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KALAMAZOO COLLEGE
OCTOBER 1, 1975-SEPTEMBER 30, 1976
Kalamazoo College is committed to the concept of equal rights, equal opportunities, and equal protection of the law. It administers all
programs- admissions, financial aid, employment, instruction, and services-without regard to race, creed, national origin, age, handicaps, or sex, and implements this nondiscriminatory policy under a formal affirmative action program.
Kalamazoo College I Second-class postage paid at Kalamazoo, Michigan 49007 I Published January, April, July, August, and
November by Kalamazoo College I April, Vol. 3, No. 2, 1977 I Marilyn Hinkle '44, Director of Public Relations; Virginia Beverley,
Associate for Publications; Richard Francois '69, Director of Alumni Relations.
ANNUAJL RJEJPOR1r 1L'7§-76
This Annual Report, although dealing as expected
with a year now past, is also very much
future-oriented-because preparation for the
future is what the Kalamazoo College
enterprise is all about. In every field of
instruction, in every program of off-campus
activity, the thrust is to help students to
develop knowledge, insights, and values
regarding the world and its peoples, precisely
so that they can apply these attributes
in building a better future. Evidence is here
presented, in written and pictorial form,
of the involvement of faculty, administrators,
alumni, trustees, and students of this
outstanding college toward improving the quality
of life in the near and distant future.
The cover design, incorporating the symbol we are currently using, is a reminder of the unusual aspects of the Kalamazoo
College experience. Its global form with diagonal axis suggests the international scope of the College program. Each section may
be seen as representing one of the four components of the Kalamazoo Plan: on-campus classes and activities, off-campus
career development, foreign study, and the senior individualized project. The mark also symbolizes the College's four-quarter
year-round calendar-and, more subtly, its commitment to integrative, value-oriented education.
2
Kalamazoo COlleGe
Educational Quality/ Fiscal Responsibility
by George N. Rainsford
There are two points of view about contemporary
private liberal arts colleges to which a president must
frequently respond. The first is that a college is in the
hands of managers who are not concerned with traditional values or the quality of the educational program.
The second is that a college is in the hands of educators
who are not concerned with fiscal responsibility. This
report will deal with the way in which Kalamazoo College
is addressing itself to a competitive academic program
and to responsible fiscal management-two matters
critical to the health of any educational institution, both
existing to serve its students.
Academic excellence continues to be a great strength
of Kalamazoo College. The College remains among the
best private liberal arts institutions in the country. Its student body last year ranked 30 percent above the national
average in the academic profile of entering freshmen. Its
graduating seniors were 50 percent above the national
average in expectation of further graduate work and in
placement at graduate and professional schools of their
choice. Ninety-six percent of its faculty members hold
terminal degrees for their respective fields.
In its effort to remain educationally competitive, Kalamazoo College has a significant advantage over similar
institutions. Beyond the traditional learning achieved by
exposure to outstanding faculty in the classroom, the
College has sought supplementary objectives for its
students: competence in applying learning in the world of
work, growth toward a world view, and skill in integrating
learning and articulating the results of that integration.
Recognizing that learning takes place outside as well as
in the classroom, the faculty designed a series of offcampus programs that have come to be known as the
Kalamazoo Plan. Career development in the sophomore
year, foreign study in the junior year, and an individualized project in the senior year are not in themselves
unique to Kalamazoo College. However, sequenced and
integrated and providing not just an opportunity for some
but an expectation for all, these programs make the total
Kalamazoo College education unique and particularly
appropriate as preparation for the modern world.
At Kalamazoo College there is a difference in the
rhythm of learning and doing. In the hands of a strong
faculty committed to teaching, Kalamazoo College
students have had to master an academic discipline as
well as acquire some familiarity with a wide body of
culture and knowledge. They have then applied that
knowledge in a work situation, experiencing the discipline of employment and the demands of living on their
own. They have learned a second language well enough
to use it in a foreign country, studying and living with that
country's people and achieving important elements of a
world view. They have had the opportunity to focus and
integrate work don~ in the major by meims of an individualized project, usually done off campus and involving a problem of either practical or theoretical
significance. Kalamazoo College students move back
and forth frequently between on- and off-campus
programs in a way that makes them at home in new
situations, untraumatized by change. They know the real
world before they enter it as graduates.
Complementing this quality academic program, the
faculty have accepted the obligation to keep their learning current. Particularly significant is the sabbatical leave
and development program administered by a faculty
committee, with the development component funded in
large part through a grant from the Mellon Foundation.
The grant also supports faculty development of new
programs designed to keep the curriculum fresh and
dynamic. Projects supported last year included an innovative fre~hman orientation session involving a choice
of two weeks on campus or three weeks in the Canadian
wilderness; a comparative American Studies program;
faculty travel and research in Europe, South America,
Mexico, and the United States; an on-campus summer
workshop for young poets; and the College's first experiment with marine biology. The faculty also revived their
own study group, which meets regularly to stimulate
faculty program ideas and to talk about education. Last
year, their concern with the national inflation of grades
led to a tightening of grading standards.
Recognizing that the College is widely known for its
strong preprofessional programs in science, medicine,
and law, administration, faculty, and students have reaffirmed their commitment to the liberal arts environment
in which these programs exist. In June, Commencement
activities were combined with the dedication of the newly
remodeled and expanded science building. Commencement speaker Linus Pauling, two-time winner of the
Nobel Prize, spoke eloquently to the theme, "Science
and Human Values." The arts also received attention with
the beginning of the construction of the new thrust stage
theatre, the first of its kind in Michigan. An ongoing
review of alumni attitudes ~oward their education, begun
during the year, also helped sharpen the focus on
keeping the educational program of the College fresh.
There is also a growing awareness that there are fiscal
costs attached to quality. In making resource allocation
decisions, the College is committed to involving students
and faculty as well as administrators. Faculty and student
representatives on the Planning and Budget Committee
have helped to make critical decisions about annual
3
budget income and expenditures, and to make realistic
assessments of the long-term capital needs of the
College. Similar faculty involvement has permitted institutional acceptance of difficult personnel decisions
and has indeed made for better decisions. Thus there is
little separation between educators and managers in the
College's operation in that administrators are deeply
committed to and appreciative of the quality of the
academic program and faculty are increasingly sensitive
to the importance and the difficulty of making fiscal
decisions and implementing fiscal planning. Critical and
responsible faculty deliberations on questions of the size
of the College, the standards of quality in teaching and
advising, and the level of educational resources needed
for the support of the academic program have taken
place in the Faculty Council and in the Educational
Policies, Instructional Resources, and Admissions committees.
Although there is some legitimate faculty concern over
the growth of administrative costs, there is a growing
acceptance of the fact that the quality of the College's
management function is as important to the College's
future as the quality of its academic programs. Higher
education is no longer in a period of growth. Economic
Here, Dr. Rainsford talks informally with members of the Student Commission about some of their concerns. Pictured, left to
right, are sophomore Karen Kitchel from Holt, sophomore Chris Derose from East Lansing, senior (and Commission president)
Lee Morriss from St. Johns, Dr. Rainsford, and senior Myra Selby from Bay City.
4
Kalamazoo COlleGe
problems can no longer be solved merely by adding
students. Competitive demands on available resources
will grow, and resource decisions will thus become more
critical.
With a stable population and an ongoing inflationary
increase in costs, all income sources must be maximized
and costs must be held down wherever possible. All of
this implies a need for management. And if that management is to have the respect and support of the faculty, it
must be of the same quality as the faculty and must have
the same commitment to the liberal arts traditions. If
managers are to make sound decisions, they must have
information about current situations as well as comparable information for earlier years and from other institutions. Decisions made today, particularly as they involve people, will have long-term implications for the
future that must be studied as part of the decisionmaking process.
Over the past four years, the College has added to its
administrative functions in several key areas affecting,
particularly, cost control and income production. A new
budgeting system was introduced to give better control
and predictability. The endowment management was
completely overhauled to provide stability and more income. A personnel function was added to deal with the
growing demands of ERISA, Affirmative Action, compensation programs, and payroll. A purchasing and property
management function was added to maximize the effectiveness of the dollars the College spends and also to
maximize the income from the rental of College property.
The Development office was upgraded by the addition of
two full-time professionals, in preparation for an anticipated capital campaign and augmented annual fund
efforts. Annual giving has more than doubled in the last
three years to $775,000. The alumni and public relations
programs were put in the charge of full-time
professionals, to provide additional support for fund
raising and admissions efforts.
In areas outside of income production and cost
control, the College's planning and institutional research
function was upgraded, as were the offices of Admissions and Financial Aid. As enrollment grew from 1,300
to 1,500, the College converted the Registrar's position
to a full-time level. It also added a full ..time Director
of Housing.
· The principal emphasis of the faculty and management team of the College has been to speak responsibly
to both quality and costs. New academic programs have
been developed, but budgets have also been balanced.
The College has maintained the quality of its academic
program while it has operated in the black. Faculty and
staff salaries have been maintained at competitive levels,
but financial aid to students has also been substantially
increased.
This successful combination of concern for the continued development of academic quality and fiscal responsibility might lead one to say that the fiscal future of
Kalamazoo College is assured. However, one aspect of
fiscal responsibility is concern for the future expressed
through forward planning-identifying strengths and
weaknesses in the current operations of the College and
predicting how they will be affected by the circumstances
of the future. As academic and fiscal forward planning
have been undertaken, faculty, students, and administrators alike have come to the realization that the absence of significant endowment resources will become a
major handicap in the future.
In an effort to increase these endowment resources, all
elements of the College community have participated in
the design of a plan to be implemented in the years immediately ahead. The outlook is optimistic because the
College has the two fundamental bases needed to make
the building of endowment support appropriate and
successful. These are, first, the long-standing tradition of
academic quality and strong management and, second,
the fine trustee leadership and public support which the
College has so long enjoyed. Bringing together these
resources in an effective way which will speak to the
College's future is the important challenge that now lies
before us.
Dr. George N. Rainsford became Kalamazoo College's
thirteenth president in 1972.
5
Research on the Campus
by Kurt D. Kaufman
Dr. Kurt Kaufman, who joined the Chemistry Department in 1956, has an impressive
record in scholarly research. He has received several research grants and has for a
number of years been a consultant for the Kalamazoo Spice Extraction Company,
His projects have involved many students, who have profited greatly from the
exacting discipline of assisting in his laboratories. Recently Dr. Kaufman received a
five-year grant from the Paul B. Elder Pharmaceutical Company of Bryan, Ohio, for
further work on psoralens. These compounds are effective in treating certain
proliferative skin diseases, notably psoriasis, and may provide a breakthrough in
treating others. In this interview, Dr. Kaufman explains something about his current
research and elaborates on the philosophy of education that has earned him the
respect of his colleagues as well as his students.
Q. Dr. Kaufman, would you describe the project you are
now working on and explain how you got started on it?
A. This research dates back to 1959, when I and others at the College were involved in synthesizing some
compounds called psoralens. These compounds were
receiving attention from dermatologists because they
were being used successfully, in conjunction with sunlight, to treat the skin disease called vitiligo. In this
disease, the patient loses skin pigment in patches so that
he has white spots. It is a relatively uncommon disease
but particularly offensive to dark-skinned people. In India
it is called white leprosy; of course, it is not related to
leprosy, but the person who has it suffers some exclusion
from society. The only known cure is through the use of
psoralens, either applied topically or given internally, followed by exposure to sunlight or to artificial ultraviolet
light
It was soon discovered that the compounds could
cause the formation of pigment in normal skin, too. In
fact, the therapy is less effective than desired in some
patients with vitiligo because, while the white patches
have become darker, so has the surrounding normal
skin. This caused a good deal of excitement about the
potential of a nonprescription psoralen suntan pill. Fortunately these pills never materialized; the compounds
are photosensitizing and certainly ought not to be used
except under a physician's supervision. However, in the
course of the suntan studies, it was shown that many
people who had taken psoralens followed by controlled
sun exposure did not seem as susceptible to sunburn.
Even those who had always had a lot of trouble burning-such as redheads, very light blonds, and persons
with freckles-did not burn so quickly. So that developed
a use for the compounds as a prescription treatment for
certain kinds of sun sensitivity.
Dermatologists were then using the compound 8methoxypsoralen, primarily because it was available.
It occurs in the seeds of a plant that grows in Egypt, and
it was being extracted in Cairo, purified, and made available throughout the world. Our research at the College
was focused partly on developing a synthetic psoralen
that would be more readily available and more effective.
We synthesized a large number of different psoralens
and other compounds that were similar in structure that
we thought might have the same activity. What emerged
as the compound of choice was not 8-methoxypsoralen
but rather trimethylpsoralen. It was more active than
8-methoxypsoralen, which meant it could be used in
smaller doses with the same effectiveness. What's more,
it was cheaper, and the source of supply was more
reliable-because if the Egyptians do not want to sell
you 8-methoxypsoralen, they don't.
During that period (in the early 1960s) we were also
involved in a cooperative study with the dermatology
department of Harvard Medical School, examining the
correlation between the chemical structure and the
biological activity of psoralens and obtaining more information about how these compounds work.
We had completed the work on psoralens and gone
on to other things when, in December of 1974, the group
in the dermatology department at Harvard Medical
School reported the use of 8-methoxypsoralen in the
treatment of psoriasis. Now psoriasis is a disease that
usually gets better in the summertime, and it was natural
to try psoralens because they seem to enhance whatever
it is that sunlight does to skin. However, much complicated
experimentation was required at the Harvard clinic to
establish that indeed 8-methoxypsoralen is effective in
treating psoriasis. Actually what is involved is "photochemotherapy"- which means treatment by irradiation
in conjunction with a drug. The first disease treated by
6
KaLamazoo COLLeGe
photochemotherapy was, of course, vitiligo, but psoriasis
is more interesting because it causes greater suffering
and a lot more people have it.
A number of test centers throughout the United States
are now using 8-methoxypsoralen and a long-wave ultraviolet light-a longer wave length than the one that
causes sunburn-for treating psoriasis. This is known
as PUVA therapy. It is quite clear that it works, but it will
probably be some time before the Food and Drug
Administration will have enough clinical data on hand to
approve its use for that purpose.
With the announcement from Harvard, I again became
interested in the synthesis of psoralen compounds and
enlisted research support from the Paul B. Elder Company, a small pharmaceutical firm in Bryan, Ohio. This
is the company that originally brought psoralens to the
American market for the treatment of vitiligo, and they
retain an interest in using them for psoriasis. Our research
program here is focusing on two goals: to develop a competitive synthesis of 8-methoxypsoralen and to increase
our understanding of the mechanism of action. We are
trying to design new psoralen molecules that are more
effective in treating psoriasis. Incidentally, trimethylpsoralen seems to be less effective in treating psoriasis
than it is in treating vitiligo-although there is some
disagreement about this. It is clear, however, that 8methoxypsoralen will be the first psoralen for which FDA
approval will be sought. It is still obtained from the plant
that grows in Egypt. Of course, the demand for it is going
to be considerably greater, and there absolutely has to
be a feasible synthesis.
I might add however, that I intend to explore the possibility of growing the Egyptian seeds somewhere closer
to home, just in case our efforts to synthesize 8-methoxypsoralen are unsuccessful. My wife and I will be in the
Cayman Islands, near Jamaica, this spring, and I have
arranged to use the facilities of the International College
there to plant some of the seeds.
Q. How are students involved in the research on
psora/ens?
A. I have a senior, Steve Kroll, who is now doing his
Senio.r Individualized Project on psoralen synthesis
under the Elder research program. And I will have a sophomore working on it next quarter for his career development experience. Steve is carrying out reactions that we
hope will lead to a commercially feasible synthesis of
8-methoxypsoralen. I make suggestions to him, of course,
as to what he might try, but he goes into the laboratory
and investigates that approach with some degree of
independence from me. He has already carried out one
step of a proposed synthesis successfully and is working
on the second step.
Q. Might psora/en compounds be helpful in treating other
proliferative skin diseases?
A. Yes, a good deal of thought is being given to the possibility of using psoralen compounds for eczema and
acne. There is no definite evidence at this point that they
are useful in treating those diseases, but it seems likely
that they might be. This is difficult to study as it requires
human subjects; animals do not have those diseases.
Q. What other projects have you and your students
worked on-for instance, in connection with your longstanding association with the Kalamazoo Spice Extraction
Company?
A. Several of my students, particularly Jim Pickett, were
involved in a project, completed last June, on the synthesis of curcumin. It is a yellow food coloring commonly
extracted from turmeric. Our synthetic material is commercially competitive in cost and is much purer. This
product has a sort of greenish fluorescence; it is used to
color dill pickles, among other things.
We are now working on processes involved in the
treatment of hops extracts. The Kalamazoo Spice Extraction Company has for some time been working to develop
an extract of hops that would be superior to the hops
themselves in the brewing of beer. Whole hops present a
storage problem, and it is difficult to control the amount
of bittering material that gets into each batch of beer.
Hops extracts are more efficient, more effective and, in
addition, can be treated chemically to convert the natural
bittering compounds into compounds that are slightly
different and superior for use in bittering beer. A student
who graduated from the College last June-Dan Iverson
-is doing postgraduate work with me on that project.
Q. You have the reputation for being very tough on your
students-yet they respect you tremendously. How
would you describe your philosophy of education or
your approach to teaching?
A. Different approaches and different attitudes are of
course appropriate for different courses. Students are
not in my courses because of a casual interest in chemistry; most of them are there because they have some
professional ambition that requires knowledge of organic
chemistry. So they are pretty serious students, and my
7
attitude is pretty professional. It is necessary that they
understand the material, but understanding is not enough;
they must also remember it.
I try to provide opportunities on the exams for students
to use the material creatively. In fact, I think it is really
necessary to use information creatively in order to
remember it for a long period. I think students are encouraged by my examinations to remember the material in
rather a lot of detail, much of which I am sure they forget
quickly after the course is over. But if they then encounter
it again-as they would, for example, if they take biochemistry or if they are involved in a research experience
in organic chemistry-then it will come back to them.
After they have repeated that process three or four times
-encountering material, understanding it, remembering
it, forgetting it, reencountering it-it actually begins
to stick.
The other key objective pertinent to my philosophy of
education is that students evolve gradually from a dependent state to an independent state. I try to build that
process, particularly in the laboratory. And I think it is
also visible in the chemistry department curriculum as a
whole. It is not just the independence, it is the gradual
evolution toward independence, that matters. I think
students, at least those in my area, are not able to come
in and function independently at the beginning. But it is
important that the program, as it unfolds either over the
length of a course or throughout the four-year curriculum,
encourage students to move from dependence to
independence.
Q. Rapid change is perhaps more apparent in the science
field than in any other. Do you think the College has been
successful in encouraging students' adaptability to
change? In particular, are your science graduates better
prepared to cope because of their experiences on and
off the campus?
A. I think so. I think our program is very much a liberal
arts program. We are not engaged in vocational training,
even in the sciences. It might be appropriate to call what
we do preprofessional training, but it is certainly not
vocational in any narrow sense, as we are still concerned
primarily with teaching science students how to think.
My earlier remarks about how they must remember
material as well as understand it may seem to contradict
that statement. However, in my opinion, people cannot
learn to think unless they have a good deal to think about.
They have to develop the capability to retain a large mass
of complicated subject matter. Now it is perfectly true that
that subject matter may be obsolete twenty years from
Dr. Kaufman and senior Steve Kroll
from Alpena are shown in the organic chemistry
laboratory, discussing work employing the
rotary evaporator. For his Senior Individualized Project,
Steve has been carrying out vario'us
reactions in an attempt to find a commercially feasible
synthesis of a psora/en compound.
now. There may not be one percent of it that still remains
relevant twenty years from now, but that is not an argument against developing the ability to hold a large mass
of subject matter in one's head and at the same time have
it available for creative or problem-solving use. And that
is what, in the sciences, we teach people how to do,
using, of course, subject matter that is contemporarily
relevant.
Talk about scientific ideas becoming obsolete tends
to be exaggerated. It is true that there are many things
students learn about now that did not exist twenty years
ago-for instance, the nuclear magnetic resonance spectrometer, a very important teaching tool in the laboratory
program of organic chemistry. Eighty to ninety percent
of the information in the main textbook used in sophomore organic chemistry is information that has been
around for thirty, forty, or fifty years. I think the College's
present program, with its blend of traditional on-campus
instruction , practical off-campus experience, and
emphasis on the liberal arts, is the best possible educational answer to the obsolescence dilemma. It is one of
the College's strongest points, and it is one of the reasons
I am here.
a KaLamazoo COLLeGe
Exchanges with the Djuka
by Lawrence W. Jaquith
lawrence Jaquith has been an assistant professor in the Department of Theatre Arts
and Speech since 1974. As designer and technical director, he supervised the
installation of the elaborate lighting system in The Playhouse. Mr. Jaquith has
traveled throughout South America. He spent two and one-half years with the
Aymara Indians in Bolivia, working on rural community development projects.
During the summer of 1976, he participated in an expedition among the Djuka tribe
in Surinam, on the northeast coast of South America. The goal of the expedition was
to foster an interchange of skills and ideas and to identify possibilities for further
projects. In the following article, Mr. Jaquith reflects on his experiences.
Late afternoon, a thin drizzle passes, and the Marowijne
River in Surinam breaks into patches of gold and pale
blue. A dugout slips into a niche in the black rock outlining Tapadum Island. A slim hand reaches through
grass to secure the craft against a palm. Up from the river
come the elderly Ajuba, his wife, and their two young
children, barefoot, across the now-still beeholes in the
sand. Their pace is slow, for their long day of planting
and hunting in a distant field began before dawn. Ajuba
carries his shotgun, his wife balances a grey cloth bundle
on her head in the traditional manner, and each child
holds part of the hunt-one a string of catfish, the other
a toucan. Reaching their hut, they put down their loads.
Ajuba crouches to enter the hut and moves toward his
hammock. He returns, buttoning up a shirt and tucking
it into trousers over the striped loincloth he has worn all day.
We greet each other in the semidarkness, warm smiles
on our lips. His bloodshot eyes sparkle as he bends
over a nearby fire, lifting hot coals with his fingers to use
in lighting his own fire. He builds it over the coals with
the points of three logs forming its nucleus, as his ancestors learned to do from the Amerindians upstream.
Assured of warmth against a cooling Caribbean breeze,
he sits on a carved stool leaning into the glow as stars
spread out across the darkening sky.
Busily and with faintly murmured directions, the family
prepares a meal. Together the children lift a pot of river
water onto the blackened tripod to boil for rice. Tilting
back, Ajuba stares blankly into the night as his hands
mechanically tear the spiny feathers from the toucan.
The broth simmers and the family nestles close. When
the soup is ready, they share it with one another, Ajuba
serving his children from his spoon. He and his wife
exchange words, and laugh. They caress the children on
their laps, then set them down to play on the earth. Ajuba
and his wife are very close and loving. Though I fear
disturbing them, I bring wine to share, then pass beyond
them to sit on the open rock. Through the dark space,
Ajuba's eyes and mine meet agan. Perhaps he is sorting
out the goings-on of the day; perhaps he is wondering
why we fourteen strangers have come to Tapadum Island,
which he uses for a camp ....
We are in Surinam with the Jamaican anthropologist,
Aba McHardy, in a venture of nonexploitative, primary
contact with the Djuka tribe. We have grouped on
Tapadum Island before the long journey upstream on our
diplomatic mission.
The Djuka, numbering about 15,000, are members
of a larger group of bush Negroes found throughout the
Western Hemisphere. Brought to the Americas as slaves
for the colonies, these fiercely independent peoplecommonly called Maroons-countered their enslavement
by escaping from the plantations to the rain forests. (The
word Maroon comes from the Spanish cimarron, which
originally referred to farm cattle in Haiti that escaped
to the forest and fought to live unrestrained.) The newly
formed tribes developed proud Afroamerican societies
different from those on the plantations, restoring much of
the warm kinship and human values of their heritage.
The Surinam Maroons suffered through long and
difficult battles with Dutch soldiers to maintain their independence. For more than fifty years, the growing
bands of Maroons had to flee and hide far upriver from
the encroaching soldiers. The depth of the rain forest
and the formidable travel over the rapids-filled rivers
l:lelped to protect them.
The Maroons' survival depended on strong resistance,
cultural links to the past, and cooperation among tribal
members. By praising individual abilities, they upbuilt
their heritage and strengthened the tribal bond. Thus,
the skilled weaver and the carver of intricate paddle
designs would be acclaimed highly for their skill, just
as would the good hunter. By sharing, they emphasized
the importance of each member to the tribe as a whole.
9
Pictured during a moment of relaxation
are Kalamazoo College faculty member
Larry Jaquith and three other participants
in last summer's expedition in Surinam.
From left are Viano, one of the Djuka
boatmen; Mr. Jaquith; Bliss Bruen,
photographer on the team (who took
this shot as a timed exposure), and
Capilo, another boatman.
By the 1760s the Dutch were ready to sign peace
treaties with the Maroons. Once these were agreed upon,
the six tribes of Dutch Guiana-the Saramaka, the Aluku,
the Paramaka, the Matawai, the Kwinti, and the Djukaretained the land they had settled. Since then, their
contact with the coastal towns has been largely limited
to buying food staples, cloth, and tools.
Even though many Maroons work for wages in town
and some have received higher education abroad, most
have elected to live beyond the lures of Western society.
Their way of life, therefore, is significant and not only historically but also because of its vitality and the people's
ability to evolve in a healthy relationship with their ecosystem.
The Djuka have little of the disease, crime, and need
for money that waste so much energy in the West. They
are, in fact, their own state within the nation of Surinam.
Their democratic system is very egalitarian; all members
share a voice in the government. The balance of power
rests with the Granman (elected leader), and his Krutu
(counc il) , the priests, and the abiamen (keepers
of the oracle).
The ability of the Djuka and other Maroons to deal
with change over the next century is of particular concern
to the new national government. For this reason, Surinam's
Ministry of Rural Development asked Professor McHardy
to visit with the Djuka, to seek their counsel on ways the
people of Surinam might share talents with each other
and avoid violating individual rights to self-determination.
Several of us with skills in ethnobotany, medicine, soci-
ology, and the arts volunteered to join in the project. . . .
Standing in front of the moonlit hut, we offer a bottle
of liqueur to Viano, chief boatman and brother-in-law
to Ajuba, asking that he pour a libation for safely bringing
us thus far on the river. He looks pleased, agrees, and
we have established some trust among the Djuka.
In smoothed-out sand, Viano sprinkles powdered clay.
He sets an ostrich-egg-shaped ball of compacted clay
in the center. Chanting throughout the ceremony, he
dusts around and over the ball with additional clay. To
one side he pours the libation, blessing the ancestors
and the children not yet born, who are messengers to the
gods. He praises the Amerindians who first came to the
land and whose land we now share. Next, in deference
to Ajuba's advanced age, he blesses him and offers him
the bottle, which Ajuba accepts and pours at the shrine
of an ancestor nearby. Then those of us who come in
friendship receive the blessing, and everyone drinks from
the bottle. Fire coals turn white, and more than twenty of
us lie back in our hammocks under a groaning roof.
Always too early, the ever-present village rooster
commands in the dawn from a distant shore. Quietly
we rise, exchanging weak smiles in the darkness. Ajuba
and I sit for a moment together facing the lightening sky.
Mist clings blue about the palms and unopened morning
glories as we load the dugouts. Carved from a single log,
each slim craft will glide through water as an arrow through
air. We squat, five of us to each boat, on thin boards
under a faded yellow and green roof near the stern and
motor. Supplies ride up front under a tarpaulin.
1o
Kalamazoo COlleGe
As we push away from Tapadum, the strong current
drags us downriver until the motor can catch and raise
us against the swift force. In the bow, thirteen-year-old
Anton guides the dugout through rapids, skirting around
low brush and jutting rock-remnants of another age.
Anton's keen eyesight, his knowledge of the river, his
skilled use of a long, shaved pole in testing the water's
depth and in signaling Capito, who is manning the outboard
-all give us a sense of trust and an understanding of how
the Djuka have managed throughout the centuries.
Because we do not always understand the boatmen's
orders to balance the inside, waves rush often to our
laps. The ride is thrilling. And we feel protected by having
partaken in the ritual washing with herbs the day before, a washing shared with Maroons returning from a
distant place, to set them in harmony again with nature.
A slight miscalculation at Manbarival Falls thrusts us
into rock. Anton's pole is torn from his fingers, slaps
across the length of the boat, and flies off. Capito swims
out to break us free. These exciting moments contrast
with the tranquility of the lakes above the falls, where
the beating wings of a kingfisher unfurl from the water to
stretch through golden trailing flowers. Except for the
birds we see little wildlife near the shore.
Villages become more numerous the further we travel.
A few huts with carved, brightly painted doors peer
out onto beaches, but most remain hidden among palm
and breadfruit. Villagers raise their heads from chores
to smile and wave back to us. Viano negotiates our
passing the night in a village where he has family. We
find ourselves quite welcome.
While the men separate the gear into huts, the women
assist the villagers with the sifting and roasting of
cassava. We bathe in a delightful bend in the river away
from the current. After dark the drums appear, and we
join the villagers in their traditional song. The music
continues late, its rhythm flowing through thick village
air. We retire to our huts. Sometime during the night a
peccary snorts his way through our hut.
In the morning, after consuming tea and bread gilded
with honey, I see an old man bending over his boat under
a gorgeous stand of feathery bamboo. Passing down
among the dugouts, I reach the spot where the man is
standing, and we nod and smile at each other. His
dugout appears old and in need of repair and new paint.
On the inside, small sticks wedge open the shape. Along
the top edge, new rough-hewn boards have been bent
along the length of the boat, raising its height by another
eight inches.
As the old man works at stuffing tree "hair" between
the upper boards and the lower dugout section to keep
out the water, I watch for an opportunity to assist him.
Certainly he is a fine craftsman who knows just how to
work with wood. With his cedar wedge he lightly taps
the hair into place with a small claw hammer. It must be
spread out just so, he demonstrates, and then it will fit
perfectly and seal the crack. Setting down his tools for
a moment, he finds a penknife and begins to carve into
the freshly painted blue and red design on the bow. He
shows me how he must complete the carving after the
initial shaping and painting.
I examine the cedar wedge, show him my file, and
offer to sharpen the edge. He smiles an approval. Then
for a while we work together, forcing the sealing into the
cracks. Speaking no common tongue, we exchange
but a few sounds; yet the shared trust and the sense of
discovery are real. I wonder what he is thinking as my
clumsy efforts work against his talented hands-those
wrinkled hands reaching across the years. Finishing,
we scrape out withered leaves and soft mud from the
boat's bottom. I give my friend the file. We have made
a fair exchange.
Departing from the village, our group discusses the
weeks ahead when we will branch onto the Tapanahony
River, stopping for contact with villages along the way.
Our formal mission will include the bearing of gifts to the
Granman (elected leader) at Dreitabbetje and to the
priests at Poeketi and Granbori, from whom we will seek
wise council for future encounters. Later, in the capital,
Aba will increase our friendship with the Ministries of
Rural Development and Education. Their support and
involvement as Surinamese participants in future projects
with the Djuka will be vital in our approach of sharing
responsibilities and in reassuring the Maroons ~hat their
countrymen join in their concerns and interests.
The Djuka have a lovely saying which translates, "All
of we be one." The words express their willingness to
share their riches with others. They are words of trust,
relieving fears and permitting contacts. But, however
generous the Djuka's feelings, these contacts with
outsiders may ultimately destroy their solitary life much
as has happened for the Aymaraista, the Navajo, the
Kreen-Akrore, and the Tasaday. Lures from the outside
cannot be easily rubbed off with a ritual washing. Yet
if the link with traditions can be maintained, the people
can hope for something to continually return to.
In the remote areas of the world live many men and
women whose self-determined efforts give them a few
more hours alone. Daily they rekindle their spirit from
the voices of their ancestors. Perhaps the climate will
turn better soon, and people will no longer feel the urge
to threaten individuals who choose to live in their own
way. Or perhaps they may stay hidden and not be found
out.
11
TRUSTEE PARTICIPATION
Trustee involvement at Kalamazoo College extends beyond the
regular Board meetings. On this page are pictures suggesting
the interest and concern that Board members show toward
the academic, social, and financial well-being of the College
community. One outlet for such concern is the Board's
Student Life committee, whose members last year were
Mrs. Burton H. (Elizabeth) Upjohn, chairman; Mrs. Carol G. Boudeman;
Mrs. Marie Burbidge; Dr. Arthur L. Farrell; Dr. Richard U. Light;
Dr. Timothy U. Light; and David F. Upton.
A spirit of optimism seems to prevail
as Russell V. Kohr, Director of Development,
shares some of his ideas for the upcoming
capital campaign, "Funds for the Future,"
with the campaign chairman,
Mrs. Burton H. (Elizabeth) Upjohn.
Trustee David Markin gives art students
valuable pointers in beginning an art
collection without the aid of a limitless
budget. A sample of Mr. Markin's personal
collection was on display in the Fine Arts
Building at the time. The exhibit incuded works
of both well-known and "unknown" artists.
Dr. Maynard M. Conrad and his wife, Gene, last winter hosted students and fellow
trustees at their Gull Lake home, for a cross-country skiing party. Shown here
enjoying after-ski refreshments are Mrs. Marie Burbidge, trustee; Karen Nelson,
senior from Newton, Massachusetts; Tom Giancarlo, sophomore from Detroit;
and Paul H. Todd, Jr., trustee. Other trustees have had similar gatherings
with students in their homes.
12
KaLamazoo COLLeGe
COLLEGE I COMMUNITY
Interrelationships and joint projects with the community
add immeasurably to the academic strength and reputation
of Kalamazoo College and serve to dispel the "ivory tower"
myth that is sometimes attached to institutions of higher
learning. Many of the College's programs are open to the
public, and some have the specific goal of assisting the
wider community. The photographs on this page illustrate
three types of activities that help to make Kalamazoo College
the cultural and academic center that it is.
Preston S. Parish and Dr. Wen Chao Chen
are shown listening to a speaker during
one of last year's BAD (Business/Academia
Dialogue) sessions, cosponsored by The
Upiohn Company and Kalamazoo College.
Mr. Parish is Vice-chairman of The Upiohn
Company board and Chairman of its executive
committee; Dr. Chen is Kalamazoo College's
Vice-president for Community Services
and Director of the Center for Management
Studies and Educational Services.
~
~----~~-~
President George N. Rainsford and his staff
recently prepared and presented an inspiring
Chapel service given, as usual, for the benefit of
persons both within and outside of the College
community. Shown on their way to the Chapel
are Jesse Dungy, administrative assistant to
the president; Mrs. Gene (Kathryn) Stratton,
secretary to the president; and Dr. Rainsford.
A highlight of the Kalamazoo scene is the annual Bach Festival,
presented on the campus for the enioyment of music-lovers throughout
the area. Here, persons from the college and the community are shown
at one of the series of noon programs held in the Light Fine Arts Building.
This series is an attractive feature supplementing the formal concerts.
13
Two SIPs-Culmination of College Work
Senior Individualized Projects at Kalamazoo College take many forms, depending on
the students' interests and talents. Typically the SIP helps the student to integrate, in
a culminating experience, what he or she has learned. Many SIPs involve library
research primarily; others are done in the field. In this issue of Kalamazoo College,
we present excerpts from Sl Ps representative of each of these types. The projects
chosen for review-completed during the 1975-76 fiscal year-were awarded
Honors in the respective departments. They reflect the growth in perceptiveness,
insight, and concern for a better future that characterize students as they complete
the College's programs.
Tim Long's Senior Individualized Pro;ect, entitled
"Workin', Livin', Schoolin': A Study of Appalachian
Life, " was the direct outgrowth of an interest started
during his sophomore year. For his career development
experience, Tim worked in the Buckhorn Children's
Center in Buckhorn, Kentucky, located in the Cumberland
Plateau of eastern Kentucky. While there, he tutored,
supervised special events such as trips and parties,
assisted students with evening study and gym periods,
and in general made himself available to help wherever
he could. He made good friends among the highlanders
and came to appreciate their "truly different culture"-to
the extent that he chose to go back to the region for
field study that culminated in his SIP. Tim's advisor
for the SIP was Dr. Robert Stauffer of the SociologyAnthropology Department.
After graduation last June, Tim ;oined the staff of
the Buckhorn Children's Center, where he is now putting
to practical use the sense of purpose and direction
developed during his college career.
In his SIP, Tim first reviews the history of the eastern
Kentucky region, under two headings: "Nineteenth Century-Isolation" and "Twentieth Century-Exploitation."
The next section deals with social stratification. Tim contends that it does not make sense to classify the Appalachian highlanders in traditional ways, because they
have not been a part of the "money-based American
society."
He writes, "As the twentieth century moved upon the
highlanders of eastern Kentucky, most were still living as
their ancestors did around 1880, the industrial revolution
having had very little effect on them. The railroads first
opened up parts of the Cumberland Plateau in the early
twentieth century, but the great majority of highlanders
were little affected by this and continued their isolated
living. . . . Coal miners, of course, were subject to a
money-based economy but most highlanders were not
coal miners, and many who were, remained markedly in
the person-to-person economy of their forefathers when
away from the mines."
Only after World War 11-with the opening of the area
by paved roads and better transportation vehicles-did
eastern Kentuckians slowly begin to "join the rest of the
country," Tim points out. Highlanders have until very
recently remained mostly in a farm-based person-to-land
and person-to-person economy, as do all societies in
which farming is the main occupation.
Tim suggests that the class distinctions we use for the
highlanders should be taken, not from the broader
American culture, but from the culture of which they
themselves are a part. "One very important element of
the traditional highlander's society has been the family
structure," he notes. " 'Kin' is likely to be the most important word, even today, in the highlander's vocabulary. I
have been asked a number of times what I was doing in
eastern Kentucky with no kin around. 'Do you have kin
living here?' When the questioner has learneq that I do
not, the response has been, more than once, 'Well, then,
why did you come?' "
Tim contends it is possible and reasonable to classify
highlanders by means of their important kin relationships,
with the three main classes being the clan oriented, the
extended-family (or kin) oriented, and the nuclear-family
oriented. Each of these classes has a distinctive living
pattern.
14
KaLamazoo COLLeGe
A clan oriented family lives in its own hollow; if the clan
is large, it may occupy two or three adjoining hollows.
Most of these families are subsistence farmers, but many
have a supplementary means of making a living: perhaps
another crop, a family-owned lumber yard, a job as a bus
driver or part-time janitor for the school district. Each
family's entire social life revolves around the matrix of
siblings, cousins, children, and grandparents. Family
members rarely leave their own hollow-did not do so
even for school, until the schools became consolidated.
Today, clan oriented families, with their traditional mountain culture, are to be found only in the more isolated
hollows.
The kin oriented family may live away from the clan but
near parents and/or brothers and sisters. Its members
may share many social occasions with these relatives but
will also have social encounters with acquaintances from
work. A clan oriented family may be transformed into a
kin oriented family as its homeland becomes less
isolated; as roads are built and the nearest store or the
county seat is within easy traveling distance, the family
finds it easier and perhaps more profitable to form social
relationships beyond those with their kin. Most rural
highlanders in eastern Kentucky today belong to a kin
oriented family, according to Tim. Included in this
classification are teachers; strip mine workers; country
store owners; and employees of government, industry,
and churches. All share, as their strongest bond, an attachment to their kin and to the land where they were
raised.
Nuclear-family orientation is a recent phenomenon in
the Kentucky mountains, brought about mainly by outsiders who came into the area to live and to set up industries, mission schools, etc. Workers "living in towns
among many others besides kin and with eyes on the job
possibilities and realities thjey are facing" are developing
nuclear families because it is difficult for them to maintain
contact with their kin.
"The value of working with such a social stratification
system," Tim says, "is that one must look deeply into
each family before classifying that family within a group."
A well-to-do Appalachian family might have a nuclear,
kin, or clan orientation, as could a family on welfare.
Concluding this section of his SIP, Tim writes, "Hopefully, classifying highlanders through their kin relationships
will make it easier to recognize both the distinct culture to
which highlanders belong and the individuals within that
culture. The stereotyping resulting from such classification should be no more than establishing common
cultural practices, such as methods of farming, styles of
dress, dialects, roles, and types of tools and equipment.
When the stereotyping consists of analyzing the minds of
a whole culture group, one has gone too far."
Much of Tim's paper deals with the problem of poverty
in the area and with the special role of education in overcoming this problem. "Kentucky has consistently been
ranked at the bottom of the education ladder among
states, and Appalachian Kentucky is at the very bottom
within the state," he says, citing both statistics and
specific examples to prove his point. He recommends,
first of all, reorganizing the school districts, which he feels
are now run in the interests of politicians rather than
children.
He recognizes, however, that "even a total reorganization of Kentucky school systems will not alleviate one on
Appalachia's biggest school problems"-the fact that so
many Appalachian school children have been raised in
an atmosphere of indifference or even of hostility toward
education.
"Today the children of Appalachia grow up in a school
system where they are taught that they live in one of the
most depressed areas of the country," he says. "They
learn the history of their nation, culminating in the high
standard of living of which they see very little. They learn
nothing of their heritage and of the mountains from which
they have come. This must be given a 180 degree turn.
The study of their own history and culture should be incorporated into all types of learning. An awareness of the
highlander's heritage should be given to children in the
day care centers and preschool classes as well as the
public schools. An Appalachian educational materials
center must be developed, so that all primary books used
will be culture-based. Appalachian children must change
from viewing their region as others do, as being deprived.
Many highlanders today are very proud of their heritage,
but this is not carried through in the schools-and it is
here that it must be.
"Since the highlander's culture is rich and abundant,
more can be done in the schools than giving small
children an awareness of their heritage. High school
students can be offered classes in an Appalachian
studies program. Besides courses in Appalachian
history, there can be linguistics classes, studying mountain speech and its origins."
In summary, Tim recommends a reshaping of public
education from the present system that tries to make the
highlanders conform, to a system that itself conforms to
the mountain culture.
"When this has happened," he writes, "the highlander
may find education to his liking and once again be able to
cope with the economic as well as social aspects of his
life."
15
Patricia Harrington '76 analyzed the work of the
German philosopher and writer, Martin Heidegger,
in her SIP entitled "Martin Heidegger: The
Happening of Truth in Language and Art." Pat
reveals something about another philosophy-that
behind the SIP program, with its individualized
integration of learnings-in the acknowledgements
section preceding the paper. Here she expresses
her "indebtedness and gratitude to Dr. Lester Start,
who introduced me to many fascinating areas of
philosophy and gave me much helpful advice
and encouragement in the writing of this paper;
to Dr. David Scarrow, whose firm belief that
philosophy can be written clearly and simply enough
for one's mother to read has been the guiding aim
behind my own writing; and to Or. John Spencer,
whose method of teaching and theory of education
have been an inspiration to me."
Pat is now a student in the Divinity School of
the University of Chicago.
Martin Heidegger's thought throughout his life
revolved around one central question: the problem of the
meaning of Being," Pat Harrington writes in the introduction to her SIP.
Some philosophers might say that Being is the "most
universal" of concepts, she observes, and thus indefinable-as well as self-evident. They would then
"leave this concept and go on to something more interesting." Pat cites Heidegger's belief that this is a mistake- "in fact, the fundamental mistake of philosophy,
whith has tried to understand beings (as a noun) without
first determining the meaning and ground of being (as a
verb)."
She continues, "As the launching-point of science, the
philosophical distinguishing of independent entities was
a good and useful development in history. Heidegger
does not want to judge the Western perspective as
'wrong' or 'bad'; he wants to remind us that it is only one
of several possible perspectives on reality, and that it is
now time to return to primordial experiences of Being in
order to gain a fresh perspective. Science now has
progressed to a point where it is becoming a threat to
humanity rather than a benefit, and Heidegger sees this
as the end of an era, the end of philosophy as we know it.
He is trying to discover a new way of thinking, even a new
language for thinking, about Being."
Interpreting Heidegger, Pat explains, "Being is the
clearing, the openness, the 'between' of object and subject. . . . Since it is possible for humans, and only
humans, to understand their own Being, Heidegger
attempted an analysis of what humans can discover
about their own special kind of Being, in the hope that
these featu res of human existence . . . could be
generalized to apply to Being itself," she writes. "Out of
this analysis came Being and Time, the rich and highly
influential description of human existence which became
the basis of Existentialism. Heidegger later abandoned
this route of getting at Being and turned to the revelations
of art.... In these later works, humans, in understanding,
are outside themselves, within the clearing of Being;
Being has the active role of revealing or concealing itself
and determining the fate of humans. The artist is a
messenger between Being and humans, and between
God and humans."
In the body of her paper Pat first explains various conceptions about the nature of truth (including Heidegger's
definition of truth as "uncovering" an entity), and in the
remaining parts she discusses how Heidegger sees truth
as happening in language, art, and poetry. The final section of her paper, entitled "Conclusion: The Contemporary Philosopher," is quoted below almost in its entirety. (Sections set apart by single quotes are from
Heidegger's works.)
"Heidegger began his first major work, Sein und Zeit,
by raising 'the question of the meaning of Being.' This
question has remained at the heart of his work ever since.
Let us see what we have discovered about Being in the
course of Heidegger's writings.
"The outstanding characteristic of Being is its
relationship to truth. Being is the ground of things-inbeing, the light behind them that allows them to shine
forth, while Being itself is groundless and concealed.
Being is interdependent with Da-sein, human existence,
which is being-'there' in the open in which Being acts.
Human thought must let Being be, as an active,
revealing-and-concealing force. Being is not an actual
entity, not God nor 'reality'; neither is it a timeless or eternal form. Being is essentially temporal and historical, as it
gradually unfolds itself to the great thinkers in history.
Each historical epoch receives its own perspective on
Being which Being reveals to those thinkers who exist in
nearness to Being.
"Criticism of Heidegger is useless if we don't understand what he is attempting. Heidegger's denken,
thinking, is not the abstract reasoning of logic, but neither
is it what we would call 'intuition.' It is a kind of thinking
which should involve the whole person, heart and intellect, and it lies behind both intuitive and conceptual
thought. This thought is an act of freedom, for it is a
bringing of what-is before the thinker, and yet it is passive
16
KaLamazoo COLLeGe
and receptive, for it lets what-is be what it is. This thought
is an opening of the thinker to what is outside of
himself....
"Heidegger compares this kind of thinking to a field
path (Feldweg) or forest path (Holzweg). It is a lonely
path, open to the solitary thinker but not something to be
shared with the general public, not a public highway. It is
a byway, wandering amid darkness, which is being
cleared by the thinker as he goes, and with no guarantee
that it will ever reach a destination. 'In this thinking, the
chance of going astray is greatest.' There are many ways
for this thinking to go wrong, for it does not lend itself to
scientific proof.... There is a great chance with this type
of thinking that it will turn out to be a path which merely wanders deeper and deeper into dark forests until
one is hopelessly lost and the path dwindles away to
nothing.
"And yet, 'thinking Is perhaps, after all, an unavoidable
path.' The ground of beings, Being, calls insistently to us,
and the authentic existence is one turned toward this call
in responsive listening. If this thinking is not subject to
scientific proofs, 'it Is just as little a matter of arbitrariness: rather, it is rooted in the essential destiny of
Being.' While this thinking is dangerous and easily goes
astray, still it is not subjective, for it is guided by the
objective truth of Being, which is not of man but determines man's fate.
"Heidegger is not interested in 'the cultivation of a domain of truth already opened,' as he calls scientific inquiry. Any time a new domain of truth is opened, it
requires a leap of thought over past logical reasoning into
a radically new mode of expression. Heidegger's thought
is akin to poetry: new ideas must be said in new ways,
and poetry is the example par excellence of language
being used in new ways. To criticize Heidegger for his
use of such expressions as 'the world worlds' or 'the thing
things' is to fail to understand what Heidegger is attempting to do. The rules of grammar, like the rules of logic,
presuppose a certain way of looking at reality. Legitimate
ideas may not find expression within the bounds of conventional modes of speech. Moreover, Heidegger's
poetic style is an effective means of reaching a complacent audience. It is easy to read much literature without
really thinking about what it says. Heidegger's surprising
phrases force the reader to stop and think about the
meaning of what he is reading.
"In the area of aesthetics, Heidegger contributes the
theory that art is a mode of authentic human existence, in
which the artist, open to Being, grounds Being in a figure
so that truth may become manifest to humans. Art is
something startlingly new and different, something un-
familiar which opens up a new realm of truth. Art
challenges our habitual, familiar thoughts of unauthentic
existence and brings us close to the ·ground of all
thought, Being.
"This is an especially useful theory for contemporary
art, for modern art does not easily fit the traditional ideas
of the 'beautiful' or the second-rate 'representation' of the
physical world. With the advent of photography, the artist
lost his occupation as narrator of historical events and
portrayer of kings. Much contemporary art has little or
no connection with the actual appearance of the
physical world. Rather, the contemporary artist tries to
shock, surprise, or draw laughter with his or her
abstract, surreal, or childlike images. Picasso and
Braque throw together contradictory perspectives of
the same still-life; Chagall and Klee sketch playful,
dream-like fantasies; and paintings by Miro seem to
portray movement itself as the lines and dots bounce
around on the canvas. What can these paintings be
saying, and how can we call them 'art'? Many people
still say these paintings are not art and prefer the art of the
distant past. Cubism dates back to 1910 and Surrealism
reached its greatest expression in the 1930s; half a century has gone by, and we still say we do not understand
this art.
"Contemporary art does not fit into our conceptions of
what art should be. It presents to us frightening new ways
of viewing reality; it reflects new attitudes toward life.
Heidegger's writing is in the same contemporary mode: It
startles and surprises us. The philosopher who says 'the
world worlds' is comparable to the artist who paints the
back and side views of a vase at the same time. We can
say of either that it is not logical, not done according to
the rules.
"Yet, if we open ourselves to these contemporary
modes of expression, they may speak to us. Legitimate
truth, says Heidegger, must shock us out of our habitual
frame of mind in order to bring us into the presence of
what is ever new and yet as old as historical man- truth.
"Contemporary artists are opening up new realms of
truth, new perspectives on Being. Heidegger, also, has
opened up a new realm of thought, which prods us out of
our accustomed ways of philosophizing and into new
pathways.
"Those who follow Heidegger down his lonely forest
paths risk getting lost in the darkness. But, if they
persevere, the rewards of following Heidegger to the end
are great, for he is a sincere and dedicated thinker. The
area he questions is one which many philosophers dare
not touch, but it is an essential area with which the great
thinkers of every age must come to terms."
17
A College's Growth and Maturity
by Jesse L. Dungy Ill
Jesse Dungy '58 has returned to the campus for a year's internship (through a
Rockefeller Foundation grant) in President Rainsford's office. He has a Master's
degree in higher education from the University of Michigan and is now a candidate
in that institution's doctoral program. In the following article he compares the
present campus scene with that of twenty years ago.
Returning to Kalamazoo College after more than a
decade and a half of absence has proven to be a unique
experience. When I left the Academy Street campus to
try and carve out a niche for myself in the complex mainstream of the world of work, I had little thought of returning. In fact, I am not sure I even wanted to do so. The
College had provided me with experiences that later
would prove to benefit me immensely. However, I felt I
had gotten just about all that was possible out of this
environment. I did not even remotely imagine I would
some day return to serve the institution that had helped
me to hone my intellectual, academic, and social skills.
When one returns to a familiar setting, the inevitable
question is always, "How has the place changed since
you were here last?" One then feels compelled to reply
somewhat in line with what he feels the questioner wants
to hear. I have been most comfortable when giving
an answer approximating my feelings at the particular
moment-and the longer I am here, the more I realize that
my views are constantly changing. Therefore, the views I
shall express are subject to continuing revision .
Looking back to the fall of 1954, I recall that my first
view of Kalamazoo College was from a train window as it
passed alongside the hill upon which perched venerable
old Bowen Hall, Hoben Hall, and Harmon Hall. (Not having been to Kalamazoo before, I only guessed that what
I was seeing was indeed a college campus.) As the train
slowly inched into the city, the old yellow barracks building (which I later learned housed the music department
and the maintenance department) came into view. On the
opposite side of the tracks, the Kalamazoo College football team was diligently practicing in the dust of the old
practice field, reached via a narrow wooden footbridge.
Alighting from the train at the station, I was greeted by
several members of the student body who swooped up
my luggage, whisked me into the front seat of a yellow
Pontiac convertible, and quickly covered the short distance from station to campus. As we made our way to the
College, the students pointed out many scenes that are
now very familiar to me. Swinging onto Academy Street,
we passed old Tredway gymnasium, flanked by the old
asphalt tennis courts. Harmon Hall was next, then Hoben.
Sitting there in the car looking up the quad to Stetson
Chapel, I remember reflecting, "This is my idea of what
a college should look like." I still feel that the quad,
when resplendent in summer greenery, is the heart of
Kalamazoo College.
My first week on campus was crammed full of the
then-traditional battery of freshman aptitude tests. Our
evenings were taken up with picnics, visits to different
places in and around the city, and a pep rally.
Freshman hazing was very much a part of college life
during my undergraduate days. Thus, it was not long
before the traditional green beanies appeared on the
heads of all freshmen. This frosh initiation procedure
continued right up to the bonfire that preceded the
Homecoming football game. At that time, all of those
who wished could toss their coveted (or hated) beanies
into the roaring inferno.
Virtually all I have pictured has either changed or been
eliminated from the scene. However, it is the memories
of the type I have just recounted that serve as the basis
for comparison in my current impressions of the College.
Mr. Dungy converses with another alumnus, Dr. Raymond
H. Comeau '63, assistant professor of education.
Dr. Comeau: "This is an exciting place to be in the
late 1970s, and I would not want to be anywhere else!"
18
KaLamazoo COLLeGe
MoneyKalamazoo College today has retained some of the
flavor of the past while infusing new elements. We now
appear to have a campus that wears two hats-a traditional one and a contemporary one. It is this mixture of
personalities that has made my return to the campus
intensely interesting.
Our student body no longer goes through the pains of
frosh hazing or society initiation. No longer do we see
such well-conceived pranks as the placing of a complete
automobile in Hoben lounge. What we do see is frisbee
being played on the quad, and the bicycle club taking
off on an outing around Kalamazoo.
The day-to-day operation of the College has also
undergone a face lifting. We now have a very sophisticated management system. As a result, very little of
what goes on escapes being noticed by some trained
member of the administration.
We have a faculty capable of providing students with
an extremely high level and quality of instruction.
We have a student body with the ability and motivation
to grasp the most challenging learning experiences we
can provide.
We have a physical plant that, for a college of our size,
is in many respects among the finest.
We have a Board of Trustees that operates sincerely
in the best interests of the College.
We have a group of dedicated staff members who go
out of their way to contribute to the overall efficiency and
well-being of the College community.
What we appear to have now (and what I sense was
being carefully nurtured from the time I matriculated) is a
college that is richly mature-a college that is carefully
molding for itself an ongoing reputation as a superbly
excellent institution of higher learning. Kalamazoo College
is becoming an educational entity to which not only the
community but also the state and the nation can relate
and of which they can be proud. Our foreign study program has provided us with both an international flavor
and an international reputation.
Thus, as I sit at my desk in Mandella, I can't help but
feel the nostalgia of my return. It is a return that has given
me much in the way of a new level of education, which
(hopefully) will help to propel me into my chosen career
as an educational administrator. It seems that the College
has prepared me on two plateaus-the first being that
of the underclassman struggling to acquire the knowledge necessary to cope wih the anxieties of adulthood,
and the second coming about as a result of my current
exposure to the administrative mainstream. I feel very
fortunate to have been a part of this campus scene at
two different times in my life.
The
late P. T. Barnum is often quoted-but seldom for
this: " Money is a terrible master but an excellent servant."
P. T. Barnum did say that, and in one incisive sentence
he has summed up the financial situations of most of the
private colleges and universities of America.
Even the colleges with the largest endowments must
relentlessly pursue additional funds to keep pace with the
continuously escalating costs of providing quality educational opportunities. In this sense, money is a terrible
master. Colleges like Kalamazoo, with generous and
continuing support from alumni, friends, home community, business and industry, and trustees, have been
able to obtain sufficient money to know that it is indeed
an excellent servant to education.
This portion of the Annual Report for 1975-76 is about
money-money, budgets, investments, fund raising, and
management. Without apology, it is good to report that
the revenues received during the year did cover the
expenses incurred. It is proper, however, to remember
that this is really important because it has made possible
the healthy, enthusiastic continuation of a first-quality,
distinguished college.
The Current Fund Operation
Total revenues available for current operations increased
by 17 percent over the previous year, but this significant
jump included a large, unrestricted bequest received at
year end from the estate of the late David Greene, a
former trustee of Kalamazoo College. This bequest,
totaling $271,323, made possible the elimination of an
accumulated deficit in the current fund from previous
years. It also provided funds required to match a Kresge
Foundation grant for the purchase of a new computer
that will be used to support a management information
system including all of the accounting and business
sequences.
For the second consecutive year, enrollments exceeded levels anticipated for budget purposes. Tuition
and fees were increased by $400 and, with the increased
enrollments, produced $598,408 of new revenue. Gift
and grant income was also above the previous year by
$178,652 or 20.2 percent. Endowment revenues totaled
$543,499 and were $68,513 above the previous year.
Additional revenues received from writing covered call
options accounted in part for this increase.
Expenses exceeded budget in part because the increased enrollment generated additional expense and in
part because inflation and an increasing demand for student financial aid created severe pressures. In addition, a
new computer costing $137,142 was purchased and
19
An Excellent Servant
by John M. Dozier
paid for, and six new vehicles were purchased for the
motor pool. A number of purchases traditionally booked
as prepaid expenses were absorbed in this year, which
improves the financial stability of the College.
Management Considerations
Less progress was made this year in improving management for the business and financial areas of administration than was the case in the previous year and than had
been hoped. The Director of Development resigned April
ENDOWMENT AND SIMILAR FUNDS
EDUCATIONAL COST PER STUDENT/TUITION
$Millions
$1 6
$ Thousand s
$4
15
MAR~
13
11
10
v
ETVA UE j
~v
v
/
.........
~I
HIST DRICA
VV"
~
/
14
12
1, 1976, to run for public office, and the Comptroller resigned effective September 30, 1976, to accept an administrative position with Marietta College in Ohio. Both
of these positions remained unfilled at fiscal year end,
although active recruiting had begun.
The grant from the Kellogg Foundation received last
year for the development of a management information
system has been useful in moving gift records and student records to a more sophisticated mode. During
1976-77 it is anticipated that substantial progress will be
made toward translating the accounting and the other
3
1\
~
\
\
BOC ~VAL ~E
9
\/
."'./
2
EDUC V..TION ~L CC
..--- v-
~
~
~-
-
/
v
~
-
TU ITI DN
/
8
7
'67
'68
'69
Year
'70
'71
'72
'73
Martel Value
1966-67 .... ...
1967-68 .... ...
1968-69 .......
1969-70 .....
1970-71 ... .. ..
1971-72 .......
1972-73 ..... ..
1973-74 .......
1974-75 .......
1975-76 .......
..
$ 11,663,908.21 •...•.....
12,232,864.54 ..........
12,198,097.16 ..........
11,434,173. 14 ..........
13,888,438.79 ..........
16,093,472.28 ..........
15,489,801.82 ..........
8,943,290.20 ..........
9,933,538.32 ..........
10,651 ,881.00 ........ . .
'74
'75
'76
Book Value
$10,121 ,594.46
10,847,007.51
12,070,91 1.63
12,229,966.47
12,826,829.36
13,385,179.52
12,985,61 1.52
12,160,103.82
12,029,354.44
10,645,51 5.26
'67
'68
'69
'70
'71
'72
'73
'74
EducaHonal Coat Par Student
Year
1966-67 . ... ....
1967-68 ··· ·····
1968-69 ........
1969-70 ........
1970-71 ..... ...
1971-72 ...... ..
1972-73 .... ... .
1973-74 .. .. .. ..
1974-75 .. . ·····
1975-76
0
•••••••
$2,143
2,382
2,439
2,497
2,548
2,740
2,692
3,453
3,875
4,420
.................
.................
·················
·········· ····· ··
. .... ..... ····· ..
·················
.... ..... ........
. ........ ... ... ..
. .......... ..... .
. ............ ....
'75
'76
Tuition
$1,095
1,095
1, 170
1,230
1,305
1,380
1,380
1,515
1,635
1,890
20
KaLamazoo COLLeGe
business office records to a computer-based system. A
new computer was purchased during the year with more
than one-half the cost paid by a grant from the Kresge
Foundation.
Better systems and procedures must be developed in
several areas to complement those already in place. This
will be one of the principal goals of the College for the
year ahead.
Investments
This was a year of real achievement in improving the
policies and procedures for optimizing investment
returns from endowment funds. The Executive Committee and the Financial Affairs Committee of the Board
of Trustees developed a statement of Investment Goals
and Policies. After the statement was adopted, a careful
review of past performance led to the selection of new
managers for the investment of the College's endowment
assets.
It was agreed by the trustee committees that a common investment pool of 65 percent equities and 35 percent fixed income securities would be maintained.
Further, the recommended management suggested a
three-way split with the segments being ( 1) equitygrowth, (2) equity-income, and (3) fixed income. The
managers selected for these segments were, respective-
ENDOWMENT INVESTMENTS TOTAL RETURN
Dividends
Marllet
Total
and
Interest Appreciation Return
1967
1968
1969
1970
1971
1972
1973
1974
1975
1976
3.51
3.32
3.51
4.25
4.64
4.22
3.08
3.31
4.79
4.81
Dow Jones
Industrial
Average
9.69 13.20
1.92
7.90
( 1.60)
1.72
( 8.39) ( 4.88) (11.80)
( 7.06) ( 2.81)
9.20
15.41
20.05
9.80
18.50
18.85 23.07
( 2.14)
0.94 (13.50)
(47.00) (43.69) (37.73)
31.29
15.82 20.61
11.61
16.50 14.75
Standard
& Poor's
Industrial
500
2.39
11.00
( 8.40)
3.90
14.20
18.90
(14.80)
(39.53)
37.68
20.10
ly, (1) Putnam Capital Management, (2) Delaware Investment Advisers, and (3) Harris Bank and Trust. On May
15, 1976, the assets of the endowment fund were
transferred to this new team.
The market value of the endowment on September 30,
1976, was up $562,539 from the previous year end and
was at the highest value since September 30, 1973.
The program of writing covered call options to enhance the cash earnings as well as the total return from
the investment of endowment funds was launched as the
1975-76 fiscal year began. Options were written against
one 10,000-share block of Upjohn common stock. The
year's goal was to produce a net of $40,000 in earnings.
In fact, $39,213 was earned. As a result, it is planned that
this program will be expanded.
Cash management continues to be important, and it is
an area in which a good job is being done. Money rates
came to lower levels than had been anticipated in our
forecast, and they stayed low during most of the year. As
a result, short-term investment earnings were not as good
as the previous year, yet the more than $82,000 earned
was a significant income item.
Development Activities
Annual gift support for current operations increased by
20.2 percent to $1,063,060, while capital gifts totaled
$341,097. The continuing increase in the number of
donors and in the total dollars available for annual budget
support is heartening.
With the exception of the director, the Development
staff was in place and functioning by the end of the fiscal
year. Recruitment was moving apace, and it appeared
likely that a director would be named within weeks after
the close of the year.
The planning for a Capital Funds campaign moved
ahead during the year. Faculty, administrators, students,
and trustees identified urgent needs and reached agreement on the first-priority summary that would constitute
the basic campaign goals. Prospect identification moved
ahead, and conceptual analyses of geographic campaign areas, generic sources of funds, and ranges of
gifts were developed.
A campaign calendar and a campaign organization
were proposed. As the year ended, the President was
prepared to moved ahead with this badly needed campaign.
John M. Dozier has been Vice-President for Finance and
Development since July, 1974.
21
CURRENT FUNDS, REVENUES, AND EXPENDITURES
Revenues
1975-71
1974-75
Educational and General
Student Tuition and Fees .................................................... . $3,947,725
543,498
Endowment Income ........................................................ .
398,860
Federal Grants ............................................................ .
Gifts and Grants ........................................................... . 1,063,060
445,853
Other ...................... . ............................................ .
Sub-Total ............................................................ . $6,398,996
$3,349,317
474,986
304,025
884,408
415,569
$5,428,305
Auxiliary Enterprises
Residence Fees ........................................................... . $1,388,211
78,619
Rental Facilities ........................................................... .
228,016
Bookstore ............................................. . .................. .
Other ................................... . ............................... .
Sub-Total ............................................................ . $1 ,694,846
$8,093,842
Total Revenues
$1,232,495
60,243
191,540
5,000
$1 ,489,278
$6,917,583
Expenditures
Educational and General
Instruction and Research .................................................... . $2,842,959
Public Service ............................................................ .
231 ,636
442,113
Academic Support ......................................................... .
Student Services .......................................................... .
771 ,897
Institutional Support ....................................................... .
934,211
Operation and Maintenance of Plant. ........................................... .
897,526
Student Aid .............................................................. .
496,806
• Sub-Total ............................................................ . $6,617,149
$2,595,666
227,995
400,803
578,458
670,504
650,367
342,146
$5,465,939
Auxiliary Enterprises
Residence and Dining Hall ................................................... . $1 ,387,005
74,904
Rental Facilities ........................................................... .
212,323
Bookstore ................................................................ .
Sub-Total ..................... . ...................................... . $1 ,674,232
Total Expenditures ......................................................... . $8,291 ,381
$1 ,298,860
80,183
157,771
$1 ,536,814
$7,002,753
Other Transfers
Quasi-Endowment Funds Appropriated ........................................... . $ 259,237
(131,612)
Unrestricted Gifts Allocated to Quasi-Endowment ................................... .
(2,306)
Other Transfers ............................................................. .
117,262
Restricted Funds Applied ...................................................... .
Surplus (Deficit) ....................................................... . $ 45,042
YEARENDEDSEPTEMBER 30
$ 337,980
130,245
$ 20,759
22
Kalamazoo COlleGe
TEN-YEAR COMPARISON
Physical Plant Value ............. . ..
Book Value of Endowment
and Similar Funds .......... . . . . . .
Market Value of Endowment
and Similar Funds . ...............
Total Education &
General Expenses ............. . ...
Enrollment ...................... . .
Tuition Rate .......................
Gifts for Budget Support ..............
Capital Gifts ......... . .............
Federal and State Support ............
1966-87
1967-88
1968-89
1969-70
$16,558,473.98
$16,937,608.06
$17,692,567.33
$18,034,393.30
10,121 ,594.46
10,847,007.61
12,070,911.63
12,229,966.47
11,663,908.21
12,232,864.54
12,198,097.16
11,434,173.14
2,571 ,843.60
1,200
1,095.00
404,196.00
2,655,396.00
146,599.00
2,913,141.74
1,223
1,095.00
576,724.00
1,001,621.00
170,904.00
3,143,933.60
1,289
1,170.00
575,953.00
1,461 ,163.00
197,239.00
3,353,465.07
1,343
1,230.00
535,178.00
579,602.00
204,152.00
COMBINED BALANCE SHEET
Current
Funda
ASSETS
Cash ... ............... . ....... . ........... .. .......... . ........... . $
Cash Equivalent Investments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Accounts and Notes Receivable ..........................................
Real Estate Contracts Receivable ... . .................. . ................. .
Due to/from Other Funds ...... . ............. . ......................... .
Inventories . ............ . ............................. . ....... . ..... .
Marketable Securities . . ................ . .. . .......... . ............... .
Prepaid Expenses & Other Assets .......... : . . ........ . ... . ...... . . ..... .
Other Assets . ... .... .. ........... . .................................. .
Property, Plant and Equipment ... . . . ...... . ........ . ...... . ............ .
Loan
Funda
$
663,929.12
85,535.47
855,624.94
174,586.04
836,360.21
407,312.82
----
TOTAL ASSETS .... . . . ........................ . ..... . .............. $3,023,348.60
32,283.95
40,061.04
1,062,253.02
9,413.82
1,000.00
15,994.50
$1 ,161 ,006.33
LIABILITIES AND FUND BALANCES
Cash Overdraft . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Accounts Payable and Accrued Expenses ........ . ........................ .
Agency and Other Deposits .................... . . ...................... .
Advance Tuition and Student Deposits ............ . ...................... .
Inter-Fund Payables ...... . ...... . ................ . . ........ . ... . ..... .
Donors' Remaining Interest .................................... . ....... .
Loan From Student Loan Fund .......................................... .
Federal Government Portion ......... .. ................................. .
College Portion ................ . .. . .................. . . .. ...... . ..... .
TOTAL LIABILITIES . ................... . ........... . . . ...... . .... . ..
Fund Balances . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
TOTAL LIABILITIES AND FUND BALANCES ...................... . ........
4,868.21
280,368.93
273,441.87
1,398,832.36
523,750.93
$
--$2,481 ,262.30
$ 542,086.30
$3,023,348.60
846,397.55
98,105.27
$ 944,502.82
$ 216,503.51
$1 ,161,006.33
23
1970-71
1971-72
1972-73
1873-74
1874-75
$18,826.253.75
$18,973,476.83
$19,288,389.68
$19,354,655.84
$19,326,651.92
$21,262,050.77
12,826,829.36
13,385,179.52
12,985,611.52
12,160,103.82
12,029,354.44
10,645,515.26
13,888,438.79
16,093,472.28
15,489,801.82
8,943,290.20
9,933,538.32
10,651,881.06
3,464, 790.97
1,360
1,305.00
613,838.00
899,362.00
166,961.00
3,690,529.82
1,347
1,380.00
509.374.00
1,318,063.00
167,701.00
3,804,038.95
1,413
1,380.00
495,252.00
1'752, 159.00
130,809.00
4,681,918.75
1,356
1,515.00
635,224.00
1,806,011.00
184,172.00
5,465,938.92
1,401
1,635.00
884,408.00
233,399.00
304,025.00
6,617,148.79
1,497
1,890.00
1,063,060.00
341,097.00
476,172.00
Endowment
Fund•
(Book)
$
77,898.82
623,164.00
14,786.08
841,688.12
All Fund•
Annuity and
Life Income
Fund•
$ 17,987.62
8,000.00
1,423.91
Plant
Fund•
21,026.91
244,703.89
14,800.00
22,143,294.46
75,891.10
777,432.31
22,372.33
$
$10,645,515.26
$834,363.42
$22,499,716.36
$38,163,949.97
$
$
$
$
109,158.45
71,194.89
48,161.18
81,678.76
3,000.00
158,149.98
248,793.33
$ 190,837.21
$10,454,678.05
$10,645,515.26
$232,344.87
$602,018.55
$834,363.42
$ 296,954.51
$22,202,761.85
$22,499,716.36
Prior
YNr
Current
YNr
149,197.30
1,579,858.05
1'163,998.48
917,579.22
894,558.34
174,586.04
10,679,398.43
407,312.82
38,172.33
22,159,288.96
$
29,519.58
9,065,605.91
1875-78
4,868.21
508,883.45
273,441.87
1,398,832.36
857,223.02
158,149.98
846,397.55
98,105.27
$ 4, 145,901.71
$34,018,048.26
$38,163,949.97
124,176.78
1,726,795.93
945,049.51
696,531.19
505,319.41
141,244.80
12,682,361.31
341,483.50
212,822.33
20,796,606.30
$38,172,391.06
$
129,780.70
550,684.82
158,707.32
1,406,098.62
497,503.67
160,018.73
7,815.74
786,707.33
90,804.56
$ 3,788,121.49
$34,384,269.57
$38,172,391.06
$
24
ANNUAL FUND HONOR ROLL REPORT
In the absence of major capital endowment assets, a ~uccessful annual
giving program is the lifeblood of an institution like Kalamazoo College.
Fortunately for the College, its annual giving program from alumni,
friends, parents, and businesses has more than doubled in the last three
years. This Fund provides real and important sustenance to the academic
and scholarship programs, doing much to keep the College healthy at a
time when many similar institutions have started a downward spiral.
These dollars given voluntarily each year are among the most important funds
of this institution, for they indicate that people feel strongly enough about
the academic quality, traditional values, and fiscal responsibility of the
College to invest in it personally. Each of you who have done so can have
real pride in your accomplishment.
ANNUAL FUND LEADERSHIP
David R. Markin, Chairman
Burke E. Porter, Cochairman
Richard D. Klein,
Alumni Division Cochairman
Karla L. Atkinson,
Alumni Division Cochairman
Samuel H. Cupps,
Friends Division Cochairman
Louise Dunbar, Friends Cochairman
Mr. and Mrs. Roy S. Dahmer,
Parents Division Cochairmen
Robert P. Kittredge, Business
and Industry Division Cochairman
William T. Creson, Business
and Industry Division Cochairman
Elizabeth S. Upjohn, Special
Gifts Committee Cochairman
Marie S. Burbidge, Special Gifts
Committee Cochairman
William J. Petter, Grand Rapids
Area Chairman
Jane Souris, Detroit Area Cochairman
John A. Trump, Detroit Area Cochairman
Betsy Barnhart Cump,
Chicago Area Cochairman
Neil McKay, Chicago Area Cochairman
Ralph W. McKee,
Southern California Cochairman
These figures will help tell the story: In 1972-73, the Annual Fund goal was
$295,000. In 1975-76, alumni, friends, parents, corporations, and
foundations contributed $610,612 against our $600,000 goal-the highest
Annual Fund in the history of the College. In this same year, the number
of members in the Associates' Society increased almost 50 percent, from
178 to 265 members.
All of this has challenged the College to set a $650,000 objective for the
1977-78 program. With admissions at an all-time high, with an academic
program already distinctive and constantly being improved by superb
faculty, and with an administration dedicated to fiscal responsibility in the
use of the College's resources, there is every reason to believe that the goal
for the Annual Fund can be reached. Thanks to all of you on the Honor Roll
of the Kalamazoo College Annual Fund, the environment here is one of
confidence, enthusiasm for the future, and pride at being associated with
such an exciting enterprise.
George N. Rainsford, President
SOURCES OF GIFTS TO
THE 1976 ANNUAL FUND
TOP TEN CLASSES FOR •••
DOLLARS RAISED
Alumni
$199,694.36
Friends
121,805.72
Parents
15,227.50
Corporations
117,131.03
Foundations
167,485.76
TOTAL
$621,344.37
1914
1947
1927
1937
1939
1934
1941
1950
1949
1948
$40,975.00
21,710.00
12,075.69
8,654.18
7,025.80
6,302.00
4,129.74
3,323.50
3,284.00
3,070.00
NUMBER OF DONORS
1970
1967
1963
1966
1969
1973
1968
1950
1965
1971
85
77
76
74
74
70
69
64
64
63
PARTICIPATION LEVEL
1925
1917
1922
1916
1912
1913
1921
1914
1915
1941
75%
67%
56%
52%
.50%
50%
50%
47%
47%
47%
THE FOUNDERS' SOCIETY
Mr. and Mrs. John C. Abbott
Mrs. Frances Allen
Mr. H. Glenn Bixby
Mrs. Carol G. Boudeman
Mr. and Mrs. Donald E. Bowen
Mrs. Frances Bramblett
Mrs. Earl l. Burbidge
Dr. and Mrs. Maynard M. Conrad
Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Crissey
Mrs. Dorothy U. Dalton
Mr. and Mrs. Alden Dow
Mr. and Mrs. E. M. Estes
Mr. John E. Fetzer
Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Gemrich
Mr. and Mrs. Donald S. Gilmore
Mr. and Mrs. William F. Glen
Mr. I. Frank Harlow
Mr. Ivan F. Harlow
Dr. and Mrs. Thomas R. Hathaway
Dr. and Mrs. Weimer K. Hicks
Mrs. Douglas J. Hoops
Mrs. Queena M. Hughes
Mrs. Harold G. Kolloff
Mr. William E. LaMothe
Mr. W. P. Laughlin
Mr. William J. Lawrence, Jr.
Dr. Richard U. Light
Dr. Timothy Light
Mr. and Mrs. Neil McKay
Mr. David Markin
Mr. and Mrs. Charles J. Monroe
Mr. and Mrs. Ray T. Parte!. Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Preston Parish
Mr. and Mrs. Burke E. Porter
Dr. George N. Rainstord
Mr. Clarence Remynse
Dr. Orner E. Robbins. Jr.
Mr. J. Woodward Roe
Mr. Sheldon Rupert
Mr. Alan N. Sidnam
Mr. Louis J. Slavin
Mr. and Mrs. William Slavin
Dr. Laurence L. Spillers
Mr. Thomas A. Todd
Dr. Harry A. Towsley
Mr. and Mrs. Burton H. Upjohn
Mr. W. John Upjohn
Mr. David R. Upton
Mrs. Franklin G. Varney
Mr. and Mrs. Richard P. Windisch
THE ASSOCIATES' SOCIETY
The Hon. Glenn S. Allen, Jr.
Mr. Harold B. Allen
Mr. Harold Alenduff
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond E. Alie
Mr. Eric E. Anderson
Dr. and Mrs. Hugh V. Anderson
Mr. and Mrs. Rolla Anderson
Mr. Lawrence F. Armstrong
Mr. and Mrs. Joe T. Arnold
Mr. and Mrs. William Howard Atkinson
Mrs. Carlton E. Atwood
Mr. Franklin R. Austin
Mr. Elton R. Awrey
J. G. Sandeen
Dr. and Mrs. Brian Bannister
Mr. John P. Banyon
Mr. and Mrs. M. D. Bardeen
Mr. George Barnard
Mr. and Mrs. Julius A. Bauer
Mr. John Helsel! Becker
Mr. and Mrs. Carl L. Bekofske
Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Berman
Mr. and Mrs. Donald H. Bishop
Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Brackenridge
Mr. Merrill J. Brink
Dr. and Mrs. Earl H. Brown
Mr. Leonard E. Bullard
Mr. and Mrs. Lorence B. Burdick
Mr. Willis B. Burdick
Mr. and Mrs. Elwin F. Buskirk
Mr. Donald L. Campbell
Mr. and Mrs. Loren E. Campbell
Mr. and Mrs. John C. Carlson
Mr. and Mrs. George A. Carpenter
Dr. George F. Cartland
Mr. Larry P. Casey
Dr. Maurice E. Castle
Dr. and Mrs. Wen Chao Chen
Dr. and Mrs. Halvor N. Christensen
Dr. Frances Clark
Dr. Joel W. Clay
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph F. Clay
Mr. Donald W. Coggan
Mr. Harold M. Connable
Mrs. H. P. Comiable
Mr. and Mrs. Bert H. Cooper
Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Copeland
Dr. and Mrs. N. Warn Courtney
Mrs. Richard P. Covert
Mr. W. T. Creson
Mr. James C. Cristy, Jr.
Mrs. James Crothers
Mr. and Mrs. Roy S. Dahmer
Mr. and Mrs. George I. Daniels
Dr. and Mrs. Don G. Davis
Mr. Edward Davis
Mr. Robert G. Davis
Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Delano
Mrs. Douglas A. Delong
Dr. William J. Dinnen
Mr. Leslie E. Dodson
Mr. and Mrs. John W. Doty
Mr. James R. Douglas
Dr. and Mrs. Bernard J. Dowd
Mr. and Mrs. John Dozier
Dr. Marion H. Dunsmore
Mr. Frank J. Ehrman. Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Peter Enggass
Dr. and Mrs. George K. Ferguson
Mrs. Robert Fitch
Mr. Bruce W. Flessner
Mr. Robert N. Fletcher
Mrs. Howland A. Fowler
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Francois
Or. J. William Fry
Mr. J. Bryant Fullerton
Dr. and Mrs. Carl A. Gagliardi
Mr. and Mrs. Edward L. Galligan
Mr. Fred C. Garbrecht, Jr.
Dr. and Mrs. Hugh F. Gardiner
Mr. Charles E. Garrett, Jr.
Mr. Robert E. Gault
Dr. Martha L. Gay
Mr. Alfred J. Gemrich
Dr. Charles C. Gibbons
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Gilchrist
Mr. and Mrs. James S. Gilmore, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. E. Myles Glenn
Miss Louise Goss
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph W. Gotschall
Pat Greathouse
Dr. and Mrs. Donald R. Griflith
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hader
Mr. W. Custer Hammond
Dr. Joseph Harris
Mr. and Mrs. Jack W. Hartung
Mr. and Mrs. Allan Hascall, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Allen T. Hayes
Dr. Don W. Hayne
Mr. Richard P. Heintz
Dr. and Mrs. Paul J. Hettie
Miss Dorothy Heyl
Mr. and Mrs. William A. Hickmott
Mrs. Ralph Hile
Ms. Marilyn Hinkle
Mrs. John S. Holbrook, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Laurence Hollander
Mr. and Mrs. Winfield Hollander
Dr. David G. Hopkins
Mr. and Mrs. John C. Howard
Mr. and Mrs. William J. Howard
Mr. and Mrs. Russell G. Howell
Or. William N. Hubbard
Mr. James 0. Hudak
Miss Sally Hunter
Mrs. Jean Huston
Mr. and Mrs. Vincent L. Iannelli
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas K. Jefferis
Mrs. Arthur Jens, Jr.
Or. Erik H. Jensen
Mr. and Mrs. John A. Jurgensen
Dr. Eugene T. Karnafel
Dr. and Mrs. Philip E. Kellar
Mrs. A. Grant Kennedy
Mr. Leland J. Kerman
Mrs. Valorus Kerry
Mr. and Mrs. Donald F. Kiel
Mr. and Mrs. James T. Kirkpatrick
Mr. Robert P. Kittredge
Mr. Richard A. Kjoss
Mr. Richard D. Klein
Mr. Leroy R. Klose, II
Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Knoechel
Dr. and Mrs. Carl Koenen
Mr. and Mrs. Leon A. Koopsen
Mr. Stanley S. Kresge
Mr. Duane E. Kress
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Laatsch
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas W. Lambert
Dr. and Mrs. Eugene Lansing
Mr. Edwin R. Lauermann
Mr. and Mrs. Jack W. Lawrence
Mr. and Mrs. John W. Lawrence
Mrs. William J. Lawrence, Sr.
Mr. and Mrs. Calvin S. Lazar
Mrs. Richard F. Lindquist
Mr. and Mrs. Alvin H. Little
Or. and Mrs. Donald G. Little
Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Long
Miss Dorothy E. McCarthy
Dr. Ward McCartney, Jr.
Dr. and Mrs. Frank B. McCue
Mrs. Prentiss McKee
Or. and Mrs. Ralph McKee
Mr. Earle W. McNeil
Dr. and Mrs. Harold Machin
Mr. Robert Magill
Mr. and Mrs. Harold J. Maloney
Mrs. Charles J. Manby
Mr. and Mrs. Peter Mann
Mrs. Robert F. Manogg
Dr. and Mrs. William P. Marshall
Mr. William B. Matteson
Mr. and Mrs. William J. Maze
Mr. Thomas F. Meagher
Mr. Hugh F. Mehattie, Jr.
Mr. Richard Meyerson
Mr. Bruce H. Mickle
Mr. and Mrs. Allan B. Milham
Mrs. Paul Minsel
Mr. and Mrs. Lansford Moore
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Morse, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Andrew F. Murch
Mr. Carl P. Nelson
Mr. William H. Nelson
Mr. David B. Nilson
Dr. Carl Norcross
Eleanor Lang Olson
Dr. Gilbert F. Otto
Mrs. Martin H. Padmos
Mr. George E. Palmer
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Parte!
Mr. Barry T. Parsons
Mrs. John S. Patton
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Pender
Mr. William M. Perkins
Mrs. V. E. Peterson
Mr. and Mrs. William J. Petter
Mr. and Mrs. Hubert S. Phelan
Mrs. John L. Pickering
Mr. Kermit 0. Pike
Mr. John G. Polzin
Mr. Fraser E. Pomeroy
Sarah B. Porter
Dr. and Mrs. ·Jack R. Price
Miss Helene M. Radley
Mrs. W. A. Ratcliffe
Dr. William B. Redmon
Mr. and Mrs. Allan S. Reyburn
Mr. and Mrs. James J. Robideau
Mrs. David W. Roth
Mrs. E. F. Runge
Mr. and Mrs. Dan M. Ryan
Dr. and Mrs. Roger A. Scholten
Mr. Alan E. Schwartz
Or. and Mrs. Carl E. Schweitzer
Dr. Charles L. Seifert
Mr. and Mrs. Richard J. Shackleton
Mr. and Mrs. Luel Simmons. Jr.
Dr. Donald A. Siwik
Dr. J. Bernard Sloan
Mr. Donald C. Smith
Mr. and Mrs. Glen C. Smith, Jr.
Mr. Lary R. Smith
Mr. and Mrs. B. Thomas Smith, Jr.
Mr. Richard Smoke
Mrs. Sam Sorscher
Mrs. Theodore Souris
Dr. Perry C. Spencer
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur B. Springsteen
Mrs. W. E. Steidtmann
Mr. Peter 0. Steiner
Mr. James L. Stewart
Mr. Robert W. Stewart
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Stone
Dr. and Mrs. Forrest C. Strome, Jr.
Mr. John Stubblefield
Mrs. Louis W. Sutherland, Sr. +
Mr. John D. Sweet
Dr. and Mrs. Robert C. Taylor
Mrs. Vinal Tabor
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Tedrow
Dr. and Mrs. M. J. Tessin
Mr. and Mrs. Edward P. Thompson
Dr. James B. Thompson
Mr. Jelindo A. Tilberti
Mr. Bruce A. Timmons
Mr. Paul H. Todd, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Tompkins
Dr. and Mrs. Dee Tourtellott
Drs. Paolo B. and Giuliana M. Trambusti
Mr. Robert W. Tyner
Mrs. Janet F. Upjohn
Mr. Robert Van Blarcom
Dr. Donald W. Vanliere
Dr. Roger F. Varney
Mr. Charles J. Venema
Or. William J. Venema
Mr. L. J. Verplank
Dr. and Mrs. P. I. Wagner
Dr. Richard A. Walker
Dr. and Mrs. Walter W. Waring
Mrs. James K. Warner
Mr. Ronald 0. Warner
Mr. William Western
Mr. Charles H. Williams
Mr. J. Rodney Wilson
Mr. and Mrs. Carl D. Wisner
Mr. and Mrs. Thos. B. Woodworth, Jr.
Dr. T. Thomas Wylie
Dr. and Mrs. Eugene C. Yehle
+Deceased
25
ALUMNI DONORS
1908
Clara A. Rookus
1909
Aaron Earl Gardner +
Anna Puffer Lenderink
1910
Martha J. Gifford
Lee M. Hutchins
Bert L. Kitchen
Florence Lucasse
Mabel E. Stanley
Emily Carder Wilcox
1911
Lillian Krogen Walcott
1912
Marian Davis Clement
Sheldon H. LaTourette
Esther Chapman Prince
Ruth Smith Smith
1913
Nina Winn Boyd
Elsie D. Davis
George K. Ferguson
Elsie P. Kappen
Mabel Benson Ratcliffe
Pearl Reedy Tanis
Helen Crissman Thompson
1914
**Dorothy Upjohn Dalton
F.ances Eldridge
Marie Welch Garrett
Gladys Hobbs
*Earle W. McNeil
Ernest E. Piper
Bessie Todd Rivenburg
Katherine Stuart Russell
Paul Shackleton
1915
Helen Bronson Boekeloo
Mabel Woodard Fiske
Ann Monteith Johnson
J. Edward Longley
Oscar J. Peterson
Louis D. Rhoades
Donald C. Rockwell
Mildred Welsh Shackleton
1916
**Esther DeWater Abbott
Clarence Jay Everett
*Helen McHugh Hickmott
Elizabeth Lennox Hughes
•Leland J. Kerman
Reinda Mears Lampman
*Donald G. Little
*Gladys Vosburgh Little
Gertrude McCulloch
Lydia Buttalph Mayle
Harold F. Orr
Bessie Freeman Rickman
Dorothy Garrett Rockwell
Persis Schamehorn Schultz
Howard B. Taft
Elizabeth Marvin Taylor
Troy G. Thurston
1917
Clayton R. Brandstetter
Marguerite Brockie
L. Verne Scudder Christenson
Laurence A. Chrouch
Edwina McGiannon Conklin
Elizabeth Stetson Fleugel +
Pearl Scudder Haskins
Genevieve Hartman Hawkins
26
Belle Hoskinson Lambert
Walter W. Lucasse
Ruth Hemenway Nolin
Kenneth M. Payne
Lourine Polasky
•Helene Radley
Ruth Goss Ralston
William L Schultz
Clara Arthur Williams
Miriam Longyear Wixson
1918
Elsie Randall Aikin
Letitia Ruddock Carroll
Mildred Tanis Harris
Theodore Hoekstra
Virginia Hope Howell
Marian Monteith Hudson
Richard G. Hudson
Herman F. Kurtz
Florence Woolsey Miller
Norman Moyie
Avis Thomas Paz
Charlotte Wenzel Sadlier
Dorothy Harter Smith
John C. Walker
1919
Ruth Helene Balch
*Lorence B. Burdick
*Willis B. Burdick
Esther Den Adel Ferguson
Catherine Larsen Lincoln
Joseph E. Loughead
Richard J. Oosting
Murray J. Rice
Eleanor Currey Rich
Laura L. Schutter
Bernice Keith TenDyke
John Edgar TenDyke
Ruth Toyne
1920
"Virginia Connable Burdick
Warren Frank Burtt
Geraldine Hamilton Crocker
•Marion H. Dunsmore
Alta Sutherland Fennell
Priscilla Smith Hutton
Florence Taft Klein
Martin A. Larson
Narda Schoonmaker Milroy
Adelaide Rich Morrison
Helen Monroe Puttkammer
Doris Powell Rice
Clayton M. Sherwood
Charlotte Pinckney Smith
Forrest Strome
Emma Mullie Zuidema
1921
Doris Brigham Aitken
"Harold B. Allen
"Helen Ralph Bauer
Bruce Beardsley
Ruth Hudson Birdsell
Henry C. Burnett
Irma Starring Canfield
Gladys Weller Chatters
Rita Beebe Coe
Roy F. Comer
Dean W. Flagg
Eulalia Baker Goodsite
Winifred Herron Hemingway
*William A. Hickmott
Jerald Hoekstra
Wilhelmina Huizinga Lanam
*William H. Nelson
Margaret Cady Searl
*Evelyn Dressel Steidtmann
Margret Stewart
Doris Wood Weber
(Hon.) Honorary degree recipient
Monroe J. Wilcox
1922
Harry A. Bell
Lawrence R. Blinks
Genevieve Buck
Charles Burlingham
• Miles Casteel
"Ralph F. Clay
John H. Coleman
•Louise Every Crothers
Maude Ellwood
Helen Fleming Failor
Warren C. Johnson
"Emily Tedrow Little
Marion Graybiel Means
Frances K. Mishica
Clifton W. Perry
J. Roelof Pieters
Charlotte Little Richardson
Ralph P. Seward
Harold Wilcox
Helen Cary Wood
+
1923
*Harold W. Alenduff
Marston S. Balch
Heloise Tuttle Bell
Wilbert A. Bennetts
M. Gene Black
Frances Klyver Blake
•Earl H. Brown
Harold Carlyon
Ruth Perry Carlyon
*Ruth Angell Clay
J. Mace Crandall
Cameron L. Davis
Helen Hough Deland
Maurice L. Dickinson
Hartley T. Grandin
Ruth Frobenius Hamill
Madalene Johnson
Glen E. Martin
Bradford J. Morse
•carl H. Norcross
Hazel Harrington Seifert
1927
1926
1924
Albert A. Adams
Harold B. Allen
Bernard W. Ansley
Hazel Bean
Eleanor McQuigg Blinks
Dorothy Madden Bonneville
Harold W. Brown
Vern W. Bunnell
*George F. Cartland
Ruth Scott Chenery
Rollin D. Davis
loa Byers DeVos
Pauline Kurtz Jacobs
Helen Ward Koontz
Helen M. Little
Robert A. Lundy
Beatrice Brown Markillie
Manfred H. Martin
Louis C. Remynse
Kenneth H. Sausaman
Mildred Sagendorf Schrier
Noble D. Travis
Philip H. Vercoe
Vivian Yates Walkotten
Vera Hill Young
1925
Harold D. Beadle
• Adrienne Cheney Brown
Wilfred P. Clapp
Cletus D. Cordry
Millicent Schermerhorn Davis
Aileen Radkey DesAutels
Fred DesAutels
•Member of Associates' Society
Hubert J. Van Peenen
Lillian F. Weller
Lawrence W. Westerville
Dorothy E. Yaple +
Harold Emerson
Anita Byers Fairbank
Marie Wright Fishbeck
F. Ray Forman
•J. Bryant Fullerton (MA)
Lucille Wells Glass
Benjamin Graham
Burr M. Hathaway
"laurence H. Hollander
*Ruth Waterous Hollander
Helen Murray Kelly
Rex W. Kennedy
Mary Undenthal Kline
Richard E. Morley
Wilma Dunwell Morley
Julia Barbor Morris
Kenneth Z. Osborn
Roland Pierce
··clarence L. Remynse
Dorothy Dockham Rennie
James B. Stanley
Roger S. Thompson
• Dee Tourtellotte
Verna Smith Turner
Virginia Dickenson Allerton
Lillian B. Anderson
Beatrice Cheney Barnes
Helen Going Black
Robert T. Black
Ruth Adams Bosworth
Karl Bradley
Lloyd Breininger
Blanche Grandbois Bush
Mary Brooks Butler
Earl W. Cartwright
Sue Cory
Louise Millhuff Dean
Lulu Maynard Derby
Donald B. Doubleday
*Dorothy Allen Dowd
Lillian Draewell Dressel
Virginia E. Earl
Thomas B. Eldred
Juan Espendez-Navarro
Theodore Fandrich
Edwin G. Gemrich
Albert H. Haakenson
Richard D. Hall
Jeanette Fuller Heether
Erwin T. Hinga
Frieda A. Hinrichs
Alice Gordon Jackson
Pauline Byrd Johnson
Donna Rankin Jones
Ernest Kline
Lucile E. Bullock Krusell
William E. Lehew
•Alvin H. Little
Shirley Payne Low
Russell D. Lyon
Gertrude Adriance Mcintire
Margaret Fleming Mayer
Harold R. Miller
Kenneth Lader Olmsted
Clayton C. Osborn
•Gilbert F. Otto
Grace Loupee Pelto
Waldo W. Pennels
Ruth Wilbur Shive!
George H. Smith
Leroy D. Stinebower +
Theodore Summers
John C. Svec
•Evelyn Pinel Tabor
Royena Hornbeck Tice
*Helen Loll Tourtellotte
..Harry A. Towsley
Russell Q. Triquet
~·Member
of Founders' Society
+Deceased
"lawrence F. Armstrong
John C. Benedict
Dorothea Henshaw Bowersox
Gertrude Tousey Buswell
Versa V. Cole
Alma Smith Crawford
Catherine Ehrmann Dipple
Lewis L. Dipple
Alice Starkweather Doubleday
Vada Bennett Dow
Catherine Wells Draewell
Frances Nicholson Finly
Gould Fox
*Lula Mathews Hile
Esther Pratt Hudson
Robert F. Hulett
Dorothea Dowd Jewell
Winifred M. Johnson
Dorothy Johnson Lander
Marjorie Volkers Largent
Edgar H. Lundy
Margaret Paterson Mcintyre
Eldred C. Moag
Marjorie Morse
*Grace Hutchins Murch
Guy L. Perry
Edward F. Pope
Charline Ransom Quick
Katharine Dukette Rogers
E. Duane Sayles
·Perry C. Spencer
Hildegarde Watson Sweitzer
Eloise Rickman Vermeulen
Oscar H. Winne
Lucy Merson Wise
1928
Marjorie Bacon
Marion L. Cady
• Frances Clark
•Genevieve Wildermuth Connable
*Bennard J. Dowd
*Mildred Moore Fitch
Carita Clark Fox
Helen Stone Glezen
Donald C. Hackney
Mildred Gang Hackney
Mayone Ruth Youngs Hawke
•Ardith Buswell Hollander
·winfield Hollander
Eleanor Jameson Johnston
Robert L. Krill
Timothy Meulenberg
Henry W. Meyer
Ruth DeGraff Percy
Earl Schermerhorn
Eva Lendenthal Schultz
Roger V. Swift
Eldred G. Townsend
Helen Oliver Van Horn
Frances McCarthy Wood
Graham D. Woodhouse
1929
Bryce A. Becker
Charles D. Bock
Justin Brocato
James F. Buckley
Bernice Harper Clark
Frances Willison Cowell
Elmer J. Dorstewitz
Helen Hanenberg Doubleday
William S. Downey
Mary Louise Sales Farmer
J. Elliott Finlay
Henry Green
Lois Stutzman Harvey
Harold H. Havens
John H. Kuitert
*Andrew F. Murch
Esther E. Newton +
Mildred Philipp
Shirley Cuthbert Post
Frederick W. Powell
Hazel Allabach Sayles
Kathleen C. Smith
Leola Woodruff Stocker
Orlo F. Swoap
Frank E. Toonder
James Van Doren
Phyllis Simpson Vydareny
1930
Ray T. Allen
Isabel Jackson Beeler
Clara Heiney Buckley
Anna Brandenburg Chatterton
Laurence H. Cook
*Charlotte Bacon Cooper
Constance Palmer DeCair
*Harriet Rickman Fullerton
Lee-Oiia Smith Gemrich
William F. Hathaway
Grant W. Johnston
Winnifred Ayling Kirk
John Kless
Arthur D. Lewis
Marguerite Larsen McQueen
Constance Metzger Marquardt
Ezra Merrill
Mary Waldo Minsel
Betty Sutherland Race
Frederick J. Rogers
Mary Jane Ross
Helen Fenner Schuring
Florenlin Schuster
Aileen Hempy Swoap
Mary Schmidt Tapley
Cornelia Thompson VanDoren
Mildred Doster Virtue
Margaret Wise Walton
1931
Lodisca Payne Alway
Gerald H. Bradford
Dolly Walker Brenner
Edwin F. Buckley
Thomas A. Fox
Howard A. Frost
Mary Elizabeth Smith Good
Morlan J. Grandbois
Frederic Groetsema
Ivan D. Haack
Howard .C. Hoover
Victor D. Kniss
Josephine Read Kuch
Margaret Oakley Lamb
*Harold Machin
*Helen Warner Manby
Gordon L. Moore
Anne Dunning Morrow
J. Cameron Murdoch
Fern Ball Persons
*Ruth Hudson Peterson
Donald H. Pilaar
**Sheldon Rupert
Evelyn Rankin Rye
Curtis W. Sabrosky
Marian D. Schrier
Ruth King Springett
Katharine L. Swift
Rhoda Hofstra Thompson
Lyman Williams
1932
Thomas C. Anthony
*Anne Kirby Atwood
Lawrence E. Balch
Dorothy Ryall Britigan
Stanley M. Buck
Harris Burnett
Esther Stout Clapp
Harry L. Clarage
Richard B. Crandell
Dorothy Matthews Deehr
Sterling Deehr
Wineta Fox DeWeese
LeMoyne Newton Gray
Hazel Hinga Hammond
Lee Hammond
*Don W. Hayne
*Dorothy Heyl
Charles K. Johnson
*LeRoy R. Klose, II
Betty Dunigan Krueger
Edward J. Lauth
*Margaret Lawler Machin
Margaret MacKenzie
Darwin Mead
Geraldyne Vermeulen Moore
Eleanor Kirby Myers
Robert P. Neff
William B. Rapley, Jr.
Ralph E. Schau
Fred L. Stites
Donald F. Switzenberg
Garrett J. Troff
Marjorie Saunders Troff
Milton J. VanderBrook (MA)
1933
Donald T. Anderson
Virginia Steele Ash
Burton L. Baker
Elizabeth Hoben Brown
Hugh Chamberlin Burr (Hon.)
Helen Morse Casey
Helen I. Coover
Robert I. Delong
Phyllis Sergeant Dykhouse
Lavern Gelow +
Nita Stark Gelow
Horace M. Horton
Lois Austin Hudson
Winthrop S. Hudson
Theone Tyrrell Hughes
Norbert N. Hutchins
Frederick L. Jones
Adelaide Kaiser
Roy G. Klepser
Dorothy G. Lewis
*Evelyn Webster Long
Elizabeth Gibson Lynch
Prentiss McKee +
A. Marian Delong Merrill
Luella Oberg Pursel
Robert J. Pursel
Ruth Banks Reynolds
Walter E. Scott
Jean Hopkins Shipley
Stephen C. Stowe
*Charles J. Venema
Marian Schlobohm Wedel
Catherine Pierce White
Maxine Wirick Wilcox
1934
Morris E. Austin
Mary Gleason Beal
L. Thompson Bennett
Shirley Anderson Blankenburg
Elsen K. Burt
*Martha Runyan Conrad
V. Peter Ferrara
Henrietta Kraai Fulreader
Michael Hachadorian
Edward C. Hagerty
Harold Hammer
Frank Heath
Glenn L. Heikes
Donald F. Hellenga
*Jean Benedict Huston
A. Elizabeth Johnson
*Duane E. Kress
B. lllif Newcomer Laurence
*Delbert D. Long
*Roberta Clark McKee
Ralph McKee
Richard A. Macomber
Dana Brandenburg Meyer
John S. Miller
Milton H. Okun
Harold S. Renne
Marshall H. Rutz
Richard V. Snyder
Raymond L. Spencer
Clarence M. Taube
Theodore N. Thomas
Lawrence Tucker
Lucile Lotz VanEck
*Roger F. Varney
Frances Vivian
Russell Worden
1935
Virginia Kibler Aldrich
*John P. Banyon
*George Barnard
Russell H. Bell
Jeannette Berry Brubaker
*Donald L. Campbell
Theodore W. Conger
*Harold M. Connable
Richmond Cooper
Grace Bosker Craik
Mary Constance Crose Cutting
Katharin denBieyker
Homer M. Elwell
Leonard H. Elwell
Wilbur J. Hall
Jacqueline Ayling Haney
*Allen T. Hayes
John L. Inglis
Burl G. Lanphear
Jeriene Ward McKee
Kenneth A. Mantele
Evelyn Grandbois Mohney
John H. Oven
Jean Jennings Pickering
Leo B. Rasmussen
Elinor Rapley Reed
Catharine V. Richards (MA)
Charles A. Ridley
Louise Paxson Rudkin
Charles L. Scott
Ruth Loebe Thomas
*James B. Thompson
*Robert Van Blarcom
1936
*Glenn S. Allen, Jr.
Ruth Schlobohm Anderson
Robert Beaumier
Jean Moore Chapman
**Maynard M. Conrad
Irene Seid Goldman
John Hunerjager
*Betty Shafer Jens
Robert D. Koestner
Harriett Plasterer Lindsey
William H. Martin
C. Bernice Anderson Marx
Priscilla Crockett Morris
Jeanne Tanis Nadolny
Joseph Newell
Louise Barrows Northam
Dorothy Simpson Palmer
Mary Miller Patton
Earl H. Pierson
Victor R. Plasterer
Charles Randall, Jr.
Edgar F. Raseman, Jr.
*Carl Schweitzer
Newell Sinclair
Laurence E. Strong
Anne M. Wilson Suck
Frieda Op'tHolt Vogan
Carl B. Taylor (MA)
Harriet Halladay Warburton
Paul B. Wyman
1937
Sophia Zmuda Bacon
Doris White Bates
Earl J. Browne
Charles S. Cameron
Harriette Barton Connolly
Paul J. Connolly
Helen Kramer Cupples
Kenneth E. Davis
Albert L. Deal
Elizabeth Ellsworth Field
Noble S. Field
John C. Finerty
Frances M. Gardner
Walter A. Good
Martha Guse
Walter 0. Haas, Jr.
*Ruth Demme Hayes
Jane Sidnam Heath
Arthur Heming
Kenneth B. Hunt
Mary Den Adel Hutchins
Sidney Katz
Evelyn Grosa Meyer
Dorothy DeSmit Morse
Genevieve Taggett Raker
Laura E. Ranney
Jane Meyer Rapley
Margaret Richards Reynolds
Angela Patterson Richards
*Suzanne Little Schweitzer
Noboru Shirai
•• Alan N. Sidnam
Jane Morris Soop
Maude Southon
Mary Stroud Vinton
Earl Weimaster
Charles R. Witschonke
1938
Jollie Allen
Raywood Blanchard
*Elwin F. Buskirk
Ruth Sinclair Cameron
Donald L. Davidson
Wilson G. Eby
Margaret Wood Halsey
*Irene Kriekard Hartung
*Jack W. Hartung
Adeline Fawcett Hicks
Barbara McKinstry Jennings
Ada Rutz King
A. Kenneth Kuyk
Karl W. Lambooy, Jr.
K. Ann Locher
Eugene McKean
Helen Whiteside Randall
W. Harry Rapley
Ruth DeSmit Rosencrans
Homer M. Smathers
Helen Southon Taffel
Barbara Taylor Thompson
*Ruth Schroeder Tompkins
Floyd Van Domelen
Donald R. Wyman
Harvey D. Walker
Monica Yund Wood
1939
James B. Allan
Mary Louise Warner Banyon
James A. Barclay
Klair Hunter Bates
**Carol Gilmore Boudeman
John J. Braham Ill
Harlan A. Colburn, Jr.
Priscilla Crum Colt
Robert 0. Gillespie
**1. Frank Harlow
Albert Homoki
Frances Ring Hotelling
Robert D. Hotelling
David Kurtz
Stanley H. Lane
Pauline Bohls Orr
Gilbert L. Reed
Harold E. Reid
Chester A. Ross
Wilfred A. Shale
Donald C. Smith
Frederick B. Speyer
Florence Niffenegger Sprau
Betty Stroud
Richard J. Swiat
Cullen Towne
*Arleta Turner Warner
Elizabeth Watson
William H. Weber
Marilyn Barton Wilhelm
T. Thomas Wylie (Hon.)
1940
Brooke Aspergren
Douglas W. Benedict
Paul Burlington
Dorothy Ross Colburn
David L. Fry
Jean McAllister Fuhrman
Donald W. Hagerty
Maxine Thompson Hopkins
R. Bowen Howard
Lawrence L. Kurth
Evelyn Glass Kurtz
Elizabeth Walker Laetz
Evelyn Lee Mclean
Jack A. Meyer
•Jane Merson Moore
*Lansford J. Moore
Jack Pierce
Agatha Whitcomb Raseman
Marion L. Shane
Russell T. Snip
*Sidell Slosberg Sorscher
Frank Southon
•Jelindo A. Tiberti
Lois Ingersoll VanKeuren
Bert Webb, Jr.
Donald Worth
Class Gift: campus trees
1941
Ruth Dalm Aspergren
Margaret Patti LaVene Bode
James M. Cloney
Rachel Williams Dorgan
Edward Drier
June VanderVeen Drier
Genevieve Ally Drigot
*Frank James Ehrman
Barbara Todd Eitel
*Fred Garbrecht, Jr.
Anne E. Godfrey
**Helen Gunderson Hoops
Richard Howlett
Winfred C. Hunter
Margaret J. Keefe
27
Marjorie Sundstrom Ketcham
Marian Scherer Kingsley
Alice Penn Kurth
**William J. Lawrence, Jr.
Richard A. Lemmer
Margaret Hootman Marsh
Margaret McCrimmon Maunder
Robert H. Maunder
Arthur J. Myers
Forrest S. Pearson
Jean Folz Riser
Jewel Starkweather Robinson
Eugene Rowe
*Gail Gilmore Smith
*Glen C. Smith
James Southon
*Robert C. Taylor
Ellen Jones Tharp
Betty Shaler Thompson
Sarita Molina VanDomelen
Matthew S. VanKeuren
Paul J. VanKeuren
Jane Sweitzer Verdries
*Richard A. Walker
Priscilla Peck Webb
George W. Williams
*Euaene C. Yehle
1942
Nancy Todd Ackerman
Virginia Orr Barbour
Robert S. Barrows
Marjorie Litowich Benish
Douglas B. Braham
Richard Bucknell
William H. Burke
*Joel W. Clay
Celia Halpert Davidoff
Reta Phillips Douglass
Ruth Raseman Eldridge
Hallie Joy Fergusen
*Charles E. Garrett, Jr.
Gerald A. Gilman
Jack W. Harvey
*Pat Knappen Pender
Eric L. Pratt
Dean K. Ray
*Daniel M. Ryan
*luel P. Simmons
*Marian Wilson Simmons
Dorothy Hart Thomson
Paul H. Todd, Jr.
James Tuma
Edward A. VanDyke
Kenneth L. Wright
1943
*i;iugh Anderson
Elinore Hoven Basnett
H. Lewis Batts, Jr.
Jean McColl Batts
Lynette Spath Blanchard
*Leonard E. Bullard
Harold Burt
Helen McAllister Chapman
Florence Drake
Frank H. Lincoln
Ellen Ossward Maxfield
Alice Parker O'Halloran
Elizabeth Rich Osborn
Irene Gideon Polderman
Arthur L. Reed
Constance Peck Reps
•Allan S. Reyburn
*Evelyn Seeley Taylor
Edward P. Thompson
Winifred Coors VanKeuren
Donald E. Ward
Mary Hosford Williams
Edward W. Winslow
28
Yvonne Gibson Wright
*Mildred Hoff Yehle
1944
Esther Anderson
Dorothy Kiefth Becker
Russell J. Becker
Ann Garrett Bennett
Norman D. Erway
Wilma Fechter Erway
Betty J. Shaw Gagnier
Ardith Rowland Hanna
Virginia Taylor Hill
*Marilyn Hinkle
Cynthia Earl Kerman
Sara Woolley Knight
Ann Tompkins Krum
Frances Weigle Law
Marian Grove Manley
*Eleanor Lang Olson
Marjorie Lyons Pfluke
Carol Metzger Power
Mollie Mitchell Reynard
Lavon Woodward Russell
*Annie McNeil Ryan
John E. Sarno, Jr.
Mary Ethel Rockwell Skinner
Margaret Foley Staake
Paul C. Staake, Jr.
Robert B. Stewart Ill
Betty Heystek Thompson
Henry VanDyke
Stuart Wallace
Charles H. Walter, Jr.
Walter Yoder
1945
Ida Anderson Alway
Bette Brown Barnes
Barbara Berk Bolduc
Agnes Root Bopp
*Merrill J. Brink
Dorothy Conner Christensen
Barbara Price Davenport
Eleanor Hootman Dewey
Barbara Rasmussen Engelhardt
Jacqueline Webber Galbraith
Philip E. Jakeway, Jr.
Betty Shayman Johnson
June campbell Korn
Gordon Kriekard
Dorothy Lee Langei
•Joan Gall lindquist
·ward McCartney
Lois Sikkema Mead
Martha Exner Rock
Marion Johnstone Schmiege
Shirley White Soukup
Marian Hall Starbuck
• Edith Hoven Strome
• Forrest Strome, Jr.
Winona Lotz Swope
Ellen Ann Druliner Taylor
*Richard D. Tedrow
Robert F. Travis
Marian Law Ward
Marjorie Kiefer Warner
Charles R. Woodson
1946
•Jacqueline Bowen Anderson
Carol Rattier Banzhaf
John Christenson
Phyllis Ralston Corley
Mary Louise Gullberg Diebold
Norma Seagly Gates
Joan Schilling lsmond
Nanita Wetherbee Lusso
Mary Stover Mallory
Margaret Thompson Mateeff
Dorothy Sack Miller
Mary Pratt Nash
Patricia Kennett Powers
Harry S. Randall
Helen Glaser Reed
Dale A. Reynard
Edna Shore Sernatinger
Robert S. Simmons
Elizabeth Turnbull Smith
Myrna Loth Snyder
Victor Soukup
Marion N. Stutes
Arleen Smith Waldron
L. J. Wetherbee
Marilyn Sharp Wetherbee
1947
Robert E. Aaron
M. Jane Anderson Barnhart
Ernest Bergan. Jr.
Betty Jones Biehl
Inez Goss calcerano
Barbara Goodsell Clark
John H. Clements
Robert D. Dewey
Florence Carlyon Extrom
Samuel Folz
Emily Frances Earle Goostrey
*Constance Newcomer Griffith
• Donald R. Griffith
Richard Hogan
Robert Johnson
Ralph 0. Kerman
Shirley Evans LaSage
Sara Smith Mcindoe
Richard L. Nycum
William L. Olvitt
•John G. Polzin
Patricia Miller Pratt
Joyce Greene Rabbers
Margery LePage Rabbers
Leonard N. Russell
Homer Shoop
Jack Stateler
*Virginia Johnson Stone
*Wayne R. Stone
Martha Shoemaker Strumpfer
Walter Scott Tatem
Warren E. Taylor
• Dorine Ketcham Tedrow
*William John Upjohn
Albert Walkoe, Jr.
1948
Carolyn Kauffman Aaron
Clayton D. Alway
Bruce Corley
Cecil F. Dam
William F. Danielson
Esther Martin Floyd
·Louise Goss
Rosaryn Spencer Harris
•Jean Armintrout Koopsen
Mary Braithwaite Krieger
Gordon F. Kurtz
Patricia A. Mcintyre
Marcia Clemons MacCready
Jacqueline Buck Mallinson
Deleon P. Mateefl
Joan Akerman Millar
Ruth Gilson Nycum
Jane Hunter Parker
*William B. Redmon
Harriet Stowe Rosenbaum
George W. Ryan
Durand Ryrie Smith
Jane Keller Souris
**Laurence l. Spitters
Charles E. Starbuck
Robert W. Stewart
Dorothy Hubbell Stimson
Russell A. Strong
Theodore E. Troll
Jack A. Trump
Victoria Lewicki Vandenberg
Paul M. Vaught
Esther carlyon White
Owen W. Williams
1949
Marcia Barnes Bertsch
Alma Hendrickson Blyth
Bruce M. Bowman
Florence Chisholm Bowman
Gerard C. Brennan
Paul Carpenter
Richard H. carrington
George M. Christensen
Warren F. David
Lois Place DiCara
Wendell F. Discher
Elizabeth M. Ervine
William F. Glen
Donald Wayne Green
Patricia Dunbar Gregg
Patricia Treal Hartman
Paul S. Hiyama
Harold Johnson
Geraldine Virginia Lee Jones
• John A. Jurgensen
June Weaver Kauffman
Donald R. Kent
Irene Currie Kent
*Donald F. Kiel
Virginia Sikkenga Krautheim
Melisse Truitt Kurtz
Marjorie Hickman Lanuti
Joanne Schrier McCandless
Robert Mallory
Phillip W. Mange
Marion Paller Meyer
Richard Meyerson
Robert W. Newland
Helen Krabbe Padro
John R. Powell
Paul H. Roberts
Kendrith M. Rowland
Berdena T. Rust
Stephen J. Smith
William B. Smith
Robert D. Strumpfer
Joseph F. Thompson
Thomas E. Thompson
Mary Lou Harvey Williams
1950
Leo Alberti
Bradley M. Allen
John Barkenbus
Charles W. Barnes
Dona Ruth Weidman Barnes
Joan Robinson Bergman
Richard L. Boyd
Marilyn Brattstrom Brennan
Harry L. Brown
Richard E. Brown
Robert A. Burchfield
Lloyd S. Burns, Jr.
I. Carl Candoli
lynette Minzey Cassady
Rose Marie Damm Contos
Nancy Vercoe Cross
Robert M. Cross
Donald Gulp
Mary Williams Danielson
Fletcher DesAutels
Lovell J. Dewey
Marjorie J. Dickson
Mary Joslin Discher
Gordon L. Dolbee
Wendell Doney
•James R. Douglas
William F. Emrick, Jr.
Ted R. Engdahl
Barbara Smith Fox
•J. William Fry
Leonard A. Ginnebaugh
Charles W. Gore, Jr.
Hector C. Grant
Barbara Schreiber Hamlow
Allen B. Harbach
*Virginia DenAdel Hascall
Shirley Hill Hasty
Glen F. Hulbert
Barbara DeLong Johnson
Marguerite A. Johnson
Hugh J. Kennedy
John C. Kokinakes
• Leon A. Koopsen
H. Eloise Quick Mange
S. Lawrence Mayer
Wallace B. Melson
Elaine Hendershot Munson
JoAnne Dalrymple Nelson
Maurice A. Nelson
*David B. Nilson
John P. Overley
Jean Broo Roos
*Helen Walker Roth
Jean Smith Rowland
Noble F. Sievers
Bette Wall Simanton
Charles T. Stanski
*James L. Stewart, Jr.
Virginia Stickan
Jack W. Sunderland
Lester R. Svendsen
Alex Szabo
Ruth Parrott Szabo
Harry E. Travis
Horace L. Webb
Donald D. Wolff
1951
Gordon D. Bednarz
Frederick Bergman
Robert T. Binhammer
Garry E. Brown
Louise Lacey Brown
William G. Clark
James G. Copeland
James D. Garfield
Jane Ellenburg Garfield
Janet Brown DesAutels
Jean Shivel Dolbee
Robert P. Dye
H. Halladay Flynn
•James S. Gilmore. Jr.
Mary Osborne Ginden
Betty leonard Glen
·Allan P. Hascall, Jr.
Conrad Hinz, Jr.
Timothy Hogan
H. William lves
Val J. Jablonski
Maurice C. Kaser
*Mary Alice Kirkland Kiel
John H. Leddy
*Dorothy E. McCarthy
Nannette Pierce Magee
Wayne E. Magee
Jean Collinson North
Alice L. Koning Owen
Marian Hellmann Panny
Ernest Piechocki
Harley R. Pierce
*Kermit 0. Pike
Edward C. Path
Melvin L. Reed
John D. Romm
Gwendolyn Schwarz Schlesinger
Robert M. Simanton
Joyce Rickman Smith
Joseph V. Van Cura. Jr.
Jane A. Salomon Welborn
Glenn L. Werner
Frederick W. Winkler
Frances Labz Wolff
1952
John A. Avery
Anne Davison Binhammer
Parke B. Brown
Rosemarie Brandt Brudnak
Roger D. Conklin
Lewis A. Crawford
Leslie Vermeulen Eichelberg
Morton S. Fisher
John H. Fonner
Ronald L. Harvey
Kathleen Flemming Hines
Joan McGeachy Hinz, Jr.
Clyde E. Ingersoll
Robert Ketcham
Luann Herndier Ketcham
Frederick H. Leitz
Helen E. Brink Lincoln
Emily Collins Melson
'Barry T. Parsons
Thomas J. Peterson, Jr.
Robert A. Rodenhiser
Richard N. Schmitt
Barbara Wren Sulkowski
Patricia Chrouch Sunderland
Alberta Brown Taylor
Robert L. Taylor
Vito T. Tutera
James C. Tyler
Marilyn Knight Underhill
Patricia Praeger Venner
Thomas C. Willson
1953
Nancy Crissman Arlitz
Andrejs Broze
Jane Stateler Cameron
Nancy Murch Carrington
Roger C. Cox
Lou Ellen Crothers Crawford
John E. DeVos
Richard Enslen
Lloyd A. Fowler
Edmund J. Hall, Jr.
Thoma~ E. Hodson
Richard D. Klein
Sandra Bell Louch
Charles Maltby
Betteann Meyerson
James Morrell
Harry V. Myers
Gabrielle Hernstat Nations
Robert 0. Neeser
Richard L. Nelson
Helen Biscomb Nemire
Roger A. Pickering
Louis Rosenbaum
Edward Sulkowski
Jeanne Maloney Svendsen
Jay R. Tarlov
**Thomas A. Todd
Constance Newland Troll
Charles A. Van Zoeren
*Philip I. Wagner
Douglas Wendzel
Harriet Thompson Wikum
Gerald Wilson
Teruko Yutani Wong
Edward L. Yaple
1954
Lee Adams
Kipp Voorhees Aldag
Afred Arkell
James P. Bambach!
Sue Stapleton Bambach!
Conrad F. Bernys
Louis Brakeman, Jr.
Sue Van Houten Carpenter
John B. Clarke
Eugene E. Cortright
Jean Hathaway Crowe
*Evelyn Biek Davis
Carol Pastula Dawes
Ethel M. DesAutels
Maynard M. Dewey
Naida Shimer Dewey
Dean L. Forhan
Sallie Harsch Gardner
Charles T. Goodsell
Sharon Commenator Greig
Herbert A. Grench
Gloria Gould Hagadone
James R. Hagadone
William A. Highfield
*Eugene T. Karnafel
•Julia Dean Kellar
*Carl Koenen
*Shirley lnd Koenen
Chester Loucks (Han.)
Donald Mcintyre
James V. Milan, Sr.
Marylyn Eck Morrell
John E. Mueller
·carl P. Nelson
Ruth Osterling
Robert P. Pfister
·Jack R. Price
Harold W. Rudolph
Marvin J. Schultz
Marcia VanderMeer Stevens
Carolyn Maas Van Horn
Robert C. Van Horn
William F. Way, Jr.
'Charles H. Williams
Linda Crandall Worthington
1955
Samuel E. Allerton
Charles R. Bell, Jr. (Hon.)
Jack A. Bowen
'Robert L. Copeland
*Mary Jean Mertz Covert
• Don G. Davis
*Evelyn Biek Davis
Donald H. Dayton
Duane DeVries
Sara Horn Dobbertien
Jack M. Doyle
*Shirley Boers Fowler
John P. Gidean
Kathleen Lathers Guernsey
Mary Steiner Hargreaves
Howard J. Hirschy
Shirley Ketchen Hodges
Margaret Wong Hwang
*Philip Kellar
David J. Larson
Timothy D. Lemon
Catherine Rutherford McCann
Elaine Johansen Mange
Susan Pirnie Millar
Judith Robertson Neihoff
Irene T. Olson
*Charles L. Seifert
B. Thomas Smith, Jr.
Evelyn J. Smith
Mary Lou Schofield Smith
Don C. Steinhilber
Stephen Styers
Bruce Van Domelen
1956
Thomas R. Anderson
B. Duane Arnold
Richard I. Brown
•Joan Story Copeland
Endrene Peterson Crampton
David D. Crane
Lois Frey Crane
JoAnne Keller DeVries
James H. Fowler
Gretchen Bahr Frueh
John C. Frueh
Georgia Showalter Girardeau
Norma Durham Grench
Thomas R. Hathaway
Fleurette Kram Hershman
Jerre Locke James
Phillip w. Lewis
Joseph A. Meagher, Jr.
John A. Nelson
Justin Ruhge
•J. Bernard Sloan
Carolyn Crossley Smith
Donald E. Stowe
David Stuut
Mary Jane Faugust Thomason
Robert L. Thomason
Nancy Wolff Underhill
Paul D. VanStone
Angie Vlachos
Marilyn Everett Wi Ison
1957
Barbara Rock Andrews
Betty L. Bonathan
Paul F. Coash
Richard R. Dean
W. Gailord Dugan
Barbara McCabe Fowler
Paul J. Hanson
Samuel L. Harrington
Nancy Sue Shanks Kennedy
John S. LaMonte
Mary Ann Goff LaMonte
Anne K. McCain
Nancy West Mann
David J. Markusse
'Hugh F. Mehaffie, Jr.
Dorothy Young Nasoni
*Beverly Nunn Price
Katherine Hennig Rebstock
Joan Stiles Rodenhiser
Stephanie Burns Sacco
*Katharine Richards Shackleton
Judith Lindberg Shoolery
Thomas H. Slotterbeck
*A. Bruce Springsteen
Judith Lyon Stuut
•John D. Sweet
Elizabeth Wenzel Vajda
Sarah Stevens VanDomelen
1958
•John H. Becker
Marcia Yoder Brown
David Chidester
•Jean Hilton Courtney
*N. Warn Courtney
Herman W. DeHoog
*Leslie E. Dodson
Richard C. Ehrle
Lawrence M. Eistenstein
Larry S. Eldridge
Carl F. Finch
Patricia Cooper Finch
Janet Adducci Bradley
Carol M. Goodhew
David C. Brown
Marlene Crandell Hathaway
Gertrude DeHoog Brown
George S. Hayne
Roy P. Carlson
Kathleen Maher Hayne
Suzanne Metz Crowley
Arthur Herriman
Rosemary Luther DeHoog
James K. Hightower
Alfred J. Gemrich
Samuel A. Hollar
Daniel V. Gilman
Carol Miller Holmes
Susan Eichelberg Glendening
*Sally Hunter
Evanna Adams Harden
Jane Schaafsma Iannelli
C. Sue Kelley Henger
Vincent L. Iannelli
Edward D. Hodges
Joan White Kaufman
Ann Wagner lnderbitzin
Ruth A. Knoll
Frederic Jackson
Nancy Cummings Labb
Girts Kaugars
Judith A. Sweitzer Larson
John H. Kless
Charles W. McMahon, Jr.
Nancy Blackwood Kless
Charles M. Meeker
Sachiko Kobayashi
Daniel S. Metzger
Marvin E. Konyha
*William Perkins (MA)
John P. Kuch
Charles L. LeValley
Philip P. Perry
A. Bennett Schram
James R. McCabe
Judith Pavia McCabe
*Richard J. Shackleton
Donald S. McClure
Donald L. Shuler
Robert C. MacDonald
Margaret Brown Shuler
Douglas J. Mackinder
Jo Anne Valentine Simson
George Macleod
James H. Smith
Robert J. Miles
Robert C. Steward
Eleanor Hellen Miller
Carol Beall Stone
*Louise Ann Faragher Padmos
Sally Seifert Styers
Gayle Dowd Pierce
John F. Wasmuth
R. Bruce Rank
Merrilyn Cigard Wenner
Donald H. Sanborn
Larry Werner
Constance Gillesby Wickrema Sinha James H. Saylor
Ojars Smits
Ruth Sollitt Williamson
James E. Spencer
1959
Willard Thorp (Han.)
James L. Van Zandt
Warren C. Andrews
John R. Veenstra
Carolyn Thomas Beavan
Virginia Phillips Vincent
Carol Hoover Bruda
William A. Vincent
Karen L. Atkinson Ciske
Patricia Wentworth
Leon K. Caverly
Robert Westin
Karen Lake DeVos
Wendel B. Wickland
S. Ingrid Brown Ehrle
•J. Rodney Wilson
Alan G. Ferguson
David W. Fischer
1961
Charles R. Fisher
Alvin
C. Bailey
*Robert N. Fletcher
Susan A. Calkins Boucher
Frederick J. Gaiser
Richard K. Burnham
Bruce D. Harrington
•Larry P. Casey
Jerry Hartman
Judith H. Cooper
Sharon Wiley Hightower
Arthur W. Crowley
•James D. Hudak
'Marilyn Ludwig Daly
Waclaw Jedrzejewicz (Hon.) +
Margaret Ann Edmonds
Merrillyn VanZandt Krider
Charles E. Evans
Vernon H. Krider, Jr.
Mary Ellen Steketee Fischer
James C. Laidlaw
Mariana Roumell Gasteyer
Peter Lillya
*Robert E. Hader
•Jane Gilmore Maloney
Henry D. Haynes
Walter F. Maser
*David G. Hopkins
Jerry C. Packer
Lewis T. Houston
Katheryn Edmonds Rajnak
Richard A. Hudson
Robert W. Stark
Lawrence B. lnderbitzin
Donald C. Steffen
James W. Iovino
Judith Miller Steffen
Robert V. Johnson
Jane Vanden Berge Steward
John F. W. Keana
James K. Taylor
Robert C. Kelly
*Robert W. Tyner
Sylvia Schaaf Kelly
*William J. Venema
John A. Kerley
Alison Groetsema Werner
Mary Hanson Kerley
*William H. Western
Jon 0. Labahn
Diane Dugas Worden
David W. Larson
Leonard Worden
James C. Leighty
1960
Carole J. Lewis
William R. Liggett
Paul F. Asbury
Maija Zadins Lillya
Gary Babcock
Mary Murch McLean
Gail Wruble Berry
Francine Smith Meeker
Phillip H. C. Berry
29
1963
*William H. Atkinson
*Karen Glomp Bekofske
David E. Bellingham
Hugo B. Bergstrom
Richard W. Bovard
Jeanne Hand Bowman
*Robert L. Brackenridge
Kay Wedge Buss
Robert A. Buss
•Jana Kennedy Campbell
•Loren E. Campbell
Virginia Batts Chorley
Carl R. Christensen
Barbara Friese Clapp
William A. Clapp
Raymond H. Comeau
Richard W. Compans
Joanna Young Davis
Gary P. Corpron
Richard N. Doyle
Kenneth G. Elzinga
Charles R. Fehr
James A. Flower, Jr.
Carolyn Wendelken Formsma
Barbara Klein Furrow
Karen Moore Glatt
E. John Graichen
John M. Grandin
Marvin Hage
James S. Howell
Kenneth M. Hunter
Alan C. Hutchcroft
F. Elaine Goff Hutchcroft
Robert L. Judd
Fred C. Kolloff
Dennis Lamb
*Thomas W. Lambert
Anne Struhsaker Larsen
James B. Larsen
Susan Schroeder Larson
E. Turner Lewis
John H. Lillie
Stephen M. Lipman
Susan Martin Livingston
Douglas A. Long
Stuart B. McConnell
James McCoy
Robert W. Mclean
Georgia Irvine McRae
James R. Marlett
Lucy Blynn Marsden
Richard Marsden
Margery Hayes Miller
Robert K. Morgan
Belsy Hoyt Myers
Philip W. Nantz
Thomas M. Neujahr
W. James Orr
Makrouhi A. Oxian
Douglas Parrish
Susan Cann Plautz
Phillip 0. Presley
Bonnie Bradford Ramseyer
Gail Olin Rodwan
Philip B. Rose
Donald L. Schneider
Gena Eldredge Schultz
Gayle Mitchell Southworth
James G. Spaulding
Karen Erickson Spaulding
Alan E. Strong
Sharon Douglass Swintz
Robert J. Tardiff
Kenneth D. Van Andel
Gary E. VandenBerg
J. Ross Wilcox
Henry M. Yaple
Jeffrey B. Aldrich
Mary C. Andersen
Susan Cooper Akao
John F. Michkovits
Gary L. Miller
Beverly Castle Myers
Gary L. Myers
Asa Pieratt
Lawrence R. Quinn
Wilbour Eddy Saunders (Hon.)
Don W. Schneider
Linda Brenneman Schneider
Orrin C. Shane Ill
*Ronald A. Siwik
Mary Dunkirk Smits
Alan Stewart, Jr.
Gerald F. Tompkins
Marie A. Vermeulen
Mary Goss Vitolins
1962
Linda Stutzman Baker
William A. Baker
Kenneth J. Berry
Nancy Thompson Berry
Patricia Crego Boylan
Charles R. Bursey
Shirley Wright Bursey
Helen M. Hooper Butt
David A. Carlson
Sandra Frost Carlson
Richard E. Chorley
David Clark
Richard B. DeMink
Diane E. White Doyle
Sandra Lent Farrow
Stephen A. Ferrara
Constance R. Forsyth
Gerhard Fuerst
Charles Glatt
*Margaret Weid Hader
Audrey Johnson Harrison
David L. Hawkins
•Judith Brown Holbrook
Charles J. Hornback
Lynne Emmons Hudson
Janet Grimm Hyne
Robert Innis
Jean Schaafsma Jackson
Philip C. Jensen
Marion Banister Johnson
Donald L. Knight
Richard M. Koerker
Linda Hunter Krane
James G. Lindberg
Thomas G. Macfie
Arthur Miller
Marylyn Lindsey Moon
Thomas C. Moon
James I. Neujahr
Kennett A. Offill
Robert H. Poel
Judith Sterling Porter
Susan Kessler Rank
Richard A. Robyn
Elizabeth Reverski Rodgers
J. Gordon Rodwan
Ivan R. St. John
lise Gebhard Schletter
Carol Kratt Skillman
David Southworth
Mary Jane Vargo Tompkins
Edward Van Peenan II
C. Glen Walter
Edite Balks Walter
David C. Wenke
Sandra Montague Western
Marguerite Hathaway Westin
William Zinn
30
1964
Sandra Nordin Anderson
David W. Andrews
Dawn Larson Atkinson
Larry B. Barrett
*Carl L. Bekofske
Susan Broemel Best
Gordon Bingham
Phillip L. Blair
Howard E. Bowman
Pamela Smith Broemel
Elaine Fish Bugoski
Linda Harlow Cannon
Judy K. Cantarella
David R. Clowers
George L. Collins (Hon.)
Karen Foxworthy Craig
Roger B. Creel
*Dianne Sopp Delong
Gretchen Cassel Eick
Richard N. Eick
Glen C. Fischer
Barbara Cummings Foster
Georgiana E. Foster
Michael P. Goodman
Stephanie Crum Gradillas
Charles D. Hackney
Walter L. Hall
Thomas J. Hayward
David Heath
Gail Brunson Hill
Margaret P. Britton Kolloff
Roger A. Kooi
Richard R. Krueger
*Donna Reed Lambert
*Edwin R. Lauermann
Don P. LeDuc
Susan Lentz LeDuc
Ruth Hirrschoff Leine
Priscilla Hazen Lillie
Grace Smith Lipman
Bruce Marsh
Luella Williams Mast
Ronald M. Milnarik
Roland F. Mittica
Michael l. Moore
Nancy Briegel Moore
Mary Stucky Myers
Davidson Nicol (Hon.)
John C. Persons
Robert K. Peters
Mary Switzer Rees
Ingrid Sandecki Rossmann
David P. Shaub
*Lary R. Smith
Mara Smits
David M. Swarthout
Nancy Kuhns Taylor
*Bruce A. Timmons
Thomas G. VanderMolen
John N. VanOtterloo
Elliott B. Weitz
Patricia Barney Westphal
1965
Barbara Arnold
Carol White Averill
Keith Bekofske
Ruth Archer Bekofske
John D. Berkaw
Diana J. Besemer
Susan Tetu Bolon
Daniel B. Boylan
*Susan Wotila Brackenridge
Pamela Behnke Caito
Richard T. Clapp
Lester L. Coleman
Jon P. Cowan
Thomas R. DeVries
Alan M. Durkee
Carl M. Fields, Jr.
David L. Filkin
Helen Strong Foreman
Jack Foreman
Richard K. Foster
Donald S. Frost
Martha Merson Frost
James E. Frutchey
'Hugh F. Gardiner
*Nancy LaFuente Gardiner
*Martha L. Gay
Susan Hayes Hartman
Alan F. Heath
Jan P. Hessler
J. Randall Huyck
Marion Laetz Huyck
Ann Gillespie Ingles
John C. Ingles
Sonja Perejda Keller
W. Wallace Kent, Jr.
Janice Wheeler Kenyon
John L. Kiefer
Mary E. Klepser
Robert L. Koerker
Elsa C. Lane
Katherine Seaman Lewis
Sherri II Johnson Lloyd
C. Douglass Locke
Eglis T. Lode
Mirth Nelson Lundal
William 0. Lynch
Sarah Meyer McCoy
Melinda Ray Marsh
Urania Fuller Messing
Arthur H. Miller
Janet Schroeder Miller
John J. Miller
Baiba Kaugars Ozols
Elizabeth Mead Pifer
James W. Pifer
Galen K. Pletcher
Jon C. Ranger
Karen Kammerer Rice
Bertha Doleman Robinson
Janice Baty Shaw
Robert L. Shearer
Robert T. Sibilski
Dehn E. Solomon
Constance L. Freier Sterbenz
Ann Marie Stroia Studwell
Gary L. Wild
Lee Summers Wild
Margery Connable Zeller
1966
Marylu Simmons Andrews
R. Michael Ash
*Karla Lutz Atkinson
Robert J. Baker
Marilyn Halverson Bamford
Mark F. Baron
William Barrett
Charles Bender
Jeffrey H. Beusse
Susan Stewart Bingham
Virginia Wilkes Blair
Patricia Flynn Boortz
Donna F. Brown
Astrida I. Butners Buntaine
Norman S. Buntaine
Albert D. Busdiecker
Paulette Jahnke Carr
Sharon Young Cherry
Joyce Kirk Coleman
Joan Sisson Cooper
Jon R. Cump
James A. Day
John K. DiTiberio
Nancy Lamb Dotlo
Lynne Eddy
Joellyn Rose Ellis
Robert C. Engels
Meribeth Matulis Freeman
Joseph M. Garrison
Lisa A. Godfrey
Douglas Gunnison
Donald L. Hafner
Amy Mantel Hale
James D. Hale
Charlotte Hauch Hall
Michael J. Ham
Patrick E. Hargot
Walter R. Herscher
Richard W. Hess
James Howard
Barbara Johns Howell
John R. Huddlestone
Joan Tuller Jensen
Kathleen I. Shaw Kortge
David E. Kyvig
George Lambert
Marguerite Dewey Lambert
Carol S. Cameron Lauhon
Alfred P. Lee
Franklin P. Mason
Garth Maxam
Karen Strong Melin
Robert Merrill
*Charles Morse. Jr.
Edward J. Moticka
Betty Strand Murray
Elizabeth Neubert Myers
Richard Myers
Robert Neuman
Jean Geltund Nitta
Marcus C. Pomeroy
Marilyn Coffing Pomeroy
Steven D. Rakich
David A. Rector
Phi lip A. Rice
Jennifer Smith Sanderson
G. Thomas Seeley
Diane Pirog Smith
Marion Smith
Sandra Noren Snyder
Jan Rowe Solomon
Dennis E. Stover
Ellen Anne Blanford Teghtmeyer
Ginnie Good Warner
John W. Warner
Sue Barthoff Weidenbaum
Geri Rosen White
Jimm F. White
Linda Swaim Wolcott
1967
William A. Albert
James Anderson
Lauren Binda Anderson
Lyle A. Anderson Ill
Nancy Keech Anderson
Richard Anderson
C. Danford Austin
Andrew Beierwaltes
Thomas C. Benson
Joel Bernstein
Margaret Porter Beusse
Leslie Bouwman
Thomas Brown
Judith A. Coon
Mark Coon
James J. Cooper
Richard L. Coulter
Thomas C. Crawford
Elizabeth Barnhart Cump
Lila Betty Burroughs Dawson
Harold J. Decker
David F. Dombroski
Monica Traut Dreuth
John H. Emerson
Marcia Brackney Emerson
Glenn R. Gardner
Steven Glenn
Tamara Dole Glenn
John C. Goff
Peter A Goodspeed
Lynn Pierson Gunnison
Joan McClure Guziec
Charles R. Haberlein, Jr.
James Harrison
Ira Hartman
Mary Lou Dunnaback Hess
Nancy V. Hitchcock
Gail French Hubbard
Mary Westerville Karpiel
Barbara Burness Kyvig
Christopher Paul Landee
Martha Parker Latimore
George Lindenberg
Marion Kathleen Richner Locke
Martha Ann McGinness
Carol Barney Maier
Joseph L. Merchant
Sandra Bedard Meyer
Foster E. Mohrhardt (Hon.)
John L. Moore
Jon R. Muth
Ruth Morriss Peterson
Leslie Pitts
Kay Keller Radecki
Linda J. Rodd
Janice Williams Roeder
Elaine Martin St. Laurent
William Sanderson
Don M. Schmidt
Judith Atwood Seeley
Ronald Sharp
Suzanne Kirk Shaub
Harry E. Sherman
Robert J. Shiller
David Showers
Gail Lancaster Silkstone
William Silkstone
Allan C. Smith
Richard Smoke
Elizabeth Jones Starman
Dennis E. Steele
Michael W. Stripp
Joseph B. Stulberg
Premanjali Devadutt Stulberg
Karen Cassens Thompson
Thomas Ticknor
Susan Risser Treinen
Thomas VanDoren
George Wellman
Sara Will>on Wellman
Nancy Southard Young
Lucille Zaininger
1968
Jack F. Ahlfeld
Susan Wolofski Ahmed
Margaret Webb Brown
Roger E. Brownell
Susan Stephens Burns
Daniel T. Carter
*Donald Coggan
Pamela Jean Sawicki Czerny
Sybil Smith Davis
Vernie Davis
Christine Mertz Dear
Rosemary Tucker Decker
Ann Sullivan El Kouhen
Gwen VanDomelen Fountain
James A Fountain
*Susan Kilborn Francois
Hardy 0. Fuchs
Linda Maples Fuchs
Harry T. Garland
Thana King Giridhar
Karen J. Goss
Bruce M. Haight
Nancy Loebe Hessler
Charlotte Lorey Hoven
Brent Jenkins
Carol Osburn Jenkins
Marilee Smith Kaufman
Peter Kline
Janice Brenner Kopen
Robert Kopen
Cheryl A. Kraft
Helene Kudzia
Susan Eastman Leone
Anthony K. Lux
Jeanne Malachowski
Lawrence E. Matecki
Douglas F. Mernitz
Janice Koltko Mernitz
Michael F. Molly
Nancy Rice Moore
*Yvonne Troutead Morse
Carol Hoben Muth
Rodger Myers
John L Orr
Margaret Ralston Payne
Judith L. Prentice
Jacqueline Lowrie Read
Thomas Roeder
Emily Bakeman Ruddell
John Ruddell
Paul S. Rutledge
Harrison A Schaffhauser
Richard H. Sharp
David D. Sharpe
Laurence Sibrack
Paula Prane Sibrack
Ellen Tangent Slaughter
Raymond Slaughter
Paul Smithson, Jr.
Robert Snyder
Margaret Stewart
Suezanne S. Storch
Catherine Fay Telep
Diane McGowan Tichenor
Marianne Minarovic Truitt
John A Trump
Molly Conklin Turner
Ralph Vosburgh, Jr.
Barry L. Webster
Marcia Connolly Wilson
Richard E. Yehle
Joseph B. Young
1969
L. Kurt Adamson
Martha Gampbell Adamson
Ellen Worgess Anderson
Bonnie Wachter Bachman
Patricia L. Bauer
Robert Belair
Candace Start Bogar
Thomas Bogar
Roger Brinner
Susan Fahrenwald Brinner
Patricia Freeman Brown
Terrence J. Brown
Dawn Cosgrove Buchanan
lisa Hueter Burke
David Chapman
Norma Bailey Cook
Lynne L. Croxford
George E. Drake
David L. Easterbrook
Nancy Jean Day Eden
Guri Chambers Edolf
James D. Edolf
Steven Elkinton
Kim N. Elliot
J. Scott Erickson
John E. Ferrell
*Richard K. Francois
Alexander Glendinning
Paul Goddard
Ann Wright Haight
Richard L. Halpert
Katherine Carr Ham
Patricia Reed Hoyer
Debra Halperin Hurley
Constance Ripstra Kennedy
Linda J. Ketelaar
Alan R. Kirk
John R. Krezoski
Susan Oster Krezoski
Michael J. Kukla
Rosario Cardenas Kukla
Barbara Atkinson Lanwermeyer
Timothy Lavalli
John Linton
Lynda Lane Lonowski
Michael E. Low
John W. Lundeen
Donna Gay Madsen
John Magerlein
Frank Malone
Elizabeth Lindermann Malone
Mary Kay Boucher Mason
Lucinda Rudell Maunder
Charles V. Meyer
Regina Wheat Miller
Alan D. Nesburg
David Newcomer
Valerie D' Amato Newcomer
John Pacay
Jolinda Whitton Pacay
Lane W. Palmer
Mary Elliott Pitts
Nancy Reitz
Kathleen Carr Richardson
Melvin L. Rogers, Jr.
Evelyn Carlson Sheaf!
Thomas B. Silver
Linden C. Smith
Virginia Heimbuch Smith
David H. Strome
Thomas W. Thackara
Lee Tichenor
Cynthia Turner
Carol Hafley VanLuvanee
John A. VanLuvanee
Connie Wardowski Wadsley
Marianne Darrah Wason
William P. Weiner
Sidney Weseman
Maung Ba Win
1970
*Eric E. Anderson
Kenneth J. Archey
Marilyn Christliob Archey
Marianne Meyer Armento
Robert L. Barnhart
Thomas D. Bedell
Tonda Sue Boothby
James Boyce
Jean A. Broadwell
Carolyn L. Brown
Jayne Current Brown
Robert D. Brown
John Carroll
James W. Clay
Kristin Thompson Colgren
David 0. Corp
Randall Lee Dalton
Alan Dee
Ellen Levi Elwell
Stephen Elwell
Michael Farrell
Janet Williams Ferrell
Robert Franklin
Martha J. Hanscom
Pamela Steward Harding
Cynthia Lord Harrison
David Harrison
Gail Hunt Henry
Nancy Yoder Honeysett
Nancy A Hornbaker
Alan G. Israel
John C. Kellogg
Catherine Thomas Keyes
Katherine M. Kovacic
Nancy Butine Krapf
Roderic W. Krapf
Christina Driver Kring
Jonathan Kring
Frances Hotelling LeBlanc
David F. Lester
Linda Myers Lester
Janet Girardin Levi
Jonathan A Levi
Jacqueline DeVol Light
George W. Liles, Jr.
Linda Madsen Linton
Cheryl Lyon
John A. McCleery
Valerie Wo Sun Mau
Joseph Muenzer
Margaret Lister Muenzer
Barbara C. Nykoruk
Richard Obrig
Nancy Keeler Palmer
Jane York Renze
Cynthia Napier Rosenberg
James Rosenberg
Myron A. Sayles II
Bruce W. Scott
Carol Wheater Seppala
Gregg Seppala
lnese Brutans Sharp
Charles R. Sherman
Kate B. Showers
Nancy Sinclair
Andrea J. Singer
Nelson S. Slavik
Paula Norman Snyder
Karen E. Kurtz Spielman
William B. Struck
Ruth Neubert Stuart
Judith Sutterlin
Frederick P. Taschner
Gail Moore Taschner
Henry W. Taylor
R. Moses Thompson
Shirley Thompson
David M. Thoms
Susan Stuckey Thoms
Linda Hays Trepanier
Roger Lee Trepanier
John H. Twist
Timothy C. Vander Meulen
Craig S. Vossekuil
Henry G. Williams
Susan Lindenberg Williams
Timothy V. Williams
Mary Dillon Woolever
1971
William D. Belski
Mary Mosier Breymann
Earl L. Cooper
W. Daniel Coyle
Sarah L Darter
Brian Davis
Deborah A. Foote Faulkner
Douglas Faulkner
H. Thomas Francis
Rebecca Hassan Frazier
Gregrick A. Frey
Carolyn Hulbert Gibson
Peter Gibson
Judy Bell Hafer
Thomas E. Hafer
David G. Halbig
Harriet Portner Halbig
Ruth Hall
Guilford G. Hartley
Karen D. Daile Helm
Steven R. Helm
Carolyn Welti Hoffee
Paul R. Hunter
Robert J. Jacob
Alice K. Jameson
Lisa T. Jankowski
Robin C. Jaynes
Calvert B. Johnson
Virginia· Jones
William F. Keucher (Hon.)
Susan Kysela
Thomas V. Lange
Gail Hoben Llanes
Marshall J. Lyttle
Brian R. McCrea
Richard J. Maunder
Andrew S. Muth
Lynn Dee Irwin Myers
Gerald W. Oakes
Kathe Perron Obrig
John J. Parisi
Henry S. Perkins
J. William Potter, Jr.
Carol Post Raines
Brent D. Rector
Patricia Eldred Roe
Wayne E. Roe, Jr.
Robert L. Schrag
David W. Scott
Vicki Simms Shaller
Joanne Robbins Sloane
Peter D. Sloane
Betsey Brown Swinehart
Grant E. Swinehart
Stephen C. Sylvester
Ellen Parsons Tatreau
Virginia S. Taulane
Bradford Thompson
Richard Tubbs
Frank Vaskelis
Sally Ironside Vaskelis
Ann Rutledge Vossekuil
Bryan M. Vossekuil
Richard L Westrate
Shirley Hedges Westrate
Lloyd T. Williams. Ill
Richard L. Winkley
Michael H. Woolever
Bonnie Ware Yaple
1972
Karin Neuss Bajor
Lawrence H. Bajor
J. Barbara Rees Barnhart
Robert S. Barrows, Jr.
Bruce D. Barton
Caryl VanLonkhuyzen Barton
Gretchen Beardslee
Muriel A. Bina
Nancy Rinier Brady
Paul D. Burnam
Jill Downing Carroll
James D. Cavallo
Sandra Chin Corp
Michael F. Edick
Susan Beardsley Fisher
Carolynne Dawson Gieryn
31
PARTICIPATION
DOLLARS NUMBER OF PERCENTYEAR
18991911
1912
1913
1914
1915
1916
1917
1918
1919
1920
1921
1922
1923
1924
1925
1926
1927
1928
1929
1930
1931
1932
1933
1934
1935
1936
1937
1938
1939
1940
1941
1942
1943
1944
1945
1946
1947
1948
1949
1950
1951
1952
1953
1954
1955
1956
1957
1958
1959
1960
1961
1962
1963
1964
1965
1966
1967
1968
1969
1970
1971
1972
1973
1974
1975
1976
1977
1978
TOTAL
32
CLASS AGENT
RAISE I)
1,380.00
Lillian Krogen Walcott
Ruth Smith Smith
70.00
890.00
Elsie Davis
40,975.00
Ernest E. Piper
285.00
Helen Bronson Boekeloo
1,376.00
Leland J. Kerman
825.00
Ruth Goss Eldridge Ralston
425.00
Marian Monteith Hudson
765.00
Murray J. Rice
Marion Dunsmore
645.00
1,228.00
Monroe J. Wilcox
Clifton W. Perry
2,948.00
1,565.00
Harold Carlyon
1,210.00
Ruth Scott Chenery
Harold Beadle
2,293.00
3,062.50
Royena Hornbeck Tice
Alma Smith Crawford
12,075.69
1,902.50
Alma Smith Crawford
Lois Stutzman Harvey
937.50
1,280.00
Charlotte Bacon Cooper
Evelyn Rankin Rye
2,560.00
2,195.00
Fred L. Stites
L. Joseph Crum
1,366.00
Marshall Rutz
6,302.00
Theodore Conger
2,970.00
Louise Barrows Northam
2,610.00
8,654.18
Ruth Demme Hayes
Wilson Eby
1,542.50
Arleta Turner Warner
7,025.86
Evelyn Lee Mclean
1,319.00
4,129.74
Richard Walker
2,457.50
Marian Wilson Simmons
Hugh V. Anderson
1,250.00
Ardith Rowland Hanna
1,542.50
Eleanor Hootman Dewey
1,997.50
Nanita Wetherbee
679.50
21,710.00
John G. Polzin
3,070.00
Maxine Bailey Morris
3,284.00
Irene Currie Kent
3,323.50
Mary Joslin Discher
3,042.50
Robert T. Binhammer
1,005.00
Thomas C. Willson
Robert Nesser
2,755.00
Kipp Voorhees
2,175.00
Sally Horn Dobbertien
1,867.50
1,143.62
Joan Story Copeland
1,725.00
Thomas Slotterbeck
Marlene Crandell Hathaway
2,580.00
2,172.50
Karen Lake DeVos
Thomas Kreilick
2,069.50
2,317.50
Robert E. Hader
1,772.00
Penny Weid Hader
2,159.00
William Atkinson
2,560.00
Sherry Broadwell Niewoonder
1,802.50
Donald and Molly Merson Frost
Karla Lutz Atkinson
1,603.00
Nancy Southard Young
2,351.50
2,194.50
Susan Kilborn Francois
1,729.94
Norma Bailey Cook
Henry Williams/Katherine Kovacic 1,660.00
1,565.00
Alice Jameson
909.04
Laurie MacKenzie
Willard Washburn
1,435.01
678.00
Clarence T. Ross
1,350.22
Joseph S. Folz
Robert F. VanPatten
105.50
50.00
32.60
DONORS
AGE
10
4
6
8
7
16
18
13
13
15
21
20
22
25
30
36
35
23
27
27
29
34
33
36
35
28
37
24
31
25
40
26
21
30
30
24
33
31
43
64
41
29
35
41
30
29
25
44
36
48
45
54
76
58
64
74
77
69
74
85
63
47
70
47
27
5
1
3
42
50
50
47
47
52
67
46
43
38
50
56
46
46
75
44
39
35
39
38
34
41
33
38
36
37
43
35
37
32
47
27
19
29
33
27
29
26
23
28
24
20
22
28
25
32
24
30
20
28
27
30
35
30
31
29
28
24
23
29
20
15
21
14
8
2
2,347
27.5
Sally E. Madsen
Thomas F. Gieryn
Sarah A. Mellish
Edward R. Ginzler
Marsha l. Morton
Alan E. Hays
Laura Dillon Muth
Barbara J. Cook Hinz
Michael Nelson
Richard Hyer
Dale W. Norton
Robert Julian
Jennifer Dill Ovink
Stephen Kaskie
Roger W. Ovink
Mary A. Kastead
Kenneth E. Phillips
Karl Thomas Kodiak
*Sarah B. Porter
Daryl S. Larke
Gail A. Raiman
James W. Miller (Hon.)
Margaret Greenhalgh Morrell Gerald Rosen
Teresa E. Schafer
Stephen B. Myers
Jeremiah Sinnah-Yovonie
Kenneth L. Norton
Harold A. Sutherland
Mary E. Passage
Tom Thomson
Bruce A. Pietsch
Ingrid Thunander
Thomas Ross
Roger Toile
David A. Searles
William L. Urton
Sarah Ann Seitz
Johannes L. Van Den Bergh
Randall Sing
Janet Foster vanHartesvelt
Judith R. Smutek
Mark vanHartesvelt
Howard F. Sommer
James A. VanSweden
Christopher N. Speare
Diana Vogelson
Sheri K. Sprigg
Willard H. Washburn
D. Gay Perkins Stanley
Michael J. White
Gregory Stanley
Beth Wietelman
Donald W. Stiles, Jr.
Judith Manning Winkley
Jean Brumbaugh Stiles
Edith D. Wittenberg
James D. Swope
Christopher T. Wolle
Bonnie Chyrowski Trattles
Susan Fletcher Wright
David S. Webber
Barbara Williams
1974
1973
Robert D. Abell
Michael H. Anthony
Jennifer Jo Armstrong
Catherine E. Bach
D. Bradford Barker
David W. Bisbee
Liv A. Bjornard
Janet M. Blair
James Chase
Michael M. Crouch
Jane Ann Crum-Atkins
John P. Czechanski
Sheila Ann Decker
Wallace C. Duncan, Jr.
Deborah A. Dupont
Thomas R. Eden
Kerry Graham Edick
Mary Ann Sells Engdahl
Kerry Sue Estes
Anne Skjaerlund Fege
David Fege
Ellen Verdon Fitzgerald
James P. Flynn
Martha Williams Flynn
Ricki Fowler
Michael Frazier
Marguerite D. Glover
Gary A. Gudelsky
Judith Thompson Gudelsky
Diane Hanson
carol Haskin
Allan J. Hauck
Linda Cznadel Hauck
Janet Joers
Donna S. Kaczmarek
Janet E. Katz
James L. King
Lynne Jackson King
Rick E. Klug
Margaret Marx LaFrance
Linda Leithauser
Douglas A Lindsay
David G. Loughhead
Martha McMahon
Michael K. McNamee
Maria C. Benson
Dena K. Bovee
Helena Chang Chui
Mary Ann Cisar
William E. Clay
Barbara Woodson Collins
John M. Collins
Christine Daneman
Barbara Duncan Darroch
Bruce B. Darroch
Laurie Ironside Dziubek
David Elrod
Betsy A. Feiker
Katharine M. Hartley
Steven S. Hennessy
Anne H. Hickok
Barbara Hartmann
HuetdeGuerville
William P. Huxtable
Frank Jefferis
Carol M. Kahler
Michael Howard Kane
Corey H. Krause
Joseph M. Lane
Sherilyn K. Marshall
Rose Mary Mrazek
Bonnie Munger
Christine E. Murray
Anne E. Broker Parisi
Dana W. Ramish
Cynthia Read
Roberta E. Righter
Clarence Thomas Ross, Jr.
Andr~ L. Rowlett
Carolyn Scott
Phyllis Slocum
Neil A. Strelling
Edith Deer Sutterlin
Mark W. Sutterlin
Donald E. Swartwout
Susan Howard Swartwout
Thomas B. Sweenie
Shirley C. Taylor
Lynn Fencl Tempel
Scott F. Tempel
Stephen Thomson
Kurt J. VanMeter
Leslie Erickson Witcher
Elizabeth Witt
Geoffrey Wright
1975
David M. Bebiak
Cathy l. Brichetto
Sheryl E. Collins
Lynn Emrick Driscoll
Elliott M. Estes (Hon.)
Joseph S. Folz
James D. Hanson
R. Lynne Hutchinson Hennessy
Mary K. Huber
Derek C. Hybels
Barbara Pape Kilkka
Pamela L. Kistler
Stephen D. Labbe
Leonard Leonardi, Jr.
Eric Lewis
Sarah Lynch
Lynn McCann
William J. McDevitt
Mary Ann Shetzer McNeil
Mary l. Miller
David E. Remick
Mary Ellen Singer
Lisa Becker Smith
Linda J. Temple
Mark Theobald
James Vanderweele
Ronald R. Ward
Debra J. Warejcka
Bonnie Wheeler
1976
Eugene V.M. Bissell Ill
Stuart V. Bradley, Jr.
Teri Ilene Lowell
Jeff Owen
N. Scott Ralph
Cynthia Maupin Thomson
1979
Daniel Paul Harris
Lisa A. Peterson
Shan Renee Soliday
NONALUMNI PARENTS
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas D. Allen
Mr. Donald R. Anderson
Dr. and Mrs. J. L. Anderson
Mr. Frank Angelo
*Mr. J. G. Sandeen
Dr. and Mrs. Ralph E. Bauer
Mr. George B. Beard
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Beardslee
Dr. and Mrs. Robert Berkow
Mr. Richard F. Biringer
Dr. Vernon Blaha
Mr. and Mrs. Cornelis Blok
Mr. George R. Bodurow
Mr. Wesley J. Bouwhuis
Mr. and Mrs. Willard A. Brayne
Mr. and Mrs. Donald J. Bruggi
Mr. and Mrs. A. V. Cangelosi
• Mrs. Mildred Carlson
*Mr. and Mrs. George A. Carpe
·Dr. Maurice E. Castle
Mr. and Mrs. D. F. Cavalle
*Mr. and Mrs. Roy S. Dahmer
Mr. and Mrs. Paul W. Dame
Mr. Herman E. DeHoog
Dr. John C. DeMocker
Mr. Charles A. Dickinson
·or. William J. Dinnen
Mr. and Mrs. Victor Dorer
Mr. and Mrs. Foster Enggass
Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Everett
Mr. and Mrs. Olen Foley
Mr. and Mrs. James E. Russell
Dr. Frank A. Folk
Dr. and Mrs. John Satterfield
H. Ward and Glenna A. Fountain
Mr. and Mrs. E. H. Schneider, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. John W. Fox
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph I. Selby
Dr. Roy Frame
Mr. and Mrs. Seymour A. Shapiro
Mr. and Mrs. Robert K. Friesner
Rev. Warner H. Siebert
Dr. and Mrs. Charles E. Froham
Mrs. Olga M. Smith
*Mr. and Mrs. Edward Galligan
Mr. Robert C. Stevens
Mr. Gerald J. Gamalski
Dr. and Mrs. Oscar C. Stine
Mr. and Mrs. John Talbott
Mr. James E. Garrison
Mr. and Mrs. James A. Gary, Ill
Mr. Donald Taylor
*Mr. and Mrs. M. J. Tessin
Mr. and Mrs. Rocco Giancarlo
*Mr. and Mrs. E. Myles Glenn
Mr. and Mrs. John R. Thomson
Mr. and Mrs. Robert B. Godfrey
Christine B. Turn bull
*Mr. and Mrs. Pat Greathouse
Mr. and Mrs. Louis D. Vogel
Mr. and Mrs. Wade F. Gregory
Marian E. Vagi
Mr. L. L. Halstead
Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Vonk
Dr. Ladislov J. Hanka
Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Wallace
Dr. Joseph Harris
Mrs. Pearl A. Warn
Mrs. David Wehmeyer
Mr. and Mrs. Louis B. Heavenrich
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hegel
Mr. and Mrs. Glenn G. Wellington
*Dr. and Mrs. Paul J. Hettie
Rev. and Mrs. William A. Wendt
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer J. Horsley
Mr. Robert S. Whiting
Mr. and Mrs. Don N. Wilkinson
Mr. and Mrs. Norman A. Hunstad
Rev. and Mrs. Horace H. Hunt
*Mr. and Mrs. Carl D. Wisner
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Jaskey
Mr. and Mrs. Albert L. Witmer
Elizabeth R. Jenkins
Mr. and Mrs. Anthony E. Woods
Dr. Erik H. Jensen
FRIENDS
Mr. and Mrs. K. D. Jensen
Anonymous Donor
Dr. and Mrs. M. H. Joyrich
Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Abendroth
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Kammeraad
Mr. and Mrs. George Acker
Mr. and Mrs. Harry H. Kansman
Dr. Edward P. Ajemian
Mr. and Mrs. Richard L. Keene
*Mr. and Mrs. Raymond E. Alie
Mr. and Mrs. Ray E. Kehoe
•• Mrs. Frances Allen
Dr. and Mrs. William Kerr
Dr. and Mrs. W. Haydn Ambrose
Mrs. Dorothy J. Ketelaar
Mr. a'nd Mrs. Joseph L. Anderson
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur R. Kiel
*Mr. and Mrs. Rolla Anderson
*Dr. and Mrs. Edwin Knoechel
Mr. and Mrs. Steven Anderson
Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Krass
Mr. and Mrs. Verne Anderson
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. 0. Kroeschell
Mr. and Mrs. Louis H. Andrews, Jr.
*Mr. and Mrs. Robert Laatsch
Dr. and Mrs. Robert J. Armstrong
Mr. and Mrs. Alfred P. LaBarge
*Mr. and Mrs. Joe T. Arnold
*Dr. and Mrs. Eugene Lansing
*Mr. Franklin R. Austin
Dr. Donald J. Large
*Mr. and Mrs. Elton R. Awrey
*Mr. and Mrs. Calvin S. Lazar
Ms. Marian W. Baird
Mrs. A. W. Lee
Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Baker
Mr. Charles J. Levi
Mrs. L. J. Baker
Mr. and Mrs. Stuart G. Luces
*Dr. and Mrs. Frank B. McCue
Mrs. Nelda K. Balch
Mr. and Mrs. Robert T. McKearnan
Mrs. Dana Baldauf
Mr. and Mrs. Reo McNamara
Mrs. Alice Balz
Dr. and Mrs. William McQuillan
Mr. Gunther W. Balz
Dr. and Mrs. John R. McVey
*Dr. and Mrs. Brian Bannister
Dr. Donald F. MacArthur
Mr. and Mrs. Franklin Barber
*Mr. and Mrs. Peter Mann
*Mr. Maxwell D. Bardeen
Mr. Bruce H. Mellinger
Mr. Norman Bardeen, Jr.
Mrs. Vernon H. Meyers
Mrs. Virginia Pratt Bardeen
*Mr. Bruce H. Mickle
Mr. Julius Barthoff
Mr. and Mrs. Harold B. Minkus
Mrs. Rexford W. Barton
Mr. and Mrs. John W. Moehle
Mr. and Mrs. William Bascom
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Moritz
Mrs. Gerhard H. Bauer
Mr. and Mrs. William J. Morriss
Mr. and Mrs. A. Edwin Baur
Mrs. Barbara R. Morton
Mr. and Mrs. John Bebiak
Mr. Richard R. Murphey, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Beisel
Mr. W. B. Neely
Mr. Paul A. Belter
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon A. Nethercut
Mr. John Bemis
Mr. and Mrs. Swih Noble
Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Bender
Mr. and Mrs. Dewey Noland, Jr.
Dr. and Mrs. lvor Berry
*Mr. and Mrs. Donald Bishop
*Mr. and Mrs. George E. Palmer
*Mr. and Mrs. William J. Petter
Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Bland
Mr. and Mrs. Merlin Petzold
Mr. and Mrs. Warren Board
*Mr. and Mrs. Hubert S. Phelan
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Boot
Mr. L. R. Pietsch
Dr. and Mrs. Gerald Boyack
Mr. Walter B. Pipp
**Mrs. Frances Bramblett
Mrs. Barbara K. Powell
Mrs. Melvin W. Brethouwer
Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Reingold
Mr. John J. Bragger
Mr. and Mrs. Fred C. Reynolds
Mrs. Norris Brookens
Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Richardson
Ms. Adeline Brower
Dr. Kenneth W. Rowe, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Don F. Brown
Mr. and Mrs. Eric V. Brown, Sr.
Mrs. Delta Kelly
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur V. Freeman
Mr. Michael L. Kemerling
Mrs. Inez A. Brown
Dr. and Mrs. Joe Fugate
Mrs. Martha D. Kennedy
Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Brown
Mr. Lewis Gach
Mr. Paul D. Kennedy
Mr. Robert M. Brown
*Dr. and Mrs. Carl A. Gagliardi
Mr. and Mrs. Albert E. Bruggemeye Mr. and Mrs. Randolph Gale
*Mrs. Valorus Kerry
Mr. F. Ward Brundage
Mr. and Mrs. Clark B. Garra
Dr. and Mrs. Henry Ketcham
**Mrs. Marie S. Burbidge
Mr. and Mrs. James Garside
Mr. and Mrs. Judson C. King
Mr. and Mrs. Carl G. Burness
*Mr. and Mrs. James T. Kirkpatrick
*Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Gault
Mr. and Mrs. James W. Burns
**Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Gemrich
Mrs. C. Hubbard Kleinstuck
Mr. John C. Klosterman
Mr. and Mrs. John T. Burns, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Shu Geng
Mr. and Mrs. D. G. Knapp
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence A. Burns
Mrs. G. H. Gerpheide
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Ko
Ms. Kay C. Burtis
*Dr. Charles C. Gibbons
Dr. and Mrs. Thomas Kodiak
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Bushong
*Mr. and Mrs. Jack Gilchrist
Dr. and Mrs. Allen V. Buskirk
Mr. and Mrs. Marvin L. Glassman **Mrs. Harold G. Kolloff
Mr. and Mrs. Donald L. Button
Mr. and Mrs. Ervin J. Kopecky
Dr. and Mrs. Israel Goldiamond
Ms. Mary E. Campbell
Mr. and Mrs. George Kosabucki
Mr. and Mrs. J. Carlton Goodridge
Mr. Donald Kreling
*Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Gotschall
Ms. Janet Campbell
*Mr. Stanley S. Kresge
Dr. William Carter
Great Lakes Colleges Association
Mr. and Mrs. Richard L. Lang
Mr. and Mrs. Claude Casey
Mr. J. W. Greiner
Dr. Victor Lange
Mr. M. W. Chamberlain
Dr. and Mrs. Robert Grekin
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Larzelere
Checker Taxi Company-Office Sta Mr. and Mrs. Donald Griesbach
*Mr. and Mrs. Jack W. Lawrence
Mr. and Mrs. Brown Grosvenor
*Dr. and Mrs. Wen Chao Chen
*Mr. and Mrs. John W. Lawrence
Mr. and Mrs. Carl C. Christensen
Mr. and Mrs. Peter Haab
*Mrs. William J. Lawrence, Sr.
*Dr. and Mrs. Halvor N. Christensen Dr. Charles E. Hall
Mrs. Maude Leindecker
Mrs. Margaret Wood Halsey
Shiau-Ta Chung
Dr. and Mrs. Irving Levitt
Mrs. Frank W. Clark
Mr. and Mrs. Francis P. Hamilton
Rev. and Mrs. R. G. Lindenberg
Mr. and Mrs. James D. Coats
Dr. and Mrs. Russell A. Hammar
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald V. Littig
Dr. and Mrs. Frederick W. Coggan *Mr. W. Custer Hammond
Mr. and Mrs. Don T. Little
Dr. and Mrs. Henry Cohen
Mr. Brian A. Hampton
Mr. William T. Little
Dr. and Mrs. D. R. Colingsworth
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Hanichen
Dr. and Mrs. W. Kay Locklin
Mr. and Mrs. James Hanichen
Mr. Emilio G. Collado
Mr. and Mrs. John J. Love
Mrs. Ruth Collins
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Hanson
Mr. Charles H. Ludlow
Dr. and Mrs. William T. Collins
Dr. and Mrs. Harold J. Harris
Ms. Phoebe Lumaree
Mr. and Mrs. John P. Conrad
Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Hartley
Ms. Helen B. McConnell
Dr. and Mrs. Richard J. Cook
Dr. and Mrs. Edward J. Hartmann
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald McKessy
Mr. and Mrs. A. Robert Corstange
Mr. and Mrs. Richard B. Hartt
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas F. McNally
Cranbrook Educational Community
Miss Frances Haskell
Rev. David McShane
Mr. and Mrs. John S. Crosby
Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Haughey
Dr. Marshall A. MacDonald
Ms. Virginia E. Hayden
Mr. and Mrs. Samuel M. Cupps
Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Maclachlan, Jr.
Mr. Arthur M. Hayes
Dr. Doris E. Dahlstrom
Dr. and Mrs. B. J. Magerlein
*Mr. and Mrs. George I. Daniels
Dr. and Mrs. H. S. Heersma
*Mr. Robert Magill
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Daniels
Mr. Valentine Heinrich, Jr.
Mrs. Robert F. Manogg
Mrs. Robert Davis
*Mr. Richard P. Heintz
Dr. and Mrs. Frederick J. Margolis
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Decker
Mr. and Mrs. .Wayne Hellenga
Mr. David Markin
Mr. and Mrs. Miles D. Helmer
*Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Delano
Dr. Linda M. Delene
Mr. Alfred M. Herald
Mr. and Mrs. Irving J. Markin
Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Diebold
Mr. and Mrs. Merton High
Dr. and Mrs. Don Marshall
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Dillenbeck
Dr. and Mrs. Raymond L. Hightower *Dr. and Mrs. William P. Marshall
Mr. Erwin H. Doerschler
Mr. and Mrs. James H. Hilboldt
Mr. and Mrs. Eldon R. Matthews
*Mr. and Mrs. John M. Dozier
Mr. Anthony S. Matulis
Mr. and Mrs. Carl R. Hildebrand
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Drenth
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur A. Hilgart
Mr. William D. Maxon
Mrs. Paul Ducmanis
Dr. and Mrs. Conrad Hilberry
Dr. Elizabeth Mayer
Mr. James H. Duncan
*Mr. and Mrs. William J. Maze
Mr. and Mrs. E. M. Hinder!
Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Dunlap
Dr. and Mrs. Alfred K. Ho
*Mr. Thomas F. Meagher
Mr. and Mrs. Howard L. Easterbrook Dr. and Mrs. Richard W. Hodgman
Mrs. H. F. Mehaffie, Sr.
Mr. Floyd A. Eberly
Mr. and Mrs. Herman Hoeksema
Mr. Jeffrey R. Messner
Mr. and Mrs. Keith H. Edmondson Mr. Lawrence C. Hoff
Mr. Cliff Mezey
*Mr. and Mrs. Allan B. Milham
Dr. and Mrs. Ray L. Eilenfeldt
Mr. Harold H. Holland
Mr. Clarence H. Elliott
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur F. Homer
Mr. Arthur H. Miller
Mr. and Mrs. Harold L. Ellsworth
Mrs. Patricia Miller
Mr. and Mrs. Saburo Hori
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Emaus
Mr. and Mrs. Rudel C. Miller
Mrs. Helen L. Howard
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Epstein
Mrs. Helen Mills
*Mr. and Mrs. John C. Howard
Dr. and Mrs. Robert B. Moffett
Mrs. Nina M. Erway
Mrs. Mary Jane Howard
Mr. and Mrs. Tom J. Essenburg
Mr. and Mrs. Frank D. Mollhagen
*Mr. and Mrs. William J. Howard
Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Fake
Mr. and Mrs. Rudolph J. Molly
*Mr. and Mrs. Russell Howell
**Mr. and Mrs. Charles J. Monroe
Mrs. J. W. Falkenstine
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Hsi
Dr. and Mrs. W. H. Morse
Mr. George B. Ferguson
**Mrs. Queena M. Hughes
Mrs. Robert E. Ferguson
Mr. and Mrs. Peter Morton
Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Hunsche
Mrs. Robert Fisher
Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Mullen
Mr. and Mrs. Richard X. Hutter
Mr. and Mrs. Louis W. Flaccus, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Sylvester J. lonta
Mr. and Mrs. John R. Murray
• Mr. and Mrs. Bruce W. Flessner
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Y. lwanaga
Dr. Adrian J. Neerken
Dr. and Mrs. Frank Folk
Mr. and Mrs. Alven W. Neff
Mr. and Mrs. John M. Jackson
Mrs. Willard 0. Foote
Mr. and Mrs. T. Newell
Mr. Laurence Jaquith
Dr. and Mrs. John V. Fopeano
Mr. and Mrs. Edward M. Nielsen
*Mr. and Mrs. Thomas K. Jefferis
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Ford, Ill
Dr. George M. Nielsen
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest J. Jones
Mr. E. A. Forsleff
Mr. Richard Olvitt
Mr. and Mrs. Russell T. Jones
Mrs. Beryl A. Orr
Mr. and Mrs. Duane Foxworthy
Mr. N. R. Kaczmerek
Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Frahm
Mr. and Mrs. Anthony J. Palladino
Kalamazoo Coalition for
Ms. Marilyn Fransted
*Mr. and Mrs. Donald Parfet
International Women's Year
33
*Mr. Richard Klein
••Mr. and Mrs. Ray T. Parfet, Jr.
Dr. and Mrs. David Strauss
**Mr. William E. LaMothe
Mr. William U. Parle!
Dr. and Mrs. Jacob C. Stucki
••Mr. W. Price Laughlin
**Mr. and Mrs. Preston Parish
*Mrs. Louis W. Sutherland +
**Mr. William J. Lawrence, Jr.
Col. and Mrs. Joseph A. Parisi, Jr.
Mr. Peter J. Thomas
··or. Timothy Light
Rev. and Mrs. Douglas Passage
Mr. George D. Thompson
Mrs. Gail Llanes
Dr. and Mrs. Edwin Pearson
Mrs. Colleen A. Thor
**Mr. Neil McKay
Mr. John E. Penniman
Mr. and Mrs. James B. Thorne
Dr. Wilbert J. McKeachie
Mr. Tim Peters
Dr. and Mrs. Carl W. Tiller
Mr. Durey H. Peterson
Mr. A. J. Todd, Jr.
·or. Ralph W. McKee
·Mrs. Marian Manogg
Mr. Winship A. Todd
Mr. and Mrs. Reed B. Peterson
**Mr. David R. Markin
Mrs. Marcia F. Pettit
Mr. S. R. Tracy
*Mr. William B. Matteson
Mr. Charles F. Pfaff
Mr. George W. Turner
*Mr. Richard Meyerson
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Trader
Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Pian
·Mrs. Mary Miller Patton
*Drs. Paolo/Giuliana Trambusti
Mr. L. R. Pietsch
Mr. and Mrs. J.F. Turner
Dr. Albert C. Pittman
Mr. and Mrs. Davis Portner
·Mr. Frase; E. Pomeroy
Dr. and Mrs. E. Gilford Upjohn
Mr. and Mrs. Alexis A. Praus
Mr. Paul Pressler
• Mrs. Janet F. Upjohn
**Mr. Burke E. Porter
••or. and Mrs. George N. Rainslord
··or. Orner Robbins. Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold VanderSalm,
Mr. and Mrs. Forrest A. Rank
**Mr. J. Woodward Roe
Mr. and Mrs. Robert VanderVeen
··Mr. Alan N. Sidnam
Mrs. John B. Rapp
Mr. and Mrs. Melvin VanDis
**Mr. Louis J. Slavin
Mr. and Mrs. Garret VanHaalten
Lt. Martha Y. Reinhardt
•or. and Mrs. Donald Vanliere
*Mr. Donald C. Smith
Mr. and Mrs. Myron L. Rice ·
·Mr. Richard E. Smoke
Mr. Paul A. Riepma
Judge Wade Van Valkenburg
·Mrs. Jane Keller Souris
Mr. and Mrs. Donald K. Risser
Dr. Earl J. VanZandt
*Mr. Edward P. Thompson
Mrs. Franklin G. Varney
Mr. Robert Riuardi
*Mr. and Mrs. James J. Robideau
Mr. and Mrs. Richard E. Vernor, Jr.
·Mr. Paul H. Todd, Jr.
Dr. and Mrs. W. McKinley Robinson Mr. and Mrs. H. Carl Walker
·*Mrs. Elizabeth Upjohn
**Mr. David F. Upton
Dr. and Mrs. Howard Roerecke
Ms. Jacoba V. Walker
*Mr. Ronald 0. Warner
Dr. Barry I. Ross
Mrs. Dorothy N. Walton
·or. and Mrs. Walter Waring
Mr. and Mrs. Frederick M. Rueber
HONORARY TRUSTEE DONORS
*Mrs. E. F. Runge
Mr. Robert L. Warner
*Mr. Harold B. Allen
Mr. Glen W. Rynbrand
Mrs. Ann L. Weathers
Dr. Homer Armstrong
Mr. and Mrs. Leonard E. Salmanson Dr. and Mrs. Harris D. Webster
Rev. William R. Webster
**Mr. H. Glenn Bixby
•.1rs. Russell Sangston
Mr. Thomas Weeks
··Mr. Donald E. Bowen
Dr. and Mrs. David Scarrow
Dr. and Mrs. Davis I. Weisblat
Mrs. Betty H. Brown
Ms. Jean K. Schau
Ms. Mary R. Welch
• •Mrs. Dorothy U. Dalton
Mr. J. Peter Schma
Mr. James C. Westin
·or. George K. Ferguson
Mr. and Mrs. Elwood H. Schneider
··Mr. John E. Fetzer
Mr. and Mrs. Claude C. Wheeler
·or. and Mrs. Roger A. Scholten
··Mr. Ivan F. Harlow
Mr. and Mrs. Paul D. Wheeler
Dr. Richard S. Schreiber
Mr. Richard G. Hudson
Mr. Edward L. Whitaker
Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Scott
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Whitehurst
Mr. Robert L. Johnson
Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Seashore
Mr. Warren C. Johnson
Mr. and Mrs. Erskine P. Wilder, Jr.
Mrs. Martin Server
··or. Richard u. Light
Ms. Martha A. Wiley
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Shepherd
*Mrs. Mabie Ratcliffe
Mrs. Daisy Woods Williams
Mr. David A. Shiner
*Mr. Alan E. Schwartz
Dr. Martin Shotzberger
Mrs. Maynard Owen Williams
Dr. Harold T. Smith
Mr. and Mrs. Stuart H. Simpson
Mrs. Martha N. Wilkinson
··or. Leroy D. Stinebower +
Mrs. Milton Simpson
Mr. Robert Winblad +
Mr. Dwight Stocker
Mr. and Mrs. lrcel Slack
Mrs. Kathleen Winblad
··or. T. Thomas Wylie
••Mr. and Mrs. louis J. Slavin
Mr. Edmond B. Woodruff
**Mr. and Mrs. William Slavin
*Mr. and Mrs. Thomas B. Woodworth, Jr. BUSINESS, INDUSTRY,
Mr. and Mrs. Claude L. Smith
Dr. and Mrs. Wayne Wright
AND FOUNDATIONS
Mr. and Mrs. Earle Smith
Mr. and Mrs. R.A. Yealin
Adventure Travel
Mr. lawrence Smith
Mr. Lloyd D. Venner
Aid Association lor
Mrs. Marjorie H. Smith
Mr. and Mrs. James Young
Lutherans
Mr. and Mrs. Allred Southon
Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas Zantjer
Alvan Motor Freight, Inc.
Ur. and Mrs. John Spencer
Mr. and Mrs. John C. Zuber
The Altrusa Club of
Mr. and Mrs. luther Spencer
Airway Friday 10 league
Michigan
Mr. and Mrs. G. Wayne Spike
Oakwood Jr. High Social Fund
American Baptist Churches
Mrs. Hans L. Spiro
TRUSTEE DONORS
Elm Grove, Wis.
Mrs. Edna H. Stanley
American Baptist Churches
*The Han. Glenn S. Allen, Jr.
Mrs. Charlotte Schupan Star
Valley Forge, Pa.
**Mrs. Carol Boudeman
Dr. and Mrs. Lester J. Start
American Baptist Churches of
**Mr. Earl R. Bramblett +
Dr. and Mrs. Richard Stavig
Michigan
The Han. Garry Brown
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond B. Steffen
American Baptist Churches of
**Mrs. Marie S. Burbidge
*Mr. Peter 0. Steiner
New York State
··or. Maynard Conrad
Mr. and Mrs. Vernon A. Stenger
American Motors Corporation
*Mr. William T. Creson
Dr. Andrew Stevenson
·Mr. James C. Cristy, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. M.F .L. Stewart, Jr.
American National Bank and
*Mr. Edward Davis
**Mrs. Alice Stinebower
Trust Company
**Mr. Elliott M. Estes
Mr. and Mrs. N. 0. Stockmeyer
Anderson and Son, Inc.
Dr. Arthur l. Farrell
Mr. Jack C. Stone
Architectural Building
*Mr. Allred J. Gemrich
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Story
Products, Inc.
**Mr. Edwin G. Gemrich
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Stratton
Automatic Laundry Company
..Mr. I. Frank Harlow
Mrs. Patricia Strelling
Bermingham and Prosser
Mr. and Mrs. Donald T. Strong
·or. William N. Hubbard
Company
Mr. Frederick Strong, Ill
• Mrs. Jane Iannelli
Blue Crystal Lanes
*Mr. Robert P. Kittredge
Mr. and Mrs. L. lee Stryker +
Bond Supply Company
• Mr. John Stubblefield
*Mr. Richard A. Kjoss
Brown Company
34
Brown Foundation Inc.
D. M. Brown Co., Inc.
Burroughs Mfg. Company
Don Cain, Inc., Realtors
C. Doug Carrigan Custom
Builder, Inc.
Central Tile and Terrazzo
Co., Inc.
Century Buick-Opel, Inc.
Checker Motors Corp.
Chemical Bank
Clausing Corporation
Jesse and Pearl Climenko
Foundation
Connecticut Mutual Life
Insurance Co.
Continental Air Transport Co., Inc.
Continental Bank Foundation
Continental Bank and Trust
Co. of Chicago
Continental Linen Services
Carle C. Conway Scholarship
Foundation
Cork'N Cleaver, Inc.
Corsiglia Restaurants, Inc.
CPC International, Inc.
Cramer Electric Company
Dimitri's
Dorer Engineering, Inc.
Earl-Beth Foundation
Early, Inc.
Eaton Corporation
Eckrich Foundation, Inc.
Equitable of Iowa
Ernst and Ernst
Esso Inter-America, Inc.
Exxon USA Foundation
Fader Equipment, Inc.
Fetzer Television Corp.
John E. Fetzer Foundation
Fidelity Federal Savings
and Loan of Kalamazoo
First Baptist Church,
Kalamazoo, Michigan
First Federal Savings and loan
Association of Kalamazoo
First National Bank and Trust Co.
of Chicago.
First National Bank of Kalamazoo
Ford Motor Company
The Garrett Agency
Gemrich, Moser, Dombrowski,
Bowser and Miller
General Motors Acceptance Corp.
General Motors Corporation
Rollin M. Gerstacker Foundation
C. J. Gibson Co.
Gilmore Broadcasting Corp.
Jim Gilmore Enterprises
Genevieve and Donald Gilmore
Foundation
Grace Foundation, Inc.
Greco's, Inc.
Gull Oil Corporation Foundation
Hammond Machinery Builders
B.L. Harroun and Son, Inc.
Hercules, Inc.
Heyl Foundation
Hoekstra Roofing Company
The Holland Evening Sentinel
Holly's Restaurant
Fred J. Hotop and Company
Household Finance Corp.
Howland Auto Sales
Lew Hubbard, Inc.
Humphrey Products
Humphries-Hansen, Inc.
IBM Corporation
International Travel Consultants
Interstate Steel Company
Jackson Iron and Metal Camp~
Johnson-Howard Lumber Com
Jones Electric Company
Kalamazoo Container Company
Kalamazoo County Republican
Committee
The Kalamazoo Foundation
Kalamazoo Gazette
Kalamazoo Label Company
Kalamazoo Mill Supply Compar¥)
Kalamazoo Paper Chemicals
Kalamazoo Rubber Stamp Com~
Kalamazoo Savings and Loan
Assn.
Kalamazoo Stamping and Die
Company
Kellogg Company
Kendall Industrial Supplies
John Keyser Agency
Kliegle Bros.
Otto Kihm Tire Company
Kirsch Company
L.R. Klose Electric Company
John C. Klosterman Company
Knappen Milling Company
Jud Knapper, Inc.
Jud Knapper Boy's Store
Bill Knapp's Michigan, Inc.
Lad Chemicals, Inc.
Ladd Enterprises, Inc.
F. Joseph Lamb Company
Libin's Varsity Shop
Joseph E. Loughead Company
The Michigan Colleges
Foundation, Inc.
Michigan National Bank-West
Michigan Cottage Cheese, Inc.
Miller-Boerman
Miller Davis Company
Miller Lumber Company
Modern Shoe Repair
Morgan Guaranty Trust Co.
National Bank of Detroit
James C. Nichols Studio
The NL Industries Foundation
Norton Simon, Inc.
Oakley and Oldfield
Parker-Hannilin Foundation
Parkview Hills
Pemco Wheel Company
Pension and Group Services, I
Pepsi-Cola Company
Pioneer Construction Company
Portage Glass and Paint
Company
Burke E. Porter Machinery
Company
The Presser Foundation
Racquet Club
Reader's Digest Foundation
Carl V. Reck, Jeweler
Redwood and Ross
The Robbins Foundation
W. C. Roney and Company
Saga Corporation
Schau-Powell, Inc.
Schiavone Studio
Schwarz's Restaurants, Inc.
Don Seelye Ford, Inc.
Sequoia Press
E. M. Sergeant Coal Company
Shakespeare Products Division
Shell Companies Foundation
Sign Art, Inc.
The Lear Siegler Foundation
South Side lumber and
Fuel Company
Southwestern Michigan Judo
Assn.
David L. Spaulding, Inc.
Standard Brands Foods
Standex International
Statler Ready Mix Concrete Co.
Stewart-Clarke Furniture
Stryker Corporation
The Upjohn Company
Valley Inn Management Company
Waco Financial, Inc.
West Hills Enterprises. Inc.
Weyerhauser Company
Wheeler-Bianey Company
J.M. Wilson Corporation
Wilson-Brinker Associates. Inc.
Jack Wolfe, Associates
Woodside Church
WQLR
Yellow Taxi Company
Zurn Industries, Inc.
CONTRIBUTORS THROUGH
MATCHING GIFT
PROGRAMS
Abbott Laboratories
Aetna Life and Casualty
Allstate Foundation Higher
Education Fund
American Can Company
American Tobacco Company
Amoco Foundation, Inc.
The Anaconda Comoanv
Atlantic Richfield Company
Bristol-Myers Company
Celanese Corporation
Champion International
Chemical Bank
Chevron Matching Gifts Plan
Chrysler Corporation Fund
Cities Service Foundation
Clark Equipment Company
CNA Financial Corp.
Connecticut Mutual Life
Insurance Co.
Continental Bank Foundation
Continental Can Company, Inc.
CPC International, Inc.
R.E. Donnelley and Sons
Dow Chemical Company
Dow Corning Corporation
Eaton Corporation
Equitable Life Assurance Society
of the United States
Equitable Life Insurance
Company of Iowa
Exxon Educational Foundation
First National Bank of Chicago
Ford Motor Company
Educational Fund
General Electric Foundation
General Food Fund, Inc.
General Telephone Company
of Michigan
Getty Oil Company
Grace Foundation, Inc.
Green Giant Foundation
Gulf and Western Foundation
International Business
Machines Corporation
Kimberly-Clark Corporation
Marathon Oil Company
Massachusetts Mutual Life
Insurance Company
McGraw-Hill, Inc.
Mead Johnson Company
Merck Company Foundation
Montgomery Ward Foundation
3M Company
New England Mutual Life
Insurance Company
North America Car Corporation
Northwestern Mutual Life
Insurance Company
Phillips Petroleum Company
Prudential Insurance Company
of America
NL Industries Foundation
Salomon Brothers
Schering Foundation, Inc.
Scott Paper Company
Foundation
C. D. Searle and Company
Sears Roebuck Foundation
SMC-AIIied Paper Company
Smith, Kline and
French Foundation
Squibb Beech-nut Corporation
Standex International
Foundation
St. Regis Paper Company
Sylvania GTE, Inc.
Syntex U.S.A., Inc.
Tennaco Foundation
Textron, Inc.
Time, Inc.
Transamerica Corporation
Union Oil Company of
California Foundation
Union Pacific Corporation
Uniroyal Foundation
Upjohn Company
U.S. Plywood
Varian Associates
Westinghouse Education
Foundation
Whirlpool Foundation
Zerox Corporation
CAPITAL GIFTS,
ENDOWMENT, GIFTS IN KIND
**Mr. and Mrs. John C. Abbott
Dr. and Mrs. W. Haydn Ambrose
Dr. Herbert Bogart
Dr. Stillman Bradfield
**Mrs. Marie S. Burbidge
Mr. W. R. Crissey
*Mr. James C. Cristy, Jr.
Dr. Ralph Deal
Mr. and Mrs. Frederick C. Fischer
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Forman
Dr. Philip Gillette
Mr. and Mrs. William F. Glen
Mrs. Caroline Ham
Mr. Ray Hamilton
Dr. and Mrs. John M. Hammer
Mrs Ardell 0. Jacobs
*Mr. Leland Kerman
Dr. Victor Lange
Dr. Richard Light
Mr. Mark McDonald
Ms. Sandee Overmars
Mr. Bernard Palchick
Mr. and Mrs. James Pinkham
Dr. Wade Robison
Dr. and Mrs. Howard Roerecke
Dr. John Satterfield
Dr. David S. Scarrow
Mr. Paul Smithson
Dr. Donald Stanat
Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Stocker
Dr. Lonnie Supnick
Dr. Philip Thomas
Dr. Laurence E. Wilson
**Mr. and Mrs. Richard P. Windisch
Bond Supply Company
E.l. DuPont Company
M-P Tool and Engineering
Company
Robert L. O'Boyle
Associates, Inc.
Master-Craft Corp.
The Upjohn Company
IN MEMORIAM
Ethel Dennis Allen
Ray Blowers, Jr.
Richard Boyack
Florence M. Bushnell Burdick
Paul Collins
Stewart B. Crandall
Harmon Everett
Frederick C. Fischer
Elizabeth Stetson Fleugel
Mary Cooper Fogarty
Margaret Kurtz Fortner
N. C. Foster
Stanley W. Glass
Agnes Grenell Goss
Lester Graybeil
David Greene
H. Colen Hackney
· Elton Ham
L. J. Hemmes
Dorothy Bowen Hootman
Mr. and Mrs. Don King
Esther VanderBrook Kent
lrmgard Kowatsk1
Kenneth Krum
John J. Kuch
Margaret J. Kurtz
Thomas S. Markin
Clarence Leslie Miller
Lowell C. Plasterer
Charlotte Little Richardson
LeRoy D. Stmebower
Grace Taylor
Elizabeth Dewing Todd
Franklin G. Varney
Knox Wicks
Floyd C. Wilcox
Winifred Cubberly Wilcox
Maynard Owen Williams
Irene Witters
CONTRIBUTORS TO
NATIONAL JUNIOR
TENNIS CHAMPIONSHIPS
Ms. Eleanor S. Bailey
Mr. Alfred Balkin
Mrs. Alice I. Balz
Mr. George E. Barnes
Dr. William T. Bateman
Mr. John M. Beaton
Dr. Harland L. Beers
Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Beimer
Mr. Paul A. Belter
Mr. L. Thompson Bennett
Dr. and Mrs. lvor Berry
Mr. Sherwood Boudeman
Mr. and Mrs. F. Hayden Bradford
Mrs. Norman Bristol
Mr. John J. Bragger
Dr. Arthur L Brown, II
Mr. and Mrs. Eric V. Brown, Sr.
Mr. Robert M. Brown
Mr. and Mrs. Lorence B. Burdick
Mr. and Mrs. John T. Burns, Jr.
Mr. B. Robert Chamberlain
Mr. J. Matt Chandler
Dr. Wen Chao Chen
Ms. Marlene G. Clark
Mr. William J. Clothier
Mr. Paul F. Coash
Mr. and Mrs. James D. Coats
Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Connable, Jr.
Mr. Bert Cooper
Mr. and Mrs. John W. Copenhaver
Mr. and Mrs. William H. Culver
Mr. F. B. Curtinius
Mrs. Dorothy U. Dalton
Mr. John D. Dickson, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Donald B. Doubleday
Mr. and Mrs. Robert D. Dunbar
Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Emerson
Mrs. R. B. Fast
Dr. and Mrs. D.L. Finch
Mr. F. Conrad Fischer
Mrs. Wilhelmina A. Fischer
Mrs. Nancy J. Frank
Mr. Joe M. Gandolfo
Dr. and Mrs. James A. Gardner
Mr. John W. Garside
Mrs. Marshall D. Garvey
Mr. Roger A. Gauntlett
Mr. and Mrs. Philip C. Giesen
Mrs. Cheryl Goodrich
Mr. and Mrs. David Gregg
Mr. J. W. Greiner
Mr. and Mrs. Peter W. Haab
Mr. and Mrs. James Hackenberg
Mr. Francis P. Hamilton
Mr. W. Custer Hammond
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Handelsman, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Philip A. Hatfield
Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Hawk
Mr. and Mrs. James S. Hilboldt
Mr. and Mrs. E. M. Hinder!
Dr. and Mrs. A. B. Hodgman
Dr. and Mrs. Richard E. Hodgman
Dr. Robert Hume
Ms. Ann H. lhling
Mr. and Mrs. William Jackson
Mr. and Mrs. James P. Jacobs
Mr. William Keiser
Dr. Robert C. Kettunen
Mr. and Mrs. James T. Kirkpatrick
Mr. Charles E. Kirsch
Mr. and Mrs. D. C. Knapp
Mr. and Mrs. Harley G. Koets
Mr. John R. LaParl
Mr. John W.·Lawrence
Mr. William J. Lawrence, Jr.
Dr. Richard U. Light
Mr. and Mrs. Phillip Llewellyn
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Lopez
Mr. Thomas P. Loughlin
Dr. William Carter Lowe
Mr. and Mrs. James Lugers
Mr. Richard A. McComber
Rev. David McShane
Dr. Marshall A. MacDonald
Mr. Kenneth Macrorie
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel G. Maloney
Mr. and Mrs. Harold J. Maloney
Mr. Steven Maloney
Mr. and Mrs. William D. Maxon
Mr. William J. Maze. Jr.
Mr. Hugh F. Mehaflie
Mr. and Mrs. Richard J. Miller
Mr. and Mrs. Fred T. Miller
Mr. George E. Monroe
Mr. Fred J. Nelson
Dr. C. T. Nicholas
Mr. and Mrs. Budd J. Norris
Mr. James H. Orwin
Mr. and Mrs. Robert N. Oudserna. Sr.
Mr. Robert N. Oudsema, Jr.
Mr. Harvey Overton
Mr. and Mrs. Anthony J. Palladino
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Parfet
Mr. and Mrs. Ray T. Partet. Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. William U. Parfet
Mr. John E. Pike
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Plano
Mr. and Mrs. Mark Putney
Mr. Robert Riuardi
Mr. James V. Rosenbaum
Mr. and Mrs. Rodney Roth
Dr. and Mrs. August R. Roty, Jr.
Mr. James A. Ruckstaetter
Dr. and Mrs. Donald S. Schaefer
Mr. J. Peter Schma, C.L.U
Mr. Alan H. Silverman
Mr. Dale A. Snow
Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Southon
Mr. and Mrs. Dwight L. Stocker
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J. Sullivan
Mr. Peter J. Thomas
Mr. Winship A. Todd
Drs. Paolo and Giuliana M. Trambusti
Mrs. Judith Upjohn Travis
Dr. and Mrs. E. Gifford Upjohn
Mrs. Janet F. Upjohn
Mr. and Mrs. Paul L. VanDenBrink
Mr. Robert VanDis
Mr. arid Mrs. Garret VanHaaften
Ms. Sheila D. Ware
Mr. Russell E. Watson, Jr.
Mr. James C. Westin
Mr. and Mrs. Robel E. Wetnight
Mr. Alexander Wiener
Mr. James B. Woodruff
Mr. and Mrs. Thos. B. Woodworth, Jr.
Ms. Cathy A. Zeman
Alvan Motor Freight
The American National Bank
and Trust Co.
The Boogie Family, Ltd.
Robert Britigan and Co.
Brown Co.
Combs and Carey
G.E. Diekema and Associates
Durametallic Corporation
Eckrich Foundation, Inc.
Fetzer Television Corp.
First of Michigan Corporation
Genevieve and Donald
Gilmore Foundation
Susan Holley Interiors
Fred J. Hotop and Company
Kalamazoo County Convention
and Visitors Bureau
Kalamazoo Mfg. Co.
Kalamazoo Paper Chemicals
Kalamazoo Roof Truss Mfg. Co.
Bobby Kaplan Tennis, Inc.
L.A. Klose Electric Company
Krum-Hallam Chevrolet, Inc.
R.W. LaPine, Inc.
Master-Craft Corp.
Michigan Cottage Cheese
Company
Michigan National Bank-West
Miller and Boerman, Inc.
Pension and Group
Services, Inc.
Plainwell Paper Co.. Inc.
Postal Instant Press
Rota-Finish Co.
The Service Club
H. B. Sherman Mfg. Co.
Slavin Foundation
Steinman-Dudley Co.
A.M. Todd Company
United States Lawn Tennis Assn.
The Upjohn Co.
Upjohn National Leasing Co.
Victor Sports. Inc.
Wheeler -Blaney Company
Whirlpooi-Seeger Corp.
35
The Kalamazoo College Board of Trusteea
George N. Rainsford, President of the College
Olllcan of the Board
I. Frank Harlow
Chairman
Ronald 0. Warner
Vice-Chairman
Louis J. Slavin
Vice-Chairman and Treasurer
Edwin G. Gemrich
Attorney, Gemrich, Moser,
Dombrowski and Bowser
Kalamazoo
I. Frank Harlow
Vice-President,
Dow Chemical Co.
Midland
Ralph W. ·McKee
Assistant Dean, School of Medicine
The Center for the Health Sciences
University of California
Los Angeles
Marian Manogg
Birmingham
Richard E. Smoke
Attorney,
Menlo Park, California
Jane K. Souris
Attorney,
Riley and Roumell
Grosse Pointe Park
David R. Markin
President, Checker Motors Corp.
Kalamazoo
Edward P. Thompson
Attorney, Fox, Thompson,
Morris and Stover
Kalamazoo
Jane S. Iannelli
Kalamazoo
Richard Meyerson
Manager, Equitable Life
Assurance Society
Cleveland, Ohio
Paul H. Todd, Jr.
President,
Kalamazoo Spice Extraction Co.
Kalamazoo
Glenn S. Allen
Judge,
Michigan Court of Appeals
Lansing
Robert P. Kittredge
President,
Fabri-Kal Corporation
Kalamazoo
Mary M. Patton
Associate Professor of Literature
The American University
Mclean, Virginia
Elizabeth S. Upjohn
Public Relations Director,
Parkview Hills
Kalamazoo
Carol G. Boudeman
Hickory Corners
Richard A. Kjoss
President,
Security Bank
Billings, Montana
Albert C. Pittman
Pastor, First Baptist Church
Kalamazoo
David F. Upton
President, Southwestern Michigan
Abstract & Title Company
St. Joseph
Alfred J. Gemrich
Secretary
Kathryn N. Stratton
Assistant Secretary
Members of the Board
Garry E. Brown
Congressman,
United States Congress
Washington, D.C.
Marie S. Burbidge
Kalamazoo
Maynard M. Conrad
Orthopedic Surgeon
Kalamazoo
James C. Cristy, Jr.
Retired Administrator,
The Upjohn Company
Kalamazoo
Edward Davis
Ed Davis Associates, Inc.
Detroit
Herbert H. Dow
Secretary,
Dow Chemical Company
Midland
Elliott M. Estes
President,
General Motors Corporation
Detroit
William N. Hubbard
President,
The Upjohn Company
Kalamazoo
Richard D. Klein
Executive Vice-President,
First National
Financial Corporation
Kalamazoo
William E. LaMothe
President,
Kellogg Company
Battle Creek
W. Price Laughlin
Chairman of the Board,
Saga Food Service
Menlo Park, California
William J. Lawrence, Jr.
Industrialist
Kalamazoo
Timothy Light
Department of Oriental Studies,
University of Arizona
Tucson, Arizona
Gail H. Llanes
San Francisco, California
Fraser E. Pomeroy
Associate General Agent,
New England Mutual Insurance
Birmingham
Burke E. Porter
President, Burke E. Porter
Machinery Company
Grand Rapids
Orner J. Robbins, Jr.
Chairman, Chemistry Department
Eastern Michigan University
Ypsilanti
J. Woodward Roe
President, Ransom Fidelity
Lansing
Alan N. Sidman
President,
All-American Sports, Inc.
New York
Louis J. Slavin
Investment Manager
Kalamazoo
Arthur L. Farrell
Executive Vice-President,
Michigan Baptist Homes, Inc.
Lansing
Neil McKay
Vice-Chairman,
The First National Bank of Chicago
Chicago, Illinois
B. Thomas Smith
·Director of Purchasing,
Massey-Ferguson
Toronto
Alfred J. Gemrich
Attorney, Gemrich, Moser,
Dombrowski and Bowser
Kalamazoo
Wilbert J. McKeachie
Chairman, Department of
Psychology, University of Michigan
Ann Arbor
Donald C. Smith
President,
American National Bank
Kalamazoo
Ronald 0. Warner
Retired Executive,
General Motors Corporation
Flint
Honorary Members of
the Board
Harold B. Allen
Homer J. Armstrong
H. Glenn Bixby
Donald E. Bowen
Betty H. Brown
Dorothy U. Dalton
George K. Ferguson
Chairman ofthe Board, 1946-1953
John E. Fetzer
Ivan F. Harlow
Richard G. Hudson
Robert L. Johnson
Warren C. Johnson
Richard U. Light
Chairman ofthe Board, 1953-1974
Mabel B. Ratcliffe
Alan E. Schwartz
Harold T. Smith
Dwight L. Stocker
Frederick S. Upton
T. Thomas Wylie
RETURN POSTAGE GUARANTEED
KALAMAZOO COLLEGE, KALAMAZOO, MICHIGAN 49007