Sailor`s - St. Andrews Archive
Transcription
Sailor`s - St. Andrews Archive
F A L L 2 0 0 0 M A m Sailor's Admiral Dennis Blair '64 addresses the Class of 200 !hes Baum '36 and Bill Amos on the ChapCi al Report TRUSTEES Katharine duP. Gahagan Chair H. Hickman Rowland, Jr. '58 President Allen B.Morgan Jr.'61 Vice President, pro tempore Caroline duP. Prickett Secretary Henry H. Silliman Jr. Treasurer Stephen L. Billhardt '83 Robert B. Blum Sr. Trustee Emeritus William J. Bostian Parent Trustee William KBrownlee'44 Trustee Emeritus John Cook '45 Robert G. Gahagan Michael K. Gewirz'81 Francis Giammattei Jr. '47 Edward H. Hammond Jr. '60 Monie Hardwick Parent Trustee Maureen K. Harrington Henry N. Herndon Jr. '48 Trustee Emeritus Thomas H. Hooper m 71 Philip C. Keevil Catherine E. Kinsey Parent Trustee Carey McDaniel Koppenhaver '90 Alumnae Term Trustee Cynthia Primo Martin Everett R. McNair 73 William T. Murray HI '50 Steven B. Pfeiffer Catherine Soles Pomeroy '89 Alumnae Term Trustee William M. Pope Jr.'61 Daniel T. Roach Jr. Headmaster Winthrop deV. Schwab '36 Trustee Emeritus Charles H. Shorley 71 Alumni Corporation President Edward M. Strong '66 Alumni Term Trustee Patricia G. Warner Parent Trustee Michael J.Whalen'84 Wayne P. Wright Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Delaware ALUMNI CORPORATION Anne Rhodes Amos '78 Aubrey W. Armentrout '91 R. Stewart Barroll '72, Secretary Chester E. Baum '36 William C. Bean '72, Vice President Taylor Cameron '90 Lawrance M. Court '62 Curtis M. Coward '64 Paul W. Eichler '82 Eric A. Ellisen '81 A. Kearney Harrington '93 Norris S. Haselton Jr. '54 William S. Hearn '45 Hugo M. Heriz-Smith '85 herine van Ogtrop Hoffberger '90 P. Churchill Hi Eve G. Kadick '75 J. Michael Kadick '75 Carey McDaniel Koppenhaver '90 Ian B. Montgomery '85 Franchesa M. Profaci '80 ex officio Tomas A. Puky '89 Jehu D. Quillin, III '56 W. Barrett Register '51 Andrew L. Seymour '82 Charles H. Shorley '71, President John D. Showell IV '68 William B. Smith '69 Walter W. Speakman '38, Emeritu Jonathan F. Starr '77 Charlton M. Theus Jr. '45 Earl E. Walker Jr. '90 Davis A. Washburn '44 L. Herndon Werth '52 ST. ANDREW'S M A G A Z I N E Vol. 22, No. 2 EDITOR id G.W. Scott CLASS NOTES EDITOR Fran Holveck CONTRIBUTORS Carlos Alejandro Bill Amos Dennis Blair '64 Don Blake Ches Baum '36 Christine Celano Oswald Cuervo '99 James Jenkins '98 Joy McGrath '92 Chesa Profaci '80 ADDRESS CORRESPONDENCE TO: St. Andrew's Magazine St. Andrew's School 350 Noxontown Road Middletown, DEI 9709-1605 Fax: (302) 378-0429 Tel: (302) 285-4259 E- mail: [email protected] ST. ANDREW'S MAGAZINE Kent Printing Corp. in Chestertown, Maryland, prints the St. Andrew's Magazine. St. Andrew's Magazine is published three times a year by the Communications Office for the alumni, parents and friends of St. Andrew's School. Copyright 2000. Third-class postage paid at: Stevensville, Md. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to St. Andrew's School, 350 Noxontown Road, Middletown, DE, 19709-1605. F A L L 2 0 0 0 FENTS 16 A SAILOR'S BLESSING Admiral Dennis Blair '64 gave his advice to the Class of 2000 as this year's Commencement speaker. 20 REUNION 2000 This year's Reunion was a time to remember with the Scholarship Golf Tournament, with a special musical tribute to Larry Walker and the annual crab feast. 28 WORDS OF WISDOM Former faculty member and School historian Bill Amos and Tribal Elder Ches Baum '36 ON THE COVER Carlos Alejandro photographed the School and the front lawn from the point on Noxontown Pond. had words of wisdom at two very special services in the Chapel. DEPARTMENTS 2 HEADMASTER'S NOTE 4 UP FRONT 10 CARDINAL POINTS 14 ALUMNI NEWS 32 CLASS NOTES 46 IN MEMORY 49 THE COLUMN CENTER ANNUAL REPORT Jay Rhame '00 slides in to second base in a baseball game against Tower Hill. ST. ANDREW'S MAGAZINE l HEADMASTER'S NOTE Resisting Racism in our Everyday Lives O ver the last few months, I have done a lot of thinking and a lot of talking about the issue of race, both in America and at St. Andrew's in particular. A number of years ago and again in his recent bid for the presidency, Bill Bradley urged Americans to break the silence around the question and the issue of race in our lives. I was born 43 years ago in 1957, and part of my youth was inseparable from the civil rights struggle within America. I remember Dr. King and his dream. I remember the riots of the 1960s and early '70s. I remember the fight over school desegregation. I remember the fierce racism that once tormented our land. For many white people, the struggle for racial dignity, equality, accessibility and acceptance ended with the passing of the Civil Rights Act and the death of Dr. King. We had come a long way, it seemed, and the time had now come, it seemed, to get on with the business of equality for us all. The problem is unfortunately not so simply solved and tucked away. We are tainted with vestiges, remnants and flare-ups of racism and intolerance. It is an arduous challenge to be an African American in our society today. And it is a challenge for our own African-American students to live even in a community as good, as trusting and as accepting as St. Andrew's is. What's going on? Why is it difficult to live in the America of today for African-American people? In a piece written years ago, the white professor at Wellesley College, Peggy Mclntosh, wrote a paper that attempted to document the advantages she, as a white woman, enjoyed in our society. Here are a few items she listed: • I can go shopping alone most of the time, pretty well assured that I will not be followed or harassed. • I can turn on the television or open to the front page of the paper and see people of my race widely represented. • I can be sure that my children will be given curricular materials that testify to the existence of their race. • Whether I use checks, credit cards or cash, I can count on my skin color not to work against the appearance of financial reliability. • I can arrange to protect my children most of the time from people who might not like them. • I do not have to educate my children to be aware of systemic racism for their own daily physical protection. • I can do well in a challenging situation without being called a credit to my race. • I am never asked to speak for all the people of my racial group. • If a traffic cop pulls me over or if the IRS audits my 2 SPRING 2000 tax return, I can be sure I haven't been singled out because of my race. • I can worry about racism without being seen as selfinterested or self-seeking. • I can take a job with an affirmative action employer without having my co-workers on the job suspect that I got it because of my race. • I can choose public accommodation without fearing that people of my race cannot get in or will be mistreated in the places I have chosen. • I can be sure that if I need legal or medical help, my race will not work against me. These, Mclntosh argues, are privileges associated with being a member of the white majority in America. Whites have economic advantages, educational advantages, legal advantages, media advantages, security advantages. Recently, Professor Beverly Tatum of Mount Holyoke College wrote a book entitled Why Are All the Black Kids Sitting Together in the Cafeteria. She develops a very interesting thesis, one that sheds light on the process of racial transformation and identity at the heart of the adolescent experience. She argues that early in life boys and girls grow up in a world that is not defined by racial identity, racial decisions. Students of color, she argues, often arrive in high school or late in middle school without a clear consciousness either of their own racial identity or the existence of racism in our society. Adolescence can be a time when young men and women begin to confront the reality of many challenges ahead of them in their lives. For students of color, the adolescent years are the ones when they suddenly feel themselves cut off from many of their white friends in middle school. These years may also be a time when students confront their first signs of racism or intolerance. Tatum observes that students may see schools use stereotypical academic tracking. They may see students of color held to a lower academic standard. They may see that interracial dating is not acceptable. They may see or hear stereotypes of their race that cast them in a particular light. They may find themselves excluded from literature and history courses. They may be expected to give the black perspective in class seminar discussions. They may hear racist jokes or comments. Their reaction? They seek the camaraderie and security found when they meet other students of color who can empathize with their experience, who can confirm their own feelings . . . or they may lose their confidence, their voice, their identity as the world judges them through stereotypical standards. My instinct as a Headmaster is to shield your children from the culture of the world as long as I can. I subscribe to the theory that our culture does its best to hurry our children into their roles as adults. We hurry our young towards the lure and promise of alcohol and drugs and sexuality. We have created a media culture that educates our children very quickly about the world of adults. But I cannot shield students of color from moments when they must recognize vestiges and expressions of racism or discrimination. What we try to do at St. Andrew's, and what we must learn to do better, is educate all of our students about the history, culture and threat of racism in our hearts. We need to keep in mind the words of Desmond Tutu who urged us to see the absurdity of judging others by physical differences, to see the absurdity of denigrating others to make ourselves feel better and superior. Our goal at St. Andrew's is to achieve diversity through community. In other words, we want our students to be united by their sense of common humanity, their shared sense of their dreams, their aspirations, their love for their families. These qualities unite us all each and every day. But we also want to learn to appreciate the deep and enriching differences that make us unique, that give us our own story, that inform us of who we are. My communications with St. Andrew's parents of color, alumni of color and students of color have emphasized the importance of this work. We must all work together to keep our communication open, to listen to one another's concerns, to rise above distrust, bitterness and anger. Would it surprise you that every St. Andrew's parent of color and alumnus of color described racism as alive and well in America today? Would it surprise you that an Afro-American alumna of the School told me she wanted her daughter here, because she knew if anyone from the outside wanted to hurt her daughter, I and the rest of the faculty would protect her? What can we do as teachers, as parents to promote a spirit of racial equality and reconciliation in our lives? Let me suggest at least a few ways: 3. We need to describe to our children why racism is evil, why it has distorted the American dream of freedom and equality. 4. We need to explain to our children our own role in the civil rights movements of our times. Where were we in the late 1960s and 1970s? What was our experience as we watched the courage of Rosa Parks, the sacrifice of Dr. King? 5. We need to continue to read widely and collaboratively as authors develop their own readings and interpretations of American history, of American racial attitudes and relationships. 6. We need to talk to others from different races and cultures. We need to be strong enough and courageous enough to admit racism, to understand how blind we are to its causes, effects and consequences. This is painful work; it has been painful to me to talk to students of color at my school and to have to explain that yes, even at St. Andrew's, we have to acknowledge and confront racism. But my talks with students of color here confirm just how strong, resilient and affirmed they feel by our concern, our commitment to develop and do better. Headmaster 1. The business of promoting racial understanding and sensitivity is the job of all of us. This is not a crusade of a particular racial group. This is a crusade of humanity, sanctioned and blessed here at St. Andrew's by an Episcopal tradition that decries all forms of racial discrimination. 2. We need to stand up and resist all forms of racism in our lives, in our newspapers, in our media, in our culture. How do we react to racist jokes and comments made by our colleagues, our peers? Do we speak up or simply ignore these words for fear of offending the speaker? Editor's Note: This speech was delivered on Arts Weekend 2000. ST. ANDREW'S MAGAZINE 3 UP FRONT Serving as student ambassadors, Matt and Lucy raised close to $10,000 to support educational programs and research for Delaware citizens with mental retardation. For their outstanding work, St. Andrew's received the TouchLove Award for fundraising for the third consecutive year. Memorial Bench dedicated at Reunion The newly dedicated Andrew Mein '90 memorial bench serves as a place for quiet contemplation near the boathouse in Washburn Cove. The bench was a gift from the Class of 1990. SAS Students shine in 45th Blue-Gold Game Three St. Andrew's seniors participated in the annual Blue-Gold Football Game this summer to help raise money for the Delaware Foundation for Retarded Children. Dave Patterson '00, Matt Wolinski '00 and Lucy Long '00 took part in the 45th Blue-Gold All-Star Football Game in June. Dave played part of the game at quarterback for the Gold while Matt and Lucy were student ambassadors. Dave received attention the week before the game with a feature article in The News Journal. He threw a touchdown pass to help the Gold win 22-12. Although St. Andrew's football is not known as a state powerhouse, Dave showed that he could keep up with the best in the state. "Dave proved that he deserved to be out there playing," St. Andrew's athletic director and assistant football coach Bob Colburn said. "Being involved in the Blue-Gold All-Star Game is a great association for St. Andrew's with other teams in the state." In addition to teaming up with other schools to play in the game, the St. Andreans were paired with a "buddy," one of the developmentally disabled children the event helps each year. 4 FALL 2000 A memorial bench was dedicated for Andrew Mein '90 in the shady grove overlooking Washburn Cove. The Class of 1990 decided on the bench as their 10th Reunion class gift. "The idea evolved because as students we'd seen other memorial benches and as a class we knew we wanted to do something to memorialize Andrew at the School," classmate Taylor Cameron said. "Because he was very much involved in crew, we knew we should put the bench in Washburn Cove. In fact, several of us had independently come to this conclusion before we even discussed it as a class." Andrew was a member of the SAS varsity crew that competed in the 1989 Royal Henley Regatta. He returned to campus to work as an assistant crew coach. "We could just envision future crews gathering around it—guys leaning their oars against it and teams huddling around it," Cameron said. "That is something that Andrew would want to be a part of because he always was a part of it—while he was at St. Andrew's and after he graduated." Colburn coaches Delaware South to victory Bob Colburn equals baseball. It should come as no surprise that he was again a coach for the Delaware South team, but this year that team won the Carpenter Cup. As one of the six founders of the Carpenter Cup, Bob Colburn has been associated with the tournament since 1985. While the goal is to win, the main purpose of the baseball tournament is to showcase talented high school players from the Mid Atlantic region and to exercise good sportsmanship. The tournament is played at Veteran's Stadium and honors Bob and Ruly Carpenter, former owners of the Philadelphia Phillies. Different than regular baseball games, the showcase is geared towards the nearly 200 college coaches and professional scouts invited, and takes out a lot of the strategy of the game. Hitters aren't allowed to bunt, and pitchers aren't allowed to walk batters. During the week of the tournament, Bob would wake up at 6:00 a.m. and leave for Philadelphia by 7:00 to oversee all of the day's games. Some days he didn't get home until midnight, only to get up the next morning to return to Veteran's Stadium. Faculty member David Miller assisted Bob during some of the tournament games. 2000 Awards and Prizes The Fine Arts Award The Headmaster's Award Even though Delaware beat an impressive New Jersey team in the finals, 6-1, Colburn's favorite statistic reflects the greater impact of the tournament on the players' lives. Forty-three players were accepted into colleges or received better financial aid after the tournament. His dedication to the Carpenter Cup and to baseball has given these student athletes a better future, much like the work he does every day at St. Andrew's School. Golf tournament sets new records A record number of St. Andrew's alumni, parents, friends and faculty teed off under brilliant skies on June 9 for this year's Scholarship Golf Tournament. This is the ninth year the Alumni Corporation Board has hosted the Reunion warm-up event, which raises thousands of dollars for the St. Andrew's scholarship fund. Henry Wilson '50 won the individual prize for lowest gross score and was fitted with the traditional red jacket at the awards ceremony. His class also garnered the reunion prize by fielding eight golfers - more than any other reunion class. At the awards ceremony, the Class of 1974 presented a new golf tournament trophy, the Eisenbrey Cup, which will be awarded each year to the class with the most golfers. They dedicated the trophy to John Eisenbrey '74, who rounds up a dozen classmates to play each year. "We are very pleased with this year's tournament," said Tournament Chair Larry Court '62. "With a record number of golfers (120), and a record level of sponsor support, the event is still growing. Sign up early next year!" John McGiff's art featured at local gallery Four years ago, art teacher John McGiff began a series of "painting exercises" with the landscape surrounding the 90-year-old white barn with the green roof on the School's property. The experiment developed into a fascination with the Delaware landscape and the vanishing barns and farmhouses found in the area surrounding Middletown. McGiff's work was featured in the Delaware Agricultural Museum this summer and captured the rural countryside of the Middletown area that has become endangered in the last several years due to increasing development. With nearly 40 paintings completed, McGiff's show—Vanishing Landscapes: Farm Lands of Middletown, Delaware—documents the character of the area's great farms. "Perhaps the most rewarding part of documenting these farms has been meeting the families that run them and hearing the stories of how things have both changed and stayed the same in farm management over the last 50 years," said McGiff, who is the Arts Department Chair. "All of the people have been amazingly open and generous." Leslie Elizabeth Hirsh Nicole Alexandria Ansell Katherine Belk Morris Matthew Evan Wolinski The Henry Prize David Gardner Patterson Heidi Louise Pearce The King Prize Nicole Alexandria Ansell Caroline Trevor Salas The Founder's Medal Lacy Abbott Caruthers The William H. Cameron Award Nicholas Joseph Conell The St. Andrew's Cross Hideyuki Howard Miyahara The Community Service Prize Leslie Elizabeth Hirsh Hideyuki Howard Miyahara Adam Thomas Jackson The Ceramics Prize The Walker Band Prize Laurence Hart Birdsey Leslie Elizabeth Hirsh The Choir Prize Robert Morgan Pennoyer, II The Art Prize Marguerite Vere Nicoll The Drama Prize-Acting Sarah Louise Bowers Pedro Antonio Dalmau Tara Jo Gilbreath Jonathan Chi-Ming King The Sutton Drama Prize-Technical Adam Thomas Jackson John Edward Turcik The Photography Prize Leslie Elizabeth Hirsh Lucy Fleming Long Minta Elaine Madeley Lindsey Carroll Noe Lindsay Catherine Payne Jennifer Elizabeth Sanders The Baum Prize for English Caroline Trevor Salas The Harrison Prize for Mathematics Sung Kun Kim Jonathan Chi-Ming King YiLiu The Fleming Prize for French Caroline Trevor Salas The Hargrove Prize for Spanish Nicole Alexandria Ansell Lacy Abbott Caruthers David Arriaga Nebel James Preston Todhunter The Webb Prize for History David Waterhouse Gray William Christopher Lange Lorinda Ivy Laryea Caroline Trevor Salas Charles McFadden Ellison The Voorhees Prize for Classical Languages Jonathan Chi-Ming King The Scott Prize for Science The Amos Prize for Life Sciences Mark James Hall The Orr Prize Jessica Wynne Dillon The Pell Prize for Religious Studies David Waterhouse Gray The Parker Prize Leslie Elizabeth Hirsh Dale Samuel Park The Leyon Prize for Creative Writing Michael Kirk Battle Wenjun Jing The Mandes Library Prize The Williams College Book Award Megan Elizabeth Schuller The Dartmouth College Book Award Autumn Hope McGrath Robert Morgan Pennoyer, II The Malcolm Ford Award The J. Thompson Brown Award Erin Fletcher Hall The Francis L. Spalding Award Anna Lyon Hickman Michael Fahrney Primiani The Calder Prize Ewurabena Sekyire Hutchful The Cresson Prize Nicholas Joseph Conell Marguerite Vere Nicoll Joseph Burns Rhame, III ST. ANDREW'S MAGAZINE 5 UP FRONT Continued... we went without touching, but soon that became irrelevant as we swept past the now familiar landmarks. We docked the boat quietly but smiling so hard I could see it in everyone's backs, summing up the whole experience in short breaths, "wow." Tonight, after some race visualizations, we are all ready for an early night, so we are going to say goodnight to the underformers and go to bed. (I'm still smiling.) Girls7 crew takes on the best in the world After seven days of training, winning the Reading Regatta and enjoying the oddity of rowing on a river with locks, the girls relaxed for two days to regain their strength. In their first race, they beat a very fast Gloucester by six seats. The win propelled the crew into the semifinals against the Canadian crew, Sir Winston Churchill, which beat the girls at Stotesbury in early May. The following are excerpts from Meg Nicoll's '00 journal of the days in London. DAY 7—LONDON After our last hard practice before tapering we headed to the train station for a day in London. We met Ms. Mead (coach) in Paddington and found her just off her plane and a little groggy but determined to stay awake and ward off the effects of jet lag, with our help, of course. We experienced a double-decker bus and the fact that you have no clue where they stop until you jump off (and in some cases jump right back on), all the shops in Piccidilly Circus, and fine London cuisine. For some of us it was a bizarre chain restaurant, the Rain Forest Cafe, for a lack of other options in the immediate area where we were blessed enough to experience two full thunderstorms during the course of our meal and enjoy the company of elephants and gorillas as we ate. DAY 8—HENLEY-ON-THAMES Tonight is the night before the night before! Time for all the usual preparations... Sleep! Practices were great, now that the parents are here we have a wonderful support group always at our disposal. It was a treat to look up before launching and see that some of the parents had obtained a couple of the small puttering boats that are all over the river and banks to watch us practice, or at least have fun cruising up and down the Thames! Practice was the most incredible ever, though; on the way in, Mr. Bates suddenly called out for us to go all eight square blades. We had done square blades before, but this was as if we all wanted to give each other something to remember the boat by. We never touched the water, I lost track of distance, I started counting strokes that 6 FALL 2000 SAS VS. SIR WINSTON CHURCHILL—SUNDAY MORNING Caroline Salas '00 captured the tension of the last few meters of the semifinal race against Winston Churchill. With 400 meters left, we take a ten for legs. Every single person stands on their footstretchers; our legs slam down in unison. We're walking on them. I can hear Anne Farland's excitement in her voice. We're coming into the sprint and we're even. We slip back a little bit but as we do, Anne starts talking up our sprint. The first ten of our sprint is our third focal point; when we get to it, we pull like never before. I have nothing left. Absolutely nothing left. Yet I dig deeper. We're even. We're even and sprinting. It's still not over. The rate goes up; my arms and legs go numb. For an instant there's shooting pain everywhere, but then I can't feel anything. All that I know is that I have to pull harder and that I have to find something else to put behind my blade. They walk on us. We're down one seat. I look for more. All that I can see is Genevieve Cadwalader's oar lock; all that I can hear is Anne's voice telling me that I am not in pain. Last ten strokes (our final focal point). Our oars are ripping through the water. The horn sounds; Winston Churchill has crossed the line. A second later, we finish. As we spin there are no regrets. We just had the most unbelievable race of our lives; there was nothing more that we could give. Mr. Bates shouts to us that it was a gutsy race and he's right, it was. As we paddle back to the dock, someone says "Row with pride." We do. We regret nothing and are proud of ourselves and how far we have come. As we paddle in, we all struggle to hold back our tears. There are no tears of defeat; we will cry because our time together has ended. College Destinations for the Class of 2000 Larry Walker earns coaching honor Bates College Boston College Boston University (5) Brown University Bryn Mawr College Carnegie-Mellon University Colby College Colgate University Colorado College (2) Cornell University (2) Davidson College (3) Denison University Duke University Eastman School of Music Furman University George Washington University Georgia Tech (2) Hamilton College Harvard University (4) Haverford College Johns Hopkins University (2) Middlebury College Muhlenberg College Northeastern University Northwestern University Rollins College St. Andrew's University Larry Walker went out in style this year being named the Assistant Coach of the Year for baseball by the Delaware Baseball Coaches' Association. It is the second year the award has been given and Walker earned the award in his last season of coaching with the St. Andrew's baseball team before his retirement. Walker worked as a pitching instructor for all of his 39 years as assistant coach under head coach Bob Colburn. He coached six All-State and 19 AllConference pitchers. At Parents' Weekend this past spring, Colburn presented Walker with a St. Andrew's Plate in honor of his commitment to the baseball team. "Larry attends our spring camp which means getting up early and staying late for six straight days of intensive work," Colburn said. "He is loyal, supportive, and committed to excellence whether on the baseball field or directing the band. Larry gets off the field at 5:30 p.m. and races to conduct the band at 6:30; there were many times when Larry returned from a game and went directly to band practice without supper," Colburn quipped, "which for Larry was a real sacrifice." Walker's retirement last spring opened a coaching vacancy for one of his former players. Bill Brakeley '86 will return to St. Andrew's as new pitching coach in 2001. Matt Flaherty named Lacrosse Coach of the Year Matt Flaherty didn't waste any time establishing his presence as St. Andrew's lacrosse coach or bringing up the level of play for the team. In his first year as head coach, Flaherty was named Boys' Lacrosse Coach of the Year by the Delaware Coaches' Association. Bob Colburn explained that it was a difficult situation for a coach to come into because there were talented players, but the team unity wasn't strong. "He was organized and disciplined. Matt quickly commanded respect from his players," Colburn said. The team ended the season 11-5, which tied the best record in SAS history for boys' lacrosse. The boys placed second in the Independent Conference and advanced to the quarterfinal round of the state tournament. Flaherty praised assistant coach Peter Unger, father of Ted Unger '02, who drove from Philadelphia to assist the team. Swimmers earn Ail-American recognition For the second straight year, four girl swimmers earned Honorable Mention All-American recognition. The team of Anne Barber '00, Meredith Goeller '00, Lindsay Payne '01 and Jennifer Walcott '01 finished 28th in the nation in the 200 Free relay for the private school division. St. Mary's College St. Michael's College Sarah Lawrence University Smith College (2) Southern Methodist University Stanford University Swarthmore College Trinity College (3) Tufts University Tulane University (2) U.S. Naval Academy University of Delaware—Honors University of Georgia University of Maryland— Honors/Music University of Pennsylvania University of Rochester University of Virginia Villanova University Washington &c Lee University Wesleyan University Whittier College William Smith College Williams College Wofford University Yale University (3) In a field of over 120,000 high school swimmers nationwide, St. Andrew's proved it can compete at the highest level. The girls' competitiveness is surprising once one considers that St. Andrew's students only swim during the winter season while most other programs are in the water all year. "The most rewarding experience has been helping swimmers believe in themselves and, in a sense, overachieve," said Coach Lundy Smith, "You go against other schools and shock the competition." The competition was definitely shocked when St. Andrew's finished second in the state meet and won the Independent Conference for the sixth straight year. "This is a great way to put the finishing touches on a great season," Smith said. "It is recognition for a lot of hard work on a national level." While this year was Smith's last at St. Andrew's, returning coach Bill Wallace will have to turn to the leadership of Lindsay and Jennifer to set the tone for another great season. Faculty members welcome additions to the family Faculty members Esther and Eddie Chang '83 are the proud parents of Liam Jiakai Chang, who was born on May 31, 2000. He joins Jiachi and Jiadi at home. Director of Business Services John Dzik and his wife, Theresa, also celebrated the birth of their newest member of their family, Ursula Marie, who was born on July 14, 2000 and weighed 9 Ibs. 6 oz. She joins the Dziks' other children, Sammy and Rachael. Emily Holcroft (diving coach and School nurse) and her husband, Tim, welcomed their first child, Ethan John Holcroft, on June 15, 2000. He weighed 7 Ibs. and was 19 inches long. ST. ANDREW'S MAGAZINE 7 UP FRONT Continued.., 2000-01 Alumni Events Calendar Annual Fund smashes $1 Million mark The St. Andrew's School Annual Fund broke the $1 million ceiling this summer for the first time in School history. It was another record year for annual giving. "Some of the surge of the St. Andrew's Annual Fund should certainly be credited to the strength of the U.S. stock market," Director of Development Chesa Profaci '80 said. "However, we cannot discount the strength of the School, its students and faculty, and the dedication of its alumni and parents." Headmaster Tad Roach praised Profaci and Associate Director of Development Joy McGrath '92, along with countless alumni and parent volunteers, for their tireless work. The growth of this year's annual fund was 22 percent over last year's record of $839,009. The Annual Fund has been on a steady increase over the last ten years. In 1990, the Annual Fund was $366,920. Gun collection restored and redisplayed September 15-17 Class Agents' Strategic Planning Retreat September 23 Fall ACB Meetings September 30 Alumni Day Fall Trustee Meeting - 9:30 a.m. October 7 Loudon Wainwright '65 plays at Avala Theater in Easton, Md. October 12 October 19 October 27-29 D.C. Metro Stop N.Y.C. Metro Stop Parents' Weekend November 9 November 16 Boston Metro Stop Wilmington, Del. Metro Stop December 10 Service of Lessons and Carols January Los Angeles Metro Stop San Diego Metro Stop San Francisco Metro Stop February 23-24 Winter Musical Production Winter Trustee Meetings March Atlanta Metro Stop For the last 50 years, the Alexis Felix du Pont Gun March 17 Winter ACB Meetings Collection has been a fixture on the walls of the Main Common Room. Its elegant wood cases and garish May 6 Winterthur Point to Point green boards have intrigued visitors to the School and May 11-12 Spring Trustee Meeting been a curious keepsake for the community. May 12-13 Arts Weekend This summer the collection was cleaned and VI Form Dinner May 20 remounted in the cases. A fuller, and in some cases, May 23 Alumni Chapel Service more accurate description of the pieces was written and the pieces were appraised for their current marJune 8-10 Reunion Weekend ket value. Conservator Rob Howard worked with Communications Director David Scott and Business appreciation and historic perspective for those who go past it Manager Mike Schuller on the restoration and redisplay. every day." Part of the work Howard did was to provide an extensive analysis as to the historical and technological significance of Girls' crew christens Bertha! and Abigail each piece. The collection contains the same model gun as the Thanks to two generous gifts this spring, the girls' crew one used by John Wilkes Booth to assassinate Abraham program is now equipped with two of the most advanced Lincoln. There is a Japanese sword dating back to 1679. There crew shells available. The Abigail, given by an anonymous are several interesting examples of technological experiments donor, represents the most technologically advanced design for firing systems that were discontinued or abandoned. in the sport today. The Bertha!, given by Bill Stoops, father "This gun collection was assembled by someone who was of Susan Stoops '88, allows the girls' crew to race two fours. interested in the development of the arms technologies and A Resolute eight, the Abigail incorporates technology had an inquiring mind," Howard said. "It's really got some used for America's Cup sailboats. Described by Resolute as "the only boat made completely of aerospace grade, oven interesting pieces." "The origins and significance of the collection have not cured unidirectional carbon epoxy prepeg; it is significantly always been apparent to visitors," Schuller said. "What we're stiffer than any other racing shell." Due to its stiff and light hoping to do with this effort is to increase the sense of lega- hull, the Abigail allows the girls crew to get more power cy provided by this unique collection, as well as enhance the transfer out of every stroke and to be the fastest competitor 8 FALL 2000 off the start. As Coach Brad Bates explained at the christening, its sleek, black hull received many gasps from the other side of the Pond when it emerged for the first time from the "bat cove" on Noxontown Pond. If one was not enough, the Bertha! embodies the great traditions of St. Andrew's rowing while using the latest in Vespoli boat technology. At the christening, Coach Louisa Zendt '78 explained, "By design, the coxswain sits in the bow and gives the boat about a 12-second advantage over the traditional stern coxswain designs." The boat allows St. Andrew's to row two competitive fours during the season. The boat was named by Susan Stoops, a four-year coxswain at St. Andrew's. "Bertha comes from the Grateful Dead, a favorite group while I was a student at St. Andrew's," Susan said. "Though not a favorite song, a favorite name, and I thought it was well suited for a boat." "The gift of these boats allows us to continue to strive for excellence in a sport that emphasizes not only the spirit of competition," Headmaster Tad Roach said, "but also remarkable collaboration and friendship—a sport that matches so perfectly what St. Andrew's is all about." Summer Quest has successful second summer Before this year's Summer Quest began, Harvey Zendt, director of St. Andrew's School's summer enrichment program for local eighth graders, received requests from last year's students asking if they could come back. "I was amazed by the enthusiasm of the kids who wanted to come back," Zendt said. "Unfortunately, we didn't have room for them all, but we created a junior teacher position which the students could apply for to come back and help teach at Summer Quest." Of the 32 students in last year's program, 19 of them wrote back to Zendt explaining their interest, and four were given the opportunity to come back as junior teachers. The enthusiasm told Zendt that Summer Quest must be doing something right. "When you combine the cream of the crop from Delaware eighth graders with great role models on the teaching staff," said Zendt, "you form a group that can accomplish amazing things." In its second year, Summer Quest maintains its primary goal of strengthening the academic skills of eighth graders and exposing them to people and experiences which will enhance their love of learning. Teachers not only teach material but also show students their own intellectual interests in order to develop their own passions for learning. "The most rewarding aspect of teaching for me," said Will Robinson '97, "was seeing the kids begin the program Bill and Susan Stoops '88 watch the ceremony for the christening of Bertha! this spring on the dock in Washburn Cove. The father/daughter team gave the Vespoli crew shell to the girls' crew program. quiet, reserved and unexcited to be in summer school and then emerge energetic, motivated and engaged in learning towards the end. These kids are all smart, but they haven't all been given the opportunities this environment fosters to feed their curiosity and support their strengths." One way that the program allows kids to open up is during morning gathering. Along with announcements and other activities, students take turns during the course of the four-week program to present something to their classmates, such as dancing, clay sculptures or poetry readings. Students engage in a wide curriculum, which includes language arts, math, science and art. In the afternoons they break into group sessions for activities which vary from arts to sciences to athletics. In language arts, they read passages from Steinbeck, Thoreau and Fitzgerald. For science class, they took nature walks around Noxontown Pond, traveled to the beach to measure the tides, and conducted experiments in the biology lab to find what kind of lifestyles crickets prefer. "Having the opportunity to teach in a fun and enriching environment such as Summer Quest will prepare me for a possible career in education," said Nick Conell '00. In the fall, Nick will travel to South Africa to teach at St. Andrew's sister school, St. Marks College, for six months. Above all, Summer Quest challenges kids to explore and engage in the world around them. Given a chance, such as the one at St. Andrew's, these kids will be better prepared for high school and have a new appreciation for a life of learning enrichment. ST. ANDREW'S MAGAZINE 9 CARDINAL POINTS racing came during the week." The dynasty shows no sign of decline. The entire junior eight returns next year as well as two rowers returning from the senior eight and the coxswain. Bates gave credit to his coaching staff for teaching these athletes the fine points of the sport. "Louisa Zendt '78 and Hilary Mead passed on great rowers who were ready to perform at the next level," Bates said. "Along with Lundy Smith, this is the best coaching staff we've ever had." SPORTS PHOTOS BY DON BLAKE The girls' crew celebrates after their victory at the National Scholastic Regatta which was held on Noxontown Pond. Girls' crew builds on a dynasty The girls' crews had home course advantage when the National Scholastic Regatta came to Noxontown Pond on Commencement weekend, but they didn't need it. Both senior and junior eights won the national championships with impressive times. "We were the favorites and we needed to put together a race plan and make it work," Coach Brad Bates said. "Both boats showed a great deal of maturity. They won their heats without pushing too hard and were able to perform in the finals." The advantages of being at home can turn into distractions. Bates worried about his teams' ability to stay focused. "The seniors set the tone. This was something they knew they wanted for a long time," he said. The two boats won earlier in the season at the New Jersey Championships. They captured the Cathy Coughman Cup by beating defending national champion T.C. Williams. At the Stotesbury Regatta, the senior eight was the top American boat, finishing second to a very fast Winston Churchill School from Canada. The junior eight won for the first time since 1975. The reason for the drought isn't lack of talent in the SAS boats but configuration of those boats. "Many schools enter their top boats in the junior eight race, which makes the win that much more impressive," Bates said. The gold and silver was the best Stotesbury finish for St. Andrew's since the two boats captured silver medals in 1997. Bates was impressed all season by the top boats. "They practiced against the fastest crew in the region every day. That's a huge advantage," Bates said. "When it came time to race we were ready. Sometimes our toughest 10 FALL 2000 Girls7 lacrosse makes state finals The girls' lacrosse team came within two goals of capturing their third straight state title but lost to Tower Hill 7-5 in the state championship game at the University of Delaware. Having graduated five players from last year's team who are now playing Division I college sports, Coach Ann Chilton '85 knew this year's team had a different challenge. "We had several players whose first experience with lacrosse was at St. Andrew's," Chilton said. "Making the state tournament final was an achievement for this team, even though people expected us to be there." During the regular season, the Saints and Tower Hill faced each other twice, splitting the games. The Hillers won the first meeting, 11-8 and St. Andrew's won the second, 10-9. Going into the final, Chilton knew either team had a chance to win. "They really capitalized on their opportunities. They were the better team on that day," she said, "but our girls played a great second half. This team never gave up." Chilton said that the team's strengths were speed and fitness. "The players knew their roles and adjusted to different game plans," Chilton said. "We were in a lot of close games throughout the season and that made us a better team." The team was led by senior captains Heidi Pearce, Meredith Goeller and Emily Pfeiffer. Seniors Julia Bozick and Courtney Cordeiro led a strong defense in front of goalie Anne Woods '01. "Heidi, Meredith and Emily were an integral part of this team for three years," Chilton said. "They played an important role." Boys7 crew wins four prizes The boys' first boat captured all four cups or trophies it competed for and then eyed bigger targets. Both the first and second boats won the New Jersey Championships; the first boat won for the first time since 1997. Coach Lindsay Brown said three of the schools that the first boat beat in Heidi Pearce named All-American Heidi Pearce '00 was named to the All-American girls' lacrosse team this spring. Heidi was also named The News Journal's Player of the Year for the second time in her SAS career. Girls' lacrosse coach Ann Chilton said Heidi was one of the greatest athletes—male or female—in SAS history. "She is incredibly competitive and has a huge amount of talent. She raised the level of play when she stepped on the field," Chilton said. "But she was also very humble. She inspired other kids. It's not an accident that girls' sports at St. Andrew's have done so well in the time Heidi has been here. "In her quiet way, she changed sports at St. Andrew's without being a prima donna," Chilton said. four for Scholastics. With no practice, the group got in a boat and rowed. Brown said they enjoyed the racing. Baseball team finishes third in Conference PHOTO BY DON BIAKE Hannah Osier '00 runs toward the goal in the state championship game against Tower Hill. The girls lost 7-5. New Jersey were finalists at the Stotesbury Regatta in Philadelphia. Each year the boys compete with other schools in a series of cup races. In winning the Kershaw Trophy in the race with Kent School and the O'Brien Cup by beating Thomas Jefferson, the boys showed their abilities. "Winning these races gave me the idea that this was a highly competitive varsity eight," Coach Lindsay Brown said. "They went on to race very well at Stotesbury and at Scholastics." At Stotesbury, the boys finished fourth and the second boat took fifth. The Scholastic Regatta took place at St. Andrew's School this year. The senior eight took fifth place and Coach Brown was happy about the work his team did. "I was pleased all season with the spirit and intensity of this crew," Brown said. "It was a pleasure and honor for me to work with them all year." The senior eight was led by four seniors: Doug Brayton, Mark Hall, Matt Wolinski and Morgan Scoville. Doug and Mark were co-captains who were also three-year varsity rowers, something that is quite rare, according to Coach Brown. "These guys are intense athletes and great leaders," he said. "They just liked to compete." The junior eight and the freshman eight showed great improvement throughout the season as well. Brown was pleased with the performance of both boats at Scholastics. He also mentioned that the team put together a mid-weight The baseball team made dramatic improvements through the course of the season finishing with a record of 8-9 (5-3 in Conference). But what made Head Coach Bob Colburn proudest of this team was the way they battled back from a 0-4 start. "We started off with four straight losses and then went 8-5 the rest of the way," Colburn said. "This team made progress from the first day to the last." On Arts Weekend, the team played Tower Hill for a threeway share of the Conference title, but came up on the short end. One of the season's highlights was playing Tatnall in back-to-back games. The first game was played at St. Andrew's and the team lost a hard fought game, 1-0. The next game was played at Frawley Stadium in Wilmington and the Saints won, 15-0. Mike Primiani '02 pitched a no-hitter through five innings. Colburn said the win was a big morale booster for the team. "Two of our three losses in the Conference were by one run," he said. "We weren't outplayed by any team in the Conference." This year's team was led by four seniors: Kodi Shay, Jay Rhame, Andrew DeSalvo and Mike Warner. Kodi, an AllConference third baseman in his junior year, broke his finger the day before the Tower Hill game and could not play PHOTO BY JOHN BURK Mike Primiani '02 drives the ball during the game at Frawley Stadium. ST. ANDREW'S MAGAZINE 11 Flaherty said, "but that opened the game up for them. We were there the whole game." The Saints ended up losing, 16-8. Seniors Jon Marvel, Dave Patterson and Slates Snider led the team. Flaherty noted that Jon was constantly encouraging his teammates during practice. Dave was named to the First Team All-State and Slates and Jon were named Honorable Mention. Flaherty also praised Christian Andersen '01 who played in the goal every minute of every game. "The senior class was great," Flaherty said. "They picked people up in practice and got them to focus before the big games." PHOTO BY DON BLAKE Santhi Voora '02 returns a serve in a match during the regular season. The girls' tennis team captured the state championship for the first time since 1996. the rest of the season. Jay and Andrew were First Team AllConference at outfield. Andrew had an on-base percentage of .621 and set a School record for base-on-balls with 28. Mike Warner was First Team All-Conference as a utility infielder. "The seniors led by example. They were always encouraging to their teammates," Colburn said. "We had a lot of people who really improved. Things look bright for the future." Mike Primiani was Second Team All-Conference at pitcher and first base. He led the team in batting average at .396. Robbie Pennoyer '01 was Second Team at second base. The team set a School record for the number of batters hit by a pitch with 23. Boys7 lacrosse challenges state's best With a record of 11-5, you might think the boys' lacrosse team had just a slightly above-average season. But a closer examination of the season points to the fact that the Saints were possibly the fourth best team in the state. The team's only losses were to Cape Henlopen, Tatnall and defending state champs Caesar Rodney. Under first-year Head Coach Matt Flaherty, the boys combined great skill with a tireless work ethic to challenge deeper, more experienced teams. "At the first practice, I saw gaping holes in the lineup, and I had no idea how we were going to fill them," Flaherty said. "But all season long, guys stepped up and plugged them. We had 18 players and every one of them played in every game. That's a real team." Led by an inspired senior class, the team faced Cape Henlopen in the second round of the state tournament. The boys had lost to Cape in the second game of the season, 12-10. Coach Flaherty said his team hadn't reached peak fitness and simply ran out of gas in the early season meeting. In the tournament game, the Saints cut the Cape lead to four and extended their pressure on defense in the second half. "We had to try to put pressure on them defensively," 12 FALL 2000 Boys7 tennis takes second place in state The boys' tennis team had the unenviable task of defending its state title with only three returning players. After a perfect (14-0) regular season, the boys fell one point short of realizing their goal of repeating. Salesianum School edged the Saints for the title. Earlier in the season, St. Andrew's beat Sallies 3-2 in a dual meet. "At the beginning of the season, if you had asked me if we had a shot at the state title, I would have said, 'No way,'" Coach Eddie Chang '83 said. "We had lost all our singles players and didn't have any seniors on the team." But the team entered the tournament in a good position, Chang said. Jeff Wieland '01, who started at first doubles last season, moved up to first singles this year. He drew a nationally ranked player from Caesar Rodney and lost in the first round. Ben Harney '01 and Michael Larkum '01 played second doubles last year and moved up to first doubles. They advanced to the semifinal round where they lost in a tiebreaker in the third set. Gino Terriuolo '01, a German foreign exchange student, was state champion at second singles. Chad Ballard '02 also made it to the semifinal round before losing for the first time all season. "Chad was the great surprise of the season," Chang said. "He went from being an exhibition player last year to having an undefeated regular season. He kept his focus and his concentration." Chad also contributed in other key ways, such as handling the majority of racket stringing for the team. The second doubles team of Charles Ellison '01 and Henry Heckman '02 also advanced to the semifinals. Chang said his team was young and talented. After the state tournament had been decided, he drove the team back to Dover High School, where the semifinal matches were played. "I wanted them to remember the moment and the feeling of having something slip from their grasp," he said. "We needed to learn that we never want to put the destiny of this team in anyone else's hands. We want to control our own fate." With all of his team except Gino returning next year, Chang has high hopes. "The one thing we lacked this year was adversity," he said. "But we've learned from this tournament and these guys will come back with what they've learned next year." Girls7 tennis wins state championship All season long, a quiet muttering could be heard among the girls' tennis team: they wanted to be state champions. It wasn't a screaming self-confidence but more a subtle background noise. Most observers saw a team having a lot of fun. "We were having a blast," Coach Hardy Gieske '92 said, "but ingrained in that was a fundamental work ethic." The team finished the regular season with a 15-1 record. Their only loss came at the hands of Tower Hill with whom they shared the Conference title. As the state tournament began, each player or doubles team had at least one loss. Gieske said this gave his team extra incentive. On the final day of the state tournament, St. Andrew's had three teams competing. They needed just one win to claim the state title. Both doubles teams and third singles advanced to the finals. Jenny Sanders '01 and Chloe Taft '01 picked up the win to secure the title and were state champs at first doubles. They beat the only two teams who beat them during the regular season. They topped Tower Hill in the second round and Archmere in the final. The second doubles team of Jane Parshall '02 and Katie Hawkins '02 lost in the finals to Ursuline but beat Tower Hill to avenge their only loss of PHOTO BY DON BIAKE Jon Marvel '00 cuts through two defenders in a game for the boys' lacrosse team. The boys challenged the state's top teams all season long. the regular season in the first round. Kate Wilkinson '00 stormed back to beat the top seed in her bracket and advance to the finals. No. 1 singles player Ashleigh Pattee '02 lost in the first round to an Ursuline player. No. 2 singles player Santhi Voora '02 made it to the semifinals where she lost to a Tower Hill player, who eventually became the state champion. "We went out to dinner after the tournament was over and they were saying it still would have been a fun season even if they had lost," Gieske said. "They were such a good group, they couldn't get together and not have fun." While the Saints are having a good time, many teams around the state are not. Only Kate graduates from this team, which will make defending their state title very possible and—well—fun. Boys' tennis recognized with Sportsmanship Award The boys' tennis team had a goal in mind all season long: it was to repeat the teamwork and fun that brought them a state championship in 1999. With a 14-0 regular season record and a strong state tournament run, the boys fell just one point short of a second title. But they won something equally important to the team—the Sportsmanship Award. Coach Eddie Chang '83 was pleased with his team's performance all year. Many underclassmen filled in and will return to next year's team. "Sportsmanship is a top priority for our team," Chang said. "To have this team recognized with the Sportsmanship Award is even more important to me and to the School than winning matches." Boys' Athletic Director Bob Colburn said the award reflects the School's attitude toward sportsmanship. "So many times when an officials' organization creates a Sportsmanship Award, St. Andrew's wins it the first year," he said. "The Athletic Department takes great pride in this recognition." Jeff Wieland '01 returns a shot during a boys' tennis match this season at St. Andrew's. The boys finished second in the state. ST. ANDREW'S MAGAZINE 13 ALUMNI NEWS Coming back home Chip Haselton '54 has always felt he owed a debt of gratitude to St. Andrew's School. Over the years, his work on various alumni organizations has repaid the debt tenfold. Recently the Miami resident talked to David G.W. Scott about his St. Andrew's experience. Chip Haselton '54 returned for Reunion 2000 and, perhaps more importantly, to attend another meeting of the Alumni Corporation Board. N orris "Chip" Haselton '54 is a self-proclaimed "Foreign Service brat." Chip bounced around several schools in his young days by virtue of parental international transfers before coming to St. Andrew's. He feels he got into St. Andrew's by the skin of his teeth, and he's spent many years serving the School that gave him so much. "There was one slot left the year I applied and I got it," he said. "When I look back on all my education, my time at St. Andrew's is by far the finest educational experience I've ever had, including college. And the amazing thing is, the School is a far better institution now." Chip said it takes time out in the world for an alumnus to realize the excellence of St. Andrew's. "You don't wake up to the quality of the place until you leave," he said. "But once you leave, you really want to come back." Some of his work on the Alumni Corporation Board has been about getting other alumni members to come back—and give back—to the School. He started his 14 FALL 2000 alumni work in the '70s with one term on the Alumni Council. He's into his third term now. "The good spirits of the alumni doing good for the School is infectious—I thoroughly enjoy it; I enjoy the camaraderie," he said. "I have very little family I even know—and they are spread far and wide. I've found over the years that SAS is my surrogate family; that's one big draw which gets me back here." Even though Chip lives in Miami, he does taxi duty three times a year in picking up Barry Register '51 and Herndon Werth '52 at the Wilmington train station and delivering them at the end of the weekend. "When I arrived here in 1951, Barry was a B.M.O.C.— a powerful and august Sixth Former to whom I bowed as I passed," he said with a smile as Barry listened with eyebrows raised. "Now we're the best of friends, and the bowing's in the past." As a member of the Events Committee, Chip enjoys participating in the meetings and helping with suggestions to Committee Chair Carey McDaniel Koppenhaver '90. Keeping the family connection W hen Tomas Puky returns to an Alumni Corporation Board meeting it's not a big deal. Even though he lives in Mexico City where he works with an engineering firm, the four-and-ahalf-hour flight to get to St. Andrew's School is nothing. "I made a two-year commitment to the ACB," Tomas said. "I make a point to come to every meeting." With the ACB gathering momentum, Tomas knew there were those who would be skeptical about his ability to participate and live so far away. "It's the same flight as from the West Coast," he said. "We live in a global village. Distance is no longer a frontier. I'm making an investment of time and I'll continue to do it as long as I'm enjoying the work and making an impact." Travel is one way this 1989 grad meets his commitment, but e-mail is another. Tomas said he works hard to communicate with alumni electronically. But it's not just one or the other. He keeps in touch by e-mail and conference calls, and he shows up at meetings. As a member of the Resource Networking Committee, Tomas is working to show present SAS students that there is life after college. "Right now we're trying to learn from the students what they want to hear about," he said. "It's really a network nurturing environment: We want to give students the benefits of alumni experiences from the possibilities to the opportunities accumulated in the spectrum of the alumni body." Tomas feels it is important for the students to get to know the alumni and vice versa. By talking with alums from all generations, students will learn how things have changed and improved at the School. "The students can see where many of the traditions practiced at the School today come from," he added. When he was a student, Tomas was influenced by many teachers and coaches. While it wouldn't be fair to single out one teacher who had the most influence on him because they were all influential, he did mention his history teacher and his advisor. "Nan Mein was an academic mentor. She was there at a turning point for me," he said. "Dave Washburn was a strong influence in crew, math and football. He taught me about hard work and discipline." As he reflects on his mentors, he is finding new friends at St. Andrew's. "I've gotten to know a lot of the older alumni members," he said. "You spend four years at school, but there is much more than that. There is a St. Andrew's after your high school days are over. It's like having a big family. Even though you don't live together, you still keep in touch and get together whenever possible. In essence, St. Andrew's School is a big family." And Tomas will do what he has to—whether it's a flight from Mexico City or Texas (where he is pursuing his MBA)—to keep that family connection alive. "That lady is a dynamite leader, and we all thoroughly enjoy her company." One of Chip's main concerns is that not enough of the alumni body comes back to participate at Reunion, Alumni Day, the Service of Lessons and Carols, and Commencement. "There are so many alumni within easy driving distance," commented Chip, "who could come and join us in the fellowship of the School and be kept abreast of the constant progress and interesting things going on at SAS; but they simply don't come, and we are disappointed and frustrated. It's one of the things we try to improve on each meeting. "I encourage people to remain part of the family and participate in improving our school. It's like practically any other scholastic institution: you have, amongst the alumni, the truly dedicated, like Herndon Werth and Barry Register, who show up and work constantly, even at their homes in between meetings. Then you have people, as I said, within easy striking distance, who never come for varying reasons, some known only to them. We are also constantly inspired Tomas Puky '89 by the huge efforts of Director of Development Chesa Profaci '80 and Tribal Elder Chester Baum '36." Chip mentioned the Metro Stops in various cities near and far which do considerable good in attracting the hardto-get alumni who live in those areas. In this fashion, these programs connect alumni with some of the most meaningful people in their lives. Lifelong friendships are renewed. Current School news is reported in talks by Headmaster Tad Roach, Chesa Profaci and others. "We all have a shared SAS experience," Chip added. "Even though we're spread far and wide, we should all make the effort to come back, stay in touch, and participate in the ever-improving quality of the School. "In gratitude for what SAS did for me, and that means the direct efforts of Walden Pell, William Cameron, Howard Schmolze and George Broadbent, my parents established a scholarship program here for the sons and daughters of career Foreign Service officers," he said. "There are so many students that scholarship has helped over the years, and it gives me a tremendous good feeling." ST. ANDREW'S MAGAZINE 15 Commencement 2000 A Sailor's lessincr The Commencement Address of Admiral Dennis Blair 5 64 +& F irst off, congratulations to the Class of 2000, also to the parents and families and to the faculty and staff of this magnificent school. Let me take you back to the thrilling days of yesteryear—St. Andrews 1964. Some things were dif- ferent. Real time information about the outside world like the assassination of President Kennedy, which happened in November of our senior year, came to us through a television in the Common Room, up there. It was black and white. To adjust the volume or to select one of the four channels that were available, you actually had to rise from your chair, cross the room, and turn a dial on the set. We didn't smoke during a varsity sports season, but otherwise it was cool, "bitchin5" we said. We wrote our papers, first in outline, then in draft, then a final smooth in pen and ink. We listened to the Beatles ("I Want to Hold Your Hand,55 "She Loves You 55 ) on record players. We managed to win the St. Andrew's first baseball championship, and we used wooden bats. Knee operations put us out for a season; they left six-inch scars. Oh yeah, and I almost forgot, there were no women here. 16 FALL 2000 But some things were the same. Bob Colburn was the baseball coach. Larry Walker helped him out and directed the band. The school buses we road to away games were yellow with a black stripe. Sixth formers always sat in the back. Soap operas were the hottest daytime TV shows. Some of us sneaked into the Common Room to watch them. We went to chapel in the basement. We didn't get any sleep before commencement exercises, and we had a hard time staying awake for the commencement speaker. We thought Middletown was in the middle of nowhere. Well, let me bring you up to date on what has happened in the 36 years since then, and then try to tell you what I have learned from it. When we graduated in 1964, the American phase of the Vietnam War had just begun. Some of us would serve; some of us would avoid service, and it preoccupied us for about the next decade. But we worked our way through that decade, with it some of us finishing college, some of us marrying, some of us starting families. And there were major social movements during that time that affected our outlook and some of our lives. The Civil Rights Movement, which had started while we were here at St. Andrew's, progressed from civil disobedience through city burning. Revolution was a popular term. You saw it mostly in the media. There was a sexual revolution with the pill becoming widely available. The Equal Rights Movement took off with challenges to unequal status in the workplace, later on the sports field. Women came to St. Andrew's in 1973. The Environmental Movement gained strength built on scientific research and people's feeling that we were just running out of clean air, clean water and green space. Then in 1982, most of you were born. That year I purchased my first personal computer. A clunky thing called an Ozbourn, for word processing and databases. Those computers rapidly became more powerful, more interconnected. They made it easier and quicker to do a lot of individual functions, but the sheer amount of information and the connectivity made our lives much more complicated. About this time, geographers began systematically mapping the planet, establishing locations to the square meter through global positioning systems. Then in 1989, you all turned seven. The Berlin Wall came down. The United States and its allies had won the Cold War without a major conflict and without using those Your huge nuclear weapons arsenals, which both sides had developed. Nineteen ninety-one, you are nine years old. The United States began an economic expansion which continues to this day, the longest period of growth in our history. And during the 1990s, biologists discovered nearly all of the hundred thousand or so human genes. We learned that it would take nine and a half years to read aloud the three billion bases in a person's genome sequence. Now it's 2000. You all are graduating and leaving Middletown. What can I tell you? As a great philosopher, Yogi Berra said, "Predicting is really hard, especially when you're talking about the future." But I will venture a couple of predictions. I predict these big social movements of the day will work themselves out in unforeseeable ways— sometimes for the better, but sometimes for the worse—and it will take a lot longer than you thought. I mentioned the sexual revolution and the equal rights movement. Both have successfully changed attitudes and behaviors, but they have created their own problems. Along with other factors, they have affected the family. The divorce rate from my generation is over 50 percent. The whole concept of the family is still evolving. A prediction in my current line of work: there will not be another World War—hot or cold. There are no big new "isms" like colonialism, fascism, communism, that stoked the great confrontations of the past world rivalries that led to world war. There will be smaller conflicts, smaller threats, and as Vietnam taught us, small wars can have great impacts on the country and the people in it. Our challenge as the only current superpower is to use that power right, to build an international security structure that will keep that peace for a long time. It is certain that the information revolution will continue. Your generation will be even more awash in information and data, and you risk knowing more and more and understanding less and less than ever before. The key will be turning that data and information into knowledge and understanding. And last I predict the current economic expansion will not go on forever. Start saving soon. generation will be even more awash in information and data.. ST. ANDREW'S MAGAZINE 17 Now those are my predictions. What advice can I give you? First, start with the basics: be honest. I learned a lesson in honesty from the legendary Bill Cameron here at St. Andrew's. Three friends and I were playing bridge one day in my room up in the corner here. A few minutes after the card game broke up a teacher walked by, saw that there was a bed pulled away from the wall, a couple chairs on either side of it—obvious card-playing arrangement—and gave me a bunch of demerits. I marched into Mr. Cameron's office and protested. "The teacher," I said, "had not seen a card game. There were no cards as proof. It was all circumstantial. I was the only one being punished. That's not fair." Mr. Cameron looked at me Headmaster Tad Roach welcomes i Admiral Blair to the lectern. a while and said, "Were you playing cards?" "Huh... Yes." "Then what are you complaining about?" he explained. Don't self justify. Don't be a spin-doctor. Don't take a legalistic approach. Play it straight. And oh, by the way, if you tell the truth, it's a lot easier to remember what you said. Second, what about your profession? Your job? Your passion? Choose one of service, service to others. It can be a service profession like mine. In the armed forces, we are a team working to defend a country and support its interests. It can be another service profession: teaching, nursing, environmental protection. They are all working for the common good. It can be part time: Big Bro-ther/Big Sister, community volunteer activities like a food bank, Habitat for Humanity, supporting St. Andrew's through the alumni association. It can be Remember, things are never as bad. or as , as they on the international level, the national level, the local level, the personal level. The common thread is serving others. Robert Kennedy said a year after I graduated from here: Admiral Dennis C. Blair '64 was named Commander in Chief, U.S. Pacific Command on February 20, 1999. Blair was sworn in as the leader of the oldest and largest of the United States unified commands. Blair has served as director of the Joint Staff and the associate director of Central Intelligence for Military Support. He also served as commander, Cruiser Destroyer Group FIVE, in the U.S. Pacific Fleet from August 1993 to March 1995. Blair was commanding officer of Naval Station Pearl Harbor in 1989-90. He served on guided missile destroyers in both the Atlantic and Pacific fleets. He served as executive officer on the USS Berkeley (DDG 15) and commanded the USS Cochrane (DD 21), which was deployed in Japan. A 1968 graduate of the U.S. Naval Academy, Blair attended Oxford University as a Rhodes Scholar. 18 FALL 2000 Anne Barber at Commencement. Let no one be dismayed by the thought that there is nothing that one man or woman can do against the enormous array of the world's ills. Few will have greatness to bend history itself, but each can give some small act and then some of these events will be written in the history of our generation. One of the really great accomplishments since 1964 has been to reverse completely America's attitude towards smoking. A similar campaign has made driving drunk unacceptable—a practice my generation accepted as a birthright. And these accomplishments were done by individuals, working together in formal and informal organizations over a long period of time. Third, keep your balance. At the end of a very bad day on my first shift, my wise, old commanding officer said to me, "Remember things are never as bad, or as good, as they seem." He was absolutely right. But balance is not just an attitude, it's an agenda. Eliot Richardson, another hero, died not long ago. In his book called Reflections of a Radical Moderate he wrote these words: Being problem solvers, moderates put a premium on solutions. Moderates have ideals, but they aren't starry-eyed idealists. Moderation is not a fighting faith, but a faith worth fighting for. The fear and concerns, and ambitions. So take that junior year abroad. Join the Peace Corps. Take that job overseas, Fifth, and last, I urge you to write. I learned to write here at St. Andrew's from Chester Baum, whom I saw earlier today. And I'm sure you have great teachers here. I don't mean I can create poetry or write fiction, but St. Andrew's teaches good expository prose, outlining ideas, writing topic sentences for each paragraph, using mostly short sentences with subject and verb and agreement. I have found one of the best ways to turn data into under, standing, to bring order out of Doug Brayton and Morgan Scoville. T "^ this welter of information that Lavanya Balasubramanian, Susan Clarkson, Emily Pfeiffer and Ashley Bergland. Congratulations, and a sailor's blessing of fair winds and following and every One of you. radical moderate will not have the best sound bytes. He will not oversimplify an issue. He will not use sports quotes like "winning is the only thing." The radical moderate navigates by his or her ideals, develops skills for pushing them forward through hard work, compromise, respecting the views of others, seeking common ground, always looking for progress. Fourth, I advise you to go international. The rest of the world is coming to the United States through information, immigration, education, commerce. But you will not understand what is going on in the world unless you spend some time outside your own country, and you won't understand your own country until you understand how it is similar to and different from others. We are interconnected and we are interdependent in information, in the environment, in economics, and yet we are different. We are diverse in culture, in washes around us, is to write something down. In writing this essay for your graduation, for example, I came to understand a great deal more about these past 36 years of my American experience. That's it. Be honest. Choose a job or spend time serving others. Pursue moderate solutions relentlessly. Go international. Write. Nope, one more thing: 28 of us graduated from here in 1964. I have three very close friends from that class today. I can ask them anything, anytime, and they can ask the same of me. I have 25 other good friends. Hold on to your friends from St. Andrew's. You're going to need them over the years. So again, congratulations and a sailor's blessing of fair winds and following seas to each and every one of you. ST. ANDREW'S MAGAZINE 19 R E U N ON A Time to Catch Up: Dave Washburn '44 and current faculty Judy and Tom Odden A Time to Relax: Rich Spry '85 (foreground) and Ian Montgomery '85 My husband (Hank Pool W) and I attended Reunion Weekend. It was our third in a row, and we enjoyed it tremendously, as always. A Time to Reunite -Linda Acheson ST. ANDREW'S MAGAZINE 21 A Time to Remember: Bill Amos A Time to Give: John Hukill '50 (left) presents Headmaster Tad Roach with a set of cardinals he carved on behalf of the Class of 1950. A Time to Receive: Ches Baum '36 (above) receives a book at Reunion from the Class of 1950. 22 FALL 2000 A Time to Catch Up: Bob Colburn and Earl Walker '90 A Time to Smile A Time to Celebrate: Class of 1965 members David Walker (left) and Lee Tawes, with Susan McNeely, the widow of Jay McNeely '65 An extremely memorable 50th. My Reunion Committee worked very hard, and we attracted nearly 20 of*27 living '50 alumni. A Time to Check In -Stuart Bracken '50 ST. ANDREW'S MAGAZINE 23 A Time to be Casual A Time for Conversation: Susan and Maury Kemp '50 with Will Speers To a person, every one of my classmates bad a meaningful experience—I haven't seen any e-group feedback yet but venture to say it will be positive. - Bob Greenlee '75 A Time for Renewed Friendship: Lee Tawes '65, Peabody Hutton '65 and Marsha Tawes 24 FALL 2000 ST. ANDREW'S SCHOOL 1999-2000 Annual Report of Gifts I n my years as president of the Board of Trustees, and before that as capital campaign chair, I never fail to be impressed by the quiet but dedicated efforts of so many members of the St. Andrew's community in sustaining and strengthening this School. This Annual Report of Gifts confirms the commitment and generosity of so many St. Andreans—alumni, parents and friends. This was a remarkable year with a record $1,028,957 total Annual Fund. We couldn't have done it without those whose names are listed here. Please know how appreciative St. Andrew's is and how grateful I am to you, our alumni/ae, parents and friends for the energy and enthusiasm you give to the School to help make St. Andrew's a great school. Thank you. -H. Hickman Rowland Jr. '58 President, Board of Trustees 1999-2000 GIFTS ANNUAL FUND Unrestricted Restricted $857,749 171,208 $1,028,957 Total CAPITAL For current use For endowment $895,244 148,750 $1,043,994 Total Memorial Gifts Bequests $87,580 108,970 TOTAL ALL GIFTS $2,269,501 ANNUAL FUND SUMMARY OF GIFTS Alumni/ae Present Parent Families Parents of Alumni/ae Trustees Friends Total 1,240 210 268 32 52 $418,791* 397,541 * * 79,888 109,197 23,540*** Fishers of Men Reunion Award: Class Agents Ralph Neel 75 (left) and Gattie Jones '45 with Alumni Corporation Board President Chuck Shorley 71. Ralph's class contributed 65% to the Annual Fund. Cattle's Class of 1945 reached a perfect 100 percent. Percentage of Annual Fund Donors by Constituency Trustees Present Parent Families Alumni/ae Parents of Alumni/ae 97% 80% 49% 25% $1,028,957 *$469,253 when including Alumni Trustees 'f * $453,903 when including Alumni & Trustee parents * ''Total includes gifts from faculty, grandparents, former & present faculty, staff and foundations. A new lectern was a gift from the Class of 1959. Alumni gathered during Reunion Weekend to dedicate the Andrew Mem '90 memorial bench given by the Class of 1990 and friends. The bench is located in Washburn Cove. 2 ANNUAL FUND REPORT 2000 Annual Fund Leadership Giving The donors listed below have demonstrated their generous support for the 1999-2000 St. Andrew's School Annual Fund at the following giving levels: BISHOP'S MITRE $25,000 & Above Anonymous Anonymous Mr. & Mrs. David M. Knott Sr. Ms. Sally E. Pingree— The Charles Englehard Foundation O. Lee Tawes III '65 ST. ANDREW'S CROSS GUILD $10,000 to $24,999 John S. Cook '45 Mr. & Mrs. David C. Patterson Mr. & Mrs. William Gahagan Mr. & Mrs. Stephen A. Simon Mr. & Mrs. Andrew J. Hall Thomas C. '70 & Diana Stephens William C. Howlett 745 Mr. William G. Stoops Patterson Keller '49 Mr. & Mrs. Douglas A. Warner III Allen B. Morgan Jr. '61 Mr. & Mrs. Irwin Zazulia FOUNDERS' LIST $5,000 to $9,999 Mr. & Mrs. Ian Abernethy Anonymous Anonymous Mr. & Mrs. Walter E. Constantine Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Frank H. Craighill Mr. & Mrs. Barry J. Downs Mr. & Mrs. Charles P. Durkin Jr. John R. Jr. '74 & Susan Eisenbrey O. Wells Foster '50 Mr. & Mrs. Bernard S. Gewirz Mr. & Mrs. Arthur A. Gosnell David B. Harms '72 Mrs. Margaret J. Heckman Mr. & Mrs. Philip C. Keevil Ms. Catherine Kinsey & Mr. Clinton Smullyan Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Robert A. Pilkington William M. Pope Jr. '61 Julian Price Family Foundation (The) H. Hickman Rowland Jr. '58 Barry M. '64 & Anne Sabloff Mrs. Caroline W. Salas Thomas R. Saunders '42 Michael J. Whalen'84 HEADMASTER'S CIRCLE $2,500 to $4,999 Robert S. Appleby '50 Mr. & Mrs. C. Chadwick Ballard Jr. Alfred D. Barbour '75 Dr. & Mrs. John M. Bergland Stephen L. Billhardt '83 Mr. & Mrs. Robert B. Blum Sr. Dr. & Mrs. Neil W. Brayton Randolph W. Brinton '64 Mr. & Mrs. Richard T. Carraher Curtis M. Coward '64 Mr. & Mrs. Thomas H. DeLashmutt Mr. & Mrs. John F. Devlin Arthur B. Dodge Jr. '41 Eric A. Ellisen '81 Ms. Melanie Taylor Farland Letitia Hickman Green '80 Horace W. Harrison '39 Mr. Guy C. Heckman G. William Helm Jr. '59 Carl B. King '60 Dr. & Mrs. Sidney K. King Mr. & Mrs. Tarlton H. Long Mr. &: Mrs. Thomas R. Marvel Jeffrey L. Miller '90 Mr. & Mrs. Robert T. Monk Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Peter C. Morse Mr. & Mrs. William R. Osier Mr. &c Mrs. Benjamin C. Paden Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Russell Pennoyer Lynn W. & Timothy W. Peters Family Foundation Mr. & Mrs. Steven B. Pfeiffer Dr. & Mrs. Francis W. Previti Mr. & Mrs. William Prickett Mary Ashton Roberts '84 David E. Scherer '51 Dr. &c Mrs. George S. Scoville Jr. Seraph Foundation, Inc. (The) Dwight D. Sipprelle '76 Frederick B. Starr '51 James O. Stokes '47 Edward M. Strong '66 Drs. Chris M. & Lillian M. Teigland Robbert H. van Mesdag '48 Mr. & Mrs. Eugene H. Vaughan Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Jack B. Wilkinson Randolph L. Williams '61 Joan J. Dickerson Woods '76 Mr. & Mrs. John P. Wright ANNUAL FUND REPORT 2000 3 GRIFFIN SOCIETY $1,000 to $2,499 Andrew J. Adams Jr. '59 Dr. & Mrs. Edward L. Alexander III Mr. & Mrs. John R. Allen Jr. Daniel G. Anderson Jr. '46 T. Roberts Appel II '52 Richard M. Appleby Jr. '47 Kate Rentschler Ausbrook '80 Henry S. Baker Jr. '44 Mr. & Mrs. Dean R. Barber Amy L. Barto '86 George J. Baxter '54 William C. Bean '72 John M. Bloxom IV '75 Jay H. Blum '84 James R. Boyd '64 Mr. & Mrs. Christopher D. Brady E. Buck Brinton Jr. '61 Richard E. Broome '48 William H. Brownlee '44 John A. Buda '82 Mrs. Lea A. Cadwalader David P. Campbell '54 Luther R. Campbell Jr. '46 Emily W. S. Caspersen '90 Russell W. Chesney '59 Morton H. Clark '50 Mr. & Mrs. William Clarkson IV Robert D. Colburn '80 Mr. & Dr. Pierre Cournot Mr. & Mrs. Warren J. Cox W. William A. Cox '56 John S. Craighill '62 William A. Crump Jr. '44 JohnW. CullenIV'81 David H. Davis '70 Alfred K. Day III '64 Mr. & Mrs. Antelo Devereux Dr. & Mrs. John J. Devine Anthony B. Eagleton '85 Robert B. Evans '49 Drs. David R. & Martha J. Finn Mr. & Mrs. Robert A. Fischer Jr. Brian D. Fisher '60 Mr. Charles & Dr. Kathleen Foley Robert F. Fogelman II '91 Mr. & Mrs. Michael R. Foster Mr. & Mrs. Herman E. Gaskins Jr. Michael K. Gewirz '81 Francis Giammattei Jr. '47 Mr. & Mrs. Elisha Gray 4 ANNUAL FUND REPORT 2000 Dr. & Mrs. Cesar Guerrero Mr. & Mrs. Robert P. Hammell Edward H. Hammond Jr. '60 Charles E. Hance '61 Mr. & Mrs. T. Chandler Hardwick Mr. & Mrs. John F. Harrington Hunter B. Harris Jr. '59 W. Howard Hart '53 R. Anderson Haynes '65 Mr. & Mrs. Lawrence W. Hendrickson Henry N. Herndon Jr. '48 I. Harding Hughes Jr. '41 John D. Hukill '50 Jennifer Hurtt Mullins '88 W. Callender Hurtt III '90 Mr. & Mrs. Peter A. Jay Gaston V. Jones Jr. '45 Mr. & Mrs. Davis L. Kennedy Jennifer M. Kern '83 John C. Kinahan '43 Mr. & Mrs. Charles E. Klumb Carey McDaniel '90 & Michael Koppenhaver Dr. & Mrs. Dean Kumpuris Mr. & Mrs. Walter J. Laird Jr. Mr. & Mrs. William S. Lange Arthur P. Laws '45 Mr. & Mrs. Haynes P. Lea David N. Levinson '53 Michael B. Lilley '79 Timothy C. N. Mann '47 Mr. & Mrs. Joshua Martin Carolyn Matthews '77 Mr. William D. Matthews James M. McSherry '49 Lawrence D. Milligan Jr. '53 Mr. & Mrs. Shozo Miyahara Mr. & Mrs. Robert T. Monk Sr. Mr. &: Mrs. C. Walker Morris Mrs. Louise J. Morse John F. Morton '65 Mr. & Mrs. William T. Muir William T. Murray III '50 Peter B. Nalle '41 Peter B. Obbard '49 Robert T. Oliphant Jr. '53 Mr. & Mrs. Brian Palmer Mr. & Mrs. Gordon B. Pattee Mr. & Mrs. Richard B. Payne Mr. & Mrs. Stuyvesant B. Pell Dr. & Mrs. Robert P. Penney Timothy W. Peters '66 Mr. & Mrs. David M. Phillips Walter D. Phillips '59 Mr. Sumner Pingree III John M. Pinney '61 Henry S. Pool '60 Dr. & Mrs. Robert E. Purcell Jr. John L. Ray '42 Andrew W. Reynolds '68 Mr. & Mrs. Joseph B. Rhame Mr. & Mrs. Daniel T. Roach Jr. John L. M. '62 & Irene Roberts R. Robbins Romaine '65 Mr. & Mrs. Dexter C. Rumsey Mr. Peter E. Salas Richard R. Schulze '53 Winthrop deV. Schwab '36 Mr. & Mrs. Henry B. Sethness David M. Shields '59 Mr. & Mrs. Henry H. Silliman Jr. C. Hamilton Sloan '87 Dr. & Mrs. David H. Smith Jonathan C. Smith '65 Richard S. Smith Jr. '48 Mr. & Mrs. V. Reitzel Snider Mr. & Mrs. Robert G. Stone Jr. Charles B. Straut '43 Mr. & Mrs. Timothy Sutherland J. Kent Sweezey '70 Edward F. Swenson Jr. '36 Mr. & Mrs. James W. Sykes Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Edward Symes Mr. & Mrs. Roger H. Taft Mr. & Mrs. Stuart E. Teach Charlton M. Theus Jr. '45 R. Marshall Thompson '68 Mr. & Mrs. Peter R. Unger Mr. Frank A. Venutolo & Ms. Barbara Lewis David H. Walker '65 J. Christopher Walsh '75 Davis A. Washburn '44 Charles A. Waters '77 Dehn S. Welch '39 t Mr. & Mrs. Cole P. Werble William T. White III '78 James J.B. Wigglesworth '58 Mr. & Mrs. Jonathan S. Willis III Henry V. P. Wilson III '50 William L. Wrightson III '84 SAINTS CLUB $500 to $999 Stephanie Jones Ahl '84 Anonymous Iwan Antonow '80 Edward Jouett Armstrong '44 James A. Bacon '45 Mr. & Mrs. C. S. Balasubramanian Mr. & Mrs. Robert F. Baldwin Jr. Mr. & Mrs. C. C. Ballard Sr. B. Norris Battin '54 Robert C. Beams '86 Dr. & Mrs. Joseph W. Behl Mr. & Mrs. Stanley S. Betts Mr. & Mrs. Stephen L. Bowers Stuart J. Bracken '50 Mr. & Mrs. Chester Brandes Susanne Brogan '75 Mr. & Mrs. Jacob F. Brown II Peter Megargee Brown '40 Mr. & Mrs. Thomas J. Burns Ian G. Brownlee '73 James M. Bullock '62 Mr. & Mrs. Dyer Butterfield Jr. Gardner A. '66 & Kathryn Cadwalader Mr. Howard H. Callaway Taylor F. Cameron '90 Stephen J. Chamberlin '47 Edmond Yi-Teh Chang '83 Christopher G. Cleghorn '70 Keely M. Clifford '79 Mrs. Lightfoot C. Cook Mr. & Mrs. W. Michael Cordeiro Mr. & Mrs. Richard L. Counts III Mr. George C. & Claudia Carter Covington Harkness G. DeVoe '50 Ashley Tompkins Devery '85 Mr. & Mrs. W. Thomas Dolan Kellie S. Doucette '88 G. Mitchell Edmondson '73 Mr. & Mrs. C. Greg Ellison C. Douglas Evans '76 Stephen S. Evans '49 Mr. & Mrs. Wilson C. Everhart Jr. Robert J. Falciani '79 George M. Furnival '43 Mr. &c Mrs. Robert Gahagan J. McHenry Gillet '46 John D. Gray '48 Mr. &c Mrs. David K. Grinwis John Colin Harrington '91 Franklin Hawkins '35 Donald D. Haynsworth '46 Hugo M. Heriz-Smith '85 Theodore L. Hill Jr. '52 Henry R. Hillenmeyer '61 Mr. & Mrs. Tatnall L. Hillman David D. Hindle '58 Edwin A. Hoey '48 Thomas H. Hooper III '71 John M. Hopkins '48 R. Stockton B. Hopkins '41 James M. Hudson Jr. '77 David S. Humphries '48 Mr. & Mrs. William C. Hurtt Jr. Dr. & Mrs. Ronald D. Jackson Mr. & Mrs. James T. Jenkins Thomas M. Jervey '45 Clarence H. Keller '50 Christopher M. Kennedy '75 Mr. & Mrs. Ki Ho Kim F.Ross King Jr.'58 Mr. & Mrs. Lawrence W. Laramy William D. Luke Jr. '53 J. Ross Macdonald '40 Dr. & Mrs. Nelson T. Macedo Gregory S. Marsh '75 William M. McClements '81 Thomas B. McCoy '75 Mr. & Mrs. Joseph S. McDaniel III Matthew J. McDermott Jr. '51 William W. McDowell Jr. '47 A. Dodge McFall Jr. '76 Everett R. McNair '73 Mrs. Prentice J. McNeely Charles F. Miller III '58 Mr. & Mrs. John P. Minneman Mr. & Mrs. Robert P. Moser William C. Mott Jr. '78 Harry L. Murray III '60 Jesse Nalle '39 David A. Olson '70 Robert H. Orr '34 Mr. Jayson L. Pahlmeyer Mr. & Mrs. Charles J. Payne Jeff A. Petty '74 Ms. Grace W. Pierce-Beck Warner W. Price '59 Franchesa M. Profaci '80 Mr. & Mrs. Henry R. Pupke Dr. & Mrs. Mark A. Rackish Mr. & Mrs. Philip S. Reese Christopher P. Reeve '68 W. Barrett Register '51 Thomas P. Robinson Sr. '51 Jonathan F. Rodgers '75 Drs. Harry P. & Susan K. Ross Mr. & Mrs. H. Murray Sawyer Jr. Mr. & Mrs. John M. Seabrook Robert J. Shank '57 William H. Shields III '75 Charles H. Shorley '71 John D. Showell IV '68 William L. Sibley '88 Charles A. Silliman '36 Scott M. Sipprelle '81 Mr. & Mrs. Francis W. Smith George B. Smith '66 Henry B. Smith '67 Richard A. Snyder '75 William B. Spire '89 Jonathan F. Starr '77 Robert L. Taylor '47 Dr. & Mrs. Kenneth E. Thomas Richard H. Thompson '50 Constantine N. Tonian '49 Donald M. Tucker '41 William G. Tucker III '68 Eric B. Twombly '84 Kenneth W. VanDyke '46 Richard B. Vaughan '88 W. Moorhead Vermilye II '58 Mrs. Jean B. Wagoner Mr. & Mrs. Chester A. Waldron Mr. & Mrs. Eraser I. Wallace Mr. & Mrs. Michael A. Walter Newell R. Washburn '57 G. Carter Werth '52 McClelland '90 & Carter Wilcox '90 Jason L. Woody '91 William S. Zuill '48 ANNUAL FUND REPORT 2000 5 NOXONTOWN FELLOWS $250 to $499 James F. Adams '48 Mr. & Mrs. Thomas E. Archie Richard P. Baer III'62 & Priscilla E. Small Elizabeth B. Baird '84 Michael K. Bateman '57 Loring W. Batten III '36 Carl B. Bear '60 Barry A. Benepe '46 Daniel P. Bennett '81 Edwin John Bernet Jr. '72 Mrs. Sally E. Borghardt Coleman P. Brown II '59 Quincy A. Brown '92 William R. Brownfield '70 Gordon E. Brownlee '75 David C. Bryan '51 Mr. & Mrs. Cartielyn Buckle Mr. & Mrs. Peter Budetti John P. Burkett Jr. '58 James B. Bullitt III '52 Dr. & Mrs. Joseph R. Calder Jr. Peter D. Caloger Jr. '69 Rushton T. Capers '63 Scarlett Halsted Carey '78 Jill Willock Caron '87 Arthur A. Carota Jr. '69 William B. Churchman III '41 James W Clements '82 John M. Cogswell '57 Frederick W. Coleman '65 Mr. & Mrs. Peter F. Comstock Dr. & Mrs. Lawrence J. Conell William H. Corddry '38 William R. Cory '38 John E. Court '92 Lawrance M. Court '62 Asbury Coward IV '60 John D. Creadick '52 John C. Grumpier '75 Craig W. Cullen Jr. '82 Noel C. Dalton '43 William F. Davis Jr. '44 Dr. & Mrs. Jesse C. DeLee Peter M. Delo Jr. '61 W. Marks Dryden '66 Stephen B. Duke '56 Mr. & Mrs. Ian H. Dunn Mr. & Mrs. Clement S. Dwyer Beth Williams Ellingwood '84 Matthew J. Ellis Jr. '52 Mrs. Sheila Faulkner Andrew C. Florance '82 Jerry '67 & Patricia Fogle George W. Forbes III '63 Pierson Friend '84 Steven B. Gewirz '85 J. Lyles Glenn IV '74 Eric M. Godshalk '59 Mr. & Mrs. Michael C. Goeller Michael D. Gouge '73 Mrs. Elizabeth B. Grant Robert H. Greenlee '75 William H. Grubb '59 Rafael J. Guastavino Jr. '75 Armistead L. Guthery '51 John S. Halsted '51 Mr. & Mrs. H. Brown Hamrick 6 ANNUAL FUND REPORT 2000 Joseph L. Hargrove Jr. '67 Garrett J. Hart '78 Henry Hauptfuhrer IV '74 Arthur E. Haycock Jr. '59 William S. Hearn '45 Frederick J. Heinle III '95 Ms. Joyce Hensleigh & Mr. Gustavo Muzzolon F. Joseph '74 & Marianne Hickman Dr. & Mrs. Gavin Hildick-Smith Michael A. Hill '71 Mrs. Marie Leftwich Hnarakis t Catherine van Ogtrop Hoffberger '90 William Holman '71 Hume A. Horan '51 Eric C. Howard '74 Mr. 6c Mrs. Ehr-Ping HuangFu C. Peabody Hutton '65 Peter G. Jacoby '77 Mr. & Mrs. Gary M. Jastrab Anthony J. Jeffcott '57 Mary Buffington Jenkins '84 Prof. &c Mrs. Dong-Hyun Kim Mr. Douglas L. King Gregory M. King '89 Dr. & Mrs. Kirk H. Kinney F. Matthew Kramer '74 Rev. & Mrs. Carl N. Kunz Jr. Peter D. Laird '61 Ridie R. Lazar '90 Mrs. Mary Louise Leipheimer Richard C. Leonard '50 Mr. & Mrs. Richard L. Levengood David Lindsay '51 Daniel W. MacDonald '47 Mr. & Mrs. Douglas W. MacLay Mr. & Mrs. Mark Madeley Mr. & Mrs. Carlton A. Mallory Amy B. Markowitz '83 Randolph Marshall II '59 John M. Maull '72 Heather N. McAvoy '86 Malcolm Edwin McGee '69 Patricia K. McGee '76 A. Joy McGrath '92 G. James McNaughton '76 Mr. & Mrs. Duncan Merriwether Mr. & Mrs. James T. Milam Arthur M. Miller '70 Edgar R. Miller Jr. '47 David D. Mills '72 Christopher L. Milner '68 John C. Mincks '74 David Olav Moltke-Hansen '69 Ian B. '85 & Lydia Jarrett '82 Montgomery Mr. & Mrs. William S. Moorhead Ms. Louise A. Morse T. A. E. Moseley III '64 Charles D. Murphy III '62 Mr. & Mrs. Harry L. Murray Jr Mr. & Mrs. John S. Murray Lyle B. Nelson '88 Stephen V. Noble '69 William M. Nuckols '57 Vicki Klumb O'Neill '87 Robert D. Owens '83 Mr. & Mrs. Hugh S. Park Mr. & Mrs. Steven M. Parker Richard G. Patch '45 Thomas J. Patton '51 William B. Paul Jr. '64 Ms. Sylvia J. Payne Mr. & Mrs. William S. Peebles IV Douglas M. Pell '58 Megan L. Peters '93 William Pfeifer II '63 Mr. & Mrs. B. Victor Pfeiffer Cyrus H. Philpott '92 Peter A. Presby '73 Mr. & Mrs. J. Ward Purrington Elizabeth Hammond Pyle '89 Mr. & Mrs. Robert R. Rada John G. Reeve '66 Mrs. Emilee M. Reynolds William D. Rogers '44 Dr. & Mrs. Stephen G. Sanders Anne Percy Sargent '83 Robert F. Schelling '45 Mr. & Mrs. Robert N. Schmidt Mr. & Mrs. Louis C. Shackelford Brian D. Shockley '83 Alan C. '70 & Francine Sibert Edwin L. Sibert Jr. '38 William L. Sibert II '42 William C. Sibert '40 Sarah S. Siebert '97 Albert Simons III '69 David S. Skinner '67 Carl B. Smith Jr. '85 William B. Smith '69 Walter W. Speakman '38 Vincent W. Spoltore '80 J. David Strong '75 William C. Strong '70 Henry P. Sullivan '43 t Dr. & Mrs. John C. Tayloe Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Talbot J. Taylor Harry R. Tear III '87 David D. Thombs '55 John J. Tolson IV '67 Francis J. Townsend Jr. '34 Daniel Trimper IV '51 Mr. & Mrs. John Turcik Arthur Vandenberg '68 Mr. & Mrs. Robert I. Veghte Herbert D. Vogel Jr. '48 C. William Waechter Jr. '61 Loudon S. Wainwright III '65 Mr. & Mrs. James D. Walcott Jr. Stephen C. Walke Jr. '60 Arraminta A. R. Ware '82 Norman C. Ware '75 L. Herndon Werth '52 L. Elizabeth Westcott '78 Mr. & Mrs. George F. Wheelock David A. Wike '86 Mr. & Mrs. J. Roffe Wike Jonathan S. Wilford Jr. '41 Susan Willock '89 Mr. & Mrs. Randolph L. Worth Dr. & Mrs. Kin K. Wun Dr. & Mrs. Lawrence Zarchin G. Harvey & Louisa Hemphill '78 Zendt CARDINAL CLUB $100 to $249 Ms. Eva Ablorh Dr. & Mrs. Bal K. Agarwal John M. Alden '43 Lars P. Allfather '75 Mr. & Mrs. Charles W. Allmon Edward H. Amaya '86 Robert C. Amos '75 & Anne Rhodes Amos '78 Mr. & Mrs. Sigurd L. Andersen Ms. Renee Andrews-DeLaine Maria Antonow '82 Conrad C. M. Arensberg '61 Aubrey W. Armentrout '91 Bulent I. Atalay '58 Michael K. Atalay '84 Robert P. Auersch '51 Stover L. Babcock II '56 Mr. & Mrs. I. William Bagwell IV C. Stephen Baldwin '55 Stephen M. Baldwin '74 John C. Ball Jr. '41 Mr. & Mrs. Ellis O. Barber John H. Barber Jr. '71 Charles M. Barclay '54 Mr. & Mrs. Stephen K. Barker William H. Barney III '70 R. Stewart Barroll '72 Yong-Son Woo Basta '83 William D. Bathurst '50 Chester E. Baum Jr. '36 Thomas F. Bayard IV '62 Ms. Barbara J. S. Bear Walter Scott Beard '69 David O. Bellis '46 Mr. & Mrs. Craig Biddle III Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Black Dennis C. Blair '64 Timothy J. Bloomfield '57 Dr. & Mrs. William R. Bloxom J. Caleb Boggs Jr. '52 Giles R. Borghardt '90 Mr. William J. Bostian & Ms. Sally D. Adkins Mr. & Mrs. Ernest Bostic Jr. Robert T. Boyd III '44 John H. Boyden Jr. '40 Russell E. Boyle '74 Mr. & Mrs. H. Harrison Braxton Jr. Clay Bridgewater '53 Henry A. Briele Jr. '62 Sidney B. Brinckerhoff '52 William O. Britt '57 George A. Broadbent '41 David B. Brown '79 Mr. & Mrs. F. Abbott Brown Jr. Mr. &c Mrs. Gordon Brown Jr. J. Dixon Brown '71 Mr. & Mrs. W. Thacher Brown Steven H. Brownlee '77 James J. Bruin '89 Julian T. Burke III '65 Eric N. Burkett '63 Dr. & Mrs. Douglas G. Burnette Bentley H. Burnham '83 Findley Burns Jr. '35 Theodore Burton III '42 t Arthur C. '88 & Elizabeth B. Butcher '88 Dr. P. Brandt Butler Andrew L. Butters '91 Coleman E. Bye Jr. '49 Mrs. Carol L. Calhoun Corinna Calhoun '89 Mr. & Mrs. Howard H. Callaway Jr. Harry B. Cannon Jr. '52 Hugh N. Cannon '53 Mr. & Mrs. Christopher S. Carey Mr. & Mrs. Richard R. Carey Mr. & Mrs. Timothy T. Carrington Mr. & Mrs. Bruce E. Carroll Dr. & Mrs. Larry V. Carson Dianne L. Carter '75 Keith S. Cavanaugh '82 John C. Chamberlin '88 Norris B. Chamberlin '54 Mr. & Mrs. Roy Chapin Joshua R. Charlton '92 Mrs. Janet H. Cherrix Christopher P. Chesney '91 Robert Clagett '70 Elizabeth Bleke Clark '81 Mr. & Mrs. Oswald L. Clarke William H. Clayton '57 Timothy L. Cohn '84 Mr. & Mrs. Robert M. Colburn Michael H. Collins '85 Jack A. Comstock '95 Stephen P. Comstock '99 Alice P. Duffee Coneybeer '88 Mr. & Mrs. Lawrence Connell Henry L. Constable Jr. '50 Richard J. Corbin '51 Mr. & Mrs. Ralph Cortes Mrs. John M. Court Drs. Richard & Linda Cowan Mr. & Mrs. Leslie Cox III Marshall W. Craig '62 Robert R. Craighill '59 Mr. & Mrs. E. Eric Crawford Richard D. Crawford '63 Francis W. Crawley Jr. '93 Alan Crichton '63 Ernest Cruikshank III '62 Mr. & Mrs. Luis Cuervo Melissa C. Cull '96 Mr. & Mrs. A. Barratt Cullen Jr. Charles O. Culver Jr. '47 G. Jeremy Cummin '54 Mr. & Mrs. Eliot W. Dalton Jr. Mr. Robert A. Davenport Gillian T. Davies '81 Richard P. Davis '45 Mr. & Mrs. George J. de Garmo Katherine Kunz Delaplane '81 Daniel M. del Sobral '84 Andrew C. Dennis '90 Mr. & Mrs. John D. Dennis Mr. & Mrs. David P. DeSalvo Laurent C. Deschamps '60 Louise H. Dewar '75 Patrick '78 & Roberta Fry '78 Dewar Mr. Charles H. Dietrich Ms. Sharon Dildy Kenneth H. Ditzel '94 Dr. & Mrs. Henry B. Dixon II Mr. & Mrs. R. Douglas Doherty Samantha K. Doherty '94 Pauline T. Dolan '85 Thomas Donaldson Jr. '40 Mrs. Sally H. Dorn Jesse R. Dowd Jr. '60 Hall Downes '51 Mr. & Mrs. Donald H. Duffy Leo M. Dulin Jr. '70 Debra Page Dunford '86 Mr. & Mrs. Donald A. Dunn Mr. & Mrs. Victor duPont Mr. & Mrs. Guido Eccel Mr. & Mrs. David C. Eddy Mr. & Mrs. John W. Eden Ian Edmundson '88 James Edwards '93 Paul W. Eichler '82 Mr. & Mrs. Robert S. Eliot Ari K. Ellis '89 Emily H. Etherington '98 Douglas J. Evans '54 Mr. & Mrs. Michael R. Evans William B. Evans '36 Wilson C. Everhart III '95 Mr. & Mrs. Nicholas T. Exarhakis John D. Fairchild '50 Robert J. Faux '60 Charles S. Felver '35 F. Weston Fenhagen '41 J. Pierce Fenhagen '35 John B. Fiedler '51 Thomas H. Field '61 Elliott G. Fishburne III '58 Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth C. Fisher Margaret Fitts '82 Kimberly A. Folts '86 Dale A. Forbes '85 Benjamin M. Fowler III '42 Mr. & Mrs. Robert T. Freeman Mr. & Mrs. Theodore W. Friend III Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth A. Fry Mr. & Mrs. Donald W. Fudge Mr. & Mrs. Robert D. Funk Mr. Anthony Gaeta Jr. Eric R. Gamble '84 Anne M. Gammons '85 Dr. & Mrs. Hilliard E. Gardner Mrs. Joseph Gaskill Ms. Kathleen Gerard James K. Gerrish '75 Gregory L. Gibson '48 Philip D. Goiran '59 ToddE. Golde'81 Ms. Susan Goldsworthy Samuel H. Goodfellow '75 Harold B. Gordy Jr. '63 John T. Gordy '86 Chase C. Gove III '62 James A. Grady III '59 Kevin J. Grandfield '82 Mr. & Mrs. Byron Grant Mr. & Mrs. C. Swanson Graves Dr. & Mrs. John W. Gray Richard J. Green Jr. '80 John G. Gregory '56 Mr. & Mrs. Ernest Greppin Clayton H. Griffin '43 Mr. & Mrs. Dirk D. Grove Frederick S. Groves '82 Joaquin W. Gubb '90 John H. Gullett '62 Alfons Gunnemann '73 Richard E. Hall '89 Mr. & Mrs. Richard F. Hall III Charles E. Hamilton III '58 Mr. & Mrs. D. Ross Hamilton J. Ogden Hamilton '63 John Hanahan Jr. '41 Paul A. Hannah '78 Mr. & Mrs. Thomas C. Hard wick David B. Harned '50 Robert V. Harned '52 Mr. & Mrs. E. Gary Harney Michael P. Harrell '90 Mr. & Mrs. Paul H. Harrell J. Dick Harris '65 Dr. & Mrs. Jeffrey P. Harris Sr. Lawrence R. Harris Jr. '58 Roland F. Hartman Jr. '51 Steven C. Hartsell '71 Norris S. Haselton Jr. '54 Anthony W. Hathaway '54 David M. Hatton '74 James S. Hayes III '91 James H. Healy Jr. '54 Charles H. Heckscher Jr. '63 Thomas H. Heist III '55 C. Dallett Hemphill '75 J. Potter Herndon '65 William Frantz Herr Jr. '69 Dr. & Mrs. Robert L. Hickok Dr. & Mrs. John A. Higgins Mrs. Vianda P. Hill Bonnie D. Hillman '84 Dawn A. Hillman '86 Dr. &c Mrs. Benjamin K. Hirsh Mrs. Elizabeth D. Hmel John R. Hodgdon '47 Max M. Hofer '98 Mrs. Margaret M. Holahan William C. Holder '68 Julie F. Holderness '99 Mr. & Mrs. Richard T. Holderness Mr. & Mrs. Martin B. Hoogenboom James I. Hudson III '70 Kent S. Hughes '63 Charles V. Hulick Jr. '58 C. Powell Hutton '55 P. Churchill Hutton III '54 Anna W. Ill '82 Mr. & Mrs. David G. Imes Mr. David E. James Mrs. Joan S. Jay James T. Jenkins Jr. '98 Mr. & Mrs. Tongsheng Jing Mr. & Mrs. David M. Johns William H. Johnson '52 Robert Kirk Jones Jr. '79 Mildred B. Joyner '90 Margaret B. Judge '78 Stephanie Markus Kandarian '81 Mr. & Mrs. George P. Keeley Katherine S. Keltner '93 Mr. & Mrs. Thomas N. Keltner Mr. & Mrs. Richard A. Keuler Jr. Mr. & Mrs. H. Nelson Keyser Mr. & Mrs. H. Nelson Keyser III Mr. John B. Kiesling & Ms. Phyllis Ann Graham Brian C. G. Kinahan '71 Ms. Kathleen Day Koch Rebecca L. Koch '97 Cynthia Roselle Koenig '90 Charles E. M. Kolb '69 Pieter B. Kooistra '85 Drs. Christopher & Mary Koprowski John F. Kramer Jr. '57 Mr. & Mrs. Richard R. Kramer R. Paul Kress Jr. '78 ANNUAL FUND REPORT 2000 7 Kristen Z. Kreuzkamp '89 William P. C. Ku '74 Mr. & Mrs. Henry S. Laffitte Howe Lagarde Jr. '55 Edward J. Lake '80 John K. Landay '97 Mr. & Mrs. William B. Lane Mr. & Mrs. William T. Lauten III Margaret M. Lawton '79 Robin J. La Perle '77 J. Reynolds LeBus Jr. '56 Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth E. Lehman Brian Leipheimer '90 George B. Lewis '41 Edward K. Libby '45 Karin Lindfors '81 Mr. & Mrs. Russell F. Lindsay P. Marlies Lissack '89 Mr. & Mrs. Yue Liu Mr. Peter R. Lockhart Mr. & Mrs. G. Arno Loessner Douglas G. Lovell Jr. '45 Chandler Barnes Luke '81 William D. Ill '79 & Janet Brownlee '79 Luke Levin M. Lynch '45 David L. Lyon '69 Morgan B. MacDonald '43 Ian C. Maclnnes '54 George G. Macintire '55 Rolando G. Marquez '90 Brandon Mathews '88 Robert C. Mattson '90 Peter A. Maxson '69 Drs. Victor & Gail Mazzocco Ms. Bonlyn A. McBride James S. McBride '71 Mr. &c Mrs. Keith M. McBride John McCaffery '82 C. Brent McCaghren '63 Patrick Scott McClary '90 James M. McClaugherty Jr. '66 Mrs. Norah McCormack David T. McCune '53 Mr. & Mrs. E. Bruce McEvoy Andrew C. McFall Jr. '42 James B. McGiffert '55 Lee C. McGill '89 Mr. & Mrs. Michael McGrath Purnal L. McWhorter III '49 Mr. & Mrs. W. Harrison Mechling M. Barnard Megargee '49 Dominic J. Menei '97 D. Charles Merriwether '48 Jacqueline Paradee Mette '83 James C. Metts Jr. '48 Charles F. R. Mifflin '36 Walker L. Mifflin Jr. '36 Edgar R. Miller III '74 Mr. & Mrs. W. Sanford Miller Jr. Nadejda S. Mishkovsky '85 George B. Mitchell '55 Anne H. Montesano '86 Patrick W. Montgomery '89 Susan M. Moon '76 Elizabeth C. Moore '92 H. Howard Moorin Jr. '89 W. James Morgan Jr. '62 Mrs. Huldah Moss Stephen H. Munroe '64 Mr. & Mrs. Donald Munson Ralph F. Munyan '42 William F. Murphy III '51 Ms. Laura J. Murray R. Wesley Mutchler Jr.'58 James R. Neal III '94 8 ANNUAL FUND REPORT 2000 Ralph D. Neel '75 Kevin P. Nerlinger '78 Mrs. Pamela P. Nimick Mr. & Mrs. Jeffrey M. Noe Daniel A. Nolte '80 Mr. & Mrs. Thomas A. Northrup Robert M. Nuckols '55 Mr. & Mrs. Jonathan B. O'Brien Sara O'Connor '89 Mr. & Mrs. Gordon A. Olson Barry J. Ohlson '85 W. Hunter Old '87 Thomas B. O'Rourke '56 C. Richard Orth '56 Thomas W. Osborn Jr. '51 Robert S. Palmer '77 Alethea Y. Papson '94 John W. Paradee '81 H. Lawrence Parker '44 Henry G. Parker III '44 Sheldon K. Parker '71 Mrs. Anne R. Parrish Anthony R. Parrish Jr. '66 Mr. & Mrs. David Parshall James O. Patterson III '84 Mr. Franklin T. Payne Mrs. Constance T. Peebles P. Stephen Pell '51 Elizabeth D. Peloso '75 Stephen F. Penn '53 Thomas D. Perrie '58 Kibbey S. Perry Crumbley '87 Adam D. Perry '89 Mr. & Mrs. Henry A. Perry James M. Perry '46 Mr. & Mrs. Samuel R. Perry Mr. & Mrs. Ralph E. Peters Timothy W. Peters Jr. '91 Mrs. Elizabeth B. Pfeiffer M. Alex Philippi Jr. '54 Charles T. Pickett '53 Elizabeth G. Pierce '90 Alan B. Pinkerton Jr. '72 Ms. Jane C. Pitcher Mr. & Mrs. Robert M. Pitts Catherine S. Pomeroy '89 Mr. & Mrs. David M. Post Louisa S. Potter '85 Stephen E. Price '49 Mr. & Mrs. Peter F. Primiani Christian B. Profaci '82 Tomas A. Puky '89 Sherry Gamble Punches '87 Karl H. Pupke '83 Virginia C. Purrington '94 Jehu D. Quillin III '56 Mr. & Mrs. Richard M. Quimby Brian P. Randall Jr. '69 Mrs. Anne J. Ratledge Donald S. Ratledge Jr. '81 Claire B. Reid '90 Elizabeth S. Reynolds '93 Mrs. Susanne Rhame A. Alexander Rhodes '77 Mr. & Mrs. Michael J. Rich Ashton W. Richards '78 Mr. & Mrs. F. Lee Richards Annette Rickolt '87 Mr. & Mrs. George B. Rigdon II Mr. & Mrs. Henry B. Rigdon Andrew D. Ringle '66 Mr. & Mrs. James A. Risher Mr. & Mrs. William L. Roberts Jr. Heyward G. Robinson '76 W. B. Peter Rodgers '56 Mr. & Mrs. John D. Rogers Jr. William Z. Rogers '68 Susan Guernsey Rohrer '81 James R. Rooney II '45 Mr. & Mrs. Eugene B. Ruane Gerald G. Rue '73 Laurence B. Russell '67 Raymond W. Russell '56 Dr. & Mrs. Anis K. Saliba Khalil G. Saliba '81 Russell D. Salter '76 Steven Donegan Salter '77 May B. Satterfield '98 J. Andrew Sayre Jr. '67 Robert Q. Scacheri '85 Frederic J. Schaettler '38 Nicholas R. Scheller '69 John R. Schoonover '63 Thomas E. Schreppler '78 Winthrop Schwab Jr. '66 Elmer B. Scott Jr. '35 t John M. Seabrook Jr. '76 Mr. & Mrs. George W. Seger Suzanne H. Seger '79 & Robert F. Zach '79 Joseph L. Seiler III '70 Andrew L. Seymour '82 Dr. & Mrs. Scott C. Shaffer William Dixon Shay '89 G. Leonard Shea '51 William M. Shettle II '58 Mrs. Brenda Shivery Gregory S. Shivery '84 Dewees F. Showell III '75 George W. Shuster '63 A. Whitney Siddons '88 Robert Lanier Sides '69 Sunita B. Sierros '90 Mr. & Mrs. Thomas E. Slattery David Van Smith Jr. '82 Helen C. Smith '99 Peter H. Smith '61 Philip R. Smith '83 Stewart S. Smith '67 Mr. Charles H. Snead IV & Ms. Melinda Biddle Curtis B. Snyder '64 Howard M. Snyder III '61 Mr. & Mrs. Richard W Snyder Mr. & Mrs. James R. Soles Judi Skelton Spann '80 James R. Speer '54 Mr. & Mrs. T. Guthrie Speers Mr. & Mrs. Derek W. L. Spry Mr. & Mrs. Peter Standoff Mr. & Mrs. Clinton W. Stayton Cristina M. Stenbeck '95 Michael M. Stephanides '76 Mr. Stephen J. Stephanou Mr. & Mrs. Richard B. Stephens Mr. & Mrs. Mauritz Stetson Valerie M. Stevens '84 Thomas J. Stewart-Gordon '61 Mr. & Mrs. Charles H. Still Sr. Kathryn Still '92 Andrew D. Stone '61 John T. Stoner '49 Mrs. Sarah Stoner Susan E. Stoops '88 Bjarne Strikert '71 Mrs. Dorothy L. Stubbs Mr. Hoover C. Sutton Mr. & Mrs. Robert J. Swain Paul Olof Swanson '72 Mr. Clifford H. Tall Mr. & Mrs. R. W. Talley Prentice Talmage Jr. '44 James Thomas '41 Woodlief Thomas Jr. '47 Mr. & Mrs. Sydnor Thompson Robert F. Thomson '49 Cynthia J. Tostevin '83 Mr. & Mrs. Richard P. Traina Augustus S. Trippe II '37 Edward R. Trippe III '68 Mr. Bruce D. Troutman Ms. Mary Troutman Plummy K. Tucker '83 Mr. & Mrs. G. Nevill Turner Martha Richards Valciukas '80 Mr. & Mrs. Evert van Buchem Gregory E. van der Vink '74 Gilbert H. Van Note Jr. '48 Leeanna Varga '87 J. Kirk T. Varnedoe '63 George B. Vest Jr. '49 Mrs. Ann Lewis Vlcek Werner R. Voigt Jr. '55 Dietrich vonStechow '85 G. Stephen Voorhees II '53 Pieter B. Voorhees '60 Mr. & Mrs. Benjamin N. Wafle Adam A. Waldron '80 & Margaret Wenzell Waldron '81 Jason J.Walker'84 Mrs. Anna R. Ware Thomas E. Washburn '76 Carrie B. Waters '79 Mr. & Mrs. Robert Watkins C. E. John Way Jr. '55 Charles L. Wayne '60 Jane C. Weaver '95 Mr. & Mrs. William L. Weber Charles H. Welling Jr. '45 James M. Wendt '78 Katherine T. Werble '98 Dr. Sarah Westcott John S. Whelen '36 Mrs. Jane F. White William H. Whitehead '51 Mr. & Mrs. C.W. Whitmoyer Mr. & Mrs. Elmer F. Wieboldt Jr. Richard C. Wieboldt '71 Dr. & Mrs. Jeffrey M. Wieland Herbert E. Wilgis III '79 Mr. & Mrs. Robert H. Willey Jr. Peyton R. Williams Jr. '66 Richard W. Williams Jr. '52 Mr. & Mrs. Thomas L. Williams Edwin D. Williamson Jr. '91 Rex P. Winters '55 Carolyn H. Wirth '93 Mr. & Mrs. Douglas E. Wolfe George B. Wood Jr. '42 Lawrence E. Wood '54 Peter S. Wood '69 William S. Wood II '57 J.Donald Woodruff Jr.'58 Mr. & Mrs. John F. Woods William A. Worth '92 Arthur St. C. Wright '53 Brian W. Wright '96 Megan L. Wright '97 NoelB. Wright Jr.'51 Mr. & Mrs. Ya Sang Yang Robert E. Young '52 Mr. & Mrs. Charles F. Zimmer Christopher C. Zimmer '89 Dr. & Mrs. Mark R. Zolnick Annual Fund Donors The following pages list by constituent group the individuals and organizations that participated in the 1999-2000 St. Andrew's School Annual Fund: Contributed to the Annual Fund in each of the: "past 5 years ""past 10 years """past 15 years * * * "past 20 years *past 25 years Bold names =Class Fundraiser t = deceased TRUSTEES ***StephenLBillhardt'83 """Mr. Robert B.Blum Sr. *Dr. Neil W. Brayton """"William H. Brownlee '44 """"JohnS. Cook '45 ***Mrs. Katharine duP. Gahagan Mr. Robert G. Gahagan * "Michael K. Gewirz'81 "* ""Francis Giammattei Jr. '47 " " * "Edward H. Hammond Jr. '60 **Mrs. Maureen Harrington ****Henry N. Herndon Jr. '48 ****Thomas H. Hooper III '71 * * Mr. Philip C. Keevil *Ms. Catherine Kinsey " Carey McDaniel Koppenhaver '90 Mrs. Cynthia Primo Martin "" "Everett R. McNair'73 """" Allen B.Morgan Jr. '61 """"William T. Murray III '50 *Mr. Steven B. Pfeiffer Catherine S. Pomeroy '89 **William M. Pope Jr. '61 ** Caroline duPont Prickett * Daniel T. Roach. Jr. ****H. Hickman Rowland Jr. '58 """"Winthrop deV. Schwab '36 *"""Charles H. Shorley '71 """Mr. Henry H. Silliman Jr. Mrs. Patricia Warner 'Michael J. Whalen '84 Class of 1934 Francis J. Townsend Jr. 100% Annual Fund $800 * * Robert H. Orr * * * * Francis j. Townsend Jr. Class of 1935 Franklin Hawkins Annual Fund $1300 ****Findley Burns Jr. ***Charles S. Felver J. Pierce Fenhagen ****Franklin Hawkins Elmer B. Scott Jr. t Class of 1936 Chester E. Baum Jr. Annual Fund $4202 71% 90% *Loring W. Batten III * Chester E. Baum Jr. William B. Evans """"Charles F. R. Mifflin "Walker L. Mifflin Jr. """"Winthrop deV. Schwab ***Charles A. Silliman """"Edward F. Swenson Jr. "John S. Whelen Class of 1937 Augustus S. Trippe II Annual Fund $200 Frank J. Ball """"John C. Parry "Augustus S. Trippe II Class of 1938 Walter W. Speakman Annual Fund $1250 '" "William H. Corddry """"William R.Cory ""Frederic J. Schaettler """"Edwin L.Sibert Jr. "" "Walter W. Speakman Class of 1939 Annual Fund $4575 "Thomas V. Ashton """George A. Dunning """"Horace W.Harrison Jesse Nalle Dehn S. Welch t Class of 1942 Annual Fund $6800 50% Theodore Burton III t """Benjamin M. Fowler III "" Andrew C.McFall Jr. "Ralph F. Munyan """"John L.Ray ""Thomas R. Saunders "William L. Sibert II "" George B. Wood Jr. 75% 56% 45% Class of 1940 William C. Sibert 41% Annual Fund $1773 ""JohnH. Boydenjr. """"Peter Megargee Brown " * "Thomas Donaldson Jr. "Benjamin F. Houston """"J. H.E.Johnston J. Ross Macdonald "" "William C. Sibert Class of 1941 Jonathan S. Wilford Jr. Annual Fund $6698 43% ""John C.Bali Jr. """"George A. Broadbent ""William B. Churchman III " " " "Arthur B. Dodge Jr. """"F.Weston Fenhagen John Hanahan Jr. Percival V. Harris Jr. ""R. Stockton B. Hopkins """"I. Harding Hughes Jr. "George B. Lewis """"Peter B. Nalle Davis P. Platt " " "James Thomas """"Donald M. Tucker """Jonathans. Wilford Jr. Class of 1943 Morgan B. MacDonald Annual Fund $4737 85% John M. Alden Robert H. Boyer ""NoelC. Dalton "George M. Furnival """"Clayton H. Griffin John M. Hemphill II t """"JohnC. Kinahan """"Morgan B. MacDonald "Marion C. Rinehart """"Charles B.Straut """"Henry P. Sullivan t Class of 1944 William H. Brownlee Annual Fund $7407 76% " " * "Edward Jouett Armstrong """"Henry S. Baker Jr. Donald B. Barrows """"Robert T. Boyd III """"William H. Brownlee John K. Cowperthwaite """"William A. Crump Jr. """"William F.Davis Jr. """H. Lawrence Parker Henry G. Parker III """"William D.Rogers " " "Prentice Talmage Jr. "Davis A. Washburn Class of 1945 Gaston V. Jones Jr. 100% Annual Fund $30272 ""James A. Bacon "" "Alexander R. Beard """"JohnS. Cook """"Richard P. Davis """"Dwight M. Dunlevie """WilliamS. Hearn """"William C. Hewlett ""Thomas M. Jervey """"Gaston V.Jones Jr. "Arthur P. Laws ""Edward K.Libby ""Douglas G. Lovelljr. """Levin M. Lynch "Richard G. Patch "John H. Rood "James R. Rooney II """"Robert F. Schelling """"CharltonM. Theusjr. " Charles H. Welling Jr. "" "David K.Witheford Class of 1946 Luther R. Campbell Jr. Annual Fund $4190 73% Daniel G. Anderson Jr. """"David O.Bellis Barry A. Benepe """Luther R.Campbell Jr. """"J. McHenry Gillet """"Donald D. Haynsworth " "James M. Perry Clarkson N. Potter """Mark Reeve " " "James M. Richardson "Kenneth W. VanDyke Class of 1947 Francis Giammattei Jr. William W. McDowell Jr. Annual Fund $8625 74% """"Richard M. Appleby Jr. "Brian B. Barlow ""Landon C. Burns ""Stephen J. Chamberlin "Charles O. Culver Jr. """Francis Giammattei Jr. ""JohnR. Hodgdon """C.Russell Keep Jr. """"Daniel W. MacDonald ""Timothy C. N. Mann "Peter K. McCagg ""William W. McDowell Jr. """"Edgar R. Miller Jr. Franklin B. Olmsted "James O. Stokes Robert L. Taylor ""Woodlief Thomas Jr. Class of 1948 Richard S. Smith Jr. Annual Fund $10785 39% ""James F. Adams " Craig Alderman Jr. ""Sargent Bradlee Jr. """Richard E. Broome "Robert S. Cornell Thomas A. Deveny III Gregory L. Gibson John D. Gray " " " "Henry N. Herndon Jr. "Edwin A. Hoey John M. Hopkins David S. Humphries """"D. Charles Merriwether James C. Metts Jr. ""PaulJ. Register Jr. """RichardS. Smith Jr. ""Robbert H. van Mesdag " " ""Gilbert H. Van Note Jr. Herbert D. Vogel Jr. William S. Zuill ANNUAL FUND REPORT 2000 9 Class of 1949 Peter B. Obbard Annual Fund $16363 69% **ColemanE. Bye Jr. * Gerry W. Cox Jr. ** Robert B. Evans Stephen S. Evans ""Edward H. Fielding * William B. Groves Jr. Philip Johnson Jr. * Patterson Keller *"""James M. McSherry *Purnal L. McWhorter III M. Barnard Megargee Peter B. Obbard John F. Perry II Stephen E. Price John T. Stoner * Robert F. Thomson ****Constantine N. Tonian * George B. Vest Jr. Class of 1950 Stuart J. Bracken Annual Fund $24885 70% * " Robert S. Appleby "***William D. Bathurst * Stuart J. Bracken Morton H. Clark ""Henry L. Constable Jr. """Murdoch Davis ****HarknessG. DeVoe John D. Fairchild ****O. Wells Foster David B. Harned """"JohnD. Hukill """" Clarence H.Keller Maurice Kemp Richard C. Leonard """"William T. Murray III ****Roger D. Redden Richard H. Thompson Henry V. P. Wilson III Class of 1951 W. Barrett Register Annual Fund $10160 87% Robert P. Auersch """" David C.Bryan * Richard J. Corbin Hall Downes *John B. Fiedler " * * Samuel L. Fleming David L. Foster " **Alan C. Good *Armistead L. Guthery **JohnS. Halsted ** Roland F. Hartman Jr. Hume A. Horan ****David Lindsay * * Matthew J. McDermott Jr. William F. Murphy III *'Thomas W. Osborn Jr. """Thomas J. Patton "P. Stephen Pell **W. Barrett Register **----Thomas P. Robinson Sr. """David E. Scherer """" G.Leonard Shea ***Frederick B. Starr """Daniel Trimper IV 10 ANNUAL FUND REPORT 2000 William H. Whitehead " "" Noel B.Wright Jr. Class of 1952 Theodore L. Hill Jr. Annual Fund $4410 ""''Anonymous """T. Roberts Appel II """"J. Caleb Boggs Jr. "'Sidney B. Brinckerhoff ***"'DouglasS. Brodie * * * * James B. Bullitt III """"Harry B. Cannon Jr. """JohnD. Creadick * Matthew J. Ellis Jr. "Walter B. Fielding ""Robert V. Harned * " * "Theodore L. Hill Jr. David S. Jenkins "•""William H.Johnson * " Charles W. Kenney """"Julien H. LeCompte **C. Henry Roth II "Chaloner B. Schley *"""Galen H. Townley ***G. Carter Werth ****L. HerndonWerth "•Richard W. Williams Jr. """•""Robert E. Young Richard S. Pettus M. Alex Philippi Jr. James R. Speer Lawrence E. Wood 74% Class of 1953 Robert T. Oliphant Jr. 77% Annual Fund $6618 """"Clay Bridgewater ""Hugh N. Cannon David P. Giammattei ****W Howard Hart * * " '"Frederick E. Klutey Jr. "'David N. Levinson """" William D.Luke Jr. David T. McCune ****Lawrence D. Milligan Jr. " " * "Robert T. Oliphant Jr. "•"""""• Harrison H. Owen ""Stephen F. Penn ****Charles T. Pickett """"Thomas F. Quirk "•Richard R. Schulze G. Stephen Voorhees II Arthur St. C. Wright Class of 1954 P. Churchill Hutton III Annual Fund $5050 71% Bruce Bahr """ "Charles M.Barclay *B. Norris Battin * * George J. Baxter ***"'David P. Campbell Norris B. Chamberlin "Anthony W. Clark ****A. Clements Crowe "" * * G. Jeremy Cummin Douglas J. Evans "Robert M. Foster "Norris S. Haselton Jr. " " * "Anthony W. Hathaway "" "James H.Healy Jr. """"P. Churchill Hutton III """"Walter L. Liefeld """Ian C. Maclnnes Class of 1955 C. Stephen Baldwin Annual Fund $1750 C. Stephen Baldwin Lawrence F. Bateman Jr. Peter S. Dunning John C. Ferguson Thomas H. Heist III """"C.Powell Hutton Harry A. Jarvis Jr. " " "Howe Lagarde Jr. George G. Macintire James B. McGiffert "" George B. Mitchell Robert M. Nuckols ""Robert H. Robinson Rick N. Teuscher David D. Thombs Werner R. Voigt Jr. """"John I. Watson Jr. "C. E.John Way Jr. Rex P. Winters 73% Class of 1956 W. William A. Cox 70% Annual Fund $2400 Geoffrey C. Abbott Stover L. Babcock II R. Berle Clay """"Kenneth E. Court W. William A. Cox "Stephen B. Duke John G. Gregory "Leland T. James Roy Kimmel """J. Reynolds LeBus Jr. """"Thomas B. O'Rourke """C. Richard Orth Edward E. Pierce III " "Jehu D. Quillin III W. B. Peter Rodgers Raymond W. Russell John K. Atchley """"John P. Burkettjr. """Elliott G. Fishburne III *"""Joseph H. Gibson Charles E. Hamilton III John L. Hammer III """"Lawrence R. Harris Jr. """"David D.Hindle *""Joseph H. Hinnant ""Charles V.Hulick Jr. F. Ross King Jr. "Charles F. Miller III R. Wesley Mutchler Jr. """"Douglas M. Pell Thomas D. Perrie """"H. Hickman Rowland Jr. William M. Shettle II "James P. Thomas """W Moorhead Vermilye II Stephen S. Washburne ""James J.B. Wigglesworth " " " " J. Donald Woodruff Jr. Class of 1959 Andrew J. Adams Jr. Annual Fund $11185 78% " " "Andrew J. Adams Jr. """"Coleman P. Brown II """"Russell W. Chesney """"Robert R. Craighill Stuart B. Culleney Eric M. Godshalk Philip D. Goiran James A. Grady III "William H. Grubb """"Hunter B.Harris Jr. "Arthur E. Haycock Jr. """G.William Helm Jr. Randolph Marshall II Edward P. McCabe "Walter D. Phillips "Warner W. Price "" "Robert E.Seddon Jr. "David M. Shields Class of 1957 Robert J. Shank 56% Annual Fund $2900 Michael K. Bateman " " "Timothy J. Bloomfield """"George A. Brakeley III William O. Britt """William H. Clayton """JohnM. Cogswell "Anthony J. Jeffcott " " "John F. Kramer Jr. Charles S. Marshall "William M. Nuckols Michael L. Quillin Thomas N. Rightmyer """ Robert J. Shank """"Newell R. Washburn William S. Wood II Class of 1960 Carl B. Bear Annual Fund $9245 55% A. Gordon Appell Carl B. Bear """"Asbury Coward IV Laurent C. Deschamps "Jesse R. Dowd Jr. Robert J. Faux "Brian D. Fisher Laurence L. Fitchett Jr. """"Edward H. Hammond Jr. " " " "D. Randolph Johnson Carl B. King """"Harry L.Murray III "Henry S. Pool Edwin N. Probert II Pieter B. Voorhees Stephen C. Walke Jr. Charles L. Wayne Robert J. Woodruff III Class of 1958 James J. B. Wiggles worth Annual Fund $10355 Bulent I. Atalay Class of 1961 Howard M. Snyder III Annual Fund $24425 68% "Conrad C. M. Arensberg 70% E. Buck Brinton Jr. John C. Chambers """"JohnC. Davie Peter M. Delo Jr. Thomas H. Field ^"Charles E. Hance ****Henry R. Hillenmeyer ****Richard A. Houghton III ****peter D. Laird * * George R. Mobley """" Allen B.Morgan Jr. * * ** Malcolm Muir Jr. John M. Pinney " * William M. Pope Jr. Peter H. Smith """*Howard M. Snyder III Thomas J. Stewart-Gordon Andrew D. Stone C. William Waechter Jr. " Randolph L. Williams Class of 1962 John S. Craighill Annual Fund $5512 ** Richard P. Baer III "Thomas E Bayard IV * James C. Beverley Henry A. Briele Jr. *"""James M. Bullock ***Lawrance M. Court Marshall W. Craig """"JohnS. Craighill * Ernest Cruikshank III * Chase C. Gove III ""JohnH. Gullett W. James Morgan Jr. * Charles D. Murphy III *John L. M. Roberts 50% Class of 1963 49% Annual Fund $2660 Eric N. Burkett ***Rushton T. Capers * *James H. Cooper Richard D. Crawford **Alan Crichton * George W.Forbes III *Harold B. Gordy Jr. *John M. Gustin *J. Ogden Hamilton ****Charles H. Heckscher Jr. *Kent S. Hughes ****David L. Loomis * * * * C. Brent McCaghren ***William Pfeifer III Robert M. Pyle *"John R. Schoonover George W. Shuster ** Robert W. Soderberg Jr. J. Kirk T. Varnedoe Class of 1964 Curtis M. Coward William B. Paul Jr. $52% Annual Fund $14217 * Dennis C. Blair ""James R. Boyd "-"-"-"-Randolph W. Brinton Barton C. Conchar "'Curtis M. Coward "Alfred K. Day III R. Samuel Dillon III William P. Hammond IV T. A. E. Moseley III "-"-"-"'Stephen H. Munroe "William B. Paul Jr. ****Barry M. Sabloff Curtis B. Snyder Thomas S. Snyder Class of 1965 O. Lee Tawes ffl 54% Annual Fund $41346 Julian T. Burke III """"Frederick W. Coleman """"J.Dick Harris ""R. Anderson Haynes """"J. Potter Herndon C. Peabody Hutton Prentice J. McNeelyt David A. McWethy John E Morton R. Robbins Romaine """"Jonathan C. Smith *O. Lee Tawes III Loudon S. Wainwright III """"David H.Walker Class of 1966 Clifford J. Nuttall III Annual Fund $8150 55% Gardner A. Cadwalader William Justin Comstock "W. Marks Dryden James M. McClaugherty Jr. " Clifford J. Nuttall III ""Anthony R. Parrish Jr. """"Timothy W.Peters """"John G. Reeve Andrew D. Ringle James K. Rogers " " " " Winthrop Schwab Jr. "George B. Smith """Edward M. Strong Edward Thornton Peyton R. Williams Jr. Kenneth H. Wilson Class of 1967 Jerry Fogle 42% Annual Fund $2235 William Carpender Amos "Wynne S. Carvill " " "Jerry Fogle " " " "Joseph L. Hargrove Jr. George Marshall Heiner Jr. "Walker A. Long Laurence B. Russell J. Andrew Sayre Jr. David S. Skinner Edward B. Sloan Franklin Y. Smith "Henry B. Smith Stewart S. Smith ""JohnJ. TolsonlV Class of 1968 42% Annual Fund $6339 "William C. Holder """Christopher L. Milner ""F.Taylor Peck III ""W. Robert Prier Jr. ""Christopher P. Reeve ""Andrew W. Reynolds William Z. Rogers ""JohnD. ShowelllV "R. Marshall Thompson "Edward R. Trippe III William G. Tucker III ""Arthur Vandenberg Peter D. Washburn Class of 1969 Charles E. M. Kolb William B. Smtih 41% Annual Fund $2875 "Walter Scott Beard * "Peter D. Caloger Jr. Arthur A. Carota Jr. " " " "William Frantz Herr Jr. Charles E. M. Kolb David L. Lyon Peter A. Maxson Malcolm Edwin McGee David Olav Moltke-Hansen Stephen V. Noble Brian P. Randall Jr. Nicholas R. Scheller Robert Lanier Sides Albert Simons III William B. Smith " "Peter S. Wood Class of 1970 William C. Strong Annual Fund $14950 46% """"William H.Barney III "William R. Brownfield W. Allen Chesney "Robert Clagett Christopher G. Cleghorn ""David H. Davis "LeoM. Dulinjr. """James I. Hudson III Mark C. Leonard """"Arthur M. Miller ""David A. Olson Toby R. Roberts "" "Joseph L.Seiler III "Alan C. Sibert ""Thomas C. Stephens "" "William C. Strong " " "J. Kent Sweezey Class of 1971 Brian C. G. Kinahan Annual Fund $2900 43% John H. Barber Jr. J. Dixon Brown Richard G. Colbert Jr. Steven C. Hartsell ""Michael A. Hill William Holman """"Thomas H. Hooper III "" "Brian C.G. Kinahan "" "James S. McBride """Frank H.Merrill Gilbert E. Metcalf Sheldon K. Parker """"Charles H. Shorley Bjarne Strikert ""Richard C. Wieboldt John W. Wright Class of 1972 William C. Bean Annual Fund $7662 43% ""R. Stewart Barroll "William C. Bean " " "Edwin John Bernet Jr. James A. Govatos David B. Harms Philip W. Hoon Robert C. Lightburn John M. Maull R. Christian Millar " "David D. Mills """AlanB. Pinkerton Jr. Thomas O. Rayner "Paul Olof Swanson Class of 1973 Samuel R. Marshall Everett R. McNair Annual Fund $3285 27% Anonymous Ian G. Brownlee William D. Cantler II """G. Mitchell Edmondson "Michael D. Gouge "Alfons Gunnemann """Everett R. McNair """Peter A. Presby """Gerald G. Rue Class of 1974 F. Joseph Hickman Annual Fund $7920 49% Marshall M. Barroll Thomas J. Berrigan ""Russell E.Boyle John R. Eisenbrey Jr. """"J.Lyles Glenn IV * "David M. Hatton ""Henry Hauptfuhrer IV """"F.Joseph Hickman Eric C. Howard ""F. Matthew Kramer William P. C. Ku Carl Melamet III """"Edgar R. Miller III John C. Mincks "Jeff A. Petty Robert P. Rementer Edwin L. Sibert III """Gregory E. van der Vink Class of 1975 Ralph D. Neel Annual Fund $20495 "Lars P. Allfather "Robert C. Amos "" "Alfred D. Barbour John M. Bloxom IV Dwayne S. Breger Susanne Brogan """Gordon E. Brownlee Dianne L. Carter John C. Grumpier Louise H. Dewar 77% ANNUAL FUND REPORT 2000 11 Christopher T. Gale James K. Gerrish Thomas D. Gleason Samuel H. Goodfellow Robert H. Greenlee Rafael J. Guastavino Jr. * * * * Robert J. Harrington Jr. Terry L. Hartsell "C. Dallett Hemphill Eve G. Kadick J. Michael Kadick Christopher M. Kennedy """"Thomas O. Lawton III Gregory S. Marsh Thomas B. McCoy Marcia M. Moore **RalphD.Neel Elizabeth D. Peloso Jonathan F. Rodgers William H. Shields III Dewees F. Showell III Virginia E. Silva Richard A. Snyder ""J. David Strong J. Christopher Walsh Norman C. Ware Laura W. Ziock Class of 1976 Ralph R. Hickman Susan M. Moon Annual Fund $7785 41% *** C.Douglas Evans Ralph R. Hickman G. Marshall Kent Jr. ****Michael K. Kuehlwein *A. Dodge McFall Jr. ***"Patricia K. McGee G. James McNaughton * Susan M. Moon Paul B. Rada Heyward G. Robinson Russell D. Salter John M. Seabrook Jr. D wight D. Sipprelle ***BryanA. Skib Scott D. C. Stanard Michael M. Stephanides Linn S. Tompkins III * Thomas E. Washburn "Joan J. Dickerson Woods Class of 1977 Carolyn Matthews Annual Fund $4626 49% "" Steven H. Brownlee John J. Dewar """MarkS. Govatos * * * James M. Hudson Jr Peter G. Jacoby * Robin J. LaPerle """Carolyn Matthews **Tamara Z. Maull """"Roberts. Palmer Alexis Foster Reed A. Alexander Rhodes Daniel W. Rogerson Laura Goodrich Rosenberg Steven Donegan Salter 12 ANNUAL FUND REPORT 2000 Jonathan F. Starr Marc G. Taylor Charles A. Waters ****Catherine M. Wendt Jeffrey B. Wilgis ** Charles G. Wingate Class of 1978 Garrett J. Hart Annual Fund $4336 47% h **Axel G. Amaya *Anne Rhodes Amos * Scarlett Halsted Carey * Patrick Dewar * Roberta Fry Dewar *Paul A. Hannah ** Garrett J. Hart Sarah C. Hukill-Berninger Margaret B. Judge """ R.Paul Kress Jr. Martha R. S. Lube Wendy S. Moore "William C. Mott Jr. * * * Ellen O. Nelson Kevin P. Nerlinger Elizabeth B. O'Brien "" "Ashton W. Richards Thomas E. Schreppler Thomas B. Sewell ** Cathy B. Shields Aubrey C. Smoot III ***Brenneman L. Thompson "Gregory S. Tonian "James M. Wendt "L. Elizabeth Westcott "William T. White III """Louisa Hemphill Zendt Class of 1979 Michael D. Berrigan Annual Fund $3420 *• --Virginia B. Ashpole David B. Brown Richard A. Chubb """Keely M.Clifford """Robert J. Falciani James P. Grandfield "Robert Kirk Jones Jr. "" "Kevin T. Kuehlwein """Margaret M. Lawton "" "Michael B.Lilley Janet Brownlee Luke William D. Luke III """Catherine A. May ""Matthew J. Ruggiero "Suzanne H. Seger Elizabeth Beard Stillings """Carrie B. Waters "" "Herbert E. Wilgis III Robert F. Zach Edward J. Lake Robin Gage Lilly Claire Nevin-Field Daniel A. Nolte Louise B. Nomer """Franchesa M. Profaci ""Mary A. Sella Judi Skelton Spann Vincent W. Spoltore "Martha Richards Valciukas Adam A. Waldron Class of 1981 Elizabeth Bleke Clark Eric A. Ellisen Annual Fund $7325 36% ""W. Kenneth Baker Leslie C. Beard "Daniel P. Bennett "Elizabeth Bleke Clark """JohnW. CullenlV "" Gillian T. Davies Katherine Kunz Delaplane """Eric A. Ellisen " "Michael K. Gewirz Todd E. Golde Stephanie Markus Kandarian Karin Lindfors Chandler Barnes Luke Church M. Matthews """William M. McClements ""JohnWParadee """DonaldS. Ratledge Jr. Christopher L. Rhodes """Susan Guernsey Rohrer Khalil G. Saliba Scott M. Sipprelle Frederick A. Townsend III Margaret Wenzell Waldron "Scott D. Zimmerman 45% Class of 1980 Judi S. Spann 40% Annual Fund $7251 Iwan Antonow ""Kate Rentschler Ausbrook ""Robert D. Colburn Letitia Hickman Green Richard J. Green Jr. ""Timothy H. Hanna Class of 1982 Paul W. Eichler Annual Fund $4278 49% "Janet Washburn Acker Maria Antonow "Thomas L. Bauhan "" Richard J. Beach ""John A. Buda Keith S. Cavanaugh "James W. Clements Bruce G. Colburn " Craig W.Cullen Jr. "Mark M. Dimmick """Paul W Eichler Margaret Fitts Andrew C. Florance ""Kevin J. Grandfield Frederick S. Groves Anna W. Ill Theodore E. Johnson "Shannon H. Kuehlwein ""Jeffrey B.Lilley ""Edith M.Mac Arthur John McCaffery "Lydia Jarrett Montgomery "Eric J. Olson "" Christian B. Profaci Andrew L. Seymour "David Van Smith Jr. ""Arraminta A. R. Ware Gretchen Rada Willingham Class of 1983 Anne Percy Sargent Annual Fund $6110 "Yong-Son Woo Basta "" "Stephen L. Billhardt """BentleyH. Burnham ""Edmond Yi-Teh Chang Brent W. Geissinger ""Matthew H. Herndon "" "Jennifer M. Kern Amy B. Markowitz Jacqueline Paradee Mette Ann O'Shaughnessy Robert D. Owens """KarlH. Pupke Jill K. Rogers """Anne Percy Sargent Brian D. Shockley Philip R. Smith """Marnie M. Stetson """Cynthia J. Tostevin Plummy K. Tucker 37% Class of 1984 Mary Ashton Roberts Annual Fund $16112 51% * " "Stephanie Jones Ahl Michael K. Atalay Elizabeth B. Baird ""Jay H. Blum "Mara E. Burnett Timothy L. Cohn Daniel M. del Sobral Beth Williams Ellingwood ""Pierson Friend Eric R. Gamble """Nada Saliba Hart "Bonnie D. Hillman """Mary Buffington Jenkins Elizabeth B. O'Brien Berl Kathryn Nevin Outten James O. Patterson III """Anne Horton Pius "Markus Pottgiesser Alfred H. Rayne "Mary Ashton Roberts "Charles J. Schumacher Gregory S. Shivery "Gregory B. Stevens Valerie M. Stevens Eric B. Twombly Jason J. Walker "Michael J. Whalen "Gail E. Wright William L. Wrightson III Michael C. Zimmer Class of 1985 Ian B. Montgomery Annual Fund $4543 "Gerald M. Alexander ""Ann Sawyer Chilton ""Michael H.Collins Viviana Rodriguez Davila Ashley Tompkins Devery Pauline T. Dolan Wendy R. Downing 46% ""Jill Willock Caron Maria D. Wood *Aili Zheng Anthony B. Eagleton Heather M. Egan Dale A. Forbes Jennifer L. Frost * * ""Anne M. Gammons * Steven B. Gewirz **Hugo M. Heriz-Smith Graham A. Houghton ***Pieter B. Kooistra * * Carl N. Kunz III Nadejda S. Mishkovsky "•"•"•Ian B. Montgomery '"Barry J. Ohlson Louisa S. Potter Austin Reed * * Robert Q. Scacheri Carl B. Smith Jr. **Erica A. Stetson Dietrich vonStechow Class of 1986 Amy L. Barto Annual Fund $3735 Edward H. Amaya * **Amy L. Barto Robert C. Beams * Gregory H. Dorn "Debra Page Dunford Kimberly A. Folts *John T. Gordy * Stefan Granito Edward H. Hammond III Dawn A. Hillman Robert T. Jordan * Brian C. Kotz ** Laura L. Loessner Heather N. McAvoy Andrew K. Meyer Anne H. Montesano * Marie J. Nash Hardy Laurence Stewart Sawyer Alexander C. Stancioff "James P. Thomas Jr. William B. Whitmoyer David A. Wike 34% Class of 1987 Gregory Doyle 34% Annual Fund $2945 Anonymous Stephen Arms Laurie A. Burnett Matthew Castano Donald H. Fletcher Marina Glad Stephen Gratwick Michael Crawford Keenan **Matthias Lilienthal Lawrence H. Martin III Alex Northrup **VickiKlumb O'Neill W. Hunter Old Kibbey S. Perry Crumbley * Sherry Gamble Punches Karen Pupke Annette Rickolt C. Hamilton Sloan """'Sandra Tarburton *Harry R. Tear III Leeanna Varga Class of 1988 Jennifer Hurtt Mullins 36% Annual Fund $4792 Jennifer Jones Arms ""Anne Margaret Baxley Elizabeth C. Baxter Butcher Katherine E. Bunting-Howarth "'"•Arthur C. Butcher John C. Chamberlin **Leif P. Christoffersen "-"'Alice P. Duffee Coneybeer "Kellie S. Doucette "'Ian Edmundson Julia Elliott Morton Gibbons-Neff Laurie Farr Hanks "-Heather L. Hillman * "Jennifer Hurtt Mullins * David Johnson Brandon Mathews Lyle B. Nelson "'Frederick Patzman " " William L. Sibley * * A. Whitney Siddons Albert Simons IV ** Susan E. Stoops ""Elaine C. Thomas Richard B. Vaughan Class of 1989 Susan Willock Annual Fund $3933 61% Megin Adams Jennifer Beams James P.M. Borghardt James J. Bruin Corinna Calhoun Mimi E. Court Ari K. Ellis ""Robb W. Ellis Richard E. Hall Elizabeth Hammond Pyle "-""Jennifer S. Hanna John Andrew Hill Keary A. Jenkins ""Gregory M. King Kristen Z. Kreuzkamp James M. Lai D. Hobson Lane *P. Marlies Lissack " ""Alexander M. McCandless Lee C. McGill Patrick W. Montgomery H. Howard Moorin Jr. Sara O'Connor Timothy R. Ortman ""Mark L. Padden Adam D. Perry Thomas Pinckney Catherine S. Pomeroy Tomas A. Puky "'William Dixon Shay Emilie G. Sinkler " "'William B. Spire Einar Storm Trosdal Victor P. van Buchem Thomas Coburn Whitmoyer "" Susan Willock ""Amy E. Wilson Christopher C. Zimmer Class fo 1990 Sarah Savage Hebert Carey McDaniel Koppenhaver Ridie R. Lazar Annual Fund $10950 61% "Elizabeth W. Becker Gretchen Bensinger Nicholas C. Blum Giles R. Borghardt Jennifer L. Boynton Christopher A. Brown Taylor F. Cameron * Emily W. S. Caspersen Linda Schneider Cowperthwaite * Caroline C. Davies Steven A. Dean ""Andrew C. Dennis Elizabeth D. Dunton Amy E. Fawcett Joaquin W. Gubb "Michael P. Harrell "Sarah Savage Hebert "Catherine van Ogtrop Hoffberger W. Callender Hurtt III Mildred B. Joyner ""Cynthia Roselle Koenig "Carey McDaniel Koppenhaver "Ridie R. Lazar "Brian Leipheimer Rolando G. Marquez Robert C. Mattson Patrick Scott McClary Jeffrey L. Miller Elizabeth G. Pierce "Claire B. Reid Gregory C. Rhodes Sunita B. Sierros Earl E. Walker Jr. A. Carter Meyer Wilcox McClelland W. Wilcox Amanda W. Woods Class of 1991 Aubrey W. Armentrout Annual Fund $2675 34% "Jonathan Alexander "Aubrey W. Armentrout Andrew L. Butters Christopher P. Chesney "Edward E. Cotsen Katherine M. Fischer "Robert F. Fogelman II "Elizabeth R. Hance "John Colin Harrington James S. Hayes III James G. Hooker "P. Reynolds Lockhart Haven H. Long "Thaddeus R. McBride Timothy W. Peters Jr. Laura A. Shaffer Anna G. Vocino "Alexandra L. von Raab "Edwin D. Williamson Jr. Jason L. Woody "Edith S. Wun Class of 1992 A. Joy McGrath Annual Fund $2120 Christos T. Adamopoulos "Anne Bond Archie James F. B. Armstrong Glen A. Brenner Quincy A. Brown Joshua R. Charlton Brian L. Court Christina Court John E. Court Stephanie A. Gibson Frank S. Green Sarah P. Hammond Courtney D. Heimowitz Ty V Jones Tyson C. Kade Christopher T. Klinefelter "John Paul Lopez "A. Joy McGrath Elizabeth C. Moore Cyrus H. Philpott M. Theresa Rosas "George L. Simpson IV Kathryn Still Robert A. Toomey William A. Worth Class of 1993 Francis W. Crawley Jr. Annual Fund $1625 William M. Braxton Richard P. Carrell "Peter H. Cook "Francis W. Crawley Jr. "Halimah D. DeLaine "James Edwards Timothy A. Fallaw A. Kearney Harrington Adrian A. Keevil Katherine S. Keltner Douglas Kiker Abigail B. McBride "Leigh G. McCandless Matthew D. Meredith "Margret W. Musser "Megan L. Peters Charles E. Pratt Elizabeth S. Reynolds Lisa D. Rich "Elizabeth M. Rivinus Tasha G. Soroosh Abigail A. White "Carolyn H. Wirth Class of 1994 Anne L. Bolno Annual Fund $1360 "Anne L. Bolno "Erin I. Burnett "Jennifer R. Cheek "Edward S. Digges III "Kenneth H. Ditzel "Samantha K. Doherty "Heather L. Evans Patricia N. Evans 42% 35% 34% ANNUAL FUND REPORT 2000 13 Megan R. Forney *Anne W. Hance Caroline I. Hoogenboom Andrew W. Mahlstedt Charles H. Meyer James R. Neal III Alexis E. Nuti-de Biasi Alethea Y. Papson Virginia C. Purrington * Elizabeth T. Sahs * Emily C. Snyder Anna M. Stancioff Jonathan P. Williams Doris D. Short Katherine B. Sidebottom Emmett S. Stinson Allison P. Thomas Brian W Wright Class of 1995 Andrew D. Sykes Annual Fund $1490 40% Desiree E. Bliss Stephanie S. Bruder Cynthia A. Coggeshall Jack A. Comstock * Wilson C. Everhart III Katherine D. Fisher Shelley E. Haley Frederick J. Heinle III Nicki P. Hill * Camellia K. Ibrahim Jennifer C. Joseph Heather A. Kordish-Tanner W. Elliott Lane E. Bruce McEvoy IV Jonathan L. Newcomb Brian J. Palacios Anush M. Parikh Mackenzie H. Pitcairn Andrew M. Reynolds Ulla M. Rickert Kelly D. Schimmel Cristina M. Stenbeck D. Matthew Surles Andrew D. Sykes Joshua S. Tayloe *Jane C. Weaver Talley D. Wettlaufer Class of 1996 Brianne C. McCarthy Sc Doris D. Short Annual Fund $715 Lindsay C. Allen Nicholas A. Barker J. Eric Calder Mary Snowden Crawley Melissa C. Cull Megan M. Doherty Kristin I. Douglas Virginia C. Hamner Alexander H. Handy Reginald J. Hargrove Katherine K. Harrington R. Taylor Horner Emily I. Jensen Augusta H. Keevil Alexandra C. Koprowski Lindley Kratovil Timothy L. Laramy Elizabeth M. McCann Brianne C. McCarthy James G. Reeve Jonathan B. Rickert 14 ANNUAL FUND REPORT 2000 41% Class of 1997 Anne E. Riley George S. Hutton William B. Robinson III Megan L. Wright Annual Fund $1575 58% Margaret M. Alexander Meredith L. Blake Brian M. Bullard Geoffrey V. Carson Alexandra L. Cox John St. Clair Craighill Jr. Ashley Brooke Digges Charles P. Durkin Veronica M. Erard Holly E. Fling Moira S. Forbes Morgan E. Foster Jeffrey L. Gable Logan F. D. Greenlee William W Hamilton William F. Herr III George S. Hutton Harvey R. Johnson Mary Katherine Keeley Benjamin G. Kennedy J. Kirk Kieffer Rebecca L. Koch John K. Landay Serena H. Lehman Randolph McEvoy Dominic J. Menei J. Payne E. Miller Amol M. Parikh Rachel C. Pfeiffer Sebastian P. Ramos Anne E. Riley William B. Robinson III Eva S. Sayre Sarah S. Siebert Andrew M. Smith Robert H. Veghte Kathryn L. Wafle Tonette A. Williams Megan L. Wright Class of 1998 Michael L. Everhart Katherine T. Werble Annual Fund $1015 Luke S. Baer Tucker H. Ballard Mary P. Battle Paul D. Burnette B. Pringle Claypoole Anne P. Close Nathaniel B. Court Emily H. Etherington Michael J. Evans Michael L. Everhart Peter S. Frantz James L. Granum Jr. M. Penn Graves Bradley B. Hirsh 36% Max M. Hofer James T. Jenkins Jr. Daniel Hsing-Po Kang Nikki D. Mowbray Cristin N. O'Brien May B. Satterfield Jamila Trindle Katharine B. Vlcek Katherine T. Werble Jenell P. Williams Class of 1999 Samuel C. duPont Liza J. H. Green Annual Fund $810 Robert F. Baldwin III Cynthia A. Barker Patricia J. Bugg Joshua P. Coleman Stephen P. Comstock Meredith Q. Counts Marie B. Devine Jonathan Downs Samuel C. duPont Sally C. Flippin Claire M. Foster Liza J. H. Green Charles W. W. Hance P. Bennett Harrington Colin C. Heinle Julie F. Holderness Robin T. Juliano Ann M. Keeley Molly E. Laramy Sarah J. Marvel Nicholas R. McDonough Daniel R. Mones Christopher W. Moneta Ronald C. Owens Mark D. Phillips Elizabeth C. Pilkington Helen C. Smith Jessica G. Walter Laura R. Westfall 40% Note: Italicized names represent those parents having more than one child at St. Andrew's. Dr. & Mrs. Jerry Fogle Ms. Kathleen Gerard Ms. Sheri Gilbreath Mr. & Mrs. Michael C. Goeller Ms. Susan Goldsworthy *Mrs. Elizabeth B. Grant Dr. & Mrs. John W. Gray Mr. & Mrs. Andrew J. Hall Mr. & Mrs. Robert P. Hammell Mr. & Mrs. F. Joseph Hickman *Dr. & Mrs. Benjamin K. Hirsh *Ms. Mary S. Jones *Mr. & Mrs. H. Nelson Keyser III Prof. & Mrs. Dong-Hyun Kim Mr. & Mrs. Ki Ho Kim Dr. & Mrs. Sidney K. King Mr. & Mrs. William S. Lange Mr. & Mrs. Tarlton H. Long Mrs. Wilma Long Dr. & Mrs. Nelson T. Macedo *Mr. & Mrs. Thomas R. Marvel Ms. Brigitte McKinney Mr. & Mrs. Shozo Miyahara Mr. & Mrs. C. Walker Morris Ms. Louise A. Morse Mr. & Mrs. Richard C. V. Nicoll Mr. & Mrs. William R. Osier Mr. & Mrs. Hugh S. Park Mr. & Mrs. David C. Patterson Mr. & Mrs. Michael D. Pearce *Mr. & Mrs. Steven B. Pfeiffer Mr. & Mrs. David M. Post Mr. & Mrs. Joseph B. Rhame Mrs. Susanne Rhame Mr. & Mrs. Barry M. Sabloff Mrs. Caroline W. Salas Mr. Peter E. Salas Dr. & Mrs. George S. Scoville Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Alan C. Sibert Mr. & Mrs. V! Reitzel Snider Mr. & Mrs. Talbot J. Taylor Mr. & Mrs. Stuart E. Teach Mr. Frank A. Venutolo & Ms. Barbara Lewis Mr. & Mrs. Douglas A. Warner III Mr. & Mrs. Jack B. Wilkinson Mr. & Mrs. Michael L. Wolinski V FORM PARENTS * Anonymous Mr. & Mrs. Sigurd L. Andersen *Mr. & Mrs. Michael W. Battle Ms. Barbara J. Bear VI FORM PARENTS Mr. Carl B. Bear Richard P. Baer III & Dr. & Mrs. Joseph W. Behl Priscilla E. Small Mr. & Mrs. Christopher D. Brady Mr. & Mrs. I. William Bagwell IV Mr. & Mrs. C. S. Balasubramanian *Dr. & Mrs. Joseph R. Calder Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Richard T. Carraher Mr. & Mrs. Dean R. Barber Mr. & Mrs. Ralph Cortes Dr. & Mrs. John M. Bergland *Mr. & Mrs. Richard L. Counts III Rev. & Mrs. R. Bruce Birdsey Mr. George C. Covington & **Mr. & Mrs. Stephen L. Bowers Mrs. Claudia Carter Covington *Mr. & Mrs. Peter A. Bozick Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Frank H. Craighill *Dr. & Mrs. Neil W. Brayton Mr. & Mrs. Gardner A. Cadwalader The Rev. Robert A. Davenport Mr. & Mrs. Howard H. Callaway Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Antelo Devereux Mr. & Mrs. John F. Devlin Mr. & Mrs. William Clarkson IV Ms. Sharon Dildy Dr. & Mrs. Lawrence J. Conell Mr. & Mrs. Walter E. Constantine Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Donald H. Duffy Mr. 8c Mrs. John R. Eisenbrey Jr. *Mr. & Mrs. W. Michael Cordeiro Mr. & Mrs. C. Greg Ellison Mr. & Mrs. Stanley C. Daise Mr. & Mrs. Thomas H. DeLashmutt Ms. Melanie Taylor Farland Mr. & Mrs. Byron Grant Mr. & Mrs. David P. DeSalvo Mr. & Mrs. C. Swanson Graves Ms. Melanie Taylor Farland **Mr. & Mrs. Robert A. Fischer Jr. Dr. & Mrs. Cesar Guerrero Mr. & Mrs. Richard F. Hall III *Mr. & Mrs. E. Gary Harney Mr. Guy C. Heckman Ms. Joyce Hensleigh & Mr. Gustavo Muzzolon Mr. & Mrs. Ehr-Ping HuangFu Mr. & Mrs. P. Churchill Hutton III Dr. & Mrs. Ronald D. Jackson Mr. & Mrs. Gary M. Jastrab Mr. & Mrs. Peter A. Jay *Mr. & Mrs. James T. Jenkins Mr. &C Mrs. Tongsheng Jing Mr. & Mrs. Davis L. Kennedy Mr. John B. Kiesling & Ms. Phyllis Ann Graham Dr. & Mrs. Sidney K. King *Ms. Catherine Kinsey & Mr. Clinton Smullyan Jr. Dr. & Mrs. Dean Kumpuris Ms. Ann S. Larkum Mr. & Mrs. Yue Liu Mr. & Mrs. Mark Madeley Mr. & Mrs. Michael McGrath Mr. & Mrs. W. Sanford Miller Jr. Mr. & Mrs. John P. Minneman Mr. & Mrs. Robert T. Monk Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Jeffrey M. Noe *Mr. & Mrs. John Orban *Mr. & Mrs. Benjamin C. Paden Jr. Mr. Jayson L. Pahlmeyer Mr. & Mrs. Charles J. Payne Mr. & Mrs. Richard B. Payne Mr. & Mrs. Russell Pennoyer Ms. Sally E. Pingree Mr. Sumner Pingree III Dr. & Mrs. Mark A. Rackish Mr. & Mrs. John L. M. Roberts Drs. Harry P. & Susan K. Ross Dr. & Mrs. Stephen G. Sanders Mr. & Mrs. Michael C. Schuller *Mr. & Mrs. Francis W. Smith Mr. & Mrs. V. Reitzel Snider Mr. Stephen J. Stephanou Mr. 6t Mrs. Thomas C. Stephens Mr. & Mrs. Roger H. Taft Mr. Clifford Tall & Ms. Sylvia Payne Drs. Chris M. & Lillian M. Teigland Mr. & Mrs. John Turcik Mr. & Mrs. James D. Walcott Jr. Dr. & Mrs. Jeffrey M. Wieland Mr. & Mrs. Peyton R. Williams Jr. Mr. & Mrs. John F. Woods Mr. & Mrs. Randolph L. Worth Mr. & Mrs. John P. Wright IV FORM PARENTS * Anonymous Mr. & Mrs. Ian Abernethy *Dr. & Mrs. Edward L. Alexander III *Mr. & Mrs. C. Chadwick Ballard Jr. Mr. William J. Bostian & Ms. Sally D. Adkins Mr. & Mrs. Chester Brandes Mr. & Mrs. Cartielyn Buckle *Dr. & Mrs. Andrew Bud wig Mr. & Mrs. Thomas J. Burns Mr. & Mrs. Howard H. Callaivay Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Christopher S. Carey Mr. & Dr. Pierre Cournot Mr. & Mrs. Leslie Cox III Mr. & Mrs. W. Thomas Dolan Mr. & Mrs. Victor duPont Mr. & Mrs. David C. Eddy Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth A. Fry Mr. Anthony Gaeta Jr. Ms. Rebecca Gaeta Mr. & Mrs. Arthur A. Gosnell Mr. & Mrs. T. Chandler Hardwick **Mr. & Mrs. John F. Harrington Mr. & Mrs. O. Mason Hawkins Mr. Guy C. Heckman Mr. & Mrs. F. Joseph Hickman Mr. David E. James Mr. & Mrs. David M. Johns Mr. & Mrs. David M. Knott Sr. Mr. & Mrs. Haynes P. Lea Mrs. Shenyan Li Mr. William D. Matthews Mr. & Mrs. James T. Milam Mr. & Mrs. William S. Moorhead Mr. & Mrs. Peter C. Morse Mr. & Mrs. Robert P. Moser Mr. & Mrs. Frederic A. Muller Mr. & Mrs. Donald Munson Ms. Laura J. Murray Mr. & Mrs. William R. Osier Mr. & Mrs. Brian Palmer Mr. & Mrs. David Parshall Mr. & Mrs. Gordon B. Pattee Dr. & Mrs. Robert P. Penney Mr. Thomas D. Perrie & Ms. Nell Hemphill Jones Mr. & Mrs. B. Victor Pfeiffer Mr. & Mrs. Robert M. Pitts Dr. & Mrs. Francis W. Previti Mr. & Mrs. Peter F. Primiani Dr. & Mrs. Robert E. Purcell Jr. Mrs. Caroline W. Salas Mr. Peter E. Salas Mr. & Mrs. Henry B. Sethness Mr. & Mrs. Louis C. Shackelford Mr. & Mrs. Stephen A. Simon Mr. Charles H. Snead IV & Ms. Melinda Biddle Mr. &c Mrs. Edward Symes Mr. & Mrs. Talbot J. Taylor Mr. Bruce D. Troutman Ms. Mary Troutman Mr. & Mrs. Peter R. Unger Mr. & Mrs. William T. Wadsworth *Dr. Sarah Westcott Mr. & Mrs. Michael L. Wolinski Mr. & Mrs. Ya Sang Yang Dr. & Mrs. Lawrence Zarchin Mr. & Mrs. Irwin Zazulia Dr. & Mrs. Mark R. Zolnick HI FORM PARENTS Ms. Eva Ablorh Mr. & Mrs. John R. Allen Jr. Mr. William Carpender Amos & Ms. Josephine Eccel Ms. Barbara J. Bear Mr. Carl B. Bear Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Black *Mr. & Mrs. Peter A. Bozick Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Christopher D. Brady Mr. & Mrs. Gardner A. Cadwalader Mr. & Mrs. Bruce E. Carroll Mr. & Mrs. E. Eric Crawford Mr. & Mrs. Eliot W. Dalton Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Nicholas T. Exarhakis Ms. Melanie Taylor Farland Drs. David R. & Martha J. Finn Mr. & Mrs. Herman E. Gaskins Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Dirk D. Grove Mr. & Mrs. Lawrence W. Hendrickson *Ms. Mary S. Jones Mr. & Mrs. Davis L. Kennedy Dr. & Mrs. Kirk H. Kinney Drs. Christopher & Mary Koprowski Mr. & Mrs. Richard R. Kramer Mr. & Mrs. Mark Madeley Ms. Alexandra Matthai Mr. & Mrs. William T. Muir Mr. & Mrs. Jeffrey M. Noe Mr. & Mrs. William S. Peebles IV Ms. Jane C. Pitcher Dr. & Mrs. Mark A. Rackish Ms. Esperanza Ramirez Mr. & Mrs. Henry B. Rigdon Mr. & Mrs. Eugene B. Ruane Mr. & Mrs. Michael S. Sayre Mr. & Mrs. Thomas E. Slattery Dr. & Mrs. David H. Smith Mr. & Mrs. V. Reitzel Snider Mr. & Mrs. Clinton W. Stayton Mr. & Mrs. Timothy Sutherland Mr. & Mrs. Fraser I. Wallace Mr. & Mrs. Thomas L. Williams Mr. & Mrs. Thomas C. Wilson Mr. & Mrs. Douglas E. Wolfe Mr. & Mrs. G. Harvey Zendt PARENTS OF ALUMNI/AE Dr. & Mrs. Bal K. Agarwal ***Mr.& Mrs. Allan D. Aikens **Mr. & Mrs. Gerald N. Alexander Mr. & Mrs. Charles W. Allmon Mr. & Mrs. William H. Amos **Ms. Renee Andrews-DeLaine **Rev. & Mrs. Mark S. Anschutz Mr. & Mrs. Thomas E. Archie Mr. & Mrs. Broadus Bailey Jr. ***Mr. & Mrs. Richard A. Baker Mr. & Mrs. Robert F. Baldwin Jr. Ms. Carol J. Bancroft **Mr. & Mrs. George P. Barker *Mr. & Mrs. Stephen K. Barker *Mr. & Mrs. Richard J. Baroody *Mrs. Barbara Basciano *Mrs. Pauline M. Batchelder Dr. & Mrs. William W. Baxley Jr. ***Mrs. Douglas E. Baxter **Mrs. Edwin J. Bernet Rev. & Mrs. Craig Biddle III *Mr. & Mrs. Joseph G. Blake Dr. & Mrs. William R. Bloxom Mrs. Sally E. Borghardt Mr. & Mrs. Ernest Bostic Jr. *Rev. Dr. & Mrs. Samuel W. Bourne Mr. William K. Boynton ***Mn & Mrs. H. Harrison Braxton Jr. **Mr. & Mrs. F. Abbott Brown Jr. **Mr. & Mrs. W Thacher Brown Mr. & Mrs. Peter Budetti Mr. & Mrs. K. King Burnett Dr. & Mrs. Douglas G. Burnette Mr. & Mrs. F. McBee Butcher Dr. P. Brandt Butler Mrs. Carol L. Calhoun *Ms. Susan B. Card Mr. & Mrs. Richard R. Carey *Mr. & Mrs. Timothy T. Carrington Dr. & Mrs. Larry V. Carson Mr. &c Mrs. Roy Chapin Mrs. Janet H. Cherrix Mr. & Mrs. Oswald L. Clarke ***Mr. & Mrs. James B. Clements Dr. & Mrs. Charles P. Coggeshall Mr. & Mrs. Philip L. Cohan *Mr. & Mrs. Robert M. Colburn Dr. & Mrs. Gordon D. Coleman *Mr. & Mrs. Peter F. Comstock :: "Mr. & Mrs. Lawrence Connell **Ms. Constance Conover Mr. & Mrs. Richard W. Constantine Mrs. Lightfoot C. Cook Rev. & Mrs. Charles D. Cooper Mrs. John Court *Drs. Richard & Linda Cowan Mr. 6c Mrs. Warren J. Cox Mr. & Mrs. Francis W. Crawley **Rev. & Mrs. Daniel F. Crowley *Mr. &C Mrs. Luis Cuervo ***Mr. & Mrs. A. Barratt Cullen Jr. Mr. &c Mrs. George J. de Garmo *Dr. & Mrs. Jesse C. DeLee **Rev. & Mrs. John D. Dennis *Dr. & Mrs. John J. Devine Mr. Charles H. Dietrich ***Dr. & Mrs. Henry B. Dixon II **Mr. & Mrs. R. Douglas Doherty Mrs. Sally H. Dorn *Mr. &c Mrs. Barry J. Downs Mr. & Mrs. Ray B. Duggins Mr. & Mrs. Donald A. Dunn Mr. & Mrs. Ian H. Dunn *Mr. & Mrs. Charles P. Durkin Jr. *Mr. & Mrs. Clement S. Dwyer ***Mr. & Mrs. John W. Eden **Mrs. Elaine J. Eichler Mr. & Mrs. Robert S. Eliot Mr. & Mrs. J. Wiley Ellis *Mr. & Mrs. William Etherington *Mr. & Mrs. Michael R. Evans **Mr. & Mrs. Wilson C. Everhart Jr. ***Dr. & Mrs. Walter R. Fallaw Jr. ***Mr. & Mrs. George Farnell Mr. & Mrs. John C. Farr Mrs. Sheila Faulkner *Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth C. Fisher Mr. & Mrs. John S. Fletcher **Mr. Charles & Dr. Kathleen Foley *Mr. & Mrs. Michael R. Foster Mr. & Mrs. Joshua L. Fradel Mr. & Mrs. Robert T. Freeman Mr. & Mrs. Theodore W. Friend III Mr. & Mrs. Donald W. Fudge *Dr. St Mrs. Ronald Gable ***Dr. & Mrs. Hilliard E. Gardner Mr. & Mrs. William F. Geier Mr. & Mrs. Bernard S. Gewirz Mr. & Mrs. Arthur Gibb **Rev. & Mrs. David T. Gleason *Mr. & Mrs. James E. Gorny *Mr. & Mrs. James L. Granum *Mr. & Mrs. Elisha Gray **Mr. & Mrs. Ernest Greppin **Mr. & Mrs. David K. Grinwis *Mrs. Vera Grunow-Smith ***Mr. & Mrs. Rafael J. Guastavino Mrs. Mary C. Gunion *Mr. & Mrs. D. Ross Hamilton Mr. & Mrs. H. Brown Hamrick Mr. & Mrs. Paul H. Harrell Dr. & Mrs. Jeffrey P. Harris Sr. Dr. Merry Jayne Haworth **Dr. & Mrs. Robert L. Hickok **Dr. & Mrs. John A. Higgins Dr. & Mrs. Gavin Hildick-Smith *Mrs. Vianda P. Hill Mr. & Mrs. Tatnall L. Hillman *Mrs. Elizabeth D. Hmel Mrs. Marie Leftwich Hnarakis t *Mr. & Mrs. Richard T. Holderness Mr. & Mrs. Martin B. Hoogenboom ANNUAL FUND REPORT 2000 15 **Mrs. Dolores E. Hooper Mr. & Mrs. William C. Hurtt Jr. **Mr. & Mrs. David G. Imes Mr. Andrew Jones ****Mr. & Mrs. George P. Keeley Mr. & Mrs. Thomas N. Keltner Mr. & Mrs. Michael J. Kennedy *Ms. Kerry Kester Mrs. Ramsay C. Kieffer Mr. Douglas L. King *Mrs. E. Katherine Klein Mr. & Mrs. William W. Kling Sr. ***Mr. & Mrs. Charles E. Klumb The Hon. Kathleen Day Koch ***Mr. & Mrs. James H. Kotz ***Mr. & Mrs. Robert E. Kuehlwein ***Rev. & Mrs. Carl N. Kunz Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Henry S. Laffitte Dr. & Mrs. Maxwell D. Lai Mr. & Mrs. William B. Lane *Mr. & Mrs. Lawrence W. Laramy *Mr. & Mrs. William T. Lauten III Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth E. Lehman **Mrs. Mary Louise Leipheimer Mr. & Mrs. Richard L. Levengood *Mr. & Mrs. James R. Lilley *Mr. & Mrs. Russell F. Lindsay Mr. Peter R. Lockhart ***Mr. & Mrs. G. Arno Loessner Mr. & Mrs. David Low Mrs. Wanda Maier Mr. & Mrs. Carlton A. Mallory Mr. & Mrs. David S. Marsh Drs. Victor & Gail Mazzocco Ms. Bonlyn A. McBride **Mr. & Mrs. Keith M. McBride Mr. & Mrs. Richard L. McCandless Mrs. Norah McCormack Mr. William J. McCormack **Mr. & Mrs. Joseph S. McDaniel m *Mr. & Mrs. E. Bruce McEvoy Mr. & Mrs. Duncan Merriwether *Dr. & Mrs. Richard A. Mones ***Ms. Diana W. Montgomery Dr. & Mrs. John L. Morgan Mr. & Mrs. Nathaniel H. Morison III Mrs. Donna M. Mowbray Mr. Phillip M. Mowbray ***Mr. & Mrs. Harry L. Murray Jr. **Mr. & Mrs. John S. Murray *Ms. Daune T. Neidig Mrs. Pamela P. Nimick Mrs. Genevieve T. Nomer ***Mr. & Mrs. Thomas A. Northrup ****Mn & Mrs. Jonathan B. O'Brien ***Mr. & Mrs. R. E. O'Shaughnessy **Mr. & Mrs. Gordon A. Olson Mr. & Mrs. Henry C. Ortman Mr. & Mrs. Wendell Owens Mr. & Mrs. Steven M. Parker *Mrs. Anne R. Parrish Dr. & Mrs. J. Robert Parsons Sr. **Mr. & Mrs. Stuyvesant B. Pell Mr. & Mrs. Henry A. Perry ***Mr. & Mrs. Richard W. Perry Mr. & Mrs. Samuel R. Perry Mr. & Mrs. Ralph E. Peters *Mr. & Mrs. David M. Phillips *Mrs. Donna H. Phillips *Mr. & Mrs. Timothy Pietras Mr. & Mrs. Robert A. Pilkington Mr. & Mrs. C. Cotesworth Pinckney ***Mr. & Mrs. Henry R. Pupke Mr. &C Mrs. J. Ward Purrington 16 ANNUAL FUND REPORT 2000 **Mr. & Mrs. Robert R. Rada FOUNDATIONS, FORMER & **Mrs. Anne J. Ratledge PRESENT FACULTY, FRIENDS, Mr. & Mrs. Philip S. Reese GRANDPARENTS & STAFF *Mrs. Emilee M. Reynolds Ms. Susan W. Allen **Mr. & Mrs. Michael J. Rich Mr. & Mrs. Charles S. Arensberg Rev. & Mrs. F. Lee Richards Sandy & Frank Bailey Mrs. Julia Y. Richards Mr. & Mrs. C. C. Ballard Sr. Amb. & Mrs. Jonathan B. Rickert Mr. & Mrs. Ellis O. Barber Mr. & Mrs. James A. Risher * Donna & Nelson Bell Mr. & Mrs. William L. Roberts Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Stanley S. Betts Mr. & Mrs. Hawley Rogers Mr. &C Mrs. Gordon Brown Jr. Mr. & Mrs. John D. Rogers Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Jacob F. Brown II ***Mrs. Howard W. Rogerson Mr. & Mrs. Dyer Butterfield Jr. Mrs. Sarah C. Rohrbach Mrs. Lea A. Cadwalader ***Mr. & Mrs. John W. Rue Mr. Howard H. Callaway *Mr. & Mrs. Dexter C. Rumsey Mrs. William Coppage *Mrs. Alice M. Ryan Mr. & Mrs. James P. DeSalvo Dr. & Mrs. Michael J. Saddleton Mr. & Mrs. Guido Eccel Dr. & Mrs. Anis K. Saliba Mr. & Mrs. Robert D. Funk Mr. & Mrs. John T. Savage Mr. &c Mrs. Robert Gahagan *Mr. & Mrs. H. Murray Sawye Jr. Mrs. Joseph Gaskill **Mr. John A. Schneider Mr. 8c Mrs. Thomas C. Hardwick Mr. & Mrs. John M. Seabrook Mrs. Margaret M. Holahan Mr. & Mrs. George W. Seger Mrs. Joan S. Jay **Dr. & Mrs. Scott C. Shaffer Mr. & Mrs. Joseph C. Johns *Mrs. Brenda Shivery Ms. Leigh Johnstone ***Mr. & Mrs. Robert A. Shriver Mr. & Mrs. H. Nelson Keyser **Mr. & Mrs. George L. Simpson Mr. & Mrs. Richard A. Keuler Jr. *Mr. & Mrs. Richard W. Snyder Mr. & Mrs. Elmer Low Mr. & Mrs. James R. Soles Mr. & Mrs. Douglas W. MacLay Rev. & Mrs. John A. Springer Mr. & Mrs. W. Harrison Mechling ***Mr. & Mrs. Derek W. L. Spry Mr. & Mrs. Robert T. Monk Sr. Mr. & Mrs. Peter Stancioff Mrs. Louise J. Morse Mr. & Mrs. Richard B. Stephens Mrs. Huldah Moss ***Mr. & Mrs. Mauritz Stetson Mr. Franklin T. Payne Mr. & Mrs. Charles H. Still Sr. Mrs. Constance T. Peebles Mr. William G. Stoops Lynn W. & Timothy W. Peters *Mr. & Mrs. James W. Sykes Jr. Family Fdn. (The) *Dr. & Mrs. John C. Tayloe Jr. Mrs. Elizabeth B. Pfeiffer Dr. & Mrs. Kenneth E. Thomas Ms. Grace W. Pierce-Beck Mr. 8c Mrs. Sydnor Thompson Julian Price Family Fdn. (The) * * *Mr. & Mrs. Norman M. Thornton Mr. William Pruden ***Mr. & Mrs. Richard P. Traina Mr. &c Mrs. R. M. Quimby Mr. & Mrs. G. Nevill Turner Mr. & Mrs. George B. Rigdon II Mr. 8c Mrs. Evert van Buchem Mr. & Mrs. Michael Roach *Mr. &C Mrs. Jan H. van Nierop Mr. & Mrs. Robert N. Schmidt * *Mr. 8c Mrs. Eugene H. Vaughan Jr. Seraph Foundation Inc. (The) *Mr. & Mrs. Robert I. Veghte Rev. & Mrs. T. Guthrie Speers Mrs. Ann Lewis Vlcek Mr. William S. Speers *Mr. & Mrs. Benjamin N. Wafle Mr. & Mrs. Robert G. Stone Jr. Mrs. Jean B. Wagoner Mrs. Sarah Stoner * * *Mr. & Mrs. Robert M. Wainwright Mrs. Dorothy L. Stubbs Mr. & Mrs. Chester A. Waldron *Mr. Hoover C. Sutton *Mr. & Mrs. Michael A. Walter Mr. & Mrs. Robert J. Swain *Mr. & Mrs. James G. Ward Mr. & Mrs. R. W. Talley **Mrs. Anna R. Ware Mrs. Ann M. Wieland *Mr. & Mrs. Robert Watkins Mr. & Mrs. Robert Wolfe **Mr. & Mrs. William L. Weber *Mrs. Jane Wells MATCHING GIFTS Mr. & Mrs. Cole P. Werble **Mr. & Mrs. George F. Wheelock American International Group Mr. & Mrs. Grant D. Whipple Achelis & Bodman Foundations (The) Mrs. Jane F. White American Home Products Corporation Mr. & Mrs. C.W. Whitmoyer Bank of America Foundation **Mr. & Mrs. Elmer F. Wieboldt Jr. Bankers Trust Foundation *Mr. & Mrs. J. Roffe Wike Bank United ***Mr. & Mrs. Herbert E. Wilgis Jr. Brandywine Trust Group LLC Mr. & Mrs. Robert H. Willey Jr. Centre Reinsurance Holdings Limited **Mr. & Mrs. Peter Williams Centura Bank *Mr. & Mrs. Jonathan S. Willis III Chase Manhatten Foundation (The) Mr. & Mrs. Charles D. Wolf Chubb Corporation (The) *Mr. & Mrs. Geoffrey E. Wood CIGNA Foundation **Dr. & Mrs. Kin K. Wun Chris-Craft Industries Inc. Mr. &C Mrs. Charles F. Zimmer Crestar Financial Corporation Deutsche Bank Duke Energy Foundation (The) Eaton Corporation Enron Corp. Fidelity Foundation First Union Foundation Freddie Mac Foundation (The) Gartner Group Charity Fund GEICO Glenmede Trust Company (The) GMAC Commerical Mortgage Corp. Goldman Sachs & Co. John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Co. IBM Kent County Equipment Inc. Marsh & McLennan Companies Inc. Massachusetts Financial Services Co. May Department Stores Co. Fdn. (The) Merrill Lynch & Co. Foundation Inc. Millsboro Pharmacy Inc. J. P. Morgan & Co. Incorporated New England Business Service Inc. Norfolk Southern Foundation North American Coal Corporation (The) Pfizer Philip Morris Companies Inc. Phillips Petroleum Company PNC Foundation (The) T. Rowe Price Associates Fdn. Inc. Prudential Foundation (The) Rockwell International Corporation Trust Sallie Mae Sanofi-Synthelabo Inc. SPS Technologies Target Textron Charitable Trust Towers Perrin Wachovia Bank N.A. RESTRICTED ANNUAL FUND GIFTS Mr. & Mrs. Ian Abernethy Andrew J. Adams Jr. '59 James F. Adams '48 John M. Alden '43 Mr. & Mrs. Gerald N. Alexander Mr. & Mrs. William H. Amos Anonymous Anonymous Donna & Nelson Bell Dr. & Mrs. John M. Bergland William H. Brownlee '44 Gardner A. '66 & Kathryn Cadwalader Mrs. Lea A. Cadwalader Mr. Howard H. Callaway Edmond Yi-Teh Chang '83 Russell W. Chesney '59 Robert D. Colburn '80 Mr. & Mrs. Walter E. Constantine Jr. Alfred K. Day III '64 Dr. & Mrs. Jesse C. DeLee Ms. Melanie Taylor Farland Mrs. Katharine duP. Gahagan Mr. & Mrs. Arthur Gibb Jr. Philip D. Goiran '59 Kevin J. Grandfield '82 Arthur E. Haycock Jr. '59 G. William Helm Jr. '59 Mr. & Mrs. Richard A. Keuler Jr. Anne H. Montesano '86 Warner W. Price '59 Virginia C. Purrington '94 Roger D. Redden '50 John L. M. '62 & Irene Roberts James R. Rooney II '45 Mrs. Caroline W. Salas Mr. Peter E. Salas Seraph Foundation Inc. (The) George B. Smith '66 Mr. William S. Speers James O. Stokes '47 Mr. William G. Stoops Mr. Hoover C. Sutton O. Lee Tawes III '65 Pieter B. Voorhees '60 Mr. & Mrs. James D. Walcott Jr. L. Herndon Werth '52 Mr. & Mrs. Jack B. Wilkinson Mr. & Mrs. Irwin Zazulia GIFTS IN KIND Richard E. Broome '48 Mr. Marc F. Cheban William R. Cory '38 Professor John K. Savacool t Mrs. Katharine duP. Gahagan Mr. Eric L. Kemer Mr. Joseph M. Mandes James R. Rooney II '45 Matthew Ruggerio '79 Mr. & Mrs. Robert H. Stegeman Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Douglas A. Warner III Michael J. Whalen '84 MEMORIAL FUNDS In memory of: Doris Barron L. Herndon Werth '52 Elizabeth R. Carper '84 Michael K. Atalay '84 Elizabeth B. Baird '84 Mara E. Burnett '84 Daniel M. del Sobral '84 Beth Williams Ellingwood '84 Pierson Friend '84 Bonnie D. Hillman '84 Mary Buffington Jenkins '84 Elizabeth B. O'Brien Berl '84 Alfred H. Rayne '84 Mary Ashton Roberts '84 Gregory S. Shivery '84 Valerie M. Stevens '84 Jason J. Walker '84 Michael J. Whalen '84 Gail E. Wright '84 Michael C. Zimmer '84 Mr. A. Felix duPont Jr. Mrs. Alice duPont Mills Raymond P. Genereaux Mr. Robert M. Bird Ms. Pamela Copeland Mr. & Mrs. Alfred E. Daking Mrs. Robert Downs Mr. & Mrs. John M. Evans Mr. Marion M. Flook Francis Giammattei Jr. '47 Edward H. Hammond Jr. '60 Ms. Louise Truesdale Loening Mrs. Christopher Lowndes Mrs. John M. Martin 8c Family Mr. Thomas May Allen B. Morgan Jr. '61 Mr. Luther C. Peery William M. Pope Jr. '61 Mr. & Mrs. William Prickett Mary Ann & John Reese Mr. & Mrs. Charles F. Richards Jr. Mr. &C Mrs. Joseph D. Sargent Mr. & Mrs. Robert H. Stegeman Jr. Mr. & Mrs. William J. Wallace Jr. George M. Gillet III J. McHenry Gillet '46 Ernest H. Greppin III '85 Mrs. Lawrence Dana Mr. & Mrs. Ernest Greppin Jeanne Ingle L. Herndon Werth '52 Walter I. Laird Jr. Robert S. Appleby '50 Miss Jean B. Blythe Mr. Howard H. Callaway John & Cornelia Canby Mr. Frank M. Casson Catholic Diocese of Wilmington Inc. Mr. & Mrs. Allen M. Daley Mrs. Robert N. Downs III Ms. Ruth M. Fangman Friess Associates of Delaware Inc. Mr. & Mrs. Foster Friess Edward H. Hammond Jr. '60 Mr. & Mrs. Paul H. Harrell Mr. & Mrs. Roland F. Hartman Mr. & Mrs. John A. Krol Mr. & Mrs. William Mannering Mr. & Mrs. Allen B. Morgan Jr. Mr. & Mrs. William Prickett Mr. & Mrs. John M. Seabrook Mr. & Mrs. Henry H. Silliman Jr. Mr. & Mrs. W. Laird Stabler Jr. Ms. Martha F. Steel Mr. & Mrs. Robert H. Stegeman Jr. Mrs. A. B. C. Strange Ms. Ann D. Wick Amanda C. Leyon '95 Mr. & Mrs. Clayton Boehle Wesley H. Martin '49 David & Constance Henke Andrew Mein '90 Gretchen Bensinger '90 Giles R. Borghardt '90 Mrs. Sally E. Borghardt Reverend Dr. & Mrs. Samuel W Bourne Taylor F. Cameron '90 Emily W. S. Caspersen '90 Caroline C. Davies '90 Andrew C. Dennis '90 Elizabeth D. Dunton '90 Michael P. Harrell '90 Sarah Savage Hebert '90 Catherine van Ogtrop Hoffberger '90 W. Callender Hurtt III '90 Mildred B. Joyner '90 Carey McDaniel Koppenhaver '90 Brian Leipheimer '90 Mrs. Mary Louise Leipheimer Robert C. Mattson '90 Patrick Scott McClary '90 Jeffrey L. Miller '90 Dr. & Mrs. Scott C. Shaffer Sunita B. Sierros McClelland '90 & Carter Wilcox '90 Reuben W. McVey Sr. Mr. & Mrs. Peter M. Cella Mr. & Mrs. Michael Pryslak Mrs. Jane L. Stegeman Professor Richard P. Coleman Henry P. Sullivan '43 Mr. & Mrs. Eldredge Bermingham Mr. & Mrs. David Nimick William Laird Warwick '37 Ms. Margaret F. Bogle Mr. & Mrs. Dayre M. Davis Bozek Mr. David M. Burke The Cole Family Mr. & Mrs. Anthony J. Hollings Charles R. Hoof Inc. Ms. Suzanne Green Kominski Ms. Constance W. McElhinney Judith Seligson & Allan Greenberg Frank E. Williams Jr. '39 Mrs. Susan Hench Bowis Chevy Chase Cars Inc. Mr. & Mrs. Arthur M. Christie Ms. Katherine F. Edison-Chase Mr. Robert F. Cook Mr. & Mrs. Robert C. Gillette Mr. & Mrs. McChesney H. Jeffries Mr. Lewis M. Jeffries Mr. & Mrs. M. Hill Jeffries Ms. Elizabeth E. Lee Mr. & Mrs. George A. Maxwell Maurice J. & Marguerite N. Murphy The Robert Pyle Family The Floyd Yeomans Family The Robert Yeomans Family Mr. & Mrs. George D. Watt Ms. Mildred H. Williams Mr. & Mrs. Robert C. Wilson Jr. William L. Wrightson Jr. '52 J. Caleb Boggs Jr. '52 William H. Johnson '52 L. Herndon Werth '52 Robert E. Young '52 THE ST. ANDREW'S SOCIETY This honorary society recognizes those individuals who have made their intentions of a lifetime commitment to St. Andrew's School known through bequests gifts of life insurance, creation of charitable trusts or other deferred gift arrangements. The School is pleased to recognize their commitment to its future and welcomes additional members at any time. Anonymous Anonymous Anonymous Anonymous Class of 1949 Member R. Stewart Barroll '72 Edwin John Bernet Jr. '72 Robert B. Blum Sr. Duncan G. Bolton George A. Brakeley III '57 Randolph W. Brinton '64 Luther R. Campbell Jr. '46 John M. Cogswell '57 Robert D. Colburn '80 John S. Cook '45 William H. Corddry '38 Kenneth E. Court '56 W. William A. Cox '56 Richard D. Crawford '63 William A. Crump Jr. '44 C. Alec Dana '80 Robert S. Eliot Robert J. Faux '60 Brian D. Fisher '60 Benjamin M. Fowler III '42 Francis Giammattei Jr. '47 J. McHenry Gillet '46 Eric R. Groot '70 Andrew C. Hamlin '71 Edward H. Hammond Jr. '60 David T. Harris '38 Horace W. Harrison '39 Mrs. Mildred Hart Norris S. Haselton Jr. '54 Henry N. Herndon Jr. '48 Edwin A. Hoey '48 William C. Hewlett '45 Charles F. H. Johnson HI '60 Charles W. Kenney '52 Joseph F. Littell '42 Bradford A. Mills '72 Stephen K. Mills '65 Christopher L. Milner '68 Daune T. Neidig Stephen V. Noble '69 Katleen S. Patzman Timothy W. Peters '66 Powell Pierpoint '40 t W. Robert Prier Jr. '68 Robert M. Pyle '63 John L. Ray '42 Christopher P. Reeve '68 Emilee M. Reynolds Toby R. Roberts '70 Anne Percy Sargent '83 Thomas R. Saunders '42 David E. Scherer'51 Robert J. Shank '57 George B. Smith '66 J. Jeffrey Stives '60 Robbert H. van Mesdag '48 James B. G. vonBrunn '70 Charles L. Wayne '60 L. Herndon Werth '52 ANNUAL FUND REPORT 2000 17 TOP TEN CLASSES Class 1965 1945 1950 1961 1975 1949 1985 1970 1964 1959 Class Agent O. Lee Tawes III Gaston V. Jones Jr. Stuart J. Bracken Howard M. Snyder III Ralph D. Neel Peter B. Obbard Ian B. Montgomery William C. Strong Curtis M. Coward Andrew J. Adams Jr. Amount $41,346 30,272 24,885 24,425 20,495 16,363 16,112 14,950 14,217 11,185 TOP CLASS PARTICIPATION PERCENTAGES Pre-1970 1945 1934 1936 1951 1943 Gaston V. Jones Francis J. Townsend Jr. Chester E. Baum Jr. W. Barrett Register Morgan B. MacDonald Post-1970 (incl.) Ralph D. Neel 1975 Sarah Savage Hebert 1990 Carey McDaniel Koppenhaver Ridie Lazar Susan Willock 1989 1997 George Hutton Anne Riley Megan Wright & Will Robinson 1984 Mary Ashton Roberts 100% 100% 90% 87% 85% 77% 61.4% 61.3% 58 % 51% Honorable Mention Classes Attaining the 50%+ Participation Goal: 1935 1937 1938 1942 1944 1946 1947 1949 1950 1952 1953 1954 71% 75% 56% 50% 76% 73% 74% 69% 70% 74% 77% 71% 1955 1956 1957 1958 1959 1960 1961 1962 1964 1965 1966 73% 70% 56% 70% 78% 54% 68% 50% 52% 54% 55% Gifts received too late to be counted in this year's Annual Fund. Thank you for a great start for the 2000-01 campaign. Mr. & Mrs. Felix N. Awantang Tracy E. Chardon '80 Ryan P. Connell '99 John F. Davenport '58 18 ANNUAL FUND REPORT 2000 Alexander H. Hoon Jr. 70 Niegel D. Laborde '94 John E. Wason '39 5/50 Young Alumni/ae Leadership Club Recognizing alumni/ae who graduated in the years of 1995-1999 and are giving to SAS at an adjusted leadership level of $50 and above. Meredith L. Blake '97 Paul D. Burnette '98 Geoffrey V. Carson '97 Cynthia A. Coggeshall '95 Jack A. Comstock '95 Stephen P. Comstock '99 Melissa C. Cull '96 Charles P. Durkin '97 Emily H. Etherington '98 Michael L. Everhart '98 Wilson C. Everhart III '95 Moira S. Forbes '97 Claire M. Foster '99 Morgan E. Foster '97 Frederick J. Heinle III '95 Nicki P. Hill '95 Max M. Hofer '98 Julie F. Holderness '99 James T. Jenkins Jr. '98 Jennifer C. Joseph '95 Rebecca L. Koch '97 John K. Landay '97 W. Elliott Lane '95 Dominic J. Menei '97 Christopher W. Moneta '99 Nikki D. Mowbray '98 Jonathan L. Newcomb '95 Elizabeth C. Pilkington '99 Sebastian P. Ramos '97 Andrew M. Reynolds '95 Anne E. Riley '97 May B. Satterfield '98 Sarah S. Siebert '97 Helen C. Smith '99 Cristina M. Stenbeck '95 Andrew D. Sykes '95 Joshua S. Tayloe '95 Allison P. Thomas '96 Jane C. Weaver '95 Katherine T. Werble '98 Brian W. Wright '96 Megan L. Wright '97 Ninth Annual Scholarship Golf Tournament 2000 Scholarship Golf Tournament Prize Winners Reunion Class with the Most Players Class of 1950 Eisenbrey Cup: Class with the Most Players Class of 1950 Class of 1974 Closest to the Pin J. D. Quillin '56 Josh Tayloe '95 (on two holes) Bobby Kidd '93 Longest Drive Jim Nowland Straightest Drive Mike Quillin '57 Best Team Scramble Gill Allen '77 Brian Crow '77 Steve Salter '77 BillWolle '77 Best Team Championship Mike Quillin '57 Ned Mumford '59 Fred Nicoll Skill Johnson Second Place Team Championship John Paradee '81 Scott Sipprelle '81 KarlSaliba '81 Fred Townsend '81 Individual Low Net Ingo Zeise Individual Low Net Alumnus Scott Sipprelle '81 Individual Low Gross Alumnus Henry Wilson '50 Sponsors Alumni Corporation Board Golf Committee Lawrance M. Court '62, Chair Aubrey W. Armentrout '91 Taylor F. Cameron '90 Jehu D. Quillin '56 John D. Showell IV '68 19th Hole Sponsors Deutsche Asset Management John Eisenbrey '74 Watering Hole Sponsors Amy Burnham Markowitz '83 Clarion Group • Kingston, N.H. Refreshment Cart Sponsors Darius Mansoory '83 Nowland Construction Hole Signs Sponsor Buck '61 and Karen Brinton Signs by Tomorrow Hole-in-One Prize Sponsor NuCar Middletown Chevrolet Tournament Balls Sponsor Mrs. John M. Court and Lawrance Court '62 Faculty Players' Sponsors Terry and Tom Burns John Cook '45 Kitten Gahagan Andrew and Christine Hall Locks and Protection Devices Inc. Amy Burnham Markowitz '83 Mike McSherry '49 Middletown Wine & Spirits Sisk Mailing Service Inc. George B. "Buck" Smith '66 Smith, Henrikson, Q'Donnell & Procino LLP Hole and Green Sponsors Aloysius, Butler & Clark of Wilmington, Del. Al's Sporting Goods of Wilmington, Del. Bill Bean '72 Bill Brownlee '44 Class of 1950 Class of 1957 Class of 1962 Class of 1972 Class of 1975 Class of 1990 Class of 1991 Contract Environments Inc. John Craighill '62 and John Craighill Jr. '97 Eric Crossan Photography of Middletown, Del. George & Lynch Happy Harry's Inc. Harvey & Harvey Waste Management Chip Haselton '54 Hugo & Laurie Heriz-Smith Heriz-Smith Creative/Consulting Mr. and Mrs. Gattie Jones '45 Michael Loessner '84 Bellevue Holding Company Construction Managers Mike & Carey McDaniel '90 Koppenhaver and Stites McDaniel '94 Bob Owens '83 W. Charles Paradee Jr. Catherine Soles Pomeroy '89 The Quillins: J.D. '56, Mike '57, Mike Jr. '82 and Dave '82 John Schoonover Schoonover Studios, Ltd. Scott Sipprelle '81 Southern States Cooperative Inc. of Middletown, Del. Charlton M. Theus '45 Francis J. Townsend '34 Tri-Gas & Oil Co., Inc. W. Moorehead Vermilye II '58 Talbot Bank The Warner Family Ed Hammond '60 & Brian Shockley '83 Williams Hammond Moore Shockley & Harrison LLP ANNUAL FUND REPORT 2000 19 1999-2000 CAPITAL GIFTS For Faculty Fellowship Funds Anonymous Donor The John P. N. Austin Fellowship Mr. & Mrs. Malcolm S. Forbes Jr. The Darcy E Caldwell Fellowship Mr. & Mrs. Gordon B. Pattee The Daniel T. Roach Jr. Fellowship Ms. Catherine Kinsey & Mr. Clinton Smullyan Jr. The William S. Speers Fellowship Mr. & Mrs. Douglas A. Warner III For Cultural Diversity The Seraph Foundation, Inc. For the Founders' Hall LowerLevel Renovation Ms. Sally E. Pingree— The Charles Engelhard Foundation For the Theater Cato D. Carpenter '71 Mr. & Mrs. Malcolm S. Forbes Jr. Edward H. Hammond Jr. '60 Mr. & Mrs. J. Roffe Wike Unrestricted Capital Gifts Geoffrey C. Abbott '56 Mr. Gerald N. Alexander Carl B. Bear '60 The Borkee-Hagley Foundation The Mailman Foundation, Inc. Allen B. Morgan Jr. '61 William T. Murray III '50 John M. Pinney '61 William M. Pope Jr. '61 GIFTS TO NAMED ENDOWMENT FUNDS Blackburn Hughes Faculty Enhancement Mr. & Mrs. Roger G. Small General Scholarship Amy L. Barto '86 The Seraph Foundation, Inc. James A. Berrigan Memorial Scholarship Michael D. Berrigan '79 William A. Crump Jr. '44 Physics Lecture William A. Crump Jr. '44 Bishop McKinstry Scholarship Drs. John Maull '72 & Martha Fountain Mr. James T. McKinstry National Andrean Fund— in Memory of Frank E. Williams Jr.'39 Mrs. Marianne J. Williams & Family 20 ANNUAL FUND REPORT 1999 Year ended June 30, 2000 (Unaudited) For the Pool Noel C. Dalton '43 The Endowment enables St. Andrew's School to provide excellent education to excellent students. It is composed of many funds established in the name of alumni/ae, parents, friends and faculty members. Income from the endowment serves such integral programs as scholarship, academic, departments, faculty enhancement, summer study and the arts. Recognizing the importance of the School's founding mission, the following alumni/ae, parents and friends made gifts to endowed funds this fiscal year, many in addition to their Annual Fund support. St. Andrew's is grateful to all who support its endowed funds. James M. Webb Memorial Scholarship Ms. Judith D. Webb SCHOOL OPERATING BUDGET REVENUE Tuition Unrestricted Annual Giving Fund Year 1998-99 Percentage of Budget $5,691,000 57.6% 1,028,956 10.4% Endowment Used 2,734,401 Other (e.g. summer 426,003 camps fees etc.) 25.3% 4.3% TOTAL 100.0% $9,880,360 EXPENDITURES Fund Year 1998-99 Instruction $2,225,030 Financial Aid 1,574,200 Administrative 1,651,749 & General Operation of 1,745,864 Physical Plant Employee Benefits 1,006,386 & Insurance Auxilliary Services 1,051,898 (e.g. food service, laundry etc.) Other 625,233 (e.g. transportation, equipment, acquisitions, etc.) TOTAL $9,880,360 Percentage of Budget 22.5% 15.9% 16.7% 17.7% 10.2% 10.6% 6.3% 100.0% New overall alumni participation record of 49% New Annual Fund record $1,028,956! Thank you for supporting St. Andrew's School! A Time to Run A Time to Visit: Barry Register '51, Chip Haselton '54 and Bill Amos REUNION A Time to Walk: 1990 classmates strut on the front lawn Bug-Barge Time! Betty and Ed Hammond '60 I I p I A Time for Well-Wishes: Gloria and Larry Walker A Time to Cherish A Time to Party: Roger Redden, Bill Bathurst and Bill Murray toast to their 50th Reunion. Because reunions are designed for members of five-year classes who have all they can handle re-establishing bonds with classmates, the five-year separation between returnees means they have little in common with other classes, therefore contacts are intimate and not numerous.. 26 FALL 2000 A Time to Talk and Enjoy Good Food A Time to Row! ...But pity the plight of an old teacher! He spans half a century of student friends, and the result is—SENSORY OVERLOAD! I took the attendance list and checked names of those with whom I had at least a small conversation (as well as extended talks), and the total conies to 85 plus. No wonder my ancient mental wheels creaked and occasionally jammed. Kaleidoscopic though the weekend may have been, it nevertheless was pure delight and remains firmly entrenched in memory. E-mails continuing our exchanges are already coming... . —Bill Amos ST. ANDREW'S MAGAZINE 27 I Words of Wisdom Former faculty member Bill Amos and Tribal Elder Ches Baum '36 shared their thoughts from two recent Chapel talks. FALL 2000 I began by saying, "It is good to be home." "Home" has many shades of meaning. The word "ham" in Old English signified an abode, a dwelling place, plus its surrounding land. And almost the same word is found similarly in a number of other old European languages and dialects, as well as in modern languages, such as the German "heim." The word got incorporated in proper names as Nottingham, and in words like hamlet, even in haunt, meaning to frequent a place, as in a haunted house visited by ghosts. We have all sorts of uses and derivatives of the word. Baseball players "steal home" and play home games. A homing pigeon does its thing. We have a home country and a hometown. The upper left-hand corner of your computer screen is the cursor's "home," its starting position, and the home row on your keyboard consists of those familiar keys upon which your fingers first rest. There are home furnishings, home cooking and home 18 years at the helm. From the outset, he moved mountains to achieve financial care; a home office. An effective point in an argument "strikes home," and an investigator "homes in on the truth." Well, you responsibility for a school that despite its great wealth had been get the point. The word has a wider and more elusive meaning in utter fiscal disarray, if you can imagine it. He started the modthan just a dwelling place, dear though that may be, where fam- ern building program that continues to this day. He broke the stifling lockstep of an academic program that hadn't really ily awaits your return next week. So what has this to do with reunions many years down the advanced from the earliest days. The content and sequence of line? You'll come back in a quarter-century, walk across the cam- every subject—history, English, you name it—had been locked in pus and around the buildings, inspect new facilities, visit dorms place for a quarter of a century. His refuting this hierarchy included enthusiastically supporting Larry Walker in creating an Arts and classrooms. And you faculty members who will leave in time ahead and Department. Nothing of the sort had previously existed, because come back years from now may want to stop by your former the most influential member of the senior faculty had stoutly places of residence. For 26 of my 37 years here, our family lived resisted arts in the curriculum, believing they undermined the in the house now occupied by Mr. Speers and his family, and he virility, the manliness, of this then all-male school. And most consequential of all, Bob Moss was solely responsihas always invited us to come back in for a visit, which we do, rejoicing that the old house is filled with warmth and children ble for initiating and then working tirelessly to bring about desegregation and coeducation, both of which changed the heart of and cherished personal effects. And, of course, I must always go back to my labs and office, this school as nothing ever had, or ever will. But in pursuing all now so enthusiastically and expertly occupied by Mr. McLean of these goals, he was beleaguered by those who did not underand his colleagues. Alumni will similarly visit their favorite spots, stand and resisted change, among them some of his closest assoperhaps even seeking a nearly forgotten hideaway in the woods, ciates. Many of us did not comprehend at the time the imporone of those famous forts, which I suspect are still being built. tance of what he was doing as he pushed ahead. But today's In some of these places, you'll feel comfortable; you'll feel at school is the result, for this is what he knew it must be—what it had to be. home. Yes, he had much on his mind during those 18 years and in the But there is one place beyond all others whose significance transcends every other location, which underlies and strengthens evening often came to this quiet room to sit in the shadows to the primary ethos of St. Andrew's School. A place that has gather strength after a grueling day. worked itself into the fiber of your being without you being aware. That place is this chapel. On Sunday morning of every reunion weekThis place, this sacred place deep in the heart of end, there is a service in this beautiful room. It is a service of praise and thanksgiving, and in the School—not some handsome free-standing particular a service in memory of those who are no longer here. chapel out on the grounds with a tall steeple— More than at any other time, more than any other reunion experience—and I've witnessed this intimate place has been the kind of home this in class after class after class—the alumni and alumnae who return, with their husbands that will be part of you forever. and wives and children, these alumni sense they have come home to this chapel. It may be a fleeting sensation, perhaps only for that single And as often as he did, somewhere up ahead, or off to the side, hour, but it's a profound one, no matter what your religious affiliation may have been as a student or will be as an alumna or there might be another shadowy head or two. Student, faculty, staff? He never knew. Each person was here to reflect and medialumnus many years from now. This place, this sacred place deep in the heart of the School— tate in near-solitude, gathering strength from the peacefulness of not some handsome free-standing chapel out on the grounds with this lovely place. Finally, I'll read recognition of this same need, and seeking its a tall steeple—this intimate place has been the kind of home that fulfillment, by two students of long ago, whom I quoted in my will be part of you forever. For not only has this room been a scene of inspiration when St. Andrew's book, Time to Remember: First, a young woman of the Class of 1980. She wrote: someone speaks or reads to us—the poet Maya Angelou, for "Chapel was something you could always count on. It was a example—it has been the scene of joyous events—union in marriage, the welcome of baptism—and also a drawing together in place to see your friends; a place to be alone at night with your times of great need, a place that has provided strength and sup- fears, your aloneness, your hopes. It was a place to wear your port. Here, led by the headmaster and chaplain, we ponder best new outfit, a place to see the guy you liked who was avoidthorny issues that perplex us. Here we mourned the assassina- ing you everywhere else on campus. It was a place to sing, a comtions of a president and, soon after, of a great civil rights leader, munity sharing everything personal and everything academic at the same time." and inevitably the passings within our own communal family. And then this from a man remembering his time 20 years earSome of you—as have students and faculty through all the years of the School's existence—some of you have come here on lier, 40 years ago: "The vaulting cathedral at Chartres is spirit-evoking because of your own to seek peace, quiet, a time for reflection, usually at its enormity and play of light. It is a majestic place, very public in dusk or after hours in the near-dark of late evening. Let me leave you with three examples of those who needed and its testimony to God. The St. Andrew's chapel is quite the oppofound respite—right here. First, someone at the pinnacle of our site—intimate, dark and private. It was, for me, on many an occacommunity structure, someone you might think has it all under sion, the place to go to seek that still, small voice within. Sometimes, in the competitive, emotionally demanding life of a control: a headmaster. One of the outstanding figures in the School's history, our sec- student at a boarding school, there is a tremendous need to get ond headmaster, Robert Moss, had much on his mind during his away, to lick at real or imagined wounds and grievances. For ST. ANDREW'S MAGAZINE 29 some, that might be the athletic field or a long walk. I repaired to the chapel, sure in the knowledge that, between services, likely none but the chaplain might show up there." But even for those of you who never felt such a need, this chapel has nevertheless left an impression upon you that is imperishable. Indefinable, the place and its aura are part of you, like it or not. The English author Rose Macaulay wrote, "Where are the roots that clutch, what branches grow...? You can say, you can guess, that it is you yourself, your own roots, the branches of your own being that grow from here and from nowhere else." That is what you will sense 25 years from now, remembering the comfort and direction, perhaps inspiration, this nurturing place—this chapel—provided when you needed them most. And that's what I meant when I said, "It's good to be home." -William H. Amos Editor's Note: This is a portion of the Chapel Talk that William H. Amos (Faculty, 1947-84) delivered on May 25, 2000. Remembering a good friend She was the maternal grandmother of Talley Smith '98. She was the mother-in-law of Henry Blackburn Smith '67, who was a prefect, a leading scholar, a co-captain of the football and wrestling teams. He still remembers time spent in this room at obligatory services as restorative to his spirit that was, even in those days, stressed by the famous St. Andrew's pace. Irene Phylis Smith's daughter Judiann married our Henry Smith in 1977 in Bermuda. This marriage of Smith to Smith is not uncommon in Bermuda, where Smiths are even more numerous than in other parts of the world. My connection with Irene Smith came about thus: a succession of fortunate events led to my marriage in 1953-while I was still teaching here-to Phebe Ann Jacobs Smith. Thus I became stepfather to, not only Henry Smith, but also Daniel Blackburn Smith '65, and William Blackburn Smith '69, all of who had been born in Bermuda but had been brought here to the States after the death of their Bermudian father in the late 1940s. Ever since Henry's and Judiann's wedding in 1977, my wife Phebe Ann and I have maintained a very happy association with Irene Smith, becoming more appreciative of her during our visits to Bermuda and hers to the States. At our age, friends die with increasing frequency. We do not become inured to these sad events, but rarely find ourselves traveling far for funerals. But to describe the effect on us of Irene's death, which as I told you occurred on Easter Monday, I find I must switch to the historical present. When Henry Smith called us to break the news of Perhaps here at St. Andrew's some of you Irene's death, I blurted out that I shall represent our Oxford, Maryland, family at her funeral. Later in have spoken of your own transactions with the week, Judiann and Henry asked me to read the 23rd Psalm at Irene's memorial service on May 8 at St. Mark's Church, Smith's Parish, Devonshire, God in Inquirer's Classes. Bermuda, the church where Henry and Judiann were married almost 23 years ago. In 1974, the final year of my father's life during one of my vishave described the experience as vividly as Updike, the novelist and poet, did. Still, for 70 years, I have recited the creed almost its to his hospital room, Dad startled me by reciting from memweekly starting in the old chapel under the present business ory the 23rd Psalm. I'd never heard him do so before. On Memorial Day 1987, our son, Price, whose diving accident office, which served us until 1937. This reiterated statement of belief along with other liturgical and communal involvements in 1980 had left him a quadriplegic, suffered injuries in a car within the Episcopal Church has led me to approach life with the accident on the Baltimore-Washington Expressway that proved attitude of one who has had revelations similar to though less more life-threatening than had his broken neck. He was taken to the shock-trauma unit of the Prince Georges County (Maryland) spectacular than those of St. Paul on the road to Damascus. Irene Phylis Smith of Bermuda died in England on April 24, Hospital, where his mother and I spent an all-night vigil. When one day after her 80 birthday. She had had cancer for 25 years, we finally got away for some sleep, we found ourselves in a so her death was not unanticipated, but it was sudden. Her life shabby motel near the hospital. The only reading material in our was not defined by her disease. In fact, at the time of her death, room was a Gideon Bible. We read together the 23rd Psalm. Judiann Smith had known nothing of my involvement with she was visiting an old friend in London with whom she had been doing the sorts of things like going to the theater that she this psalm when she had asked me to read it at her mother's had enjoyed for many years on her holidays in the United funeral service. Cut, as they say, to "Seascapes," the wonderful house Irene Kingdom. Who was Irene Smith to me, and what was her connection to and her late husband, Wilbur, built on a point of Devonshire Bay to enjoy unparalleled views of Bermuda's South Shore. I cannot this chapel? 30 FALL 2000 I wanted to tell the story of a walk from a beautiful house in Bermuda to St. Mark's Church the day before the funeral of a dear friend of mine. On that walk I considered an article I had read by John Updike on transactions with the supernatural. Sometime before Christmas last year, I read an article in The New Yorker by John Updike, whom I consider one of our preeminent contemporary novelists, called "The Future of Faith: Confessions of a Churchgoer." At one point in The New Yorker article, Updike said while discussing the difficulty of maintaining one's faith in today's world: "Against the terrific tide of rational disbelief, must stand an inner sense of contact that is rather cumberously signified by terms like 'witness' and 'knowing Christ' or a sense, at least, of one's life being shaped, broadly, by transactions with the supernatural." Updike gave two powerful illustrations of his "transactions with the supernatural." Perhaps here at St. Andrew's some of you have spoken of your own transactions with God in Inquirer's Classes. In my day, anyone who "witnessed" or claimed to "know Christ" in Sacred Studies (as we then called your Religious Studies) would have been hooted at by us young sophisticates. As a lifelong believer, I have never sensed the divine presence as dramatically as did John Updike and, even if I had, I could not describe it adequately except to say that wherever I look when I'm at "Seascapes", I'm rewarded by the movement of water and spray and the colors of sky, clouds, rocky shores, trees and flowers, shallow waters and deep waters. Price and I agree-even as we reabsorb this beauty-that there is something weird about staying in "Seascapes" without Wilbur and, now, without Irene Smith. But as we sat on the terrace Saturday night, soothed by the sound of the surf and the unique song of the Bermuda tree frogs, I resolve to myself to walk to the 8 o'clock service of Holy Communion next morning at St. Mark's. Some years ago I used to enliven my stays at "Seascapes" by early morning runs along Smith Parish roads. A speed limit of 25 miles an hour makes sharing the narrow, often coral-rock-walled roads, with motorbikes, cars, and busses less terrifying than it would be in the States. So as I made my secret plans, I gave little thought to any difficulties in getting to church. Next morning, I'm on the road by 7:15 in running shoes for comfort and polo shirt and jacket for propriety, confident that I'll cover the three miles or so by 8 o'clock. Last Saturday in Oxford, Md., I had walked a 5-K course in 40-some minutes in a for-charity run/walk event and suffered only mild shin-splints from pressing too hard. But I have forgotten that between "Seascapes" and St. Mark's there's a long steep hill. Before I got to the bottom of this, I was already sweating, because I picked up my pace unconsciously after hearing a cheerful female voice say, "Passing on the right," and was passed by a young woman running faster and more easily than I ever had in my heyday. Then another young, this time male, runner floated effortlessly by me. I walked faster. Suddenly I'm at the long hill. The heat, even in the shade of trees, increased. I sweat more and reflect that I hadn't done any real training before the Oxford effort last week. I stopped to catch my breath several times, each time looking up at the top of the hill, which didn't seem to be getting any closer. The steeple of St. Mark's seemed an unobtainable finish line. Then I saw even some of the younger runners who were passing me laboring. I stopped in a driveway and bent over to catch my breath. Panic became a possibility. What am I doing here? I haven't run or walked hills for years. Why am I showing off to myself? What a ridiculous disruption of the preparations for the funeral if I collapse and have to be hospitalized. Ever since being asked to read the 23rd Psalm at the service, I had been trying to memorize it so that I wouldn't stumble over a single syllable, thinking correctly that a marred reading would be obtrusive and draw attention away from the beauty of the psalm. My role in the service was small, but I felt honored to play it. How humiliating to miss playing it because I had yielded to an impulse to prove what was so obviously false: that I am as fit as I was eight years ago. This made me consider retreating to "Seascapes." It's mostly downhill. Descending, there would be less strain on my now painful legs and my over-stimulated 81-year-old cardiovascular system. In recent years, I've learned that when the air gets too thin, it's no disgrace to retreat to the base camp. At this moment, the John Updike article came into my head, and I wondered about transactions with the supernatural. I look once more at the Victorian Gothic structure ahead, and opt impulsively for the shorter walk to St. Mark's. If I'm too late, I'll sit in a back pew and recover my strength. When I finally arrive at the church, the back pew option is ruled out, because, I discover, I must enter by the side where I'm greeted by a lay-greeter, handed the usual sheaf of material, and steered into an empty pew halfway back. I've forgotten my glasses. No matter. The words of the Anglican service read by an elderly, gentle-voiced black priest are familiar. I'm in time for general confession. When we rise after the absolution to exchange the peace, I notice the congregation moves around so that nearly everyone is able to greet nearly everyone else. As I walk toward the rear of the nave, I see in his Bermuda shorts and knee-stockings William Zuill '48, whom I have not seen since his 50th reunion. We have enough time for me to convey to him that I've walked from "Seascapes" and doubt my ability to walk back. He says that he came by car and will drive me back. The next day the nave of St. Mark's is full to the over-flowing; people are ushered into the choir. Called, as is the custom of the day, a celebration of the life of Irene Phylis Smith, the service is the Anglican Order for the Burial of the Dead. I hear the famous sentences, which I first heard read in the New York patrician tones of Walden Pell II, our first headmaster, at the funeral in 1938 of Tiger Richardson, a classmate of mine. Tiger's drinking fountain memorial you are all familiar with. It stands on the bank above the varsity football/lacrosse field. Tiger died after his sophomore year in college when his speed boat crashed into a piling in the Chester River. The sentence from the Order for the Burial of the Dead, which I heard on a summer day 62 years ago, I hear (again read beautifully) on a perfect May day in Bermuda: I know that my redeemer liveth and that he shall stand at the latter day upon the earth: and though this body be destroyed, yet shall I see God: whom I shall see for myself, and mine eyes shall behold, and not as a stranger. Eulogies have a hard time competing with the beautiful Edwardian language of The Book of Common Prayer. But our Henry Smith '67 strikes just the right note in his tribute to Irene Smith. He explains why she was beloved by her family in terms that people not in the family can understand, because his welltold anecdotes have universal appeal. He catches the essence of Irene as a public and private person in a paragraph that can stand as a model of prose for Vlth Form English students, to say nothing of an exemplar of values for subsequent presidents and chief executive officers of the Bank of Bermuda: By anyone's measure, Reenie was a very successful woman. She was a successful wife, a successful business woman, a successful mother and grandmother. And as Derek and I can both assure you a successful mother-in-law. She achieved all this success and yet, as far as I can tell, never attracted any envy or resentment from others-everybody loved Reenie. I have to believe this was because, for Reenie, success was never relative, never based on ego or competition. It was simply Reenie trying to squeeze every last drop she could out of life. And boy did she squeeze! She squeezed life for all of us-everyone who knew Reenie got a little bit extra out of life. This beautiful and honest tribute, a heart-felt and well articulated reading of a non-mawkish poem by the other son-in-law, Derek Sickling, strong congregational singing of "Love divine, all loves excelling!" and "Immortal, invisible, God only wise!", and, yes, no stumbles in my reading of the 23rd Psalm. All these things taking place in a holy temple of God and at the side of a hallowed grave constitute, for me, one of those "transactions with the supernatural," which bring meaning and joy to life: even to a funeral. And that is something that I consider worthy of being told to you by an old alumnus in this hallowed chapel. —Chester E. Baum '36 Editor's Note: This is an edited version of the Chapel Talk that Ches Baum '36 (Faculty, 1940-70) delivered on May 17, 2000. ST. ANDREW'S MAGAZINE 31 Now both residents of Spain, a minireunion brought Robert Taylor '47 and Joe Mamo '47 together again. When he rowed at Reunion 2000, Randy Johnson '60 wore the SAS shirt that his son gave him. St. Andreans and their families made good use of the T-dock while cooling off from the stifling heat in Noxontown Pond at Reunion. i i '34 Frank Townsend Hollylot 12744 Old Bridge Road Ocean City, MD 21842 Last spring, an impromptu reunion of the Class of 1934 was held in Lewes, Del., at the Fisherman's Wharf Restaurant. There was 100% attendance of the survivors of the class—Bob Orr and Frank Townsend. In addition, a guest, Albert Berger, a friend of Frank's was present. Much fun!! Bob has published a very interesting book on his life. It is available in the School library. We hope it is as successful as Harry Potter. Alumni Day 32 FALL 2000 '35 '36 Frank Hawkins 7 Chadwick Terrace Easton, MD 21601 Ches Baum 107A Willows Avenue Oxford, MD 21654 Gus Trippe 420 Panorama Drive Hemet, CA 92543 '38 Buzz Speakman Box 148 Smyrna, DE 19977 '39 '40 '41 Class Agent Needed Bill Sibert 2028 Albert Circle Wilmington, NC 28403 Jon Wilford Slippers Cove, P.O. Box 953 Easton, MD 21601 "With congenial friends and relatives and the cultural opportunities of New York City," writes Davis Platt, "I continue my volunteer work at Identity House and at SAGE (an organization to assist gay men and lesbians). I marvel at how much I'm enjoying my old age." '42 Alumni Office St. Andrew's School 350 Noxontown Road Middletown, DE 19709-1605 '43 '44 Morgan MacDonald 931 Brittany Hills Drive Dayton, OH 45459 Bill Brownlee 3606 Shepherd Street Chevy Chase, MD 20815 Class Correspondent: Bill Davis 302 Indian Springs Road Williamsburg, VA 23185 After graduating from the University of Louisville (1947), Jouett Armstrong went to Venezuela with Sears, Roebuck (195257). "In 1957," he writes, "I married a Mexican girl and came to Mexico, also with Sears. I retired in 1983 and have been fortunate to enjoy good health in my retirement years." '45 Gattie Jones 193 Lynn Avenue Shreveport, LA 71105 Gattie Jones writes: "I can report that Bill Hearn's prospective account of our pre-Reunion get-together in Rehoboth (a.k.a. Synod in the Sand III) was a great success and his genius at organizing a house party was beyond compare. The accommodations were ideal, the food good and plentiful and required no preparation on the part of the participants, and the fellowship most rewarding." '46 Lu Campbell Campbell, Rappold & Yurasits 1033 S. Cedar Crest Blvd. AllentownyPA 18103 Class Correspondent: Ken VanDyke 347 Declaration Lane Christiansburg, VA 24073 In June, Jim Trippe reported: "I just got back on my feet after a very long stay in the hospital as a result of a bad auto accident. I've thrown the cane away and was able to walk our daughter down the aisle and dance my fool head off at the reception. The Class of '45's three-day get together in June before Reunion 2000 at the Felix du Pont Memorial House in Rehoboth was a great success. Left to right are: Bill Hearn, Al and Jean Weil (good friends of Charlie Welling, who was unable to attend), Dave and Vivien Witheford, Barb and Dwight Dunlevie, Eleanor and Bill Hewlett, Audrey and Jim Rooney, and Gattie and Marty Jones. The picture was taken by Peggy Hearn. That's the last of five, so Nancy and I can now relax. "We're planning a trip to England next spring and will look up some kissing relatives. We have traced the Trippe family back to 1066 when one of my ancestors fought with King Alfred against the Normans. "I'm happy to be back at work and return to normalcy. It keeps me out of trouble, and I really enjoy it." A note from Ken VanDyke for his classmates reads: "Hey '46ers! How about getting on the SAS web site (www.standrewsde.org) and listing your e-mail addresses. I know Don Haynsworth and I aren't the only ones on the net!" '47 Frank Giammattei 1 Briars Lane Wilmington, DE 19807 Bill McDowell 39 W. Highland Avenue Philadelphia, PA 19118 In late June, Robert "Bones" Taylor and Joe Mamo met in Palma de Mallorca, Spain, after being out of touch for more than 53 years. Joe and his wife, Josephine (Jo), have lived and worked in Mallorca for 25 years. Bones and his wife, Hillary, decided to retire in Spain last November and are currently living in San Sebastian. '48 '49 Sky Smith 3811 Fort Charles Drive Naples, FL 34102-7900 Pete Obbard 139 Woodside Drive Mount Holly, NJ 08057 Lawton Hindle is recovering from kidney transplant surgery, which was performed in the spring. His son, Thomas, Gattie Jones '45 thoroughly enjoyed the Maryland crabs at Reunion. was the donor. Lawton would like to hear from classmates. Wes Martin's widow, Ginny, tells us that their son, Greg, was married on June 17 in Connecticut. Greg teaches at Rosemary Hall, and his wife, Andi, teaches second grade in a public school. Judy and Pete Obbard moved from their house of 24 years in Moorestown, N.J., to a townhouse in the independent living part of Medford Leas, which is a lifecare community. Pete will retire from Smith Barney at the end of 2000. "Then we will spend summers in Maine and winters here [Mount Holly]," states Pete. "We have moved only eight miles, so we continue to be near friends and Philadelphia." '50 Stu Bracken 1401 Rose Valley Way Ambler, PA 19002 Mort Clark writes: "I was sorry to miss the Reunion, but we had all three generations of the Clark family in Tuscany for two weeks. I have two daughters married to Englishmen and four English grandchildren at present. The boys are already enrolled at their fathers' 'public schools,' but I hope to persuade one of the girls to apply to St. Andrew's." ST. ANDREW'S MAGAZINE 33 prove them wrong and have 100% attendance. Mark your calendars, tickle your files, and note the date now — June 2002. '53 '54 50 x 50 - 1950's 50th - Members stood with Ches Baum '36 and Bill Amos. Walt Phillips '59 and wife Pam had a great time with Liz and Andy Adams '59 in Morehead City, N.C., at one of the many very good local restaurants. After receiving the Reunion T-shirt and 50th Reunion biography book, Dick Leonard's wife, Nancy, wrote: "I took them to him the day they came, took back the shirt in order to sew a name tag in it, took it back and the nursing assistant placed it where it would not be missed by the next aide to dress Dick. "Since then, we have read the information listed with each man's picture. We can do two a day before [Dick] gets too tired. He is enjoying hearing about his friends. "Stuart Bracken and Jack Keller have been in touch, and their calls have been related to Dick, and letters read to Dick." Nancy and Dick's telephone number at Fairhaven is 410-795-6250, and their e-mail address is [email protected]. '51 Barry Register 65 East 96th Street, Apt. 6B New York, NY 10128 Barry Register would like to relay the following message and information to his classmates: The Reunion weekend dates are now set for our 50th — June 8-10, 2001. Mark your calendars NOW!! As a member of the ACB, your Class Agent/Correspondent attended Reunion 2000, which was perfect in all respects, including the weather, with thanks to and appreciation of, the highly organized troops of our director of development, Chesa Profaci. As you can read in the Class of 1950's notes, they had a glori34 FALL 2000 ous 50th with an excellent turnout. They very kindly welcomed me into their fold, since I was originally in that class, and very imperceptibly, over the course of five years, became a member of '51. As discussed in the last issue of the Magazine, we have to be thinking of our bios. Previous class bio collections have included some amusing and previously unknown vignettes of events during the years. Perhaps you can dig into your memories and come up with some of your own, such as Ed Clattenburg's telling us his side of the story of the errant rocket sailing through Ed Hawkins's window one starry night. Our one-time archivist and selfdescribed Tribal Elder, Ches Baum '36, is always on hand at these events, and we all enjoy reminiscing with him. An added attraction at recent reunions is the presence of Bill Amos, who kindly always remembers that I was one of his charter advisees back there in 1947. I would suggest your reading his Time to Remember for further history and insight of the School, which he always enjoys discussing. Two far-away classmates who have indicated their eagerness to attend are Peter Pell and Tom Osborn. Jack Fiedler tells me he went to our 45th at Yale, which I did not attend because of some minor complications, and expects to return to SAS. And you can count on Dave Lindsay and yours truly. The results are in for Annual Giving. The Class of 1951 again did very well, for which the School is extremely grateful. ATTENTION '52ers!! Keep in mind: 2002 — your 50th Reunion! Time is moving on and it will be here soon. Secretary/Class Correspondent Herndon Werth is anxious for all classmates to attend and experience a memorable weekend. They said it couldn't be done. . . . let's Church Hutton 4216 Holborn Avenue Annandale, VA 22003-3733 Tony Philippi is "sculling and selling— have guaranteed entry for Head of the Charles 2000." Tony Hathaway retired in 1998 and has been pursuing his hobby of nature photography. He has traveled, as a consequence, to Ireland, Australia, Alaska and Brazil, with forthcoming trips to the Antarctic and Svalbard. Walt Liefeld is taking a break from campground hosting. He and Judy are traveling in their motor home through Texas, the Southwest, the West Coast and to Alaska, visiting national parks along the way. They plan to visit son Peter '83 in California in June and return to Killens Pond State Park in Felton, Del., as campground hosts in November and December. Mary and Jim Healy traveled coast to coast for the wedding of their daughter, Kathy, in San Diego, Calif, on July 6, 2000. Jim remarked that she was the "last of the unmarried daughters to 'tie the knot'!" '55 '56 '57 Ted Hill 217 Pheasant Run Drive Paoli, PA 19301 Class Correspondent: Herndon Werth 434 East 58th Street, 6A New York, NY 10022 Tom Oliphant P.O. Box 222 Mt. Desert, ME 04660 Steve Baldwin 110 Riverside Drive, Apt. 12-F New York, NY 10024 Bill Cox P.O. Box 810 Erie, CO 80516-0810 Bob Shank 3894 Red Lion Road Bear, DE 19701 Class Correspondent: George Brakeley 138 East Avenue New Canaan, CT 06840-5612 '58 Jerry Wigglesworth 115 North Delaware Ave. Manhattan, KS 66502 SAS Alumni Web Site Address: www.members.dca.net/sas user name: sas • password: grad '59 Andy Adams 2201 S. Arlington Ridge Rd. Arlington, VA 22202-2122 From Poulsbo, Wash. (30 miles due west of Seattle, on Kitsap Peninsula), Stu Culleney reports that he spent "30 years in the Sub Service and CIA, a couple of years as an engineer for Johnson Controls World Services and then retired at age 51 (eight years ago)." He and his wife, Dana, have two daughters. The youngest graduated from the University of Washington in June 2000, and the oldest has three children. Russ Chesney was the vice chair of a 16-member task force which met over four years and recently published "The Future of Pediatric Education Task Force II — How the Education of Child Health Personnel Should Be Organized." Liz and Andy Adams spent two evenings with Pam and Walt Phillips during their visit to Morehead City, N.C., in May. '60 '61 '62 '63 Carl Bear P.O. Box 682 Bozeman, MT 59771-0682 Class Correspondent: John Morton 119 Huse Drive Annapolis, MD 21403 '66 Cliff Nuttal RD 3, Box 1800 Milton, PA 17847 '67 Class Agent Wanted Franklin Smith writes: "My wife, Linda, and I continue to live in Summerville, S.C., only four blocks from the house that I grew up in. I have been working in the field of Character Consulting for the past 3-1/2 years, training organizations in how to have a character focus for all of their employees. The trainings have taken me from South Carolina to Texas, Florida and Idaho with the most recent trip to train an organization in Hawaii. "Our oldest son, Yeadon, is now 19 and planning to be an intern on the Mission Field at an orphanage in Juarez, Mexico, for a year. Curt Coward 2087 Hunters Crest Way Vienna, VA 22181-2841 Billy Paul 1540 Pikeland Road Chester Springs, PA 19425 Jerry Fogle 2127 Showers Lane Martinsburg, WV 25401-8882 Keep those CLASS NOTES coming! e-mail: [email protected] Alumni Day * September 30 Cap Roberts '62 (left) and Gardner Cadwalader '66 stood with their daughters, Serena '01 (bow) and Genevieve '00 (stroke) at the Henley Women's Regatta on June 17, 2000. Class Correspondent: Walt Harrison 2323 Thistledowne Dr., NE Grand Rapids, MI 49505 John Craighill 2700 Windswept Lane Annapolis, MD 21401 Class Correspondents: Bill Pfeifer 126 Cedar croft Road Kennett Square, PA 19348-2421 Randy Brinton '64, Barry Sabloff '64 and Ches Baum '36 posed with Dennis Blair '64 following his Commencement speech. Chris Michel writes: "I'm sorry I missed the reunion. The class reunion spirits have been consistently high for a number of years (they definitely make it all the way out to California), and this year was no exception from the daily press reports I've been reading on the e-group. I know I loved my time at the 5th, 20th and 30th, so I'm sure you all had a great time. "My wife, Sara, and I made it to an SAS San Francisco get-together earlier this year. It couldn't hold a candle to actually being at the old mother ship (or was that alma mater?), but I'm glad I went." Howard Snyder 330 Laurel Lane Haverford, PA 19041 John Schoonover 54 Rockford Rd. Wilmington, DE 19806-1004 '64 '65 Lee Tawes 388 Bedford Center Rd. Bedford Hills, NY 10507 Members of the Class of 1960 caught up at Reunion 2000. Carl King (left), Henry Pool (center) and Steve Walke discussed life during the crab feast. "I really enjoyed our 25th reunion some years back and look forward to making another one in the future." Jerry Fogle recently spoke on the telephone with George Heiner, who lives in the high desert of southern Arizona and writes for the high-technology industry. Among his western SAS contacts is David "Bunker Hill" Walker '65 with whom he talks from time to time. Jerry and George reminisced about the SAS of the 1960s. George hopes to attend another reunion some day, as he occasionally travels eastward on family business. Jerry reviewed his more modern contacts with the School recently, as his daughter Ingrid '00 graduated in May. ST. ANDREW'S MAGAZINE 35 '68 Duke Snyder '75 with Meredith (2) at Reunion. Lory Peck 6315 States Road Alpine, NY 14805-9716 Chris Reeve ("Mole") reports that he and his family "are well and thriving." Wife Jenny is working on her degree in primary education. Their eldest child, Margot, is studying environmental science and engineering. Daughter Angela graduated from St. Margaret's, Brisbane, and is on a year's exchange in France. Doug, the youngest, is in 8th grade, boarding at "Churchie" in Brisbane. '69 Willy Smith P.O. Box 341 Oxford, MD 21654 Maureen and Dave Lyon are in Melbourne, Australia, where he is the U.S. Consul General. Dave says, "It is a lovely city with beautiful parks, great restaurants and friendly people. Malcolm McGee sends his regards and writes: "Since March 1997, I have been the Resident Director of the Anderson House of the Society of the Cincinnati in Washington, D.C. The Anderson House, a Beaux Arts mansion that was built in 1903 and given to the Society in 1937, is the National Headquarters of the Society of the Cincinnati, an organization founded in 1783 by the officers of the Continental Army and Navy that served with George Washington. I would welcome SAS visitors to see this historic house." 70 71 Joe Hickman 74 with his daughter, Anna '02. Bill Strong 326 S. Taylor Avenue Oak Park, IL 60302 Brian Kinahan 104 Adams Way Chapel Hill, NC 27516 Class Correspondent: Chuck Shorley 10126 Silver Point Lane Ocean City, MD 21842 Nilda and Rob Seyffert moved from Maryland to New York. Their daughter, Amalie Zoila, was born on December 2, 1999, and joins sister Marina. Rob had "a great lunch with Joe Pistell in May." He adds, "Our friend, Peter Hildick-Smith, has returned from England, and we often see him." Bill Bean Suite #156 1672 Main Street Ramona, CA 92065 36 FALL 2000 73 Sam Marshall 457 Glyn Wynne Haverford, PA 19041 Everett McNair 238 31st Avenue Court, N.E. Hickory, NC 28602 74 Henry Hauptfuhrer 313 Gaskill Street Philadelphia, PA 19147 Matt Kramer 11 James Street Framingham, MA 01701 Greg van der Vink was named Princeton University's 250th Anniversary Visiting Professor for Distinguished Teaching. He will be taking a year's sabbatical from his job in Washington, D.C., where he has been working as a scientist in a research consortium and as an advisor to the Secretary of State. Marshall Barroll is "living and loving the laid-back life on Kent Island." He adds, "I still fly out of Dulles Airport, which is a tough commute from here, so I'm thinking about buying a small plane and commuting from Bay Bridge Airport." 75 Ralph Neel 404 Timberpoint Court Columbia, SC 29212-0806 Jamie Gerrish writes: "Reunion was just that.... reuniting with the friends I made 25 years ago. It was great! Thanks to all my classmates that made a big effort to make it back." Greg Marsh's e-mail reads: "Just wanted to say my family and I had a ball at Reunion 2000. Great memories that should last us at least until 2005. And I think we proved conclusively that the Class of 1975 STILL rules!" * ^^ >^ Ralph Hickman 1 ' 4896 Sentinel Drive Brecksville, OH 44141 /o Sue Moon 7120 Jefferson Street Kansas City, MO 64114 The latest news from Eric Muhs' is: "After six years of teaching physics and serving as science department chair at Watsonville High School on California's Central Coast, my wife and I are moving back to Seattle with our two sons, Eleuterio (5) and Enrico (2). My wife, Gabriella GutiErrez, recently finished her Ph.D. at Stanford University and will be a professor at Seattle University in the fall. This summer, I continued my work at the Santa Cruz Institute for Particle Physics at UCSC on various aspects of GLAST, the Gamma-ray Large Area Space Telescope, to be launched 2005. Lately, flying and music have taken a back seat to work and family, but we are planning a summer-long vacation next summer, which starts in June at SAS for our 25th Reunion." 77 Carolyn Matthews 7100 Lakeshore Drive Dallas, TX 75214-3554 Jeff Wilgis and his wife live on Cape Cod, where he works in the computers industry. Sandy Rhodes is "alive and well in St. Petersburg, Fla. Hope all my classmates are great. There's always 'room at the inn,' especially during spring training." 78 '81 Linda and Herb Wilgis are living in Seattle, Wash., where he is a lawyer. They have two sons. Judi Skelton Spann U.S. Naval Academy 36 Upshur Road Annapolis, MD 21402 Vince Spoltore 965 Highway 67 South Decatur, AL 35603 Carlyle Smith was sorry to miss the Reunion. She was busy with post-production work after her return from the Cannes Film Festival in the spring. She held a party for 500 people to launch her new production company. Tracy (Riddle) Chardon's note reads: "I really wanted to make it to the reunion but just couldn't. I'm definitely coming for the 25th. I'm sure it was a blast. Not much has changed here—still in mom mode. My hus- Eric Ellisen 111 Downs Avenue Stamford, CT 06902 Jonathan Rodgers 75 with daughter Kate (5 months). Class Correspondent: Lizzie Bleke Clark 4740 Wesleyan Woods Dr. Macon, GA 31210 Garrett Hart 860 N.E. Rimrick Drive Bremerton, WA 98311 Mike Berrigan 7908 Fairoaks Court Pleasanton, CA 94588-3607 '80 band, Steve, and I took a wonderful trip to Chamonix, France, in February. He survived an avalanche, and I survived the heart attack I had after hearing about it." Rob Colburn recently traveled to Japan where he represented The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc. (IEEE) at the commemoration ceremonies honoring the Shinkansen (Bullet Train) as an electrical engineering milestone. While there, as a guest of Japan Railways, he was invited on a test run of the new experimental magnetic levitation train (320 mph). Happy news came from John Paradee: "At 4:09 p.m. on June 30, 2000, my wife (Linda) gave birth to our first child, a son named Jackson McNinch Paradee. Jack weighed 6 pounds, 7 ounces and measured 19 inches long. Although our initiation into the rites of parenthood has been rather challenging (to say the least), Mom and Jack are both doing very well. Be sure to tell Tad Roach he should plan on retiring before the Class of 2018 begins accepting applications, as Jack is likely to be joined by the likes of Fred Townsend's son, Rick, and Liz (Yatco) and Chris Olsen's son, Nicholas. Could be trouble!" Scott Sipprelle, a top investment banker, opened MRG Nucleus fund with Neil Barsky in July 1998. The two managers now run the $120 million hedge fund. Their story appeared in The New York Times on May 21, 2000. Courtney and Chuck Marvil report: "Life is great! We have welcomed the third and final member of our family to the world—Emma-Grace Marvil was born on January 10, 2000, and has immediately taken residence as the princess ruler of her two older brothers, Charlie (7) and Phipps (3)." Chuck adds, "I am very active in the restaurant community in Atlanta, and I welcome any SAS grads or future grads to drop by PRIME at Lenox Square. Looking forward to the reunion in 2001!" Class of 1974 Golfers: John Eisenbrey, Jack Schreppler, Rick Vach and Greg van der Vink. Class of 1974 Golfers: Eric Howard, Pete Miller, Joe Hickman and Bob Dunn. How to Submit Your Class Notes 1. E-MAIL: [email protected] 2. FAX: (302) 378-0429 3. MAIL: St. Andrew's Magazine 350 Noxontown Road Middletown, DE 19709-1605 If you would like your news to appear in a specific issue, use the deadlines listed Below: Issue Deadline Winter '00 Spring '01 Fall '00 November 1, 2000 March 1, 2001 July 1, 2001 Unable to reach your class correspondent? Call Fran Holveck, Class Notes Editor, at (302) 285-4256. This summer, alumni in the Pacific Northwest gathered for a trident submarine tour and cookout hosted by Anni and Garrett Hart 78. ST. ANDREW'S MAGAZINE 37 '82 Frank Brooks Profaci, son of Mary and Chris Profaci '82. Becca (Bailey) Wright gave birth nine weeks early to Emma Mathewson on April 21, 2000. AND. . . Becca wasn't at home in Virginia; she was on a business trip in Boston! "I've always got to do things in a dramatic, attention-seeking way, don't I?" remarked Becca. "Emma is doing well for a preemie of her 'age,' but we definitely only take life one day at a time." Mary and Chris Profaci's new addition to the family, Frank Brooks, arrived on November 12, 1999. He joins big sister, Ellie (3). '83 Will (1-1/2) and Grayson (3-1/2), sons of Peter and Stephanie Jones Ahl '84. Boo Percy Sargent 3 Stuart Drive Bloomfield, CT 06002-1524 Ted Wilgis lives in Beaufort, N.C., and works as an environmental educator. Bret Von Urff is a CPA, currently working on a master's degree from Villanova University in taxation. As a senior accountant at BDO Seidman in Philadelphia, he enjoys his many collaborations with both public and private clients. Two years ago, his wife, Sheri, gave birth to their "beautiful" daughter, Emily Ann. Sheri holds a master's degree in art therapy from Hahnemann Medical School/University and is enjoying the time she spends at home with Emily. '84 SAS faculty member Ann Sawyer Chilton '85 celebrated her 15th Reunion with daughter Sawyer and the Class of 1985. Paul Eichler 866 Monroe Terrace Dover, DE 19904 Mary Ash ton Roberts 150 E. 18th St., Apt. 6H New York, NY 10003-2450 Sandy McCauley and husband Andrew Sirk are proud to announce the birth of their son, Connor, on April 13, 2000 (21 inches; 9 Ibs, 1 oz.). "Mom and baby are doing fantastic." '85 Ian Montgomery 35 Laurel Drive Fair Haven, NJ 07704 Anne Gammons became Mrs. Alex Crocco on July 29, 2000. Erica Stetson served as a bridesmaid. The newlyweds moved to Lewiston, Idaho, where Alex is consulting with a pulp and paper mill. Anne will teach 7th and 8th grade Language Arts in Lapwai, Idaho, which is on the Nez Perce Reservation. '86 Philip and Emily (Eden) Trotman '87 on their wedding day. 38 FALL 2000 Amy Barto 29 Carson Street Phoenixville, PA 19460 Laurence Stewart Sawyer graduated from Tufts University School of Veterinary Medicine in May 1999 and is completing an internship at South Shore Animal Hospital in South Weymouth, Mass., where she will work next year in small animal surgery. Ginny and Rob Beams are expecting their second child in November. Rob is still managing citrus sales and packing at Gallery-Judge in Florida. In the summer, he began commuting to the University of Pennsylvania every other weekend to attend Wharton's Executive M.B.A. Program. Dawn Hillman moved to West Los Angeles and says it's "very fun." She is currently performing in the play, The Gingham Dog, in West Hollywood and working on an original script, Longshot, which is both a band and a play! Dawn suggests, "Check out www.geocities.com/ oj street and www.geocities/oj street/play.v" Rob Jordan was promoted to Limited Partner of Agency, bond trading at Cantor Fitzgerald. "I ran into Chris Odden at the Waccabuc Country Club during Easter Sunday brunch," wrote Rob. "It was great to see him. I am enjoying life on Long Island and on Wall Street. I trade government bonds all day then either go to the beach in the evening and surf or play golf. Lately, the waves have been cranking!" Heather (Patzman) McAvoy and husband Peter welcomed Kathryn Marlies into their family on April 25, 2000. She joins brother Connor, and they "are thrilled to have one of each!" Living in Seattle, Wash., Susana and Edward Hammond were able to spend some time climbing around Mount St. Helens. They enjoyed the spectacular view from the south rim and could see Mt. Ranier, Mt. Hood (east of Portland), Mt. Baker (on the Canadian border), and the Olympics and Mt. Jefferson in central Oregon. "The lava dome is impressive," remarked Edward. "There's no rim to the north (towards Mt. Ranier), because the big desert-looking area out there is where the main force of the eruption was. That whole side of the mountain was blown away, along with 1,000 feet off the top. On the caldera rim, there's constant action— falling rocks, dust and steam. It was really interesting. Photos don't do it all justice." '87 Greg Doyle 108 Earlington Road Havertown, PA 19083 Philip and Emily (Eden) Trotman were married on September 18, 1999, in Martha's Vineyard, Mass. Emily, a teacher in Mexico City, Mexico, was trained in the Montessori method. "Getting a lot of use out of my Spanish classes at SAS!" remarked Emily. Peter Salett's new CD, "Heart of Mine," is available for purchase on his website: petersalett.com. Jennifer Hunt Mullins 28 McCarter Avenue Fair Haven, N] 07704 '89 Class Correspondent: Elizabeth (Baxter) Butcher 39 Worchester St., #1 Boston, MA [email protected] Elizabeth Baxter and Art Butcher were married on June 17, 2000, at St. Andrew's during an Episcopal ceremony performed by Canon P. Simon Mein. The newlyweds work in Boston, where she is the director of business development for the Lending-Tree, a loan marketing company on the Internet, and he is the Northeast sales manager for the urology unit of Boston Scientific, a maker of medical devices. Kellie (Mitra) Doucette and her husband, John, find it hard to believe they are heading into their fifth year down in Bermuda. Kellie comments, "But island life is about to get a bit more hectic as I am expecting twins in September, which should keep us on our toes for awhile. Any visitors passing through should definitely get in touch." Lainie Thomas writes: "We're finally joining the parenting trend, too. I'm pregnant and due Halloween night. Although we still live in Hargeisa, Somaliland, we'll have the baby in neighboring Kenya, as medical standards there are a bit more in line with the West. Then we'll be back here for another six months before we finally move on." Whitney (Lockhart) Siddons reports: "I was joined by classmate and former roommate Beth Succop in celebrating my marriage to Chad Key Siddons on April 15, 2000, in Bryn Mawr, Pa. A good time was had by all." In the summer of 1999, the Global Biodiversity Institute (GBDI) invited World Foundation for Environment and Development (WEED) to design and implement bioprospecting seminars for a series of training courses in Africa. In August 1999, WEED'S Leif Christoffersen facilitated a five-day training seminar on bioprospecting contract negotiations in Nairobi, Kenya. Leif instructed a workshop on biodiversity access and benefit-sharing negotiations. Christopher and Julie (Herbert) Wahman's third son, Michael Edward, was born on July 10, 2000, and weighed 6 Ibs. 6 oz. He was received well by his two older brothers. Catch Up! www.members.dca.net /sas Susan Willock 301 Spring Hill Farm Circle Chestertown, MD 21620 Class Correspondent: Catherine Soles Pomeroy 611 N. Barrett's Lane Christiana, DE 19702 Class of 1980 Golfers: Letitia Hickman Green and husband Mark, and Dink Lilly (husband of Robin Gage Lilly). Tomas Puky was in the midst of moving to Texas to attend business school during Reunion Weekend and then was off on a sailing adventure. Libbie and Casey Zirnmer are adjusting to parenthood after the birth of their son, William Harlow, on June 7,2000 (7 Ibs. 1 oz., 19 inches long). '90 Callen Hurtt 640 N. 100 E. Price, UT 84501 Mac & Carter Meyer Wilcox 228 West 4th Street, #19 New York, NY 10014 '91 Susana and Edward Hammond '86 were view from the top of Mount St. Helens. ed at the Webb Armentrout 1285 Druid PL NE Atlanta, GA 30307 At the wedding of Thad McBride and Lucy Martin in Washington, D.C., in May, Edwin Williamson caught up with "the best of all men (for the purpose of that wedding, at least), Ben Biddle, who is still in D.C., happily married, and the owner of Boris and Leo, two tougher-than-average Yorkshire Terriers, a notorious breed." Edwin adds, "I also saw John 'He's not heavy, he's my brother' Budetti, Dexter 'I got lucky in marriage' Walker, Zach 'I'm gonna get lucky in marriage this summer' Zehner, Joe 'I may be lazy, but I'm quick' Bradley, the famous Rowland Stebbins, Rob Tm thinner than I've been since eighth grade' Fogelman, the Marvelous Muskrat Webb Armentrout, the 'dancing girls' Jolie Whitmoyer and Mary Neidig, and I'm sure a few others. The other pride and joy of faculty children during our time at SAS(well, at least until the last semester), Sam Stegeman, was there as well, and everyone had a good old time. "Not long after finishing my first year of med school a few weeks later, I headed out to fair San Francisco to see Ted Cotsen. He introduced me to the best views, tunes, bars, and schwarma that San Francisco has to offer. They were all fantastic. A fine town. I think he still has a crush on Mrs. Jacobs, but he's getting over that, I'm sure. Back in NYC, I threw a frisbee with Jamie 'I can out bitter you while still smiling' Lukes and the famous Rowland in Central 1982 turned out en masse for the VI Form Dinner. Paul Eichler (I), Edith MacArthur, J.W. Clements and Anna III pose in front of the mural. Sunita Barhan Sierros '90 with her daughter, Toula. ST. ANDREW'S MAGAZINE 39 relocated to Washington, D.C., to continue his work in the field. '93 The May wedding of Frank Crawley '93 and KC Hammond brought St. Andreans together in celebration. Left to right: Pete Cook '93, James Edward '93, Mary Snowden Crawley '96, Frank Crawley '93, KC (Hammond) Crawley, Adrian Keevil '93 and Alieda deHavenon. Park yesterday, and will see them more. And more." In May, Webb Armentrout informed us that he would be working for the Bank of Scotland in Edinburgh this summer. "This will be the first golf tournament I have missed in five years at SAS," stated Webb, "but I will be able to see the British Open. . . at St. Andrew's!!" '92 Pamela Heath '92 graduated from the Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine in June. Susan Willock '89, Taylor Cameron '90 and Carey McDaniel Koppenhaver '90 shared a few laughs at the VI Form Diner. 40 FALL 2000 Joy McGrath St. Andrew's School 350 Noxontown Road Middletown, DE 19709 [email protected] Pamela Heath graduated from the Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine on June 4, 2000, and began her orientation for her residency at George Washington University Hospital/Holy Cross Hospital Family Practice program on June 19. She and her husband, Roland Denson, are planning to relocate to the D.C. area. Keil Mello reports that she was visited by Hardy Gieske, Quincy Brown and Glen Brenner last summer. All of them were in Bermuda for various sailing events, and "it was wonderful seeing them again." This fall Josh Charlton enters his third year of law school at Fordham in New York City, where he often sees Glen Brenner. Over the summer, Josh took a job in Brussels working in EU anticompetition law and World Trade Organization issues. Working in Brussels and visiting friends in Europe was a nice change of pace from the Big Apple for him. JP Lopez is in San Francisco pursuing a career in theater. He loves the experience so far and would love to hear from anyone in the San Francisco area. Tyson Kade has completed his graduate work at the Coastal Environmental Management Program in the Duke University Marine Laboratory and has Frank Cratvley 1730 Picadilly Lane Raleigh, NC 27608 fwcrawle@unity. ncsu.edu Frank Crawley and Kelly Christina (KG) Hammond were married on May 20, 2000, at First Presbyterian Church in Sumter, S.C. A reception at Kensington Plantation in Eastover, S.C., followed the ceremony. The bride and groom arrived in a newly restored 1930 Chevrolet driven by its owner, Don Barrett. Jaime Edwards and Adrian Keevil served as groomsmen and Mary Snowden Crawley '96 was a bridesmaid. Adrian's girlfriend, Alieda deHavenon, also attended the wedding. Pete Connolly, retired SAS maintenance foreman and close friend of Frank's, and his wife surprised Frank and drove down from Middletown. Frank and KC spent their honeymoon in Ocho Rios, Jamaica. Frank is starting his second year of graduate studies at the Integrated Manufacturing Systems Engineering Institute (IMSEI) at North Carolina State University. He is studying Mechatronics and still working for a Porsche mechanic in Hillsborough, N.C. KC works as the interim director of youth and young adults at First Presbyterian Church in Raleigh, N.C. In the spring, Elizabeth Reynolds looked forward to a break: "I plan to enjoy this summer of 2000 before I finish up my master's and have to move on to being an adult! I would love to see anyone passing through D.C." '94 Anne Keller Bolno 330 Sunder land Rd., #64 Worcester, MA 01604 Class Correspondent: Dionne Thomas 87-85 191st Street Holliswood, NY 11423 In July, Caroline Hoogenboom checked in with her news from Beaufort, S.C.: "I have finally figured out my job direction. I'm moving to France (Provence) to go to wine school, and then I hope to travel around the 'wine world,' gaining experience in the field. I'm off to Tunisia next week to visit friends and attend a traditional Tunisian wedding. It should be very interesting. I recently spoke with Gary Keifer, who is starting medical school at UNC in August, and she sounds happy." Caroline closed with, "All the best to everyone!" Alysia Oakley writes: "I'm working in New York for an independent film production company, so if you've written any feature-length scripts, drop me a line." Anna Standoff writes: "I quit my job working in travel PR in December and took on the full-time job of disappointing my parents when I decided to move to Portugal for six months (January-June). I have spent my time trying to learn Portuguese, reading, exploring Spain and Portugal, spending all my savings and going to the beach a lot. It's been great. I may have to do it again in another couple of years." Anna started a new job in New York doing travel PR. Cosmo Fattizzo has recently added Jimmy Hamilton '92 (a.k.a. Vincenzo Penza) to his rooming situation in Manhattan. Jimmy is currently the network administrator at Artisan Entertainment and continues to do well in life and the pursuit of happiness. Cosmo continues to pursue his acting career and is currently starring in an off-Broadway musical called Sin and is beginning to focus on film and television. On the side, he is contracting his time to an internet company called Comet Systems, where he is helping to manage the customer/tech support department. In the extracurricular world, Cosmo has been playing Softball and recently began rock climbing. Cosmo stays in touch with James Nelson and would like to send his best wishes to all of his classmates. Dominic Seiterle will be rowing in the Olympics in Sydney for Canada in the men's double. '95 Andrew Sykes 1111 Park Avenue New York, NY 10128-1234 Heather Kordish graduated with a double major (environmental science and Asian studies) from Lehigh University in December 1999 and married Fred Tanner, IV, on January 8, 1999. She was commissioned as a second lieutenant on January 11, 2000, and Fred is a first lieutenant in the U.S. Army, stationed at Fort Benning, Ga. Heather was assigned as a recruiter at Auburn University and then went to Fort Gordon, Ga., in June, to her branch school; she is in the Signal Corps. Erik Heinle lives in Arlington, Va., and works at a law firm in Washington. He often sees Elliott Lane. He'd like to hear from other St. Andrew's alums in the area. A dean's list student, Christoph Stutts graduated with a bachelor of arts degree in history from Bates College in May, during the college's 134th commencement exercises. Desmond Tutu, archbishop emeritus of the diocese of Cape Town and winner of the Nobel Peace Prize for his advocacy of racial justice in South Africa, received an honorary doctor of humane letters degree and delivered the commencement address before a crowd of 2,500 at the outdoor ceremony in front of Coram Library. Camellia Ibrahim writes: "I was sorry to miss everyone at the reunion in June. My graduation from McGill was the same I PHOTO BY OZZIE CUERVO Air Boer: Luke Baer '98 returned to campus this summer to take a dip in Noxontown Pond. weekend, and my family had threatened to go. . .with or without me. Like several others, I slipped (comfortably) into the 'fiveyear plan' as a result of coxing for the McGill crew and taking field semesters in both Kenya and Panama. "While in Panama this past winter, I had the opportunity to work for the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute. Deciding to put off the 'real world' a bit longer, I start a master's back at McGill in September. I will be looking at biodiversity conservation and community-based environmental decision-making in a community south of Mexico City. (I am sure everyone is scratching their heads.) Again — open invitation for those traveling through Montreal. Peace, all." Wilson Everhart taught at St. George's in Rhode Island for their summer program and started his second year at Holderness this fall. www.standrewsde.org '96 Brianne McCarthy 610 Leigh Rd., Apt. U-3 Newark, DE 19711 Doris Short 261 Concord Drive Pottstown, PA 19464 Mary Snowden Crawley is a "rising senior" at Dartmouth College, majoring in art history and studio art with a minor interest in photography. After returning safely from Nepal during the summer of 1999, Kate Harrington "had a fabulous senior year at Middlebury." "I have one more semester left of college and, thus, a few more months to figure out what I'm going to do with my life. Best of luck to everyone who graduated this year!" J.R. Parsons' June e-mail message reads: "James Reeve, Dan Reinhardt and I have all received our commissions into the U.S. Armed Forces. I'm in the Air Force, going to Dayton, Ohio, for a research and development job. James is on his way to Pensacola, Fla., for Naval Flight School. Dan will be shipping out to Korea with the Army, where he hopes to meet up with Shawn Kim and discuss the good old days. If anyone in Dayton/Cincinnati wants to clue me in to any good restaurants or clubs, or get together for dinner sometime, e-mail me." A note from Kate Sidebottom reads: "I am spending five weeks this summer studying Shakespeare and British literature at Oxford. I will graduate, with honors, from the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill this December, having earned a B.A. in history and a minor in chemistry. I wrote ST. ANDREW'S MAGAZINE 41 THE mina Handy attributes a great deal of his success to the good old SAS English program. The writing skills he learned at SAS helped him land a job as a reporter at a local newspaper, which catapulted him into the field of journalism. When I learned about Handy's occupation as editor of Computer Gaming World, the oldest gaming magazine in America, I jumped at the opportunity to find out how he attained the dream job of my adolescence. "Well, it was mostly luck," he admits. "After a year at Boston University, and then a year at a community college in Maryland, I ended up moving out west to San Francisco." Living with a friend since early 1999, Handy began job hunting in Silicon Valley and came across an online advertisement for work at MacHome Magazine. He applied for a position and secured work in their gaming section of the magazine, where he was in charge of reviewing the latest Alex attributes a great deal of his success gaming applications for the Mac, trying out the latest hardand software for different to the good, old SAS English program ware platforms... "And playing lots of video games. Lots of video games," he said. After eight months of managing the At St. Andrew's, Handy, a self-proclaimed "big Mac guy," spent his down entire gaming section of MacHome time gaming over the primitive school Magazine, Handy switched over this past network with his buddies, gaining expe- March to Computer Gaming World, a rience on the Macintosh platform with magazine owned by Ziff Davis Media such popular titles as Escape Velocity, which owns other popular gamer mags Doom and Marathon. such as Electronic Gaming Monthly and So how does the SAS education evolve the Official Playstation Magazine. He's into a job in the field of video gaming? now Assistant Editor/CD Editor of the hile his classmates are wrapping up their college careers and are diving headfirst into the American job market, Alex Handy '96 has been making a living for the past year doing the same thing he dedicated a great deal of time to at St. Andrew's. He plays video games. "I'd say for every eight-hour work day... yeah, about four hours are spent gaming." Video games—the arch-nemesis of corridor faculty and residential study hall at St. Andrew's School for the past decade and a half. A household item that is as common these days as the television set. "There are 100 million units of the Playstation alone in this country," Handy chuckles. "And the Game Boy? Geez, every kid owns one. We've got more Game Boys in America than microwaves." 42 FALL 2000 PC gaming magazine,, charge of compilir monthly dosage of fre patches that come wij plimentary CD. While he main MacHome, Handy is now part < team of editors that organize the magazine's extensive list of reviews and previews for games, hardware, and software, all for the Windows platform. Although he admits that a great deal of it involves just beating and mastering every aspect of a game, Handy points out the very critical and analytical elements of reviewing video games. "You don't necessarily have to be a great gamer for this job. You just have to understand the mechanics that make a video game good." Considering all factors such as graphics, sound, controls and difficulty, Handy's reviews ultimately have a significant impact on a reader's decision to purchase or rent a game. "But there is a policy here that you have to beat a game before you can review it," he notes. Handy has written reviews for Everquest and Asheron's Call, both for the Windows platform. While most of this entails single-player action, Handy and his co-workers take advantage of the LAN in their offices to participate in the multi-player, networked dimension of the two games. His past reviews for Mac games are available online. His favorite: a comparative review of "multi-player, first person-perspective shoot-em-up" titans, Quake 3 Arena and Unreal Tournament. —By Ozzie Cuervo '99 Playing Euchre wins alum a trip to Disney World an honors thesis this past year on how art was a form of survival for prisoners of the Holocaust. I played field hockey for the Tar Heels for the last four years, and I will play my last season this fall. I have had a wonderful experience at UNC and have grown to really love Chapel Hill. I'm looking forward to seeing my SAS classmates at our reunion in June '01!" * /^ ^^ George Hutton - _ . 4216 Holburn Avenue S I Annandale,VA 22003-3733 Anne Riley 1435 N. Greenbay Road Lake Forest, IL 60045 Megan Wright 401 Quadrant Road N. Palm Beach, FL 33408 During his junior year at Wesleyan University, John Landay earned his third varsity letter in men's lacrosse. In addition, he was named a First Team All-Star by the New England Small College Athletic Conference and a Second-Team Division III All-Star by the New England Intercollegiate Lacrosse Association (NEILA). Twice during the year, John was named NESCAC player of the week. He also received the team's MVP award and has been named a team quad-captain for the 2001 year. John is majoring in psychology and is a sports staff writer for the Argus, Wesleyan's campus newspaper. Eva Sayre finished her junior year at Duke, having done her fall semester at Oxford, with a double major of English and Medieval Renaissance Studies. She worked in Boston for the summer for a business management consultant firm. '98 Michael Everhart 2316 Yale Avenue Camp Hill, PA 17011-5339 Kate Werble 3414 Garfield St., N.W. Washington, DC 20007-1464 Class Correspondent: James Jenkins 1845 Parker Lane Henderson, NC 27536-3542 Ian Malloch rows for Yale. Lara Levengood studied in Monterrey, Mexico, on a Davidson summer program and will spend the fall semester at the University of Salamanca, Spain. Penn Graves and Katharine Vlcek spent two months in London during the summer, staying first in a hostel and then Since I have been at Kenyon College, I have encountered many mid-western influences, one of which has been learning how to play a card game called Euchre. My friend Nick and I didn't think that we had a chance to win the tournament at school, but the idea of a free T-shirt and food sounded good to us so we signed up to play. When we got to the Kenyon tournament and saw that there were only six other teams in the Euchre section, we were suddenly filled with visions of winning a trip to Disney World over spring break. Although both Nick and I were new to the game, we had been playing often enough to hold our own with just about anyone. So we started playing around 10 p.m., trying to control our excitement because we didn't an apartment. Jamie Carrington lived in Boston for the summer and worked at The WorldPaper, an international affairs publication that mainly publishes in the developing world. James Jenkins is studying abroad in Hong Kong for his fall semester on a program through Syracuse University. The program is designed in three stages: two weeks of travel in China, ten weeks of classes and a four-week internship period. Although he is an English major at Davidson, the focus of the program covers the political and economic changes going on in modern China. During the summer, James worked at St. Andrew's in the Communications Office with Director Dave Scott and Ozzie Cuervo '99, primarily on the Fall Magazine, the new St. Andrew's web site, and various other summer projects such as putting the rope swing back up. "Being at St. Andrew's," says James, "made it possible for me to see a lot of old classmates. Sam Cox and I went on a weekend camping trip in Pennsylvania with Anne Close, Anne Willis and Jamila Trindle. They all seem to be doing well. Sam did a session of summer school at the University of Pennsylvania and also worked in the mayor's office in D.C. He will be spending the fall semester in D.C., interning at the White House. Jamila moved to California and will spend a semester in New Zealand. "Other news: Luke Baer stopped by SAS on his way back from visiting Emmett Lynskey, who had just returned from a summer program in Europe. Mike Cordeiro got a great internship with British Petroleum in Charleston, S.C. Than Court worked on a ranch again in Wyoming." Alumni Day! September 30, 2000 want our dreams of sunny Orlando to be shattered by defeat. After a long night of cardplaying, we had done it; we had won a trip to Disney World. Nick and I, unfortunately, got knocked out immediately by a couple of guys from Xavier. But we didn't complain, because we still had two more days left along with passes to all the parks. We won our next two rounds in consolation but then lost to some guys from Texas Tech. I think that we placed 15th out of about 25 teams which isn't too bad. But, what was most important to us was that we had gotten to go to Disney World for free just because we knew how to play a card game called Euchre. —Luke Baer '98 www.standrews-de.org sports news events directions and now... even weather! be an e.agent! keep your class virtually together • with a class list serv • chat room • e.mail directory • bulletin board it takes five minutes to create an e.group for your class! want to be an e.agent? e.mail joy mcgrath [email protected] ST. ANDREW'S MAGAZINE 43 in our nation's capital. The two traded stories from their first years at college and reminisced about their years at St. Andrew's. '00 Nick Sabloff 280 White Oak Lane Winnetka,IL 60093-3630 NSabloff@aol. com Annie Taylor 706 College Terrace Williamsburg, VA 23185-3533 [email protected] Three generations of the Sibert family celebrated Laura's graduation with the Class of 2000. With Laura are her father, Alan C. Sibert 70 (left), and her grandfather, The Reverend William C. Sibert '40. '99 Bill Brownlee '44 presented Genevieve Cadwalader '00 with the Brownlee Crew Prize oar at graduation on May 28, 2000. Sam duPont 6868 Travelers Rest Circle Easton, MD 21601 Liza Green Station 1 214 Metcalf Charlottesville, VA 22904 Joining up with James Jenkins '98, Ozzie Cuervo interned in the Communications Office at St. Andrew's to help organize and design the School's new web site that launched this fall. While working for his alma mater, he was also able to meet up with other alumni, including Will Robinson '97 and Nick Conell '00, who both participated in the summer enrichment program, Summer Quest, that is held on campus. Ozzie also reports that he has spent time redesigning his student band, Mojo Train's web site (www.MojoTrain.com) along with developing a site for author, Julianna Baggott (www.JuliannaBaggott.com) in preparation for the release of her first novel, Girl Talk, this winter. Baggott is the wife of Communications Director David Scott. Ozzie writes, "I was also lucky enough to take a weekend to D.C. where an infamous classmate of mine is working this summer." Ozzie was referring to classmate Karl Crow and their Fourth of July reunion Class Correspondents: Tar a Gilbreath 823 Irene Circle Covington, TN 38019-3304 taragilbreath@hotmail. com Genevieve Cadwalader 90 West Mermaid Lane Philadelphia, PA 19118-4024 Eastover90@aol. com A June note from Tara Gilbreath reads: "With the summer well underway, SAS's newest additions to the alumni body have been relaxing, working, traveling and basically having a good time. While it seems like only yesterday that we were working hard at SAS, some of our lives haven't changed all that much. "I've been working part time as a 'peon' in the office of a wholesaling company, but I spend the rest of the day by the pool for a little relaxation. "Laura Sibert has been working two part-time jobs, one at a local toy store. She also traveled to Connecticut to visit Hannah Osier, who is working as a camp counselor at Tabor Camp for kids. Leslie Hirsh has been working as a summer counselor as well. "Julie Post has been working and hanging out at Waterman's Restaurant in Rock Hall, Md. "Jon King has been working with the Network Manager of Kanbay Incorporated in Chicago. "Jennifer Daise is spending a good bit of the summer studying voice in Rome, Italy." www.standrews-de.org Former SAISL Commissioners Ozzie Cuervo '99 and Karl Crow '99 toast their newfound freedoms on the 4th of July in Washington, D.C. 44 FALL 2000 Everyone is out there. Connect right here. METRO STOPS METRO STOP 'me(,)tro 'stap n.9 a Happy Hour gathering of St. Andreans, usually at a centrally located watering hole to bring alums from all class years, parents of current and former students and current and former faculty together for a couple of hours of informal conversation, networking, hors d'oeuvre and cash bar. The SAS Metro Stop was envisioned by and suggested to the SAS Alumni Office five years ago by trustee Michael Gewirz '81 who lives in Washington, D.C. Its purpose was to be a low-time commitment, low-budget stop on your way home from work or to the nearby Metro to catch up with SAS friends and meet some new St. Andreans who work and/or live in your area. Schedule of 2000-2001 Metro Stop* October 7 October 12 October 19 November 9 November 16 January 2001 March 2001 Easton, Md. Washington, D.C. New York Boston Wilmington, Del. San Francisco, Los Angeles, San Diego Atlanta For more info: Trapnell Alumni House 302-285-4260 [email protected] ST. ANDREW'S MAGAZINE 45 IN MEMORY Peter C. Mitchell '58 Peter, 59, died of a heart attack on Memorial Day at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston, four days after suffering a heart attack while on the job at Cottle's lumberyard in Edgarton, Mass. He was an accomplished folk and bluegrass guitarist, an able carpenter and a passionate amateur historian. Peter was born in New York City, the first of three children. He attended Trinity School in New York, and in 1949 the family moved to the Vineyard, where his father opened a poultry farm in empty barracks by the airport. He attended public school on the Island before going to St. Andrew's. Peter attended Trinity College in Hartford, Conn., for three years, and in 1960 shipped out as an able-bodied seaman on the Woods Hole Oceanographic research vessel, Chain. He greatly enjoyed the adventurous life of traveling across the world with stops at Istanbul, Capetown and Bermuda, among many others. He became ship's oiler and, since he was a keen learner, was sometimes permitted to pilot the vessel. He recalled taking the ship through the Dardanelles when he was 21. Also, when the Chain was anchored off Monaco on Thanksgiving in 1960, the crew was invited ashore for a holiday dinner with Prince Rainer and Princess Grace. When Peter married Martha Jane Langenheim in 1965, he gave up the seagoing life. The couple first lived on the Vineyard, where Peter worked as a carpenter. They moved to Boston in 1966 and returned to the Island two years later. They bought a house lot in Longview, off the Lambert's Cove Road in West Tisbury, and Peter built a Cape style house, doing the work himself while working also as a carpenter for Otis Burt. In 1970, he settled into a job at Cottle's in West Tisbury. The Mitchells had three children in these years. Peter C. Mitchell, Jr. died soon after his birth in 1971, Janet Lawson was born in 1973, and Margaret Given was born in 1979. In 1981, the family relocated on Bainbridge Island, which lies across Puget Sound from Seattle, Wash. In 1984, Peter came east alone, settling in Boxborough. He returned to Bainbridge Island in 1990 to be near his daughters. He went back to work at the lumberyard that had employed him previously. Returning to the Vineyard for the last time in 1998, Peter was welcomed by his brother, Patrick, and his sister, Katherine Hough, both of West Tisbury, and by some of the same cousins he'd played with as a boy. Cottle's also welcomed him back. He lived briefly in Vineyard Haven, then found an apartment in West Tisbury. Peter was a vital and robust-appearing man, but health problems began early. He had triple bypass surgery when he was 39, and in 1985 it was discovered that he had diabetes. He suffered a stroke in 1993. According to some who heard him play, if Peter had chosen to do so, he might have earned considerable success as a musician. On the Vineyard in his late teens and early twenties, he was part of the folk and bluegrass scene that included Tom Rush and Bill Keith, who was to become one of the country's foremost banjo players. Peter and Bill often performed together at the Chilmark Community Center. Peter had an encyclopedic knowledge of World War II and 46 FALL 2000 built model airplanes from the war era. On Bainbridge Island, he befriended several veterans who had been fliers in the war; he would surprise them with models of the planes they'd flown, correct down to ever detail. He loved to ride a motorcycle and owned three HarleyDavidsons over the years. He loved movies, especially the classic westerns. Peter was known for his wit and irreverent sense of humor. It never left him, even in the dark hours of worry about his heart. Just before his death he had amused himself composing humorous snatches of verse with magnetized word tiles stuck to his refrigerator. Underneath the funny lines came a shift of mood, pieced together tile by tile: "After still moment of life, stare of death." Peter is survived by his wife, daughters, brother and sister, and by numerous nieces, nephews and cousins. A memorial gathering was held at the home of Patrick and Cynthia Mitchell on the Panhandle in West Tisbury. (This article contains excerpts from the Vineyard Gazette, Martha's Vineyard, Mass., June 2, 2000.) The following tribute by Peter Colt Josephs appeared in the Vineyard Gazette: Peter C. Mitchell was a kind and decent man of great honesty, integrity and character who adroitly overcame daunting obstacles after having adult responsibilities thrust on him at an early age. At age 19, after two years of college, Peter became the man of the house and left college to go to work to support his family and put his two younger siblings through college or professional school. He was proud that his brother was able to attend and graduate from Trinity College (Hartford, Conn.), like their own father, but at forfeiture of completion of his own Trinity education and degree. Peter received instead a no less valuable certificate of merit from the school of hard knocks aboard Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution's workhorse research vessel, Chain. His well-scrubbed college peers stood in absolute awe of him. Peter was a working man's gentleman and his was a life well lived. Besides his fine family, Peter will be greatly missed and long remembered by his many friends and Island contemporaries. Christopher E. Wilson '99 Chris, a resident of Smyrna, Del., died as the result of a car accident on June 8, 2000. Chris was born in 1981 in Alabaster, Ala. He grew up in the neighborhood of Woodbrook in South Dover and on his family's farm in Smyrna. He played football and lacrosse at St. Andrew's. A loving brother and son, Chris spent a good deal of his life in public service. At age 13, he volunteered at the Delaware Agricultural Museum, helping facilitate summer programs for small children. Each summer since 1996, Chris served as a counselor at Camp Arrowhead, a wilderness camp for children in Lewes sponsored by the Episcopal Diocese of Delaware. He was also a member of Christ Church in Dover and often served as an acolyte. Chris was a lover of music and played jazz trumpet at St. Andrew's. He also learned to love the sea. He spent the last year of his life sailing in Trinidad, Venezuela and the eastern Caribbean with his uncle. Chris was scheduled to start his freshman year at Dickinson College in Carlisle, Pa., this fall. Dedicated to serving children, he planned to study history in preparation for a career as a teacher. Chris is survived by his parents, Ted and Juanita Wilson of Smyrna, Del.; his brother, Josh Wilson '95 of Chicago, 111; his two grandmothers, Hilda Krupka of Hartly, Del., and Marion Wilson of Rehoboth, Del.; and numerous uncles, aunts and cousins. Chris will be sorely missed by all those who knew him and the contents of his heart. Classmate Mary Vaughn made the following comments at a memorial service for Chris: This doesn't seem real. How can it be? How do I deal with losing someone who has always been a constant in my life? In the past couple of days, I've been reflecting on the last 19 years of our friendship. Chris has been a part of the landmarks in my life. He and I survived the awkward middle school years together, remaining friends even when he was kinda chunky and I had huge ugly glasses. I attended my first boy/girl sleepover at his house, where he woke me up with a nasty wet willy. We were scared but excited freshmen together on our first day at St. Andrew's and were scared but excited graduates together on our last. Even after graduation, when we were both doing our separate things, we still managed to get together and share stories about our lives before watching Jerry Springer. There were also so many everyday things that we did that made up our friendship, like those days that he would sit me down and make me listen to his latest CD or watch what must have been ten hours of Monty Python or the Simpsons. He's the reason that I have developed such a love of Monty Python, even though I never would have admitted it to him. It's hard to think about future landmarks in my life without Chris being a part of them. Chris was so goofy. He was never afraid to make a fool out of himself to put a smile on someone else's face. Back in our Odyssey of the Mind days, after our meetings, our team would sneak out to the barn to set things on fire. One day, Chris took a can of hairspray and a handful of matches, which his mother caught him taking, and met us out at the barn. We proceeded to light a stick on fire, and Chris, as the master firebearer, used the hairspray to make a really cool torch. He could make fireballs, and write things, and all sorts of cool stuff. We never got tired of it. Another time, after an icestorm, Chris went into the garage, which had frozen open about a half foot. He waited until I had come close enough, and grabbing my ankles, pulled my feet under the garage. He not only took off my socks and shoes in the freezing cold, but he tickled me, too. I'll miss his picking on me. Chris loved St. Andrew's. He was always right in the middle of things, whether it had to do with school spirit or form activities. He would go to all the home volleyball games, leading the football team in cheers. He would always be one of the first to show up for dances in the senior room, always dressed in the theme for the night, even back when our class had to have parties in the Student Center. He'd show up early to set up and stayed late to clean up. He came every Christmas and Easter to decorate the chapel and never missed a class meeting. Chris was always that thoughtful guy who would send Crushes to those girls who might not have gotten any otherwise. Because of an injury, he was the first guy to brave aerobics with Ms. Hewlett for two years; and his face was a common one at all major games with red paint all over it, shouting for all he was worth. Our class members all have memories of Chris, from chatting in the weight room to playing around on the front lawn. I remember the times where he and I would sit and talk about how we were. Chris's school spirit and passion for St. Andrew's was contagious. Whatever Chris did, it was done with a love of life and energy that few people have. Even through the toughest parts of his life, he never lost that. This is his gift to us. Even now, I find it difficult to refer to him in the past tense. That's like saying that he's over. But he's not over. As long as we remember him, he'll always be alive in our hearts. I didn't lose just a friend on June 8,1 lost a brother. I didn't call him as much as I should have, but he was still a part of my family, and he'll always be a part of me. Classmate Sulaiman Jenkins said these words at the service: Five years ago, I would've never imagined that I'd be in the same room with Chris and not be able to slap him high-five, ask him how he's doing, and sip on a nice cold Coke. I would've never imagined that now, five years later, I'd be standing here trying to muster up all the strength and courage to talk about him in the past tense, and about what his life meant to mine. I couldn't imagine this because those days seemed so endless, so timeless. We were two great friends with bright futures ahead of us. We were supposed to grow old, supposed to see the world, drink wine, and smoke cigars together. I guess God had different plans. If there's anything I've learned from this at my tender age of 18, it is that we all need to live in the moment. We all need to tell those who we love, that we do love them because tomorrow is never promised. Let me say a few words about Chris. It's fitting that one of Chris's favorite movies was Braveheart because Chris was truly brave of heart and brave of spirit. As I carouselled through high school, trying to lay the foundation for a successful life, I often took for granted and lost sight of those intangible joys of life. Chris always restored my vision. With his high spirits he always showed me how to enjoy life with his goofy humor and how to appreciate it with his random acts of compassion and empathy. He was a lovable person with a heart of gold and he had a loving family behind him. He always put himself last and helped others first and for that I have admired him dearly. Chris was a classmate, a teammate, a roommate, and a friend. I just never got the chance to say it. Well, Chris, here I am, your old roomie. I know you're doing OK, kid. You mean the world to me, and you have opened the gates of my heart as well as many others. I have thrown away the key. So I guess that means you'll stay there forever. Keep smiling and know that you will be on my mind until the day I leave this world. I love you, Chris. I always have. I always will. ST. ANDREW'S MAGAZINE 47 ecause of the contributions St. Andrew's made to me in years past; because of the strong effort by the School family to do, be and provide the best to those it touches; because of the scale of the organization to allow and encourage the inter- personal relationships needful to achieve good results: it is rewarding for us to have a small part in tilling the School s needs." Bill Hewlett '45 and his wife, Eleanor, established a charitable remainder trust in 1996 because it is a vehicle (when using highly appreciated securities) that gives several bangs for the buck: • a current tax credit based on an untaxed appreciated value. • a predictable income stream for life (of the donor/beneficiaries). • some inflationary protection on that income. 'It's a combination that's hard to beat! To learn how to get the most "bangs for your bucks," Lct the Development Office at (302) 285-4260 or [email protected] 48 FALL 2000 Reflections and Fact By David "Bunker Hill" Walker '65 I t's July 4, 2000, and I am sitting on my deck in the middle of the Prescott National Forest in Northern Arizona, reflecting on my life and how fortunate I am to be an American. My wife, Diane, and I returned from my 35th Reunion weekend visiting classmates who will be friends for life. We had ten of our remaining 30 classmates from '65 return for the reunion. Jud Burke, Jack Gregg, Abner Haynes, Peabody Hutton, Andy McNair, John Morton, Jon Smith, Lee Tawes, Loudon Wainwright and David (Bunker Hill) Walker. With the exception of some gray hair and some weight shift, everyone looked the same. The personalities and quirks hadn't changed much either. When I reflect on Reunion, I think about the lifechanging experiences that St. Andrew's afforded me. My mother heard about St. Andrew's from a close friend. When we drove up from D.C., I remember seeing the varsity baseball and football fields, the tennis courts and the gym. c_ I told my mom that I was going to go to this / school. I did not fully understand that there were two major obstacles: we couldn't afford a tenth of the tuition, and—oh yeah—I had to qualify academically. Bull Cameron confided in me, much later, that when I told him I wanted to be the middle linebacker for the Washington Redskins, I was going to go to St. Andrew's come hell or high water. We all have people who come into our lives and make a difference. Bull Cameron took a chance on me, and I worked hard to make sure I deserved his trust. Webb Reyner was our football coach. He had a knack for "psyching" me up before and during games. He challenged me to be tough and emotional, yet think smart. As the football captain on the fall '64 team, we beat Tower Hill for the first time in 13 years. Mr. Cameron declared Monday a school holiday. I will never I forget the standing ovation that our team received when we came into the dining room that night. The "never say die" attitude at St. Andrew's was instrumental in my successful sales career. Bill Amos is a legend at St. Andrew's and the scientific community at large. Math and science were not my strong points, but he made biology fun. For a city boy, the opportunity to study the ecosystem of Noxontown Pond was incredible. At the Reunion Weekend, Diane and I took the barge trip up the Pond with Dr. Peter McLean. Listening to the history of the Pond since 1965 made me think of how fortunate we all are that we could experience the millpond in Middletown. I know where I got my feelings for preserving and protecting the environment. Ferdie Hillier taught me to appreciate ancient history. Coming from a political background in D.C., history and politics intrigued me. How the ancient civilizations started, evolved and then blended into today's culture fascinated me. I ended up majoring in political science/economics at Occidental College. I was in Sam McCandless' geometry class on November 23, 1963, when we got the tragic news about President John F. Kennedy. We were dismissed from class and went directly to a common room to watch the black-and-white TV. I had already lost my father and my stepfather (at age 3 and 9), but to many of my classmates, this was the closest to death that any had ever come. Sunday at the Reunion, we attended the memorial service for all St. Andreans who have passed into the next life. Especially memorable was the dedication of the new carillon in memory of our classmate, Jay McNeely. Jay's wife and children were moved by the spirit of the entire weekend. Seeing Ned and Gretchen Gammons, reminded me of the impact Ned and Sandy Ogilby had on all of us. When I rededicated myself to the Lord seven years ago, I realized that my "Golden Rule" philosophy started with my mother but was also enhanced by my Christian experience ) at St. Andrew's. i Seeing Bob Colburn and Larry Walker at the ' Reunion was very special. I was on some pretty good teams from 1962-65. They taught us how to win with class and lose with dignity. Bob and Larry are fiercely competitive, but they are always gentlemen. They taught us to do the "right thing," even in the face of lousy circumstances. It is fitting that with all the awards St. Andrew's has won over the years, that SAS would win the first Sportsmanship Award in Delaware. This award is the epitome of Bob Colburn. After graduating in '65,1 went to Occidental College in Los Angeles. In 1969, I met my wife, Diane. We moved to Arizona in 1974, and through a series of sometimes painful years, I ended up in the high-tech business of selling hardware and software to the Intels and Motorolas of the world. We are blessed , with two children, Kelly (22), and Rhett (24). Kelly just gave birth to our first grandchild, Sophia on May 13. Rhett will graduate from Arizona State University in June 2001. We all have a similar story. When we left St. Andrew's, we probably went to a better-than-average college, and, in our case, avoided going to Vietnam. Because of that experience, we got our first jobs and were set on a course for an amazing journey that has been our lives. (I personally believe that Jesus Christ has been driving mine.) And if we really think about it, we wouldn't be who or where we are today if it weren't for St. Andrew's. This incredible institution gave us courage, strength and purpose to get through our teenage years unscathed. Whether we were there because we wanted to be or because our parents wanted us to be, doesn't really matter. St. Andrew's School changed our lives. Editor's Note: If you are a member of the St. Andrew's community and would like to have an essay considered for "The Column," call (302) 285-4259. ST. ANDREW'S MAGAZINE 49 •' 'i. . w :#* At the National Scholastic Regatta this year, which was held at St. Andrew's, the girls7 crew tossing coxswain Anne Farland '01 into the rainy waters of Noxontown Pond. DREW'S 350 Noxontown Road Middletown, DE 19709-1605 ADDRESS SERVICE REQUESTED U.S. POSTAGE PERMIT NO. 120 STEVENSVILLE.MD21666