UMUC Achiever Magazine, Spring 2003

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THE ALUMNI MAGAZINE OF UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND UNIVERSITY COLLEGE

spring 2003

ACHIEVER

Closing the Gap Achieving Economic Parity Through Workplace Diversity


2002–2003 ALUMNI ASSOCIATION BOARD OF DIRECTORS (Seated, left to right) Frank Kent III, Ralph Young, Patricia Toregas, Bruce Emmel, Debra Young; (second row, left to right) Joseph Bowen Jr., Jennifer Creque, John Aje, Susan Krause, Jeff Brody, Desmond Decker, Nathaniel Alston, Kate Perry, Charles Watson; (third row, left to right) Kenneth Wu, Yevette Cashwell, Dionna Neverson, Anthony Savia, Art Huseonica, James Hubbard, Thomas Lockwood, Cheryl Adams.

PATRICIA J. TOREGAS ’84 & ’91

RALPH C. YOUNG ’93

President

Vice President, Outreach

A resident of Pasadena, Maryland, Toregas is a manager with Verizon, in Silver Spring, Maryland. A mother of four and grandmother of five, she enjoys symphonies, art shows, cooking, gardening, decorating for the holidays, and spending time with her family.

A resident of Bowie, Maryland, Young is budget officer for the Joint Task Force–Computer Network Operations, in Arlington, Virginia. He chose to attend UMUC, he said, because “UMUC was and is the college for working adults seeking lifelong education opportunities. Unlike many other institutions, UMUC offers the ‘personal’ touch. You’re not just another paying statistic; you do matter.”

BRUCE A. EMMEL ’86

President-Elect A resident of Colesville, Maryland, Emmel is manager of technical support services for Lockheed Martin Space Operations, in Seabrook, Maryland. A volunteer firefighter with 30 years of experience, he chose to attend UMUC because, “UMUC provided the education I needed in an accommodating format and convenient schedule.” JOSEPH BOWEN ’84 & ’94

DEBRA E. B. YOUNG ’88

Secretary/Treasurer A resident of Bowie, Maryland, Young is director of the Commerce Acquisition Systems Division of the U.S. Department of Commerce. She enjoys bicycle riding, golf, and reading, and chose UMUC because of its accessibility: “No matter where I am, UMUC is there, too, [so] I can continue to be fresh academically and grow professionally,” she said.

Vice President, Government Relations A resident of Columbia, Maryland, Bowen is director of administration for McKissack & McKissack, Inc., of Washington, D.C. He volunteers his time, he said, because “UMUC has done so much for me I probably can’t volunteer enough.” PATRICIA A. WESTLEIN ’88

Vice President, Student Relations Originally from Elmira, New York, Westlein is senior proposal manager for the Washington, D.C., offices of ACS. A fitness buff, she says one of her favorite UMUC memories is of statistics professor David Chapman, who reassured students that there was “No penalty for incorrect guesses.” THERESA POUSSAINT ’02

Vice President, Communications A resident of Washington, D.C., Poussaint works in human resources for HMSHost, of Bethesda, Maryland. A fan of jazz and classical music, she gives of her time, she said, because, “as a preacher’s kid, I learned at a young age that . . . the act of giving is rewarding in itself.”

FRANK KENT ’91

Vice President, Philanthropy and Alumni Annual Giving A resident of Great Falls, Virginia, Kent is director of human resources for Nice Systems, Inc., of Herndon, Virginia. Married and the father of two, he says that his hobbies include coaching soccer and spending time with his family. “I came to UMUC to change my career path,” he said. “UMUC provided the opportunities to open that door.” JEFFREY S. BRODY ’93

Vice President, Career and Professional Development A resident of Columbia, Maryland, Brody is executive director of human resources for Northrop Grumman Information Technology’s Defense Mission Systems business unit. He has served as an adjunct professor at George Mason University, University of Maryland, College Park, and UMUC. He volunteers his time, he said, out of a “desire to give back and ensure that I can help others learn from my experiences—OK, my mistakes.”


TABLE OF CONTENTS

COVER STORY, page 6

Closing the Gap The demographic face of America is changing, faster than most of us could ever have imagined. The three UMUC experts shown here—(from left)  2002 BY CADE MARTIN

Hasan Sayani, Ernesto Santos-DeJesus, and Megan Hurley—weigh in on how

PHOTOGRAPH

dealing with diversity can help close gender and racial pay gaps and improve the bottom line.

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alumni President’s Message

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Breaking News

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Closing the Gap:

Achieving Economic Parity Through Workplace Diversity 14

The history of webtycho

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Class Notes

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the race to washington: Felix alvarado’s run for a congressional seat

COVER PHOTOGRAPH

 2002 BY CADE MARTIN

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Calendar of Events

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Chapter highlights

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honor roll

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U N I V E R S I T Y O F M A RY L A N D U N I V E R S I T Y C O L L E G E


PRESIDENT ’S MESSAGE

Patricia J. Toregas

Dear Alumni: As is apparent to all of us, the demographic makeup of America’s workforce, and, indeed, its consumer marketplace, is changing rapidly. According to U.S. Department of Labor statistics, by the year 2008, women and people of color will represent 70 percent of all new entrants to the workplace. Moreover, recent statistics show that minority consumer buying power nearly doubled over the past decade, growing at a much faster pace than overall U.S. buying power. In fact, combined consumer spending by people of color, who now make up nearly 40 percent of the total U.S. population, is an amount greater than the gross national product of Canada. In meeting the needs of this ever-changing society, government and industry leaders have turned to institutions of higher education for help in reframing the way they do business. Colleges and universities are providing critical workforce training, innovative research and development, and state-of-the-art technology transfer—all aimed at closing the economic and social gaps that still exist among diverse groups. UMUC is particularly well positioned to meet that challenge. As a university, our diversity is somewhat unique. Of the 80,000 students currently enrolled in UMUC programs, more than half are women, and 46 percent consider themselves minority group members. Likewise, our alumni groups represent a veritable United Nations of racial, ethnic, and cultural backgrounds. UMUC’s virtual campus has opened the door to enrollments that literally span the globe, across all of its seven continents. This vast online educational network also makes it much easier for students with

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diverse lifestyles and disabilities to fully participate at all levels of higher education and continuing professional development. Moreover, we offer extensive financial aid, as well as such specific assistance programs as Better Opportunities Through Online Education and Northwestern Partners in Progress, in an effort to close the economic gap for students who might not otherwise be able to afford higher education. We are also committed to hiring faculty and administrative staff that closely reflect this amazing diversity among our student body. But, most importantly, our graduates are consistently found among the top management tiers in both the private and public sectors, regardless of their race, gender, ethnic backgrounds, or disabilities. With this big picture firmly in mind, we turn to you, our alumni, to help us continue “closing the gaps” in this great nation of ours, by donating your talent, experience, and dollars to ensure UMUC’s position as a global leader in educating diverse adult learners. We believe that, through this commitment, we may open many new avenues of thought and opportunity for the students and communities we serve, now and in the years to come. And, that, after all, is the true mission of education in all of its forms. Sincerely,

Patricia J. Toregas ’84 & ’91 President UMUC Alumni Association

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Brit Kirwan Assumes Role as Chancellor August 1 William English (“Brit”) Kirwan began his new position as chancellor of the University System of Maryland (USM) on August 1, 2002. Kirwan, the former president of Ohio State University (1998–2002) and the University of Maryland, College Park (1989–1998), succeeds Donald N. Langenberg, who retired on April 30, 2002, after almost 12 years as chancellor. Kirwan said that the USM is increasingly viewed as a national and global leader in the delivery of high-quality, affordable public higher education and that he was “elated” to begin his new job. “The USM institutions are poised for greatness,” Kirwan said. “The campuses are delivering on their promise to attain national eminence and have the momentum to take their rightful place among their peer institutions—the North Carolinas, Wisconsins, Michigans, the very best that American public higher education can offer.” The University System of Maryland enrolls more than 120,000 students, employs more than 10,000 faculty members, and has an operating budget of more than $2 billion. There are 13 institutions within the system, 11 degree-granting colleges and universities and two research institutes. The system is governed by a 17-member Board of Regents. Kirwan is the third chancellor of the system, succeeding Langenberg and John Toll, currently president of Washington College in Chestertown, Maryland. “The USM institutions are among Maryland’s most valuable assets,” Kirwan said. “They are vital elements in the economic and cultural life of Maryland. I look forward to joining the USM family and want everyone associated with the system to know that I am here to champion their cause.” Nathan A. Chapman, former chair of the USM Board of Regents, said the board is certain that Kirwan will convey the message that the USM is a seasoned and reliable supplier of public higher education—a product that will not falter, even in an uncertain economy. “Brit Kirwan is a proven, mature leader who reflects the stature the USM has achieved,” Chapman said. “He is confident, thoughtful, sensible, and greatly respected.”

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Brit Kirwan

A native of Kentucky, Kirwan grew up on the University of Kentucky campus, where his father was dean of students, graduate dean, and finally president of the university. The younger Kirwan earned his bachelor’s degree from the University of Kentucky and holds a master’s degree and PhD from Rutgers University. He is a member of several honorary and professional societies, including Phi Beta Kappa, Phi Kappa Phi, the American Mathematical Society, and the Mathematical Association of America. He is coeditor of the book Advances in Complex Analysis. He serves on the boards of directors of the American Council on Education and the National Association of State Universities and Land Grant Colleges and co-chairs the Business–Higher Education Forum’s Diversity Initiative Task Force. Last April, Kirwan was elected to membership in the American Academy of Arts & Sciences, the nation’s preeminent learned society and research institution. Kirwan is married to Patricia Harper Kirwan; his two children, William E. Kirwan III and Ann Elizabeth Horton (who earned a master’s degree from UMUC) are alumni of the University of Maryland, College Park; and he has three grandchildren.

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BREAKING NEWS

UMUC Inn and Conference Center Expansion Will Make It Area’s 12th Largest

Three UMUC Employees Receive Presidential Award

By Andrea Martino

The University’s plan to expand its Inn and Conference Center in Adelphi, Maryland, by some 100,000 square feet will make the UMUC complex the 12th largest meeting facility in the national capital area and more competitive for larger conferences. The UMUC Inn and Conference Center, 12 miles from the nation’s capital, is practically equidistant from Dulles, BaltimoreWashington, and Reagan National airports. The addition will more than double the number of guestrooms available. With construction already under way, the expanded area will include 127 guestrooms, 15 suites, and seven conference rooms. Planners expect the addition to be complete by December 2003. Construction for the site was approved by the University System of Maryland Board of Regents in July 2002 and is funded by auxiliary revenue bonds through the System Funded Construction Program. The architect for the project is Oldham and Partners, a Washington, D.C., firm that recently designed the renovation of the Inn and Conference Center’s existing hotel, ballroom, upstairs lounge and art gallery, and the Garden Restaurant. The construction manager for the expansion is Bovis Lend Lease of Bethesda, Maryland. Oldham and Partners has registered the addition with the U.S. Green Building Council for certification in the Leadership in Energy & Environmental Design (LEED) program that requires the utilization of recycled materials and energy efficiency. The UMUC addition is one of only two hospitality projects worldwide registered with the U.S. Green Building Council. For more information on the UMUC Inn and Conference Center, operated for the university by Marriott, visit the Web site at www.umuc.edu/icc.

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(Left to right) Pershail Young, Gerald Heeger, Tobe Levin, and Enid Bank.

Three UMUC employees received Presidential Awards at the annual Service Awards ceremony on September 12, 2002. Each recipient—Enid Bank, director of Instructional Technology; Tobe Levin, faculty member, UMUC–Europe; and Pershail Young, director of Administrative Processes and Student Support—received a plaque and monetary award of $5,000. “The Presidential Award is designed to recognize extraordinary accomplishment and performance by a member of the university’s staff or full-time faculty,” said Erytheia Lambert Jones, vice president for Human Resources. “Nominations are solicited in the late spring of each year and reviewed by a committee made up of a cross section of UMUC employees, including representatives from the staff and faculty governance groups. The committee’s recommendations are then presented to UMUC President Gerald Heeger for his approval.” The Presidential Award—first granted in 2001—is part of the university’s employee award and recognition program and is typically granted to an employee who demonstrates commitment to UMUC as a whole and who has a record of extraordinary achievement on a project that directly impacts the university’s operation or mission and yields positive, tangible, institutionwide results.

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UMUC Partners with Joint Forces Staff College By Andrea Martino

UMUC and the Joint Forces Staff College (JFSC) of the National Defense University have established an agreement allowing JFSC graduates to earn a new online Master of Science in Management— Joint Military Strategy, Planning, and Decision Making degree at UMUC. University Provost Nicholas Allen and JFSC Commandant Roosevelt Mercer Jr., Brigadier General, U.S. Air Force, signed the agreement in the fall of 2002 at JFSC in Norfolk, Virginia. The partnership will enable students currently enrolled in JFSC’s Joint and Combined Staff Officer School and Joint and Combined Warfighting School, as well as those who have already completed either program, to earn the new UMUC degree. To be eligible, students must be able to complete necessary coursework in seven years, starting from the time they begin at JFSC.

“We are most pleased to extend UMUC’s graduate programs to students and alumni of the Joint Forces Staff College,” said Allen. “Both UMUC and JFSC share synergies in effective management principles—such as critical thinking, problem solving, and teamwork—that are fundamental both in military and for-profit arenas. The credentials of a UMUC management degree, available because of our expertise in online delivery, will offer JFSC graduates the added benefit of being more marketable when they retire from the military.” In addition to its wealth of online academic offerings, UMUC’s online student services, including library and information services with about 90 databases, will be accessible to JFSC graduates.

This is UMUC’s fourth Graduate School partnership with U.S. military University Provost Nicholas Allen shakes hands with JFSC Commandant Roosevelt organizations since August “We are entering a new era Mercer Jr., Brigadier General, U.S. Air Force. 2001. Other recent agreeas we embark on this venments are with the Army Signal Center (Fort Gordon, Georgia), ture between UMUC and the Joint Forces Staff College,” said the U.S. Naval War College (Newport, Rhode Island), and the Mercer. “Such a partnership is revolutionary, not evolutionary, Army Management Staff College (Fort Belvoir, Virginia). UMUC in its input for civilian/military relationships as we join to suppartnered with the Information Resources Management College port and defend this great nation. This is a win-win [partnership] of the National Defense University in 1995. for the civilian community and for the military.” To earn the master’s degree, JFSC graduates will transfer 15 credits from the college, then complete six more UMUC management courses and two end-of-program courses for a total of 39 credits. Those who complete the degree may then choose to pursue a UMUC Master of Business Administration (MBA) degree by taking only three more six-credit courses. The required courses from UMUC are available completely online, though students who wish may take classes at appropriate sites throughout northern Virginia, Washington, D.C., or Maryland.

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UMUC is the leading educational provider to the U.S. military, last year enrolling more than 47,000 U.S. active-duty military personnel and their dependents in 28 foreign countries, under contract with the U.S. Department of Defense. JFSC is the U.S. Armed Services’ premier educational institution for joint and combined operational-level planning and warfighting. For more information about the new degree program at UMUC, visit www.umuc.edu/mil or www.jfsc.ndu.edu.

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CLOSING THE GAP THE DEMOGRAPHIC “FACE” OF AMERICA IS CHANGING— AND AT A RATE FAR GREATER THAN MOST OF US COULD EVER HAVE IMAGINED. OVER THE PAST CENTURY, THE UNITED STATES HAS BECOME AN ECONOMIC, SOCIAL, AND POLITICAL HAVEN FOR PEOPLE OF ALL COLORS, CREEDS, AND NATIONALITIES. AND THAT ALLURE HAS RESULTED IN SOME TRULY SIGNIFICANT DEMOGRAPHIC SHIFTS.

A c h i e v i n g

E c o n o m i c

Pa r i t y

T h r o u g h

Workplace Diversity


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he numbers tell the story. For Americans age 70 and older, there are 5.3 white people for every person of color—or a ratio of roughly 5 to 1. However, for Americans under 40, this ratio changes dramatically, becoming 2 to 1. Even more amazing, among children under 10 in this country, the ratio drops to 1.5 to 1. Moreover, the term “minority” is no longer an accurate description for racially and ethnically diverse groups in 48 of our country’s 100 largest cities. As this demographic shift occurs, the makeup of the U.S. workforce changes accordingly. Although women have always accounted for roughly half of the total population, they were never considered a significant force to contend with in the business world—until the 1960s and 1970s, when women began to enter the ranks of corporate America in unprecedented numbers. According to the U.S. Department of Labor, women now compose nearly half of the total workforce. Similarly, the number of African American, Asian American, American Indian, and Latino workers has grown exponentially. Just 50 years ago, these ethnic groups combined represented only 7.6 percent of the workforce. Today, that percentage is rapidly moving upward, more than doubling to 16 percent in 2000 and projected to surpass 30 percent by the year 2020. Moreover, the U.S. Census Bureau reports the number of Americans with disabilities—a group that covers all of the racial, gender, and ethnic bases—is outpacing every other subgroup of the population. Today, more than 20 million families, out of the 70 million in this country, report having at least one member with a known disability. Unfortunately, in spite of these dramatic shifts in the demographic landscape, we are still grappling with what this all means to the workplace. How do we end the discrimination—both overt and covert—that continues to lurk there? Although we have made strides toward embracing a more inclusive workplace, we continue to record significant disparities in pay, power, and promotability between the traditional American workforce—which until just a few years ago was overwhelmingly white and male—and that of its emerging challenger, which includes increasingly more women and multiethnic workers. Take women, for example. Despite the total number of women working in corporate America, they account for only 10 percent of senior management staff in Fortune 500 companies, less than 4 percent of the uppermost management ranks (CEO, president, executive vice president, and COO), and fewer than 3 percent of top corporate earners. According to the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, in 1999 (the last year for which figures were available), African American and Latino workers, the two largest minority subpopulations in the U.S., were in a similar position. African Americans accounted for only 6.2 percent and Latinos 4.2 percent of all senior officials and managers, whereas whites held 86.3 percent of those positions. In addition, these groups held only 6.6 percent and 3.5 percent, respectively, of all professional positions, compared with 81.8 percent held by whites. Moreover, economist Julianne Malveaux recently reported that African American household incomes in this country, as a whole, remain at less than 60 percent of white household incomes. With this bigger picture in mind, what are we doing as a nation to even the opportunity playing field, shatter the glass ceilings, and, therefore, close the economic gaps that still plague us for a whole host of reasons—discrimination, the traditional roles of women, educational inequities, and divergent lifestyles, to name a few? For one thing, government has risen to the occasion with such legislative policies as the various civil rights acts, the Equal Employment Opportunity Act, the Family Medical Leave Act, the Americans with Disabilities Act, and minority business set-asides. Additionally, the private sector has proffered a variety of family-friendly policies and merit promotion schemes to make it easier for everyone to move up the corporate ladder. Moreover, both sides of the fence— public and private—are spending millions every year on diversity initiatives, aimed at closing these

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ACHIEVER


gaps and making it more comfortable and profitable for everyone to work. And colleges, universities, and policy think tanks are receiving millions in grants and contracts to develop and study these initiatives. So, given those efforts, how are we doing as a nation and where should we go from here? To answer these questions, we decided to convene our own panel of UMUC alumni, faculty, and administrative staff—all of whom are currently involved, in one way or another, with the business of diversity planning, management, and training. Like most folks committed to advancing the workplace diversity movement—as a way to close the economic gap for women and minorities in this country—our panel members concurred that the diversity issue is not only multifaceted, but also evolving. As Harvey Major, a UMUC graduate who works for the U.S. Department of Energy, put it, “Diversity has about as many meanings as there are people in the conversation.”

Ernesto Santos-DeJesus, UMUC’s director of Diversity Initiatives, agreed. “The beauty of diversity as a concept is that it addresses so many levels. Even within identified minority groups, there are subgroups, so to speak. For example, within Hispanic culture, there is a wide range of distinctions made in terms of skin color, education, socioeconomic status, and national origin. And all of those factors affect employment opportunities. So I like to think of diversity as more about the different ways people think and process information in relation to their own cultural and personal experiences. Everyone brings something different into the workplace, which is what makes it so dynamic.” As an educator, Megan Hurley, a faculty member and program director for education in UMUC’s Graduate School, uses the analogy of a mature tree with many branches to illustrate the concept of diversity to her students. “I often ask them to imagine themselves standing on one particular branch of that tree and then jumping onto a different one. Each branch is equally strong in its own way, and all of them eventually lead to the same place—up.”

“In today’s world, it’s hard to find a classroom in which there aren’t at least some issues of diversity.” After nearly 13 years of experience in employee fair practice and diversity planning with the Maryland–National Capital Parks and Planning Commission, Jeanette Glover, a UMUC Graduate School alumna, contends that employers are beginning to view diversity as a three-dimensional construct: the individual worker, the organization, and the customer. “From the individual worker’s perspective, managers must take into account all of the things that make each employee a unique contributor to the work effort,” Glover said. “But we also need to determine what must happen organizationally to harness those contributions. So, within that dimension, I envision an inclusive workplace in which everyone feels comfortable, productive, and genuinely involved—one that encourages creativity and risktaking and where there’s an open-door policy for settling issues fairly and expeditiously. Once you have those two dimensions in place, you need to add the customer to the mix. Everything we do to further opportunity in the workplace makes it far more likely that we will meet the needs of the marketplace.” In responding to these needs, a growing number of businesses, institutions of higher education, and government agencies are implementing their own diversity programs. These initiatives run the gamut from special events designed to promote multicultural awareness to clearly defined practices for recruiting, hiring, and promoting a more diverse workforce. Most employers find the

Megan Hurley

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U N I V E R S I T Y O F M A RY L A N D U N I V E R S I T Y C O L L E G E

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investment highly worthwhile, especially when faced with the high cost of not only hiring and retaining employees, but also holding on to market share. According to Diversity, Inc., losing an employee costs about four times that worker’s salary, whereas losing a worker with ties to a multicultural community costs far more in terms of overall market share. Our panel members were quick to point out that the “business case” for diversity is becoming far more widely accepted in both the private and public sectors. “Diversity programs focus on developing a workforce that more closely reflects the consumer marketplace as a whole,” said Santos-DeJesus, “and that helps strengthen the bottom line in two ways. By expanding employment opportunities, we’re creating a more affluent consumer population. On the other hand, a diverse workforce can be more responsive to the needs of specific consumer markets. Everybody wins.” Jeanette Glover agreed and added that many employers are beginning to see a real return on their diversity program investments, particularly in terms of a happier and healthier workforce. “Since we began diversity planning and training in earnest at the commission, we’ve had fewer discrimination complaints,” Glover said. “To me, that means that folks here feel more comfortable with each other and with the working environment, and that translates into greater productivity and employee retention, saving us all a lot of money in the long run.”

Ernesto Santos-DeJesus

go in achieving true economic parity for women and minorities.

Hasan Sayani, a UMUC faculty member and program director in Information Technology and Technology Management, likens embracing diversity in the workplace to “creating a larger, and therefore stronger, gene pool.” In the process, Sayani believes that employers have become more open-minded in their hiring prac-

As Santos-DeJesus—who has nearly four decades of fighting discrimination under his belt—put it, “If I could write a book, it would be entitled, Out of the Box—What Now? We’ve done a good job of teaching people what discrimination looks like, but we’re still grappling with what to do about it—how to find real, hardcore solutions.”

“Everyone brings something different into the workplace, which is what makes it so dynamic.” Harvey Major couldn’t agree more. Besides his “regular” job with the Department of Energy, Major serves as treasurer for the department’s National Treasury Employees Union and Blacks In Government chapters. In wearing these hats, he advocates for programs that lead to longer-term solutions for moving people onto and up the career ladder.

tices, and recalls encouraging a friend in the technology field to hire a highly qualified woman who was also completely deaf. “He was understandably worried that her disability might get in the way of her ability to do this particular job,” Sayani said. “However, he ended up hiring her and, months later, told me that his company had gained many unexpected benefits as a result of this decision. For instance, because they had to communicate with her solely through the written word, they found that their written presentations were now far more lucid and effective.” But our panel members agreed that, in spite of the strides we’ve made so far in this country, as a nation we still have a long way to

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“There are basically two ways to close the economic gap,” he said. “One way is to push people down from the top. That’s pretty much the approach we’ve taken up to now. The other, and obviously preferable, way is to implement practices that move people up from the bottom, but that requires some real strategic planning. For example, our union chapter has taken the lead in developing

ACHIEVER


a series of career pathways for lower-grade employees at Department of Energy. By completing the necessary steps for advancement under this program, an employee can move from a blue-collar to a white-collar job classification. And that could mean as much as a four-level jump in pay grade.” Megan Hurley believes that women, in particular, need greater social support to succeed in their chosen career fields. “Although we’ve made some real progress in terms of closing the gender gap, our society continues to struggle with the duality of women’s roles,” Hurley said. “Let’s face it; women are still being asked everyday to make choices between family and career that men seldom have to consider. If we expect women to have greater employment opportunities, we need to create a much more familyfriendly workplace. That demands a much greater commitment on society’s part to advocate for higher-quality day care, for example, as well as a broader application of family leave policies.”

In keeping with UMUC’s commitment to diversity education, Megan Hurley (faculty member and program director for education in the Graduate School) recently served on the planning committee for an innovative University System of Maryland conference entitled Teaching Diversity/Thinking Diversity, held October 12, 2002, on the Towson University campus. “This conference was developed to help us all look at the many ways we can address and incorporate diversity education at the university level. On a personal level, it has given me an exciting opportunity to not only share ideas, but also find better ways to implement them in my own work,” said Hurley. Faculty members from the 11 degree-granting institutions within the University System of Maryland were asked to submit papers for possible presentation at the conference, which was open to anyone interested in attending. As a result, five UMUC faculty members, from a variety of disciplines, were chosen among the final 28 presenters: Julie Carvalho (psychology); Gila Kurtz (distance education); Jim Rawson (communications); Uche Ohia (Center

According to our panel members, affinity groups—organizations that champion the rights and interests of specific subgroups— have played significant roles in creating awareness around the workplace discrimination issue. However, these organizations must now ally themselves more closely to achieve greater gains for women and minorities as a whole. Jeanette Glover warned that when one group’s interests are pitted against another’s, the “‘crabs-in-a-barrel syndrome’ often results, in which one group gets a stronger foothold at the top, and pushes others back down into the barrel.” Santos-DeJesus echoed that sentiment and added that it’s time for these groups to form larger, cross-cultural alliances, “because, as we’ve seen in the past, there’s always greater power in numbers.” Nevertheless, in assessing progress, our panel members agreed that America is now well positioned to turn its smaller victories over discrimination into big wins down the road. Jeanette Glover said that the events surrounding September 11, although tragic, united us more closely as a nation, regardless of our individual differences. Santos-DeJesus noted that a number of large U.S. corporations—Hewlett Packard, Pepsico, Ford Motor, and Ernst & Young, to name a few—have done a “great job” in terms of promoting women and minorities to positions of power. Moreover, according to Harvey Major, we are entering the “decade of opportunity” for public service employment, due, in large part, to the “graying of the federal workforce.” Hasan Sayani said that, when compared with other countries around the world, the United States has a number of advantages in winning the war on discrimination over time. In addition to the many freedoms we enjoy in the United States, he credits this country’s “tremendous economic opportunity” for attracting an incredible range of talented people to our shores. “I also believe that Americans, as people, are basically very compassionate, and most of them have taken the first step toward embracing diversity—they have a strong desire to.” So how can we harness this desire to create a far more even economic playing field in this country? Our panel members feel strongly that the answer lies, in large part, within the halls of academia. As Santos-DeJesus put it, “Education can play a major role in ending discrimination. We should be using the power of knowledge to help our young people think about these issues differently, and to do that, we should be incorporating diversity education as a core course into every discipline we offer at the college level. Additionally, given the global marketplace, we need to begin teaching a multicultural business model, rather than the very Eurocentric model we’re teaching now. UMUC has taken a real lead in this area, especially given our growing online education presence in just about every major student market around the world.”

for Teaching and Learning); and Henry J. Grubb (psychology and counseling).

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course, they had a really hard time making the leap of faith into multiculturalism.” According to Sayani, this exposure issue is also a problem for international students coming to the United States for the first time. With this in mind, he helped students in UMUC’s Capstone Program create a computer system portal that serves as a two-way cultural “yellow pages.” He also advocates for host family and year-abroad exchange programs on more college campuses. “When I first arrived at the University of Michigan from India as an undergraduate, the university assigned me a host family, who were like my own personal transition team. They invited me to their traditional American holiday celebrations as well as to picnics and church socials. It was a great way for me not only to learn about western culture, but also to share my culture with them. I think everyone benefited from the exchange.” Hasan Sayani

“I also believe that Americans, as people, are basically very compassionate, and most of them have taken the first step toward embracing diversity—they have a strong desire to.” For UMUC faculty members Megan Hurley and Hasan Sayani, it seems perfectly natural to incorporate diversity education into the courses they teach. As Hurley said, “In today’s world, it’s hard to find a classroom in which there aren’t at least some issues of diversity. Look at the whole [special education student] inclusion model, for example. I would be remiss if I didn’t weave the diversity theme into everything I teach.” In addition to diversity management, Sayani has incorporated multicultural business ethics into the technology classes he teaches. “You’d be surprised how many cultural ethics issues we encounter as we move our business overseas. You can see that on the college campus itself. Take plagiarism, for example. That’s not a problem in some countries where students and professionals are accustomed to freely using information without attributing it. When these individuals are accused of plagiarizing in this country, they don’t know what they’ve done wrong.” Hurley also contended that for many students the college experience offers the first real opportunity to interact with people from diverse backgrounds. She recalled her experience teaching at another large state university before coming to UMUC. “There was very, very little diversity among the undergraduate student body there, who, for the most part, came from small towns. So we had to look to faculty and staff for multicultural diversity. For many of these kids, living in dorms that were sometimes larger than their hometowns was a big step into the unknown. Of

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Jeanette Glover, who has designed a variety of diversity training programs, feels that diversity education should begin with the way we teach history to children, starting in preschool. “We need to teach history the way it really happened—the good, the bad, and the ugly—rather than this very Eurocentric version we have in our schools here. History class is a good place to start fostering a greater appreciation for the contributions that people from all walks of life have made to this country, whether they were slaves, American Indians, or British settlers. And that appreciation simply translates into a much broader worldview as we age.” For Harvey Major, education has become an essential equalizer in the workplace. “Knowledge is power when it comes to being competitive in the job market. Now, an undergraduate degree is equivalent to what a high school diploma meant back in the 1950s. Just the act of getting a good education is an important factor when it comes to moving ahead at work. And in something like diversity management, where there is no black and white, higher education helps people understand the gray areas better. Unfortunately, there are far too many people in this country— and most of them are minorities—who don’t have good educational resources. We can’t even assure educational parity in the federal government, where the first thing that gets cut in a crunch is the training budget. We need to make education a true priority if we’re ever going to succeed in our mission to end discrimination.”

ACHIEVER


BREAKING NEWS

STANLEY J. DRAZEK TEACHING EXCELLENCE AWARD RECIPIENTS S C H O O L O F U N D E RG R A D UAT E S T U D I E S JOHN M. NEWMAN has been a faculty member since 1981 and has helped develop interdisciplinary courses on the Vietnam War, America in the 1960s, African American and Chinese history, and, more recently, courses on counter-terrorism and historical writing. While teaching for UMUC–Asia in the 1980s, Newman founded the Great Issues Studies Program in Okinawa—a program of debates, symposia, and other functions in which UMUC and the local community participated together. He organized and led the first major American academic exchange with the People’s Republic of China, which included a contingent of 63 UMUC students from all over Asia who visited China. Students have consistently expressed appreciation for Newman’s support of their learning. One student observed that Newman was willing to guide students through intimidating readings and assignments, and that by the close of the semester, most class members reported that they had learned a lot and enjoyed the process. Another student remarked, “Most of us wondered how he could possibly teach us African American history. I must admit, Dr. Newman kept the class spellbound with his eloquent lectures, [which] deepened my curiosity about African American history and gave me insight regarding the civil rights struggle during the Kennedy administration.” Newman’s teaching philosophy encourages students to develop skills in critical thinking and independent interpretation, and he makes the extra effort to help students who may lack experience or academic strength. Newman received his PhD from George Washington University in 1991. EDWIN G. SAPP has more than 35 years of college teaching experience in technical writing, business communications, literature, argument, computer programming, operations research, and radio wave propagation theory. He has taught more than 90 courses at UMUC since 1993 and was ranked as an outstanding educator, within the top 10 percent of faculty, by students in 1994, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, and 2000. He has served since 1999 as writing chair for all English courses under the communications general education requirement and actively supports all new and experienced instructors by answering questions and sharing his own resources and teaching strategies. Sapp is a prolific writer on technical issues involving U.S. military system performance and defense budgets. He also writes articles on stress management, effective counseling, and antique car restoration, and published a newspaper report on a new laser surgery procedure. His numerous fiction and nonfiction pieces include articles for Night Music, UMUC’s literary magazine. His teaching philosophy is to provide practical, challenging, and creative opportunities for his students to “learn about things worth knowing.” He helps students apply their growing skills to real-life events, such as interviewing for a job, building a sense of community, and resolving problems. His warm and encouraging way of working with diverse audiences of adult learners has drawn praise, and students have expressed their appreciation for his classes, which have helped them obtain better jobs, promotions, or increases in pay.

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While he admits to being an “old-fashioned teacher in a new-fangled environment,” Sapp is a leader in his commitment to learning and inspiring his colleagues and his students to achieve high standards. Sapp received his JD from the University of North Carolina in 1962 and his MLA from the Johns Hopkins University in 1973. G R A D UAT E S C H O O L HENRY C. ALBERTS has taught courses in system analysis, design, and information technology at UMUC since 1998, when he retired as professor of engineering management at the Defense Systems Management College of the U.S. Department of Defense. During the course of his career, he conducted research on supersonic flow and aerodynamics for the U.S. Army’s Ballistic Research Laboratories and later worked on the design and fabrication of the first U.S. intercontinental ballistic missile and satellite vehicles for the U.S. Air Force Geophysical Research Directorate. Alberts was also the head of operations research and assistant to the president of AVCO Corporation, where he focused on the design and building of complex management systems. In addition, he worked for Stanford Research Institute in research and as a management and systems consultant in Europe. His teaching philosophy focuses on mature students who need the instructor’s personal recognition and consideration. He believes that “instructors may add to their own knowledge and usefulness at the same time they provide information and knowledge to their class.” Students have responded favorably, remarking in one instance that he “brought a wealth of personal knowledge to the class and stimulated meaningful discussion.” Another student offered this apt summary of his strengths: “I enjoy Dr. Alberts very much. Since my technical background is weak, his lecture material was especially helpful in understanding the material. It was excellent! Dr. Alberts has a true gift for explaining technical material in a way that can be understood.” Alberts received his PhD from the City University, London, England, in 1995. JOSEPH H. MYERS has been a faculty member in technology and management since 1992. He is the chief of Strategic Planning and Policy Development for the Small Business/Self Employed Division of the Internal Revenue Service. He spent 15 years with the U.S. General Accounting Office and was responsible for numerous management reviews of cabinet-level agencies. During that time, he spent five years as a key staff member for both the U.S. Senate Appropriations Committee and the U.S. House of Representatives Committee on Government Operations. Myers’ teaching philosophy revolves around “four principles: relevance, class discussion, student support, and continuous communication”—plus, he adds, “making it fun.” These requirements involve updating his courses and encouraging students to share and work with their perspectives and experiences, since students are often employed with corporate leaders, such as Marriott Corporation, IBM, Lockheed Martin, AT&T, and EDS. Student comments reflect success in Myers’ commitment to this philosophy. One student said that Myers “ . . . provided an environment that was fast-paced, challenging, and very relevant. [He] provided great illustrations and examples from today’s work [and] a real-world perspective on the material.” Another class member remarked, “Myers was the best professor I have had. His information was very well organized and applicable. He really encouraged students to give examples from their own work experience. That, along with his good nature, provided the classroom with learning and interaction. He is clear and logical, providing insights [and] material that the books don’t cover.” Myers received his MS from Carnegie Mellon University in 1974.

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T H E H I S TO RY O F W E B T YC H O As you can imagine, UMUC’s virtual campus is a work in progress, having gone through many iterations in its development. With that in mind, we went directly to the source, setting up our own online “classroom” and conference center to discuss the past, present, and future of UMUC’s Tycho-based online campus. Participants included some of the very men and women who have, over the past decade, helped make it a reality. An edited transcript appears below, much as it appeared on the participants’ screens.

Hi, Everyone! Welcome to our threaded discussion (the first one ever for me). The purpose of this conference is to prepare an article for the Achiever on the history of online education at UMUC. Toward that end, I would like this discussion to be as interactive as possible, as it will be reprinted in this format. So, with that in mind, I would like you to respond to this general topic: What was it like, in the beginning, to create and use a virtual campus? Cindy Whitesel (professor of communication studies, School of Undergraduate Studies) was the first to respond; Kathy Harvett is a freelance writer and the author of this piece:

Now, after 30-plus years, I have to say that teaching online has improved my teaching in ways I never dreamed. Using the technology in teaching opened other avenues for me. More later . . . A few minutes later, Whitesel added: Just to reminisce about some of the frustrations . . . In the early years, when the technology was new and more primitive, it could be so frustrating dealing with it. I remember long waits while my responses uploaded to the electronic classrooms—waits long enough for me to get up from my computer and do something else. I remember the early crashes and having to start things over from the beginning. I remember dealing with ISPs [internet service providers] and learning the ropes of how they worked, when was a good time to be online and when one could expect to be booted off by faster traffic. I remember groping for a language to use to discuss all these new things. We just didn’t know the right words or the right language to discuss it. Learning curves were steep in those days as we worked through the problems and figured out how to solve them. In fact, we spent time just trying to name and describe the problems! In many ways, teaching online brought a small group of teachers together and gave us a kind of unity of experience that we hadn’t necessarily shared previously.

Hi, Kathy! Since you didn’t set any limits, I’m going to talk a bit about this experience now, go away and think about it more, and then come back and interact. That’s the way I see students working in my classes and it seems to be a natural method for myself. I’ve been involved with teaching online so many years now, it seems impossible that there ever was a “beginning.” I remember the early days of the VAX system and how difficult it was to remember all the commands. I recall the early days of Tycho, when we couldn’t copy text or import it. I remember when WebTycho came along! How much easier it seemed than the VAX and the Unix versions of Tycho! As the software improved, the classes got to be so much easier to create and manage. The new WebTycho practically does everything so that I can concentrate on teaching with less time on “management.”

More later . . . Don’t want to be the only one talking here . . .

—Cindy

Working online energized my teaching. After 20-plus years teaching in the classroom, along came technology and in a short period of time, my teaching was turned on its head. I took to it immediately and enjoyed the interactions. I loved reading the thoughts of all my students, not just the few who were gregarious or confident. For me, the added bonus was that my students

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were writing, writing, writing. I’m a writing teacher, so I enjoyed watching them “write to think.”

Enid Bank (director of instructional technology, School of Undergraduate Studies) then responded: I came to UMUC in 1994. It was at this time that VAX was on its way out and Tycho, Win 3.1, was in development. As part of my job, I became involved in the development of this product. I

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was glad to see a Windows environment product, as the VAX was full of commands that were user-unfriendly. And I had never liked application packages that were full of commands. The WinTycho (as it became when WebTycho was invented) development days were exciting and energizing. We would spend hours at a time debating how the product should be set up, what needs were important for the graduate and undergraduate schools, and what the design should look like. In retrospect, it was a great committee—everyone felt free to express ideas. The client [software] that students and faculty needed to load in order to connect to the server was a problem for a lot of people. In the early days, there were no ISPs as we know them today and folks had to do a lot for themselves with the help of the very small Tycho support staff, our UMUC help desk, and people like myself. We did write a wonderful manual that was provided to all users, but that did not happen right away. Actually, I don’t remember when the first version was written, but I still have a copy of the last one. (I have a hard time parting with some memorabilia.) Getting the name Tycho copyrighted (not sure if that’s the right term) so that no one else would use it was something the committee took care of. We were on pins and needles waiting for this legal piece to take place. As soon as we had WinTycho up and running, the Web began to come into prominence. We could see immediately that this was the direction we needed to take. Again, we had a wonderful committee that began the development and design of the Web product. I’ll take a break now and let others dive in.

—Enid Rich Daumit, an adjunct associate faculty member, offered some insights from a teacher’s vantage point: Teaching a WebTycho course requires more hours than teaching in a face-to-face classroom. One reason is having to navigate around the WebTycho classroom. We were using VaxNotes when I first started teaching online. One feature that VaxNotes didn’t have was an indication of whether a (conference) note had been read. I had 15 or 20 topics in my course conference and I had to keep a record of the last response for each topic to ensure that I didn’t miss any new responses every time I went into the conference. That became a very tedious task towards the end of the semester for me and for my students. Now the WebTycho classroom provides a red star to the left of each unread topic/response. A list of unread topics/responses is also provided and a double arrow at the top and bottom of each

topic/response leads directly to the next unread topic/response. Less time is needed to navigate around the conferences and more time is available for meaningful use of the conference. The read/unread capability is also helpful for navigating around the Assignments folder.

—Rich Nathaniel Calloway (academic director of e-commerce and technology management, School of Undergraduate Studies) added a few anecdotes of his own from the very early days of Tycho’s latest iteration—WebTycho:

Hi, Everybody! Web-based education via WebTycho at UMUC has a very special meaning for me. The very first WebTycho course at UMUC in the School of Undergraduate Studies was offered in the summer semester of 1997. The course was ACCT 321 Cost Accounting. I remember it well, because I was the content expert for the development of the course and taught the course that first semester. It was exciting, because in addition to developing the course itself, a series of video programs for the course were also produced to be shown on the cable channel and made available for rental from UMUC. I was the presenter in the filming of two of the video programs and the coordinator for all of them. All things went smoothly and we thought that everything was ready for the first day of teaching the course. We discovered during the first week of the course that those students enrolled who used AOL and Erols as their internet service providers could not connect to WebTycho—could not get into the Web site to take the course. We eventually corrected the problem and, most important, did not lose a single student because of the problem. The lesson we learned was that e-mail and telephone/postal mail contacts are very important in communicating with students during such a situation. Considering that it was the first time for WebTycho in the undergraduate school, we saw that our immediate attention to the needs of our students made the difference. At that time, it took an unprecedented level of cooperation and effort on the parts of the academic department and the IT systems support to solve this problem. I enjoy teaching WebTycho, and have done it every semester since the summer of 1997. In addition, I am doing my doctoral study in the field of Web-based distance education. I believe that Web-based distance education will be a significant part in the present and future of education—especially higher education.

“WebTycho” continued on page 17 15

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a hiker a father of four

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I am a chemical engineer from Nigeria a nature lover an 11-year veteran of UMUC

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“WebTycho” continued from page 15

Wayne Precht (assistant director of Information Technology) offered another dimension to the discussion: I am not an instructor, nor have I ever taken an online course. But I have been programming distance education systems for more than 12 years here at UMUC—first with the PLATO system, then Tycho (frequently referred to as DOSTycho and WinTycho, though that refers to the client used to access it; the server side was the same), and now WebTycho. I have worked closely with faculty, especially when rolling out a new system, and I frequently skim through the running classes to get a sense of how things are going. This technology is in a constant state of evolution, but the underlying paradigms remain: conferencing as the main, asynchronous communication; e-mail (or “personal notes,” as they were called in the PLATO days) for communicating one to one. In many ways, as advanced as the Web version is over previous versions, it is still catching up to PLATO. I could make a one-to-one mapping of most of the PLATO features to Tycho to WebTycho. Maybe I will do that just to trace the intersystem anthropology. Beverly Morris ’99 (applications developer, Information Technology) gave us a look into the future of online education at UMUC: I have been working with WebTycho since 1998, and have taken online courses myself. I think the greatest improvement occurred in WebTycho during the past two years with the transition to WebTycho 2.x. That version and subsequent versions have largely been a response to the needs expressed by our distance education customers. Earlier in this conference, there was discussion regarding the committees that worked together to define the progression of distance education at UMUC. One of the most important pieces in the distance education puzzle is the user. In 1998, Team WebTycho began extensively polling its user base with usability studies and surveys. The technical evaluation (still in use) provided a vehicle for direct feedback from all WebTycho users. The future of WebTycho took on a new direction in response to that feedback. The usability studies helped define the navigation and interface areas of WebTycho that required updates or redesign by initiating testing sessions with a variety of users.

While the committees and advisory groups played a key role in the development of the software, it was imperative to tap the open resource of customer opinion. The surveys and feedback from the end users still provide valuable input to the WebTycho development team. Cindy Whitesel brought the discussion full circle when she posted the final response:

Hi, Everyone! It’s fun to see familiar names in the WebTycho conferences! Except for Beverly Morris, I recognize you all. I remember how exciting it was to be teaching writing online where students had to write to communicate. A novel idea developed—that students might have to participate in order to learn. In the online classroom, everyone participated and I got to know students better than I ever had. From there came another novel idea—that the classroom could be student-centered, that we could actually focus on the students and actually see in writing what they were learning and what they were thinking. When I could read through students’ thinking processes, I became much better at helping them learn the material. The early days were eye-opening for those of us who were open to new or innovative teaching strategies. In order to teach online, we teachers had to focus on what we were doing as teachers. In order to do that, we had to focus on what we wanted our students to learn. As we developed our notions of what studentcentered teaching was about, we had to examine how we taught and what we expected. Our students had to do the same. Rich and Nate may remember those early years in faculty training when a group of us came together to learn what it meant to teach online. Our training was more than “education management”— we were really relearning what it meant to be teachers. We were also learning how much more learning we could expect—and get—from our students. Although I never participated in those teacher surveys, Wayne may remember my stopping by to visit in IT. I’d often see Wayne or John and we’d have a conversation about the system, what it was doing or not doing, and what might make it better. I saw such a dedicated team of developers who seemed to actually enjoy their work as much as I enjoyed teaching.

—Cindy 17

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CLASS NOTES

Edward J. Perkins ’67 Norman, Oklahoma, served as America’s first African American ambassador to South Africa and as U.S. ambassador to the Commonwealth of Australia and the Republic of Liberia. He served as director general of the Foreign Service from 1989 to 1992. He is currently executive director of the International Programs Center— and holds the Crowe Chair in Geopolitics—at the University of Oklahoma and was awarded the prestigious Director General’s Cup, which recognizes a senior officer of the Foreign Service who has made a particularly distinguished contribution to the U.S. State Department through work with communities and educational institutions and through non-governmental activities. The award was presented at the 35th annual Foreign Affairs Day luncheon, in Washington, D.C., where Secretary of State Colin Powell gave the keynote address.

the intelligence bureau and helping to create a new division for hostage negotiation. He owned an electrical contracting business from 1980 to 1996 and now serves as a bankruptcy investigator with the U.S. Bankruptcy Court. He is currently finishing a master’s degree in accounting at the University of Nevada–Las Vegas and expects to test for his CPA’s license in 2003. He wrote, “There seems to be a strong need for fraud investigators in the bankruptcy system, and I hope to respond to that need.”

Force, prior to my 1992 retirement, and my [subsequent move] to a second career as a child abuse investigator for the state of Florida. I retired again in June 2002 and started a third career, this one with ASC. Without a degree, there are very limited options if you want to work in the public sector or for companies subcontracted by the state. The market is flooded and the degrees make the difference between getting the interview and not. UMUC gave me a strong foundation for all three careers!”

David A. Hoodenpyle ’76 Tallahassee, Florida, earned his AA from UMUC while stationed in Belgium with the U.S. Air Force at NATO headquarters. His experience there encouraged him to complete his bachelor’s degree, after which he returned to civilian life as a Unisys/Burroughs computer salesman. He currently works as a technology reseller.

William M. Holland ’75

William G. Stengle ’81 & ’89

Las Vegas, Nevada, served as a member of the U.S. Secret Service while he was a student. After graduating, he served for 16 years as an officer with the Las Vegas Metro Police Department, working as a detective in narcotics, vice, and

Gainesville, Florida, recently joined ASC, Inc., as support coordinator for developmentally disabled adults and children. He wrote, “My [UMUC] degrees were instrumental in [my rise] to the rank of master sergeant, U.S. Air

Jim Koepke ’82 Bloomington, Minnesota, wrote Adventures in a Mental Health Center (PublishAmerica, Inc., 2002), a humorous, behind-the-scenes look at what really goes on in a mental health center.

Antonio Ojeda ’85 Killeen, Texas, wrote, “[UMUC] provided me the opportunity to continue my studies while pursuing a full-time military career.”

Carol J. Franzen ’86 Newport News, Virginia, retired from the Air National Guard and is now an independent certified facilitator with Life Success Productions specializing in personal development seminars.

Philippe Steele ’86

ANTOINETTE M. ROACH ’96 Takoma Park, Maryland, has owned and operated Copperfield Public Relations in Washington, D.C., for the past two years. She brings more than seven years of communication experience to the job, with expertise in communication and marketing strategy, media relations, and grassroots outreach campaigns. Prior to launching Copperfield, Roach worked for Cohn & Wolfe Public Relations in San Francisco, California, managing and servicing client projects for Deloitte Consulting, MetFabCity.com (Praxair), Digital 4Sight, and Sony. Before that, she worked for the Army Distaff Foundation in Washington, D.C., where she provided senior marketing, fundraising, and public relations counsel. She began her public relations career at Ruder Finn Public Relations in Washington, D.C., where she worked with the firm’s environmental, institutional, and corporate-practice clients, including the Global Climate Coalition, Discovery Communications, Inc., and the Department of Housing and Urban Development. Roach serves as a young benefactor board member of the Boys and Girls Clubs of Greater Washington, and has taught English to adults in Japan and to high school students in Hyattsville, Maryland.

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Noblesville, Indiana, joined the U.S. Army and fought in Operation Desert Storm with the 2nd Armored Cavalry Regiment. After completing his enlistment, he served for several years as a pay specialist at Ft. Benjamin Harrison in Indianapolis, Indiana. He has since completed both his bachelor’s degree and MBA from Indiana Wesleyan University. He wrote, “My fondest memory as a student would have to be the good times shared with my friends and other students and faculty at the student union building and downtown at the Oktoberfest and Malthaser’s Beer Hall.”

Nancy A. Pellone ’87 St. Petersburg, Florida, currently works as a management analyst in the office of the director for the Department of Veteran Affairs. She was recently chosen to participate in the Leadership Enhancement and Advancement Development program, which is devoted to developing future leaders.

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CLASS NOTES

Steve Moore ’90

EVERETT H. KLEIN ’79 Montague, Michigan, retired from the U.S. Air Force in April 1989 and completed a Master of Divinity degree from Seabury–Western Theological Seminary in June 2001. He was ordained a priest in the Episcopal Church in September 2002 and accepted a position the following month as rector of St. Peter’s By-the-Lake Episcopal Church in Montague, Michigan. He wrote, “Getting to and through the master’s degree was an exciting spiritual journey. As I prepare sermons, I draw upon experiences I had while taking UMUC classes in such exotic places as Incirlik Air Base, Turkey, just 40 miles east of Tarsus, the birthplace of St. Paul, or I draw upon my experiences in Antokia—once called Antioch of Syria, St. Paul’s base of operations. Having taken upper-level courses in anthropology while living in this area has made all the difference in the world to my understanding of the Epistles of St. Paul. I am thankful for these experiences and for UMUC’s presence in the military around the world.”

Kim Beata Kraushar ’88

Maureen Dolan Rosen ’89

Eagle River, Alaska, completed 20 years of service with the federal government, including nine years with the U.S. Air Force and 11 years in civil service. She wrote, “When I left the U.S. Air Force, my BS from UMUC enabled me to apply for an excellent position with the U.S. Department of Justice, where I was recently promoted to GS-13 (after starting out as a GS-7) in my job as an analyst in the Anchorage, Alaska, office. Education is the key!”

Chapel Hill, North Carolina, with Rosen & Associates, Inc., published KIDSCA$H: Cash Management for Kids, a workbook designed to teach children of all ages how to keep track of their money. The workbook is also available in a classroom version for educational use. The book can be purchased online at www.kidscashmanagement.com.

Mike Sozio ’88 Irving, Texas, recently retired from the U.S. Army Reserve after a 24-year career. He has been assigned to a position as chief of Information Systems Europe in the Army & Air Force Exchange Service.

Barry W. Connelly ’89 Oceanside, California, earned his JD from the Thomas Jefferson School of Law and passed the California State Bar Exam.

Elizabeth M. Simonetti ’89 Suwanee, Georgia, completed her EdD degree in higher education from the University of Georgia. Her dissertation reported on faculty opinions of distance learning.

Johnnie R. Aldrich ’90 Las Cruces, New Mexico, retired after 39 years of full-time teaching, having served as associate professor of Spanish and English at Southwest Tennessee Community College and for 15 years with UMUC–Europe.

Mark Krzysko ’90 & ’95 James W. Hubbard ’89 Bowie, Maryland, has served in Maryland’s General Assembly, representing District 23, in Prince George’s County, since 1992.

Ellicott City, Maryland, was named deputy director of electronic business in the Senior Executive Service Corps of the Department of Defense. Previously, he served as division director for electronic commerce solutions with the Naval Air Systems team.

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Maryland, recently collaborated on Johnny Holliday: Rock to Jock (Sports Publishing, Inc., 2002), the autobiography of Johnny Holliday, celebrity rock DJ, ABC Sports commentator, and for 23 years the radio play-by-play voice of the University of Maryland Terrapins. Moore is director of advanced research computing at Georgetown University in Washington, D.C. Earlier, he co-authored Helen Hayes: A BioBibliography (Greenwood Press, 1993), now in its second printing.

Oscar E. Padilla ’90 Washington, D.C., recently launched an Internet consulting company that focuses on helping small and midsize companies maximize the value of the Internet through smart strategies.

Joan L. Johnson ’91 Oakland, Maryland, retired from the Maryland Higher Education Commission after 25 years and moved to western Maryland, where she now serves as Garrett County coordinator for Big Brothers Big Sisters.

William Sheridan ’92 Germantown, Maryland, celebrated his 10th year as owner of Plus Computing Corp., providing consulting services for Oracle, UNIX, and other computer systems.

Andrea J. Sigust ’94 College Park, Maryland, is senior communications specialist with SiGust Enterprises, which specializes in telecommunications, professional writing, and Christian publications.

Reuben Rentas Jr. ’95 Harlem, Georgia, received an MBA in leadership from Brenan University in May 2002. He was listed in Who’s Who Among Students in American Universities and Colleges.

Robert P. Bosking ’96 Severn, Maryland, reported that 20 years of service in the military piqued his interest in computer science, from early, stand-alone PCs to global networks. He wrote, “My UMUC graduate education has provided a solid foundation and structure upon which to build a second career.”


CLASS NOTES

Thomas J. Ledoux ’96

Dominic P. Tenorio ’96

Tommy C. Clemens ’98

Ellicott City, Maryland, wrote, “An apparently routine UMUC humanities course on the Civil War sparked an interest that has blossomed into a worldwide contributory project honoring Vermont’s participation in the war, and led to an MA in Civil War studies from the American Military University in Manassas, Virginia.”

Okinawa, Japan, received a certificate of commendation while assigned to headquarters, Marine Wing Support Group 17, 1st Marine Air Wing, on Okinawa. He was recognized for superior performance of duty, and a U.S. Marine Corps newsletter reported, “Displaying remarkable dedication and initiative, Tenorio consistently performed his demanding duties in an exemplary and highly professional manner.”

Yorktown, Virginia, completed an MS in international relations from Troy State University.

James Rineaman ’98 Spring Grove, Pennsylvania, wrote, “[I] recommend UMUC to anyone who wants a quality education. My experience at UMUC was one that I will always remember and cherish.”

Bonnie Austin ’99

HELGA WEST ’95 Frederick, Maryland, has partnered with her husband, Randy West, to establish Mission Works Communications, Inc., an innovative public relations and management consulting firm designed to help nonprofit organizations “work” their missions in new and creative ways by offering seniorlevel expertise at a fraction of the typical agency cost. West and her husband reevaluated their careers and priorities following the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, which all but crippled many public relations firms. Rather than bemoan the economic downturn, the couple decided to put the situation to constructive use and establish an organization that helps nonprofits help others. Together, they bring impressive credentials to the job. West recently received her second Telly Award for a video she produced about newborn hearing screening for the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association. That award joins the couple’s other awards, which include an IABC Silver Inkwell Award for best media kit and campaign, a PRSA Thoth Award for best radio PSA, and a Telly Award for a television program on welfare-to-work. For more information, visit www.missionworkscom.com. In 2002, after suffering a near-fatal assault in Florida, West also established Witness Justice, an online, nonprofit organization dedicated to empowering victims of violent crime by providing guidance and information on understanding and responding to an attack; strategies for healing; access to mental health, legal, and relationship experts; access to a virtual community where victims can connect with other victims; and more. West’s message has been heard on Larry King Live, Prime Time Live, and Good Morning America, and her advocacy led to a number of measures being enacted in Florida, including better signage on highways and in airports warning of crime trends, and steps to make rental cars less conspicuous and thus harder for criminals to target. For more information, visit www.witnessjustice.org.

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Elmendorf Air Force Base, Alaska, is substitute teaching until she can save enough money to begin work on her Master of Education degree. She wrote, “I am so over the dark winters here, and I would gladly move and put off graduate school until the next base. I guess I’ll just have to wait and see, but until then I will don my anti-spitball goggles and paper-airplane deflectors and go to work!”

Susan Burgess-Lent ’99 Bethesda, Maryland, received a $6,000 individual artist grant from the Maryland State Arts Council for her novel In the Borderlands (Xlibris, 2000), the story of an American doctor’s tour of duty in refugee camps following the Rwandan genocide. The grant will help to support future writing projects, including a novel in progress set in the Sudan.

Mary B. Frazier ’99 Annapolis, Maryland, is chief of configuration and performance management for the U.S. Census Bereau. She wrote, “I’ve recently downsized my living quarters, selling my singlefamily home and moving into a condominium in Annapolis. My new home gives me more time to enjoy life and Maryland’s capital!”

Angela R. Knight ’99 Springdale, Maryland, is a computer professional with more than 10 years of experience in information technology. She currently develops client server applications for a financial services organization. She wrote, “UMUC provided a high-quality education and flexible class formats and times, allowing me to complete my undergraduate degree and further my career in the technical field.”

www.umucalumni.org


CLASS NOTES

EMMETT PAIGE ’72 NAMED TO MARYLAND HIGHER EDUCATION COMMISSION In September 2002, then-Maryland Governor Parris N. Glendening named Lieutenant General Emmett Paige Jr. ’72 (U.S. Army, Ret.) and two others to the 12-member Maryland Higher Education Commission. Paige is a member of UMUC’s Board of Visitors and vice president of Lockheed Martin Information Technology Company (formed after Lockheed Martin acquired the OAO Corporation, of which Paige was president.) “Maryland has made historic investments in institutions of higher learning, and these three highly qualified new commissioners are committed to building on the incredible accomplishments of our university system,” Glendening said. “Education is the key that unlocks the door of opportunity for students of all backgrounds. Our top priority is to build a world-class system that is easily accessible to anyone who has a thirst for knowledge. I am confident that General Paige . . . bring[s] the passion and the experience necessary to make our vision a reality.” In 1993, President Bill Clinton appointed Paige assistant secretary of defense for Command, Control, Communications, and Intelligence. He is currently serving a five-year term on Glendening’s task force to study governance and coordination of the University System of Maryland and the Strategic Committee on the State Plan for Higher Education.

Lisa A. Oliver ’99

Damascus, Maryland, received her Master of Public Administration degree from American University in May 2002.

Award for UNITED (Unified Intake, Triage, Evaluation, and Service Delivery System). In use at three Montgomery County regional service centers, UNITED integrates health and human service delivery to improve access to services and reduce barriers for customers and staff alike. Harwood is a systems analyst/ developer with Aspen Systems Corp. in Rockville, Maryland.

Raymond Ross ’99

Kathleen Abebe ’01

Silver Spring, Maryland, graduated from physician’s assistant school in August 2002 with a postgraduate certificate.

Fort Washington, Maryland, wrote, “As a fulltime employee, student, mother of two children, and wife, UMUC made my dream of earning a degree in business and management a reality. I took full advantage of UMUC’s distance education program and also attended courses at UMUC’s satellite facilities. As a result of old-fashioned determination, lots of hard

Summerville, South Carolina, graduated from the University of South Carolina with a BS in nursing.

Janis H. Peterson ’99

Grace Dailey Harwood ’00 Montgomery Village, Maryland, received the Montgomery County, Maryland, Department of Health and Human Services 2002 Innovation

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work, and support from UMUC’s excellent faculty, I maintained a 4.0 grade-point average and graduated summa cum laude! After a brief break, I plan to return to UMUC to complete an MBA.”

Dennis K. Archey ’01 Parkesburg, Pennsylvania, recently accepted a position as an administrative assistant to the director of development at Swarthmore College, in Swarthmore, Pennsylvania.

Lea G. Crandel ’01 Huntingtown, Maryland, wrote, “UMUC helped me to finish my accounting degree while managing a full-time job and family responsibilities. I couldn’t have done it without the flexibility that UMUC offers to its students. I can’t wait to start on a master’s degree!”

Diana F. Edwards ’01 Mt. Rainier, Maryland, accepted a position as an application analyst with the Washington Hospital Center. She wrote, “The lessons learned [at UMUC] have become aspects of my daily life. These lessons will allow me to continue growing intellectually, which will allow me to advance to the next level.”

Patrick A. Griffin ’01 Pensacola, Florida, received his commission as a naval officer after completing Officer Candidate School at Naval Aviation Schools Command, Naval Air Station, in Pensacola.

Janine Marie Kraus ’01 Denton, Texas, began work on a Master in Higher Education from the University of North Texas in spring 2002 and was married May 17, 2002.

Jeffrey A. Landis ’01 Camp Pendleton, California, participated in the Sea Soldier ’02 exercise while assigned to the 13th Marine Expeditionary Unit. The 12day, live-fire training exercise—conducted in cooperation with soldiers from the Western Frontier Regiment of the Royal Army of Oman—came only a matter of weeks after Landis’ unit conducted offensive raids against Taliban and Al-Qaeda forces during Operation Enduring Freedom.


CLASS NOTES

Kimberly Lewis ’01 Alexandria, Virginia, joined the U.S. Army and moved to Jackson, South Carolina, for basic training. She will be working as a linguist. She wrote, “Very exciting, but also very terrifying.”

Brenda K. Taite ’01 Ellicott City, Maryland, was accepted into the Vermont Law School class of 2002.

Adekunle Adebanjo ’02 Baltimore, Maryland, wrote, “I came to the U.S. from Nigeria in 1998 and enrolled at UMUC in the fall of 1999. Since then, my life has turned around for the good. With the help of online classes, I was able to combine work and study—thanks to UMUC.”

Adam D. Birnbaum ’02 Virginia Beach, Virginia, recently accepted a position as a business analyst in the HIPAA division of AMERIGROUP Corporation. He previously served as the company’s manager of communications.

Sherwynne P. Hughes ’02 Germany, wrote, “[UMUC’s] night classes were perfectly scheduled and allowed me to finish up my degree despite having two very active baby boys at home. I plan to go on to graduate school (as soon as my husband completes his undergraduate degree with UMUC as well). UMUC gave me hopes and helped me achieve my dream!”

Dennis Joyner ’02 Richmond, Virginia, chose to attend graduate school at UMUC because of its reputation for excellence in distance education. He wrote, “Having also received my undergraduate degree via the distance education format, I was very much aware of how online education can benefit busy adults in the workforce. I would highly recommend UMUC to those who value a quality education.”

Adam L. Thor ’02 Fair Lawn, New Jersey, completed his bachelor’s degree four years after graduating from high school and plans to attend law school in September 2003, after completing his enlistment in the U.S. Navy. He wrote, “Without the online freedom, I don’t think that I would have been able to complete my degree on time due to my job.”

UMUC JOINS FORCES WITH MORGAN STANLEY TO CHANGE LIVES As a corporation, Morgan Stanley is dedicated to creating a more diverse workforce, a commitment that company officials consider one of their highest priorities. In keeping with this philosophy, the company’s foundation—which made gifts totaling $40 million last year—underwrites numerous community initiatives that further diversity and economic opportunity for women, minorities, and people with disabilities. So, for Morgan Stanley, UMUC’s Better Opportunities Through Online Education was a natural fit—so much so that it recently presented the university with a gift of $450,000, over three years, to expand the program into Delaware and New Jersey. The partnership is a big win for everyone. As Joan Steinberg, vice president and director of community affairs at Morgan Stanley, says, “Even though the program is online, it’s set up to help students feel truly connected to the institutional environment, rather than simply hooking them up to a [personal computer]. We also like that UMUC works so hard to meet the needs of these students, who are usually working moms for whom their first priority is their kids. UMUC has developed a program that takes that into account—working around family lifestyles.” The Morgan Stanley gift will allow UMUC to offer its Better Opportunities program to qualified participants in three new markets, all of which are communities where Morgan Stanley offices are located—Wilmington and Dover, Delaware, as well as Jersey City. This proposed expansion will underwrite 33 “Morgan Stanley Scholars” over the three-year grant period, all of whom may be considered for jobs in the company once they have completed the program. “We’ve been extremely impressed with the quality of student enrolled in the Better Opportunities program,” said Steinberg. “These are individuals who already have a strong commitment to the workforce, but who can’t move ahead in it for one reason or another. They are also highly motivated to improve their chances, especially when you consider that most of them have families and fulltime jobs. So, when you combine those qualities with the certificate training they receive through the program . . . well, these are women we would love to have working for us.” According to Beverly Lucas, UMUC’s director of Special Programs, Better Opportunities became a reality two years ago when the university joined forces with its first community partner, Goodwill Industries of the Chesapeake. The idea behind the program—which now enrolls 45 students—was to offer free, high-quality, online professional certificates to lower-income workers, who are often stuck in dead-end jobs that don’t afford them the opportunity to further their education or broaden their skills. Moreover, program courses are fully transferable as credits toward four-year degree programs.

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GETTING INTO THE VOLUNTEER SPIRIT Whereas most of us think of volunteerism as a few hours here and there, whenever time permits, UMUC alumus Kirk Platt ’99 sees it as an avocation, something you commit yourself to as passionately as, say, raising kids or climbing the career ladder. In fact, for years, in addition to the demands of family and work, Platt has done just that—giving of his time, energy, and talent, more than a few hours each week, to make this world a better place. His efforts earned him an award from from former Maryland Governor Parris Glendening, recognizing Platt’s outstanding volunteerism. Platt began his volunteer career 17 years ago, when his oldest son was born with a rare genetic disorder known as Wolfe-Hirschhorn Syndrome, which left him with multiple cognitive and physical disabilities, including the inability to communicate with words and walk without assistance.

“I was still working for BG&E [Baltimore Gas and Electric Company] when I heard they had several hundred computers to give away. The trick was to find a way to transport them to the VME workshop, so that our techies could work their magic. I managed to find a trucking firm that donated its vehicles to pick up and unload the computers. Then the [VME] guys sorted, salvaged, rebuilt, and modified them so that disabled folks could use them more easily. We managed to donate 360 fully functional units,” Platt recalled proudly. “It goes along with my own personal philosophy that every project should be a win-winwin—a win for the community, a win for the company, and a win for the environment.” Platt put the same ingenuity and philosophy into motion when he began his campaign to design and build a “boundless” playground at his son’s school.

“When you say playground, most people envision your standard swings, slides, and jungle gyms, but for kids with physical disabilities of all kinds, you have to think way beyond that. When Ruth Eason approached me, they had some ideas and very little money to buy the kind of equipment they needed. So we used our heads and came up with what turned out to be a fanKirk Platt accepts an award from fortastic addition to the school. For example, mer Maryland Lieutenant Governor instead of a regular sandbox, which is low to the Kathleen Kennedy Townsend. ground, we designed one on legs so that kids in And help he has, devoting many hours each wheelchairs could wheel right up under it. We also added a special month to work with such organizations as eMerge—a group railing around all four sides that they could use to lean against home and job training facility for adults with multiple disabiliwhile they played in the sand. It’s incredible what you can do ties—and Ruth Eason School, where his son is a student. Much when you put your mind to it. The kids and the teachers were of the work he does for these groups centers around “problemthrilled!” solving their special needs,” by combining his technology and project management skills. (Platt earned his degree from UMUC In addition to his work with VME, Platt also serves as vice chair with a primary specialization in information technology, with a for the Anne Arundel County, Maryland, Special Education secondary specialization in technology and management.) Advisory Committee (a group of parents, community members, and educators who help shape the county’s special education “For the past several years, I’ve worked with a group called VME— programs), and works as a troop leader for his younger son’s Cub Volunteer Medical Engineers. We have about 60 doctors, theraScouts pack. When asked if he ever has any leisure time, Platt pists, engineers, and computer guys who donate their time to laughed. design and reconfigure assistive appliances for disabled folks. Last year, we did about 300 projects for a wide variety of nonprofit “I wouldn’t know what to do with myself. I think my wife would be organizations and schools. It’s an amazing group,” Platt said. happy if I slowed down a little. But I guess I’m just a high-energy kind of guy. And what I do with it all feels so right.” One of Platt’s more impressive projects involved working with his fellow VME volunteers to refurbish and reconfigure 360 computers for eMerge’s computer training lab.

“When we first took our son to Johns Hopkins [Hospital] after he was born, we were told he was one of 120 known cases in the world, and that there was no cure. But we were both determined to do everything we could to help him. That’s when I began to see how many other kids and adults around us were suffering from so many disabilities and that there was something I could do to help.”

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THE RACE TO WASHINGTON: FELIX ALVARADO’S RUN FOR A CONGRESSIONAL SEAT By his own admission, UMUC alumnus Felix Alvarado ran an oldfashioned “horse race” in his bid to unseat Republican incumbent Joe Barton in Texas’ 6th U.S. Congressional District. He didn’t win, but he certainly made a strong showing at the finish, garnering about 30 percent of the vote. Past UMUC Alumni Association President Janice H. Reilly ’90, who won the 2002 Edward A. Parnell Outstanding Alumna Award, visited another outstanding alumnus, Felix Alvarado ’86, in Texas to support his bid for a Congressional seat.

As a career military man turned high school teacher, Alvarado knew what it would take to run a good race with honor, integrity, and determination. He began his military career after dropping out of high school to join the Army in 1961. Upon completing a six-year stint—and having risen to the rank of staff sergeant—he left the Army to join the Air Force, retiring after 21 years as a chief master sergeant (the highest noncommissioned rank), with a bachelor’s degree in business and management from UMUC and a master’s degree in management. As Alvarado put it, “I call myself a very rare person. It was pretty unusual for an enlisted man to have achieved so much educationally. But for a Hispanic enlisted man in 1988 . . . well, let me put it this way: back then we were still called Mexicans.” After retiring from the military, Alvarado went into the insurance business for a while, but decided he was far more interested in becoming a high school teacher. So back to school he went, receiving both his teacher’s and principal’s certificates from the University of Texas–Arlington in 1994, just as his GI Bill ran out. He now teaches social studies—mostly world geography—to high school students. Although Alvarado began his campaign for Congress as a virtual unknown, with no “war chest” and no key endorsements, he made great strides in his race against what he calls a “deeply entrenched opponent.” He attributed his growing popularity with voters to careful planning and a grassroots approach. “When I started the campaign, I had zero name recognition. The first priority was to get my name out there and, because I had very little money for TV ads and billboards, I walked a lot and I talked a lot,” Alvarado laughed. “I told people that I wanted to be their voice in Congress, not the voice of special interests and big business, like my opponent had become. And people started to listen. I think they knew that I care about the same things they care about—things that really matter to them at the end of the day, like the quality of the air they breathe and the future of their Social Security and Medicare benefits.” So even though he didn’t win a Congressional seat, Felix Alvarado came away a winner.

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Calendar of Events February 18, 2003

April 29, 2003

May 18, 2003

Alumni Association Executive Board Meeting Inn and Conference Center Adelphi, Maryland

Alumni Association Executive Board Meeting Inn and Conference Center Adelphi, Maryland

UMUC–Asia Commencement Seoul, South Korea

February 25, 2003

May 6, 2003

Alumni Association Board Meeting Inn and Conference Center Adelphi, Maryland

Alumni Association Board Meeting Inn and Conference Center Adelphi, Maryland

March 20, 2003

May 10, 2003

Alumni Association Happy Hour at the Oracle Inn and Conference Center Adelphi, Maryland

UMUC–Europe Commencement Reiss Museum Mannheim, Germany May 15, 2003

New Graduate Reception Inn and Conference Center Adelphi, Maryland

April 5, 2003

IMAN Annual Dinner 10 th Anniversary Celebration Holiday Inn College Park College Park, Maryland

May 17, 2003

May 25, 2003

UMUC–Europe Commencement Heidelberg, Germany June 14, 2003

UMUC–Asia Commencement Okinawa, Japan June 19, 2003

Alumni Association Annual Meeting and Awards Reception Inn and Conference Center Adelphi, Maryland For more information, contact the Office of Alumni Relations at 240-684-5125.

Stateside Commencement Comcast Center College Park, Maryland

April 26, 2003

UMUC–Asia Commencement Tokyo, Japan

It’s a Small World In 1978, Larry Hepinstall, then an area director for UMUC–Europe and later director of Alumni Relations, interviewed Lance Limoges in Heidelberg for a position teaching geology and geography. At the time, Limoges was working in Dharan, Saudi Arabia. Hepinstall was impressed with Limoges’ credentials and, after Limoges’ contractual obligations in Saudi Arabia were complete, Hepinstall offered him a position on Torrejon Air Base in Madrid. Unfortunately, Limoges could not accept.

(Left to right) Larry Hepinstall, Lance Limoges, and Rosemary Hoffmann in Adelphi, Maryland, along with the “job offer” it took Limoges almost 25 years to accept.

Flash forward to the spring of 2002. Limoges was living stateside, but had recently reapplied to teach overseas and was invited to UMUC’s Adelphi headquarters to interview. When asked how he knew about UMUC’s programs, Limoges produced a letter Hepinstall sent him after the 1978 interview. As it happened, Hepinstall—who now lives in Silver Spring, Maryland—was on the UMUC campus that very day for the annual Alumni Association meeting. Rosemary Hoffmann, who was assistant Mediterranean area director in 1978, was also on campus. The photo tells the rest of the story. In August 2002, Lance Limoges began teaching geography for UMUC–Asia.

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CHAPTER HIGHLIGHTS Stay connected to your fellow alumni through Alumni Association chapters. Several academic and regional chapters have been in existence for years, and new start-up groups are in the planning stages. For more information, contact the Office of Alumni Relations at 240-684-5125 or visit the alumni Web site at umucalumni.org. AC A D E M I C C H A P T E R S

G E O G R A PH I C C H A P T E R S

IMAN Chapter

Howard County Chapter

The International Management (IMAN) Chapter, one of the first UMUC alumni chapters, will celebrate its 10th anniversary at the Fifth Annual IMAN Chapter Dinner on April 5, 2003, at the Holiday Inn in College Park, Maryland. You are invited to join fellow alumni, faculty, students, and staff for a night of entertainment, networking, and delicious food. For further information, contact Dharma Selva at 240-684-5114 or via e-mail at dselva@umuc.edu.

After the success of last May’s reception in Howard County, Maryland, honoring James Robey ’79, UMUC’s 2002 Distinguished Alumnus and the Howard County Executive, a planning committee was formed to establish a chapter in that area. Kate Perry ’97 & ’01, a member of the Alumni Association board of directors, is leading the effort. The first meeting was held in the fall of 2002 at the home of Fred Antenburg ’66, an attorney in Columbia, Maryland. Visit the Web site at umucalumni.org, for details about upcoming alumni activities in Howard County.

2002–2003 IMAN Chapter Officers President: Dharma Selva ’02 Vice President: Connie Turner Corresponding Secretary: David Long South American Liaison: Cleopatra Sinkamba Islar ’02 African Liaison: Steve Koenig ’98 Asian/Pacific Liaison: Joyce Wright ’90 & ’94 European Liaison: Ozgur Vural ’02 Undergraduate Representative: Zorayda Munoz MBA Chapter

The MBA Chapter Planning Committee is making considerable progress toward establishing a chapter for graduates of the Master of Business Administration (MBA) program. A call for nominations and the election ballot will be posted on the alumni Web site at umucalumni.org, and all MBA graduates are encouraged to participate and get out the vote. Human Resources Management Chapter

The HR Network continues to grow under the dynamic leadership of Jeff Brody ’93, Alumni Association vice president for career and professional development, and Mary Schwanky, director of UMUC’s Career and Cooperative Education Center. To get involved and become a member of this exciting group, visit the alumni Web site at umucalumni.org.

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San Antonio, Texas

Alumni who attended a networking reception last spring in downtown San Antonio expressed great interest in forming a local chapter. With more than 900 alumni in the area, the chapter has tremendous potential. If you want to join the planning committee and help Howard Cain ’68, who is spearheading this effort, contact him at cactop@aol.com.

EVENT HIGHLIGHTS Baltimore Reception

UMUC alumni in Baltimore enjoyed a special reception in November honoring William Goodwin ’91 & ’00. Named chief of the Baltimore City Fire Department last year, Goodwin came to the job with 27 years of experience covering every aspect of fire science. UMUC President Gerald Heeger and Joanne Hildebrand, director of UMUC’s Fire Science William Goodwin Program, extended their congratulations and best wishes. Goodwin earned his Bachelor of Science from UMUC with a specialization in fire science in 2000 and completed a Master of Science from Johns Hopkins University in May 2002.

ACHIEVER

www.umucalumni.org


Munich/Augsburg/Mannheim Alumni Reunite in Washington, D.C.

Alumni Happy Hours at UMUC’s Oracle Lounge

The Alumni Association hosted happy hours at the Oracle lounge in October and December. These events are fun, relaxing, and perfect for networking with fellow alumni, UMUC students, faculty, and staff. Mark your calendars and plan to join us for the St. Patrick’s Day Happy Hour on March 20!

The Fourth Biannual Munich Reunion took place on October 12, 2002, at the Capitol Brewery in Washington, D.C. More than 300 alumni attended. Michelle Renee Thamer ’86, Theresa Kalmus Hoffer, and Carlton (“Woody”) Woodell ’63 put in countless hours organizing this great event that was enthusiastically enjoyed by all. Plans are underway for the Fifth Biannual Munich Reunion to be held in 2004 at UMUC’s headquarters in Adelphi, Maryland.

Detroit Dinner with Dean Hrutka

Several alumni joined Mary Ellen Hrutka, dean of UMUC’s School of Undergraduate Studies, for dinner at the Detroit Marriott Renaissance Center during her visit to Michigan this fall. Development Officers Meet and Eat with UMUC Alums in Dallas

Lisa Seischab, UMUC’s director of major gifts, and Rosemary Straub, assistant vice president for development, joined Dallas alumni Leslie Patterson ’88 and Felix Alvarado ’86 for dinner. Read about Alvarado’s run for a Congressional seat on page 24.

Therese Kalmus, Michelle Thamer, Kelly Connors.

UMUC Grad Gets Red-Carpet Treatment from Disney —by Alita Byrd Instead of attending a commencement ceremony with her fellow graduates in Adelphi, Maryland, this summer, Pamela Kemp marched down a red carpet in the executive suite of Disney Consumer Products in Burbank, California. Kemp— personal assistant to Andy Mooney, president of Disney Pamela Kemp Consumer Products—was unable to make the trip to UMUC to receive her diploma, so her co-workers arranged a mock graduation celebration for her instead. Family, friends, and colleagues were all in attendance as Mooney handed Kemp her diploma. Kemp’s graduation cap and gown came from Walt Disney’s prop department. “The plan was to take our executive floor and turn it into a commencement setting,” Kemp said. “The president would

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act as the dean and hand me my diploma. He thought it was a great idea and agreed to do it.” “The ceremony was a big deal,” said Mooney. “We had a podium, red carpet, seating for 30, and a boom box playing Pomp and Circumstance.” Kemp is now the proud holder of a bachelor’s degree in management with a secondary emphasis in business and technology, all earned online from UMUC. Disney helped pay a portion of the cost of Kemp’s classes, and Mooney was pleased with the investment. “I applaud and support Pamela’s desire to continue her education,” Mooney said. “People are generally in awe of Pamela’s ability to find time to work at the level she does every day, study for so long, and be a great mom.” “It helped that I wasn’t tied to the typical structure of traditional school,” Kemp said. “I truly believe that online education will be the wave of the future by the time my children attend college.”

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UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND UNIVERSITY COLLEGE

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The lists on the following pages represent gifts received during the 2002 fiscal year (from July 1, 2001, through June 30, 2002). Every effort has been made to ensure the accuracy of the information. In the event that an error has been made, please accept our apologies and inform us of the inaccuracy by contacting the Office of Institutional Advancement at 240-684-5100.

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Your ongoing support of UMUC allows students to realize their hopes and dreams. Continuing support from people like you allows us to sustain UMUC programs and offer vital services to students. Make your contribution today. Checks must be made payable to The University of Maryland Foundation. For more information or to make an online ontribution, visit our Web page at www.umuc.edu/donate.

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LETTER FROM THE PRESIDENT

Dear Alumni and Friends of UMUC: As I enter my fourth year as president of this incredible university, I am still amazed by how often I hear the words, “UMUC changed my life!” The stories abound—a busy firefighter in Philadelphia who completed his bachelor’s degree completely online without missing a single day on the job; a young military wife for whom a much-needed (and much-deserved) UMUC scholarship allowed her to continue her education after the birth of her first child; an employee of the federal government who, when faced with a possible reduction in force at work, began attending classes at night to prepare for a new career in private industry. For many of you, UMUC has made it possible to reach new heights by offering access to excellent academic programs through state-of-the art technologies in many locations around the world. Given this experience, your continuing support, as alumni and friends, makes it possible for us to maintain that leading edge, thereby meeting—and often exceeding—the expectations of our students as they prepare to become leaders in an increasingly complex global community. Some of you have opened your checkbooks and made generous donations to support specific programs, to purchase equipment, or to underwrite one of our scholarship funds. Some of you have given just as generously of your time and talent to mentor students, to teach classes, or to help create cutting edge curricula. Still others have provided the valuable feedback that we need to improve and to enhance our academic offerings and student services. But regardless of how you choose to give, you are all, in your own way, changing the lives of the students who come to this university. So, on behalf of the 82,000 adult learners now enrolled at UMUC, along with our faculty and administrative staff, I thank you, our alumni and friends. Your leadership, achievements, and generosity amaze and inspire us all, and, because of you, we can continue changing lives by being what and where our students need us to be. Sincerely,

Gerald A. Heeger President

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LETTER FROM THE THE ANNUAL CAMPAIGN CHAIR

Dear Friends: As chair of this year’s annual campaign, I would like to thank all of you who have contributed so generously over the years. Your support and good wishes have made UMUC what it is today. UMUC continues to play a unique role in the world of higher education. Its students enter at all ages and stages of life—some seeking professional advancement in their fields, others hoping for personal enrichment, and still others training for a second career. With this diversity in mind, all of the university’s programs and services are geared specifically to meeting the needs of adult learners. Toward that end, UMUC has become the international leader in anytime, anywhere learning—with a virtual campus that is second to none and classroom-based course offerings in more than 30 countries on all seven continents. Moreover, UMUC has established an excellent reputation for training real-world leaders in a rapidly changing global marketplace. The university is particularly well known for its degree programs in business management and information technology, both of which continue to propel graduates to the leading edge of today’s high-performance workplace. However, it costs a great deal to run a university of this caliber, especially in today’s highly competitive academic market. Tuition and state funding alone only cover the basics. Philanthropy plays a crucial role in underwriting the cost of innovation, and donations from alumni and friends make it possible to fund the scholarships that so many UMUC students depend on to continue their education. In the past, your generosity has helped UMUC underwrite financial aid, academic programs, technology development, and more. In doing so, as alumni, we add value to our degrees by promoting the university’s reputation. As friends, you become active participants in the future of higher education. But this year we ask you to dig a little deeper. UMUC has reached a critical juncture in its mission, and the stakes are higher than ever before. With Maryland now facing a deficit in excess of $1.5 billion, UMUC—like other Maryland state colleges and universities—will receive less state support until the budget crunch is over. At the same time, our students must tighten their belts as they deal with a faltering economy and job market. With this in mind, I would like to issue a challenge: If each of UMUC’s 100,000 active alumni gave $25, we would raise $2.5 million. For those who give more than $25, I challenge you to increase your giving by at least 25 percent. There is no doubt in my mind that, for all of you, the return will be well worth the investment. Sincerely,

Frank Kent, Chair 2003 Annual Campaign 30

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This list represents gifts received during fiscal year 2002 (July 1, 2001–June 30, 2002).


UMUC President’s Club 2001–2002

PRESIDENT’S CLUB CIRCLE Lifetime Giving: Exceeds $50,000 Anonymous (1) Evelyn J. Bata ’68 Barry M. Chasen ’76 and Lyn E. Chasen I-Ling Chow and Diana Chow Hilton Village, Inc. in honor of Doris Patz Willard Hackerman and Lillian Hackerman C. Ricardo (“Rick”) Hamilton Allan Horelick Philip Horelick Hugo A. Keesing Thomas M. Li and Christine Li Esta Maril John L. Milton ’68 and Symantha Milton Kenneth L. Nees ’62 Doris Patz Charles E. (“Ted”) Peck and Delphine Peck Robert Ting and Sylvia Ting

PRESIDENT’S CLUB CABINET Lifetime Giving: $25,000–$49,999 Estate of Mary Ainsworth Wilson H. Elkins and Vivian N. Elkins Bill G. Evans ’61 and Helen R. Evans Ting-Ting Fan David C. Maril Robert E. Myers Jr. and Gretchen A. Myers Donald S. Orkand Jerome D. Robbins ’72 Louis E. Shecter Emory T. Trosper John W. Vessey Jr. ’63 Joan O. Weiss Choi Yong-Nim

PRESIDENT’S CLUB COUNCIL Lifetime Giving: $15,000–$24,999 Nicholas H. Allen and Eva J. Allen Richard F. Blewitt ’73 and Elizabeth Reinhardt Blewitt Frida Brown Thomas W. Burbeck Sam Chebeir ’95 Ronald Dustin Nancy Ferguson Charles J. Ippolito ’61 Ruth Jacobs-Arrill ’91 & ’95

Leonard Kaplan and Tobee Kaplan Kimberley S. McCarl Bonnie Osborn and Kirk Osborn Emmett Paige Jr. ’72 and Gloria M. Paige Edward A. Parnell ’75 and Nancy Parnell Harry J. Patton Howard G. Reamer Terrence A. Tierney and Kelly A. Pessagno

PRESIDENT’S CLUB COMMITTEE Lifetime Giving: $10,000–$14,999 James D. Adams ’57 and Irene M. Adams John O. Aje and Tope Aje Joseph J. Arden Vida J. Bandis Roland F. Behnke ’61 and Eleanor H. Behnke William M. Benesch and Joan Benesch William R. Berglof and Atsuko Yamado Berglof Harold J. Bothner III ’82 & ’93 MS and Jean M. Measell Marcia M. Bouchard ’94 and Ronald M. Bouchard Joseph V. Bowen Jr. ’84 MGA & ’95 MIM and Michele E. Jacobs ’74 David W. Bower Sr. and Dorothy Bower Richard Ronald Bowers ’75 Stephanie C. Bowers ’88 MGA and Richard J. Bowers Verne L. Bowers ’61 Laslo V. Boyd and Patti Boyd Leroy J. Brever Paul W. Brewer and Valerie Brewer Nicholas Brockunier ’76 and Ann Crowley Bonnie N. Broh-Kahn ’77 and Jere Broh-Kahn Charles E. Castle Jr. ’70 and Elaine Castle Vermelle Converse Patrick Craig Donna H. Cunninghame ’92 MGA Wallace H. Currey ’61 Roscoe E. Dann Jr. ’67 and Elfriede Dann Dennis J. Doolin and Eiko Nakata Doolin Elizabeth L. Durkee ’85 MGA Bruce A. Emmel ’86 and Mary E. Emmel Stephen H. Fisher ’89 Earl H. Foote ’77 & ’02 Bernard T. Franck and Chieko Franck David M. Freeman Nancy L. Gentry ’91 & ’99 MS and Robert T. Glenn Rosemary E. Gibson ’89 & ’94 MGA and Ulrich P. Gibson

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Irvin Greif Jr. and Nanette Greif Sharon G. Hadary Mary Anne Hakes ’90 MGA and Richard J. Hakes Julie E. Hamlin J. Simon Hancock Christina A. Hannah and Lawrence M. Hannah Kimberly A. Hansen Paula A. Harbecke Adam W. Harper Jr. ’60 and Francis O. Harper W. James Hart III and Marilyn Maupin Hart Gerald A. Heeger and Geraldine R. Heeger Richard E. Hess Joseph Holston Mary Ellen Hrutka and Joseph M. Hrutka Robert W. Jerome Joan L. Johnson ’91 and W. Offutt Johnson John F. Jones Jr. Morris T. Keeton and Ruth Keeton Ruby Kelly-King ’91 Frank R. Kent III ’91 MGA Nancy J. Klewicki ’86 and Michael R. Boyle Harry Kriemelmeyer Jr. ’89 and Mildred F. Kriemelmeyer ’89 O. Wayne Krumwiede ’66 and Grace Krumwiede James R. Kurtz ’65 & ’96 MGA W. Thomas Lansford ’90 & ’96 Adele P. Lewis ’87 & ’93 MS and Edward J. Lewis Judith H. Livingston and Richard Livingston Jeffrey W. MacCallum ’76 and Christine MacCallum Patrick Madden and Megan Arthur T. Benjamin Massey and Bylee H. Massey Ronald E. Mauritz ’84 Laverne G. Mensah and George A. Mensah Michael Merson and Anis Merson Carole Miller Gayle F. Miller ’95 and Tony Ulewicz Barbara R. Mintz Javier Miyares Betty M. Montgomery ’86 Ann B. Muffeny ’97 and Frank Muffeny Lloyd Oliver ’59 and Sylvia Oliver Yvonne C. Pateman ’62 and Martha N. Stanton Beverly L. Perry Janice H. Reilly ’90 MGA and Peter R. Reilly C. Lyle Rishell ’55 and Marilyn Rishell Thomas H. Robinson


T H E B AC K B O N E O F U M U C ’ S F I N A N C I A L S U P P O RT Lieutenant Colonel Wallace H. (“Wally”) Currey ’61 (U.S. Army, Ret.) may not be able to match the generosity of UMUC’s largest donors and corporate sponsors, but he is still among the university’s most valued supporters—one of hundreds who make regular, if modest, contributions, helping to establish a secure base from which the university can pursue its mission. Currey graduated from UMUC more than 40 years ago, after attending classes in Berlin, Germany, where he was stationed and serving as the Army finance officer. “I had a very positive experience,” Currey said. “Our education officer designed a curriculum especially for me. Most of the classes were conducted by UMUC, but two courses—one in economics and one in military history—weren’t offered. UMUC worked with our education officer to contact qualified, accredited instructors in the Berlin area who could help me. So I ended up taking a tutorial course from the wife of an Army colonel and another from a lieutenant colonel who was our intelligence officer.” Currey was grateful for the opportunity and flexibility that UMUC offered, and when his wife passed away and he was thinking of establishing a memorial in her honor, he immediately thought of UMUC. In 1998, Currey began contributing to the Patricia I. Currey Scholarship Fund, which will provide aid to students pursuing careers in the mental health professions. He continues to contribute $100 each month. “It’s not a huge amount, but it keeps adding up. My intent,” he said simply, “is to continue [building it] for the rest of my life.”

Douglas W. Scheffler ’85 & ’92 MS and Elizabeth Scheffler ’80, ’95, & ’97 Fabian X. Schupper Elinor Seidel ’63 Serge M. Shewchuk and Susan L. Shewchuk Valerie L. Siegel ’81 Jeremy Sigler John Sigler Sheila S. Sprague ’82 MGA and Jack C. Sprague Joan F. Stern ’68 Yuji Suzuki and Lorraine R. Suzuki Janet E. Syme Patricia J. Toregas ’84 & ’91 MGA Linda Traenkle ’81 Robert J. Trelease Albert L. Troupe ’92 Vijay K. Verma Betty C. Wang and Joseph C. Wang Katherine F. Wellington ’87 and Jamie Eastland Margaret J. Wort ’81 and John P. Wort Debra E. B. Young ’88 and Ralph C. Young ’93 Gary A. Yunker ’80 and Yong Hui Yunker Monika Zwink

PRESIDENT’S CLUB Annual Gifts ($1,000–$9,999) Jean Bielefeldt Nancy W. Brown ’92 and William Brown Marc M. Campbell Richard T. Chadwick ’95 MS David R. Chamberlin ’94 MS Hong M. Chen and Priscilla Chen Richard P. Claude Richard L. Clegg ’93 Sylvia Cordish Ruby M. Crichton ’92 and Leonard Chrichton Charles P. Custis ’84 Cynthia A. Davis Carol J. Dell’Amore Eric B. Dent Elaine Durkee Thomas B. Finan Jr. and Mary K. Finan Werner H. Fornos ’65 J. Matthew Gaglione John P. Gibbons ’98 MS and Melanie N. Gibbons Joan M. Guest ’89 MGA Anna H. Hall Barbara C. Hanson Eric D. Harbison ’89 & ’90

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Neil H. Harris ’93 Stephen P. Holowenzak Daniel Inglett Anna M. Kary ’82 Kimberly Banks Kelley Jack Kushner ’90 MGA Chin F. Kwok Walter H. Long Jr. ’83 & ’90 MS Ellis E. Meredith Bertrand H. Mongeon ’63 Michael S. Page ’93 & ’96 MGA Scott A. Paris Chan M. Park Anne L. Rahill Patricia M. Reneman ’79 & ’84 MGA Kenneth R. Smith M. Y. So ’78 & ’85 Margaret A. Soflo ’71 Robert F. Stahl Jr. Albert L. Troupe ’92 John A. Waksmunski Jr. ’79 Patricia Westlein ’88 and David Westlein ’88 & ’95 MGA May C. Wong Rachel F. Zelkind

This list represents gifts received during fiscal year 2002 (July 1, 2001–June 30, 2002).


DEAN’S CIRCLE ($500–$999)

Lawrence E. Anderson ‘89 Patrick H. Bair ’83 Edward L. Barker John Beckno ’62 Stephanie C. Bowers ’88 MGA Debora J. Brundage ’74 John W. Carman ’72 R. N. Crain ’96 & ’00 Daniel K. Cumberland ’91 & ’02 MS Kae G. Dakin ’96 MGA Roscoe E. Dann Jr. ’67 Lisa W. Davidson ’98 MA Thomas F. Davis ’83 Anna R. Doroshaw ’91 Charles A. Dukes Jr. John S. Gallamore ’81 Jackie L. Gamblin Joseph X. Garvey Jr. ’98 MGA

Mark Glagola Don M. Gonzalez ’97 Marcelite J. Harris ’89 Robert C. Harrison ’77 Joanne F. Hildebrand Charles J. Ippolito Jr. John A. Israelson ’62 Derryl E. Johnson ’85 Robert A. Johnson ’82 Vincent Jones Joseph J. Katz Kenneth Knapp ’95 Richard F. Kolasheski Matthew J. Korbeck ’75 Patricia S. Kuhrtz ’90 MGA Mark E. Lewis ’86 Evelyn C. McDonald ’93 MS Bradley T. Mettee III ’67

Clayton E. Michaels ’99 Marie A. Nestor ’97 Douglass F. Peagler ’92 Cathryn D. Perry ’97 & ’01 MS William T. Rachford Jr. ’70 & ’72 Charles L. Renninger ’89 Anthony P. Savia ’97 Koo-Sik Shin Fredrick A. Sivils ’84 John Sutton ’94 William C. Sweeney ’84 Albert Tappa ’65 Alvin L. Thompson ’73 & ’78 Scott Thorp Terry A. Walker ’92 Joyce M. Wright ’90 & ’94 MIM Steve S. Yamamoto ’61

SCHOLAR’S CIRCLE ($250–$499)

Cheryl A. Adams ’90 & ’91 Betty J. Andrews ’90 MGA Joel Aronoff ’79 & ’95 MS June A. Austin ’00 Ernest L. Baillargeon ’64 Candace C. Ballard ’90 Elsie M. Barnes ’91 Hope A. Barnes-Nelson ’93 Marshall B. Bass ’59 John P. Battle ’97 Martine R. Beachboard ’92 Randall J. Bertsch ’95 MGA Albert P. Bieri Jr. ’88 Joseph V. Bowen Jr. ’84 & ’95 MIM Aletha L. Brown ’78 Harold F. Burgess ’00 Paul A. Campbell ’78 Linda J. Carr ’91 James P. Chandler ’86 & ’87 Partick and Janet Chase Paul T. Christian ’82 Charles R. Chumley Joseph L. Cofield ’96

Rita J. Colbert ’86 Paul E. Collins ’85 John L. Connelly ’74 Mary P. Coulson ’90 Joe B. Crownover ’57 John Cussen Michael L. Dierks ’85 Brenda E. Dixon ’95 MGA Richard Dowling Charles A. Eisenhart ’73 Jerome H. Enis ’62 David L. Farley ’82 Juanita Felder ’65 Giraud V. Foster Carl J. Fritzinger ’91 MGA Robert L. Fuss ’92 MS Rupert A. Gaines ’80 Lawrence P. Gibbs ’73 James A. Golden ’97 Talanda P. Goodwin ’99 & ’01 MS Joan Gorney Darrell P. Graf ’85 Luise J. Graf

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Clarence W. Guelker ’61 Michael Hall ’97 Paula A. Harbecke Marilyn M. Hart W. J. Hart III Maureen F. Harvey ’81 Margaret H. Hedges ’79 Glendon D. Hendricks ’81 James A. Hesson ’75 Garland Hicks ’95 Thomas J. Hill ’87 Michael D. Hill ’87 Wechool Jung Ronald J. Keller ’67 Bernard Kelly ’93 & ’95 MS Amer Khouri ’00 MS John J. Kinloch Jr. ’86 Margaret P. Kinnaman ’85 & ’93 MGA Susan J. Krause ’87 Palmer V. LaGrange Jr. ’94 Jacquelyn R. Lakoduk ’83 Rick E. Langan ’81 Geraldine F. Lanier ’94


SCHOLAR’S CIRCLE ($250-$499)

Carrol G. Lewis ’89 Theodore M. Libershal ’66 Brenda F. Lukenich ’94 Constance L. MacDonald ’96 Marcia L. Magette ’82 Barbara A. Manfreda ’89 & ’95 Miriam Matteson Patrick J. McCann ’83 Pamela S. McClendon ’89 Edward W. McDonald III ’94 James R. Meckley John J. Meiburger ’96 MGA Deborah A. Moomey ’84 James P. Mooney ’88 Marian C. Moran ’86 Mariko Nakamichi Algia H. Nash Jr. ’71 Virginia M. O’Donnell ’81 Linda Olson Peter C. O’Neill ’95 MIM Cecilia B. O’Ryan ’82 Robert A. Paczynski ’90 MS Anne C. Palumbo Vijay A. Pandit Eugene G. Peters ’84 & ’91 MGA Jeffrey A. Peterson ’92

Charles C. Philipp Nancy Philipp ’88 & ’95 MS Judith V. Phillips ’92 Ernest J. Porter ’86 MGA Barbara A. Power ’88 Wilma J. Raub ’99 MS Tina E. Regan ’86 James D. Richardson ’91 John M. Richardson Richard H. Roman Jr. ’91 Mary E. Sands ’98 Ernesto Santos-DeJesus Gina M. Schmidt-Phillips ’93 Mary W. Schwanky Lisa Seischab Larry J. Silva ’88 Alan D. Silverman ’74 Donna M. Smith Norman D. Smith Jr. ’73 Angela Smookler ’94 & ’98 MGA Cindy L. Spannare ’98 Patricia K. Spencer Roberta C. Staff-Ramirez ’92 Eugene L. Stong Rosemary A. Straub

John J. Sullivan ’71 Mickey D. Sullivan ’85 Sylvia M. Syphax ’96 MS Christopher C. Tate Karen K. Teemer ’69 & ’91 Bruce E. Theden ’95 Alan N. Timmerman Donald Vanleuven ’92 Patricia D. Vestal ’85 Gregory H. Waller Sr. Peter M. Wanco ’97 & ’01 MBA Michael Washlack Jr. ’77 Brian W. Welch ’74 Larry D. Welch ’71 Sharon A. Whitt ’89 Esther Whitten Devin K. Williams ’96 Earle C. Williams Sterling Williams Paul G. Williamson ’92 Virginia N. Windmoeller ’87 Charles A. Wolf Jr. ’69 Albert J. Wright ’72 Gary E. Yates ’92 Penny L. Young ’85 Charles H. Youngblood ’72

FOUNDER’S CIRCLE ($100–$249)

Linda L. Abbott ’95 Louis N. Abreu III ’99 Diane H. Acurso ’83 Amy J. Adams ’93 James D. Adams ’96 MGA James J. Adams ’94 Robert W. Adams ’85 MGA Lionel C. Allard III ’66 & ’91 Calvin Allen ’91 Dawnitra B. Allen ’88 & ’94 Eva J. Allen Hilda Allen Nicholas H. Allen Richard T. Allen ’81

Linda L. Allen-Benton ’90 Priscilla J. Altmann ’88 MGA Mary S. Amaro ’01 Ellen L. Ambrose ’95 & ’99 MS Robert P. Anderson ’79 Peter M. Arnold ’78 Patrick M. Arthur ’90 Charles K. Asare ’85 & ’00 MS Victoria C. Ashiru ’01 Charles R. Ashurst ’80 & ’92 Lee Ashworth Alice A. Atkinson ’75 Richard L. Ault ’52

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Emilie M. Austin ’95 Richard A. Bafford ’84 Lois M. Bailey Robert F. Baird Jr. ’90 Ramaswamy Balasubramanian ’99 MS Charles Baldwin Jr. ’95 Teresa L. Baldwin ’86 Frederick V. Banse-Fay ’57 Noel C. Barbot ’71 Larine Barr ’89 MGA J. C. Barrow ’90 Raymond J. Bartlett Jr. ’97 Bryan W. Bartsch ’84 Josephine Bautista ’00 MS

This list represents gifts received during fiscal year 2002 (July 1, 2001–June 30, 2002).


Nicholas E. Bayer ’98 MGA Arthur G. Beale ’61 Helen L. Bearden ’00 Lewis R. Bearden ’79 & ’87 MGA Joseph A. Beauregard ’61 Wayne E. Becraft ’84 MGA Loree A. Bedford ’97 Robert T. Beidleman ’82 Margaret A. Beliveau ’91 Kenneth G. Bellone ’94 Donna C. Belt ’83 & ’92 MGA Margaret H. Bender ’96 & ’98 Wayne E. Bennett ’76 Daniel Bennette ’85 Dean K. Benson ’80 Harold R. Benson ’93 & ’99 MS Vincent S. Benson ’94 MGA Deward E. Benton ’60 Janet M. Berard ’86 Wilma M. Bernardo ’82 Diane K. Bicjan ’86 Darcel T. Bigelow ’90 MGA Howard Binkley ’75 David A. Bird ’86 & ’87 Inger A. Bischofberger ’79 David K. Biser ’85 Mark C. Bisnow Michael J. Bivens ’80 Mitchel L. Bivens ’91 & ’94 Michael L. Bjerknes ’97 MIM Keith W. Bland ’92 Johnny M. Bledsoe ’95 MS Roy N. Blood ’87 Olive F. Blue Richard C. Bohnet ’85 MGA Michael R. Boivin Sr. ’81 Victor L. Bonaparte ’93 MGA Barbara Bonner ’95 Kimberly D. Borden ’90 MGA Barry Borella ’59 Joyce E. Boudreaux David J. Boutcher ’97 & ’00 MS George H. Bowers Brian E. Bowman ’85 George L. Bowman Jr. ’71 Henry E. Bowman ’82 Geneva B. Bowser Laslo V. Boyd George P. Boyle ’98 Shirley J. Braddy ’97 Robert S. Bradley ’76 Robert D. Bradshaw ’86 Kevin W. Brady ’86 Betty A. Bragunier ’93 James M. Brand Jr. ’78

Barbara T. Brandt ’91 Cynthia D. Brandt ’96 MGA Larry W. Brant ’90 Gustav J. Braun Jr. ’59 Bernadette M. Brawner ’00 Robert J. Brewer ’73 Jeffrey Brickey ’95 Rachel Briley ’77 Thomas E. Broring ’97 Charles W. Brower ’84 Anthony M. Brown ’84 & ’97 Arthur J. Brown ’81 Clifton L. Brown ’98 MS Francis D. Brown ’84 Gary A. Brown ’91 Lesley R. Brown ’83 Melissa A. Brown ’90 MGA Robert E. Brown ’90 Tina D. Brown ’92 Trina M. Brown ’01 William P. Brune ’84 Willie D. Buggs Jr. ’85 Georgia J. Bupp ’90 Gregory A. Burden ’01 Sheila F. Burke ’70 Fred Burkhard David B. Burnette ’93 Robin V. Burns ’86 Olie V. Burton II ’99 John L. Busch ’87 William R. Bushee ’97 MS Gertrude C. Bushey ’82 & ’89 MGA Richard E. Butzke ’83 Paul M. Byrne ’94 Betty W. Cameron ’97 MGA Robert J. Cameron ’54 Suzanne E. Campbell ’98 David M. Canning ’99 Richard G. Carlson ’80 Philip S. Carmichael ’82 James F. Carmody ’72 Chester E. Carpenter ’81 Luis O. Carrasco ’97 & ’00 MIM Charlene L. Carson ’82 Maria L. Cascioli ’89 Kenneth E. Casey ’78 Lorraine M. Catalano ’97 Frances P. Cave ’82 & ’90 MGA Laverne C. Caviness ’80 Mary A. Cecil ’88 Cynthia L. Cenname ’91 MS LeeAnn L. Chambers ’89 MS Veronica R. Chambers ’01 Ronnie M. Chantker ’95 Donald G. Chapman ’81

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Donna L. Chase ’90 Eric F. Chatmon ’95 MS Lucia M. Chavez ’89 Earl V. Chavis Sam Chebeir ’95 John W. Cheek III ’85 Ping Chen George L. Child ’92 MGA James Y. Chin ’90 Yolanda D. Choates ’01 Eileen P. Chow ’84 James E. Christian ’99 MS Delores Q. Christie ’72 Steven Y. Chung ’92 MS Helen F. Church ’92 & ’99 MS Patrick L. Clancy ’82 Alphus R. Clark ’59 Harry A. Clark Jr. ’62 Myron E. Clark ’77 Roger G. Clark ’90 Roy C. Clark Jr. ’65 Patricia E. Clarke ’85 Joseph S. Clatchey Alferd Clegg Allen R. Coale ’78 Donna R. Coblentz ’91 James W. Cocke ’59 David J. Cohen Norman Cohen Andrew J. Cole ’98 Eulas R. Cole ’86 Herman Cole Jr. ’94 Rennie C. Coleman Jr. ’66 Lori A. Collins ’94 Robert L. Collins ’76 & ’94 Shannon G. Collins ’83 Robert A. Commerford ’87 Glenn A. Compton ’71 & ’84 MGA James G. Condello ’94 Vincent P. Conti Victor A. Cooke ’91 MS Kenneth L. Coombs Marion T. Cordova ’89 Terry C. Cox ’98 James R. Craig ’79 Louis P. Crane ’81 Gerald F. Cranford ’89 MGA Benjamin F. Crew Jr. ’74 James B. Cronin Brian Crooke ’94 Rebecca J. Cross ’92 Henry A. Crowder ’93 Kevin M. Cummings ’97 Gregory E. Cunningham ’84 Keith Cunningham ’95


Donna H. Cunninghame ’92 MGA John J. Curry Jr. ’79 James A. Cutlip ’91 & ’01 MS Jeanne-Marie M. Dabney ’94 Graca A. Da Cruz ’00 MS Mary C. D’Addario ’97 Hortense D. Dale ’84 Jino J. D’Alessandro ’56 John V. Daley ’84 & ’85 James K. Davidson ’95 & ’99 MS Darrell Davies ’00 Bradley J. Davis ’88 MS Cynthia A. Davis Orville W. Davis Jr. ’79 Oscar N. Davis ’96 MGA Roger B. Davis ’68 Barbara C. Dawson ’91 Douglas A. Day ’91 Jeffrey S. Deadrick ’00 Emilie M. Deady ’87 MGA Desmond G. Dean Jr. ’88 Mark T. Degrush ’97 Brigitte Dehart ’99 Michael T. Del Selva ’79 Jean Delancy ’98 Claggett Delauder ’96 John A. Delgado ’90 John W. Demler ’65 Richard L. Denny ’96 MS Roland C. Depew ’97 MGA Elizabeth L. Derr Gary A. Desler ’77 Lucille Dettor ’74 Ronald Dickens ’80 Charles R. Dickerson ’84 Jean S. Diggs ’99 MS & ’00 Douglas Dillard ’62 & ’63 Robert A. Dillon Jr. ’58 Roberta E. Dillow ’80 Donald H. Diloreto ’73 Ellen M. Dirlam ’90 Thomas V. DiSalvo ’99 William H. Disher ’72 Virgil L. Dixon ’91 Frank A. Dodge ’98 MGA Daniel T. Doherty ’95 MS Lawrence G. Doman ’78 Gerard J. Donahue ’96 MGA Iris C. Donovan ’91 Mary J. Dorr ’73 Lucius G. Douglas ’95 MGA Joan M. Dove ’94 MGA Kevin B. Dowd ’99 James E. Downing ’94 Sterman M. Drain ’90

Evalee H. Dumas ’84 Denise R. Duncan ’84 H. P. Dunn Jr. ’87 Betty J. Easter Diane R. Eberle ’88 Richard F. Ebersole ’97 Jacqueline W. Edelmann ’77 Debra C. Eldredge ’79 Keith W. Ellis ’83 Elaine V. Emeth ’93 Mary E. Emmel Lenore England Virginia A. Engle ’88 James W. Evans ’88 MGA Jon E. Falck ’64 John P. Falvey ’92 MS Oladipo Famuyiwa ’95 MGA John T. Farady ’59 Patrick V. Farina ’82 Rosanna M. Farley ’90 John L. Farnan ’99 Bobby C. Farrar ’76 Wanda M. Fells ’01 Frank F. Fennell Jr. ’90 Leopoldo Fernandes ’93 MGA Tina M. Ferraiolo ’00 Denise F. Ferrenz ’84 Randy D. Ferryman ’94 MGA Karen L. Fetterly ’83 Mary L. Fiedler James W. Finch ’88 Beth R. Fischer ’91 James R. Fischer ’73 Robert J. Fleury ’79 Christina A. Flocken ’87 Roderic Flowers ’97 MGA Mary A. Foley ’96 Byron Fordham ’94 & ’00 MS Rita Fordham ’85 Kathleen U. Fornatora ’90 MGA Andre A. Fournier ’98 Michelle Franc ’84 & ’94 Harold E. France ’83 Cheryl A. Francis ’96 Nancy Fraser ’83 MGA Mary B. Frazier ’99 David M. Freeman James E. Freeze ’64 Joseph T. Frey Jr. ’96 Norman P. Friedlander ’90 Asao Fukuyama Raymond V. Fundyga ’84 Troy D. Funk ’97 J. Matthew Gaglione Adriana G. Gahche ’94 MS

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Patrick M. Gallagher ’00 Thomas D. Galliher ’87 Lisa M. Gamon ’90 James S. Garbett ’77 Adalberto Garcia ’01 Richard S. Gardner ’95 Linnea J. Garlock ’92 Timothy J. Gately ’74 Carolyn J. Gatto ’81 Richard J. Gatto Herbert J. Gavin ’64 Rhonda Gebicke ’85 Roy P. Gee Jr. ’85 Janice A. Geesaman ’95 Ruth A. Geiser ’80 Eugenia Genys ’98 MGA Alem G. Ghebrezghi ’99 MS Barbara G. Gibbs ’95 & ’99 MS Ralph H. Gibson ’67 Rosemary E. Gibson ’89 & ’94 MGA William R. Gibson ’90 Keith E. Giggy ’78 Lincoln J. Gilbert ’71 Mark W. Gilding ’95 William W. Giles ’93 & ’95 MS Geraldine F. Giossi ’77 Anthony L. Girillo ’75 William D. Golden ’88 Fred J. Goldsmith ’80 Bernard J. Gonciarz Jr. ’83 Beverley J. Goodale ’86 & ’96 MGA Lucy A. Gorsky ’97 Daniel N. Goutos ’91 MS Marilyn S. Grace ’82 Barbara A. Graham ’88 Robert B. Graham ’84 & ’97 MGA Erik G. Granered ’95 MIM Clyde B. Grant ’96 David Graves Joan F. Greendeer-Lee ’96 Theodore H. Grier ’74 James W. Griffie ’91 Catherine Griffioen Mary R. Grochmal ’99 MS Shelly M. Gross-Wade ’97 Jeffrey L. Gruber ’84 Keith A. Gruenberg ’94 Lynn C. Grunza ’00 Tabatha S. Guion ’01 Timothy E. Haas ’93 MIM Steven R. Hagan ’80 Mary A. Hakes ’90 MGA Kenneth E. Hale ’77 Robert W. Haley ’91 Michael A. Hall ’99

This list represents gifts received during fiscal year 2002 (July 1, 2001–June 30, 2002).


Frank A. Halstead ’96 John Hamilton Jr. ’99 Julie E. Hamlin Paul H. Hamlin Fred A. Hand ’74 Bob L. Handley ’93 Ernest W. Hankamer Kimberly A. Hankins ’97 Christina A. Hannah Patricia E. Hannum ’77 Wanda M. Hanshaw ’78 Joanne D. Hanson ’82 Ira J. Harley ’98 MS Karen R. Harley ’95 Theresa B. Harney ’91 Richard L. Harp ’91 Sandra N. Harriman Anna C. Harris ’99 Kathleen W. Harrison ’69 Linda S. Haydon ’93 Douglas M. Hayes ’78 Burtis E. Heacock ’76 Donald P. Hearn ’73 Gerald Heeger E. C. Heffelfinger ’60 Colleen K. Heitkamp ’88 Alan S. Helfer ’78 John C. Hepburn ’80 Mary L. Hepp ’89 Peter A. Hermann Harry B. Hersey ’59 Michele A. Herzog ’89 & ’90 Walter D. Higginbotham ’91 Elmer A. Hilario ’91 Douglas E. Hill ’93 Takako Hinahara Sue A. Hoadley ’89 & ’90 Sidney G. Hochstein ’88 Randall G. Hoffman ’89 MGA Raymond J. Hoffman ’92 Francis L. Holihan ’60 Hugh T. Holland ’97 Greta E. Holland ’84 Marie E. Hollinger ’85 MGA Joan E. Hollis ’94 Edward B. Holman ’89 Laura B. Honesty ’97 MGA Roy Hooker II ’96 Jon B. Hopkins ’96 MS Joseph E. Hopkins ’62 Joseph E. Hopkins III ’72 George W. Hoppe ’72 Thomas W. Hormby ’83 Nancy House ’00 James A. Howard

Philip V. Howell Jr. ’58 Mary Ellen Hrutka En C. Hsiung ’96 MS David S. Huff ’95 MS Catherine E. Huston ’79 John B. Hutcheson ’87 Frederic D. Hyatt ’71 Allen L. Ingling ’85 Ralphine A. Ippoliti ’79 Clement I. Irons ’65 Ruth E. Irwin ’96 MGA Thomas E. Jablonski ’81 Beverly J. Jackson ’86 Carol D. Jackson ’91 & ’96 Ricky M. Jackson ’96 Sidney R. Jackson ’98 Thomas E. Jackson ’98 Thomas E. Jackson Sr. ’85 Michele E. Jacobs ’74 Paul H. Jacobson ’71 Arthur L. James Jr. ’91 MS Douglas E. James ’80 Antoinette M. Jarboe-Duley ’92 Richard F. Jeffers ’64 Mary E. Jelks ’98 MGA Phyllis A. Jenkins ’79 William J. Jenkins ’63 Anthony E. Jennings ’92 MGA Robert W. Jerome Deborah A. Johnson George I. Johnson James H. Johnson Jr. Leonard F. Johnson ’80 Clarence Jones ’99 MS Larocca T. Jones ’80 & ’87 MGA Nina N. Jones ’98 MS Ralph T. Jones Jr. ’92 Roland L. Jones ’99 MS Timothy J. Jones ’97 MS Ida Jones-Anderson ’98 Francis L. Jordan ’95 Sylvester Jordan Jr. ’86 & ’89 Daphne V. Joseph ’83 & ’97 Maurice D. Joseph ’78 John W. Jourdan III ’79 Robert Juarez ’71 Patricia A. Jubeark ’94 William J. Kaifer Jr. ’82 Ralph F. Kalmus ’77 Bruce E. Kaminski ’88 Arthur M. Kane ’87 Rosemarie Kane-Thompson Leon Kaplan ’74 George P. Kappa Jr. ’75 Ela Karczewski ’93

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Gregory J. Kaseeska ’81 Meron Kassaye ’00 Sherry L. Kaufmann ’97 Edmund Z. Kelety ’85 Patricia J. Kelley ’74 David P. Kelly ’95 MIM Walter C. Kelly Jr. ’00 Clara P. Kennedy ’76 Frank R. Kent III ’91 MGA Loyd L. Kenworthy Jr. ’66 Gisele C. Keny ’01 MS Betty J. Kenyon ’90 Ronald J. Kerrigan ’77 Nancy B. Kessler ’00 MS Barbara E. Kidd ’85 John A. Kile Jr. ’96 Barbara A. Kiley ’74 Min J. Kim ’96 Jerome Kimble ’96 Doris A. King ’99 Edward F. King Jr. ’75 Eldon W. King ’92 John L. King ’77 Otis J. King ’85 Charles S. Kingston ’60 Marc A. Kinnamon ’95 MS Karen A. Kinney ’86 Alex K. Kinyenje ’00 Robert J. Kirwan Jr. ’78 Stephan F. Klein ’75 Camille Klinker ’94 Darlene S. Klinksieck ’85 & ’92 John S. Klock Yoko Kmetz Adriane D. Knight ’93 Mark Koenigsberg ’79 Frank W. Kopanyi Jr. ’80 Robert L. Krantz ’75 John Kratzinger ’94 Bernard J. Krauss ’88 MS Lyla K. Krayenhagen ’00 John D. Krear ’99 Dean R. Kreh ’86 Mary C. Kreidler ’98 Joseph E. Krejci ’94 MS Randall G. Krentz ’72 Jerralynn A. Krinks ’91 Stuart N. Kriss ’85 Mary B. Krizek ’95 MGA Deborah R. Krolikiewicz ’86 & ’88 Gordon N. Kuehn ’78 Ralph W. Kuethe ’62 Roger L. Kuhns ’72 Thomas A. Kulenek ’96 MS Laurie Kuntz


Erytheia A. Lambert Jones ’96 MGA Etienne T. Lamoreaux ’86 Paul A. Lance III ’81 John D. Landen ’90 & ’92 Tanya E. Landry ’91 MGA Laura D. Lane ’96 John W. Lanting ’83 David A. Larson ’96 MS Jean A. Larson ’85 Barbara A. Latvanas ’95 MGA Lisa A. Lauer ’00 Maria B. Laughlin ’97 Carol Lawn ’94 Nancy Lawry ’97 Dennis R. Lawyer ’95 James M. Lazarek ’96 MGA Marc Leager ’94 David C. Leathers ’94 MGA Chaung Ja Lee John L. Lee Jr. ’70 Theresa M. Lesko ’89 Margaret O. Lester ’95 MS Theresa R. Lewandowski ’89 Jacqueline M. Lewis ’95 Robert W. Lewis Jr. ’93 & ’98 Robert R. Leyshon ’79 Kim-Bun Li ’94 Richard L. Lichvar ’79 John C. Lieber ’86 Paula L. Liebrecht ’97 Cynthia M. Lince ’83 Cathlene M. Lindberg ’00 Regina S. Litman ’82 Judith H. Livingston Robert H. Locke ’70 Constance T. Logan ’96 Frederick J. Logan Thomas L. Long ’67 Larry M. Lopez ’90 Lois A. Loser ’93 & ’00 MS Daryl L. Louder ’01 Kenneth J. Lozupone ’91 Vivian C. Lu ’84 Jutta Luckas ’84 Andrea G. Luke Jon R. Lund ’89 MS Glenda J. Lynch ’86 Sharon M. Lynn ’97 Nanette Mack Garth Mackenzie Patrick Madden George B. Madill ’74 George E. Maeby ’79 Austin W. Maguire ’86 Laurence R. Maguire ’96 MIM

Patricia A. Maguire ’87 Paul F. Malinowski ’84 Tina G. Manns ’97, ’99, & ’02 MS Claire B. Mansberg ’71 Howard Y. Manwiller Jr. ’87 Dennis A. Marglin ’00 Felicia E. Marino ’98 Richard C. Markle ’91 John T. Marsh ’89 Mary Ellen Martin Willard Martin Elaine N. Martini ’90 Richard J. Martucci ’81 Timothy F. Marx ’82 Ronald M. Mason ’00 John P. Mathews ’00 Gregory N. Matsuda ’84 Michael Maurer James A. Maybin ’86 & ’87 Gregory V. Maydan ’97 MS Charles P. McBride ’98 MGA Matthew D. McBride ’88 & ’90 Charles J. McCabe ’95 Thomas S. McCall ’80 Claire McCardell ’94 Beatrice M. McCarthy ’84 & ’90 MGA Felicia D. McCauley ’01 Sharon McClendon ’00 Brooks McClure ’77 Patrick O. McConaghy ’79 Richard E. McConnell ’79 Brian J. McCreesh ’66 Christine H. McCully ’89 Barry J. McDevitt ’93 Keiko I. McDonald Kevin D. McGee ’89 Charles McGeever Joan S. McKee ’88 Patrick McKinnon ’95 MS Emma J. McNamara ’79 Brian R. McNeill ’90 Michael M. McParland ’94 Lorna D. Meier ’93 Roy L. Mellon ’88 & ’96 Theresa M. Melton ’98 MGA William H. Menges ’71 Eileen S. Menton ’90 MGA William C. Mercer ’72 Richard P. Merrill Brent G. Merson ’85 Gregg B. Messel ’98 Kittie L. Messman ’98 Burnell W. Meyer ’85 Richard Mezo Kevin Michel

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William Middleton Jr. ’85 Joanna S. Mika ’98 Emil C. Milacek Jr. ’72 Eric P. Milhous ’85 & ’97 MIM George H. Miller ’78 Patricia A. Miller ’90 Robert E. Miranda ’91 Javier Miyares Mark C. Monahan Betty M. Montgomery ’86 Theodore N. Montgomery ’71 Sherry Moore ’95 & ’97 George A. Moquin Andrea J. Moreno-Espada ’73 Richard K. Mozier ’88 James M. Mudd ’91 Elizabeth Mulherrin Frances A. Mulligan Charles H. Mullins ’81 Donald D. Munro ’91 MGA Rebecca Murillo ’90 Elizabeth B. Murphy ’98 Bruce A. Murray ’92 Herbert L. Murray Jr. ’88 Sally H. Myers ’78 John R. Myers ’87 Hisae Nakajima Don L. Nance ’90 Cornelius E. Nanton ’98 Patricia A. Nash ’96 Robert B. Nathan ’92 MS Margaret L. Neall ’91 Daniel P. Neau ’86 & ’87 Richard D. Neidig Ravellan H. Neitz ’62 Nancy A. Nelson ’82 Jeffrey D. Newbern Marcelle W. Newsome ’96 MS Larry Newton ’80 Frank C. Niccoll III ’84 Louisa G. Nichols ’96 MGA Robert E. Nisbet ’96 MS Paula M. Noll ’80 & ’93 MGA Louis Norman ’98 Parker W. Northrup Jr. ’75 Patricia H. Obert ’83 Joseph B. O’Carroll ’83 J. Joseph O’Connor ’87 Thomas J. O’Donnel Jr. ’65 Jim E. Oliver ’84 Lloyd Oliver ’59 Paul Oliver ’60 Thomas F. O’Loughlin ’00 Jerome H. Ongies ’63 Augustine C. Ormrod ’71

This list represents gifts received during fiscal year 2002 (July 1, 2001–June 30, 2002).


NEW VP FOR ADVANCEMENT BRINGING WEALTH— AND WEALTH OF EXPERIENCE—TO UMUC by Andrea Martino

It doesn’t take long to realize that Sandy Harriman, UMUC’s new vice president for Advancement, knows everybody! Behind that quiet demeanor and bashful smile is an apparently endless source of contacts. There aren’t enough Rolodexes and PDAs to track the people she knows from her native Atlanta, Georgia, north to Howard, Montgomery, and Baltimore counties in Maryland, and across the country. Quiet though she may seem, in barely three years at the university, Harriman has been personally responsible for the largest donation in UMUC’s history—a gift of $1.6 million of ancient Chinese art that led to the establishment of UMUC’s Art of China collection. (Working with the donors, she later obtained another $200,000 of contributions to the collection.) “She is very persistent,” said I-Ling Chow, the lead donor who envisioned the establishment of the Art of China collection. Chow contributed art and real property valued at more than $800,000 and credited Harriman for closing the deal. “I met Sandy when she worked at another Maryland college,” Chow said, “and when that college did not contact me after Sandy moved on to UMUC, she waited a respectable two months and contacted me again. That is when I made my first contribution to UMUC. I appreciate very much that she is so ethical. That is important to me and very key to the Chinese culture.” The university’s popular Better Opportunities Through Online Education program has also benefited from Harriman’s expertise, securing an additional $450,000 in corporate funding from Morgan Stanley Dean Witter. And, not surprisingly, UMUC now enjoys the closest relationship ever with advancement professionals at the University System of Maryland (USM) headquarters. “I am delighted with Sandy’s promotion to vice president,” said John Martin, vice chancellor for advancement at USM. “She is an outstanding development professional, combining knowledge and expertise with personal qualities of warmth and thoughtfulness, which are all required for success in her field.” Given the wealth of experience Harriman brings to UMUC—she served at both Howard and Montgomery colleges, as well as in the federal government, at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services—success is virtually guaranteed here as well. And for that, the entire university can be thankful.

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Gloria Orr Joan N. Ostheimer ’67 Robert J. Ouellette ’88 & ’92 Marcia L. Owens-Fowler ’92 Linda L. Owings ’97 Oluwaseun T. Oyemade ’99 Joe E. Pace ’60 Eleanor M. Packard ’87 Julie J. Paczynski Philip J. Padgett ’70 & ’96 MGA Jean Louis Pajot ’80 Peggy A. Palmer ’97 Clarence S. Parker ’62 Dorothy B. Parker ’95 & ’99 MS Hilary N. Parkinson ’82 Alethea E. Patten ’93 & ’98 MGA Carolyn M. Patterson ’99 MS Wesley E. Paulson ’85 & ’92 MGA Charles D. Payne ’61 John T. Payne Jr. ’73 Joseph S. Payne ’55 Kathryn S. Pearson ’95 MGA Donald L. Peck ’66 Damian M. Peloghitis ’89 & ’90 Patricia A. Pender ’89 MGA Wayne L. Peppers ’83 Douglas Perkins ’87 Edward J. Perkins ’67 J. V. Peterson ’97 MGA Richard C. Peterson ’95 MS Robert D. Peterson ’96 MS Joseph R. Petrisko ’86 George W. Pfeiffer ’74 Marilyn S. Phelps ’92 Cheryl R. Phillips ’95 MGA Joseph T. Phillips ’77 & ’88 MGA William M. Phipps ’82 Leonard J. Pick II ’89 William E. Pierce Jr. ’79 & ’84 Thomas A. Pietrcollo ’95 MS Tambrey A. Pilkerton ’95 Sheila T. Pilling ’93 Gerald L. Pizer ’91 Susanne R. Plant ’99 MS Patricia A. Plunkert ’76 Thomas M. Podrasky ’78 Vicki L. Poore ’99 Hallie S. Porter ’98 Donald Poudrier ’95 Scott J. Powell ’00 Kathleen A. Power ’79 Thomas E. Powers ’80 Laura A. Preston ’93 Jeanette B. Prevots ’01 Lavaun P. Proctor ’93


Peter Y. Pu ’80 Jeff D. Pullen ’92 & ’96 MGA Debra A. Pumphrey ’81 Hiroko C. Quackenbush Eileen J. Quinn ’88 James G. Radcliffe ’67 Edward Radovich ’77 Samuel Ramos ’01 Sherri R. Ramsay ’90 Barbara L. Ransom Richard D. Ransom ’77 Richard N. Reed II ’93 Susan L. Reed ’94 Diane M. Reitz ’86 & ’90 Steven P. Rempe ’86 Herbert E. Reynolds ’70 Tamara L. Rich ’00 Gary W. Richardson ’93 Roger W. Rick ’79 Frank W. Riddle ’96 Milton Rifkin ’69 Anthony N. Riggs ’74 Dale A. Rill ’00 Vanessa M. Rini ’91 Marju Rink-Abel ’90 MS Donald M. Ritscher ’60 Brian J. Roach ’97 MS Keith Roberts ’99 Julie A. Robertson ’01 Marion F. Robinson Jr. ’85 Aladino Robles ’98 MS Sherron A. Rockelli ’89 Jose Rodriguez ’95 Raymond J. Roeder ’95 Charles R. Rogers ’87 MGA Duane G. Roling ’72 J. D. Rolle Welton T. Roper ’87 James C. Rosapepe Victor S. Rosenblum ’85 Cynthia Rosenwald Peter B. Rosenwald David J. Ross ’73 Keith E. Ross ’00 Robert M. Ross ’71 Carol M. Rowe ’90 Howard L. Ruddell ’96 MGA Deborah A. Rudy ’89 Rand P. Ruggieri ’95 MIM Robert P. Russell ’81 Therese G. Ryan ’78 Thomas J. Ryan Jr. ’62 William E. Ryan ’84 Edwyn M. Saiki Jeffrey L. Salisbury ’79

John A. Sanda ’65 John R. Sander ’95 James F. Sanders Jr. ’00 MS James C. Santos ’88 & ’90 Isaac C. Sanvee ’97 MS Preston M. Sappington Jr. ’84 Ronald B. Sappington ’89 Patricia P. Savory ’84 Julie A. Scanlon ’91 & ’94 Joseph P. Schaeffer ’96 John D. Schamp ’73 Edward J. Schechter ’71 Irene M. Schiller ’67 Norman D. Schleicher ’96 MGA Richard M. Schneible ’96 Holle E. Schneider Ricks ’83 Karen Schnell Elaine H. Schrader ’68 Albert L. Schreiber ’98 MS Chad D. Schrock ’98 Carmen W. Schumacher ’86 Dorothy M. Schummer ’87 Claudine Schweber Frederick X. Schwenker ’80 Daniel M. Scofield ’84 James M. Scoggins ’98 Gregory J. Scott ’98 MGA Bonita Scungio ’79 Samuel R. Seccurro Lynn C. Selmser ’84 G. L. Selmyhr ’62 Christine S. Senese ’78 Henry P. Seufert ’70 Terry J. Sewell ’97 Betty P. Sharper Vivian Shayne Michael H. Shipley ’85 Obey L. Shorter ’87 & ’88 Steven C. Shriver ’80, ’88, & ’90 Martin E. Siemen ’89 Charles E. Silbaugh ’88 Alan B. Sinclair ’77 Robert Sipes ’91 & ’96 Caroline Skinner Nancy Slomowitz ’98 Clayton C. Smith Jr. ’93 & ’94 DeWitt C. Smith Jr. ’63 Ernest R. Smith Jr. ’75 Ernest W. Smith ’65 Joyce C. Smith ’71 Lawrence A. Smith ’85 & ’91 Richard E. Smith II ’86 Phyllis L. Smock Jeffry S. Snyder ’98 MS Francis E. Soloducha ’94 MS

40

ACHIEVER

Orrett A. Sommerville ’91 & ’93 Ralph S. Soussan ’85 Steven R. South ’89 Catherine M. Speakman ’80 Gregory J. Spickler ’84 Judy F. Spillman ’99 Mary A. Spilman ’97 MIM Kevin M. Sprague ’96 Robert E. Sprecher ’95 Gary M. Spurrier ’87 Donna Stadtmueller Robert F. Stahl Jr. ’92 MGA Victor A. Stamp ’81 William R. Steele ’79 Joann D. Stengel ’92 John M. Stephens ’92 Patricia A. Stewart ’95 Kathleen C. Stine ’88 Sandra M. Stocks ’91 Penny S. Stoker ’82 Darrin M. Stolba ’93 MS Theodore E. Stone Marion E. Strange ’64 Claudia M. Street ’83 Silvija A. Strikis ’85 Maria T. Strong ’00 MS Forrest E. Studebaker ’70 John R. Sullivan ’90 Martha L. Summers ’85 Sheldon C. Sutton ’72 John C. Sweeting ’97 Mary E. Switzer ’85 Janice M. Swope ’95 Ilsia A. Szczepanski ’95 John Tabb ’00 William Talaber Jr. ’79 Patricia A. Tanner ’00 Ricky D. Tart ’95 Catherine S. Taylor ’91 MS Lillie B. Taylor Walter L. Taylor ’84 Curtis W. Teague ’96 Benjamin C. Terry ’98 Evelyn G. Terry Frank W. Thibodeau ’61 Terrence L. Thiel ’80 Alice M. Thomas Ernest C. Thomas ’96 MGA Wanda M. Thomas ’96 William Thomas Jr. ’65 Jennifer C. Thompson Lewis H. Thompson ’82 George Thomson III ’84 William B. Tibbits ’78 Stephanie A. Tierno ’93

This list represents gifts received during fiscal year 2002 (July 1, 2001–June 30, 2002).


Brenda E. Tillman ’00 John H. Tillman Sr. ’82 & ’90 Ruthann Timmer ’91 Elaine L. Tingle ’86 Bill R. Tipton ’86 Dolores W. Tokasz ’94 JoAnn T. Tolson ’85 & ’87 Joseph L. Topel ’01 MS Patrick A. Toulme ’99 MS Neal C. Townsen ’86 & ’99 Linda Traenkle ’81 Enrique E. Trevino III ’00 Nancy J. Trick ’78 Lance S. Trossevin ’77 Margaret L. Truitte ’00 William J. Trunkes ’69 Brenda J. Tucker ’94 Cherry A. Turner ’92 Sandra Turner ’81 Wanet B. Tyson ’97 & ’99 MS Robert Ullrich ’98 James R. Vaillencourt Jr. ’91 Ronald E. Valasek ’70 Naudlee Valcin ’00 William C. Van Liew III ’87 Jean M. Van Tassell ’83 John K. Vance ’79 Francisco Velez ’00 Vijay Verma Michael A. Vincent ’81 Frances A. Volel-Stech ’89 Luann H. Vondracek ’88 Robert G. Waddell ’61 Linda S. Wadlin ’86 Larry E. Wagner Jr. ’89 & ’92 Aubrey B. Walcott ’00 MS Jay D. Walker ’93, ’95, & ’97 Johnathan M. Walker ’90 Mary A. Walters ’92 Rebecca B. Walzak ’94 MGA Yvette M. Ware ’99 Joyce M. Warfield ’96 Debra L. Waterson ’95 Thomas S. Watters ’79 Michael K. Webb ’00 MS William E. Weber ’62 Robert J. Weesner II ’91 MGA Daniel A. Wegele ’86 & ’90 Bernard A. Wejzgrowicz Jr. ’90 Margot M. Wenko ’88 & ’96 MGA Diane M. West ’98 Louis F. West ’83 & ’91 John M. Weston Jr. ’66 Thomas P. Wetzel ’88, ’92, & ’93

Harold D. Whallon ’58 James White ’82 Kenneth H. White Jr. ’65 Larry White ’94 & ’99 MS Leslie H. Whitten Vernon E. Wickman ’58 Ethelyn B. Wiggins ’71 Thomas J. Wiles ’81 Doyle Wiley ’89 & ’94 Scott A. Wiley ’87 Jeremy D. Wilkinson ’00 Cecile A. Williams ’76 Diane B. Williams ’77 Elizabeth H. Williams ’83 Harold Williams Harold P. Williams ’82 Heather J. Williams ’00 Lewis F. Williams ’88 Raymond J. Williams ’57 William G. Willis ’73 Aleta R. Wilson ’94 & ’96 MS Clay Wilson III ’79 & ’95 MS Damon A. Wilson ’99 Jeffrey A. Wilson ’97 MS Malcolm D. Wilson ’95 Terry M. Wilson ’91 Kevin F. Winkeler ’88 Eugene Winston ’76 Robert E. Witmer ’85 Russel B. Wolfe ’87 Cathy R. Wood ’95 MGA Donald E. Wood ’61 James P. Woodard ’92 & ’97 MS Eloise M. Woods ’79 William H. Woolf ’69 Arabella M. Wright ’90 & ’98 MGA Mary A. Wright ’92 William R. Wright ’80 Elaine Wurzel Paul J. Yahn ’73 Nancy L. Yeroshefsky ’96 MGA William A. Yoder ’73 Debra E. Young ’88 MGA Ralph C. Young ’93 Robert W. Zachidny ’71 Roxanne W. Zaghab Mary Zago ’93 Janet Zimmer Chester A. Zue ’91 & ’94 Donna E. Zukauskas ’00

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OTHER DONORS Jomar Abad-Santos ’98 & ’00 Jamillah B. Abdul-Baaqiy ’98 Henry T. Abell ’72 Joyce A. Abelquist ’93 Edward Abraham ’00 Peter E. Abresch Jr. ’96 Diane L. Achenbach ’90 Carol A. Achstetter ’95 William A. Acree ’81 Ernest W. Adam ’85 Belinda Adams Coralie A. Adams ’91 Deborah K. Adams ’96 MS Donald R. Adams ’81 Joy Adams ’97 Kate C. Adams ’95 Kenneth E. Adams ’93 Martha T. Adams ’84 Neil C. Adams ’85 & ’91 MS Vicki L. Adams ’97 Catherine M. Adamson ’83 Gregory W. Adank ’92 Waribo N. Adasi ’87 Mark Addae ’98 Linda D. Addison ’97 Pius A. Adebowale ’91 & ’96 MGA Ramie L. Ahlstrom ’00 William G. Akers ’91 Abimbola Y. Alade ’01 Solomon Aladejana ’00 & ’01 MS Joseph Albanesi ’90 Michelle M. Albert ’95 Philip K. Albert Sr. ’75 Steven J. Albertini ’93 MS William F. Alcarese ’95 Joycenette Alcorn ’01 MS Joy E. Aldred ’89 Catherine L. Aldrich ’00 Johnnie R. Aldrich ’90 Diane T. Aldridge ’98 Rory L. Aldridge ’94 & ’97 Aureo Alejandro Jr. ’90 Patricia D. Aleman ’98 MS ’01 Margot A. Alert ’92 Deborah L. Alexander ’97 Dino A. Alexander ’93 & ’99 Ivan B. Alexander ’98 MS Joyce N. Alexander ’94 Larry C. Alexander ’91 Marcella E. Alexander ’81 Michael L. Alexander ’96


Richard M. Alexander ’95 MGA Rosalind S. Alexander ’96 Teresa W. Alexander ’98 Jerry R. Alford Jr. ’91 Efren B. Allas ’90 Carletta D. Allen ’92 Casandra I. Allen ’98 Dick W. Allen ’82 Freddie Allen ’00 MS Jacqueline D. Allen ’93 Jacqueline M. Allen ’99 MS Kevin K. Allen ’90 Kimberly C. Allen ’88 Lester E. Allen ’80 Nadine A. Allen ’94 Richard L. Allen ’90 Tobitha L. Allen ’97 MGA Robert W. Allgood Jr. ’97 Mary T. Allmond ’98 John K. Almarez ’80 Gisele L. Almeida ’91 Betsy A. Alperin Richard M. Alpher ’68 James E. Alston ’01 Andrea D. Alt ’00 Martha E. Altamar ’80 & ’84 Robert A. Altiero ’97 & ’00 MS Wanda S. Altman ’88 & ’91 Gustavo M. Alvarado ’83 Jeannie L. Alvarado ’96 Patricia D. Amati ’01 MS Anna M. Amato ’91 David J. Ambrose ’00 MS Peter L. Ambrose ’91 Arthur E. Ames ’00 Aimee L. Anderson ’97 Ella Mae Anderson ’81 Jodie A. Anderson ’94 & ’00 Kelley B. Anderson ’00 & ’02 MS Marion M. Anderson ’97 Martha C. Anderson ’87 MGA Pamela G. Anderson ’98 Troy D. Anderson ’97 William A. Andersen III ’96 Paul M. Andolsek ’88 MGA Bruce R. Andrews ’99 Melinda M. Andrews ’92 & ’94 Willard T. Andrews ’77 Vito Andrisani ’99 Brian J. Andrukat ’96 MS Shirley M. Andrus ’91 Gidget A. Angerillo ’90 Gloria A. Anthony ’96 MS Neil E. Antin ’89 Teresa J. Antonioli ’99

Shirley M. Appelt ’78 Carolyn C. Ardis ’86 Kamal N. Argawal ’97 MS S. O. Aribiah ’00 MS Gilad M. Arie ’92 Hassan K. Arif ’97 Patricia N. Armiger ’88 David L. Armijo ’87 Lisa A. Armstead ’99 Craig M. Armstrong ’97 Hugh Armstrong Benjamin T. Arnold ’96 Frederick Arnold Sr. ’80 Judy C. Arnold ’95 MGA Martin L. Arnold ’93 Paulette M. Arnold ’91 William J. Arnold II ’88 & ’92 Wanda J. Armwood ’98 Joseph T. Arrington ’85 & ’97 Joseph P. Arsenault ’92 Michelle Arteaga Jennifer A. Arthur ’00 & ’01 Arnold A. Asp ’64 Leonid Assur ’96 Patricia A. Astill ’89 MS Jorge M. Astorga ’98 Roslyn E. Astrop ’92 Dogbo B. Atchimon ’99 & ’02 MIM Cyneatria Atchison ’87 Sandra G. Atkins ’80 Kimberly J. Atkins ’96 John M. Atkinson ’00 Sinclair E. Atkinson ’90 & ’92 Emmanuel E. Atsalinos ’92 Paula Atwood ’85 Walter G. Atyeo ’90 Michael R. Aubin ’92 Jonathan P. Aultman ’00 Elmer L. Aulton ’83 Ayorkor S. Austin ’01 Sharon E. Austin-Hassan ’97 MGA Tamberly D. Averett ’88 Kecia D. Avery ’98 Karen M. Aycox ’90 & ’94 Bettina A. Ayers ’01 John Bablitch ’81 Patricio E. Baca ’80 Georgette D. Bachinsky ’88 Paul E. Backs ’92 MGA Dana R. Baden ’00 Joyce W. Baden ’87 MGA Eleanor L. Bader ’00 Donald K. Baer ’97 Nolan S. Bagadiong ’96 MS Phyllis L. Bagdonas ’01

42

ACHIEVER

Bernadine A. Bailey ’91 James A. Bailey ’90 Janet D. Bailey ’95 Otto C. Bailey ’64 Pamela K. Bailey ’79 Paul J. Bailey ’98 Audrey P. Baker ’82 MGA George R. Baker ’67 Joyce E. Baker ’94 Scott S. Baker ’96 Thomas H. Baker Jr. ’88 Urica A. Baker ’97 Ilona F. Bako ’82 Roger H. Balaban ’77 Donna J. Baldasari ’84 Mark J. Baldino ’93 Joseph Baldo ’82 James J. Baldrighi ’90 MGA Lynne E. Baldrighi ’90 MS Deborah H. Baldwin ’90 & ’91 Ena I. Baldwin ’83 Letetia Baldwin ’00 Wesley D. Baldwin ’96 Cynthia Banks ’94 & ’95 Diane Banks ’95 Jack D. Banks Jr. ’94 Robert I. Banks ’71 Sheryl E. Banks ’00 Tonya Banks ’01 MS Ronald M. Banta ’65 William C. Banze ’77 Peter M. Barbernitz Jr. ’84 Joe Barbosa ’97 Linda A. Barbour ’85 Michelle J. Bardell ’94 Harold F. Bare ’60 William A. Barfield ’99 MS Marie-luise Barila ’98 Christine A. Barker ’00 Conway Barker ’92 John P. Barker ’60 Robert R. Barker ’79 Edgar J. Barnes ’90 Johnny L. Barnes ’90 Gabriele Barnett ’00 James L. Barnett ’59 William E. Barnett ’61 Robert W. Barnhouse ’81 Carol L. Barranger ’85 John A. Barrella Jr. ’86 Brian H. Barrett ’94 Steven E. Barrett ’85 & ’02 MS Gordon D. Barrie ’84 Sean A. Barron ’94 & ’99 Yvette M. Barrowes ’92

This list represents gifts received during fiscal year 2002 (July 1, 2001–June 30, 2002).


Robert O. Barry ’94 Margaret C. Barth ’93 Teresa M. Barth ’85 Heesoon Bartlett ’96 Barbara A. Barun ’99 Thomas S. Basham ’73 Melanie Bassett ’01 William G. Bastedo ’52 Jean M. Bateman ’81 Angela C. Bates ’92 & ’00 MS Rebecca J. Batta ’99 Janis D. Battle ’77 Hermina E. Baumann ’80 John L. Baumgartner ’85 Yvette V. Baylor ’99 Covert J. Beach ’92 Linda E. Beam ’92 Johnny L. Beard ’92 Sarah E. Beasley ’00 Kirk E. Beatley ’98 Robert Beaton ’94 Nancy J. Beauchamp ’88 David P. Beaupre ’95 MS Donald P. Beck ’80 Joann L. Beck ’86 Anna I. Becker ’79 Tanya M. Beckett ’91 Pamela J. Beckham ’97 Gerald L. Beckman ’72 David E. Bedard ’99 Philip A. Bedard ’98 Carlos A. Bedford ’01 James H. Beecher ’80 Julie A. Beel ’94 Carlo A. Belella ’76 Margaret A. Belisle ’99 Lillian B. Bell ’70 Richard W. Bell ’78 Toni Lee Bell ’83 Richard J. Bellemare ’81 James W. Beller ’73 Nancy S. Belmont ’96 MGA Aleli R. Belonia ’99 MS Jaime L. Benavides ’00 Deogracias S. Bencio ’90 Carolyn A. Bender ’76 Meredith Bene ’97 Denise J. Benedik ’98 Asta B. Benjamin ’86 Cleopatra D. Benjamin ’00 Diane Benjamin ’94 MS Eddie V. Benjamin ’91 Juancara Bennett ’00 MS Cheryll Bent ’01 James E. Benton ’82

Judith L. Bentz ’91 Wendy A. Berdeguez ’99 Alfred G. Berger ’80 Paula J. Berghauser ’93 Edward P. Bergin ’98 Stephen H. Bergman ’94 MS Jeffrey A. Bergsten ’98 Curtis L. Berkel ’94 Nana B. Berkoh-Nti ’86 & ’91 MGA David E. Berlad ’70 Frank M. Bernick ’65 Toba F. Bernstein ’90 Arthur J. Berry ’94 James B. Berry III ’91 Lawrence D. Bershtein ’96 & ’97 MS Tereston F. Bertrand Sr. ’97 Annette Besignano ’95 Tamra L. Bessette ’94 & ’95 Brenda M. Bethea ’00 Cynthia J. Bethea ’94 Thomas D. Bethem ’83 & ’89 MS Nancy A. Betress ’94 Clarissa J. Beyer ’91 Judith T. Beyer ’84 Dong-yan Bian ’97 Martha L. Bianchi ’87 Howard R. Biddle ’88 & ’94 Timothy X. Biel ’95 Barbara J. Bielaski ’97 Paul J. Bielski Jr. ’75 Marta S. Bierria ’99 & ’00 Donald J. Bierschbach ’93 & ’94 Dwight E. Bigelow Jr. ’65 Alfred R. Biggs ’00 L. M. Biggs ’96 William W. Biggs ’87 Scott B. Billenstein ’99 Becky S. Binder ’00 Carletta Bingham ’01 Stephanie S. Bingham ’90 James D. Binsted ’00 Victoria L. Birckbichler ’99 Christa F. Birdine ’00 Brenda L. Birk ’90 Anne L. Birmingham ’01 James F. Bisher ’00 MIM Margaret E. Bisher ’85 Joanne F. Bishins ’79 Henry C. Bishop ’72 Louis E. Bishop ’97 Michael A. Bishop ’99 Robert B. Bisselle ’97 MS William R. Bitman ’94 MGA Shirley F. Bivens ’95 & ’98 MS Thomas C. Bizjak ’99

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Terra S. Bjorling ’01 Ethel R. Black ’81 George K. Blackwell ’85 & ’86 Patricia J. Blackwell ’97 & ’02 MS Almore M. Blair ’80 Cynthia L. Blair ’97 Michael K. Blair ’96 MIM Gary W. Blake ’01 James W. Blake ’84 Michelle A. Blake ’96 Thomas W. Blakelock ’79 Kathryn T. Blakney ’90 Edward W. Blanchard ’73 Hannelore Blanchard Cynthia M. Bland ’95 MS Judith R. Blankenship ’92 & ’95 Eddie L. Blanton ’86 Catherine Blatnik ’94 Charles M. Blatt Jr. ’94 Robert A. Blaydes ’00 Cheryl A. Bleakley ’84 Philip D. Bledsoe ’96 Alice J. Blessley ’92 MS Rebekah Blevins ’87 & ’90 James Q. Blimmel ’71 Martin I. Block ’92 Steffen Bloetner ’01 Gordon F. Blood ’62 Debra A. Bloom ’91 & ’92 Michael L. Bloom ’01 MS David B. Blount ’00 Judy G. Blumenthal ’84 Robert B. Boakai ’96 Paul J. Boatman ’85 Melva M. Boatright ’90 Kathleen M. Bobbitt ’87 Faye V. Bobb-Semple ’93 Jeffery Bobrosky ’94 Richard A. Bodkin ’75 Evelyn Boeckler ’99 MS William C. Boehm ’67 John W. Boehne ’94 Tyrra Z. Bohannon ’95 Mary A. Bohn ’91 & ’94 Denise M. Bolda ’89 & ’99 Jennifer L. Boles ’00 Lynda E. Bolt ’91 Edward J. Bombardier ’94 Roger K. Bond ’62 Ebenezer Bondzie ’00 Donna P. Bonner ’99 Terry A. Bonnevier ’95 Lisa A. Bontempo ’97 Judith A. Bonucci ’91 Kimberly A. Boone ’99


Linda C. Boor ’85 Claudia Booth ’99 Jacqueline L. Borda ’98 Anthony F. Bordogna Jr. ’81 Noreen A. Borkenhagen ’80 Joseph M. Borkowski ’92 Darlene L. Borza ’96 & ’98 John P. Boska ’95 Maceo Boston Jr. ’88 Andrew L. Bostwick ’00 Day M. Boswell ’90 & ’92 Joann L. Boswell ’80 & ’87 Michael J. Botelho ’85 Frances B. Bottoms ’80 Gary R. Boue ’98 Claudette Bouldin ’90 Razina B. Boursiquot ’95 Sheryl L. Bowanko ’94 MS Eugene Bowden ’80 Beverly J. Bowen ’93 MS James W. Bowen II ’93 MGA Linda G. Bowen ’81 Joseph Bowers ’98 Agnes C. Bowersox ’80 Gerald E. Bowie ’79 Lois A. Bowie-Marsh ’99 Cynthia A. Bowling ’96 Suzanne K. Bowman ’84 Douglas W. Bowser ’97 Yolanda R. Boyd ’00 Sharon T. Boyle ’79 Karen I. Boyles ’99 Celestine A. Brabble-Brown ’97 MGA Mary B. Bradburn ’79 Cherryl Bradley ’01 Patricia J. Bradshaw ’97 MIM Mark C. Brady ’94 MGA Peter Brady ’95 Gerard C. Bragg ’00 Abdel K. Brahimi ’95 MS Shaun I. Brahmsteadt ’95 Julia Brailovsky ’00 Marius G. Brambilla Jr. ’57 Sandra T. Bramblett ’93 Larry Brammer ’85 Robert N. Branan ’81 Ira J. Brand ’95 Megan H. Brand ’85 Rebecca E. Brandon ’97 Mark Branham ’01 Lisa F. Branick ’95 MGA Anthony Brannum ’00 Denise A. Branson ’00 Jeneen Brantley ’99 Phyllis Brantley ’94

Vernetta M. Brantley ’00 Phillip A. Branton ’00 Cleveland B. Braswell Sr. ’98 Shellanne E. Brathwaite ’99 Michael L. Bratton ’98 Mark N. Braune ’91 Wayne E. Braunstein ’76 Debra K. Breaux ’98 Leonard W. Breitman ’99 Peter Breloff Helen C. Brennan ’00 William A. Brenner ’94 MGA William E. Brenner ’98 Francis J. Breslin ’73 Mary J. Breslin ’98 MGA Michael C. Brett ’86 George W. Brew ’86 Shelesa A. Brew Paul Brewer ’98 Susan L. Brewer ’90 & ’91 Sharon S. Brewster ’00 Vanetta L. Brice ’97 Colleen R. Bridegum ’85 & ’92 MGA Sugar R. Bridges ’00 Elsie A. Brierly ’90 Lamont A. Briggs ’00 Mark W. Briggs ’85 Ronald A. Briggs ’96 Jeanette Brightman ’99 Karen A. Brinkley ’98 Linda M. Brinkman ’92 Jeffery A. Brinkmeier ’92 Herbert W. Briscoe ’88 Iris C. Briscoe ’95 Edgar R. Britt ’67 Jacob A. Brittingham ’01 Jeffrey Broadhead ’93 & ’94 Wanda L. Broadus ’91 Rosemary M. Brock ’96 Warner L. Brockson ’75 Maureen N. Brodar ’91 Jacqueline C. Brogden ’96 John F. Bromhal ’87 Brenda L. Brooks ’82 & ’84 Bruce W. Brooks ’82 & ’00 MS Cynthia G. Brooks ’97 Deena P. Brooks ’99 Gale A. Brooks ’97 Gary E. Brooks ’98 Gloria A. Brooks ’97 MGA Kathryn A. Brooks ’97 Kittonia N. Brooks ’01 Laruth Brooks ’96 Michael L. Brooks ’00 Richard C. Brosnahan ’93

44

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C. Michael Brotton Sr. ’63 Roger G. Brow ’98 MS Andrea J. Brown ’00 Charles W. Brown ’00 Cheryl A. Brown ’00 & ’01 Cheryl E. Brown ’99 MS Christopher N. Brown ’96 Colette E. Brown ’96 Connie S. Brown Delbert R. Brown ’87 & ’95 Dimitri M. Brown ’98 Dwayne E. Brown ’86 Glenn M. Brown Jr. ’82 Gloria J. Brown ’91 Elmer O. Brown ’83 Evangeline Brown ’01 Janice Brown ’01 Jeffrey A. Brown ’91 Jennifer M. Brown ’72 Jerald D. Brown ’73 John W. Brown ’73 Kenneth W. Brown ’99 Nanette I. Brown ’80 Paul H. Brown ’98 Philip J. Brown ’01 Ronnie M. Brown Russell Brown ’93 Sheila A. Brown ’00 Sherry M. Brown ’86 Stephen R. Brown ’86 Wayne G. Brown ’77 Willie L. Brown ’97 & ’99 MS Lisa J. Brownawell ’01 Donald D. Brownell ’00 Christin G. Browning ’93 Jeanne L. Browning ’96 MGA Donald Brownlee ’94 April L. Brubach ’01 Agnes J. Brubaker ’76 Sally S. Bruce ’93 & ’01 MS Cynthia A. Brudner ’96 Richard A. Bruha ’72 Carol J. Brumback ’97 MS Gary P. Bruner ’92 MS Richard J. Bruns ’91 Sidney R. Bruton ’00 Debra A. Bryan ’85 Betty J. Bryant ’80 Mary L. Bryant ’80 Glenard L. Buchanan ’73 John F. Buchanan ’70 Terri L. Buchanan ’99 Roger C. Buchholz ’88 & ’92 David B. Buckley ’87 Kathleen A. Buckley ’92

This list represents gifts received during fiscal year 2002 (July 1, 2001–June 30, 2002).


Richard A. Buckshaw ’94 Sylvia M. Budd ’92 Miguel S. Buddle ’93 Wallace P. Buerschinger ’61 Sandra A. Buffalano ’82 & ’98 MS Earl M. Buffaloe ’97 James Bufkin ’99 Elizabeth N. Bulkowski ’92 Sydney L. Bunbury ’97 Naomi C. Bundy ’01 Wendell A. Bunyan ’94 MGA Peter J. Buote ’82 James J. Buratti ’79 Michele R. Burch ’98 MS Cheryl M. Burg ’88 & ’99 MS Thomas E. Burgee ’87 Allen L. Burgenson ’00 MS Jerri M. Burgess ’81 Saundra L. Burgess ’99 & ’01 Michael Burk ’87 & ’95 MS Nancy L. Burkardt ’63 Judith A. Burke ’80 Kevin Burke ’86, ’88, & ’95 MS Robert J. Burke ’89 Thomas P. Burke ’80 Leland C. Burkett ’80 Elizabeth A. Burkhardt ’84 Kenneth Burlingame Willie J. Burnette ’91 Keith A. Burnham ’00 & ’01 Toya M. Burns ’99 MS Mary K. Burrell ’96 & ’99 Linda Burroughs-Glover ’99 Alice W. Burrows ’94 Elmore M. Burton ’83 Gay W. Burton ’91 Linda V. Burton ’97 Valentina N. Burton ’95 Warren Bush ’90 Delmer K. Bussell ’95 Carole W. Butler ’99 Christopher L. Butler ’91 Derrick A. Butler ’98 Donna M. Butler ’01 Gina S. Butler ’84 John Butler Jr. ’78 Joseph L. Butler ’98 Vera E. Butler ’94 Derrick A. Butts ’96 MS Mary D. Butts ’87, ’88, & ’96 MGA Kathy A. Byars ’81 Jacqueline D. Bynum ’96 MS Eleanora G. Byrd ’98 Janis D. Byrd ’93 Neil Byrd ’00

Nita K. Byrd Tyrone W. Byrd ’97 James C. Byrk ’76 Terrence P. Byrnes ’92 Jeffrey M. Byron ’92 MGA Manuel Caballero ’92 Brigitte Cabiness ’90 & ’92 Mary M. Cabrera ’98 Tina Caffey ’98 George B. Cahoon Jr. ’01 Patricia A. Cain ’99 Teresita Cajayon ’00 MS Moises Calambas ’00 Ricardo J. Calderon ’98 Bobby L. Caldwell ’80 Ronald B. Caldwell ’98 Stephen E. Caldwell ’01 Brian Callahan ’94 MS James M. Callahan ’95 MIM Monette Callahan ’99 Robert C. Callan ’00 Charles Caloia Jr. ’92 MGA Joseph K. Calvert ’80 Ardath A. Camara ’91 Cassandra M. Cameron ’00 Charlene T. Cameron ’93 Keith D. Cameron ’00 MS Roberta R. Cameron Wayne S. Campagna ’82 & ’88 Elizabeth B. Campaigne ’95 MGA Anita M. Campbell Barbara J. Campbell Barbara L. Campbell ’98 Edmund S. Campbell ’71 Michael C. Campbell ’98 MGA Michael L. Campbell ’00 Richard M. Campbell ’91 Sandra N. Campbell ’97 MGA Shelley Campbell ’88 Wayne C. Campbell ’87 William A. Campos ’00 Suzy Candelaria ’93 & ’95 Christopher Canfield ’01 Jewel L. Cannada ’84 Elijah Cannon Jr. ’92 Janine M. Cantin ’91 Michael J. Cantrell ’98 Robert P. Cantu II ’00 Denise D. Canty ’98 Tin T. Cao ’96 Craig F. Caplan ’00 MS Kathleen A. Caponiti ’90 & ’93 MGA Helen B. Carapetian Juan M. Cardenas ’99 John M. Careccia ’00

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Richard N. Carey ’80 Leo D. Carl ’63 William G. Carlisle ’98 Theodore T. Carlsen ’87 Barton G. Carlson ’94 Lona N. Carlson-Powell ’93 Basil W. Carney ’70 Shaun Carney ’99 Martina R. Carpenter Woods ’98 Karmen Carr ’89 & ’95 MGA Mark E. Carr ’90 Thomas E. Carr ’92 Loretta L. Carr-Holly ’96 & ’99 MS Jamie A. Carrigan ’99 Cecilia M. Carroll ’87 & ’00 Daniel B. Carroll ’94 Joyce E. Carroll ’01 Patrick M. Carroll Jr. ’01 Wilma Cartagena ’94 & ’97 Cecil J. Carter ’71 Cheryl W. Carter ’91 Ellen S. Carter ’98 Melissa D. Carter ’98 Michael R. Carter ’90 & ’96 MGA Timothy E. Carter ’81 Tony W. Carter ’00 Wayne E. Carter ’96 William N. Carter ’01 MS Elaine M. Cartwright ’99 Mark G. Caruso ’94 MS Daniel F. Case ’97 Shelly D. Casey ’96 & ’99 Troy Cash ’94 & ’01 Lawrence H. Caskin Jr. ’70 Anne M. Casler ’96 Paul A. Casso ’77 Aubrey G. Casteel ’84 Robert J. Castelli ’99 Lisa C. Castro ’97 Leslie A. Catanzarito ’00 Stephen J. Cates ’96 Brenda P. Catlett ’80 Amy S. Catlin ’94 Joanne M. Catron ’97 Henson T. Cauffiel II ’82 Diana G. Cavey ’00 Gordon M. Caylor ’01 MS Theresa A. Cecchini ’85 Peter Cembrowicz Andrew J. Centofanti ’86 & ’87 Theresa L. Cerda ’00 Michael N. Cerino ’00 MS Donald F. Cerny ’90 MS Ed Cerny Warren E. Cerrone ’58


Monique D. Ceruti ’91 & ’96 MS Anna E. Chambers ’73 Douglas L. Chambers ’85 Leo A. Chambliss ’95 MS Parbattee Chandarpal ’97 Douglas C. Chandler ’95 Mark J. Chandonnet ’98 & ’99 Bridgette E. Chaney ’00 Donald E. Chaney Jr. ’84 & ’00 Robert S. Chaney ’65 Andre P. Chang ’94 Chih P. Chang ’94 MGA Son H. Chang ’86 Tsu K. Chang ’86 James Chapman Jr. ’93 Lauren S. Chapman ’91 Lynette M. Chapman ’81 Gerald F. Chappell ’74 Raymond M. Chappell ’90 Barbara A. Charles ’95 MGA Benoit H. Charlot ’97 Maria E. Charro ’00 John A. Chase Jr. ’89 Terry A. Chase Barry M. Chasen ’76 Lyn E. Chasen Samuel E. Chatman ’99 Seema Chaudhry ’91 Charles O. Chavers Jr. ’88 Johnny L. Cheatham ’84 Glen G. Chee You ’84 Nancy J. Chekonik ’82 Ding-chu J. Chen ’00 MS Denise M. Cherry ’01 Lenwood C. Cherry Jr. ’98 William W. Cherry Jr. ’88 & ’93 Seshu K. Cherukuru ’99 John E. Chester ’73 Beverly A. Chidel ’85 Kean K. Ching ’00 Edward L. Chisolm ’80 Pei-Lu P. Chiu ’90 Meir Chlewicki ’88 William P. Chmielewski ’90 Inok C. Cho ’95 Eric N. Chomko ’95 MS Paula P. Chomko Imran M. Choudhery ’98 Sultan M. Chowdhury ’97 MS Rose M. Christensen ’82 & ’86 Evelyn D. Christian ’96 Laverne J. Christian ’95 Rose M. Christmas ’83 Nga Chui ’99 Ah J. Chung ’97

Lee Chung-Hwan ’94 Martha R. Churchill ’80 Judy E. Ciaraldi ’92 Eva E. Cichy ’00 Nancy C. Cioffari ’82 Aida M. Cipriani ’90 Alfred L. Cipriani Rebecca L. Clapp ’98 MIM Arthurdell R. Clark ’99 Dorothea E. Clark ’97 MGA Erinn Clark Gordon M. Clark Jr. ’90 Mary A. Clark ’83 Ronald L. Clark ’98 Coleton A. Clarke ’90 David P. Clarke ’90 Denise K. Clarke ’00 Diana M. Clarke-Waldorf ’96 Ronald W. Clarkson ’97 Barbara O. Clary ’83 & ’85 Linda G. Claus ’89 MGA Judith L. Clay ’79 Melanie C. Clay ’99 MS Kenneth T. Claypool ’00 Meochia Y. Clayton-Johnson ’99 & ’00 Timothy P. Cleary ’00 John D. Cleaver ’99 Lee-Ann M. Cleland ’96 Benny M. Clements Jr. ’92 Richard A. Clemmons ’94 Susan W. Clemmons ’80 Dorothy O. Clennon ’00 MS Bernard J. Cler ’70 Katrina L. Cleveland ’00 Patrick J. Cline Jr. ’71 Vickie L. Cline ’98 Edward B. Clopton Jr. ’80 Noreen Clyne ’98 George W. Coakley ’74 Eric L. Coates ’00 Laurie A. Coates ’90 Lana C. Cobb ’86 Tyson L. Coble ’99 Mark S. Coburn ’76 Christina M. Coccagna ’96 MS Barbara A. Cochran ’83 & ’98 MGA Donald Cochran ’95 Lena H. Cockfield ’99 MS Roslyn R. Cofer ’00 Casby Coffey ’94 Dale H. Coffey ’89 Jo-Ann C. Coffey ’90 John W. Cofield Jr. ’79 Adele J. Cohan ’81 Ronald M. Cohen

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Shari L. Cohen ’91 James B. Coker ’69 Kelly M. Colbourn ’01 Marilyn M. Cole ’82 Lawrence W. Coleman ’96 Lisa T. Coleman ’99 Theresa M. Coleman ’96 Sandra M. Coles ’90 MGA Bernarr B. Coletta ’96 Freeman Colley ’92 Gary M. Collier ’93 Theda B. Collier ’85 Judith A. Collinson ’91 Tamiko L. Colonel ’00 Ernest W. Colwell ’67 Vincient J. Colwell ’88 Charles K. Combs ’91 Brandon Comella ’94 Carol A. Compton ’75 Gary D. Compton ’90 Estrellita M. Conklin ’90 Stephanie S. Conlan ’85 Richard S. Connell ’93 & ’94 Brian V. Connelly ’01 Carol L. Connelly ’97 Francesca P. Conner ’87 Keith O. Conner ’98 MGA Janet M. Connolly ’99 Ann C. Connor ’01 MS Debra C. Conover ’99 William R. Conover ’88 & ’96 MS Jo A. Conrad ’98 Susan E. Conroy ’99 MS Joseph R. Conserette Jr. ’94 Byron K. Constance ’99 Sharon M. Constantine ’95 Joseph J. Conway ’93 Emily B. Cook ’95 Linda L. Cook ’86 Rutherford R. Cooke ’98 Leland R. Cooley ’87 Elizabeth M. Coon ’00 Lynn V. Cooney ’98 Dorothy S. Cooper ’93 George G. Cooper ’86 Jackie L. Cooper ’94 Kelly J. Cooper ’94 Elaine M. Cooperman ’99 MS Margaret F. Coopey ’77 & ’85 MGA Kathleen C. Coor ’83 Catherine J. Copertino ’97 MGA Dennis C. Copertino Judith D. Corbett ’86 Carroll P. Corbin ’82 Kathy L. Corbin ’00

This list represents gifts received during fiscal year 2002 (July 1, 2001–June 30, 2002).


Joel K. Core Mary C. Core ’95 MGA Marvin B. Corea ’00 David H. Corlett ’93 Sarah M. Cormier ’95 MS Mark E. Cornelius ’01 Carol F. Cornell ’85 Larry D. Cornman ’01 David C. Cornwall ’94 Donna L. Cornwell ’86 Scott T. Corridon ’00 Lewis N. Corrington ’67 Ilse J. Corydon ’89 Leona R. Cosby ’92 Nadine M. Coseo ’99 James Costantino ’00 Edward J. Costello ’65 Kathleen F. Costello ’86 Deborah A. Cotten ’85 Linda Cotton ’99 Frank J. Cottone ’98 Thomas P. Coughlin ’99 Willie Council ’01 Christine V. Courtney ’97 & ’01 MS Shirley Courtney ’94 & ’96 MS Alvin E. Courtney ’01 Carmen L. Cousin-Johnson ’00 & ’02 MS Richard K. Covell ’64 Cathy A. Covington ’96 & ’01 David C. Covington ’96 & ’97 Trena E. Covington-Lilly ’01 MS Fredrick E. Cowell Jr. ’88 & ’96 Carroll K. Cox ’86 & ’92 Greta C. Cox John G. Cox ’91 MGA Leeodie F. Cox ’80 & ’86 Sheryl F. Cox ’00 Jana M. Crabtree ’90 & ’96 Daniel J. Cragg ’82 John Craig ’91 & ’93 Joyce Craig ’00 MS Sally K. Craig ’89 Sesame D. Craig ’01 Charles L. Crain ’61 Gary R. Cramer ’84 Norman B. Cranford ’61 William F. Crapo ’80 John T. Crawford ’96 Michael E. Crawford ’97 Shirley J. Crawford ’64 Tammy Crawford ’94 Lisa R. Creamer ’96 MGA Theresa A. Creel ’85 Lynne E. Crevoiserat ’87 Jacqueline Y. Crews ’91

Lawrence Crilley ’98 Daniel H. Crim ’88 Glenn N. Crispell ’73 Angela S. Cromartie ’99 MS John C. Crone ’85 & ’92 Abigail E. Cronin ’97 MGA George E. Cronin Jr. ’89 Paula J. Cronin-Carr ’92 & ’93 Richardson H. Crook ’85 & ’86 Henry A. Crooks ’92 Beverly A. Crosby ’80 Teresa A. Crovato ’96 Paul W. Crowe ’86 Purificacion V. Crowe ’95 James E. Crum Jr. ’96 Mary E. Crumbacker ’86 Jennifer I. Crumley ’93 Robert H. Crump Jr. ’93 Hannah Crutcher ’01 MS Patricia Crutchfield ’96 MS Capri C. Cruz ’99 & ’02 Henry Cruz ’96 Karen J. Cudd ’91 Annamarie Culbreth ’91 Jarvis Cullen ’99 Michael P. Cullinane ’92 Aaron E. Culver ’99 Jack L. Cummings ’97 Linda A. Cummings ’85 & ’94 Stephen W. Cummings ’71 Rhonda W. Cundiff ’98 & ’01 MS Jacqueline R. Cunningham ’91 Linda D. Cunningham ’00 MS Martha J. Cunningham ’86 & ’88 Suzette M. Cunningham ’82 Michael S. Cuppett ’92 Thomas W. Curd ’97 James A. Currea ’99 Tersha L. Currier ’01 Sheila R. Curtis ’93 Johnnie R. Cusack Jr. ’95 Karen A. Czajka ’86 Joseph F. Czyzyk ’80 Michael V. Dabulskis ’98 MS Dennis R. D’Adamo ’86 Melinda M. Dadds ’96 Gena M. Daggett ’01 David C. Dahl ’70 Melanie B. Dahlgren ’90 Anthony C. Dahm ’98 Yaoping Dai ’00 John D. Daigh Jr. ’98 Elizabeth H. Dailey ’00 Mary P. Dailey ’71 Elizabeth P. Daily ’73

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Mahesh Dalal ’95 MS Mark C. Dale ’92 Enos G. Daley ’98 & ’02 MS Lynn M. Dalton ’91 Robert C. Daly ’92 MS Sandra M. Damdar ’89 Johnny Dang ’00 Thuy N. Dang ’00 Tracy H. Dang ’99 Fred B. Daniel Jr. ’81 Irvin E. Daniel ’00 Fredrick D. Daniels ’88 Robyn L. Daniels ’00 Tamika I. Daniels ’98 Wallace A. Daniels ’82 Joe W. Danielson ’91 David M. Darcey ’83 Annie B. Darden ’85 Peggy L. Dare ’85 Kevin M. Darnell ’89 Fereshteh Daryanavardan ’96 Laurens K. Dash ’99 Mary P. Daskal ’01 MS Sreedevi Datla ’94 Herbert Dauber ’63 Douglas A. Daugherty ’89 Valerie Daugherty ’95 MS Corrine R. Dautrich ’94 & ’96 Romeo B. David ’88 Mary J. Davidge ’83 Christine D. Davidson ’93 & ’00 John J. D’Avignon ’91 Barry D. Davis ’80 Edward L. Davis ’91 & ’92 Evelyn R. Davis ’86 & ’91 MGA Harvey A. Davis ’92 Keith L. Davis ’89 Louise P. Davis ’89 Marian M. Davis ’81 Michelle L. Davis ’91 Reginald E. Davis ’90 Richard L. Davis ’55 Ronald B. Davis ’99 Sonya Davis ’01 Susan P. Davis ’96 Valerie A. Davis ’98 John E. Day ’93 MGA Kathleen A. Day ’95 Michael K. Day ’92 Winifred C. Day ’97 Kathleen M. Dayton ’98 Portia E. Deal ’99 Gary F. Debruin ’83 & ’85 Jacqueline I. De Carlo ’99 MS Davesylvin D. Decker ’91


Sandra L. Decker ’96 Robert L. Deemer ’80 Kenny L. Dees ’93 Hilaire G. Degast ’53 Cynthia E. Dekle ’96 & ’00 MS Ambrosio M. Dela Cruz Ferdinand D. Delacruz ’87 Michael J. Delany ’91 Cristina Delborrello ’01 Sharon V. Delfino ’01 Ignacio Delgado ’96 Thomas F. Delle Donne ’91 Douglas D. Deloach ’98 Mary A. De Luca ’96 MGA Emilio G. De Lucia ’80 Gisela DeMarco ’76 Mary M. De Mark ’00 Carmen M. Demasters ’92 Charmaine F. De Mercado ’01 Patricia A. Demers ’82 Sandra M. Dempsey ’90 Walter F. Dempsey ’87 Carol E. De Nino ’99 Michael Denison Carol J. Denne ’88 Kathy Dennis-Marrs D. W. Densford ’77 Mrudula A. Deodhar ’00 Patricia A. Deplasco ’99 MS John J. Depola ’85 Adelheid Deren ’97 Clarise Derosier ’97 MGA Edwin R. Deshong ’00 MS James L. D’esterhazy Jr. ’97 Edward P. Detommaso ’01 Anne M. Devadason ’97 MGA James Deveney ’80 Sharon B. Devivo ’89 Joseph M. Devlin ’95 Howard Diamond ’94 MS Brenda E. Diaz ’00 Brooke M. Diaz ’99 MS Silvio A. Diaz ’00 Marcel A. Diby ’99 Bette J. Dicamillo ’83 William R. Dice ’80 & ’93 William E. Dickerson Jr. ’91 Phyllis L. Dickerson-Johnson ’95 Michael N. Dickey ’83 David A. Dickinson ’00 Kathryn A. Dierks Gralyn E. Diggs ’84 Harold E. Dilley Jr. ’80 John Dillon ’78 Frank Dimeglio Jr. ’81

NARROWING THE DIGITAL DIVIDE FOR PEOPLE WITH DISABILITIES With grants totaling $113,000 from both the Verizon and NEC Foundations, UMUC’s ADE initiative (Accessibility in Distance Education) is off to a flying start.

UMUC Provost Nicholas Allen (left) and Collegiate Professor and Assistant Provost Claudine SchWeber (center), present a plaque to Verizon’s Director of Public Affairs Paul G. Wood (right), in appreciation for Verizon’s support of UMUC’s ADE program.

This public/private partnership was launched in an effort to make UMUC’s virtual campus far more user friendly for students with a wide range of physical and learning disabilities. ADE will build upon the UMUC–Verizon Virtual Resource Site for Teaching with Technology by creating new pages devoted solely to using state-ofthe-art adaptive technologies that promote greater accessibility to Web resources for people with disabilities.

Research conducted over the past decade found that students with disabilities not only are far less likely to enroll in college within five years of high school graduation, but also have somewhat lower collegiate expectations than their non-disabled counterparts. Educators believe that these disparities are closely related to the barriers many of these individuals experience when attempting to access traditional, campus-based degree programs. Online education, therefore, has been touted as a far more accessible commodity, especially for people with special challenges. However, as Nick Allen, UMUC’s academic provost, points out, there are still access problems with Web-based education, particularly when it comes to instructional effectiveness for diverse learners. “Like other advances, UMUC’s ADE is intended to help faculty learn more about what they need to do to be effective teachers—for all students, including the challenged,” Allen emphasizes.

Huy Dinh ’98 Daniel J. Di Panfilo Jr. ’98 Michael A. Di Tullio ’97 Melba D. Divens ’99 Arthur W. Divens ’97 MS Robert D. Dix ’83 Cheryl A. Dixon ’95 MGA Cynthia D. Dixon ’00 Dianne B. Dixon ’00 Kenneth C. Dixon ’97 MS Sammie L. Dixon ’00 Alicia A. Dixon-Sledge ’00 MS Chuyen M. Do ’92

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Adele N. Doan ’00 Ronald W. Dobson Jr. ’92 Kathryn D. Dodd ’99 Betty J. Dodds ’94 Ruth Doepkens ’01 Beatrice M. Doerrman Richard M. Doerrman ’68 Norman W. Dofflemyer ’99 Herman Dogan Jr. ’82 Gary B. Dollar ’93 Terri L. Dom ’95 Tommy J. Domingue Jr. ’99 Kimberly A. Dominguez ’00

This list represents gifts received during fiscal year 2002 (July 1, 2001–June 30, 2002).


Thomas S. Dommel ’86 Maria M. Donahoe ’89 Steven M. Donahue ’01 MS Jean A. Dondelinger ’88 Karen Donehoo ’98 Stephen P. Donnelly ’01 MS Betty V. Donovan ’95 John Doorhy Jr. ’94 Joyce M. Dorn William H. Dorn ’73 Jeanne A. Dorough ’80 Fay Dorsett William D. Dorsett ’85 John V. Dorsey ’00 MS Tracy A. Dorsey ’93 Clorene A. Douglas ’01 Constance V. Douglas ’86 James R. Douglas ’82 Pamela J. Douglas ’00 Catherine E. Dove ’98 Damien D. Downing ’80 Susan B. Downs ’76 William R. Downs ’94 & ’00 Catherine E. Doyer ’00 Alice M. Drackley ’99 Mark R. Draeger ’75 Cedric M. Drake ’86 Craig C. Drake ’80 Margaret H. Drake ’90 Robert S. Drake ’80 David L. Drazek ’89 Dorothy W. Drenner ’85 Ross J. Drew ’94 Millard J. Driscoll ’80 William D. Driscoll ’86 Gail M. Driskill ’86 Fready E. Drummer ’97 MS Pamela M. DuBost ’88 Mark S. Dubrow ’94 Linda L. Dudley ’92 & ’01 MS Jeannine A. Dugan ’98 Teresa K. Dugan ’99 Victoria A. Duggan ’97 MGA James F. Dukes ’96 & ’00 MS Annette D. Duley ’98 Jeffrey M. Dulin ’92 Porfirio H. Dumpit Jr. ’87 Lloyd G. Duncan ’96 Michael A. Duniho ’67 Carlvern M. Dunn ’01 Larry J. Dunn ’95 Margo J. Dunn ’84 Mary L. Dunn ’86 Barbara P. Dunnigan ’82 Diane M. Dunning ’98

Nicole D. Dunning ’97 Elaine L. Dunst ’78 Shelley M. Dupont ’95 Tammi L. Duran ’99 Paul M. Durbin ’97 Tyrone Durham ’00 Brian J. Durkin ’99 Wayne M. Dustin ’00 Jenny E. Dutton ’00 Michel L. Duval ’93 Deborah H. Duvall ’80 & ’99 MS Terry L. Dworaczyk ’91 & ’92 Patrick Dwyer ’98 James C. Dyson ’96 MGA George Eager Jr. ’65 Andrew Early ’01 Ann H. Easter ’92 Mark Eastman ’77 Guy L. Eaton ’89 Linda F. Eaton ’90 Laura J. Eberhard ’97 Kim M. Ebert ’98 Keith G. Ebker ’93 MS Joanne Eccleston ’91 James W. Echard Jr. ’83 Benita E. Echels ’91 Leonard G. Economou ’79 Carolyn F. Edmonds ’89 MGA Marie M. Edouard ’96 & ’99 MS Christina T. Edwards ’97 Hiromi S. Edwards ’92 James J. Edwards ’97 Jude E. Edwards ’95 & ’98 MS June N. Edwards ’82 Leroy E. Edwards ’90 MGA Rhonda S. Edwards ’88 & ’93 Veronica Edwards ’94 Anthony E. Effiong ’00 MS Diane M. Eggert ’85 Lisa J. Eggleston Lovette U. Ego ’99 William Ehardt ’74 Harold Eickhoff ’98 Margaret J. Eilertson ’77 & ’82 Juliet Eiselstein ’97 Stuart Eisen ’76 & ’95 MGA Z S. Eisenman ’00 Brian D. Eklund ’96 Steven G. Elder ’92 Kenneth A. Elias-solis ’01 Emily Eliopoulos ’01 Grace D. Ellerbe ’93 Timothy E. Ellerbusch ’86 Dean F. Elliott ’80 Frank E. Elliott ’83

49

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Mary A. Elliott ’96 MIM Pamela S. Elliott ’83 David L. Ellis ’73 Donald Ellis ’99 Adele B. Ellsworth ’70 Tiffiny L. Elman ’00 Isaiah Elmore ’93 Landon L. Elswick ’76 Herbert L. Emerson ’91 MS David L. Emory ’93 John A. Ena Sr. ’81 Alfred Endler II ’94 Arthur Engelbrecht ’99 & ’02 Robert L. Engemann ’56 Leroy E. Engle ’80 Christine E. Englehart ’87 Carolann L. Engler ’88 MGA Karen L. Engstrom ’00 MS Tony V. Eoppolo ’90 Gail M. Epstein ’00 Lucy T. Erdelac ’83 Susan D. Erickson ’00 Madeleine K. Errickson ’75 Carol J. Ertel ’98 Frederic A. Escobar ’00 Nicole R. Eskridge ’01 Ann Esposito ’86 Clara I. Estrada ’01 James P. Estrada ’95 Charles K. Etheridge ’96 Steven C. Ethington ’91 Festus A. Etienne ’90 Evette N. Evans ’00 Heather J. Evans ’94 Katherine J. Evans ’80 Mark E. Evans ’97 Robert C. Evans ’64 Robert W. Evans ’88 Rollis B. Evans ’98 John S. Everline ’97 Gerald W. Eves Jr. ’01 Judith L. Eyler ’87 Glover Ezeh ’98 & ’01 MS Misako K. Faddis ’97 & ’99 Jonathan Fader ’74 Charmaine Fahie-Malcolm ’92 Antonio D. Faison ’91 William R. Faith ’90 Elizabeth H. Fallon ’95 Ronald W. Falter ’00 Su-Jen Fan ’00 Vincent F. Fansler Jr. ’97 & ’99 MS Evelyn R. Farinas ’94 MGA Audrey L. Farley ’97 James F. Farrell ’73


Jo Ann Farrell Leon E. Farrell ’59 David E. Farris ’73 Konnya S. Farris ’91 Lorraine A. Farris ’91 & ’96 John R. Fast ’96 Jerry Faulk ’01 MS Dennis Fawson ’85 & ’96 Thomas J. Fechter ’95 MGA John A. Feeley ’94 John C. Felder ’00 Daniel Feldman ’96 MIM Frances L. Feldman ’72 Cheryl L. Felent ’90 Pedro Feliciano-Alequin ’87 & ’94 Sarina M. Fellers ’98 Margaret W. Fellows ’89 Cheryl D. Fells ’00 Yolandra Y. Felton ’99 Debra A. Femiano ’88 Kathleen Fenk ’98 Janie Fenwick ’00 Laura C. Fenwick ’97 Patrica J. Ferensic Curtis L. Ferguson ’93 Thomas W. Ferguson ’92 Karlene L. Fernow ’93 Michael L. Ferrell ’94 MGA Patricia M. Ferrone ’97 Carol Lee Feser ’83 Pamela M. Fetsch ’88 Janice W. Feurtado ’99 Paul C. Ficken ’96 Walter Ficklin ’01 Robert P. Fiehn ’96 Denese H. Fields ’97 Dwight A. Fields ’93 & ’94 Greig C. Fields ’99, ’01 MS, & ’02 Norma A. Fields ’97 MGA Kenneth W. Fiester ’96 Richard J. Finch ’98 Christina Fincutter ’88 Meredith D. Finn ’00 Maureen F. Fiorello ’80 Ardis Fisher ’83 Isaac A. Fisher ’73 James E. Fisher Jr. ’93 Lowell E. Fisher ’74 Paul W. Fisher ’91 Frances Fister-Stoga Rex N. Fitch ’94 Linda C. Fitchett ’86 James C. Fitz Bennie W. Fitzgerald ’80 Karen L. Fitzgerald ’91

Kevin D. Fitzgerald ’92 Michael L. Fitzgerald ’99 MS Jeanette L. Flaim ’91 Thomas E. Flake ’85 William C. Flannigan ’53 Walter W. Fleming ’91 Tanya L. Flemons ’96 MGA Anne C. Fleshman ’01 MS Belinda M. Fletcher ’00 Jackquelyn E. Fletcher ’90 Jeanne E. Fletcher ’80 Carmen E. Flores ’98 George Flores ’98 Nicholaos D. Floros ’87 Valerie A. Flournoy ’95 MGA Benzell T. Floyd ’98 & ’99 Tanya L. Floyd ’99 Angela A. Floyd-Sapp ’97 Michael J. Fluck ’92 & ’01 Karen M. Flynn ’87 Musu M. Fofana ’00 MS Donna J. Foisy ’91 James M. Foley ’86 John C. Foley Jr. ’93 Linda L. Folks ’80 Antonio Fominaya III ’97 MS Monique Fontaine ’95 MGA Jonice B. Fontes ’93 Michele D. Forbes ’00 Benson S. Ford ’97 Brandon K. Ford ’94 Brenda L. Ford ’97 Kecia M. Ford ’98 Victor A. Ford ’00 James E. Foreman ’96 Terry A. Foreman ’91 Ronald L. Forgnoni ’00 Terrence J. Forish ’97 K. S. Forman ’89 Danya D. Forrester ’98 Todd S. Forsythe ’89 Craig R. Fosnock ’96 & ’98 John P. Foster ’98 Robert T. Foster ’59 Alexandra M. Fotos ’96 Gabrielle E. Fournet ’00 Denis L. Fournier ’90 Carlene Foushee ’95 Laura A. Foussekis ’94 MGA Michael L. Fowler ’97 Ricky M. Fowler ’96 Stephen L. Fowler ’97 Consandra Fox ’94 Daniel J. Fox ’87 Joel M. Fox ’90

50

ACHIEVER

Leslie A. Fox ’96 MGA Marjorie A. Fox ’90 Kenneth L. Foxton ’86 Edward M. Fraczkowski ’94 MS Harold W. Francis ’01 Michael A. Francis ’93 & ’94 Pamela L. Francis ’98 Brian C. Frank ’85 & ’87 Charles Frank ’79 Kathleen A. Franke ’00 Dicy L. Franklin ’84 Eva Franklin ’87 Patricia T. Franklin ’99 Colin A. Fraser ’86 Joyce M. Fraser ’80 Larry D. Frazier ’94 Shelley A. Frazier ’92 MGA Richard P. Freccia ’83 Audrey S. Freed ’98 Daniel J. Freedman ’98 MS Adam Freeland ’98 Barbara Freels ’98 Anthony J. Freeman ’00 David R. Freeman ’90 Jeffrey L. Freeman ’92 Karrissa I. Freeman ’83 Fernando P. Freitas ’97 MS Audrey L. French ’93 & ’94 Jean C. Frere ’81 Sandra J. Freudenberg ’92 Alan C. Frick ’80 Joel I. Friedman ’78 Ulrike Frintz ’88 Karen P. Fritschle ’00 MS Dennis D. Frymark Jr. ’93 Herbert F. Frymark Jr. ’90 Thuy H. Frys ’94 Brian Fuchs ’98 MS Deborah A. Fugas ’84 Rosina Fugate ’82 Gregory L. Fuhs ’99 David E. Fulton ’95 Ruth M. Fulton ’73 Gracie A. Funk ’85 John T. Fuston ’70 William H. Gaal ’83 David A. Gadberry ’84 Patricia A. Gadowski ’91 Thomas L. Gage ’85 & ’86 Denise S. Gaigler ’00 Claudia M. Gaines ’95 & ’00 MS Sonja M. Gaines ’82 James A. Galgano ’87 James M. Galimore ’94 & ’97 MS Rose M. Galindo ’93

This list represents gifts received during fiscal year 2002 (July 1, 2001–June 30, 2002).


Gerard J. Gallagher ’93 Lawrence J. Gallagher ’71 Jeffery L. Gallant ’86 John W. Gallaway ’95 MIM Lydia K. Gallick ’82 James E. Gallo Jr. ’94 Ernest L. Galloway ’00 MS Kenneth E. Gallup ’95 & ’97 Luzia L. Galosi ’97 Froilan I. Galutera ’01 Margaret D. Galvin ’79 & ’86 Betty A. Gambill ’93 Stanley T. Gamble ’96 Stephen K. Gammon ’89 Sugandi Gan ’00 Larry E. Gant ’93 Linda M. Gantt ’95 Alexandra B. Garcia ’01 & ’02 Jose L. Garcia ’90 Ramon Garcia ’90 Myra E. Gardiner ’98 MGA Howard P. Garey ’81 & ’83 Yoko Garey Charles F. Garhart ’77 Margaret M. Garrahy ’90 Denise D. Garrett ’96 Diane P. Garrett ’01 Charles B. Garrette ’92 Emma M. Garrison- Alexander ’96 MS Laurie E. Garthune ’98 Anne K. Gartland ’90 George D. Gartland ’87 Bret H. Garton ’92 Khristahl K. Garvin ’00 Mary G. Gaskins ’84 Phyllis A. Gaskins ’01 MS Joseph F. Gasper ’80 Philip A. Gastilo ’98 Bridget D. Gatewood ’01 Sandra L. Gault ’97 Nancy B. Gavett ’83 Richard A. Gavitt Jr. ’91 Susan P. Gawlick ’73 Emayeneme S. Gbemiye-Etta ’91 & ’98 MIM Paul Gbenoba ’91 & ’94 MGA George A. Gebelein ’81 MGA Lydia A. Gebregiorgis ’01 Rebecca Gebru ’01 Tanya M. Geiger ’96 & ’97 William L. Geiger ’97 MS Ronald A. Geisler ’92 Sharon S. Geller ’93 MS Theresa A. Gemmell ’80 Asher L. Gendelman ’86 Denise E. Gendron ’88, ’90, & ’91

Brenda J. Genis ’92 Tenika C. Gentry ’01 Clifford George ’94 MS Ronald A. Gerbasi Jr. ’77 John E. Gerken ’93 Kathleen C. Germack ’89 Joseph B. Germain ’90 Iris J. Germany ’92 & ’98 MGA Linda J. Germershausen ’94 Kyle Gernes-Petry Gloria J. Gerrity ’96 Edward J. Gersich ’94 Virginia K. Getz ’79 Rula M. Gheyssari ’90 MS Lewis F. Giammaria ’96 & ’00 Dung Giang ’98 Charles A. Gibson ’94 MS Janice C. Gibson ’95 Tennille M. Gibson ’01 MS Yolanda C. Gibson-Michaels ’96 Andrew R. Gifford ’00 Darren D. Gil ’85 Elaine R. Gilbert ’98 Richard A. Gilbert ’96 Marsha R. Gilchrist ’97 & ’01 James Gilfone Jr. ’82 Karen L. Gill ’86 Curtis S. Gilliam ’01 Delores C. Gilliam ’85 Samuel A. Gilliam ’83 Robert Gilmore ’96 Eugene A. Ginda ’64 Richard S. Ginsburg ’77 Gerald A. Gionet ’90 MGA Sheri R. Girard ’99 Ryan L. Girley ’00 Joseph A. Girolami ’91 Amy L. Gitchell ’88 Malvern M. Gladstone ’90 Barbara A. Glasby ’99 Jacquline A. Glass ’00 MS Walter B. Glazer ’75 Thomas D. Gleason ’96 MGA Marcia R. Glenn ’96 Leslie B. Glickman ’93 MGA Jeannette R. Glover ’99 MS John J. Glynn ’76 Beth L. Gochrach ’99 Cicero A. Godbee ’99 Joyce R. Godby ’91 Natasha Goddard ’00 MS Brenda C. Godstrey ’99 Robert P. Goebeler Sr. ’95 MGA Jim B. Golden ’98 MS Lydia H. Golden ’98

51

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Paula C. Golden ’70 Martin I. Goldenberg ’82 Robert M. Goldman ’83 Barry F. Goldstein ’99 Jonathan E. Goldstein ’88 Carolyn S. Gonser ’98 Mary Gonyea ’01 Vincent P. Gonzales ’99 Dioselina I. Gonzalez ’99 & ’01 Itzel B. Gonzalez ’89 Maria M. Gonzalez ’98 MIM Michelle T. Gooch ’91 Ina Goocharan ’97 MGA Misty A. Good ’01 Eric R. Goodall Sharon M. Goodall Ronald W. Goode ’85 Maria M. Goodlatte ’91 Bryan D. Goodluck ’96 Andrea F. Goodman ’00 Egbert M. Goodman ’94 Jerome L. Goolsby ’90 Rajkumar Gopala-Rao ’86 Roger L. Gordon ’85 Lester L. Gordy ’91 & ’92 Michael A. Gorham ’75 George P. Gorman ’89 Joseph D. Gormley ’85 Patricia L. Gorton ’81 Christine Gosch ’96 Wanda Goshorn-Smith Clara J. Goss ’85 & ’91 MGA John K. Goto ’83 Ann M. Gould ’89 Ronald Gowallis ’85 April L. Gower-Getz ’98 MGA Donald E. Graham ’95 James Graham Jr. ’93 Robert F. Graham Jr. ’94 Eric K. Grant ’91 John F. Grant ’00 Kenneth Grant ’00 MS Richard F. Grant ’91 Lauren M. Grantham ’94 Joseph J. Gravante Jr. ’84 Alfred M. Gravel ’95 MIM Amanda C. Graves ’91 & ’96 MS Bobby R. Graves ’93 Jason P. Graves ’01 Melinda G. Graves ’96 Glen F. Gray ’88 Gwendolyn Gray ’99 Kenneth Gray ’99 Joseph H. Gray Jr. ’85 Josephine F. Gray


Karen Gray ’00 Wayne Gray ’89 Robert J. Grazioli ’84 Angela M. Green ’01 Cynthia R. Green ’01 & ’02 Edwin R. Green ’73 Geraldine Green ’90 MGA Neil Green ’94 Philip H. Green ’95 Roger L. Green III ’95 & ’01 MS Wendy K. Green ’98 Joseph F. Greene ’96 Maurice A. Greene ’83 Robin B. Greene ’99 John T. Greenwell ’92 Michael Greer ’94 Randy L. Greer ’95 Nina M. Gregoire ’97 Michelle M. Gregonis ’95 Larry L. Gregory ’87 & ’93 Paula L. Greif ’99 Cecilia A. Greul Coliton ’87 Dianne H. Greyerbiehl ’94 MGA Angela L. Grider ’98 Jean E. Gries ’95 Coretta P. Griffin ’97 Margaret A. Griffin ’00 Andrew R. Griffith ’97 MS Robert E. Griffith ’90 Nelson J. Grillo ’91 Corinne R. Grim ’95 Doris E. Grimes ’88 Michael J. Grimes ’91 Thomas W. Grimes ’93 Paul W. Grisham ’95 Emmett J. Grissett Jr. ’94 Matthew E. Groff Jr. ’63 Patricia J. Gronkiewicz Charles E. Gross ’94 MS William R. Gross ’98 Gordon E. Grossmann Sr. ’69 Dean E. Grothe ’78 Deborah E. Grover ’92 Margery G. Grubb ’92 Kevin F. Grundmeier ’94 Rolf R. Gruning ’80 Paolo Gualtieri Maria M. Guerrero ’99 Gregory Guidas ’90 Diane T. Guidry ’86 William C. Guise Jr. ’96 Frank T. Gulino ’82 Dean R. Gullixson ’88 Jenny M. Gunderman ’99 MS Brian S. Gunderson ’59

Donna Y. Gunter ’00 James Guntow ’85 Theresa Gupta ’94 Carolyn L. Guy ’98 Robert A. Gwynn ’75 Khai N. Ha ’84 James C. Habig ’99 Klaus A. Hadschin ’87 Thomas W. Haduch ’96 MS Ada N. Hage ’93 MGA Todd A. Hage ’81 Karin M. Hahn ’88 Samantha D. Hailey-Granderson ’99 & ’01 Henry Hailstock Jr. ’80 Jan H. Haines ’84 Joel D. Haines ’98 MS Darrell W. Haire ’99 Wendell E. Hakala ’64 Midori Hakata ’00 S A. Halbrecht ’99 MS David O. Hale ’91 MS Meredith S. Hale ’54 Allen F. Hall ’81 Charles H. Hall ’96 Jenny L. Hall ’00 John W. Hall Jr. ’80 Joseph E. Hall ’70 Lawrence Hall ’97 Mary D. Hall ’90 Thomas G. Hall Jr. ’81 Valerie J. Hall ’99 Virginia L. Hall ’94 Thomas W. Haller ’83 Harvin G. Halley ’93 Ruth E. Halley ’85 Dana L. Hallman-bama ’00 MS Sharon E. Halsey ’92 Patricia M. Hames ’84 Brian K. Hamilton ’00 Dennis L. Hamilton ’80 Donna J. Hamilton Jacquelyn M. Hamilton ’00 Terry L. Hamilton ’98 MS Archie D. Hampton ’96 Mary Ann Hanberry ’98 Edward J. Hand III ’99 Beth L. Handelman ’91 John J. Handiboe ’91 David I. Hands ’00 Wallace M. Hanes ’67 Dennis J. Haney ’93 Edward A. Hanka ’86 Susan Hanlon ’95 Frank W. Hanna Jr. ’88 & ’91 Marie A. Hanna ’88

52

ACHIEVER

Charles F. Hannan ’75 Candace G. Hanrahan ’97 Barbara A. Hansen ’82 Kathleen M. Hansen ’89 James A. Hanson ’79 Mildred B. Hanson ’85 Kenneth S. Hanten ’65 Rhonda L. Haralson ’91 Gregory Harden ’99 Adam R. Hardin ’91 Irene A. Hardman ’84 & ’89 MGA Jacqueline A. Hardware ’99 MIM James A. Hargadon ’01 Liesa Harkness ’94 Joaquin A. Harley ’98 Nina Harmon ’99 MS Deborah L. Harmon-freeman ’00 John R. Harold ’97 Jeffrey L. Harp ’00 Wendy A. Harpe ’86 Charlotte K. Harper ’91 Larry E. Harper ’95 Patrick H. Harper ’01 Sandra L. Harper ’98 Michael E. Harpster Tyra E. Harpster ’90 Michael J. Harrar ’98 Collette M. Harris ’99 & ’01 MS Drexel B. Harris ’80 Francis P. Harris ’99 Hamil R. Harris ’94 MGA James T. Harris ’84 Jeffrey M. Harris ’85 Lashawn W. Harris ’01 Linda G. Harris ’98 MGA Lorraine V. Harris ’86 Neitha J. Harris ’01 Ojima A. Harris ’85 Tracey L. Harris ’01 Vera B. Harris ’97 Vivian L. Harris ’96 James A. Harrison ’99 MS Robert C. Harsha ’80 Stephen G. Harshfield ’76 James A. Hart ’72 Peter C. Hart ’00 Douglas L. Hartmann ’93 Beverly A. Harvey ’95 MIM Larry J. Harvey ’94 Sharon T. Harvey ’94 Sherry Harvey ’01 Robin R. Haselden ’96 Ronald E. Haselnus ’96 MGA Agnes M. Hassan ’96 MGA Thomas A. Hasselstrom ’91

This list represents gifts received during fiscal year 2002 (July 1, 2001–June 30, 2002).


Frank M. Hastie ’81 & ’85 Gloria J. Hastings ’90 David G. Hastie ’94 Susan A. Hatcher ’98 John G. Hatem ’95 Mary E. Hatfield ’93 Jeffrey A. Hathaway ’93 MGA Elizabeth N. Hathcoat ’98 Patricia A. Hatton Ira S. Hauck ’91 & ’92 Kathryn B. Hauser ’84 & ’90 MGA Rebecca L. Haven ’01 Loria E. Havens ’88 William L. Hawk ’77 Andrew T. Hawkins ’97 Patricia A. Hawkins ’99 Jeffrey R. Hayden ’90 MGA Connie M. Hayes ’91 Michael W. Hayes ’91 Shannon B. Hayes ’95 Stuart A. Hayman ’97 MGA Claudette Haynes ’00 MS George F. Haynes ’99 MS Mickey J. Hayward ’88 Lisa A. Hayward ’96 Anatole K. Heacock ’95 Patricia Head ’00 Thomas Healey ’97 Judy L. Healy ’89 Cynthia L. Heaney ’99 Thomas A. Heard ’84 & ’90 MS Joseph A. Heastie ’80 Barbara A. Heath ’95 Joseph E. Hebler ’92 David B. Heckel ’01 MS Thomas E. Hedigan ’95 Michael C. Heffner ’82 Kathryn A. Heflin ’92 Jay L. Heinemann ’85 Scott D. Heiser ’98 MS Jeffrey L. Held ’95 Aaron Heller ’84 Christino C. Helmas ’91 Martin C. Heltzel ’77 Lorna F. Henderer ’98 Brian E. Henderson ’96 Hortense Henderson ’94 Michael R. Henderson ’00 Michael T. Henderson ’93 Watonia M. Henderson ’00 Wiletta C. Henderson ’99 Karen Hendricks ’86 Constance C. Hendrickson ’69 Darlene L. Henley ’80 Joyce E. Henne ’93

Robin R. Hennen ’98 Erin E. Hennessy ’98 Norine D. Henrie ’98 Tracy L. Henry ’00 James L. Henson ’00 MIM Robert N. Herald ’00 Edward R. Herbert III ’85 & ’97 MS Deana P. Herbert ’00 MS Joseph R. Hergan ’65 Mariann Heritage ’85 Judy A. Herman ’92 Margaret A. Herman ’63 Jose L. Hernandez ’92 Lorenzo G. Hernandez ’92 Kevin G. Herndon ’01 Maricel M. Herrera ’00 & ’01 Ann H. Herring ’82 Donald E. Herrity Jr. ’99 Angela L. Herron ’87 Susan M. Hersman ’82 Edward Hertz ’75 Daniel Hess ’80 Maria C. Hetland ’90 Brian F. Hickey ’95 Cyrilla F. Hickey ’01 John J. Hickey ’60 Kenneth D. Hicks ’79 Daniel L. Higgins ’00 Sue A. Higgins ’84 Veronica M. Higgs ’98 & ’01 MS Weldon Higgs ’72 David D. High ’96 MIM Earle D. Hightower ’96 Dawn E. Hill ’96 James M. Hill ’94 Kenneth R. Hill ’91 Kevin A. Hill ’00 Leo A. Hill ’86 & ’98 MS Raymond C. Hill II ’64 Sylvia Hill ’91 Tanya M. Hill ’99 Paul F. Hillebert ’97 Elinor C. Hiller ’79 Ann M. Hilpert ’00 MS Christopher J. Hiltbrand ’00 Nancy A. Hinchliffe ’97 MIM Michael K. Hinchy ’89 Patricia M. Hindes ’00 Anna V. Hines ’91 Gilberto C. Hinojosa ’99 Will Hinton ’99 Charles R. Hipp ’84 Joanne Hirsh ’91 David W. Hitt ’94 Kenneth R. Hixon Jr. ’96

53

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The T. Ho ’01 Joyce M. Hobbins ’91 Ramona G. Hobbs ’93 Janice M. Hobson ’94 MGA Inez D. Hockaday ’00 Yolanda Hodge ’99 MS Benjamin K. Hodges ’90 Charles T. Hoeflinger ’00 Susan F. Hoernlein ’00 John J. Hofbauer ’01 Mary J. Hoferek David C. Hoff Jr. ’97 David R. Hoffmann ’94 Frederick J. Hoffman ’81 Keith M. Hoffman ’99 MS Andrew V. Hogans ’97 MS Melvin E. Hohn ’85 & ’86 Patrick D. Holben ’91 & ’95 Richard K. Holbrook ’96 Karen A. Holcomb ’93 Patrick G. Holcomb ’01 Kelly Holden ’99 Robert N. Holder Jr. ’80 Karen Y. Holliday ’99 Bazola B. Holloway ’91 Deronda C. Holloway ’96 Sandra A. Holly ’95 MGA Rhonda L. Holman ’97 MS Carolyn J. Holmes ’84 Ilene M. Holmes ’78 John H. Holmes ’77 Muriel P. Holmes ’95 MGA Orest Holowka ’71 Earl Holtzscheiter ’56 John D. Honeycutt ’90 Alfred E. Hood ’93 Linda J. Hood ’89 Jennifer G. Hooks ’98 Larry J. Hooks Elaine L. Hooper ’93 Theodore R. Hoopes Jr. ’95 John W. Hooten ’83 Willie F. Hooten ’98 Earl A. Hoover ’88 & ’91 Valarie J. Hoover ’93 Dexter Hope ’96 Bruce L. Hopkins ’77 Joseph W. Hopkins III ’76 Linette A. Hopkins ’89 & ’93 Theresa M. Hopper ’92 Burton T. Hopwood ’71 Bonnie S. Horan ’97 Kenneth R. Horner ’78 John M. Hornick ’93 Robert A. Hornickle ’77


Karen L. Hornig ’00 Richard E. Horsley Jr. ’72 Diane A. Horton ’64 Douglas K. Horton ’94 Ingrid I. Horton ’91 Joseph P. Horvath ’91 Joseph A. Hosier ’99 Doris J. Houdesheldt ’76 Jacquella R. Houey ’99 Richard F. Hougesen ’91 Anna S. Houle ’94 & ’01 Martha J. Housley ’86 Teresa C. Hovell ’85 Allen C. Howard ’99 Elizabeth T. Howard ’95 MGA Jan M. Howard ’84 MGA Janice E. Howard ’86 & ’87 Kurt Howard ’87 Michael R. Howard ’96 Sharon Y. Howard ’99 Jerry W. Howe ’80 Katholyn M. Howell ’85 Roger L. Howell ’86 Ronald R. Howell ’94 Thomas B. Howell ’89 Mark W. Howes ’84 Arthur L. Howle ’79 Patrick A. Howley ’78 Carol B. Hoy ’90 MGA Ida P. Hsu ’91 & ’96 MGA Lin Huang ’95 Xinli Huang ’98 MGA Davilynne A. Hubbard ’00 Elaine C. Hubbard ’90 Pamela A. Hubbs ’94 Carol A. Hubshman ’90 Meosha L. Hudgens ’01 Edward L. Hudgins III Cynthia A. Hudson ’95 Ernest D. Huff Jr. ’84 MGA Fredrick A. Huffman ’73 Laurie Huffman ’87 Jill B. Huggins ’95 & ’97 Janice E. Hughes ’00 Derrick Hull ’00 Kim J. Humbard ’95 Scott A. Hummel ’92 & ’94 Billie J. Humphrey ’99 MS Robert Humphries ’96 Erik A. Hund ’89 Carol M. Hungria ’99 Jeffrey C. Hunnewell ’00 Dorothy J. Hunt ’90 Karla L. Hunt ’96

Sandra T. Hunt ’81 Judy F. Hunter ’98 MS Michelle A. Hunter ’96 Rickie N. Hunter ’98 MS Heather D. Hurd ’95 Megan Hurley Miriam L. Hursey ’96 Cheryl C. Hurst ’92 Louis B. Hurvitz ’89 Nabeel A. Hussain ’99 Fabion F. Husson ’98 Mark P. Huston ’95 MGA Robert M. Huston ’60 Brindle L. Hutchins ’94 Joan B. Hutchins ’71 Humberto A. Hutchinson ’99 Mary L. Hutchison ’93 Theresa L. Hutchinson ’89 Nancy J. Hutson ’82 & ’95 Deborah A. Hutton ’96 Adam C. Huyck ’96 Daniel J. Hyatt ’97 & ’02 MS Stephanie L. Hyde ’00 Catherine A. Hylander ’79 Penny Hylton ’02 M.B.A. Annette M. Hyman ’00 Gloria H. Hyman ’00 Donald P. Hymel ’86 Lynn B. Iffland Thomas W. Igoe ’88 Muhammad Ikhlas ’00 Victoria A. Imre ’97 MIM David P. Inada ’96 MS Joan L. Ingerman ’84 Diane Ingram ’96 Keith A. Ingram ’86 Deborah C. Inskeep ’94 MGA Gita Irani ’98 Dan H. Iredell ’85 Lena F. Iredell Hayden C. Ireland III ’91 Charles L. Ireton ’89 & ’98 MS Joyce E. Isaac ’96 MGA Krystal M. Isaac ’00 MS Michele W. Isaacson ’86 & ’90 Joanne F. Isacson ’79 Rene Isser ’91 MGA Simon Iverson ’93 Donald E. Jaccard ’93 & ’96 Yvette R. Jacinto ’84 Antoinette Jackson ’95 Broadway Jackson Jr. ’96 Catherine L. Jackson ’00 Celeste A. Jackson ’97 MS

54

ACHIEVER

Charles O. Jackson ’00 Clairesse Jackson ’98 MIM David R. Jackson ’69 Dawn R. Jackson ’96 Donna M. Jackson ’94 Earlene C. Jackson ’87 Geraldine Jackson ’80 Jackie T. Jackson ’85 Josh Jackson Jr. ’89 James E. Jackson ’84 Robert M. Jackson ’80 Shannon A. Jackson ’00 Fern M. Jackson Duncan ’96 & ’98 Carol C. Jacobs ’82 Debra M. Jacobs ’00 Eric P. Jacobs ’96 Marva E. Jacobs ’97 Richard K. Jacobs ’69 John H. Jacobsen ’82 John M. Jacobson ’96 Kerrie A. Jacques ’96 Oswaldo Jaime ’00 Ruby Jain ’94 Hassan A. Jallow ’96 MIM Bruce James ’94 Diana P. James Patricia James ’91 Vera A. James ’96 Donald E. Jamison ’97 MS Judith Jamison ’99 Suzanna C. Jamison ’92 Himabindu A. Jandhyala ’99 Angela L. Jandrew ’89 James C. Janik ’96 Todd C. Janorske ’87 Michael R. Janssen ’88 & ’91 Timothy Jaques ’00 Floyd L. Jarboe ’87 Brian A. Jarvis ’00 Constance B. Jarvis ’98 Susanne M. Jaskiewicz ’99 William J. Jasper Karla M. Jaundoo ’98 Elizabeth M. Jay ’81 Ronald Jean ’00 Byron W. Jefferson ’95 Mary J. Jefferson ’83 & ’85 Willie M. Jefferson ’01 David S. Jeffery ’84 Peter F. Jelen ’96 MIM John A. Jenkins Jr. ’90 Ronald J. Jenkins ’85 Sallie M. Jenkins ’81 William R. Jenness ’64

This list represents gifts received during fiscal year 2002 (July 1, 2001–June 30, 2002).


David A. Jennings ’00 Maurice P. Jenoure ’00 MS Ann Jensen ’63 Patricia J. Jensen ’80 Peter A. Jensen ’97 MS Cheryl A. Jervis ’92 Marianne T. Jessee ’83 MGA Dean W. Jessup ’92 Virginia C. Jester ’79 Brice R. Jett Jr. ’91 Bacu Y. Jeung ’90 Darl W. Jewell ’96 Bo Jia ’99 MS Marianne G. Jig ’96 Adiatu A. John ’97 Faye D. Johndrow ’98 Deborah A. Johns ’00 MS Alfred Johnson ’87 Andrew T. Johnson ’95 Brigitte W. Johnson ’99 MS Candace M. Johnson ’97 Carolyn L. Johnson ’88 Charles L. Johnson ’87 Corey R. Johnson ’92 Cornelius A. Johnson ’91 & ’97 Esther M. Johnson ’83 Eugene E. Johnson ’95 Evelyn M. Johnson ’97 & ’00 Jacqueline R. Johnson ’00 & ’01 James M. Johnson Jr. ’92 James N. Johnson ’97 MGA Latina R. Johnson ’88 Leonard C. Johnson ’00 Lisa A. Johnson ’98 Ramon M. Johnson ’00 MS Sandara Johnson ’96 Shirley P. Johnson ’91 Staci M. Johnson ’00 Tiffany Johnson ’01 Tina L. Johnson ’98 MS Vanessa A. Johnson ’94 Walter L. Johnson ’79 Wanda Johnson ’95 Wayne Johnson ’63 Willie J. Johnson ’00 Eric R. Johnson ’96 Sharon L. Johnson ’88 Shirley B. Johnson ’94 Lois D. Johns-Ridenour ’93 James C. Johnston ’89 Deborah M. Johnstone ’88 Anita M. Joiner ’89 Antonio L. Jones ’99 MS Clivette T. Jones ’01 Cynthia F. Jones ’99

D. Jones ’97 Douglas E. Jones ’94 Dwight A. Jones ’98 Eddie L. Jones ’84 Ellis Jones ’91 & ’95 Gregory N. Jones ’98 James A. Jones ’99 MS Janie M. Jones ’94 Juanita Jones ’00 Juliana Jones ’91 Lisa A. Jones ’97 Lynne P. Jones ’96 Marcus G. Jones ’98 Martha E. Jones ’96 Mary-Ellen Jones ’93 Michael R. Jones ’78 & ’96 Monika J. Jones ’90 Richard H. Jones ’82 Robert Jones ’96 Sharon K. Jones ’00 Shelley R. Jones ’98 Sonja N. Jones ’00 Marsha A. Jordan ’99 & ’02 MS Marylin R. Jordan ’85 Karen R. Joseph ’92 Michel E. Joseph ’90 Paul E. Joseph ’92 Bernard F. Joy Jr. ’70 Camille A. Joy ’99 Eve Juarbe ’94 David C. Judah ’90 & ’91 Pierre R. Julien ’99 Michael A. Justice ’88 Srinivas Kadiyala ’99 MSW. Robert B. Kaizar ’94 Yasushi Kakuta Alireza Kalantari ’96 MGA Kathleen S. Kalinowski ’92 MGA Kenneth B. Kalisz ’93 Carl B. Kallmyer ’59 Jerry K. Kaminaga ’83 Patricia H. Kane ’99 Aiko O. Kaneshige Kiyomi Kaneshige ’71 Danny K. Kao ’88 Wendy J. Kaplan ’95 Sanjeev Kapoor ’00 Thomas E. Kaprive ’87 John Kapustik ’00 Ernest J. Karch ’61 Ela Karczewska Carl W. Karlburg ’84 & ’92 Todd A. Karner ’95 MGA Benedict A. Karnosky ’60 Timothy L. Karr ’00

55

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Louis P. Kastner ’96 Carol A. Kastorf ’01 MS Cheryl B. Kates ’98 Richard Katterson ’80 Thelma E. Kavanagh ’87 James R. Keane ’96 Julie E. Kearney ’90 Bessie L. Keck ’88 Gerald C. Keck ’86 Peter J. Keckel ’62 Renu Kedia ’98 & ’02 MSW. John W. Keedy ’80 Alice J. Keefe ’82 Edward D. Keenan ’98 Bruce P. Keil ’83 James E. Keiper ’96 Lark F. Keller ’76 Bartie L. Kelley ’94 Alexis L. Kelly ’00 MS Lawrence T. Kelly ’84 Richard B. Kelly ’93 MS Robert H. Kelly ’87 & ’96 MGA Robert M. Kemp ’55 Vincent Kendall ’99 Ann H. Kendrall ’79 Charles L. Kendrick ’99 Alice C. Kennedy ’95 Lorraine D. Kennedy ’91 MS Phillip R. Kennedy ’95 Richard C. Kennedy ’79 Robert H. Kennedy Jr. ’94 Mary E. Kenner David E. Kenney ’96 Mary J. Kenney ’76 William D. Kent ’65 Helen L. Kerner ’85 & ’91 Marlis Kessler ’82 Abu N. Khan ’90 Vandana R. Kharod ’94 MS Bella Khodorkvsky ’01 Etta B. Kidwell ’80 Cosmos P. Kiedi ’92 Karen Kiley ’94 Lynn M. Kiley ’00 David P. King ’98 Donna J. King ’99 Edwin S. King ’70 Evelyn W. King ’96 Freda C. King ’98 MGA Gene P. King ’81 James E. King ’80 Jim D. King ’97 Lisa King ’96 Lowell G. King ’85 & ’94 Raymond F. King ’64


Sandra King ’99 Michelle E. Kingsbury ’85 Carol J. Kinsley ’93 Delbert E. Kirby ’87 Douglas M. Kirby ’95 Roy J. Kirk Jr. ’93 Robert W. Kirkpatrick ’71 Walter Kit ’96 MS Catherine D. Kitchens ’87 & ’92 Mary E. Klatko ’79 & ’82 MGA Carol A. Klauber ’79 Leslie K. Kleban ’00 MS A. S. Klein ’94 Dennis Klein Everett H. Klein ’79 John P. Kleinhans ’96 MS Gregory R. Kleist ’88 Edward B. Klem ’90 MS David Kline ’80 Linda M. Kline ’99 Frankie N. Kline Martin L. Kline Jr. ’60 Stephen C. Kling ’88 MGA Kim Q. Klingenstein ’98 & ’01 MS Colleen L. Klinger ’96 Margaret A. Klock ’95 Anne M. Klosowski ’95 Robert W. Klotz ’95 Norman P. Klug ’84 MGA Gary J. Klunk ’80 Marie P. Kluttz ’79 Kimberly G. Klyberg ’97 MGA Chester H. Knapp ’91 MGA Cripe A. Knapp ’88 Tina L. Kneip ’95 Federico A. Knight ’88 Sharon E. Knight ’00 Frances Knopf ’89 David L. Knott ’98 Rebecca T. Knowles ’91 Karen G. Knox ’96 MS Marguerite N. Knox ’88 Gregory H. Knuckle ’93 MS Dieter C. Knuepfer ’60 Su C. Ko ’98 David J. Kobza ’90 George F. Koch ’89 Vladimir A. Kochneff ’85 Betty S. Koenig ’88 Mikeiel R. Koenig ’96 Robert A. Koetz ’78 Marcia L. Kogle ’93 Beverly A. Kohn ’89 Denise A. Kohr Reston ’99 Meltem Kokaly ’96 & ’97

George H. Kolenky Jr. ’91 Roy E. Kolly ’85 MGA Robert C. Kolstee ’89 Alexander B. Komoroske ’59 Suwanna Komsatayapongvudhi ’00 MS Kenneth M. Kone ’63 Vaclav Konecny ’99 Raymond T. Kontros ’00 Belinda L. Kopec ’85 Fred F. Korangy ’99 MS Madhavi Korisapati ’01 MS Janice E. Kosko ’82 Richard P. Kost ’80 Richard H. Kottemann ’86 Eva Kovacs ’93 P. D. Kovalsky ’01 Charles A. Kowalewski ’93 Holly M. Kowgios ’82 Indira Y. Kozak ’99 & ’01 Russell J. Kozerski ’00 Deborah S. Kozubal ’87 John M. Kramarczyk ’97 Joy Kramer ’99 S P. Kramon Mary F. Kranking ’91 Robert S. Krasowski ’89 MS Jeri L. Kravitz ’00 Thomas Kravitz ’77 Richard E. Krebill ’86 David J. Kreger ’98 Randy C. Kreimoyer ’97 Angela D. Kreitzer-McClay ’93 & ’96 Brian W. Kremler ’96 Edward T. Kriebel ’93 & ’95 Cherie L. Krigsman ’85 & ’88 Sathiya Krishnan ’98 MS Kenneth W. Krouse ’81 Elizabeth L. Kruppa ’79 Pamela S. Kucharski ’96 John A. Kudrick ’99 MS Robert A. Kuecker ’93 Patrick J. Kuhn ’95 MGA Paul G. Kuhn ’84 & ’88 Randall Kuldell ’95 MS Albert L. Kulle ’77 Betty A. Kulle Philip Kulp ’01 Linda M. Kumi ’90 Mary E. Kundin ’97 Krupa S. Kunju ’00 Gaby Kuperman ’92 MGA Nancy S. Kupperian ’88 Robert J. Kurtz ’70 Jonathan G. Kuruc ’91 Bernice G. Kuryk ’73

56

ACHIEVER

Kenneth A. Kuzio ’98 MS Rosemary Kvaka ’78 James L. Kwolek ’91 MS Denise M. La Fluer ’97 Debra L. La Gasse ’98 Lawrence J. La Moure Jr. ’93 MS David F. La Vally ’00 Billie M. Labhart ’81 James A. Lacewell III ’01 Robert H. Lacey III ’88 Eileen M. Lacijan ’99 MS David W. Ladner ’91 Jane Lafazio ’87 Robin K. Lafferty ’99 Jocelyn M. Lahargoue ’01 Charles L. Laine III ’79 Elsie I. Lake ’91 Philip A. Lake ’63 Barbara L. Lakin ’77 Martha F. Lallis ’98 Thai V. Lam ’00 Gail L. Lamaster ’91 Carolyn K. Lambdin ’90 Alan Lambert ’98 Sandra L. Lambert-Bray ’89 Cheryl E. Lammy ’98 Diane Lampe Bruce H. Lancaster ’83 John E. Lancaster ’81 Edward M. Land ’75 Gregory W. Land ’94 Ann Carroll Lane ’73 Henry C. Lane III ’00 John T. Lane ’01 Shawn L. Lane ’83 & ’90 MGA Terri A. Lang ’96 Sandra C. Langenfelder ’86 Brenda S. Langley ’93 & ’95 Hazel F. Langley ’88 Marylou Langston ’93 & ’97 Lewis E. Lantz III ’78 Richard H. LaPointe ’95 Brian G. Lapsley ’00 Kathy R. Lare ’97 Margot Larkin Tom A. Larochelle ’82 Holly N. Larson ’94 Jacqueline A. Larson ’92 Karla J. Larson ’82 William A. Lascelle ’88 Clarise M. Lassiter ’00 Jean-Marie Dean Lattie ’90 MGA Sandra M. Laughlin ’90 MGA Victor H. Laughton ’63 Linda S. Laukaitis ’91 MGA

This list represents gifts received during fiscal year 2002 (July 1, 2001–June 30, 2002).


Kevin G. Laurila ’95 Barbara J. Lavalle ’89 Ronald M. Lavender Sr. ’80 Suzanne Laviolette ’92 Dianna M. Lavoie ’96 Ernest P. Lawhorn ’87 Milton Lawler ’88 & ’89 Eric Lawrence ’94 MGA Kathleen D. Lawrence ’85 Willimina G. Lawrence ’84 Leonard W. Lawson ’80 Renee E. Layshock ’90 MGA Charles G. Layton ’80 Joel T. Layton ’93 Jeanette A. Lazarofsky ’97 Barry A. Lazarus ’80 Anh N. Le ’98 Tina L. Lea ’93 Charles Leach ’97 Mary G. Leadbetter ’86 Teresa J. Lear ’88 Ronald A. Leard ’92 Theresa A. Lebhar ’98 Marlene M. LeBrun ’87 Grace M. Lechert ’01 Paula L. Leclaire ’86 Ricardo C. Lecompte ’93 Jesse I. Ledbetter ’58 Joan M. Ledbetter ’76 Marie E. Ledbetter Anna J. Lee ’81 Anthony Lee ’94 Cheryl D. Lee ’01 Daryl D. Lee ’96 Jana M. Lee ’00 Janice M. Lee ’00 Jethro Lee ’85 Kevin D. Lee ’91 Kwang W. Lee ’96 Mesanie M. Lee ’95 Robert E. Lee ’91 Soon Ok Lee ’87 Vernecia R. Lee ’00 MS Edward P. Leech ’84 Cheryl A. Leeman ’91 Robert G. Leeman ’87 Marvin G. Leerar ’72 Kevin D. Leese ’99 Karen J. Lefler ’89 MS John P. Lehane ’79 Cheryl A. Leid ’91 Kirk F. Leiferman ’85 Dennis L. Leland ’94 MS Brian J. Lem ’92 MS Robin E. LeMaster ’99

Olivia P. Lenahan ’92 MGA Patricia J. Lenderking ’90 Edward W. Lent III ’85 Lesley S. Leonard ’97 Patrick P. Leonard ’93 & ’94 Thomas E. Leonard ’91 John V. Leone ’88 James G. Leoni ’93 & ’99 MS Constance B. Leppert ’99 Eugene W. Lerch ’91 Penny S. LeRoy ’94 Christopher A. Lertora ’00 Bertram L. Leslie ’55 Cynthia Lesniewski ’98 Richard P. Lessard ’92 Frances Y. Leung ’83 Betsy A. Lew ’84 MGA Adele P. Lewis ’87 & ’93 MS Antonette M. Lewis ’92 Antwan Lewis ’98 Bernard L. Lewis ’98 Carlotta G. Lewis ’87 Cheryl R. Lewis ’96 MGA Edward J. Lewis James J. Lewis Jr. ’99 John Lewis ’98 Lafon Lewis ’87 Michael J. Lewis ’95 Nadine S. Lewis ’00 Robert D. Lewis ’86 Willie L. Lewis ’91 Winston E. Lewis ’84 Geraldine A. L’Heureux ’96 Enid S. Libster Stephen M. Libster ’86 Abbi J. Lichtenstein ’93 Deborah A. Lightfoot ’97 & ’00 MS Wayne G. Lileks ’71 William H. Lilley III ’91 & ’97 MS Anna Lim ’80 Carol Y. Linder ’91 Michael A. Lindsey ’91 Robert W. Lindsey ’82 Thu T. Linh ’94 MS Carolyn A. Linthicum ’95 MGA Glenna L. Linville ’88 Princess Lipscomb ’87 & ’88 Alice E. Litavecz ’98 & ’01 MS Denise V. Little ’00 Dianne Little ’99 Ginger B. Little ’91 & ’93 Anthony C. Littlejohn ’93 & ’99 Mark A. Littlejohn ’99 Elizabeth C. Littleton ’91 James T. Littleton ’83

57

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Goldie B. Livingston ’91 Edgar J. Livingstone ’94 Andrew D. Lloyd ’73 Celestine E. Lloyd ’00 Roberta L. Lloyd ’88 Barbara M. Lluveras ’94 Jaime A. Lobera ’98 & ’99 Mark H. Loberg ’99 MS Sheila Locke ’95 Jacquelyn R. Locks ’92 Robert H. Lockyer ’60 Julia A. Lodge ’93 & ’94 Paul V. Loeffler ’79 Jacqueline B. Lofton ’98 & ’01 MS Geneva V. Logan ’89 Loretta M. Logan ’89 Joseph A. Lohman ’93 Jane Lohr ’78 Kimberly N. Lomax-Williams ’97 Joyce A. Loney ’89 Chandra T. Long ’99 Christopher J. Long ’91 Jeffrey A. Long ’94 Richard G. Long ’76 Ray H. Longerbeam ’85 Virgil J. Longo ’67 Pedro Lopez ’90 & ’91 Carla J. Lorenzo ’95 Joan M. Lorincz ’96 Ilona V. Losonczy ’82 Stanley J. Loughlin ’99 MS Patricia A. Loughran ’79 Jana H. Loughry ’93 Robert L. Louis Jr. ’92 Barry M. Love ’92 Terresa N. Love ’01 Claude T. Lovelace II ’76 Michael Lovelace ’94 Albert P. Lovelady ’67 Joette D. Loveless ’00 Mary M. Lovello ’94 & ’00 Clarence L. Lovick ’99 Brian C. Low ’88 & ’90 Burma C. Lowe ’83 & ’85 Jerry L. Lowe ’94 Teresa M. Loweth ’01 Phillip Lowry ’90 & ’92 Charity L. Loyd ’87 Janice M. Lubosch ’86 Cherie Lucas Jeffrey R. Lucas ’95 Carlos A. Luciano Mattie L. Luckett ’88 Marjorie W. Ludwig ’98 Donald E. Luffy ’64


William E. Lukowski ’81 Paula A. Lumby ’00 Frank W. Lumpkin ’80 Deborah L. Lundahl ’90 & ’94 Jan L. Luong ’01 Brenda Luper ’95 MGA James W. Lusk ’99 Karen Lusk ’00 Walter J. Lutman ’91 Hung Luu ’00 Jacqueline E. Lyde ’01 Hans J. Lykens ’79 Ricky R. Lyle ’00 Yetta Lyle ’00 William L. Lynam ’99 Alma E. Lynch ’93 Charles H. Lynch ’81 Peter F. Lynch III Allen Lyngdoh ’98 MGA Harriet Lynn ’97 MGA Joseph P. Lynott ’93 MGA Richard J. Lyon ’87 Carole A. Lyons ’94 James K. Lyons ’99 Charles K. Lytle ’94 Howard A. MacCord Sr. ’59 David B. MacFarland ’92 MS Gilda T. Mack ’94 Susan E. Mackie ’95 MS Anne T. Mackinnon ’97 MGA Bruce D. Macmillan ’90 MGA Barbara R. MacNeill ’78 Andrea J. Macquillan ’99 Angela E. Madagu ’01 Anna C. Magee ’85 & ’99 MS Ernest L. Magee ’78 Kenneth Magidson ’73 Janet L. Maheras ’90 Russell C. Maheras ’91 Dinh Mai ’99 Edward Mai ’94 Jane Majcher ’89 MGA Claudius D. Major ’01 Joe Major ’95 Carol Y. Mak ’95 Michele A. Makle ’91 Robert N. Makuch ’80 Lori A. Malachi ’99 MS Lorenzo E. Malcolm ’92 Donna R. Maley ’77 John M. Malinky Angela M. Malley ’98 Melvin R. Mallonee ’70 Ronnie Malone ’88 Thomas A. Malone ’99

Jennifer R. Maloney ’01 August F. Malson II ’85 David M. Malson ’94 Andrew E. Maly-Cordell ’99 Victoria W. Manalabe ’93 Walter E. Manderson ’84 Christine M. Mandeville ’99 Hugh C. Maney ’91 Allen J. Manfre ’86 Badase Mangaroo ’86 Ricky E. Mangum ’83 David Manion ’95 MS Mark A. Mann ’99 Lee A. Manning ’92 Harel Manor ’00 Steven Manthei ’95 MIM Michael G. Mantzouranis ’79 Edith A. Maple ’80 Nicole D. Marchan ’00 Jeffrey V. Marchione ’91 Katherine Marconi ’99 MS David Marcus ’75 Frances A. Marcus ’90 & ’99 MS Judith H. Marcus ’85 MGA Michael A. Mardesich ’99 MS Marsha K. Margarella Robin L. Margolis ’82 Deon D. Markey ’97 Gail A. Marotte ’01 Manuel Marquez Jr. ’91 John F. Marshall ’98 Kameron A. Marshall ’85 Natalie E. Marshall ’01 MS Richard P. Marshall ’91 & ’93 Sharon A. Marshall ’00 Shirleitha D. Marshall ’92 Anthony C. Martin ’94 Danny C. Martin ’92 Dwight C. Martin ’99 MS Kathleen M. Martin ’88 Lewis M. Martin ’99 Lloyd B. Martin ’72 Marie O. Martin Paul S. Martin ’90 Richard C. Martin ’78 Rita L. Martin ’92 Robert C. Martin ’87 Robert E. Martin ’95 MS Ronald P. Martin ’99 MS Russell B. Martin ’85 Stephen C. Martin ’85 Carlos P. Martinez ’92 & ’94 Eric R. Martinez ’00 Patricia C. Martinez ’85 Shirley A. Martinez ’94

58

ACHIEVER

Aldo Martusciello ’93 Carol A. Martz ’57 Richard A. Marz ’89 Kiyan Masahiro John J. Masaitis ’73 Barbara R. Mason ’97 Curtis L. Mason ’94 Cybelle Mason ’99 MIM Karen Mason ’98 Patricia L. Mason ’97 Dorothy J. Masterson ’84 Edward B. Mastin III Barbara Materre ’92 Kathleen E. Mathai ’98 MGA Tracy D. Mathews ’97 Evelyn A. Mattar ’95 Alexis D. Matthews ’01 Gregory J. Matthews ’71 Jacqueline G. Matthews ’98 MGA John D. Mattie ’57 Garrett G. Mattingly ’87 & ’96 MS Richard K. Mattingly ’92 Paul C. Mattoon III ’94 & ’95 Paula D. Matuskey ’81 James W. Mauriello ’84 Ronald J. Maus ’84 Tammie L. Mayer ’91 Kenneth C. Maynard ’81 Jennifer L. Mazzarello ’99 Jacob T. Mbafor ’96 Victor Mba-Jonas ’90 Gregory S. McAfoos ’92 Patrick E. McAllister ’94 Wendy V. McAllister ’96 MIM William S. McAllister ’85 Steven D. McAlpin ’87 A. J. McAnelly ’87 Jefferson D. McBride III ’91 Margaret R. McBurney ’97 Edward F. McCaffrey ’88 Robert L. McCampbell ’92 Cara M. McCandless Bruce A. McCarthy ’85 Kelli A. McCarthy ’91 Elizabeth A. McCartney ’85 Mary E. McCausland ’72 Clyde F. McClain ’72 Daniel J. McClannahan ’88 Michael T. McClanahan ’93 Jeffrey McClaskey ’88 & ’95 Philip M. McClean Alfred B. McClintock ’58 Scott L. McCluney ’92 & ’01 Joe T. McClure ’95 Vaughan M. McClure ’65

This list represents gifts received during fiscal year 2002 (July 1, 2001–June 30, 2002).


Andrew M. McCombe ’90 Antoinette M. McConneaughey ’98 Geoffrey T. McConnell ’80 Judith D. McConnell ’87 Noemys I. McConnell ’01 Darryl D. McCoy ’89 & ’97 MS David E. McCoun ’87 Karen F. McCoy ’85 Michael D. McCoy III ’77 & ’88 MGA Robin M. McCoy ’93 Troy I. McCoy ’98 Vidner D. McCraw ’93 Anne C. McCray ’93 Lori A. McCray ’93 Karen A. McCreary ’01 Antoinette N. McCree ’01 Alisa A. McCullar ’99 Steven K. McCullum ’94 Jasper M. McCurdy ’62 Michael V. McCutchan ’97 Joe H. McDonald ’83 Patricia S. McDonald ’91 Janet I. McDonnell ’79 Linda D. McDonnell ’00 Dorothy J. McDonough ’93 Harold E. McDonough ’70 George C. McDowell ’83 Wilma R. McFadden ’91 Grover P. McFerran ’79 Michael E. Mcgee ’00 Raymond J. McGlynn ’91 & ’01 MS Vandetta M. McGoogan ’95 Mark T. McGown ’97 MS Timothy L. McGrail Sr. ’98 Wanda J. McGraw ’96 Otis McGrew ’77 Joyce McGuiggan ’92 Lisa A. Mcguire ’99 Timothy M. McGuoirk ’90 Gloria S. McIntosh ’00 Michelle D. McIntyre ’97 & ’01 MS Anita L. McIver ’98 Emmett O. McKelpin ’97 MS Mark A. McKelvey ’83 Pamela R. Mckenzie ’97 Patrick D. McKernan ’84 John J. McKim ’99 Kathryn R. McKinley ’94 Barbara D. McKinney ’95 Hugh L. McKinney ’54 Jeffrey N. McKinney ’98 MS Matthew K. McKinney ’96 & ’00 Robert E. McKinney ’61 Joseph McLafferty ’00 Barbara J. McLaughlin

Merle McLean ’94 Joseph A. McLellan ’77 Stephen W. McLeroy ’96 Harry D. McMahan Jr. ’75 Leo T. McMahon Jr. ’58 Timothy H. McManus ’90 & ’91 Dennis W. McMillan ’71 Nora M. McMillian ’82 Daniel G. McMullen ’93 MGA Donald E. McMullin ’77 Thomas D. McNally ’75 Maria L. McNamee ’00 Clestine McNeal ’00 Susan L. McNeal ’01 John T. McNeece ’00 Katia C. McNeely ’01 Vinicia A. McNeil ’98 Russell W. McNutt ’70 James P. McQuillan ’93 Guy M. McRae ’94 Christina A. McReynolds ’94 Dianne H. McSears ’85 & ’98 MS Michael B. McShea ’98 Kimberly A. McVinney ’98 Maxine M. Mead ’91 Riva R. Meade ’89 Jean M. Measell John J. Mecholsky ’01 MS Joseph Medeiros ’73 Walter D. Medley Jr. ’80 Cornelia Meekma ’92 David C. Meeks ’85 Jerry M. Mehaffey ’96 Jane S. Mehrtens ’83 Lawrence F. Meiers ’87 Kenneth J. Melchiorre ’83 Larry P. Mellgren ’86 & ’87 Gary A. Mellor ’91 Lorie J. Melocchi ’91 Ben S. Melson ’97 & ’98 Allen G. Melton ’98 Anne S. Melvin Lesa P. Melvin ’95 Susan D. Mendenhall ’94 Elmer A. Mendez ’90 Elinda F. Mendiola Pamela A. Menefee ’84 Ronald E. Menke ’97 Craig T. Menning ’01 Erwin E. Mercado ’94 MS Joey N. Mercado Jose N. Mercado John M. Mercer ’99 MS Brenda Y. Meredith ’97 MGA Stanley R. Merentie ’99

59

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Keith G. Merkey ’96 MGA Dana C. Merrick ’92 Teresa M. Merrick ’94 Cedric L. Merritt ’96 MS Margaret W. Meserole ’97 MGA Jean F. Mesidor ’01 Julius C. Metts Jr. ’73 Stephen E. Meyer ’78 Deborah A. Meyer-Mercado ’90 David M. Meyers ’94 Kevin J. Michael ’87 & ’98 MS A. L. Michaux Jr. ’62 Werner E. Michel Joseph Mickens Jr. ’79 Earl L. Middaugh ’77 Paul W. Middlemiss ’01 Harry F. Middleton ’65 MS Audrey F. Mihalcin ’93 MS Raymond R. Mihalik ’92 MS Ulrika V. Mikel ’79 Joan P. Milan ’00 Wayde L. Miland ’99 Carol F. Miles ’84 Franklin Miles ’91 Donald L. Milks ’86 Angela C. Miller ’00 Antoinette Miller ’00 Barbara J. Miller ’84 Barbara L. Miller ’96 & ’97 Betty J. Miller ’97 Cole L. Miller ’83 Donna G. Miller ’94 & ’98 Eric L. Miller ’93 & ’95 Eva M. Miller ’88 Fred C. Miller ’98 Frederick J. Miller ’99 MS George E. Miller ’87 Howard A. Miller ’81 Kathy A. Miller ’94 Kurt L. Miller ’85 & ’90 Lisa A. Miller ’97 MS Paul J. Miller ’81 Terry L. Miller ’90 William R. Milligan ’78 Dennis D. Mills Sr. ’89 Rochelle Mills ’98 Robert F. Milner ’99 MS Tatiana L. Milton ’92 Tycha L. Milton ’98 Hayden P. Mims ’64 Steven J. Mincey ’95 Roderick L. Mincher ’87 Fuller Ming Jr. ’98 MS Rosetta Mingo ’82 & ’95 MS Tracy J. Minnifield ’98


Frank A. Minton Jr. ’74 Kenneth W. Minton ’80 Janice B. Mintz ’70 Peggy A. Mion ’90 Janet N. Miracle ’67 Andrew M. Mishaga ’96 MGA Janet Mishler ’92, ’97, & ’01 James C. Mitchell Jr. ’88 & ’93 Karen D. Mitchell ’92 Troy S. Mitchell ’96 Bharati Mitra ’97 Tom Miyasaki ’60 Lawrence E. Mize ’00 Jeffrey L. Mock ’71 James S. Modderno ’97 Kirk S. Moir ’90 Rodrigue Moise ’86 Ingeborg G. Molaison ’94 George W. Molessa Jr. ’92 MS Lisa S. Moling ’91 Weslene V. Molon ’90 Theresa A. Mommeut ’91 Kimberly G. Momodu ’01 MIM Kathleen M. Monahan ’88 & ’91 Parmod Monga ’00 MS Virginie E. Mongonou ’99 Carol I. Monroe ’00 Casandra C. Monroe ’98 MS Christine J. Monroe ’96 Scott A. Monroe ’86 Leonard R. Montford ’96 MS Anthony N. Montgomery Jr. ’97 Burnetta R. Montgomery ’00 Grant E. Montgomery ’87 Ruth E. Montgomery ’91 & ’95 Rebecca L. Montoya ’99 Ernest R. Moody ’93 Laurel A. Moody ’97 MS Vernice J. Moody ’99 Jo A. Moorash Andrea M. Moore ’94 Carol A. Moore ’97 MGA Charles D. Moore ’82 Clarence A. Moore ’92 Eryn L. Moore ’00 MS Gloria L. Moore ’93 Jennifer A. Moore ’89 Kathi M. Moore ’98 Melody A. Moore ’97 MGA Patricia A. Moore ’97 Patrick G. Moore ’95 Paulette Moore ’00 Quanita D. Moore ’00 & ’01 Ruth A. Moore ’94 Taina J. Moore ’96

Timothy P. Moore ’96 Tyler Moore ’00 Juan Mora Jr. ’74 Ricardo M. Morales ’97 Cindy E. Moran ’88 Frankie F. Moran ’92 MGA John R. Moran Jr. ’94 Thomas Moran Michael Morano ’69 Eugene E. Morath Jr. ’55 Soudabeh Moraveji ’00 James W. Moreland ’85 & ’86 Jon A. Morell ’80 Brian R. Morey ’82 Doreen E. Morgan ’98 Franklin E. Morgan ’66 Frederick H. Morgan III ’92 MGA Lavern S. Morgan ’92 Mary C. Morgan ’87 & ’89 Michael E. Morgan ’88 Robert L. Morgan III ’96 MGA Ronnie L. Morgan ’95 John W. Morgester IV ’80 Keiko Morgester Karen L. Morgret ’91 MGA Rodney A. Morison ’85 & ’01 Julia A. Morollo ’93 Marie K. Moroney ’96 Carla M. Morris ’01 Dale W. Morris ’00 Guy E. Morris Jr. ’88 & ’92 Janice D. Morris ’91 Patricia A. Morris ’97 Tiwana Morris ’98 William J. Morris Jr. ’81 Yvette D. Morris ’96 Gregg M. Morrison ’97 MS James N. Morrison ’86 Marvin P. Morrison ’86 John R. Morrissette ’95 Kelly R. Morrissette ’98 Mark M. Morrow ’80 Burnham S. Morse ’97 MS Lorraine A. Mortimer ’99 Andrea N. Morton ’88 Franklin T. Morton ’82 Theodore R. Mosley ’01 Natalie B. Moss ’91 Herman L. Motley Jr. ’78 Kenneth J. Mountcastle ’96 Sharon Mountcastle Sandra C. Moxley ’83 Rita J. Moy ’96 MS Guy L. Moyer Thomas P. Moyer ’87

60

ACHIEVER

Pamela A. Muck ’98 James D. Mueller ’72 Ali M. Muhammad ’00 & ’01 Theresa L. Muldoon ’99 Lindora Mullen ’92 & ’95 MGA John P. Mulligan ’79 Richard L. Mullikin ’82 Thomas J. Mullin ’57 Francis K. Mundon ’77 Renee K. Munir ’97 MGA Juan J. Munoz ’82 Nancy M. Munoz ’87 MGA Louis D. Murchison ’91 Charles E. Murphree Jr. ’87 Gerald T. Murphy ’86 Michael P. Murphy Virginia E. Murphy ’99 Brigette L. Murray ’96 Elizabeth F. Murray ’96 MGA Kelly G. Murray ’90 Lutitia Murray ’95 MGA Theresa L. Murray ’95 Sophia L. Murrell ’92 Laura E. Murrer ’94 Mark D. Murset ’89 Michael P. Musachio ’96 Paul D. Muscato ’99 Robert E. Musitano ’72 Mary C. Mussari ’94 Betty W. Mwenje ’99 Gary B. Myers ’96 MGA Loretha A. Myers ’87 Richard J. Myers ’91 William H. Myers ’97 MGA Dalton V. Myrie ’93 James C. Naeher ’90 Debora Nagy ’94 Gary R. Nagy ’94 Anand J. Narain Jr. ’01 Rishi M. Narain ’96 MGA Michael J. Nardone ’97 & ’98 Marc P. Narkus-Kramer ’98 MIM Gregory L. Nations ’94 Jodi D. Naughton ’96 George C. Neal ’68 Michael A. Neal ’97 MS Richard L. Neal ’79 Maribel C. Neanover ’00 John H. Needer ’95 Cynthia A. Neely ’99 Edward M. Neely ’89 A. Thomas Neiss ’60 Karen J. Neitzey ’91 Amy M. Nelson ’88 Henry R. Nelson ’84

This list represents gifts received during fiscal year 2002 (July 1, 2001–June 30, 2002).


Ivornette L. Nelson ’97 Joyce M. Nelson ’84 Lana N. Nelson ’00 Sammy Nelson Jr. ’00 Vanessa A. Nelson ’90 & ’99 MS Victoria Nelson ’97 Peggy L. Nemitz-Rogers ’85 Joseph B. Nestor ’62 Clay R. Nettles ’01 MS Raymond R. Neumann ’88 MS Anthony W. New ’90 Claudia W. New ’84 Linda M. Newbold ’98 Loretta Newby ’96 Patricia G. Newby ’00 Michael T. Newcomb ’99 & ’01 Paul Newgen ’99 Jennifer P. Newlin ’95 MS Howard E. Newman ’58 Irwin G. Newman ’73 Michael Newman ’85 & ’90 Phyllis Newman ’86 Robert C. Newman Jr. ’49 Terri L. Newman ’96 Robert R. Newton Jr. ’94 Sandra H. Neydl ’90 Chingtong D. Ng ’98 Tiang L. Ng ’95 MGA Chi D. Nguyen ’98 Duong D. Nguyen ’97 MS Minh-diep Nguyen ’01 Qunhui Ni ’99 Nakisha R. Nichols ’01 Lisa R. Nickle James E. Nickless ’92 Roger J. Nicolai ’89 Constantinos Nicolaou ’95 MGA Robert Nielsen ’95 Steven Nielsen ’96 Margarida F. Nighswander ’98 MS Johny A. Niles ’89 & ’94 Robert A. Niles ’62 Rodger E. Nisley ’98 MS Donald D. Nissen ’82 Patricia M. Nitowitz ’00 Timothy J. Nixon ’94 Helena Nkole ’87 & ’95 MGA Nicholas Nkole Mary D. Noak ’93 David A. Nobles ’71 Paul M. Noblitt ’77 Patricia M. Noel ’92 Scott J. Nogal ’99 Linda R. Noonan ’96 MGA Alfia Nooruddin ’00

Carol A. Nordbrock ’93 Thomas S. Norman ’82 Mitchell P. Norris ’97 Patricia A. Norris ’95 Scott R. Norris ’93 Timothy Norris ’01 Tina M. Norris ’97 & ’01 MS Victoria Norris Raymond S. Northrop ’91 Daniel L. Norton ’90 & ’91 Steven D. Norton ’92 & ’95 Violet C. Nottidge ’96 MGA Paul D. Noursi ’99 MS Harriette G. Novak ’94 Sandra L. Novak ’00 Oliver P. Nowlin ’93 Linda V. Noy-Stamp William Nuamah ’00 MS Leonard E. Nugent ’82 Edwin Nunez ’00 Aracely Nunez-Mattocks ’99 MS Rebecca U. Nwachukwu ’97 Apollonia N. Nwosu ’01 MS Edward J. Oakes ’95 MS Carolyn A. Oakford ’88 Glen D. Oakley ’95 Margaret I. Obert ’72 Bonnie S. Obrien ’84 Leo J. O’Brien ’70 Joan E. O’Brien ’01 Suzanne R. O’Brien ’97 Joseph F. O’Connor ’66 Michael J. O’Connor ’80 Patricia J. O’Connor ’98 Richard J. O’Connor ’01 MS Carmine D. Oddone ’81 Bernice Oden ’86 Lenore R. Odom ’96 Jenkins Odoms Jr. ’85 Michael W. O’Donnell ’78 Thomas J. O’Donohue ’65 Folasade M. Odubiyi ’00 Gloria E. Ofori-Dankyi ’01 Edith Ogella ’62 Brigid S. Ognibene ’90 Julie B. Oguh ’98 MGA Kayoko Oguri ’01 Jeremiah O’Hanlon ’97 John J. O’Hare ’88 Jacqueline B. O’Keefe ’80 Kimberley A. O’Keefe ’95 MGA Akpan T. Okon ’00 MS Motoko Okuyama ’96 Wakili A. Olayiwola ’00 MS Michael A. Olig ’90

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U N I V E R S I T Y O F M A RY L A N D U N I V E R S I T Y C O L L E G E

Adrianne B. Oliss ’76 Mohammad Oliullah ’97 Robin A. Oliver ’91 Cynthia L. Olson ’87 Patricia A. O’Malley ’82 Pamela J. O’Meara Brenda M. O’Neal ’93 John A. O’Neal ’96 Lisa A. O’Neal-Salke ’99 Kimberly A. O’Neil ’94 & ’96 Mark W. O’Neil ’96 John S. O’Neill ’88 Ava Onisick ’88 Anthony G. Opeka ’98 MS Charles L. Opfer ’99 Paul S. Orapin ’00 MS Michael A. O’Reilly ’99 & ’00 Steven M. Ornstein ’84 Gary S. Orr ’96 Martha B. Orris ’87 Kathleen P. Ortino ’00 MS Jacque W. Osborn ’97 Robert J. Osborn II ’91 Cheri D. Osborne ’99 Debra L. Osborne Terrence F. Osborne ’00 Patricia E. Oshea ’85 Mark E. Osmer ’95 MGA Marrianna H. Osolin-Putnam Joseph T. Osorio ’95 Steven C. Osvatics ’99 Dennis P. O’Toole ’78 Lawrence L. Ott Jr. ’96 MIM Glenn G. Ottley ’81 & ’99 Donna J. Ottone ’94 & ’97 MGA Carol A. Overton ’01 Alison M. Owens ’94 MGA Artis L. Owens Jr. ’90 Phillip W. Owens ’82 Phyllis J. Owens ’99 MS Robert F. Owens Jr. ’98 Tracy L. Owens ’94 & ’96 Valerie J. Owens ’91 Cecelia M. Owens-Graves ’85 Christopher R. Owers ’83 David A. Owl ’73 Olanike Oyefeso ’99 MIM Catherine M. Oyler ’87 Philip E. Pace ’95 Alex P. Pacheco ’85 Laura E. Pacheco ’85 Donald F. Pacini Jr. ’95 Elmer P. Padgett Jr. ’74 Jane L. Padgett ’97 MGA Karen B. Padgett ’95


Ralph M. Padilla ’90 Michael E. Pafford ’80 & ’81 Jennifer B. Page ’91 Loyce B. Pailen ’90 & ’96 MGA Roy Pailen Raymond L. Paine ’99 & ’00 Lauren A. Palardy ’85 & ’92 MGA Kristie L. Palfrey ’91 & ’95 John G. Pallo ’64 Barbara H. Palmer ’98 David C. Palmer ’96 John R. Palmer ’97 & ’01 MS Margot A. Palmer ’95 MGA Susan R. Palmer ’01 Malti Pande ’99 Neal M. Panken ’85 Hugh D. Pankratz ’88 Philip A. Pardee ’97 John W. Pardun ’86 Regina S. Pardun ’95 William R. Parfitt ’88 Himanshu R. Parikh ’97 MS Mary J. Paris ’97 Scott H. Paris ’97 Anne C. Park ’88 Rosanna A. Park ’94 William H. Parke ’90 & ’96 MS Gregory Parker ’99 Jessica L. Parker ’87 & ’99 MS Kevin M. Parker ’89 Melanie D. Parker ’98 Richard E. Parker ’85 & ’86 Warren L. Parker Jr. ’65 William A. Parker ’98 William R. Parkhurst ’80 Sherida M. Parkins ’00 & ’02 Brian C. Parks ’95 Carlos Parra ’95 MIM Barbara A. Parsee ’94 Shirley A. Parsley ’99 Donna J. Parsons ’84 John F. Parsons ’67 Ronni K. Parsons ’93 Willa D. Parsons ’97 Leona D. Partis ’01 Jenean P. Paschalidis ’98 MIM Mary K. Pastor ’88 MGA Deborah A. Pate ’96 MGA Rebecca L. Pate ’98 Hemlata N. Patel ’01 MS Mahavir S. Patel ’96 MGA Ann M. Patenaude ’96 Louise R. Patrick ’81 & ’83 Mary Lou Patrick ’96 Gerald E. Patten ’98

Kem N. Patterson ’92 Salvatore A. Patti ’97 Martha A. Patton ’79 David L. Paul Devon Paul ’94 Sabine R. Paul ’93 MS Darden V. Paule ’98 MGA James H. Pauley ’87 Francella L. Paulisczak ’90 Fred Paull ’98 Michelle M. Pavlik ’95 Wanda C. Paxton ’86 Guy A. Payne ’74 Raymond V. Payne ’00 Rodney W. Payne Jr. ’96 MS Camille R. Peake ’00 Greg A. Pearson ’99 Mary W. Pearson ’94 MS Susan L. Pearson ’91 Donald W. Peck ’91 Lynn A. Peck ’01 Jack M. Pedigo ’85 Gerald A. Peer ’86 & ’87 Rhonda S. Peer Huey-Ching Pei ’88 Patrick B. Pelan ’95 James O. Pell Jr. ’91 Elizabeth A. Pelle ’00 Traudlinde Pelletier ’96 & ’98 Anthony L. Pemberton ’93 Clarice B. Pemberton ’97 Philip S. Pendergrass ’93 Cheryl F. Penick ’91 Dennis Penn ’97 Randy W. Pennington ’91 Benjamin H. Penuel Jr. ’73 Marjorie E. Perdue ’00 Nona M. Perez ’92 Timothy L. Perez ’93 Blair S. Perkins ’86 Helen M. Pernell ’98 & ’00 MS Frances R. Perrine ’94 Gerri K. Perry ’85 Ronald L. Perry ’98 Devi L. Persaud ’97 Dorothy D. Pesci ’95 MGA George C. Pesquera ’90 Mandy S. Pet ’87 Warren E. Peter ’91 Frank H. Peterman ’95 Kathryn S. Peters ’71 Sue E. Peters ’98 MGA Wayne E. Peters ’83 Wende C. Peters ’97 MS Henry T. Petersen ’96

62

ACHIEVER

Leslie A. Petersen Sr. ’97 MS Barbara M. Peterson ’93 & ’97 MGA Michael R. Peterson ’80 Ruby C. Peterson ’98 Victor G. Peterson ’94 Joseph P. Peuser ’93 Kerry L. Pezzuti ’97 Frank Pfennig ’00 MGA Timothy D. Pflaum ’71 & ’95 MS Thai Q. Pham ’00 Keith O. Phill ’01 Ulric M. Phillip ’00 Beverly J. Phillips ’95 Christopher G. Phillips ’83 MGA David J. Phillips ’94 MGA Elizabeth M. Phillips ’00 MS Geneva S. Phillips ’93 Howard L. Phillips ’80 Michael E. Phillips ’80 Neal H. Phillips ’83 Vivian A. Phillips ’90 Todd L. Phinney ’93 Ralph V. Pho ’00 John A. Piazza ’90 Gabriel Picciano Jr. ’98 Irmgard D. Pichot ’92 MGA James H. Pickett ’86 Graciela Piedras ’01 MS Stefan Piele ’90 & ’91 Suzanne Pierre-McMullan Karen H. Pierson ’91 Debra W. Pigg ’91 Douglas H. Pike ’01 Pauline A. Pilate ’90 Lalitha A. Pillai ’97 Escolastic R. Pimentil ’75 Joseph W. Pindell ’98 Andrew C. Pinkham ’01 Daniel C. Pinkley ’91 Irene B. Pino ’86 Sergio Pino ’99 MS Ricky D. Pipal ’97 John E. Piper ’80 Karen K. Piper ’97 Matthew Pisani ’97 Frank L. Pivik ’00 Dawn C. Pivonka ’00 Rebecca A. Placek ’90 Keith O. Pladson ’81 Michael R. Planz ’00 MS Ira M. Platt ’77 Irvin W. Platt ’92 Laura J. Pletcher ’96 MGA Gottfried Pletzer ’66 Joseph G. Poch ’91

This list represents gifts received during fiscal year 2002 (July 1, 2001–June 30, 2002).


SERENA COOK—ON HER WAY UP No two ways about it; Serena Cook is a go-getter. And it’s precisely that quality that made it possible for her to become UMUC’s first Better Opportunities Through Online Education graduate—while raising three active kids with her husband, Edward, and holding down a full-time position as human resources assistant with CVS Drugs. Cook’s career retraining began nearly nine years ago when, while working as a nursing assistant and poised to begin nursing school, she was diagnosed with rheumatoid arthritis. A career in nursing was out of the question, given the strenuous activity that accompanies patient care. Undaunted, Cook began to look at her options and checked into job training programs offered through Goodwill Industries of the Chesapeake, in Baltimore. “At the time, Goodwill had a clerical and computer skills training program that seemed to fit my needs pretty well. But I couldn’t qualify for it because I wasn’t receiving public assistance. Can you believe it? Of course, back in 1994, we were in the early stages of welfare-to-work reform. But after looking at my choices, I decided that Goodwill was the way to go and I did what I had to do to make it work. I applied for social services.” After completing the program’s classroom portion, Cook was placed in a six-month internship at Johns Hopkins University “to see how well I would fit into the clerical working environment.” In fact, she adapted to it so well that Goodwill offered her a job as a program assistant in their burgeoning career development division. It proved difficult, not because of the workload, but because of the many hours she had to spend sitting behind a desk. “With the arthritis, it was hard to sit all day. But Goodwill wanted me to stay, and offered me a job as a mobile admissions coordinator. In that position, I went to sites all around Baltimore enrolling folks in Goodwill programs. I really enjoyed it, but was looking to keep moving up. In 1998, Goodwill asked me to become the administrative assistant to the president. I was a bit worried at first that I would be sitting too much again. But I felt that I could learn a lot from this woman, and she was very flexible with me, especially when she saw how much I wanted to grow and learn. Because I had made a two-year commitment to her that I intended to

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keep, she was willing to let me train in a lot of different areas, as long as I accomplished what she needed done.” Before long, Cook was organizing career fairs, streamlining the career development database, and setting up employee rewards and recognitions programs. She had found her true passion— the world of human resources—and would soon join CVS. She also heard about UMUC’s Better Opportunities Through Online Education program, which was then in its pilot stage, a career development partnership between UMUC and Goodwill Industries of the Chesapeake. “I have to admit I was skeptical at first, because I’m skeptical about anything that calls itself free,” Cook said. “I’m always asking, ‘What’s the catch?’ I mean, it sounded too good to be true—free tuition, free computer, free assistance. However, my boss finally convinced me that there was no catch, and I contacted [program director] Beverly Lucas at UMUC.” Cook enrolled in May 2000. As a lifelong self-starter, Cook had already completed some coursework at Sojourner-Douglass College in Baltimore, but found that classroom-based learning was extremely challenging with three kids at home. “Even though Sojourner-Douglass had onsite daycare and would help my kids with their homework, I still felt that I was the one who was ultimately responsible for making sure they understood their lessons. We were also not getting home sometimes until 10 o’clock at night, when we were all exhausted, and then getting up bright and early the next morning for school and work. UMUC and Better Opportunities made it possible for me to fit school into my lifestyle, not the other way around.” Cook now loves online learning. As she put it, “Online, I can study whenever I want to, even at 2 o’clock in the morning if I can’t sleep. And it helps me manage my time better. If I know I have a week to complete an online assignment, I can figure out what I need to do each day to meet that deadline.” As the program’s first “graduate” (Cook completed her general business studies certificate in June, one year ahead of the threeyear program schedule), she found Better Opportunities to be “pretty great all the way around.” She now has her sights set on earning her Professional Human Resources (PHR) certificate and completing a four-year degree—online, from UMUC, of course.

U N I V E R S I T Y O F M A RY L A N D U N I V E R S I T Y C O L L E G E


Jeffrey Poffenberger ’94 Mendel S. Pogell ’61 John A. Polak ’75 Mary L. Polk ’87 Patricia A. Ponce ’96 Susan L. Ponder ’93 Victor M. Ponte ’91 MGA James A. Poole ’00 Alison Pope ’85 Angela F. Pope ’96 & ’99 MS Annina G. Pope ’97 Deborah E. Pope ’86 Leonel O. Popol ’99 Richard H. Poppe ’94 Keith S. Portell ’97 Linda Porter ’00 Richard P. Porter ’67 Tami M. Porter ’96 & ’00 Sonia M. Portillo ’00 Derrick M. Posey ’97 M. Ryan Poston ’85 Martha M. Potter ’88 MGA Dorothy E. Pough ’91 Deborah W. Poulin ’96 MGA Steffani K. Pounds ’86 Michael R. Pour ’88 David C. Povlitz ’99 Annie M. Powell ’88 Chuck Powell Gay V. Powell ’86 Gordon Powell Jimmy Powell ’99 & ’00 Joyce E. Powell ’98 Portia Powell ’97 Tricia L. Powell ’96 & ’99 Barbara L. Powers ’96 MGA Larry D. Powers ’93 Suzanne B. Pramov ’78 Frank J. Prather ’76 Kevin Pratt ’01 MS Robert D. Pratt ’00 MS Johnny L. President ’91 Lamesha Pressley ’97 Maureen F. Prettyman ’88 Carnetta L. Preyer ’00 Fitzgerald L. Price ’01 James D. Price ’85 Joann R. Price ’96 & ’00 MS John V. Price ’73 Kent H. Price ’60 Linda A. Price ’96 MGA Mary A. Price ’92 & ’96 MGA Milton D. Price Jr. ’98 Stephen B. Price ’80 & ’96 MS Verranda Price ’93

Marilyn Pride-Chapman David L. Printz Sandra P. Printz ’95 & ’98 MA Andrea L. Pritchett ’98 Troy L. Pritt ’68 William G. Proce ’93 Cheryll A. Proctor ’94 Frederick E. Pross ’80 Charles W. Prout ’73 Evral V. Pryce ’96 Mike F. Pucciarelli ’99 Clifton B. Pugh ’00 Deborah A. Pugh ’90 John A. Pulnar ’76 Minerva T. Punsalan ’01 Margaret R. Purcell ’01 Anil K. Puri ’96 MGA James M. Putnam ’82 John M. Putnam ’96 MS Val E. Puzulis ’93 Arlene Pyatok Amy L. Pyle ’97 Susan A. Pyron ’94 Huy D. Quach ’00 Daviena D. Quarles ’93 Doris G. Quarles ’98 MS William D. Quarles ’76 Kenneth C. Quick Jr. ’01 Floren L. Quick ’80 Ramona M. Quinn ’86 & ’97 MGA Francis C. Quinn ’80 David P. Quinn ’97 MGA David J. Quirk ’89 Charles H. Raab ’70 Janice S. Raab ’97 MS William B. Radford ’91 Bonnie E. Rafer ’94 Shakil Rahman ’96 Abiodun Raimi ’01 MS Mary S. Rainey ’89 Anusha N. Rajapatirana ’00 MS Rachel M. Rakestraw John Raleigh Jeffrey Ramaker ’94 Vijaya L. Ramineni ’91 Alberto C. Ramos ’98 Catherine Ramos ’97 David R. Ramos ’98 MGA David N. Ramsey ’00 MS Cornelius J. Ramsey ’01 Margaret A. Ramsey ’79 Fred D. Randall ’96 Andrea M. Rander ’92 Stephen C. Rankin ’75 Rohini S. Rao ’87

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ACHIEVER

Barry J. Rapavy ’95 MS Risa E. Rappaport ’97 MGA Stanley I. Rappaport ’79 Robert A. Rashford ’93 MS Caren N. Rasmussen ’77 Catherine A. Rasmussen ’84 Joann Rath ’97 MS Barbara M. Rathmell Donald L. Rathmell Jr. ’96 Barry N. Ratowe ’83 & ’89 Arnold P. Rausch ’98 Werner Rauscher ’90 Richard N. Rawlings Jr. ’97 John R. Ray ’94 Peggy Raymond-Rubio ’94 Gene Reaves ’96 Jeanne L. Rector ’83 Thomas L. Redding ’73 Lorraine B. Reddy ’85 Sunil P. Reddy ’00 MS Robert A. Redfield ’91 Frederick E. Redmond ’92 Dale Reece ’94 John G. Reed ’97 MIM Leo D. Reed Jr. ’94 MGA Maryland K. Reed ’89 Ralph W. Reed ’88 Daniel A. Reeder ’90 Alfred J. Reese Jr. ’71 Marie A. Reese ’93 Lamar Reese Douglas W. Reeser ’74 Robert F. Reeves Jr. ’89 MS Loretta C. Regalia ’95 Renee M. Rehovich ’97 Colleen M. Reilly ’91 John Reilly ’94 & ’97 Carmen Q. Reimer ’88 Andrew S. Rein Anita S. Remesch ’92 Monica C. Remington Betsy A. Renfrow ’93 Daniel J. Renneisen ’56 Jameson D. Reps ’96 Nathaniel A. Reus ’93 Randall L. Reymer ’94 Paul R. Reynard ’73 Mario R. Ricci ’97 Bernard E. Rice Jr. ’92 Ruthener T. Rice ’99 Willie J. Rice ’87 Alan R. Rich ’88 Evelyn Richards ’84 & ’95 MGA Francis D. Richards ’99 MS Francis M. Richards ’91 MGA

This list represents gifts received during fiscal year 2002 (July 1, 2001–June 30, 2002).


Cal A. Richards ’96 Hugh O. Richards ’00 MS Floyd E. Richardson ’93 Germaine N. Richardson ’00 Ivory Richardson Jr. ’85 & ’95 MGA John W. Richardson III ’99 Laura A. Richardson ’98 Lilian Richardson ’89 May N. Richardson ’00 James E. Richmond ’92 Larry S. Richmond ’75 Nancy J. Rickert ’00 Carlos J. Ricketson ’64 Donald E. Ricketts ’91 Linda R. Rickey ’01 Marc D. Ricklis ’00 Rebecca A. Riddell ’93 Sterling J. Rideout ’02 M.B.A. Frederick H. Riegelmeier III ’79 Steven J. Rigby ’93 Joyce L. Riggin ’95 Judith W. Riggins ’98 MGA Carter Rila ’80 Beverly R. Riley ’91 Terrence M. Riley ’95 MGA Thomas H. Riley ’88 Elaine Rimel ’89 Marcus E. Rindal ’70 James L. Rineaman ’01 Kathleen M. Ring ’89 Vanessa M. Rini-Lopez Rita I. Rios ’86 Patricia M. Rippeon ’93 Jodi A. Risse ’97 MGA Jeffrie L. Ritchie ’86 Lydia J. Rivera ’96 & ’02 Jeanette R. Rivera-Breznai ’99 Laima T. Rivers ’81 Willie Roberson ’94 MS David W. Roberts ’98 Deborah L. Roberts ’91 Derrick W. Roberts ’92 Frederick C. Roberts III ’77 John N. Roberts ’82 Martha G. Roberts ’01 Susan D. Roberts ’01 Freddie A. Robertson ’95 Gary C. Robertson ’87 Kenneth R. Robeson Jr. ’00 Delia B. Robey ’97 MGA Noel B. Robins ’95 MGA Debra L. Robinson ’95 MGA Dominic E. Robinson ’93 & ’99 Francine G. Robinson ’98 Jacqueline R. Robinson ’93

Jeffrey A. Robinson ’85 Jo E. Robinson ’82 Judith A. Robinson ’95 MGA Kimberley H. Robinson ’98 Leora A. Robinson ’86 & ’90 Maria P. Robinson ’91 MS Shirley A. Robinson ’79 Thomas F. Robinson ’76 Tony B. Robinson ’00 & ’02 Terrena O. Robinson-Gaines ’00 Janel G. Rocha ’00 Barry D. Roche ’99 Thomas D. Rock ’85 Patrick M. Roddy ’97 James K. Rodgers ’93 Jerry J. Rodgers ’92 Tonya T. Rodgers ’98 Steven W. Rodichok ’95 William A. Roemer ’63 Diana L. Rogers ’86 & ’88 Reed V. Rogers ’99 Tricia S. Rogers ’00 MS Margaret Rogers-McPhee Irvin H. Rohe ’82 Cynthia W. Rohrer ’81 Richard R. Rojas ’01 Dorinda B. Rolle ’85 Ryan E. Rollings ’96 & ’99 Beverly K. Rollins ’93 MGA Gregory L. Rollins ’00 Carlos R. Roman ’93 Ronald G. Roman Albert V. Romano ’95 MGA Anthony N. Romano ’84 Cynthia Rome ’98 John Romer ’73 Ricardo Romero ’00 Lisa Romerosa ’90 & ’95 Noella M. Ronald ’92 MGA Laura A. Ronan ’94 Mary S. Roney ’89 Brian D. Rooks ’01 Julia A. Roquemore ’90 Jose L. Rosa-Ramirez ’01 MS Carl Rosario ’01 Glenda R. Rose ’95 Juliana D. Rose ’79 Rebecca J. Rosebrough ’00 David E. Rosenbaum ’00 Stephen A. Rosenberg ’78 Doris E. Rosenblatt ’83 Irma Rosendahl ’75 Randy J. Rosenfeld ’95 Ronald N. Rosenkoff ’76 Anthony F. Ross ’97 MGA

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U N I V E R S I T Y O F M A RY L A N D U N I V E R S I T Y C O L L E G E

Charles Ross Ellen A. Ross ’91 Raymond B. Ross ’91 & ’98 Wilbert Ross Jr. ’81 Randy S. Rossnan ’99 Jacqueline B. Rota ’01 Daniel R. Roth ’96 MGA Dorrice C. Roth ’96 Michelle C. Roth Donald F. Rothkugel ’96 Bradley A. Rowbottom ’01 John J. Rowe ’83 Pallabi G. Roy Sarah S. Roy ’92 MS Sudebi Roy ’97 Kenneth O. Royston ’96 Melanie P. Ruark ’87 Sue R. Rubinstein ’87 MGA Cheryl A. Rucker ’00 Anthony W. Rudzinski ’68 Joanne L. Ruest ’01 Kimberly L. Ruffin ’98 Diedra M. Rush ’96 MGA Elizabeth A. Rush ’86 Jerold Rusnock ’00 Elizabeth Anne Russell ’98 Loise A. Russell ’99 MS ’01 Rita A. Russell ’91 Robert L. Russell ’99 Terence R. Russell ’84 Rose M. Russo ’97 Heidi D. Ruster ’90 George W. Rwakaara ’00 Mary A. Ryan ’85 Gary T. Rzepka ’94 Alan Saavedra ’88 David C. Sabatini ’95 MGA Mariama Y. Saccoh ’00 Joseph J. Sacket ’90 Frank J. Sackton ’70 Edward C. Safford ’91 Celia G. Sahagun ’00 James A. Salafia ’98 Patricia L. Salan ’00 Elisabeth C. Salchow ’7 MA, ’79, & ’95 Alan M. Salesman ’90 Margaret A. Salin ’87 Lisa J. Saliture Janet M. Salsberry ’90 Leanna M. Saltarello ’98 Joanne M. Saltzberg ’97 Dima Samata ’96 MS Phyllis A. Sambar ’94 David Sampson ’99 MS Ofon M. Samson ’00 MIM


John P. Samuelson ’87 Robert Sanabria ’65 Danny J. Sanchez ’88 & ’96 George Sanchez ’87 & ’96 Martha M. Sanchez ’99 Irene P. Sandate ’97 Kimberly A. Sanders ’98 Megan J. Sanders ’00 Michael L. Sanders ’01 MS Georgeanna W. Sanderson ’79 Giana Sandoval Jose R. Sandoval ’94 Nkwenti P. Sanga ’97 MGA Meena Sankar ’00 MSW. Timothy Sanna ’90 & ’95 MIM Nick M. Santarosa ’91 Chantal D. Santelices ’00 MIM Eduardo D. Santiago ’95 Marco A. Santini ’80 Michael M. Santini ’95 Wanda Santini Audrey Sarratt ’84 & ’98 MS Susan R. Sarro ’99 Aparna Sathe ’95 MGA Lisa Satow ’96 Bernard L. Satterfield ’01 Peter S. Saucier ’77 Jerold A. Sauer ’85 Diane Saukas ’88 James E. Saul ’96 Brian J. Saunders ’99 Cherie A. Saunders ’92 Donelle M. Saunders ’01 Kenneth Saunders ’93 & ’96 Carol A. Savage ’84 Catherine J. Savage ’93 Elizabeth G. Savidge ’90 Jyoti Sawhney ’97 Dennis J. Sawyer ’96 Donna A. Scarbrough ’00 William C. Schaefer ’00 MS Meta J. Scharre ’85 Dusan J. Schejbal ’81 Krista L. Schejbal Samuel L. Scherr ’90 James J. Schiavone ’88 Pamela Schilling ’96 Dale A. Schlichter ’91 Edith V. Schmidt ’97 Steven D. Schmidt ’95 MIM Darrell L. Schmitt ’90 Stuart A. Schneider ’76 Simone A. Schoch ’86 Carlton L. Schoeman ’87 & ’94 Karen M. Schoenfeld ’01 MS

Russell B. Scholl Jr. ’66 Bruce Schoonover Jr. ’96 MS Warren Schor ’90 Holly B. Schotz ’94 Donald Schrader Jr. ’95 Lois M. Schramme ’76 Sharon C. Schrier ’88 Christine A. Schuetze ’82 Daniel J. Schulte ’70 Chester M. Schultz ’63 Gerald S. Schultz ’86 Stephen J. Schultz ’98 MS William Schultz ’81 & ’95 MGA Lizabeth M. Schulz ’97 Dennis J. Schwanz ’87 Bruce R. Schwartz ’72 Joan Schwartz ’87 Oscar Schwartz ’94 Mindy M. Schwarz ’95 MIM Eugene Scott Jr. ’85 & ’88 MGA Gary G. Scott ’91 Hubert B. Scott Jr. ’93 Kenneth W. Scott ’97 & ’01 MS Louise G. Scott ’84 Marcia M. Scott ’84 Zymora A. Scott ’88 MGA Benjamin M. Scrivens ’88 Jessica L. Scruggs ’92 Arthur J. Scudder ’91 Michael C. Scully ’90 Carol T. Seabrooks ’96 MGA Joseph S. Sears II ’80 Karl D. Sease ’96 Englebert M. Sedegah ’00 Kristin L. Seeger ’91 Ian Seeley ’00 MSW. Dennis L. Seggerty ’99 Gbonda M. Sei ’97 MGA Mary Lee Seifert ’94 Alan Seigel ’94 MGA Maurice S. Seigel ’70 Jeanne M. Seils ’86 Roy Seivwright William R. Selby ’84 Ernst S. Selig ’65 Aida Semerjian ’97 Timothy E. Semotan ’92 Michele A. Sendow ’87 Peter Senecal II ’94 Maureen Serieux-Blanchard ’97 Leonard B. Sese ’73 Dale G. Sesvold ’93 & ’99 Ivan E. Severson ’70 Charles L. Seymour ’97 James A. Seymour ’98

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ACHIEVER

Vincent H. Sgueo ’01 James R. Shackett ’72 Walter E. Shade ’86 & ’88 Bruce A. Shadle ’92 & ’96 Charles W. Shaffer ’81 Clyde G. Shaffer ’73 Sanford L. Shaffer ’81 Larry L. Shanks ’74 William L. Sharp Jr. ’84 Michael G. Shaub ’99 Donald W. Shaver ’99 MS Kenneth W. Shaw ’97 Emily M. Shawn Robert A. Shawn ’58 James L. Shedd Jr. ’92 Theresa A. Sheehan ’92 Kelly A. Sheffield ’98 & ’00 Neal N. Sheladia ’01 Amy B. Sheldon ’89 Jerome E. Sheldon Sr. ’99 Robert S. Shellhammer Jr. ’90 Gloria G. Shelton ’91 Patricia L. Shelton ’82 Vincent R. Shelton ’98 David T. Shepardson ’77 Carol A. Shepherd ’89 Betsy Sheppard ’84 Tod D. Sher ’94 MS M. Laverne Sherbert ’88 Wendy K. Sherbert ’01 Jennifer M. Sherbrook ’00 Donald M. Sherman ’96 Adrian W. Sherrod ’76 Joanne C. Sherwood ’99 Laura M. Shields ’88 Connie S. Shiplett ’90 Samuel D. Shiplett ’84 Mary L. Shipley ’89 David S. Shiroma ’70 Melissa A. Shively ’01 Alan Shiver ’92 & ’94 Rasheed H. Shobayo ’00 Veronica M. Shockley ’98 William B. Shoemaker ’77 Deborah L. Short ’92 MGA John R. Short Jr. ’61 Samagan Shouldis ’99 Richard G. Shover Jr. ’86 George M. Shuffer Jr. ’56 Roberta F. Shulman ’95 MGA Rose F. Shusterman Luisa Siaca-Luciano ’94 MGA Michele D. Sibiski ’91 Pamela J. Sichelman ’86 James E. Sidlowski ’81

This list represents gifts received during fiscal year 2002 (July 1, 2001–June 30, 2002).


Frances Sidman-Butchart Jacqueline F. Siem ’00 Chester J. Silfee Jr. ’93 Anjalika I. Silva ’98 MS Susan S. Simaika ’80 Victor W. Simerly ’79 David F. Simmers ’85 Diana Simmons ’84 & ’96 Katherine E. Simmons ’97 MGA William B. Simmons ’92 Nancy P. Simons James E. Simpson Jr. ’79 Cheryl I. Sims ’99 MS Jared S. Singer ’99 Meenu Singh ’00 Prem P. Singh ’01 MSW. Punam Singh ’00 James R. Singletary ’76 Kimberly D. Singleton ’01 Sonya J. Singleton ’98 MS Beulah M. Sink ’83 William M. Sink ’80 Stanley D. Sinn ’98 MIM John R. Sinskie ’98 Stephen R. Sirbaugh ’67 Theresa C. Sisco ’77 Ron L. Sisk ’82 Bryan D. Sivils ’99 Milton B. Skelton ’63 Dale C. Skillicorn ’76 Richard H. Skorny ’97 MGA Stanley A. Skrabut ’96 Yuri V. Skrynnikov ’96 & ’00 MS Vladimir W. Skuby ’64 Robin M. Slade ’99, ’00, & ’02 MS Russell C. Slayden ’98 MGA James E. Sledge ’90 James T. Sleeth ’98 Edmund Slezak ’73 Glen S. Slezia ’97 Rosemarie Slider ’92 Jack R. Slomnicki ’92 Alan E. Small ’80 John E. Smallman ’95 Austin Smallwood Jr. ’98 MS Gawu S. Smallwood ’00 Paul E. Smallwood ’80 Gina M. Smallwood-Jones ’91 Michael Smiley ’72 Ann M. Smith ’85 Carolyn R. Smith ’82 Cecilia R. Smith ’88 Cole E. Smith ’91 Corinne F. Smith ’97 MGA David E. Smith ’70

Deborah R. Smith ’90 Donald F. Smith ’79 Ernest R. Smith III ’00 MIM Ernestine E. Smith ’88 Frank C. Smith ’82 Frederick E. Smith Jr. ’00 MS Gerald H. Smith ’80 Gina I. Smith ’98 MS Hope C. Smith ’00 Jacqueline D. Smith ’80 James E. Smith ’92 Jason A. Smith ’01 Jiromi Smith ’97 John F. Smith ’96 MGA John G. Smith ’00 & ’02 MS Judith A. Smith ’86 Judith T. Smith ’98 Karen C. Smith ’93 MGA Larry A. Smith ’96 MGA Larry S. Smith ’76 Lorin Smith ’01 Marshall Smith ’84 Robert J. Smith ’86 Ronald L. Smith ’77 Rufus Smith ’95 Sharon Smith ’99 Tanya E. Smith ’99 Thomas W. Smith ’77 Todd Smith Wanda M. Smith ’95 MS William C. Smith Jr. ’92 MGA Willie J. Smith ’98 Tonya Smith Sellers ’01 Matt Smolsky ’83 Michael R. Smoot ’95 William A. Smoot Jr. ’79 Gary W. Smythers ’87 Susan M. Snay ’96 MGA Helen M. Sneed ’85 Anthony D. Snell ’97 & ’99 Kathy A. Snodgrass ’85 Maria J. Snyder ’70 Owen B. Snyder ’94 Stephen L. Snyder ’99 & ’01 Steven D. Sober ’00 MS Alan A. Sohrab ’86 Courtney E. Sohyda ’99 Denise Sokolowski Danny L. Solomon ’97 Ned C. Solomon Rahel B. Solomon ’98 Richard A. Solow ’80 John T. Somensky ’94 MGA Constance P. Somerville ’95 Thomas T. Somuah ’80

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Lea A. Sondheimer ’00 Craig E. Sonnemann ’86 Donna J. Sonnemann Mabel T. Soohoo Patrick J. Soohoo ’78 Beverly M. Sorensen ’85 Kim P. Sorrell ’92 Adetayo A. Sosanya ’97 Melissa O. Southerland ’96 Mary A. Souvine ’98 Bernard A. Spalding Hannah L. Spalding ’85 Wayne E. Spangler ’96 MGA Bart Spano ’80 Wayne E. Spates ’80 Robert G. Spear ’79 Eldridge Spearman ’80 Rhonda M. Spells ’90 Ronald F. Spence ’91 Larry W. Spencer ’83 William L. Sperato ’91 & ’93 John A. Speraw ’99 Frank J. Spernak ’73 Nancy S. Spiker ’93 Lee W. Spitler ’56 Catherine M. Splain ’01 John Spooner ’01 Wanda T. Spottswood ’98 Hubert O. Spraberry ’63 Cameron R. Spranger ’97 Eric M. Spriggs ’01 MS Mark L. Sprout ’95 Edward Spurlock ’94 MGA Michael J. Squier ’85 Carolyn E. St. Hill ’97 Martha E. St. John ’00 Karl F. Staab Jr. ’99 Franklin C. Stack ’64 Jacqueline K. Stacks ’87 & ’88 John W. Stafford Jr. ’78 Lisa E. Stafford ’97 Clarence J. Stallworth ’99 & ’00 Thomas R. Stallworth ’92 & ’94 Nicholas C. Stamos ’97 Barbara D. Stanard ’89 Michael Stanco III ’81 Leon Standard Peter Stankovich ’99 MS John E. Stanley ’91 Joyce A. Stanley ’96 MGA Christine E. Stansbury ’97 Carroll M. Stanton Joseph Stanton ’97 MS Linwood R. Starbird ’92 Kimberly L. Starcher ’94 & ’96


Patricia A. Stark ’88 Richard A. Starkson ’94 & ’97 Alice L. Starliper ’99 Richard J. Stattel ’92 John H. Statts ’62 Edward L. Stawarz ’91 MS Michael J. Stec ’99 MS Gary L. Steele ’94 Bruce A. Steely ’97 Dolores A. Steenland ’91 Andrew P. Stefancik ’81 Mark G. Stehling ’90 Kenneth P. Steinbruckner ’79 Robert Steinheimer ’74 Tina M. Steo ’96 Gregory P. Stephens ’94 & ’98 Roydell N. Stephens ’99 Charles J. Stepp ’81 David Stepp ’95 Anne D. Sterling ’81 David W. Sterling Jr. ’98 James W. Sternitzky ’89 Hazel E. Stevens ’83 John Stevenson ’83 Alexandra L. Stewart ’00 Catherine A. Stewart ’82 & ’90 Collins A. Stewart ’00 Elizabeth M. Stewart ’92 Elva J. Stewart ’98 MGA Howard E. Stewart Jr. ’89 John P. Stewart ’81 Mathew S. Stewart ’87 Michael L. Stewart ’91 Rebecca M. Stewart ’98 Timothy B. Stewart ’94 Richard W. Stickle ’77 Dawn A. Stiles ’89 Angela C. Stimpert ’92 Joan E. Stivers William P. Stivers ’82 Nick W. Stockton ’00 MS Frank A. Stokes III ’98 James T. Stokes ’96 Karen E. Stokes ’93 Kitty K. Stokes ’91 Steven S. Stoll ’80 Harold R. Stolp ’94 & ’98 Robert E. Stolzenburg ’89 MS Ronald D. Stone ’98 Marisa Stoolmiller ’00 Robert B. Stoops ’79 Richard A. Storch Harold D. Story ’68 Richard E. Stotler ’95 MGA Joseph R. Stottlemyer ’99

Cheryl A. Stout ’93 Jennifer Stowes ’93 & ’94 Jeffrey C. Strauser ’94 Scott C. Straw Theresa Strebel ’00 Frank F. Street ’95 MS Phyllis Streib ’85 & ’96 MGA Michael L. Strich ’85 Lisa Stringer ’98 Susan H. Strok ’79 Ann S. Strong ’59 Harold E. Strong ’62 Gayle J. Stroud ’92 Lorraine Stuckey ’81 Jeffrey L. Studds ’92 MGA Sherry A. Stull ’00 Jane Stunkel ’91 Meenakshi Subramanian ’00 Thomas E. Suchoski ’96 Karen I. Sudduth ’94 Jennifer L. Suess ’95 Elizabeth L. Suitt ’77, ’88, & ’93 MGA Eric G. Sulfaro ’99 Raquel Sumaray ’86 & ’94 MGA Mark J. Summers ’94 Craig Sumners ’98 Richard D. Sundberg ’86 Gary L. Sunderland ’00 Anne E. Suomi ’86 Douglas Y. Sur ’90 MS Tommie L. Surratt ’92 Lindannetta Sutton ’91 Loretta B. Sutton ’99 Patricia L. Sutton Shinichi Suzuki ’96 Margaret A. Swails ’99 Bobbie L. Swann ’84 Cathryn A. Swann ’98 Ronald L. Swann ’95 MGA Robert T. Swanton ’58 Catherine A. Swartz ’98 Lurlene D. Sweeney ’84 Donald H. Swellander ’65 Rebecca L. Swerdloff ’86 Patrick A. Swift Jr. ’99 Wayne E. Swift ’82 Walter S. Swindell II ’97 MGA Brian P. Switalski ’96 Brian M. Switzer ’00 Thomas P. Swyers ’00 Linda S. Synowczynski ’90 Michael Syracuse ’76 Ladislau S. Szilagyi ’93 Raymond H. Szyperski ’73 Michael Tabash ’00 MIM

68

ACHIEVER

Michael A. Taborn ’97 Joseph E. Tadley ’92 Cheryl A. Tague ’99 Omid Tajallibakhsh ’99 Martin B. Tallent ’98 Raymond Talley ’80 Grady Tallington ’99 Abigail R. Tamakloe ’98 Carol J. Tamburo ’86 Chee Y. Tang ’01 MS Scott Tanos ’95 Bertha G. Tanzymore ’89 Ellen E. Tappin ’00 MS Kerisiano S. Tapuvae ’86 Joseph R. Tardif ’88 Robert Tarloff ’99 Antonio R. Tarray ’00 Angela R. Tasker ’86 Ronald M. Taubitz Kenda W. Tavakoli ’00 MS Vincent J. Tavedi ’96 Regina E. Tavernier ’00 Brenda R. Taylor ’83 Craig A. Taylor ’98 Debora M. Taylor ’91 Deon M. Taylor ’99 Donna J. Taylor ’96 James J. Taylor ’95 James P. Taylor ’65 & ’94 James S. Taylor ’87 Jason G. Taylor ’01 Lori A. Taylor ’85 Lorna D. Taylor ’98 MGA Lovie A. Taylor ’94 Matilda A. Taylor ’98 Miley A. Taylor ’95 Phyllis L. Taylor ’88 Tracy E. Taylor ’00 Wallace F. Taylor ’96 William G. Taylor ’94 Ellen S. Teague ’86 Joel W. Teel ’96 John K. Teeuw ’96 Mary R. Teitelbaum ’79 Lawrence P. Teixeira ’87 Douglas Telasha ’90 Elizabeth J. Teles ’79 Thomas J. Tellson ’96 Lawrence E. Tennison ’96 Lisa L. Tennyson ’93 Shelly T. Tereska ’95 Andrew M. Terezakis ’98 Gloria J. Terrell ’97 Dorothy M. Terry ’85 Olayinka Teru ’98

This list represents gifts received during fiscal year 2002 (July 1, 2001–June 30, 2002).


Michael Teruel ’95 Emil A. Tesheira ’01 Denise L. Tester ’90 MGA Avis V. Tetteh ’94 MGA Sylvia E. Teuermann-Scott ’99 Donna M. Thacker ’94 Rajiv R. Thacker ’00 Joyce Ann Thaden ’81 & ’98 Anh T. Thai ’96 Teresa M. Thamert ’86 Lucius Theus ’56 Timothy R. Thielke ’00 Belinda M. Thomas ’82 Brion W. Thomas ’93 Carole J. Thomas ’90 Deanna G. Thomas ’01 MS Elizabeth N. Thomas ’98 MS Larry E. Thomas ’92 Marilyn D. Thomas ’94 MGA Melzetta E. Thomas ’96 Neil Thomas ’00 Shirley E. Thomas ’87 Barbara L. Thompkins ’88 Curtis L. Thompson ’79 Daniel D. Thompson ’00 Danny Thompson ’93 Frederick J. Thompson ’94 & ’98 Gary L. Thompson ’97 MGA Gregory C. Thompson ’91 Jacqueline A. Thompson ’99 John W. Thompson ’85 Kathleen Thompson ’92 Kristina M. Thompson ’95 Maria Thompson ’92 Ronald A. Thompson ’98 Tanja S. Thompson ’98 Ronald K. Thomsen ’88 Terrance R. Thorne ’95 Carla K. Thornton ’00 Shelly Thorpe ’94 Mark D. Tibbs ’99 MS Patricia A. Tiches ’96 Eleanor H. Tickell ’74 Thomas R. Tillis ’97 Nichole K. Tillman ’98 MS Bascom E. Tillotson ’56 William T. Tilton ’58 Mary S. Tinder ’99 Caroline H. Tinkham ’92 Deborah L. Tinsley ’00 Ralph L. Tisdale ’91 Larry H. Tison ’91 Mark A. Titus ’92 MS Karen M. Tobin ’86 Jeffrey M. Todd ’93

Linda R. Tolbert ’00 Ruth Toles ’00 Danny R. Toliver ’95 Beth A. Tolley ’99 Margaret Tolliver ’00 Willadene Tolmachoff ’94 MGA David W. Tomczak ’95 Cynthia A. Tomei ’99 Phuong K. Ton Nu ’01 Fred H. Toney Jr. ’97 Laureen A. Toney ’96 Gregory G. Tongue ’83 & ’86 Sandra G. Toomey ’99 Dennis O. Torbett ’76 Marcos A. Torres ’92 & ’94 Steven L. Toth ’99 Teresa Totillo ’96 Douglas P. Tower ’99 Mary P. Towers ’90 & ’91 Lynne A. Towle ’00 Damian J. Townsend ’99 Jimmy L. Townsend ’93 James R. Trainer ’00 Hien G. Tran ’01 Van T. Tran ’96 Christopher L. Travers ’83 & ’99 MGA James F. Trawick ’59 Pamela M. Treece ’87 Billy R. Trent ’82 Maxine D. Trentham ’80 Lisa M. Tressler ’00 Ronald L. Treusdell ’80 Lorenzo A. Tribbett ’88 & ’89 Betty O. Trimble ’83 Jennifer L. Triplett John A. Triplett ’94 Walter Troeschel ’73 Barbara S. Troll ’82 Paul R. Trondson ’90 Frances A. Troxler ’92 Virginia H. Troyer ’83 & ’86 Thomas A. Trucks ’94 John A. Trudo ’91 Blanche O. Trueheart Eddy R. Truelove ’97 Patrick A. Truman ’96 MGA James A. Trumble ’96 Maida S. Tryon ’85 Stanley Tsai ’99 MS Sergei A. Tsarev ’00 Mimi Tse ’91 James J. Tsikerdanos ’70 Dexter O. Tucker ’97 Karen F. Tucker ’93 Ricky Tucker ’00

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Charlotte A. Tull ’92 Theodore Tull Kuo-Min Tung ’96 Bernice F. Turbeville ’79 Carol F. Turi ’99 Gary W. Turman ’97 Alice Y. Turner ’90 Bernard Turner ’99 Cathleen Turner ’67 Dale N. Turner ’88 Dorothy J. Turner ’85 & ’91 Gwendolyn J. Turner ’89 John T. Turner ’72 Kyong C. Turner Luvenia C. Turner ’98 & ’00 Patricia L. Turner ’83 Paul D. Turner ’81 Raymond L. Turner ’79 Todd M. Turner ’97 MS Donald H. Turno ’00 Robert J. Turns ’92 Gwendolyn G. Turpin ’00 Paul M. Tuten ’00 Vicky A. Tuttle ’84 Anthony J. Twardziak ’82 Sidney P. Twining ’01 Daniel L. Twombly ’87 & ’90 Elizabeth A. Twomey ’84 Rosettia M. Tyus ’98 MS Christopher Tzafaroglou ’99 Roseline N. Ude ’01 Robert C. Uebelacker Jr. ’96 MS Lester T. Ueda ’89 & ’94 Uchebundu U. Uhegwu ’00 MS George F. Uhl ’69 David M. Uhler ’94 Thea A. Uhlig-Ruff ’87 MGA Tamara Uhrich ’98 & ’02 Allen E. Ullery ’86 Jamie S. Umbach ’87 Janet N. Umhau ’86 Sheveron S. Underwood ’85 Stanley C. Underwood ’01 MS Steven D. Unruh ’98 & ’99 John J. Upman Jr. ’86 Yvonne D. Upshaw ’85 Walt Urbanski ’85 Attila A. Uregen ’90 & ’92 Samuel L. Urquhart ’93 Charles E. Uttech ’88 Alfven G. Uy ’99 Sudha Vadlamudi ’97 & ’98 David D. Vaira ’82 Maria E. Valderama ’85 & ’86 Vanessa K. Valentine ’01


Vitron D. Valentine Beverly Valltos ’95 MGA Renee Van Erp ’96 Barbara S. Van Kuren ’84 Linda Van Noy-Stamp ’85 Patricia A. Van Sant ’96 MGA Jeffrey L. Van Voorhis ’01 Linda B. Van Wagenen ’80 Christina H. Vanbrakle ’77 & ’98 Antionette T. Vanderhorst ’99 Diane H. Vann ’91 Alease VanNorman ’94 MGA John W. Vannorman III ’91 William Varga ’95 MGA Toni M. Vargo ’98 I. J. Vasina ’91 Cynthia Vass Paul A. Vass ’87 John D. Vassar Jr. ’98 MS Amery E. Vasso ’94 Marjorie D. Vaughan ’95 Christine Vaughn ’00 Leittia M. Vaughn ’96 Tamara R. Vaughn ’99 Vera E. Vaughns ’96 Ginger L. Veal John D. Veal Jr. ’94 Guillermo Vega ’00 Sammy D. Vega ’94 John A. Veguilla Jr. ’87 & ’92 Patricia A. Velasco ’86 Nina K. Vellayan ’95 MGA Doris Velona ’70 Walter Velona Belinda B. Venner ’79 Barbara T. Veraa ’81 Diane T. Verney ’92 Christine M. Vernon ’91 Patricia M. Vernon-Rusher ’94 Charles E. Vest ’80 Evelyn J. Vieira-Fulford ’01 Pedro N. Viera ’99 Leon Vigdor ’67 Nelly E. Villacreses ’86 Laurie A. Villani ’98 Jobany Villatoro ’01 Kathleen M. Vincent ’86 Nancy E. Vincent ’92 Julie M. Vineski ’01 & ’02 Irma A. Virgil ’79 Stephanie Vitale ’01 Ladona L. Vizbulis ’92 & ’01 Terry T. Vlosich ’87 Isaac K. Vodi ’87 Myles A. Vogel ’87 & ’91 MGA

Mark P. Vogler ’99 Francis M. Vojik ’97 Lynn S. Von-Reuss ’98 Jacqueline J. Vos ’95 Steve E. Voss ’92 P. Raymond Vroegindewey ’81 Dwight T. Vu ’98 Swetha Vutukuru ’01 Kenneth R. Waddell ’01 MS Robert R. Waddell ’86 Harvinder Wadehra ’97 Robert W. Waffle ’80 Duncan M. Wagner ’88 Peter A. Wagner ’89 Eldon D. Wahlers ’72 Carol Wainwright ’94 Chelice R. Waites ’96 Deborah L. Waits ’92 Mark C. Walcott ’96 MS Bright K. Walker ’68 Charles D. Walker ’98 MGA Inmaculada G. Walker ’99 Linh C. Walker ’00 Charles T. Wall Jr. ’94 Linda A. Wall ’95 Daniel M. Wallace ’95 George F. Wallace ’84 Lorraine Wallace ’00 Reginald P. Wallace ’98 Stephen K. Waller ’00 Todd Walowit ’97 John A. Walsh Robert E. Walsh ’85 Ervin Walter ’79 & ’96 MGA Mary M. Walter ’97 John A. Walters Jr. ’78 Raymond S. Walton ’91 Philip A. Waltz ’96 Gary J. Wandrie ’01 Errol C. Ward ’76 Joseph L. Ward Jr. ’91 Kasandra Ward ’98 Michael L. Ward ’91 Trenwith R. Ward ’97 MS Charles L. Warden ’84 Darren P. Warden ’90 Betty L. Wardrip ’87 David L. Ware ’95 MS Joseph P. Warner ’91 MGA Robert E. Warner ’64 Patricia L. Warren ’95 MGA Paul S. Warren ’94 Ray H. Warren ’99 Rosemary S. Warren ’90 James E. Warwick ’99

70

ACHIEVER

Mark W. Wascom ’93 & ’94 Arveice M. Washington ’98 & ’01 MS Brenda L. Washington ’94 Eric R. Washington ’00 Levi L. Washington ’96 Ronald Washington ’99 Marilyn B. Wassmann ’92 Hazel Waters ’95 Christopher W. Waters ’93 Brenda J. Watkins ’01 Ernestyne H. Watkins ’00 MS Charles B. Watson ’96 MS Douglas O. Watson ’96 Marc A. Watson ’01 Pamela L. Watson ’99 Marjorie C. Watson Young ’84 Heidi K. Watts ’96 & ’01 Jeffery L. Watts ’98 Roberta L. Wayne ’95 Gates Weaver ’86 Diana L. Webb ’90 & ’00 MS Bruce H. Webster ’00 MSW Darwin L. Webster ’91 Richard E. Webster ’78 Eileen D. Webster Cissel ’96 Patrick Wedderburn ’94 & ’98 MGA Christen M. Wehrenberg ’00 Julie V. Weimar ’93 MGA Susan L. Weisheit ’93 Diana M. Weith ’93 William E. Weizel ’72 Glenn L. Welch ’85 William M. Welch ’86 Ulysses Weldon Jr. ’93 Jerome G. Welkom ’69 Kathleen Weller ’83 William O. Weller Jr. ’62 Betty A. Wells ’91 Herman D. Wells ’95 John Wells ’81 Mary C. Wells ’84 Maureen Wells ’93 Patricia M. Wells ’91 Jane Welsh Sleman ’81 Virginia J. Welzant ’98 MS William Y. Wen ’98 MGA Duane D. Wendle ’72 Michael C. Wentling ’01 MS Karen M. Wentz ’86 Rosann T. Werner ’94 Leslie R. Wesley ’99 Anthony E. Wessel ’92 & ’93 Dale E. Wessel ’97 Linda C. Wessels ’00 Donna T. Wessner ’95

This list represents gifts received during fiscal year 2002 (July 1, 2001–June 30, 2002).


Clinton C. West Jr. ’97 Darrell L. West ’00 Lynn L. West ’90 Ivy L. West ’00 Karyn W. West-Brown ’95 Anne H. Westbrook ’91 Bessie M. Westfield ’99 David Westlein ’88 & ’95 MGA Ella L. Weston-Dawkes ’78 Ronald S. Westphal ’71 Justin N. Wete ’98 MGA Thomas J. Whalen Jr. ’95 Deborah M. Wharff ’98 & ’00 MS George L. Wheeler Sr. ’84, ’87, & ’90 MS Gregory P. Wheeler ’99 James A. Wheeler ’88 Tammy L. Wheeler ’95 Celeste M. Wheeles ’96 Stephen G. Whetstone ’00 MS Anna T. Whisenant ’82 Barbara V. White ’00 MS Caroll M. White ’83 & ’89 Catherine R. White ’76 & ’92 MGA Donzleigh R. White ’81 Eddie W. White ’91 Kathy L. White ’98 Laird K. White ’99 MS Lynne M. White ’96 MGA Oakley F. White ’92 Robert F. White ’90 Robert H. White ’90 Rodney M. White ’85 Stephen T. White ’96 MS Steven A. White ’93 Daniel A. Whitehead ’94 Julie A. Whitehead ’97 Robert W. Whitford ’71 & ’72 Patricia A. Whitington ’99 MS James G. Whitt ’91 Charles J. Whittaker ’72 William R. Whittington ’91 John W. Whitworth ’72 Helen B. Wieferich ’83 Alan L. Wigen ’84 Lawrence U. Wigfield ’80 Debra L. Wiggins ’00 Edna M. Wiggins ’96 MS Twanna T. Wiggins ’97 Gregory Wiherle ’01 Joann M. Wikenheiser ’90 Scott A. Wilander ’93 & ’94 Cathy F. Wiles ’98 Carolyn J. Wilhite ’96 & ’97 Dale K. Wilkerson ’82 David L. Wilkerson ’87

Randolph A. Wilkins ’89 John S. Wilkinson ’92 MS Robert J. Wilkinson ’81 Linda Z. Willard ’77 Rose M. Willett ’99 Alicia R. Williams ’97 Anthony K. Williams ’00 Barron A. Williams ’00 Carol A. Williams ’88 Christine A. Williams ’01 Earl W. Williams ’82 Gloria J. Williams ’89 Halina J. Williams ’93 MGA James Williams Jr. ’94 James A. Williams ’61 John A. Williams ’88 Jon A. Williams ’73 Jonathan G. Williams ’97 Kathy B. Williams ’00 Kimberly M. Williams ’96 MS Lenora S. Williams ’94 Leona C. Williams ’98 Lisa R. Williams ’01 MSW. Michael L. Williams ’90 Nancy E. Williams ’91 Nicole C. Williams ’01 Scott H. Williams ’96 Esau Williamson ’80 Floyd A. Williamson ’81 Margot B. Williston ’84 Otha M. Wills ’89 & ’97 MGA Donovan L. Willsie ’81 Byron A. Wilson ’94 Dandalyn J. Wilson ’00 Carma J. Wilson ’96 Darlene M. Wilson ’99 Deena P. Wilson ’99 Foredonia M. Wilson ’80 Janette R. Wilson ’90 & ’94 Kerry D. Wilson ’97 MS Lee R. Wilson ’79 Maria Wilson ’98 Mary A. Wilson ’92 Mary H. Wilson ’97 Michael B. Wilson ’74 Robert A. Wilson Jr. ’96 Rodney D. Wilson ’80 Rose M. Wilson ’01 Tonya R. Wilson ’01 Wayne G. Wilson Jr. ’00 Linda F. Wimberly ’88, ’91, & ’92 Gloria B. Wims ’01 MS Virginia S. Winborne ’83 Philip R. Windmueller ’98 Lester L. Wingate ’99

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Ronald A. Wingfield ’99 Colette M. Winnard ’99 MS Luella J. Winne ’94 Sandra L. Winston ’92 Gail W. Wisan ’87 Sidney Wise Jr. ’83 Calvin M. Wisser ’96 MS John V. Witherspoon ’57 June M. Witherspoon ’57 Tera F. Witt ’98 Jack D. Wittenborn ’80 Robert E. Witthohn ’70 Jeannette M. Wittman ’00 Ernest W. Wohnig III ’01 MIM William F. Wojtkowski ’01 Michael H. Woldemariam ’92 & ’98 MIM Nancy F. Wolejsza ’90 Thomas A. Wolf ’93 MGA Wayne R. Wolf ’98 MS Holden E. Wolfe ’96 Jeanette R. Wolfe ’98 & ’02 MS Lester Wolfe ’98 Bella G. Wood ’84 James A. Wood ’84 James P. Wood ’74 Roderick P. Wood ’84 Roy R. Wood ’71 Stanley L. Wood ’99 Thomas K. Wood ’00 MGA Velventina V. Wood ’95 Charles W. Woodland ’77 Carolyn E. Woodridge ’95 Robert M. Woodruff ’59 Paul L. Woods Jr. ’97 Pamela A. Woodside ’94 Kenneth M. Woodson ’96 Katherina M. Woodward ’76 Richard W. Woodworth ’80 Richard R. Worch ’86 Carmen E. Workmon ’82 Stacy E. Wren ’98 Amelia L. Wright ’90 Angela D. Wright ’98 Christopher D. Wright ’00 MS Deborah G. Wright ’91 Denise P. Wright ’99 Elmer E. Wright ’86 Keitha L. Wright ’94 Michael A. Wright II ’99 Patrick Wright ’00 Richard M. Wright ’96 Sheila Y. Wright ’94 Wayne W. Wright Ping Wu ’94 Daniel W. Wyczalek ’76


Darrin Wylie ’01 Parker D. Wyman ’83 Jeffery W. Wynn ’94 Xenis P. Xenofondos ’01 Walter F. Yanchulis ’96 Laverne D. Yarbrough ’91 Arlene B. Yasko ’79 Edmund O. Yates ’97 Raymond Yee Sr. ’82 David G. Yelle ’95 Joseph F. Yengel ’00 Fukui S. Yoder ’96 Joseph B. Yodzis ’96 MIM Alice M. Yonkoski ’82 Joseph D. York ’91 Stephen A. Yorkman ’01 Andrew M. Young ’91 Bronwyn L. Young ’90 & ’01

Charles R. Young ’82 James D. Young ’98 MGA Josephine H. Young ’97 MS Marcia Young ’00 Marisa E. Young ’78 & ’83 MGA ’98 Richard N. Young ’92 Robert S. Young ’64 Thurman L. Young ’85 Kevin J. Youngblood ’95 Heather L. Youskauskas ’01 Helena L. Yowell ’00 Wing C. Yuen ’98 Kim Yun-Sik Anthie Zairis ’92 Christopher P. Zalewski ’97 MS Miguel A. Zamudio Jr. ’90 Oswaldo A. Zarabia ’98 Joan A. Zardus ’83

Rosemary C. Zattiero ’99 Terry D. Zeigler ’99 MS David L. Zeppieri ’83 & ’91 MGA David H. Zevin ’83 Franz J. Zichy ’98 MS Donna M. Zick ’89 Joseph E. Ziliox ’92 Ira R. Zilist ’87 Mary A. Zimmerman Margaret B. Zink ’84 Marla L. Zisa ’97 Lloyd E. Zufelt ’01 Andrzej S. Zwaniecki ’00 MIM Lawrence G. Zweibohmer ’85 Jeffrey C. Zwemke ’83 Kenneth A. Zych

CORPORATE DONORS

AEGON USA Alex Brown & Sons Charitable Foundation, Inc. The Annenberg Foundation The Annenberg/CPB Project AT&T Corporation CitiFinancial Clarion Credit Management Clark Winchcole Foundation Constellation Energy Group, Inc.

Ford Motor Company France-Merrick Foundation, Inc. Hughes Network Systems Human Vision LLC J. Willard & Alice S. Marriott Foundation Lockheed Martin Information Technology Mary & Daniel Loughran Foundation, Inc. Morgan Stanley Foundation Natelli Communities NEC Foundation of America

72

ACHIEVER

The Orkand Corporation Pepsi-Cola Bottlers of Washington, D.C. Pepco Swank Audio Visuals The William G. Baker Jr. Memorial Fund Verizon Communications Inc. Maryland Verizon Foundation The Whiting-Turner Contracting Company

This list represents gifts received during fiscal year 2002 (July 1, 2001–June 30, 2002).


Gerald Heeger, President Sandy Harriman, Vice President, Institutional Advancement Cynthia Sikorski, Director, Alumni Relations Andrea Hart, Associate Director, Alumni Relations David Freeman, Vice President, Communications Chip Cassano, Senior Editor and Writer Kathy Harvett, Writer Julie Ryu, Graphic Designer The Achiever is published four times a year by the Office of Alumni Relations and the Communications Division at University of Maryland University College, Adelphi, Maryland. Call 240-684-5125 with your comments and suggestions or send e-mail to info@umucalumni.org. University of Maryland University College subscribes to a policy of equal educational and employment opportunities. 02-INST-01


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