomi D. Leszkiewicz
Jane and Jon R. Lind
The Rev. Margaret S. Mahaney and Donald R. Mahaney
Robin Maitland
in memory of Harry Facenda Scotland
Mrs. William Masek
in memory of William Masek, Sr.
Frances R. McKinley
in memory of Hope Ritter Smith
The Rev. Melody Meeter and Dr. Daniel Meeter
Butzi Moffitt
Anne and Kevin Mulvaney
The Rev. Margaret A. Muncie and the Rev. Stephen Bolle
Richard J. Nicastro
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■ Annual Fund ■ Benefit ■ Caring Partnerships
Capital Campaign
■ Carolyn and John Twiname Leadership Fund
■ Walter J. Smith, S.J. Professional Leadership Fund
Guillermina and Salvador B. Soriano
Evelyn Sturhann
The Rev. Canon Storm Swain and the Rev. Stephen R. Harding
Sister Anne H. Tahaney, O.P.
Phillips Talbot
in memory of Mildred Talbot
Kathryn Weidmann
Sylvia and Benjamin Weinstock
Helene Weld and Francis M. Weld, M.D.
The Rev. Ann Williams and The Rev. Paul D. Steinke
Janet and Anthony Zaccagnino
in honor of Eleanor Genovese
Theresa B. Zadrosny
in memory of George Rich
Caroline A. and Edwin Zimmerman
in memory of Madeline Abbot Thomas
Anonymous (2)
in memory of Katherine Nicastro
Gladys T. and Edward H. Novitch
in honor of Adam Sherman Novitch’s Bar Mitzvah
Dr. Herbert F. Oettgen
Meredith Kefauver Olsen and Derek Olsen
Volunteers
The HealthCare Chaplaincy would like to thank the following individuals for their generous gift of time.
Johanna Pyle
J. Donald Fairbanks
Jamie Rabinowitz
Patty Herlihy
in honor of his Bar Mitzvah
Thomas J. Pierce
Ann and John Renahan
Judith Ryan
in honor of Rita Lynch
Jeanne B. and Lawrence M. Riegel
Mary E. and John J. Roth
Ruth S. and James P. Santos
Gifts in Kind
Foliage Garden, Inc.
in honor of Carolyn and the Rev. John Twiname
Seward & Kissel LLP
Kuniko Schulein­Steel
Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz
Sister Mary Schutte, S.C.
in memory of the Conner and Schutte families
Bernice Slotnick
27
The Hope and Remembrance Society
The HealthCare Chaplaincy created The Hope and Remembrance
Society as a means of offering contributors enhanced and sustainable
giving options. The Society includes donors who have made a planned or deferred gift to The Chaplaincy. Gifts include bequests,
charitable gift annuities, real estate charitable trusts, life insurance, and retirement benefits. Janet C. Bosse*
Margaret Phelan Reed
Dr. Mary H. Boynton*
Patricia R. and F. Herbert Prem, Jr.
Rosemary Brough*
Ralph U. Price
Helen Watson Buckner*
Ayse Rosin*
Ruth L. Cohen, Ph.D.
David G. Sacks*
Lavonne and David A. Cowan
Joseph Gerhard Schodl*
Leisa S. and Charles G. Crane
Howard F. Sharfstein
Florence Dutton*
Dallas B. Sherman*
Susan L. Fischer
The Rev. Dr. Walter J. Smith, S.J.
Margaret M. Hill
William G. Spears
Patricia Hill
Olga Steneck*
Louise Howell*
Herman J. Stich*
Harriet Huber
Sheila and Lawrence J. Toal
Douglas Kahn*
Patricia Koo Tsien
Lillian W. Kay­Zulli*
B. Gayle Twiname, Ph.D.
Betty Kranzdorf
Carolyn and John Twiname
Augusta Metz*
Eugene I. Zuriff
Muriel Palitz
Anonymous (2)
Iverdell Payne*
* Deceased Members
Susan L. Fischer pictured at her farewell reception commemorating nine years of service as The Chaplaincy’s
CFO and senior vice president for administration and human resources.
28
Board of Trustees
Officers
Life Trustees
Lawrence J. Toal, Chairman
Edith C. Bjornson
The Rev. Dr. Walter J. Smith, S.J., President & CEO
The Rev. Dr. John S. Damm
Frank J. Petrilli, Vice Chairman
Donald J. Keller
Roy E. Weathers, Treasurer
Samuel C. Klagsbrun, M.D.
Karen Smythe, Secretary
Charlotte Miller
William W. Donnell
Ralph U. Price
Trustees
William G. Spears
Imam Luqman Abdush­Shahid
Carolyn A. Twiname
The Rev. Canon George W. Brandt, Jr.
The Rev. John D. Twiname
Rosamaria Carbonell
Rabbi Harlan J. Wechsler, D.D.
Warwick M. Carter, Jr.
David B. Case, M.D.
President’s Advisory Council
Julie P. Cho, D.M.D.
John C. Beck
Kathryn Christensen
John S. Chalsty
Charles G. Crane
John S. Dyson
Kathleen M. Foley, M.D.
Richard B. Fisher
Christopher C. Grisanti
Charlotte M. Ford
Irving S. Hamer, Jr., Ed.D.
Thomas S. Johnson
Edward D. Herlihy
Helene L. Kaplan
Rochelle Hirsch
Martin Lipton
Sherry Jacobson
Edward D. Miller
Carolina Jaramillo­Johnson
Richard D. Parsons
John W. Johnson, Jr.
Philip J. Purcell
Arnold L. Lisio, M.D.
Jack Rudin
Matthew M. Ludmer
Daniel R. Tishman
Leslie McCall
Stephen H. Weiss
Jon Meacham
Suzanne Wright
Mary O’Neil Mundinger, Dr. P.H.
John J. O’Neil
Hope Bryce Preminger
E. Joshua Rosenkranz
Louis Scenti
Howard F. Sharfstein
Michael J.A. Smith
Maria T. Spears
David E. Stutzman
29
Clinical Staff
Beth Israel Medical Center
North General Hospital
The Rev. Michael Carter The Rev. Carlos Alejandro
Rabbi Nathan Goldberg
Rabbi Jacob Greenberg
North Shore University Hospital
The Rev. Stephen R. Harding
Sister Maureen Mitchell, R.S.M., D.Min.
The Rev. Jon Overvold
The Brookdale University Hospital and Medical Center
Rabbi Charles Rabinowitz
The Rev. Carlos de la Peña
NYU Medical Center The Rev. Trudi Jinpu Hirsch
The Winifred Masterson Burke Rehabilitation Hospital
The Rev. Dr. John P. Bauman
Rehab Institute of New York at Florence Nightingale Health Center
The Rev. Arlinda Derrick DeWitt Rehabilitation & Nursing Center
The Rev. David P. Barrie
The Riverside Church in the City of New York
The Rev. Johnny Bush
Griffin Hospital
Chaplain Thomas Kilts
St. Luke’s­Roosevelt Hospital Center
Al­Hajji Imam Yusuf H. Hasan Hospital for Special Surgery
The Rev. Margaret Muncie
Rabbi Ralph Kreger
Sister Margaret Oettinger, O.P.
St. Mary’s Center
The Rev. Daniel Shenk
Lawrence Hospital Center
The Rev. Dr. Sarah L. Fogg
Vassar Brothers Medical Center
The Rev. John Simon
Lenox Hill Hospital
The Rev. Dr. John J. Bucchino, O.F.M.
Winthrop­University Hospital
Rabbi Ralph Kreger
Chaplain Megan Kelly
The Rev. Melody Takken Meeter
Chaplain Jane Mather
Memorial Sloan­Kettering Cancer Center
Sister Elaine Goodell, P.B.V.M.
Al­Hajji Imam Yusuf H. Hasan
Rabbi Stephen H. Shulman
New York Hospital Queens
The Rev. Michael Carter
Rabbi David M. Keehn
Sister Rosarine Quinn, C.S.J.
30
Administration
Administrative Center
Executive
The Rev. Dr. Walter J. Smith, S.J.
President & CEO
Jane E. Colvin
Executive Assistant to the President & CEO
Administrative
Eileen J. Weber, Esq.
Director, Finance & Administration
Nina Goltsberg
Senior Bookkeeper
Natalie Gentles
Administrative Assistant
Jane E. Colvin
Director, Marketing & Publications
Brian Kim
Manager, Corporate Design
Eric Sommer
Publications Manager & Staff Writer
Jason Lehrhoff
Manager, Information Technologies
Fran McKinley
Manager, Individual Giving
Derek Olsen
Manager, Institutional Giving
Maintenance
Haroon Khemrul
Salvador Soriano
Maintenance Engineers
Center For Pastoral Care, Education & Research
Executive
Jeanne Lee
Executive Vice President & Chief Operating Officer
Program Administration
The Rev. A. Meigs Ross
Director, Center for Clinical Pastoral
Education
Rabbi Bonita E. Taylor
Associate Director, Center for Clinical Pastoral Education
The Rev. Martha R. Jacobs
Associate Director, Continuing and Professional Studies
Managing Editor, PlainViews
Gary Hess
Registrar & Program Administrator
Peter Brown
Education Assistant
Edward F. Haran
Manager, Human Resources
The Rev. George F. Handzo
Director, Clinical Services & Institutional Relations
Carole Holland
Administrative Assistant to the Director of Clinical Services
Rabbi Shira Stern, D.Min.
Director, Center for Studies in Jewish Pastoral Care
Kevin J. Flannelly, Ph.D.
Associate Director, Research
Helen Tannenbaum
Research Librarian
John Barone
Administrative Assistant
Receptionists
Michelle Hussey
Naomi Sacks Nilda Rivera
31
Partners in Healthcare
32
“
”
I am energized by The Chaplaincy’s visionary plan to
exert new leadership in the fields of palliative care,
education, and research.
Kathleen M. Foley, M.D., Memorial Sloan­Kettering Cancer Center
“
“
”
As a communications professional, I am encouraged by The Chaplaincy’s creation of PlainViews™, an electronic newsletter designed to foster collaboration
and understanding among pastoral care professionals
everywhere, regardless of faith tradition.
Sherry Jacobson, Senior Vice President,
Bernard Hodes Group
”
The HealthCare Chaplaincy offers one of the highest
quality post­graduate clinical pastoral education pro­
grams available anywhere in the country. They’re not
just teaching us how to be multifaith chaplains; they’re
preparing us for new leadership roles both within our own communities and the pastoral care profession.
Rabbi Yeheskel Lebovic, Pastoral Residency Student
“
“
”
During my twenty years of association with The
HealthCare Chaplaincy, I have had the opportunity to watch the organization grow in so many ways.
The Chaplaincy is more religiously and culturally diverse than ever before.
Sister Elaine Goodell, Staff Chaplain,
Memorial Sloan­Kettering Cancer Center
”
The HealthCare Chaplaincy is preparing me for a career
as one of the first Islamic CPE supervisors in the United
States. Once certified, I’ll exercise a unique leadership
position not only within Islam in America, but also within
the pastoral care and education profession as a whole.
Imam Ramadan Zakat, CPE Supervisor­In­Training
Administrative Center
315 East 62nd Street, 4th Floor
New York, NY 10021­7767
tel 212 644 1111
fax 212 758 9959
Center for Pastoral Care,
Education & Research
307 East 60th Street
New York, NY 10022­1505
tel 212 644 1111
fax 212 486 1440
www.healthcarechaplaincy.org

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