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SPRING 2004
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Handing Down the Mission
Reflections on the Example of the Christian Brothers
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Leading through Affirmation and Challenge
Brother Michael J. McGinniss, F.S.C., Ph.D., >o, President, La Salle University
a THE WORD "LEADER" ALWAYS brings back memories for me of watching President John F. Kennedy deliver his first inaugural address in 1961. Along with many members of my generation, I found him and what he had to say on that bitter cold winter's day inspiring and challenging. Ever since, Fve expected that leaders, in whatever area of life, have a like capacity for rhetorical eloquence and moral vision.
The 40-plus years since JFK's speech have added other qualities to my understanding of leadership. In tact, today I'd say that leadership has less to do with giving that one inspiring speech (though speech-making is vitally important to my work as a university president) and more to do with everyday things, some tangible and some not — how one relates to other people, how much integrity one has, the depth of one's convictions, especiallv one's faith in God. Two people, both Christian Brothers, taught me these lessons by the quality of their lives and the example of their leadership.
The late Brother David Ryan, F.S.C., was in charge of the Brothers' house of studies in which I lived during my four years as a La Salle College undergraduate, 1966 to 1970. Current hindsight makes those years out to be at best "turbulent," but I found them exhilarating. Change was all around — in the Church after Vatican II, in the Brothers' Rule, in politics and social mores. But David's faith in God, in the value of being a Christian Brother, and in the potential of each very young student Brother provided solid ground when all around us the foundations seemed to be shaking. David did that bv being a good listener (even to very confused student
Brothers), by being patient, by his sense of humor about himself and us, by his love of the Brotherhood, and by his very evident faith. And, yes, he often spoke very eloquently in his regular conferences to the community of student Brothers. I have David to thank for introducing me to Paul Tillich, the great theologian who has so influenced my academic career and work.
Brother Colman Coogan, F.S.C., twice served multiple terms as Visitor of the Baltimore District during my 39 years as a Brother. I have heard more than one of my confreres describe him as the most influential member of our District over the past five decades. In my experience of him, Colman exercised that influence by his unique capacity to combine affirmation and challenge — of the District of Brothers, of smaller community groupings, and above all, of individuals. Colman always communicated that he loved and accepted us as Brothers as we were, while also believing and reminding us that we could be better, more faithful to our mission, closer to God. Like almost all of the current members of the District, I heard Colman give speeches and reflections that were eloquent, but my most powerful experiences of his leadership came in private conversations. When I was a grad student at Notre Dame, Colman often visited me for a couple of days at a time. I would go off to class during the day, and he would hide out in what is now called Hesburgh Library, taking the opportunity to catch up on his reading. Each evening, we'd have dinner and talk — about theology, about the Brothers, about me. I felt that gift of affirmation and challenge firsthand, and I'm a better person and Christian Brother for it.
SPRING 2004
LASALLE
MAGAZINE
Volume 48 I Number 1
Editor
Maureen A. Piche
Assistant Editor
Caitlm Murray, M.A. '04
Staff Writers Jon Caroulis Kimberly MacAlister, M.A. '04
Alumni Notes Editor Francine Loftier, '01
Staff Designer
Joshua Ash
Contributors
Kale Beers, '95
Michael Echan, '04
Brother Joseph Grabenstein, F.S.C., 73
Karen Toner, '04
Katie Whalen, '03
Photography Vincent Massa John McGrail, '69 Andrew Pinkham Jim Roese
Alumni Association Officers
William W. Matthews, Esq., '90, President Michael Diccicco, 71, Vice President Gerard V. Burke, M.D., 75, Secretary Thomas J. Murphy, C.L.U., '56, Treasurer
La Salle Magazine (USPS 299-940) is published quarterly for the University's alumni, students, faculty, and friends by the Office of University Communications (Joseph Donovan, Assistant Vice President). Address correspondence to the Editor, La Salle Magazine, Benilde Hall, 1900 W. Olney Ave., La Salle University, Philadelphia, PA 19141-1199. Changes of address should be sent at least 30 days prior to publication of issue with which it is to take effect to the University Advancement Office, La Salle University, 1900 W. Olney Avenue, Philadelphia, PA 19141-1199. Periodicals postage paid at Philadelphia, Pa. POSTMASTER: Send change of address to office listed above.
cover story
Handing Down the Mission
feature
Through Tragedy, A Vocation
special feature
La Salle's Lesser-Known History
profiles
A Shrine for Local Legends Making Healthcare a Family Affair
departments |
|
17 |
Book Notes |
22 |
News |
28 |
Sports |
31 |
Alumni Notes |
LASALLE UNIVERSITY
Handing Down
the Mission
Reflections on the Example of the Christian Brothers
On the next few pages, several Brothers and laypeople write about the always-reverberating impact other generations of Brothers had on their minds, hearts, and career paths. They also delve into what the Brotherhood means to them as a vocation and an institution. The common thread connecting each of these stories is the unwavering dedication, unconditional love, and vast knowledge these men have shared with their students. In the past, present, and future, the Christian Brothers always teach best through their example.
SPRING 2004
Changing the Lives of Individual Students
Brother Emery C. Mollenhauer, F.S.C., Ph.D., L.H.D., Associate Professor of English, La Salle administrator
LIKE MANY BROTHERS WHOSE vocation dates from pre-Yatican II days, my world before becoming a Brother was located amid an i Irish | Catholic ethos, a happy but culturally rather cloistered community where vocations were plentiful. Though memories of my many years as a Christian Brother remain part of a precious, incommunicable past, the survey which follows may lack gritty immediacy for some and may seem almost mythic to the MTV™ generation.
At West Philadelphia Catholic High School, then staffed by a community of well over 60 Christian Brothers, we had Brothers for all courses for all four vears. What we now speak of as Lasallian values were conveyed quite effectively through the presence and lives of the Brothers. Students sensed and saw a refreshing spirit of acceptance, a pervasive fairness, an honest respect for the individual person, a responsiveness to others' needs, a commonsensical approach to the whole educational enterprise, and an environment of shared mission. Moreover, the lack of any clerical distinctions reflected and made appealing the reality of Brotherhood.
The great majority of students admired and liked the Brothers as teachers and, especially when associated with the Brothers in extracurricular activities, grew to be aficionados of the Brothers and their charism. In my own case, having been editor-in-chief of the newspaper had much to do with my appreciation of the Brothers" vocation. Immediately after high school, I joined the Brothers and went through our five-year religious formation program of a novitiate and then, along with 130 like-minded young men, a four-year scholasticate at the Catholic University of America.
In the immediately following vears, I gave my vouth to Pittsburgh, where I had rewarding and memorable years teaching, pursuing graduate degrees, and moderating school publications and student government. I also had the privilege of sponsoring a few young men who became Brothers. Following a
year of study and reflection in our Motherhouse in Rome 1 960 . I was assigned to teach at the then La Salle College. Early in the second semester of my first year at La Salle, our provincial appointed me Dean of our Evening Division. During my eight years as dean, as well as in subsequent years i 1969-1991 as Academic Vice President and Provost. I tried to keep in touch with students and the professional life by regularly teaching one course each semester.
After resigning from administration, I returned happilv to the apostolate that attracted me to the Brothers in the first place: full-time teaching. Currentlv, I enjoy the demanding but rewarding experience of meeting well over 90 students each semester, and, as far as I can ascertain, teaching and rapport with students have progressed well enough.
Early this semester, I called a neighboring sLx pack of students at 3:30 on a Monday morning to complain about their noisiness. When I opened with a clearly gruff "hello." a student responded jauntily, "What's upr" I retorted, "For starters, it's 3:30 a.m. and I'm up." Less amusing is the reality that in recent years some students address me I respectfully as "Mr." or "Dr." or "Professor" or "Father." Such mild tremors to our sense of significance subside, however, in the presence of the strong support we Brothers receive from our colleagues, the rapport most Brothers enjoy with their students, especially those who have come from our own high schools, the exhilaration that follows an especially successful class session, and the occasional report of how we unwittingly changed the liv es of individual students signiticandy.
LA SALLE MAGAZINE
Andrew Pinkham Photography
Fellow Workers in the Vineyard
Sid MacLeod, Assistant Professor of Communication 2000 recipient of the rarely awarded Affiliate Christian Brother designation
WHY WAS I NAMED AN HONORARY Christian Brother? I guess that I am one of the "fellow workers in the vineyard."
Many years ago. La Salle had an incredible teacher. Dr. Roland Holroyd. He was also an Affiliate Christian Brother. Once, in the introduction to a talk, after recognizing clergy, administrators, etc., he recognized his colleagues. He called us — the faculty — "fellow workers in the vineyard." I have been a partner with the Brothers at La Salle for more than four decades. We teach, we counsel, we advise, and most of all, we hope to touch the hearts and minds of our students.
When I came to La Salle in 1959, there was no manual on how to teach, how to treat the students, or how to be a colleague. You learned by example — the example of the Brothers and the teachers who had been influenced, or taught, by the Brothers. It's interesting that the experience has finally been labeled, although the concept has been around for a long time. The current word is "Lasallian."
I'm not really sure diat my designation as Affiliate Christian Brother entails anything specific. I think it is
a humbling honor rather than a litany of duties and benefits. I must confess that I have parked my car in the "Brothers Reserved" spaces on campus a few times. Some of my most meaningful "Brothers" experiences have been holiday celebrations at the Roncalli Center, a Brothers residence, and doing a video on the Brothers' ministries in the Baltimore Province.
I first met the Brothers at St. Mary's College in Winona, Minn. It is now St. Mary's University of Minnesota. Before that, I was educated in high school bv the Irish Christian Brothers. I have always been impressed by men and women of the cloth, non- clerics, who dedicated their lives to teaching.
Today, more than ever, the involvement of lay people in the ministry of the Christian Brothers is very important. As a lay person and an Honorary Brother, I imagine that I am an example of that. The Brothers and I have the same ministry. More and more, the Brothers are honoring those who participate with them — their partners. In all of the Brothers' schools and ministries, lav people are partners in the missions and goals that were established by St. John Baptist de La Salle. We all are workers in the same vineyard.
SPRING 2004
Teaching with
"Passion and Compassion"
Brother Ed Sheehy, F.S.C., '68 Associate Professor of History
THE SCENE: LA SALLE HIGH School, Cumberland, Md. The Time: early 1960s. Plans: attend La Salle College (then), major in history or political science, and then teach, work, for the government, or become a lawyer. At that point, the principal of the school, Brother Jeremy McNamara, asked this 16-year-old to consider the Christian Brothers.
Reluctance, then a yes. Why? Because people like Brother Gerry Molyncaux, '58, of our Communication Department ( even though he was the only Brother to give me detention — April 1963, not that I remember that stuff) were teachers, advisers, moderators, and authentic Brothers.
Fast forward to now. What do we teach? One wonders if the content is as important as teaching who we are: Brothers. The key remains — respect for self, respect for others, respect for life at all ages, and responsibility for actions. Respect for the students. There are no "dumb" questions in a lively, interactive classroom experience. Well, okay, maybe one or two. Example: last semester's classic — "How many letters in the alphabet?" response from student: "27." 27?! "Yes, X, Y, 'N,' Z!"
It was no coincidence that St. La Salle spoke to his
Order's members as "Brothers." For well over 300 years, and during our 141 here at this University, the Brothers have been just that for students — "older adults" working with "younger adults." Brothers have an extended family. Last semester, speaking with a group of students, one mentioned that I didn't have any children. I said, "You are all my children." Hokey as that sounds, they laughed, and remembered it. Hopefully, our students see us as mentors — not without warts, of course (ray interest in trivia and Spongebob Squarepants intrigues some).
Throughout the turmoil of the past 40 years, the key to the "success" of the Brothers has been two-fold, I think. First, education in the broadest sense remains our mantra. Secondly, the Brothers have begun more and more to share this charism of teaching, and the twin signs of the Institute — faith and zeal — with our colleagues in the educational mission.
We still remain an involved group because we believe that education is a seamless garment — that the classroom only provides part of the process of mutual learning. For we learn and grow and are energized by the younger adults, too. Whether it's insight in the formal academic setting, or conversing in the Food Court or offices, I continue to marvel at how much there is to learn from today's generation. Their commitment to community service, ability to roll with the punches, and to bond in a time of community tragedy can teach us a lot.
The Brothers in Cumberland, Md., taught with "passion and compassion." Our mission we have chosen is to continue that calling. We do so in step with other committed teachers who desire, in St. La Salle's words, "to touch hearts" through "faith" and "zeal," for as the prophet wrote in the Old Testament, "those who instruct others unto justice shall shine as stars for all eternity."
Andrew Pinkham Photography
Applying Values to the Gyms and Playing Fields
Brother John Kane, F.S.C., 'So, M.A. '87
Director of Academic Support Services for Student-Athletes
I WAS NEVER THE BEST PLAYER ON THE TEAM WHEN I was growing up. I was the type of kid who sat next to the coaches on the bench. Initially, I believed that if the head coach saw me first, then I would get more playing time. Once I realized that the coach usually knew whom he wanted to put in, I still sat near the coaches. I then enjoyed watching them and seeing how thev coached and made decisions. You could learn a good deal sitting next to the coach. I thought I would like to do this some day as well.
My father was a La Salle graduate, class of 1952, so growing up, I was a La Salle fan. I remember going to the Palestra to see Kenny Durrett play. I think back dien that I knew I would also go to La Salle. I had no real idea what a Christian Brother was at the time. Like many others, I initially thought La Salle was named after the explorer.
My first real contact with the Brothers came at La Salle High School. I was immediately impressed with them as teachers, but more so for whom they were. The Brothers got to know you outside the classroom. They were moderators and ran activities. They came to games and supported students in whatever activities they were involved with. It was clear that the Brothers cared for their students. By my senior year, I had become friendly with a number of Brothers, and one asked me if I ever thought about becoming a Brother. I told him that I actually had. A few years after that, I entered the Community.
My love of athletics never left, and as a Brother, I discovered many opportunities to be involved with sports. During my first 20 years as Brother, I was in high school working as a teacher and administrator. I always was connected to athletics as a moderator or coach. I also spent eight years as athletic director at West Catholic, here in Philadelphia. Like the Brothers who had an impact on me in high school, I knew it was important to get to know students outside the classroom. For me, athletics was a good means to do so.
I came to La Salle University five years ago, when there was an opening for Director of Athletic Operations. Eventually, I was made Assistant Athletic
Director. I remember when I was 10 or 11, I was with my father driving past La Salle; we pulled over to look at Hayman Hall, which was under construction. Later, during my undergraduate days, I spent almost every afternoon in Hayman playing basketball. Little did I realize that I would be running the building some day. Just recently, I switched jobs to become the Director of Academic Support Services for Student-Athletes. I value the level of interaction with our student-athletes this new position affords me.
There is a lot of warranted criticism of athletics todav, especiallv at the collegiate level. However, I am still convinced that, done the right way, athletics is a wonderful tool to help young people grow into the best they can be. As a high school athletic director, I used to make sure my coaches knew that I considered them all educators, whether they were teachers or not. I believe it is the same at this level. Working in a Lasallian school demands this of our coaches and staff. I am uplifted on a daily basis as I watch La Salle's coaches interact with student-athletes. Our coaches get it. As a Christian Brother in adiletics, I can serve as a reminder of the values that have been ours for over 300 vears, and that they do apply to the gyms and playing fields. It gives me joy to see the willingness of our coaches, staff, and most especially, our student- athletes, to embrace these values as their own. Athletics has been a big part of my life. I realize that, at this time, it is a blessing to be able to carry out my vocation as a Christian Brother working with the student- athletes at La Salle University.
The Silent Example of Their Lives
Brother James Butler, F.S.C., '82, La Salle Board of Trustees,
liary Provincial and Director of Education for the Baltimore District of the Brothers of the Christian Schools
"EMERY? WHAT KIND OF A NAME is Emery: I've never met an Emery in my life." I can clearly remember that reaction when, early in 1978, I opened my letter of acceptance to La Salle College as it then was I. A high school student of the free and easy '70s, I certainly knew that there was some group called the Christian Brothers who made wine — nondescript domestic table wines and something exotic called "Mcloso Cream Sherry." I had seen the name Brother Timothy, Cellarmaster, on the back of the bottles but never knew these guys had anything to do with education. I was to learn better.
I also have a second recollection associated with receiving that "fat envelope" of acceptance that was eventuallv to set the direction for my life in so many unexpected ways. I remember looking at that signature and wondering, "Why doesn't he sign his last name?" I could see it was a little long, but, nevertheless, I had received other acceptances from lesuit colleges and universities, and they were always signed something like, "Rev. John P. McGowan, S.J." Here was an acceptance from an academic vice president who seemed to want to be on a first-name basis.
Puzzling to a 17-year-old, but also a taste of what w as to follow. .Although I had never met a Christian Brother in my life before coming to La Salle, I was quickly to learn that it was this "first-name basis," this "l.asallian personalism," if you want to get fancy about it, that was to be characteristic of my relationship with the Brothers.
It was years later that I was to learn to say, "the heart of a Lasallian school is relationships." It was probably a number of years after that that I truly came to understand what it was about. The Brothers, competent scholars and educators though they might have been, were first and foremost about people.
I got taught that lesson as early as my first registration day at La Salle. While the imperturbable Brother John Owens, F.S.C. directed events on these
hectic days with preternatural authority, he was assisted by an elderly Brother in the traditional habits. Rosary beads in one hand, he handed out registration cards with the other. But Brother E. James Conaghan, F.S.C., never simply performed the function. He looked at each card, saw the individual's address, and made some comment to each student who approached his desk. He might ask about the parish, the high school, a local luminary, but the effect was the same — you were an individual, somebody it was worthwhile knowing. That's a lesson the Brothers have always taught, each in his own way.
A later lesson I came to learn at La Salle was that the Brothers respected individuals perhaps at least partiallv because they were such rich individuals themselves. There was little evidence of the "batch mentality" sociologists tell us affect those who live in structured groups. Each one brought something unique — and delightful — to his classroom or social interaction with us. There was the whispered insight of Brother Daniel Burke, F.S.C. as he taught us to walk through the walls of a poem. Contrast this with the rollicking enthusiasm of Brother Patrick Ellis, F.S.C.. singing whole numbers from a Gilbert and Sullivan operetta in his Satire class. I recall the sight of the erstwhile elegant Brother Jack Dondero, F.S.C., "45. laughing so hard at lunch that he sprayed chocolate milk all over his white shirt and silk tie. There was Brother Joseph Keenan, F.S.C., '56, the master raconteur, illustrating abstruse theological points with stories of his North Philadelphia boyhood, bantering with the man we knew was his best friend, the pricelesslv ironical Brother Edward Davis, F.S.C. We had our working class scholars, too — Brother Claude Demitras, F.S.C. "53, and Brother James Muldoon, F.S.C, '55 — approachable and unpretentious whatev er their administrative positions.
There were those who still possessed a youthful enthusiasm. We had Brother Gerry Molyneaux, F.S.C, "5S. with his fraternity. Brother Jerry Fitzgerald, F.S.C, '70, anvw here and everywhere, and Brother Richard Havvley, F.S.C, in the biology lab. I still remember one major who was a floor-mate on Bernard's coming
LA SALLE MAGAZINE
home and commenting on anatomy class: "I had a pregnant cat. Br. Rich was so excited. He was like a sixth grader about it."
Then there were those who had nothing of the pre- adolescent about them. Though I only saw them at a distance and in their senior citizen mode. Brothers David Cassian Prendergast, F.S.C., Gilbert Jude Sapone, F.S.C., and Giles Raymond Wilson, F.S.C., still had "icy Lasallian stares" that could strip the paint off walls. In their black robes, they resembled the then- contemporary Darth Vader, In demeanor, they made Darth Vader look like Mr. Rogers. It was an article of faith among many of my generation that Br. Giles Raymond carried a gun. It seemed obvious to me from looking at him that he wouldn't hesitate to use it. All in all it was a parade of human characters as rich as that in TIk Canterbury Talcs. And generally every bit as funny.
"Why'd you become a Brother?" It's a question many students have asked me over the years. And I never had a very good answer. Certainly none of these guys ever asked me (they were probably also good judges of character I. But it was the silent example of their lives that worked the trick. It wasn't "I can be like them" — because they clearly weren't any one particular way. It was the example of the way they lived their individual lives, and the interest they took in ours, that inspired so convincingly. I could be myself and still be one of a greater "us." It's not only the stuff of a religious vocation. I think this is a principle that any "Brothers' boy" (from years gone by) or graduate of a Lasallian school (as we say today) would understand. It's simply how we do business.
And do magic.
"You Are an Important Part of Something Much Bigger Than Yourselves"
Brother Joseph Grabenstein, F.S.C., '73
Archivist for the Baltimore Province and La Salle University
a "BROTHER JOE, YOU HAVE A JOB that will never end!" Not long ago, a student uttered those words to me as we concluded a 30-minute tour of the Archives. His sentiments match mine perfectly. In a sentence, I preserve the long-term memory of the legacy of La Salle University and of the Christian Brothers. But that job has evolved into a vocation-within-a-vocation which is more stimulating and rewarding than I ever expected.
We all have our interests, hobbies, and passions. Mine is history. I was born in a small Maryland city with no shortage of history markers and landmarks from various eras. I grew up on a busy street which had borne (150 years earlier! ) a much slower traffic of westward bound covered wagons and stage coaches. (Perhaps you have heard of the old Cumberland Road.) I studied and read history with pleasure. After graduating from La Salle in 1973, I taught it for 18 years. During that time, I accumulated boxes and boxes of souvenirs, newspaper articles, graphics, anecdotes — anything which could be held, displayed, or related in a classroom in order to catch a youngster's eye and ear. History definitely has a vibrant dimension, and I have always tried to find it. I've been a military reenactor (would you believe a Redcoat?) in a TV rniniseries about George Washington. I've given informal tours of Gettysburg and Harper's Ferry. I've been asked to do much research and writing of history for the Christian Brothers. And I've been archiving history here at La Salle since 1992. Approximately 90 percent of my clientele can't believe how many materials I have about their selected topic. My best advertisement is satisfied customers, and I'm blessed to count them in the hundreds.
Because the Archives is in College Hall's lower level, some have dubbed it "the Batcave," or "the land down under," or even "the Dungeon." No problem. I prefer
to think of our Archives, however, as a walk-in time tunnel. It's fascinating to watch the faces of my clients and guests when thev visit. They always enjoy seeing the most recent La Salle beer stein or vintage Explorer basketball game program which I purchased on eBay. Their eyes and smiles express sufficient gratitude when they behold the old black-and-white photographs which match their needs perfectly, or when I provide a document or news clipping which boosts their term paper or augments their research on a La Salle alumnus.
No, the Archives is not a classroom. But the old maps, handwritten student roll books, videotapes, scrapbooks, and other sources are "power-point" enough for me. After all, it's our story we're preserving — and sharing. We have a rich legacy to tell and re-tell. Since the mid-'90s, I have given about 30 presentations per year to La Salle students, mostly freshmen. (This doesn't include numerous presentations to some high schoolers as well.) Virtually every talk utilizes the same title, namely, "You are an important part of something much bigger than yourselves." And it works. Young people get a kick out of seeing our 1996 yearbook, with one quintessential word ("La Sallle") misspelled on the cover and on key pages within the book. They're amused by the "cow in the dormitory" story of May 1968. They're shown pictures of our three campuses before our arrival at 20th and Olnev. They learn how we got the nickname "Explorers," and what our coat-of-arms signifies, and why blue and gold are our colors. (Kinda wish someone had told me such things when I was a freshman at La Salle myself! )
I remind the students that they can change their major (most of them will! ) or their address, or their future career. Some people even opt to change their name. But the one thing which they — and we — can never, ever change... is our roots. And for true Lasallians, who would want to?
Yes, archiving is indeed a job which will never end.
10
LA SALLE MAGAZINE
An Enduring Legacy of Relationships
Michael Boyle, '98, doctoral candidate at the Centre of International Studies, Cambridge University, and a Hamburg Fellow in Conflict Prevention at the Center for International Security and Cooperation (CISAC), Stanford University
Andrew Pmkham Photography
IN THEIR 140 YEARS IN THE United States, the Christian Brothers have had an impact not just on the institutions in which they taught, but on generations of families that have benefited from their service. My family undoubtedly belongs in the category of those who have benefited enormously from their ties with Christian Brothers. While there are many graduates of La Salle and other Christian Brothers institutions in my family, it is my grandfather, who never had the opportunity to go to college, whose story best portrays what the Christian Brothers mean to me.
My grandfather, John McArdle, was born in 1899 in Philadelphia. He attended Cathedral Grade School in Center City, a small primary school at which girls were taught by an order of nuns and the boys by the Christian Brothers. Though he remained in school only until the age of 13, my grandfather was profoundly influenced bv his experience there, and spoke fondly of the Brothers for the rest of his life. He would pepper his conversations with the phrase, "The Brothers in school used to tell us...," and
remind his family of their lessons on the importance of education and charity. To my grandfather, these were not the lessons of an education long-forgotten, but guidelines for his life. Among the many relationships he developed with the Christian Brothers, one stands out for not only its impact on his life, but its longevity. In 1912, my grandfather met Brother Eugene, a newly minted Christian Brother who, at 18 years old, was only six years older than his pupils. Br. Eugene was his eighth grade teacher and, for the next 70 years of his life, his friend. Thev corresponded regularly, shared stories of their lives and families, and had a friendship that spanned nearly the course of their entire lives.
To me, this relationship exemplifies the best of what the Christian Brothers can be. While the Christian Brothers have a social mission — to encourage a value-based education and to train students for public and community service — their enduring legacy may lie just as much in the personal relationships that they have built with their students. That they have had such an impact on a family across generations is a testament to the power of the values they represent and their ability to realize those values in their daily relationships with others.
SPRING 2004
The Best Possible Versions of Ourselves
Marianne Salmon Gauss, '74, M.B.A. 's- Assistant Professor of Management
WHEN I HEARD THAT THE cover story for this edition of La Salic Magazine was about the Christian Brothers, so many faces came to mind.
In my first class, on a Wednesday morning in September of 1970, Brother Claude Demitras, F.S.C., '53, boomed a "Good morning," and started to change my life. Br. Claude also was my academic adviser as I struggled my way through school. He taunted me when I had to drop out of day school and switch to night classes, saying that I would never finish. When I graduated, he took me and a classmate to dinner. During dinner, I asked why he had teased me, rather than support me. His answer was that he thought I was already feeling too sorry for myself, and that sympathy would have given me permission to fail. With maturity and self- knowledge, I would have to agree. I would have used sympathy as a crutch, but imagine his knowing that! Well, of course, that's the secret. The Brothers care about the individual student. This caring attitude has spread to the faculty and staff of La Salle, as we strive to emulate the Brothers, and help them carry out their mission.
My most intense period of learning about the Brothers, St. John Baptist de La Salle, and the charism happened to me as a member of the Lasallian Leadership Institute (LLI). The Institute is a program divided into three years — spirituality, leadership, and management. Designed to help us learn the basic tenets of living a Lasallian life, the Institute introduced us to the writings of St. La Salle and
others. We were given lectures by the best thinkers of the present day. Most importantly, we were introduced to colleagues from a wide variety of ministries, all sharing in the Lasallian charism. These colleagues gave empirical evidence that the Brothers have communicated who and what they are, clearly, if subtly, in each of these ministries. The speakers were also inspiring. Brother Malachy Broderick, F.S.C., told us a story on the nature of commitment; it is still amazingly poignant and memorable for me. Brother Miguel Campos, F.S.C., taught us that the Brothers believe their path to heaven is built by saving the souls of their students. What an incredible call to teach the whole student, so that the future adult can have a "whole, holistic, and holy" life.
The goals were many, including simply providing us with a community of like-minded educators with whom to share and from whom we could draw inspiration. However, the Brothers are confronting two challenging realities. Throughout the American Catholic Church, there are fewer and fewer people entering religious life. This is coupled with an ever- increasing need to help children, especially poor children, through education. There is excitement and hope when I think of the special opportunities that are being provided to inner-city children through the San Miguel School in Camden, N.J., and La Salle Academy in Philadelphia. The Brothers do not want to abandon the ministries in which they are already engaged, but these new ventures need leadership. Also, die Brothers are increasingly recognizing the level of commitment among the many lay and religious partners with whom they work. The LLI is a wonderful way to address all of these needs. So far,
LA SALLE MAGAZINE
there are nine people here at the University who have finished the Lasallian Leadership Institute. Currendy, six more members of the faculty and administration are participadng.
I am luckier than many La Salle alums in that I have been able to continue to interact with the Brothers. As an adult, it is even clearer that there is a special brilliance here. So often, I see how these men work, dav after day, long into the night, to help our students find the best possible versions of themselves.
The Brothers who taught me were always men of quiet humility, passionate about teaching, but without ego. They taught me Lasallian values, long before
there was a term for it, through their simple example. What is remarkable about the 60 or so individuals with whom I participated in LLI 2, is the commonality of qualities. These people are also passionate about teaching, caring for the whole student. They work hard, caring, praying, and nagging, to help the young people in their classrooms find a full and satisfying life.
So many Brothers have had an influence on me. Each one has special gifts to share, and I am richer for each Brother I've met. I am working by their side now, and their inspiration, faith, and support still mean everything to me.
What a Privilege to Share in That Wealth
Brother Thomas McPhillips, F.S.C., Ph.D., '72 Professor of Biology
14
IT MIGHT HAVE BEEN THE RESULT of a careful re-reading of the De La Salic Brothers' Rule. Maybe it was a response to a nagging desire- to be of greater service. Or maybe it was just the thought of experiencing an adventure. Whatever the reason, my decision to teach at Bethlehem University was one of the best of my life. When I first set out for the Holy Land in 1994, I had little idea what I would find there. I certainly had an awareness that the place suffered from great political turmoil; however, I had no sense of what that might mean for the people I would be working with. One thing was clear though: No matter to whom I spoke, no matter what I read, I sensed that the Brothers and staff at Bethlehem University were making a significant difference to people who really needed them. Why wouldn't you want to be part of that?
Teaching biologv to an all-Palestinian student body presented serious challenges to this dyed-in-the-wool Philadelphian. For the first time in my life, I was experiencing in a big way the meaning of "cultural differences." I quickly came to understand that, in Palestinian culture, almost everything is perceived to be negotiable. More importantly, however, I also prompdv figured out how central family and friends were in the lives of these people who had little else.
Toward the end of my tenure in Bethlehem, I approached a group of students I had been teaching in a seminar. "You and your friends obviously have very little to spend on clothing and school materials. (Textbooks were so expensive as to be out of the question.! Yet, every day, I see piles of sweaters and notebooks around campus that are unattended for hours. Why is it that they are never stolen?" They looked at me as if I had two heads. "Brother, why would we steal from our friends?" Once more, these beautiful people illustrated to me that thev might have been materially poor, but their spirits were rich beyond belief. What a privilege it was to share in that wealth. Language presented a whole different kind of
LA SALLE MAGAZINE
challenge. Imagine teaching the complexities of biology in English to a group of students, none of whom speak English as a first language. Early in my stint at Bethlehem LTniversity, I was teaching a class on the biochemistrv of cellular respiration. Suddenly, these heretofore most respectful students erupted into animated conversation with each other. Had I completely lost my ability to control a class? Hardly. My rapid-fire delivery of the material simply overwhelmed those whose English skills were marginal. On some sort of cue that I never figured out, the better students took over and re-explained in .Arabic to the rest what I had tailed to communicate. Within 30 seconds, all settled down and I was back in charge — this time, speaking more slowly and using simpler vocabulary. I learned to welcome these interruptions, for it was then that true learning occurred.
As I try to put my own fast-paced, chaotic world into some sort of perspective, I often think back to the students at Bethlehem LTniversity, with their simple lifestyles and their focus on family and friends. I am confident that these students have taught me more than I taught them. So, in their honor, I take every opportunity to share those priceless lessons with my students at La Salle.
A Worldwide Educational Mission
Brother Francis Tri Nguyen, F.S.C., Ph.D.
Director of the Sociology Program, native of Vietnam
SINCE MY ARRIVAL IN AMERICA in 1975 as a refugee from Communist Vietnam, I have refoeused my energies and adapted myself to new surroundings. This necessitates much reflection, detachment, and patience: neither complete inaction nor insurance against all risks, but rather a search for new ways to live my Lasallian vocation in a new sociocultural environment. I may thus continue to live for God and do His will with whatever talents and ministry circumstances He has entrusted to me. My bi- directional adaptation to American culture has engaged me, not in assimilation nor integration, but synthesis, blending the best of the East and the West.
I had been a La Salle Christian Brother in Vietnam for 20 years. I had taught either in French or in Vietnamese at the Brothers schools in Vietnam, and in Cambodia at the secondary and college levels. The Confucian tradition in Vietnamese society had elevated the teacher's social status to a rank above that of the parents1. Thus, thanks to my teacher status and also to the black robe I was wearing, I gained "automatic" respect and authority in the classroom. Over the years, I've had the privilege of meeting Asian Brothers from Hong Kong, Japan, Thailand, the Philippines, India, Sri Lanka, Malaysia, and Singapore. Unlike the latter countries, the socio-political environment in war-torn Vietnam had brought constraints and tensions in the educational sphere in general, and in the Brothers schools in particular. I am therefore thankful to the Divine Providence for the blessings of liberty and peace in America.
I was appointed assistant professor at La Salle University in 1987, promoted to associate professor in 1993, and conferred tenure in 1994. I have been director of the sociology program since 1995.
My educational ministry at La Salle LTniversity has brought both challenges and rewards. Students' written evaluations at the end of each semester
prevented me from becoming complacent and uncritical: I have learned to relate to students in a more egalitarian and respectful manner, and to shift from the teaching to the learning paradigm. At the same time, I have been blessed unexpectedly with many students' kindness, trust, and friendship. Many have confided in me, asked me to write letters of recommendation for graduate schools, law schools, medical schools, and even a Navy School for Officers. I have been invited to their weddings and to their homes to celebrate Thanksgiving, Christmas, and Easter with their families. Moreover, colleagues from the schools of Arts and Sciences, Business, and Nursing have heartened and sustained me with their support and friendship overall these years. It has been particularly gratifving to receive the following note from the director of graduate psychology on Dec. 12, 2003: "Dear Br. Tri, I want to express my appreciation for the excellent responses the students gave to your teaching. It is good to see that students value the enthusiasm and the preparation you brought to this course. Students are coming to recognize the importance of preparing to work with a diverse group of clients."
Students seem to appreciate the international flavor I bring. Currently, I am conducting research on the identity of Lasallian universities in the 21st century, thereby giving the students a glance into the 65 Lasallian colleges and universities and into the Lasallian communitv worldwide, which is composed of 6,000 Brothers and 73,000 lay colleagues collaborating in the shared educational mission of touching the minds and hearts of 900,000 students in 80 countries.
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features
Through Tragedy, a Vocation
IT'S HOW YOU RESPOND TO SETBACKS THAT helps you find out what direction you'll take in life.
This was the case for Mary Brownsbcrger, who is pursuing a doctoral degree in psychology at La Salle University. Her stepson was in a car accident that left him disabled. But out of that tragedy came a positive: "It opened the door to what I really wanted to do with my life," she said. Her goal is to be actively involved in the empowering of those with disabilities. She is concentrating her degree in rehabilitation and neuropsychology.
One of Brownsberger's many volunteer activities is with Special Equestrians, a therapeutic riding facility in Warrington, Pa. The program uses horses to facilitate therapeutic activity for people with disabilities.
Brownsberg said, "What I enjoy the most is being at the barn and interacting with the instructors, students, and horses. The students have diverse disabilities. I've worked with
Mary Brownsberger (left), a doctoral psychology student at La Salle, is also a volunteer with Special Equestrians. She is helping Nathan Zelesko on the horse.
BY KATIE WHALEN, '03
children with autism, adults who are blind and/or deaf, teens with cerebral palsy, and adults who have suffered brain injury."
"In 30 minutes, a person's physical and emotional state can become totally transformed," she said. "The students are amazing. I've seen some who were really acting out before their lesson started, even self-harming. But most of the time, as soon as they're on the horse, a transformation occurs. Their attention shifts, and they're able to have a good, productive lesson. Most don't want the lesson to end after 30 minutes!"
Brownsberger recently received the Bob Eigenbrode Memorial Award, given by the Pennsvlvania Psychological Association to a graduate psychology student. Among the criteria for the award are "potential for service to the field and involvement in activities."
"Even though she is being educated to be a professional psvchologist, her desire to reach out to those in true need really sets her apart," said Frank Gardner, Ph.D., Director of La Salle's Psy.D. Program, who encouraged Brownsberger to apply for the award.
The Psy.D. Program at La Salle is incredibly challenging, yet Brownsberger maintains a 3.98 grade point average. Gardner said, "She works really hard and is involved in so many things. She's a true picture of compassion, motivation, and energy."
In addition to teaching an undergraduate course in psychology at La Salle, Brownsberger is a member of two honor societies, has been elected as student representative to speak for her fellow doctoral students, and is a member of the Student Affiliates of American Psychology.
With all of these experiences and activities under her belt, Brownsberger doesn't show any signs of stopping. She hopes to teach people interested in rehabilitation careers. And she plans to keep following her goal: "To empower the disabled and their families to be as healthy and self-sufficient as possible."
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LA SALLE MAGAZINE
book notes
Street Kid
by Nicholas Cianci, '58
Xlibris Corporation, 2003 136 pp., $20.99
These days, it is hard to find a good, clear representation of the Italian-American situation of the past century. We are bombarded today by the typical "mafia/gangster" stereotype of Italian men and, thus, it seems like all Italian men of the 20th century exhibited this ultimate lack of respect for human life and integrity. However, in Cianci's simple and genuine autobiography, which tells the story of his early days on the street and his gradual emergence from destitution, we get a different look at this group and the men who define its existence. We are presented with a man, who, through his experiences and his interactions with others, brings back the long-lost dignity and integrity of the represented Italian- American persona and its way of life. (Excerpted from a review on amazon.com.)
Nicholas Cianci, '58, grew up in the streets of South Philadelphia during the Depression. He attended public schools in Philadelphia before serving in the Army during the Korean War. He attended La Salle on the G.I. Bill and received his degree in education and English. He has worked as an English teacher, a guidance counselor, assistant principal, and principal in both junior and senior high schools. Now retired, he lives in Southport, N.C.
Chapter One: The Story of Vic Charles
by Bob Staranowicz, '83, M.A. '92
Bookman Marketing, 2003 308 pp., $14.95
Vic Charles has returned from his tour, but his sub-conscious has been left behind in Vietnam. He is a successful writer and is prepared to begin his second work. For reasons unbeknownst to him, he is stuck in "Chapter One." The flashbacks, the twitching, and nightly sweats have once again reared their ugly head. Vic tries not to let these re-occurrences bother him, but they take their toll on what could be a very successful writing career. He does his best to keep the latest "terrors" from his wife, Molly, and his two sons, Spence and Mark. All is well until he feels the need to travel to the "Wall." This could be his last trip anywhere, as he discovers that he has brought something back from the war with him that has been inside of him for more than 20 years. As his life may be slowly slipping away, he discovers the foreign substance that he has been harboring for many years. As Vic lays in his hospital bed, only he knows whether he will survive or not. (from bookmanmarketing. com)
Bob Staranowicz, '83, M.A. '92, served with the 101st Airborne in Northern I Corps, Vietnam. He was awarded an Army Commendation Medal and a Bronze Star. Chapter One is his first effort at novel writing. He co-wrote the play "Etchings: The Stories Behind the Wall," which was initially performed at West Columbus High School in Cerro Gordo, N.C, and Fayetteville State University in Fayetteville, N.C. He resides in Bucks County, Pa.
"Book Notes" will be featured periodically in upcoming issues of this magazine and its companion piece, the Alumni News. We invite you to let us know if there's a book written by an alum within the last year that should be highlighted by e-mailing Caitlin Murray at murrayc@lasalle.edu.
Conversations with Isabel Allende
Edited by John Rodden, 78 Foreword by Isabel Allende
University of Texas
Press, 2004 (revised edition)
304 pp., $29.95
Allende seems to get more and more popular all over the world. That's a good reason for libraries with active fiction collections — specifically, whose copies of Allende's books rarely sit idle on the shelves — to invest in this collection of 34 interviews Allende has given in the 1980s and 1990s, some not previously published, others published in languages other than English. Allende isn't a reticent interviewee; she has lots to say, and frequent topics in these interviews include Latin American politics, feminism, her family history, the difference between writing novels and short stories, and her deceased daughter, Paula (subject of one of her most recent and certainly most poignant books, Paula, 1995). Her responses to similar questions by different interviewers do not always add up to a consistent picture of events in her life, but that's just fine; what fiction writer doesn't embroider and manipulate the truth, even about himself or herself, for the narrative needs of the moment? Her fans will love the Isabel who comes across so well spoken here, (from Booklist)
Since graduating from La Salle, John Rodden, 78, has taught at the University of Virginia and the University of Texas at Austin. He is the author and editor of eight books, including Performing the Literary Interview, Lionel Trilling and the Critics, and The Worlds of Irving Howe. He lives in Austin, Texas.
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line*. -«>-***
La Salle's Lesser-
IN THE COMICS:
TOPIX was a comic book published for Catholic school students in the 1940s, which included a feature about St. John Baptist de La Salle's mission to educate underprivileged children (above) and the story of how Joe Verdeur, '50, overcame his fear of water to later go on to become an Olympic Gold Medal winner.
THE BEGINNING OF AN ILLUSTRIOUS POLI
(Lett) Current Pennsylvania Governor Edward G. Rendell gavt speech at La Salle, officially launching his political career, o time, he was seeking the office of Philadelphia District Attor of Philadelphia, Rendell returned in 1996 to participate in a game.
PFTP'5
EXCELLENCE IN COMMUNICATION:
Two of the most prominent recipients of the La Salle Collegian Award, presented for public service in the communication field, were Walter Cronkite, who received the award in I960, and David Brinkley, who was honored in 1961. (left: Cronkite: right: La Salle President Brother Daniel Bernian, F.S.C., Brinkley, and former Collegian Editor Robert Lyons, '61).
TAKE ME OUT TO THE BALL GAME: Phillies Hall of Fame pitcher Robin Roberts (shown at center of picture Tom Kennedy, left, and Bill Winning, right) leads a baseball clinic at La J (Right) Dennis Lehman, '73, poses with the Phillie Phanatic. As a membt public relations department, Lehman was the person who came up with lovable green mascot.
PARODY PUBLICATIONS: Shown above are the front and back covers of Hind Quarters, a spoof of La Salle's prestigious Four Quarters literary magazine, along with the cover oflhe Horse's Mouth. Both were published in 1967. Other unusual publications include The Sackcloth Circus (1968) and Phantasmagoria (1978).
VERY FUNNY FELLOWS.
La Salle hosted two of America's favorite comedians in the early days ofthi careers. Bill Cosby (left) appeared at La Salle in 1965. At the time, students paid 25 cents for admission to Cosby's stand-up performance. The current of "The Tonight Show, " Jay Leno (right), entertained at La Salle in 1983.
tCnown History
U you knew Brother Patn<*EU*. s
if vou knew diw>~ — JyChaver^«««>*-
heard this story before and miss hearing it. read on...
May 31. 1968. nttappeneddunng^ ^
.hc Wister Farm. £££,*,„ offi
AL CAREER: first campaign 1.4, 1977. At the flight: As Mayor ;ty basketball
AN UNUSUAL LATE-NIGHT VISITOR: It's not uncommon for students to keep goldfish or a hamster in their dorm rooms, but during the early morning hours of May 31. 19B8, the residents of St. Bernard Hall awoke to the sound of stamping feet and mooing. As part of a prank, a cow i had been led from Wister Farm, up 20th Street, and into the dorm. According to former President Brother Patrick Ellis. F.S.C., getting the cow OUT proved to be more difficult than getting it into the budding.
*"* St.. above aiart) Hrc
I
t, between in 1969. '.he Phillies 1ea for the
YOU KNOW HIM AS FRANK BARONE FROM "EVERYBODY LOVES RAYMOND":
but did you know that Peter Boyle, '57. was also a Christian Brother in his younger days, going by the name of Brother Francis de Sales? Another interesting piece of trivia is that John Lennon served as the best man at Boyle s wedding.
®hr Centennial 3BalI
SOUVENIRS FROM AN EVENT THAT NEVER TOOK PLACE:
A gala event was to be held in celebration of La Salle's Centennial Anniversary on Nov. 23. 1963. The event was canceled because of the death of President John F Kennedy the previous day.
Kennedy (right), while serving as the Junior Senator from Massachusetts, received an honorary degree from La Salle and addressed a special college assembly five years earlier.
/
THOSE CRAZY
COLLEGE
KIDS:
College students have a reputation for engaging in
some bizarre activities. Among those that have occurred at La Salle include the publicity photo featuring La Salle 's gymnasts creating a "human pyramid" (above, c. 1901). In 1939, at the encouragement ot members of the sophomore class, freshmen competed in races in which the participants pushed peanuts with their noses (above right). "Knicker Soccer Bay" (right) began in 1957 as a zany halftime pep rally during soccer games to help bring visibility to the soccer team.
AN ALL-STAR CELEBRATION OF" AFRICAN-AMERICAN CULTURE:
Heavyweight champion Muhammed Ah (left) and entertainer Sammy Davis Jr. (right) were special guests at a week-long festival held at La Salle College in March 1969.
alumni profiles
A Shrine for Local Legends
Alum Establishes Philadelphia's First Sports Hall of Fame
BY JON CAROULIS
AFTER TWO YEARS OF PLANNING, THOUSANDS of hours of work, and hundreds of phone ealls, Ken Avallon, '83, just 48 hours before the event, was trying to figure out where 270 people would be seated.
Avallon felt as though he was planning a wedding, but in February, he saw a dream come true when his idea, a Philadelphia Sports Hall of Fame, inducted its first class.
"I felt like a bride," said Avallon, President of the hall. Two days before the ceremony to induct its first 19 members, he and the hall's vice president were working on a seating chart.
Philadelphia Mayor John F. Street was at the induction, and so was Pennsylvania Governor Fdward G. Rendell. Some of Philadelphia's greatest sports figures where there, too. La Salle basketball legend Tom Gola, '55, was among the initial 19 figures inducted, but is recovering from a stroke and was unable to attend.
Avallon, who works as a technology consultant, got the idea for the institution when he read a May 2002 newspaper story, lamenting how Philadelphia didn't have a sports hall of fame.
"I did some research and couldn't track down anything," Avallon said. "There was [no sports hall of fame] that I could find. I spent the better part of three or four days talking to friends, my brother, and dad, and I put a plan in place to see what I could come up with."
The hall became a family project of sorts. Avallon's brother, Alex, '81, and lather, Alexander, '54, were involved until his father's health prevented him from working on the project. Alex is the hall's treasurer.
Once the hall was established with a constitution, bylaws, and federal 501(c)(3) status, the group began assembling the first class of sports figures. (In addition to athletes, coaches and managers are eligible.) Initially, 35 people were nominated for the hall's
(From left) Alex Avallon, '81; Alexander Lowell Avallon, '54; and Ken Avallon, S3.
charter class; then, 48 Philadelphia-area sports figures — including sportswriters, broadcasters, athletic directors, coaches, and athletes — voted to choose the first class of 19 to be inducted.
On Feb. 9, at a Philadelphia hotel, Avallon saw his work come to fruition.
One of the highlights for him, he said, was presenting a Legacy of Excellence Award to Philadelphia Phillies broadcaster Harry Kalas. "Many of the athletes and figures inducted played before I was born," Avallon said. "But I've grown up listening to Kalas, and it was nice to see him there."
One other person Avallon would have loved to see at the event was Gola.
"My father was at La Salle when the school won the NCAA championship," Avallon said. "I met Gola a number of different times when I was a kid. Dad knew him pretty well, and I met him when he was coaching in 1969. We were living in Pittsburgh, and Dad took us to a basketball game between La Salle and Duquesne (when Gola was coach). Once we moved back to Philly, we went to his house to visit him a few times. It really would have been nice to be able to shake his hand, and ask if he remembered me."
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LA SALLE MAGAZINE
Making Healthcare a Family Affair
BY KAREN TONER, '04
IT MAY APPEAR ODD TO ANYONE OUTSIDE the Burgoyne family that attorney Paul J. Burgoyne, '70, serves as Chair of La Salle University's Nursing Advisory Board, a predominately female group.
To his family members, Burgoyne's serving on the nursing board is normal. Nurses surround this Cherry Hill, N.J., resident, whose wife, sister, brother, and sister-in-law are members of the profession. His daughter Madelyn is a third-year nursing student at La Salle.
Burgoyne wanted Madelyn to enroll at La Salle three vears ago. "The nursing staff assists students in the classroom and in clinical settings," he said. "This sort of attention is important in all fields, but even more so in nursing.
"La Salle's School of Nursing has been an ongoing contribution to the LJniversity, die surrounding community, and the city ot Philadelphia," Burgoyne said.
The University's Nursing Advisory Board — made up of alumni, community leaders, healthcare directors, and other academics — meets five times a year to increase awareness of the School of Nursing and to ensure it addresses the needs of students in healthcare. Burgoyne has served on the board for five years. His sister-in-law, Janice Beitz, R.N., Ph.D., '83, La Salle Associate Professor of Nursing and Co-Director of the Wound, Ostomy, Continence Nursing Education Program, said, "He graciously agreed to chair the board despite a brutally busy schedule. Even though he is a lawyer, he is also committed to the idea of quality healthcare and quality healthcare education. I believe this is due to his being married to my sister, Margaret, who is a certified registered nurse anesthetist."
"Paul has always wanted to serve La Salle. It's unusual in that he's not in any of the fields the School of Nursing teaches — nursing,
speech-language-hearing science, or nutrition — and the field is predominately female. But he's very moral, very principled; so I asked him to join the board. He's been a very good chair," said Zane Wolf, R.N., Ph.D., Dean of the School of Nursing.
Paul and Madelyn are not the only Burgoynes connected to La Salle: 15 relatives including brothers, cousins, in-laws, and his father, who graduated in 1933, are all La Salle alumni.
For 22 years, Burgoyne has worked on the Pennsvlvania Supreme Court's Attorney Disciplinary Board, investigating complaints against lawyers. Prior to that, he was a criminal defense lawyer in Philadelphia. He received his bachelor's degree in political science at La Salle and later graduated from Rutgers University School of Law.
news
Brother Michael J. McGinniss, F.S.C., Unanimously Elected to Second Term as La Salle's President
Brother Michael J. McGinniss, F.S.C., Ph.D., '70, was unanimously elected to a second five-year term as President of La Salle University by the school's Board of Trustees. Br. Michael, a former professor at La Salle, became the University's 28th President on July 1, 1999.
"I'm very proud of what we've accomplished in the past five years, and very excited about meeting the challenges that face us," Br. Michael said. "On a personal note, it's great to see so many wonderful things happening at my alma mater." His second term will begin on July 1, 2004.
"The Board of Trustees displayed an overwhelming show of support for Br. Michael's leadership," said James J. Lynch, '71, Chair of La Salle's Board of Trustees. "After a formal review process that concluded with a remarkable consensus, the Committee on Trusteeship strongly recommended reelecting Br. Michael, and the entire Board of Trustees voted unanimously to reelect him to another term. We feel very confident that Br.Michael is providing the direction the University needs."
Giving to the University has increased dramatically during Br. Michael's tenure as President. Total gifts and grants made annually to the University from fiscal year 1999 to the end of fiscal year 2003 grew 33 percent with unrestricted annual giving growing by 23.4 percent. In addition, during that time, 12 alumni clubs or chapters have either been revived or launched.
Under Br. Michael's direction, a strategic plan was developed and
continues to be implemented. The plan focuses on five themes: enhancing the intellectual and spiritual life of the University; communicating La Salle's distinct identity; investing in the future; enhancing the quality of life in the University's neighborhood; and strengthening partnerships with alumni.
Several dignitaries and distinguished alumni participated in an official groundbreaking ceremony lor La Salle's new student housing and dining facility on south campus in March. Those digging in included (from left) Mayor of Philadelphia, John F. Street; James J. Lynch, 11. Chair of La Salle s Board of Trustees, and Chair and CEO. of Sovereign Bank MidAtlantiC; City Councilwoman Donna Peed Miller; and Brother Michael J. McGinniss. F.S.C., Ph.D.. 10. President of La Salle.
Ground is Broken for New $26 Million Residence Hall and Dining Facility
La Salle University held a ceremonial groundbreaking for the construction of its new $26 million residence hall and dining facility. The hall will house more than 430 students and is expected to be completed in June 2005.
With increasing demand for on- campus housing, University officials have decided to add new facilities. When the new hall is completed, all resident students will live in University- owned housing.
Since 1998, the University has leased units from the Ogontz Manor
Apartments at Ogontz and Olney avenues to accommodate the demand for on- campus housing. University officials only wanted this to be a temporary solution for the enrollment surge.
"The high water mark was the fall of 2002. We had 2,143 students living in University housing. That's 65 percent of all full-time day undergraduates and 81 percent of the freshman class," said Raymond Ricci, '67, La Salle's Vice President for Enrollment Services. "We purposely reduced the size of the freshman class in 2003 because of housing limits."
The 102,921-square- foot residence hall will be a three-story complex consisting of a central entrance with four wings containing rooms. Three wings will feature suites of two bedrooms for four students with a connected bath. The fourth wing will feature double occupancy rooms with communal bath facilities. It will also have lounges and study rooms for student use.
It will be located on the school's south campus, a largely undeveloped area, and is the first new residence hall constructed since 1989.
The dining hall will seat 300 and can accommodate up to 700 meals per day. It will feature a design that allows for meals cooked-to-order for each person. There will also be a convenience store and a community mailroom in the dining hall.
Construction will be done by Nason and Cullen, Inc., of King of Prussia and Philadelphia-based Artis T. Ore, Inc., who teamed up to form a joint venture and were the successful bidders on the project.
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LA SALLE MAGAZINE
Alumni Hand Out Highest Honors
Stars illuminated the Union Ballroom at La Salle University's Alumni Association Awards on Nov. 14, 2003. Anthony Cardinal Bevilacqua, Archbishop Emeritus of Philadelphia, and Elmer F. "Bud" Hansen Jr., '58, President and C.E.O. of Hansen Properties, Inc., were honored with the night's two major awards. Cardinal Bevilacqua received the Signum Fidei Medal, which derives its name from the motto of the Christian Brothers, "Sign of Faith." The award is given annually to an individual who makes noteworthy contributions to the advancement of humanitarian principles in keeping with the Christian/Judeo tradition. Hansen was honored with the John J. Finley, '24, Award, given to recognize alumni who have exhibited outstanding service to La Salle or the Alumni Association. The award's namesake was known as "Mr. La Salle" for his devotion to the University.
Anthony Cardinal Bevilacqua. Archbishop Emeritus of Philadelphia, and Elmer F. "Bud" Hansen Jr., '58. President and CEO. of Hansen Properties. Inc.
New Athletics Logo Makes Its Debut
After 10 months in the making, La Salle University's new athletics logo was enthusiastically received at its unveiling on Feb. 25 at the Explorer Men's Basketball game against Temple.
According to Peter D'Orazio, '81, Assistant Athletics Director for Advancement at La Salle and the Athletics Department's point person managing the creation of the new mark, the new logo captures a piece of the past while at the same time pushes La Salle forward.
The new logo depicts the profile of a 17th century French explorer looking through a telescope with the words, "La Salle Explorers," below. The University's colors of dark blue and gold are used.
"The new athletics logo combines the historical icon of the explorer along with a modern image for the department," D'Orazio said. "Since the unveiling, we have received nothing but positive feedback from alumni and Explorer Club members."
The extensive research to create the new logo included gathering input from coaches and staff, and other segments of the University community.
"The process was very detailed, but it was necessary to review all samples and revisions with a wide variety of personnel to ensure that the new mark would be widely accepted," D'Orazio said.
The athletics logo is one element of La Salle's new graphic identity
program that was announced in December. The new graphic identity was developed by 160over90, a full-service marketing and communications agency headquartered in Philadelphia.
Sounds of the Ocean
La Salle junior Justin R. Morace, a Digital Arts and Multimedia Design (DArt) major, won first place in La Salle's fourth annual Digital Art Competition for his original work, "Sounds of the Ocean" (shown above). He created the piece, which displays a conch shell protruding from a human ear, for a "Sound Project" in his Electronic Visual Communication class, taught by Sandra Camomile. In it, he attempts to illustrate the sound of water. Since all entries for the contest had to be created through digital techniques, Morace had someone take a digital photo of his ear and then digitally superimposed a conch shell over it.
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Leon Ellerson, '56, Computer Software Pioneer, Receives Leadership Award
Rosa Lee Smith (right), widow of Warren I. Smith, M.D, '54, congratulates Robert E. Wyatt Sr., 78, the recipient of the 2003 Warren E. Smith, M.D., '54, Award.
African American Alumni Association Awards Bestowed
This year's Warren E. Smith, M.D., '54, Award was presented at the African American Alumni Association Dinner held on Nov. 7, 2003. Dr. Smith was one of the first African Americans to graduate from La Salle's pre-med program. He served as La Salle's psychiatrist for 15 years. The award is presented each year to an African American who has achieved success in his or her profession, has demonstrated a commitment to traditional Lasallian values, has made significant contributions to the community, and serves as an outstanding example to all La Salle students. In addition to Wyatt, Lasella Hall, '06, received the 2003 Warren E. Smith, M.D., '54, Scholarship, established to support full- time African American students who meet academic requirements, make significant contributions to the community, and serve as an example to all La Salle students. Louise Jackson Billups, '83, was also honored with the Presidential Award in recognition of her outstanding service to the African American Alumni Association.
Leon Ellerson, '56, President of Keystone Computer Associates, is the recipient of La Salle University's 12th annual Leadership Award, presented at the University's Charter Dinner this March.
The award honors individuals who have demonstrated outstanding leadership in corporate, civic, governmental, and religious affairs.
Ellerson says giving back to La Salle is quite simple.
"My admission to La Salle happened to occur at a critical time in my life when another university had closed its doors to me," he said. "It is also worth nothing that La Salle had welcomed me in the 1950s, during an era when attitudes toward people of color were a lot different than what they are today. In addition to its stellar academics, I might add that La Salle's track record has also been enlightened by its traditional, eminently worthy philosophy of helping those less advantaged by circumstance."
1965 inception. He has been the firm's president since 1975.
In addition to the Leadership Award, Ellerson has received the Warren E. Smith, M.D., '54, Award from La Salle's African American Alumni Association for his professional achievements, and the University's John J. Finley, '24, Award for his outstanding contributions to the La Salle community.
The Charter Dinner commemorates the founding of La Salle as an institution of higher learning when it was incorporated in 1863. Money raised at the black-tie event goes toward student scholarships.
Ellerson is a member of the University's Board of Trustees and a founding partner of Keystone Computer Associates, a Fort Washington, Pa., firm at the forefront of computer software development since its
The 12th annual Charter Dinner/La Salle University Leadership Award Ceremony was celebrated at Normandy Farm in Blue Bell, Pa, on March 20. Longtime La Salle supporter and University Trustee Leon Ellerson, '56, was presented with the Leadership Award in front of 340 of Ellerson 's and La Salle 's friends, corporate partners, and alumni. Proceeds from the annual Charter Dinner enhance the University's Scholarship Fund, thereby benefiting future generations of La Salle students. This year's Charter Dinner raised over $230,000 for students. This is the first year that the Charter Dinner was held at Normandy Farm. Elmer F 'Bud' Hansen Jr., '58, and Elmer F. Bud' Hansen III, '90, M.B.A. '96, hosted the event. The Leo Niessen Jr. Charitable Foundation and its trustee, William R. Sasso, Esq., '69, also a member of La Salle University's Board of Trustees, were the presenting sponsors. (From left) John Buernaccini, CEO. of Keystone Computer Associates Incorporated and the evening's master of ceremonies; Brother Michael J. McCinniss, F.S.C., Ph.D., 10, La Salle President; Sandra Lee Curry, of Keystone Computer Associates; Ellerson; and Patrick E. Hanraty, of Boenning & Scattergood, Inc., and Chair of the 2004 Charter Dinner.
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LA SALLE MAGAZINE
ESL Certification: La Salle at the Forefront
Beginning September 2004, the state of Pennsylvania will require educators teaching English as a Second Language (ESL) in public schools to be specifically certified in that content area. La Salle's Bilingual/Bicultural program understands the need for a specialized curriculum regarding this topic and is now an approved provider for ESL certification in Pennsylvania.
Luis Gomez, Ph.D., Director of La Salle's Bilingual/Bicultural program, says teaching English as a Second Language requires well-defined and unique skills because the teacher is dealing with a multitude of cultures and languages in one classroom.
"Teachers must be able to deliver the material in a way that is comprehensible to all cultures," Gomez said. "They must also be aware of the different cultures in their classes and be able to rise to a certain level of cultural sensitivity."
The ESL certification program consists of five predetermined courses that will address in depth the areas of expertise that are required by the
Pennsylvania Department of Education. These areas include: English usage and the
development of linguistic
awareness; support services for English language learners; English as a Second Language approaches, methods, and techniques; and cultural awareness and sensitivity.
"Dynamics of cross-cultural communication is a key element to the coursework," Gomez said. "All cultures are different, and ESL teachers must be able to clarify these nuances and use them in their pedagogical approach to the classroom."
Keyes' View of Current Events at Economic Outlook 2004
Political commentator and Ambassador Alan Keyes shared his views on current events as the guest speaker at the La Salle School of Business' Economic Outlook 2004, held Jan. 27, at The Union League of Philadelphia.
Over 450 alumni and friends of the University attended Keyes' discussion of the election year, the health of the world economy, and the United States' impact on worldwide issues, including the War on Iraq. The School of Business is a host of this event with the Business Network at The Union League of Philadelphia and Thomson Financial.
In 1983, President Ronald Reagan appointed Keyes to the United Nations Economic and Social Council. He is a former presidential candidate and frequent commentator on national radio and television programs.
Business On Campus — Now in its 12th year, the Executive On Campus Program (EOC), sponsored by the School of Business Advisory Board, brought together over BO business professionals, mostly La Salle alumni, to speak to undergraduate classes about career paths, industry highlights, and current business trends. Bob Truitt, Business Advisory Board member and President of the Beverage Can Division of Crown Cork & Seal Co. Inc. addresses students in a Business Perspectives (BUS 100) class.
The School of Business held Economic Outlook 2004 featuring Ambassador Alan keyes, former Presidential Candidate and Ambassador to the United Nations Economic and Social Council. This annual event, co- sponsored by The Union League of Philadelphia, was completely sold out with over 450 attendees, including alumni and business leaders from the tri-state area. Economic Outlook 2005 will be held next January.
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25
Retired Faculty, Staff Gather to Remember
More than 30 retired faculty and staff members held the first (of what they hope will be many) reunion luncheon at the Lulu Country Club near Glenside, Pa., in November.
The event was organized by Charles Halpin, '44, formerly a faculty member of the Management Department, and Thomas McCarthy, Emeritus Professor of
Thomas M. Ridington (left), former faculty member of the Fine Arts Department; Charles Halpin, '44 (center), former faculty member of the Management Department: and Peter Sweeney, '47, former faculty member of the Accounting Department.
Psychology and former Vice President of Student Affairs.
Guest of honor at the function was 90-year-old "Pete the Barber" Paranzino, who has cut the hair of many faculty and staff members since he became La Salle's resident barber in 1939.
Back-slapping was the order of the day; many of the guests had not seen each other in years.
There were few speeches — which was deliberate. But Halpin did offer one observation. Addressing the group, he said that when they worked at La Salle, the University was much smaller, and that allowed for faculty to become more acquainted with one another, both professionally and personally.
Everyone had such a good time that Halpin and McCarthy plan to make it an annual event, on the second Wednesday of November, and they hope more retired faculty and staff can attend next year.
lohn Rooney, '46 (left), Emeritus Professor of Psychology; his wife, Marion (center); and Peter Fillicetti, a former faculty member of the Psychology Department and Director of the University's Counseling Center.
"Pete the Barber" Paranzino (left! and Joseph O'Erady, '56, former faculty member of the History Department.
(From left) Robert Lyons, '61, retired Director of News and Public Affairs; Raymond Ksiazek, '53, retired faculty member of the Biology Department; Ralph Tekel, retired faculty member of the Chemistry and Biochemistry Department; his wife, Lillian; and Thomas McCarthy, Emeritus Professor of Psychology and former Vice President of Student Affairs.
save the date
family weekend
September 17-19, 2004
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LA SALLE MAGAZINE
The Explorer Club is the official fund development and booster organization for La Salle Athletics. It provides financial support for La Salle's 23 intercollegiate sports programs. Explorer Club members receive benefits at various levels, including priority for purchasing the best seats in the house for ticketed events. Gifts can be designated for the sport of your choice or the general athletic fund.
Program Areas Supported by the Explorer Club
• Athletic Recruitment Program
• Academic and Student Support Program
• Degree Completion Assistance Program
• Athletic Publications and Promotional Materials
• Radio and TV Production
Explorer Club Vice President of Membership and Auction Event Chair, Kevin Davis, '80, addresses the attendees of the 2003 Autumn Auction and Reception held in September in the Tom Gola Arena.
2004 Explorer Club Fund Drive
The Explorer Club is looking for individuals who are interested in taking a leadership role with the athletic program and willing to participate in the Spring Fund Drive. For additional information, please contact Peter D'Orazio, Executive Director of the Explorer Club, at 215.951.1545.
To receive an Explorer Club membership application, please call the Athletic Advancement Office at 215/951-1606 or e-mail us at explorerclub@lasalle.edu
Save the Date! 2004 EXPLORER CLUB AUTUMN AUCTION AND RECEPTION
September 25, 2004 Tom Gola Arena
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sports
TORPEY DRIVEN TO BUILD NATIONAL RECOGNITION FOR RUNNERS
BY MICHAEL ECHAN, '04
WHEN YOU THINK OF COLLEGIATE POWER- houses, certain programs come to mind. Duke basketball, Michigan football, and Miami baseball all certainly qualify as the dominant schools in each sport.
Although La Salle University cross country and track may have never won a national championship, let alone the four that Duke has won, to be mentioned among the likes of those programs is exactly where Coach Charles Torpey is trying to take the program. A modest start though it may be, the recent national rankings in cross country have
Coach Charles Torpey (center) accepts one of his eight A-10 Coach of the Year awards at the indoor track championships from University of Rhode Island Associate Athletic Director Lauren Anderson (left) and Associate Athletic Director at University of Massachusetts Al Rife (right).
established a new benchmark for the program and are the starting block from which die talented mentor of La Salle athletes can launch such a drive.
Since arriving at La Salle in the mid-90s from Springbrook High School in Silver Spring, Md., Torpey has taken a program that was merely competitive and molded it into a program that has produced two All -Americans (Brian Gallagher, '98, and Theresa Carroll, '98) and 10 Academic All-Americans, the most recent winners being current seniors Todd Witzleben and Jenna Darcy.
Torpey has led his team to six A-10 tides, the most recent coming this past tall as the La Salle men's team won its third straight A-10 championship. He also received his sixth Coach of the Year honor this fall for his teams' success. He attributes all this success to one ideal: Never be satisfied.
"It's never enough; despite a lot of the things they've attained, they still aren't happy with it," he said. "We have a lot of goals and objectives here, and we haven't attained a bunch of them. We don't want to be just one of the best teams in the A-10, we want to be the best team in the A-10. We want to be one of the best teams in the East; we want to be a national type of team."
Most outsiders might diink that such success would have spoiled him or softened his approach, when, in actuality, success like this is old news to him.
Before his days as a high school coach (he led the Springbrook boy's team to the Maryland 4A state title in 1992), Torpey was the head coach at the University of Maryland during most of the 1980s, a time when the Terrapins had one of the most dominant
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LA SALLE MAGAZINE
TORPEY AT LA SALLE A-10
Men's Team
Championships
1999, 2001 2002, 2003
Women's Team
Championships 2001, 2002
programs in the entire eastern United States. It seems as if that is Torpey's M.O.: arrive at a school and quickly turn it into a dominating, award-winning machine.
Torpey is also known for something tiiat cannot be reflected in place-standings, stop- watches, or national rankings. He continues his dealings — his relationships — with his runners beyond the athletic arena and beyond college life. To him, it is only part of the process.
"I still talk to a lot of them (former runners). It's my own thing; it's always been a lifetime commitment. It's not just four years and you're out or five years and you're out. There's more to it than that. Most people aren't going to attain their physical or mental capabilities in four or five years; it's impossible," he said.
This kinship with former athletes is not exclusive to those he has mentored either. The coach has nurtured great relationships, and holds in high regard, program alumni that predate his leadership, such as Explorer Olympian and current Naval Academy cross country coach Al Cantello, '55, and others. He was able to nurture those relationships even further last season when the Athletics Department invited the three La Salle Olympians (Cantello, Ira Davis, '58, and John Uelses, '65 ) back to campus to be honored during festivities at a men's basketball game.
Whedier a runner is as talented as senior Sheila Klick or a relative newcomer who might not win award after award, he still takes die
same approach widi each of them. Torpey derives great satisfaction from n helping his student-athletes in attaining their I own personal goals, whether it be running a four-minute mile or a six-minute mile.
His life, though, doesn't stop at the Wetzler Track or in his office under McCarthy Stadium. He is a dedicated family man, with his wife Janice and three children: * Christopher, Brian, and Jenna. He can also be seen around campus with Director of Campus Recreation Ed Lawless. In fact, it is rare that you ever see them apart.
"Torp and I are best buddies, and we rarely talk (about) work," Lawless said. "It seems that everything we see, we think die same on.
"I like hanging around him and his team because of the energv and the passion. He's just so uplifting to be around."
It is rare to see such dedication to something that does not receive the attention or publicity as some of its counterparts. Basketball gets all the glitz; football garners all the glorv, and baseball wraps itself in nostalgia. But Torpey exemplifies selfless dedication not only to his sport, but to his school and to his student-athletes. He has taken a small sport, at a small Catholic university in Northwest Philadelphia, and turned it into a program that annually sends representatives to NCAA championship meets. All this without a massive school or the booster program funding that usually comes with a larger-scale program. Aid all of this happened, surprisingly enough, improbably enough, under the watch of one person — one uniquely talented and dedicated coach.
From left: Coach Charles Torpey with La Salle Olympians Al Cantello, '55; John Uelses, '65; and Ira Davis, '58.
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Championship Squad Members Reunite for 50th Anniversary
Recreating the 1954 NCAA championship team picture are.- (seated, from left) Frank Blatcher, '56; lean O'Hara (wife of the late Frank O'Hara, '54); Tom Sola Jr. (son of Tom Gola, '55); Kevin Ames (son of the late Bob Ames, '56); (standing, from left) Frank Finegan, '57; Charles Greenberg, '56; Fran O'Malley, '56; Manny Gomez, '56; and former manager John Moosebrugger.
Coach Billy Hahn (left) greets champions Charles Greenberg, '56 (center), and Frank Blatcher, '56 (right), at a private reception for the 1954 championship team held at The Union League of Philadelphia.
La Salle President Brother Michael 1. McGinniss, F.S.C., Ph.D., 10 (left), and La Salle Athletic Director Thomas Brennan, Ed.D. (right), presented a commemorative plaque of the 1954 championship team to Tom Gola Jr. (center) in honor of his father, Tom Gola, '55.
1954!
2004
°^"cha^°
BY KALE BEERS, '95
It was 50 years ago when a plane from Kansas City, Mo., touched down at Philadelphia's airport and taxied up to a heaving throng of people awaiting the arrival of the passengers inside.
That date was March 21, and the day before, those passengers — the La Salle men's basketball team — had conquered the world. Led by All- American and National Player of the Year Tom Gola, '55, the 1954 Explorers routed Bradley University 90-76 to seal their championship run at Kansas City's Municipal Auditorium. That date was March 20, 1954.
Almost 50 years to the day, the planes, cars, and trains once again arrived in Philadelphia; this time, they came from all directions, and they carried those same passengers back to 20th and Olney for a reunion of La Salle's champions. Some made the trek from as far as Fort Myers, Fla., (Manny Gomez, '56) others were as close as Abington, Pa., (Charles Greenberg, '56). In total, 10 teammates and their family members were represented for the weekend of festivities that celebrated one of Philadelphia's greatest sports feats and certainly the University's top team athletic accomplishment.
The players and their families were treated to a private reception at The Union League of Philadelphia on Friday night as well as an open reception at La Salle's Blue and Gold Commons dining facility on Saturday before the current Explorers tipped off against George Washington. At half-time of the game, the players or representatives were presented ceremonial plaques and received a standing ovation during the stirring presentation.
A half-century later, La Salle remembers its champions.
Coach Billy Hahn spoke to members, representatives, and guests of the 1954 championship team at the private reception.
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LA SALLE MAGAZINE
notes
1940s
19 4 9 Thomas V. MacNamara (B.S.) of
Holland, Pa., has been named a World War II registry honoree. A memorial will be dedicated on May 29, 2004.
1950s
19 5 0 Thomas F. Kehoe (B.A.) of San
Francisco, Calif., was featured in the June 29, 2003, issue of Wine Spectator Magazine. A picture of his winery is included in the article.
19 51 James Phelan (B.S.) of Emmitsburg, Md., was the guest of honor at the Marine Barracks, Washington, D.C., Evening Parade on July 25, 2003.
19 5 7 John (Jack) C. McDevitt (B.A.) of
Brunswick, Ga., is looking forward to his 11th novel, Polaris, to be published in November under his pen name, Jack McDevitt.
1960s
19 6 4 Alan Brown (B.A.) of Cape Charles, Va., has a recurring role in HBO's The Wire as Police Major Stanislaus Valcheck. He also has a supporting role in the HBO film Something the Lord Made.
William T. Cannon, Esq. (B.A.) of
Philadelphia, Pa., was appointed to the Pennsylvania Commission on Crime and Delinquency by Governor Edward Rendell. He formerly chaired the Philadelphia Policy Advisory Commission.
19 6 8 Michael DeFino (B.A.) received the Widener University President's Award upon retirement for his five-year service as chair of the law school's Board of Overseers. He
Former Wilmin |
gt |
on Mayor |
Maloney, '64, |
M |
emorialized |
Thomas C. Maloney, Esq., '64, former Mayor |
doors. He was also in office when the Market |
|
of Wilmington, Del., is being remembered h\ |
Street Mall opened to the public; therefore, the |
|
his friends and constituents with a 7-foot, |
1 |
ocation of the sculpture is a fitting tribute. |
5-inch, 750-pound bronze statue that will ^B |
The statue, ptoduced by Charles C. |
|
be placed next to the Grand Opera fl |
Parks, a celebrated Wilmington artist, took |
|
House on the Market Street Mall in ^B |
13 months and $120,000 to create. |
|
Wilmington. ^^k |
Maloney 's friends raised much of the |
|
Maloney, who died of cancer in July ; |
Bok funding through private sources. |
|
of 2000, was Wilmington's youngest iflj |
IO The sculpture is modeled after a |
|
mayor. He was elected to office at |
PL well-known picture dt Maloney |
|
just 50 years old and served from JBJ < |
taken in August 1975 as he walked |
|
1973 to 1977. /f^. |
^P' the Market Street Mall with his ' jacket slung over his shoulder. |
|
"Tom brought a youth and \ isic in ^BV ■■ |
||
to government that was truly- |
At the time of his death, Maloney |
|
unique," said J. Brian Murphy, who ^Bt BJ |
| was the Executive Director of the |
|
interned for Maloney during his ^^1 ^ |
I Service to Overcome Drug Abuse |
|
time as mayor. The two became |
B Among Teenagers. |
|
close friends. |
Maloney's wife, Lynda, and their two |
|
"He was one of the most dynamic mayors in |
1 children, Samantha Maloney-Gracie and |
|
the country," continued Murphy, currently an |
■ T Christopher Maloney Jr., say the |
|
Economic Development Consultant tor they |
I statue is a beautiful acknowledgement. |
|
city of Wilmington. |
The dedication ceremony is scheduled |
|
According to Murphy, Maloney was |
1 tor June 2004. |
|
instrumental in organizing rundraising that |
||
saved the Grand Opera House from closing its |
will continue to serve on the Board of Overseers and on the university's Board of Trustees.
Robert T. Moran (B.S.) retired from AT. Kearney (Electronic Data Services) after 16 years of service. He also spent 15 years with Johnson & Johnson as Vice President of Human Resources. He formed his own company, Robert T Moran, Executive Search and Organizational Consulting.
19 6 9 Richard J. Smith (B.A.) is Assistant Principal at the Westampton Campus of the Burlington County Institute of Technology. The New Jersey Principals and Supervisors Association selected him Assistant Principal of the Year. The McDonalds Corporation and the National
Association of Secondary School Principals sponsor this program.
19 70s
1970 Ralph "Skip" Hamel (B.A.) of
Windsor Locks, Conn., received a Master of Science in Communication and Information Management from Bay Path College.
Edward Hofmann, F.S.C. (B.A.) finished his assignment as Assistant Administrator of the Christian Brothers' Headquarters in Rome, Italy, and is now assigned as Director of Vocation Ministry for the Baltimore District.
19 71 Salvatore L. D'Amico (B.S.) is a
United States Air Force and Korean War
SPRING 2004
31
veteran. A former accountant, he is now retired and lives in Aston, Pa.
Lewis M. Sudul (B.A.) of Lancaster, Pa., is a computer science teacher for the School District of Philadelphia. He married Linda Price in April 2003.
19 7 2 Stephen M. Hoffman Jr. (B.S.) of
Herndon, Va., was promoted to Deputy Director of the Federal Reserve System's Division of Banking Supervision and Regulation.
19 7 4 Andrew E. DiPiero Jr., Esq. (B.A.) of
Huntingdon Valley, Pa., has been re- elected to a three-year term to the Board of Trustees of Quaint Oak Savings Bank.
LTC (R) John S. Wargo (B.A.) of Gurnie, III., coached his drill team to its third district title in four years. He has also been nominated for the Golden Apple Teaching Award and, for the second time, is included in Who's Who of Teachers.
19 7 5 Patrick J. Hogan (B.S.) of
Crownsville, Md., has been named Associate Director for Safety and Security of the Peace Corps.
19 7 8 Francis J. Domzalski, M.D. (B.A.)
has left his position as Medical Director of the emergency room at Lima Memorial Hospital in Lima, Ohio, and has accepted a position in the emergency room at Eisenhower Medical Center in Rancho Mirage, Calif.
Peter B. Dulniawka (B.A.) is a military plans specialist with the United States Army in Japan.
Pamela (Tipton) Gamel (B.A.) of Elmer, N.J., is a network engineer with Sungard Availability Services. She has three daughters ranging in age from 8 to 14 years old.
1980s
19 8 0 Mark R. Goodwin (B.A.) secured the patent "Intraosteal Vitrasound for Surgical
Navigation during Surgical Implantation." He is the founder and managing partner of Start Up, Biospinex, LLC.
Mitchell Katz (B.S.) of Indianapolis, Ind., was appointed C.F.O. of Lee & Ryan Environmental Consulting, Inc.
Joseph A. Spadaro (B.S.) of Levittown, Pa., is C.F.O. with ALC Environmental, Inc.
198 2 Mary (Fanelli) Ayala (B.A.) of
Portales, N.M., was promoted from Chair of the Languages & Literature Department to Assistant Dean of the College of Liberal Arts & Sciences at Eastern New Mexico University. She was also promoted to full Professor of Modern Languages.
19 8 3 Joseph Sobczak (B.A.) of
Philadelphia, Pa., was mobilized with the Army Reserve for Operation Enduring Freedom. He is an information systems warrant officer whose unit's mission is information assurance.
Lesa (Slifer) Williams (B.S.) relocated to Florida to become Facility Manager for New Jacksonville Equestrian Center. The center is being built by the city of Jacksonville as part of the Better Jacksonville Plan.
19 8 4 John R. Gimpel, D.O. (M.A.) received The Golden Apple Teaching Award (teacher of the year) at Georgetown University School of Medicine in Washington, D.C.
19 8 5 Robert Crawford (B.A.) of
Franklinville, N.J., was awarded the Bishop's Medal by the Most Rev. DiMarzio, Bishop of Camden, N.J., for serving on both the Committee for the Protection of Children and the Diocese's Clinical Advisory Panel. He is a therapist in private practice.
Elaine (Volk) Flynn (B.S.N., M.S.N. '91) is
President of the Greater Philadelphia Chapter of the Association of Rehabilitation Nurses. She has also been appointed to serve as a member on their Budget and Finance Committee for the 2003-2004 term. In the last six months, Flynn has presented a workshop and two
posters at conferences in Dublin, Ireland; New Orleans, La.; and San Antonio, Texas.
19 8 7 Mia Labunka (B.A.) of New York, N.Y., is in her first year of law school in Eastern Europe.
1988 Kenneth Bullock (B.S.) of
Norristown, Pa., received a Master of Science in Contract Management from the Naval Postgraduate School in Monterey, Calif. He is a senior contract specialist and contracting officer with the U.S. Navy.
Aaron J. Poller (B.S.N.) of Winston-Salem, N.C., is a nurse at Wake Forest University's Baptist Medical Center.
19 8 9 David E. Greed (B.S.) of Yardley, Pa., has been elected into the partnership of KPMG LLP. He provides assurance services to technology clients with a focus on software. Greed is a member of the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants and the Pennsylvania Institute of Certified Public Accountants.
1990s
19 9 0 Richard Devlin (B.S.) of Warrington, Pa., is married with two children. He is currently a supervisor with Fairbanks Capital Corporation.
James J. Horan (B.S., M.B.A. '97) of
Doylestown, Pa., is Chief Financial Officer for LScan Technologies, Inc. in Conshohocken. He has been teaching in La Salle's M.B.A. Progam for the past six years.
Michael Nuzzolo (B.A.) of Yardley, Pa., was promoted to Microbiology Manager in a laboratory technical support group at Merck & Co., Inc.
1991 Michael Higgins (B.A.) of
Norristown, Pa., is Director of Learning and Development with the Radian Group in Philadelphia.
19 9 2 Brian P. Gerrard (B.A.) recently celebrated six years with the Montgomery
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LA SALLE MAGAZINE
Touchton, '
Peace-Time
74, Receives L o n g - 0 v e r d u e Medal Recognition
On December 2, 2003, during a small ceremony near Atlanta, Ga., John E. Touchton Sr., Ph.D., 74, received four medals he earned over 20 years ago during his sen-ice in the First Cavalry Division ot the
United States Army.
" I didn't go into the Army to get medals. I just wanted to do a good job," said Touchton.
He did a good eni itigh job to earn him an Army Achievement Medal (AAM), a Meritorious Service Medal (MSM), and two Army * Commendation Medals
(ARCOMs), one of which is being reviewed for a possible upgrade to the Soldier's Medal. It wasn't until the fall of 2002, when Touchton met then- Congressman Saxby Chambliss (R-Ga.), who was running tor Senate in Georgia, that it even seemed possible he would ever receive the medals he earned.
Dr. Touchton provided Senator Chambliss' team with the necessary documentation, and they went to work. It took eight months to get the medals approved; but in August 2003, it became
John f. Touchton Sr. Ph.D., 14, (right) is congratulated by Congressman Saxby Chambliss (R-Ga.).
official that Touchton would receive his long overdue awards.
Currently, Touchton has teceived the AAM for his work at Fort Benning in Research and Development on the Sniper Rifle Project and the Btadley Infantry Fighting Vehicle Projecr; and the MSM which is the Peace-Time Equivalent of a Bron:e Star, for his two years as the Commanding Officer of the last active duty Horse Cavalry Unit left in the U.S. Army.
Dr. Touchton earned his first ARCOM for saving a man's right arm at the Atlanta Forrest Festival held in Atlanta, Texas, in 1981. During an arm wrestling contest, one of the contestant's arms snapped, severing the brachial artery. Touchton's quick response to stabilize the man not only saved the victim's arm, but also his life.
His second ARCOM nomination is currently under review to be upgraded to the prestigious honor of the Soldier's Medal which is the Peace-Time Equivalent of the Congressional Medal of Honor. It is awarded when a soldier risks his lite in order to save the lives of others. In May 1981, Touchton, at great personal risk, and with total disregard for his own safety, entered an overturned horse trailer filled with eight 1,200-pound horses. The trailer had slid off a muddy toad into a ditch knocking all the horses oft their feet. He managed to coordinate and execute the evacuation ot all hotses and personel from the trailer with only minimal injuries to all. His quick response and calm command ot the situation saved many lives that day.
Touchton was honored to receive the medals bestowed upon him in December. He is still waiting for the decision of the Army Awards and Decoration Board tor his Soldier's Medal.
Township Police Department.
Paul M. Hogate (M.A.) recently opened a private psychotherapy practice in Pennsville, N.J.
Heather Johnson-Mullisky (B.A.) was
recently named the English Department Chair at James M. Coughlin High School in Wilkes-Barre, Pa. She also received a 2003 Educator of Distinction Award from the Coca Cola Scholars Foundation. She was nominated to Who's Who Among American Educators by one of her students.
Frederick Schwarzenbach (B.A.) of
Manahaukin, N.J., is a product specialist with Johnson & Johnson/Ortho-Biotech.
Leslie (Blanchard) Stapleford (B.A.) of
Townsend, Del., was promoted to Assistant Vice President in the Acquisition Operations Department of Bank One Card Services.
19 9 3 Larry Berran (B.S.) of Dowmngtown, Pa., was appointed President and C.E.O.
of Pipeline, a software company servicing the insurance industry.
Matthew D. Melinson (B.S.) of Ivyland, Pa., was appointed to the executive board of the Philadelphia Chapter of the Pennsylvania Institute of Certified Public Accountants. He is the State and Local Tax Manager at PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP.
19 9 5 Pauline (Dowling) Hedrick (B.A.) of
Colchester, Conn., received a Master of Education from Penn State University. She is currently a training development manager for Danaher Corporation. She and her husband Tyrone had a daughter, Grace Rebecca, in 2002.
19 9 6 Patrick Denzer (B.A.) of
Philadelphia, Pa., is the Producer for season three of Trading Spaces on The Learning Channel.
Jennifer (Dunphy) Murray (B.A.) of Perkasie, Pa., received a Master of Education from Holy Family University in Reading in May
2001. She had a daughter, Jamieson, in December 2002.
19 9 7 Colleen M. Caputo, R.N. (B.S.N.) of
Bensalem, Pa., is a clinical consultant with Alans Medical Systems.
Yvonne M. Downey (M.A.) of Philadelphia, Pa., was promoted to Center Director at Haddington Multi Services for Older Adults, Inc. She also received the Eli Lilly Award for Community Health Programs for Seniors.
19 9 8 Christopher Magliozzo (B.A.) of
Lawrenceville, N.J., is an editor for Crew Cuts Film in New York.
Annette McCloskey (B.S.N.) of Waipahu, Hawaii, completed a Master of Education in Organization and Adult Development at Temple University. She is currently working in Hawaii with children and reconnecting with family and her roots.
Brian Mills (B.A.) of Newtown, Pa., graduated from Rutgers Camden Law
SPRING 2004
33
School. He passed Pennsylvania and New Jersey bar exams and is employed with Masell: Warren P.C. in Princeton, N.J.
19 9 9 Bonnie Errico (B.A.) of Bronx, NY., earned a Master of Social Work from Fordham University in May 2003. She has been promoted to managing the Alzheimer's program for people living on the lower east side of Manhattan.
Frank J. Grosso (B.S.) of Warrington, Pa., joined the staff of Automotive Careers in Blue Bell, Pa., as General Manager.
Thomas M. Lannen (B.A.) recently completed U.S. Navy basic training at Recruit Training Command, Great Lakes, III.
Danielle (Penko) Magliozzo (B.A.) of
Lawrenceville, N.J., is teaching at Central Bucks School District and is currently working towards a Master Degree in Education.
Jamie M. Sanko, C.P.A. (B.A.) of Wilmington, Del., passed all four parts of the May 2003 C.P.A. exam. He scored in the top 10 in the state of Pennsylvania. Sanko accepted a position at Ernst & Young.
2000s
2 0 0 0 Cheryl Giannattasio-Knauer (B.A.) of
the Maryland Institute College of Art was named Treasurer for the Baltimore Public Relations Council for a one-year term.
Eileen P. Golden (B.S.) accepted a new position in the accounting department of the law firm Duane Morris LLP in October 2003.
Jason Y. Hill (B.S.) of Flourtown, Pa., received an M.B.A. from La Salle University in May 2003. He and his fiance, Lauren Richmond (B.A. '01), are
planning a July 2004 wedding.
Sean McDevitt (B.A.) of Brighton, Mass., helped organize 100 hours of national service testimony on Capitol Hill. The
weeklong effort, "Voices for AmeriCorps," mobilized over 700 champions and alumni who spoke on behalf of AmeriCorps to urge congress to pass $100 million in supplemental funding.
Rikki (Quinn) James (B.A.) of Willow Grove, Pa., is a redemption specialist for Daimler Chrysler Services in Horsham. She is pursuing an M.B.A. in technology management at the University of Phoenix. Her son, Aiden James, recently celebrated his first birthday.
Oavid Stanoch (B.A.) of Williamsport, Pa., is a judicial clerk for the Federal Judiciary. He is a graduate of Temple Law School and will complete a federal clerkship with the Hon. James F. McClure Jr. (M.D. Pa.) before going to work in the Philadelphia office of Dechert LLP. He is engaged to Monica Fahey (B.A. '01).
Kelly R. Tierney (B.S.) completed her third year of medical school at Drexel University School of Medicine with honors. She was awarded a fellowship for one year to the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas. Tierney will be doing clinical research in the field of nutrition and metabolic diseases in HIV patients. She will return to Pennsylvania in October and finish her fourth year of medical school.
Victoria A. West (B.A.) of Sharon Hill, Pa., received a Master of Education of the Visually Impaired from Pennsylvania College of Optometry in May 2003. She is currently teaching in the early childhood program at Overbrook School for the Blind.
2 0 01 Duwan L. Lang (B.S.) was recently promoted to Logistics Management Specialist at the Naval Inventory Control Point in Philadelphia, Pa.
Lauren Richmond (B.A.) of Philadelphia, Pa., is in her second year of Villanova Law School. She and her fiance, Jason Y. Hill (B.S. '00), are planning a July 2004 wedding.
2 00 2 Jonathan S. Miller (B.S.) of
Washington, D.C., is a graduate student at Georgetown University studying bio- chemistry.
Rosalind Wilson (B.S.) of Philadelphia, Pa., welcomed her new foster son, Matthew Tangrad, 1 1, into her life and has plans to adopt again in the future.
2 0 0 3 Elizabeth Smith (B.A.) of Atco, N.J., accepted a position in Oahu-Leeward School District as a special education teacher.
Births
19 8 8 A daughter, Audrey Mary, to Jerry and Karen Cantello-O'Kane (B.A.)
1989 A daughter, Brigit Mary, to Gus and Victoria (Ambolino) Kane (B.S.).
A daughter, Kelly Ann, to Lisa and Martin McKenzie (B.S.).
19 9 0 A son, Alexander James, to Lee and Suzanne (Lardear) Dotson (B.S.).
A son, Andrew Michael, to David Espenshade (B.A.) and Lisa (Baum) Espenshade (B.S.).
A son, Daniel Richard, to Ken and Kathleen (Ryan) Hackman (B.A.).
A daughter, Emily Rose, to Debbie and James J. Horan (B.S., M.B.A. '97).
Twins, Matthew and Steven, to Tracy and Michael Nuzzolo (B.A.).
1991 A daughter, Halle Louise, to Jessica and Scott R.S. Besler (B.S.).
19 9 2 A son, David, to David and Donna (Gilbride) Green (B.S.).
A daughter, Ruth Elizabeth, to John and Heather Johnson-Mullisky (B.A.).
A son, Jack, to Drew and Maryrose (McGovern) Ruggieri (B.A.).
19 9 3 A daughter, Amelia Rose, to Peggy and Larry Berran (B.S.).
A son, Gabriel John, to John P. Cipollone
34
LA SALLE MAGAZINE
For Tim M u n s o n , '80, Perseverance Leads to Personal and Professional Success
Tim Munson, '80, has an ace up his sleeve when he talks to young people at schools about their futures. Yes, he's a special agent in
charge of the FBI's Mobile, Ala., office. Yes, he worked full-time as a police officer while earning his degree at La Salle's evening division. Yes, he has persevered. But more importantly, he has prevailed.
Munson never knew his father and was placed in foster care as a child. For years, he never saw his mom or his siblings. He was literally passed from foster home to foster home. One was so bad, he had to run away.
Then two things happened for his benefit.
An older brother wanted him to assist in a crime. Munson was so nervous, he was shaking, but decided not to take that fork in the road. The other moment is when a college professor took him in as a ward and showed somebody cared. Then, he came home from high
Tim Munson, '80
school to find this professor dead of natural causes. He was back in foster homes — and he dropped out of high school.
Munson joined the Army and saw a tour of duty in Vietnam. Upon returning, he married and began a family. Looking for some stability, he joined the Philadelphia Police Department. In the 1970s, he joined a number of Philadelphia residents who took advantage of the GI Bill to pursue college. (Munson had earned a GED by this time.)
"That was a Godsend," says Munson, who attended La Salle's evening division. "1 would never have been able to be in the position where I am today if not for that."
He walked a police beat during the day and took classes at night tor six years with many other officers who were attending the evening school.
He graduated with a degree in criminal justice, and a few years later, he joined the FBI, working his way up the ranks to his cutrent position; he oversees more than 100 officers and civilians.
Munson gets requests from schools to speak with students about his experiences — about overcoming obstacles and making a contribution.
His message is simple: "If I could make it, you can make it, too."
(B.A.) and Jennifer (Quigley) Cipollone (B.A., MA '98).
A son, Nathan Henry, to Taryn (McDermott) DeVincent (B.A.) and Richard DeVincent.
A son, Aidan Paul, to David and Betsy (Santos) Dutwin (B.S.).
A son, Jack Christopher, to Lori (Manzo) Ferko (B.S.) and Brian Ferko (B.S.)
1994 A son, Aidan Mattingly Ham- Flood, to Jain P. Flood (B.A.).
A son, Owen Thomas, to Jennifer (Ord) McLoone (B.A.) and Chris McLoone (B.A. '95).
A daughter, Grace Kathleen, to Marc and Maribeth (Inverso) Pierlott (B.A.).
19 9 5 A daughter, Molly Rose, to Rosemarie Jagielo-Manion (B.A.) and John Manion (B.A.).
A son, James Robert, to Kristen (Spielberger) Giordano (B.S.N.) and Lance J. Giordano (B.S.).
199 6 A son, Dominic Albert, to Rose Marie Morelli (B.S., M.B.A. '02) and Albert Petruzzelli.
A daughter, Francesca, to Danielle and Joseph Sulock III (B.A.).
1997 A daughter, Olivia Anne, to Anne (Smart) Chiavegato (B.A.) and David Chiavegato (B.A.)
A daughter, Julia, to JoAnn (Foy) Roth (B.A.) and Robert Roth (B.A.)
19 9 8 Twins, Rocco Anthony and Vincent Charles, to Rocco and Linda (Warner) Wack (B.A.)
A daughter, Hannah Faye, to Rachel C. Kaufman (M.A.).
Marriages
19 66 Walter J. Plagens (B.A.) to Mary
Ann Manno.
19 9 0 Stephanie Colello (B.S.) to Walter James Derrig.
19 9 4 Sophia Delva (B.S.) to Carlos Saunders.
Brian Flynn (B.A.) to Katherine Raguckas, O.D.
19 9 5 Tonya Ellis (B.A., M.A. '02) to Peter Rapp.
19 9 6 Jon P. Frey (B.S.) to Amy E. Guyger.
Melissa Solt (B.A.) to Phil Williams.
19 9 8 Christopher Magliozzo (B.A.) to Danielle Penko (B.A. '99).
Sadig Nickelson (B.A.) to Alberto Angel Requejo.
19 99 Brian Martin (B.A.) to Kimberly Kessler (B.S.N. '00).
Jaime Lynn Longo (B.A.) to Michael Gallagher (B.S.).
2 0 01 Melissa Sue Bennett (B.A.) to
Gregory Harper.
Alicia Sestito (B.A.) to Eric Stonesifer (B.A.).
2 0 0 2 Jennifer A. Luke (B.S.N.) to Joel E. Dougan.
In M e m o r i a m
193 9 G. Harold Metz (B.A.) on Jan. 11,
2004.
19 4 0 Joseph Reagan, F.S.C. (B.A.) on
Sept. 28, 2003.
194 7 Hugh J. Caven, D.D.S. (B.S.) of
Wallingford, Pa.
SPRING 2004
35
19 4 8 Joseph C. Sabato (B.S.) of Crown Point, Ind., on June 14, 2003.
19 5 0 Walter G. Boehm (B.A.) of Sun City Center, Fla., on June 27, 2003.
Francis N. McCabe (B.S.) of Center Valley, Pa., on May 8, 2003.
19 5 3 Francis A. Florio (B.A.) of Drexel Hill, Pa., on Jan. 13, 2004.
19 5 4 James McGettigan Sr. (B.A.) of
Marlton, N.J., on Nov. 20, 2003. He was a former special education professor, and state Department of Education consultant.
19 5 6 William Gershanick, D.D.S. (B.S.) of
Hatboro, Pa.
19 5 8 John J. Brady, F.S.C. (B.A.) on Nov.
12, 2003.
19 5 9 William H. McCaffrey (B.A.) on Oct.
13, 2003.
1961 John Paul Sharp (B.S.) of
Warrington, Pa., on Oct. 22, 2003. He was a longtime coach and athletic director at Archbishop Wood High School in Warminster. He also taught biology there for 37 years.
196 3 Michael J. Walsh (B.S.) of Mount
Wolf, Pa., on Dec. 14, 2003.
196 6 Joseph Gordon (B.S.) of
Philadelphia, Pa., on Feb. 21, 2003.
196 7 Bruno J. Bromke, Ph.D. (B.S.) of
Bellmawr, N.J., on July 25, 2003.
Terry P. Crawford (B.A.) of Pittsburgh, Pa.
19 7 1 Robert P. Denver Jr. (B.S.) of
Philadelphia, Pa., on July 17, 2003.
19 7 3 Franklin Higgins (B.S.) of Newport Beach, Calif., on July 21, 2003.
19 7 7 Stephen F. Mitchell (B.S., M.B.A. '85) of Lancaster, Pa.
19 81 Carl Edward Scarpa Jr. (B.S.) of
New Castle, Del., on Oct. 10, 2003.
19 8 6 Eric Paul Bristow (B.A.) of Rocky Mount, Va., formerly of Bucks County, Pa., on Nov. 15, 2003.
FACULTY
Miroslav Labunka, Ph.D., Equitus OSGM, a
retired Professor of History. Dr. Labunka joined La Salle's faculty in 1965 and remained until his retirement in 1993. He
is survived by three children: Alex (B.A. 75, M.B.A. '81), Irene (B.A. '81), and lllia (B.A. '87). He was also a professor at the Pope Clement Ukrainian Catholic University, a research fellow of the Ukrainian Research Institute at Harvard University, and a former rector of the Free Ukrainian University in Munich, Germany.
STUDENTS
Eduardo Cangiano, of Bayonne, N.J., a sophomore business major, on Jan. 29, 2004.
Ross Davies, of Holland, Pa., a graduate student in the Professional Communication program, on Oct. 5, 2003.
Vivian Figueroa, of Philadelphia, Pa., formerly of Puerto Rico, a student in the Bilingual Undergraduate Studies for Collegiate Advancement (BUSCA) program, on Dec. 29, 2003.
Daniel Hewitt, of Warminster, Pa., a freshman history major, on Nov. 12, 2003.
Alexis Santiago, of Philadelphia, Pa., a freshman in the Bilingual Undergraduate Studies for Collegiate Advancement (BUSCA) program, on Dec. 1, 2003.
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36
LA SALLE MAGAZINE
HOMECOMING '04
Saturday, October 16, 2004
WS^Ueillnmer^
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J.
Bring your family, classmates,
and friends to one of the best
alumni events of the year!
WO V&ars 2*4 SiAUee4ing ... wifk VW* StApport
* A > |
., 1 > |
i |
Amanda Hartman, '04 Age: 20 Major: Biology
Kathryn Hartman, '07
Age: 1 8
Major: Integrated Science,
Business, and Technology
La Salle Activities and Awards: La Salle Swim Team Academic Scholarship Swimming Scholarship
La Salle Activities and Awards:
La Salle Swim Team
President of La Salle Ambassadors
Honors Board
Athletic Relations Committee
Academic and Athletic Scholarship
"There were many reasons we both chose La Salle. Our father is a graduate of the class of
1976 and we grew up in the La Salle tradition. With the University offering each of us
scholarships and grants to help offset the cost of tuition, we are grateful to have the chance
to continue the Hartman legacy at La Salle."
Call L-a Salle University AAvanteMient Office- at 2-15 351. 15^1 fo *u,ake ^ev>r gift fodai/.
Did You Know
The abbreviation F.S.C., which follows every Christian Brother's name, stands for "Fratres Scholarum Christianarum" (Brothers of the Christian Schools).
The world headquarters or "Generalate" of the Christian Brothers is located in Rome.
About 5,700 Christian Brothers, together with their 75,000 colleagues, operate just over 1,000 Lasallian schools in 80 countries, serving the educational needs of 913,000 students worldwide.
The United States is one of the few places in the world where the Brothers are commonly known as the Christian Brothers. They are known in most nations as the De La Salle Brothers.
The Christian Brothers first came to Philadelphia in 1853 to teach in the grammar schools of St. Peter's and Assumption parishes.
Though further research is needed, many believe that a Christian Brother (Brother Jasper) originated baseball's seventh inning stretch in New York in 1882. The sports nickname of Manhattan College, a fellow Lasallian institution — "the Jaspers" — is a salute to his interest in athletics there.
Christian Brothers founder, Saint John Baptist de La Salle, was not related to the French explorer of the same surname (Robert Cavalier, Sieur de La Salle) who claimed the Mississippi River for France. However, another French explorer, Father Marquette, was a cousin of St. La Salle.
Special thanks to Brother Joseph Grabenstein, F.S.C., '73, Archivist for the Baltimore Province and La Salle University, for researching and compiling this information.
LASALLE UNIVERSITY
Philadelphia, PA 19141
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GETTING INVOLVED
LIVES CHANGED HY LEARNING EEYOND THE CURRICULUM
the first word
Relationships, Community, Involvement, Learning
JOSEPH J. CICALA, PH.D., '79, DEAN OF STUDENTS, LA SALLE UNIVERSITY
TEACHING IS NOT— OR, MORE PRECISELY, SHOULD NOT lie — the central concern of La Salle University or any other institution of higher education.
Nonsense, you say? Please consider this alternative. Learning is — or, more precisely, should L>e — the central concern of every institution of higher education, including La Salle University.
Feel better now? I thought you might. The stories you'll read in the pages that follow blend to form a larger picture which strongly suggests that learning is alive and well in our university community and, further, that its impacts stretch far beyond the curriculum, the co- curriculum, the extra-curriculum, and the boundaries of the campus itself.
Learning is not a spectator sport nor, I believe, is it a direct result of teaching, no matter how good the teacher. Lessons culled from contemporary scholarship and practice, as well as our Lasallian traditions, convince me that the work of our university should be characterized by four words: relationships, community, involvement, and learning. Here's why.
In higher education circles, modern definitions of learning encompass all facets of human development through which a student is likely to progress during the course of enrollment. If learning is our goal, we must consider how learning occurs.
Our professional literature leads us to lielieve that learning is a direct function of what has come to be called involvement, defined by leading scholar Alexander Astin as the quality and quantity of physical and psychological energy the
)
learner devotes to the academic enterprise. Simply put, the more you put into it, the more you'll get out of it.
If involvement leads to learning, we have to think about how involvement is most likely to be engendered. Again, contemporary scholarship leads us to a conclusion: Involvement is fostered in atmospheres of community, in which people perceive themselves to be — and, to the greatest extent possible, actually are — working together in common purpose toward the achievement of ends greater than their own.
If community fosters involvement, we need to determine how community may be achieved. Common sense will lead you to the same conclusion as that reached by prominent scholars: Community begins with relationships. In a university setting, that means relationships between and among students, faculty, and staff. The major theories of premature student departure (theories of student retention and success if you turn them around) are in agreement about one thing: A student's social integration into the university community is integral to the student's learning and success.
Interestingly and not at all coincidentally, the lessons of contemporary scholarship and practice mirror the legacy of St. John Baptist de La Salle. For more than three centuries, Lasallians have endeavored to touch the hearts of students (relationships) and to do so together and by association (community). The model of simultaneous classroom instruction, taken for granted today but pioneered by the early Christian Brothers, was designed in large measure to foster association among students and, by so doing, to promote involvement, with the greater learning of all as the goal.
The stories you'll read in the pages that follow demonstrate what may be accomplished in an institution of higher education that is committed to student learning and, moreover, to the promotion of student learning in accordance with the principles described above. These stories form a remarkable mosaic that reflects the impact of relationships, community, involvement, and learning on students' lives during their enrollment and, ultimately, as they employ and deepen their learning as citizens and leaders of the world they rejoin as graduates of La Salle University.
Joseph J. Cicala, Ph.D., 19, a member of The Masque, on stage with EMMr Award Winning TV producer Eileen Matthews, '81, in the Fall 1978 production ofThe Man Who Came to Dinner.
SUMMER 2004
LASALLE
MAGAZINE
Volume 48 I Number 2
Editor
Maureen A. Piche
Assistant Editor
Caitlin Murray, M.A. '04
Staff Writers
Jon Caroulis
Kimberly MacAlister, M.A. '04
Alumni Notes Editor
Francine Loftier, '01
Staff Designer
Joshua Ash
Contributors
Kale Beers, '95
Jordan Burke, '04
Brother Joseph Grabenstein, '73
Robert Hoffman, '01
Meaghann Schulte
Merkhat Sharipzhan. '04
Photography
Vincent Massa John McGrail, '69 Andrew Pinkham Jim Roese
Alumni Association Officers
William W. Matthews, Esq., '90, President Michael Diccicco, '71, Vice President Thomas J. Murphy, C.L.U., '56, Secretary James J. Ahern, '70, Treasurer
La Salle Magazine (USPS 299-940) is published quarterly for the University's alumni, students, faculty, and friends by the Office of University Communications (Joseph Donovan, Assistant Vice President). Address correspondence to the Editor, La Salle Magazine, Bemlde Hall, 1900 W. Olney Ave., La Salle University, Philadelphia, PA 19141-1199. Changes of address should be sent at least 30 days prior to publication of issue with which it is to take effect to the University Advancement Office, La Salle University, 1900 W. Olney Avenue, Philadelphia, PA 19141-1199. Periodicals postage paid at Philadelphia, Pa. POSTMASTER: Send change of address to office listed above.
cover story Lives Changed Forever
feature
La Salle's Boys-and Girls- of Summer
profiles
10 |
Making Rounds Worldwide |
12 |
Living a Golfer's Dream |
14 |
Cooking Up Success |
15 |
A Different Kind of Hero Comes |
Home from Iraq |
|
special feature |
|
17 |
Commencement 2004 |
departments |
|
16 |
Book Notes |
22 |
News |
30 |
Sports |
31 |
Alumni Notes |
^LASALLE ^UNIVERSITY
cover story
Lives Changed Forever
By Learning Beyond the Curriculum
BY ROBERT GRAY
EVERYONE TALKS ABOUT LEARNING FOR LIFE. BUT FOR some, learning is life. And it's not just a matter of going to classes; it's a case of living to the fullest. The Lasallian traditions of educating the whole person, purposeful education, and active engagement in the life of the community and the life of the mind have proved formative for thousands of La Salle graduates all around the world and over many years. Many have gone on to achieve extraordinary things, both great and small.
We talked to nine alumni about their lives, their memories of La Salle, and the paths they have chosen. Their stories reach back to different times and into the heart of what it means to be an Explorer. Each is as different as it is inspiring. In their words, we discover a sampling of the many paths laid before La Salle graduates by the care of those around them, and we discover just a few of the ways the Lasallian tradition lives on.
Father Eric Augenstein, 00
HEARING THE CALL
"I started thinking about the priesthood before," admits Father Eric Augenstein, '00, "But at La Salle, it was
nourished." A double major with a BA. in religion and philosophy and a minor in English, Rev. Augenstein received his MA. in Catholic thought and life in 2002 and his master's in divinity two years later, both from St. Meinrad School of Theology in southern Indiana.
A native Hoosier, Rev. Augenstein has just been named Associate Pastor and assigned a parish that serves "a cluster of three churches with one staff," in the Richmond, Ind., area. "I will also be teaching religion to freshmen and sophomores at nearby Seaton High School," he says.
There could hardly have been a more appropriate training ground for Rev. Augenstein than La Salle. After
all, where else could this aspiring priest with a passion for music and community involvement have found so many opportunities to, well, practice what he would later go on to preach?
"While I was at La Salle, I became very involved in campus ministry. I was on the liturgy planning team, and I also selected music for services." In addition to fine-tuning and planning liturgy and setting the musical tone for worship on campus, Rev. Augenstein, who is an accomplished pianist and organist, also sang as part of the La Salle Singers. He also served for two years as president of the 25-member mixed chorus.
"It was a club," he explains. "We met once a week and did a Christmas and spring concert on campus that was open to the public. While I was there, we organized Christmas caroling in the neighborhoods around La Salle and at nursing homes that were open to everyone in the La Salle community." Determined to spread the
music as widely as possible, Really, I learned more
Rev. Augenstein heavily outside of the
recruited in "all the clubs , ,
, e ,. v „ classroom than in —
and fraternities on
campus, he says. Each and I learned a lot in
would send representatives the classroom."
to add their voices to the
joyous noise. "We would
break up into groups of 10 or 12 to go singing in a nearby
neighborhood or nursing home," he remembers. "One
year we recruited 100 students!"
Rev. Augenstein's other activities while at La Salle come in handy on the job as well. In his new position. Rev. Augenstein will serve as counselor, administrator, mentor, and mediator. "While I was at La Salle," he says, "I also served as chair of the Judicial Board, hearing student policy violation cases. The neat thing about the board was that, while students chaired it, faculty member were always involved."
Really, I learned more outside of the classroom than in — and I learned a lot in the classroom," he explains.
LA SALLE MAGAZINE
Megan Barnett, 01
POLITICS, BUT NOT AS USUAL
Megan Barnett, '01, is a political animal. A political science major with minors in Spanish and business administration, she served as president of the Students' Government Association (S.G.A. ) for two years, and helped the College Republicans organize and launch Political Awareness Month on campus. She was a member of the GAELS Irish Society, and a founding member of the La Salle Ambassadors. In her junior
year, she joined Alpha Sigma Tail Sorority. As an alumna, she was elected to the Alumni Association Board of Directors in 2002, and is currently a member of the D.C. Metro Area Alumni Chapter, the Homecoming Planning Committee, and the Class Programs Committee. She's active.
The Plymouth Meeting, Pa., native is also the first daughter of two La Salle alums, George Barnett, '72, and Mary Hopper, '79, who still lives in Plymouth Meeting.
Always interested in politics, Meg Barnett worked on campaigns for Philadelphia-area candidates, and on the Republican National Convention in Philadelphia in 2000, a full-time student all the while. As a senior, she joined the Bush/Cheney 2000 presidential campaign, and traveled around the country working with former Secretary Dick Cheney. As a press advance lead for Vice President Cheney on the Bush/Cheney '04 presidential campaign, Barnett is fully immersed in the world of politics — and she wouldn't have it any other way.
"I was president of my high school class each year at Gwynedd Mercy Academy," she says, "so I decided to pull some dedicated and hard-working friends together at La Salle, and run for student government. I met [then S.G.A. president] Trey Ulrich, '99, M.B.A. '02, during freshman orientation. He gave me an overview of what S.G.A. entailed. I thought being president would be a
"At La Salle, when you show initiative, doors fly open for you."
great opportunity to get to know how La Salle operated and to make the voice of my class known.
"At La Salle, when you show initiative, doors fly open for you," she says. "For example, in my first political science class, American Government, I was given the option of writing a long paper or keeping a journal from a three-hour-a-week internship with a political campaign." She and a friend joined the campaign of Republican candidate for District Attorney Jack McMahon. The internship fed her appetite for politics. "I ended up working for independent political fundraisers and event planners for three years through college," she says.
Then, in 2000, with just eight weeks to go before the presidential election, Barnett was invited to join the Bush/Chenev campaign. "I had just turned 21, and was working with and learning from seasoned campaigners. It was incredible!" she says.
"I attribute the person that I have become today very much to my experiences during college," she says. "At La Salle, I learned to approach every situation with a 'can do' attitude."
Shannon Bauer, 03
A SWIMMER'S LESSONS
Shannon Bauer, '03, Bachelor of Science in Nursing, loves the water. "My sister, brother, and I started taking swimming lessons as kids," she explains. And when she was 10, she joined her first swim team. What started out as a "summer thing" soon developed into a "year-round thing," she says. By the time she was on the high school swim team, swimming was part of her identity.
"Ever since I was 12,1 wanted to go to La Salle," she says. Aquatic Club championship meets at La Salle had introduced her to the facilities — and to Philadelphia. "I loved it all," she says. "When it came time to apply, I was excited to see that
Stephanie Cahill, '05, Shannon Bauer, '03, and Kimmy Evanilla, '05 at a 2003 swim meet.
SUMMER 2004
La Salle had my program."
"I wanted to go somewhere where I could win as a swimmer, a place where I wouldn't be lost in the crowd," she says. "I got a good [athletic scholarship] offer from La Salle, and my parents recommended that I take it." There were other motivations, as well. "I'm Catholic," she savs. "La Salle has a spiritual community that appealed to me."
As a student athlete and nursing student, the demands on her time were enormous. "I was always up at five in the morning," she recalls. "I had daily required clinical nursing hours. Plus, I was in the swimming pool at least four hours a day." Through it all, the La Salle community sustained this distance swimmer who competed in the 200-yard, 500-vard, and one-mile competitions. "My teachers and coaches were flexible," she savs. "As long as they knew that I wanted to do well, they wanted to work with me."
As important as swimming was to Sharon during her La Salle years, she somehow found time for other kinds of involvement, the fruits of which stay with her still. She
"I wanted to go somewhere where I could win as a swimmer, a place where I wouldn't be lost in the crowd."
participated in La Salle's annual Branch Out Day, when students gather on the quad in the morning and are dispersed to tackle neighborhood projects. "One vear, we joined with members of a community church congregation on a big clean-up project," she says.
As part of nursing training, she taught nutrition, dental health, and other health-related topics in nearby neighborhoods. In a place like Philadelphia, says this self- described suburban girl from die small town of Harleysville, Pa. (population 8,795), "you gain perspective. Cultural awareness is valuable to me as a nurse serving diverse patients and communities. Those experiences helped me become more culturally aware, more sensitive to the differences between people."
So, what is this swimmer/nurse doing todav? "I'm working on my Master of Science in Nursing at La Salle," she laughs. "I liked it so much, I came back!"
Al Cantello, 55
Al Cantello, '55, throws the javelin in a 1954 Explorer Yearbook photo.
THE GRIT OF A CHAMPION, THE HEART OF A WINNER
According to Al Cantello, '55, La Salle track star, former world record holder in the javelin, and Olympic athlete, "When I graduated from high school, my oldest brother had just gotten back from World War II, and he wanted to get married. My lather had died when I was 1 2 . Ours being a typical second generation Italian family, it fell to me to become the breadwinner. So, as mv peers all went off to college that fall, I went
to work in the asbestos factory" in his hometown of Norristown, Pa. But something happened that would change everything for him. That something was La Salle.
Obviously, Cantello had already made an impression on college coaches, because, as he tells it, "Through some divine intervention, I staved in shape" while working shifts at the factory. Then, after two years of lunch boxes and swing shifts, "the La Salle track coach offered me one of the few athletic
scholarships available at the time," he says whole life."
La Salle in the early 1950s was a very different place than it is today. "There were no dorms and no women," explains. "The guys wore overcoats, ties, and hats. One thing that made me unique was that I was not from Philadelphia. Another thing was the fact that I had a car, which also made me popular." Among Cantello's fond memories of those davs: road trips to Madison Square Garden to see nationally ranked Explorers basketball.
"The thing about La Salle is, they took this broken branch and fixed it."
'It changed mv
LA SALLE MAGAZINE
"We'd pile in my ear and drive up to the citv to the game," he recalls. "Those were the days."
Earning a B.A. in English education while throwing javelin all four years as an undergraduate, Cantello kept in shape and continued improving. Soon after he graduated, he was tapped as an American Olympic hopeful. And, though he set the world record for javelin throw in 1959, and qualified for and competed in the 1960 Olympics in Rome, Italy, "the biggest thrill I ever had as an athlete was being awarded the Perm Relay watch in 1953 as part the La Salle team," he says. "I still have that watch."
In Cantello's mind, his years at La Salle "were the best of times. The mantra of the school was always to give the blue collar second generation American a chance; that is what La Salle was about," he explains. "When I was there, we had a nationally-ranked swim team and basketball team. The war had just ended. There was optimism and innocence and a purity of purpose among people. That's what made it such a great time for me."
And then there were individuals, specifically Brother Christopher, then-Dean of Admissions. "He wrote the letter to the draft board that kept me out of the Korean War, which was very unusual in those days. You see, I came from the 'wrong side of the tracks.'"
"The thing about La Salle is, they took this broken branch and fixed it," he savs, warming to his point. "I've been coaching over 40 years — cross country, indoor, and outdoor track — 75 athletes on a team, three seasons of the year [at the U.S. Naval Academy, Annapolis, Md.]. Why? Because La Salle took a chance on me. For that, I'm forever loval to the school."
Dave Carberry. 74
TOUCHING LIVES, GIVING BACK
"Whenever you work on setting policy," says Dave Carberry, '74, B.A. in accounting, and Vice President of Finance for Johnson & Johnson Healthcare Svstems, "you need to be able to stand up and articulate your point of view." At which executive seminar did the 51-year-old Yardley, Pa., resident, who also holds an M.B.A. and is a certified management accountant, learn this valuable lesson? The La Salle Student Advisory Council
"I stayed pretty busy at La Salle, and had a lot of fun doing it."
to the Dean of Students.
"I felt it was important to get involved and help out on campus," he says. And Carberry's interests ranged wide. "I stayed pretty busy at La Salle, and had a lot of fun doing it." He served as a resident assistant, helping keep the peace at close quarters where Jimi Hendrix devotees sometimes clashed with the more scholarly set. At one time or another, he participated in Stage Crew, served as treasurer for numerous campus projects, was on the residence council, and, as already mentioned, worked with the dean as a student advisor.
One reason Carberry felt comfortable getting involved on so many levels was that, for him, "La Salle was always a safe community. It's small enough that you don't get lost." Like many alumni, he was the first generation in his family to attend college. "I knew little about the selection process, and I had very little money," he says. The Philadelphia native says he wanted to "stay close to home and to the work opportunities in the city."
As a resident assistant, Carberry came to enjoy the "camaraderie of the Brothers," who played a central role in student life. "As a head resident, I managed other resident assistants in other halls. I learned to manage and resolve conflicts from that experience, and the Brothers helped me so much."
And Carberrv gives back. "I've always felt grateful for what I got at La Salle," he says. "Helping students understand what a career in business is all about — I enjoy that."
So, today, he serves on the business advisory board that helps the School of Business strengthen connections with the world of business by focusing curriculum, marketing, and internship opportunities. "This helps the business school tailor its product," he explains, "not just to meet needs of the business community, but to also help students be more successful when they hit the job market."
As a La Salle University team leader for Johnson & Johnson, Carberrv helps attract rising generations of La Salle business graduates to Johnson & Johnson. "We're very successful at attracting graduates from La Salle," he says, obviously glad for the graduates and his company. "I am very proud of that, and I plan to continue."
SUMMER 2004
Andrew Jannett, M.D., '43
AMERICAN DREAMS FULFILLED
Not all lessons reveal themselves right away. Sometimes, they surface much later to enrich life anew. For Andrew F. Jannett, M.D., '43, who earned his B.A. at La Salle by the time he was 20, saw action as a young Na\y officer in the Philippines campaigns of World War II, earned a medical degree from The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, and served as a surgeon in the U.S. Air Force in Bitburg, Germany, during the 1970s, life must have always seemed rich. Aid now, rich with memories, Jannett has begun to write, a love first nurtured in his undergraduate years at La Salle.
He was born in south central New Jersey in 1923. "Hammondton, N.J.," he writes in his memoir, A Twentieth-Century American 1923-2000, "lies in the south central part of the state and was founded sometime after the Civil War. Its flat-surface sandy soil lent itself to the successful growing of almost every berry, fruit, and vegetable. In size the town at my birth numbered about five thousand people." With characteristic attention to detail, Jannett begins his memoir, one of three books — including one of stories and another of poems — that are the latest expression of his passion for life and his love of language.
"One of the most important things is to be able to communicate," says this doctor-turned-writer. "And I credit La Salle with helping me improve mv skills. I was always a nut about English classes. But, it wasn't until much later I actually got a chance to sit down and write.'"
"Having the background I had at
La Salle, I have been able to lead a moral
existence."
In addition to English classes, Jannett also honed his writing talent as a reporter for the campus paper, the Colle/jinn. The careful distillation of a point down to its journalistic essence is recognizable many years later in his memoir. Noting the credentials of his premed classmates at
La Salle, he notes, "I was fearful of the competition." But in his studies, as in so much of his life, he need not have feared.
Looking back to those tumultuous years of the Great Depression and World War II, Jannett reflects on the abiding moral strength and security he found at La Salle.
"Having the background I had at La Salle, I have been able to lead a moral existence. I'll give you an example," he says. He celebrated his 21st birthday aboard a Navy ship in Colon, Panama (where he cast his first vote for president, by absentee ballot). As he tells the story, "I was surprised when the skipper wished me a happy birthday, and ordered me to go ashore and 'enjoy myself" Realizing that he had wandered into the red light district, Jannett quickly returned to ship, leaving the "enjoyment" on shore.
Captain Smiley said, 'Andy, did you have a good time?'
'Yes,' I replied.
He said, 'It's only 9:30/
I made no reply.
Moral character, clean living: Andrew Jannett credits La Salle with fostering both. "Who you are by the time you are 2 1 is who vou are going to be," he says. "My formative years were spent at La Salle, and those experiences helped to form me. I owe La Salle a lot."
James Kirschke. Ph.D., '64
COMING THROUGH FIRES OF ADVERSITY
James Kirschke, Ph.D., '64, B.A. in English, author and professor of English at Villanova University, is a true American hero. This decorated Vietnam War veteran earned his Purple Heart the hard way. By 1967, Kirschke had served in the steaming jungles of Vietnam as commander of mortar and rifle platoons. He was no stranger to the perils of combat as he led his platoon on yet another patrol. As he tells it, "This last area we were in was really mined and booby-trapped. It was my job to lead my men through it. I had done it before," he says. "But if you are really doing this job, you can't always be lucky."
The explosion came without warning, instantly blowing
LA SALLE MAGAZINE
off his left leg at the hip and taking with it half of his right leg, the remainder of which sustained extensive nerve damage. "It was a box mine filled with rusty nails," he explains calmly. "I was really creamed by it."
Rewind six years to 1961, when Kirschke first arrived on campus at La Salle, "I came from a lower-class background," he explains. "I had no father, and mv mom was a waitress." At that time, Vietnam meant nothing more to most Americans than a "place on the map," he savs.
"I learned things about being successful and honed my leadership skills, which I've called upon as a Marine officer, a faculty member, and as a professional. La Salle gave me the environment to do this kind of work."
Rather than face mandatory draft, he had joined a marine training program that offered a speedy route up the pay scale and regular paychecks. He also made time to get involved in campus life. In addition to the work he put into writing the first constitution for the Student Court, which, for years, served as the judicial body overseeing student policy violations and other offenses on campus, he also served as its first justice.
"I was pretty active," he says, with characteristic modesty. He served as vice president of his freshman and junior classes, president of his sophomore and senior classes, and vice president of the student council during his senior year, all as he continued working to pay for school. And he was writing.
"My teachers did everything to encourage me," he explains. "Four English professors in particular opened the doors for me. Claude Koch, who would look at anything I wrote; Brother Emery Mollenhaucr, my first composition teacher; Brother Patrick Sheekey, department head and editor of the [now-defunct] Four Quarters literary magazine; and John Keenan ['52, Professor Emeritus of English]. These men devoted more time to me than lots of students get in their entire college careers."
That attention paid off. In addition to his memoir of Vietnam, titled Not Going Home Alone, A Marine's Story, he is the author of Henry James and Impressionism, Willa Gather and Six Writers from the Great War, and the
forthcoming biography, Gouverneitr Morris (1~52-1S16): Author, Statesman, and Man of the World.
At La Salle, he says, "I learned things about being successful and honed my leadership skills, which I've called upon as a Marine officer, a faculty member, and as a professional. La Salle gave me the environment to do this kind of work."
Colleen McGeehan,
VOLUNTEERING FOR GOOD
93
Good deeds, like ripples spreading outward in a pond, can resonate through generations. Maybe that's the way the idea came to Colleen McGeehan, '93, B.A. in secondary education and mathematics, and a teacher at the Young Women's Leadership School in East Harlem, N.Y. Her idea was that, like her, her students should have the chance to experience volunteer work. After all, during her years at
La Salle as part of Campus Ministry, McGeehan had seen for herself the joys of volunteering, of doing "something that was beyond ourselves."
While an undergraduate, her volunteer work had taken her twice to Appalachia during spring breaks. One vear, they went "to a work camp for families and kids" in rural Kentucky, she says. "It was a farm cooperative that families used to help cut costs." Another year, she and fellow volunteers worked in West Virginia on a home repair project. "Many coal mining towns had put up ramshackle homes in the 1930s and '40s," she explains. "People still live in them."
So it only seemed natural to McGeehan that, as a teacher, she should help her students get involved, too. "Volunteering in Appalachia was a seminal experience for me. I said to my colleagues, 'we should do this, too.'" Soon, they were taking groups of high school students to Appalachia to work on the same kind of projects McGeehan had experienced while in college. When driving became an issue, "we switched to doing local Habitat for Humanity projects," she says. "Volunteering really enriched my life and my students'. It helped us see each other differently."
SUMMER 2004
As it turns out, much of what McGeehan sees is through the eves of a volunteer. In fact, it was through the Lasallian Volunteers, a program that places graduates in volunteer programs, that she first came to New York, where she now lives and works. "The people in that program are very interested in social justice," she says. "They opened my eyes to volunteering as a graduate."
People often talk about how Campus Ministry was always a place that allowed people to be themselves," she vi\ s, remembering fondly how working with others could hasten achievement of a common goal of helping those in need. "It was a place where you'd meet people you might not get to meet," she explains. "Even though we might have different reasons for volunteering, in the end. everyone was contributing to the same thing."
"I would call myself' Lasallian,'" she savs proudly. At its best, "the Lasallian community means being connected and aware of the world in which you live. It might mean service; it might mean supporting those in service. For me," she explains, "it has meant education."
Daniel Tann, Esq., '82
LEVELING THE FIELD OF DREAMS
Baseball can be a great teacher. Ask Philadelphia native Daniel Tann. Esq., '82, B.S. in accounting with a concentration in organizational behavior management. "When I was 9 or 10 years old growing up in West Phillv next to a park, the city was segregated." he says. "But we never had enough kids for two full baseball teams." Solution: Go to the other side of the park, and invite the Italian kids to join in and "bridge the gap."
One day, he says, "the police were called. They told us — the black kids — that we couldn't play there. That was my first exposure to discrimination. That's when I decided to become a lawver."
During his undergraduate years at La Salle, Tann w asted no time helping create new institutions on campus, leading the student body through elected office in student government, and bolstering campus awareness of discrimination.
Daniel Tann. Esq.. '82. from a 1981 Explorer Yearbook photograph with Students' Government Association Officers.
others, you are obligated to help."
His student government career began "as chair of the Food Service Committee," he explains. Next, he was elected sophomore class senator. In his junior vear, he served as Vice President of Business Affairs. In his senior vear, vice president of Student Affairs and President of the student senate.
"I was also a founder of the Mu Upsilon chapter of
Phi Beta Sigma fraternity at "I was always taught La Salle," he adds. Tann first that if t tQ a
learned about PBS, one of . ,. _
the historically African Place m Your llfe
American fraternities where VOU Can help
founded at Howard University in 1914, when he spotted some unfamiliar African American students
on campus "handing out information on sickle cell anemia. I had known someone who died of it," he savs, "so I stopped to talk to them." They were PBS fraternity brothers from another school, out on a community-based activity. "What they were doing was very hands-on," he says. "That intrigued me."
Elected as the chapter's First President in 1981, he coordinated a comprehensive "Black History Month" program with the Black Students of La Salle (B.S.L.) organization. It would be the first of many social, cultural, and political programs aimed specifically at black students. "The fraternity," he says, "was a great outlet." He also worked with the La Salle Urban Center to interlace with community groups to "put an .African American face on the L'niversity in dealing with community issues," he explains.
"I think today the LTniversity tries very hard to work with the community,'' he says. That's at least partially due to his groundbreaking efforts. And Tann continues to work hard for his alma mater.
A member of the La Salle Alumni Association Board of Directors since he graduated in 1982, he more recently founded the African American Alumni Association. "My major goal is to work for more scholarships for African American students at La Salle," he says. To that end, in 2000, "we formally endowed the Warren E. Smith, M.D., '54, Scholarship, which is named for one of the first African American graduates of La Salle's pre-med program."
"I was always taught that if you get to a place in your life where you can help others," he says, "you are obligated to help." La Salle's founder couldn't have put it better.
LA SALLE MAGAZINE
features
SUMMER IS MANY THINGS; AMONG THEM, VACATIONS, make-up courses, and, of course, baseball.
Several La Salle University alums are involved with baseball, doing just about everything but swinging a bat.
When, once upon a time, a TV professional asked Leigh McDonald Tobin, '87, to name her dream job, she didn't hesitate.
"PR director for the Phillies," she said.
Dreams do come true.
nc
Since 1990, Tobin has been a Phillies employee, and is now in charge of the team's media relations. But being a fan and an employee are different experiences.
"Once you start, you'' re awed (being around players). It was the weirdest feeling. Mike Schmidt was my hero growing up, and there he was. In the hallways, I'd hear (announcer) Harrv Kalas' voice behind me. It all becomes realitv instead of a fantasy," she says. Working in the team's new stadium this season "has been awesome."
In 1997, for the 50th anniversary of Jackie Robinson's charge through baseball's race barrier, his widow, Rachel, attended the unveiling of a Philadelphia mural of her husband by David McShane, '88.
The three-story work on North Broad Street, a few miles south of La Salle, depicts Robinson stealing home in the 1955 World Series.
"So often, I've seen images and likenesses of my / -*Ml«rf^PTri,*'~ at
husband," Mrs. Robinson said at the unveiling. "When I look up at this mural, that's him."
McShane was a biology major, but always dabbled in painting. Later, he studied and pursued art full time, and when the director of Philadelphia's mural program asked if he would do one on Robinson, he accepted.
June 2001 was not going to be easy for Dennis Lehman, '73, Executive Vice President for Business Affairs of the Cleveland Indians. He got his start in baseball working for the Philadelphia Phillies, and thanks to inter- league play, the two teams faced each other in Cleveland.
"I certainly had mixed feelings about it," he says.
Lehman started working for the Phillies on summer vacations in high school. When the club moved to Veterans Stadium in 1971, he ran the scoreboard for the Phillies and the Eagles.
Because most games were at night, Lehman finished his education at La Salle during the day, obtaining a degree in political science. He was also moving up the Phillies ladder, working on the financial side. In 1988, the Indians offered him a position in which he'd be responsible for all revenue operations.
Even though he's only 25, Kevin Ibach, '00, has been a baseball lifer. His father was a sports writer and worked for the Chicago Cubs. Ibach played baseball at La Salle, got an internship with the Baltimore Orioles, and is now the club's Baseball Operations Assistant, in which he works with major league and minor league players in a variety of roles.
"I would love to eventually get into coaching. I always tell people when and if the Orioles win the World Series, and I have that ring on my finger, I'll be more than happy to hang it up no matter what position I have. Having a World Series ring would be the ultimate goal. I don't know if I could beat that, so why not give something back to the game?"
SUMMER 2004
IN A SMALL, CONGESTED ROOM WITH LITTLE LIGHT AND a lack of modern equipment, miracles are performed and people's lives are forever changed.
Despite the less-than-ideal conditions, Roger Bucs, M.D., '64, and a team of other volunteers from the World Surgical Foundation, Inc., work at a frantic pace correcting cleft lips, accessing and removing lumps and bumps the size of grapefruits, performing mastectomies, hysterectomies, thyroidectomies, and whatever else they can handle in a week's time.
On average, Bucs and his team complete 200 surgeries on their missions to some of the poorest countries in the world.
"We go wild and work like mad while we are there," Bucs said.
The World Surgical Foundation, Inc., formerly known as the World Mission of Central Pennsylvania, strives to provide health care for the underprivileged in Third World countries.
"For me, this is the ultimate," said Bucs, an anesthesiologist with Riverside Anesthesiology Associates in Harrisburg, Pa. "I always thought missionary work would
be the most satisfying thing you could do in the field of medicine. It is pure patient care and the only reason to go on these missions is because vou care about people. And these people truly appreciate our being there."
Despite his several missions, which have included trips to the Philippines, Honduras, India, and Thailand, Bucs is always overwhelmed by the reception his group receives.
"Hundreds of people are lined up waiting for us to arrive. Many have traveled for days to get there," he said.
According to Bucs, the foundation does perform some difficult surgeries, but because of the conditions, none of extreme risk. "A few lives are saved, and the quality of life for many is improved," he said. "For example, our patients with cleft lips are outcasts, but with corrective surgery, their lives are completely changed."
Bucs became involved with the former World Mission of Central Pennsvlvania in 1997 shordv after it was organized. The foundation's goal is to perform one major mission per year. Upcoming missions include Bangladesh and a trip back to the Philippines. The foundation also supplies equipment to other organizations performing similar missionary work.
"Many countries don't have adequate public health
10
LA SALLE MAGAZINE
systems," said Bucs, who is on the Board of Directors for the World Surgical Foundation, Inc. "In the Philippines, for example, if a patient has an emergency, it's taken care of. But once the emergency is over, if that patient can't pay for care, that is the end of it. We've closed colostomies for people that have had them for 20 years."
Preparing for a mission is just as much work as participating in it. Funds need to be raised to pay for expenses such as shipping equipment and medication. The 40 or so volunteers who go on each mission pay for their own expenses. Participants include anesthesiologists, surgeons, recovery room and operating room nurses, and non-medical volunteers. The volunteers not specifically trained in medicine help coordinate the trip, and while on missions, they assist in sterilizing equipment and maintaining records.
In addition to raising money, the organization also needs to coordinate with the host country the shipping and receiving of supplies.
The World Surgical Foundation, Inc., has a warehouse that stores older equipment such as x-ray and anesthesia machines, TV poles, and operating beds donated by hospitals and doctors' offices. Prior to leaving on a mission, the host count)' is asked to fill out an equipment wish list.
"We find out what our next location will need, and we go to our warehouse and try to fill their requests with what we collected," Bucs said.
Regardless of how much equipment the foundation can supply, the team of volunteers is still working under poverty-stricken conditions, which often call for some ingenuity.
"We do the best we can with what we have, but we often lack basic equipment we take for granted in the United States. So, at times, we do things very primitively," Bucs said. "I once put together a self-made anesthesia machine. The wonders of duct tape — I felt
like MacGyver."
Perhaps one of the most essential and basic of supplies that doctors lack is blood. Bucs recalls an incident where a patient had lost 30 percent of her blood volume and was in desperate need of a transfusion. Volunteers went out and asked anyone they came across to donate blood because there was literally not a drop in the hospital.
"The blood bank consisted of an empty refrigerator," Bucs said. "Police officers donated, and, luckily, they were the right blood type — she made it."
In spite of- — or perhaps because of — the health care environment existing in the host countries, Bucs understands the impact he is making.
"We are absolutely needed," he said. "We bring surgical expertise and care to underserved areas and people where no one else would — or perhaps could."
According to Bucs, the need for more missions of this nature is widespread.
"We are always looking for more volunteers to help meet our goals. There is so much need out there, we don't even put a dent in it," he said.
Next year, Bucs and his team are planning a trip back to the Philippines. "There is never a shortage of people to help," he said.
Elaine Bucs has joined her husband on his trips abroad; she sterilizes equipment and assists patients as needed. The Bucs resides in Hershey, Pa. They have four children, and recently welcomed their first grandchild.
For information on how to become a volunteer for the World Surgical Foundation, Inc., visit their Web site at www.worldsiirgicalfoundation.org.
Paying Honor
Roger Bucs, M.D., '64, grew up in the small town of Roebling, N.J., where his father,
George, worked in a steel miil. Despite the fact that George Bucs did not go further than
sixth grade in school, he was a strong believer that a good education would take a person places in life.
He was adamant that his son and daughter go on to college and earn higher education degrees, and both did. After his father
died in 1991, Roger Bucs and his brother-in-law Thomas Burke, '60, wanted to find a way to honor him. The two came up
with the perfect plan: a scholarship in his name. The George J. Bucs Scholarship originated in 1993, and provides financial
assistance to a La Salle student from Florence Township, N.J., where Roebling is located. The scholarship follows the student
throughout the course of his or her four years at La Salle, provided the student maintains or exceeds a specified grade point
average.
SUMMER 2004
11
LIVING A
BY KIMBERLY MACALISTER, M.A. '04
MSg
WHEN ASKED HOW OFTEN HE PLAYS GOLF, 74-YEAR-OLD JIM FINEGAN, '51, casually says, "Oh, I play only on days that end in a 'yV
No one would expect less from the man who is revered as the foremost American authority on golf in Scotland, Ireland, England, and Wales. He makes sure to play nine holes with two golf balls; that way, he gets in his full 18-hole game every day at Philadelphia Country Club.
Finegan has been an avid golfer since he was a boy. He started playing die game when he was 9 years old. Two years later, he began to caddie. Growing up, if he wasn't in school or doing homework, he could be found on the golf course.
After graduating from La Salle in 1951, where he made a name for himself through his academic achievements as well as his golf ability, Finegan spent three and a half years in the Navy. In September of 1956, he started out as a copywriter for Gray & Rogers, a Philadelphia-based advertising agency. With his enthusiasm and creativity, Finegan worked his way up the ranks and was named Chairman and C.E.O. of the company in 1972. In 1977, Finegan became the only golfer inducted into La Salle's Hall of Athletes. ^^^^^_
Prior to his retirement from Gray & Rogers in 1990, Finegan began writing pieces for national golf magazines. After he retired and could devote full time to the game he loved, he started writing books.
In all, Finegan has written five books and is currently working on his sixth. His first book is a comprehensive history of golf in Philadelphia, titled, A Centennial
12 LA SALLE MAGAZINE
Tribute to Golf in Philadelphia. A lifetime member of Pine Valley, he wrote the club history, which was published in 2000.
But, perhaps he is best known for his trilogy of travel books, published by Simon &; Schuster, that follow Finegan as he lives a golfer's dream of playing the most highly regarded courses in the British Isles. Though he has played virtually all of the American "shrines," such as Merion, Oakmont, Augusta National, and Pebble Beach, he has not played as widely in the United States as in the United Kingdom and Ireland.
"While many of the greatest courses within the British Isles are already well-known," Finegan said, "it <i HeatKs is mv pleasure from time to time to discover an e5!eJ G;e»ns unheralded gem, like Crudcn Bay in Scotland " or Narin & Portnoo in Ireland, and bring it to the attention of the American goiter." ^^m
"T.'c» ■■■■ ("iVoti.nj" were published in 1996. Blasted
Heath and Blessed Greens covers
the courses of Scotland;
Emerald Fairways and Foam-Flecked Seas
embraces golfing in Ireland. Finegan said
the last book in the series, All Courses
Great and Small: A Golfer's Pilgrimage to
England and Wales, took seven years to get
published because Simon & Schuster
believed that, of the hundreds of
thousands of annual American visitors to
England and Wales, relatively few were
there for golf.
Still, Finegan found a host of marvelous courses while researching the England/Wales book, and is optimistic that they will draw American golfers to these two lands.
"The Addington, just outside London, is a great parkland course that the world has very little knowledge of," Finegan said. "And Pennard, in South Wales, is a majestic links course routed through spectacular sand hills."
His current book remains untitled, but it finds him back in Scotland and Ireland writing about many of the courses he has already covered. ^^^^^^^^
Instead of a travel guide that one takes on a trip, his
new volume is going to be an oversized coffee table book with "breathtaking" photography to correspond with his words.
So, according to this golf historian, what makes a great golf course?
"Great holes," Finegan said. "There are many courses that can generate considerable tension, but some of them | turn out to be obstacle courses rather than golf courses. A golfer wants challenge and excitement, but the degree of difficulty should be reasonable, not ruinous."
IER 21
13
COOKING UP SUCCESS
BY CAITLIN MURRAY
RALPH PALLARINO, '94, REMEMBERS PLAYING
"hot dog stand" with his brother as a young child in the
basement of his family's Chicago home.
"That's the earliest memory I have of anything that would give me the impression that maybe owning a restaurant is what I wanted to do," said the 32 -year-old head chef who co-owns two popular Conshohocken, Pa., restaurants.
Now, instead of plastic hot dogs and relish, Chef Pallarino is cooking up innovative dishes of balsamic marinated baby lamb chops with a shallot demi-glaze and, one of his signature creations, lobster macaroni and cheese which won "Best of Philly" in 2002.
He and two friends, Kim Strengari and Marianne Gere, went into business together four years ago.
"I would always cook dinner for my friends on the weekends," said Pallarino, who has had no professional culinary training. "They thought I was good, but I didn't know if I was good enough on that level." After he cooked for a friend's birthday party in 1999, party guest Strengari approached him about opening up a small Italian BYOB with Pallarino as the chef.
Their first venture, Bella Luna, was an upscale Italian eatery on the Main Line. In the wake of its success, the trio opened Stella Blu in Conshohocken two years later — the more casual of the sibling restaurants. Though Bella Luna has since closed, Stella Blu has done so well that they decided to open another place a few months ago to accommodate the overflow of reservations. At their newest establishment, the Gypsy Saloon, located across the street from Stella Blu, a variety of fare from ribs and burgers to lobster risotto appear on the menu.
Without having set foot in a culinary school in his life, where does Pallarino get it?
"Growing up in a big Italian family, you can't help but get involved in the cooking that's alwavs going on. My grandma was the one who really got me interested. She and my mom always invited me into the kitchen," recalled the chef, who began cooking at age 10. "I don't put a ton of thought into it; it just comes naturally to me."
"If I hadn't learned what I did at La Salle, I would have never been able to start my own business or do any of this."
restaurateurs doubt his "natural" ability in the kitchen? If so, Pallarino doesn't blame them. "It's like an actor who doesn't pay his dues and then gets a gig on The Sopranos. I'm sure people get mad — wouldn't you? But once they taste mv food, they can decide for themselves."
In addition to his restaurants' success, Pallarino has developed quite a reputation for himself in the culinary world. In fact, he appeared on NBC's reality show, The Restaurant, starring celebrity chef Rocco DiSpirito. He was recruited by DiSpirito's business partner, restaurant financier Jeffrey Chodorow, to try out as DiSpirito's potential replacement in light of recent turmoil between the two.
"He said he heard about me and wanted to taste my food. So he came into my restaurant, and I did a tasting for him and his family," said Pallarino, who is a big fan of the show. "A month later, I got a call from a mutual friend who said Jeffrey was having problems with Rocco, and asked if I'd be interested in trying out." In an episode that aired on May 10, Pallarino, who was described as a "wonder kid," was shown preparing a multi-course tasting for Chodorow and his associates.
He also starred on the Food Network's Date Plate, a reality dating series in which two eligible bachelors or bachelorettes cook a romantic meal within a fixed budget in the hopes of winning over a blind date. Pallarino's role was to help the not-so-food-sawy contestants prepare a creative menu and meal.
Having created such a name for himself in the industry, it seems ironic that the restaurateur — a former accounting and finance major — had no intention of following such a career path. "I never had my heart set on being a chef," he said. Instead, he wanted to go into insurance or finance, which he did after he graduated from La Salle in 1994. Though he cooks at one of his restaurants just about every night, he never quit his "day job" as an insurance broker, which, he said, has afforded him the luxury of owning his own business and investing in other tilings. "If I hadn't learned what I did at La Salle, I would have never been able to start mv own business or do anv of this."
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LA SALLE MAGAZINE
A Different Kind of Hero Comes Home from Iraq
BY JOHN GROGAN, INQUIRER COLUMNIST
The following story is reprinted from Tlie Philadelphia Inquirer with permission.
FOR 14 MONTHS, MARIA MURT DID NOT DARE ALLOW herself to dream of the future. Her husband, Tom ['89], a former Upper Moreland Township commissioner, had been plucked from her life to fight in Iraq.
Until she had him safely back home, the future would stay on hold.
She soldiered on, day by day, in her new role as single parent to three children, avoiding news programs and cringing each time the doorbell rang, afraid of the message that might arrive.
Recentlv, the Upper Moreland woman finally allowed herself to exhale. Standing in Philadelphia International Airport, she saw her soldier husband making his way toward her through the crowd.
"Tom!" she screamed. And they fell into each other's arms, neither able to say a word. Their three children — Katie, 11, Daniel, 9, and Patrick, 6 — swarmed around. Murt's father, James, a World War II veteran, was there, too, and so was a color guard from the Willow Grove post of the Veterans of Foreign Wars.
"We were all just so emotional," Tom Murt said from home this week. "We were all crying."
The entire time Murt had been overseas, he was able to speak on die phone with the children just three times. On his first night home, Murt read bedtime stories to them, and the next morning, he helped make their lunches and
walked them to the bus stop. "That's what I missed | the most," he said, "the simple, everyday parent things."
The hardest part of his deployment was not the scorpions or the pit
toilets or the constant threat of attack. "The really, really hardest part is being away from your loved ones," he said.
As I reported Feb. 23, Staff Sgt. Murt coped with the loneliness and boredom by launching a personal crusade to help the impoverished Iraqi children in the villages around his base. He sent e-mails home to friends and colleagues, asking them to donate whatever they could, and the local community responded in force. By the time he left, Murt had received and distributed more than 200 large boxes of clothing, toys and school supplies. In the process, he befriended hundreds of Iraqi children and built inestimable goodwill.
He could not wait to return to his own family, but part of his heart remains behind with the children he will never forget. "Once you see that kind of poverty," he said, "it's really very hard to stop thinking about it."
But now he is home, and home is where he plans to stay. He [planned to] start back at his job as an instructor and academic adviser at Pennsylvania State University's Abington campus [in the fall]. He said he had no plans to try to regain his seat on the Upper Moreland Board of Commissioners, which he resigned when he was deployed.
"We never expected it to be this long," Maria Murt said of their separation. "But we're together again. We're back as a unit. I just feel so lucky to have him home again."
She has seen the flag-draped coffins, and knows how differently their story could have ended.
On his first morning home, right after putting the children on the bus to school, Tom and Maria Murt attended 9 a.m. Mass at St. David's Catholic Church in Willow Grove, where they are parishioners. They both had a few things for which to give thanks.
For Murt, the adjustment to civilian life will take time. His appetite is spotty, he continues to sleep fitfully, and loud noises bother him. His wife hopes her home cooking will help him regain some of the 40 pounds he lost in the Iraq desert.
On a recent afternoon, Murt stepped out onto the front porch of the family home to greet yet another well-wisher. His children were clutched around him, not about to let him out of their sight again. It was an American portrait — a soldier home from war, a family made whole again.
Beside him, a large, white banner flapped in the breeze. It read: "Welcome home, Tom. We love you and we are proud of you."
SUMMER 2004
15
Drowning i» dx Clear Pool
* Kw^te^j fi
book notes
Drowning in the Clear Pool: Cultural Narcissism, Technology,
and Character Education by Francis J. Ryan, '69; John J. Sweeder, 71; and Maryanne R. Bednar
Peter Lang Publishing, 2002; 198 pp., $29.95
With marked increases in school violence, educators have again been called upon to emphasize character education in their classrooms. While diversity of community values has rendered such efforts increasingly problematic, a more fundamental impasse to character education is cultural narcissism. Adolescents influenced by an inflated sense of grandiosity, entitlement, devaluation of others, and self-absorption often dismiss character education as irrelevant or constraining to their "me-centered" lifestyles. To counter cultural narcissism, teachers need to foster character education by developing the moral system (self-understanding, social cognition, moral sentiments, and moral judgment) in each of their students. A creative use of educational technology can help teachers raise moral sensitivity, while simultaneously diluting the negative influences of cultural narcissism that pervades much of contemporary American life, (from the book jacket)
Francis J. Ryan, Ed.D., '69, is the director of La Salle University's American Studies Program. He is also a professor in the program and teaches courses in American studies and American history. John J. Sweeder, Ed.D., '71, is a professor in La Salle's Education Department. He teaches educational technology, adolescent development, and methods courses in secondary education. They co-wrote the book with their colleague, a professor of education at La Salle, Maryanne Bednar, Ph.D.
Through Ashley's Eyes by JoAnna Robinson, '81, Xlibris Corporation, 2003; 119 pp.. $20.99
Ashley reveals the abuse and womanizing affairs of Granddad George, which caused her Grandma Susan to leave her hometown of Greenville, S.C., and secretly flee North with her four girls: Lillian, Mary Ann, Sarah, Eva, and two granddaughters.
Lillian is Grandma Susan's oldest daughter. She is an unwed mother of two small girls, Jennifer and Dolores. She was glad to move up North because she knew that it was the only way she was ever going to separate from her first love, William Brooks. Once the family moved, Lillian's life changed, (excerpted from the book jacket)
JoAnna Robinson, '81, is new to the writing world. She is currently working on her second book, Whispers from Small Voice. She and her husband live in Philadelphia.
God: That Still.
The Deafening Silence: A Memoir by Rosemarie Manes, M.A. '87, LMFT
1st Books. 2003; 256 pp., $12.50
Eleven-year old Rosemary lives in South Philadelphia. She plays hop-scotch, jacks, and ball, and visits her father's produce store, called Mike's. Rosemary loves to watch him tease women, argue with men, and give produce to nuns.
His store bustles with the force of his personality — except when the gangster-looking men arrive. They register as unimportant until Rosemary's father plunges a knife into his chest.
He dies leaving Rosemary's mother with 12 children, the youngest at age three. As word spreads of his suicide in the neighborhood, even Blind Man Joe betrays Rosemary, saying they can no longer be friends.
The family moves to an Irish Catholic neighborhood where the name Pasquarello becomes another obstacle to overcome. Against this background is rage at her father and her mother demanding The Deafening Silence surrounding his suicide. Rosemary navigates realities such as going to bed hungry and being a teenager who was forced out to work.
As the young woman's heart emerges and with the encouragement of her fiance, she challenges The Deafening Silence. On Rosemary's wedding day, her mother reveals her family's secrets.
The Deafening Silence is a book about a father's suicide, a mother's indomitable strength, and a daughter's odyssey through the mire of rage and abandonment into a young woman's triumph of love, (from the publisher)
Rosemarie Manes, M.A. '87, LMFT, is an executive/personal coach and a licensed marriage and family therapist. Her work with families in private practice has taught her that love is not always enough to ward off the horrors that can beset a family. She lives in the Philadelphia area with her husband, John. Their children, Audrey and John Jr., and grandchildren live nearby.
If you know of a book written by an alum that you 'd like us to highlight in a future issue, e-mail Caitlin Murray at murrayc@lasalle. edu.
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LA SALLE MAGAZINE
commencement 2004
>.
v
JOSEPH A. VOLPE JR., PH.D. Lindback Award Recipient
A Salute to the Class of
2004
BILL WIEGMAN, '04
Commencement Speaker
i I
■
^
BROTHER MICHAEL J. McGINNISS, F.S.C., PH.D., JO
La Salle President
AN UNLIKELY KINSHIP
BY JON CAROULIS
It was unlikely that Jason Ager, '04, and Joanne Holmes, '04, would have met at La Salle. She was a working grandmother from New Jersey going part-time, usually at night, and he was a young honors student who lived off campus with friends.
Holmes, who is 41, started and stopped her college career several times, taking 17 years to earn her degree in social work. Ager, 21, who says he had things easy, finished in four years, received the senior award for best foreign language student at La Salle, and won a Fulbright Scholarship to study in Austria.
Being a social work major, Holmes was required to do two internships. Being a single parent, spending time at an unpaid internship was not possible, so she found employment at social service agencies and worked her school requirements around her job.
A double major in English and German, Ager wrote a 55-page paper about the late Austrian Jewish writer Leo Perutz's influence on contemporary Viennese writer Doron Rabinovici, which he submitted for the Fulbright. He will continue to study these writers and will teach English for one to two years. (Ager is the 52nd La Salle student to receive a Fulbright since 1965.)
The two met for the first time on a sunny afternoon in April to tape a TV show on La Salle's Channel 56. They chatted non-stop for almost two hours, impressing each other with what they had accomplished.
"She's awesome; I don't know if I could have persevered the way she did," Ager said of Holmes. Ager described the support he got from his parents and his teachers, saying, "The universe was in place for me to succeed."
"He's incredible," said Holmes. "He did what he did because he wanted to do it; no one was pushing him. I work with young people, and you don't often see someone like that as focused as Jason was."
Both found what they needed at La Salle: supportive friends and faculty, and challenges to overcome. They also found a friend in one another that day in April.
SUMMER 2004
17
A LONG WAY TO MY DIPLOMA
BY MERKHAT SHARIPZHAN, '04
I am 41 years old, and I am from the Republic of Kazakhstan in Central Asia. I have been living and working in one of Europe's most beautiful cities, Prague, since 1995. So, I am a Kazakh, living in the Czech Republic, working for the U.S. Broadcasting Company, and now I can add one more clause — I am a member of La Salle University's alumni.
The world is really shrinking. Who would have thought you could earn a master's degree at a United States university without being in the U.S.A.? Ten years ago, if someone said to me I would be able to do this, I would have been more than surprised.
But it's a reality. May 9, 2004, will remain as one of the most unforgettable days in my life. At La Salle's Commencement in Philadelphia, my name was mentioned at the opening of the ceremony. I stood among my fellow graduates — my classmates — that I have never met. Isn't it amazing? Oh, yes, it is.
Sitting in my row in McCarthy Stadium during the graduation ceremony, I could not believe that I was a part of all of this. My
thoughts brought me back to 1996 — the year thinking of enrolling in the Communication and Public Relations Program. All the universities in Prague only offered M.B.A. courses in the evenings. I was not interested in earning an M.B.A., but there were no other courses offered by any of the schools in Prague.
I work for Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, as Director of the Kazakh Broadcasting Service. So, among dozens of target countries, we broadcast to Kazakhstan, a very controversial former Communist Central Asian country of 15 million. Corruption and dictatorship are major characteristics of the country's current regime. Every day at work is a fight for democracy and human rights. Current Kazakh youth and their orientation in the drastically changing world is another issue to be taken under consideration in our everyday work.
Taking all that into account, one can easily suggest that the mission of the 51-year-old company I work for is crucial. In such circumstances, one of the most important challenges faced by my service is the changing media market in the target country of Kazakhstan.
In 2002, I was lucky to learn that the University of New York
A TOWER OF STRENGTH
BY KIMBERLY MACALISTER, M.A. '04
As Cathy Carchidi, '04, stood in a foot of water in her basement, she looked up and said, "God, I have been through the fire and the flood, but I will not do the locusts."
The flood, caused by Hurricane Floyd, is one of three major tragedies Carchidi has endured, including a devastating fire, and the unexpected death of her mother.
But through it all, Carchidi fought back. She relied on her family, her faith, and her fortitude to stay focused and never lose sight of her goals — which included earning her bachelor's degree — after 38 years in the making.
"There were a lot of obstacles, and, at times, I felt like I would never make it," Carchidi said "But through tragedy, you can become a tower of strength that you never thought possible."
Carchidi's quest began when, as a senior in high school, she volunteered to fill a teacher shortage in the city's Catholic school system. She began taking required elementary education classes at a local college.
But in 1970, when she was only 22, Carchidi's mother died suddenly of a heart attack at the age of 45. One of seven children, Carchidi and her sister Joan took on the responsibility of raising their younger brothers and sisters who ranged in age from five to 13 years old.
"I had to center on my family," Carchidi said. "They needed me and I needed them."
By 1976, her siblings were a little older, and Carchidi was
able to enroll at La Salle, changing her major to religion. She continued for two years, and completed 16 courses while working full-time and tending to her brothers and sisters.
Carchidi had her first child in 1979, and, as a single mother, money was tight; once again, she had to take time off from school. After marrying in 1984 and having a second child, Carchidi took courses at La Salle when she could. But tragedy struck again.
On January 31, 1996, at 1:40 a.m., Carchidi's family was awakened by the sound of smoke alarms. She and her husband rescued their three children from their beds and safely evacuated the house. A faulty gas fireplace installed just 21 days earlier caused the fire.
"We literally lost everything including our family dog, Princess. I never thought we would get past it, but as a family, we pulled through. We prayed, we went to counseling, and we somehow moved on with the overwhelming support that we received from so many people," she said.
Carchidi resumed classes at St. Charles Seminary in 2000. It was then that Hurricane Floyd hit, and her home was flooded.
"We were left picking up the pieces once again," she said.
Carchidi did pick up the pieces and continued on. She enrolled at La Salle in the fall of 2002.
"I wanted to graduate from La Salle. I had a tremendous experience there. The faculty always stood by me and I am forever
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LA SALLE MAGAZINE
in Prague had started a new graduate program in Professional Communication and Public Relations. Life consists of coincidences. I learned about the program from my colleague about two months after officials of the U.S. Broadcasting Board of Governors, the U.S. official body working with U.S. Broadcasting Abroad, introduced us to their new concept called: "Marrying Mission to the Market." In other words, not only our programs' contents, but also the competitive environment in the target countries turned to become of great importance. Needless to say, I decided to jump into the University of New York in
Prague's program immediately.
Later, I learned that the program was through La Salle University. From the very first module at the University, I have never regretted that I decided to enroll. It was not an easy year, though: late Fridays, Saturdays, and Sundays; my two daughters protesting my absence on weekends; my precious wife's hard work to help me with my studies. All of that is behind me now.
Two months before the graduation ceremony at La Salle, I spent one month in Kazakhstan. The knowledge I have received at La Salle was very useful. I applied as much as I could while there. Five television shows, press conferences, and special programs with local newspapers surely raised the awareness about our programs among the population of Kazakhstan.
We are moving forward with the rapidly changing world. Surely, La Salle helped me to make my move forward more dynamic and more successful. Thank you, La Salle! Thank you, University of New York in Prague!
Front Merkhat Sharipzhan, '04: Rear, from left: Patrice Oppliger, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Communication: Iwona Kusztal. Ph.D.. Assistant Professor of Communication: Lynne Texter, Ph.D.. Chair of the Communication Department: Michael Smith. Ph.D., Director of the Graduate Program in Professional Communication: and Brother Berry Molyneaux, F.S.C., Ph.D., '58, Director. M.A. in Professional Communication and Public Relations, Prague.
grateful for all of their support," she said.
On her graduation day, Carchidi 's husband, three children, and the brothers and sisters she helped raise were there to celebrate with her.
"Oh, I cried," she said. "But they were happy tears this time."
Carchidi has two more years left before retiring as Supervisor at Lawncrest Recreation Center, where she has worked for the past 18 years.
"I get paid to help people recreate their minds, hearts, and spirits. But now with my degree, after I retire, I may be able to go back to the other job that sparked my heart — teaching," she said.
CHANGING LIVES/ TOUCHING LIVES
BY KIMBERLY MACALISTER, M.A. '04
"With this degree, I have the potential to touch someone's life and change it for the better every day," said Megan Rafferty, '04, who earned her Bachelor of Science in Nursing at this May's Commencement.
Ever since she was a little girl, Rafferty said she wanted to be a nurse. But she never had her own reasons for wanting to
pursue the profession, until she entered La Salle and started
getting first-hand experience.
'My mom worked in a hospital as an x-ray technician. When I
was little, I thought that was nursing, and I wanted to do what my mom was doing," Rafferty said.
As she got older, Rafferty understood that her mom wasn't a nurse, but she decided to go with her instincts. "I had been saying I wanted to be a nurse for so long; I just stuck with it," she said.
Rafferty persevered and earned the academic nursing award for having the highest G.P.A. in the day school's Nursing Program. On top of excelling academically, she also discovered the answer to the question she was often asked.
"I never fully understood why I wanted to be a nurse until I started working with patients," she said. "It is easy to say that you want to be a nurse so you can help people, but nurses don't just help people — they touch and affect their lives — and patients do the same for nurses."
Since graduation, Rafferty is working at Abington Hospital in the orthopedic unit. She deals with a variety of patients, from those suffering bone trauma due to car accidents or falls, to those who voluntarily elect for surgery such as knee and hip replacements.
"My patients are in pain, and it is my job to make them comfortable," she said. "Every little thing you do for a patient is to make their stay in the hospital a little more bearable."
While at La Salle, Rafferty participated in community service activities such as Project Appalachia, where instead of soaking up the sun on Spring Break, students travel to Kentucky and build homes for the poor. "It was an amazing experience that helped with my career because it enhanced my compassion for others," she said.
"La Salle's Nursing Program gave me the intense training I need to succeed in this field, and I am excited to be out working and putting my skills to the test," she said.
SUMMER 2004
19
DESPITE PHYSICAL OBSTACLES, TIMOTHY DUFFY GRADUATES FROM LA SALLE WITH AN ACCOUNTING JOB WAITING FOR HIM
BY JORDAN BURKE, '04
Like his La Salie University classmates, senior accounting major Timothy Duffy, '04, read the instructor's comments on the blackboard during class. He just used a monocular, which looks like a tiny telescope.
The Levittown, Pa., resident is legally blind but driven enough to pursue his passion for accounting.
"I have strong prescription glasses, and I use the monocular to see the blackboard. For the computer, I use larger fonts," says Duffy. "I am legally blind, but I can see. My vision is hard to explain to people, because I don't know what 20/20 really is. I will never know, but everything is clear."
La Salle classmates have helped him take notes, but he also has the excellent support of the Accounting Department.
"[Being an accounting major] was a fun experience. The teachers made it even better because they willingly worked one-on-one with the students," Duffy said. "The entire department
basically would bend over backwards to make sure that I could
understand everything."
"Tim did the things that every student should do, whether they're vision impaired or not," says Mary Jeanne Welsh, Ph.D., chair of the La Salle Accounting Department, who had Duffy for two courses. "If he was reviewing for an examination and didn't
Timothy Duffy lr. '04 (left), celebrated his graduation from La Salle with his parents, rimothy Sr. and Patricia. Duffy is legally blind, but driven to pursue a degree in accounting. He graduated with 3.69 6.P.A. (magna cum laude) and was a member of the crew team for three years. He is now employed with PricewaterhouseCoopers.
understand something, he came in and asked me about it. We went over the material."
"Tim is very focused," she said.
Since attending high school, Duffy has enjoyed accounting; he finally decided to pursue it as a career. He will cash in on years of schooling and hard work after he graduates and begins a job at PricewaterhouseCoopers, an international accounting firm with its local office at 20th and Market streets in Philadelphia.
"I worked as an intern last summer in the tax department there, and after the internship ended, they extended me an offer for full-time employment once I graduated" recalls Duffy.
"I fit in great with the people at PwC," he says. "I felt I had a good connection with all of the people in the firm. I really sensed that I fit well with PwC's culture."
Duffy is also an athlete, and since freshman year, he has rowed for La Salle's crew team. Although he was admittedly not the greatest at the sport, Duffy enjoyed the exercise and challenge of crew.
But in order to maintain his high grades, Duffy reluctantly left the team this past year to concentrate on schoolwork.
"It was a hard decision," he explains, "because I had started since freshman year, so it became a big part of my life. I really enjoy the sport though, and I would like to row for a club team for fun after I graduate."
Duffy has many goals, including learning more about his profession.
"Hopefully, with working at PwC, my knowledge of accounting will increase so that I can move up the ranks. My ultimate goal is to one day become a partner in the firm," says Duffy.
Great expectations. But his passion to achieve does not end with his professional life.
"As of right now, I am unable to drive," Duffy says. "But I feel that one day I will be able to. With ail of the new technology continually developing, anything is possible."
It took her eight years, but La Salle employee Wanda Mayhugh, '04 (right), earned her degree in social work from La Salle in January and "walked" at this May's Commencement ceremony. Sharing the moment with her are her daughter, Shereese Pearsall, '02 (center), who traveled from Atlanta to see her mom in cap and gown, and Joanne Holmes, '04 (left), a good friend who also graduated with a degree in social work.
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LA SALLE MAGAZINE
By The Numbers:
|_ 256 The number of graduates who received their degrees at La Salle University's 141st Commencement Exercises on May 9. 2004
Q_ 4 Tne number "f graduates who were accepted to health professional schools, including 12 to medical school, one to podiatry school, and one to dental school
98 ^ne percentage rate of acceptance of La Salle alumni into medical school over the past 20 years
Chair of La Salle University's Board of Trustees James J. Lynch, '71 (left), and La Salle President Brother Michael J. McGinniss, F.S.C., Ph.D., 70 (right), confer an honorary Doctor of Humane Letters upon Brother Armin Altamirano Luistro F.S.C. Br. Armin was recently appointed President of De La Salle University in Manila and is the former Provincial of the Brothers' District of the Philippines. He is noted for his work creating education ministries that serve the poor in the Philippines, focusing especially on the needs of at-risk street children. He also helped to lead the expansion of the Brothers' missionary presence in the Pacific-Southeast Asia region and is founding co-chair of the De La Salle Catholic University of Manado in Indonesia.
Peter Terpeluk Jr., 70, U.S. Ambassador to Luxembourg, received an honorary Doctor of Humane Letters at La Salle's Commencement. Ambassador Terpeluk began his career in public service as a town manager in two southeastern Pennsylvania townships and later joined the U.S. Small Business Administration, where he led trade missions to the United Kingdom, Russia, and China, and rose to the position of Acting Deputy Administrator. Prior to his diplomatic appointment in April 2002, he served as Executive Director of the Greater Philadelphia Economic Corporation, where he worked closely with government and business leaders to spur economic growth in the Philadelphia region.
IN THE FOOTSTEPS OF GIANTS
Tom McAllister Accepted into Prestigious Iowa Writers' Workshop BY JORDAN BURKE, '04
John Irving. Flannery O'Connor. Raymond Carver. Tom McAllister. Tom McAllister? What do they have in common? The first three are well-known writers who graduated from the University of Iowa's Writers' Workshop. McAllister, a 2004 graduate, was recently accepted into the prestigious Iowa program.
"After I got accepted, a professor [who also graduated from Iowa's writing program] told me that statistically, the Iowa Writers' Workshop is harder to get into than M.I.T.," McAllister said. "It was a huge relief. After being rejected by three other schools, I was losing confidence. I guess I was relieved at first, followed by a rush of excitement."
"The only reason I applied to Iowa was because Dr. [Vincent] Kling ['68] made me, and I figured it was worth a shot," he said.
"Admission to a highly coveted place in the Iowa Writers' Workshop is based mainly on a writing sample, so it's obvious that Tom's ability is what won him this distinction," says Kling, a professor of English at La Salle. "Having worked with Tom on the writing project that earned him his admission, I can testify — as a reader only, but a very avid one — to the skill that brought content and form to such a level of mature artistry."
This past semester at La Salle, McAllister worked with Kling to complete an honors project that included five short stories. He sent in three of those stories, "The Burial," "Sleeping Troubles," and "Cooking the Sacred Cow," with his application to Iowa.
McAllister's stories are set in Roxborough in different time periods. He says that nothing really extraordinary ever happens, nothing really shocking.
"I try to get a picture for real life and show it to the reader," he says. "Then I just leave the judgments up to the reader."
"Sleeping Troubles," for example, is about a female oncology nurse who is forced to deal with the death of her husband when he is diagnosed with cancer.
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(From left) Tom McAllister, '04, and Stephen Smith, Ph.D., Associate Professor of English
McAllister says he has been writing since high school, but not seriously. He began to focus more on his creative writing during his junior year of college, and switched his major to the English Department's writing program.
"I like the feeling I get right after I finish writing something I think is good," McAllister says. "My family always says it's good. But it's an even better feeling when an unbiased reader thinks it's really good. That's a great feeling."
McAllister says that his writing is greatly influenced by the novelist Chris Offutt. Justin Cronin, a former professor of creative writing at La Salle University, recommended Offutt to him.
"You can definitely see Offutt's influence in the dialogue of my writing," McAllister said.
McAllister's family has also encouraged his writing.
"My dad used to read a lot, like five or six books a week," McAllister remembers. "He would get me reading them after he was finished, and then I started writing on my own. I guess I realized I might be pretty good and went from there."
The support of the La Salle faculty has greatly helped McAllister.
"Dr. Kling is just great for encouragement," McAllister said. "He keeps you focused and working hard. He also had some really great ideas to improve my stories. Most importantly, though, he is an educated friend who really helps me out."
McAllister begins school at Iowa this fall. He has many goals for the future.
"Ultimately, I would like to write," he says, "but I plan to teach creative writing in college so that I can have free time to continue my writing and also financial security. I have to pay the bills."
SUMMER 2004
21
news
President's Cup 2004: A Hit Once Again
More than 230 alumni, parents, and friends of La Salle turned out for the sixth annual President's Cup Golf Tournament at the Blue Bell Country Club on April 19. All proceeds from the event— which totaled $222,000— benefit scholarship and financial aid resources for La Salle students. Hosted and sponsored by Elmer F. (Bud) Hansen Jr., '58, and Bud Hansen III, '90, M.B.A. '96, the day's events included golf, team prizes, individual skills awards, live and silent auctions, and a raffle drawing. Nicholas A. Giordano, '65, served as master of ceremonies.
La Salle's Newest Graduate Program: History
Courtney Altemus, '90, M.B.A. '96, lines up a putt during the tournament.
La Salle University's History Department will offer a brand new master's degree program beginning this fall. The program has two tracks: the traditional M.A. in History and an M.A. in History for Educators.
"The timing was right," said Charles Desnoyers, Ph.D., Chair of the History Department. "Plus, many of our history students have told us they love La Salle, and they want to stay here. Now, with this degree, they can."
George Stow, Ph.D., will direct the program. The curriculum was designed by Desnoyers, Stow, and Francis Ryan, '69, Ed.D., Director of La Salle's American Studies Program.
"What makes this program unique is that we're blending traditional readings courses with primary-source-based, historical analysis courses," Ryan said. "And the track for educators is not just
1111 '■■■■m "■«»»■'■ n.wii.1* Brother Michael]. McBinniss, F.S.C., Ph.D.. 10, La Salle President, poses with the winning foursome. (From left) Pat Murray, '99, PatKillian, TedFriel, and Kirk Brinton.
for teachers. The degree can be used by museum specialists, archivists, and those planning careers in public history."
Desnoyers, Stow, and Ryan say that the La Salle program is one of the first graduate history programs in the nation that has core requirements in oral history, visual history, material culture, and archival analysis, in addition to traditional readings courses.
The education track is also innovative, combining the content of history — the historical works themselves — with methods of how to teach history. The track will help middle and secondary school teachers maintain active certification status and reach the "highly qualified teacher" category.
The program offers concentrations in American history, European history, and world history.
Tom McSowan, 76 (center, holding paddle), bids for an item during the live auction.
22
LA SALLE MAGAZINE
SLHS Receives Foundation Support, Other Grants Awarded
A local charitable foundation has awarded La Salle University's Speech- Language-Hearing Science (SLHS) Program a three-year grant of approximately $300,000 to educate speech-language pathology graduate students to work with the region's oral- deaf community and to establish a link between the La Salle and the Clarke Pennsylvania Auditory/Oral Center in Bryn Mawr, Pa. An oral-deaf person is someone who uses speech rather than sign language as his or her major mode of communication.
"Few programs in Speech-Language Pathology in the nation and none in this area educate Speech-Language Pathology students specifically to care for the needs of the oral-deaf community," says Barbara Amster, Ph.D., Director of La Salle's SLHS Program.
The grant will be used to provide partial scholarships for SLHS students; fund a full-time faculty member who will have a joint appointment at the Clarke Pennsylvania Auditory/Oral Center and La Salle; provide teaching and laboratory equipment; design and implement a course to educate students on meeting the needs of the oral-deaf community; and transform existing undergraduate Speech-Language-Hearing Science courses into a Web-based, distributive learning format.
One aim of the grant is to educate more Speech-Language Pathology students on how to facilitate speech in deaf individuals using a process called the auditory-oral approach. "It's a wonderful method, but Speech- Language Pathologists usually aren't trained in this technique, so we want to increase the number of persons who can serve the needs of the oral-deaf community," Amster said. "Given the appropriate educational opportunities, Speech-Language Pathologists who are trained in the auditory-oral method can
make a huge difference in the speech communication capabilities of oral-deaf people."
NEWCOMBE FOUNDATION
In addition, The Charlotte W. Newcombe Foundation has awarded La Salle University a $29,000 grant to provide financial assistance for non-traditional women students over the age of 25 who are halfway through their college education. Five thousand dollars of the grant is intended as a challenge to the University to seek an equal amount in matching funds from other donors to build the existing Newcombe Endowed Scholarship Fund.
Elizabeth Heenan, Director of La Salle's Continuing Studies Program, said, "Through my personal experience, I know that this grant has made a significant difference in the lives of our women students. It enables them to continue on with their goal of obtaining a college degree."
"This grant is more than just being recognized for academic achievement. It really makes a difference as to whether or not these students are able to continue their education," Heenan added.
Each year, about 20 women students at La Salle receive aid from the Newcombe Foundation. Since 1981, the foundation has provided nearly $500,000 in grants to La Salle students.
THE SALLIE MAE FUND
The University also received a $20,000 grant from The Sail ie Mae Fund of the Community Foundation for the National Capital Region to provide scholarship assistance to students in La Salle's Bilingual Undergraduate Studies for Collegiate Advancement (BUSCA) Program during the 2004-05 academic year.
BUSCA (which means "to search for"
in Spanish) is designed to provide students who primarily speak Spanish with the opportunity to pursue a university education while gradually learning English. Students take their "content" courses for the first two years in Spanish, while they take (for credit) English as a Second Language. They are then able to begin taking other regular university courses in English. Students will receive an associate's degree and are automatically accepted at La Salle to continue for their bachelor's degree.
La Salie to Offer Graduate Psychology Classes at Gwynedd- Mercy College
La Salle University and Gwynedd-Mercy College officials recently signed an agreement to offer La Salle's Master of Arts in Clinical-Counseling Psychology program at Gwynedd-Mercy College beginning in Fall 2004. Gwynedd-Mercy already offers La Salle's M.B.A. Program on its campus. From left (front row): Dr. Denise Wilbur. Vice President for Academic Affairs, Gwynedd-Mercy College; and Thomas Keagy. Dean of the School of Arts and Sciences. La Salle University; (back row) Walter Griffin. Vice President for Finance. Gwynedd-Mercy College; and Dr. John Rooney '46, Director of the Master of Arts program in Clinical- Counseling Psychology. La Salle University and Gwynedd-Mercy.
SUMMER 2004
23
La Salle Student Government Lauded as Nationwide Model
The La Salle University Students' Government Association (S.G.A.) received top honors as Student Leader magazine's Spring 2004 cover story. The magazine called the association a model for other student governments nationwide.
"La Salle's S.G.A. has made extraordinary progress in building relationships with their administration this year," the magazine's editors said in a statement. "With a population of only 5,500, the strength of La Salle's community depends on students having close, personal bonds with faculty and staff members. Joseph J. Cicala [Ph.D., 79, Dean of Students and S.G.A. advisor] has worked together with S.G.A. officials to strengthen the relationships between the students and the administration."
The magazine's statement also quoted Bill Wiegman, '04, S.G.A. president for the 2003-04 school year: "Students come to La Salle because they see that they can build these sorts of relationships with the faculty,"
Wiegman said. "We just take those relationships to another level with staff and administration."
Student Leader also noted that La Salle's S.G.A. "realized that the majority of La Salle's population didn't grasp how much work administrators were doing on the students' behalf. In response, S.G.A. helped create a weekly newsletter of meeting minutes and announcements to keep students informed about what's going on in the administration."
Frank Ciaburn, '04, who was an executive S.G.A. senator, was quoted as saying, "Many students recognize that the people running their school are working for them and not against them."
Students Support Rape Kit Awareness
Sometimes all it takes is a little exposure to get people involved in a cause. Mary Ellen Balchunis-Harris, Assistant Professor of Political Science at La Salle University, showed her Women In Politics class a segment of The Oprah Winfrey Show that depicted a national problem: unexamined rape kits sitting on police department shelves while rape suspects continued to prey upon new victims. Rape kits contain DNA and other potential material evidence gathered from a rape victim.
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Moved by what they saw, the class took it upon themselves to organize an event to create awareness and raise funds to analyze rape kits more efficiently and effectively. On April 16, 2004, in conjunction with Women Organized Against Rape, Balchunis- Harris' class hosted a conference entitled Saving Women's Lives: Support Funding to Process Rape Kits, on campus.
Speakers included Lt. Michael Boyle of the Philadelphia Police Department's Special Victims Unit, and Lynn Abraham, District Attorney of Philadelphia, who explained the power of DNA evidence and the importance of quickly processing rape kits so that suspects are apprehended before they attack again. The conference raised awareness on campus, and the profits went to various organizations and the Office of the District Attorney to support rape kit analysis.
■
25TH ANNUAL HOLROYD AWARD AND LECTURE
Honoring
George Isajiw, M.D., '86
2004 Holroyd Award Recipient
Presenting Mark R. Stein, M.D., '64
"Legacy of the Good Doctor"
■
Friday, October 15
7:00 p.m. Award and Lecture
Dan Rodden Theatre
Sponsored by Independence Blue Cross, Keystone Mercy Health Plan, and Orthopaedic Surgery and Rehab. Assoc, P.C.
24
LA SALLE MAGAZINE
La Salle Fraternity Helps Family in Need
A comedy show held by La Salle University's Sigma Phi Lambda fraternity raised nearly $2,000 for the family of Alexis Santiago, a La Salle student from the Olney neighborhood who died from injuries sustained in a house fire last fall.
According to the police, the fire was caused by arson. Santiago and several relatives perished, and the home was destroyed. For a short while, the surviving family members were living in a church basement.
Santiago, a freshman in La Salle's Bilingual Undergraduate Studies for Collegiate Advancement (BUSCA) Program at the time, died three days after the fire. The BUSCA program is designed for Spanish-speaking students
who want to gradually learn English while earning their bachelor's degrees.
"Since 1935, Sigma Phi Lambda has been a La Salle fraternity," said fraternity member Adam Voisard. "Alexis Santiago was a student in the La Salle BUSCA Program, and, thus, a member of the Lasallian community. When we became aware that the Santiago family, members of the Lasallian community, were in need, we decided to provide whatever help we could to the family."
Three comedians — Chris Morris, Eric Roth, and David Kayle — performed at the University's Dan Rodden Theatre. In addition to ticket sales, the fraternity accepted contributions to help the family.
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TOM GOLA ARENA
La Salle's new athletics logo was recently added to the Tom Gola Arena floor in Hayman Hall. The center-court version, which carries on the tradition of blue and gold, features the Explorer mascot along with the University name.
Band concert ■ Lunch under the big tenl
ident's Reception ■ Dancing through the
des ■ Family Mass and brunch ■ Honors
ocation ■ Student group performana
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Alumni Celebrate at Reunion Weekend 2004
Over 525 alumni and guests gathered on May 14 and 15 for Reunion 2004. The weekend's festivities, which included campus tours, class dinners, live music, and a simulated Night in Vegas, kept all generations entertained.
Reunion Weekend kicked off on Friday night with a concert on the main quad featuring the band Speed. It was a hit with the young alumni crowd. Then, the casual atmosphere of Saturday's family picnic and kids' carnival was a main attraction for the many alumni who brought their families back to campus.
Themed class dinners enabled alumni to catch up with old friends while sitting down to a beautifully prepared meal. The 50th, 45th, 40th, and 25th reunion classes enjoyed fine dining at the elegant plated dinners selected for them, while the rest of the classes celebrated New Orleans-style with a festive Mardi Gras buffet, complete with Baton Rouge rib eye and bourbon chocolate pecan tarts.
"Our class had a great turnout," said
Jim Morris, '79, Senior Vice President at SEI Investments, who celebrated his 25th reunion. "I saw a lot of old friends, and thought everything was really well done."
It was the first time Chris Bentz, '89, teacher and coach at Lancaster Catholic High School, who celebrated his 15th year reunion, attended reunion festivities. He and his wife arrived just in time for Saturday's family picnic and took advantage of the overnight accommodations provided by the University.
"It was a great 24-hour experience. The food and activitie were excellent," Bentz said.
"My wife and I loved the Night in Vegas. We had a great time, and we aren't going to wait as long to come back."
Plans are already underway for Reunion 2005. Please contact the Alumni Office at 215.951.1535 to get involved.
26 LA SALLE MAGAZINE
Renowned Professor of Philosophy, John Caputo, '62, Accepts Prestigious Appointment at Syracuse University
After 36 years as a professor of
philosophy at Villanova University,
renowned philosopher John Caputo, '62,
will join the faculty
at Syracuse
University as the
Thomas J. Watson
Professor of
Religion and
Humanities.
Caputo's work in the field of continental European philosophy has earned him national recognition. In all, he has authored or edited 14 books and published more than 100 articles and book chapters.
his thought have appeared.
According to Richard B. Pilgrim, Associate Professor and Chair of the Religion Department at Syracuse, "This is a real coup for Syracuse University and the Department of Religion. Jack works at the intersection of religion and philosophy. His name and notoriety will attract students in both disciplines."
After earnmg'his bachelor's degree from La Salle, Caputo went on to
In the past three years, two books about earn his master.s degree from v,||anova
and his doctorate from Bryn Mawr College. He has spent his entire professional career at Villanova, and is responsible for starting its doctoral program in philosophy in 1993.
Although he taught in Villanova's philosophy department, Caputo always had a special interest in the tradition of religious theory and the philosophy of religion.
"It is difficult to pull up roots after 36 years," Caputo said. "But I am looking forward to teaching a new audience at Syracuse. Rather than only teaching students earning philosophy degrees, I will be teaching students earning doctorates in religion as well."
"It should be a nice adventure," Caputo added.
"I have a good six or seven teaching years left in me," Caputo said. "My appointment at Syracuse is a wonderful thing to do at the end of my career."
140 VeWX #rui StAUe&ting ... with VW" StApport
Amanda Hartman, '04
Age: 20 Major: Biology
La Salle Awards:
President of La Salle Ambassadors
Academic and Athletic Scholarships
Kathryn Hartman '07
Age: 18 Major: Integrated
Science, Business, and Technology
La Salle Awards:
Academic Scholarship
Swimming Scholarship
Paris L. McLean, '04
Age: 22 Major: Elementary and
Special Education La Salle Awards:
Warren E. Smith Scholarship Recipient Alpha Epsilon Alumni Honor Society 2003 Good Works Team by AFCA for his dedication and commitment to community service
Thank yen* to all these- who C0ntrH?t*te4 fe hie- look- -forward fo everyone's Support for
Serena Kaschak, '04
Age: 28 Major: Psychology
Full-time Mental Health Counselor at
Friends Hospital
La Salle Award:
Alpha Epsilon Delta Pre-Med Honor
Society
the- ZOOZ-ZOOQ- Annual fund, the 7-00^-2005 Annual Fvxnd.
SUMMER 2004
27
LET US KNOW ABOUT A FUTURE
EXPLORER!
Please complete as much of the following information as possible about a student you would like to encourage to attend La Salle University. You can complete the form and return it to:
La Salle University Office of Admission 1900 West Olney Avenue Philadelphia, PA 19141
or fax it to 215.951.1656. We appreciate your support — the University needs your involvement to reach our enrollment goals!
Student Information
Name
Address
City, State, Zip Date of Birth _ Phone
High School
Year of Graduation GPA
SAT/ACT score
Gender: Male Female Academic Interest(s)
Alumnus Information
Name of Alumnus
Year of Graduation
Address
City, State, Zip
Phone
Relationship to Student
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 16
ENGLISH DEPARTMENT REUNION
On April 4, 2004, the English Department hosted a get-together for alumni and past and present faculty to reconnect. The department's first reunion was held five years ago. Based on the success of these two events, the department intends to continue hosting reunions in five-year increments. This year, an estimated 150 guests attended the event held in La Salle's Ballroom. Top left: Kevin J. Harty, Ph.D., Chair of the English Department; Tom Keagy, Ph.D., Dean of Arts and Sciences; and Carmella laria, '00, get reacquainted. Bottom: The event drew alums from five decades.
28
LA SALLE MAGAZINE
Flubacher Award
In April, the Economics Department presented its annual Flubacher Scholarship, which was established in 1996 by alumni, faculty, and staff who were inspired by the example of the late Dr. Joseph Flubacher, '35, a former La Salle professor of economics. Besides high scholastic achievement, the winner of this award must demonstrate a commitment to social peace and justice.
This year two recipients were honored: Army Sgt. Sean Berk, '04, the 2003 honoree, and Thomas DiCamillo, '05, this year's honoree, both economics majors. Berk was unable to attend last year's ceremony because he was serving his tour of duty in the Middle East.
DiCamillo worked this past summer as an intern for the U.S. Department of Commerce in Washington, D.C. At La Salle, among numerous other activities, he has been a member of Peer Educators, an organization run by
the Division of Student Affairs, since his freshman year.
"I know that no matter what career awaits me after college, I will bring to the job my Catholic values, which have always brought with them a responsibility to speak up or act on social issues," DiCamillo said.
Berk's deployment to Iraq gave him a unique perspective on his commitment to social justice.
"To go to Iraq, I had to delay my studies by two years, but there I got an education that cannot be replicated in a classroom," Berk said. "During my 'study abroad,' my thoughts frequently turned to Dr. Flubacher, his life, and what being the recipient of his scholarship meant to me. And what it means to me is that one person can ' make a difference in the world."
Honors Bestowed on Alumni at Annual Accounting Awards Dinner
JACK REARDON YOUNG ALUMNUS AWARD
Mary Jeanne Welsh, Ph.D. (left). Chair of the Accounting Department, and Jack Rear don. Ed.D. '59 (right). Emeritus Professor of Accounting, pose with Sara Chiappa O'Brien, C.P.A.. '98, the recipient of this year's Jack Reardon Young Alumnus/a Award, at the University's 38th annual Beta Alpha Accounting Honors Society and the Accounting Association 's Awards Dinner on April 22.
MICHAEL A. DEANGELIS AWARD
At the same event, fellow accounting graduates (from left) Ralph J. Mauro, Esq., '84, a partner at Kleinbard, Bell & Brecker, LLP; James V. Morris, 19, Senior Vice President at SEI Investments; and Kyle V Maryanski. C.P.A., '91, a partner at PricewaterhouseCoopers, LLP, were honored this year with the Michael A. DeAngelis Award for outstanding achievement in their professions.
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At La Salle's Beta Gamma Sigma induction ceremony on April I. three distinguished alumni were honored for their achievements in business. Their accomplishments exemplify honor, wisdom, and earnestness as signified in Beta Gamma Sigma. (From left) John W. Turner Jr., '89. President and Chief Executive Officer ofJ.W. Turner Industries; David P. Carherry, 14. Vice President of Finance, Health and Fitness at Johnson & Johnson Healthcare Systems, Inc.; Gregory 0. Bruce. M.B.A. '81. Dean of the School of Business; and Thomas J. (Tim) Fitzpatrick, 12, M.B.A. '81, President and Chief Operating Officer of Sallie Mae, Inc. Turner was a 2003 chapter honoree. but was unable to attend last year's event.
Beta Gamma Sigma Named Outstanding Chapter
La Salle's chapter of Beta Gamma Sigma was named the outstanding chapter in the United States and the world for 2004 out of nearly 400 chapters internationally. The honor society recognizes the highest-ranking students from AACSB International- accredited business programs.
For this recognition, the society provides a $1,500 scholarship to a La Salle student in the School of Business.
"Beta Gamma Sigma requires only academic performance to be inducted, but we want our students to give back to the University community," said Susan Borkowski, Ph.D., a La Salle professor of accounting and the faculty advisor for the La Salle chapter. "We ask inductees to mentor freshman students, and we ask graduate students to participate in our annual Banker's Day event to judge freshman teams' business plans. Our students deserve it, because it requires so much beyond studying."
SUMMER 2004
29
sports
From Student-Athletes to Professional Coaches
BY MEAGHANN SCHULTE AND KALE BEERS, '95
Many La Salle University alumni who participated in athletics during their college days have gone on to be successful in their professional lives. A good number of these alums have used their experiences as student-athletes at La Salle to get them to where they are today.
Explorers are represented all over the world in athletics. From swimming to basketball, broadcasting to coaching, La Salle has had success in aiding student-athletes to pursue careers in the athletic world. The following are just two success stories:
Cheryl Reeve, '88
"If I hadn't played collegiate basketball, I would not have been turned on to coaching the sport, and be where I am today," said Cheryl Reeve, when asked how playing basketball at La Salle has influenced her professional life. Reeve is the assistant coach of the Charlotte Sting in the Women's National Basketball Association (WNBA).
While at La Salle, Reeve played basketball for four years, and had a one-year stint as a Softball player. She left her mark on the Explorer women's basketball program, recording 420 total assists, making her fifth all-time in La Salle history. She is seventh all-time in La Salle historv in career steals with 171. In her four- year career, Reeve started in 110 games, which des her for second all-time. She is fourth in games played with 116.
"The NCAA mandates that you can only plav four years of college basketball, or I would have plaved forever," said Reeve. "Luckily, Coach [John] Miller kept me on board as his graduate assistant, which was the first step in getting me to where I am today in coaching."
Reeve is in her fourth season in the WNBA. Prior to coaching professionally, she was the head coach for the Indiana State Sycamores from 1995-99, and was an assistant at George Washington University for five seasons. "Coaching is a means to continue being a part of what I love," Reeve said.
Jami Wilus, '02
Jami Wilus holds five of the six career records in the La Salle women's lacrosse history books. She played the most games (60), accumulated the most points (231 ), tallied 230 goals and 78 assists, and leads the school in draw controls with 90. Wilus not only holds these records, but she dominates the categories with gaps of over 100 in points, 135 in goals, 48 in assists, and 42 in draw controls.
Wilus is just finishing up her second year as the head women's lacrosse coach at North Penn High School, her alma mater. She feels, "The combination of academics and athletics at La Salle taught me so much about myself and prepared me for the future. Lacrosse has helped me in manv ways professionally; the discipline, time management, and determination that I used for lacrosse has prepared me for coaching and teaching, while opening a window of opportunity for me in my professional life."
30 LA SALLE MAGAZINE
notes
19 4 6 Rev. Sidney C. Burgoyne (B.A.), Pastor Emeritus at St. John Fisher, Boothwyn, Pa., celebrated his 50th year in the priesthood.
194 9 Dr. Joseph P. Mooney (B.A.), Professor Emeritus of Economics at La Salle, celebrated 50 years of marriage to Maria Elena Mooney on May 22, 2004. Five of their seven children are also graduates of La Salle.
19 51 Richard J. Daisley, C.P.A. (B.S.) of
Drexel Hill, Pa., co-judged a regional accounting competition hosted by Beta Alpha Psi, the national scholastic and professional fraternity for financial information students.
19 5 3 Br. Kevin Strong, F.S.C. (B.A.) was
appointed President of Cardinal Gibbons High School, Baltimore, Md.
Br. Philip Whitman, F.S.C. (B.A.) was
appointed Managing Editor of the Beltsville News, an all-volunteer monthly community newspaper in Beltsville, Md.
19 5 8 Br. Malachy Broderick, F.S.C. (B.A.)
celebrated his golden jubilee in religious life at the Church of St. Bartholomew, Bethesda, Md.
Robert Lydon (B.S.) of Lansdale, Pa., a retired federal acting regional inspector general, does part-time investigations for federal agencies such as the National Security Agency. He is a freelance writer whose most recent article on Bing Crosby was published in the October-November edition of Irish American Magazine.
19 5 9 Daniel J. Colombi (B.A.) received the Outstanding District Service Award from the American College of Obstetricians & Gynecologists in May 2004. He is an ordained deacon, Elder-Trustee of First Presbyterian Church of Haddonfield, and is married to the mayor of Haddonfield, N.J.
Br. Hugh Maguire, F.S.C. (B.A.) received the Pro Ecclesiae et Pontifice medal in recognition of his long service in the port of Philadelphia.
Lt. Col. Anthony "Tony" L Sherman, '81. of Pottstown, Pa., was honored posthumously on June 12, 2004 at the Philadelphia Memorial Armed Forces Reserve Center located in Northeast Philadelphia, where a hall was dedicated in his name. A graduate of La Salle s ROTC program. Sherman was a U.S. Army reservist with the 304th Civil Affairs Brigade, based in Philadelphia, Pa. In February 2003, his brigade, known as "Task Force Warrior, " was deployed to Iraq. On Aug. 21, 2003. he died fulfilling his duty at Camp Arifjan in Kuwait. He is survived by his wife, Lisa; his 9-year-old son. Brant; and his mother, Joan C. Meyer, IB. John McSrail, 'B9. also a graduate of the ROTC program at La Salle, represented the University at the dedication ceremony. (From left) Brig. Ben. Steven 1. Hashem, Commander of the 353rd Civil Affairs Command; Lisa Ann Sherman, widow of Lt. Col. Sherman; and Col. William Beard. Commander of the 304th Civil Affairs Brigade at the dedication of Sherman Hall on June 12. Photo credits; © John McCrail/johnmcgrail.com
Above is the plaque that hangs in the hall dedicated to the late Lt. Col. Sherman at the Philadelphia Memorial Armed Forces Reserve Center.
Hon. Jerome A. Zaleski (B.S.) retired from the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia in December 2003. He became the Administrative Judge of the Family Court, distinguishing himself in the domestic relations and juvenile branches of family court.
19 6 2 John Caputo (B.A.), a renowned philosopher, will join the College of Arts and Sciences at Syracuse University as the Thomas J. Watson Professor of Religion and Humanities this fall.
Hugh A. Gilmore (B.A.) of Philadelphia, Pa., owns and operates Gilmore's Book Shop in Chestnut Hill, Pa.
196 3 Harry A. Connelly (B.S.) was
appointed to the Zoning Hearing Board in Buckingham Township. He is a retired vice president for Philadelphia Gas Works.
19 6 4 Patrick J. Hogan (B.S.) of Crownsville, Md., was named Assistant Director of United States Peace Corps Security.
19 6 5 William F. Bryan III (B.S.) of Convent Station, N.J., retired from Hartford Financial Services after 38 years.
Domenick D'Orazio (B.A.) of Philadelphia, Pa., was elevated to second-degree black belt in the art of Kempo Karate.
196 7 Louis J. Beccaria, Ph.D. (B.A.)
accepted the Philadelphia Association of Fundraising Professionals (AFP) Award on behalf of the Phoenixville Community Health Foundation.
Anthony LeStorti (B.A.) is the Executive Consultant for Ideatects, Inc. in Doylestown, Pa. He recently published When You're Asked to Do the Impossible: Principles of Business Teamwork and Leadership from the U.S. Army's Elite Rangers (Lyons Press, 2003). The book synthesizes lessons from
SUMMER 2004
31
his background as an airborne ranger, college professor, and management consultant.
19 6 8 Dr. James J. Clarke (B.A.) of
Villanova, Pa., was appointed to the Board of Directors for Chester Valley Bancorp, Inc.
Paul Vignone (B.A.) of Allenhurst, N.J., is one of two general agents responsible for combining two top New York agencies of Penn Mutual Life Insurance Company to be a "full service" financial services firm that provides on-site support for its insurance and financial professionals. The new combined agency is known as Vignone- Grossman PCP, The Planning Center for Professionals, Inc.
1 9 B 9 George J. Edwards, Esq. (B.S.) of
Katy, Texas, co-founded Osyka Corporation, an exploration and production company producing assets in Mass., La., and Texas. He and his wife Tonye recently had a son, George Nathan. They also have a 3-year-old daughter, Gladys Emmanuella.
John Gartland (B.A.) is putting the skills he acquired during 31 years with the Drug Enforcement Agency to use as he oversees security at Charlotte/Douglas International Airport. He is the Federal Security Director for the Transportation Security Administration.
Robert Walker, R.N. (B.A.) of Cherry Hill, N.J., received Episcopal Hospital Nursing Excellence Award and Nurse of the Year Award for 2004.
19 7 1 David M. Gillece (B.A.), Executive Vice President of Colliers Pmkard, Baltimore, Md., was inducted into the Calvert Hall Alumni Hall of Fame. He was recognized for his commitment to Lasallian ideals, leadership, and professional achievement.
Geroge W. Kletzel Jr. (B.A.) was ordained a permanent deacon for the Archdiocese of Philadelphia by Cardinal Justin Rigali on June 6, 2004.
Vincent A. Lofink (B.S.) of Bear, Del., was honored at the 50th anniversary of the University of Delaware's M.B.A Program as a member of "The Lerner Fabulous 50," a prestigious group of M.B.A. alumni. State
Representative Lofink was selected for his contributions to the organization and the community in which he lives.
George Tomezsko (B.A.) of Hollywood, Pa., wrote and self-published Civil War Fragments (Southern Heritage Publishing, Inc.). The book discusses three little-known battles and incidents from the Civil War. The highlight of the book is a detailed account of the heroism of the Corps of Cadets (mostly teenagers) from the Virginia Military Institute during the Battle of New Market.
19 7 2 Br. John McDonnell, F.S.C. (B.A.), a
missionary in Ethiopia, returned to the U.S. to assume the position of District Development Director for the Brothers' Baltimore Province. He succeeds Br. Patrick Ellis, F.S.C, former La Salle president.
James Fenerty (B.A.) of Warrington, Pa., was presented the John J. McMenamin Memorial Award by the Philadelphia Basketball Old Timers Association. His career win total at Germantown Academy, Philadelphia, Pa., is now 350. Many of his players are now in Division I college ranks and the N.B.A.
John E. Tomaszewski (B.A.) of
Abmgton, Pa., was honored in the "Top Doctors" issue of Philadelphia Magazine as one of the region's best practitioners in the specialty of pathology.
19 7 4 Eugene G. Cattle (B.S.) received the Sallie Mae/Nellie Mae Sales and Marketing Award for the third time in four years. He is a higher education consultant handling regional and national accounts in the Richmond, Va., area.
Madeline Janowski, C.P.A. (B.S.) of
Philadelphia, Pa., a director in the tax department of Asher & Company, Ltd., is the recipient of the 2004 Mordecai Gerson Meritorious Service Award. This award is presented to a council member with a minimum of five years of membership who has rendered extraordinary service to further the work of the council.
Anthony B. Quinn, Esq. (B.S.) led a five member sweep of the Springfield Township School Board elections. He was unanimously elected president of the school board at the reorganization meeting.
19 7 5 Michael G. Dell'Orto (B.A.) of Wilton, N.H., is co-author of Images of America: Wilton, Temple and Lyndeborough (Arcadia Publishing Co., 2003), a history-in-pictures of three towns in the Monadnock region of New Hampshire.
Robert E. Hanrahan Jr. (B.S.) of West Chester, Pa., has been appointed to the Board of Directors of the Civil War and Underground Railroad Museum of Philadelphia as an ex- officio member.
Rev. Benedict E. Kapa (B.A.) was reassigned as pastor of St. James the Apostle Church in Clarksburg, W.V.
Edward J. Mesunas (B.A.) of Lafayette Hill, Pa., was appointed Deputy Sheriff of Montgomery County, Pa. He received the top academic award from the Pennsylvania Sheriff Association upon completion of the Commission on Crime and Delinquency's 12th training class, where he also served as class president.
19 7 6 David L. Bader (B.S.) of Burke, Va., retired from the Central Intelligence Agency after 27 years of employment. He is now an expert consultant for Spectal, LLC, a national defense contractor.
Paul Schneider (B.A.) of Langhorne, Pa., was named one of the top three public relations professionals in the cable communications industry by CableFAX Magazine, an industry publication.
19 7 7 John lannello (B.S., M.B.A. '84) was
elected Resident Vice President of the Harleysvi lie Group Inc. New Jersey office. He oversees all property/casualty operations throughout the state.
Rev. Vytautas Volertas (B.S.) of Maspeth, N.Y., studied in Rome, Italy, at the Pontifice Collegio Beda.
19 7 9 Br. Thomas Bondra, F.S.C. (B.A.)
celebrated his 25th anniversary as a De La Salle Christian Brother at St. Gabriel's Hall, Audubon, Pa.
Jerry Dawson (B.A.) graduated from the University of Southern California with an M.F.A. in filmmaking. He is now producing and directing documentaries in the Los Angeles area.
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LA SALLE MAGAZINE
Maryclaire (McTamney) Dzik (B.A.) was
appointed Branch Manager/Broker at Weichert Realtors, Fort Washington, Pa., office. As a top producer and a recipient of numerous awards, she brings with her a reputation for providing buyers and sellers a superior level of dedicated service.
19 8 0 Carol (Louden) Beauchamp (B.S.) of
Aston, Pa., received the American Red Cross Tiffany Award for employee excellence. This award is the highest recognition that a staff member can receive. The award was for employee excellence in the professional/ technical service area.
Br. Richard Herlihy, F.S.C. (B.A.) celebrated his 25th anniversary as a De La Salle Christian Brother at a Mass at Our Mother of Consolation Church in Chestnut Hill, Pa. A reception followed at La Salle College High School, Wyndmoor, Pa., where he is a religion teacher and assistant athletic director.
19 81 Br. Kevin Dalmasse, F.S.C. (B.A.),
former Auxiliary Provincial Director of Education, has been appointed Regional Director of Education for the Brothers in the United States.
John Persichetti (B.A.) of Thousand Oaks, Calif., authored "Calibrate Your Monitor Carefully and Often" for the June issue of Audio Video Multi Media Producer magazine. Formerly with Sony Pictures, he is now a colonst for Posty Logic Studio/Hollywood. His recent high definition projects include Spy Kids 3D: Game Over and Once Upon a Time in Mexico.
Hughes A. Robinson (B.A.) of Philadelphia, Pa., retired as an equal employment opportunity investigator. He formed the Diversity and Sexual Harassment Group (DSH Group) and is conducting seminars.
Margaret (Wolper) Strouse (B.S.) owns a massage practice, Hands-On Health, in Collegeville, Pa.
Carlton A. Payne, Ph.D. (B.A.), Director of Behavioral Health for the City of Philadelphia and former child psychologist, authored Neophyte, short stories about the Youth Study Center. The book tells the stories of troubled teens who are products of the juvenile court system.
19 8 2 Br. James L Butler, F.S.C. (B.A.), a
former member of La Salle's Education Department and a University Trustee, has been appointed Auxiliary Provincial Director of Education for the Baltimore District of the Christian Brothers.
19 8 3 John A. Hediger (B.S.) of Warrington, Pa., was named General Manager of Mercedes-Benz of Wilmington, Del.
19 8 4 John R. Gimpel, D.O. (M.A. '00)
received the Golden Apple Teaching Award for teacher of the year at Georgetown University School of Medicine in Washington, D.C.
Michael Hoffman (B.A.) of Basking Ridge, N.J., is president of his computer consulting company, ClientXclient LLC.
John A. McCann (B.S.) opened his second real estate/appraisal office in Ocean City, N.J.
19 8 6 William G. Dotzman, D.O. (B.A.) lives and practices osteopathic medicine in the Tampa Bay area in Florida.
19 8 7 Rosemarie Carosella (B.A.) of
Havertown, Pa., is Director of Corporate Communications for Health Partners.
Joseph J. Forte Jr. (B.A.) of Turnersville, N.J., is the Security Director at the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania.
G. Russell Reiss III, M.D. (B.A.) is a
cardiothoracic surgeon at Salt Lake City Veterans Hospital and the University of Utah.
19 8 8 Terry Jo Ainsentein, R.N. (B.A., M.A. '97) of Bensalem, Pa., was selected for Who's Who Among America's Teachers, 2004. Her article, "Developing a Style of Interpersonal Supervision," was published in the February 23 issue of Nursing Spectrum.
Paul Krumenacker (B.S.) was appointed to the Doylestown Park and Recreation Commission. He owns an investment company, Wealth Advisory Services, Inc., in Doylestown, Pa.
David P. McShane (B.A.) of Bala Cynwyd, Pa., is the mural artist for the Silver Award presented to Health Partners for the "Respect is Healthy" series at the first annual Service Industry Advertising Awards (SIAA).
19 9 0 Christopher P. Kops (M.B.A.) of
Churchville, Pa., was appointed Vice Dean for Administration and Finance at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine.
199 1 Eugene J. Halus Jr. (B.A.), an
assistant professor of political science at Ohio University, Lancaster, Pa., teaches in three of the university's master's programs — public administration, social policy, and a
SUMMER 2004
33
general graduate degree in social science. Most of his research focuses on urban politics, neighborhoods, and economic revitalization in the city of Lancaster itself.
James J. McBride (B.S.) of Moorestown, N.J.. an institutional business development director for Turner Investment Partners, has been named a principal, which entitles him to equity ownership of the firm.
19 9 2 Suzanne Ely (B.A.) of Santa Monica, Calif., resigned her positions at The National Enquirer and Star to "enjoy life." Her plans include writing about film, music, and popular culture for national newspapers and journals, and to teach tabloid journalism (online) at The New School University.
19 9 3 Robert Conroy (B.A.) of Drexel Hill, Pa., was nominated to a second term on the Executive Board of the Middle Atlantic College Stores. He is the assistant campus store director at Philadelphia University.
Shannon Conroy (B.A.) of Timonium, Md., earned her M.A. in education from Georgian Court College in Lakewood, N.J.
Duane Swierczynski (B.A.) of Philadelphia, Pa., had his most recent books, The Encyclopedia of the FBI s Ten Most Wanted List and The Big Book 0' Beer, published in February 2004 (by Checkmark Books) and April 2004 (by Quirk Books), respectively.
Eric Toppy (B.A.) is the Director of Managed Markets Marketing and Planning for Biovail Pharmaceuticals. Inc.. in Bridgewater, N.J.
19 9 4 Howard F. Campbell (B.A.) of Gastonia, N.C.. started a consulting firm where he consults on matters of physical and personal security, as well as a wide variety of educational issues, from systems review, to headhunting, to testing.
Seann Hallisky (B.A.) of Seattle. Wash., formed the Hallisky Law Group. PLLC. providing a full range of legal services.
Paul Joseph Licata (B.S.) of New Milford, N.J.. is a retirement planning specialist with Morgan Stanley.
Christy Marrella-Davis (B.A.) of Marlton, N.J.. attended Georgetown University this summer, completing the Summer Institute
on the Constitution for the requirements for the James Madison Foundation of which she was awarded a fellowship.
19 9 5 Christina Brennan (B.A.) of New Glarus, Wis., is a sales manager with Dean Health Systems. She and her husband. Marc Ott, are enjoying their 2-year-old daughter, Caitlyn Grace.
Michael D. Donnelly (B.A.) of New Canaan, Conn., joined Professional Lines Underwriting Specialists Inc. (PLUS) as a vice president to assist in the company's continued expansion.
Paul Franco (B.A.) of Long Beach. N.Y.. spent seven months in Iraq with a Navy Seabee Unit attached to 2nd Battalion, 5th Marine Division. USMC. He returned to New York City to continue his work as a firefighter.
Br. Ernest J. Miller, F.S.C. (M.A.), a history teacher at Central Catholic High School in Pittsburgh. Pa., made his profession of Final Vows. The ceremony took place at a Eucharistic Liturgy held in the Church of St. Augustine. Washington, D.C.
William J. Ricchini (B.A.) of Philadelphia, Pa., recently had his album, Ordinary Time. selected as one of the 10 best albums by Village Voice Jazz and Pop Pol Rocco DeCicco (B.A.) played bass guitar on at least one of the songs.
1996 Nicholas Bernardo (B.A.) of Philadelphia, Pa., started a marketing consulting company specializing in helping local businesses expand.
Stephen Mann (B.A., M.B.A. '04) of Nornstown. Pa., accepted a research assistantship in the Linguistics Program at the University of South Carolina in Columbia, where he will be working on a joint M.A./Ph.D.
19 9 7 Peter C. Kleponis (M.A.) of Mont Clare. Pa., is an associate of Dr. Richard P. Fitzgibbons, M.D.. at Comprehensive Counseling Services in West Conshohocken. Pa.
Mark J. Pontzer (B.A.) of Downingtown, Pa., earned his master's degree in educational administration from Temple University. In
the fall, he will attend Widener University's School of Law.
Michael Sielski (B.A.) won first place for sports reporting, daily newspaper, in the annual journalism contest of the Keystone Pro Chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists — a contest open to all newspapers in Pennsylvania. His story was a three-day series on a tragic accident and how it changed forever the life of an in-line skater. The award was given at the Pennsylvania Newspaper Association's annual conference.
19 9 8 Tierney (McNulty) Kelly (B.A.) of Philadelphia, Pa., was promoted to Vice President of Regional Publicity. Miramax Films. She and her husband, Matthew, welcomed a son. Matthew A. Kelly IV, in December.
Michael Pelham (B.S.), Chief Strategic Planner for International Chemical Company in Philadelphia, Pa., awarded monetary prizes to students in the Communications Program at Holy Family University for participating in an editing project for the company.
19 9 9 Jeff Bedard (B.A.) of Philadelphia, Pa., will begin the Executive M.B.A. Program at the University of Pennsylvania Wharton School of Business in the fall.
Jeffrey J. Chrin, C.P.A. (B.S.) of Philadelphia, Pa., is a senior tax consultant for Deloitte Touche. He recently passed the National Association of Securities Dealers (NASD) 63 and 65 exams. He also received a Master of Taxation degree from Villanova University.
Roger Hoyle (B.A.) is in his second year of the Master of Fine Arts Program at the College of the Arts in San Francisco. He is pursuing his degree in filmmaking. He recently produced his first professional film, a commercial that promotes a new diner and is now airing on the San Francisco Comcast cable stations.
2 0 0 0 Rev. Eric M. Augenstein (B.A.) was ordained to the priesthood for service in the Archdiocese of Indianapolis, Ind. He celebrated his first Mass in his home parish of St. Jude in Indianapolis on June 6.
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LA SALLE MAGAZINE
Breaking Down Barriers: Marie Hicks, '80, and Sons
Over 30 years ago, Marie Hicks, '80, asked why Girard College, a prestigious all-boys academic boarding school, was surrounded by a tall, looming wall. She didn't like the answer she received.
"I was told the wall was to keep blacks out," she said. "And that made me angry."
She teamed up with Cecil B. Moore, who led the Philadelphia branch of the NAACP, to fight for black students to gain admission to the school.
"I wanted to do something about it, because it wasn't right," she said. "Girard College was a really good school, and my boys should have the opportunity to go there."
In 1954, the Supreme Court announced its landmark decision in the case of Brown v. Board of Education, calling for the desegregation of schools. It was then that the fight with Girard College began. The struggle to integrate the school resulted in a 14-year lawsuit and included two trips to the U.S. Supreme Court, picketing, protesting, and a visit by Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. For Hicks and her family, the struggle also included death threats and hate mail.
Hicks' son Theodore entered Girard College in September 1968 as one of four black students. Her older son Charles was admitted several months later. As students, their days were filled with harassment and hatred.
"It was hard on the boys, especially Charles, who was the only black boy in his class," she said. "But I explained to them the importance of what they were doing and why they needed to be strong."
In May 2004 — 50 years after the Brown v. Board of
Education decision — Girard College marked the 30th anniversary of its first black graduate, Charles Hicks. The entire Hicks family returned to Girard's campus where both Charles and his mother spoke of the struggles and the triumphs of their fight. Theodore graduated from Girard a few years after his brother, and was the first black valedictorian.
Marie, whom Dominic C. Cermele, Girard College President, referred to as "our own Rosa Parks" in a May 2004 Philadelphia Inquirer interview, says she fought for what she believed in and would not back down, because she knew that, in the end, her actions would touch the lives of many people.
"I live my life knowing that, if you help someone along the way, your living was not in vain," Hicks said.
Indeed. Today, Girard College welcomes all applicants regardless of race or gender.
David Pepino (B.A.) of Ardmore, Pa., joined the faculty of St. Joseph's Preparatory High School in Philadelphia teaching mathematics.
Kathleen Tanney (B.A.) of Philadelphia, Pa., was promoted to Assistant Vice President of Deposit Support with Beneficial Savings Bank.
Paul Thompson (B.S.) of Wilmington, Del., is a portfolio analyst for JP Morgan Private Bank Premium Investors Group.
2 0 01 Gregory Lyons (B.A.) of Southampton, Pa., and his band "Laguardia" were signed by Universal. They marked their release of its major-label debut with "Welcome to the Middle" at the Khyber in Philadelphia.
P. J. Hakim (B.A.) was named Director of Information Systems at J. Goodman & Associates, Inc., a food service sales and marketing company in Santa Monica, Calif.
2002 Allison L. Andreno (B.S.N.) of
Cedarhurst, N.Y., is the 2004 recipient of the Center of Nursing Excellence Award. She designed an informational brochure about cardiac telemetry that is currently distributed to all patients upon admission at North Shore University Hospital in New York.
Anastasia Joy Brown (B.A.) of Pemberton, N.J., is a services coordinator at MTV Networks in New York City.
Edward Persichetti (B.A.) of Bristol, R.I., is a studio technician and full-time cameraman for Eye-Witness News/FOX Providence. He earned his Coast Guard captain's license and is presently the captain of the Prudence Island Ferry docked in the Newport River, R.I. As owner of Persichetti Productions, he shoots and produces local merchant commercials.
Justin Peticolas (B.A.) was promoted to Retail Training Instructor for Commerce Bank's Commerce University. He will be training new hires as well as coaching and developing current employees at the university's Northfield, N.J., campus.
SUMMER 2004
35
2 0 0 3 Candice Cleere (B.A.) of Greenville, Ohio, is a law student at Catholic University of America, Washington, D.C.
T. J. Hubbard (B.A.) of Orlando, Fla., is a full- time production associate for original productions working on "What's in the Bag" and "Big Break II." He is also freelancing with The Golf Channel working in live television.
Marriages
19 9 3 Shannon Conroy (B.A.) to Douglas Ports.
19 9 4 Christy Marrella (B.A.) to Steven Davis Jr.
Heather L. Mirabelli (B.A.) to Scott Phillips.
19 9 7 Loretta Shirley (B.A.) to Timothy M. Esposito (B.A.).
Kristina Wahl (B.A.) to James Glanzman.
19 9 8 Shannon Blackburn (B.S.) to Eric Leber.
Brian Mills (B.A.) to Joanne Cislo (B.S.W.).
Amanda Smith (B.A.) to Peter Fridirici.
1999 Colin Brennan (B.A.) to Shannon
Purcell.
20 0 0 Danielle Dotsey (B.A.) to Noel
Ramirez.
Mariann Kuttler (B.S.) to Keith Ledwith. Patricia Noe (B.S.) to David J. Scheidel. Tamika Tubens (B.A.) to Ryan Hines (B.A.). Erin S. Smyth (B.S.) to Robert T. Wenzel.
200 3 Frances Heil (B.S.) to Jason
Simmons.
Births
1983 A son, Aidan Matthew, to Maryellen and Keith R. Ruck (B.S., M.B.A '95).
19 8 4 A son. Christopher Robert, to Yvonne and Robert A. Hopstetter (B.S.).
1987 Triplets, Audrey, Sawyer, and Greyson, to Barbara and Jesse Deane (B.S.).
19 9 0 A daughter, Emily Lynn, to James and Kelly (Beckner) Hruska (B.A.).
An adopted son, Jake, to Robert and Maura (McMahon) Primus (B.A.).
1992 A daughter, Hailee, to Renee and Scott D. Campbell (B.A.).
A daughter, Bnanna Beverly, to Monica and Brian M. Fish (B.A.).
A daughter, Katherme Grace, to Thomas J. McDermott (B.S.) and Bernadette (Heanegan) Mc Dermott (B.S. '93, M.B.A. '99).
A daughter, Cecilia Marie, to Carroll A. (Lutz) Palakow (B.A.) and Gregory J. Palakow (B.A.).
19 9 3 A son, Louis Arigo, to Beth and Anthony R. LaRatta, Esq. (B.A.).
A son, Christopher Patrick, to Amy and David J. Owsik Jr (B.A.).
19 9 4 A daughter, Lindsay Grace, to Joyce (Jellig) Bednarek (B.A.) and Robert Bednarek (B.A.).
Twin daughters, Madeline and Olivia, to Aileen (Ragan) Wanzer and Eric Wanzer (B.S. '96).
A son, Ryan Michael, to Arthur and Theresa (Delaney) Whitchurch (B.A.).
199 5 A daughter, Anna Maria, to Paul Langan (B.A.) and Eliza Comodromos-Langan (B.A. '96).
19 9 6 A son, Jack Christopher, to Rob and Denise (Vizza) Brand (B.A.).
A daughter, Hannah Elizabeth, to Christine (Yucis) Schulden (B.A.) and John Schulden (B.S. '97, M.B.A. '04).
A daughter, Rachel Elizabeth, to Chris and Carol (Strus) Thornton (B.A.).
A son, Philip Robert III, to Phil and Melissa (Solt) Williams (B.A.).
199 7 A son, Kadyn A., to Aminah T. (Sumner) Finney (M.A.).
A daughter, Ava Loren, to Herb and Theresa Garvin-Keyser (B.A.).
A son, Andrew, to Maria and Michael Hermann (B.S.).
In Memoriam
19 3 7 Felix M. Kadel (B.A.) of Harnsburg, Pa., on December 7, 2003.
193 8 Charles A. Reilly Sr. (B.A.) of Indian Rocks Beach, Fla., on November 28, 2003.
194 2 Thomas M. Centanni (B.A.) of
Philadelphia, Pa., on April 25, 2004. He was a Philadelphia Police officer for 40 years.
194 8 Charles M. Durning (B.S.) of
Glenside, Pa., on June 9, 2004.
19 4 9 Martin W. Gehlhaus (B.S.) of Oreland, Pa., on April 9, 2004. He retired from PECO after a 45-year career as a manager of area development and commercial sales.
John J. Lawn (B.S.) of Blue Bell, Pa., on March 15, 2004.
Paul G. McGinnis (B.S.) of Newtown Square, Pa.
19 5 0 James P. Conboy Jr. (B.S.) of Drexel
Hill, Pa., in January 2004. A decorated veteran who lost his leg in World War II, he was featured in a 1945 Life magazine issue boarding the plane that took him to Germany. That photo essay was picked up around the world.
John J. Kelly (B.A.) of Broomall, Pa., on October 20, 2003.
Patrick N. Leto (B.S.) of Highland, Ind., on March 26, 2004.
Thomas J. Shusted, Esq. (B.A.) of
Haddonfield, N.J., on April 2, 2004.
19 51 Joseph V. Burns (B.A.) of Glenside, Pa., in December 2003.
19 5 2 Samuel A. McKay (B.S.) of Tampa,
Fla., on April 13, 2004.
David W. Rumsey (B.A.) of Warminster, Pa., on May 24, 2004.
John J. Toscano (B.S.) of Philadelphia, Pa., on March 28, 2004. He was a retired Philadelphia police officer.
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LA SALLE MAGAZINE
19 5 4 Joseph G. Bi lie (B.S.) of Momsville, Pa., father of Joseph G. Bille (B.A. 78), on March 4, 2004.
Frank T. McGough (B.S.) of Hammonton, N.J.
Michael J. Reeves (B.S.) of Sinking Spring, Pa., on December 10, 2003. He was retired from Traveler's Insurance Company.
Anthony E. Valerio (B.S.) of Trevose, Pa., on November 3, 2003.
19 5 5 Alfred L. Hetrick (B.S.) of Woodbury, N.J., on November 21, 2003.
James J. McKenna Jr., Ph.D. (B.A.) of King of Prussia, Pa., on April 18, 2004. He founded the Criminal Justice Department at Villanova University. He established a program at Graterford Prison to allow inmates and guards at the maximum- security facility to earn college credits from Villanova.
19 5 6 Anthony Battaglia, M.D. (B.A.) of
Gibbstown, N.J., in February 2004.
Thomas J. Simone (B.A.) on May 6, 2004.
19 5 7 Robert Reed (B.S.) of Austin, Texas, on September 25, 2003.
19 5 9 Alexander J. Woodley Jr. (B.A.) of
Philadelphia, Pa.
19 64 Ronald J. Hamill (B.A.) of
Philadelphia, Pa., in June 2003.
Edward A. Mumma (B.A.) of Waynesboro, Pa.
David A. Partridge (B.S.) of Blue Bell, Pa., on May 31, 2004.
Stanley Rudewicz (B.S.) of Philadelphia, Pa., on March 13, 2004.
196 9 Ralph V. Caliendo (B.S.) of
Warminster, Pa.
Thomas A. Johnson (B.A.) of Springfield, Pa., on May 18, 2004. As a member of La Salle's swim team, he was inducted into La Salle's Hall of Athletes in 1990. He was a Sun Oil Company executive and NASCAR racing fan.
Gregg J. McKiernan (B.A.) of Santa Cruz, Calif., in October 2003.
19 7 1 Stanley D. Kolman, D.O. (B.A.) of
Ventnor City, N.J., on December 11, 2003.
197 2 Felix Alex Barkowski (B.S.) of
Cinnaminson, N.J., on February 25, 2004.
David C. Eisenhart (B.S.) of Fenwick Island, Del., on December 21, 2003.
19 7 4 Joseph C. Anhalt (B.S.) of Fairless Hills, Pa.
James B. Doyle (B.S.) of Bensalem, Pa.
Charles McDowell (B.S.) of Philadelphia, Pa.
19 7 9 Benjamin R. Card (B.S.) of Willow
Grove, Pa.
19 8 1 John J. Gillespie (B.S.) of El Toro, Calif., on August 29, 2003.
1984 Bernard Hurley (M. B.A.) of
Collingswood, N.J., on Tuesday, May 25, 2004. He had a distinguished career as an inventor, engineer, and manager at RCA and Lockheed Martin.
19 8 9 David P. Logan (B.S.) of Philadelphia, Pa.
Lawrence J. Patelunas Jr. (B.S.) of Langhorne, Pa.
19 94 William M. Hamilton (B.A.) of
Philadelphia, Pa., on May 17, 2004.
2 0 0 2 Kathleen A. (Cahill) Ruby (B.A.) of
Horsham, Pa., in January 2004.
FACULTY
Marijke (van Rossum) Wijsmuller, a retired professor of mathematics and mother of Maya K. van Rossum (B.S. '89), in March 2004. She joined La Salle's faculty in 1979 and remained until her retirement in 1998.
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For the first time in La Salle's history, the University's Commencement ceremony was seen live from coast to coast through a Webcast linked from La Salle's Web site. According to Biondo Communications, the company that provided the Webcast, 149 users logged on to view the ceremony in real time from as far away as California and Florida. More users tuned in at 4:00 p.m. for the rebroadcast, and again as the ceremony was replayed throughout the evening. (From left) Chris Brower, a senior information technology major at La Salle, assists Biondo Communications owners (and brothers) Joseph Biondo, '01, La Salle's Web manager, and Anthony Biondo, '00, with the Webcast.
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LASALLE UNIVERSITY
LA SALLE MAGAZINE Philadelphia, PA 19141
FALL 2004
AGAZINE
I
I
I
You are cordially invited to celebrate with
La Salle University!
The 13 th Annual Charter Dinner
La Salle University Leadership Award to be presented to
William R. Sasso, Esq^
Class of 1969
Chair and Executive Partner
Stradley, Ronon, Stevens & Young, LLP
Presentation, Dinner, Reception, and Dancing
Half past six in the evening Saturday, the nth day of March, 2005
Normandy Farm
Blue Bell Pennsylvania
Invitations to follow in January 2005
For more information, please contact the Office for University Advancement at 215.991.3595 or hagamin@lasalle.eda.
The Charter Dinner celebrates the founding ot La Salle College on March 20, 1863. and pays tribute to the generations of Christian Brothers, laypersons, and clergy whose dedication has made La Salle University the prominent institution that it is today. Each year. La Salle bestows the Leadership Award on an individual who has displayed outstanding leadership in the corporate, civic, governmental, or religious communities that shape the quality of life in this region.
Since its inception, the Charter Dinner and La Salle University Leadership Award Ceremony have raised over S1.7 million This year's dinner and ceremony will continue to enhance the University's Scholarship Fund, thereby benefiting future generations of La Salle students.
FALL 2004
LASALLE
MAGAZINE
Volume 48 ! Number 3 Michael J. McGmniss, F.S.C. President R. Brian Elderton Vice President for University Advancement |
2 |
Shoulder to Shoulder for the Future |
|
Joseph W. Donovan Assistant Vice President for Marketing and Communications |
5 |
President's Report |
|
James Gulick Assistant Vice President for Alumni Relations |
|||
Theresa K. Travis Assistant Vice President for Development |
8 |
Honor Roll of Donors |
|
Edward A. Turzanski Assistant Vice President for Government and Community Relations |
8 |
Private Sources |
|
Beth Lochner Director for Advancement Services |
8 |
Corporations |
|
Patrick J. Feeley Director of Corporate and Foundation Relations |
9 |
Foundations and Trusts |
|
Fred J. Foley Jr. Director of Grants. Research, and Support |
9 |
Government Sources |
|
Charles E. Gresh, F.S.C. Felicia H. Gordon-Riehman |
10 |
Alumni |
|
Joseph Buck Directors of Major Gifts |
10 |
President's Club |
|
Gwen Golish Director of Prospect Development |
12 |
Gifts in Kind |
|
Trey P. Ulrich Director of Annual Fund |
14 |
Reunion 2004 |
|
Maureen Piche Director of University Publications Editor. La Salle Magazine |
16 |
De La Salle Society |
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Caitlin Murray Assistant Director of University Publications Assistant Editor. La Salle Magazine Joshua Ash |
18 20 |
Legacy Society Scholarships |
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Graphic Designer |
22 |
The Christian Brothers |
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24 |
In Honor Of |
||
25 |
Memorial Gifts |
||
La Salle Magazine (USPS 299-940) is published quarterly for the University's alumni, students, faculty, and friends by the Office of University Communications. Address correspondence to the Editor, La Salle Magazine. Benilde Hall, 1900 W. Olney Ave., La SaTle University, Philadelphia. PA 19141-1199. Changes of address |
26 29 32 |
Bequests Athletics Partners and Sponsors Parents, Faculty, Staff, and Friends |
|
should be sent at least 30 days prior to publication of issue with which it is to take effect to the University Advancement Office, La Salle University, 1900 W. Olney Avenue. Philadelphia, PA 19141- 1199. Periodicals postage paid at Philadelphia. Pa. POSTMASTER: |
36 |
Alumni Notes |
Send change of address to office listed above.
/^LASALLE
UNIVERSITY
Shoulder to Shoulder for the Future
"From the very start [the Christian Brothers] have understood that. .education must equip youth with a genuine and efficient professional training and the means of making a living. And they have understood at the same time that the formation of the soul and the intellect, the bringing up of a human being as human, remains the highest and indispensable aim of education. "
[ACQl es Maritan French philosopher.
WRITING IN THE I9SOS ABOUT THE LaSALEIAN TRADITION
ON SEPTEMBER 12, 2004, LA SALLE PUBLICLY launched Shoulder to Shoulder: Securing the Future, the most ambitious rundraising effort in the University's history. This major gifts initiative is designed to bring the La Salle Community together in support of two key projects that, once realized, will sustain the University- in the new century: funding the construction of a new science and technology facility, and strengthening the University's endowment.
The two goals of Shoulder to Shoulder have been carefully selected to capitalize on the momentum generated by new leadership and new programs at the University. They offer new opportunities for involvement for the entire La Salle community to help secure its future.
Strengthening La Salle Together. Shoulder to Shoulder
"Shoulder to Shoulder is the way many great things in this country have gotten accomplished,'" noted James J. Lynch, VI, Chair of the La Salle University Board of Trustees. "The theme of this fundraising effort was chosen specifically to reinforce the values at the heart of what will make this campaign a success: hardworking people — working together — to secure the future for La Salle."
Through Shoulder to Shoulder, the University is now calling upon those who have benefited from the Lasallian educational experience to support La Salle as it works toward achieving its goals and creating important resources to support future learning.
1. Hugh Devlin. '64. Chair of Shoulder to Shoulder, and Brother Michael J. McGinniss. F.S.C.. Ph.D.. ID
"I have always admired the Brothers and their commitment to providing a Catholic education to good students of modest means, so that they can make their way in the world and also make the world a better place," remarked I. Hugh Devlin, '64, Chair of Shoulder to Shoulder. "It is my belief that this foundation of Christian Brothers values — rooted in connectedness and giving back — will inspire the alumni community to stand together to support the mission of La Salle through this important initiative."
"Great universities are great because their alumni make them so," added Brother Michael J. McGinniss, F.S.C., Ph.D., '70, President of La Salle University. "It is impossible for me to express how humbled I am to be standing here before vou as President of this University and my deep gratitude to all who have given so generously to this campaign.
"I look forward to continuing to extend the University's network of association and to successfullv completing this campaign, upon which, we — working together, Shoulder to Shoulder — will build the future of La Salle."
Providing Innovative Learning Resources
La Salle's mission aims at preparing students for informed service and progressive leadership in their communities, and science and technology skills are among the most sought after in today's employment marketplace. The University's well-earned reputation reparing graduates to join the medical, nursing,
for prepar
*
•r
-r^pijxw^
ffPtr-V
education, science, and business professions will be enhanced by building a new science and technology facility (see architect's rendering above).
Today, science and technology touch ma disciplines and influence manv kinds of careers. Preparing men and women for rewarding professional lives demands a new kind of learning environment that recognizes this fact. Through this innovative facility, La Salle is reaffirming its commitment to addressing the new needs of science and technology in all academic areas — from the arts and sciences to nursing and business.
This new facility will feature an open floor plan designed especially to encourage collaboration and cross-disciplinary learning. This is the way modern science — and business — gets done, and it's the kind of learning environment La Salle students need. Such innovative programs as Integrated Science, Business, and Technology (ISBT), Digital Arts and Multimedia Design (DArt), the E-Commerce Institute, and majors in information technology are helping drive enrollment. Along with the traditional sciences, nursing, and business, such programs will flourish and grow in the new science and technologv facility.
Strengthening the Endowment
St. La Salle and the Christian Brothers began as teachers among the working poor of 17th-century France. For some 300 years, a Christian Brothers education has meant helping students of ail financial means build successful lives on an ethical foundation based on faith.
La Salle continues this tradition, offering education that balances a need for both personal and professional fulfillment to the widest possible range of students.
Honor Roll or Donors 2005-2004
Today, more than 90 percent of students attend the University with some form of merit- and need-based financial aid. The ability to offer a La Salle education to every student of academic merit remains central to the University's mission, and serves as both a challenge and an opportunity for every member of the La Salle community.
La Salle must strengthen its endowment to continue to attract the best and brightest students, regardless of their financial background. A robust endowment is also one of the strongest statements of commitment to the value of a Christian Brothers education in the Lasallian tradition.
Together for the Future of La Salle
As La Salle works to enhance its profile as a great University, these strategic goals have been established to secure critical resources that will enhance academic programs and meet student needs. They present opportunities for involvement for the entire La Salle community to work together — Shoulder to Shoulder — to secure La Salle's future.
lames 1. Lynch, 71, Chair of La Salle 's Board of Trustees, and Leon E. Ellerson. '56, Trustee
Fundraising Priorities
To fund a state-of-the-art science and technology facility
This building will provide a place where the University can continue to fulfill its mission of offering an education that prepares students for careers that are in demand today.
$20 million
To strengthen and support the endowment
The ability to offer scholarships to promising students has always been a priority at La Salle. Endowment support is key.
$5 million
Total $25 million
Honor Ron of Donors
003-2004
President's Report
2003-2004
Dear Friends of La Salle:
On behalf of the entire La Salle community, I want to express my sincere gratitude to all our benefactors. Through this report, I am delighted to recognize your generosity and sustained encouragement in fulfillment of our mission.
With your support, the University continues to be a dynamic educational community shaped bv traditional Catholic and Lasallian values.
Our identity is firmly rooted in a deep respect for each individual, a belief that intellectual and spiritual development go hand in hand, a passion for creative teaching and learning, and that education should be useful — for personal growth, professional advancement, and service to others.
These beliefs have served as guideposts as we developed and continue to carry out the University's Strategic Plan. What follows are highlights of our progress during the past year.
One such highlight warrants special attention, which it has by way of the article that precedes this letter: "Shoulder to Shoulder for the Future." I encourage you to read this account of this significant fundraising initiative, whose goal is to raise S25 million for the construction of a new science and technology building and the strengthening of the University's endowment. To date, the University has raised SIS. 7 million towards that goal. We are especially grateful to those who already have given their support, and we encourage others to join in this worthwhile cause.
As I look to the future, I see La Salle continuing to build on the positive momentum of recent years, inspired by the committed leadership of our Board of Trustees. We pray that you will remain our partners in our endeavors. Thank you again for your generosity to La Salle and to our students.
Sincerely yours,
Michael J. McGinniss, F.S.C., '70 President
Highlights of the Tear
Enhancing Our Intellectual and Spiritual Life
The strength of the University's curriculum is assured in part by meeting, or exceeding, the rigorous standards of accreditation. This year, two of our newer programs earned their accreditations: Speech-Language Pathology by the American Speech-Language Hearing Association, and the doctoral program in Psvchology ( Psy.D.) by the American Psychological Association. In addition, our School of Nursing's baccalaureate and master's degree programs were recently reaccredited bv the Commission on Collegiate Nursing Education for 10 years, the maximum accreditation allowed for an institution.
Further, La Salle has embarked on its self-study for reaccreditation by the Middle States Association, an institution-wide commitment for ongoing assessment and improvement.
The quality of our faculty continues to be one of La Salle's greatest assets. Our faculty has a passion for teaching and mentoring that touches our students' hearts and spirits as well as their minds. Working with the Faculty Senate, the Provost's Office has undertaken initiatives to provide even greater support to our
Honor Roll of Donors 2003-2004
OPE RATI NG REVENUE |
|
b |
d |
c |
e |
L ^%^ |
g |
^ |
h |
i |
|
j |
|
^^^^ |
Total S in OOO's |
Tuition and fees, net of discount of 532,493 (a) |
60,185 |
Government grants (b) |
2,959 |
Private gifts and grants (c) |
5,973 |
Pledge revenue (d) |
882 |
Activities related to academic areas (e) |
1,466 |
Sales and services of auxiliary enterprises (f) |
16,945 |
Interest income (g) |
195 |
Endowment payout under spending policy |
|
Earnings on net investments (h) |
1,000 |
Net realized/unrealized gains/(losses) (i) |
1,247 |
Net assets released from restrictions (j) Total Operating Revenue |
1,245 |
92,097 |
OPERATING EXPE |
NSE |
||
b |
k. |
||
c |
d |
e |
|
a |
|||
f |
|||
^ |
|||
h |
W |
Total S in OOO's |
|
Instruction (a) |
30,227 |
||
Research (b) |
978 |
||
Academic support (c) |
8,408 |
||
Student services and athletics (d) |
13,921 |
||
Public service (e) |
4,240 |
||
Institutional support (f) |
15,657 |
||
Auxiliary enterprises (g) |
14,277 |
||
Other (h) |
316 |
||
Total Operating Expense |
88,024 |
valued faculty to carry out the teaching and learning mission of the University.
The experience of learning at La Salle has been enhanced bv an increased emphasis on international education, with additional Study Abroad programs and 42 countries represented in the student body.
On the student side of the equation, the year has been marked bv the development of programs to strengthen the advising system, including an early alert referral system for freshmen; this can only serve to improve La Salle's already stellar freshman-to- sophomore retention rate, a traditional strength of the University.
Students grow intellectually and spiritually beyond the curriculum as well, and much of the credit belongs to the Division of Student Affairs, which garnered a number of national honors for its work this vear.
The LTniversity has continued its efforts to cultivate Catholic and Lasallian values in the curriculum, programs, and institutional culture. The faculty and administrators who are participating in the Lasallian Leadership Institute, a three-year national leadership program of the Christian Brothers, are setting the example.
Effectively Communicating Our Distinct Identity
Building on the market research commissioned two vears ago, which helped to define the University, La Salle has focused its efforts to communicate this identity. The La Salle community's values and approaches form our brand and distinct identity. It is the feeling that should come to mind when people hear the name of La Salle Universitv.
Honor Roll of Donors 2003-2004
The past year has seen the gradual introduction of La Salle's graphic identity. The new University7 logo began to appear on publications, in advertising, on banners around the campus, and on University vehicles. The new tagline, "Never stop exploring," has been introduced in printed materials and in radio commercials. The new athletics logo has proven popular with students for clothing and accessories.
While the consistency of our graphic identity is important to establishing our brand, communication of the essence of La Salle, as described bv our positioning statement and key messages and language, is also critical. The University incorporates these messages at every appropriate opportunity. Moreover, the L7niversitv is committed to having all in the campus community "live" the brand.
Investing in Our Future
The University's commitment to making the personal, communal, and financial investments needed for future success is very evident this year. The S25 million Shoulder to Shoulder: Security) the Future initiative ( see preceding article I is testimony to the kind of investment our alumni are willing to make in La Salle. On campus, the most visible sign of investment is the construction of the new $26 million residence and dining facility on South Campus.
As the Honor Roll section attests, financial support for the University continues to grow. Total giving for the year approached S9.2 million. The Annual Fund increased for the third year in a row, highlighted by a nearly nine percent increase in participation in the past year. Funding from grants in the 2004 fiscal year — S5.6 million — was the highest single yearly total for La Salle. The National Science Foundation's five-year S12.5 million grant to a La Salle-led partnership to improve mathematics and science education in the region contributed greatly.
Continued investment in and use of technology remains a priority. This vear witnessed the launch of a portal within the University's Web site for internal communications. Also, the foundation has been laid for campus-wide wireless Internet access.
Enhancing the Quality of Life in Our Community
La Salle's commitment to the community may have been symbolized by the establishment, last vear, of the position of Director of Community and Economic Development, but our actions and influences are
W^^c
*'
Work is well under way on a new South Campus residence and dining facility, which will accommodate more than 430 students (see architectural rendering above). Completion of the buildings is slated for Summer 2005.
longstanding and significant. The University continues to be a major economic contributor and a model of communitv- outreach and partnering.
Our Nonprofit Center helps area nonprofit organizations govern themselves to fulfill their missions; the Neighborhood Nursing Center offers myriad health services to local residents; the University provides scholarships specifically for students from the community; La Salle offers educational programs and services for students of area public and private schools; University students volunteer more than 100,000 hours annually for communin- service projects; University facilities are made available and are well utilized bv neighbors and local groups.
Special efforts this year have focused on converting 20th Street between Olney and Belfield avenues into a one-way street, resulting in fewer accidents. Also, La Salle representatives met more frequendy with local residents to partner in neighborhood quality of life issues.
Cultivating Partnerships with Alumni
Major steps have been taken to develop the alumni relations program. Five new clubs were added in the past year, and 35 events were held in 16 cities nationwide. Attendance at alumni events included increases of 25 percent at Reunion and 200 percent at Homecoming. On-line services on the Web site have been expanded, and an alumni portal was launched. The alumni e-mail database has been increased to more than 10,000.
A new Alumni Careers Committee has been charged with enhancing career networking programs. An Alumni Student Affairs Committee was created to further develop alumni relations with current students, and alumni have volunteered for everything from cleaning up nearby Fairmount Park to helping recruit prospective students.
Honor Roll of Donors 2003-2004
HONOR ROLL 2003 2004
Gifts and grants reported in this section of the President's Report reflect donations received by the University with postmark dates between June 1, 2003, and May 31, 2004. (If your gift was postmarked in June 2004, please be assured that your gift will be listed in the 2005 President's Report.)
Contributions are reported in accordance with CASE (Council for Advancement and Support of Education) standards. Income during Fiscal Year '04 may include any of the following: gifts of cash; gifts of stock; matching gifts; grants; bequests; planned gifts; gifts-in-kind; real estate; and gifts of paid-up life insurance. We also report government grants for which the University has applied and been funded.
Everv effort has been made to ensure the accuracy of the donor list. If a name has been misspelled or omitted, or if a gift has been reported incorrectlv, we appreciate your assistance in reporting it to the Office for University Advancement at 215.951.1540.
Private Sources
Individuals
(Includes both unrestricted and
restricted gifts and bequests Se*.
Honor Roll on pages 12 thl
tor complete listing of contributors )
Total Gifts:
V2 -}».
Corporations
(Includes gifts from corporations, corporate foundations, and matching gifts)
Total Gifts > -S2.881
President^ Club
(Sso.ooo and above)
Hansen Properties Sallie Mae. Inc.
Sallie Mae Fund oi the Community Foundation ot the National
Capit.il Region
Charter Club
Independence Blue FncewaterhouseCoopers Foundation
University Club (S10.000-S24.999)
Elliott- Lewis Corpor.it Johnson ck Johnson Family of
Companies Keystone Computer Associau Philadelphia Coca-Cola Bottling
Company Sovereign Bank Ven:on Foundation Wachovia Foundation
Dr. Flubacher Club
(Ss.ooo - CLBW As
Ford MotOt Company Fund GlaxoSmithKline Foundation H & R Block Mortgage JWT Store- I, Inc. KPMG Foundation
. imery, McCracken, Walker ck Rhoads. LLP PNC Bank
Reillv Fi>.un C "cry SEI Investments
bild Jesus Stradle\ Ronon Stevens ex Yuunsc. LLP
Williams Foundation Thomson Financial Travelers Lite ck Annuity
San Miuuel Club
Accenture Foundation Incorporated Amencan Express Foundation BankAmerica Foundation Barnes- Si Noble College
Bookstores, Inc. Beneficial Savings Bank Blank Rome LLP Bristol Myers Squibb Foundation
Incorporated Che\Ton USA Incorporated
\ Foundation Crown Holdings. Inc. Fairway Automotive Group Fannie Mae Foundation
H2L2 Architects/Planners
Houghton Mifflin Company Johnson & Johnson Health Care
us, Inc. key-tone Mercy Health Plan Liberty Mutual Group Lomax Companies Merck Company Foundation Merrill Lynch ex Company
Foundation Incorporated I Foundation Nason and Cullent, Inc./Artis T.
Ore. Inc.
de Foundation Neiman Marcus Group OneBeacon Charitable Trust
undation Incorporated Price waterhouseCoopers LLP State Farm Companies Foundation Vanguard Group Foundation Vernon PA
\ incent Giordano Corporation Zook, Dinon & Roman. PA
Chairman's Club (S1.000 - .
5M Foundation ACE ISA Foundation AETNA Foundation Amencan Federation of State.
County, Municipal Employees Anexinet Corporation Aramark
Barclay Brand Corporation Beacon Commercial Real Estate Campbell Soup Foundation Chestnut Hill Eternal Group Delaware Investments Deloitre ex Touche Foundation Deloitte ck Touche LLP Deutsche Bank Americas Foundation Direct Solutions Network. Inc. Emerpnse Rent-A-Car EXXONMobil Foundation Fiduciary- Tnist GE Fund Greater Philadelphia
Chamber of Commerce Guidant Foundation Incorporated Haverford Trust Corns HealthPoint DPT Laboratones. LTD. IKON Office Solutions
Foundanon Inc. Johnson. Kendall ck Johnson, Inc. Klehr, Harrison, Harvey, Bran:burg
ck Ellers LLP Kleinbard Bell &. Brecker LLP KPMG LLP Lockheed Martin Marino Building Contractors. Inc MBNA Amenca Bank NA Morgan Stanley NR Films
Nissan North America Incorporated ONESDCTYCA ERMNETY Options Clearing Corp. Orthopaedic Surgerv ck
Rehabilitation Associates, P.C. Paradise Development Group Inc. Paul L Newman, Newman's Own PECO Energy- Company Pepper Hamilton LLP Philadelphia Stock Exchange Prudential Foundation Darn Rauscher Foundation
SCT Software &. Resource
Management Corp. Siemens Corporation Siemens Medical
Solutions USA, Inc. Sprint Foundation UBS Financial Sen. ices, Inc. US Fi*\l Services, Inc. Unilever United States Foundation
Incorporated Ventresca Ltd.
ia Bank, N.A. Weverhaeuser Compam Foundation Wilmington Trust Company Wyeth
Founder's Club
(Ssoo S999)
Aircraft Instruments Company American Honda Motor Company
Incorporated American International Group
Incorporated Andor Capital Management LLC Angle Building &. Restoration, Inc. Aon Four
A-tr.Zeneca PharmaceutK ATOFTNA Chemicals Incorporated
Foundation Blum Capital Partners, LP Buxmont Spons Training, LLC Carabello and Mansell Dental Assoc. . 1 Palmolive Company Cornerstone Bank Dell Corporation
Diccicco Battista Communications FleetBoston Financial Corp. FMC Fbun
H. B. Fra:et Compan\ - PA Jim Roese Photography
John Nuveen &. Compam
Incorporated Kent ex McBnde. P.C. KYW NewsRadio 1060 Lockheed Martin Corporation
Foundation Marshall, Dennehey, Warner,
Coleman ck Goggin Oak Value Capital Management Pti:er Incorporated ROC Consulting Group Inc. Rosnov Jewelers Saint Gobain Corporation
Foundation Savin Funeral Home, Inc. Schenng Plough Foundation
Incorporated Firstrust Bank
Music Entertainment
Incorporated Sovereign Bank Foundation Subaru of America Foundation,
Incorporated Subaru of America Inc. Swift Mailing Services. Inc. H\R Block Foundation Procter ck Gamble Fund WAWA. Inc.
Ugo Donini Club
(S250-S499)
ABN AMRO North Amenca
Incorporated Alma Group, Inc. American Express AmeriHealth Administrators Aqua America Bagnell ck Co. Blooming Affairs Florist California Steel Pressure Pipe
Company Chubb ck Son Incorporated
Bequests Friends Faculty/Staff Parents
Christian Brothers Alumni Spouses
Total
$127,561 $78,743 $49,579 $65,713 $53,027 $3,825
$2. 496.687
INCOME SU M M |
A RY |
Individuals Corporations Foundations and Trusts Government Other Total Gifts for FY 03-'04 |
$2,496,687 $782,881 $1,915,126 $3,820,657 $150,162 S9.l6s.SI3 |
Honor Roll of Donors 2003-2004
Comcast Corporation
Congoleum Corporation
Crossing Financial. LLC
CYRO Industries
DMJM Harris
Drucker &. Scaccetti, P C.
Frank's Family Deli
Gannett Foundation, Inc.
Georgia-Pacific Corporation
Honeywell Foundation
IMS Health
John A. McCann & Assoc.
Kelb 6l Massa Photography
Kennedy Culvert ck Supply Co.
Knight Ridder Incorporated
Law Offices or Daniel J. Tann
Mellon Bank Corporation
Microsoft Corporation
Northern Telecom Incorporated
Padova ek Lisi
Penn Mutual Lite Insurance
Company Pennsylvania Power &. Light
Company Proctot Silex Corp iratii in Rust- Oleum Coproration Tapemark Company Air Products Foundation Connelly Foundation Guardian Lite Insurance Company of
America Intellegencer/Reci ird Charitable Trusts Philadelphia Tribune Co., Inc PQ Corporation Ventresca Travel, Inc. Waters Corporation
Anniversary Club (S140 S249)
AMGEN Foundation Aventis Pharmaceuticals BP Foundation Incorporated Comprehensive Information
Technology Audit Services Inc Dow Jones &. Company Incorporated Eaton Charitable Fund Exelon Corporation Josiah Macy Jr. Foundation Oracle Corporation Praxair Incorporated Quest Diagnostics Incorporated BOC Group Incorporated The Glenmede Trust Company Harleys\ ille Insurance Companies JP- Morgan Morgan Chase
Foundation The Union Central Life Insurance
Company United States Steel Foundation
Incorporated
Donors
(UproSl.39)
Abbott Laboratories Fund
ABC Carpet Service, Inc
Access Group Incorporated
AKZO Nobel Incorporated
American Ret Fuel Company
Bank One NA
Bio/Data Corporation
Boeing Company
CBX Corporation
CNA Foundation
Consolidated Edison Company of
New York, Incorporated Constellation Energy Group, Inc. CSX Corporation, Inc. Delaware Management
Company, Inc
EBSCO Industries, Inc.
Ecolab Foundation
Eli Lilly ck Co. Foundation
Elkton Supply Company, Inc
First Virginia Banks Incorporated
FitstEnetgy Foundation
Fleet Financial Group
GPU Foundation
Greco Food Products, Inc
Hartford Insurance Group
Hewlett Packatd Compvim
Foundation Hoffman Mailing Solutions ITT Industries Incorporated LandAmenca Foundation Levi Strauss Foundation L'Oreal USA, Incorporated Marsh ck McLennan Companies
Incorporated McGraw Hill Foundation Inc. NCR Foundation PNC Bank Foundation Public Service Electric ex. Gas
Company Raytheon Company- Science Applications International
Corporation SKF USA Incorporated Sony Pictures Entertainment Sorrentino's
Speck Industrial Controls, Inc. T. Rowe Price Associates Foundation
Incorporated Tenet Healthcare Foundation Charles Schwab Corporation
Foundation Gillette Company May Department Stores Company
Foundation UPS Foundation Incorporated Walt Disney Company Foundation TruMark Financial Credit Union Tyco Interational Limited Westchester Medical Center
Foundation Whirlpool Foundation Xerox Foundation
Foundations and Trusts
Total Gifts:
S 1.915.126
President's Club
($50,000 and above)
The Annenberg Foundation
Jake Foundation
Kean Hartquist Foundation
Paul E. Kelly Foundation
Navesink Foundation
Otto Haas Charitable Trust No. 2
SEI Giving Fund
William Penn Foundation-
The W.W. Smith Charitable Trust
Charter Club (S25.000-S49.999)
Leo Niessen Jr., Charitable
Foundation Joseph Schmit: Jr Trusi TTS Foundation
University Club
(Sio.ooo $24,999)
Claneil Foundation, Inc. Patricia Kind Family Foundation
Patricia Kind Family Foundation Christian R. ex Man, F Lindback
Foundation Samuel P. Mandell Foundation William G. McGowan Charitable
Fund, Inc. The Charlotte W. Newcombe
Foundation Schwab Fund for Charitable Giving
Dr. Flubacher Club ($5,000 $9,; )
Anonymous
G Fred and Sylvia DiBona Family
Foundation National Philanthropic Trust Winchester Foundation
San Miguel Club ($2,500 S4.999)
George J. Bucs Scholarship Fund Spencer Educational
Foundation. Inc. Vanguard Charitable Endowment
Program
Chairman's Club (S1.000-s2.499)
Anonymous Boston Foundation Charitable Gift Fund Comcast Foundation Stanley and Lorraine Goldstein Philanthropic Fund
Founder's Club 1 551 "' S999)
AllState Foundation
lames S. Kemper Foundation
Other
Total Gifts S 150.162
Charter Club (S25.000-S49.999)
Am Assoc of Colleges of
Nursing/John A Hartford Fdn. I V La S.ille Community
University Club (s10.ooo-s24.999)
La Salle University Alumni
Association Philadelphia Frostbite Regatta
Dr. Flubacher Club (55.000-s9.999)
Christian Brothers Spring Garden
Community Christian Brothers - Roncalli
Community
Saint Munen Hall Community Philadelphia General Hospital Alumni Association
San Miguel Club (s2.500-s4.999)
La Salle University School of Arts and Science
Chairman's Club (S1.000-s2.499)
AFSCME International
Calvert Hall College
2004 Senior Night Out
La Salle University Student Affairs
Bowman School of Dance. Inc.
Founder's Club (S500-S999)
Archdiocese of Philadelphia First Church of Christ o\ Flemington La Salle University Ambassadors Open Door Mission True Light
Chutch, Inc. Saint Christopher's Hospital for
Children St Patrick Church Sigma Phi Epsilon Sigma Theta Tau International,
Incorporated Mann Center tor the Performing Arts
Ugo Donini Club (S250-S499)
La Salle College High School Waldron Mercy Academy
Anniversary Club (S140 S249)
Assumption RYM Church
Works ol Merc} Hudson Catholic High School La Salle University
School of Business PA Campus Compact Sisters of the Blessed Sacrament
Donors
(UptoSl39)
Catholic Worker Clinic Country Day School of the
Sacred Heart De La Salle Christian Brothers
San Miguel Community Douglas S. Fischer Decent Fund Holy Trinity Fathers Northeast Philadelphia Lions Club Till Beta Sigma Fraternity
Nu Sigma Chapter St. Hubert Catholic High School
For Girls Saint Joseph's Pteparatory School Saint Mary's Hall Union League at Philadelphia
Zeta Phi Beta Soroit}
Beta Delta Zeta Chapter
Zeta Phi Beta Sorority
Kappa Omega Zeta Chaptet
Government Sources
Total Gifts: $ 3,820,657
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania
Department of Education
Act 101- Academic Discovery
Program Act 143 (YMCA of Philadelphia and
Vicinity); Adult Learning Project
Department of Environmental
Protection
Environmental Education Program
Department of Health
Abstinence Education and Related Services (Central Susquehanna Intermediate Unit): Reach lor the Stars
Department of Public Welfare Community Connections Initiative
Federal Government
Department of Education
Office of Educational Research and Improvement (Temple University Center for Research in Human Development and Education): Laboratory for Student Success
Child Gate Access Means Parents in School
GEAR-UP (School DistrKi of
Philadelphia, Temple University)
Section 231 (YMCA of Philadelphia and Vicinity): Adult Learning Project
Department of Health and Human
Services
Abstinence Education and Related
Sen ices: Reach for the Stars Advanced Education Nursing: Nurse
Anesthesia Program Advanced Education Nursing
Traineeship Nurse Anesthetist Traineeship Scholarships for Disadvantaged
Students
Honor Roll of Donors 20032004
NT'S CLUB
La Salle gratefully recognizes individuals contributed $50,000 or more to the University during FY 2003-2004.
vho
Mr. Thomas Curlev , 70
Janet and Charles L. Daley, '57
Mr. and Mrs. ]. Hugh Devlin, '64
Mr. Leon Ellerson, '56
Joan (Mancini, 74) and Thomas j. Fitipatrick Jr., 72
Estate of Joseph F. Fluhacher, Ed.D., '35
Rohen E. and Barbara H. Hanrahan, 75
Mr. Elmer F. Hansen Jr., '58
Mr. Elmer F. Hansen III, '90
Mr. 6k Mrs. Thomas J. Kcan Jr., '54
Kathleen (Gordon, 77) and James J. Lynch, 71
Mr. John L. McHale, '49
G.Dennis O'Brien, Ph.D.
Mr. Leo W.Pierce Jr., *67
Mr. and Mrs. David Poiesz, '80
Mr. Carmen V. Romeo, '65
William R. Sautter, C.P.A., 71
Mrs. Joseph E. Slawek
Department of Housing anJ L rban
Development
Resident Opportunity Support
■
National Science Foundation Computet Science, Engineering and
Mathem itii ■■ Sc Ki ilaiships Course, Curriculum and Laboi itorj
Improvemeni
■ [i mi. Initiativi i
Philadelphi.i So
Mathematics I i Math Science Partnership:
Mathematics and Science
Partnership ■ il ( ire itei
Philadelphia Sports Science (Temple University)
Local Government
Citv of Philadelphia Health Interventii in Pi Immunization Program Nurse Family Partnership School District of Philadelphia Title VII, COAST Program
Other Government Sources
Children's Aid Society: GLOSSC Southeast Pennsylvania AHEC
Alumni
1934
Chairman's Club
(Si.ooo v
Joseph E ( n'wlo . Esq
1935
President's Club
i •■■; io ■ ■
losephF Flubacher, Ed.D.
1936
Honors
(lpi.> -
Mi Joseph A. Rider Sr
193"
Donors S139)
Mrs John s Penrvj
1938
Founder's (
551 >0 S '
Re. John A- Guischard, rh D
Anniversari Club
Mr Robert | SietS
Donors
|Lpt" -
William C Howie Jr., M.D
1939
Donors
(Up to S139) Mr Jesse I- Stash
I940
Founder's Club (S500
MAI |..hn r McAlinn
I 941
Donors
(Up to S139)
Mr loseph A. Gidjunis Sr. Mr. John J. McHale Brother G. John Owen. I S.i
1942
Chairman's Club
(Si.ooo-s: 4
Ludwig M Frank, M D
Ugo Donini Club
(S250 >4""
Mr Michael A DiFaro
Anniversary Club (S140 S249)
Canzio E Giuliucci, M D
Donors
>I!9)
Mr. Henn J Baraldi Mart J. Ciccantelh. M.D.
1943
Chairman's Club (Si.ooo si 4 > i
Mr. Theodore H, Mecke Jr,
Founder's Club (s$oo S999)
Mr Charles E Burke
Donors
(Up WSI39)
Mr Joseph F, Fraier
Mr. J. Harold Koob
Mr. Francis R [gnaszewski
Mr. Joseph J. McFadden
Mr. Francis J. McMahon
1944
Dr. Flubacher Club
(S!.ooo ~
James and Margaret Newell
San Miguel Club (sz.500 S4.999)
Charles A J Halpin Jr., J.D.
Chairman's Club
($1,000*2 499)
Mr William J. Devlin Mr. John F. Flannen
Founder's Club (ssoo sooo)
A I Chiaiasrri, D.D.S
Anniversary Club (S140-S249)
Mr John J. Kane
Donors
1 1 p K>S139)
Francis J. Donahoe, Ph.D.
I94S
Ugo Donini Club
- 199 )
Leo E. Connor. Ph.I ) Mr James F. Dever Eugene I. Hamburg I M I I Mr. James T McMenamin
ANNIVERSARY CLUB ($140 SM9)
Mr William A Geppert |r \ ill rio [ Federici, M.D
Donors
(Lp W SIM)
Mr Mark A Manning Ir
r.946
Founder's Club
(S5OO sc,o(>)
Mr. Thomas J. McCann
Ugo Donini Club (S250-S499)
Mr S Thomas Deenev |ohn I Rooney,Ph.D.
Anniversary Club (S140-S249)
Pemiscot 1, \ Spina, C P.A.
Donors
(UptoSl39)
Rev Sidney C Bureovne, rh.P Robert J. Carabasi, M.D. Paul J Salvo. M.D.
194"
CHAIRMAN S CLUB ($] .'.-1- S2.499)
Mr. William J. Wisniewski
Ugo Donini Club
(S2SO-S4<K>)
Mr Peter I Sweeney
Anniversary Club ($140-5249)
Mr Joseph A Wilson
Donors
(Up to S139)
Mr. lames F. Cannon Mr Joseph A McDermoti Sr. Mr. Laurence M. Mooney Mr. Arthur A. Pern Jr
1948
San Miguel Club ($2.500-$4^)»i Mr. Francis J. Speiser
Chairman's Club (S1.000-S2 499)
Mr. Harry J. Gibbons Thomas B. Harper III, Esq Mr. and Mrs John L. McCloskey Joseph D McMenamin. D.O
Founder's Club
(SsOO S999)
Mr. Edward G. Dolton Jr. Paul W. Mcllvaine. M.D.
Ugo Donini Club (S250 S499)
Mr. Frederick J. Bernhardt
Mr. James M. Coyle
Mr James F, Curran
Mr Francis T. Foti
Robert F. Gallagher. D.D.S.
Howard L. Hannum. Ph.D.
Anniversary Club
(ST40S24l>)
Joseph R. Guerin, Ph.D. Bertram Kreger, D.D.S.
Donors
(UptoSTJ9)
Mr Edward R. Barber Mr Andrew .1 Cahrelli Jr. Mr Joseph V. Driscoll Mr. Charles M Duming Joseph C. Flvnn. M.D. Joseph V, Huftnagle, D.O. Mr. Leo C. Inglesb) Mr. Reginald F. Johnson Mr. William G. Kluth Mr. Norbert G. Lion Mr. Joseph T. Longo Mi Si ice, L. McDonnell Mr. Robert J- McGranaghan Mr. Kenneth R. Pfister Mr. Frederick A- Strasser Jr.
1949
President's Club
(S50.000 and above) Mr. John L. McHale
Honor Roll of Donors 2003-2004
San Miguel Club
($2500 M I
Mr Salvatore I Stea
Chairman's Club
($1 OOi 1 S2 499)
Brother Daniel W.Burt. 1 5.1 Mr. Thomas I N, one
Founder's Club
($51 10 S999)
Mr. Paul R Flack
Mr Joseph G. Greenberg
Mr. Harn I Mason lr
Ugo Donini Club [S250 5499)
Mr Robert I Foster Mr lohnL Minoer Mr. Thomas J Quinlan Mr Richard F. Slrosser Mr. Edward G. Titterton Jr.
Anniversary Club CS140 5249)
Mr Patrick J. Breslin
Mr. John J Burns
COL John J Luxemburgei |r .
Re I ire J
Mr lames P McCool Mr. Robert F. McMackin Joseph P. Mooney, Ph.D.
Donors
(Up to 8139)
Mi James 1- Ban- Mr |oseph I. Batcaglini Mr Roben E Casitlo Mr. Thomas J. Cullen Brother J Edward Davis, F.S.G Mr Thomas F. Drake Mr loseph I I higan Jr Mr. Anthom | Durkin Mr. Charles V Fagan Mr, Thomas W. Fairbrother Mr. William J. Finegan Jr. Mr. William D. Fletch. 1 Mr. Paul E. Gillespie Mr Carmen F. Guarino Mi [ohn M 1 lallorati Si
1 Quinn Haiti Esq Mr. James F kelh Mr. Martin L. Leonard Mr. Charles E. McShane Re\ Joseph J Miele Mr Edward I Murphy lr Mr Joseph A Plunkerr Mr. Walter K Poltorali Mr. John C. Rosania Sr. Mr. William A Rothwelljr. Mi ( ierard 1 Schom Mr. William C. Schrandt |r Mr. Frank J Walton Mi » 1 irence W ebb Mr Mitchell I YanakSi
[950 University Club
(SlO.OOO s;4 993 1
William J Hennch Jr., Esq. Mr. Clement W Rowan
Dr Flubacher Club ($5,000 S9.999)
Mr and Mts (oseph A Gallaghei
William F Grauer, C P.A
San Miguel Club
(S2.500
Edward I Stt mmler, M.D
Chairman's Club
[Si OOO $2 499)
Frank Kelly
Joseph R McDonald, Esq. |ohn \ Mclntyte, Ph.D. Brother Lewis Mullin, 1 - -
Mr Joseph I Thomas
Founders Club
($500 s ,)
John Helwig Jr.. M.D. Mr Thomas F. Kehoe COL. James P. Sheehan, Retired
Ugo Donini Club (S250 5499)
Mr.JohnJ.Cahill Joseph H. Foster, F_v| Mr |. lines I Gracyaln) Estate ot Francis W. |udge Mr. Patrick N Leto Mr. William I Smith Mr Stephen X Trac\
Anniversary Club
(Sr4o S249)
Daniel J. Allan, Esq. Mr. William J. Bree:e Mr. John J. Bresnan
Mr. James P l onbo) |r
Mr C. ( ius I onstant Mr James P ( oyle h Mr. George T. Evans Mr. Frank W. HauserJr. The Hon. William A King |i Mr. John W Lyle Mr. WiIIi.hu ! 1 Moll ■■ Robert I Sorensen M D
Mr Thomas I Welsh Mr. Louis C. Woy< 1 [1
Donors
(Up to MMI
Mr. James F Almond |r
Mi [oseph I Barrhold Mr Francis P I ■ Mr. Thomas J. Brads Mr Frederick ( Brandt Alfred P Bukeavich, M I ■ Mr loseph M. Connell William J. Deery Jr., Ed.D
Mr Bernard J I V\ lin
Mr. Get irg< P I t Icen Mr. Robert J. Ehlmger Mr loseph ( i 1 irael [r. Mr. William H. Graham Mr Fraiiv. is | ] [orn Mr. James | Hynes Jr. Mr. Willi, mi R Johnson Mr. Joseph 1 \\ |ones Mr [ohn I I elh Mr Edward F Lindsay Mi I imes I McBride Mr I harlesM McDonald
Mr I, imes A. McGovern Mr. John T Mulholland Mr. Edward T. O'Brien Joseph F O'Callaghan, Ph.D. Mr. Frederick C. Peech lames J Phck, Esq. Mr Bruno T. Plizak William A. Sheridan, Ed.D.
Mr, Henn C Taddei Mr. C. Steward Tomkins Mr JohnP Welsh Mr ( Aimer I Za< caria
1951
University Club 1,999)
Mr, Frank Stanton
San Miguel Club
(S2.500 M
Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Cl n lr
Chairman's Club
l.-i OOO 52 I
Martin J. Bukowski, M.D.
Mr. James \\ ! ini g in
Mr Waher | Hynel
Mr Charles F Kik\
Mr. Philip I Lucia
Brother Gregorian McLaughlin,
! S I Daniel J. Ragone, ( ['.A Mr William ( Seiberlich Jr.
Founder's Club S999)
Mr and Mrs |ohn B. Cregan Mr. Frank J. Ntauer Jr. Mr. Thomas | Mollo}
Ugo Donini Club
(S2S0 S499)
Charles !' 1 kigan, I sq Eugene P. McLoone, Ph.D. Mr. John |. Malone
Anniversary Club (S140 S249)
Mr Lawrence I Bur Jr. Mr Matthew A. Fanning Mr Francis J. Hoban Mi Robert J. Hunter Mr Gennaro C Leone Mr. Ham J Mayer |r Mr Linus | Phelan
Mr Louis M Ra|
Mr Richard A Rothwell Sr
Donors
(Up PO si ;.ii
Mr |oseph F Armstrong Joseph E. Baumgartnerji . Esq Mr. Joseph J Boyei Mr Mario A Bhcci Mi Noberi A Busch
Ml I' (Ills {. 1 I I. UK J
Mr Joseph E ( "id\
e F. C mlin [r., D.D.S Chester T Cyzio, Esq Mr Richard I Daislej Mr. Francis I ) I lei !i 1 irgi Mr Donald D. IVMuro
Mr. Nicholas J. DiCandilo Mr. Philip E Dolan Mr. Francis R Donovan Mr James E I towne^ Si Mr. William F. English Mr. James P Ewell Mr. Edmund J. Fit:patrick Mr ( lharles I 1 !ar\ s) Mr. Joseph P t. Irace Mr. Joseph A. Granahan lr Mr John 1 I laggern.
Mr.Alben S Harris
Mr. Charles H. HigginS
Mi Jeromt P I lofinann
Mr Paul I Hottir p 1
Mr. Charles \ Inglesbi
Mi Francis A Lihotz
Joseph Y McGinnissSi , D.D.S
Mr James "[ \Kl ,|\nM
Mr. EdH.udW Mikus Mr Gregory R. O'Brien Mr John \ Pensii n ■ Mr. Ham T Rem John A Ryan, Est| Mr. John F Schenkel Mr H,ir\e\ I Stefenowicz Mr. Thomas E Surou ics Mr. James F Taddei
Mr Joseph S. Ti tti
Mr HughP \\ ilsh
1952
Chairman's Club
(Sl.OOO S2 J
Mr- Henrs A Backe Sr Edward I and Ka\ Buchanan Mr. Donald J. Burkhimer Mr. Joseph H. Tonence Mr. James G, McSherrj
Founder's Club (S500-S999)
Mr. John J. Callan
John I Dennehy, M D
Mr C William Kiesei
Mr John W McMenamin
Mi Paul M Moset
The Honorable Joseph T Walsh
Joseph H Wood Jr., M.D.
Ugo Donini Club (S250 5499)
Mr. Edward F Bums |r
Mr. lame- I Gibbons
Mr. Francis V. Griffin
Mr Thi mi. is J Lealn
Robert J. MaroSr.. M.D.
Dr. Charles W. Reil, COL, USA,
DC, ( Ret)
Mr Nicholas A Salandria Mr. Benjamin Tumolo
Anniversary Club (S140 8249)
Frank A Barren
Mr. Francis \ ( !.>nar\
Mr. John T. Duffy
Mr Edward V l iraham
Mr. John J. Mikus
Mr Richard W O'Brien
Mr. Richard K, O'Donnell
Mr. Samuel E Padgett
Mr. John S \ ollmei lr
Mr. Edward I Whelan
Donors
(Up ro 5139)
Richard A Bedford, M D.
Mr. Emanuel J. Benhayon Mr. Fred \ Boccella Mr. James P. Brennan
Mr, Frank J. Campbell |i Francis A I en.,, IH I Mr, Albert F. Chehus Mr. James R. ( le n\ Mr Thomas R C k,n\ Mr. James V. Covello
Mr. John J Elliotl Mr Frederic! \ I nc k Mr Thomas I Feenc^
Mr Joseph M ( la> in Mr. William M Gaynoi b Mr. Leonard F, Gmeiner Mr. George C. 1 lines Mr. William F, Slating Mr. Edward F Lagan Mi [ohn \ Mel iulei COL Joseph G. McGlade Mr 1 Eerberi [ Mel aughlin Mr John A Margraf Reuben C Miller, Cl D Thomas L Moy, D.0 Mr. Frank R. Murdock Richard L. Raab, D.D.S Mr. Edward A Rogart Mr. George W Rose- Mr David W Rums«n Mr. John A Schorr Mr i lerberi E St hweizer Timothy J. Sheehan, D D S. Mi ( arroll E. Shellon Mr. James F Shemely Mr. Frederick H Wozniak
I9S3
University Club
(Sio OOO S24 999)
Mr John J French Walter P. Lomax [1 , M D Mr [acques I Moore
Chairman's Club (S1.000-S2 499)
Brother Arthur I Bangs, I v< Michael F Golden M I 1 Mr. Edgai M Guertin Paul J. McGinn.s, I'h D
Founder's Club ($500 S999)
Rev. Charles J 1 \i\
Ugo Donini Club
(S2S0 S499)
John T. Greed, Ph.D
Lawrence | lordan, D.O Mr. William! Md o^ Mr. Louis P. Masucci G. Russell Reiss Jr., M.D.
Mr James A Riviello
\\M\tKs.\Ri Club
(SI40 -249)
Mr. Eugene J. Brett Sr. Joseph F. Freeman, Ph.D, Mr. Thomas R Gallagher Mr. John J, Gardiner John B. Lynch, Esq Mr. Paul J. Maci ■ Mr Donald F. Sharp
Ml Thomas \X "sheehan
Mr. and Mrs Thomas E. Wallace
Mr Donald W Yurkonis
Mr. John J Zact iria
Donors
(Up to $139)
Mr. William P. Best
Mr. Richard E. Bowers
Mr Anthony M Cirnc\ Sr
Mr. Ronald C Deen Mi Angela A I turso
Honor Roll of Donors 2003-2004
G I F T S I > |
J KIND |
||
We gratefully ac |
<nowledge |
Mr. James N. Leary |
Finnigan's Wake |
the following individuals, |
Mr. E. Dennis Lehman Jr. |
Frank's Family Deli |
|
companies, and institutions |
Thomas A. Leonard, C.P.A. |
Garrison Printing Company |
|
who contributed products, |
Mr. Sidney J. MacLeod Jr. |
Glanzmann Subaru, Inc. |
|
goods, and services to La Salle |
Robert L. Manieri and |
Holiday Inn-City Line |
|
in 2003-2004: |
Anne Marie Smith |
Jim Roese Photography |
|
Edward S. Marks, Ph.D. |
John A. McCann and Associates |
||
Individuals: |
Mr. John A. McCann |
Kelly & Massa Photography |
|
Barbara Amster, Ph.D., CCC/SLP |
Mr. Joseph E. McCullough |
Krispy Kreme |
|
Dr. Peter Bogucki |
Mr. Jeffrey P. McFadden |
La Salle University Campus Store |
|
Jeffrey R. Boyle, C.P.A. |
Ann M. Mickle, Ph.D. |
Lenox Incorporated |
|
Peter Boyle, D.H.L. |
Mr. James V. Morris |
Magarity Ford & Chevrolet |
|
Gregory O. and Patricia M. Bruce |
G. Dennis O'Brien, Ph.D. |
Mayfair Jewelers |
|
Ms. Kathleen M. Burns |
Donna (DiBello) and |
Mercedes Benz of Devon |
|
James A. Butler, Ph.D. |
Louis A. Petroni, Esq. |
Montgomery, McCracken, |
|
Mr. Albert A. Cantello |
Mr. Roy M. Philip |
Walker & Rhoads, LLP |
|
Mr. James L. Cavanaugh |
Mr. Leo W. Pierce Jr. |
PECO |
|
John F. Carabello, D.M.D |
Mr. Dennis M. Powell |
PNC Bank |
|
Robert J. Chapman, Ph.D. |
Mr. Edward J. Reitmeyer |
POMCO Graphic Arts |
|
Mr. James Coleman |
Mr. Carmen V. Romeo |
Royal Caribbean Cruises, Ltd. |
|
Mr. Lew Cook |
Gregory E. Sciolla, Esq. |
Signed, Sealed, Delivered |
|
Mr. Brian Cullen |
Mr. William M. Siegle |
Spaghetti Warehouse |
|
Ms. Maria (Tucker) Cusick |
Mr. Frank Stanton |
Stutz Candy Company |
|
Joseph DelRaso, Esq. |
Mr. Timothy R. Tilson |
Talamore Country Club |
|
Mr. Nick DiCicco |
Dr. Cornelia Tsakiridou |
The Philadelphia Phillies |
|
Thomas A. and Diane M. Doyle |
Mr. & Mrs. Peter G. Vizza |
The Philadelphia Zoo |
|
Mr. Francis J. Dunphy Jr. |
Mr. Thomas J . Walsh |
The Union League of Philadelphia |
|
Thomas J. and Sarah M. Flood |
Mr. James J. Walsh |
Trans Union Credit Information |
|
Mr. Michael T. Fox |
John D. Zook, C.P.A. |
Company |
|
Mr. William J. Frieljr. |
Ugly Moose |
||
Mr. Gaetano P. Giordano |
U.S. Airways |
||
James R. Glanzmann |
Companies & Institutions |
Ventresta Travel |
|
Mr. John E. Glasei |
Amtrak |
Vincent Giordano Corporation |
|
Mr. Mark G. Gola |
Aehtho Group |
Wilke Chevrolet/Buick/Subaru |
|
Blair H. Gould, C.P.A. |
Blooming Affairs Florist |
Yellowbook.com |
|
Kevin J. Harry, Ph.D. |
Bonnet Lane Family Restaurant |
||
John C. Kleis, Ph.D. |
Cleveland Indians |
||
Mr. James P. Fit:geratd Mr Francis X Gavigan Mr. James F. Hanahan Sr. Mr. Frank A. Harrison Mr. John B- McDevitt Mr. Charles H. McGettigan Mr. Joseph E. McGrath John T. Magee, M.D. Mr. Thomas J- Mazza Jr. Mr. Francis E. Monaghan Jr. ArthurS. O'Neill [r.. Esq Mr. Guido C. Pacitti Mr. Robert V. Quindlen Frank Sardina Mr. Ray A. Schartner Mr. Richard |. Threlt.ill
1954
President's Club
(Sso.ooo and above)
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas I Kean 1
Dr. FlubacherClub (s5.000-s9.999)
CPT Edward F. Bronson, USN, Retired
James F. McGettigan. Ph.D. Mr. Joseph J. Molyneaux Mr. Joseph R. Sadowski
San Miguel Club ($2,500 m »•>'>)
Gerald P. Ginley, Esq.
Chairman's Club
(SI.OOO-S2 499)
Ottavio Francis Bu-ndi
MG William F. Bums, USA, Retired
Mr, David P. Malone
Lawrence J. Mellon Jr.. M.D.
Brother William J. Quaintancc,
F.S.C. Mr. Joseph J. Sweeney Mr. Tarleton D. Williams Sr.
Founder's Club (5500-5999)
Mr. William B. Fynes Sr.
Mr. Joseph P. Kearney Mr. George L. Mason 111 Mr. Donald E. Zdanowicz
Ugo Donini Club
(S250-S499)
Mr. Thomas P. Callahan Mr. Daniel J. Flannery Mr. Francis P. Loeber Mr. Robert J. Schaefer Mr. Peter F. Shields
Anniversary Club
Isi-K' S249)
Mr. Andrew J. Augustine III Mr. Richard J. BlashSr. Mr. Robert W. Bonner Mr. John F. Bnckley Mr Loter R. DeFonso Mr. James E. Fleming John J. Grauer Sr., Esq. Mr- William J. Hildehrand Geffrey B. Kelly. S.T.D.. Ph.D.,
LL.D. Mr. Joseph W. Matthews Sr. Mr. Edward V. McGrath Mr. Raymond T. Vasoli Harry J. White, Ph.D.
Donors
(Up to $139)
Raymond S. Alexander, M.D.
Mr. John W. Bimbrauer
Rev. John F. Bloh
Mr. John G. Camila
Mr. Jack F. Daniels
Mr. Gerald W. Faiss
Mr. Joseph D. Finn
Mr. John J. Fossett
Mr. Joseph P. Heaney
Mr. Edward F. Heller
John E. Hughes, Ed.D.
Mr. Albert J. Koob
Mr. Francis J. Kushner
Mr. James F. Martin
Mr. PauIJ.McAleer
Mr. Joseph A. McCaffrey
Mr. Jerome P. McCann
Mr. John P. McElvenny Jr.
John Mooney
Mr. John T. Moore
Mr. John R. Moosbrugger
Anonymous
Mr. Thomas J. Padden
Donald E. Praiss, M.D.
Mr. Robert E. Querubm
Mr. Eugene J. Roman
Francis C. Sarro Jr., D.D.S. Mr. John B. Simms Jr. Mr. Guy T. Sotnle
1955
University Club
(Si 0.000 -S 24.999) Mr. Leonard A. Ward
San Miguel Club
(S2,soo-S4.'>yy)
The Hon. Joseph H. Rodriguez
Chairman's Club (Si.000-s2.499)
Mr. Albert A. Cantello Brother Charles E. Gresh, F.S.C.
Founder's Club ($500-5999)
Mr. James R. Bacon
Mr. Vincent A. DellaValle Mr. Frank J. Noonan
Ugo Donini Club (5250-5499)
Mr. Francis X. Jardel James J. McKenna Jr., Ph.D. Lee J. and Annette (Kosorog)
O'Connor, Ph.D. Mr. Anthony G. Rampulla
Anniversary Club (S140-S249)
John F. Dinger, Esq. Edward J. Fetter. Ph.D. Mr. Charles J. Haag Mr. Thomas J. Horan Jr. Rev. Mr. Joseph J. Manson LouisJ.Stief. Ph.D.
Donors
(Up to SIJ9)
Mt. Henry J. Campiglia Mr. Anthony N. Coyle Mr. A. Leo Coyle Mr. Conrad M. Cregan Mr. Richard T. Dalena Mr. Joseph A. DeBarberie Mr Anthony J. Dennisonjr. Mr. Joseph P. Diviny Mr. Thomas E. Dougherty Mr. Joseph A. Fanelle Mr. Edward J. Fogarty Jr. Mr. James F. Garberina Mr. John T. Hannas Mr. Ralph J. Itri Thomas J. Kardish, M.D. Mr. Joseph P. Kelly Mr. William F. Kelly Mr. James B. McGinn Mr. William J. McNeill The Hon. Edward G- Mekel Mr. John J. Patriarca Albert C. Price, M.D. John J. Schubert. M.D. John J. Siliquini, M.D. Mr. Robert B. Taylor Mr. James A. Totaro Jr. Mr. James Warrington Jr.
Honor Roll of Donors 2003-2004
[956
Presidi NT'S ( LUB
■ ibove)
Mr Leon Ellerson
I \i\ i rsity Club
(Sii ' ooo $24 999]
i N .ni.l Mrs. Henr\ G De \ inceni
Chairman's Club
Mr Peter J Finnegan
James A. Gross. Ph.D. loseph A Kane,Ph.D. Gerald W. McEntee, LH.D-
Thomas J. Murphj . ( I. I
Founder's Club (S500 ■
Charles W. and
Jane (Gregorio) Greenberg Robert W Lynch,! P \ Mr Stephen J McLoughlin
I GO D< >nini Club (S2S0-S499) Edward P ( arey, Esq. Mr. Peter J Dwyer Sr Casimir A lanicki, Ph.D.
The Hon. John T.J Kelh Jr Mr Thomas I Kelh Mr. Lawrence L Maguirc Mr. Francis j McTague
Mr. Paul Mi-nr.i
Mr |i iseph A Quirus
Mr Edward I Welsh
Anniversary Club (S140 S249)
Mr. Dewev P. Clark
Hon. Francis P. C Robert T Deck, Ph.D. Mr Raymond I Derbyshire lose] I, \ Koehler, DO. Mr Robert N McNjIK Rev. John C. Moore Mr James J Pennestri
Donors
(Up to
Mr David L Andrews
Mr. John J. Barrett
Mr William I Brad} |i
Mr. Erwin A 1 aq
Mr. Frank R Fighei 1 -1
Mr. Robert Fischer
Mr. John Ginyard
Mr James J. Hatch
Mr. Raymond G. Huml Jr.
Mr. Robert F. Jones
Mr John I Kerstan
Mr. Thomas I Mi I rowan Jr.
Mr. F. Paul Mita Jr.
Mr Stanley L Morton
Mr. James C O'Brien
Mr Martin * ! Pendergasi >r
Mr Joseph M Penrose
Mr Louis P Reifl
Mr James D. Ritzheimer
CAPT |ohn L Sechler, USN, Rei
Mr Joseph W Suchinsk)
Mr loseph J. Tagg
Mr Frank J Trent
Mr. George J. Wagner Jr.
[957
President's Club
(S5C md il
Janet and Charles L Dale)
Dr. Flubacher Club
■
Mr and Mrs John] Hagan
San \Iii,i i i C lub
Joseph J. Mahon Jr., Esq
Chairman's ( n b (S1.000-S2 499)
John R. Galloway, Esq Professor Charles P. Kindre jan, 1 Mr. Charles W. Kilbride Mr. Donald M. Kelh. Mr. Donald A- Murray
Founder's un. b (S500 ■■■
William J Bam, M D Mr. Daniel T. Campbell Jr Thomas J. Devlin, PhD Mr Alfred J. Giegerich Robert W Kraemer, Ph D Mr. Frederick J. Leinhauser John A Smuh. Ed.D
Ugo Donini Club ($250
Mr. James J. Broussard Mr Edwin R. Corley Jr. Mr. John J Devet Mr. Gerard |. Lewis Mr Thomas A McManui Man Lou and
Richard M Monihan, M 1 1 Mr. H. Eugene Passmore Jr. The Hon. Richard A Powerslll Mr Vincent I Szymkowski
Annia ersari Club
Mr Theodon I 1
Mr Francis X Rnegan lr
Mr Ronald L In 1
Mr loseph R Kelh, Mr Richard F I 1 Mr Alonzo M Lewis Philip J. LoPresti, M 1* Mr. John T. O'Brien
Joseph E. Pappanojr., M.D.
Mr. Richard J Sexti m |i Frank P Silver, M I1
Donors
(Up to SIJ9)
Mr BohdanO. Anniuk Mr. Anthon) I Barl one Rev. David E Beebe Mi ( harles A Bein Jr Mr Paul E Bisbing Mr Paul T. Braceland Mr Nuncio N C .1I1 Mr. John F. Campbell Mr. Francis X C assid^ Robert L. Cog in, Ml I Mr. William R. Culp Mr. Alfred O. Deckert Mr [ohn L I Vlaney Mr John F. Dowling
Mr. Thomas P. Duffy Mi Waller J. Eliason Mr Edward J Filliben Mr Ernest F. Gash CMDR Victor M Gavin,
l S.N .Retired Mr |oseph P Gaynoi Mr |ohn I
William I Hall 111, M.D Mr. Thomas A. Halligan Alfred S Hoffman, < P A Mi James -\ Kean harlesF Kelly 1 Kerlin, Ph D Nicholas C Kihm, Esq. Mr Richard A Kin- Mr Henry J. Koliei William T. Lee, CHFC, C.L.U. [ohn 1 Mc< .mi Ph.D. Mi Francis M. McCloskey Mr. John C, McDevict Mr |ohn A. McNichol Jr. Mr. Frank 1 M( Sotll J Si
Mr. Roben S Mojica
Mr Edward J Murphy 1 ! I Myers Mr. Gabriel I Pascuzzi Mr. loseph i Pe irson vr. Mi I ■■ maid C Robinson Mr ( narles F Ru< Mi |ohn I Senator* Mr Thomas I Shanlev [ohn J Snyder, Ph.D Mi Michael L Uzm Mr. Henr\ W Zakrzewski
loSS
Presiden r's < hi.
Mr. Elmer F Hansen |r
Charter Cll b 00 S49.9
: Mrs William J. Md ■ irmick li
l niversiti Club
M 11 I md C Gerard Kramer
San M 1 1 . 1. 1 1 ( lub
M I)
I. ■■ I I isale, M.D.
■ 'A i bun
Brother Gerard F Molyneaux, F.S.C., Ph D
( HAIRMAN*S< LUB
Mr Kenneth G. Hager Mr John J HaggerEy Jr lames I Kuhn Jr , Esq, Mi ( lharles I Lamb Mr. |ames I McDonald Mr. lame- 1 Walsh Mr. Milton \ \\ tshington Mi Gerald M Wilk
I o\ nder's Club
Mr Robert L Bohrei Mr Mario N D'Aulerio John T. Williams Sr . M D
Ugo Donini Club CS250 S-|
\nthony I ( lucuzzella, M 1 1 Mr Thomas F Dudlei Mr t lerald T I tofmann Mr. Frederick L I iniszf w si 1 Mr \\ tlliatn I Manning Jr Mr Enoi I
Mr H- Richard Noon Mr Thomas( Smith
Vnnivirsari Club (S140
Michael E. Bohan, M.D. Mr. Lawrence I Borger Robert J. Brae h . I | Joseph F. Clarke, M.D John J. Deady, t P \ Mr. John J Gaworski Mr. Edward B. t li Edw m 1< Malarkey, Ph.D. Donald F Mc( joigan I 1 I1 - Alfred T. Pepino, M.D Mr. Richard \' Ritchie Mr Edmund B Wutzer
DON) >RS
-M. 1
Re\ Norman \ Bernstein, Ph.D. Mr Frank E Bottorfl
Mr Thomas F Bui Re\ loseph W ( .ill 1I1. in Mr Michael A Caputo Mr. Thomas I C ase^ Mi \< seph I Case) Mr Roco 1 D. ( ifbne
Mr. Arthur J Dustman lr Mr Richard I Dyei
■ nthon) A I en u 1 Si Mr. William I Flai Mi I 'i ni.ird Freiland loseph M ( iindhart, Esq Mr. Anthony J. Guerrieri Mr Adrian O. 1 lawryliw I linl. ■ \ Hepford, D.P.M Mr. Thomas K Hines St Mr Eugene L Kelb Mr William P Lamb Mi !■■ iben B Lydon Mr. Thomas M M idd< n U Mr John F Magosin |r Mr. lames I Manii m -1 Mr Don lid A Marrandina Mi |oseph \\ McBride Mr Thorn is I' Mc( iffh Mr |ames I Mc( .nine Jr. Mr Edward 1 1 McDermott Mr loseph F Mc( luinness Mr rhom i- M McLenigan Mr |ohn A. Mellon Mr Ri .1 en i I Mono Mr |ohn 1 Mullin [ohn P Rossi, Ph D Mr John C Rothwell Mr Bernard Stepanski
Mr lames E Sullh «' li
Mi William ] Webei
1959
Dr Fll bachi R( 1 l b
■
Ml William I Bork |r
Mi |ohn I shea
San Miguel Club
Lawrence E. McAlee, Esq. Thomas F Toomey lr . M.D. Mr. Emesi R Vai dli
Chairman's Club
52 4s K.I)
Joseph C. Flanagan, M I1
Founder's Club (S500 S999)
Mr. Joseph L. Hanlev Mr lame- F SchtOtz Francis J. Trzuskowski, Esq.
Ugo Donini Club
(S2S0 S499)
Mr. William F. DeHaven Mr. Bernard J. Dillon Jr. Mr. John L. Langan George P. Liarakos, M I ) Mr. John S. Ligenia Edvi 11 I Mel Markowski, Ph.D. Mr Joseph G. Roddy Mr lames F. Stehli
Anniversary Club S249)
Mr Elmer Bauer Jr.
COL John C Farley , U S A., Retired
i II I. seph T Kennedy,
I S.N., Retired Mr John J Lee Mr Roben W. Lowers Mr Michael J Magnotra lr Mr Francis J. McGroryJr. Mr Raymond I Nolen Jr. Mr Bernard J. Vaughan Sr
Donors
i;m)
Mr. William M. Barbour Bernhardt G Blumenrbal, Ph.D. Mr. Edward V. Byms Mr Robert J. Cahitl Mr Joseph A Caron 1 Mr. Raymond T Clothiei Mr Donald J Croke Mr Albert J. Dorle) lr Mr |ohn I Feehan Jr.
lame- J Feerick |r , Esq.
Mr. Anthony P Finamore
Mr lohnM. Flood Mr Hugh C Gallagher Mr Robert A. Godbe)
Mr John V. Goldsmith Mr. John T. Green Jr. Mr Ralph F. Krolikowski Mr William A. Lavery Mr Louis J Lend\ n Mr. lames |. Lynn Mr Tacnck J. McFadden Mr. Joseph A. McGehrin Sr. Mr.ThomasW McGrath Mr. William M. Moran Mr i lei irge T Murphv Mr i. Ilarence I Noh ic b Mr IrankJ.ObaraJr. Mr. Gerald C. O'Neill sr Mr kiseph J. Pello Mr. William F. Raichle lr Mr. William J. Randall John F. Reardon, Ed.D. Mr loseph P F Robert J . Rowland lr . Ph.D. Mr James J. Sproul Mr W illiam F Taylor
Honor Roll of Donors 2003-2004
REUNION 2 |
OOI I |
I V 1 N G |
La Salle congratulates |
all our Reunion classes |
|
and gratefully acknow |
edges the |
following |
class gifts: |
||
Class Year |
Amount |
|
1944 |
$12,234 |
|
1949 |
$93,553 |
|
1954 |
$135,771 |
|
1959 |
$31,268 |
|
1964 |
$101,133 |
|
1969 |
$53,673 |
|
1974 |
$36,262 |
|
1979 |
$35,695 |
|
1984 |
$9,484 |
|
1989 |
$9,765 |
|
1994 |
$11,495 |
|
1999 Total |
$5,312 SS35.645 |
Mr. Anrhom A Tutsi Mr. Lawrence J Vannozxi Mr. William M Wet:let Mr. Thomas J. Whelan
I960
Charter Club ($25,000 $49,999)
Estate of Joseph A- Kelbaugh
University Club (S10.000-S24
Anonymous
Mr. J. Russell Cullenjr
Dr Flubacher Club
(S5.OOO v. ML,',
Mr. Frederick C. Mischler Sr. Mr. and Mrs. Robert T. Wright Sr.
San Miguel Club [4.999)
Mr. Peter A. Martosella Jr.
Chairman s Club
■
Mr Philip N |. Rshei Kick Marczely Mr. Charles J. O'Brien Jr. Mr Richard J. Prendergasi Brother David Rogers, F 5 I L. Dennis Schuler, Esq. Thomas R. Swart:, Ph.D.
Founder'* *. i i r
(SSOO-SQOO)
Anthony Battagha, Ph.D- Samuel P. Cimino, D.D.S. Norman H. Coopeismith, M P Mr James J. Groome
Ugo Donini Club S499)
Mr. Anthony M. Alberta
Mr. Anthony D. Caruso Mr. Joseph D'Aulerio Jr. Mr Alfred A. Lisiewski Sr. Mr. Francis B. McCullough Mr. Joseph A. Saiom Robert W. Suter, Esq.
Anniversary Club
(S140 SM">
Brother Edward Conway, F.S.C.
William J. Gallagher. Esq.
Mr. Joseph E. Hill
Mr. Girard D. Kilker
Mr. Charles F. Scot! It
Mr Edward J. Werner
Mr. Roherr C. AUwein
H.irr, C j Himes. Esq.
Mr. Jame^ \ M< ' ■
Mr Edward A Miller
Mr. Robert E Pi ml- 1
Donors
(Lpio 5139)
Mr. Robert T. Alden
Mr. Joseph M. Rr.id\
Mr. Charles D. Branch |r
Edmund P Butler. Esq
Mr. Joseph M. Callahan
Mr Jame^ 1 Canavan
Mr. Peter Carides
Joseph A. Ciconte, D.M.D.
Mr. Joseph R. Clay
Mr lohnH. Cobb
Mr. Alan T. Craig
Mr. John B. Digan
Mr. Edward M. Dougheriv Jr
Mr. Harry G. Fleming
Mr. Walter J. Griffin
Mr. Thomas E. Hartberger
Mr. Frank A. Hemphill
Mr Thomas J. Flenn,
Mr Fr.ink H. Javorka
Mr William! lek->r
Mr. William F. Keter
Mr Joseph V Kell>
Mr Frank P. k'ellv
Mr. Joseph A. Koch
Mt. Charles A- kinder
Mt. Frank A Manfredi
Mr Paul G. Mattus
Mr. John M. McCarterty
Mr. John F. McDonald
Mr Francis T McGrath
Mr. Francis A. Miller
Mr. Joseph M. Murray
Mr. Francis X. Murray
Mr. John F. Olszewski
Mr. William J- O'Neill
Robert F. Pappano, Esq
Mr. Anthony J. Parente
Mr. Robert M. Remhart
Dr. James T. Richard
Mr. Joseph J. Sgro
Mr, Christopher W. Silvotti Jr.
Mr John V. Snydei Si
Donald L. Sprague. Esq,
Brother Kevin M Stanton, F.S.C.
Mr. John J Stein
Mr Richard L. Vanderloo
Mr. Philip A. Vecchione
Mr. Eugene J. Veneziak
Mr. William F- Walsh
Mt. James P. Waters Jr
H.,m W Woodcock, Ph.D.
1 96 1
Dr„ Flubacher Club (s5.000-s9.999)
Mt Joseph H. Cloran Mr. Robert N. Masucci Mr. James F. Mullan
San Miguel Club
(S2.5OO-S4MU-0
Mr. James D. McShea
Chairman's Club (S1.000-S2499)
Paul F. Bet:, Ph.D.
Mr. Donald J. Brook-
Mr Nicholas G. Cavatocchi
Mr. James P. Edward*.
Joseph P. McFadden '61
Stanle\ T Prais-, D.D.S., MAGD
Founder's Club
Frank and Kathleen Carhn Mr. Robert S. Lyons Jr James J. Madden, Esq. Mr. James T. McLaughlin
Ugo Donini Club S499)
Vincent P. Anderson, Esq.
Mr Laurence T. Crossan Sr.
COL Gerald T Hipp. USA. Retired
Mr Sidne\ J Kowalczyk
Mr lo-eph J. Ruiicka
Mr. Hugh A. Strehle
Anniversary Club
1-14.. 5249)
Mr. Timothy J. Coonahan
LTC Richard E. Darcy, Retired
Mr Raymond F Hagen Sr.
Mr Eugene R- Hahn
Mr. Francis J. Helverson
Mr. David R. Longacre
LTC James J. McGill. USA. Retired
Mr. Gerard F. McLaughlin
Mr. John J. O'Driscoll
Donors
(l p to 5159)
Mr Paul V. Adams
Mr. Robert M. Aiken Sr.
Mr. Ira T. Bellew
Mr. Edward J. Bemier
Mr. Adolph P. Birkenberger
Mr. John L. Burke
Mr. Daniel Campbell
Mr John N Carides
Mr. George A- Carroll
Mr Thomas J. Casey
Mr. Joseph A. Centonre
Mr. Peter A. Ciliberto Sr
Mr. James J. Connelly
Mr Teter C. DeFeo
Mr Peter DeFilippis
Enrico J. DiRien:o, M-D.
Mr Robert A. Donovan 111
Mr. Patrick J. Dooner
Mr. George F. Eck
Mr. Joseph P. Egan
Mr Hilmar P. Hagen
Mr. William W Haines
Mr Joseph J. Hallman
Mr John K. Held
Mr. George S. Jordan
Mr. William J Kenr
Mr. Richard N. Laci n ir 1
Mr John A. Leporati
Mr Harold E. Lindenhofen |r
Mr Thomas F Lynch
Mr. Vincent I Mascoli
Joseph S. McAulirfe, Esq.
Mr. Daniel I Md arch}
Mr. Martin J. McDonnell
Mr. John J. McFadden
Mr Joseph F. McMahon
Mr. Thomas C. Melley Sr.
Mr. Howard E. Morgan
Mr. Robert J. Mulligan
Mr William J. Neville
Martin F. Ney. Ed.D.
Mr. David Norwit:
Mr. Robert J. Pace
Mr. Norman J. Pastore
Mr. John J. Piatkowski
Mr Thomas J. Rafter
Mr. Theodore M. Rogers Jr.
Mr. Robert J. Rush |r
Mr. Jack T. Savage
Mr. Thomas M. Scanlon
Richard M. Schieken, M.D.
James T Sedlock. Ph.D
Mr. Raymond C Seiberlich
Mr Raymond J. Short
Joseph M Shortall, E^q.
Mr. Robert P. Strasavich
Mr. William H Tavlor
Mr. Donald J- Trappier
Mr John E. Verhaaten
Mr Francis J. Weiss
Mr Milton F. Whitehead
Mr. Herbert Whitehead
1962
University Club (s10.000s24.999)
Mr. William A. McShain
Dr Flubacher Clue (S5.000 59
John F. Carabello, D.M.D Mr. John E. Glaser Mr. Michael J. Griffin Mr. Charles J. ReilK Mr. Leo J. Schilling Jr
Chairman's Club (S1.000-S2 499)
Anthony P. Baratta, Esq. John J. Convey. Ph.D. Mr Thomas J. Lynch Mt. Michael J. McKenna Mr. Thomas F. Pyle Jr.
Founder's Club (S500S999)
Mr. Walter E. Dunn Jr.
Ugo Donini Club
(S2SO S400)
Mr Joseph Y- Ashman Jr,
Mr Anthony J. Clark Jr-
Mr Richard A DiSammartino
Mr Thomas J. Kirsch
Nicholas J. Lisi, Esq.
Mr. Charles J. Mahon
Mr. John C. Mitkus
Mr. Eugene Nines Sr.
Mr. Charles D. Oettle
Mr. Francis W. Pfluger
Mr William R. Regit
Anniversary Club
(S140 S249)
Rev. Robert E. Albright
Mr. Don R. Alloway
John D. Caputo, Ph.D.
Mr. Joseph G. Crosby Jr
Mr. Charles W. Giannetti
Mr. Owen L. Green III
Linda A. and David R- Hepburn
Brian T. Kildee, Esq.
Philip C. McGuire, Ph.D.
Mr. John J. Neuschel
Mr. John F. Richardson
Mr. James J. Weir
Donors
(Up to $139)
Mr James J. Alesi Mr Franklin T. Barrett Frederick J Ciao, Ph.D. Mr. John J- Crewalk Mr John J. Cunningham Mr. Edward J. Devinnev Jr. Mr. Russell T. DiBella Mr F lulian diCiurcio Mr. William P. Donng Jr Mr. Joseph M. Downey Rev. Mr William F. Eliason Mr. Norman F. Forand Anthonv J. Fugaro, D.O. Mr. Hugh A. Gilmore Mr. John F Hipp Mr. Peter J. Keenan Mr- John F. Kenney James H. Knebel, Esq. Mr. Earle C. Landes Mr. Vincent L. Leonetti Mr. Thomas F. Lindemuth Mr. Edward C. Lucas Mr. Neal McDonnell Jr- Mr. Francis B. McHugh Mr. Francis X. McKeffery Sr. Mr. Daniel J. McNeff Mr. Frederick J. Meyers Mr William F. Moore Mr Edward T. Moore Jr. Mr. Philip A, Murphy Mr John J. Murphy Jr. Mr. John J O'Neil Mr Robert |. Picollo Mr. Vincent J. Pinto Mr Vincent C. Piselh Mr Thomas Ryan
14
Honor Roll of Donors 2003-2004
Mr. Robert C. Schmidt Mr. James F. Sherlock Mr. Raymond F Snyder Mr. James P. Stanton Sr. Mr Richard J. Tra valine Mr. Joseph G. VanReymersdal Mr. Frank J. Varga CAPT George P. Vercessi,
U.S.N., Retired Mr. Frederic C. Vincent Mr. Glenn V. Wild Mr Frank J. Wood Jr. Mr. James D- Wuenschel Mr Chester A. Zach Mr. Joseph S. Zajac-kowski Mr Gerald J. Ziccardi
1963
Dr. Flubacher Club (s$.ooo S9.999)
Terence K. Heaney. Esq. Mr Michael G. Mullen
San Miguel Club ($2,500-54.999)
Mr. Vincent P Bern' Mr. Edward J. Fierko
Chairman's Club
($j 000 52 499)
Mr. John B. Beal Gerard J. Carpenc\, Esq John L. Connell, C.P.A. Mr. John M. Costa Michael F. Dougherty, Esq. Mr. Joseph M. Evancich Mr. John W. Harran Mr. Fred A. Howell Mr. Joseph M. Ridgway Mr. John F. Smart Jr. Richard M. Snvder, Esq.
Founder's Club (S500-S999)
Charles M. DeFuccio, Esq. Mr. Thomas F- White James A. Dalton, Ph.D. Mr Thomas A. Kelly
Ugo Donini Club
($250-5499)
Mr. John M. Bradley Mr. Joseph P. Brennan Mr. Joseph E. Hanlon Mr. Gerald P. Kirsch Mr. Nicholas T. Lutsch James A. Murphy, M.D. Mr. Bernard A. O'Connor
Anniversary Club (S140 S249)
Mr. Charles R. Adelsherger Mr. Victor F. Cantarella Mr. John J. Lalterr\ Mr Leo J Mansi Jr. James and Elizabeth McBrearty Mr. William A McDonaldJi Mr Malachy D. 0"Neill James P. Reich. D.M.D. Mr. JohnJ.Robrecht 111 Mr. Philip A. Sullivan
Donors
(Up 10 SI39)
Frank J Battaglia, Ph.D.
Mr. Howard G. Becker |
||||||
Mr. Richard D- Breen |
||||||
Mr. Robert B. Byrnes Sr |
2009-2004 |
INCOME S L |
M M A RY |
|||
Mr. Eugene C. Cerceo |
||||||
Mr. Peter A. Certo |
||||||
W. Gerald Cochran. M.D. |
^^^M |
Individuals 27% |
||||
Mr Eugene M. Conhoy |
||||||
James D. Deasy, Esq. |
j ^H |
|||||
Mr. Vincent DiPaolo |
||||||
Mr. Roberr S. Dunn |
Fo |
undations & Trusts 21% |
||||
Mr. Daniel G. Gill Jr. |
||||||
Mr. Thomas H. Haag |
||||||
Mr. Thomas L. Hagenharth |
||||||
Mr. Edwin E. Harhaugh |
||||||
Jay H. Holt:man, M.D. |
||||||
Mr Thomas E. Huggard John C. Incarvito Jr., M.D. |
Corporations 8% |
|||||
Joseph L. Izzo, M.D. |
Other 2% |
|||||
Mr. Richard J. Kawczvnski Mr Leroy B. Kemery Jr |
Government 42% |
|||||
Mr. Andrew J. Lapps Jr. |
||||||
Mr Walter P. Lapusheski |
||||||
Mr. Jack M. Lee |
im McGrath |
Mr. John ]. Canney |
Drs. Zane R. and Charles J. Wolf HI |
|||
Mr Alexander I Marek |
Vlr. Mario V Mele |
Mr J.imes K. Conway |
||||
Mr. Samuel J. McCarthy Jr. |
ohn P Penders, Esq. |
Mr. Vincent M. Cooney |
Dr. Flubacher Cll b |
|||
Mr Daniel B. McDyre Mr Edward J. McFadden |
vlr. Kenneth Shaw Jr Brother Joseph J. Willard, F.S.C. |
Mr. John R. Crawford Mr. David P. Cullen |
(S5 c S9.999) |
|||
Mr John J McGinnis |
Mr. William F D'Arq |
Raymond F. Shea Jr., Esq. |
||||
Joseph E. McGrath. Esq. |
Founder's Club |
Mr. Roberr P. Davis |
||||
Mr. Vincent A. Morelli |
SSOO s |
Mr. John M. Donnelly |
San Miguel Club |
|||
Mr. James W. Moy |
Mr. James J. Doyle Jr. |
($2,500 54.999) |
||||
Mr. Eugene H. Murphy |
Mr. Richard F. Barry 111 |
Mr Robert D. Falkowski |
John W. Becher. D.O. Mr. Joseph J. Connelly Jr. |
|||
Mr. Michael W P.rk Mr. Eugene J Park |
vlr. Frank C. Corace Vlr. Denis B. Cummings |
Mr. Michael F. Gallagher Mr. Frank J. Gallo |
||||
Mr. Francis S- Rovelli Mr. Alfred B. Ruff Mr. Joseph J. Ruggiero |
W.lhamE. Dietrich Jr., Ph.D- vlr. Vincent A. Gallagher Steven J. Madonna, Esq. |
Mr. Anthony I Gatt Mr. Robert L. Giusti Mr. Donato Giusti |
Chairman's Club (si oi M i S2 499) |
|||
Mr. Louis D. Seymour |
vlr. Joseph J. Schoen Jr. |
Mr Edward J Golden Jr |
Mr. Stephen M. Paiuk |
|||
Mr. Francis M. Smith |
Edward A. Wrohleski, M.D |
Mr Robert F. Guenn |
Mr. Albert W. Davis |
|||
Joseph M. Speakman, Ph.D. |
Donald J. Zeller, Esq. |
Mr. Philip E. Heaney |
The Honorable John J. Donnelly |
|||
Mr. John J. Stevenson Jr. |
Mr lules L. Horvath |
Mr. John D. Leahy |
||||
Mr Myron Suchanick |
Ugo Donini Club |
Mr. Paul M Kilbnde |
||||
Mr. Joseph T. S:ul |
(S250 S499) |
Mr. David B. Knies |
Founder's Club |
|||
Mr Louis D. Taddei |
Mr Frmk P. Brennan |
Mr. William J. Lahr III |
($SOO S999) |
|||
Mr. Robert J. Vitahe Mr Matthew J. Wachowski Jr Mr William E.Wixted |
Mr Edward T Cahill Dennis W. Cronin, M.D. |
Mr. Mark J. Malone Mr Joseph G. Manfredonia |
Mr. William F.Bryan III Mr. Thomas B. DiPaolo |
|||
vlr. Eugene G. Delany |
Mr. John J. McCracken Jr. |
Gerald M. Handley, Esq. |
||||
Vir. Joitph M. Donnelly |
Mr. Charles F. McFadden |
Mr. Arthur S. Mackin |
||||
Vlr. Joseph Guaraldo |
Mr. Thomas H. McGee |
Mr. Joseph T. Makowski |
||||
1964 |
Mr John (Jack) Hickey-Williams |
John J. McGroarty, Ed.D. |
Mr. Theodore M. Pappas |
|||
V1r. Joseph E. McCullough |
Patrick J. O'Connor, Esq. |
Michael J. Vallillo. D.D.S. |
||||
Vlr John E Politowski |
Mr. Gerard B.O'Donntll |
|||||
President's Club |
Mr. Peter A. Seibel |
Mr. Gerald C Plewes |
Ugo Donini Club |
|||
(§50.000 jnd above) |
Mr John D. Snyder |
Mr. James J. Reed |
(S250-S499) |
|||
Mr. and Mrs. J. Hugh Devlin |
Mr Joseph A. Spencer |
Mr. Anthony J. Rokos |
||||
Mr William F. Sproule |
Mr. Arnold D. Samson |
Mr. Joseph B. Bloom |
||||
University Club |
Zachary S, Wochok. Ph.D. |
Mr. Donald P. Savakmas |
Mr John P Dooley |
|||
Mr Frank TV Seidel |
Mr Michael F- Doyle |
|||||
($10,000 S24.999) |
Anniversary Club |
Mr. William W Spencer |
Mr. Charles E. Dunleavy Jr. |
|||
Joseph A. Coffey Jr., Esq |
(S*40 S249) |
Mr. Edward F Sutter Jr |
Robert G. Fraser, Esq. |
|||
Mr. William J. Collins Jr |
Mr. Anthom Tosi |
Mr. John L. Garraty |
||||
Mr Michael W. McGuire |
Vlr John C. Altto.j.j, |
Mr. Thomas J Trainer |
Mr. James P. McFadden |
|||
Vlr. J Bruce Bengivenni |
Mr. Robert P. VanderNeut |
John E. McGonigle. C.P.A. |
||||
San Miguel Club |
Mr 1 Michael Davis |
Peter L Viscusi, Ph.D. |
Mr. Matthew L. Mulhn |
|||
(s2.500-s4.999) |
Vlr. Howard C. DeMartini |
Donald J. Walheim, Esq |
Lawrence E. Murphy, C.F.P. |
|||
Mr. James L. Cavanaugh Mr. Bruce R. Dych |
Vlr Joseph G. Hirschmann |
Mr Vincent W. Walters |
Mr. Ralph S- Palatucci |
|||
Vlr Eugene J. Mather Eugene J. McGonigle, Ph.D. |
|oserhE Wreen, Ph D |
Sigmond S, Rutkowski Jr., D.O. |
||||
Dennis S. Mario. C.P.A. |
Thomas 1' McGonry, M.D |
Anniversary Club |
||||
Mr Joseph J McDonald |
Vfr. Joseph F. Murphy - |
(S14O ^-M<)| |
||||
Evening Division 1964 |
1965 |
|||||
Chairman's Club |
Vlr. Carl J. Papenello |
Mr. Joseph J. Boyce |
||||
(SI GOO'S! 499) Edie A. and Norkrt F Beker, Ph D |
Mark R. Stein. M.D. lames W Ziccardi. DO. |
President's Club (Sso.ooo and above) |
John F. Brent, D.M.D Mr. Michael A. Colucci St. Mr. Maurice E. Cox Jr. |
|||
Roger G Bucs, M.D. Mr. Joseph W. Donovan Mr. Paul J. Gallagher Sean Gresh, Ed.D- PeterA. Horry, C.P.A. |
Donors (i p •- S139) |
Mr t '.iniKii \ Rom& 1 University Club |
Mr. Joseph T Cunnane Joseph A. Dieterle, D.O- COLJohnM. Feret |
|||
Mr James H. Ahele Mr. Carl C. Berke |
(SIO.000 S24.999) |
Michael J Ginieciki, M.D. Mt.John W. Huss |
||||
Mr Richard F Keevev |
Mr. Bernard J Bieg |
Mr Paul J Gallagher |
Mr. Joseph E. Markert |
|||
Mr. Donald F. McAvoy Jr. |
Mr. Alan L. Brown |
Mr Nicholas A. Giordano |
Mr. Richard P McNamara |
|||
H 0 N 0 |
r Roll of Don |
ORS 2002-2004 |
IS |
In recognition of their generosity to La Salle University, we gratefully acknowledge the following individuals with cumulative donations of 5100,000 or more:
Lasallian Club
$2,500,000 and Up
Named in honor of St. La Salle.
Ambassador+ and Mrs. Walter H. Annenberg The Christian Brothers of La Salle University Mr. and Mrs. John F. Connelly + Nancv and J. Hugh Devlin, '64 John McShain +
Brother Teliow Club
$1,000,000 - $2,499,999
Named in honor of tlie /bunding President
of La Salle.
Dorothy M. and William J. Henrich Jr., '50
Carmen V. Romeo, '65
Brother Anselm Club
$500,000 - $999,999
Named in honor of Brother Anselm, who, after
sen rug La Salle College during the Depression
with his dedication and exceptional development
acumen, is considered by many to be the second
founder of La Salle.
Leon Ellerson, '56
Jacqueline F. and William J. McCormick Jr.,
■58 Joseph Schmiti Jr., '20 + Jay R. Stiefel
St. Michael Club
0,000 - 5499,999 Named in honor of the parish thai uas the
dation of La Salle High School and
La Salle College.
Almira C. Bainhndge +
Thomas Curley, 70
Janet and Charles L. Daley, '57
Henry G. DeVincent, M.D.. '56 Catherine E. Doran, '73 + Dr. and Mrs. Paul G.+ Ecker Joan Mancini, '74, and
Thomas J. Fitrpatrick Jr., '72 John E. Glaser, '62 John J. Hagan, '57
Barbara and Robert E. Hanrahan Jr., '75 Elmer F. Hansen Jr., '58
Kathleen Gordon, '77, and James J. Lynch, '71 Dr. and Mrs. Morton Mandell Margaret Webster Plass + David T. Poies:, '80 William R. Sautter, C.P.A., '71 John J. Shea, '59 Frank Stanton, '51
1863 Club $100,000 - $249,000
Named in honor of our founding year.
Anonymous
Benjamin D. Bernstein +
William J. Binkowski, '48
Ted Bronson, '54
* Kathleen M. Burns, '75, 'SI M.B.A., and
John Kapusnick Barbara and John F. CarabeUo, D.M.D.. '62 Thomas J. Casey, '52 + Joseph A. Coffey Jr., Esq., '64 Ellen Jane and Robert C. Crosson Jr., '5 1 J. Russell Cullen Jr., '60 Walter M. Czarnota, '52 + Mr. and Mrs. Francis J. Dunleavy
* John J. French, '53
* Joseph A. Gallagher, '50
* Nicholas A. Giordano, C.P.A., '65
Elmer F. Hansen 111, '90 H. Blake Hayman, M.D., '41 + Ragan A. Henry, Esq. Roland Holroyd, Ph.D., '27 + Francis W. Judge, '50 +
* Janet H. and Thomas J. Kean, '54
* Christine Kellv and Peter J. + Kiernan, '64
* La Salle University Alumni Association
* Walter P. Lomax Jr., M.D., '53 Joseph G. Markmann, C.P.A., '49 + Robert N. Masucci, '61
John L. McHale, '49
* John J. McNally, C.P.A., '64 +
* Frederick C. Mischler Sr., '60 Daniel R. Mullin, '41 + Francis R. O'Hara, '54 + Leon J. Perelman, '33 +
* Leo \V. Tierce Jr., '67 Richard J. Prendergast, '60 PTS Foundation Charles J. Reilly, '62 Richard S. Rueda, Esq., '62 Joseph R. Sadowski, '54 John O. Saeger +
Alan H. Silverstein, '70
* Mr^ Joseph E. Slawek
Dorothy and John W. Turner Jr., '69 John H. Veen, '59 +
* Zane R. Wolf, Ph.D., and Charles J. Wolf III,
M.D., '65
: 2004 Inductee + Deceased
Mi I 'i* id R Murphy Mr Joseph L. Rigolizzo Richard C- Simmers jr., D.O. Mr George C Stewart
Donors
(Up to S139)
Nicholas F Angerosa, Ph.D. William J. and
Rosemary (Clancy) Baldino Mr Joseph F. Burns Mr. Patrol I Cerceo BG James J. David Mr. William F. DiMeo Mr Frederick J. Donatucci Mr. Joseph F. Donnelly John A. Doody, Ph.D. Mr James A. Dunn Jr. Gregory J. Feldmeier, M.D. Mr Richard A. Flanagan III Edward J Gallagher. Ph.D. Mr. John O. Gardiner Jr.
rninick D. Garofano Mr. Donald J. Gedney M: John T. Greene
Mr. John M Han Mr loseph F. Heath Mr. Edward W. Hoy LT COL Ralph E. Johnson,
Retired Mr. Charles J. Kane Mr. Joseph 1 Karleslc) Mr Francis C. Keenan Mr Edward I Keenan Mr. Paul J. Kems Mr. John F. Knight ^r Mr Joseph T. Koen Mt. Michael P Kratochwill Mr Raymond I Lean Mr Joseph P Lesniak Mr. loseph F. Lynch Mr. Edward J. Lynch Jr. Mr. Ralph A. Maiolino
isephj. Mark Mt. Geotge J. Matekovic Mt. James L. McCorkle Mr Wayne G. McKeever Mr. John G McNert Peter J. Mlynarczyk, Ml Mr. Richard G Mohelski Mr. Frank j. Pagano
Mr Thomas J Poltorak Mr Roherr H Quinn Mr. Richard W Revnaud Mr Edward C. Rice Mr. Charles A. Rohino Jr. Mr Richard P Ryan John J. Seydow, Ph.D. Mr. William T. Sherlock E. F. Joseph Siehold, D.O. Mt. William E Smith Mr. George J. Sosna III Daniel F. Steinmec: Jr., Esq. Mr. James H. Stewatt Mt. Walt A. Suessenguth Mt. Timothy O. Tohin Mr. Donald J. Vivian Mr A. Eugene Weber Mr William V Zelner
1 060
University Club
(SlO.OOO ^I4l>'-19) Mr. James M. Lord
Dr. Flubacher Club
Mr. Anthony J. Nocella
S w Miguel Cll b
i 999)
Dr. and Mrs. W. Richard Bukata Mr. and Mrs. Eugene J. Ferry Mr. Harry J. Pearce
Chairman's Club
■■ : 499)
Thomas J. and Sarah M. Flood Joseph L. Quinn. C.P.A.
Founder's Club (S501 1 — 1
Mr. Walter F. Crossley Mr. John M. Kramer Mary C. and Leo J Mullen Jr. Richard C. Ri::o, Esq. Jertrev M. Voluck, Esq.
Ugo Donini Club
($250 $499)
Mr Peter M. Poughertv Mr Earl R FeltvhcrLier Richard P. Hunter Jr., Esq. Mr. John I. Kavanagh Sr. Mr William B. Miller Mr William E. Newbauer Jr. EJ^.irJR. r^lsh... Esq Mr. Serafin F. Sandella Mr- lame- M Savarese Joseph F. X Savona, Esq \\ Ellis Smith, D.M.D. Mr. Frederick M. Westcott
16
Honor Roll of Donors 2003-2004
Vnniversari Club
! ru
Nh MbertG Achufi
Mr. Gerald J. Bennett Mr |oseph P. Braceland Mr Thomas J Dvorak Mr. Philip R. Reno lohnS. Follet,M.D. Peter J. Garito, Ph.D. Mr \ mcenr A. Grimes
AltrcJS. Halas, D.M D
Mr. George J. Keane Mr. Roger A. Loos Mr. Thomas E. McGlinchy Mr Richard T. Sands Mr. Thomas S. Saquella Mr. Paul M. Schugsta Jr. Mr Max G. Sewald Mr. Frank A. Smigtel Mr. Patrick J. Ward
Donors
1 1. pro sijg)
Mr Michael A. Baum Mr William L. Becketr Mr. George M. Beschen Sr. Mr. Anthonv L. Bralcryk Mr Robert L. Browne Mr J. Richard Cahill Mr. Natal ) Carahello Mr Harris A. Can- Frank N Clan Jr., Ph.D. Mr Louis F Colantuono Jr. Mr Edward F Columbia Mr Joseph R. Conrov 111 Charles L. Conway Sr.. C.P.A. Mr William C. Deutsch Mr. Donald A. Discavag* Mr. Gerald M. Dougherty Norman A. Ettenger. M.D. Mr Herman Farher Mr Robert J. Fix Mr. Jerome Flomen Mr. John H. Forrest Mr Francis V. Gentile Mr. Vincent J. Geraci Mr Cyril .1 Greenya Mr Ham B. Haeherle Rev. Michael P Hegarq Mr Michael F Heron Mr John E. Higgins Jr. Mr. George L, Hohenleitner
Mr John A. Juzairis
Mr. Thorn. i- K kartenherger
Mr |ohn IKellev
Mr. Charles W. Kettercr Jr.
Nicholas C. Kiemieskv, Ph.D.
Mr Walter 1 karwan
lames M khek. M D
Mr Wayne T knapp Sr.
Mr. Edward T. Malatesta
Gerald J McConeghv, Esq.
Mr. Frank |. McCo}
Mr Thomas W. McGHnn
Mr. Thomas D. McGovern
Mr. Francis T. McLaughlin
Mr. Frank] McNallylr.
George I Mecherly, Ph.D.
Rc\ Pa\ id C Menegay
Mr. Norman E. Morrell
Mr James F Murphy
Mr. James J. Murphy
Rev. Raymond C. O'Brien
Mr. James C. O'Laughhn
Mr. William C Ott
Mr. Philip J. Palmer
Richard. '66 and David. '00 Pcpii
Mr Edwin J. rtittner
Mr Walter I PI a gens Jr.
Mr losephW.ReblJr.
Mr. Fredric 1 S intolux it
Mr Kurt C Schwind
Mr |ohn M Shaeflfei
|ames W Sisl K , Esq
Mr. Edward H . \\ est ermann Si
Mr. James M, Wilson
Mr. James R \ i ia
Mr Bruce E Zehnle
[96
/
President's Club
(S50 000 and abow | Mr. Leo W Pierce Ji
Dr Flubacher Club
59.999)
Mr. J. Anthony Hayden
san Miguei Club
Mr Michael J. Ragan
I 11 URM VN S CLUB 52 499)
Mr David C Fleming Jr.
Mr |ohn ) McGrath Augustine E Moffitt lr , Sc D
Mr Roben I O'Brien Raymond A and
Kathryn (Bareis) Ricci Mr Petei I- Smith 1 ei mard B Kn Esq
1 oi ndi r's Club
Louis I Beccaria, Ph.D
Mr Robert A Becker
\ inc em Butera, M.D.
Honorable Thomas E 1 tempse^
Warren W. Faulk. Esq.
Mr. Garrett J Girvan
Mr. Alfred M I iuai ildo
Mr. Paul 1 1 lenii ■
Mr. Robert H. Lemke 111
Mr Walter W Noci |l
Ugo Donini Club (5250 5499)
|oe Brisle^
Mr Lawrence F Carroll Mr James E. ( onnell Mr William 1_ Dunn Jr Mr. Willi. mi I Mt I aughlin Di Michael N Milonejr. Timothy E Urbanski, M.D. Michael 1 \ ergan
\nni\ 1 rsari Club C$140 5249)
Arthur J. Askins, < I \ Mr. John F Cole Mr. Gerald A. Cropp Mr Edward K. Forster Mr. Martin P. Frain Jr. William E. HermnA P A Mr. Edward ]. Keppel Mr. Charles W Knecht David J. Linaugh,( IA Mr. Chestei I Mi< hew lcj Jr Mi V incent D. Quinn Mr William J. Ryan Mr James A. LJlnuh Jr. Mr George A Vasiliauskas
Mr Peter 11 Zcieua
Donors
■ SI39)
1 lannelore T. and
Francis C. Barbienjr, Esq Mr. Frank J. Bar :i\ ick Mr. Barry F. Bennett Mr. Thomas F. Boland Sr Mr Frederick J. Bosrwick Mr Joseph E. Botta Mr Daniel D. Bums [r. 1 imes A Butler. Ph.D. Mr 1 ierald I C 'oghlan Mr Joseph G Colasante Mr Harvey A. Druker
Mr |amesB Duttey
Mr loseph J. DufFy Mr. John N. Flinn Mr Edward P. Flood Rev. Robert J. Frit: Mi Mk hael F. Gallagher Mr. John E. Gallagher Mr James J. Graham Mr Martin H. Horchler Mr. Edward F Intravartolo Mr William F. Jacovini Jr. Mr Andrew M Jurek Mr Robert B Kelly • ll 1 \v ,r,l kelh
Mr |ame> E Kennedy Mr Randolph K Larsen Jr Mr \\ illiam L Leahi
Lieber Jr.. Esq Mr \\ iltei N Loburak Mr Leonard I Maciaszek Mr Raymond J. Master-, n Mr C harles E McKinney Mr Walter M Migralajr. Mr John J. Moftatt Jr. Mr George J. Morrison Mi [oseph A. Nickels III Mr Reuben I Nyvelt Mr Raymond Oczkowski Mr Edward A O'Lone Thomas F Praiss, C.F P . E A Mr Theodore R Quann Mr. Martin | Reddington Mr RobertW Reichenbach The Hon Maurino ) Rossa.ro - lr Mr. Thomas P Ryan Mr Richard C Smith Mr Ruben T Testa Mr loseph 1 \ arga Mr Joseph P Wargo |r Mr R.-berr H Wott Mr Leonard \ W roblewski Mr Richard C Zielinski
[968
DB I LUBACHER CLUB
Mr Lawrence A. Grabenstein
San Miguel Club 1 999)
Mr Andre P. Moutenot Joseph C. Murphy, C.P.A.
Chairman's Club
(si 000 S2 499)
William G. Brennan, C.P.A. Mr. James J. Faulk Anthony R Giorgio, M.D. Dr. md Mrs. James J. Heger Brother Edward J. Sheehy, I 3.( James P and
Marie t Mi" me\ ' Steinitz
Mi I i \\ illiam Vickers I Janiel 1 Whelan Esq Thomas P, Witt, Esq William M. Wixted, M D
I oundi r's Club ($500 S999)
Mr Thomas 1 And< 1 •■ m Mr Harry F Kusickjr. Gregory E Sc ii ilia, I sq Mr. Robert W, Sykes
Mr. William J. Warne
Ugo Donini Club (S250
Anonymous
lames P Bradley Sr.,J.D
Andrew | CandelOTC, D.O
Mr. John P. D'Amato
Mt Edward I 1 1 « Mr loseph E 1 Jaffne^ Mr John I ( iibbflns Mr. Thomas P. Kelly Jr Charles E. Lally, ( P \ COL Lawrence G Lupus, Retired I T. Robert P O'Halloran, Retired i Ri tesser, Ed-D.
Vnnivers \m Ci in (SI40 S249)
Mr Michael P Mthofl
Mr Patrick \ Belle
Mr Hank Bullwinkel
Michael E I onnaughton, Ph.D
Mr Eugene I I \ in; |i
Mi 1 teorge P ( Sraham k
\ in. nil F (link, Esq,
Mr Robert \ HodgklSS
Mr RobertO Horvath Mr Robert I lunch Mr James M Knepp Mi ( ieorge \\ Luther III Francis I and
Miriam (( far) ) Maloni ) Mi |oseph 1 M. Hirer Brothei John P McErlean, I 5-< LeoF MclnemeyJ P.A lames M IVnny li , Esq
Donors
' I
Mr Lawrence 1 i Auerwecl
Mr Walter F Beard |r
Mr, Stephen W ( henei Mi C harlesS ( ohen Mr, Roben L ( ■ »nn ■ 5i
Mr. John ) t, Yenru |r Mr Edmund I C !n ssen Mr Gerald E Davis Mr Michael I DiFebbo I hi -in. i- \ and I 'ianc M I *• >\ le Joseph A and
Kathleen A (O'Neill) I ianstei Mr Eugene I Gei Mr [1 ihn T t irosso Mr. Andrew I ( !ubi( .1 [1 Mr. William J. 1 lamilton Mi I imes P Harper Mi loseph T llicke\ Mi David I Holland
Mr Robert M Kuii;
Mi I dgar I Langdon
Mr i tifford I Lent:
P Stephen Lerario, Esq,
N li 1 lharles V L\ man
Mr. Michael I Maguire Mr. Raymond E Majewski Mr George E Matthews Mr Francis J McBrideJr.
Mi |ohn F McClainJr,
Mr. John F NK 1 1 mnick
Mr Robert J. McDermott
Mr Mark G McElwee
Mr Paul T McGeehan
Mr. Timothy F McKenna
Mr Thomas I i McManus
Mr Gerald I McNeil
Mr. Peter Mecznik
Mr Gerald J. Mergen
Mr Franc 1- J. Messaros
Mr. Frank J. Milewski
Mr. Richard J. Monastra
Mi 1 lennis C. Moore
Mr Thomas R. Murphy
Mr Edward JNolft Jr.
Mr James H. Noon Jr.
Mr. Richard W. O'Connell
Brother Richard T. Oliver, O.S.B.
Mi fames F Politowski
Mr. Charles 1 Potob
Mr. Francis W. Reagan
Mr. Dennis T Re irdon
Mi GeraldJ.Reid
I ht V\ illiam J. Rieger
Mr William E. Ring
Mi |ohn E Schank
loseph P Schliep.C P.A
Mr Lenferd I Seelj
Mr Philip J Smith III
Alan M Spagnola, M.D.
Mi Richard E Stoutzenberger
Mr William R \ m Buskirk
Mr |ohnR Vasoli
Mr |ohn A Whiteside
Mr. Donald M \\ oods
Mr Vincent I Zappacosta
[969
University Club S24 999)
William R Sasso, Esq
Dorothy and |ohn W. Turner Jr.
Pr Flubacher Club
"■
Rudolph H Carrier lr . Ev|
John M.Daly. M.D.
San Miguel Club (S2 500 S4.999)
Edw ird M Roberts, ( P.A.
Mi |nhn I \\ iilm Jr.
Chairman's Club
1 homas L Furk >ng Ji . Ph.D.
Richardl Hill, Esq
Bob Kerns, Esq.
Thomas R. McGuigan, Esq.
James F. and
Margaret M. McManus, Ph.D. Mr. Chester J. Orzechowski Jr. Mr. Francis C. Palopoli Mr. Frank \ Possingei loseph H. Reichman, M.D. Ml William M Wartel
1 01 ndi r's Club
($SOO ■■
Mr. William P. Bamett Mr |ohn I. Cahill
I 1 in< is A and
Christine M Champine Kevin O, Faley, Esq. \\ loseph Hetherington, Esq.
Honor Roll of Donors 20032004
LA SALLE LEGACY |
)CIETY |
Planned Gifts and Bequests ensure |
future security to maintain programs |
and facilities at La Salle University |
and provide opportunities for growth |
and expansion. In recognition of our alumni and friends who have |
|
honored La Salle through their investments in planned giving and |
|
bequest commitments, the Univers |
ty has established the La Salle Legacy |
Society. This year, we gratefully act |
nowledge the following Society |
members: |
|
Ms. Almira C. Bainbridge |
Mr. Thomas F. Kehoe. '50 |
Mr. John S. Baky |
Mr. Joseph Klebaugh, '60 |
Mr. John B. Beal, '63 |
Mr. Maurice A. Kelley, 39 |
Ms. Christina Biehl |
Mr. HarrvF. Kusickjr.. '68 |
Mr. John L. Biehl Jr., 73 |
Mr. William J. Letmkuhler, '65 |
Ms. Kathryn Biehl |
Charles A. Leonard, Ph.D. |
Ms. Rose Mary Biehl |
Ms. Kathleen (Gordon, '77) and |
Mr. Frank S. Blatcher. '56 |
Mr. James J. Lynch, '71 |
Judge Genevieve Blatt |
Mr. Anthonv M, Marino. '54 |
Luther W. Brady, M.D. |
Mr-. Regina McCarren |
Mr. Thomas J. Casey, '52 |
Mr. William J. McCormick Jr., '58 |
M. Kathryn F. Cocozza, '83 |
Mr James J. McDonald, '58 |
Mr. John H. Condon Sr. |
JohnJ. McNallv. C.P.A., '64 |
Mr. Michael C. Coughlin. '83 |
Mr. Joseph D. McNamara, '56 |
Mr. Robert C. Crosson Jr., '51 |
Mr. John McShatn, '17 |
Mr. J. Russell CullenSr '22 |
Mr. William McShain, '62 |
Mr. J. Russell Cullen Jr., '60 |
Mr Michael G. Mullen, '63 |
Mr. Walter M. Czamota, '52 |
Mr. Daniel R. Mullin. '41 |
Mrs. Man- E. Dean |
Helen F. North, Ph.D. |
Henry G. DeVincent, M.D., '56 |
Ms. Elsie E. O'Halloran |
Mrs. Catherine E. Doran, '78 |
Rev. Martin J. O'Halloran. '40 |
David C. Eisenhart Jr.. CT.A . 71 |
Francis R. O'Hara, Esq., '54 |
Mr. Leon Ellerson, '56 |
Ms. Margaret Webster Plass |
Joseph C. Flanagan, Ml |
Mr. Joseph P. Rhein, "38 |
Mr. Thomas J. Flood, '66 |
Mr. George J. A. Roken Jr. |
Dr. Joseph Flubacher, '35 |
Mr. John O. Saeger |
Mr. Everett Frank Jr. |
Mr. Joseph J. Schmit: Jr., '20 |
Mr. Joseph A. Gallagher, '50 |
Mr. Kenneth Shaw Jr., '64 |
Mr. Nicholas A. Giordano, '65 |
Mr. Thomas W. Sheehan. '53 |
Mr. John E. Glasc: |
Mr. Charles E. Stahlecker |
Mr William 1. Good |
Mr. Arthur C. Stanley |
Charles A. J. Halpin Jr., J.D.. '44 |
Mr. Frank Stanton, '51 |
Mr. Robert T. Hansen, '64 |
Edward J. Stemmler, M.D., '50 |
Dr. Roland Holro' |
Mr Isidor P. Stritrmatter II, '56 |
Peter A. Horry, C.P.A., '64 |
Ms. Mary Tomasco |
Philip E. Hughes Jr., Esq., '71 |
Mr. Edward J. Vasoli, '52 |
Mr. Francis W. Judge. '50 |
Mr. Raymond T. Vasoli, '54 |
Kathleen M. Bums. '75, and |
Mr. John H. Veen, '59 |
John Kapusnick |
Ms. Beatrice A. Walsh |
Mr. Robert A. K.s |
Mr. Bruce E. Zehnle, '66 |
Mr James H.Hughes III Mr. Kenneth R. Mancini Jr. Mr. Thomas J. McElvogue Rosina and Francis J. Rvan. Ed.D. Mr. Charles A. Tier
Uco Donini Club
James B. Albrechr. M D. John C. Becker. Esq. Mr. Thomas F. Boyle Mr. Robert J. Bugdal Mr. Sam C. Chung Mr. Robert J. Coylc Mane 1 Bruno 1 and Leo r
I^egnan, Ph.D. imKitt
Denis S. Longo. Ph.D. Joseph M. and
Eileen M (Sweeney) Markmann Mr. Rodger J. McLaughlin Francis M. Milone, Esq- Norman H. Rappaporc. D.D.S.. M.D. Mr John T. Reed
M.D.
W. Dennis Zerega. Ed.D
Vnniversaki Club
■^49) Mr. Richard J. Come
Henn- B. Eastland. Esq
L- Matthew Frank. M.D
Joseph A. Goldbeck Jr., Esq.
Alan J. Jarvis, Esq.
Mr. Courtney C. Kronk HI
Mr. Leon F. Machubki
Mr. Francis M. Moonev
Bill Reyers
Mr Dennis J. Rochford
Ms. Cathenne B- Setwell
Mr. Anthony L, Voetl
Donors
(Up to $139)
Mr. John R. Akotjr.
Mr John F Anthom Mi William D. Bradshaw Mr Donald J Corcoran Mr. Robert I Courtney |r. Mr Terence I Darj Mr Thomas K ! Mr. H. Ken DeDominicis John E. DeWald. Esq. James J. Doyle. Ph.D. Mr Robert A. Fina Mr. Stephen C. Rood Mr Michael F Flvnn Frances M and
John T Gallagher, Esq. Mr j.'hn \ Gambale Mr Joseph L. Gardner Jr Mr George \ Griffith Mr Frederick S Gunther I Patrick Henn. Ph.D. Mr Francis D. Heron Mr. Dennis M Kense\ Mr. lames H. Klein Mr Richard |. Kochanski Mr. Joseph F. Koscinski Jr. Mr Peter :
Mr. Ledell D Lipscomb Mr Edward P. Lisiecki Jr. Mr. Edward J LoCasale Mr Robert D Lowden Mr Bernard B- Lowekamp Mr Thomas I Mahei
h M Marquart
Mr lames P McNalh,
Mr. Edward Mockapetris Mr Charles J. Nemeth Mr Edward J. Nolen Mr. Robert M. O'Connell Mr Edward J Olwell Mr Peter I O'Neill
Mr. Mich.ie! E. Osborne Mr Thomas C. Reid Stuart S. Sacks. Esq. Mr. FrankJ.SchallerJr. CarlF. ShulcC.r.A. Stephen E. Storms. Ph.D. Mr. Theodore W. Wahl Mr Anthony M Walmch Jr Mr. MamnE W .- Mr. James V. Welding Jr. Mr William B. Wiegand Mr Robert J Zuccanm
[970
President's Club
■ and above)
Mr Thomas Curley
Universits Club
Thomas A. Leonard, C.P A
Dr. Flu bach er Club
Thomas J. Mahonei . C r A Peter M McGonigle, Esq.
San Miguel Club
Joseph A. D'Amato. C.P.A
Mr. Henn. F. Eberhardt
Mr Gregory LeCerrt
Margaret M.(BresIin) and William J-
Markmann. M.D. Mr. William D Mullen ^r Mr DennisJ.Reid
Chairman's Club
-
Edward K. and
Janice M. Beit, Ph.D.. R.N Brother Patrick A Duffy, F.S.C
Brother E- Gerald Ficgerald. F.S.C.
Mr. Thomas J. Hoskins
Brother Michael J. McGinniss. F.S.C.
Founders Club
Judith (Stanton) and James J. Ahem Jr. Mr Robert L- Bendorovich Jr Mr. Charles F Clean- Mr Francis J. Dunphy jr.
ph A F.ckjr. Anthonv M Giordano Jr.. M.D. Patnck M Gleason. Ph.D. Bernard Grossman, M.D. Mr. David C. Lancaster Mr. Robert F. McAnespey Mr. Thomas A. Oravez Mr. John T. Osmian Mr. Charles J. Reynolds
Loo Donini Club
Paul J. Burgoyne, Esq.
Mr. William Campo
Mr. Dennis J. Coyle
Mr Mathew L. Dellarco
Mr. Nicholas A. DiFranco
Mr. Bradford P. Eridtson
Mr. Philip J. Gray
Mr |ohn J. Higgins Jr.
Mr. William J. Kelly
Mr Jerome F. Lombard Jr.
Charles P. Lutcavage, Ph.D.
Mr. JohnJ. Maloney
Kenneth W. Moore. C.P.A.
GUI M Nardellajr. M.D.
Mr. Michael G. Neuschel
Joseph M Owens, Ph.D.
Thomas C. Ratchrord. Esq.
Bech A. and Joel C. Rosenteld. M.D.
Anniversary Club (S140 •-_
Mr. Nicholas J. Cappello Jr. Mr. James M. Carroll Mr. Philip C. Oa\ erelli Mr Manuel W. Dia: Daniel J. Dinardo, C.P.A. Mr Walter E- Donovan Mr Richard C- Emen Mr.CariJ.Gedetk Mr Harrv Leopold Jr. Mr. George H. Levesque Jr. Mr. George J. Lordi Jr Mr. Martin I- McFadden Phillip J. Miraglia. PhD Mr Robert J Nolasco Mr. Ra\mond J. O'Brien Mr Edward C. O'Donnell Jr. Mr Robert J. Pannepacker Mr Thomas M Yapniarek Rev Leonard H. Zeller
Donors
•
Mr. Dominic Aceto
G. Michael Bellenghi. CT.A
Mr. PaulCBiegJr.
Mr. John J. Bond
Mr Thomas B. Bowe
Mr Joseph E- Bulsak
Francis J. Carbo. D.D.S.
Mr William D Conrad
18
Honor Roll of Donors 2003-2004
Mr Donald 1 I uva CAPT Daniel J. D'AlesioJr., Esq. Mr. Michael J DeLoretra Jr Mr. Raymond D. DeStephanis Jr Mr Ham, J Diamond Mr Michael I Dillon Mr. Thomas J. Dispenzere Mr. George K. Eckenrode Timothy J. Erh, M.A. and [oann Kelly Erh, Ph.D. Anhur R- Ersner, M.D. Mr. Robert D Freedman Mr Frederick F Galdo Francis C. Gatti Jr., Esq. Raymond M. Gerepka, Esq. Mr. Joseph P. Glennon Jr. Walter J. Griffin. C.P.A. Mr. Vincent A Guarini Mr. Ralph E Hamel Mr. Paul T. Hannan Mr. James J. Harnett Mr. Vincent P. Haugh Ir John J. Heck, C.P.A. Mr. E. James Henderson Jr. Mr. Richard J Jackson Mr. Thaddeus A. Jalkiewicz [r Mr Joseph P Kane Rev. Thomas R. Kennedy, C.M. Mr Richard A. LeRrun Mr. Edward J. Lehman Mr. Edmond F Mac Donald Charles R. Maratea, Esq. Mr. Thomas W. Maresca Mr. Luigi J. Marrafino Mr. Gerald T. McAllister Mr. John J. McAvoy Mr. James P. McCaftertv Mr. Daniel J. McCardle Mr. Michael P. McElroy Edward J. McGlinchey Jr., Esq. Mr. John J. McGIynn Mr. Michael E. Miskel Mr. Joseph W. Mitchell Mr. Joseph M. Mottola Mr. James F. Naegeli Mr. Joseph S. Napterkowski Mr. James F. O'Donnell Mr. Charles M. Paul Mr. H. Randolph Pomeroy Mr. Charles J. Quinn Jr. Mr. Stephen A. Race Mr. William S. Reill\ Mr.LeoJ.Robb Mr. Charles V. Roche Bruce J. Romanc:uk, M.D. Mr. Francis A Ronkowski Mr Nicholas A. Rudi Mr. John J. Saccomandi Jr Mr Anthony J Santoro Mr. Martin J. Sheeron Sr. Mr. Charles M. Sielski Mr. Edward C. Smith Mr. David B. Smoluer Mr. Stanley E. Swalla Jr. Mr. William N. Tanner 111 Ralph J. Ten. Esq. Mr. Raymond F Theilacker Mr. Walter M. Urban Jr. Mr Kenneth S. Verdon Mr. Peter L. Veterc James C. Walker. Esq. Mr. Kenneth M. Walsh Mr. William J. Welsh Mr. Michael J. Wilkin Mr. Michael J. Wilson Mr. Frederick A. Zaiss
1971
President's Club
($50,000 and above)
James J. and Kathleen (Gordon)
Lynch William R. Sautter. CTA
Charter Club (S25.000 S49.999)
Mr Robert J. Christian
Dr. FlubacherClub (S5 S9.999)
Robert Folberg, M.D. Mr. Robert A Jenco Christopher and Sandra Koch Patrick J. O'Leary, C.P.A.
San Miguel Club ($2,500 ^4 999)
Michael J. and
Frances (Jacob) Diccicco Mr. Thomas J. Shaw 111 Mr. William M. Siegle Dr. and Mrs.. John Sweeder William A. Wachter. Ph.D.
Chairman's Club ($1,000 S2.499)
Brother Francis B Danielski, F.S.C. Mr James M. Mack Brother John J. McGoldrick, F.S.C Mr. Dennis M. Powell
Founder's Club (S500 (999)
Mr Samuel J Farru£gio Jr Thomas J. Feenck, Esq. Mr John J. Ganano Philip E Hughes Ir , Esq Mr. Kenneth J Kempt Richard E. Kreipe. M.D. Mr. Pasquale C. Marchese
Ugo Donini Club (S2so $499)
David J. Badolato, M.D William A. Biermann, M.D. James M Conic. Esq Mr. James F Connoi Mr. D. Michael Fre\ Mr. David M. Gillece Thomas J. Haines, Esq. Mr. George H. Holder
Albert G KroU, Esq
Mr. Gerald R. Petre
Thomas J. Pierce, Th D
Michael J Reinking, C.P.A., CSMC
Edward V. Schulgen, Esq.
Mr. James A. Slinkman
Mr. Gary R. Walsh
Mr. Thoma-, F Wojciechowski
Anniversary Club
($140 s^'it
Laurence V Ashbacher, M.D. Gerald R. Bodisch. Ph.D. Mr. Richard G. Bohs Loudon L. Campbell, Esq. Mr. Jeffrey E. Chnstides Mr. Gary L. Crawford Mr. James J. Cronin Robert F. Cunningham, Ed.D Dennis P. and
Margaret E. (Funk) Dailey
( hades E. and lane B. D.in.hel Mr James M Diamond Mr. Michael R. Hogan Edward J. Hughes, Esq Mr. Thomas M. Jamrogowicz Mr. Perer J. Matje Jr Patrick J. McHugh, Ph.D. Mr. Richard J. O'Donnell Mr. Joseph L. Ramsay Jr. Mr. Harry B. Sauers Mr. Robert G. Sneath li John Wiley Jr., Esq. Mr. Joseph M. Wilson
Donors
1 1. p to SIM)
Mr. David L. Abruzzi
Mr. Francis G. Amorosi
Mr Edward C. Anastasi
Mr. Richard A. Avicolli ^r
Thomas J. Saldino, Th D
Mr. Bernard E. Beck
Mr. Thomas A. Bielecki
Mr. Daniel P. Biko
Mr. Bernard J. Black
Brian J. Byrne, PhD
Mr Thilip A Canal
Mr. John J. Cantwell
Joseph F. Capodanno Jr., Esq.
Mr. John V Cofet
Mr. Robert J. Colton
Mr Vincent R 1 onnot
Mr. James H Convery
Mr Thoma- L Corcoran
Mr. Charles M. ( ostelli
John P. Cotter, Esq.
Mr Thomas J. Coyne
Karen Q. and Bruce K. EViman. Esq
Mr Laurence | I hlSG ill
Mr. Michael J. Dunn
Mr David H Duryea h
Mr Charles F Fastiggi Mr. James J. Feeley Jr. Mr John J Ficzgibbons Jr. Mi Kevin P FUnn Michael [ Franczak, Ph.D. Mr. Michael A. Gephart Mr Richard A Giantisco Mr. William J. Graham Mr. Roger A. GreL!" Mr Michael J. Higgins Rev Martin R Hohlfeld Eugene P. Hughes Jr , M.D. Mr. Richard M. [ovine Mr. Richard D K.czinarski Mr. John R. Kenny- Mr. George E. Kientzy Jr Mr. James R Klaghob Mr. Roman 1 Leszcrv-zvn Mr Louis R. Libeno Mr Thomas J. Londergan Mr. Robert P. Malachowski Mr. Carl P Malitsky Rev. Nicholas F Martorano, O.S.A. Mr. Charles D. Marvii Jr. Mr James P McCafferty Mr. Joseph J. McCallJr. Mr. FrankJ.McCall John M McGuwan, M.D Mr James F. McGowan |r Mr. James J. McKeogh Mr. Richard A. McNally Mr. Dennis M- McNulry Robert J. Miller, EJ D Mr. Robert A. Monagan Mr Anthony J. Morhno Mr. Dominic J. Motta Jr. Mr. John P. Nolan Mr. Connell P. O'Brien Mr. JamesJ. O'Neill Mr. James M. Par.idi-
Mr. Frank J. Peditto
Mr. Michael A. Pernck Jr.
Mr. Edwin S. Pikalow
Mr. Robert I Seitert Mr John J. Sramerro Mr. Edward J. Tiemcv Mr \ incent M Tomo Mr Erich L. Uhlenhrock Mr. Leroy G. Walker Mr. Thomas J. Wolf
1972
President's Club
(SSO.OOOand above)
Joan iMancini) and
Thomas J. Fitzpatrick Ir
Universiti Club (Sio 000 £24,999)
Mr. Vincent P. Walls
Dr. Flubacher Club S9.999)
Thomas Capizzi, Th D Michael L. Duffy, J. D Mr. William S Hough John F. Kent, Esq.
San Miguel Club
(S2sOO (4,999]
Mr. Mark D. Baldino I ISrry T Chugani, M.D. Daniel A. Giannini, C.P.A. Thomas S. Kilcheski, M D Marilyn (Davis) and
Charles J. Quattronc Jr.
Chairman's Club
iv, 0O0 S3 499)
David and Brenda Beavers Eugene V Gallagher, PhD. Robin F. Gallagher, D M.D. Mr Srephen L McGonigle Mr. Thomas S. Rittenhouse Anthony C. Santopolo, M.D. Mr. Elmer J. Shamwell J M.chael Wh.taker, M.D.
Founder's Club (S500 S999)
Robert E. Bonner, M.D. Mr. Louis D. Figan Mr Raymond C. Freisheim Mr. Stephen M Hottman Jr. Mr Edward T. Kane Jr. Mr. William G.Mullen Francis P. Sutter, DO.
Ugo Donini Club ($250 S499)
Mr. John L. Austin Margaret R. Connors, Esq. Mr Donald J. Courtney Mr William J. Hamilton Walter J and Mary V. Heyse Mr. John P. Kelly John F. Mclnemey, Ph.D. Mr Michael G. McMenamin JohnJ.O'HaraJr.M.D. Mr. Roberr W. Schwaneberg Mr. Daniel E. Thomas Mr. Charles J. Walsh Jr. Mr. Henry M Woernet
\\N!\ ERSAR1 LlA'IJ ($1 10 S240I
Robert P. Argentine jr., M.D. Mr. Ralph Batman Kathleen M. (Tulb | and
Joseph V. Bnggman, Ph.D. Francis \ Dillon, Esq Mr. William M. Drajgon Mr. Weam D. Heinz Brother Thomas H. McPhillips,
F.S.C. Mr Michael I O'Brien Mr. Vincent J. O'Donnell Mr. Joseph A. O'Neill Jr. Raymond I Porreca |r , Esq. Mr Vincent M. Putin Mr. John P. Quinn Charles A. Roop, C P A. Mr. Michael T Ruio Mr Theodore J Vanderslice Mr Henry J. Zentner
Donors
(UptoSl}9)
Mr Frank P. Ali::i
Joann (Yanak) and Joseph ] Baillie
Mr. John J. Bellus
Mr. Thomas W Biester
Mr. Ronald R. Boyle
Mr. Kurt R. Bruhn
Mr James C. Buck
Mr Edward P. Ceresmi
Robert Cohen, C.P.A, CFE.
WilliamJ.Coll.er.CrA
Mr. Kevin J. Connor
Mr. James P. Connor
James A. and
Mary E. (Gerrow) Costanro Mr. Marshall Daly Mr. Vincent M. Donnelly Concetta M. and William I Doyle ir Mr. Joseph O. Dunn Mr. George C. Ehrmann John C. Fenningham, Esq Mr. Olafe Gaihisehs William and Denise Galvin Mr Henry W Goldberg Mr. John H. Griesemer Jr. Ms. Kathleen M. (Grady) Grogan Mr. James B. Gross Mr. Edward F. Gutekunst Mr. Christian E. Henningsen Sr. Charles R. and Loretta J Heyduk Mi Donald E. Hilbert Mr Ralph E Horky Mr. William R. Johnson Mr. Robert A. Kramer Mr. James A- Kukltnski Mr John M. Lawfer Jr. CAPT William E. Lehner,
MC. USN. Retired Vincent J. Lynch, PhD Ms. Regina A. Maginnis Ms. Elizabeth (Washofsky) Mann Mr. Charles F. Marshall III Mr Raymond A. Mattem Jr. Mr. James V. McDonald Mr. Douglas S McFarlane Mr. Joseph A. McGunman Mr. Edward R. Merkle Mr. Lawrence J. Nedzbala Mr. John W. Neichercoti Mr Michael D Nolan Roman O. and
Olha (Mychajhw) Nowakiwsky Mr. Michael A. Nuccio Mr. Gerald P. Oeste Mr. Robert A. O'Hara Mr. Mark C. Olkowski Mr. Paul J. Pantano
Honor Roll of Donors 2003-2004
The followinq endowed and/or restricted |
scholarships have been generously funded to |
support students enrolled at La Salle: |
|
American Association of Colleges of |
Brother Patrick Ellis Alumni Scholarship |
Pennsylvania Higher Education |
|
Nursingflohn A. Hartford Foundation |
Dr. Joseph F. Flubacher Scholarship |
Foundation/Independence Blue Cross Nurse |
|
Scholar-hip |
John S. Grady Honors Program Scholarship |
Scholars Grants and Nursing Education |
|
Annenberg-Henrich Scholarship |
James Guo Scholarship |
Grants |
|
Gregg Argenziano Scholarship |
Heck Memorial Scholarship |
Pfizer Scholarship |
|
Lester Barenbaum Scholarship |
LT. John Henry Scholarship |
PGH Alumni Association Scholarship |
|
BergerA\'°allace Scholarship |
David 1. Hagan Scholarship |
Sallie Mae Fund BUSCA Scholarship |
|
William J. Binkowski Scholarship |
The J. Anthony Hayden Scholarship Fund |
Joseph Lawrence Scheiter Memorial |
|
James J. Binns Scholarship |
Johnson &. Johnson Scholarship |
Scholarship |
|
George J. Bucs Scholarship |
Thomas J. and Janet Kean Scholarship |
Sigma Phi Lamda Scholarship |
|
Helen Burke Memorial Fund |
Jack Keen Memorial Scholarship |
W.W. Smith Charitable Trust Scholars Grants |
|
John F. Byrne Memorial Scholarship |
James S. Kemper Foundation Scholarship |
and Scholarship Prizes |
|
Robert J. Chesco Memorial Scholarship |
Peter J. Kieman Scholarship |
Warren E. Smith, M.D. Scholarship |
|
Class of 197c Scholarship |
Maureen E. Lodge Scholarship |
Lillian and Ralph Tekel Scholarship |
|
Lt. John H. Condon Memorial Scholarship |
FrancU X. McErlean University Scholarship |
UPS Scholarship |
|
Bishop Corngan Memorial Scholarship |
William G. McGowan Charitable Fund |
U.S. Department of Health and Human |
|
Dr. Robert J. Courtney Scholarship |
Scholarship |
Services, Advanced Education Nursing |
|
J. Russell Cullen St.. Memorial Scholarship |
John (Jack) J. McNally Scholarship |
Traineeship |
|
Josephine Danielski Scholarship |
John McShain Scholarship |
U.S. Department of Health and Human |
|
Robert L. Dean Writing Scholarship |
Mercedes Benr/Lionel Simmons Scholarship |
Services, Nurse Anesthetist Traineeship |
|
Michael A. DeAngehs Memorial Scholarship |
Charles E. Merrill Trust Scholarship |
U.S. Department o! Health and Human |
|
Brother G. Claude Demkras Scholarship |
Lillian Beresnack Miller Scholarship |
Services, Scholarships for Disadvantaged |
|
St. Francis De Sales Scholarship |
Modern Handling Scholarship |
Students |
|
J. Hugh and Nancy Devlin Scholarship |
Charlotte W. Newcombe Foundation |
John H. Veen Memorial Scholarship |
|
Susan Dietszh Scholarship |
Scholarship |
Wachovia Foundation Scholarship |
|
Anne H. and Harry J. Donaghv Scholarship |
National Science Foundation, Computer |
Thomas A. White Memorial Scholarship |
|
Dr. Paul R. Doran and Catherine E. Doran |
Science. Engineering and Mathematics |
John D. Zook Scholarship |
|
Memorial Scholarship |
Scholarship |
||
Leon Ellerson Scholar>hip |
Northeast Catholic High School Scholarship |
||
fames \\ . Teat-son. Esq.
Mr. William I. Tese^
Mr. John A- Rates
Mr DawdN Reirt
Mr. Albert J. Riegerjr
Mr. Thomas T. Robinson
Mr. John Y. Rocks
Mr. Thomas J. Rodders
Mr. Daniel F. Rul:-
Mr. Edward F. Ruppel
Mr. Glenn C. Russell
Michael J- Saile. Esq.
Chester]. Sahvach. Ph.D.
E. Bam Smith. CT A.
Mr. Francis J. Spiecker
LTC Thomas \Y. Sprague. Retired
Mr. Pasquale A. Tursi
Ms. Celeste M. Yenen
Mr. Thomas F. Walsh Jr.
Mr. Norman M. Weiss
Mr. Francis C. White
Mr. Richard G.Wdhams
Mr. lames A. Wright
Dennis M. Young. CPA.
Mr. Richard Y. Zetierlr.
[973
Dr. Flubacher Club
■
John J.Gallagher. Esq.
Mr. Stephen 1. Rauscher
San Miguel Club
Mr. Gerard J. Binder Blair H. Gould. CP.A. Mr E, Dennis Lehman Jr. Trevor P. Lvnch, MP Mr. PaulG. Schott Mr. William L Srulginskv Mr. Ronald J. Young
lh urm aim's Club
..
James J. Avery Jr.. FSA. AlhertJ. Bellilr, PO. William J. Flannerv, Esq. Brother Joseph Grabenstein. F S.C Mr. Robert J. Kujovskv Anthony M. Landis. D.O. Mr. Frank X. L\nch
:ent P. McNichol
Founder's Club S999)
Judith (Stanton^ and
James J. Ahem Jr. Mr. Philip J. Brennan Joan C. (Thomas) and
Joseph G. Gallagher jr.. Esq Mr. Peter J. Giaccio Charles J. Jamison. Esq. Mr. Kevin O'Rourke Mr. James M. Paulits Dr. and Mrs. John A- Pron Mr. Robert J. Sestiro Jr.
Arthur A. Warren, L-q. Mr. lohn S. Wvdrtvnski
Ugo Donini Club
George S. Costantino, M.D. Mr Michael S Hatfield Mt. Robert B. Jackson Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas \\ Robert 1. Lewis, D.O. John F. Mencer. Esq- Thomas A. O'Brien. Ph.D. James P. Pagli3ro. Esq. Mr. Theodore E. Riegert Mr, Kevin W. Robinson Mr. Frank J. Rodtiers Jane (BorscheM and John E. Tomasiewsk 1
Anmvers\ri Club
Mr. George J. Blair Jr. William J. Bonner Jr.. Esq. Mr. John M. Bovle Kathleen M. (Tully) and
Joseph Y. Briggman. Ph.D. Mr R t en D- Ducken Jr. Mt. George J Jakabcin Mr. .Arthur A. Kahn Terence Knstotak. CP Mr. Yincent j. Mancini Mr. James T. Martin Jr. Catherine A- *McPevitt* and
George J. Feller MrLeoCSchaertler
Mr. Libero Scinicanello
Mr. Thomas J. Sielski Ms. Ponna M. Talis
Donors
( Up to s
Mr. Rait S. Anoia Mr. Alan 1 Ash George A Bamert and
Man- R. Hopper Mr. Robert J. Black Mr. John H. Bleattlerjr. Mr. Wayne P. Braddock Johnj. Branigan. Esq. Mr. Harvey L. Bunch Jr. Mr. Frank A. Bun- Mr. Scon F. Campbell Mr. Lam- Cardonick Mr. John J. Carrozza Robert G. Casillo. Ph.D. Mr. Paul X. Cook Mr. John T. Cooke Mr. Edmond P. Costantini Man E- (Gerrowl and
James A. Costanzo Mr. Martin I, Costello Mr. Francis M Curran Ms. Christina T. Curran Mr. John G. Dartah William R. Deiss. Esq. Mr, Michael Pei\^i,- Anita L iSmolenskil and
Francis j. Doyle Mr. Mark V. Prewic: Mr. John B. Fassnacht
Mr. John M. Flvnn Mr. Daniel F. Rvnn Mr. William D. Fox Jt. Mr. James T. Fox Mr. Wayne D. Gess Mr. Stephen G. Glumac Mr. Thomas E. Gore Jr. Mr. Frank E. Gostomski Mr John R. Gyza Mr. Francis L. H.nJcn Ms. Elizabeth C. Heidak Edward B. Horahan III, Esq. Mr. Richard Hvmes Ms. Elaine (Keating) Irving Mr. Stephen P. Kendnck Mr. John W Kinee Mr. Francis M. King Jr. Mr William J. Kuhl Mr Stephen I Lomas Sr. Richard R. and
Kathleen (RodiscM Lvnch. PhP- Mr John W Maull Mr. James L McCmlev Mr. Edward P. McGivem Mr. Thomas C. Menapace Mr. Edmund M Miksit: Mr Ponald Miller Mr. Charles F Moms Mr Thomas E- N^vne Mr. Robert T. O'SulUvan Sr John D. Prinscott, M.D. Mr. James J. Rac: Mr Michael F. Raczvnski Mr. Ravmond J. Regan Ms. Kathleen t.Whalen> Reic: Leonard S. Richter. CGFM
Honor Roll of Donors 2005-2004
Mr Philip G. Romano Mr. Joseph K. Ryan Jr. Mr. John M. Scarpelhno Mr. Eric O. Scheffler Mr Robert L Seiwell Ms. Cecilia Sheehan Mr Marc S. Silverman Mr. Anthony A Sindoni Mr. William F. Smith Mr. James E. Spicer Sr. Henrv W. Supin-ki, Esq Michael YanBuskirk, Esq. Gret;on | \ invent. MO Mr. Kenneth R. Wagner Michael L Welsh, CP.A.
<974
President's Club
I S51 1 . 100 and above)
Joan (Mancini) and
Thomas J. Fitzpatrick Jr.
University Club (sio.000 S14 999)
William E Kelh, I • ,
Dr. FlubacherClub
(S5.ooo-S9.999)
David P. and
Barbara (Gawinski) Carbern
San Miguel Club
(S2.500 S4.999)
Frances (Jacob) and
Michael J. Diccicco Siegfried I and
Marianne (Salmon) Gauss
Chairman's Club
(Si 1 v; 199)
Elizabeth (Rodim) and Paul Kunv Mr Dennis R Ruhisch
Founder's Club (S500-S999)
Mr Mark Adel-berger Roseman I (AngemO and
John E DeSantis Bn.in S. Ettinger, Esq Mr William J Fneljr. Joan C. (Thomas) and
Joseph G. Gallagher Jr., Esq. Mr Daniel A. Gallagher Jr. Mr James T Muth Richard A Rothwell Jr . D.D.S.
Vco Donini Club ($250-5499)
Mr. Donald F. Ackerman
Mr. Mark J Connors
Dennis J. Donohoe, MP
Mr William T. DuhS
Madeline (Mallon) Janowski, C.P.A.
Mr Jerome 1 Ml \vo^ [i
Mr. Thomas D. McGovem
Leonard F Milewski, M.D.
Mr. Franc i> \ Mofratt
Mr. Joseph T Palm
Mr Can 1 1 ^moller
Lyndanne M Whalen, Esq.
ANNIVERSARY CLUB
lsi4>' S249)
Mr. Joseph E. Abbott
Mr lames J. Beaver Mr. Philip E. Cassidv Jr Eugene G Cattle Mr. Brian C l\il\ Joseph M. Huher, ( P A Robert H. Lane, Ph D- [\imel E. and
Nanc\ M (Webb) Maguire Miriam (Gary) .ind
Francis E- Maloney Mr. Robert J. Polastre Mr. Kent M. Sloan Herbert E. Taylor, PhD James L. Turner, Esq. Rev. Fr. Cletus M. S Watson.
T.O.R. Ms. Carol Williamson Vincent D. Zeller. CP.A.
Donors (Up to 5139)
Richard J. and
Joanne M. (Thorn) Alexander Catherine (Bradle\ ] and
Joseph J. Baker Jr. Ms. Karen M (Keenan) Bennett Mr. Brian T. Byrnes Linda A. (Pantano) and
l^-t-ph F. Canataro, Ed.D. Mr. A. Joseph Carusi Robert D. Cipko, Ph.D. Mr [oseph J. Connelly Mr. James F. Corcoran Mr Carl J l\i\ 1- Mr. Louis A DiCesan
Mr Dennis D DiDomenico Thomas W. DiEnno, CP.A. Maria (Birlew) and
Carlo] DiMarco, D.O. Andrew E DiPiero Jr., Esq. Mr Nuil ] Dougherty Francis J. and
Anna L. (Smolenski) Doyle Mi Dennis M Doyle Ms. Kathleen (McCullough) Dyer William F and
Kathleen (Nolen) Edwards, RN Mr John G E--poMt.>
Ms. Ann (Wilsbach) Esposito Mr Daniel T. Fit:gerald Mr. John J. Foster Jr. Ms. Carmela (Melso) Galati Kathleen A. (O'Neill) and
Joseph A. Ganster Howard Gershman, Esq. Mr Victor A Giardini Mr. Corneliu- A ( iibbons Mr. Chris C Giles Edward I Haaz,M.Ed
Mr Kenneth D Ha^crman
Ms Maria (Puhy) Hand
Mr. Charlie I' Henderson
Mr. Daniel J. Fliggms
Mr Edward R. Hitzel
Mr. James E. Johnston
Michael J and Elizabeth S. Kaurrman
Bemadette F. and James J Kenm Jr.
Michael C and
Carol Solomon Kieter Mr. H. Gordon Kunzman Mr. Charles G. Lare Mr Lewis M Levinson Mr. Edmund F Lewis Mr. Louis A Lomhardo III Mr. Thomas R Lorandeau Mr H Da* id Madonna
John H McCleary, Ph.D.
Mr. Joseph L. McPhilhps Ms. Kathleen M. Molla Mr. John A Moore Jr Ms. Alice K Moy Mr Paul J. Murph\
JohnJ.NorciniJr..Ph.D. Mr Michael E O'Donnell Ms Jean (Wall) Owens Mr. Michael C. Parella Mr. Frank A. Pau:a Mr. Henry P. Rawls Michael I Rosner, M.D. Virginia (Muessig) and
Edward N. Sague, D.D.S. Mr. Richard M Scully Ms. Joanne (Wachterl Smith Mr. Dennis J. Smith Mr. Charles Stamm Mr. Steven A. Staranowski Mr. Joseph P. Stees William H. Tennant Jr., Esq. Ms Catherine T iCorbett) Tereniak Ms. Frances iParrotto) Trees Mr. Michael J. Yaupel St- LTCJohn S. Wargo. Retired Mr. Peter A Weismuller Mr. Charles J- Whalen Mr. Lee] Wiles Rev. Richard C Williams Mi [oseph i 1 W ilson Mr. Thoma- M \\ i-mewski
1975
President's Club
10 and above) Robert E. and Barbara H. Hanrahan
University Club
(SlO.I v. I 999)
Ms. K.ithleen M. Bums
Dr Flubacher Club [9.999)
Mr. James R. Guntle Jr.
S\n Miguel Club
(S2.500 >-}'>^)
Roben T. Reichinan, M.D Robert A. Shore. M.D. Kathryne (McCrarh) and Mark D. Speaker, Esq.
Chairman's Club £2,499)
Mr William S. |ohnston Paul E Karis, M.D. Mr. John E. Kopac: Paul and Elizabeth (Rodimt Kunv Mr Patrick A. Mc( iinlej Ms Kathleen (Scotti) McNichol Mane iMoonev) and James P. Steinit:
Founder's Club
($500 S999)
Ms. Beverly A. Bacon Lawrence T, Bowman, Esq. Mane B.ir.>nv Dolan Mr. Gerard A. Plourde Mr. John M Smalan Mr. Gary C Smith Mane (Moone) * and
James P Sieinit: Dr. George J. Zimmerman and
Paulette Travers Zimmerman
Ugo Donini Club
(S25O $499)
Mr. James F. Bernardo
Mr. Robert M 1 a •<■■■.
Ms i Catherine M I lougherty JohnJ.MulderiglU.Esq
Kathleen Mullen. D.M.D
Ms. Elizabeth (McGinley) Soltan
Jane (Borschel) and
John E. Tomaszewski, M D
Anniversary Club
(S140-S249)
Mr. Joseph S. Biondo
Mr. Paul F. Blinn
Ms. Michelle (Lamb) Boddorff
Gerald V. Burke. M.D.
Mr. Daniel J. DeM isi
Mr Stephen J Einlev
Ms. Denise M. Guiniven
Mr Derek Hopkins
Nanc} M. (Webb) and
Daniel E. Maguire Patricia M McDermotr, Esq. Francis and Teresa O'Kane Mr. Michael N. Scavuzzo Karen M. (Donchet:) and
Joseph E. Schurt: Mr. David H. Valaro
Donors
(UptoSlJ9)
Mr. Eugene G Ancharski Mr Michael G. Armstrong Rosemary (Clancy > and
William J. Bald.no Mr Edward J Beck Ms. Diane M Bones J. Greg Brady. D.O. Karen (Frauntelter) Burnett. P.G, Linda A. (Pantanni and
Joseph F. Canataro. Ed.D. Mr. Donald A. Casolaro Mr. Carl G. Castellano Edward I Charlton, Esq. David E. and Eva Christiansen William N Clearfield, D.O. Mr. Curtis R. Cockenberg Jr. Mr. Thomas F Conn John 1 Connor-, E-q
Ms Man (McGrarh) Coppola
Mr Robert S Cro-ke\
Mr Michael G. Dell'Orto
Ms. Theresa M. (Wmski) Desmond
John T. Dewey, Ed.D
Mr. Thomas A. DiBello
Richard A. D1D10. Ph D
Thomas L. Evans, Ph D
Ms. Theresa (Dempsey) FaiTell
Mr. Duane M. Fletcher
Mr. Francis P Flood
Mr. Kenneth G. Fulmer Jr.
Mr. John E Funkhouser
Mr. Eugene M. Glavin Jr.
Mr William J Hagan
Ms. Annette L- Halpm
Mr. James H. Hark ins
Ronald G. Hull, Esq.
William K. Istone, Ph.D.
Mr Richard M. Jacovini
Mr. Beniamin T Johnson Sr
Mr. Paul E |uska
Mr. Joseph P. Kenne\
Carol Solomon and
Michael C Kieter Edward J. and
Maureen J. (McNally) Klenk Mt. Alexander C Koniecznv Ms. Hannah (Fagat Kramer Ms. Geraldme (Twardowski) Lacei Mr. James J. Leddy Ms. Catherine M. (Rowland) Link Anne Mane (McDonnell) and
Gregg R. Lode-, 1 1 (
Ms. Man, Anne S. Lut:
Ms Man P Mack
Mr. Ralph W. Ma < e
Ms. Janice A (Maguire) Malone
Mr. Thomas A Masterani
Mr. William W. Matthews Jr
Mr. James J McKeKe\
Mr. Mark H. McLau [hliri
Mr. Denni- I Melinspn
Mr. Michael K. Montgomery
Mr. Charles J. Mullane
Ms. Terese (Gibhon-1 Murph\
Patricia (Donegan) and
Jerome C O'Connell, Esq. Maureen (Lower\ ) and
Leo Pezzementi, Ph.D. Mr. John S Pizzo Mr. James G. Plewes Mr. Jack W. Pogue Parncia V. Radich, Esq. Mi William T Rambojr Mr. Emest R. Rivard Mr. Andrew C Roppoli Ms. Anne (Wilson) Sabol Alfred D. Saccbetti. M.D. Harry S. Shams, PhD Ms. Margaret (Sheerin) Shirk Robert L. Siegel, PhD Ms. Joan A. Smalarr Raymond R. Stankiewic:, CP.A. Mr. Frederick R. Strathmann Ms. Ellen D. Walsh M- Phvlhs D. (Atkins) Zebin
1976
University Club
(SlO 00O-S24 "
Mr. Thomas F. McGowan
Dr Flubacher Club (55,000 S9.999)
Mr. Gaetano P Giordano
San Miguel Club
1-; 500 S4.999)
Mark R. Klingensmith, M.D., FACS Mr Steven J. Napiecek
Chairman's Club
(Sl.OOO S2 499)
Anthony W. Bracken, M.D.
Frank P Buzvdlowski, Esq.
Mr. Terence J. Connors
Ms. Lenora M (Spina) Grittin
Ms. Sallyanne F Harper
Brother Edward Koronkiewicz, E.S.C
Kathryn (Moos) and
John J. Merrick Jr., Ph.D-
Founder's Club
(S500-S999)
Anonymous
Mr. John J. Chapman
Mi William W Felnv-k. Ill
Mr. Mark D Grimm
Mrs. Kathleen iSh.rw ) Mathis
James P. Murphy, Esq.
Paul F. and
Joanne (Collins) Schneider Mr. Eugene L. Scotti Jr.
Ugo Donini Club (S2S0-S499)
George F. Beppel, CP.A.
Honor Roll of Donors 2003-2004
THE CHRISTIAN BROTHERS
In FY 2003-2004, the Brothers contributed a total of $53,027 for unrestricted support, scholarship aid, and program assistance. This year, La Salle gratefully acknowledges the following Christian Brothers, who provide leadership, direction, and inspiration to the entire La Salle community:
Brother Hugh N. Albright, F.S.C. Brother Arthur J. Bangs, F.S.C. Brother Daniel W. Burke, F.S.C. Brother Joseph F. Burke, F.S.C. Brother Edward Conway, F.S.C. Brother Francis B. Danielski, F.S.C. Brother J. Edward Davis, F.S.C. Brother Joseph Dougherty, F.S.C. Brother Patrick A. Duffy, F.S.C. Brother Charles F. Echelmeier, F.S.C. Brother Gabriel A. Fagan, F.S.C. Brother E. Gerald Fitzgerald, F.S.C. Brother Felician J. Gerry, F.S.C. Brother Joseph Grabenstein, F.S.C. Brother Charles E. Gresh, F.S.C. Brother Richard Herlihy, F.S.C. Brother John Kane, F.S.C. Brother Robert J. Kinzler, F.S.C. Brother Edward Koronkiewtcz, F.S.C. Brother Charles A. Lackes, F.S.C. Brother Joseph F. Mahon, F.S.C. Brother Dennis M. Malloy, F.S.C. Brother John P. McErlean, F.S.C. Brother Michael J. McGinniss, F.S.C. Brother John J. McGoldrick, F.S.C. Brother Gregorian McLaughlin, F.S.C. Brother Thomas H. McPhillips, F.S.C. Brother Emery C. Mollenhauer, F.S.C. Brother Gerard F. Molyneaux, F.S.C. Brother Lewis Mullin, F.S.C. Brother John Chung Quoc Nguyen, F.S.C. Brother Francis Tri Nguyen, F.S.C. Brother G. John Owens, F.S.C. Brother William J. Quaintance, F.S.C. Brother David Rogers, F.S.C. Brother Robert J. Schaefer, F.S.C. Brother David Schultz, F.S.C. Brother Edward J. Sheehy, F.S.C. Brother Kevin M. Stanton, F.S.C. Brother Fred Stelmach, F.S.C. Brother J. Stephen Sullivan, F.S.C. Brother Nicholas Sullivan, F.S.C. Brother Joseph J. Willard, F.S.C.
Kathleen (Guerin) and
Philip S. Cosentino, Esq.
Mr. Anthony M. DeAngelis
Mr. John F. Dreyer
Phyllis (Wolf) and
William T. Gallagher
Philip J. and
Linda M. (Storz) Grutzmacher
Mr. Edward j. Hargadon
Ms. Joan (Chernuka) Lamhorne
Mr. John H. McDevitt Ms. Julia G. (Pollio) Nen William J. O'Donnell III, C.P.A. Randolph V. Ragsdale, Esq. Mr. Charles G. Resch Barbara A. Spauldtng, CFRE Ms. Mary (Sloss) VanHom
Anniversary Club
1^.14.' *-: 4'i|
Mr. Robert L. Berghauer Barbara (Dunn) and
Frank D. Delaurentis Robert E. Desmond, M.D. Donald A. Dilenno, M.D. Mr. J. Bernard Ellis Mr, Francis P. Gannon Jr. Mr. Thomas C. Gedman Ms. Katharine A. Hammeke Ms. Frances (Rumaker) Harrison Ms. Harriet C. Herman Lawrence R- Hotfman, C.P.A. , Esq. Mr. James M. McAneney Mary K. McCarthy, M.D. Mr. James P. Scanlin Thomas P. Sheeran, D.M.D. Regina (Cudemo) Smock, M.D. Mr. Frank A. Steltz Mr. Francis L. Strocen Jr. Mr Mike K. Thompson Mr [oseph E. Wilson Jr.
Donors
(UptoSi39)
Mr Dennis J. ArTlerbach Mr. William Anstock Sr. Mr. William R. Behm Ralph P Bocchmo, Esq. Ms. Denise D. Braden Ms. Eileen (McGlone) Bradley Ms. Pearl (Frazier) Bullock Mr, Joseph J. Buonpastore Mr Edward M. Carilli Mr. Keith A. Conrad Mr. Andrew P. Crane Maryann (Pantano) and
William B. Davis Ms. Margaret M.
(Flanagan) DeLorenzo Mr. Michael B. Doherty James T. and Mary T. (Rush) Dolan Mr. William T. Dougherty Mr. Joseph R. Fares Mr. James W. Finegan Mr. Edward J. Fitzpatrick Mr. Ronald M. Fonock Mr. John J. Ganister Ms. Barbara (Marro) Gillespie Mr. Charles W. Glantz Mr. Philip J. Guglielmi Rosemarie (Newell) and
Joseph G.Gulla III Rev. Neil Gutmaker Mr. Anthony J. Hagan Mr. Joseph A. Heayn Stephen M. Howard, Esq. Mr. Martin A. lnfanti Mr. Thomas F. Jones Jr. Mr Edward F. Kane Jr. Ms. Victoria (Clark) Kauffman Mr. James P. Kelly Mr. Ellis R. Kirbyjr. Mr. Jay M. Kleinman Maureen J. (McNally) and
Edward J. Klenk Mr. Paul P. Lach Mr. Edward A. Letchak Mr. Richard B. Lowe Richard R. and
Kathleen (Bodisch) Lynch, Ph.D. Mr. Francis T. Mallon Ms. Jacquelyn (Harper) Mason Ms. Marguerite (Madden) McFadden Ms. Rosemarie A. McGinty Ms. Elisa (Ziccardi) Minni Dorothy M. Moore, M.D. Mr. James J. Mulhns III Ms. Judith Opatow
Ms. Sabina R. Otto Mr. Joseph V. Otto Salvatore A. Paparone Jr., Esq. Mr. William T. Piccone Mr. Robert D. Poiesi Ms. Mane Ellen (Seneff) Poos Mr. Nicholas M. Rongione Louise (Giannattasio) and
Michael J. Rupp, M.D. Mr. Richard K. Russ Mr. Manuel M. Sabato Virginia (Muessig) and
Edward N. Sague, D.D.S. Mr. Jerel P. Saltzman Mr. Anthony C. Scancella Mr. Gerald J. Schlechtet James B. and Kathryn (Weckesser)
Schoedler Mr. Gregory J. Scirrotto Ms. Anne M. Scull Mr. Charles G. Sheridan Ms. Anne Marie (Shervin)
Stockhower John K. Taus, D.O. Paul A.Terpeluk, D.O. Ms. Judith L. VanBuskirk Thomas M. Vollberg, Ph.D. Marianne (McGettigan) Walker, Esq. Mr. Thomas J. Walsh Joseph W. Weikel, Esq. Ms. Connie (McGowan) White Andrew B. Woldow, M.D. Mr. William C Wood Mr. Michael C. Wozniak Ms. Jeanne Yaecker Mr. Paul F. Zakulec Ronald W. Zartarian, D.M.D.
1977
President's Club
(S50.000 and above)
Kathleen (Gordon) and James J. Lynch
Charter Club ($25,000 S49.999)
Mr. Jonathan J. Palmer
University Club (Jio 000-524.999)
Russell R. and
Susan M. (McErlean) Barrett
Dr. Flubacher Club (S5.000 59,999)
Barbara (Gawinski) and David P. Carberry
San Miguel Club
($2,$00-$4.999)
Anna (Celenza) and Michael J. McAleer
Mr. Michael P. Rose
Chairman's Club (sj.000-s2.499)
William N. and
Anna (Melnyk) Allen Teresa M. Jackson and
Lawrence P. Byrnes, Esq. Paul M. Coady, M.D. Rose (Guerin) and
Francis P. Day, M.D. Richard L. Fagnani, C.P.A. Brother Robert J. Kinzler, F.S.C.
Francis T. McGettigan, C.P.A. Ms. Kathleen M. Slomski
Founder's Club
(SS00S999)
Mr. Kenneth B. Hankinson Jeffrey P. Hurley. M.D. John K.Manani, D.O. Mr. Anthony T. Mazzei Sr. John E. Mitchell, C.P.A. Mr. Joseph M. Montgomery Joanne (Collins) and Paul F. Schneider Mr. Richard C. Stephens
Ugo Donini Club
(S2$0-$499)
Mr.JohnFanelli III Ronald F. Feinberg. M.D., Ph.D. Rosemary A. Gallagher, C.P.A. Louis G. Hasner, Esq. Gordon M. Langston, M.D. John F. and Joanne M.
(Pendergast) McVey, C.P.A. Mr. Richard J. Powers Lisa (Adams) Stackhouse, D.O. John J. Waldton, Esq.
Anniversary Club
(S 140 S 240)
Mr. Leo J. Cimoch
Mr. Robert J. Cunningham
Loti A. DePersia, M.D.
Joseph V. DiCecco, Ph.D.
Mr. Thomas P. Hanna Jr.
Mr. Anthony J. Macrina
Mr. Michael T. Moknski
Ms. Mary (Decrescente) Murphy
Mr. Joseph T. Nadolski
Jerry B. Schwartz, M.D.
Anne Marie Smith and
Robert L. Manien Ms. Mary K. (Smith) Ruff Mr. Carl Wahl George L. Weber, D.O. Mr. Richard T. Wroblewski Stephen A. Wydtzynski, Esq.
Donors (Up to $139)
Mr. John P. Bisco
Mr. Joseph H. Bohr
Mr. John A. Bolash
Mr. Thomas F. Bolton
Mr. Anthony A. Bonanni
Mr. Michael T. Brady
Michael R. Buckley, Ph.D.
Mr. Albert J. Budano
Claude H. Buehrle, C.P.A
Mr. Charles F. Cerveny
Rev. Jeffrey T. Cesarone, O.Praem.
Mr. Kenneth T. Coppola
Mr. Larry T. DeAngelo
Mr. Walter J. Donahue III
Mr. Edward T. Duffy Jr.
Mr. David J. Dziena
Ms. Dianne L. Fabii
Mr. John R. Fafara
Mr. Allan N. Fusco
Ms. Elaine L. Glehocki
Ms. Diane M. Glendon
Mr. Raymond P Hill
Mr. Henry M. Kloczynski
Mr. Gary M. Knoerlein
Ms. Nora K. Kramer
Mr. James W. Lomanno
Mr. Richard A. Lord Jr.
Mr. John D. MacLuckie
Barbara S. Matas
Honor Roll of Donors 2003-2004
Faith A- (Maslanka)
McDennon,( FA Daniel J. McDevitt, Esq. Mr LouisJ.McGrathlll Mr Richard J. McHale Dorothy A. McMiiUen, PhD Mr Craig A Merit; Thomas J. and Kathleen M
(O'Sulln.m1 Monaghan Mr Stephen M. Naughton <■ . ^ 1 1 ui iMvchajliw) and
Roman O. Nowak in sk \ Ms. Catherine T. O'Brien Mr. Edward J. O'Hanlon me and
Eiuabeth M (juliano) Olivieri Dr and Mrs. James J. Perry Maureen (Lowery) and
Leo Penementi, Ph.D. Mr John E. Pooler Jr. Robert P. and
Antoinette (Cavalieri) Pracilio Mr. Edward M. Pngge Mr. Bernard M. Rayca Ms. Kathleen A. Regan Ms Elizabeth (Cummings) Reynolds Mr. Peter L Sandusl . Ms. Carol (Ttessel) Schmeer Kathryn (Weckesser) and
James B- Schoedler Ms Rose M Schreiner Ms Eugenia M. Sham- Mr David J Smith Ms. Frances E- Stahlecker Mr John G Sruckert Ms. Diane F. Sweeney Mr Daniel L Sywulak Mr Christopher M. S:al Mr. William J Thompson Richard P. Tonetta. Esq. Ms Diane M (Adelizzi) Zapisek Mr. Albert J. Zimmerman
1978
San Miguel Club
Peter M. DiBamste, M I 1 Mr. James A Kazmerskie Marilyn (Davis) and
Charles J. Quattrone |r
Chairman's Club
I -i 01 IG S2 499)
Susan (Murphy) and
Walter W. Dearolflll, MD Donald J. DeGraria. C.P.A . A B V Mr James E Linus Kathryn (Moos) and
John J. Memck Jr., Ph.D.
Founder's Club (S500 $<
Francis E. Dehel, Esq. Mr Thomas J. Hoban Eileen (Kelly) and
Robert A. Kennedy Jr Ms Denise J. (Lamb) McPeters Joseph M Phillips Jr., Fh-D. Mr. James G. Vendetti Mr. Craig M. Waring
Ugo Donini Club (S250-S499)
Robert J. Blester. M.D. Mr Lester H. Cahn
Kathleen (Guenn) and
Philip S- Cosentino. Esq. Lisa M. Galante, M.D. and
Thomas A. DeBerardinis, M I I Catherine M. Harper. Esq. and
Paul J. Kelly 111,' I1 -\ Mr. Edward B- Highland Jr. Mr. Michael Ledva Jr. Mary (Mullin) and
Robert M McN.im.ira, M.D Ms. Sharon M. McQuate Mary Ann (Walz) and
Col. Michael H. Schmitt Mr. G. Steven Simons Lawrence and
Barbara (Moser) White
Anniversary Club (S140 5249)
Mr Michael Barmash
Mr. Joseph F.BI.ckley 111
Mr. LawTence j BustO Ir
Bruno C. Fiorenza and Maria Spano
Ms. Michele T. (Katkocin) Harbison
Mr. David G. Kelhle
Mr Bernard J. Siegel
Louis L. Trovato, D.D S &
Barbara (Guthrie) Trovato, PhD. Mr Ji -eph E. White Mr Michael Zeik
Donors
(Up to $139)
Mr. Carl Alalia
Joseph A. Baldassarre. C.P.A.
Catherine (Guanno) and
John J. Barr, Esq. Mr. William J. Beamon Mr. Joseph Bille Mr. William C. Bradfe) Ji Ms Charlene L. Brcnnan George S. and
Joann (Lawler) Brenner Ms. Annemane T
(Lento) Brownmiller Mr John T. Burke Mr Frederick J. > mi Mr. Rodger Caramanica Eva and David E. Christiansen Camille DiLullo, Ph.D. Eugene M. DiMarco, DO. Mr Robert J Fanning Michael A. Franchetn. M.D. Mitchell K. rreedman, D.O Ms Donn.i M (Glowacki) Fulton Ms Helen (Zygmont) Glmski Mr Gerard S- Hampshire Frederick J. Harem Jr.. Esq. Maryanne (Walsh) ,ind
Joseph F. Hediger Jr. Ms. Mary A. Hennessy Mr. James C. Higgins Ms. Judith A. James Mr. Paul J. Jannelli Ms. Carol P. Jones Mr Barr, M. Kauttmann Mr John W. Lamb Mr. Hubert P. Leonard Howard B. Levin. D.O. Michael G. Malatesta Sr.. C.P.A. Ms Diane (Koenig) Manwaring Mrs. Mercy A Martin Ms Margaret (Grzesiak) McAna Jimmy McGinniss Mr. Thomas J. McGovem III Mr. Paul F. Mesure Mr. Louis F Miller Ms. Monica M. (Mills) Sommen tile Mr. Anthom I Monica
Joseph F Moonev, PhD
Mr. Francis M Moser Mr. Joseph I Mundy Mr John A Murray John P. Nolan Jr. MD Mr. Edward R Novak Ms. Margaret E O'Connor Mr. Joseph A Parisi Mr James P. Penza Jr Mr. Daniel A. Pierro Susan (Sajeski) Pitts. M.D. Karen R. Pushaw. Esq Louise (Giannactasio) and Michael J. Rupp. M.D. Mr. Robert 1- Senior Mr. Michael T E Mr Michael A Tarsitana Mr. Joseph A- Tortorelli Mr. PererJ. Tyler Sr. Ms Edna' Vol Mr. Noel G \\ 1 .,■.
[979
University Club
Mr. James V Morris
Dr. Flubacher Club
($5,000 '
Mr. Stephen J. Gallagher
San Miguel Club
(S2.500 \;
Michael J. and
Anna (Celenza) McAleer
Chairman's Club
(Si.ooo-Sa
Man Ann (Stefany) and
Anthony J. Catanzaro Mr. Joseph P. Halpin Philip J. Horn )r, M D Teresa M. Jackson and
Lawrence P. Byrnes, Esq. MaryellenT. Kueny and
Donald J. Rongione
Founder's Club
Anonymous
Patricia A Mellon, Esq Kathleen Meriwether, Esq Mr. Paul J. Perrello
Ugo Donini Club (S250 54
Michele M. Anthony. MD- and
James P. Mc( lain, Esq John R. Burns, Esq. Joseph J. Cicala, PhD Bruce C. Compcon and
Mary Anne Hines Mr. Albert A. DiFalco Herben J Lottiet Mr.HughJ.McCafrrey Ms. Mary C. Nicolo Col Michael H. and
Mary Ann (Walz) Schmitt Brian J. Siegel, Esq. Mr. Michael J Weyand Barbara (Moser) and
Lawrence White
Anniversary Club (S140 J249)
John M. Dragancscu. M.D.. FACP
Mr. Kevin 1 Fi >ley Mr. Ned O Kraft Mr. Raymond V Matrone Kathleen (Hess) and
Walter R Wojciechou 4 i
Donors
( Up to S
Mr. Donald L. Abramowitz Joanne M. (Thorn) and
Richard J. Alexander Beverly Bryce Bey Mr. Thaddeus F. Bivenour Mr Joseph H. Brandon Mr. Anthom T Camilli Francis G, Celii. Ph.D. Eileen M. (Gaddi>) and
Richard W. Combatti Rev. Richard L Davis. T.OJL Mark Delowery, D.O Mrs. Petnna A.
(Bisicchia) DePasquale Mr. Richard DiGiacomo M.irs T iRush) and James T. Dolan Ms. Elizabeth (Waier) Doyle Concetta M. and William J. Doyle Jr Ms. Mary T. Durkm Mr Joseph H Eisenhardt Jr. Mr. Brian J. Fitzgibbons Ms. Linda A F<>\ Ms Karen (Kraft) Hoehn Mary R. Hopper and
George A. Barnett Ms. Kimberlv A. (Walsh) Home Ms. Carol A. Humenick Laurie A. (O'Hara) and
Joseph J. Kalkbrenner Jr., Esq. Scott and Michele Krasny Ms. Suzanne (Golden) Landis Mr. William L. Lewis Ir Mr. Michael P. Lonergan LTC Julie (Trego) Manta Mane (Orfeo) and Joseph W. Matera Ms. Julie (Stipidis) Mazza Anonymous Mr. Martin C. McEltO) Mr. Joseph T McGee Ir Mr. Manus G. McGettigan Ir Mr. Bartholomew W. McQuoid Mr. William J. McVey jr. Ms. Audrey T. Mento Mr. Carl F. Michini Mr. Brian M. Middleton Ms Mar) Ann (Brosmer) Miller Mi Stephen ! Morris Mr. John F. Morrissey Jr. Mr. Francis J. Noonan Elizabeth M. (Juliano) and
Salvatore Olivieri Mr Key in I O'Rourke Mr Vincent A. Paccapaniccia Ms Gnsel R. Palmer Ms. Janice M. Pantano Ms. Martha Robinson Collier Ms. Patricia A. Sandstrom Mr. lgnazio Scaglione Valerie (Konieczm ' and
Thomas J. Seminack Brother Robert M. Sentman, O.C.D. Mr. John P. Seykot Ms. Marghente (Dehoratius) Shaefter Ms. Sara J. Shaw Mr. Ronald F Sliwinski Jr. Mr. James P. Spiewak Michael T. Steelman. D.O. Matthew S. Steinberg, D.M.D Mr. John C. Suchy Ms. Mary Frances (Whelan) Szpila Ms. Man J Taylor Ms. Patricia (Gregory) Thoretl William 1 Vilko. M.D.
Mr. Parnck E. Walsh Maryanne (Walsh) and Joseph F Hedigei Ir Ms I ill (Smith) Whitney Ms. Marylou (Lazzara) Williams
1980
President's Club
(SSO.000 and above) Mr. and Mrs. David Poiesz
San Miguel Club 54,999)
Colleen P. Gillespie. Esq. Mr- and Mrs. Roger Marchetti
Chairman's Club
John T. Capeccu C.P.A. Brother John Kane, F.S.C. Alfonso M. Salacar, Esq. William P. St. Clair IV. C.P.A. Mr. John J Walsh
Founder's Cll b
(S500 vi"-' 1
Anna (Melnyk) and
William N.Allen Timothv). Clay. D.M.D. Mr Ket in D. Davis Mr. Dennis M. Durkin Mr. Martin J. Oczki Robert T. O'Sullivan Jr.. D.O. Ms. Ann E. Seiberlich Maureen (Dugan) Serpico, Esq. and
Christopher J Serpico. Esq
Ugo Donini Cll b (S250 5499)
Mr. Michael F Burke Mr. George F Fulev Mr. Michael Hagan Mar, (Mullin) and
Robert M. McNamara, M.D. Mr Michael J- Petrocik Mr. John P. Pierce Samuel W. and
Regina (Moore) Plummer Robert J. Pushaw [r , Esq Davd P Smeltzer. C.P.A. Mr Russell A. Spruance
Anniversary Club .-it- $249)
Ms. Eleanor A Allen
Ms. Leslie L. Branda
Ms. Elizabeth (Harper) Briglia
Ms. Nancy M. Burawski
Ms. Jennifer Donohue
Mr. James J. Dunk o J
Ms. Ann (McCulliss) John>on
Mr. Daniel J. Kelleher
Ms. Patricia M. Koch
Ms. Dorothy McBnde
Manhel W Molvneaux. Ph.D.
Barbara (Guthrie) Trovato, Ph.D. &.
Louis L Trovato, D-D.S. lame- V Whelan, Ph.D.
Donors
(Up tO MM)
M- Cheryl A. (Vurkanin) Aycocli James T. Basara, D.M.D. Ms. Kathenne (O'Brien) Ben in Mr. Brian R. Bent:
Honor Roll of Donors 20032004
IN HONOR OF
Gifts were made in 2003-2004 honoring the following individuals:
Joseph A. Dieterle, D.O., '65
Rev. Thomas J. Donaghy, Ph.D.
Mr. Leon Ellerson, '56
Mr. and Mrs. Charles A.J. Halpin Jr.. J.D., '44
Mr. and Mrs. William J. Henrich Jr., Esq., '50
Martha Kutteh, '08
Br. Michael J. McGinniss, F.S.C., Ph.D., 70
Mr. Thomas M. Ridington
George B. Stow, Ph.D.
Ms. Teresa (Murphy! Co^shjll Alice B Colon, Ph.D. Mr. John M. Conlow Ir. Mr Thomas J. Connors Stephen C. DeAngelo, C.P.A. Ms, Catherine M. DelCiotto
seph M. Destralo HI Ms. B. Joan Dougherty lerrre\ W. Erinofl . Ms. loan H. Gainer Mr. Gerald S. Giardinelli Mr. Vincent ]. Giarrocca [t Mr. Thomas M. Going Ms. Loretta (Zwolak) Greene Mrs. Irene P. Hembarskv. R.N. Br. Richard D. Herhhv, F.S.C. Mr Anrhonv C. Herman Mr. Arthur W. Hrcks FV>rothv A. Himes, \! D. Man Anne Hines and
Bruce C. Compton 1 lurie A. (O'Hara) and
| Kalkbrenner Jr.. Esq. Mr. Mitchell E. Kat: Joseph W. and Marie (OrTeo> Matera Ms. Ann E. Matthews Mr.JohnJ.McCarth\ Jr. Elizabeth A. (Ra:ler>and
John S. McEldem,
ithia (Matcrak* Miller Ms. Demse P. Montell Mr. Thomas W. Morrison Diane M Mover. Ph.D. Mr. C. Christopher Mulder Mr. Steven C. Olshevski Roseman (Robinson* Pall, Esq. Ms. Manna A. Pavluk Mr. \ ictor M- Petr\'john Elizabeth J vMullarke\ * and
Joseph A. Piccolo Mr. Stephen J. Procano Ms. Patricia (Dajnowski) Quaile Linda (Gauder) and
Thomas E. Rakszawski Mr. lohn A. Rankin Jr. Mr. Gregorv J. RUlev Mrs. Bemadette M. (Lvnn I Ms. Deborah (Jones) Roundtree Mr. Ronald B. Sankev Mr. William L Smith Mr. Frederick W. Smith Ms Jane iMcFarlane' Staats Ms. Deborah Scofanik-Ferrell Mr. Janice R. Snles Mr. lames A. Tometta Diana (Gilmore* and
K^eph T. \ anThuvne Mr. Timoth\ J. Walters Mr. PaulJ.Walush Mr Richard C. Watson Jr.
Mr. Oregon \'. Watson Mis. Susan (Chubik) Wing
I98l
San Miguel Club
■
Gregorv O. and Patricia M. Bruce Mr. Gregorv J. Webster
Chairman's Club (si.ooo s .
Mr. kevm R. Aker
Dr> Mar. Jo (W\s,>ck) and
Eugene A. Eline Jr. M- Judith A. (Polowczuk) Magner Mr. Vincent F McGonagle Gregory I. Now ak, Esq. Mr. Timothy M O'Connor Mr. Edward A. Tunanski
lot NDER*S Club
■
Richard J. and Giovanna
(\ itlahorua* Donnelly Mr. James R. Flvnn Catherine (Filemvr) Madden, C.P.A.
ck Kevin E Madden. C.P.A. Ms. Eileen (Matthews' Sitarski Mary C. O'Brien, M D Kevin M. and
Sandra (Tomkowic:* Roddv
Ugo Donini Club
Kathleen M. Chancier, Esq.
Joseph K. l:es. M.D.
Ms. Therese Joyce
Ms. Janine M. Manscotti
Mr. Wayne D. Menrak
Robert J. Morle\. M.D.
Edward M. and
Kathleen (Golden* Waddington
Anniversary Club (S140 -v
Ms. Donna M. Genasi Ms. Eileen K- Halpin Mark T. Kennev. MAI, SRPA Ms. Kathleen (McLaughlin* Mellett Ellen Meriwether. Esq. Mr.WilliamC Morsel! Schuvler Newman. M.D. Florence M. and
\\ illiam D. Nievvood
Mr Robert Rtcks Mr. Bruce A- Ruggen Ms, Joan M Smallwood Mr. Gerard A. Sweeney Mr Ralph P. Tann Mr. Carl J. Wanjek
Donors
Mr. John R. Ando Eileen (McCann) and
Alfred A. Araco Jr. Mr lames F. Barben Ms. Pamela J. (Williams) Bems Rita A. (Motrin) and
John S. Bimhak Mr. Edward J. FWk Mr. John J. Bowes Jr. Mr. F. Howard Braithuaire Joann (Lawler) and
George G. Brenner Mr. Thomas E. Campbell Ms. Ramona M. Cannon Joseph A and Tatncia A. Chelius Ms. Geraldine (Shields* Cromlev Man A. E. Curran. D.H.M Mr. John W. Dornisch Mr John R. Fenton Jr. Ms. Man, L. Feron Mr. Johnnie L. Freeman Miroslaw D. Gardvas:. M.D. Ms. Marlene M Goebig Mr. Gerald J. Greenfield Melanie M. (Susiak) and
Daniel T. Guerin Ms. Linda A. Johnson Mr Wa\ne S. Johnstone Mr Ronald J. Kane Ms Barbara Kelly-Greco Ms. Helen D. Kromdyk Mr. lo-eph R. Lar^e Ms. Theresa (Maguire) Leichner Mr James L. Love Mr. Gerald I. Magid Michael B. Magnavita, C.P.A. Wend', R Mailman. M.D Mr Benjamin J. MashiofT Mr. Michael J. McCall Ms. Cindy (Ambruoso) McCutcheon Mr William P. McDonnell John S. and Elizabeth A.
(Rarler* McEldem- Mr Joseph G. McMahon George G. and
Annette M. (Buccil Mick Ms. Hamette R. (Dreer) Mishkin Ms. Christine iDomineske) Musick Man (McGonigle) and
Kevin M Oleksiak Ms. Maureen (McGinn* O'Neill Ms. Janet Pellicciotti Antoinette (Cavalieril and
Robert P. Pracilio Mr Thomas Quinn Thomas E. and
Linda (Gauder* Rak>:awski Mr. Nicholas J. Retina Mr. Roberr G. Reynolds Ms. E- Jane Ruane Kathleen M. Sandman. Ph.D. Mr. Richard C. Savers Rabbi NealS. Scheindlin Mr. Gregorv J. Schmirt Ms. Barbara L. Smith Joseph R. Solimeo, CPA Ms. Barbara A. Steinmec Mr. George R. Stevenson Jr. Ms. Elaine M. Stoebenau Ms. Sharon A
(Henderson' Stubblefield Ms- Laura (Fnere* Swezey
Ms. Janice M. (Neiman* Vukich
Mr. Jefiiey Waldman
Mr. James L. Wein>tein
Nb. Janise Williams
Mr. Robert W. Windhaus
James A. Winn, Esq.
Rev. Jams D. Wright
1982
Dr. Flubacher Clcb S9.999)
Susan F (Altamore) Carusi. Esq- Leslie 3nd Mary Kay (Morrow) Farrell
San Miguel Club (S2.500 -.
George T. Magee, Esq.
Chairman's Club
(Sl.OOO-S2.pag)
Mr. Jerome S. Leiynski II
Ms. M. Judith (Torres* Lvnch
Founder's Club 5999)
Michael F.Bonner. C.P.A. Donna (Tait) Diaz, M.D.
:ina (Villahonta) and
Richard J. Donnelly ria K. Haville Martin A. and
Catherine (Roam) Healev Mr. Francis J. Molettien Jr. Mr. Michael A. Mosley Ms. Lvnn M. Mueller Sandra (Tomkowic:) and
Kevin M. Roddv Ellen (Resinski) Rosen, Esq. Daniel J. Tann, Esq.
Ugo Donini Club S499)
Elliott J. Bilofsky. D.O., FAOCO Thomas C- Breslm and
Man M. Trautwein Susan O'Connor- Dane 11a and
John F. Danella, M D James J DeMarco,M.D. Mr. Anthom J. Falzarano Michele (Kaurfman) and
Hal M. Hirsch. D.M D Ms. Lisa C. Makosewski Ms. Diane (Bahereit) Melley Mr. Eric M. Retsenwit: Barbara A. Sharkey and
Thomas C. Voigl
Anniversary Club (S140-S249)
Ms. rVnna (Mallov) Branca Ms. Chenl (Seeds) Brotman Mr. John P. Dougherty Ms. lean M. Francois Man E (Hemande:* and
Michael G. Gilbert Dorothy F. Jannelli, M.D Patricia A. Kling Mr. John C. Lancaster Mr Francis J McGrath John F. and Joanne M.
(Pendergast* McVey, C.P.A Andrew J. and Man Ellen T. Miller.
MSN. R.N. Rosemary (Kashlak* Newman
Mr. Daniel J. O'Dea
Mr. Pivush G. Ruparelia Thomas D. and
Diane (Lisiewsk: - Ms. Mary M.Winn
Donors
(Upro$i39)
Regina M. (Collins) and
Gerard H. Ahernethy ManlFanelli' Avala, Ph.D. Craig J. Badolato, M.D. Mr. Charles E. Baxter III Ms. Donna (Duffy) Bell Ms. Deborah E. Bernhardt Ms. Carol (Fetterman) Blauth Mr James J. Carrigan Kenneth F. Cohen, Esq. Ms. Margaret W. iLvman) Crawford Mr. Joseph B. Dougherty Mr. Zonan B- Dubenko Mr Michael L. Erlich Mr. Robert A. Fabisrewski Howard D. Feinstem. C.P.A. Ms. Deborah A. Fluehr Ms. Cecile (McCarthv) Gantert Gintare T. Gecys, D.O. Mr. Brian Gemzik Mr. Edmund L. Green Mr. Scott N. Greenberg Demse (Kessler) Grugan, CPA, Esq.
and Joseph K. Gnigan. CPA Mr Mark S. Guemeri Mr. Kenneth K. Haas Ms. Patricia M. Hallman Ms. Karen (Smith) Hawkins Ms. Kathvann iCusack* Heilig Loretta J. and Charier R He\duk Joanne (Swift) Hummel, M.D. Mr. James F. Koch Ms. Yvonne (Havman) Kraeher Ms. Barbara (Meskill) Letnere Ms. Manbeth (Paulev* Locke Ms. Deborah (Geisler* Lovett Mr. Joseph E. Lynch Colleen (Wydro* Marano. Ph.D. Ms. Lisa (Martosella) May Ms. Kathleen (Conklin) McCabe Mr Scott D. McCaw Mr. Brian T. McGuffin Mr. Joseph L. Mellon David J. Miller, C FA Lori A. (Stieffenhofer) Mills, E~q. Ms. Man Ellen (White) Mitchell Mr Thomas M. Moore Mr. Charles E. O'Connor Jr. Mr. Paul J. Poies: Mr Harry J. Quinn Jr. Mr. Jeffrey K. Randa^o Mr Mark S. Robinson Ms. Anna P. Russell Mr. James P. Ryan Mr. John J. Schneider Bill Shields
Ms. Karen A. (Schuck) Stewart Mr. John C. Stipa Ms. Mary Beth Tecce Edward A. and Patrice (Lamb)
Trauffer, M.D. Mr George M. Ulmer jr. Mr. Thomas A. Vinciguerra Jr. Ms, Monique (Champagne) Yates Ms. Elizabeth (Graves) Zaccaria Ms Francesca (Serra* Zorzi
±4
Honor Roll of Donors ;ooj-!oo4
1983
Dr. Flubacher Club
(SS.OO0 59.999)
i burtnej Family
San Miguel Club (S2.500 54.999)
Linda A. (Schaefet) and
Diego F. Caldenn Estate of Kathryn F Coo isza
Chairman's Club (Si.000-S2.499)
Edward K. and
Janice M Beitr. Ph.D., R.N. Joseph A- Braccia, C.F.A. Mr. John J. Ciesla Mr. Louis V. Eccleston Mary A. (DeGregorio) and
Paul D. Ehrtichman Deborah (Sawyer) and
Martin B. McCann 111 Paul H. Young, Esq. Carol (O'DriscoIl) and
Stephen T. Zarrilli
Founder's Club
■
[ \ Scott M. Dorrner Donna (Mulloj > and
Thomas P Forkin. Esq Richard and Alice Gaihler Joseph G. Gibbons, Esq. Mr. Joseph G. O'Neill Mr Edward C. Recchiuti
Ugo Donini Club
(S2S0 S499)
Ms. Frances (Wilsbach) Bahn
Ms. Maria iTuckt-r) Cusick
Mr Thomas R. Evich
Ms. Karen M. (Rus:ko\vski) Fedele
Michele (Kauffman) and
Hal M. Hirsch, D.M.D. Mr Francis X. McGorry Jr. Mr Dominic M. Paranzino Joseph L. and
Ellen J (Chester) Pasquale Regina (Moore) and
Samuel W. Plummer Man, M. Trautwein and
Thomas C- Breslm
Anniversary Club S249)
Mr Benjamin G Baird M.ir. (Thomson) and
Peter J- Brauman Mr. Joseph F. Conners Jane B. and Charles E. Danihel Patricia M. (Pendergast) and
Kevin G Finlav Mr lames J. Fullam Mr ml Mr- Sri. phen P. Kennedy Ms Man V. Lawton James F. Markmann, M.D. Ms. Kathleen (Colbert) Ren: Karen (Spielberger) Sullivan. M.D Ms. Karla M. Sztukowski Anne L. (Galasso) and
James V. Templeton Jr. Ms. Frances M. Treishich
Donors
I I p tO S.IJ9)
Ms. Elaine E (SpaJaccini) A::arano
Ms. Susan C. (Petrucelli) Baldino Rosemary A. Barbera, Ph.D. and
EduardoA Villegas, M S \\ Ms. Harriet M. Beckert Mr. Mark L. Bemhauser James M. Boligit: Jr.. C.P.A. Ms. Catherine 1 St. me < Bn m iks Ms. Eileen (Monahan) Chopnick Annemane F (Organ) Clarke, Ph.D. Ms. Teresa (Gaffne\ ) Curley Mr. Richard J. DeCarolis Ms. Susan (Conway) Devane Mr Richard J. Donaher Ms. Lisa (McCarthy* Donnelk William F. and
Kathleen (Nolen) Edwards, R N Ms. Beverly A. Edwards Rev. Donna M. EI13 Joann Kelly Erb, Ph.D. and
Timothy J. Erb, MA Joy Faber. Esq. John C. Fnskev, C.P.A. Ms Susan M. Gallagher Mr. Paul E. Gauss Ms. Eileen M. Gildea John F. Glowacki Jr., Esq. Mr. Earl Goldberg Ms. Barbara L. Goldstein Mr John N. Gregorio Thomas M. Hinchey, Esq. Ms. Barbara J Hoerst Mr. Michael G. Huml Sr Ms. Michelle (Phinn) lannucci Mr. Joseph J. Invin Eileen M. Kelly and
Gregory J. Geruson Mr. Stanley J. Krol Jr. Ms. Sandra M. Levit Ms EJith (Tamhurro) Lewis Ms. Martha H. Lubynsl \ Mr. Michael J. Matthews Mr William J. McFadden Mr. Joseph J- McGrenra Roseann (Fisher) and
James S. Mincer Mr Kenneth R. Mitchell Jr. Mr. Walter F Moleski Jr Jane (Murray) and James G. Munr 1 Ms. Kathleen (McGauley) Nieman Ms Janice Olszewski Mary M. (Costello) and
Leo E. O'Shea Elizabeth (Mastropaolo) and
Jeffrey]. Oulion Mr Andrew I Pagano Mr Michael A. Papa Ms Maryann Pensteto Ms. Rosetta Pierce Mr. Lubomir B. Pynh VI- v lir\ E. Reiss M-. Margaret M. Rosenberg Scott M. Sadel. M.D. Mr Michael J. Sala:ar Mr. Gner D. Schaffer Ms. Bernadette (Glennon) Schi ch Mr Robert E. SchonewoU Ms ^rdisE. (Ryder) Shea Thomas Snyder and
Dr. Barbara Snyder Mr. Lehman J Snyder Jr. Kathleen (Stewart •
Stoneback, C P.A Mr. John P. Tracey Jr Mark S. Trachtman. M.D. Edward A. and Patrice
(Lamb) Trauffer, M D Paul J. and Joanne M.
(Saponara) Tyer Mr Thomas M Ullmer Ms. Kelt) A. Walker Ms Maureen (McKeown) Walsh Mr. Thomas F Whomsley
Mr. Thomas J Zamadk
1984
Chairman s club ■ _ 499)
Robert L and Louise P. Harman
Mr John A, McCann
Brother John Chung Quoc Nguyen,
F.S.C. Denisc (Galbraith) and
John T. Shannon Jr.
Founders Club (S500 ■
Mr. Cornelius G. Curran Richard and Alice Gaihler Tncia (Lenaghan) and Edward C Hogan, Esq.
Roberr A. Hopstetter. Esq. Ralph J. Mauro. Esq.
I go Donini Club (S250 S499)
William J. Kaufmann, Esq. Mr James J. McMahon Susan O'Connor-Danella and
John F. Danella. M.D. Ellen J. (Chester) and
Joseph L Pasquale Mr Patrick B Shanahan Ms Lenore Troyanosky-SH glei
Anniversary Club (S140 5249)
Kathleen (Dynan) and
James J. Black, Ph.D. Mr Edward W. Cummlngsjr. Mr. Gregory Curran Ms Kellyann (Franks) Jeletic Martin A. and
Monica (Wiltshire) Lupinc-tn Maureen (McGonigal) and
Frederick C. Mischler Jr. Mirek A and Christine R.
(Musman) Niemynski Mr. Dennis T. Owens Ms, Cecilia B. (Dolan) Purschke Ms Angela Galiano-Roth Ms. Helene M.
(Schwemmer) Genald Ms. Lisa (Basile) Shears Mr Henry J. Srraub Ms. Diane M. Ungvarsk}
Donors (Lp ro S139)
Mrs. Lynn M. (Bahmiller) Alexander Ms. Maureen (Giglio) AuBuchon Deborah A. (Eiser) and
Jerome J. Azareuic: Ms Man A. Bacon Ms. Bernadette (Pacini) Baird Patricia A. Bennett Dehorah (Fay) and
Joshua Buch, Ph.D- Ms. Josiane M. (Bulens) Wunderle Mr. Robert J. Caprioglio Mr Michael P. Cassidv Patricia -\ and Joseph \. Chelius Ms. Pamela Z. Clary Mr. Brian J- Connollv Ms. Patricia (Tavlor) Crowe William B. and
Maryann (Pantano) Davis Ms. Mary E (Deissler) Dillon Ms. Linda (Diaczynsky) Dopplei
In 2002-2003, students at La Salle benefited |
|
from gifts made in loving memory of the |
|
following individuals: |
|
Mr. Gregg Matthew Argenziano |
|
Mr. Dennis A. Asselta, '80 |
|
Br. Edward Bork, F.S.C. |
|
Mr. Eduardo Gaetano Cangiano |
|
Br. Lawrence J. Colhocker, F.S.C, Ed.D., '58 |
|
Mr. Dennis]. Collins, 74 |
|
Robert J. Courtney, Ph.D., '41 |
|
Mr. Brian P. Damiani, '64 |
|
Mr. William ]. Diamond, '41 |
|
Br. John P. Dondero, F.S.C. Ph.D, '45 |
|
Mr. Patrick E. Dooley, '34 |
|
Joseph F. Flubacher, Ed.D., '35 |
|
Ms. Tjenny G. Gavriilidou |
|
Br. Gene Graham, F.S.C, '47 |
|
Mr. Joseph R. Guerrini, '84 |
|
Mr. Felix M. Kadel, '37 |
|
Mr. Francis J. Kehoe, '48 |
|
Mr. Peter J. Kiernan, '64 |
|
Mr. John Charles Manning, '54 |
|
James E. and Margaret F. McGoldrick |
|
Mr. James A. McGovem, '50 |
|
Mr. Michael J. McGranaghan, '72 |
|
Mr. Charles J. McKeaney |
|
Br. Jeremv McNamara, F.S.C. |
|
Lillian B. Miller, Ph.D. |
|
Ms. Elizabeth C. Moran |
|
Mr. Theodore Eggleston Morrow- |
|
John P. Murray Jr., '80 |
|
Marjorie M. and Irwin Nat Pincus |
|
Leonard Reichman, D.D.S., '38 |
|
Br. G. Augustine Roberts, F.S.C. |
|
Mr. John W. Schmidt, '52 |
|
Br. E. Patrick Sheekey, F.S.C, 79 |
|
Mr. Hugh Thomas Smith, '52 |
|
Ms. Claire M. Stafford |
|
Ms. Clairmarie Stafford |
|
Mr. James T. Sullivan Jr., '51 |
|
Mark D. Williams, D.D.S.. '82 |
Alfred J. Dume^ I\ , Esq
Ms Frances A EVver
Mi |ohn G. Farrell
Mr. Thomas M. Flach
Joan (Orsini) Ford, Esq.
Ms. Barbara D. (Thorp) Gentry
Ms loan E. Gibson
John R. Gimpel, D.O
Mr. Charles C Hansen
Mr. Glen C- Hanson
[eanne (Yuengling) and
RalphS. H.sle 111 Mr Michael R. Hoffman Ms. Ellen M. Hohmann Mr. James P Hopkins Jr. Ms. Barrie L1 t Leasofi ' Hoy is Mr. Bernard Hurley Mr John X Kearns Ms. Linda M (Cobb) Kinrer Ms Barbara (Lever) Krauss Ms. Julia A (Cotton) Kurd:iel
Ms. \ irginia D. (Pickup) Listman Jane A Lombard, Esq. Mr. Charles F. Magee Richard F and
Lynn A. (Provost) Marta Susan (Myretus) and
Michael A. McCann Mr. Edward J McDey in
Ms Helen (McBrv.m) McG,nle\
Mr. Robert F Meighan
Mr Michael M. Mullin
Mr. Robert A Nyce
Mr John J O'Neill
Leo E. and
MaryM. (Costello) O'Shf i Mr Charles V Petosa Joseph B. Pino, DM D Ms. Danya (Szymanik) Pompeo Ms. Gandia K Ragoopath Mr Ria: U. Rahman Mr. Michael T Reflfher
Honor Roll of Donors 200J-2004
Bequests help to safeguard the mission and values of the Christian Brothers and the University for years to come. We gratefully remember the following individuals who have passed away, and who continue to provide opportunities to La Salle's students through their thoughtful planning:
Judge Genevieve Blatt Ms. Kachrvn Cocozj Mr. Walter M. Czarnota, '52 Mr. Joseph Flubacher, '35 Mr. Everett Frank Jr. Mr. William J. Good Mr. Francis W. Judge. '50 Mr. Joseph Kelbaugh. '60 JohnJ.McNally,C.P.A.,'64 William McShain, '62 Elsie E. O'Halloran Rev. Martin J. O'Halloran Mr. Joseph P. Rhein, '38 Ms. Mary Tomasco i. Beatrice A. Walsh
'40
Ms
Dennis F. and Mana (Cornley) Regan Ms. Marguerite H. (Elias) Rice Ms. Karen (SmirM Roche Ms. Karen A. (Lawlor) Rossi Ms Karen L. (Plumer) Ruff Ms. Cecilia M. Ruppert Mr. Robert A. Salanik Janice (Raks:awski) and
John L. Santangelo Jr. Ms. Diane iPandoli) Serena Ms. Eileen (McHugh) Silva Mr Kenneth J Smith Mr Gregory P Smith Ms. Bail 3penee
Ms. Gina M Spencer
m (Callahan) Stil Ms. Joanne M. lYincii Straub Mr William R. Strecker Joanne M. tSaponara) and
Paul J. Tver LT Neil G. \ an Pumer ' = Mr Matthew G. Walsh
1 98s
Dr. Fll bacher Club
Deni>e (D'Antonio) and Thomas F- Malecki Jr.
», HAIRM VN*S CLUB
■
There^i Andris Mr. M.ltonJ. Ball Richard L Duszafeji .Ml' Kelley A Grady, Esq. an J
Mr. lohn D. lanJa
Mr. Michael E. McDevitt
Ms Nancv (Monenson) Nearv
Mr. Timothv 0*SI
Mr Edward J Reirmever
Christine M (Tanro^h) and Peter \V Tun
Fot nplk s Club
Barbara L Ackerman, MP John K. Dugan, CP.A. Jane (Gregono) and
Charles W. Greenherg Gerald C. Grunewald. Ph.D. Cathenne (Roam r) and
Martin A. Healev Tricia (Lenaghan) and
Edward C. Hogan, E-^| Mr. Joseph R. Huck Jr.
Ugo Donini Club 1499)
Renee A. (Rapa) and Jeffrey E. Faller Mr. Terrence J. Jacob Dr. and Mrs. Bernard F King rgj Levick, DO Ms. Audrey V. Lombard Elaine O. Mshomba and
Richard E_ Mshomba Mrs Lynette tHvmani Nelson Beth A. and Joel C. Rosenfeld, M.D. Phyllis (Garberman) Schapire I Kathleen IGolden) and
Edward M. Waddington
Anniversary. Club
Kathleen (Pynan) and
' Black. Ph.D. Anonymous Mark DoJel. R N Robert L. Manieri and
Anne Mane Smith Manq A. (Brown) Marino. M.D. Dan Met. I
Ms Mar. (Geyer) McLaughlin Maureen (McGonigal) and
Fred C- Mischler Jr.
Mr Shelby F. Moore
Alice (Premaza) Mueller. D.O. and
John J. Mueller Jr.. D.O. William D. and
Florence M. Niewood Mr Score Pauli Mr Robert Pavone Ms Nancy J. Scheut:
- monson M-l I Mana Spano and Bruno I Mr. Joshua M. Tamoft Mr Michael J. Welsh
Honors
Mr. Douglas Achuff
Kimberlv A. Atkinson. D.O. Jerome J. and
Deborah A (Eiser) A:.ire\\ic: Ms Elizabeth A- Baker Ms. Ponna J. Bare^ John S. and Rita (Motrin) Bimhak Loretra B. and Michael T. BraJv
Ms. Pehorah t Herman! ( Mr. Lee J. Culver David P Di Paolo. MP \U. Kathrvn M (Dougheity) Lich Mr. Eugene J. Dra. Ms. Lis,.! (Goldman' Driban Ms. N ancv L. Entnken Mr. John J. Farris Ms Michele F Flukev Denise A. Franchetti. C F A Ms. Man. E. Gallagher Mr |>hn R. Gauntt Mr Roben K. Gay- Mr. Joseph R. Gei Mrs. Jesse M. Gibson
ila A. Gillespie Mr James C Goldsmith Ms. Tarncia (Schena* Gruhe Arthur J. Hass, C.P.A- Mr |ohn D. Heere Mr James B. Humphreys Mr. Thomas J. Hutchin,son ]r Mr. Anthonv C. Isabella Kevin V. Jame>. M D Cynthia M. (Bartolomeoi and
Paul M. Keenan Ms. Biirbara (Revnolds) Kelly Mr Michael F. Kenville Ms Kathr\n (Haig Mr. Reed C. Liflca Ms. Kathleen A. Lindenhoien Mr Patnck C. Logan tquin P. Lucero Ms. Lorerta M. Martin Mr William T McCUkey Mr. William H. McCormick |r Mr Michael Y McDermott Ms. Man E. (McGee) Th Ms. Man. L. McGinni? Mr. Thomas |. McKenna Mr Joseph C. McTamnev Ms. Margaret A. Morthorst Ms. Theresa M. Mulvey Ms. Constance M Mumper Mr. John B. News>me Ms. Margaret (Mortimer) Olkow^ki Mr. Francis E- O'Rourke Mr. Karl W. Orth Ms Diane Orrechowski letrrev J- and Eliraheth
[Mastropaolo] Oulton
irxicia H r.in-i James H. Pickering Jr.. Esq
leen E- (Pedicone) Piruka Ms Li>a A (Henng) Pratt Mr. David NX'. Richard Mr James Y Ricigliano
Ms. Margaret A. Ruane Mr. Scott M Schieck Charles L. and Mary E. Schuster Thomas Snvder and
Zk- Barbara Snvder Ms. Patricia lHanev> Stimson
Ms. WilU F. Stokes
Mr. Gregon I. Teithorster
Ms. Annette tCnstiano) Thompson
Mr Mark G. Tressel
M-. Charlene (Fancoa^t i I
Ms. Laura (Turner) Tvgh
Ms. Karen B. Weiss
Mr. Robert D. Williams
Ms Su^an M (An>e!) Wilmei
Ms Myrtle \ V.
1986
San Miguel Club
-
[V and Mrs. John Sweeder
Chairman s Club
52 499)
Mr Ralph J Garman
Ms. Audrev (Nugent) Greenmt;
John P. Janda and
Kelle\ A Grad\. Esq Deborah (Sawyer) and
Martin B McCann 111 Mr Thomas E Nowal
Ugo Donini Club
-
Mr. Greg E. Adams
Charles F. Barbera, MP
M- Ellen M Campbell
Kevin M. Cregan. M.D.
Daniel K. Ficrpamck. CP.A . OF A.
Chip Greenberg
Ms. Michelle A Haitsch
Mr Pavid T. Kun:
Mr. Robert WLiptak 11
Ms. Patricia [Dunne] McNamara
Mr. Michael J Simmond-
Thomas C. Voigt and
Barbara A. Sharkev Ms. Man L Wilbv
\nnt\trs\r-i Club
Ms. Rosemane Asamura
. iPeSancti-* DiNardo Ms. Julie M. (Doughern 1 Frant: Mr. Larr>' R. Han- Mr. James H. Jenkin-, Jr Mr. Harry G- Kyriakodis Ms, Camille tjanicki) Lajaunie Monica (Wiltshire) and Martin A. Lupinetti . incline T McGrath Ms Laura A (Peszka) Gibble Ms. Corinne Sims Mr Edward C- Sweenev
Donors
Gerard H. and Regina Mane
(Collins) Abernethy Ms. Patricia G. (Simmons) Alderter Irma R. (Konrad) and
Gregory Baraniecki Ms Cvnthia C. Bayer Mr James B Beglev
Gregory and Judith E.
(Gallagher) Braun. M.D. Ms. Joanne M. (Pilla) Burdulis Mr. Frank I Campisi Ms. Jane E. (Bates) Cero Mr. Roben E Cimorelli Mr. James F. Collins Mr. Thomas W. Cooper Ms. Rose J. Cowhev Ms. Jill O. Crandlev Ms. Dorothy C. Davis Caroline (Kamper) Davis, M.D Mr. Michael B. Dickinson Mr. John M. Douglass Mr. Thomas B. Duncavage Ms. Joan R. Eddy Ms. Mane (Robinson) Elliott Mr, John R Ferraro Mr. William M. Finn Ms Sylvia Fishbein Ms Carol L- Gash Annemane (Knox) and
Terence P Gillespie Ms Sheila (Kane) Gorman Ms. Janine (Rocco) Greenwood Lisa (Marino) and
Michael M. Hallowell Mr. Bruce Hammerman Jeanne (Yuengling) and
Ralph S. Hisle III Rosemarie E- (Trotter) and
David W. Kravnak
Ms Lisa A Loebei
Ms Madeline T Madden
Ms. Concetta Mannello
Mr. James E. McGee Jr. John P. and Rosemary A
(Brennan) Mc< Sonigle Ms. Diane M. McGovem Sean X. and Cindy M.
(VanArsdale) McGrath
• rt C. McHugh Michael J. and Alice
(Baehr) McLaughlin Mr Robert P. Miller Ms. Carol A. Miller Patrick C. Murphy. Esq Mr Michael S. Niemann Mr Gerard C. Ordunta Ms. Constance D. Rice Mr James T. Richard jr. \b Lisa G. Rog Ms. Loretta M. (Young) S Mr Joseph F Sculh Jr Ms Ruth K. Seitter Mr Brian R Shields Ms Susanne M. iPol.m) Slavin Ms- Janet E- Smith Ms. Theresa A. (Cenk
SotTJn m it Ms. Agatha Stone Ms. Margaret M Tieme) Gary D. Vogin, M.D, Ms. Diane M. Yollberg Ms. Kathleen M. (Backaus-.o \\ i ll Ms Maria T. (Sheeron) Zoit\
[987
Dr. FllbacherCllb (S5000 ->■
Pauline C. Scalvino. L.q
sax Miguel Cll b S2.50
Mr James F. Bagnell
Kn.nne (Grady) ajid Jt'n R. Detewtc:
26
Honor Roll of Donors 200)2004
Chairman's Club
($I.OOO-$2 4 9 ■■"
Sr Eileen M. McGowan Maureen (Ryan) and John D. Rilling, C.P.A.
Founders Club
($500 -$999)
Christine M. and
Francis A. Champine Mr. Srephen K. Degnan Mr Mark G Gola Man L Goldschmidt, Ph.D. Elizabeth R (Leneweaver) and
Thomas J Lochner Mr Patrick M Pendergasi
Ugo Donini Club 1499)
Mr. Matthew]. Flamini
Mr Timothy F. Collins |r
Ms. Susan M. Dougherty
Rebecca A. Efroymson, Ph.D.
James C. Guanno, M.D.
Ms Stephanie J. (Gamble) O'Hagan
Anna M. Pagliaccetti, Esq.
Ms. Lois E. Potter
Mr John G. Preston
Ms. Maureen (Cholewiak) Royds
Mr. Brian T. Sammond
Dr. Doree R Sidcofl
Mane Yakubik, V.M.D.
Donors
(UptoSl39)
Ms. Lisa A Adamovage-Hoback Mr. Robert V. Bailee Ms. t arol L. (Gerhard) Baquero Ms. Eileen (Donaldson) Becker Mr Jerome T. Bradley Janice A. (Gasho) and
John A. Brennan Jr. Robert T. Brill, Ph.D. Ms. Nancy (Lenaghan) Buck Ms. Christine (Giegerich) Burton Ms. Dolores A- Byrnes Ms. Rosemane Carosella Ms. Laura J. Cavanaugh Mr. Timothy J. Cush Ms. Lisa M. Dankanich Cynthia DiBuono, V.M.D. Mr. Stephen P Dolan Ji Mrs. Eileen O- (Sivil) Lbran Ms Man J Dress Mr. T. Perry Engard Mr.NicholasJ Florkowski Thomas J. Gorman, CEBS Ms Victoria B Grade! Angelo and Anita Guzzardi Ms Elizabeth S Henry -Williams Ms. Marline S. (KmuO Herceg Diana Hermann, M.D. Paul M. and Cynthu M.
(Bartolomeo) Keenan Mr. Charles N kc.rh 111 Ms. Cheryl L. Kline )ohv and Melissa A Kolsun Mr F Neil Lindenfelser Ms. Joann M Lytic Ms. Stephanie (MscKenzie)
Marcinkowski Ms. Kathleen A Marg i\ Ms. Charlene M. (McCoy) Mayer
Ms. Cathy L. McCullough Michael P. and
Kathleen R. (O'Hara) McGeehan Alice (Baehr) and
Michael J. McLaughlin
Mr. William R McTigueJi
Anonymous Mr Timoth\ I Melro\ Bruce Mercogliani i, Ph I1 Michele M. Miller, R.N., M.S.N Mr. Paul A. Monaco Kathleen M. (O'SulUvan) and
Thomas J. Monaghan Ms. Debra (Ricci) Naso Ms. Heidi Y iSnmKTLeary Mr Mario A Ohveti \N Linda A Razler Ms. Jane (Kirk) Roberts Ms. Annmane P. Ryan Mr. Michael A. Saponara Ms. Mary (Timmins) Schluth Mr Richard C. Shnkard Mr. Daniel E. Snowden Ms. Thelma E. Sut^s Ms. Gerry (Warkins) Sweterlusch Ms San (Tran) Tang Ms. Carol H. Thim Mr. Edward A. Thomas Ms Leigh A. (McDonald) Tohm Mr Michael I Tumelry Ms Man K Yandcgrtrr Ms Nancy T Walton Mr. Donald D Whitman
1988
University Club
(SlO OOO S24
Jefrrei R Roslc, C.P.A.
DR FLUBALHfcR CLUB
(SS.000-S9.999)
Mr. Michael J. Anions
San Miguel Club
($2,500 M 1
Gretchen A. (Heehner) and
Wade A. Br.ism. ». Ihristopher J. Jams, C.P.A and
Bemadcttt. (Mulligan) Jams.
Ed.D.
Chairman's Club
(S1.000 ->: 199)
Louise P and Robert L Harman Mr Joseph M. kelh Mr Thomas F. McCrea Maureen (Ryan) and
JohnD. Rilhng, C.P.A. Mr Matthew I Vhwenderman Denise (Galhraiih) and
John T. Shannon Jr.
Founder's Club
(SSOO-S^hi!
Tracev A. Reardon-Rowen and
I 1 touglas K iwen Lisa M (Donnelh > .\nJ
Jeffrey P. Denton Mr Michael B. Farley |ohn P. and Kathleen \
(Bagnell) Finnegan Felice I (Fleisher) Koscinski, M D Maureen (Gunpeli Males, Esq Mr JohnN. McBryan Mr James P Mc( larrhy James D. and
Therese E. (Harcank) McHugh Carolyn A Piccone, M.D Peter Z. Teluk, Esq
Ugo Donini Club
Mr John P Campbell
John M. Cellucci, M.D
Ms. Adeline L. (Citrano) and
Ron Mandel Anthonv and Karen C.
(Moones l l"V!\ esc. ■'■■ o Susan (Straub) Fuller. Esq. Ms. Kathleen (Kuenzel) Gnbb Mr. George J. Haitsch Mr. Mark A Latond Eileen M. (Sweeney) and
Joseph M. Markmann ( hristine and
George A Peifecky, Ph.D. Ms. Judi (Walsh) Loughltn
Anniversary Club (S140 ".
Mr Douglas P. Allen Paul L. Boger, D.M D
Mr. James A. Boyd
Ms. Janine (Buffone) Niwinski
Ellen and Joe Diorio
Mr Stephen P. Friend
Michael and Man Ellen Gilbert
Vincenzo V. Giuliano, M D
Ms. Myrtle R. Green
Mr. Joseph P. Hiltwine
Mr Matthew J. McBryan
Gary and Nancy McMonagle Ms. Nancy M- Perl Richard D. Quattrone, DO Mr. Francis P. Thompson
Donors
ii p to S139)
Mr. Christopher J. Adams
Tern J Aisenstein, R.N.
Ms. Ann M tl.ichtc\ * Avallone
Mr. Richard J Bailey
Mr. Michael | Berchick
Mr- Beniadette M.
(Bonaduce) Weaver Annette M. (Bucci) and
George G. Mick Mr Hugh! Campbell
Ms. Kathleen A. 1 1 linchey) Cantretl Mr Michael A. Cory Mr. Henr\' ) Cotton Mr Jerry W Crawford
Mr Darryn R ( Tomwel! Michael Im hristofaro, < P \ Mr. Robert A. Dieterle Ms. Lynn (Woytyei y) Doan Michael G. En:. 1. P A Mr. Jesse R. Goodrich Ms. Lisa (O'Kane) Hesbacher Christopher L. Higgins, C.P.A. Ms. Margaret (lgoe) Hubert Mr. Robert A. Katz Paul H and Kelly
(Mullen) krumenacker Ms. Kacherine G Lahman Mr. Michael A. Licata Ms Sus.inn M Mn^trk Ms. Christine (Man* Mazzola Ms. Miriam C. (Jawork I McCaule^
Ms. Kathleen M McKeever
Mr. James E Parsons
Mr. James L Resnick
Ms. Knstin.i S Roberts
Ms. Linda K. Robinsi in
Ms. Michele A. Slavinski-Mehlbaum
Nancy A. Smith, Esq.
Ms. Michele A. Staples
M ir\ lynn (Kearney l and
Daniel A. Siccher Ms. Eileen M. (Carcione) Strulson
Ms. Barbara (Maier) Thomas
Mr. Robert S Tokonitz
Mr Mark A. Tonelli
Ms Christine (Springer) Vclicer
Mr. Ronald M. White
Ms. Holly (Mohr) Whytosek
Mr. Robert ]. Wilkinson
Ms Andrea T (Eadeh) Wills
Ms Man Ann \\ inokur
Mrs. Linda A. (Martin) Wo j ton
Michele Tedesehi-Zimmerman, M.D.
Ms. Nancy E. Zoeltsch
1989
San Migi n Club
(S2.500-S4 1
Bemadette (Mulligan) Jams, Ed.D. and Christopher J. Janis. C.P A
Chairman's Club (S1.000-S2 499)
Brother Joseph Dougherty, F.S.C. Mr. Brian J. Murray Theresa A (Qli.uk > and
Jonathen Bell Honora C (Browne) ind
Thomas M McGinn
Ugo Donini Club (S250, S499)
Mr John J. Bagnell
Mr. Kevin J Byme
Marie 1 Bruno) and Leo F. Craig Jr.
Ms. Kelly A. Greenberg
Mr. Michael V. Griffin
Mr. David P. Horrell
Mr. Stephen D. Kopec
Ms. Barbara M. McDonald
Mr. Joseph G. McGirr
Mr. Carroll E. Rockey
Mi Michael £ \ an Thuyne
\\\i\ i rsak) Club ($140 i
Mr. Charles P. Clearyjr.
Ms. Margaret A.(Bedesseml 1 leu.
Mr. Michael 1 Dow ling
Jane E. Nagle, Esq.
Mr Stephen P O'Donnell
Judith (Rosboschil) and
Matthen 1 1 Ramsey Roben M Walker, Esq. Miriam (Dvorak) and
Mark A Wennersten
Donors
I Up to Sl39)
Mr. Henry M Aiken Mr. Michael H Arment Mr. Christopher T Bent: Ms. Andrea Bonaci ■ u >i
Mr Robert A Butler
Ms ( >.i\ le A (t iumki iw ski) ( arb me Mr Vinceni 1 Cataldi
Ms. Margaret L (Heard) Catanese Mr. Richard J. Clifford
Ms. Barbara A. ( o.id\
Ms Hedv Cohen
Mrs. Kimberly A (Messina) DaCosta
Mr Steven A DeMasi
Mr. Dennis M Duhon
Mr. Daniel J. Egan
Ms. Joan (Ray< .1 1 Fassara 1
Ms I lin-niH K (Faust)Garry
Ms Molly It. iilk-spie) Fiandra
Mr. Joseph A. Forcing
Mr. Stephen P. Gessner Mr. George W. Glaze Ms. Patricia A
(Mahonej 1 1 Iral ■ iwsl 1
Mr James K Gulick Jr
Mr. Thomas G. Haight
Ms. Diane L. Hamburg
Ms. Wanda T. Houston
Mr Mario I loannucci
Ms Blanche (Palacfo) Kammer
Dr. Richard V. LollaJr.
Ms Stephanie J (Rozanski) Lovett
Mr. Stephen J. McBain
Mr. Gerald T. McCarry
Cindy M (VanAisdale) and
Sean X McGrath Mr. Peter A. Mollica Ms. Anne Y (Richards)
Montgomery Mr Howard M Morgan Karen S. Bncker-Moser Elizabeth (Doyle) and
Timothy D. Moxe\ Kevin M and Mar)
(McGonigle) Oleksiak Mr. Hermon L. Parker Mr Michael A. Peyton ErastZ. Pohorylo, Pharm.D Mr. Richard J. Schafer Ms Melissa (Clark) Scheffey Susan J. Scutti, Rph, J D Ms. Geraldine M. (Lyons) Sharkey Diane (Lisiewskl) and
Thomas D. Sykes Ms Maureen E Tate Ms. Janice (Perry) Tnchtinger Si MargaretE. Walsh, - - I Mr. Gregory G. Whelan Dana (Flaherty) Worthington.
( P -\ Mr Mitchell J. Yanak Jr. Ms. Janet A (Zatkins) Warner
1990
President's Cll b
Mr. Elmer F. Hansen III
San Mil 11 l Club
(SJ.500 vt ,
Ms * ..unin\ A Altemus
Chairman's Club
(SI OOO •-' 1
EJie A and Norben F Belter, Ph D Ms Livi A (Rusciani) F.iltyn Mr Christophei G |ahn William W Matthews III, Esq,
Founder's Club (S500
Mr Ramzie A Abdinassei
K.ir,i, ( iM. 1, ,1,, \ ) and
Anthony 1 Vl\ esci n 1 1 Mr. William F Donovan III Ms. Kelly L (Beckner) Hmska
Ugo Donini Club
Joseph 6t Diane Burke Mr. Peter J- Frisk,, Dana(Hyland) Kade '90 B \ Christine and
George A Perfecky, Ph I1 Ms. Ann T Rowland Anthony C Tridico, Th D.
Honor Roll of Donors 2003-2004
Anniversary Club
James C. Anagnos. Esq. Mr. Josh Dicskv David T. and Lis
(Baum) Espenshade Mana 1. (Colsev) and Brian L Heard Mr. Lam* D. Holman Kathleen (Quiglevl and
Christopher M. Hudak Mr. Nathaniel J. John.- Ms. Ellen C- Koicdiiej
CYI Mr. James J. McCrane III Mr. Philip S. Morgan Jr. Ms. Anita L Plakans Robert B- Rogers. Esq Mr. N ; tiara
Mr. Paul D. Sdi
I nia M. Wagner
Donors
Ms. Gina R. Amato
Ms. Denise (Cassidv) Arrigale
~ E Uo) Bassman
Ms. Laura C. (Clavinl Blanchrield Mr. Ntichael 5. Blash
- Bracaszevnsi Janice A. (Gasho) and John A. Brennan Jr. Ms. Karen A. (Dougherty* Bura inie A. Colello
ail P. ■Beam* Davis Ms- Pauline L (Felter) Devlin Ms. Man A. tjannev* DiMarino
- :anne M. iLardear) Dotson Ms. Kathleen E. Duggan
Ms. Ann Marie J. Eidenshink
Mr. Brian D. Fancavtc
Ms. Pamcia C. Farrell
Mr. Robert F. Finketston
Mr. Joseph S. Galvano
Mrs- Christine (Mallo\ 1 Gan*
Mr. Daniel J. Gi
Leah (Poole) Greenwood. Ph.D.
nine iPreisler* Groch Ms. Kathleen A- (Ryan) Hackman Mr. Timothy R- Hammel Ms- Laureen T. (Ctanmni) Haves
Hendn Ms- Carole A. Hevs Mr. David B. Homiak
-^nta M. (Chambers) Jaskolka Ms. Maureen M. Kane Sr. Patricia Kellv. GNSH Mr Matthew M. Killinger
- .iraB. Kline Mr. James A. Kolpack
Mullen) and
Paul Krumenacker en J. Laderman Rev. John J. Large nna Leso Nfe. Barbara L. LeVan Mr Dennis C. Linso Mr. Frank R. Longo III .Andrea L (Palumbo) and
Daml L Mack - Anthonv G- Martillom, C.P.A. Mr. John-Claude Martin Ms Wanda M. (Daniels) Martorano Ms. Man P Mc - Mr. William D. McMenamin Ms. Jan Christine K. (Klasterl Meko, Esq.
and John J. Meko Jr. Mr. Thomas C. Moule
Mr. Timothv J. \ . Elissa (Brodenck) and
Francis X. Nolan Jr. seph J. O-Connor 111 Man Ellen (Banford) and
Thomas J. O'Mallev. Esq. Mr.MarkW. Pinto Ms. France A. (Fav) Pollock Ms- Bai+ :e t Pope
Ms- Alice M-R (WingerO Price Janice tRakscawski) and
John L. Sanur - Ms. Marcelb A. (Kuttler*
Bossow Schanfcweiler Ms. Sharon (Sochanchak* Schanr Ms. Debra L Scott Christopher E Selgrath. D.O. Ms. Anna Marie E - Mr. Robert S. Shewbrooks Mr. R. Matthew Stephenson Mr. Michael P. Tedesco Mr. Michael C. Thomson Ms. Jennifer A. Turner Mr. David R. Turtle Ms. Knsnn (Gentile* Weneel Mr. Kenneth E. West Jr. Ms. Karen M. (Kaiser) Woodnng Ms- Arpie Zerounian
1991
S kN Miguel Club
Mr. Kvle V. Mananski
Chairman's Club ($1,000 a
Ms. .Ann T (McGrath) EUkxt
Founder's Club 5999)
Edward T. and
Adnenne M. (Daukaus* Cutter Lisa M. Donahue and
Kenneth I. Rose III
Ms-Eh-abethJiMcGur -
-
Uco Donini Club
■499)
Mr. David S. .Archer
_v Diane Burke Cbllen G. (Laffertv) and
John F. Fin-patrick Jr. Mr. Charles W. GreenK:. Judith A. (Drobile) and
Daniel P. Jovce Jr. Mr. Paul T- Stanley
Anniversary Club
(SI40-S249)
Scott and Jessica Besler Peter J. and Man
(Thomson) Brauman Mr. Craig C. DeFano Ms- Bemadette Diugokecki Mr. William F. Dougherty Jr. David T. and Lisa A.
(Baum) Espenshade Ms. Ellen M. Geisel Mrs. Christine A. (Glackin) Hopkins Mr Matthew J. Kane Patnce McCaulk
Dominic Esposito 111. Ph.D. Mr. James J. Nelson Ms. Karen L (Morasco) Sharkev -n A. (O'Brien) Sher
Ms. Kimberlv Toomev
Donors
(UptoS!?o)
Mr. John J. Adair Mr. Stuart D. Appel Eileen (McCann> and
Alfred A. Aracojr. Mr. Chuck M. Ball Gregory and Irma R.
rad) Baraniecki Mr. Michael E- BeU Mr. Kevin J. Bracken
M. (DiDomenico) Bruno Mr. Vincent J. Bucolo Jr. Ms. Diane (LaPorta) Campo Ms. Cathvann (Riest Dalaimo Christopher Michael Davis Ms. Laura A. (Mullan* DeCencio Ms. Pamcia DeSanto Ms. Enn (Walker) Dickerson Mr. Fred J. Domico Ms. Lisa V. Emerick
?n P. Gelovich Mr. Christopher J. Gill Mr.RichardJ.GorskiJr.
5-Graeff Joseph R. and Man A
(Buschka) Hainthaler Mr. Jason M. Hams Ms. Lvdia A. Heise Sis. Kathleen E Hohenleimer Ms- Catherine L (Frisko) Holsing Bemadette F. and James J. Kennv Jr. Mr. Kevin M. K.dd Melissa .Ann andjobv Kolsun Ms. Carla J. Laub Mr Walter T. Lomax Mr. Gino Lostracco Mr Fred L Ludy Kelly E(Maher) and
Barreca i ret M. tCardiet Malcv Mrs. Clare V. Martin Mr. Joseph Massucci Ms. Christina (Ma=a> McGamgle Ms. Diane M. (Brady) Mercuno Deacon Thomas H. Miller Ms. Regina M. Muldoon Elissa 1. Brodenck ) and
Francis X. Nolan Jr. Joanne M. (Dolack) and
Joseph A. Quanrone Ms. Donna M. (Brady I Raziano Marcie L (Colello) and
Joseph A. Romano Lisa J. (Sterling) Share. M.D. Sir. Robert T. Slinkard Mr. Francis G. Sterner III
-;cnc Ms. Denise H. (Bahmiller) Tate Ms. Anne Marie lHatst) Thomas Ms. Mary FJien C
iTomaszewski) Thorpe Mr. Eric R. Toppy
?n M. Uholik Ms. Jennifer K (Scott) Vinci Mr Michael L Viola Ms. Carolvn A. \ onMechow Mr Gregory J. Vrafa Mr. Jason M. Waksman Mr. Robert T. Wnght Jr. - ca N. Young
1992
Chairmans Club ($1,000 -.
Margaret F«>rrestel. C.P.A. Susan M. (Schwab* and
Jcrseph F. Hohenleimer Mr. William F. Mullet
Founders Club
Thomas G- and Kathleen N.
Sovem) Purer Mr. Thomas L Markowski
Uco Donini Club
-
Michael A. and Tracy E
(Malone) Boedewig Christopher W. and
Jeannine M. (Cridge) Calhoun Scott and Renee Campbell
\elis> DeMallie Sir. James M. D Ms. Linda A. Ewald Mr. Jason R. Gilbert Ms. Judith A. (Taylor) Goldstein Joseph J. McMahon Jr.. E^j Ms. Beth (Far-rums* Moreau Ms. Janet L Parker
.n L. Reardon Joseph M. Csercsevits and
Gina M. Russo, CP.A. Mr. Fredenck Schwanenbach Mr. John T. Williams Mr. Michael J. Zitt
\\ni\ ers\r"» Club
Ms. Rose M. Davis
Mr. Charles J. Dinning Jr.
Mr. Brian M Fish
Paul M. Hogate, M.A.. LCSW.
LP.C Christopher M. and
Kathleen (Quigley) Hudak Charles P. Keates. Esq. Mr. James M. Knepp Jr. Tncia A. (Watson) and J.
Christopher Locate 11 Mr. and Mrs. Thomas A. Lutter Ms. Laura A. MacPherson Ms. Kerr. M. McCortnack
: C Medurajr.. D.M.D. Mr. DamianJ. Mogaveto Ms. Mana L (Hams) Morgan Mr. Richard E Niwinski Jr. Ms. Leslie A. (Blanchard) Stapleford Mr. Christopher B. Taulane
Donors
-IJ9)
Ms. Allison A. Auld
Christopher and Jennifer Barbier
Mr. Michael J. Benrus
Ms- .Anne K. Bishop
Ms. Laura J. (Hanson) Brehm
Ms. Jill S. Caro=a
Nicholas J. and Si
iMcKee) Coggins Michael A. Consiglio, Esq. Gerald Dieckhaus. C.P.A-. C1A. Mr. Robert M. Donahue Mr. Patnck F. Duffy Ms. Kelliann(McGee' F Mr. Robert A. Fuller Mr- Robert J. Geiss Mr. Brian P. Gerrard Debra A. Gnes Randall
Melissa M. Guenther. C.P.A. Man A. (Buschka) and
Joseph R. Hainthaler Mr. Stephen A. Hawkins Mr. James J. Havbum Mr. Joseph J. Hogan
- Wallitsch) and
John T Hurd Ms Marguerite M. Kane Ms Judith B. (Einch) Karas Ms. Lois W. Kamicki Mr Charles G. Lannutti Mr. Victor Leonard Kathleen F. (Laiterty ) and
Martin J. Lewin Ms. EUen H. Link Ms. Catherine D.
iMc.Alee^ Lijr-r Mr. Mark A. Lunsford Mr. Michael T. Lyons Ms Kathleen S. MacDonald Mr. Arthur G. Marlin Jr. Mr. Gregon* S. Maurer Ms. Tara A. McCarthy Thomas and Bemadette McDennott Ms. Pamcia L (Pflegert McGoldnck Ms. ManTose P. McGovem Michael S. and Lisa M.
(Giacometri) Minghenelli Mr- Robert J. Monk Mr. Matthew R. Nunnally Mr. Matthew T. O'Bovle Mr. Thomas J. O'Farrell Ms Denise M. OHara Ms. Kimberlee A.
(Farruggio) Pearson Mr. Daniel S. Pelulio Mr. Nicholas L Pemajr. Jt>seph A. and
EtnabethJ. (Mullarke-.! Piccolo Mrs. Kathleen M-
(Loughman) Ramsev Ms. Elena M. (Snvdet^ Rixlngue: Mr. Jonathan D. Roesser Mr. Th : Tncia L (^chalet) and
Thomas A. Petrecz Jr. Ms. Ltndamane B. (Sands) Schussler Patncia K. Dalv and
Joseph L Simmers Mr AlprKTiso Smith Ms. Charlene (Dewees) \'aii Mr. Jiiseph R. W Ms. Jennifer M. (Wucert Wilburn
iAard Mr Matthew J. Wnght
1993
San Miguel Club -4999)
Mr. Philip T. Hince Mr. Anthom F Verier
Chairmans Club
(Sl.OOO -.
Joseph F. and Susan M.
- ..uab) Hohenleimer Helene T. Gradv and
Matthew D. Gallagher Mr Michael T McLaughlin
Founders Club
Richard T. Cadigan. Esq. Ms. Jennifer R. (Cole) Davis Mr. Daniel L DeStetano Theresa K. Travis and John F. Gil!
28
Honor Roll of Donors 2003-2004
Ugo Donini Club (S250-S499)
Mr Lawrence C- Berran Tracy E. (Malone) and
Michael A. Boedewig Mr. William P. Browne Ms. Kathy Brown-Fitzpatrick Jeannine M. (Cndge) and
Christopher W. Calhoun Ms Leah M. (Barrett) Finnegan Joseph F. and Susan M.
(Schwab) Hohenleitner Ms. Dana Y. King Ms Maureen L. McGetrigan Ms. Barbara (Lance) Menin Mr. Troy H. Pierce
Annivtrsary Club
1-14" SZ49)
Mr. Jeffrey J. Foose Dr. Joy M. Gianvittorio and Dr. Daniel A. Rakowslci Dr. Jennifer M. King Mr. Gerald J. Tarantolo Jr. Mr Albert T. Venino III
Donors
(Up to Si
Mr. Daniel J Albrecht
Andrew R Beck, C V A
Ms. Bmnella L (Mirarchi) Benales
Mr. Domtnic P Bonacci Jr.
Mr. Brian A. Bnider
Ms. Nancy R. Candito
Stacey A- (McKee) and
Nicholas J. Coggins Ms. Karen R. (Hagerty) Cohen Ms. Barbara A iMurphv) Cristatdi Ms. Jennifer E. Curran Ms. Kathleen (McCann) DelPtao Ms. Linda M. Dix Ms. Paget A. Erwin-Donohue Mr. Hugh J Fern Jenine E. (David) and
Albert S. Finarelh III Mr. Roben E Fischer III Ms. Michele A Frislcc Ms. Barbara A. Gallen Ms. Ann (Brooks) Gavin Denise (Maksimow) and
Steven C. Gingolaski Rodger T. and Kristina M
(Horan) Guerra Mr. Thomas R Hall Jeffrey W. Hermann, M.D. Ms. Lisa(Zacchei) Hill Mr. James F. Hoban Ms. Lisa A (Hyde) Holloway Ms. Christine L Hooper Ms. Ardellia T. (McLain) Jones Ms. Maryann T. (Fatycz) Juhano Ms Angela (Puffy) Kelly Ms. Linda Kunka Mary Beth (Krauss) and
Michael I Lee Ms. Bernadette (Kummer)
Leszczynski Martin J. and Kathleen F.
(Lafferry) Lewin Ms Sara D MacNeil Mr. Thomas M McCurdy Mr. William H McDermott Thomas and Bernadette McDermott Mr. Peter R. McGahey Ms. Kelley A. (O'Malley) McGhee Mr. Matthew D. Melinson Mr. David C. Mongeluzi Mrs. Rosemary R. Morse Ms. Bernadette A- (Murray) Nace Mrs. Julie A. (Zimmerman) O'Malley
Mr. David I Owsik |r
Ms. Christine (Amento) Rath
Mr. Joseph D Rondinelh
Ms. Beth A. Ru:icka
Ms. Kathrvn M t Rudolf) SakauCzki
John D. Scanish, Psj I1
Mary E. and Charles L. Schuster
Mrs. Maria A. (Sesso) Punzo
Mr. Terrence J. Shea
Mr John P. Sheahan
Mr. David A Spiatt
Mr. David G. Stasny
Mr. Jerome J. Steffe
Ms. Patricia A. Stover
Mr. Thomas J. Tanttllo
Ms. Andrea J. (Lapusheski) Vicente
Mr. Steven K. Weltman
Mr. Frank M. Wet:ler
Ms. Irene M [Olkowski) Wick
1994
University Club (S10.000-s24.999)
Susan M. (McErlean) and Russell R. Barrett
Chairman's Club
(Sl.OOO-52 499)
Matthew D- Gallagher and
Helene T Grah, Kathryn (Bareis) and
Raymond A. Ricci Mr. Timothy R. Tilson
Ugo Donini Club
(S2$0 S499)
Ms. Cathy J. (Hardman) Bolton Ms Deborah I. [Marks] Lake CPT Douglas A. LeVien HI Kathleen N. (McGovem) and
Thomas G. Furer Heather A. Mclnemey, C.P.A. Mr. William P. Mitchell Ms. Patricia M. Short Stacey M. (Slater) and
Joseph P. Woratyla
Anniversary Club (S140 S249)
Ms Dawn E. Cusimano
Rev. Thomas F. Gardocki, Ps\ i1
Karen M. (Liechty) and
Michael B. Hoban Man C. and Leo 1 Mullen Jr. Ms. Sharon (Risa) Starr Mr \ iktot A Tserkovniouk
~Young Alumni Club ($70 S139)
Mr. Ronald V. DeFeo 111 Mr. Robert F. Distel Kristina M. (Horan) and
Rodger T. Guerra Mr. Anthony J. Kimsal Mr. Eric L Kmtschmer Ms. Christy E. Marrella-Davis Ms. Michelle L. (Fish) McElro\ Mr. Patrick J. Moone) Mr Edward J Sheed\ |r Michael T. Stctliano and
AmyLynn V. Flood Mr. David H. Smith James A. and Regina C.
(Quinn) Sontag Ms Audrey J. Tucker Ms Catherine Wiley
Donors
(Up to $69)
Ms. Anne P. Baumher Joyce A. (Jelligt and
Robert J. Bednarek Ms Piane M. (Azzolini) Benesi Ms. Barbara L.
(Vandergntt) Bittinger Ms Susan L. Burnert Mr. John J. Canning Mr. Marco D. CaruUi Mr Matthew M. Castrina Mr. Charlie J. Chants Ms Carolyn E- Clear Mr. Thomas R. Conway Mr Marcanthonj DeLeo Ms. Karen M DiStefano-Spring Ms. Therese M. (Ungaro) Donahue Ms. Ellen I Eidelson Ms. Laura E. England Sr. Marilyn Foy
Amy (Lynn) and Daniel S. Fraley Ms. Susan M. Gemmell Ms. Catherine M ( ieorge Steven C and Denise
(Maksimow) Gingolaski Ms. Crystal M Goodrich Ms Ann M Graziano Colleen A. Gulczynski
(Kahler] D.O Krista M Hirschmann and Kevin F
Rodowicz, D.O
Mr Robert P. Hurle\
Ms. Amelia K (Horlacher) Jones
Mr. Timothy R. Kindt
Mr Steven ] Kobasa
Ms. Irene J. (Oakley) DiFranco
Ms. Frances C. McKeown
Mr. Leo J Mullen III
Ms. Christine M. (Holier) Mulhn
Ms. Ava L Norfleet
Patricia H. and Joseph M Tansi
Nicole (Shelly) and
Joseph E.Pilku> III Jeanne M. (CumpeD Sandella, D.O. Ms Dianna (Arnold) Stderin Ms. Lvne^ia A (Crawford) Steward Mr. Kurt E Snent: Ms. Monica C. Stonone Mr. Thomas A. J. Sutton Ms I lonna A Tonrev Mr. Ronald D. Washington Mr William E Waverli Roben E. Williams, Esq.
1995
Dr. Flubacher Club (s5.000-s9.999)
Mary Kay (Morrow ) Eind Leslie Fan-ell
San Miguel Club
($2,500 s ,
Ms Lisa I Cruikshank
Chairman's Club
(Si.ooo-S; 499)
J. Barry and Carleen D. Dickinson
Founder's Club (S500 S999)
Ms. Marta V. Alvarez Ms. Judith C. Binns Mr Lance I Giordano
ATH LETICS PROGRAM PARTNERS AN D SPONSORS
Corporate I artners
Albert Einstein Healthcare Network Holiday Inn-City Line Independence Blue Cross NovaCate Rehabilitation
Supporting Sponsors
Amtrak
Beneficial Savings Bank
Coca-Cola
Dole Food Packaged Foods
Finnigan's Wake
La Salle University Alumni Association
La Salle University Gtaduate Education
La Salle University School of Business
PECO Energy
Signed, Sealed, Delivered
Stout's Chatter Services
The Ugly Moose
Wealth Advisory Services
Gifts in Kind
Amtrak
Bonnet Lane Family Restaurant
Finnigan's Wake
Frank's Family Deli
Holiday Inn-City Line
Kirk's Pi::a House
Krispy Kreme
La Salle University Campus Store
Maganty Ford & Chevrolet
Signed, Sealed, Delivered
Spaghetti Warehouse
The Ugly Moose
U.S. Airways
Yellowbook.com
Ugo Donini Club (S2S0-S499)
Ms. Linda A. (Neu - M irlin Adnenne M (Daukaus) and
Edward T. Cutter Ms. Tonya S. (Elln) Harper Staci M. (W.lhelm) and
Derek P. Loranca
Anniversary Club (SI40-S249)
Ms. Diane Bilda Ms. Rosalie (Hunter) Ferry Ms. Patricia A. Foley Mr TlromasJ. France Ms. Jennifer A. Hart Brian P. and Kristen
(Dogherty) McVeigh Dr Daniel A Rakowslci and
Dr. Joy M. Gianvittorio Mr. Mark A. Rice 1
Young Alumni Club
(S70 Sim)
Ms. Diane M. Heal
Mr Greg Jacobs
Mr. Christopher M. Keating
Bradford C. and
Stephanie M. (Irvine) Lyons Ms. Suzanne L. Moore Ms. Marisa P. Pascale Ms. Karel L. Pererman Ms. Carol L. Ramsey-Smith Ms Heather D Smith Mi D avid G. Steinbach
Donors
(Up to si... I
Ms. Kathleen L Bicker
Ms. Edithann M. Bohh
Ms. Amans (Rodriguez) Brown
Mr. Neil Clovei
Mr. Kevin D. Corr
Dr. Carol Anne Dillon
Mr. Richard M Fitzpatrick
Mr. Jeffrey J. Ganter
CPT Wayne J. Gavin
Honor Roll of Donors 2003-2004
Mr. Jerry S. Gilbert
Mr Andrew H. Giorgi
Ms. (Catherine M. Gunn
Mr Stanley A. Guogas Jr.
Mr. Renault W. Ham
Ms. Gale Hewitt
Mr lames J. Johnston
Mr. Christopher J. Kane
Mr. Derek G. Kephart
Jennifer M. (Pessillo) and Matthew
S. Klein Ms. Maureen (McGeehan) MacNair Kathleen R. (O'Hara) and
Michael P. McGeehan KimL. (Dickey) and
Robert J. Meusel Mr. Neerav B. Mull Mr Stephen F. Obarski Ms. Susan E. (Lindruth) Orehowslo, Ms. Dorothy E. Parke Ms. Sandra M. Searle Ms Yen Tieu Mi Carl A- Tori Mr. Michael Vardarojr. M Regina E. Weber
1996
Chairman's Club (S1.000-S2.499)
Kathleen T. (Brennan) and William J. Jones Jr.
Mr Lawrence J. Logan
Founder's Club (S500 S999)
Mr. Thomas A. Leonard |r Ms Maura E. (Gaffhey) Nash
Ugo Donini Club (S250-S499)
Mr. Thomas M. Denno Derek P. and Staci M.
(Wilhelm) Loranca Ms. [oanne M (ShieffU r)
Sonnelitter Ms. Shamn (Pennington) Speai
Anniversary Club
($140 S249)
1 Patrick and Christine M
(Donahue) Doogan Mr. Peter J. Dougherty lr Mr Edward J. Fomias 111
Kevin S. and
Jennifer M. (Thomec:ek) Gerry Ms Fiona M. Jarvis Ms Margaret L. Mitchell
Young Alumni Club (S70 S139)
Mr Daniel Burke Ms. Linda A Calcagni Mr. Thomas J. Campbell Mr. I Vimel J. Cluna M Susan C. Fallon Frances M. and
John P. Gallagher. Esq. Mrs. Laura D. (Fyfe)Jaskot Rosemar) A. ( Brennan) and
John P. McGonigle Donna Kolodziej Peek Ms. M ^usan Tuk Mr Robert R. Warner Jr. Mr William A. Wilkins It
Donors
(i p cc S69)
Angela P. and Frank T Alcaraz Hannelore T and
Francis C. Barbien Jr., Esq. Mr. John F Brayshaw Si Ms. Maria S. Bucco Ms. Bemice E (Clark) Bumey Ms Melissa A. (Heider) Companicl Ms Bethanne M Dadario Ms Mayra A. Diaz Christine M. Dieckhaus, Ph.D. Mr. David M Fiss Ms. Anne M. (Sweeney) Foley Ms. Kathleen P. Gross Mr UttR\ M Harrer Ms Betty '\ (Beck) II. Ms Luq (Childress) Hufl Ms \ alerie D. Ji >hnson Eliza A (Cbmodromos) .mA
Paul A. Langan Ms I nthia (Force) Limber! Mr Francis L Mangini 1 Mr. John D. McGinty Ms. Colleen M McN.ilK Ms. Cynthia (Novak) Narofl
Ms Kathleen (Taylor) Nolan Mr [esse M Ruber Mr. Brian F Santangelo Ms. Dolores M. Seif Ms. Loredana B Sesso Ms Kirstm B. Shrom Ms, Lori A. (Sihelnik) Stabinski Ms. Helene B. Teufel Ms. Sara ( > VanSani Ms. Diane O Wagner Nnnee L. (Wagner) and Daniel T. Hohan Jr. Mr. Keith R. W.lkerson
1997
Chairman's Club
(s s2 499)
Mr. Frank T. Crohn
Mr. Joseph G. Domhrow-ki
Founder's Club
(SSOO Smmoi
Ms. Judith A. Hoffman Mr Eric M McNeil Mr. Taul M. Walchak
Ugo Donini Club CS250 S4
Thomas A. and Sarah L. Hopkins Mary Lou and
Richard M. Moniahn. M.D. Lisa M. Donahue and
Kenneth I. Rose 111
Anniversary Club (S140 S249)
Mi ' 'r.itt.Ti D. Chase lr
< hrUtine M iLY.nahue) and
I Patrick Doogan Ms. Theresa Bengal Jennifer M. (Thomeczek) and
Kevin S. Gerry Mr. MarkG. Haigh Mr Joseph W. Markmann Patricia ElaineThomas
Young Alumni Club ($70 5139)
Mr Paul J. Benish
Ms Mary L. Benner
Kori A Connelh, , Esq
Ms. Demse (Champagne) Morris
Regina C (Quinn) and
James A. Sontag Ms Kn-nna L Wahl
Donors
(Up toS69)
Frank T. and Angela P. Alcara:
Ms. Rita D. Ballinger
Mr. Frederick C. Bloesch
Ms. Deborah A. Boedewig
Ms. Denise A. Casey
Ms Deborah A. (Pilla) Castellano
Ms. Theresa L. t Jooi
Ms Monica (Pasztalaniec) Dave)
Ms. Bernadette B. Dice ion
Ms [eanC S I Settembrino) Dolan
Mr. Timothy M. EspositO
Mr Brian \'. Gallagher
Ann M. (GalLi^lx r) and Eric I Till
Mi Joel M. Greco
Mr. John Gnllone
M- i ileen A. Haneiko
Ms. Michelle S. (Messina) Henry
Ms. Shirley E I (owe
Mr. Ivan Kas;e:ak
Ms Dorothy A Klunek
Mr. Jeffrey R LaMonica
Jennifer L. tRuecer) and
David C. Lehsk\
Ms Mane T. \ Burke) Markuszka Mr. Edward T. McFarlane Ms. Heather D. Meehan Ms. Nicole B. Miller Kristin M. (Murray) and
Timothy J. Nash Ms. Catherine A. Pajakinas Ms. Kathleen A. Pavalkis Mr. Mark J. Pont:er Ms MaryannE (CourdufT) Redlingei Mr- Marilyn F (Lehlbach) Riley Mr Anthony R Russo 111 Mr. Lucas A. Ryan Mr Michael T Schaeler Elizabeth J. (Miller) and
Brian A Schaller Mr. Michael C. Si) Isl 1 Diana A. (Portillo) and
Trov D. Sisum M- Man1 A. Steit: Ms. Joj A r^opmski Mr. Michael R. Taylor James E. Townst-nd, D O. Mr Joseph T. Tresnan 111 EduardoA VillegSS, M-S.W and
Rosemary A Barbera, PhD Mr. Mark A. WaLh Ms Christi A Weston
1998
San Miguel Club (S2.500s4.999)
Margaret M. (Breshn) and
William J. Markmann. M.D.
Chairman's Club
(Si, 000 >: 4 "■.. 1 Mr. Robert E. Reidy
Ugo Donini Club (S250-M1'")
Ms Jud\ (Stefanki) Allison
Matthew and Came Berran Mr. Christopher n. Picollo
Mr. M. Raymond Roscnhluni
Anniversary Club
(M40-S249)
Mr. Troy A. Harry Mr. Joseph M. Huber Amy (Clark) and Tern Lynch Thomas I Sinclair )i , M.D.
Young Alumni Club
(^^l}9)
Ms. Allison S. Adair
Mary L. (Fromuth) Alford
Ms. Shannon Blackburn
Mr. Cesidio V. Colasante
Mr FduardW. Colferjr.
Mr. Nicholas L. D'Addezm
Mr Stephen DeCesare
Ms. Charlene A. (Grant) Gilmore
Ms Flirabech A. Griffin
Mr. Christopher P. Lydon
Ms. Michelle A. (Priestley) Rathbun
Ms. Alyson L. Stone
Ms. Susan (Williams) Byrne
Ms. Huey-Jen Lin Wu
Donors
(Up to s,,.,|
Ms. Nicole Ambrosini
Ms Sandra M Bonazza
M- Colleen M Bruno
Ms. Jeanette Danvers
Ms Julia L. (Stevens) Davis
Ms. Carol B. (Kinney) Drummond
Mr Michael J. Gatti
Ms. Erin M. (Puharic) Giordano
Mr Paul D. Goldhammei
Ms. Wendolyn R. Grace
Ms. Teresa A. Gresko
Ms. Jill (Fluehr) Gross
Mr. Andrew Gwiazda
M.s. Jessica L. (Edelhauser) Hamilton
Mr Brian M Kenned)
Ms I /nthia I Long
Ms. Linda L, (Boflnger) LuD
Ms. Geraldine J (Craige) McDonnell
Ms. Robin L. (Koch) McGill
Timothy J. and
Kristin M. (Murray) Nash Sara J. (Chiappa) O'Brien. C.P.A Ms. Catherine Pacrkowski Mr Thomas A Peters Mr James I Ross
Ms T hl\ 1 M (Lijewski) Salloom Mr Matthew J Santillo
Ms. Michelle K. Shegda Tri i\ 1 >. and
Diana A (Portillo) Sisuni Ms. Mane J. (Benincavil Smolenski Ms. Patricia A. Tn mbisl 1 Ms Erin T. Vi::a Ms. Anne (Dickson) Woods Ms. Jams (Carhn) Wo:ar
1999
Chairman's Club (Si.000-s2.499)
Jeffrey J. Chrin, C.P.A.
Founder's Club (SS00-S999)
Mr Trey P Ulrich
Ugo Donini Club (S2S0-S499)
Ms. Michelle E. Bernsicin Matthew and Came Berran Mr. Colin C. Dooley Mr lohn T Lohnjr. Ms. Carolyn M
i\\\idL-rman)Wellock
Anniversary Club
(S 140 -S 249)
Ms. Traci L. Cook
Mr. Stanley F. Eliasjr.
Ms. Roxanne M. Hughes
Mr. Howard S- Kncer
Ms Knsry L. Kuhn
Ms. Cheryhn L (Fd^.irds) Rush
Mr. Dean H. Sciorillo
Ms Monica Shields
Ms. Harriet C. Wolff
Young Alumni Club (S70 S139)
Mr. Brien M. Bell Mr. Nicholas S Cavallaro Mr. Michael P. Gallagher Ms. Jamie Lynn Longo Ms. Jane M. (Keller) Mack Ms. Deanna E. Monroe Mr. Christian J S.ittic 1 Mr. David I Schalleui Linda M. (Stor:) and
Philip J. Grut:macher Ms. Lisa M. Thomer Mr. Gregory C. Wagner Ms. Marilyn (Bier) Winiecki Nancy A. (Haig) and
John M. Wisniewski
Donors
(Up to S69)
Ms. Caroline A Brennan
Ms. Kathenne E Bristei
Ms Megan J. Carey
Mr. Gene J. Clean
Ms. Danielle Cockinj:
Ms. Wanda Dia:
Ms. Patricia H. Doyle
Ms. Wendi T (O'Boyle) Duffy
Ms. Bonnie L Ernco
Mrs. Deborah J. (Thomson I
Fanale.CP \ Ms. Nancy L. Fusco Ms. Melissa M. Gleason Mr. Alexander M Grot! Ms. Denise M. Krystopa Mr. Thomas Lang Ms. Christine M. (White) Leh,sk\ Mr. Kenneth R. Liheratore Mr. Joseph M. Longo Mr. John D. Lottier Kristofer S. Matullo, M 1 ) Ms. Carletta Mays Ms. Maria L McDermott Ms. Beth Ann T Moody Jennifer Myers Ms. Jennifer E- Neill Mr. Brian N. O'Grady Ms. Erin C. Boyce Ms. Stephanie M Tinto Ms. Carol S. Ramsey Ms. Rebecca M. Ras:ewski Ms. Gramatiki Rigas Mr. Joseph T. Ryan Ms, Maureen E Scollon Mr Limes R. Startare Ms. Annmane M. Terelle Ms. Audrey L. Thompson Eric J. and Ann M. (Gallagher) Till
*o
Honor Roll of Donors 2005-2004
Mr, Edward Tomassetti M- Staca Urie Mr. Gabriel P. \ izza Ms Agnieszt iO (< laweska W ojciehowski
2000
Founder's Club
Mr. Paul R. Thompson
Ugo Donini Club [S150 S499)
Ml eenG. Khalifa Mi Frank] MoffalV
Anniversary Club ($140-5249)
Ms. ( iloria 1 (Grady ) Cissne
Ms I It rnna M. Mass
Mr. Thomas V McAndrew
Mr. Brum P. Pugliese
Ms, Jane lErvin) Russ
Mr Robert F. Sautter Jr.
Young Alumni Club
S i (9)
Ms. Karen F (Heisrand) Ambiosine
Ms Christine (Fieri) Barnhart Mr Robert R Buber Mr. Raymond I DiLissioJr Ms M.m E Ellis Mr. Raymond P. Friedman Mr. Er.ckS Hyde Ms. Melissa Martinez Ms. Tern R. McAllister Ms. LeighAnne Murphy Ms r ira M. Nicolo Mr Mark P SchugSta Mr Donald M Tuohey Mr Charles A. White Ms Maria L. Whitman |. ihn M and Nancy A. (Haig) Wisniewsl > Ms ( Catherine A W oods
Donors
(Up to S69)
Ms, Carolyn C. (Hatch) Brescia Mr Todd A. Brinkos Ms (adyn C, (Bernard) Carugno loanne M
Mr Mark A ( olliet
Mr Matthew P. Conville
Ms Audrey A.
(Rawlinson) ( j sgr ive I Mary T. Crawford Ms. Kimberly I 1 kale Mr Anthony J. DiMeo Mr. Eric G. Dorse)
Mr Mark I Dorsey
Ms. Maureen T. Dougherty
Ms. Zee F. Feinberg
Mr. Edward V. Ferns Mr. Ruben J Gibbons Ms Eileen P Golden Ms i andace M. Harris Ms Stacy E Harris Mi Sung Geun |o Ms. Lisa Kimelheim ■ ile M Knox Mr. Frans S. ! <■■
Mr ke\ in F. Lee Ms. Maureen Lichtner Ms Tracy L Mann Mi Sean F McDevitt
Ms. Theresa M McMonagle Ms. Anne C. Muller Mr. Kevin E. Myles Mr Michael P. O'Farrell Ms. Susan E. Patrick Ms Margaret M I Ms. Toniann A. Ra::i Mr Richard S. Rekos Ms Colleen M Smith Ms. Erin S. (Smyth) Wcnzel Ms Sarom Sok Mr. Samuel J. Spoto Ms. Jill L. Terch Mr William S. Thorp Ms. Carolyn S. Truxell Ms. Diana L. Wemlein Ms. Victoria A Wesi Mr. David J.Witulski Ms. Karen (Roach' W ynn Mr. Thomas G. Yaegel
200I
Founder's Club (S500-S999)
Kathleen A. (Bagnell) and John P. Finn.
Ugo Donini Club S499)
: in H. Bamett Mr. Gregory F Bl Judith A. (Drobile) and
Daniel P. Joyce Jr FrancineJ. iHandrord) Lottier Richard E. Mshomha and
Elaine O- Msh Mr Michael 0 \\ I
Anniversary Club ($140-5249)
Mr. Daniel F. Aquilmo
Mr. Allen C Becker
Mr Michael Cavallaro
Ms. Bemadette M. Ditnch
Ms. Felicia H- (Gordon) Riehman
Ms. Helene Holmes
Ms. Joan E- King
Mr Brian E Kordeck
Ms. Alicia Santelli
Mr. Matthew Topley
Young Alumni Club S139)
Mr. Albert Alven Jr. Mr. Joseph Biondo Mr Timothy Breen MeghannM \Keppard)and
Matthew C. Chiappa Mr. Edward J Conway III Mr. Christopher M. Cummins Ms. Doreen A I V is Mr William M RcPatrick _ Ms. Karen D, Gaedke Mr David G. Greer Anita and Angelo Guzzardi Ms Meaghan (Cm:) Harris Mr, Eric Hoey John J. Kelly, M.D. Ms. Julie A- Leusner Mr. Robert J. Levins Ms. Man, K. McGettigan Mr Allan J. Medwick Mr. Jame- C. Morrow Ms. Roseann Silenzio Mr. John J. Sullivan Jr. Mr Brian C, Turner
Donors
(Up to S69)
Mr. Christopher S Beadting Mr Joseph M Bednarek R. hen I and Joyce A.
(Jellig) Bednarek Ms Patricia C Bell Ms Marianne Bellesorte Ms Christine M. Benincasa Ms Roseanne R Capaccio Ms, Kane I Crocker Ms Kimberly B. Delany Mr. Ke* in A. Donnelly Ms. Tena M. Emmanuel It James 1 Figorski Ms. Deborah A (Yakubik) Forgione Mr. James O. Greene Dt William F. Haynes Jr. Ms. Joanne M. Herman Mr. David J. Kasievich Ms. Erin L. Lenox Ms. Courtney L. Liehel Mr. Jeffrey I M irkowski Ms Lauren A. McDermott Ms. Brenna McLaughlin Ms. Melissa A. McVey Ms RinaR Patel Mr. David R. Pomni Karen Pourby, O.S.F. Joseph A. and loanne M.
(Dolack) Ouattrone Ms Marlene T. Rorke Mr lame- M. Townsend Sr. Ms Marie A (Wojcik) Wolanin Ms Elisabetra M Zodeiko
2002
Founders Club (S500
Mi [ohn S T 1 1
Ugo Donini Club S499)
tul M. Volosin
Vnniversaio Club (S140 5249)
Ms Lisa A. Bamelli Mr Ph.hp R. Brunozzijr. Ms Rosemary A. Fallon Mr Andrew P. Meager Mr. Paul V Palaruan \h laredO. Ridder Ml Nicholas J. Speers Ms. Esther C. W oolei
Young Alumni Club ($70 S139)
Mr Robert Bell Ms. Marilyn A. Bergner Mr. [oseph S. Franco 11 Mr Andrew C. Greth Ms. Bethany L Hudak Ms Megan E. Kite Mr Matthew R Moral e Mr Jabari A. O'Garro Ms. Kathleen Rupert Mr |osephC W ird
Donors
(I ptoS69)
Ms Fortunata T. Berardi
Ms Rachael H Bey
Mr \i ishua L. Bnnklev
Ms. Tina M. (Nelson 1 C arn m \
FRESH MAN |
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1997/98-2003/04
Ms DoloresM Cassidy Ms. Jullian 1- Conochan Ms 1. hristina T I Mr Stephen W. Crognale (r. Ms, M, Leigh Anne Daniels Ms. Leigh-Ann Detssroth Ms |enna M Dykie David P. Gerstman, M.D Ms Marguerite A Hall Mr [ohn M Manna Ms I oleenE Hill Ms. Frances L. lannelli Ms Mary E Keunecke Ms |ennifer * I. Lucas Ms \un I Madden Ms Mil: m M Mail 'i ino Mr 1 harles I Malone Ms. Kristin A Mt Menamin Mi S onl
Mr Anthi my I Nanni Ms Sua hi M Nespola Ms. hll M Nicoletti Ms fessica F O'Neill Ms. Marilyn S. Orr Ms ' ienevra Rossman Ms. Kathleen A Ruby Christina SadlowskJ Mr William P Scheei Ms Lenora C Thrower Ms. Erica D. Tollini Mr. Benjamin M Troisi Ms. Carol A I ccell. rn
Mr. Todd J. Warner
Ms. Lauren E. \\ 1 bei Ms Ri isalind Wilson
2003
Founder's Club (S500-S9
Mr. Thorn ts G * ' 11 ■■ l
Ugo Donini ( lub
itrickj Feeley Ms Margarei A Kane
Anniversary Club ($140-8249)
Ms Patrit ia \ 1 Mr. Thom 1 M 1 Dr. Larry x Scidman
Young Alumni Club ($70 5139)
Mr. Michael A. Benscotet Mr. Jason T. Corcoran le C. DiGiulio Ms. Christiann M. Griffith Ms Soloraiya Login Mr James H. Ryan
Donors
1 1 p to $69)
Ms Amy A Baran
Ms Shannon M. Bauer
Ms- \ arissa A Bender
Mr. Colin J. Benner
Mr Todd J Binkowski
Ms. Chnstan M. Byrne
Ms. Ann M. Christian
Mr. Kevin M. Cole
Ms. Colleen M. Davin
Mr. Emir Dedic
Mr. Thomas J. Driscoll
Ms. MarybethK. Du Till
Mr. Anothony L. Gabriele
Ms. Christa M. Gardner
Ms. Nancy M. Hughes
Mr. Christopher M. Kaley
Ms. Linda M Kasprzak
Elizabeth S. and Michael I Kaufrman
Mr. John P. Linden
Mr. Michael P. Man-en
Mr. Michael J. Mullen
Ms, Jane E. (Machowski) Nugent
Ms. Jennifer C. O'Brien
Mr Michael F. Pelosi
Ms. Christine A. Ren:i
Ms. Jocelyn Camille Savenelli
Mr. Stephen R. Schayer
Mr. David M. Smith
Mr. Jeffrey R. Smith
Mr. Robert V Stacl
Ms. Yordanos R. Tela
Ms. Mar, E Ubbens
2004
ANN1VERSAR1 l LUB
S249)
Mr Nicholas Delia Vecchia
Honor Roll of Donors 2003-2004
Young Alumni Club (s7G S139)
Ms. Britney A. Barber Mr. Richard M. D'Ulisse Jr. Mr. Anthony]. Franchini Me. Joseph F. Harrison IV Mr. Gregory J. Kaiser Jr. Ms. Marjorie C. Springer
Donors
(Up to S69)
Ms. Alexis R. Abate Mr. Jason P- Ager Mr. Wilham J. Andreoni Mr. Christopher C. Andris Ms. Eli:abeth S. Ashton Ms. Hope C. Banchi Ms. Lauren Barone Mr. John D. Bates Ms. Yolanda Bauhof Ms. Elise A. Behm Mr. Darren M. Behuniak Ms. Maureen M. Berard Ms. Cristin M. Bieretz Ms. Jennifer L. Blaney Mr. Shawn T. Bleiler Ms. Kelly M. Bohrer Mr. John Joseph Brady Ms. KrystenJ. Brockington Ms. Lindsay A. Burke Ms. Stephanie L. Buitows Mr. Robert J. Bu<h Mr. Carmen J. Calvanese Mr. Bryan E. Campbell Ms. Kate Marie Campbell Mr. Patrick James Campbell Ms. Catherine (Maloney) Carchidi Ms. Kristin J. Cardullo Mr. Robert Carrasquillo II Mr. Francesco Ciaburri Ms. Bemadette M. Ciaravino Ms. Alexis (Conty) Ciccimaro Ms. Amanda E. Clark Ms. Angela C. Colletta Mr. Thomas P. Collins Ms. Susan E. Connor Mr. Matthew A. Coughlan Ms. Kimberly Michelle Coughlin Mr. Peter D. Daly- Ms. Jacqueline L. Damato Mr.PhihpG.D'Angelis Ms. Renee M. D'Angelo Ms. Havlev A. Danser Mr. Thomas W. Davis Ms. Sarah E. Davis Ms. Christine L. Delisi Ms. Laurie R. Dely Ms. Jacqueline M. DeMedio Mr. Matthew A. DeMizio Ms. Linsay A. DeMuth Mr. Patrick A. DeRespinis Ms. Lianne R. Dictor Ms. Amanda C. DiGiandumeniLo Mr. David G. DiGio\.inni Mr. DennisJ.Dilks Ms. Jeanette M. Dixon Ms. Megan A. Donahue Mr. Matthew J. Donnelk Ms. X.ualie A. Doron Ms. Katie A. Dougherty Ms. Colleen M. Dowling Mr. Timothy Duffv Mr. Thomas P. Dykie Ms. Alison B. Eaton Ms. Allison M. Eckert Mr. Jason R. Eggert Mr. Patrick L. Elder Mr Matthew C. Elliott Ms. Mary K. Erb Ms Julie S. Enckson
Ms. Susan F. Eskate |
Ms. Mary T. Modes |
Mr. Gregory J. Fala |
Mr. John P. Mulrov |
Ms. Alicia J. Falkinburg |
Mr. David A. Murphy- |
Mr. Michael P. Ferenschak |
Ms. Lauren C. Murphy |
Ms. Michelle C. Feriod |
Ms. Caitlin E. Murray |
Ms. Jennifer L. Fiolo |
Ms Stephanie Neri |
Mr. Jeremy R. Fisher |
Mr. Shawn P. Nies |
Ms. Erin K. Fitzpatrick |
Ms. Donna C. Norman |
Mr. Brian O. Flynn |
Mr Richard J. Nulty Jr. |
Ms. Maureen E. Flynn |
Ms. Kristin E. Ochal |
Ms. hllun M. Fomito |
Mr. Grant E. Okagawa |
Ms. Kristi M. Foster |
Ms. Katianne O'Neill |
Ms. Lucia M. Franco |
Mr. Andrew M. Ostaszew^ki |
Ms. Colleen E. Gallagher |
Ms. Kristen M. Overrurt |
Mr. Joseph D. Gallo |
Ms. Paige L. Parad\ |
Mr. Philip A. Gambino |
Mr. Michael J. Pansi |
Ms Reja A. Gamble |
Mr. Kiel B. Parker |
Ms. Shannon M. Garrett |
Mr. Matthew C. Pascucci |
Ms. Michele M. Gentile |
Ms. Katie E. Patterson |
Ms. Bemadette Gillen |
Ms. Jennifer R. Payne |
Ms. Marianne E. Gillespie |
Ms. Marion R. Peachey |
Mr. Neil T. Gilligan |
Ms. Brenda A. Pica |
Mr. Joshua R. Gilmore |
Mr. Rasheed Quadri |
Mr. William N. Gleason |
Ms. Colleen M. Quigley |
Ms. Heather K. Gosciniak |
Ms. Dana L. Quiyltn |
Mr. Edward F- Green |
Mr. Matthew J. Quinn |
Ms. Tracy A. Guenther |
Ms Megan L. Rafferti |
Ms. Xtaoyan Guo |
Mr. Todd A. Reckamp |
Ms. Colleen M. Haig |
Ms. Lauren A. Reilly |
Mr. Brum C. Henry- |
Mr William Reilly |
Ms. Amanda M. Hartman |
Ms. Leila M. Rellini |
Ms. Danielle M. Heenev |
Mr. David C. Roberts |
Mr. Andrew P. Hickev |
Mr. Erie Ross |
Ms. Jennifer Higgins |
Ms. Horentina Ruiz |
Ms krutin Hoffman |
Ms Maryann Russo |
Mr. Matthew M. Hopkins |
Ms. Jennifer Ru::i |
Mr. Andrew J. Hughes |
Ms. Susan M Savidgc |
Mr. Christopher I. Hughes |
Ms. Jennifer M. Scalora |
Mr. Jonathan D. Hunt |
Mr. Craig M. Schiavo |
Mr. Kyle D. Hunt |
Mr. Ryan P. Schrank |
Mr. Matthew A. Isbrecht |
Mr. Bryan E. Screws |
Ms Vmy M. Jacoby |
Mr. Christopher M Seaver |
Ms. Kristin L. Jannelli |
Ms. Kimberly A. Sheridan |
Mr. Miguel A. Jones |
Mr. Keith P. Simons |
Ms. Jennifer M. Kaiser |
Ms. Lon M. Simpson |
Ms. Rachel M. Kendall |
Ms. Colleen M. Slowery |
Ms. Emily B. King |
Ms. Stacey L. Smith |
Mr. Brian P. Knuettel |
Mr. Daniel F. Somavilla |
Mr. Brian A. Koch |
Mr. Marcos Soriano |
Mr Anthony M. Koehl |
Ms. Amanda D. Spalding |
Mr. James E. Kotkiewic: |
Ms. Lynn M. Spiegel |
Ms. Joan M. Kushnerock |
Mr. John D. Sprandio |
Ms. Michelle M. Ladyansky |
Ms Melissa A. Srypulkoski |
Mr Matthew M. Lallv |
Ms. Erin Sullivan |
Ms. Danielle N. Landwher |
Ms. Margaret M. Swart: |
Mr. Jason E. Langsner |
Ms. Rebecca A. Tanghe |
Mr. Evan W. Lane |
Ms. Allison C. (Murphvl Ta\lor |
Ms. Maria C. Lehr |
Mr. Donald A. Thompson |
Mr. Justin J. Leo |
Ms Nimantha N. Thompson |
Ms. Cathy-Jo Mackus |
Ms. Karen M. Toner |
Mr. Ryan D. MacLuckie |
Mr. Michael Trainor |
Mr. Jeffrey R. Madden |
Ms. Gina M. Trasatti |
Mr Michael J. Maier |
Ms. Jamie D. Trinkle |
Ms. Regina M. Marchiondo |
Mr. Matthew R. Ulmer |
Ms. Marielle C. Martino |
Ms. Cecile Van Oppen |
Ms. Teresa McAleese |
Mr. Joseph A. Violi |
Mr. James J. McCafferty |r. |
Mr. Frank A. Vogt |
Mr. Stephen R. McCracken |
Mr. Timothy C- Warner |
Mr. Adam R. McGrath |
Ms Fania A. Waterman |
Ms. Colleen B. McKelvey |
Ms. Jennifer G. Weldon |
Mr. Paris L. McLean |
Ms Theresa Wetherhold |
Ms. Katherine C. McTamany |
Mr. Bret J. White |
Mr Fr.ink 1. Merk III |
Ms. Christina A. White |
Ms. Jennifer A. Messner |
Mr William F. Wiegman |
Mr. Matthew J. Michel |
Ms. Lauren J. Wojcik |
Ms. Jennifer A. Miller |
Ms. Danielle E. Woods |
Mr. Joseph J. Miller |
Mr. Ravmond Yantosh Jr. |
Mr. John K. Mmzhell |
Mr John L Zazworskey |
Mr. Eric MofYett |
|
Mr. Joseph D. Monforto |
|
Ms. Eileen M. Morrison |
|
Ms. Tanisha K. Morton |
Parents, Faculty, Staff, and Friends
President's Club
(550.000 and above)
G. Dennis O'Brien, Ph.D. Mr- Joseph E Slawek
University Club
(s10.000-s24.999)
Anonymous
Mr. and Mrs. G. Fred DiBona Jr.
Mr. Michael T. Fox
Morton S. Mandell, M.D.
Drs. Zane R. and Charles J. Wolf III
Dr_ Flubacher Club (S5.000-S9.999)
Mr. Brian Cullen Mr. Sidney J. MacLeod Jr. Laura and Marc McKenna Patrick J. O'Connor, Esq. Estate of Mary V. Tomasco JohnD. Zook.C.P.A.
San Miguel Club (s2.500-s4.999)
Mr. and Mrs. R. Brian Elderton
Br. Gabriel A. Fagan, F.S.C., Th D
Mr. Peter G. Gould
Ralph and Cinda Hall
Mr. and Mrs. Lee M Hymerling
Mr. James N. Leary
Mr. Richard D. Lofink
Mr. Brian McCormick
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph McEwen
Helen F. North, Ph.D.
Mr. and Mrs. Wlodarczyk
Chairman's Club
(M i.h>o-:>2,499)
Dr. and Mrs. Albert F. Argenziano
Mr. William J. Avery
Lester B. Barenbaum, Ph.D.
Aleksandar and Bojana Bene
Mrs. Betty M. Bott
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel A. Boudwin
Thomas M. Brennan, Ed.D.
Mr. Kirk Brinton
Mr. and Mrs. Sal Caimano
Alan and Debbie Casnoff
Dr. John F. Connors 3rd
Dr. and Mrs. Mark J. Cornfeld
Ms. Sandra L. Curry
Mrs. Brian P. Damiani
Mr ind Mrs. Thomas Dolan
Rev. Thomas J. Donaghy, Ph.D.
Mr. and Mrs. Francis J. Dunleavy
Dr. and Mrs. R. Lawrence Dunworth
Mr. and Mrs. John W. Eisele
Mr Brian Ellerson
Mr. Edward J. Fnel III
Mrs. Phyllis CGulick
Valerie A. Ellerson and
Patrick E. Hanraty Mr. A. Bruce Heck Mr. and Mrs. William J. Jones Sr. Thomas A. Keagy. PhD. Bruce A. Leaubv, Ph.D. Mr. and Mrs. William M. Lee Mr. Francis J. McGarveyJr. James F. and
Margaret M. McManus, Ph.D. John B. and
Barbara C. Millard. Ph.D. Lynn E. Miller, Ph.D. Mr Nathan Miller
Mr. William H. Morgan
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas R. Nelson
Mr. Edward A. Nickerson
Mr. Philip G.Perry
Mr. and Mrs. Francis S. Pisch
Vincenr C- A- Scully Jr., Esq.
Mr. Bertrand L. Smith
Mr. Tau! D. Smith
James A. Talaga, Ph.D.
YusufJ.Ugras, Ph.D.
Founders Club
(SS00S999)
Dr. and Mrs. Todd J. Albert Mr. and Mrs. Mark P. Berenato Susan C. Borkowski, Ph.D. Ms. Gretchen Burke Mr. James Coleman Mr. and Mrs. Paul C. Conevs Sr. Mr Lew Cook Dr. and Mrs.
Chalmers E. Cornelius III Mr. and Mrs. Leo P. Dauwer Joseph DelRaso, Esq. Mr. and Mrs. Timothy P. DeMuth Mr. Nick DiCicco Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Dolan Fred J. Foley Jr., Ph.D. Mr. James C. Ford Mr. W. Carson Fullmer Mr. and Mrs. David J. Graham Mr. Thomas Grogan Rev. Kenneth P.J. Hallahan Mr. Nelson G. Harris Mr. John D. Heenan Dr. and Mrs. Lance N. Horwitz Mr. Alexander L. Hoskins Mr. and Mrs. Paul S. Lazor Mr. Arnold Leibowit: Thomas J. and Elizabeth R.
(Leneweaver) Lochner Paul D. McCann, Ph.D. Mr. and Mrs. George S. McElhtnney The McGowan Family Ms. Georgette M. Most Mr and Mrs. Edward A. Murphy Richard A. Nigro, Ph.D. James J. Owens, Esq. Mr. and Mr. Ronald M. Raab Mr. and Mrs. Richard A. Reed Rosina and Francis J. Ryan, Ph.D. Ms. Elizabeth A. Scofield Joseph Seltzer, Ph.D. Mr. and Mrs. Robert R. Sheldon Ms. Mary Snyder Mr. and Mrs. Edward G. Stafford Scott E. Stickel, Ph.D. Dr. and Mrs. Ralph Tekel Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Truitt Anne M. Walsh, D.S.W. Mr. and Mrs. William G. Wolfe Tamara L- Zurakowski, Ph.D. Patti R. Zuzelo, Ed.D., R.N., C.S.
Ugo Donini Club (S250-S499)
Ms. Robinette (Ramsey) Barnes Mr. and Mrs. Robert T. Bastien James A. and
Maryanne R. Bednar, Ph.D. Mrs. Rosemary T. Bender Mr. and Mrs. Paul W. Bennett Suzanne Boyll, Ph.D. Mr. and Mrs. Harry C. Brown Mr. and Mrs. Richard G. Brown Mr. James A. Burke Mr. and Mrs. Rudolph L- Cahata Mr. and Mrs. Donald E. Callaghan Mr. and Mrs. Jay H. Calvert Jr. Ms. Genevieve M. Carlton
32
Honor Roll of Donors 2003-2004
Mr. and Mrs. Michael P. Creedon Sr
Mr. and Mrs. Edward J. Chromiec Jr.
Ms. Roberta G. Devries
Mr. and Mrs C. Clayton Echan
Mr Michael J. Emnu
Mr. and Mrs. Robert J Fales
Mr. and Mrs. Phillip J- Ferenschak
Mr. and Mrs. James B. Ginty
Richard Goedkoop. Ph.D.
Mr and Mrs Albert D Goldhammer
Mr .md Mrs. John S. Grady
Ms. Vera (Duvall) Guttmann
Mr. William D. Hahn
Dr. and Mrs Arthur H. Haves Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. William J. Heisler
Ms, Marilyn A. Hill
Dr. and Mrs. S. Jay Hirsh
Alice L. Hoersch, Ph.D.
Mr. and Mrs. John J. Hogan
Sarah L. and Thomas A. Hopkins
Mr. David L. Hyman
Mr. and Mrs. Gregory J. Kaiser Sr.
Mr. and Mrs. James A. Kaley
Mr. and Mrs. George P. Kinek
Karhenne K Kinsey, Ph.D., R.N.,
FAAN Mr. Rod Kirkner Mr. and Mrs. Justin P Klein Mr and Mis, Joseph A Kramer Mr. Louis A Lamorte lr Mr and Mrs. William M. Lee Mr. William L Leonard Mr |ohn K Lyons Mr. and Mrs. Joseph A. Mackus Jr. Mr. Burton A. MacLean Jr. Mr and Mrs, Joseph F. Mair Ms. Sharmain Matlock Turner Mr and Mrs. LouisJ. McCormick |r Mr .md Mrs |ohn W. McDonald Mr |effrej P M,Fadden Mr. Richard R. Mesirov Albert Momjian, Esq. Mr Joseph Noonan Lee j. and Annette
(Kosorog) O'Connor, Ph.D. Christine and
George A. Pert'ecky, Ph.D. Ms. Maureen A Piche Gatl D. Ramshaw, Ph.D. Mr. Jack M. Rappaport Mr. Brian J. Reagle Mr. Joseph B. Rowan Mr. Paul F. Royal III Rosina and Francis J Ryan. Ph.D. Mr Michael C. Sauter Mr. and Mrs. Isadore M. Scott COL. and Mrs. David H. Souser,
U.S.A., Retired Mr. and Mrs. Donald W. Spalding Thomas S. Straub, Ph.D. Ms. Margaret M- Taggart Dr. Lynne A. Texrer The Hon. and Mrs. Arthur R. Tilson Mr. and Mrs John M Vincent Mr. C. H. Washbum Ms DotOthl Williams Mr. and Mrs. Gregory S. Wolcott Mr. Robert W. Wolcott Jr. Bonni H. Zetick, Ph.D.
Anniversary Club
(Si.4" >249)
Ms. Patricia B. Aleksinas Mr. and Mrs. Dennis A. Arouca Mr and Mrs. Danny C. Banes Drs. George W. and
Marilyn (Ross) Bradford Mr. and Mrs. David J. Bramowski Mr. and Mrs. Anthony V. Briscella
jt
Mr. David T. Brooking
Mr. and Mrs. William G. Bucher Sr.
Mr. Joseph E. Buck Mr. and Mrs. Edward V. Campbell Mr and Mrs. Eduardo G. Cangiano Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas A.
Caramanico Mr. and Dr. Craig S. Carter Mr. and Mrs Philip A. Carrier Mr. and Mrs. Donald R. Cholish Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Cialina Mr. and Mrs Joseph A Citelli Mr. and Mrs. Edwin A. Collins Mr. and Mrs. Anthony M. Dam Dr. Marianne Dainton Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas Delia Vecchia Ms. Joanne P. DelPrado Mr. and Mrs. Jean C. Dely Mr. and Mrs. John K. DeMuna Mr. and Mrs. Carmen J.
DrGiandomenico Mr .ind Mrs. Franklin E Dobson lr Michael A. Du:v. Ph.D. Mr and Mrs John 14 Eisele Mr and Mis Leonard C Emnck Dr. and Mrs. Douglas j. Farrell Mr. Henry T. Farrell Preston D- Feden, Ed D Mr. William J. Fox Mr. and Mrs. Robert P. France Dr and Mrs. John R. Gallaghei Mr and Mrs. Kevin F. Gallagher Mr .md Mrs. William Gallagher Luis A Gome:, Ph.D. Mr and Mrs Anthony M. Greaver Ms. Corynda L- (Williams) Hagamin Mr and Mrs. Dean R. Heller Mr. George F. Hess II Mr and Mrs. William J. Holmes Barbara and Finn Homum Mr and Mrs. John D Hospital Ms, |oyce Hunley Melvin L. Jackson, MD. Mr and Mrs. Kenneth G. Jellitt Mr and Mrs. Gary C. Kaufman Ms. Alexis N. Keegan Phil Keegan and Catherine Alexis Mr .md Mrs. Michael J Keenan Mr. and Mrs. George G. Kirlin Jonathan Knappenberger, Ph D Mr. and Mrs. Gene Krup.i Mr. and Mrs. William G. Krupa Dr. and Mrs. William R Lake Mr. and Mrs. Aurelio Leone Mr. and Mrs. Kevin J. Lindsey Mr. David E. Loder Ms. Barbara D. Long Mr- Mane K. Luckman Mrs. Kathryn E. MacFarland Mr and Mrs David L Malane Mr ,ind Mrs Joseph A Mascio Mr. and Mr- Christopher P. McGill Maryknoll Fathers and Brothers Anonymous Ms Helen Montagnaro Mr and Mrs. Robert Moose
Mr. and Mrs Joseph A Murphy Mr and Mis. Joseph J, Pawlak Ms. Catherine F. Perseghin Mr. Thomas R. Phillip- Mrs. Lauretta A. Prendergast Dr. and Mrs. Timothy L. Price Mr. Tony Rizto David Robison, Ph.D. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Salute Mr and Mrs. Philip M. Schenkel Mr and Mrs. Carl Schorhng Mr. and Mrs James E Siangroom Ms. Virginia M. (Tepper) Mehrer Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Turchi Mr. and Mrs. Richard S.Tyrol Mr. and Mrs. Harry J. Upbin Frederick Van Fleteren, Ph.D. Mr and Mrs. Christian Weigcl
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond A. Yantosh Deborah (Spillane) Yost, Ph.D.
Donors
(Up tO MM)
Mr. and Mrs. Perer Ahracnn^ka- Ms, Antoinette Abrams Mr. and Mrs. Samir AbuAbsi Mr. and Mrv Daniel J. Adams Mr. and Mrs Is.imuel Adams Mr and Mrs. William M. Ager Mr. and Mrs Lowell M. Agnew Mr. and Mrs. Edyvard Ahem Mr. and Mrs. Samuel J. Ajaeb Mr. and Mrs. Anthony C. Aldorasi
Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Albert J. Allen Jr. Ms \nya Allen Mr. and Mrs- Dennis Allen Mr. and Mrs. Donald Allen Marjone S. Allen, Ph.D. Mr and Mrs Corrado C. Amento Barbara Amster. Ph.D.. CCC/SLP Mr. and Mrs. William D. Anagnos Ms. Patricia A. Anderson Mr. and Mrs Rick A Anderson Mr. and Mrs. Paul C. Angelucci Mr. and Mrs Raymond L
Angeisbach Mr. and Mrs Gene Annacone Mr. and Mrs Kurt A. Anspach Mr. and Mrs Peter S. Antipas Mr. and Mrs. Dominic M. Aquilino Mr. and Mrs. John J. Armato Mr. and Mrs. Laurence J. Arnold Dr. and Mrs. Patrick J. Arnold Mr. and Mr- Inn.-. M \ros Si Mr. and Mrs. George E. Atkinson Mr and Mr- A R Auclair Dr. Brooks A Aylor Mr .ni.l Mr- Michael A Bagni Mr md Mrs. Don H. Bakes Mr. and Mrs. Harry J. Bambi Jr. Mr. and Mrs Edward Rarameyuc; Mr and Mrs Joseph Baranoski Mrs. Geraldine M. Barclay Leonard Barkan, Esq. Mr and Mr- Thomas E Bamelli Mr. and Mrs. Brian J. Barrett Mr ,ind Mrs- Joseph F. Bartley Mr. and Mrs. Ephraim R. Bautista John E. Beatty, Ph.D. Mr. and Mrs. William J. Beatty Mr. and Mrs. Michael B. Beauregard Mr. and Mr- t, h.irle- S. Bedard Mr. and Mrs. George Beerschank Mr and Mrs. Brian Belko Ms. Charma C. Bell Mr. and Mrs. Donald D Bell Mr. and Mrs. Paul A. Benner Mr George L. Bernstein Mr. and Mrs. Robert Berry Mr and Mrs. [ay F. Bevenoui Si Mr ind Mrs William Biello Mr. and Mr-. J P Ri^lcv Mr. Anthony J Biondo 5r. Mr and Mrs Layvrence J Bish Ms. Lynda G. Black Mr. and Mrs. John C. Bleiler Jr. Mr. and Mrs Frederick B Bloesch Dr. Peter Bogucki Mr. and Mrs. James M. Bollerman Mr. and Mrs Edward A. Bonanni Sylvain Bom, Ph.D. Mr. James T. Booth Mr. and Mrs A Raymond Bossert II Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas W. Botta Mr. Derek A. Bowmer Mr. and Mrs Joseph T Boylan Mr. and Mrs. James M. Boyle Mr. and Mrs. Stephen L. Brackin Mr and Mrs. David J. Bradley
Mr Shaun M. Brady
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph A. Brancaleone
Ms Ileen R. Branderbit
Mt .ind Mrs Alan J. Braverman
Mr, and Mr- William Bra:ill
Mr and Mr- Michael J Breen
Mr and Mrs David A I Brennan
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas G- Brennan
Francis G. Breslm and
Claire K. Hagerty Mrs. Dionizia Brochinsky Mr and Mrs. Francis Brooks Dr. and Mrs. Martin M Brown Mr ind Mrs. John V. Brull Mr. and Mrs. Philip G. Bruno Mr and Mrs. Raymond Buber Ms Helen D.Bubka I teborah (Fay) and
Joshua Buch, Ph.D. Mr and Mrs. Robert Buck Mr. and Mrs. Richard R. Buehler Mr and Mrs. Joseph P. Bukis Mr. and Mrs. Thomas D. Bull Mr and Mrs Lee G. Burden Ms. Arlene C. Burke Mi and Mr- Howard W, Burke Sr Mr and Mrs. James D. Burke Mrs Linda G Burrows Mr md Mrs. John C. Butler Mr and Mr-. John T Cabibi Mr and Mrs. Dennis L. Caine Mr and Mrs. Joseph Camaro Ms Carmella M. Campbell Mr Robert E. Campbell Mr. and Mrs. James A. Campione Mj and Mrs. Ronald Capaldo Ms Cvnthia (Flynn) Capers Mr and Mrs. John J. Caputo Mr and Mrs. Bruno A. Cardillo Ms Irene E Carey Mr and Mrs. Nicholas D ( arleton Mr and Mrs John L Carroll Mr and Mrs. Michael D. Carroll Mr and Mrs. Anthony L. Cascio Mr and Mr- Denis IV i ase^ Mr. and Mrs John F t. last \ Mr. and Mrs. James Cassidy Mr and Mrs Russell Catenna
Ms. Sarah H. Catlin Ms. Catherine Catlie Mr. and Mrs. Andrew P. Cecchi
I 'oim.i (Christ) Celano, Ph.D. Mr. and Mrs. Anthony A. Cellucci Mr. and Mrs. Bong H. Chang Robert J. Chapman, Ph.D. Mr. and Mrs. Denis J. Chiappa
Mr and Mrs Frank W. Chillemi Ms. M. Ivona Chrzastowska Mr. and Mrs. Emesr W. Churchville John and Kim ( hwastyl Mr and Mrs Peier F. Ciaravino DavidJ.Cichowic:, Ph.D. Mr. and Mrs. David Cituni Gary K Clabaugh, Ed.D Robert R.Clancy, MD Mr and Mrs. James W. Clark Sr. Mr. and Mrs Kenneth R. Clark Mr. and Mrs. Randy ( lark Dr. Ellen L Clay Coates Family Ms Shelia E. Coccia Mr. and Mrs. Paul A. Coghlan Mr and Mrs Burton Cohen Dr. and Mrs. Jeffrey B. Cohn Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Colasante Ms. Carole Coleman Mr. and Mrs. James J. Colwell Mr and Mrs. Andreas Comodromos Dr and Mrs. Dominick S. Condo Mr Eugene Condon Mr. and Mrs. Patrick J. Conlan Mr. and Mrs. Bruce G. Conly Ms. Patricia A. Connors-Zini Ms. Rosemary Convery Mr. and Mrs. Patrick A. Conway Mr. and Mrs. Stephen J. Cook Mr. and Mrs. Mario Corrado Mr. and Mrs. Ricardo E. Correal Mr. and Mrs. William P. Cosentino Ms. Linda Cottrell Mr. and Mrs. Ernest R. Council Ms. Marian R. Courtney Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Courtney- Ms Sandra L Coye Mr. and Mrs. Matthew F. Coyle Mr and Mrs. Thomas J. Coyle Mr and Mrs George C. Crane Mr. Harry P. Cranmer Ms Iva N. Croston Mrs. Carmen E. Crow Mr. and Mrs. Terrence R- Cushman Mr. and Mrs. George F. Dale Mr. Daniel J. Dalton Mr. and Mrs. Daniel J. Dalton Mr inJ Mr- Anthony F. D'Amore Mr. and Mrs. Stephen T. D'Angelo Mr and Mrs. John L. Daniels Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Jose P. DaSilva Ms. Ann T. Datte Ms Margaret A. Daub Mr and Mrs. Henry F. Daum Sr Ellen Dauwer
UNDER G R A DU ATE D A V FN ROLLM INT
3.360
1996 -2004
Honor Roll of Donors 20052004
Mr. Paul D
Mrs- Dawn Davidson-Walsh
Ms. Carolyn Davis
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas A. De Zolt
Mr- and Mrs. Frank J. CY
Mr. and Mrs Dennis E. DeAn|
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas G. Deglet
Mr. and Mrs Paschal j. DeHoratius
Mr. and Mr*. John L. Dejong
Mr. and Mrs. David H I
[>elp Mr. and Mrs. Edward DeLuise Mr- in DeMarzio Hi
Mr. anJ Mrs. John R Demever Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Denshuick Mr and Mrs. Edward S. DeSalme Mr. and Mrs John R. Demit Mr. and Mrs. Michael T. DiCamillo Mr. and Mrs. Gerald I Dieckhau- Sr. Mr. and Mr- Joseph F. Diersingjr. Ms. Cathenne E. DiGe Mr. and Mrs. Thomas E 1 Mr. and Mrs. Anthonv P I Mr. and Mrs. Francis X Pman '
Mr. and Mr- Nich Mr. George W. Dolph Mr. and Mrs. Joseph E. I ' Mr and Mrs. George Donnellv Mr. and Mrs- Richard J. Donnelly Ms. Elizabeth A Donovan Mr. and Mrs. Dennis J. Dougherty Mr. and Mrs. Martin J. Dowling Mr. and Mrs Kenneth O. Doyka Nir. and Mrs. Anthonv J. Diagani John Drulle and Emilia Eira- Mr. Peter F. Dm i
Mr. and Mrs. David A. DuBan Sr. Mrs. Joyce A. Dubon Mr and Mrs- E. Richard Dudzic Mr. and Mrs. Frederick G. Dufrher Mr. and Mrs. George J. Durtner Mr. and Mr- Patrick J. Duttv Mr. Richard M. DTJlisse Sr Mr. and Mrs. Robert F. Duncheskic Mr. Thomas. E. Dunn Mr. James Durkin Mr. John L. Dwyer Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Dvmow-,ki Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Edd^ Anne E. Edhn. Ph.D. Mr. and Mrs. Can F. EJ Mr. and Mrs. Mark C. Edwards Mr. and Mrs Richard Eirich Mr. and Mrs. James Eisenbarth Mr and Mrs Steven A. E :■ Mr Sylvan H. Eisman Ms, Gale Eisner and Mr- Robert Blum Mr. and Mrs. Frank D. Elliott Ms. Linda J. Elliott Mr. and Mrs. Richard P. El Mr. and Mrs. Robert V. Entenman
f-vickson Mr. and Mrs Michael J Eskate Mr. and Mrs. lame- J. Es] Mr. and Mrs. Michael J L Mr. and Mr- Paul A. Evanko Mr. and Mrs. Francis F. Faher Mr. and Mrs. William C Fair Mr. and Mrs. Allen Fala Mr. and Mrs. Claude P. Falchier Mr. and Mrs. Samuel J. Falvo Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J. Fanelie Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence J. Fatrell Mr. and Mrs. Martin F. Farrell seph W. Feene\ Ms. Eva A. Feinherg
: Mrs. Steven E. Feld Mr. and Mrs. Louis Ferguson Mr. and Mrs. John J. Femandes Mr. and Mrs. Michael J. Ferrara
Mrs. Regina M Fi Ms. Lisa A. Fields Mr. and Mrs. Michael Figura Ms. Kathleen Finlav Mr and Mrs. James J. Finnegan Mr. and Mrs. Harvey A. Fischer Jr. Mr. James A. Fitzsimmons ind Mis. |ohn I.
Fitzsimmons Mr. and Mrs. William C Flaherrv Mr. and Mrs- Michael C. Flanagan Mr. and Mrs. Paul A. Flvnn Ms. Robin K. Folkerts Mr. and Mrs. Antonio C. Fonseca Mr. and Mrs. R. Edward Form Mr and Mrs William Ford Mr. and Mrs. Joseph I E Mr. and Mrs William J Foscei Mr. and Mrs. Michael Fragnito Mr. and Mrs. Dietrich Franc:u-;ki Mr. and Mrs. Martin W Franklin fr Ms. Sharon A. Franklin Ms. Mar. Q Franr; Mr. and Mrs. Ludwig J Fran: Mr and Mrs Peter L J - Dr. and Mrs. Peter P. Fr Mr. and Mrs. Jame* Fnn Mr. and Mrs. Richard I Frohbergh Ms. Evelvn Frolich Mr. and Mrs. Robert P. Fulton Mrs. Theresa M. Fulton Mr. and Mrs. Thomas G. Furer Mr. Lawrence M. Fure\ Marguerite E. Futch. M.N.M. Mr. and Mrs. Anthonv Gad Mr. and Mrs. jai Mr. and Mrs. John J. G.tffnev Mr. and Mrs. Anthonv L. Galantc Mr. and Mrs. Michael F. Galante Mr. and Mrs. Richard P. Gatdien Mr. and Mrs. John C. Gallen Mr. John D. Gall
jeanna Gamble Mr and Mrs. Hanshchandra Ganatra Mr. and Mrs Nick Gargon Mr and Mrs Rodngo O. Gargullo Mr. and Mrs. Louis R. Gano Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Gaspen Mr. and Mrs. Charles E- Gaus Mr and Mrs. Charles E. Gaus Mr. and Mrs. Steven W. Geisc Mr. and Mrs. Thomas L Geisler Jr. Mr and Mrs Michael C. Genna Mr. and Mrs Michael Genii- Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence George Mr. and Mrs. Ronald R. George Mr. William J. Gertabek Mr. and Mrs. Charles D.
Giamberardino Mr. and Mrs. John Gianvutono Jr. Ms. Dorothv Giblin Mr. and Mr>. Ernest S. Gildein Mr and Mrs. George S. Gile*. Mr. Daniel Gillen Mr. and Mrs. lames F Gillespie Mr. and Mrs. Daniel J. Gilligai Si Mr. and Mrs. Joseph L. Gilson Mr. and Mrs. John M. Gingrich Ms. Louise C. Giugliano Rob Gocklin and Colleen Redden Mr. and Mrs. Robert F. Godard Ms. Mar.anne Godleski Mr. and Mrs. John T. Golden Mr. and Mrs. Thomas F. Golla Ms. Kathleen A. Goss Mr. and Mrs. Wavne R. Grear Mr. Stephen C Greb Mr and Mrs. Eugene Green Dr and Mrs William Fi. Green Mr and Mrs. Harvev S. Greenberg Mr and Mrs. Dav,d J. Gnftilh Mrs. Gerald L. Guckin
Mr. and Mrs. Garv C- Guendelsberger Mrs. Karen A. Guenther Mr. and Mrs. William H. Guenther Ms. Pat M. Guemna Ms. Rosemary Guemni Mr. and Mrs. Dennis M. Guest Mr. and Mrs. Stanley P. Gwiazda Mr. and Mrs. Larry E. Habasc\ ich Mr and Mrs. Robert T. Haenn Ms. Barbara J. Haight Mr Thomas A. Hall Ellen Halpem, Ph.D. Ms. Alexis C. Hamblet Mr. and Mrs. Michael C Hamra Mr. and Mrs. William J. Handv Mr. and Mrs. Henrv M. Hanev Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Hannan Mrs Elizabeth Hams Mr. John G. Ham- Mr. and Mrs. Kevin L. Hams Mr. and Mrs. Thomas E. Hams Mr and Mrs Joseph F Harrison III Mr and Mrs Lawrence E Harton Kevin J Ham. Ph.D. Mr. and Mrs. .Arthur L. Hauck Mr. and Mrs. Jay C. Haves Mr. and Mrs. Bruce V. H Mr. Kevin D Heard Mr and Mrs. Gerald F. Heckler Mr. and Mrs. Shawn W. HerYeman Ms. Edith C. Heilman Ms. Sandra L. Heleniak Ms. Martha Hennessv Ms. Donna M. Ijacquemotl Henrv Dr. and Mrs. Edward R. Hermann Mr. Francis L. Herrmann Ms. Patncia A. Hershock Mr. and Mrs. David H. Hickev Mr. and Mrs. Billy M. Hicks Mr. and Mrs. Robert J 1 1 Ms. Beverly J. Hmdenlang Ms. Ann L. Hobday Ms. Grace Hogan Mr. and Mrs. James J. Hogan Mr. and Mrs Mamn L H Mr. and Mrs. Edward J. Hudak Jr. Mr. and Mrs. George J. Hudock Jr. Ms. Connie F. Hushes Mr. and Mrs. Richard T. Hughe- Mr William J. Hughes Mr. Joseph T. Humphries Mr. and Mrs. Ernest H
Hutchinson Jr. Mr and Mrs. Charles C. Iannetta Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Biagio Infranco Mr and Mrs. Alexander A
Introcaso Jr. Mr and Mrs. William R. Insh Ms. Charlotte D. Iszard Mrs. Sandra L. Jablonski Mrs. Patricia H. Jackson Mr and Mrs Vincent T. Jacobv Mr. and Mrs. Vincent J. Jannetti Ms Kara L. Jasman Mr. and Mrs. Donald V. Jelhg Rev. and Mrs. Hyeong On Jo Mr. and Mrs. Bryan E. Johnson C. Thomas Jones. CPA Dr. and Mrs. Joseph M. Kac:marcrvk Ms. Jane E. Kadel Mr. and Mrs. Michael P. Kane Dr. and Mrs. Henry A. Kanvowski Mr. and Mrs. Robert Keetnder Ms Kathleen A . Kehoe Mt. and Mrs- James M. Kellv Mr. and Mrs. William B. KelK Mr. and Mrs. John P. Kendall Mr. and Mrs. George A. Kterzek Mr. and Mrs. Thomas F. Killeen Mar.ann and Scon Killinger Mr. and Mrs. William P. Kilrain Mr and Mrs. John J. Kiln lr
Mr. and Mrs. Yoon S. Kim
Yun Kim
Mr. and Mrs. David R. King
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph A. King Jr.
Mr and Mrs Robert E. Kinzel III
Mr and Mrs. Robert Kin:el
Mr. and Mrs. Allen C. Kirk
Mr and Mr-. Robert W Kirker
Mr and Mrs. Charles J. Kleinschmidt
John C. Kleis. Ph.D
Mr. and Mrs. .Andrew Klimowic:
Mr WilhamE Kline
Mr. and Mrs. Richard R. Knight
Ms Diane Koguc
Mr. and Mrs. Hans Kompauer
Mr. and Mrs. John G. Komutik
Mt. and Mrs. Matthew T. Korp
Mr and Mrs. Konstant;:
Mr and Mrs. John T. Kostek
Mr. and Mrs. James Kotkiewic:
Scott Krady and Carol Gnrtith-
Ms Kathleen Krai
Mr and Mrs Michael D Kramer
Mr. and Mrs Joseph P. Krankemann
Ms, Rhonda S. Krug
Ms. Lisa A. Krrvwicki
Mr and Mrs. William R. Kuchinskv
Iuona L Kusrtal, Ph.D.
Mr and Mrs Herbert A. Kuttler
Mr. and Mrs. John E. Lacv
Mr and Mrs. Kenneth J. Lagowski
Mr. and Mrs. Garv M. Lallv
Mr and Mrs. Tenence K. Lambert
Mr and Mrs. Robert M. Larson
Mr and Mrs. Frank Lato
Mr and Mrs. Rocco Laudato
Ms- J. -see K. LaViolette
Mr and Mrs. David M. Lawrence
Mr and Mrs. Walter W. Lee Jr.
Dr. Dolores Lehr
Mr. and Mrs. Oregon E. Leibel
Ray and Fran Leichner
Mr. and Mrs. Albert F. Leo
Ms Eve H. Levitan
Mr. and Mrs Pevton G. Lewis
Mr and Mrs R.'bert J. Lewis
Lins Liang. Ph.D.
Mr and Mrs Douglas W. L.ck
Mr and Mrs. Daniel E. Lilly
Ms Merhanie G, Lim
Mr and Mrs. Robert W. Limbach
Mr and Mrs. Ricky L. Linso
Mis R"bert V. Li>d>rn Mr and Mrs Anthony L- LocchettK Mr- Andrew |. Lombard _ iret A. Loradv Mr. and Mrs John M. Lorenzo Mr and Mrs Robert Loughne\ Si Mr William B Luhera Mr and Mrs. David L. Luckenbill Mr and Mrs. Carmelo Mabutas Mr. and Mrs. Domenic Magazu Mr and Mrs Thomas J. Maher Mr and Mrs Edward Mahon Mr and Mrs Mario Maiale Mr and Mrs. Michael Malia Mrs. Minam M. Mallov Mr. and Mrs. Edmund J.
Mancinelli Jr. Mr. James Mancinellt Mr and Mrs. Stefan C. Mangel Ms Anne M Manning Mr. and Mrs. Raymond J. Manning Mr. and Mrs. Vasiho T. Marchio The Mannaro Familv Edward S. Marks. Ph.D Mr and Mrs. Thomas J. Martin Mr and Mrs. William A. Mamn Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Mashner Mr. and Mrs. David M. Masiak Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J Maslo Mr and Mrs Michael A- Massimiani
Mr. and Mrs Paul Materia III
Mr. and Mrs Michael W. Mavbaum
Mr. and Mr- Joseph MazzoU
Mr. and Mrs. Silvio Ma~ uca Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph McAdams
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph E. McAllister
Mr. Robert P. McAndrews
Mr and Mrs. Daniel P. McBnde Sr.
Mr. and Mr-. MylesJ. McCarthy III
Mr. and Mrs. Patrick K. McCarthy
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene M McClaftem
Man Ann McConnell
Ms Susan M McCoog
Mr. and Mrs. Brian J. McCormick
Mr John McCra\
Mr- and Mrs- Patrick J. McDevitt
Mr and Mrs. Charles P. McDonald
Mr and Mrs Oregon M.
McDonough Mr Lawrence I McElr. a
Mrs. James J. McFadden Ms. Pamela L. McGee Mr. and Mrs. Joseph P. McGettigan Mr. and Mr-. Eugene A. McGonagle Mr. Kevin J McGonigle Mr Patrick 1- McGovem Mr and Mrs. James T. McGowan Mr Robert J. McGranaghan and
Mr. lames M. Beck Mr and Mrs John T. McGrath Mr. Joseph T. McGrath Mr and Mrs. Thomas V. McGrath Mr and Mrs. William J. McGrath Mr. and Mrs David E. McGuire Mr and Mrs. Joseph S. McGunman Mr. and Mrs. Michael J. McHale Mr. and Mrs. Hugh J. McHugh Mr Charles E. McKee Mr. and Mr- Mark McKelvey Ms GailV. McKenna Mr. and Mrs. James J. McKenna Mr and Mrs. Nelson A. McLaren Mr. and Mrs. Paul J McLaughlin Mr. and Mrs. Thomas G- McMillan Mr. and Mrs. James McPhilemv Mr. and Mrs. Robert Means Mr. and Mrs. Dennis J. Meehan Steven 1 Meisel, Ph.D. Mr and Mrs lo^e M- Mende: Mr and Mrs. Dennis Mercuno Mr and Mrs. Jeffrey J. Mesaric Mr. and Mr-. John M. Meaner Mr and Mrs. James Micek Dr and Mrs. Donald J. Michels Ann M. Mickle, Ph.D. Mr Robert B Miedel
beth Milcetich Ms. Felice Miller Mr and Mrs Hollis Miller Mr. John T. Miller Mr. L Martin Miller Mr and Mr-. Jeffrey S. Milne Mr and Mrs Andrew j Misuro Mr and Mrs- Richard B- Mitchell Ms Stephanie Mode-te Virginia B. Molda, Ph.D. Mr. and Mrs. Frank G. Mortett Dr. and Mrs. Daniel L- Mollitt Mr. M.chael S. Molloy Ms. Margaret M. Mondelli Mr. and Mrs. Douglas G. Monech Mr. and Mrs. Steven C. Montgomery Mr. and Mrs. Christopher C. Moore IV and Mrs. David H. Moore Mr and Mrs. Donald E- Moore Ms. Patricia K. Moore Mr and Mrs Bnan D. Moran Mr- and Mrs. Patrick J. Moran Mr. and Mrs Willard L. Moran Mr- and Mrs. James F. Moms Kevin and Linda Morrissej i ne D. Morton
?4
Honor Ron of Donors 2003-2004
Ms. Christine Moss
Mr and Mrs Michael P. Mueller
Mi and Mrs Leo E. Muldoon
Mr. and Mrs. Brendan Mulholland
Mr and Mrs. Paul F. Muller
Ms Joanne T. Mullin
Mr and Mrs, Joseph V. Mullin
Mr. and Mr- |ohn F MulrO} |i
Mr and Mrs. James S. Munizza
Ml nil Mr. Ruben Y. Muno:
Mr and Mis. Charles Murphy
Mi and Mrs. Dermott O. Murphv
Ms. Georgina M. Murphv
Mis M.ir\ M Murphy
Mr and Mis Peter J. Murphy
Mr .hilI Mrs. William T. Murphv
Mr and Mrs. Joseph Murray
Mr and Mrs. Edwin F. Mussel
Mr. and Mrs. Edward W. Myers
Mr and Mrs, Marc Nadeau
Ms Regina A. Nagle
Mr and Mrs. Gerald R Nail
Mr and Mrs Anthony J. Nanni
Mr and Mrs Joseph A Narcavage
Ms Jessica M Naugle
Anonymous
Mr and Mrs Ronald P. New-master
Mr. and Mrs. Ky Nguyen
Mr and Mrs. Quan H Nguyen
Mr. Val T Noel
Mr ind Mrs. David C N< iwakowsb i
Mr. Barbara Ann Nuzzolo
Mr and Mrs. Eugene T. Obeist
Mi and Mrs. Patrick O'Brien
Mr. and Mrs. Robert V. O'Brien
Mr and Mrs. David A Occhiolini
Mr ind Mrs. John M. O'Connor
Ml and Mrs Richard O'Donnell
Ms Yvonne A. O'Gano
Ms Marv Ohagan
Ms Andrea Z. Okagawa
Mr. and Mrs. Sunday O- Oladele
Mr and Mrs. Stephen J Olesik
Mr in I Mrs Donald R Olsen
Mr and Mrs. Edmond J O'Neill
Patrice A Oppligei, Ph.D.
Mr- Millie Orange
Ms Bonnie O'Rourke and
Mr Stanley M Zadroznj Mr ind Mr- [oseph R. Ott Mr and Mr- Gregory R. Ott Ms. Kirnberlv C. Oxholm Mr and Sir- |oseph W. Paczkowski Mr and Mr- Bennett Pagano Mi ind Mrs Francis Palma Hon. Paul and Mrs. Nancy Panepinto Mr. and Mrs. Vincent J.
Pannepacker Sr. Deborah Paolini Mr, and Mrs. James C. Parham Dr. and Mrs Richard A Pascucci M- Ann L- Patla Mr and Mrs. Raymond A Parti Mr. and Mrs. Give C. Paul Ms Karen Paulus Mr and Mrs. James L Pean Mr. and Mrs Joseph C. Pelleme
V- -■ 'h i [\ I
Mr. and Mrs. Robert L Penr fit lr Mr and Mrs. Howard Peterman Mr. and Mr- Joseph I Petralia Mr. and Mrs. Joseph D. Petrozzini Mi m. I Mr- lames Plarrer Mr. and Mrs Garv M Phelan Mi Ro, M Philip Mr. and Mr- lack M. rhillipsjr. Ms Sandra R Pickering Mr lohn ] Piersiak Mr Robert Piersiak
Mr. and Mrs. Leonard W. Pierrzak
Mrs Frances A. Pinkerton
Mi and Mr- Nicholas .1 Pino
Mr ind Mr- William L. Pinto
Mr and Mr- fames W Polek
Mr .ind Mrs. Hu;:h R. Pomerov
Mr and Mr- Al Pompeo
Mr. and Mrs. Richard J. Pompizzi
IH and Mrs Leonard Portnoy
Mr and Mrs Daniel T. Potts
Mr .ind Mr- Samuel Pozzessere
Mi and Mr-. Thomas A Frendergast
Mi in.i Mi- Robert M Procknow
Dr. Vincent P. Profy
Mrs. krilynn A. Prokop
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Proubc
Mr ind Mrs. Mark E. Pruec
Mr and Mrs. John A Tnbella
Mr. and Mrs. Punthur M
Putu-wamv Mr and Mrs. Henr\ P. Quartullo Mr Joseph R Quiglei Mr and Mrs Thomas J- Quinn Mr and Mrs. Timothy S Rakes Mr and Mr- Mark H. Ralston Mr and Mrs. Peter L. Randall Mr and Mrs. Kenneth H Rarig Mr and Mrs David M Raucci Ani mi mi ius Ms Anna M Rauschei Mr and Mrs. Robert T. Rauscher Mr ( hn-t. iphei R.i\ Mr md Mr- Michael C. Ray Mr Samuel L. Ray Mr- Margaret M. Rayca Mr and Mrs Paniel J. Reagoso John F. Reardon. Ed.D. Michael A Redmond. Ph.D. Mr and Mr-. Joseph E. Reichert Mr. and Mrs. John B. Reilly Mr \ incenl F Reilly Mr and Mis. James j Rementer Mr. and Mr-. Michael J. Ren:i Mr and Mr- [oseph 1 Resta Mr md Mr-. Da> id L Rhoads Sr Mr and Mrs Anthony A. Ricciardi Mrs Lisa L Rtdgeway Mr and Mr- J Edward Rite Ms Suzanne (Moran) Riordan Ms. |anei Riser
M I vl orah A. (Gallen) Roars Mr and Mr- Robert A. Robesch Sr.
Mi ind Mrs Salvador Robles
Mi ind Mi' lohn H. Roch
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas \V I
Mr in, I Mrs. David J. Romanek
Mr. and Mrs. John J. Romano
M- M.irv i. Romano
Ms i Catherine Romeo
Ms "sarah J. Rooney
Mr and Mrs. Donald G. Rowe
Mr and Mr- William E. Ruff
Mr John s Rusak
Mr and Mr- Daniel T. Russell
Mr and Mr- Louis D. Russo
Mr and Mr- Robert M. Ruzzi
Mr and Mr- Michael M Sahara
Mr and Mr- Joseph A Sabol
Mr and Mr- T ■ ■ I l e i Sacca
Mr William L Saffici ^r
Ms. Maureen Salem
Mr and Mrs. Richard A Sale
Mr and Mr- Harold Salmon
Mr and Mr- Michael Sander
Mr md Mrs. George R- Sartorio
Ml I imt i \ Si (Man Jr
Mr ind Mrs. George T. Schater
Mi ind Mr- Donald C Schallei
Mr. and Mrs. William J. Schalleur
Mr. and Mrs Mark Schneider Mr. and Mr- Edward W
Schneiderman Sharon (Faith) Schoen, Ed.D. Mr and Mrs Altons Schork Mr and Mr- Robert Schrank Ms ( hristine M Schroeder Mr and Mr- James G. Schu Mr .md Mr- Arthur W Schuller Mr and Mr- Jeffrey W Schwartz Mr and Mr-, lames T. Schwender Mr John Sebastian Mr and Mr--. Randall L. Selah l'r Madeline Seiner Ms. Joanne M Serpentine Mr and Mr- Anthony K. Sestokas Mr and Mr- Robert Shaler Mr and Mr- Robert L Shatter Ms I. ..in Shafi Mr- Deborah Sharp Mr .ind Mr-. Raymond W Sh i. Mr and Mr- Patrick H. Sheeh\ lr Mr Petei P Shelinski lr Rc\ Allen C Shelton 1 ti and Mr- [ohn M Sherry Ms raeki i Shervin Ml Kei in |, thinners Mr. and Mr- ScotI A Shollenl
■ I Shotzbarger Mi m. I Mr- Jules Silk Mi and Mr- Alan I Silverman Mr. and Mrs Steven A Simon Mr Sumie A Simon Ms. Patricia M Sin* ms Mr and Mr- Franl Sipit - Mr. and Mrs William J. SI Ms uid Mr- Marian Smagac: Mr and Mrs. Charles J. Smith Mr and Mrs. Dennis B. Smith I Mi 1 imes A. Smith Mr and Mr-. Keith W. Smith Mr- Mary H. Smith Mr. Matthew F Smith Sr Michael F. Smith, Ph D Mi Raymond I Smith Mr. and Mr- Timothy J Smith Mr. and Mi-. 1 mesl 1 Sobkou Mr |ose I. Somavilla M P itricia I Sondgeroth Mi in.i Mi- Franl S .rochen Mi in. I Mr- Theodore ]- Span Mr and Mr- Jon K Speare Mrs Leonie Spence
Mi- i urtisW Spiker lr Mrs Mi- hael l"1 Spinelli Ms. Chn-tin.i Spociik'r Layer Mr and Mrs. Rudolph Springer Mi and Mrs Michael R. St. John Mr. and Mrs. John F Stack Mr. and Mr- R Lero} Stanley
Mr. and Mr- I laniel Mclanides
Mi and Mrs George W. Steffens
Mi in.i Mr- ( i.irv Steidl
Mr. and Mr- Patrick M Stephan
Ms, June B Sterling
Mr- [ '..Ion-- M Stevens
Mi and Mrs 1. iwrence F So ■
Mr, and Mr- Richard A Stewart
Mr and Mr- Howard Stnckler
Mi IVrrram L Strieb
Mr. and Mi- Willard I Mull III
Mr and Mr-. James M Sullivan Mr. and Mr- "-Stephen J. Sulock Mr. and Mrs. Edward A Sutton Jr Paul md I'cnm Swank Mr and Mr- Edw ird P Sweeney Mr. and Mr-. Robert L Sweeney Mr and Mrs Mark S. Swift Kathryn A Szabat, Ph.D
Mr and Mr- William R Szulborski Ms. Carol C. Tait Mr. and Mrs. Carl Tarc:vn-ki Mr. and Mrs. Alan R. Taylor Ms Flue B Teitelman
I Mrs J irl J. Tentilucci Mi and Mi- 1 \it Thach Mr and Mrs. Robert B Thackrav Mi ind Mr- lohn P- Thaler Ms, Barbara H. Thanki
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald D. Thompson
Mr Robert W, Thompson
Mr and Mr-. William S. Thompson
Mr and Mrs. Richard Timrnes
Ms. Helen Tinncin
Mr and Mrs. TerrenceJ. Tinneny
Mr and Mrs. Euuene Tirada
Mi in. i Mr- Frank Tischner
Mr. and Mr- |oseph V. Tomaszewski
Mr. and Mr- Gtegor} 1 Tomersko
Mi I 'In c-r B. Tomlin
Mr. and Mr- Martin B Toner
Ms "u- in M rracei
Mr and Mrs Robert Tramaglini
Mr and Mrs. Richard Travers
Mr and Mrs Joseph E. Tribhle
Mr. and Mrs Michael R. Triglia
Mr ,m\.\ Mrs Lawrence P Tnplcrt Sr
Mi in,l Mr- Edward J. Troy
I v i omelia rsakiridou
Mi and Mrs. Jack A. Tsikira-
Mr. and Mr- Lime- M Turner
M- [ennifer Turner
Mr. and Mrs Jack D. Tvler Jr
Mi and M,- William C Ubbens
Mr. and Mrs ( J
Mi in, I Mi- I. ihn I \ .ilentino
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph T Van Thuvne
Mr. and Mr- Willard E Vandiverji
Mr and Mr- Leonard Vannicola
Mr. and Mr-. Charles Veasey 111
Mi ind Mrs |osi R V ega
Mr and Mr- Thomas 1 ' Veitz
Mr. and Mr- Robert \ enann
Mr. and Mi- 1 rani \ crderber
Mt ind Mr- |ohn P. Vermitskv
Mr. and Mr- Edward M. \ emon
Mi Ri iben M Vetrone
Mr and Mr- Paul Vianojr.
Kathleen O Vito, DN St Robert M Vogel, Ed.D
M.- William E Vogel
M; in ! Mi ■ i ius \ okolos Mr and Mrs Michael | Volz
Mi md Mr- lames Wagnei Mr. and Mrs. Joseph J. Wagner
Ms. Kathryn F. Watdron Mr. and Mrs. John J. Walker Mr. and Mrs. Joseph P, Wallace Sr. Mr. and Mrs. Ephraim S. Walters Jr. Mr and Mr- Robert E Ward Mr. and Mrs. Stephen T \\ aid Mr and Mr- Timothy F W ird Mr and Mr- |ames W.i-vlvk Mr. and Mr- Robert L Watkins Margarei 1 1 Watson, Ph.D Mi ind Mrs I. iseph I. Wawrzynelt Mr. Christophei 1 1 W i\ Mr. and Mrs Marvin R Vt eavei Ms Shawn Weavei Mi-., loan A Wem Mr and Mr- fames R Weldon Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Michael J Well- Mr. and Mrs, John Wendling Mr. and Mrs. Christopher P
Wendow 4. i
Mr. and Mrs. Michael I Werdmann Mr. and Mrs Thomas C Wermuth Mr. and Mrs Mirk West Mr. and Mr- William A. West Mr and Mrs. Francis Wetherhold
m m Whelan Mr auA Mr- Colin P. Whipkes
Ms, Janei A Whyte
Mr. and Mrs. William F. Wiegman Jr. Mi .in,! Mrs. James T. Wilczynski Mr and Mr- Edward H Wiley
Mr and Mrs. Kn mt md W ilex Samuel J Wiley, Ph.D Ms Shirlej E Williams
Mr and Mr-. William P. Williams
Ms Susan H W ,1
Mr and Mr- William I W ilson
Ms Patricia \ Winchell
Mr William I' Win,
Mr and Mr- Monza W ii
Mr .md Mrs. Martin Wi-meski
Mi - [.me 1 W i-.iii, wski
Ms Caroline V Wistar
Mr and Mrs I )a\ id D. Witulski
Mi and Mrs. Thaddeus 1 Wojnar
Mr. and Mr-. Mark I Woll
Mr. Richard 1* W I |r
Mr. Kenneth L. Woodson Ms. - hristine Worthington Mi in. I Mrs. Hollis W o-ek\ Ms ludithA Wren Mi and Mrs [amesR Yetman
Mi ind Mrs lohn Zaventnik
Pr Anne E. Zayaitz
Ms Elaine D. Zelley
Mr. and Mrs. Mark Zingle
1996-2003
Honor Roll of Donors 2003-2004
notes
19 4 5 Lawrence F. Balestra (B.S.) says he is now "living the dream" in Ponce Inlet, Fla.
194 9 Phil Kelly (B.S.) of Ferrandina Beach, Fla., has been named Neographics Person of the Year by the Graphic Arts Association for his 50 years at the helm of the New Jersey-based Strathmore Press.
19 5 2 Robert F. Jones (B.A.) of Englewood, N.J., retired as Professor Emeritus from the history department at Fordham University.
19 5 6 Robert M. Rogers, M.D. (B.A.) of
Pittsburgh, Pa., was honored by the American Lung Association of Pennsylvania for his achievements in the medical community.
19 6 3 Edward M. Slavish (B.S.) of Kaneohe, Hawaii, was appointed by the Governor of Hawaii to a four-year term as a member of the State Parole Board.
19 6 4 Br. Phillip R. DePorter, F.S.C. (B.A., M.A. 77) is the Director of Cardinal Gibbons Middle School, Baltimore, Md.
Joseph G. O'Donnell (B.A.) of Caswell Beach, N.C., retired from Level3 Communications, Inc. as Director of Defense Programs. He previously served 22 years as an Air Force officer, aviator (Air Force 2), and command and control communications officer with the 89th MAW Presidential Support unit at Andrews Air Force Base, Md.
196 5 Edmond J. Doran, Ph.D. (B.A.) of
Conshohocken, Pa., retired after 39 years as an educator at Plymouth-Whitemarsh High School in the Colonial School District, located in Montgomery County, Pa.
Bill Mealey (B.S.) of North Wales, Pa., retired from the Philadelphia School District after 39 years of teaching at Girls High School and Masterman High School.
1966 James P. Gillece Jr., Esq. (B.A.) was appointed to the Washington, D.C., Board of Justice for Children, a national non- profit organization of citizens concerned about
children's rights and their protection from abuse.
Paul V. Sipala Jr. (B.A.) of Fort Myers, Fla., was named Full Partner in Florida Gulf Tax Advisors, LLC. He specializes in tax and financial planning for clients in southwest Florida.
19 6 7 Louis J. Beccaria, Ph.D. (B.A.) of
Phoenixville, Pa., was appointed to the National Board of Directors of the 2,900- member Association of Small Foundations and was honored by the Chester County Community Foundation on its 10th anniversary, as one of its six original founders.
Gerald Page (B.A.) of Gambrills, Md., is the Vice President of Computer Sciences Corporation.
19 6 8 Joseph Belinsky (B.A.) of North Canton, Ohio, was inducted into Beta Gamma Sigma National Honor Society for business schools by Kent State University. He also received the university's Chapter Honoree of the Year Award for Beta Gamma Sigma.
Lawrence Grabenstein (B.A.) of Silver Spring, Md., was inducted as the new President of the Terrapin Club at the University of Maryland. A long-standing member of this organization that supports the Terps' athletic teams, he will be serving a two-year term as its leader.
Robert Walker, R.N. (B.A.) of Cherry Hill, N.J., received Episcopal Hospital's Nursing Excellence Award and Nurse of the Year Award for 2004.
197 0 Edward H. Morris Jr. (B.S.) of
Philadelphia, Pa., was awarded the Award of Excellence by the Thurgood Marshall Scholarship Fund. He was honored for his outstanding contributions in the field of finance for non-profit and for-profit organizations, as well as his community service efforts. He is Vice President of Investments at Independence Blue Cross.
William J. Winning, Esq. (B.A.) of Malvern, Pa., was named a Pennsylvania Super
Lawyer. He is the chair of Cozen O'Connor law firm's White Collar Crime & Complex Criminal Defense practice groups. This honor is the result of an independent balloting survey sent to lawyers across the state.
19 71 Br. Francis Danielski, F.S.C. (B.A.)
received a Master of Arts in Pastoral Ministry from St. Charles Seminary, Philadelphia, Pa.
19 7 2 George F. Hayhoe (B.A.) has
accepted a position as Associate Professor of Technical and Professional Communication in the Department of English at East Carolina University in Greenville, N.C.
Norman Johnson (B.S.) of Philadelphia, Pa., participated in the University of Pennsylvania/Institute of Contemporary Art's open video call. His video, Flash McCool: Imagination is being viewed at the ICA's video viewing station.
Thomas S. Kilcheski, M.D. (B.S.) was
inducted as a Fellow in the American College of Radiology. He is affiliated with Grassmont Hospital in La Mesa, Calif., and is active in medical societies, having served as president of both the California Radiological Society in Sacramento, and the San Diego Radiological Society in Santee, Calif.
Jack Lund (B.A.) was appointed President and C.E.O. of the YMCA of Greater New York. The YMCA of Greater New York is the largest YMCA in the U.S.
1973 Eugene D. McGurk (B.A.) of
Cinnaminson, N.J., was named Chairman of the Board of Overseers of Widener University School of Law. He also serves as secretary on the Board of Trustees at Widener.
Albert Riviezzo, Esq. (B.A.) of Downingtown, Pa., was elected to serve on the Executive Committee of Fox Rothschild LLP for a three-year term. The executive committee directs policy decisions and provides guidance and leadership for the strategic operation and growth of the firm.
36
Honor Roll of Donors 2003-2004
Robert Welsh (B.A.) of Holland, Pa., retired after 21 years teaching physics, electronics, and astronomy at the Philadelphia School District's magnet school, Carver High School of Engineering and Science. He is now spending his time hiking, camping, operating amateur radio, teaching college, and enjoying his grandchildren — all of whom, he hopes, will be La Salle grads.
19 7 4 Andrew E. DiPiero Jr., Esq. (B.A.) of
Huntingdon Valley, Pa., has joined the law firm of Stampone D'Angelo & Renzi, PC. The firm has since changed its name to Stampone D'Angelo Renzi DiPiero. He will continue to focus on complex civil litigation, including catastrophic injuries from motor vehicle accidents.
Edward J. Mesunas (B.A.) of
Lafayette Hill, Pa., was appointed a deputy sheriff of the Montgomery County, Pa., Sheriff's Department. He received the top academic award from the Pennsylvania Sheriff Association upon completion of the Pennsylvania Commission on Crime and Delinquency's 12th training class, where he also served as Class President.
BG John C. Woods (B.S., M.B.A. '87) of
Laurel, Md., was assigned Deputy Commanding General, Combined Arms Center for Training, Ft. Leavenworth, Kan.
19 7 6 Paul Zakulec, A.R.M., A.U. (B.S., M.B.A. '87) of Bensalem, Pa., was recognized as an Outstanding Course Leader by the American Institute for Chartered Property Casualty Underwriters and the Insurance Institute of America.
19 7 7 Larry S. Tuliszewski (B.A.) of East Nornton, Pa., was appointed Senior Vice President-Commercial Services/Northeast Region of LandAmerica Financial Group, Inc. Previously, he served as vice president and Philadelphia branch manager for commercial services.
George L. Weber, D.O. (B.A.) was re-elected to serve on the Board of Trustees of the Pennsylvania Osteopathic Medical Association, a statewide organization for physicians holding the Doctor of Osteopathic Medicine degree.
19 7 9 Rev. Richard L. Davis, T.O.R. (M.A.) of
Steubenville, Ohio, was elected to the board of trustees as Vice President for Community Relations at Franciscan University of Steubenville.
19 8 0 Joseph R. Baxter (B.S.) of
Philadelphia, Pa., was promoted to Senior Vice President, Head of Municipal Bond Development for Delaware Investments. He will provide strategic direction for bond investments, as well as oversee the department's portfolio managers, research analysts, and traders.
19 81 Br. Brian Henderson, F.S.C. (M.A. '92)
was elected Chairman of the Board of St. Frances Academy, Baltimore, Md.
198 2 Mary Fanelli, Ph.D. (B.A.) of
Portales, N.M., was named Dean of the School of Arts and Sciences at Eastern New Mexico University.
William D. Shields (B.S.) of Wilmington, Del., is the National Business Development Manager for Thyssen Krupp AIN Plastics and will expand the company into Canada in 2005. He also worked on Republican campaigns for the 2004 elections.
198 3 Anthony E. DiMarco, D.O. (B.A.) of
Kennett Square, Pa., was
re-elected to serve on the
Board of Trustees of the
Pennsylvania Osteopathic
Medical Association, a
statewide organization for
physicians who hold the Doctor of
Osteopathic Medicine degree.
Robert C. Lucia (B.S.) of Philadelphia, Pa., was promoted to Assistant Vice President, Retail Financial Services for Citizens Bank.
Joseph J. McGrenra, CFCM (B.A.) of Virginia Beach, Va., was elected to serve on the Board of Directors of the National Contract Management Association for the 2004-2005
program year.
19 8 4 Theodore F. Doberstein (M.B.A.)
received certification as a Certified Insolvency and Restructuring Advisor. He is
the Senior Manager with The Hermes Group LLP in Princeton, N.J.
Yvonne S. (Oberdick) Hoffman (B.S.N.) of
Philadelphia, Pa., volunteers at Jeanes Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa. At 65 years of age, she and her husband built a deck on the back of their house.
Maryann (Pietrosk) Salsburg (B.A., M.A. '91) and her husband, Jerry Salsburg (M.A. '91)
have two daughters from China: Rachel Yi, who is 2 years old, and Rebeka Lin, who is 5 years old.
Gina M. Spencer (B.S.) of Philadelphia, Pa., received a Master of Arts in Organizational Management from the University of Phoenix.
Annette M. Szygiel (B.S.) of Chalfont, Pa., was appointed Senior Vice President and Director of Marketing for the Univest Corporation. She is responsible for providing leadership and strategic direction for marketing, advertising, corporate communications, and market and competitive research.
19 8 7 T. Perry Engard (B.S.) of
Quakertown, Pa., was recently named Boys Head Basketball Coach at Souderton High School.
Mark Gola (B.S.) of Chester Springs, Pa., was highlighted as "Dealmaker" in the Philadelphia Business Journal, June 18-24, 2004, issue.
Martin E. Schmieg (B.S.) of Boulder, Colo., has been appointed Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer of Sirna Therapeutics, Inc. He will direct and oversee Sirna's financial management, accounting activities, and investor and public relations.
19 89 Rick Clifford (B.S.) of Marlton, N.J., was recently promoted to Senior Vice President at Delaware Valley Financial Group.
Cyd L Gaskins (B.S., M.B.A. '94) of
Philadelphia, Pa., was promoted to Senior Director, Professional Network Operations at Independence Blue Cross. In her new position, she will oversee physician credentialing support services, model
Honor Roll of Donors 2003-2004
37
credential ing rosters, and claims support for several large health systems.
MAJ Christopher Roth (B.A.) of Charlotte, N.C., is serving as Chief of the Architecture Branch, Architecture and Interoperability Division of the J6 for the U.S. Forces Korea in Seoul, Korea.
Melissa (Clark) Scheffey (B.A.) of Bolton, Conn., is publishing a novel, Find Courtney [Melissa Clark]. It is a recommended title by dearreader.com, AOL, and Pfizer book clubs. The novel is scheduled to be released by Bridge Publications this fall.
1990 Maria T. Finizio, Ph.D. (M.S.) of
Philadelphia, Pa., earned her Doctorate in English Linguistics from Temple University. Her poetry has been published in an anthology and various literary publications. Her most recent work will appear in the January issue of Poetry Explosion.
Arthur I. Keegan Jr. (B.A.) of Haddonfield, N.J., is the Vice President of Business Development for Fidelity National Title Insurance Co. in Philadelphia, Pa.
1991 Christopher J. Becker (B.S.) of
Hempstead, N.Y., is the Vice President of Becker & Associates Planning Services.
19 9 2 Heather (Striet) Gervais (B.S.) of
Yardley, Pa., was promoted to Director of Project Management for Cadient Group.
Justin Johnson (B.S.) of New Rochelle, N.Y., accepted a position at NASCAR as Managing Director of Corporate Sales and Marketing, leaving major league baseball after a six-year tenure.
Heather Johnson-Mullisky (B.A.) of Wilkes- Barre, Pa., and her husband, John Mullisky, announce the adoption of their daughter Caitrin Jin from Maashan, China. Caitrin joins her sister, Ruth Elizabeth.
Scott Malack (B.S.) has been named President of Coach's Corner Sports Auctions LLC, a sports celebrity auction house based in Souderton, Pa.
19 9 3 Matthew Fee (B.A.) of Syracuse, N.Y., was appointed Director of the Park Scholar Program in the Roy H. Park School of Communications at Ithaca College. He is
also completing his dissertation on Irish film for his doctoral degree at NYU.
Richard J. Nocella, Esq. (B.S.) of Mt. Laurel, N.J., has established his law practice in Marlton, N.J.
19 9 4 Br. Daniel Gardner, F.S.C. (B.A., M.A. '96) was named Principal of the Resurrection School in Harlem, N.Y.
Donna Tonrey (M.A., Psy.D. '02) of North Wales, Pa., was appointed by Pennsylvania Gov. Ed Rendell to the State Board of Social Workers, Marriage and Family Therapists, and Professional Counselors, which oversees licensing for those professionals.
Margaret Uhrich (B.A.) of Maple Glen, Pa., has been elected to a three-year term on the Board of Directors of Philadelphia's most comprehensive human services agency, Caring People Alliance.
19 9 5 Andrew Pack (B.A.) of Philadelphia, Pa., was honored as one of the winners for this year's 40 under 40 Award presented by the Philadelphia Business Journal.
John F. O'Farrell (B.A.) of Philadelphia, Pa., accepted a position as a Survey Statistician at the U.S. Census Bureau.
19 9 7 Carla Reinas (B.A.) joined the Mt. Laurel, N.J. -based public relations firm, Thomas/Boyd Communications, as Account Coordinator. She will develop and implement public relations programs designed to promote awareness and marketplace branding for the firm's diverse client base.
199 8 William M. Bosch (M. B.A.) of
Glenolden, Pa., and his wife, Nancy (Emmi) Bosch, have two sons, Francis William and Thomas Michael.
Rita Milburn-Dobson (B.S.N.) of Philadelphia, Pa., was elected to the Board of the Association of Death Education and Counseling and appointed to the Board of the Funeral Alliance.
19 9 9 Darren M. Atlee (B.A.) of Jersey City, N.J., has moved up from Production Assistant to Associate Producer for Valley Crest Productions and is currently working
on Who Wants to Be a Millionaire for ABC Television.
CPT John R. Cholewin (B.A.) of Wayne, N.J., of the U.S. Marine Corps, flies EA-6B attack jets and is currently deployed overseas with VMAQ-1, flying in support of continuing operations.
Rochelle D. Coles (B.A.) earned her Master's of Divinity from the Lutheran Theological Seminary in Philadelphia. She is now serving as Military Chaplain in the U.S. Air Force.
Marc A. Holbert (B.S.) of Philadelphia, Pa., is a doctoral student at the University of Pennsylvania Wister Institute.
Jeff Poppel (M.B.A.) of Ambler, Pa., is Chief Financial Officer with Schiffrin & Barroway LLP.
2 0 0 0 Christine (Pieri) Barnhart (B.A.) of
Ellicott City, Md., joined Magellan Health Services as Senior Communications Generalist. She is also serving as Secretary on the Board of Directors of the Public Relations Society of America's Maryland Chapter.
Michael A. Davis, D.V.M. (B.A.) of Los
Angeles, Calif., earned his Doctorate in Veterinary Medicine from the University of Georgia. He is currently doing an internship at the California Animal Hospital in Los Angeles.
Joseph J. DeFelice (B.A.) of Philadelphia, Pa., received a Juris Doctorate from Widener University School of Law.
Cheryl (Giannattasio) Knauer (B.A.) has been named Vice President of Public Relations for the Maryland Chapter of RESOLVE, a non-profit organization that provides support for people who are suffering from infertility. She will remain Treasurer of the Baltimore Public Relations Council and is the Media Relations Manager at Maryland Institute College of Art.
Nicole M. Lanzalotti, Esq. (B.A.) of
Philadelphia, Pa., graduated cum laude from Widener University School of Law. She is licensed to practice in both Pennsylvania and New Jersey, and is an associate at
38
LA SALLE MAGAZINE
Drinker Biddle & Reath LLP in Philadelphia.
Laurie Parks, R.N. (B.S.N.) of Bryn Mawr, Pa., was honored as Nurse of the Year by Temple University Children Medical Center and Hospital.
2001 Peter Laub (B.A.) is a Graphic Design Specialist with Corporate Executive Board, a for-profit think tank in Washington, D.C.
2 0 0 2 Jaime Delisio (B.A.) of Philadelphia, Pa., left his position with WB17 as a broadcast newswriter and is now an advertising copywriter at D.M.W. Worldwide. He writes television commercials and direct mail campaigns for companies around the world.
Jessica Fauser (B.S.N.) announces her engagement to Michael Bayer (B.S. '03).
Jonathan S. Miller (B.S.) of Washington, D.C, graduated with an M.I.S. in biochemistry/molecular biology from Georgetown University and is currently pursuing a Ph.D.
2 0 0 3 Linda M. Kasprzak (B.A.) of
Philadelphia, Pa., accepted a new position in the tax department of KPMG LLP as Tax Control Administrator.
Births
198 7 A son, Thomas Michael, to Yvonne and T. Perry Engard (B.S.).
19 8 8 A daughter, Molly Maguire, to Mike and Maureen (Maguire) Stephenson (B.S.).
1989 A son, Wellington MarkLee, to Steven and Tonya C. (Lombardo) Bergstrom (B.S.).
19 9 0 A daughter, Erin Trinity, to Drew (B.S. '91) and Eileen (King) Maginnis (B.S.).
19 91 A son, Liam Robert, to Cara Jean and Christopher J. Becker (B.S.).
A son, Christian Alexander, to Juana Alejandra and Brian Charles Bennett (B.A.).
19 9 2 A son, Mason W., to Barbara and Craig W. Brewster (B.S., M.B.A. '99).
A son, Casey David, to Jackie and Justin Johnson (B.S.).
A daughter, Miranda Elizabeth, to Allison and William F.Muller (B.S. ).
19 9 3 A daughter, Nalam Jeane, to Natalie and Derek D. Brown (B.S.).
A son, Ryan Joseph, to Stacie and James J. Gallagher Jr. (B.A., M.B.A. '99).
A son, Matthew James, to James (B.A.) and Patti A. Mattson-Hannigan (B.A. '95)
A daughter, Lauren Kiley, to Kevin and Julie (Zimmerman) O'Malley (B.A., M.A. '97).
A son, Ryan, to Joe and Kristin (Falcone) Visalli (B.A.)
19 9 4 A son, Nathan Reed, to Jen (Rueter) Lebisky (B.A. '97) and Dave Lebisky (B.A.)
A daugher, Allyson Leigh, to Owen and Jacqueline Loker-Galvin (B.A.).
A daughter, Addison Lynn, to Michael Siciliano (B.A.) and AmyLynn Flood (B.S. '95)
19 9 5 A daughter, Kimberly Grace, to Scott and Maria (Kellner) Hergenhan (B.S.).
A son, Matthew Albert, to Katie and Brian Marriott (B.A.)
Twin sons, Tyler Joseph and Brandon Thomas, to Rick and Jean Marie (Latini) Marston (B.A., M.B.A. '01)
A son, Brady Alan, to Kim (Dickey) Meusel (B.A.) and Robert Meusel (B.S.)
A son, James Duncan, to David (B.A.) and Janet A. (Stewart) Spaulding (B.A.)
19 9 6 A daughter, Eloise (Ella) Catherine, to Stephan and Kelly (Donnelly) Hagelauer (B.A.).
A daughter, Katie Patricia, to Brian and Kelly (Kane) Letcher (B.A.).
A son, Aiden, to Matthew and Lorin (Sparling) Mauck.
A daughter, Sarah Elizabeth, to Kevin and Patricia (McElroy) Mill (B.S.).
1997 A daughter, Aurora Flynn, to Nicole Wilson and Gerard Beaucheane Jr. (B.S.)
19 9 9 A daughter, Ryleigh Elizabeth, to Courtney May and Tracy Stifrell (B.S.N.).
Mary B. Burke (B.A. '99. M.A. '031 was married to Nicholas P. Orphanos (B.A. '00) in November 2003. The couple, who met at La Salle, had a La Salle-themed blue and gold wedding with 20 La Salle alumni among the guests. Pictured above with the newlyweds are: La Salle Bean of Students Joseph Cicala, Ph.D., B.A. 19; La Salle Administrative Assistant Kathy Goodwin; Dan Goodwin; Charlie Black. 75; Bill Hyland. '88; Laurie (Fischer) Hyland. '89; Charlotte (O'Brien) Lyons. '99; Sean McDevitt, '00: Eric Dorsey, '00; Scott Decker. 'DO; Sharon Wilson, '00; Emily Miedel. '00; Justin Serianni. 'Oh Trey Ulrich. '99; and Joe Leonard, '01.
Honor Roll of Donors 2003-2004
39
2 0 0 0 A son, Austen Robert, to Steven and Natalie Gustafson (B.A.).
A son, Lucas Connelly, to Angela Mancuso (B.A.) and Albert Alven (B.A. '01)
Marriages
19 74 Jeff Piccone (B.S.) to Martha
Phelan.
19 8 1 Ann Marie Mierzejewski (B.A.) to Martin G. Sears.
1985 Sean D. Duffin (B.A.) to Sheila M. McCaffrey.
198 8 Maureen Maguire (B.S.) to Mike
Stephenson.
19 9 0 James C. Anagnos, Esq. (B.A.) to Jennifer Anne Mahar.
199 2 Mark T. Gnecco (B.S.) to Hui Ling Yee.
19 9 7 Kori Connelly, Esq. (B.A.) to Marc Izzo.
Kathleen DeFonce (B.A.) to James Fagan.
19 9 8 Cathleen Cleary (B.A.) to Joseph Whelan.
2 0 0" James R. Gallo (B.S.) to Danielle Dasch.
2 0 0 2 Tracy Reynolds (B.A.) to Keith Anderson (B.A.).
2 0 0 4 Stacey M. Coryell (B.A.) to Keith J. Kuhfahl.
In M e m o r i a m
19 4 3 Joseph F. Frazer (B.A.) of Lower Makefield Township, Pa., on Aug. 21, 2004. A pioneer in TV and radio broadcasting, he was once producer at TV Channel 12. WPFH, where he produced the original Big Five College Basketball Broadcast.
Raymond J. Perkins (B.A.) on Aug. 14. 2004. He served as a lieutenant in the Marine Corps during World War II, was the proprietor of Budd's Decorator Shop in Ocean City, N.J.. and was an active sports booster and manager of the Atlantic City High School basketball team.
194 8 Edward R. Barber (B.A.) of Alberquerque. N.M., on May 16, 2004.
9 4 9 Rev. Msgr. Glendon E. Robertson (B.S.) of Gibbsboro, N.J., on Aug. 14, 2004. He was a priest in the Camden Diocese for 47 years.
19 5 0 William J. "Inky" Gallagher (B.S.) of Havertown, Pa., on July 28, 2004.
Stephen J. Ruzicka (B.S.) of Pasadena, Texas, on Aug. 14, 2004.
Br. James M. Donovan, F.S.C. (B.A.) of Philadelphia, Pa., on July 12, 2004.
Assistant Professor Joseph P. Cairo, '60, Economics Teacher for 40 Years, Dies at 66
Joseph P. Cairo, '60, who inspired economics students at La Salle for 40 years, died July 11 at his home in Ambler, Pa. He had been battling multiple myeloma for several years. Cairo was 66.
A graduate of La Salle College High School and La Salle College, Cairo earned a master's in economics from the University of Pennsylvania and joined La Salle's economics faculty in 1963. In 1967, he received the Lindback Distinguished Teaching Award.
"His whole adult life was dedicated to La Salle," said his son, Matthew Cairo. "He loved teaching young students. His favorite classes were the introductory classes because he got to really teach the students what was most fundamental to the study of economics."
"He was a wonderful guy and a tremendous teacher," said Joseph P. Mooney, Ph.D., '49, Professor Emeritus of Economics. "His students loved him. He had tremendous energy. I don't think anybody had more energy in the classroom, and that's what kept him going. It was very courageous of him to keep going like that for these past few years."
Mooney said Cairo would get so caught up in his teaching that his courses would run past the allotted time, and other teachers and
students would have to stand outside until he had finished. "He'd say, 'Just one more thing,' and go on for 10 more minutes," Mooney said.
"My father loved the way the Christian Brothers taught, their philosophy about education, and that was what made it a natural for him to teach at La Salle," Matthew Cairo said. He said his father was also an avid collector of books about a wide variety of topics that interested him. "I'd guess there are about 10,000 books in his house," he said. Cairo earned a second M.A. in English from Temple University.
Cairo married his wife, Paula, in 1973. In addition to Matthew, they have another son, Joseph K. Cairo, and a daughter, Julia.
40
LA SALLE MAGAZINE
19 5 3 Robert L. Bolsover (B.A.) of
Bensalem. Pa., on Aug. 27, 2004. He was a teacher, singer, actor, organist, and choir director. He was in about 40 musical productions at La Salle Music Theater, Falmouth Playhouse, Bucks County Playhouse, Pocono Playhouse, and the Neshaminy Music Theater. At La Salle, he was honored with the President's Medal in 1986 for starring and directing in 32 productions at the University.
James J. McGlone (B.A.) of Alexandria, Va.
Howard W. Spencer (B.A.) of Philadelphia, Pa., on May 31, 2004. He was a contract administrator for the federal government with contract responsibility for many of the early NASA communications satellites and the Mercury manned space program, retiring after 34 years of government service. He was a World War II veteran.
1956 Donald J. Gallagher (B.S.) of
Chambersburg, Pa.
19 5 7 Thomas McCoy (B.A.) of
Philadelphia, Pa., on June 21, 2004. He was a veteran of the Korean War.
19 6 4 Francis X. laquinto (B.S.) of
Gwynedd Valley, Pa., on Aug. 23, 2004.
19 6 8 Patrick Belle (B.S.) of Oradell, N.J., June 2004.
Joseph E. Connery Jr. (B.S.) of
Conshohocken, Pa., on Sept. 1, 2004.
19 6 9 Thomas J. Witkowski (B.S.)
19 7 2 James A. Lynch III, Esq. (B.A.) of
Havertown, Pa., on Aug. 14, 2004. He studied his family's genealogy and traced his lineage on his father's side to Thomas Jefferson.
19 7 8 William A. Donnelly Jr. (B.S.) on July 20, 2004, in his home in Northeast Philadelphia, Pa. He was a retired U.S.
Postal Service executive and a sports devotee.
19 8 7 John R. Helwig (B.A.) of Glenside, Pa., on June 23, 2004.
1990 Sean M. Halpin, Esq. (B.A.) of
Philadelphia, Pa., on July 10, 2004. He served as class president while at La Salle. He was partner at the Law Offices of Reed- Smith in Philadelphia.
1996 Joanne Sonnelitter (M. B.A.) of
Buckingham, Pa., on Aug. 24, 2004. She was a marketing analyst and scout volunteer.
2 0 0 1 Patricia Sarkis (B.A.) of Chihuahua, Mexico, June 2004.
Annual Alumni Association Awards Bestowed on November 19
Frank P. Cervone, Esq.,
received La Salle University's
Signum Fidei Award on Nov.
19, 2004, in honor of his
noteworthy contributions to
the advancement of
humanitarian principles in
keeping with Christian-Judeo
traditions of the University.
As Executive Director of the
Support Center for Child
Advocates, Cervone has been
working with children and
public interest issues for much of his professional life.
Formerly, he was a teacher and counselor at St. Gabriel's
Hall in Audubon, a Christian Brothers-run facility for
juveniles.
On the same evening, James J. Lynch, 71, and Charles Quattrone, 72, received the John J. Finley, '24, Award, given annually to alumni who have exhibited outstanding service to the University and the Alumni Association.
A longtime member and current Chair of the University's
Frank P. Cervone, Esq.
Charles Quattrone. 12
lames I. Lynch, 77
Board of Trustees, Lynch has been a tireless advocate for advancing the University's partnership with its alumni and strengthening their relationships with one another.
As former president of the Alumni Association, Quattrone provided the leadership necessary to shepherd the reorganization of the Association, which continues to develop and provide the programs and services that afford alumni the opportunity to connect with one another and the University.
Kathleen Burns. '75, M.B.A |
,'80 |
Walter P. Lomax Jr., NED., 'S3 |
Chairman. Board of Trustees |
Maj. Gen. William F. Burns, |
'54 |
Joseph F. Mahon, F.S.C, '62 |
James J. Lynch. '71 |
lames L. Butler. F.S.C.. '82 |
Morton S. Mandell, M.D. |
President of the Corporation |
|
Jose Cervantes Hernandez. |
ESC. |
Robert N. Masucci, '61 |
Michael J. McGinniss, F.S.C, Ph.D., '70 |
Robert J. Christian, '71 |
Sharmain Matlock-Turner |
||
). Russell Cullen Jr., '60 |
William J. McCormick Jr., '58 |
Vice President of the Corporation |
|
Thomas Curley, '70 |
Laura Kind McKenna |
Edward Sheehy, F.S.C. Ph.D., '68 |
|
Kevin Dalmasse, F.S.C., '81 |
Michael |. McKenna. '62 |
Associate Professor |
|
I lenry G. De Vincent, M.D. |
'56 |
G. Dennis O'Brien. Ph.D. |
History Department |
Leon E. Ellerson. '56 |
David T Poiesz, '80 |
Treasurer of the Corporation |
|
Timothy J. Froehlich, F.S.C. |
.'90 |
The Hon. Joseph Rodriguez. SS |
David C. Fleming. '67 |
James Gaffney, F.S.C, D.Min. |
Carmen V. Romeo, '6s |
Vice President for Business Affairs |
|
Nicholas A. Giordano. '6? |
William R. Sasso, Esq., '69 |
||
Elmer F. (Bud) Hansen Jr.. |
58 |
William R. Sautter. C PA.. '71 |
Legal Advisor Louis A. Petroni, Esq., '77 |
J. Anthony Hayden. '67 |
Robert Schieler, F.S.C, Ed.D. '72 |
||
William J. Henrich Jr. Esq.. |
'SO |
Eileen H. Slawek |
|
John Johnston. F.S.C. |
Kristina L. Wahl. '97 |
||
Nicholas J. Lisi, Esq., '62 |
Joseph J. Willard. ESC. '64 |
LASALLE UNIVERSITY
LA SALLE MAGAZINE Philadelphia, PA 19141