9164 MICA Cover w/Spine - Maryland Institute College of Art

Transcription

9164 MICA Cover w/Spine - Maryland Institute College of Art
Maryland Institute College of Art 2003 Annual Report / Gift Report
Building
Momentum
A Year of Inspired Progress
F
or all of us with deep ties to Mary-
internationally as a renowned center of learning and
land Institute College of Art—
innovative thinking in art and design.
students, faculty, staff, alumni,
Since The Plan was adopted by the Board of
friends, and the surrounding com-
Trustees in October 2000 as the culmination of a
munity—2002–2003 was a year of
planning process that engaged trustees, faculty, stu-
remarkable momentum. With the
dents, and staff, many of its initiatives have pro-
same excitement that we experience watching our
gressed quickly from concept into reality. We have
students’ work in progress, we can see tangible proof
taken the first major steps toward realizing the key
that the College’s strategic goals are taking shape.
goal of the Campus Master Plan: create a coherent
These goals, set forth in MICA’s Plan for the 21st
and unified urban campus. Since it opened in August
Century, touch on every aspect of the College and its
2002, Meyerhoff House, has been home to 202
mission, inscribing a blueprint for efforts to position
students, most in their critical sophomore year. It has
MICA for leadership in the 21st century. To briefly
also emerged as a vibrant center for campus life:
recap what we described in depth in last year’s
a hub for student activities, clubs, recreation, and
Annual Report, The Plan’s initiatives include:
dining, and an informal gathering place for study and
• Building an outstanding learning and living environ-
socializing. With the Commons, Meyerhoff House
ment for our community of artists and designers
now allows us to house nearly 40 percent of our stu-
through a comprehensive Campus Master Plan.
dent body.
• Providing a broad and deep curriculum that pre-
Also, throughout the year, we watched the rise of
pares artists and designers for the challenges of a
Brown Center, hailed as “Baltimore’s first great build-
rapidly changing world, integrating our strengths
ing of the millennium,” and a visible signal of the Col-
and ongoing commitment in traditional fine arts dis-
lege’s strength in digital art and design. Less dra-
ciplines with programs that build essential skills in
matic but equally important, we acquired and
critical thinking, mastery of new tools and tech-
renovated a former Baltimore City firehouse that now
nologies, and leadership capabilities.
houses our facilities services, providing appropriate
• Recruiting students who can fully realize their
work and shop space for professional maintenance
potential through MICA’s rigorous studio and aca-
of our increasingly complex campus. This move also
demic program, and growing in order to support the
freed space in the heart of campus for major renova-
broad array of programs and services that our stu-
tions to Fox Building, part of a multi-year initiative to
dents need to prepare for success in their lives and
centralize and upgrade the College’s primary public
careers.
galleries and performance spaces.
• Increasing the College’s ability to provide access to
The immediate results of these changes are pal-
the best art education for a talented, diverse, and
pable—and providing clear benefits to our students.
deserving student body.
Our students speak glowingly about the quickening
• Enhancing the College’s presence and recognition,
pulse of co-curricular activities, the enhanced colle-
both locally as a committed community leader and
giate experience, and the overall mosaic of campus
1
culture. Response from participants in our commu-
our heartfelt thanks to all of those who have con-
nity-based activities such as the Community Arts
tributed to this effort, and for your continued com-
Partnerships program (CAP) has been universally
mitment to MICA and its mission.
positive, and our Bolton Hill neighbors regard MICA
Now that we have achieved this level of momen-
as an indispensable part of their neighborhood. For
tum, we cannot afford to lose it. The goals set out in
our 8,000-plus alumni and other friends, this momen-
The Plan for the 21st Century still lie before us; much
tum offers a renewed source of pride.
remains to be done. To maintain our current pace, we
MICA continues to set new benchmarks for aca-
must look to individuals, corporations, and founda-
demic and creative achievement—and this is broadly
tions for major gifts to drive our physical and pro-
recognized among the best students seeking an
grammatic growth and ongoing support for our day-
intensive art and design education. A case in point,
to-day operations. This ongoing investment will allow
MICA regularly enrolls more Presidential Scholars in
MICA to continue moving forward to acquire vital
visual arts than any other college or university in the
resources—the best people, tools, and facilities—
nation. Our young alumni attend the top graduate
that are essential to The Plan’s success.
schools in the U.S. and the world, are selected for
In last year’s Annual Report, we offered a sweep-
sought-after career opportunities, and have amazing
ing overview of The Plan for the 21st Century and its
success as exhibiting artists in such highly regarded
major components. This year, we are delving a little
urban art centers as New York, Miami, and Chicago.
deeper into its particulars, so you can see firsthand
Much of the credit for our success is due to the
how The Plan’s progress is having a positive impact
generous financial commitments we have received in
on the life and work of MICA students. In addition,
support of The Plan for the 21st Century. Tapping into
you will meet some of the remarkable people whose
a tradition of giving that goes back to the College’s
generosity is making that progress possible.
founding in 1826, MICA’s donors collectively have
Thanks to all of you for sharing our vision of MICA
made it possible for us to move forward in substan-
as a world-class institution, and for your support in
tial ways in fulfilling the vision of The Plan. We extend
moving that vision forward.
Anne S. Perkins, Chairman, Board of Trustees, 1998 – 2003
Fred Lazarus IV, President
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Careers
In a working world that changes by the minute, where do graduates of
THE PLAN:
CAREER PREPARATION
MICA fit in? Everywhere. The opportunities for talented, intelligent artists
The Plan for the 21st Century calls for
and designers have never been greater. A number of Plan for the 21st
MICA to maintain its focus on prepar-
Century-driven initiatives prepare students for success: a refined curricu-
ing students for professional success
lum that encourages cross-disciplinary exploration, new majors that pre-
through:
pare students to be leaders in the use and development of new tech-
■
Enhanced pre-professional experiences in all programs of study—from
nologies for art and design, enhanced liberal arts offerings that
research opportunities to internships
emphasize critical thinking and problem-solving, broadened campus
and other professional experiences.
leadership opportunities, and pre-professional opportunities such as
■
New majors and programs in electronic arts and design areas.
internships and real-world projects in the classroom. MICA graduates
■
find success as fine artists, as educators, and as creative professionals
Programs that enhance global understanding and foster tolerance—from
in a diverse array of careers, including advertising, medicine, film, arts
community-based arts programs and
administration, law, and interactive technology. In fact, our alumni are
expanded opportunities for study
abroad to multicultural programming
actively pursued by employers because of their strong credentials and
well-honed creative skills. As The Plan for the 21st Century notes, “The
world of the artist and designer, like so many aspects of our technologically driven society, is experiencing rapid change. Fortunately, MICA is
through student affairs.
■
Co-curricular programming diversity
that builds leadership, professional,
and interpersonal skills through student governance, peer leadership
better positioned today to adapt to new opportunities and challenges
positions, clubs and activities, as well
than any of its peer institutions.”
as through career-based programming.
A N “ E V ER LA S TI NG ” EX P E RIENCE
three-year professional development experi-
On January 31, 2003, Everlasting, a major
ence. Blumenthal had taken the seminar
new work by multi-media and installation
every semester since her sophomore year. It
artist Ann Fessler, opened to critical acclaim
led to prestigious internships at the Smith-
at MICA’s Decker Gallery. The groundbreak-
sonian and the Baltimore Museum of Art. A
ing piece explored issues surrounding the
talented artist whose work explores issues
experiences of a generation of “unwed
of identity and cultural expectations of
mothers” who had relinquished their new-
women, Blumenthal discovered her true
borns for adoption. This remarkable and
calling in museum-based educational out-
emotionally intense installation was the
reach. Immediately following graduation,
product of a remarkable collaboration. For
Blumenthal was hired as the Adult Education
every aspect of the project—from research
Programs Assistant at Baltimore’s Walters
Students in the Exhibition Development
to identify mothers for interviews, to the
Arts Museum. The experience of having
Seminar were deeply involved in the
oral history interviews themselves, to the
responsibility for a major exhibition has had
creation of the audio/video installation
design and implementation of the installa-
a similar impact on others. For artist and
Everlasting.
tion—the artist had worked closely with
continuing studies student Gloria Askin, the
students in MICA’s Exhibition Development
opportunity to work on the exhibit Joyce J.
Seminar, led by Curator-in-Residence
Scott Kickin’ It with the Old Masters was
George Ciscle. Everlasting was the sixth
unforgettable. Askin was so impressed with
major exhibition project for the class, and
her MICA experience that she made a signif-
for one student, Emily Blumenthal (GFA
icant donation of Grove’s Dictionary of Art to
’03), it was the culmination of an invaluable
the College’s Decker Library.
4
“Three out of my four years at MICA were
spent in the Exhibition Development Seminar. It was a major investment of time, but I
learned every part of the process of creating
an exhibition. It was amazing to be able to
come up with an idea on our own and then
go out and actually develop it. That’s when
the light bulb went on. While I was attracted
to arts advocacy, I didn’t think I was interested in education at all. But through working on major shows like Everlasting, I found
that I wanted to pursue educational outreach
professionally.”
Emily Blumenthal (General Fine Arts ’03)
Adult Education Programs Assistant,
The Walters Art Museum
“Working with George Ciscle on Joyce J.
“This seminar combines my own professional
Scott Kickin’ It with the Old Masters was an
and personal passions. As a curator, I have
amazing adventure. It brought me so much
the opportunity to work with the exhibiting
enrichment and many new friends, including
artists, younger artists who are my stu-
the artist Joyce Scott. I am so grateful for
dents, and the larger community. As an edu-
what the College has done for me! The
cator, I can facilitate different experiences
first time I walked through MICA’s doors,
for students that they might want to apply to
I went through a door that absolutely
their own artwork or careers in the future. I
changed my life. Their inspiration has been
want my students to know what’s involved in
my foundation.”
the process of putting an exhibition
Gloria Askin
together, and, more important, how to make
Professional Jewelry Maker
the connection between the art and the
Continuing Studies Student
audience.”
George Ciscle
Curator-in-Residence, MICA
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ART & S OC I A L C H A N GE
and adults in Baltimore’s urban neighborhoods.
According to longtime MICA faculty member
In February 2003, the France-Merrick Founda-
“Any neighborhood grows with its
institutions. MICA has certainly been
Ken Krafchek, it takes a community to make
tion of Baltimore recognized the vital role of
the leader in that regard, creating
great art. “There’s a long tradition of the great-
CAP in the community and in students’ lives by
real synergy in the surrounding
est artists really intersecting with their world,”
creating a $1 million endowment earmarked to
neighborhood. I also believe that an
he says. “MICA’s Community Arts Partnerships
provide fellowships for MICA students commit-
educational community has to do
(CAP) program gets students out of the isolated
ted to community-based art. The gift will pro-
something for its community, and not
studio and into the community where they can
vide annual stipends for France-Merrick Fel-
just pay lip service. MICA does
make a personal connection through the art-
lows who have demonstrated exceptional
that—and more. CAP is one of many
making process. It adds an important dimen-
leadership ability and dedication to community
things that MICA does to enhance the
sion of leadership through service to their over-
service through CAP. Additional awards will be
community around it. My view is that
all college experience.” As the director of CAP
given to France-Merrick Mentors who wish to
having gone through the CAP experi-
at MICA, Krafchek oversees the efforts of nearly
work in the program. CAP also receives support
ence, MICA’s students will take a
200 MICA students, who manage and teach in
through Artafare proceeds and annual grants
sense of caring about community
40 community-based arts projects for children
from individuals and foundations.
into their careers. That’s why the
France-Merrick Foundation chose to
support the College’s CAP program.”
Walter (Wally) Pinkard
President and CEO, Colliers Pinkard;
Vice President, the France-Merrick
Foundation; Chair, the Baltimore
Community Foundation
“I learned about Baltimore Youth Television (BYTV) after I got involved
with CAP in my freshman year. After
taking a CAP video class and doing a
documentary on BYTV, I signed on as
the BYTV group leader for CAP in my
junior year. We taught kids how to
use cameras and to design their own
projects. Our kids ended up doing
videos using shadow puppet animations. Because of my involvement
with BYTV, a lot of what I’m interested in has to do with education,
children, and generosity. And I’ll be
one of the first three video majors to
graduate from MICA.”
Adam Griffiths
Senior Video Major from
Wilmington, Delaware
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“The College’s Center for Career
Development was an incredible help
to me in every way. They counseled
me through the entire Fulbright
application process. They were very
hands-on and always there to help
me with lots of ideas and information. After the studio, the Center was
the most important place for me at
MICA. Their help was key to my having a life after college.”
Rita Natarova (Painting ’02)
MFA Candidate, University of
Pennsylvania
“When I established the DeVito Scholarship at Maryland Institute College
of Art, many people were surprised
that, with a legal and business background, I did not choose a law school
or business school. But every experience I had at the College was so
wonderful and uplifting. I didn’t even
think twice about where this scholarship should go. But I never knew that
I would meet the talent there that I
did, year after year. It’s been just
astonishing to meet the DeVito
Scholars, each with early portfolios
that are so refined, so exceptional.
Rita Natarova is an outstanding
example of that kind of student.”
A MULTITUDE OF OPPORTUNITIES
Mathias J. DeVito
The Joseph Meyerhoff Center for Career
County arts magnet high school Carver Cen-
Chairman Emeritus, The Rouse
Development has made a fine art of support-
ter for Arts & Technology and MICA’s first
Moscow, she is a graduate of Baltimore
Company; MICA Trustee;
ing the future plans of MICA students. Estab-
DeVito Scholar. Natarova worked closely with
Creator of the Mathias J. DeVito
lished through a gift from the Joseph and
Career Development staff when applying to
Scholarship Program
Harvey Meyerhoff Charitable Funds in 1991,
graduate schools. She was accepted at all
the Center and its staff of full-time profes-
six to which she applied. She also received a
sional counselors cast a wide net in helping
Fulbright Grant, as well as two of the most
students identify and achieve their career
prestigious fellowships for graduate study in
objectives. Center resources currently
the U.S.: the Jacob K. Javits Fellowship in
include national databases of job possibili-
Studio Arts and The Paul and Daisy Soros
ties, more than 1,000 internship opportuni-
Fellowship for New Americans, both of which
ties, artist residencies, online resources, a
offer a generous annual stipend in addition to
career workshop series, graduate school
covering tuition expenses at the school of the
counseling, and networking events in Balti-
recipient’s choice. Natarova chose the Uni-
more and in key urban centers with clusters
versity of Pennsylvania. As a Fulbright Fel-
of MICA alumni. A recent success story is
low, she journeyed to the Umbria region of
Rita Natarova (Painting ’02), shown above
Italy and spent several months studying the
with Mathias DeVito. Originally from
works of Piero della Francesca and Masaccio.
7
Student
Recruit
Being the best means never standing still. Certainly, this is the case for
THE PLAN:
STUDENT RECRUITMENT
MICA in its continuing efforts to attract the best young artists and designThe Plan for the 21st Century calls for
ers. “We must also grow our endowment,” notes The Plan for the 21st
a number of initiatives in the area of
Century. “A firm financial foundation is necessary if the College is to provide the student scholarships essential to attract and keep the very best
student recruitment:
■
Identify the academic and personal
characteristics most likely to lead to
students.” In this regard, the College has made scholarship development
success in the College’s undergradu-
a priority for the last 20 years. From the first handful of named scholarship awards to freshmen through the Fanny Blaustein Thalheimer
ate and graduate program.
■
Develop recruitment strategies to
address institutional goals for a
Scholarship in 1982, MICA’s endowed scholarship program has grown
talented and diverse student body,
impressively. Today, it totals nearly 60 major scholarships awarded to
as well as the optimum number of
undergraduates and graduates. “Scholarships help the College in many
students necessary to support the
ways,” says Theresa Bedoya, Vice President and Dean of Admission and
range of programs and services the
College must offer to prepare artists
Financial Aid. The availability of competitive, named scholarships gets
the attention of the best prospective students, who feel honored to
receive these awards. Even in their later careers, our graduates perceive
their named scholarship awards at MICA as a real achievement.”
and designers for success.
■
Increase the College’s capacity to
provide access to all of the most
qualified students.
Endowed scholarships allow the College to recognize the achievements
and potential of top students at the undergraduate and graduate level,
and help to maintain the quality and diversity of the student body.
T HE P E OP LE W HO
S UP P ORT T HE V I S I ON
nationally. Top international students are
An important factor in MICA's evolution from
International Scholarship Endowment, and
a strong regional college of art to an institu-
by the David Jacobs Scholarship for
tion with an international reputation has
International Students. At the graduate
awarded scholarships from the C. V. Starr
been its ability to attract the very best stu-
level, scholarship support is provided by the
dents from across the nation and around the
William Henry Rinehart Endowment, The
world. While the College's history of named
Hoffberger School of Painting Endowment,
scholarships dates to the late 19th century,
and most recently, the Marcella Brenner
the deliberate effort to create named schol-
Distinguished MAT Scholar Award. Through-
arships—both annual and endowed—begun
out the Annual Fund and MICA Endowment
in the early 1980s, has made a tremendous
Fund donor lists at the back of this Annual
impact. In addition to the Thalheimer Foun-
Report, you will also find the names of
dation gift, scholarship endowments for
scores of donors who have provided scholar-
Pictured are (left to right) Herbert,
entering freshmen have been established by
ships which recognize the achievements of
Fanny, and Alvin Blaustein Thalheimer.
The Lois and Irving Blum Foundation (for
our returning students. Increasing scholar-
Fanny graduated from Barnard College
Baltimore School for the Arts graduates), the
ship resources is an unending priority for
and later studied at the Maryland
Marion and Henry Knott Foundation (for
MICA.
Institute. She was a civic leader in the
Catholic students), and by Mathias J.
DeVito for top-ranked, deserving students
Baltimore region, serving as trustee
of many cultural and philanthropic
institutions. (Courtesy the Blaustein
Philanthropic Group)
8
ment
“I’ve been a teacher all my life, so I know a
little bit about education. I think the Maryland Institute College of Art does a splendid
job in training teachers. You can’t create
artists, but it’s good to encourage people
who want to learn about it—and who want
to teach others about it.”
Marcella Louis Brenner
Professor of Education, The George
Washington University;
Creator of the Marcella Brenner
Distinguished M.A.T. Scholar Award
and the Morris Louis ’32 Scholarship;
Widow of Renowned Painter Morris Louis ’32
“The scholarships I received and the reputation for quality of the Bachelor of Fine Arts/
Master of Arts in Teaching program were my
main reasons for choosing MICA as a freshman. The Brenner Award, which I received
after I completed my undergraduate studies,
made it possible for me to continue and
complete my M.A.T. here. Without this support, without the generosity of Marcella
Brenner, I would have been forced to leave
MICA and get my teaching certificate at a
state school in New Jersey. Now I can stay
and finish my fifth year at MICA. This scholarship was a just-in-time opportunity.”
Gena Paul (Sculpture ’03)
M.A.T. Candidate and Recipient of the
Marcella Brenner Distinguished M.A.T.
Scholar Award
9
“The Jacobs Scholarship was invaluable to me
for a number of reasons. It enabled me to
come to MICA and dedicate four years to
painting, which is a very rare privilege. It
also allowed me to spend more time in the
studio during summers and vacations,
because I was not under pressure to work full
time to pay off loans. That opportunity was
essential for my development and my position as a painter right now. Had it not been
for David Jacobs, I would not have been able
to get an education in the fine arts.”
Ilya Gefter (Painting ’03)
Recipient of the David Jacobs Scholarship for
Inernational Students
“Going to MICA saved my life. It introduced
me to a community of artists for the first
time. So I’ve always felt very close to the
College and have been very impressed with
its development. When my wife and I
decided that we wanted to make a philanthropic contribution to education, we
decided to establish an international scholarship that would help break down barriers.
Creating the Jacobs Scholarship was consistent with that goal—and the Scholars themselves have exceeded our expectations. Our
gift has turned out to be worth much more
than what we gave.”
David Jacobs (Painting ’61)
Noted Television Producer;
MICA Trustee;
Creator of the David Jacobs
Scholarship for International Students
10
11
Academic
Program
“To prepare graduates to realize their full personal and professional
THE PLAN:
CURRICULUM DEVELOPMENT
potential in the visual arts in the 21st century, the College must build a
Through The Plan for the 21st Century,
curriculum that is multidisciplinary and permeable, intellectually challeng-
MICA’s curriculum is evolving to pro-
ing, relevant to the professional life of artists and designers, and techno-
vide greater options for students as
logically complex.” With this call to action, The Plan for the 21st Century
they shape their artistic and professional development.
has generated a wave of curricular innovations at MICA. Recognizing that
■
Because the boundaries among disci-
the education of today’s artists and designers requires a complex, inter-
plines (sculpture, performance, paint-
disciplinary approach, the College is refining existing programs while
ing, digital art, design) are no longer
fixed, MICA must provide students
developing new offerings in a broad array of disciplines. The list of majors
with traditional artistic and intellec-
has been broadened to include digitally based undergraduate pro-
tual skills, plus the ability to work
grams—experimental animation, interactive media, video—that serve
with others, to analyze emerging
opportunities, to communicate their
both students interested in focusing in these areas, and also students in
ideas, and to entrepreneurially organ-
other disciplines who want to add to their tools for art making. A new
ize and manage complex projects.
M.F.A. in graphic design, on line in fall 2003, builds on the College’s
■
Because the rate of change in the
professional world will continue to
national reputation in undergraduate design. Interior design is broadening
be rapid, a MICA education must offer
its focus as a program in environmental design. The liberal arts program
students the intellectual capability
has been strengthened and more directly linked with the studio program,
and discipline to continue to learn
and move forward as the world
particularly in the foundation and senior years. In support of this evolu-
around them changes.
tion, facilities are being enhanced and expanded in all areas—from paint■
ing and drawing studios to computer laboratories.
Because technology will continue to
have a major influence on the art
world, the program must ensure that
MICA graduates are able to integrate
in the program are inspired to be the best
it into their professional practice.
possible teachers because they are taught
by the best teachers—MICA faculty who
A R ES OU R C E F O R A RT E DUCATORS
Because the marketplace of ideas
and economy is increasingly global
the Lowenfield Award, NAEA’s Distinguished
and the world in which we live
Service to the Profession, National College
increasingly diverse, MICA students
Art Educator of the Year, and more. “I see
must develop international perspec-
that we make a contribution to the develop-
tives and an understanding of cultures
ment of undergraduates who take our courses
other than their own.
along with their studio majors,” says Dr.
Already renowned for educating artists,
Karen Carroll, at left, director of MICA’s art
MICA is now nationally known as a leader in
education programs. “It might be said that
educating art educators. The College’s
we help them to be reflective about their
B.F.A./M.A.T. Program provides a unique
studio practices and encourage them to
opportunity for students to complete an
research further the traditions within which
intensive studio program, earn a B.F.A. in
they are working. In addition, members of
fine art or design, and then complete the
the Center for Art Education contribute to an
necessary requirements for a master of arts
ongoing dialogue with studio faculty at MICA
in teaching—all within five years. Students
about what is involved with teaching.”
12
■
have received such prestigious honors as
“When you’ve gained as much as I have
“My philosophy of education is best illus-
from the world of art, you want to give
trated by the depth and quality and absolute
back,” says Charles Ellerin (Art Education
diversity of my students’ work—and their
’41). Ellerin should know. Following World
commitment to creating eloquent state-
War II, he started a small school arts sup-
ments,” says Juan Carlos Castro, below
ply store in his Baltimore basement, put-
(Photography ’99, M.A.T. ’00). “Each of my
ting together project kits made up of recy-
students comes in with a different way of
cled factory scraps, yarn, and buttons. In
seeing. My approach is to craft an environ-
the 20 years that followed, Ellerin parlayed
ment and a program that will enable stu-
his company, Chaselle, into one of the
dents to apply the knowledge that they’re
nation’s largest classroom art supply dis-
learning to the specifics that concern them.
tributors. Now retired, Ellerin, shown here
There has to be a personal connection,
as a MICA student, is turning his support to
something at stake for a student to make
another form of distribution. His $75,000
that investment.” A past winner of the
gift will help develop a Web resource that
NAEA’s National Student Art Achievement
will bring research and tools from MICA’s
Award, Castro teaches photography at Tow-
Center for Art Education to educators
son High School in suburban Baltimore,
around the world. The project will offer an
where his philosophy is paying off. In May
online journal to share current research,
2003, a senior in his class, Janine D’Agati,
and deliver coursework and classes online.
was one of 16 young artists chosen from a
In addition to this generous support, he has
nationwide pool of 6,000 to win the Presi-
provided annual scholarship support and is
dential Medallion for the arts.
in the process of establishing a planned
gift for MICA’s endowment.
ing diverse cultural and environmental expe-
E X PA ND IN G B OR DE RS ,
E X P E CTAT IO N S
riences in international settings: for the
Nothing expands the mind of the artist more
coming year programs are being offered in
than the opportunity to travel and make art
Canada, Greece, Italy, Jamaica, Mexico,
from a new perspective. For that very rea-
and South Korea. One of the first MICA
son, MICA has developed over the last two
alumni to take advantage of the College’s
decades what is today the most extensive
study abroad programs back in the 1980s
slate of international studio programs
was painter and sculptor Winnie Gordon ’28,
offered by any art college in the U.S. Admin-
shown at right. Gordon took her first trip
istered by the College since 1995, the Alfred
abroad shortly after her graduation, and
& Trafford Klots Artist Residency Program in
quickly discovered how the experience of
Rochefort-en-Terre, France, offers mid-
new surroundings stimulated her own artis-
career artists the opportunity to spend a
tic sensibility. Her lifelong love of travel,
month living and working in the Klots family
along with her affection for MICA’s summer
chateau overlooking this picturesque medi-
abroad programs, led to her establishing
aeval village in southeastern Brittany.
the Winifred M. Gordon ’28 International
MICA’s two- to four-week Summer Study
Programs Award. The annual scholarships
Abroad Programs offer the opportunity to
allow deserving MICA students to attend
work with MICA studio faculty while explor-
summer study abroad programs.
“My great aunt Winnie Gordon was
always very close to the College.
Because travel had always done so
much for her artistic life, she
wanted to allow that same opportunity for MICA students today. I certainly feel that the scholarship has
accomplished that goal. Our family
has been thrilled by the letters
we’ve received from MICA students, thanking us for the award.
We feel good that we’re able to do
this in Aunt Winnie’s name.”
Susan D. Taylor
President, Winifred M. Gordon
Foundation, Inc.
“The Winnie Gordon Scholarship
helped me go to the College’s
summer abroad program in Italy in
July 2003. We stayed in a small
town near Sorrento on the Amalfi
Coast. The program was a landscape course, so it pushed me to
work in an area of painting that
was unfamiliar to me. I got to
experience Italy and work with
some of the best instructors I’ve
ever had. As a result, my work has
become a lot more fluid and
expressive. Just going away and
not only painting but just seeing
really affected me as an artist.”
Jhawn Jones
Senior Illustration Major from
Virginia Beach, Virginia
Notable artists, scholars, scientists, poets,
and critics who have visited the College over
the years include Josef Albers, Polly Apfelbaum, Marshall Arisman, David Byrne, John
Cage, Elaine DeKooning, Helen Frankenthaler,
Sam Gilliam, Allen Ginsberg, Steven Heller,
Robert Irwin, Ben Katchor, Galway Kinnell,
Mario Livio, Margaret Mead, Pat Olesko, Gordon Parks, Fairfield Porter, and Clyfford Still.
“When I was a student at MICA, I
remember very clearly a number of
great figurative painters who came
down to visit from New York—people
like Fairfield Porter and Philip Pearlstein. I was thrilled to be in the presence of such artists; to some extent,
they were like my heroes. But the
reality was you got to rub shoulders
with them as real people. So after
talking with Barry Nemett, I wanted to
help by bringing in artists and critics
who would support the foundation
program in painting.”
Kevin Kearney (General Fine Arts ’74)
President, Kearney & O’Banion,
Incorporated
“Kevin was the very first exceptionally
good student that I had when I began
teaching at MICA. We hit it off right
away and have stayed connected.
When he had a show of his paintings
several years ago in San Francisco,
he even asked me to write an essay
for his catalog. Kevin’s gift funds a
significant portion of our department’s
visiting artists and critics program
each year, and we greatly appreciate
it. Critics and artists who’ve appeared
A C C ES S T O T H E B E S T MINDS
and Jane Meyerhoff Special Programs
MICA’s history of visiting lecturers stretches
Endowment; the Amalie Rothschild ’34 Resi-
back to the 19th century. Today a steady
dency Program; The Rouse Company; the
stream of the world’s top artists and critics
Samson, Rosetta A., and Sadie B. Feldman
help create a greater context for learning by
Residency in Visual Communications—and
sharing insights and conducting student cri-
through the generosity of individual donors
tiques. Support for this vital programming,
like Kevin Kearney ’74, who recently
including visiting artists, artists’ residencies,
renewed his five-year annual fund commit-
and lectures by scholars and artists of inter-
ment to provide additional funding for visit-
national renown, is provided by the Robert
ing artists in the painting department.
in part through Kevin’s support
include Gregory Gillespie, Graham
Nickson, William Bailey, Bernard
Chaet, Jack Beal, and Ellen Phelan.”
Barry Nemett
Chair, Department of Painting, MICA
15
Student
Life
Much of the momentum surrounding MICA’s growth in the past year has
THE PLAN:
STUDENT LIFE
centered on the development of facilities and services that contribute to
The Plan for the 21st Century calls for
the sense of “community.” A community cannot be “built” out of common
MICA to continue providing co-curricu-
gathering places, flower beds, club soccer, or bus trips to New York—but
lar experiences that support students
that kind of supporting infrastructure enhances the energy and imagina-
in building the skills for balanced,
successful lives—personal, profes-
tion of the people who make MICA what it is. As The Plan for the 21st
Century underscores, “The College must build a greater sense of com-
sional, creative.
■
on-campus housing, and new co-curricular programs.” This past year
Expanded pre-professional programs
and career services.
munity through programmatic and environmental structures, additional
■
Expanded public programs,
collaborations, and residencies.
saw visible progress in this area, connecting individual efforts to produce
■
the dynamic environment in which young artists and designers thrive.
MICA has long been a leader in developing a truly “collegiate” campus
life programming.
■
experience for our students. With new facilities, new residential life programs, and ongoing enhancements to co-curricular programming, life on
New student activities and residential
Additional clubs, activities, and
athletic offerings.
■
Enhanced advising services.
MICA’s campus has grown more robust than ever.
A NE W C EN TER O F C A M P U S LIF E
in the Bolton Hill neighborhood. Aside from
As the spirited venue for dances, open mic
providing 73 apartments for 202 upper-class
nights, concerts, study groups, club meet-
students, Meyerhoff House also is home to
ings, and student exhibitions—not to men-
the College’s dining hall, Fitness Center,
tion lunches with faculty, midnight snacks,
Piano Gallery (music room and gallery),
and bleary-eyed breakfasts during crit
meeting rooms, and student services and
week—Robert and Jane Meyerhoff House
club offices. Robert and Jane Meyerhoff, for
has quickly become the epicenter for student
whom the building is named in recognition
life. It’s amazing, with the myriad events
of their $4 million gift to create an endow-
and activities that happen there, Meyerhoff
ment for the residence facility’s operations
House, in its current incarnation, is just over
and maintenance, are internationally
a year old. It was created out of the former
renowned for their philanthropy and their
Hospital for the Women of Maryland, long a
vision as collectors of contemporary art.
vacant and increasingly dilapidated eyesore
“We have been impressed by the College’s
Robert and Jane Meyerhoff’s long
history of generosity to MICA has provided the Robert and Jane Meyerhoff
Gallery in Fox Building and an endowment for special public programs.
leadership and track record in the education
of artists,” notes Robert Meyerhoff. “This
specific project seemed an appropriate
vehicle to help the College fulfill its vision
of the future while also benefiting the
Baltimore community.” Emeritus Trustee
Jane Meyerhoff adds, “The addition of this
new residential life facility takes the College
to the next level in the building of a
campus.”
16
“Generations of Baltimoreans drew
their first breath at the old Hospital for
Women of Maryland, a Bolton Hill
landmark. Now Maryland Institute
College of Art has breathed new life
into the building itself, after it had
stood vacant for a decade.”
The Baltimore Sun, August 19, 2002
“This year, Meyerhoff House has really
become the hub for all student activities
that go on at MICA. People just go there
to hang out 24 hours a day—it’s like
MICA’s Student Union, right in the heart of
the campus. Students will just show up to
do study groups or play board games in
the lobby. There are a lot of planned
events held in the dining area. Now
there’s a living, thriving artists’ community on campus, and a lot of it had to do
with the opening of Meyerhoff House.”
Chelsea Munion
Senior Graphic Design Major
from Fairfax, Virginia
“Maryland Institute College of Art, whose
“If I’ve done my job well, then every student in Meyerhoff House
buildings include a onetime Baltimore &
leaves here at the end of the year having grown quite a bit—as
Ohio Railroad station, has long been
an individual, an artist, a citizen—because they understand more
given credit by residents of its Bolton
what their role is in the world. Our student Hall Assistants in par-
Hill neighborhood for providing stability
ticular get an opportunity to develop their skills as leaders; they
in the elegant late 19th-century row
actually inspire other students. All of us in Student Activities and
house community. Now the institute is
Career Development are working towards the same goal. I just
embarking on a $35 million expansion
have the unique responsibility of doing it 24 hours a day.”
that will include renovation of a hospital
Kate Plows
that has been vacant for a decade….”
Assistant Director of Residence Life, MICA
The New York Times, February 10, 2002
17
POL I S H ING A J EW E L
equip the Fitness Center. Barbara Symonds
A beautifully renovated building is a great
(mother of Tom Symonds, GFA ’05), Julie
start, but the College also needed to equip
Clark-Jones (mother of Kristin Skarbovig,
Meyerhoff House with essential amenities
GFA ’03), and Dr. William Kesselring (father
and services to enhance the residential life
of Kate Kesselring, Painting ’06) raised
experience. Friends of the College made a
$10,000 in gifts from MICA parents. This
critical difference in this effort. Among
outstanding effort in turn brought in a
them, a gift made by the Alex. Brown &
matching $10,000 commitment from MICA
Sons Charitable Foundation as part of the
Trustee George Dalsheimer. Their efforts did
firm’s 200th anniversary celebrations named
not go unnoticed. According to Ben Kutil
the inviting oasis of green, below right, that
(Graphic Design ’04), a leader in the Stu-
replaced the weed-choked lot that had been
dent Voice Association and founder of the
the building’s “front yard,” and friends of
College’s Ultimate Frisbee Club, “Everyone
Senior Ben Kutil, above, exemplifies the
longtime and well-loved Trustee Ned
was waiting for the Fitness Center to open.
artist/athlete who will reap the benefits
Daniels made contributions to create a land-
Now it’s in constant use every day. A lot of
of the new Fitness Center. Meyerhoff
scaped garden and outdoor dining area in
MICA students were involved in high school
House apartments (a typical bedroom is
the building’s central courtyard. Three mem-
athletics before coming here. Just because
shown below) and common spaces
bers of MICA’s Parents Council organized an
we’re in art school is no reason not to be
were designed for the ways artists live
active fundraising campaign during 2003 to
involved in sports.”
and work today.
18
“From my involvement with the Board, it
“Part of my motivation for the gift with
“I helped start the A Capella Group three
occurred to me that MICA students had a
Gwen was my memory of my college’s
years ago for students who were interested
lot of talent in a lot of different areas,
social hall and its grand piano, which
in having a good time getting together and
especially music. When I asked if there
served as a gathering place and created
singing. With the opening of the Piano
was a piano on campus, I was told there
a special sense of community. So this
Gallery at Meyerhoff House, now we have a
was none. So Nancy Haragan and I
gift was an opportunity to extend this
central place to meet. It’s given us an iden-
decided to make a joint presentation of a
experience to a new generation of stu-
tity—it’s our room, where we can meet and
grand piano to be installed at Meyerhoff
dents. I hope that others will see that
come together. Having the piano in there is
House. This gift was an easy one to
they can make a small gift to MICA that
really beautiful. It serves as a real focusing
make given that its absence was such an
can be meaningful in many ways.”
point for learning music. MICA has shown
obvious omission in the College’s stu-
Nancy Haragan
me that an art college can have a capacity
dent life. The magnitude of positive stu-
Executive Director, The Greater Baltimore
for music, for writing, for theater—all those
dent response has been wonderful; it has
Cultural Alliance
things are part of being an artist and going
dwarfed the size of the gift itself.”
through that creative process. The ability to
M. Gwen Davidson
have access to those activities is very
Partner & Senior Portfolio Manager,
important.”
Brown Advisory; MICA Trustee
Keith McCord
Junior Graphic Design Major from
Huntington Station, New York
“We are pleased to have the Foundation’s
support recognized through the naming of
this garden, a space that serves both the
community and the College.”
Margaret Preston
President, Board of Directors
Alex. Brown & Sons Charitable Foundation
19
Campus
Plan
Like an image rising into focus, the urban campus of Maryland Institute
THE PLAN FOR A UNIFIED
URBAN CAMPUS
College of Art is gaining a recognizable shape and clarity. Where one
The Campus Master Plan seeks to:
building stood in 1907, today a dozen new or creatively reused buildings
■
form the framework of a vibrant campus community within the neighbor-
Strengthen MICA’s identity and presence by defining campus boundaries
and creating a gateway sense of
hood of Bolton Hill. Guiding this long-term development is MICA’s Cam-
arrival.
pus Master Plan, an outgrowth of The Plan for the 21st Century. The Cam■
pus Plan, created by Ayers/Saint/Gross, calls for the eventual addition of
more than one million square feet of space, answering MICA’s growing
Improve pedestrian experience along
and crossing Mount Royal Avenue.
■
Investigate future growth opportunities through building sites on campus
need for added student housing, academic buildings, and a student cen-
and possible property acquisition.
ter. A designed streetscape with landscaping, gates, and signage will
■
provide visual integration for the campus along the Mount Royal Avenue
corridor. Major goals were achieved with the opening of Meyerhoff House
and the construction of the landmark Brown Center. However, as The
Create quality outdoor gathering
spaces.
■
Promote closer connections between
the campus and the surrounding
neighborhood.
Plan for the 21st Century states, new goals for campus development
must be set and met to keep pace with MICA’s present reputation and its
future, “ to ensure that the College offers the facilities and equipment
required to promote a comprehensive learning environment for artists.”
“Through The Plan for the 21st Century
“Over the past two years, during Board meet-
and its Campus Master Plan, we’re seeing
ings, I positioned myself at the table so I
visible signs that MICA continues as the
could watch Brown Center rising majesti-
leading art college in the country. In just
cally across the street through the window
the past two years, with the opening of
of the board room. It was unquestionably
Meyerhoff House and the construction of
the most fascinating work in progress I have
Brown Center, it is clear that a dynamic,
ever witnessed. It is also the most visible of
unified campus is emerging for the first
the many exciting developments that have
time, with the facilities our students need
occurred under Fred Lazarus’ leadership, all
to excel in art and design. It’s very exciting
of which have led to MICA’s ranking at the
to experience this momentum.”
very top tier of the country’s art institutions.
Neil A. Meyerhoff
It is a privilege to be involved in helping
MICA Trustee and Chairman of the Board
MICA become the most distinguished art
as of October 2003
school in the nation—or should we say the
Western World?”
Alice Greif
MICA Trustee
20
1
E XISTI NG S TR UC T URE S
NEW ADDITIONS
PROPOSED FACILITIES
Main Building & Annex
Meyerhoff House (1) – historic
Brown Center (3) – the first aca-
College Center
Hospital for the Women of Mary-
demic structure constructed for
Offices and Student Mixed Use
MICA Store
land creatively recast as a stu-
MICA in nearly 100 years, houses
(3 sites)
New Academic Buildings for
Sally’s Garden
dent life center, dining hall, and
MICA’s digital arts programs and
Student Housing (2 sites)
Dolphin Building
undergraduate apartment hous-
features a 525-seat auditorium
Student Recreation Center
Mount Royal Station
ing facility (opened August 2002)
(fully in use in January 2004)
Student Support Facility
Facilities Management Building
Jos. A. Bank Building (inset) –
(2) – former Baltimore City fire-
former Joseph A. Bank sewing
house renovated to house the
factory renovated for academic
College’s facilities management
and studio space, fronting on
Fox Building
Renovation of Existing Building
Bunting Center
for Academic and Student
The Commons
Mixed Use
Kramer House
department (opened summer
North Avenue (in use since fall
2002)
2000)
Alex. Brown & Sons Garden (1)
Edwin A. Daniels, Jr. Courtyard (1)
2
3
MICA’s urban campus has grown through sensitive new construction united with visionary re-use of existing structures,
such as the historic Mount Royal Station (shown at the top of
the photo below, adjacent to the Meyerhoff Symphony Hall)
and the former Hospital for the Women of Maryland (shown
on page 23, with The Commons in the background).
“It can’t be overstated how beneficial
it was to Bolton Hill for MICA to purchase and re-use the old Women’s
Hospital. In the middle of the neighborhood was this huge, abandoned,
derelict building that just sat there
for years. Its conversion into Meyerhoff House had an effect that radiated through the whole neighborhood
and created a tremendous asset. The
neighborhood-College relationship is
symbiotic: each is equally served by
the other. Bolton Hill provides a wonderful setting, while the students
bring life to the streets.”
Buzz Cusack
Partner, The Charles Theater;
Bolton Hill resident since 1973
“I’ve been a neighbor and unabashed
enthusiast of Maryland Institute College of Art for many years. It’s made
a tremendous difference in Bolton
Hill—and a great contribution to the
City of Baltimore. Its other important
contribution has been in the area of
architecture. The College has done
an unbelievable job in converting
older buildings and in building new
ones. The new Brown Center is really
something to have in the neighborhood. Today, you wouldn’t find anyone living in Bolton Hill who wouldn’t
fight to keep the College here.”
Walter Sondheim Jr.
Senior Advisor, The Greater Baltimore
Committee; Civic Leader behind the
“Baltimore Renaissance”
22
23
24
2003 Gift Report
T
hank you, contributors to MICA’s Plan for the 21st Century. Your
generosity over the past three years has created momentum in
phase one of our $125 million campaign and established new
benchmarks in philanthropic giving to the College. Generous
contributors to date are listed on the pages that follow.
As this report goes to press, you have committed more than $40 million toward
the $60 million phase-one goal of The Plan. The impact of your support can be felt
across our campus and throughout our educational programs. Most tangible is the
completed transformation of the former Hospital for the Women of Maryland into an
exciting new residence hall for student artists, Robert and Jane Meyerhoff House.
Across Mount Royal Avenue from the Main Building, the finishing touches are being
added to Brown Center—MICA’s first entirely new academic building since 1907.
Classes will begin there in January 2004.
Your gifts are creating garden and green spaces for our students, the neighborhood, and Baltimore. You are creating endowments that will provide funds in perpetuity for scholarships, for faculty development, for Community Arts Partnerships, and
for operating expenses. Your gifts have come in many forms: cash, appreciated
securities, charitable remainder trusts, and bequests.
The Plan for the 21st Century calls for strengthening MICA’s financial position by
increasing the endowment; making more scholarships available to attract top
students from across the nation and to give talented students access to a great
education; creating positions to enhance faculty development; moving forward with
a Campus Master Plan that includes new construction, renovation, and acquisition
on the College’s unique urban campus, as well as increased operating support
through a growing annual fund.
Thank you for sharing our vision…. Thank you for investing in one of the top art
colleges in the country—one of Baltimore’s educational and cultural treasures.
You can feel the momentum. You can see the impact.
Thank you for your support. It is vital to MICA’s future.
25
Plan for the 21st Century– Capital Donors
The following donors have made
commitments ranging from under $25,000 to
$6,000,000 toward building endowment and
program initiatives in response to funding
The Plan for the 21st Century.
$ 1 MI L LI O N A N D A B OV E
Marcella Louis Brenner W’32, H’01
Estate of William Beverly Bristor, Jr.
in memory of Ruth Jenkins Bristor ’35
Eddie & Sylvia Brown P’02
George & Anne Bunting
Ben & Zelda Cohen Foundation
Rosalee Davison ’60 &
Charlotte Weinberg
Betty Cooke ’46 & William O. Steinmetz ’50
Alonzo* H’85 & Virginia Decker
France-Merrick Foundation
Alice Falvey Greif
Estate of Florence G. Harper ’34
JoAnn & David ’66 Hayden
Jane H’94 & Robert H’94 Meyerhoff
The Starr Foundation
State of Maryland
$ 5 00 ,000 – 9 99 , 99 9
Alex. Brown & Sons Charitable Foundation
The Hoffberger Foundation & LeRoy E.
Hoffberger
The Wallace Foundation
$ 25 ,000 – 49 ,999
Anonymous
The William G. Baker, Jr. Memorial Fund
Thomas & Patricia Barry
Katharine Gust Blakeslee ’82, P’04
Kara Brook ’86
in memory of Reuben Brook
Fay Chandler ’67
M. Gwen Davidson & Nancy Haragan
Rosetta & Mathias DeVito
in honor & memory of Edwin A. Daniels, Jr.
Charles Ellerin ’41
Fredye & Adam Gross
Willard & Lillian Hackerman
David ’61 & Diana Jacobs
Alvin Krongard
in memory of Patricia Krongard ’77, ’90
Legg Mason, Inc.
Macht Philanthropic Fund
Mercantile Bankshares
Neil & Sayra Meyerhoff
Anne S. Perkins
T. Rowe Price Associates Foundation, Inc.
Richard & Sheila Riggs
Friends of Rochefort-en-Terre
Estate of Amalie R. Rothschild ’34
The Rouse Company
in honor & memory of Edwin A. Daniels, Jr.
The Whiting-Turner Contracting Co.
Robert Ashton
in memory of Arthur Mitchell ’66
Lynn & Tony Deering
in honor & memory of Edwin A. Daniels, Jr.
Hecht-Levi Foundation
Barbara Keyser*
Jonna & Fred Lazarus
Stephen & Miriam Levy P’00, friends & family
in memory of Marc David Levy ’00
Zumtobel/Wolfgang Egger P’03
$5 0,00 0 – 99 ,999
$ 2 50 ,000 – 4 9 9, 99 9
Jacqueline & Stephen Boesel
The Concordia Foundation
The Jane & Worth B. Daniels, Jr. Fund
Rosalee ’60 & Richard Davison
Philip E. Klein
in memory of Harriet Klein ’67
Estate of Reuben Kramer ’32 & Perna Krick ’31
John J. Leidy Foundation, Inc.
Robert Lienhardt
The Joseph & Harvey Meyerhoff Family
Charitable Funds
Doris Rief ’86, P’86
26
$ 1 00,000 – 2 4 9 ,999
Suzi Keats Cordish
George H. Dalsheimer
Estate of Edwin A. Daniels, Jr.
Lois Blum Feinblatt
Neal M. Friedlander, M. D. & Virginia K. Adams
Barbara & Samuel Himmelrich
Estate of William D. Kennedy ’65
Nina Leake Richardson & Nora Leake Cameron
in honor of Nora B. Leake* &
Eugene W. Leake H’78
Alvin & Louise Myerberg, Wendy Jachman ’71
& Jennifer Myerberg
Walter Sondheim
Anne Winstead Woody ’57
in memory of Bill Woody &
Tom Miller ’67, ’87
P – Parent/s
GP – Grandparent/s
W – Wi d o w /e r
UNDER $25,000
Ray Allen & Irena S. M. Makarushka
Rhea Arnot ’92
Jeanne Baetjer
in honor of Katharine Baetjer Pilgrim
Baltimore Steel & ACM Erectors
Lisa & Greg Barnhill
Theresa Lynch Bedoya
Louisa Cooper Dubin
in memory of Eleanor Chalfant Cooper
Carol ’86 & Douglas Frost
Gwen C. & Richard C. Hackney, Jr.
Gloria & Herbert Katzenberg
Suzanne Levin-Lapides ’69
Ellen Lupton & Abbott J. Miller
Frances LeBoutillier Rivoire P’01 &
Anne Catherine Rivoire ’01
in memory of Anne Virginia Pugh LeBoutillier
& Charles LeBoutillier
Adrien Rothschild ’71
Estate of Randolph S. Rothschild
Evelyn Schroedl ’40
Arthur & Nancy Waxter
Ziger/Snead Architects & Charles Brickbauer
H – Ho n or ar y D eg r ee r eci p i ent
* – D ece ase d
MICA’s Endowment Funds
Endowed funds at MICA were valued at
$32,673,239, as of May 31, 2003. The following list contains all funds that comprise
the endowment. Newly established funds
and existing funds that received new gifts
in support of The Plan for the 21st Century
are marked.
Jerome Abrams ’46 Memorial Scholarship
Act-So Scholarship (Continuing Studies)
AEGON USA, Inc. Scholarship
Lois and Irving Blum Foundation Scholarship
Jules M. Bodarky Scholarship
Marcella Brenner Distinguished
MAT Scholar Award°
Ruth Jenkins Bristor ’35 Scholarship°
Reuben Brook Memorial Scholarship
Brown Center°
Chesapeake Antiquarian Photographic Society
Scholarship
The Concordia Foundation Scholarship°
Betty Cooke ’46 Scholarship
Sgt. Ralph Roland Demuth Memorial
Scholarship
Mathias J. DeVito Scholarship
Shirley Eaton Fund
Fay’s Fund°
France-Merrick Foundation Community
Arts Fund°
Freda Eichelberger ’81 Scholarship in
Painting/Freda Eichelberger ’81 Scholarship
in Sculpture
Samson Feldman ’25 Scholarship in
Art Education/Samson Feldman ’25
Scholarship in Illustration
William Ferguson Merit Scholarship
General Scholarship
Margaret Glace Scholarship in Art Education
O’Neill Troy Hammond ’69, ’75
Memorial Scholarship
Claire Gaskin Harper ’41 Scholarship°
Francis Burns Harvey Merit Scholarship
Lucile Hecht Memorial Scholarship
Emanuel Herman ’39 Prize
William Mayo Herring ’41 Scholarship
Hoffberger School of Painting°
Barry Holniker ’81 Memorial Scholarship
The Maryland Institute Knott Scholarship
The Reuben Kramer ’32 & Perna Krick ’31
Award of Merit
Kramer House°
Patricia L. Krongard ’76, ’90 Art Education
Scholarship°
Nora & Eugene Leake Scholarship in Painting°
The Lenore Fund°
Marc Levy Memorial Scholarship°
George A. Lucas Fund
Main Building
Seymour Mandelbaum Merit Scholarship
Elizabeth McShane ’26 Book Fund
Meyer Photography Traveling Fellowship
Joseph Meyerhoff Center for Career
Development°
Joseph and Rebecca Meyerhoff Scholarship
Neil and Sayra Meyerhoff Fund for Student and
Staff Development °
Robert and Jane Meyerhoff House°
Robert and Jane Meyerhoff Special Programs
Endowment
Arthur Mitchell ’66 Scholarship°
Edward C. Morton, Jr. Memorial Fund Award
Louise & Alvin J. Myerberg Scholarship Fund
Christopher J. Overholser ’65 Scholarship in
Graphic Design/Christopher J. Overholser ’65
Scholarship in Illustration
Gertrude Pentland Scholarship
Mildred Caplan Perl ’39 Scholarship
James E. Peterson ’49 Scholarship
William M. Philips ’54 Memorial Scholarship
Rinehart School of Sculpture
Alfred & Trafford Klots Artist Residency
Program in Rochefort-en-Terre, France
Stanley Rosen Memorial Fund for Faculty
Development
Amalie Rothschild ’34 Residency Program°
Amalie Rothschild ’34 Rinehart Award°
The Rouse Company Program
Starr Foundation International Programs
C.V. Starr Scholarship°
James Stephenson Fund
Reba Stewart Memorial Scholarship
Fanny Blaustein Thalheimer Scholarship
Unrestricted
Walter G. ’38 & Betty ’39 Wilkinson Memorial
Scholarship
Dale Burton Wood ’30 Memorial Scholarship in
Fiber/Dale Burton Wood ’30 Memorial
Scholarship in Illustration
Bill Woody/Tom Miller ’67, ’87 Scholarship°
27
Making a Gift
Any gift to any program counts toward the
fundraising effort for The Plan for the 21st
Century. There are many ways to support the
area or program of your choice. Your gifts help
to assure the College’s continued excellence.
The professional staff in MICA’s Office of
Development can offer information on the
following options and can help you meet your
needs while making a difference at the College.
You should also consult with your legal and tax
counsel.
CASH
Cash gifts are always encouraged and are the
simplest way to make a gift to MICA. They can
be directed to any program or area of your
choice, and can be for outright expenditures, or
added to the endowment with the income
available for MICA’s use.
APPRECIATED ASSETS
CHARITABLE REMAINDER TRUST
CHARITABLE BEQUEST
A life income gift is a wonderful way for you to
participate in The Plan and yet retain the
security of an income stream for your lifetime,
and for others that you care about. A number of
trust arrangements offer flexible features that
are effective in achieving financial and estate
planning objectives.
Gifts from individuals’ wills have become an
integral part of the American philanthropic
tradition. Bequests in wills or trusts are an
effective way to create a lasting memorial and
assure the continued level of excellence you
have come to expect from Maryland Institute
College of Art.
LIFE TENANCY GIFT
TAX BENEFITS
A gift of a remainder interest in a personal
residence, farm, or vacation property provides a
way to make a major gift to MICA, while
retaining the use and occupancy of the property
for the rest of your life.
Charitable gifts generate tax deductions—both
income and estate. While you need to consult
your own tax advisor as to how a gift impacts
your tax obligation, we do have knowledgeable
staff and resources available to help explain the
general tax benefits of a particular type of gift.
CHARITABLE LEAD TRUST
These trusts provide income to the College for a
fixed period. The assets are eventually returned
to you, the donor, or to a designee.
Holdings such as corporate securities and real
estate that have appreciated in value make great
gifting assets, especially when you are making
a major gift. MICA credits you for the full fairmarket value of the stock or land, and there are
some very favorable tax benefits.
For more information about making a gift to
MICA, please contact the Office of Development
at 410-225-2324 or visit our Web site at
www.mica.edu, and click on Vision for the
Future from the Main Menu.
The Fall 2002 Recognition and Dedication Dinner
celebrated the dedication of Robert and Jane Meyerhoff
House, the Richard and Sheila Riggs Reception Area,
and the Edwin A. Daniels Courtyard. The Riggs' gift was
the first to the student residence.
1
2
1. Shown at top left are, left to right:
Mary Wolfe, her brother Richard Riggs,
his son George Riggs, Sheila Riggs, and
Richard's mother, Eleanor Riggs.
2. Trustee George Bunting, co-chair of the
Campaign Steering Committee, with Tony
and Lynn Deering in the Daniels Courtyard.
3. Fred Lazarus with Sayra and Neil Meyerhoff,
Anne S. Perkins, Robert and Jane Meyerhoff.
3
28
2003 Annual Fund
T
hank you MICA alumni, trustees, friends, parents, foundations,
corporations, staff, and faculty. Your generous support brought
the Annual Fund to a new high—$1.18 million—and provided
vital funding for scholarships, visiting artists, exhibitions, community arts programs, equipment, and operating expenses.
The success of the 2003 Annual Fund was particularly rewarding in a year of lin-
gering economic uncertainty. Congratulations to each and every donor for your role
in this success. The Annual Fund is a key component in financing The Plan for the
21st Century, and its significance to the progress of MICA cannot be overstated.
Current annual giving is equivalent to a five percent payout on a $20 million endowment. For The Plan to succeed, we must continue to grow the Annual Fund over the
next decade.
We are deeply appreciative of every gift, at every level, and hope you will continue
to make MICA a priority in your charitable giving. Again, many thanks for your generosity. It means the world to us.
Sincerely,
Nancy Sasser, Trustee
Chair, 2003 & 2004 Annual Funds
Contributors listed in this section of the Gift
Report participated in the 2003 Annual Fund,
which ended on June 30, 2003. We have made
every effort to ensure the accuracy of the Gift
Report. If we have made an error, please accept
our apology. You may call us at 410-225-2263,
and we will correct our records.
29
2003 Annual Fund Donors
THE LEADERSHIP CIRCLE
The Leadership Circle honors
donors whose outstanding annual
support, including gifts to the
Fund, has the greatest impact
upon the advancement of the
College. The Leadership Circle
consists of members whose
cumulative 2003 gifts were in
the following ranges:
Carnegie Society
$15,000 and above
Corinthian Society
$5,000 – $14,999
President’s Society
$2,500 – $4,999
Lucas Society
$1,000 – $2,499
The Evergreen House Foundation
Lois Blum Feinblatt
Wendy & Benjamin H. Griswold IV
Fredye & Adam Gross
JoAnn & David ’66 Hayden
Ellen & Edward Halle
Susan & Jon Levinson P’03
Maryland State Arts Council, an agency
funded by the State of Maryland &
the National Endowment for the Arts
The Municipal Art Society
William S. Paley Foundation, Inc.
Doris Rief ’86, P’86
Rebecca B. & Christopher Roberts
Nancy & John Sasser
Evelyn Schroedl ’40
Margaret & Patrick Walsh, M.D.
Whiteford, Taylor & Preston LLP
Ziger / Snead LLP
CA RNE GI E S O C IET Y
PRESIDENT’S SOCIET Y
Artafare Benefit
Jacqueline & Stephen Boesel
Marcella Louis Brenner W’32, H’01
Fay Chandler ’67
Betty Cooke ’46 & William O. Steinmetz ’50
Jane & Worth B. Daniels, Jr., Fund
Estate of Maria Eddison ’68
Charles Ellerin ’41
The Winifred M. Gordon ’28 Foundation
Alice Falvey Greif
Estate of Florence G. Harper ’34
David ’61 & Diana Jacobs
Isabel Klots
Jane H’94 & Robert H’94 Meyerhoff
Neil & Sayra Meyerhoff
Open Society Institute
Shara & J. Carlisle Overstreet P’04
Parks & People Foundation
The Roberta Polevoy Fund of the Baltimore
Community Foundation
T. Rowe Price Associates Foundation, Inc.
Friends of Rochefort-en-Terre
Katherine & Arnold Snider P’99
The Store LTD
Surdna Foundation, Inc.
Carol & Tom Allen
Robert Austrian, M.D.
The Ira J. Basler, Jr. & Mary K. Basler
Foundation
Sherry & Stuart Christhilf
Stiles Tuttle Colwill
Mary & Charles Costa
Edwin A. Daniels, Jr.*
M. Gwen Davidson
Rosetta & Mathias DeVito
Neal M. Friedlander, M.D. & Virginia K. Adams
Nancy & Rick ’78 Glaze
Peggy & Don Greenman
Ellen & Edward Halle
Rebecca H’96 & LeRoy E. Hoffberger
Tonya ’02 & Kempton Ingersol
Elise Cadwallader Kelsey
Philip E. Klein W’67
John J. Leidy Foundation, Inc.
Ruth & Henry Pear
Marsha & Richard P. Manekin
The Thomas F. and Clementine L. Mullan
Foundation
C. Louise Mullan Flanigan ’34
Thomas F. Mullan III
The Joseph Mullan Company
Sheela Murthy & Vasant Nayak
Anne S. Perkins
The Robert Perkins Fund
Mary-Ann & Walter Pinkard, Jr.
The Procter & Gamble Cosmetics
Foundation, Inc.
Rhythm & Hues, Inc.
Richard & Sheila Riggs
Peg ’49, ’50 & Bill ’50 Saunders
Betsy & Stephen Scott P’06
Dorothy & Paul Wolman
C ORI NT HI A N S OC I ET Y
Karin ’84 & Bill Banks
Katharine ’82, P’04 & Farlow Blakeslee
Brown Advisory
George & Anne Bunting
Mary & John C. Cooper
Suzi & David Cordish
Christopher P. D’Anna
Robin & George H. Dalsheimer
Rosalee ’60 & Richard Davison
Virginia Decker
Wilbur S. Ervin P’72, P’78
30
P – Parent/s
GP – Grandparent/s
W – Wi d o w /e r
LUCAS SOCIETY
Janice & Harold L. Adams P’92
Priscilla Alexander P’81
Ray Allen & Irena S. M. Makarushka
American Council on Italian Matters
Gloria & Joseph Askin
Associated Italian American Charities
of Maryland
Atlantic Corporate Interiors, Inc.
Estate of Randolph Avery
Lisa & Greg Barnhill
Patti & Michael Batza
Elizabeth & Edward Blair
Aurelia & Perry Bolton
Marion & Carroll Bodie
Esther B. Bonnet
Victoria & Marc ’76 Boone
Charles Brickbauer
Kara Brook ’86
Canton Gallery
Caplan Family Foundation
Constance R. Caplan
Linda & Mark Caplan
Beverley C. Compton, Jr.
Cho Benn Holback Associates
Stuart B. Cooper ’72
Anne Deford
Daniel F. Dent
Barbara & John Dreyer
Anne I. Dugan
Mr. & Mrs. J. Sanford Dugan
Deborah ’84 & Philip English
Sadie B. Feldman ’36
Carol ’86 & Douglas Frost
Harriet Ann ’43 & Clement Gardiner
Ann M. Garfinkle
The Joseph & Arkadi Gerney Foundation
Brigette Gerney P’95
Joanna Golden
Leith & Benjamin Griswold III
Gwen C. & Richard C. Hackney, Jr.
Hecht-Levi Foundation
Sandra & Siegfried Gerstung
Ryda Levi
Janet Heller
Barbara & Sam Himmelrich
Barbara & David Hirschhorn
Marion Hogan & Brian Nash
Wendy & Howard Jachman
Julie & W. Lehr Jackson
Diana Jacquot
Lisa Reich & L. Robert Johnson P’00
Kajima Construction Services, Inc.
Joan & John Kane P’04
Gloria & Herbert Katzenberg
Kevin Kearney ’74
Ensign C. Markland Kelly, Jr. Memorial
Foundation, Inc.
Susan Kerry ’03
H – Ho n or ar y D eg r ee r eci p i ent
* – D ece ase d
KPMG LLP
Mary Ann Lambros ’63, P’88, P’01
Suzanne Levin-Lapides ’69
Jonna & Fred Lazarus
Eleanor & David Macedonia P’03
Morton & Sophia Macht Foundation
Lois & Phillip Macht
Amy Macht
Carol Macht
Ruth R. Marder
The Joseph & Harvey Meyerhoff Charitable
Family Funds
MICA Alumni Association
Mary J. Miller
The Lloyd E. Mitchell Foundation
Dr. & Mrs. F. Markoe Dugan
Michael R. Molla & Brad Weesner
Nottingham Properties, Inc.
Odorite
Katherine & Dave Phillips P’06
Luise V. Reichert ’81
Cindy & Lawrence Rief
Allen Rohlfing
Carla Heider Rosenzweig ’73
Rudolph’s Office & Computer Supplies
Bunny & Charles Salisbury
Lisa Sallow
Robin & Lawrence Sapanski P’05
Robert A. Shelton, Esq.
Carolyn & John Snow
Cynthia Stroud ’78
Type Directors Club, Inc.
Venable, Baetjer and Howard
Penelope & Peter West P’05
Fred E. Worthington ’57
P – Parent/s
GP – Grandparent/s
SPECIAL GIFTS CLUB
Sponsors
$500 – $999
Patrons
$250 – $499
Associates
$100 – $249
SPONSORS
Patricia Marsh Anderson ’89
Anonymous
Art Seminar Group
John T. Beaty
Erin & Douglas Becker
Theresa Lynch Bedoya & Timothy App
Tiz & William Benedict
Judy & Allen Bentley P’02
Maggie ’86 & Tom Blanck
Nancy P. Blaustein
Jake Boone
Mary R. Brush
Sue & Jack Calvert P’05
Carolyn Campbell ’72
William L Cape ’74
Karen Carroll
Marjorie Chenoweth
Ralph Chieffo ’78
Rebecca & Ted ’70 Crosby
Lynda Shenkman Curtis ’81
Nancy & Buzz Cusack
Mary-Jo ’66 & Bob Dale ’61, ’70
Barbara ’91 & Louis Denrich
Rick Detorie ’74
Deborah Diehl
Nancy Dorman & Stanley Mazaroff
Jephta & Daniel Drachman, M. D.
Edward K. Dunn III
Mr. Benjamin G. Egerton
The Eliasberg Family Foundation
John Gilmore Ford ’56
Barbara & Patrick Francis
Barbara & Alan Gamse
Daniel Gilbert
Sally Gold & Elliott Zulver
William Gust P’04
Barr & Licien King ’77 Harris
Carol & Bill Hylton, Jr.
Mary Hyman
Mrs. Myra Jans*
Anne & Henry Jenkins
Kessler Design Group, Ltd./Ethel Kessler ’71
Estate of William L. Kinter
Ted Klitzke
Josephine Kohn Foundation
Nancy Robin Kohn
Avendui & Andrew Lacovara
Linda & Julian Lapides
Sally & Wendell Leimbach
Darielle & Earl L. Linehan
Barbara Lipman ’78
Henry & Sarah Lord
Elizabeth & Kenneth Lundeen
Dr. Jeffrey & Maripat Luntz
Katharine Madzelan ’78
Mrs. Charles Marburg
Martin Greenbaum Company
Katherine ’42 & Van Merle-Smith, Jr.
W – Widow/er
H – Honorar y D e gr e e r e ci p i e nt
Harry C. Meyerhoff
Sally Michel
Clement C. Moore
Toby & Morton M. Mower
Barbara & Charles Noell
Mr. & Mrs. I. Manning Parsons
Terry Allan Perl
Sallye Perrin & John Von Briesen
Piechocki Consultants
Barbara G. Price
Mary Beth & Jack Egan Reich P’06
Pootah & George S. Rich
Craig Richardson ’72
Ruth Rickert ’41
Patricia Rouse
Ronald Russell ’72
Lois Schenk & Todd Myers
Debbie & Jim Scott ’68
Dorothy McIlvain Scott
The Ida & Joseph Shapiro Foundation
Mrs. T. Rowland Slingluff, Jr.
Walter Sondheim, Jr.
Anne Robertson South ’66
Mark Stempel ’90
The Stieff Foundation
Jan Stinchcomb ’82
Beverly F. Symonds P’05
Leslie Sporn-Symonds & Philip Symonds
George Theofiles ’69
Sharon & David Tufaro
Mary Turnbull
William A. Van Blarcom, Jr.
Betty Childs Wells ’48
Connie & S. Bonsal White
Sascha Wolhandler & Stephen Suser
Christine & Jim Wright
PATRONS
Robert Alholm ’82
Jeanne Baetjer
Anne & Thomas Bailliere, Jr.
Dr. & Mrs. Emile Bendit
Alison & David Bennett P’04
Rita & Richard Berndt
Kevin Bethel ’89
Verina Black
Joan & Francis Blake
Mr. & Mrs. Alvin H. Blum
Mr. & Mrs. Marc P. Blum
Paul J. Boone, Sr.
Mr. & Mrs. Walter Brewster
Christine & J. Dorsey Brown
Sukey Bryan ’90
Sally Deford Buck
Kim Carlin
Robyn Chadwick ’75
Donald & Delores Chapman P’05
Karen Cipolla ’74 & Chris Sturm Perry ’76
George J. Ciscle
Suzanne F. Cohen
Mr. & Mrs. Jay W. Cooper
Beth Craddock & Cabell Smith P’04
Janice M. & Robert V.P. ’62 Davis
Mildred & Patrick L. Deering
Susan & Dr. Vincent DiPietro P’06
Carol & Alan Edelman
* – D e ce a se d
31
Friends of Rochefort-en-Terre
DONORS UNDER $ 150
1
2
3
The Friends of Rochefort-en-Terre celebrated their fifth anniversary at an annual gala, held in January 2003,
and raised over $50,000 to benefit MICA’s international residency program for established artists in
France—the Alfred & Trafford Klots Artist Residency Program. 1. Left to right, Raymonde and René Santerre, conseiller général et maire de Malansac, program director Rob Seyffert, Isabel Klots, and Fred
Lazarus. 2. Nancy Haragan, Rochefort alum Debra Rubino ’92, and Joe Rubino. 3. Friends Steering
Committee co-chairs Wendy Griswold and Kitty Miton.
2 00 3 FRI EN D S OF
ROC HEF ORT
IMPRESSIONIST
($500 TO $ 99 9)
F OUND ER ($ 5 ,0 0 0 + )
Mr. and Mrs. David Cordish
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Dunn III
Mr. and Mrs.° Henry H. Jenkins II
Mrs. Charles Marburg
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Noell
Mr. and Mrs. I. Manning Parsons III
George Rich Family Foundation
Mr. and Mrs.° Richard Riggs, Jr.
Miss Dorothy McIlvain Scott
Mrs. T. Rowland Slingluff, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. William Van Blarcom
Mr. and Mrs.° Benjamin H.
Griswold IV
Mrs. Trafford Klots°
Dr. and Mrs.° Patrick C. Walsh
OL D M A S TE R
( $2 , 50 0 T O $ 4 ,9 9 9 )
Anonymous
Mr. Stiles Tuttle Colwill°
Mrs. Cadwallader W. Kelsey, Jr.
REALIST ($2 50 TO $ 499 )
RE NA IS S A N C E
( $1 , 00 0 T O $ 2 ,4 9 9 )
Mr. Edward McC. Blair
Mr. and Mrs.° Perry J. Bolton
La Comtesse de Chabannes
Ms. Anne I. Dugan
Mr. and Mrs. J. Sanford Dugan
Mrs. Leith W. Griswold
32
Mr. & Mrs. Harold L. Adams
Mrs. H. Norman Baetjer, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Gregory Barnhill
Mrs. Gary Black
Mr. & Mrs. Walter Brewster
Mr. & Mrs. Bayly Buck
Mr. & Mrs. Jay W. Cooper
Ms. Ann Garfinkle &
Mr. Joseph Brent
Mr. & Mrs. Sherlock Gillet
Mr. & Mrs. Randle M. Goetze III
Mr. & Mrs. Jack S. Griswold
Mr. & Mrs. E. Phillips Hathaway
Mr. & Mrs. J. Dixon Hills
P – Parent/s
Mr. & Mrs. Samuel Himmelrich, Jr.
Mrs. Edwin N. Hower
Mr. & Mrs. Francis N. Iglehart, Jr.
Suzanne Levin-Lapides ’69 &
Michael Lapides
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Maddux IV
Miss Eleanor McMillan
Mr. & Mrs. Lynn McNeal
Mr. & Mrs.° Francois Miton
Mr. & Mrs. Irvin Naylor
Mrs. Philip E. Nuttle
Mr. & Mrs. Charles Peterson
Mr. & Mrs. Francis C. Riggs
Mrs. Evelyn Schroedl
Mr. & Mrs. Robert H. Stevenson
C ONTEMPORARY
($150 TO $24 9)
° denotes Friends of Rocheforten-Terre Steering Committee
member
For more information on
Mr. John K. Dugan &
Lorri P. Angelloz
Mr. & Mrs.° Andrew Hughes
Mr. & Mrs. Arthur F. Jenkins
Mr. Ben Constable Maxwell
Dr. & Mrs. Horst K. A. Schirmer
GP – Grandparent/s
Dr. & Mrs. J. Hamilton Allan
Mrs. Howard Baetjer II
Mrs. William A. Barr
Ms. Doreen Bolger
Peter A. Bowe
Mr. & Mrs. Colin Brown
Mrs. J. Dorsey Brown, Jr.
Mrs. Joseph Bryan III
Sarah Carey
Mr. & Mrs. David H. Carroll, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Charles Constable
Mrs. George M. Constable
Mr. & Mrs. M. Jenkins Cromwell, Jr.
M. Gwen Davidson
Mrs. Robert Deford, Sr.°
Dr. & Mrs.° Ronald Dworkin
Mrs. Ogden C. Gorman
Mr. Randall Greenlee
Nancy Haragan
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Hardie
Mr. & Mrs. W. Robert Higgins
Mrs. Joan McH. Hoblitzell
Mrs. Louisa Y. Hopkins
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Horton
Dr. & Mrs. Mohammed Inayatullah
Ms. Anne G. King &
Mr. Michael A. Lee
Mr. & Mrs.° Neil A. Meyerhoff
Mr. William J. Miton
Ms. Anne S. Perkins
Mrs. R. H. Dulany Randolph
Mr. William De C. Ravenel II
Mr. & Mrs. George M. S. Riepe
Ms. Linn Sage
Mr. & Mrs. John W. Sasser
Mr.° & Mrs. Robert J. Seyffert
Mrs. Olcott Smith
Barbara Stewart
Mrs. William C. Trimble
Ms. Susan van den Toorn
Dr. & Mrs.° Kirby L. C. von Kessler
Mr. & Mrs. S. Bonsal White
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Wilcox
Mr. & Mrs. Peyton Wise II
becoming a Friend of
Rochefort, please contact
Sarah Abel-DeLuca,
Director of Development
Services at 410-225-2335 or
[email protected].
W – Wi d o w /e r
H – Ho n or ar y D eg r ee r eci p i ent
* – D ece ase d
PAT RO N S (c ont i nu ed )
Betty Enselein
Ronald E. Fidler ’64
Pamela Flam ’81
Rita & James Francis P’05
Grace Ditman Frederick ’37
Mr. & Mrs. James Rea Garrett
Mr. & Mrs. Sherlock Gillett
Mrs. H. Donald Glaser
Nancy & Randle M. Goetze III
Sandra P. Gohn
Herbert Goldman
Sonia B. Gordon P ’72
Elizabeth W. Grimaldis ’64
Toni & Jack S. Griswold
Sharon Gumerlock ’77
Doug Hall ’69
Abby Lattes & Chris Hartlove ’85
Mr. & Mrs. E. Phillips Hathaway
Jennifer Henbest deCalvillo ’87
Heidi & William H. Henson P’04
Carole & Philip Herrick, Jr. P’02
Mr. & Mrs. J. Dixon Hills
Genya & Samuel B. Hopkins
Mrs. Edwin Hower
Mr. & Mrs. Francis N. Iglehart, Jr.
Henry Jones ’69
Julie & Philip Jones P’03
Barbara Keyser*
Leslie King-Hammond
W. Thorn Kissel ’58
Philippa & Karl Klessig P’05
Barbara & David Kornblatt
Sharon ’60 & Joseph ’61
Koscinski
Martin Kotler ’75
Kramon & Graham, P.A.
Richard Lansburgh
Heeseung Lee ’95
Carlton L. Leverette ’71
Renee Levine-Packer &
Arnold Packer
Ellen Lupton & J. Abbott Miller
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas H. Maddux IV
Eleanor McMillan
Lenei Srochi-Meyerhoff &
John Meyerhoff
Katherine & Francois Miton
David G. Mock
Nancy Monte Santo ’50
Judith & Charles W. Morgan
Diane & Irvin S. Naylor
Joan C. ’77 & Paul H.
Netherwood, Jr.
Margaret & Philip E. Nuttle
Pauline & Ivan B. Oshrine
Aurelia & Charles Peterson
Anne Pinkard
Tamara & Morton Plant
Elizabeth Prongas ’77
Madeline Murphy Rabb ’66
Alison & Arnold Richman
Faith ’61 & Francis G. Riggs
Linda & Zelig Robinson
Carol & Thorvald J. Romsloe P’05
Debra ’92 & Joe Rubino
Monica & Arnold Sagner
P – Parent/s
GP – Grandparent/s
Abby & Irma Sangiamo
Audrey & Neil Scollan P’03
Charissa Mari Seipp ’89
Claudia Sennett ’66 & Doug Kelso
Whitney Sherman ’71
Marta & Haidari Shikari P’04
Marley Simon ’74
Karen & Howard J. Smith Jr. P’04
Beth Craddock &
Cabell Smith P’04
George P. Stamas
Louisa Jenkins Stevenson
Frances Yvonne Swietlicki ’62
Clytie Whitson Taylor ’71
Sallie & Jerome B. Trout Jr.
Georgiana S. Tyler ’76
Ruth Shreeve Uhrig ’39
Susan & Peter Van Buren
Kathy & Mark Vaselkiv
Kenneth Warwick
Elizabeth & Brian Weese
Gregory Weidman &
Michael Flanigan
Helen & Michael Weiss
Barbara & Davison White
Laura Meacham Wilson
Mr. & Mrs. Peyton R. Wise II
Justine Woolner-Wise ’77
Judith Zagozen ’73
Lynn & Donald W. Zurwelle P’86
Kathleen & Ronald Zwizanski P’02
ASSOCIATES
Eric Abrecht ’91
Nelson H. Adlin ’52
Jean Albright &
William T. Coyle P’06
Maria & Carlos Aldana P’03
Catharine & Hamilton Allan, M. D.
Ann V. Allen
E. Winifred Alt ’38
Monica & Stephen Althoff P’06
Mildred B. Anderson ’60
Dolores M. Andrew ’82
Lorrie Angelloz & John Dugan
Stacy Arnold ’83 & Lee Boot ’82
Susan & Bowie Arnot
Amalie A. Ascher
Irene B. Aspell ’78
Rudy Autio
Lois & James Averill P’04
Mayer & William C. Baker
Sara & Daniel Barteluce P’03
Mary Barton ’47
Erin & Douglas Becker
Margaret & William Bell P’02
Gale L. Bell ’66
Kerrie Lynn Bellisario ’92
Patricia & Todd Bence P’06
Sue A. Bennett P’06
Christy Bergland
Donald A. Berglund
Mary S. Bickford ’72
Edda & Michael Bickler P’04
Leesha Bills ’77
Jane Blaustein
Betty ’52 & John ’51 Bloecher
W – Widow/er
Cathy & John Bogus P’98
Ellen Bordley
Nancy Young & Peter A. Bowe
Francine & James T. Brady
Helen Braun ’31
John Brewer
Alice Bristor ’65
Todd Brizzi ’91
Dianna & Colin Brown
Janet Browne ’41
Christine & John F. Bruns P’04
Mr. Joseph Bryan III
Stephanie & Bruce Buffum P’06
Anne & Jim ’82 Burger
Laura Burrows-Jackson &
Michael Jackson
Peggy & Alberto Bustamante P’99
Christina Bustamante ‘99
Melanie & John Caldwell P’06
Debbie & Sean Callahan P’05
Eleanor & Anthony Carey
Sarah S. Carey
Lloyd S. Cargile ’60
Darcy Christhilf Carroll &
David Carroll
Robert & Candice Carter
Pat Heffron-Cartwright &
Steven Cartwright, M.D. P’05
Mr. & Mrs. Dudley I. Catzen
Anita & Kenneth Cavallero P’06
Kathleen Chaney ’72
Anne Chapin ’49
Katherine Mason Chapman ’68
Ming-Li Chu P’06
Joanna M. Clark ’73
William Clarke ’53
Karen & Stephen F. Clayton P’06
Charles & Katie Constable
Marjorie Cooke ’73
Clark Crolius
Mr. & Mrs. M. Jenkins
Cromwell, Jr.
Marlo Cross ’92
Yolanda & Segundo Cuesta P’06
Cynthia & Bobby Ray
Davidson P’06
Bowdoin & Dolores ’02 Davis
Joyce Davis P’05
Ruth & Herbert A. Davis
David Deardorff P’06
Maggi Way DeBaecke ’69
Susan Sunderland DeFelice ’86
Peggy W. Deford ’80*
Polly DellaCrosse P’06
Michael R. Derbyshire ’74
Tom Derosa
Kim Robledo ’95 & Vince Diga ’94
Clare Dohna ’78
Melanie & Patrick J.B. Donnelly
Julie Douglis ’78
Imogene Drummond ’83
Peter Dubeau ’83
Michael Dunne ’71
Dale W. Dusman ’70
Laura & Dave Dutton
Ronald J. Elbert ’58
Funda & Semih Erbay P’05
H – Honorar y D e gr e e r e ci p i e nt
* – D e ce a se d
Vicki & Philip Fanara, Jr. P’04
James M. Faulkner ’73
Eleanor Lobe Fax ’41
Eileen & Rabbi Adam Fisher P’92
Kevin Fitzgerald ’77
Remmi Franklin ’73
Elsie Summers Frantz
Nancy & Tom Frazier P’06
GiGi & Samuel Fried P’06
Joan Lee Friedel ’61
Edith Furstenberg
Pamela McPherson Galito ’80
Douglas S. Gillette ’71
Christopher Goelet
Ilene Goldberg ’68
Palmira & Antonio Goncalves P’05
Paul Goodman
Charlotte & Charles Goodwin
Hilda & Douglas Goodwin
Hilry Gordon ’72
Dr. Stuart Gordon
Betsy F. Gorman
Dana & Stanley Gorman ’63
Marjorie K. Greenebaum ’48
Edward Greenwald ’85
Nanette & Irvin Greif, Jr.
Anne & Leonard Greif
Betty & Ross Griffith
Dr. & Mrs. Francis Grumbine
Anne Gummerson ’75
Nancy Hudgel Gurganus ’70
Babette & Henry L. Gutman
Pamela & Burton Gutterman P’05
J. J. Haines & Company, Inc.
David Hamilton ’62
Anne Hanger ’74
Nancy Haragan
Harbour Signs & Graphics, LTD.
Ellen Glenn Harden ’54
Brian M. Harris ’80
Les ’65 & Sally Harris
Linda Harrison-Parsons ’90
Janet Bauer Hartman ’73
Paul Hayes ’02
Ric Haynes ’68
Fontaine Hebb ’81 & John Slorp
Ann M. Heether ’62
Peggy & John Heller
Patricia Hellman ’94
Ina C. Helrich
Janice E. Milner Hemphill ’84
Betsy & George Hess, Jr.
Sandra & Thomas Hess
Nancy L. Himes
Gina & Daniel Hirschhorn
Mrs. Joan McH. Hoblitzell
James A. Holechek ’53
Patricia Homer &
Randall LaLonde P’03, ’04
Jennifer & Thomas Horton
Paul Hotvedt ’80
Rosita Hurka ’51
Al Hurwitz ’41
Curtis Hutchinson ’85
Allan Isaacson ’70
Gail & Jay G. Israel P’06
R. Richard Jackson
33
Edda Jakab ’84
Irna Jay ’99
Mr. Arthur F. Jenkins
Lynda Carter &
Philip Jensen-Carter ’72
Dr. Claire Smith Johnson
Dorothy & Elliott Jones P’04
Richard R. Jones P’99
Harry Jordan ’72
Karen Kaighin &
Barry Shields P’06
Fred Kail ’59
Lillion & Charles Kaplan, M.D.
Barry Katz ’73
Josie & Gerald Katz
Leah E. Kemper
Karen Kerski ’77
Sant Khalsa ’73
Mr. & Mrs. Ernest Kiehne
Charles & Nancy Ann Killeen P’06
Kyung-hee &
Young-bum Kim P’05
Anne Gilliam King
Myrta King & Kenneth Sale P’05
Beatrice T. Klein ’41
Karen Klinedinst ’85
Timothy B. Klunk ’94
Shizuko & Shigeru
Kobayashi P’06
Lisa & Will Kochinski P’06
Kathleen Kotarba ’76
Jan & Mike Krawczyk P’05
William Kroh
Stanley Kroiz ’67
Nicholas Lambros ’63
Tracy Ann Lambros ’87, ’01
Michelle & William W.
Lamprell, Jr. ’75
Linda & Julian L. Lapides
Elinor & Michael H. Laupheimer
George Lavdas
Jeanne & Forrester A. Lee P’04
Jed Leigh III ’89
Cyril & Gerald B. Lerner
Harriet Stein & Mende Lerner
Calman A. Levin*
Leslie Lillien Levy ’69
Peter Liebhold ’80
David E. Lindenstruth
Richard Lipscher ’76
Kevin Scott Lohr ’92
Ann-Marie Lyddane ’91
Mike & Debbie Lynch P’02
Macht Philanthropic Fund
Madeline Mack ’34
Ann & Clark F. MacKenzie
Frances ’66 & David Mackey P’99
Mary & Alan MacNair P’05
Dennis M. Mahoney P’06
Kathleen H. Malanowski ’83
Heather Marchese
Jeanne Markel &
Harrison Wang P’06
Richard E. Markey ’65
John & Edith Markloff P’03
Natasha & Trail Mathias
Fran & Frank Mauro P’06
34
Madolin Maxey ’70
Virginia Constable Maxwell
Glenn McCain
Andrew H. McDonald
Carol & George McGowan
Marcie McHale ’89
David McKee
John McLaughlin ’75
Larry & Barb McMillin P’03
Birgit McQueen ’81
Myong & Mark McTague P’03
Candy & Howard Means P’98
Janet Merrick &
Gary Hillesland P’06
Marjorie Merriman ’78
Marcia Metzler ’82
Linda & Roger Michel
George Miller ’71
Caroline & Peter G. Miller P’06
Artie Milton ’89
Georgina M. Milum P’06
Alan Mintz P’05
Susie & Ernesto Molfino P’01
Ronald J. Moltere ’68
Nancy Montgomery &
John C. West P’06
Janet Wilson Moore P’06
Deb & Earl Morford P’05
Stacey Saltzman Moriarty ’82
Mrs. Laurie Mosello P’06
Elizabeth & Peter Moser
Mary & John J.
Mulhern, M.D. P’94
Joan M. Mullen ’78 &
Jay Walter ’78
Elizabeth & Michael Murphy P’05
Mary Beth Muscara ’76
Nathan I. Myerberg, M.D.
Timothy Naylor ’91
Robert Nichols ’65
Richard Emery Nickolson ’68
Marjorie Noll ’80
Thomas O. Nuttle
Charles F. & Margaret M. H.
Obrecht Family Fund
Mr. Thomas F. Obrecht
Jennifer Jones & Charles Offutt
Florence & Akira Ohnishi P’06
Louis C. Orndorff ’64
Susanne MacLeod Owings ’68
Brad & Meg Pahmier P’02
Dr. & Mrs. Lawrence Pakula
Linda & Stanley Panitz
Diane Pappas & Larry Goldstein
Kristina ’77 & John Parker ’77
Thomas P. Perkins
Sally & Steven Perry P’00
Isabelle Pillis ’39
Sara Polk ’39
Scott Ponemone ’79
Thomas H. Powell
Janice C. Proctor
Tanya & Robert Pundsack P’03
Charlotte B. Purdum ’81
P – Parent/s
Kimberly & Leonard D.
Quick, M.D. P’05
Mrs. R.H. Dulany Randolph
Robert Rappaport
Deborah Raven ’76
Gretchen & Roger D. Redden
Jeffrey Reed ’76
Joan & Augustus R. Rees P’06
Louisa & Hans Peter Reiter P’05
Mary & Paul Roberts
Barbara & Harrison M.
Robertson, Jr.
David A. Robinson ’71
Sam S. Robinson ’78/
Valley Craftsman Ltd.
Cally Rockwell
Miki Rodriguez ’01 (Marta)
Martha & Christopher
Rolland P’06
Barbara & Christopher
Romano P’06
Mr. & Mrs. Stanford
Rothschild, Jr.
Felicia Rotondo ’00
Mary & Byron Rountree P’05
Libby Rouse
Ernest Rubenstein P’81
Terry & James Rubenstein
Michael Runk
Plumbing & Heating
Sharon Edwards Russell ’78 &
Ron Lang
Janet Siegman Salter ’80
Gloria Mermelstein Sandler ’62
Vera Lee de Sanin &
Mario Sanin P’03
Terry Sapp
Christine & Paul Sarbanes
H. Walter Sarbaugh ’51
Grete & Horst Schirmer
William F. Schmidt ’71
Schoen Engineering, Inc.
Ellin & Myron Scholnick P’04
Gail & Saul Schulhoff
Joan S. Schwartz
Cindy Shapiro ’84
Catherine J. Shelley ’70
Henry Shuler ’73
Carole & Hanan Sibel
Susan Cohen Sidney
Betty Sifleet ’64
Jennifer Small ’73
Mr. & Mrs. Olcott Smith
Janet Marie Smith &
Barton Harvey
Nancy Brooke ’64 &
Wesley Smith ’62, ’64
Mary & John E. Snead, Jr. P’06
John O. Snyder ’78
Richard F. Snyder ’75
Heung Seck Song &
Jung Moon Song P’04
Barbara Spodak ’78
Deedee & Paul Sprecher P’05
Carol & Michael St. George P’05
Marion Meiser Staley ’40
Jan Staller ’75
GP – Grandparent/s
W – Wi d o w /e r
Star Consultants, Inc.
Linda Staskus P’05
Jeri L. Stebel P’06
Frank Steck ’68
Joan Stolz ’84
Dr. Gust S. Stringos P’06
Elizabeth J. Strippy ’80
Sandra Schnebly Strock ’68
Mary Elizabeth
Sturm-Broderick ’44
Jean S. Sussman ’35
Leona & John ’63 Sutton
Mary Swann
Patsy & Thomas P. Swindell
Robert M. Taubman
Janet & Timothy J. Tessler P’06
Juliet E. & Louis B. Thalheimer
Angelika & Evangelos
Theophilou P’03
Suzanne & Robert J. Thieblot
Duane Thigpen ’92
B. Marvin Thomas ’66
June Thome ’96
Vicki & Mark D. Thompson P’04
Deborah Davis Thornton P’05
Afsneh & Frank Tibbs P’03
Claire Oliver Torpey ’80
Dee Ann & Antonio Torres P’02
Nancy G. C. Trimble
Barbara & William C. Trimble
Alice Dolle ’77 & James Trosch
James W. Truett
Evelyn & Barry N. Truhn P’05
Susann & Robert Undi P’03
Susan McCaffray Van Dentoorn
Sharyn R. VanSant ’66
Caroline VonKessler
Elizabeth C. VonKessler
Lewis Waggaman ’40
Ruth Wagner ’46
Sheree & Harrison Wang P’06
Ronald Webb ’68
Jeanne Markel &
Chris Wedge P’06
Leslie S. Weiner ’70
Ed Werner ’74
Barbara & Davison D. White
Leslie & Warren White P’03
Lorraine L. Whittlesey
Thomas Wilcox
Deborah A. Wilder ’75
Janice Bernstein Willen ’33,
GP’02*
Alice & Larry Wolf
Elaine & Gordan Wolman
Martin E. Yaker ’70
Wanda & Charles
Yarborough P’05
Annie ’79 & Peter ’80 Yuill
Bonnie & Richard Zacher P’02
Ellen & Calman J. Zamoiski
Felicia Zannino-Baker ’87
Fernanda Zopf ’65
Glenn Zweygardt ’69
H – Ho n or ar y D eg r ee r eci p i ent
* – D ece ase d
DON OR S UN D ER $ 10 0
Stuart Abarbanel ’76
Susan Abbott ’74
Sarah Abel-DeLuca
Beverly Abplanalp ’81 &
Eldon Abplanalp-Gaede ’81
Jenny Abrantes ’74
James Adajian ’78
Anne Adams-Kennedy ’91
Joanne L. Adleberg ’74
Alice Margolin Adler ’53
Karen W. Agee
Laura Alexander ’00
Russell Allen ’63
Kathy Litwin Allman ’74
Ilene & Meir Aluma P’04
Dorothy Anderson ’96
Dorothy M. Anderson
Reba & Michael Andrew P’03
Evelyn M. Apichella ’71
Geraldine & Vartan Arakelian P’01
Lawrence Argent ’86
Rina & Victor Arias P’06
Annemarie & Richie
Arlington P’05
Danute Armstrong ’57
Ramona Leibnitz &
John Armstrong P’03
Eldridge Arnold ’51
Ellen Aisenberg ’65
Edith S. Askin
Michael D. Asner ’61
Daniel Atkin ’99
Barbara & Charles Auerbach P’03
Loretta Gibble Bachman ’70
Andrea L. Bacigalupa ’50
Katherine Finney Baetjer
Keiko & Jeffrey Bailey P’06
Susan & Andrew Baldwin P’05
Elizabeth & Bernhard Bang
Louise & Jack Barber
Merhlyn & William Barnes P’05
Greg Barnhart ’71
Donna & Peter Barnum P’06
Virginia Barr
Joy & Jack Bartlett P’03
Marilyn Brewer Bates ’94
Woody Batts ’01
Mariann & Banker Beach P’01
Beaugard Family P’06
Barbara C. Beaulieu ’93
Rich Beebe ’90
Hope Jason Bell ’88
Nancy E. Benjamin ’76
Toni Berger ’81
Susan & Robert Berndt P’06
Jean Bernhards ’85
Sylvia R. Beser ’44
Robert C. Bevans, Sr. ’39
Sharon Bigham P’06
Todd Bilger ’89
Samuel P. Blagden P’06
Timothy Ryan Blankenship ’01
Ellen & Robert
Blumenthal P’03, P’06
Bill Bohrer ’68
Laura Elizabeth Boice ’50
P – Parent/s
GP – Grandparent/s
Doreen Bolger
J. Edward Bollinger, Jr. ’67
Tom Bonacci ’82
William J. Bond ’62
Gail Beck Boren ’85
Susan Bornstein ’80
Gertrude Borrell ’75
Alexander Ormond Boulton ’74
Mary Bowerman ’49
David N. Boyajian ’82
Dodie & Stanley Brager, Jr.
Alina Bravo Uvera ’01
Kathy Brieger
Abigail Brigstocke ’92
Patricia & James Broadbent P’04
Jonas Brodie
Don J. Bromer ’92
Charlotte Brooks ’81
Patricia & Charles Brooks
Cynthia Jawitz Brower ’73
Cheryl Brown ’83
Dorothy Oldham Brown ’29, ’30
Sibyl Brown
James H. Brown ’44
Regina T. Brown ’64
Diana Brownell ’86
Andrew John Bruntel ’01
Sallee & Norman Brust P’82
Edie Marie Buchanan ’82
Jennie Baumann Budd ’86
Derrick Buisch ’89
Holly & Louis Burke P’05
Drury Price Bynum ’91
William C. Byrne ’61
James Calafiore ’85
Sandra Camomile ’96
Carl C. Cannella ’41
Joanna Cannon ’66
Judith & Henry Carinci P’05
Kathy & Gerard S. Carlozzi P’06
Alexandra C. Fendell Carmel ’70
Janice Mary Carpenter ’92
Nannette & Ray Carpenter P’06
Judy & Jerry Carr P’85
Elyse Carter ’74
Helen Day Carter ’41
Mary & James Casey P’04
Rosemary M. Cataldi P’04
Elvira Causey ’81
Lucille Rae Chamberlain ’50
Mary & Pisal Chandrasurin P’06
Sally Chang ’97
Yvonne Chenoweth ’74
Lawrence H. Cherney ’38
Linda D. Chew ’66
Lucy Chittenden ’78
George K. Chlada ‘60
Phyllis & Bruno Ciancio P’06
Linda Cichan ’86
Christine & Ronald Ciesielski P’03
Natalie Ruth Cimbol ’55
Pat Murphy Clar ’75
William Clarke ’53
June Harrison Clawson ’43
Geraldine M. Clay
Rick Cleaver ’78
Anna May Zebley Cocco ’48
W – Widow/er
S. Peyton Cochran, Jr.
Roland J. Cody ’69
Joan Willen Cohen ’73
Ruth & Lester Cohen
Barbara & Sheldon Cohen
Johanne Coleman ’81
Patrick Calvin Coleman ’89
Anthony Coletto ’75
Jane & John
Colonna-Romano P’00
Gregory Comstock ’75
Janet Hosier Connelly ’86
Mary Connor ’77
Nancy Conrad ’72
Wendy A. Conty ’97
Christine Cook ’74
Elizabeth Cooke-King ’73
Martin Cooperman P’06
MaryAnn Cooperman P’06
Robyn & Les Cooperson P’06
Sharon & Marshall
Cooperson P’05
Robert Copskey ’81
Georgia & John Corso P’05
Anne Adams Coulbourn ’50
Carolyn Adreon Councell ’58
Chris Couture
Annet Couwenberg
Gina Covi ’94
Barbara H. Craig ’59
Kathleen & Douglas B. Croft
Malcolm Lee Crooks P’06
Eugene Cross ’64
Jane Wetmore Crowley ’83
Shannon Marie Crown ’94
Mary C. Culbertson P’05
Betsie Cullen ’75
Sita & Peter Culman
James B. Culp, Sr. ’54
George Dabols ’64
Bonnie L. Dahbura ’90
Jane Dalrymple-Hollo ’81
Babette S. Dalsheimer
Denise Marie Dambrackas ’95
Dorothy Louise D’Anna ’76
Pamela Davidson ’90
Elizabeth Davies ’72
Tania D’Avignon ’64
Anneke Davis ’82
Kurt Allen Davis ’77
Donna & Ronald Davis P’06
Stephen M. Day ’71
Barbara & Christopher
DeBarber P’06
Terry Wiest Dechene ’81
Kenneth Deily ’73
Sara Lynn DeMart ’93
Suzanne Wheeler Demeo ’76
Margarita Volkova Denisyuk ’94
W. Cary de Russy ’64
Jon Alan Detwiler ’82
Mina Devadas ’92
Charles Devaud ’56
Peter B. Devries ’69
Sally Di Marco ’72
Cindy & Kenneth Diamond P’05
Estela & George Diaz P’05
H – Honorar y D e gr e e r e ci p i e nt
* – D e ce a se d
Myra Diaz P’06
Millie DiBlasi ’55
Suzanne & Joseph
DiBussolo P’06
Vicki & Tom Diedrich P’06
Robert Dierks ’67
Roberta & Paul Dobbins P’06
Martin W. Doherty ’95
Richard Dougherty ’70
Polly Diehl Downes ’49
Mildred D. Dreier ’
Jason Drumheller ’94
Raymond J. Dubs, Jr. ’58
Ronald Dunaway ’84
Craig Dunklee ’85
Alexandra & Ronald Dworkin
Susan & Ronald Echerd P’04
Courtney Anne Egan ’93
Rachel Beth Egenhoefer ’02
Dolores Hartka Eiford ’51
Kathleen R. Eisenhart
Caryl Erhardt P’02
Susan & Jorge F. Escobar P’04
Ruth Marie Evosevich ’97
Linda & Gordon Spencer
John F. Fahey ’69
Vernon Fains ’86
Jay D. Fajen P’06
Peggy & William Fastic P’01
Katie Faulstich
Natalie A. McCubbin Fenwick ’65
Mary S. Ferguson ’48
Robert Ferguson ’67
Brigitte V. ’77 &
Nicholas B. Fessenden
Irvin Finifter ’57
Joanna & Robert Finton P’03
Shawn Fischer ’83
Barbara Ann Fisher ’86
Jonathan S. Fisher ’78
Scott M. Fishpaw ’95
Jennie & Stephen Fitzkee P’00
Diana C. Fitzwater ’66
Calvin R. Flautt ’69
Greg Foertsch ’95
Victoria Foltz ’67
Allison Marie Fomich ’98
Candace Foster ’90
Gail Foster ’78
Sally Louise Foster
Michael A. Frank P’03
Robin Sigworth Fraumeni ’83
Janice & Bruce Freedman P’05
Abigail Lee Freeman ’98
Steve Charles Freeman ’91
Dorothy R. Friedman ’48
Michael J. Friedman ’67
Mildred C. Friskey ’48
Emily & James C. A. Fuchs
Ida Fuell ’73
Denise & Christian Gaborit P’03
Norma Galinn ’75
Alice Schloss Gamse ’50
Jill & Ira Gansler
Andrew M. Garreis
Mary Evelyn Geilfuss ’75
Lawrence A. Geisendaffer, Jr. ’60
35
Mary & Nels Gelfman P’94
Frances Gerety ’72
Paula Gillen ’78
Lorraine Fedder ’71
Elizabeth Ratas Gesser ’49
Evan T. Gifford ’83
Jeanne Ann Giles ’67
Stanley Gilmore, Jr. ’70
John E. Girard P’06
Christine Girod ’87
Helen Glazer-Marcus ’78
Gena Glickman ’74
William A. Gold
Bernice Goldberg ’49
Dennis Goldstein ’68
Carrie Golkin ’72
Jill Goodwin ’02
Lillian Gorak ’74
Jaimy Gordon
Sandra B. Gordon
Donna Grauel ’76
Susan & Frank Grazier P’04
Juanita & Michael Grazioso P’06
Karen Gordon Greengard
Randall H. Greenlee
Kathleen Greka ’78
Betty Williamson Griffith ’52
Anne & Gordon Griffith
Sabra & Samuel Grimes P’05
Brooke Griswold ’97
Shirley Gromen ’76
Susan M. Groseclose ’81
Sharon M. Grossman ’77
Magdalena Guenschel ’57
Sarah & Charles Guiles P’06
Stanley Gumnit ’55
Mary Ellen Gunther ’66
Kingsley Gurney ’62
Jody & Gregg Gustafson P’05
Gail Gutierrez ’02
John Mason Habercam ’78
James M. Hackley ’70
Jayne & Jeffrey Hafer P’05
Nanette Haid ’68
Connie & Charles Haine P’03
Nell Hall ’32
Wendy Rae Halstead ’91
Sydney Hamburger ’72
Terrence Haney ’80
O. Kenneth Hankins ’66
Thomas G. Hardie II
Christopher J. Harrington ’96
John Rodney Harrington ’77
Mary & Todd Harris P’06
Robert Harrison ’93
Evelyn Hart ’43
Susan & Sol Hassenbusch
Ann & Walter Hatkep
Christine & Thomas Havel P’05
Hilda Van Rossum Hawkins ’58
Harry James Hayes ’75
Shirley Holden Helberg ’75
Deborah Hellman ’71
Patricia Lynne Gallo Hellman ’94
Maria & Samuel Hendrick III P’03
Elizabeth Middleton-Hermann ’81
Muriel S. Hettleman ’39
36
Diane Heuston ’82
Sally & John Heyn
Eva & W. Robert Higgins
Gwen Carol Highto ’78
Snowden Hodges ’76
Donald Hoffman ’57
Sherry & Elmer Hoffman
Jane & Marc Hoffman P’02
Holly Hofmann ’86
Martha Ann Holshue ’75
Fran Holt ’86
Amanda Marie Hoover ’02
Frank Hopkins ’69
Louisa Y. Hopkins
Kenneth G. Hudler ’59
Paul Hufnagel P’06
Patti Hughmanick P’04
Jacqueline Hulkower P’06
Everett C. Hullum
Elizabeth Hurd ’98
James W. Hutchens
Olga K. Hutchins
Geryld J. Huxsoll ’75
Frank Hyder ’72
James Inzero ’96
Jane Irish ’77
Madeline Irvine ’82
Elissa Lembach Jacobs ’90
Ethel & Nathaniel Jacobs
Alan D. Jacobson P’06
Jean Beinton-Jaecks ’72
Ron Janowich ’72
Carla Januska ’85
Dorothy Hurley Janzen ’76
Beverly & James Jarrett
Linda Johnson ’80
Mary & Adam Johnston P’06
Ann O. Jones ’49
Anne Hutchison Jones ’73
Douglas Brandon Jones ’99
George C. Jones ’94
Harold Jones ’65
Judy Jones ’65
Lynn Jones
Maxquesar Jones
Edward Jopson ’72
Katherine Marie Jordan ’00
Ulric Joseph, Jr. ’99, ’00
Gisela Jules ’74
Jane Kahn ’38
Eunice Kambara ’94
Gail & Leonard Kaplan
Julian L. Katzenberg
Frances R. Kees ’60
Carroll Kehne ’60
Susan & Tommy Kelly P’04
Ann & Thomas Kennedy P’03
Bonnie & Robert Kenselaar
Deborah Joy Kerschner ’75
Pat & Bill Kesselring P’06
Carol J. Kiem P’04
Grace Kim ’98
Hae & Young Kim P’06
Catherine King ’48
Audrey & David Kipphut P’04
Irene ’66 & Nicholas ’66 Kirilloff
Stephanie Kirschen-Cole ’72
P – Parent/s
Jim Kistler ’67
Marion Kitz
Helen Kleinman
Anne L. J. Klinefelter ’53
William Klinger P’04
Robert Knudsen ’95
Gary Koeppel ’75
Marie Kommalan ’50
Yael Rachel Konowe ’90
Minas Konsolas ’85
Ellen Grace Koontz ’71
Nancy & Arthur Korach
Gloria Kotzman ’41
Teresa Agnes Kowalczyk ’98
Janice Ann Krach ’74
Esther Krasevac
Frances Kratzok ’76
William Kreitlow ’64
W.J. Kroeger ’64
John H. Kroh ’75
Denise Matuk-Kroupa ’77
Mildred Gellert Kutz ’56
Blair Laden ’45
Linda Laing ’76
Cynthia LaMaster ’78
Trisha Lamb ’91
D.B. Lampman ’94
Michael Langenstein ’71
Michelle L. LaPerriere ’89
Beverly H. Lapinski ’77
James Bennett Laubheimer ’60
Annette Lawrence ’90
William Lawrence ’65
John G. Lawson ’82
Roberta G. Laynor P’05
Reyna & Douglas Lederman
Merrill Lee ’50
Claire R. Lehrman ’74
Roberta Leimkuhler ’63
Christina Drews Leonard ’90
Ruth S. Levy
Victor Liberatore ’78
Kathleen & David Lindenstruth
Cristin Aileen Link ’00
Warren Linn
Shirley Ecker Lippy ’56
David A. Little ’83
Jennifer Littleton ’94
Jonathon Loew ’74
Harvie E. Loomis ’71
Claire Lott ’48
Charles R. (Bob) Lovett ’49
Thomas Lowe P’03
Aida Lozano P’06
Bonnie & Milton Lustnauer P’05
Carol MacDonald ’75
Carol MacEwen ’71
Arthur W. Machen, Jr.
Joan B. Machinchick ’73
Theresa E. Madden P’06
Michelle & Thomas Maffett P’06
Harry C. Maistros ’72
Lisa Manzi ’96
Gary Allen Marcus ’65
Pauline Margulies ’32
Irvin Morris Marley ’61 & ’67
Bridget & James Maron P’06
GP – Grandparent/s
W – Wi d o w /e r
Michelle Renee Marquardt ’02
Allegra Marquart
Debra & Robert Marro P’01
Peggy & Steve Martin P’02
Cristina Martinez P’01
James M. Matson ’74
Melita Baumgartner Maxwell ’65
Mary Ann McCabe P’03
John Lawson McCall ’86
Dorothy McCann ’40
Sally M. McCann ’74
Crisley McCarson ’86
Cindy & Marcus McCloud P’06
Susan S. McCue ’81
David McDonald ’72
Barbara McElderry ’75
Susan T. McElhinney ’71
Brenda G. McElveen
M. Dorothy McGinnes ’50
Sheila & John McGuckin P’06
Nancy & Peter McInerney P’06
Ruth Renstrom McIntee ’53
Judith & Alexander McIntosh P’06
Laura Collins McIntyre ’74
Margaret B. McKenney ’75
Katherine McMillin P’03
Dennis G. McMullin ’63
Daisy C. McTighe ’70
Warren E. Mejo ’83
Lynne Helen Menefee ’79
Melissa Ann Menelly ’00
David Meyer ’86
Catherine A. Mezensky ’99
Margaret Miccio ’78
Mary & Peter Michos P’04
Gilbert Miller ’62
Ken Miller
Richard L. Miller P’06
Susan & William Mitchell P’05
Michael Mongelli ’59
Mark Moreland ’80
M. Larry Morgan ’66
Eve Morra ’82
Charles Mortensen ’70
Elizabeth & David Moseley P’05
David Moyer ’80
Cyndi & Vik Muiznieks P’04
Kay Muldoon-Ibrahim ’61
Mary & Michael Munion P’04
Megan Marie Murphy ’94
Erin Anne Murray ’01
Jane Murray ’48
Kathy & Dan Mussen P’02
Sharon & Jon Nachison P’06
Eileen & John Nack P’84
Ed Nadeau ’86
Marietta & Victor Nardo P’06
Mitchell Nathanson ’64
Mary Mudd Nehrling ’48
Danielle Nekimken ’92
Cathie Nelsen
Melinda & Kurt Nemitz
Arline & Louis Neumann P’93
Robert Arthur Newman ’01
Margaret A. Nichols ’72
Valerie Nicklow ’93
George A. Nilson
H – Ho n or ar y D eg r ee r eci p i ent
* – D ece ase d
Michael A. Nizinski ’01
H. Daniel Noble ’72
Virginia & David Novak
Number Ten Foundation
Louisa W. Nunan
Barbara Nussdorfer-Eblen ’76
Christi O’Connell ’02
Mary Louise & Charles O’Connor
Sue Ofe ’83
Jane & John Ohlmacher P’03
Gary L. O’Neil ’77
Timothy O’Neil ’82
George Orner P’04
Sadik Osmanof P’03
Lyn Ostrov ’79
Marjorie & Kaufman Ottenheimer
Linda MacLeod Owen ’95
Richard M. Owens ’65
Miriam & Robert Palmer P’06
Young Hee Park ’83
John W. Parker ’77
Katie Parker ’98
Cheryl Kite Partridge ’70
Ron Penley P’03
Stacy Pennebaker P’06
Mona Tamara Pennypacker ’94
Mary Perentesis ’63
Ann B. Perrone P’06
Halli Lehrer ’75
Ann Maria Peters ’81
Elizabeth Peterson ’99
Ellen M. Pinto ’82 &
Paul W. Glasgow ’81
Grace A. Pipitone ’52
Lynette Pirrung ’73
Mitchell Pollack ’51
Ruthellen Pollan ’97
Janice L. Popper-Baer ’82
Leslie Portney ’83
Nancy & William Potts P’03
John D. Pratt ’69
Theodore Prescott ’70
Judith Lehman Proffitt ’76
Mary Provosty P’04
LeDoux Provosty P’04
Martin Puritz ’49
Jean S. Rah ’99
Robin Ellershaw Ramsay ’74
Daniel C. Randall ’97
Diane F. Raspi ’85
Deborah Raven ’76
William De C. Ravenel II
Mary Rayme ’88
John C. Read ’96
Stuart L. Rehr
Robert Lowell Reichel ’01
Julia Fish ’82 &
Richard Rezac ’82
Sandra & Peter Richel P’06
Mary Richter ’66
Diane & Henry Rickmers P’04
Winona Rideout ’88
George M. S. Riepe
Peter Matthew Riesett ’98
Rachael Lee Riffee ’94
Virginia Riley ’33
Gail Anne Ritgert ’68
P – Parent/s
GP – Grandparent/s
Joyce Fritz Ritz ’85
Joseph Roberson ’79
Killes Robinson ’69
Loretta & John Rockel P’06
Maura & Thomas Rogers P’06
Edward H. Rohrbach ’72
Bonnieanne & David
Romano P’06
Lucinda & Arnold Rook P’05
Eunice Rose ’50
Benedict Rosenberg
Countause O. Rosenthal ’54
S. Joel Rosner ’79
Anne & Kenneth Ross P’05
Stephanie A. Ross P’06
Heather Rothnie ’98
Elaine Roussos ’73
Jorge Rovirosa P’00
Elizabeth Ruhl ’61
Elizabeth Ruppert P’05
Carolyn Rush ’63 &
David Kramer ’69
Cecil A. Rush ’47
Emma Lou H. Russell ’49
Joan & Martin Ryan
Lorraine Sachs ’67
Linn Sage
Monica & Arnold Sagner
Thomas Sakoulas ’94
Gray Norton Worthington
Salmons ’44
Janet Goodman Saltzman ’51
Magda Salvesen
Jean Salvucci-Guerini ’88
Donna Sams ’81
Sondra Sarles
Leslie Sater ’84
Barbara & Frederick Sauter P’01
Maureen & Rowland Savage P’01
Suzan Whildin Savage ’80
Isa & Bill Schaff P’96
Anita Batzer Scheiwe’65
Shelley & Mark Schimelman P’04
Kay & Calbert Schlein P’05
Heidi Schmeck ’78
LaRue B. Schneider ’48
Barbara Schnell ’91
Diane Frankel Schoenfeld ’70
Frederick C. Schoenk ’78
John C. Schunk ’68
Ann Schwab ’91
Kathryn Ann Scott P’05
Erik P. Scully P’05
Jerry Seaton ’67
Jeanne A. & Winston R. Seetoo
Karisa Anne Senavitis ’02
Sandra E. Sharkey ’63
Louise Sharp ’69
Jean & Parvin Sharpless
Reesey Shaw ’66
Catharine E. Shaw-Gallant ’76
Gertrude I. Shear ’80
Piper Shepard
Mark Shepersky ’89
Michele ’73 & Paul Shepherd
Drew Shiflett ’78
Dale Shore ’65
W – Widow/er
Virginia W. Shriver
Daniel A. Shub ’76
Joyce T. Shuger ’35
David Shulhafer P’05
Tammra ’65 & Arnold Sigler
Ruth & Jack Silk P’05
Claire Simanski ’68
Nolan Simon ’76
Kathleen McKenzie ’76 &
Danny Simpson ’77
Phil Sims ’75
Annette Zimmerman Singer ’38
Pauline Ann Siple ’84
Lillian & Murray Slatkin
Irena Slesers ’58
Rhea Sluchan ’74
Cynthia Smith P’05
Elmer Smith
Lisa Irwin Smith ’93
Mary Smith ’64
Sam Smith ’70
Faye & William Smith P’01
Yvonne Hartmann Smith ’62
Bonnie J. E. Smith ’74
Paul M. Snider ’71
Laurie S. Snyder
Ellen DeVincentis Sodaro ’42
Stanley Somers ’80
Rita & Stephen Spakowsky P’04
Holly W. Sphar ’00
Diane & Frank Spiegelberg P’05
Christine Sroka ’80
Benita & Nicholas St. Amant P’02
Regina W. Stancill ’66
Lynda & Jack Stark P’05
Lucy & James Stark P’06
Hillary Steel ’97
Elaine Stengel ’83
Harman A. Sterner ’61
Wilma Stevens ’70
Dale A. Stevenson ’70
Claire & Van Leuven Stewart
Katy Stidley ’86
Diane Stover ’81
Dava Presslor Stravinsky ’80
Leonard Streckfus ’80
Jane Stricklen ’47
William R. Stroh AIA ’44
Stephanie & James Strunge P’04
Merle Sturm ’46
Christopher Ashley Styles ’01
Florian Svitak ’74
Bridget Sullivan ’87
Marilyn Sullivan ’81
Penny & David Swank P’04
Khirsten & James Swann P’06
Monica L. Sylvester &
Joseph J. Basile
Melvin E. Tansill ’62
Robert Sherrill Tarleton ’62
Emily Tarsell ’80
Anna Sorrel Taylor ’01
Patricia & Richard Taylor P’03
Maureen Alane Thibeault ’88
Edward O. Thomas ’52
Matt Thomas ’92
Virginia C. Thomas ’35
H – Honorar y D e gr e e r e ci p i e nt
* – D e ce a se d
Mary Llewellyn Thompson ’52
Beth B. Thomson ’76
Brian Tolen ’96
Deborah Scarfield Torre ’82
George Toth P’03
Caron A. Townsend P’04
Sarah & David Towson P’04
Katharine Lowry Truax ’77
Ellen & Jim Turnbull P’04
Julie & Edward Turner P’05
Pamme F. Turner ’72
Mary Tustin ’57
Sarah E. Tuttle Upson ’93
Julie Urban ’76
Taifen & Pavel Vaklinova P’05
Charles N. Valenti ’41
Nancy & John Vanness P’01
Imogene Miller VanSchoick ’29
Lyndalea B. Vantine ’89
Armen Vardanyan P’04
Annie Velletri ’92
John T. Ventimiglia ’67
Joy Vernacchio ’82
Stella Overman Virts ’36
James W. Voshell ’65
Marcy Voyevod ’83
Susan & John Walborn P’04
Alicia & Mark Walker P’01
William Walker II ’69
Pamela H. Wallace ’82
Cindy & Mark Ward P’02
Nancy Warren P’06
Eleanor M. Waters ’54
Ann Dingman Watson P’06
Julia B. Waxter ’70
Charles P. Wehr ’93
Isobel L. Weiner ’52
Michael Weiss ’96
Rick Weiss ’80
Carol Wellein ’63
Diana & Peter Wellinghoff P’06
George N. Wendt ’65
Bernard J. Wenner ’64
Margaret Tolley Werner ’39
Toby Wertheim
Margaret & John West
Victoria Westover ’81
Carol White ’79
Elizabeth & Gary Whited P’03
Marie Trinite Whittie ’45
Margaret S. Wickes ’68
David Brian Wiinikka ’95
Paul Wildman ’49
Lynda W. Wilkie ’75
Anne & Donald ’48, ’83 Willard
Peter Williams ’87
Caroline James Williamson ’77
Richard Wilson ’71
Claudia Bismark & Wade Wilson
Gladys & Harrison Winter
Harry S. Wolf ’41
Jane Hutton Wolf ’61
Mary M. Wolf ’02
Mary Riggs Wolfe ’76
Wesley Wolinski ’68
Lucy Sollers Wood ’65
Peggy & Cary Woodward
37
Carol Yeager ’70
Linda & Peter Yednorowicz P’06
Olin Laray Yoder ’59
Susan Yonkers ’71
Laurie Zagon ’71
Ann Zaimon ’99
Susan & Robert Zapf P’06
Elzbieta & Andrzes Zarach P’03
Aleksandar Zavaljevski P’04
Marjorie Klyne Ziegler ’51
Elaine Zukowski ’02
M AT C H I N G G I F T S
The following corporations and
foundations provided matching
gifts to the 2003 Annual Fund.
The A.S. Abell Foundation, Inc.
The Abbott Laboratories Fund
American Express Foundation
Atofena Chemicals, Inc.
Foundation
Cigna Foundation
Computer Associates
International
Deutsche Banc Alex. Brown
Hunt Manufacturing Company
M & T Bank Corporation
Mercantile Safe Deposit & Trust
Penn Mutual Life Insurance
Company
T. Rowe Price Associates
Foundation
Shell Companies Foundation
The Times Mirror Foundation
United Defense
United States Steel Foundation
TRIBUTE GIFTS
Tribute gifts are received by
MICA from individuals who wish
to honor special occasions such
as birthdays, graduations, or
anniversaries; to recognize a
friend’s personal or professional
achievement; or to say thank
you for a kindness or service
rendered.
Given in Honor of
Given by
Charles Brickbauer
Janet Heller
Mr. & Mrs. Scott Cohen
Kara Brook ’86/Brook Group
Ltd
Stefania E. Crum ’72
Wilbur S. Ervin P’72, P’78
Freda Eichelberger ’81
Angela Barnhill
Wendy Bauer
Karen Beverly
Vernon Boozer
Ida Combs
Alsace Coover
Mr. & Mrs. Donald DeGrave
Cecelia Degraves
Mr. & Mrs. George Deppisch
Mr. & Mrs. Douglas
Dicembre
Karen Ebersole
Mr. & Mrs. Emanuel Gedeon
Marguerite German
Angelina Gossman
Lillian Green
William Henn
Mary Jobe
Mr. & Mrs. Clarence Lamb
Mr. & Mrs. Chris Larsen
Mr. & Mrs. Michael Marsella
R. McKeeby
Paul Moscatt
Coraline Mueller
Fred Mueller
Edith Muth
Jeanette Opalensky
Lynn Opalensky
Helen Pullen
Mr. & Mrs. Redel Milford
Mr. & Mrs. Frank
Rangione, Jr.
Rose Scheack
Mr. & Mrs. Carroll Simmons
Frederick Smith
Mr. & Mrs. Roland Smith
Michael Soriano
Donald Wilson
Mr. & Mrs. John Wilson
Jerome Zaben
Mr. & Mrs. Clark Zander
Cynthia M. Ervin Height ’78
Wilbur S. Ervin P’72, P’78
38
P – Parent/s
Gloria Katzenberg
Mr. & Mrs. F. Parvin
Sharpless
Billy Hadaway ’51
Carolyn Campbell ’72
Sonia B. Gordon P’72
Beatrice Levi H’04
Art Seminar Group
Louise Barber
Mr. & Mrs. A. Stanley
Brager, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Jonas Brodie
Suzanne Cohen
Babette Dalsheimer
Mr. & Mrs. Irwin Grief, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Sol Hassenbach
Margot Heller
Sandra and Thomas Hess
Mr. & Mrs. John Heyn
Mr. & Mrs. Nathaniel J.
Jacobs
Beverly Jarrett
Dr. & Mrs. Charles Kaplan
Alfred Kleinman
Mr. & Mrs. Arthur Korach
Margaret Levi &
Robert D. Kaplan
Sara Levi
Lenel Srochi-Meyerhoff &
John Meyerhoff, M.D.
Mr. & Mrs. M. Peter Moser
Mr. & Mrs. William
Trimble, Jr.
Gladys Winter
Hugh Jacobs
Donald Bergland
Everett Hullam
James Hutchens
Mr. & Mrs. Sigmund Hyman
Louisa Nonan
Suzanne Levitt
Marion Kitz
Randolph S. Rothschild ’34
Amalie Ascher
Doris Rief ’86, P’86
Edith Askin
Marley Simon ’74
Irwin C. Schroedl, Jr. ’55
Evelyn Schroedl ’40
Simone M. Thornton
Mr. & Mrs. Douglas Croft
Sandy Krostar
Kara Brook ’86/
Brook Group Ltd.
Henry Markwordt
Kara Brook ’86/
Brook Group Ltd.
Mark David Levy ’00
Sylvia Freeman
Jerry E. Miller
Kara Brook ’86/
Brook Group Ltd.
Edward Michael O’Donnell
Kara Brook ’86/
Brook Group Ltd.
Charles C. Reichert, Sr.
Luise Reichert
Amalie Rothschild ’34
Amalie Ascher
Adrien Rothschild
Phil Walcoff
Kara Brook ’86/
Brook Group, Ltd.
Ann Zaiman ’04
Mr. & Mrs. Jonas Brodie
Jim Wald
Kara Brook ’86/
Brook Group, Ltd
MEMORIAL GIFTS
Martha Willen
Kara Brook ’86/
Brook Group, Ltd.
MICA received gifts in memory
of the following alumni, trustees,
and friends. Memorial gifts provide unrestricted or endowment
resources for scholarships and
special program initiatives or
general operating expenses.
Given in Memory of
Given by
Sherman Brodey
Mr. & Mrs. Stephen Levy
Daniel B. & Anne S. Dugan
Anne I. Dugan
Stefania T. Ervin P’72, P’78
Wilbur S. Ervin P’72, P’78
Louise Fishman
Kara Brook ’86/
Brook Group, Ltd.
H. Donald Glaser
Elizabeth Glaser
GP – Grandparent/s
W – Wi d o w /e r
Dorothy Young
Kara Brook ’86/
Brook Group, Ltd.
GIFTS IN KIND
Services, supplies, and materials, which help to strengthen
MICA’s educational mission
and/or provide budget relief, are
received and recognized by the
College.
Alex Cooper Auctioneers
Dr. William A. Black
Boordy Vineyards
Gamblin Artists Colors Co.
Stephen Heaver
Mr. Edward Hoffman
Dr. Alfred Kronthal
Wine Merchant
Robert S. Zetger
H – Ho n or ar y D eg r ee r eci p i ent
* – D ece ase d
FITNESS CENTER
The Fitness Center, which
opened in Fall 2003 in Meyerhoff House, was the focus of a
special parent fundraising effort
spearheaded by Parent Council
members Bev Symonds P’05,
Julie Clark-Jones & Philip Jones
P’06, and William Kesselring
P’06. The following parents and
friends contributed a total of
approximately $10,000 toward
the Center’s equipment and
operations—funds which were
generously matched with a
$10,000 gift from long-time
Trustee, George H. Dalsheimer.
P – Parent/s
GP – Grandparent/s
R. & J. Leibnitz Armstrong P’05
Mr. & Mrs. James G. Averill P’04
Donna & Peter Barnum P’06
Todd & Patty Bence P’06
Alison & David Bennett P’04
Edda & Michael Bickler P’04
Jane & Sam Blagden P’06
Ellen & Robert
Blumenthal P’03, P’06
John & Chris Bruns P’04
Sean & Deb O. Callahan P’05
Gerry & Kathy Carlozzi P’06
Anita & Ken Cavallero P’06
Karen & Stephen Clayton P’06
Mary Ann Cooperman P’06
John Corso Family P’05
Victoria R. Culbertson ’04
George & Estela Diaz P’05
Funda & Semih Erbay P’05
Jay D. Fajen P’06
Rita & James Francis P’05
Gregg & Jody Gustafson P’05
Mary & Todd K. Harris P’06
Walter Hatke P’05
Janet Merrick &
Gary Hillesland P’06
Mary & Adam Johnston P’06
Dorothy & Elliott Jones P’04
Mr. & Mrs. Philip Jones P’06
John & Joan Kane P’04
The Kenselaar Family P’06
Lorie C. Kim P’05
Lisa & Will Kochinski P’06
Randall LaLonde &
Patricia Homer P’03, P’04
Alan & Mary MacNair P’05
Michelle & Thomas Maffett P’06
Dennis Mahoney P’06
James & Bridget Maron P’06
W – Widow/er
Cindy & Marcus McCloud P’06
John & Sheila McGuckin P’06
Pete & Nancy McInerney P’06
Larry & Barb McMillin P’03
Mark & Myong McTague P’03
Caroline & Peter Miller P’06
Georgina M. Milum P’06
Alan J. Mintz P’05
The Mitchell Family P’05
Earl & Debbie Morford P’05
Betsy & David Moseley P’05
Miriam & Robert Palmer P’06
Barbara & John Parker P’04
Stacy Pennebaker P’06
Katherine & Dave Phillips P’06
LeDoux Provosty III P’04
Tanya & Robert N. Pundsack P’03
Hans & Luisa Reiter P’05
Richel Family P’06
Mr. & Mrs.Thorvald
Romsloe P’05
Anne & Ken Ross P’05
Anika Sanin P’03
Robin & Lawrence Sapanski P’05
Mark & Shelley Schimelman P’04
Ruth & Jack Silk P’05
Linda Staskus P’05
Gust Stringos P’06
David & Penny Swank P’04
Bev Symonds P’05
Angelika & Evangelos
Theophilou P’03
Deborah Davis Thornton P ’05
Robert J. & Susan N. T. Undi P’03
Rosalind T. Vakinova P’05
John & Nancy West P’06
Wanda & Charles
Yarborough P’05
H – Honorar y D e gr e e r e ci p i e nt
* – D e ce a se d
39
Artafare: 8 March 2003
ICA’s sixth biennial gala benefiting
1. Caviar and vodka were featured at “Frozen Nights/Brilliant Lights,” a shimmeringly
elegant Russian affair cohosted by Linda and Mark
Caplan, Stiles Colwell, Suzi
and David Cordish, Fredye and
M
the President’s Fund for Community Projects was a sold-out suc-
cess thanks to nine dazzling and
delicious dinner parties designed
Adam Gross, Sasha Wolhandler, and Stephen Suser.
2. Left to right: Paul and
Dorothy Wolman, Stephen and
Betsy Scott P’06, and MaryAnn and Wally Pinkard cohosted “Is it in the Stars?”
by many of Baltimore’s premiere party hosts; out-
standing artwork contributed by 80 of MICA’s finest
1
artists for the live and silent auctions; and more than
450 Baltimore A-List guests bedecked in everything
from pj’s to wedding gowns, tee-shirts to tuxes, who
dined, danced, bid, and bought throughout the night.
7
2
6
3
4
3. A refined contemporary
Japanese setting, sushi, and
Tamami grill awaited guests at
“Fujiama MICA,” co-hosted by
Beth Buekner, Robin and George
Dalsheimer, and Lois Feinblatt.
4 & 5. Lavishly Lingeried Wendy
Jachman and Joanna Golden
hosted “It Happened One Night,”
an ultra-posh pajama party.
6. Sandra Gerstung, Robin Dalsheimer, and Sig Gerstung.
7. Martha Macks, Carole Sibel,
and Sasha Wolhandler.
40
5
P – Parent/s
GP – Grandparent/s
W – Wi d o w /e r
H – Ho n or ar y D eg r ee r eci p i ent
* – D ece ase d
8
15. Guests Pat Joseph (left) and Jo Schneider
(right) with Betty Cook ’46, who, along with Bill
Steinmetz ’50, co-hosted a unique “Baltimore Block
Party.”Not Pictured: ”Luminous Feast,” an architectural masterpiece by Brown Center architects
Charles Brickbauer, Steve Ziger, and Jamie Snead.
15
8. MICA’s Bolton Hill neighbors
created a floral-filled, fantasy
“Wedding Party.”
9. Left to right: “Black and White
Outside The Box” co-hosts Don
and Peggy Greenman, Robert
Zimmerman ’66, and Sayra and
Neil Meyerhoff—who served as
Artafare 2003 Chairs.
10. Guests Dawn and Owen Lewis.
14
13
9
10
12
11. Strolling violinist on the piazza
at “Nightfall in Napoli” co-hosted
by Sheila and Dick Riggs, Wendy
and Ben Griswold, and Lisa and
Greg Barnhill.
12. Left to right: Sheila Riggs,
Suzanne Levin-Lapides ’69, Wendy
Griswold, and Lisa Barnhill.
P – Parent/s
GP – Grandparent/s
13. Auctioneer extraordinaire,
Jon Levinson P’03, enlivens
another successful auction.
14. David ’66 and JoAnn Hayden
thank the contributing artists after
each Artafare by hosting a brunch
at Dark Hollow Farm, the Hayden’s home and horse-breeding
farm in Upperco.
W – Widow/er
H – Honorar y D e gr e e r e ci p i e nt
11
* – D e ce a se d
41
Artafare 2003
CO- C HA IR S
AUCTION COMMITTE E
Sayra & Neil Meyerhoff
Sherry Christhilf, Chair
George Ciscle
JoAnn & David ’66 Hayden
Anita Klein
Susan Perrin
Jon Levinson P’03, Auctioneer
DIN NE R H O S TS
Ginny Adams & Neal Friedlander
Lisa & Greg Barnhill
Erin & Doug Becker
Tiz & William Benedict
Maggie ’86 & Tom Blanck
Jake Boone
Charles Brickbauer
Elizabeth Buckner
Linda & Mark Caplan
Stiles Colwill
Betty Cooke ’46 &
Bill Steinmetz ’50
Suzi & David Cordish
Nancy & Buzz Cusack
Robin & George Dalsheimer
Debbie Diehl
Nancy Dorman &
Stanley Mazaroff
Lois Feinblatt
Barbara & Patrick Francis
Barbara & Alan Gamse
Daniel Gilbert & Bill Wernick
Sally Gold & Elliott Zulver
Joanna Golden
Peggy & Don Greenman
Wendy & Ben Griswold IV
Fredye & Adam Gross
Carol & Bill Hylton, Jr.
Wendy & Howard Jachman
Avendui & Andrew Lacovara
Linda & Julian Lapides
Sally & Wendell Leimback
Sarah & Harry Lord
Sayra & Neil Meyerhoff
Sallye Perrin & John von Briesen
Mary-Ann & Wally Pinkard, Jr.
Sheila & Dick Riggs
Betsy & Stephen Scott P’06
Debby & Jim Scott
Claudia Sennett ’66 & Doug Kelso
Lois Schenck & Tod Myers
Jamie Snead & Steve Ziger
Sharon & David Tufaro
Susan & Peter Van Buren
Kathy & Mark Vaselkiv
Gregory Weidman &
Michael Flanigan
Helen & Michael Weiss
Barbara & Davison White
Sascha Wolhandler &
Stephen Suser
Dorothy & Paul Wolman
Christine & Jim Wright
Bob Zimmerman ’66
42
SPONSORS
CORPORATE
Brown Advisory
Whiteford, Taylor & Preston L.L.P.
MEDIA
Style Magazine
WYPR
AND
Bon Appetit Management
Company
Canton Gallery
Schmitz Press
Theresa Segretti
CONTRIBUTING ARTISTS
Timothy App
Clara Ines Arana ’83
Gloria Askin
Doug Baldwin
Robin Bergman ’80
Linda Bills
Marc Boone ’76
Ellen Burchenal ’82
Jim Burger ’82
Rodney Carroll ’83
Carolyn Case ’97
Fay Chandler ’67
Karl Connolly ’94
Betty Cooke ’46
Steve Dallmus
Rosalee Davison ’60
Maggie DeBaecke ’69
Mary DeMarco
Linda DePalma ’76
M. K. Dilli
Dan Dudrow ’67
Joan Erbe ’55
Dennis Farber
John Ferry
Aaron Fink ’77
Carol Frost ’86
Dorothy Gillespie ’41
Sam Gilliam
Grace Hartigan
Betty Heald
David Hess
Karen Hill
Margaret Hluch
Kevin Hluch
Michael Iampieri
Edda Jakab ’84
Chevelle Makeba Moore Jones ’85
Gary Kachadourian ’79
P – Parent/s
Lyle Kissack ’89
Anita Klein
David Klein
Philip Koch
Martin Kotler ’75
Eugene Leake
Sandra Magsamen
Jonathan Maxwell ’91
Neil Meyerhoff
Raoul Middleman
Trace Miller ’86
Christine Neill ’71
Kathryn Schultz Norris
Kate O’Connor ’98
Greg Otto ’69
OXOXO Gallery
David Page
Stephen Perrin
Stephen John Phillips ’81
Spoon Popkin ’90
Penny Potter ’80
M. Robert Rappaport
Paul Reynolds ’76
Doris Rief ’86
Paula Rome
Debra Rubino ’92
Bill Schmidt ’71
Lauren Schott
Joyce Scott ’70
Rick Shelley
Jo Smail
H. Ed Smith ’65, ’69
Laurie Snyder
William O. Steinmetz ’50
Sharon Stockley ’69
Leonard Streckfus ’80
Joanne Woodward Tew
John Waters
Robert Wirth ’49, ’75
John Wood
CONTRIBUTING
INDIVIDUALS AND
BUSINESSES
Alex Cooper Auctioneers
Alex Cooper Oriental Rugs
Atlantic Stage Lighting
Baltimore Coat Check
Blondell’s Accents on Events
Bon Appetit at MICA
By Carlton & Company
Charles Levine Caterers
Chef’s Expressions
Courtesy Parking
Elaine Eff
Elan Artists
P.W. Feats
Gala Cloths by Dulaney
Alice Greely-Nelson ’78
HE’UI, Devia Kitterman
Jeannie’s Restaurant
Jokesters
Kawasaki Japanese Restaurant
Suzanne Levin-Lapides ’69
Jon Levinson P’03
GP – Grandparent/s
W – Wi d o w /e r
Linwood’s )( Due Catering
Loan Brothers
London Litho
MICA’s extradordinary
student artists
Quentin Moseley ’72
Mount Royal Printing
Sharon Price
Pridemaster Services
Sascha’s Catering
Glenn Shrum
Tabletoppers, Inc.
Taylor Rental/Party Plus
Buddy Wachter
Wells Discount Liquors
White Rose Paper Company
Robert Zimmerman ’60
ATTENDEES
Sunny & Frank Adams
Ellen R. Aisenberg
Carol & Tom Allen
Alice & Allan Alperstein
Nancy Ancel
Lorrie Angelloz & John Dugan
Rhea Arnot ’92 & Helmut Jenkner
Theda & Laurin Askew
Gloria & Joseph Askin
Mariana & Perry Bacon
Mayer & William Baker
Andrew Balio & William Schapiro
Holladay & Ray Bank
Johanna & Robert Barroll
Art Becker
Rheda Becker
John W. Beckley
Theresa Bedoya & Timothy App
Natalie & Carter Beese
Gale Bell ’66
Gail & Emile Bendit
Richard Bennett & Andrew Frake
Jody & David Berg
Helen & Louis Berwanger
Linda Bills & Stephen Dallmus
Katharine & Farlow Blakeslee
Mollye Block & Kenneth Frank
Mike Blondell
Karen Bockram & Brian Lawrence
Doreen Bolger
Frank Bonsal
Victoria & Marc ’76 Boone
Vanessa & Frank Boston
ChiChi & Peter Bosworth
Mary Bowers
Pattie Boyle
Robin & Rudiger Breitenecker
Frona Brown
Sloane Brown & Steve Sobelman
Mary Ann Burch
Judy & William Campbell
Constance Caplan
Sarah Carey
Julie Cavnor
Sherry & Stuart Christhilf
George Ciscle
Jonathon Claiborne
H – Ho n or ar y D eg r ee r eci p i ent
* – D ece ase d
Richard Cleaver ’78
Isobel & Bruce Cleland
Christie & Ward Coe
Suzanne Cohen
Beverley & Marian Compton
Katie & Charles Constable
Beth Cooper
Jane Culver
Jan & Charles Cummings
Babette S. Dalsheimer
Jessica Claire Damen ’01 &
Rufus Lusk
Gwen Davidson
Mark Davison & Sarah Wentworth
Rosalee ’60 & Richard Davison
Cassie DeYoung
Julie Dechowitz & Robert Strup
Mary Dempsey
Andrea & Bernard Denik
Barbara ’91 & Louis Denrich
Christopher Durenberger
Laurel Durenberger
Elaine Eff & John Fairhill
Betsy Faye & Bill Ross
Hadley & Christopher Feiss
Nancy & Ralph Ferrell
Nora Finn & Charles Alexander
Sarah & Eben Finney
Karen Fitchett
Sandra & Ross Flax
Narda Francford ’83 &
Rodney Carroll ’83
Beverly & Charles Freeland
Carol ’86 & Douglas Frost
Ann Garfinkle &
Joseph Brent
Lisa & Alan Garten
Susan Gatchell
Sandra & Siegfried Gerstung
Sandy & Stephen Glover
Joanne Gold
Mary Jo Gordon
Alice Greely-Nelson ’78 &
David Nelson
Cathy Greene
Alice & Roger Greif
Costas Grimaldis
Toni & Jack Griswold
Patricia Grossman
Ellen & Ed Halle
James Halle
Ann & Michael Hankin
Nancy Haragan
JoAnn & David ’66 Hayden
Janet Heller
Pat & Robert Hergenroeder
Sandra & Thomas Hess
Betsey ’71 & Stan Heuisler
Bernhard Hildebrandt ’95
Barbara & Sam Himmelrich
Carol & William Hinkel
Louise & Alan Hoblitzell
Beverly & Anikumar Hoffberger
JoAnn & George ’74 Holback
Genya & Sam Hopkins
Nancy & Louis Horst
Daniel Inglett ’67
Lynn & Stuart Janney
P – Parent/s
GP – Grandparent/s
Anne & Henry Jenkins
Claire & Allan Jensen
Patricia & Mark Joseph
Riva & Marc Kahn
Mimi Kapiloff & Art Becker
Laurie & Richard Kaplan
Josie & Gerald Katz
Clementine Kaufman
Norma & Robert Killebrew
Leslie King-Hammond &
Jose Mapily
Isabel Klots
Lisa & Joe LaMastra
Tracy Lambros ’88, ’91 &
Will Backstrom
Suzanne Levin-Lapides ’69 &
Michael Lapides
Abby Lattes & Chris Hartlove ’85
George Lavdas
Jonna & Fred Lazarus
Lainy Lebow-Sachs &
Leonard Sachs
Daphne Lee
Renee Levine-Packer &
Arnold Packer
Susan & Jon Levinson P’03
Dawn & Owen Lewis
Bonnie & Ken Lippman
Linda LoCascio & Jim Arnold
Cathy & Don MacMurray
Lynn Macfarlane
Martha Macks & Peter Kahn
Carol Madow & Jay Deckman
Irena Makarushka & Ray Allen
Marsha & Richard Manekin
Ruth Carol Marder
Christina Marshal &
Michael Mutocheller
Margaret Marshall
Mary Sue McCarthy &
Bill Hoppinson
Ursula & Tom McCracken
Deb Mendelson &
Andrew Buerger
Judith & Michael Merrill
Linda & Roger Michel
Chrissy & Roger Miller
Eric B. Miller
Paula & John Mitcherling
Michael Molla & Brad Weesner
Caroline & Alexander Montague
Caroline & Willie Moore
Terry Morgenthaler &
Patrick Kerins
Peter & Elizabeth Moser
Kari & John Mutscheller
Marion Hogan & Brian Nash
Diane & Irvin Naylor
Dulany & Jim Noble
Carey North
Kathleen Novak
Dr. & Mrs. Tom O’Brien
Carolyn & Kevin O’Keefe
Virginia & Thomas O’Neill
Bodil Ottesen
Rene & Daniel Pallace
Harriet Panitz
W – Widow/er
Diane Pappas &
Laurence Goldstein
Nan & William Paternotte
Elise Paul
Jane & John Payne
Anne S. Perkins
Susan Perrin
Anne & Roger Powell
Catherine Pugh
Whitty Ransome & Tom Wilcox
Susie & George Reidel
Pootah & George Rich
Doris Rief ’86 & Donald Woods
Linda & Stephen Rivelis
Frances Rome
Bonnie & Stewart Rosenberg
Roberta & Herman Rosenthal
Debra ’92 & Joe Rubino
Diana & Jeffrey Samet
Nancy & John Sasser
Nancy & John Savage
Marian Savige & Glenn Shrum
Karen & Ronald Schaftel
Nick Schloeder
Jo Schneider
LaRue B. Schneider
Evelyn Schroedl ’40 &
Arnold Shapiro
Carole & Hanan Sibel
Joy & Steven Sibel
Kim Smith
Mary & John E. Snead
Leslie Sporn-Symonds &
Phil Symonds
Lenel Srochi-Meyerhoff &
John Meyerhoff
Anita & Charles Stapleton
Andrew Stern
Clare & Van Stewart
Andrea Steiff
Ellen & William Stifler
Anne L. Stone
Marsha Strok
Susan Sutton
Kamila & Ben Swanson
Debbie & Ed Molinaro Thomas
Laura & George Thomas
Barbara & William Trimble
Judy & Peter VanDyke
Jana E. Varwig & Mark Laughlin
Jennifer & Jim Vitale
Jeremy Walston
Phil Warfield
Kimberly Warren &
John Cammack
Eloise Janney Weatherly
Ann & Christopher West
Christopher Whisted
Mary & Scott Wieler
Mary Lou & Steven Wilder
Stephanie & Jay Wilson
Margo Wolman & Matt Firor
Susan Wolman
Robin Wood
Christine & James Wright
James D. Wright
Clair Zamoiski-Segal &
Thomas Segal
H – Honorar y D e gr e e r e ci p i e nt
* – D e ce a se d
PRESIDENT’S FUND
CONTRIBUTORS
Anne & Thomas Bailliere
Kathy & Gerb Brieger
Mary & Charles Costa
Leslie & Tom Derosa
Carol & Alan Edelman
Harriet & Herbert Goldman
Charlotte & Charles Goodwin
Susan & Stuart Gordon
Richard Jackson
Elizabeth & Clement Moore
Toby & Morton Mower
Ellen & Nathan Meyerberg
Ginger & David Novak
Marilyn & Thomas O. Nuttle
Susan & Charles Offut
Kimberly & Leonard Quicke
Stuart Rehr
Mary & Paul Roberts
Terry & Jim Rubenstein
Kathy & Mark Vaselkiv
Elizabeth & Brian Weese
Margaret & John West
Alice & Larry Wolf
Ellen & Calman Zamoiski
43
The Mount Royal Society A Lasting Legacy
T
he Mount Royal Society was established by the Board of
Trustees to acknowledge and thank those alumni, faculty,
parents, staff, and friends who inform Maryland Institute College of Art of their intentions to include MICA in their estate
plans. Many members have included a bequest for the Col-
lege in their last will and testament. Such generosity and thoughtfulness
IN MEMORIAM
We recognize and honor the
memory of the following alumni
and friends whose estate gifts
will be received this year.
Margaret Bachman ’53
Harold Cohen ’57
Donald Turano ’59
helps ensure the College’s future financial security and continues our long
tradition of excellence in training young artists.
Others have established life income gifts. Through the use of charitable
life income plans, life insurance trusts, retained life estates, and other special arrangements, you can help assure the future of the College, while at
the same time preserving an income stream and other benefits.
Anonymous (12)
Dolores M. Andrew ’82
Gregory E. Anthony ’80
Linda S. Bowser-Chubb ’83
Margaret Clawson
Brier-Lyons ’77
George L. Bunting, Jr.
Ann M. Ciola ’74
Johanne T. ’81 & Philip Coleman
Betty Cooke ’46
Berte D’Arrigo ’43
Virginia Decker
Imogene Drummond ’83
Charles Ellerin ’41
Sadie B. Feldman ’30
44
Douglas L. Frost
Alice Falvey Greif
Anne K. Griffith
Fredye W. Gross
Mrs. Howard Hardy W’25
Grace Hartigan
Robert J. Helsley ’69
Mrs. Hugh J. Herring
Barbara L. Himmelrich
Marian Hogan & Brian Nash
James A. Holechek ’53
Rosita C. Hurka ’51
Theodore E. Klitzke
Harriet A. E. Kohl
Ann Miller Krestensen ’60
Philip W. Lambdin ’75
Leslie Lillien Levy ’69
Robert C. Lienhardt
Jennifer M. Littleton ’93
Gary Allen Marcus ’65
Allegra Marquart
Madolin Maxey ’70
Elizabeth Thomas McLeod ’72
Nancy Ann Monte Santo ’50
Anne S. Perkins
Terry Allen Perl
Harrison M. Robertson, Jr.
Nancy P. Rosnow ’72 &
Richard R. Baldwin
Evelyn D. Schroedl ’40
William O. Steinmetz ’50
Jan Pierce Stinchcomb ’82
John B. Sutton ’63
Chick West ’65
Robert J. Wirth ’50
Fred E. Worthington ’57
Martin E. Yaker ’70
Robert A. Zimmerman ’66
Please join The Mount Royal
Society. It would be wonderful to
have you among our members.
If you have already included the
College in your estate plans,
please notify us so that we may
accord you membership. Please
call Genya Hopkins, Director of
Gift Planning, at 410-225-2414,
for further information.
A Tribute to Alonzo Decker
A
lonzo G. Decker, Jr. (1907-2002) was the
Chairman of Planned Giving at MICA
from 1980 to 2002. He encouraged the
establishment of the Mount Royal Society.
Chairman of the Board of a Fortune 500 business, and a
household name, Al Decker was not an ordinary man—
and yet he had the common touch. He had friends
across the economic spectrum, and he knew what hard
times were like (when Black & Decker was downsizing
during the Great Depression, Al—then in his 20s—was
the first to be laid off.)
Al and Virginia Decker
Years later, Al learned about planned giving: how one could take steps in
the present that would benefit a charitable institution in the future. And he
learned that, often, a planned gift results in a larger gift than one had
thought possible! “Everyone can help,” said Al, “whether through life
income plans, other forms of trusts, or simple bequests via a last will and
testament.”
Al brought his enthusiasm for planned giving to MICA when he became a
Trustee in 1978. He had already convinced his mother to make a
bequest—which led to naming the Decker Gallery and the Decker Library.
He also joined his aunt, Hazel Fox, in creating life income plans that
resulted in naming the former Cannon Shoe Company the Fox Building
(in honor of his grandfather, an 1884 graduate). His sister, Jane Decker
Asmis, also made a major bequest, and he himself established a number
of trusts to benefit the College and his wife, Virginia.
Not everyone has Al Decker’s resources. He knew that. But he believed
anyone could help an institution like Maryland Institute College of Art
ensure its strength far into the future by making a planned gift of some
kind.
P – Parent/s
GP – Grandparent/s
W – Widow/er
H – Honorar y D e gr e e r e ci p i e nt
* – D e ce a se d
45
A LUM NI C OUN C IL
Sarah Allen ’99
Dedham, Massachusetts
Rhea Arnot ’92
Baltimore, Maryland
Karin Banks ’84
Mustoe, Virginia
Kerrie Bellisario ’92
New Bedford, Massachusetts
Diana Blake ’73
Cockeysville, Maryland
Maggie Blanck ’86
Brooklyn, New York
Hope Brooks ’84
Kingston, Jamaica
James Butcher ’66
Bel Air, Maryland
Garry F. Cerrone ’71
Baltimore, Maryland
Robyn Chadwick ’75
Menerbes, France
Fay Chandler ’67
Cambridge, Massachusetts
Richard Cleaver ’78
Baltimore, Maryland
Betty Cooke ’46
Baltimore, Maryland
Stuart Cooper ’72
Columbia, Maryland
Matthew H. Davis ’93
Kent, Ohio
Robert V. P. Davis ’62
Baltimore, Maryland
Rosalee Davison ’60
Baltimore, Maryland
Maggi Way DeBaecke ’69
Media, Pennsylvania
Robin DeWitt ’80, ’98
Columbia, Maryland
Vince Diga ’94
Cedar Grove, New Jersey
Imogene Drummond ’83
Garrison, New York
Beth Otter Ehrhart ’81
Baltimore, Maryland
Deborah English ’84
Ruxton, Maryland
Susan Fetterolf ’79
Oley, Pennsylvania
Ron E. Fidler ’64
Owings Mills, Maryland
Harriet Gardiner ’43
Thurmont, Maryland
Richard A. Glaze ’78
Los Altos, California
46
Sydney K. Hamburger ’72
Abiquiu, New Mexico
Sam S. Robinson ’78
Baltimore, Maryland
Chris Hartlove ’85
Baltimore, Maryland
Carla Heider Rosenzweig ’73
Brooklin, Maine
Kathy Harvey ’81
Cockeysville, Maryland
Joyce Scott ’70
Baltimore, Maryland
David Hayden ’66
Upperco, Maryland
William E. Sheppard ’72
Essex, Maryland
Rosita Hurka ’51
Baltimore, Maryland
Anne Robertson South ’66
Towson, Maryland
George Kalwa ’78
Baltimore, Maryland
William O. Steinmetz ’50
Baltimore, Maryland
Kevin Kearney ’74
Sebastopo, California
Mary McBurney Swann ’86
New Park, Pennsylvania
Scott Kelly ’87
Baltimore, Maryland
Clytie Taylor ’71
Salisbury, Maryland
Ethel Kessler ’71
Bethesda, Maryland
James Truett ’55
Annapolis, Maryland
George King ’77
Santa Fe, New Mexico
Linda E. Wachtmeister ’73
Scottsville, Virginia
Martin Kotler ’75
Washington, DC
Ron Webb ’68
York, Pennsylvania
Michelle La Perriere ’89
Baltimore, Maryland
Betty Wells ’48
Virginia Beach, Virginia
Carlton Leverette ’71
Baltimore, Maryland
Kylis P. Winborne ’69
Baltimore, Maryland
Suzanne Levin-Lapides ’69
Baltimore, Maryland
Fred E. Worthington ’57
Baltimore, Maryland
Leslie Lillien Levy ’69
Kent, Connecticut
Robert Zimmerman ’66
Baltimore, Maryland
Jennifer Littleton ’93
Lutherville, Maryland
Regina Derwin Lofland ’62
Winston-Salem, North Carolina
Chris Major ’88
New York, New York
Richard Mandy ’69
Baltimore, Maryland
Carol Martire ’89
Timonium, Maryland
Allyn Massey ’89
Baltimore, Maryland
Madolin Maxey ’70
Providence, Rhode Island
Elizabeth Thomas McLeod ’72
Alto, New Mexico
Max McNeil ’91
Frederick, Maryland
Suthat Pinruethai ’80
Chiang Mai, Thailand
Madeline Murphy Rabb ’66
Chicago, Illinois
Doris S. Rief ’86
Baltimore, Maryland
Judith Roberts ’65
Guanajuato, Mexico
P – Parent/s
GP – Grandparent/s
W – Wi d o w /e r
H – Ho n or ar y D eg r ee r eci p i ent
* – D ece ase d
PARENTS COUNCIL
CLASS OF 2 005
CLASS OF 2006
CLASS OF 20 04
Joan & Francis Blake
Gross Pointe, Michigan
Ellen & Robert
Blumenthal P’03, P’06
Miami, Florida
Lois & Geoffrey Hale
Miami, Florida
Heidi & William Henson
Glenwood, Maryland
Mindy & Howard Israel
Great Neck, New York
Dorothy & Elliott Jones
Virginia Beach, Virginia
Gina Kuemmel
Milwaukee, Wisconsin
Denise & John Bohl
S. Salem, New York
Josephine & Gregg Gustafson
Kirkland, Washington
Kay & Dave Phillips
Highpoint, North Carolina
Dianne & Ralph Suiter
West Carrollton, Ohio
Beverly Symonds
Stamford, Connecticut
Patricia Homer &
Randall LaLonde P’03, P’04
Glenfield, New York
Penelope & Peter West
Lake Forest, Illinois
Shara & J. Carlisle Overstreet
Augusta, Georgia
Debra & David Weymouth
Northpoint, New York
Rebecca & John Scheirer
Kensington, Maryland
Wanda & Charles Yarborough
Reston, Virginia
Shelley & Mark Schimelman
Clifton Park, New York
Joanne & Richard Ziello
Northport, New York
Marilyn & Wayne Thomas
Los Angeles, California
P – Parent/s
GP – Grandparent/s
W – Widow/er
H – Honorar y D e gr e e r e ci p i e nt
* – D e ce a se d
Karen & Stephen Clayton
Piedmont, California
Patricia & Samuel Durphy
Woodstock, Maryland
Bonnie & Robert Kenselaar
Maplewood, New Jersey
Patricia & William Kesselring
East Stroudsburg, Pennsylvania
Bridget & James Maron
Carmel, New York
Cindy & Marcus McCloud
Littleton, Colorado
Judy & Philip Niemie
Columbus, Ohio
Betsy & Stephen Scott
Baltimore, Maryland
Yelitza & Jose Villarreal
Miami, Florida
47
M A RY L A ND I NS TI TUT E
COLL E GE O F A RT
BOA RD OF T RU S T EE S
Tonya Ingersol ’02
Hunt Valley, Maryland
W. Lehr Jackson
Baltimore, Maryland
FINANCE COMMITTE E AND
INVESTMENT
SUB-COMMITTEE
Neal M. Friedlander, M.D.,
Finance Committee Chair
Charles Salisbury, Investment
Sub-Committee Chair
Stephen Boesel
George L. Bunting, Jr.
M. Gwen Davidson
Richard C. Hackney, Jr.
David Hayden ’66
Nancy R. Sasser
Fred Lazarus IV, Ex-Officio
Neil A. Meyerhoff, Ex-Officio
Neil A. Meyerhoff
Baltimore, Maryland
Chairman
David Jacobs ’61
Los Angeles, California
Stephen W. Boesel
Ruxton, Maryland
Suzanne Levin-Lapides ’69
Baltimore, Maryland
George L. Bunting, Jr.
Monkton, Maryland
Elliott Jones P’04
Virginia Beach, Virginia
Suzi Keats Cordish
Lutherville, Maryland
Ross Jones
Timonium, Maryland
Charles L. Costa
Lutherville, Maryland
Richard P. Manekin
Baltimore, Maryland
George H. Dalsheimer
Baltimore, Maryland
Anne S. Perkins
Baltimore, Maryland
CAMPAIGN STEERING
COMMITTEE
M. Gwen Davidson
Baltimore, Maryland
George D. Peterson
Baltimore, Maryland
Rosalee C. Davison ’60
Baltimore, Maryland
Sheila K. Riggs
Baltimore, Maryland
Mathias J. DeVito
Baltimore, Maryland
Rebecca B. Roberts
Princeton, New Jersey
David C. Driskell
Hyattsville, Maryland
Nancy R. Sasser
Baltimore, Maryland
George L. Bunting, Jr., Co-Chair
Anne S. Perkins, Co-Chair
M. Gwen Davidson
Rosalee C. Davison ’60
Neal M. Friedlander, M.D.
Alice Falvey Greif
LeRoy E. Hoffberger
Neil A. Meyerhoff
Nancy R. Sasser
Neal M. Friedlander, M.D.
Baltimore, Maryland
Robert A. Shelton, Esquire
Baltimore, Maryland
Ann M. Garfinkle
Washington, DC
William O. Steinmetz ’50
Baltimore, Maryland
Alice Falvey Greif
New York, New York
Fred E. Worthington ’57
Baltimore, Maryland
Wendy Griswold
Glyndon, Maryland
EMERITI
Fredye Wright Gross
Baltimore, Maryland
Jane B. Meyerhoff
Phoenix, Maryland
Richard C. Hackney, Jr.
Ellicott City, Maryland
Charles G. Tildon, Jr.
Baltimore, Maryland
David Hayden ’66
Upperco, Maryland
Eleanor H. Trowbridge
Washington, DC
OFFICE OF DEVELOPMENT
Telephone: 410-225-2324
and 410-225-2339
Fax: 410-225-2312
and 443-423-1022
Douglas L. Frost, Vice President,
Development
Victoria Boone, Associate Vice
President, Major Giving
Mary Ann Lambros ’63, P’88,
P’01, Associate Vice President,
Development
Sarah Abel-DeLuca, Director of
Development Services
Catherine Burrier, Development
Information Manager
Genya Hopkins, Director of Gift
Planning
Amy Langrehr, Annual Fund
Director
Heather Marchese, Director,
Prospect Research &
Management/Development
Officer
Elise Paul, Director of Funding for
Sponsored Programs
Joan Schwartz, Alumni
Coordinator
Anne South, Director of Special
Events
Karen Agee, Special Projects
Assistant
Erin Casto, Administrative
Assistant
Mary Flores, Data Processor
Kim Howard Gray, Administrative
Assistant/Office Manager
Amy Hunter, Executive Assistant
Carolyn Stratford, Campaign
Assistant
Barbara L. Himmelrich
Baltimore, Maryland
LeRoy E. Hoffberger
Stevenson, Maryland
Photos by:
John Davis, Max Glanville,
Alain Jaramillo, Dan Meyers,
Bruce Weller, Keith Weller,
Jason Knauer, Neil Meyerhoff
© Maryland Institute College of Art 2003
48
Additional donor portraits
courtesy of the donors.
Maryland Institute College of Art
Office of Development
1300 Mount Royal Avenue
Baltimore, Maryland 21217
www.mica.edu