DONOR REPORT
BELIEVE IN CHESTNUT HILL COLLEGE
CELEBRATING
90 YEARS OF EXCELLENCE!
BELIEVE There are many reasons to believe in the College. “I believe because of the people who constitute the College community: administrators, faculty, staff, students, alumni — each and all, women and men of values — who serve others with integrity and justice, whose inclusive, welcoming attitude creates a campus environment characterized by hospitality and animated by the active, intentional pursuit of peace and unity.” Carol Jean Vale, SSJ, Ph.D. President
MISSION STATEMENT
DONOR REPORT
THE MISSION OF CHESTNUT HILL COLLEGE IS TO PROVIDE STUDENTS WITH HOLISTIC EDUCATION IN AN INCLUSIVE CATHOLIC COMMUNITY MARKED BY ACADEMIC EXCELLENCE, SHARED RESPONSIBILITY, PERSONAL AND PROFESSIONAL GROWTH, SERVICE TO ONE ANOTHER AND TO THE GLOBAL COMMUNITY, AND CONCERN FOR THE EARTH.
Chestnut Hill College, founded by the Sisters of Saint Joseph in 1924, is an independent, Catholic institution that fosters equality through education. Faithful to its strong liberal arts tradition, Chestnut Hill College offers academic programs of excellence in the areas of undergraduate, graduate, and continuing studies. True to its Catholic heritage, Chestnut Hill College espouses the beliefs and values inherent in the Judeo-Christian tradition while it respects the contributions made by other faith traditions in the development of the whole person. The College nurtures a sense of integrity, spirituality, and social justice in all. The College community dedicates itself to four purposes in fulfilling this mission. It seeks:
• to provide avenues for students to achieve academic excellence and to pursue research in their major field or in interdisciplinary studies. The College encourages students to explore and experience diverse curricula and to participate in exchange programs with other institutions of higher education.
• to initiate links between the world of learning and the world of work through curricular planning, technological opportunities, and career preparation. The College guides students in applying theoretical learning through experiential education designed collaboratively by faculty and students.
• to uphold an atmosphere of communal respect in which all may clarify and articulate personal values and beliefs while exploring the ethical and moral dimensions underlying all relationships. The College encourages inter-faith opportunities by acquainting all students with Catholicism, its theology and its Judeo-Christian roots, and by engaging in dialogue with women and men of other beliefs.
• to create local and global connections that enable students to respond to the needs of others through serviceoriented enterprises. The College educates students to identify and to address issues of social justice and to work toward systemic change.
Approved by the Chestnut Hill College Board of Directors October 7, 2002
CONTENTS Letter from the President 2 Letter from the Chair of the Board 5 Financial Report 6 The Caritas Society 8 President’s Circle 10 Hallmark Society 14 ASPIRE.BELIEVE.COMMIT. Campaign 16 Tribute Fund 20 Alumni Giving 22 • School of Undergraduate Studies 22 • School of Continuing & Professional Studies 34 • School of Graduate Studies 36 Reunion Giving Fund 28 2014 Senior Class Gift Drive 30 Endowed Scholarships 32 Parents & Friends 38 Matching Gift Companies 40 Gifts-in-Kind 40 Corporations, Organizations & Foundations 40 Annual Scholarship Gala Committee & Sponsors 42 2013 Golf Invitational Committee & Sponsors 43 CHC Board of Directors 44 Alumni Association Board of Directors 45 Supporting the Future of CHC 46 When, How, and Why to Plan a Gift 48 Donor Profiles: • Eileen Long Hessman ’60 9 • Ken and Janet Brown Quintal ’70 15 • Judith Campbell ’69 19 • Katherine Patricia Sullivan Croak ’49 21 • Kathleen Reilly Gallagher ’65 31 • Marie Conn, Ph.D. 37 • Mary Katherine Ortale ’16 41
LETTER FROM THE PRESIDENT
DONOR REPORT
My Dear Friends and Benefactors of Chestnut Hill College,
H
enry van Dyke writes, “Gratitude is the
We are creating a space on these two
This morning, I met an older woman in
up around football create a fall magic that the
inward feeling of kindness received.
beautiful hills where American and international
Chestnut Hill who told me that she comes
cooler weather and painted landscape magnify.
Thankfulness is the natural impulse
students meet, study, compete, socialize and
to the College regularly for water aerobics.
From pep rallies to tailgating to the game itself,
to express that feeling. Thanksgiving is the
converse in ways that bridge differences and
She said that she has been “deeply impressed by
people gather to celebrate their college and
following of that impulse.” As I wrote this
foster unity. Conscious of the larger global
how nice our students are.” Few observations
cheer the players to victory.
message with Thanksgiving approaching, it gave
community, students and graduates help
could make me happier than hearing those
me joy to recall the many ways in which our
alleviate pain and suffering as well as provide
words from a neighbor. Often I am delighted
alumni, parents, friends and the Chestnut Hill
educational opportunities for the world’s
by the generosity, warmth, affability, respect
College community supported us during the
unschooled populations. Members of the
and kindness of our students. That “indefinable
2013-2014 academic and fiscal year. Your many
College community do not merely talk about
special something,” alumni experienced while
gifts, which took multiple forms, bettered the
wanting to change the world, they are changing
studying here, still permeates the hearts and
institution in a variety of ways. Your belief in
it in ways I never would have imagined possible.
spirits of today’s younger generation who
our mission and in our vision for the College is evident in your financial contributions.
The advancement of the rights and dignity of all people, especially women and children, are
walk the halls and compete on our playing fields and courts.
Like everything at CHC, we will do football our way. We will recruit students who are academics first, athletes second. We will demand high standards of conduct from young men who will be expected to become examples of what is best in the CHC tradition. As is true in each of the sports on our athletic roster, we will stress the centrality of respect for self and others. Further, the College intends to support
There are many reasons to believe in the
evident in our work with the SSJ Welcome
During this past year, members of the
programs for all our male athletes that not only
College. I believe because of the people
Center, LaSalle Academy, Our Mother of
College’s board of directors, in consultation
inculcate an understanding of the dignity of all
who constitute the College community;
Sorrows and Unified for Uganda;
with the College community, made the decision
people, but also engender respect and reverence
administrators, faculty, staff, students, alumni —
on service trips to the Bigwa School in
to approve sprint football as the institution’s
for women. The college years present an
each and all, women and men of values —
Tanzania and Appalachia; and through the
19th varsity sport. I am most excited about
unprecedented opportunity to shape attitudes.
who serve others with integrity and justice,
transforming work undertaken with the
the decision because of the potential it has to
It is an obligation we take seriously.
whose inclusive, welcoming attitude creates
African Sisters Education Collaborative.
gather us together as a College community in
a campus environment characterized by
So much is underway that it is difficult to
a common activity known to generate school
hospitality and animated by the active,
enumerate the services given to others by
spirit and foster unity. The traditions that grow
intentional pursuit of peace and unity.
members of the College community.
donor report 2014 » letter from the president 2
This past year, our Director of International Education worked assiduously to initiate
DONOR REPORT
and finalize agreements with a number of
FLS recruits its students from around the
generosity makes possible. Be assured that as
international universities to provide CHC
world, bringing them to CHC for an intensive,
this Thanksgiving dawned, I gave sincere thanks
students and international students with a wide
language-immersion experience that prepares
for you and for your kindness to this
variety of study abroad experiences. Affordable
them to succeed in United States’ colleges
special institution. Blessings to each of you.
agreements are now in place with institutions in
and universities. These several dozen students
England, France, Belgium, Mexico, Denmark,
add to the growing number of international
Portugal, South Korea, Spain and Chile.
students enrolled at the College and create a
Students enrolled in any of the participating
lively global community representative of the
universities can come to Chestnut Hill and
world in which we live. Sharing their culture
Sister Carol Jean Vale, SSJ, Ph.D.
vice versa. Those who take advantage of these
with current students through various social
President
opportunities will benefit not only from a
activities is both educational and enjoyable
broadened understanding of another culture,
for all who attend. In addition, FLS summer
but also from the social and personal growth
programs invite high school students from
such experiences engender. Though we have
around the world to campus for
always offered international travel experiences,
special programs that have both academic
Chestnut Hill has never been able to provide
and cultural components. Needless to say,
a program with the breadth and depth of the
CHC anticipates enrolling first-year students
one we now have in place. As an added benefit
from both groups of visitors.
to our fine academic programs, study abroad will augment students’ curricular offerings and globalize the reach of the College.
With heartfelt thanks,
These are just a few highlights from the past year. Through your contributions, you actively support our students, their good
In addition, the Foreign Language Schools of
works and their academic successes. I cannot
America have made a home on our campus.
thank you enough for the opportunities your
letter from the president Âť donor report 2014
3
LETTER FROM THE CHAIR OF THE BOARD
DONOR REPORT
Dear Friends,
A
s I prepared to write this message, I found myself reflecting on
In these pages, you will read the stories of
the meaning of the gifts we have received through our affiliation
others who, grateful for the value they found
with Chestnut Hill College, and those we give in return.
at Chestnut Hill College, responded with gifts
As we all know, Chestnut Hill College has a unique culture, as a community founded by the dedicated Sisters of Saint Joseph, women
of all kinds in order that others may realize the same value.
who overcame dire obstacles to go out into the world and be of service
I have read that high-performing campus
to others. The mission and values of these women forged the buildings in
communities demonstrate a visible commitment
which we studied and are where our daughters and sons are educated.
to serving others, and nowhere is that more
Those values are lived out every day through the work done by our faculty and staff, and I feel the power of the mission every time I return to campus. I hear personal stories regularly from alumni who know they would not be the people they are today if not for their Chestnut Hill College education. As for myself, I know this to be true. Receiving a full scholarship allowed me to pursue my dream of becoming a teacher. As the eldest of nine, without that money, my route may have been quite different. You all know the quote: “You make a living by what you get and a life by what you give.” To me, that means serving the dear neighbor, another founding principle. If we graduate women and men who believe that part of their life’s goal is to serve others even in the smallest ways, that’s what is important to me. Life should encompass serving others every day in some way — not necessarily earth-shaking — but I believe that when you do something small every day that is meaningful to you, it will evolve into a larger passion, and it will shape your life. Chestnut Hill College and the teachers there put me on the path toward
apparent than at Chestnut Hill. We are partners with the institution in graduating women and men who will benefit the greater world. As part of this global community, we educate people who care about others and are willing to demonstrate that concern in meaningful ways. We teach our students that giving to others truly matters, and when we all live that way every day, even in small ways, we embody the importance of those lessons. And so it is with profound gratitude for my Chestnut Hill education and for each and every one of you that I encourage you to increase your involvement with the College,
Thank you! Sincerely,
to become a partner in making it possible to send succeeding generations of young people into the world, educated and ready to serve.
Margaret Carney McCaffery ’77 Chair, Board of Directors
realizing my innate love and talent for teaching and working with others.
letter from the chair of the board » donor report 2014 5
JULY 1, 2013 - JUNE 30, 2014
VOLUNTARY FINANCIAL SUPPORT FOR CHC CURRENT OPERATIONS Unrestricted Purposes2
CURRENT OPERATIONS Designated Purposes3
ALUMNI
$651,113
$106,345
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
34,570
PARENTS & FRIENDS
283,701
49,049
CORPORATIONS, ORGANIZATIONS & FOUNDATIONS
142,335
283,104
ENDOWMENT4
$325,013
$1,111,719
TOTAL
$864,257
TOTAL
$467,910
$1,550,381
73,896
108,466
223,650
34,105
590,505
6,108
186,167
617,714
410,000
835,759
$1,172,078
$3,702,825
425,759
GOVERNMENT
CAMPAIGN1
DONOR REPORT
$554,771
Includes all outright cash gifts and pledge payments for the campaign. Includes unrestricted gifts to Griffin Fund & Reunion Funds; undesignated bequests; Tribute Funds; Golf Invitational; Scholarship Gala; miscellaneous other. 3 Includes designated cash gifts; pledge payments; gifts/grants for academic & non-academic departments/programs; library acquisitions; campus ministry; academic scholarships; tuition awards. 4 Includes designated gifts/bequests to the general endowment; specific endowed scholarships; endowments for academic programs and lectures. 1
2
GIVING BY PURPOSE
GIVING BY CONSTITUENCY CAMPAIGN 32% CURRENT OPERATIONS Unrestricted Purposes 30%
CORPORATIONS, ORGANIZATIONS & FOUNDATIONS 17% ALUMNI 42%
ENDOWMENT 15%
GOVERNMENT 23%
CURRENT OPERATIONS Designated Purposes 23%
donor report 2014 Âť voluntary financial support for chc 6
PARENTS & FRIENDS 16%
BOARD OF DIRECTORS 3%
THE CARITAS SOCIETY
caritassociety
DONOR REPORT
Caritas is one of the three core values in Chestnut Hill College’s motto – Fides – Caritas – Scientia (Faith, Charity, Knowledge). The Caritas Society recognizes alumni and friends who have contributed or made irrevocable gifts of at least $500,000 in cumulative lifetime giving. Chestnut Hill College is most grateful to these donors for the transformative impact their gifts have on the College, its students and faculty.
PLATINUM MEMBERS ($5,000,000 +)
SILVER MEMBERS ($500,000 - $999,999)
The Sisters of Saint Joseph of Philadelphia
The Annenberg Foundation
The Commonwealth of Pennsylvania
The Association of Independent Colleges & Universities / PA
GOLD MEMBERS ($1,000,000 - $4,999,999)
Elinor Balsama*
Anonymous (1)
Dwight V. Dowley*
The Connelly Foundation
Francis J. "Tim" Dunleavy* and Albina Dunleavy*
Regina Cuta, M.D. ’56
Ruth Horcher ’50*
Joseph & M. Kathy Tigh Detrano ’67
James and Frances Maguire
J. Hugh & Anne O'Shea Devlin ’64
Joan Menaquale ’53*
Suzanne K. Dufrasne ’58
The Navesink Foundation
Mary Jackson Fitzsimmons ’35*
John Charles & Kathryn S. Redmond Foundation
Mr. & Mrs. John R. Cochran, III
Jack & Rosemary Murphy Gulati ’61 Rocco & Barbara D'Iorio Martino ’60 Michael & Margaret Carney McCaffery ’77 (D) Elizabeth Clime Lockyer Merriam ’42* The Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources The Pennsylvania Department of Education The Pennsylvania Higher Education Assistance Agency F. Michael Sharp in memory of Beverly Sharp The W.W. Smith Charitable Trust Harold & Ann Rusnack Sorgenti ’58 Rita Tofini ’38*
donor report 2014 » the caritas society 8
*Deceased
SHE FOUND
Gratitude
“I took for granted that women could be college presidents and heads of research teams, and publish, grow and change and do all that in a spiritual context … I realized what I had accepted as normal and had taken for granted was something to be grateful for. And I am.” Eileen Long Hessman ’60
A
fter her first year of classes at Chestnut Hill College, life changed dramatically for Eileen Long Hessman ’60. With the death of her father and loss of her family home, Hessman moved onto campus (she had commuted for three years of high school at Mount Saint Joseph Academy and her first year of college), which truly became her home. “The College was such an important part of my life. Everyone was very nurturing and caring. The friends I made there have become lifelong friends, and they helped me emerge from grief and loss,” Hessman recalls. “As the years have gone by and I’ve looked at how strong an education my friends and I had there, I’ve been amazed.” She remembers the Sisters of Saint Joseph as “not only administrators, but professors and role models who exhibited a tradition of perseverance and commitment to what they did, including education, values, critical thinking and formation of character.” She credits the experience with making gratitude a large part of her life. The psychology major/English minor studied hard. She swam with the team her first year,
sang in a small choral group throughout her stay and focused on academics. After graduation, at the beginning of the Kennedy era, Hessman moved to Washington, D.C., and shared an apartment with other CHC graduates. She worked with the U.S. Dept. of Labor, counseling young people and encouraging them to stay in school, and she helped establish a job corps program. While in Washington, she earned her master’s degree in English literature from Catholic University, and then she joined a volunteer group and traveled to Tokyo, where she taught English literature and writing for a year. “I had been looking for a way to combine psychology and English, and writing is one of the avenues to guiding young people. If they are in need of help, it shows up in their writing,” she says. When her teaching commitment was complete, rather than fly home, Hessman decided to see more of the world and took a ship halfway around the world, visiting and staying with friends of CHC or family.
A couple of events stand out for her from this unusual experience: “Around 1964, many people from Vietnam were on the ship,” she says. “They were Catholic, and their priest would hold Mass in the hold of the ship. I joined them, and the singing in Vietnamese was beautiful.” She disembarked in Alexandria and toured Cairo. Then she flew to Israel and stayed in the Franciscan House of Hospitality in Jerusalem, taking day trips from there. “I met some of the scholars who had been working on a new translation of the Bible, taking the newly discovered Dead Sea Scrolls into account.” She ended her journey in Rome, where her mother joined her to celebrate Christmas. It must have taken some measure of courage to set off on a ’round-the-world journey alone. She credits the Sisters of Chestnut Hill College. “They were not only nurturers, but they knew how to encourage others with their spirit. They had a ‘can-do’ attitude that just let you know that you could do whatever you set out to do in life — with God’s help, of course.”
In addition to attending reunions, serving on the alumni board in the 1980s and donating to the scholarship fund, Hessman and her husband, Andrew, established another fund — the Long-Hessman Endowed Fund, providing support for the CHC/SSJ Legacy Program. Hessman, who worked as a writer and editor for a time, raised two children, Sean and Annamarie. She volunteered in each of their schools, and, since they have grown, she has led intensive ecumenical Bible study groups. She also is an amateur investor and finance coach. Her life has been challenging, fun and diverse. “I took for granted that women could be college presidents and heads of research teams, and publish, grow and change and do all that in a spiritual context,” she says. “It meant that I could go out of Chestnut Hill and do it too. As I got older, I realized what I had accepted as normal and had taken for granted was something to be grateful for. And I am.”
donor report 2014
9
DONOR REPORT
PRESIDENT’S CIRCLE Joseph & M. Kathy Tigh Detrano ’67
Michael F. Dunleavy (D) & Nancy A. Dunleavy
Caroline M. Devine ’72
Betty Lou Froustet ’43
Catherine Devlin ’63
Stephen A. Gardner (D)
Suzanne K. Dufrasne ’58
James Ginty, J.D. (D) & Carol Ginty
Barrie Thomas Fahey ’59
Kent Griswold, Ph.D. (D) & Lori Griswold, Ph.D.
Steven Gordon, Ph.D. (D) &
Kenneth Hicks (A)
Mary Zuccarini Gordon ’85
Barbara Forrester Landis ’07 SGS
The Greer Foundation for The Carl & Patricia Tichenor Greer ’62 Scholars Program
Michael Lockyer & Jenna Pufko
Robert & E. Michelle Sprague Guerard ’66
John C. Del Buono & Bette A. Mammone
Robert & Isabelle Walsh Gundaker ’65
The Martin Foundation
Robert & Carol Lockyer
Ellen L. Miller ’68
Seymour & Miriam Gibbons Mandell ’61
National Railway Historical Society, Inc.
Katherine Marschall, M.D. ’69
Anna Connor O'Riordan, M.D. ’53
David & Carolyn Sagendorph Montgomery ’97
John L. Melvin, M.D. & Carol Melvin Pate, Ed.D. (S)
Shaun F. O'Malley (D) & Lyn Buchheit
Patricia Harper Petrozza, M.D. ’74
J. Hugh & Anne O'Shea Devlin ’64
C. Lowell Parsons, M.D. & JoEllen Noonan Parsons ’66 (D)
Susan M. Pisano ’71
The Thomas P. Nerney Family
G. Carter & Frances McCullen Pierce ’63
Kenneth & Janet Brown Quintal ’70 (D)
James & Margaret Jackson Quinn ’64
The W.W. Smith Charitable Trust
John Charles & Kathryn S. Redmond Foundation
Francis Reynolds ’94 SGS
Robert Riethmiller, Jr. (D) & Anne Riethmiller
Sharon Marie Rooney, M.D., Esq. ’64
The John Sabia Family
Vincent & Angela Clement Tague ’61
Jack Sandoski (D) & Kathleen Sandoski
Richard & Denise Bonner Wall ’58
Marilea Swenson ’67
Vincent Zarro, M.D. & Barbara Hogan Zarro, Ph.D. ’73 SCPS (F)
Anne E. Tezak ’76
Bronze Members ($5,000+)
Clara Tucker, Ph.D. ’52*
Platinum Members ($100,000+) Elinor Balsama* Commonwealth of Pennsylvania Marie DiBerardino, Ph.D. ’48* Jack Gulati & Rosemary Murphy Gulati ’61 Michael & Margaret Carney McCaffery ’77 (D) Marie E. Miller* Patricia Johnson Rauch, Ph.D. ’55*
Gold Members ($50,000+) Anonymous (1) Hilda E. Bretzlaff Foundation, Inc. James Galli James & Frances Maguire Joan Menaquale ’53*
Silver Members ($10,000+) 160over90 James & Patricia May Agger ’63 (D) Robert H. Agnew* Judith E. Campbell ’69 Patricia Chapman
Thomas Lynch, RADM, USN, Ret. (D)
Bernard & Joan Rafferty
John & Maureen Tierney Kathleen Wagner ’60 Harry & Marianne McGurk Wallaesa ’87, ’92 SGS
Joseph & Patricia Connolly (D)
Eileen O'Rourke Atkinson ’54
Paul & Sally Ann Ayerle Corbley ’73
Mary Ann Miller Beatty, Ph.D. ’59
Timothy J. Croak
Marion Berry ’63
Crown Holdings, Inc.
Mary E. Brandt, Ph.D. ’76
Copper Members ($2,500+)
Frank Davey (D) & Elaine Bennett Davey ’65
Helen Devine Coen ’55
The Arthur Jackson Company
Joseph P. Denny (D) & April Denny
Marie Conn, Ph.D. (F)
John M. Bellwoar
Joan Coyne ’52
Kathleen Clauss Borkowski ’68
donor report 2014 » president’s circle 10
President ’s
The President’s Circle donor categories provide an opportunity for Chestnut Hill College to recognize the generosity of our leadership donors whose consistent annual support is essential to the College’s financial strength. Members of the
CIRCLE
President’s Circle are individuals who have made a minimum contribution of $1,000 to the College for any purpose.
Louise Bradley ’52
David & Jodie King Smith ’94, ’01 SGS (A)
Helen Chaykowsky ’65
Anthony & Kathleen Keirle Dougherty, Ph.D. ’67
Cecile P. Speranza* Israel Concepcion & Lauri Strimkovsky, MBA (A)
Chartwells College & University Dining Services, Inc.
James & Elizabeth Jachimowicz Fanuzzi ’66
James & Kathleen Olsen Sullivan ’64
Jolande Jong Chiu ’58
Daniel & Cassie Florenzo
John & Regina Voelker Tauke ’60
Mary E. Christenson, M.D. ’62
Mary Catherine Gallagher ’70
Ronald Zemnick (D) & Carol Voelmle Zemnick ’75
Francis & Rosemary Magee Cicchiello ’61
William Dixon, Esq. & Kathleen Gavigan, Esq., Ph.D. ’62
John L. & Rosemarie C. O'Brien Cleaver ’58 George & Beverly Kray Connolly ’56
Robert G. & Isabelle Walsh Gundaker ’65
Pewter Members ($1,000+)
George J. Hartnett, Esq. (D)
Dawnlynne Cute-Allen, D.C. ’93
Barbara Cruse ’64
Eileen Long Hessman ’60
Allied Barton Security Services
William & Anne Daly Holland ’56
Linda A. Avila ’75
Edward Dachowski, M.D. & Alice Ann Gricoski Dachowski, M.D. ’77
Timothy & Aurora Marrero Hughes ’77
James & Anastasia Hagan Bacon, Ed.D. ’60
Deborah Davies
Robert & Valerie Mikula Hughes, D.D.S ’74
Wayne & Mary Moore Baker ’64
Marty & Judy Dennis
International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers - IBEW Local
The Bala House Montessori School
Mary Katherine Schubert Denny ’40
John & Maude Meehan Belli ’49
Michael & Gillian Horna Dezzutto ’84 Douglas & Kathleen Braun Dollenberg ’62
Karen Spencer Kelly, Esq. (D)
Harry J.J. Bellwoar, Esq. & Joan McDermott Bellwoar ’55
Charles Koch Foundation
H. Jay & Kathleen Bellwoar
Barbara Donovan ’61
Thomas & Lynn Kluepfel
Carolyn Bensel, Ph.D. ’63
Edmond & Sandra Kuback Dowling ’67
Joseph Kulkosky, Ph.D. (F)
Mary Merz Berko ’52
Duane Morris, LLP
Christian R. & Mary F. Lindback Foundation
Pamela Ann Black ’64
Joan Mathers Eaves ’52
Theresa R. Mazeika*
Blank Rome, LLP
Donald & Joanne McFadden McBride ’63
Edward & Janet Rutan Bowers ’56
Thomas & Cecelia Englebert-Passanza ’77 (AD)
Mary Lou Stafford McGill ’54
Bruce & Elissa Imbriaco Breiling ’61
Rosemary McCarron Flannery, Esq. ’43
Austin & Margaret Bennett McGreal ’60 (D)
William Brobst, Ph.D. & Susan Wentland Brobst, Ph.D. ’83
Theodore & Deborah Dougherty Flint ’59 Maryann Boehmer Froehlich ’58
Bill & Mary Noel Page
Sandra Bumgardner, Psy.D. ’76, ’89 SGS, ’03 SGS (S)
Martha Ranc, Ph.D. ’86
Doris M. Byrnes ’49 Donald & Noreen Kraska Caivano ’67
Mary Isabel Lambert Glenn ’61
Joan Toohey Rochford ’52 Arthur & Mary Kaufmann Ryan ’66
Robert & Kathleen Vath Campbell ’70
Maureen T. Savage
Francis & Joan Yates Carroll ’55
Helen Gruber ’52
T. James Kavanagh Foundation
Sean & Catherine Lockyer Moulton ’92 (D) Lisa Olivieri, SSJ, Ph.D. ’76 (F)
Joseph & Roberta Rini Cartlidge ’49 Lee A. Casaccio, AIA
Kathryn Lippman Conte ’49 Mary Lee Rothwell Corr ’60
Kathleen M. Donnelly ’59
Kathleen Heidere Ford ’63 Marcia Gehman, SSJ ’63 Paula Nyhart Gowen ’63 Elaine R. Green, Ed.D. (A) Cecilia Hunt Gregory ’63 Donald & Pamela Orsini Grimmé ’54
president’s circle » donor report 2014
11
John & Sarah Mansell Guilfoyle ’58
Hardy & Nancie Ann Kenny Moebius ’75
Kathleen McDermott Strott ’59
Thomas & Sandra Cupini Hagenbarth ’63
Boulton & Margaret Quinn Mohr ’58
Robert & Margaret Hetzer Stuart ’72
Thomas Curran & Mary Ann Haggerty, M.D. ’70
Blanche Haviland Moore ’50
Robert & Anne Brannan Teufel ’60
Margaret C. Moran ’67 (AD)
George Hines & Lois Trench-Hines ’64
Frances McCarron Harper ’48
Ruth Mulligan ’41
Lynn Tubman (A)
Haverford Trust Company
Ralph & Lois Hoffner Udicious ’58
A. Carl & Catherine O'Donoghue Helwig ’63
Ryan Murphy (S) & Krista Bailey Murphy, Ph.D. (A)
William & Helen Mikula Vassily ’60
AD
Chestnut Hill College Alumni Association Board of Director
Agnes Hendrick ’64
Janet Smith Murphy ’48
Susan Vath ’86
F
Chestnut Hill College Faculty
The Honickman Foundation
Francis & Nonie Glennon Murphy ’66
Mary Gallagher Wattis ’60
Gwendolen Forsyth Hurley ’58
Paul & Frances McCormick Murphy ’73
Elizabeth Sauter Weber, Ed.D. ’74
S
Chestnut Hill College Staff
James & Joan Edmund Husted ’68
Richard & Mary O'Gorman Murray ’74
S.R. Wojdak & Associates
Joseph E. Imbriaco
Patrick J. & Elizabeth Nolan ’11 SCPS
Ralph & Nina Buckley Yeager ’68
SCPS School of Continuing & Professional Studies
Joseph & Eileen Franz Franz Janssen ’64
Young Capital
Judith Bourgeois Jensen ’60
Daniel Mathews & Kathleen O'Boyle ’84, ’97 SGS (AD)
SGS School of Graduate Studies
John Jester
Michael & Barbara Griffiths Olivieri ’56
Kevin & Jennifer Johnson Kebea ’05, ’08 SGS (AD)
Brian Ortale, J.D. & Lynn Ortale, Ph.D. (A)
Louis Keeler, M.D. & Margaret Mary McDermott Keeler ’57
Dave & Lisa Fiorillo Perfidio ’84
Marilyn Heitzman Kehoe ’53
John & Patricia Plunkett
Edwin Kellerman, M.D. & Wilma Carson Kellerman, M.D. ’55
M. Nancy Burczewski Portland ’64
Colette Robillard Kelly ’53 Peter Kelsen
Mary Katherine Ortale ’16 Judith Perkins ’70
Richard & Helen Penza Powers ’58 William R. Powers Jr.
David & M. Catherine Kronbar Kibler ’63
James Quaremba, Esq. & Amelia Petitti Quaremba, Ph.D. ’64
Patrick & Julia Heitzman Koechlin ’66
Religious of the Assumption
Robert & Jo Anne DiGiacomo Lechowicz ’66
Laura Hentz Remmey ’52
Ernest & Sandra Glynn Lippe ’62
Steven R. Loeshelle, Esq. & M. Gervase Rosenberger, Esq. ’73
Janet Dugansky Lonney ’59
Philip & Barbara Stoll Russell ’59
Francis & Patricia Crane Lynch ’54
William & Gertrude Carlin Rutledge ’63
Thomas & Virginia Lynch
D. M. Sabia & Co., Inc.
Dorothy Kushlis Macfarlane, M.D. ’67
John Schipper, III, Ph.D.
John & Elizabeth Harvey Majane ’57
Richard & Mary Hutko Scholl ’71
Peggy Grant Malone ’46
Jean Schwartz, M.D. ’55
Robert & Joan Fitzpatrick Marvin ’51
Stephen* & Regina Maxwell Schwille ’65
Dorothy Wludyka Matthews, M.D. ’54
Mary Lou Sciarrillo ’66
Nancy Keeler McBride, Esq.
James & Patricia Duffy Shacklett ’06
Robert & Marilyn Johnson McCarron ’61
John & Elizabeth Shober ’96 SCPS
James & Regina Gercke McConnell ’58 Maureen MacLean McCord, Esq. ’58
Kenneth J. Soprano, Ph.D. (F) & Dianne Soprano, Ph.D.
Philip & Catherine Winter McDonnell ’45
Harold & Ann Rusnack Sorgenti ’58
Philip McGovern, Ph.D. & Mary McGovern
J. Clark & Alice Steinman
John & Helene Boffa McGuinn ’47
Robert Young, Esq. & Carol Steinour, Esq. ’82
Margaret Mary Green McLaughlin ’62
Peter & Sara Young Stoll ’62
George & Anne Duffy Mirsch ’52
Albert Stroble (S)
DONOR LIST DESIGNATIONS A Chestnut Hill College Administration D Chestnut Hill College Board of Director
SUS School of Undergraduate Studies
* Deceased
Donor names listed in this Donor Report reflect the donor’s total contribution, for all purposes, received by the College between July 1, 2013 and June 30, 2014. Donor names that are bolded indicate 10+ years of consecutive giving to the College. All matching gifts were included in the donor’s giving totals.
Steinway artist, Matthew Bengston, performed in concert as part of the Steinway Artist Series.
president’s circle » donor report 2014
13
hallmark society
HALLMARK SOCIETY
DONOR REPORT
Members of the Hallmark Society have expressed their commitment to Chestnut Hill College through a very special and
important form of financial support. These donors have named the College as the ultimate beneficiary of a planned gift. Such gifts might include a bequest and/or charitable income gifts, such as charitable gift annuities, charitable remainder unitrusts, charitable remainder annuity trusts or gifts of life insurance.
HALLMARK SOCIETY MEMBERS
Anonymous (5) Joseph & Bernardine Keeler Abbott ’51 Robert Agnew* Rita Ciotti Altman, Ed.D. ’53 Eileen O’Rourke Atkinson ’54 Linda A. Avila ’75 Elinor Balsama* Anna Marie Barone ’57 James F. Barr* Marita O’Reilly Beckum, Esq. ’61 Harry J.J. & Joan McDermott Bellwoar ’55 Mary Merz Berko ’52 Margaret Betz ’71 Marjorie Binder ’43 Margaret Farley Bold ’49* Elizabeth M. Bowden Louise Bradley ’52 Elissa Imbriaco Breiling ’61 Catharine Gallagher Brockway ’51 Betty Buckley* Doris M. Byrnes ’49 Patricia M. Canning ’70 Barbara A. Carli ’52 Marie Conn, Ph.D. (F) Margaret Conner ’43* Madeline Conti ’40 Elizabeth Marron Cooper ’71 Sally Ann Ayerle Corbley ’73 Joan Coyne ’52 Marjorie Piga Crain ’48 Elizabeth Croake ’52 Robert C. & Ellen Jane Pariset Crosson ’50* Robert* & Leonore Smith Crowley ’37* Barbara Cruse ’64 Ann Tushim Csink ’61 Christopher Papa, M.D. & Regina Cuta, M.D. ’56
Theresa Stepkowicz Cute (S) E. Loretta Daly ’47* Deborah Davies Donald & Carole Sarubbi de Castro ’54 Eileen Menegus Debesis ’67 Mary Katherine Schubert Denny ’40 Joseph & M. Kathy Tigh Detrano ’67 Adelaide DiBerardino ’48* Marie DiBerardino, Ph.D. ’48* Sally Ann Donnelly ’53* Barbara Donovan ’61 Clara McNierney Doyle ’54 Suzanne K. Dufrasne ’58 Joan M. Enright ’58* Mary Catherine O’Brien Fallon ’45 Patricia O’Conor Farley ’47* Joanne Fink ’76 Mary Jackson Fitzsimmons ’35* Kathleen Heidere Ford ’63 Adele M. Foy* Betty Lou Froustet ’43 Kathleen Reilly Gallagher ’65 Rita Gallo ’78 Bettyanne Geikler ’52 N. A. Gillen ’69 Robert & Susan Berko Glass ’75 Lynn Cozza Goodman ’63 A. Marie Fath Greenwood ’33* Helen A. Gruber ’52 Joseph & Carol-Jane Piltz Guardino ’66 Robert L. & Shelley Sprague Guerard ’66 Joan Burnham Guokas ’40* Joseph C. & Barbra Bianco Hagan Mary Margaret Hamill ’70 Marguerite Maguire Hauser ’53* Barbara Henkels Paul Henkels*
donor report 2014 » hallmark society 14
Mathilde Wackerman Higgins ’36* George G.* & Shirley Keiser Hoberg ’47 Mary-Jo Heile Hogan ’48* Ruth Horcher ’50* Elizabeth A. Rowley Jones ’66 Patricia R. Kane-Vanni, Esq. ’75* Mary Ann Keegan ’45 Margaret Mary McDermott Keeler ’57 Kathleen Corcoran Keene ’68 Edwin Kellerman, M.D. & Wilma Carson Kellerman, M.D. ’55 Nancy Day Kelley, Ph.D. ’71 Patricia Kilmartin ’40 Cecile Heebner Knies ’63 Joan M. Kristoff ’65 Joseph Kulkosky, Ph.D. (F) Helen Kurz ’50 Joan Gerard Larkin ’52 Anne Rogers Law ’43* Ellen Logue ’47* Patricia E. Lyons Jane M. MacDermott ’45* Janice Maffei ’75 Elizabeth Harvey Majane ’57 Adele Przybylowski Majka ’43 Peggy Grant Malone ’46 Katherine Marschall, M.D. ’69 Isabel Elcock Martin, R.N. ’39* Theresa Regina Mazeika ’57* Barbara Wenthe McCarthy ’60 Catherine J. McConville* Patricia Lawson McDaniel ’50 Catherine Winter McDonnell ’45 Peter McGlinchy Anna Marie McKenna ’58 Elizabeth Meehan ’52* Rita Hunter Squires Meehan ’46
Delia Schiavi Melograna ’42 Joan Menaquale ’53* Ellen L. Miller ’68 Margaret Quinn Mohr ’58 Blanche Haviland Moore ’50 Anne E. Moore ’51 Alma Dea Morani, M.D.* Natalie Nevins ’47* Robert & Christine Nydick ’94 SGS Dorothy H. O’Brien ’50* Helen C. Oels, M.D. ’53* Diane Napoli O’Grady ’57 Virginia Mitchell O’Neill ’50 Kathleen O’Pella ’76 Anna Connor O’Riordan, M.D. ’53 Dorothy Palatucci ’64 Judith Anne Paul ’70 John & Patricia Plunkett Mariann Pokalo, Ph.D. ’77 Joan Pollitt ’69 Mary Pollitt ’58 Christine Westrum Porter ’94 M. Nancy Burczewski Portland ’64 Catherine E. Quinn ’78 (S) Kenneth & Janet Brown Quintal ’70 (D) Bernard & Joan Rafferty Maurice P. Ranc Jr. Patricia Johnson Rauch, Ph.D. ’55 Frederick Rehmus* Joan Toohey Rochford ’52 Adam & Joan McFadden Sawoski ’57 Mary Lou Sciarrillo ’66 Nicholas & Marianne Murphy Semchuk ’07 SCPS, ’10 SGS (S) Clare Shanahan ’56 F. Michael Sharp Hugh J. P.* & Joan Eichenberg Sinclair ’53*
Catherine Sladowski, M.D. ’66* Christine Desrochers Smith ’60 Mary Schuhsler Spangler, Ed.D. ’64 Cecile P. Speranza* Marion L. Steet ’46* Mary Lou Steppacher ’58 Marilea Swenson ’67 Rosemarie Walsh Taima ’57* Regina Voelker Tauke ’60 Anne E. Tezak ’76 Maureen Schmidt Thielens ’62 Louise Torraco ’53* James V.* & Mary Connelly Tripodi ’37* Mary Thompson Wagman ’39* Kathleen Wagner ’60 Roger F. Sies & Andrea Wargo, Ph.D. ’72 Ann Meagher Williams ’50 Nina Buckley Yeager ’68
NEW MEMBERS Anonymous (2) Elizabeth Jachimowicz Fanuzzi ’66 Donald & Pamela Orsini Grimmé ’54 Patricia F. Kelleher ’48* Leilani Fairman McCall ’93 SCPS* Jerome & Martha Wilderotter McDevitt ’65 Marie E. Miller* Margaret C. Moran ’67 (AD) Mary Delia Tye Neuman, Ph.D. ’66 Laura Hentz Remmey ’52 Sharon Marie Rooney M.D., Esq. ’64 Joan Dunn Wiseman ’52 Jonathan & Rose Betz-Zall ’72 * Deceased
Willing to
Take a Left Turn
“I was often asked, ’How did you wind up
a master’s degree from Fordham. “I got an
here?’” says Quintal. “And I would say that
extensive, foundational education through these
language and finance both require attention
fascinating courses,” she says.
to detail. That really matters.”
Janet Brown Quintal ’70 and her husband, Ken
J
anet Brown Quintal ’70 likes to say that when opportunity comes along, you have to be willing to take a left turn —
meaning, never say, “That’s not my field,” or
While growing up about a mile from the beach
at Red Bank Catholic in New Jersey, she met
in Neptune City, N.J., Quintal attended
her husband, Ken, and moved to his home in
St. Rose Catholic School (from first grade through
Westchester County, N.Y. Unfortunately, there
12th) in Belmar, N.J., where she was taught
was a glut of teachers in that area at that time,
by the Sisters of Saint Joseph. Not only did she
and she switched careers, working first in a bank
spend every day with the Sisters, she and her
and then in corporate finance. She ultimately
The Quintals contributed regularly to CHC over
older sister often joined their mother in giving
earned her MBA at Pace University and worked
the years; to the Griffin Fund and to various
them rides to Chestnut Hill when necessary,
for years in the finance departments of several
capital campaigns. Several of her employers
providing the girls early and regular exposure.
large Fortune 500 corporations in New York
also provided matching gifts, which doubled
and Connecticut. She retired from Reynolds
or sometimes tripled their donation. Then the
American in North Carolina. Today she serves
couple decided to create something in honor
CHC as a member of the Board of Directors.
of their fathers. “Both of our fathers wanted to,
It was common for young women from St. Rose to continue their education in a Catholic college, and both Brown daughters were accepted at Chestnut Hill.
be fearful of a chance to try something new.
“I had a deal with my father,” says Quintal.
Simply go with the flow and move forward.
“He agreed to pay my board if I won a tuition
That willingness to be courageous and move past doubt has led her down many interesting paths in her life, including the one that directed
During the time Quintal was a language teacher
“If someone hadn’t donated to some sort of fund [when I was a student], I couldn’t have gone. And my whole life would have been different ... Donating is just the right thing to do.”
scholarship, which I did. And I graduated debt-free.” Quintal graduated with a degree in French
her to a successful career in finance after being
and a minor in Spanish, and also studied Latin
trained (and working as) a language teacher.
and Russian, in which she ended up earning
The Quintals face life as a team, and as such, decided years ago to become donors to Chestnut Hill College. As she says, “If someone hadn’t donated to some sort of fund [when
and should have, continued their educations, but neither was able to because of the time — because of the Depression and family situations,” she says.
I was a student], I couldn’t have gone. And
So in 2011 the Quintals established the Brown/
my whole life would have been different. My
Quintal Endowed Scholarship in memory of
education at Chestnut Hill allowed me to have
the two men whose hard work and self-sacrifice
a successful career. Donating is just the right
helped enable their children’s successful lives.
thing to do.”
The Quintals add to the scholarship each year, and to date, two grants have been made.
donor report 2014
15
We thank our donors who are making the ASPIRE.BELIEVE.COMMIT. comprehensive campaign a priority in their philanthropic lives. Donors recognized on this list include those who have made: • Campaign pledges and gifts of $10,000 or more since the public phase of the campaign launched in September 2012. • Pledges and gifts of $10,000 or more during the silent phase of the campaign, July 2008 through September 2012. • Pledges and gifts of $10,000 or more for SugarLoaf Hill renovations during the nucleus phase of the campaign, July 2006 through June 2008. A comprehensive list of all campaign donors for gifts and pledges will be celebrated at the conclusion of the ASPIRE.BELIEVE.COMMIT. campaign.
Campaign Gifts and Pledges Anonymous (3)
Vincent* & Marion Williams Berry ’63
Barbara Carli ’52
Paul & Sally Ann Ayerle Corbley ’73
160over90
Marjorie Binder ’43
Lee A. Casaccio
Timothy J. Croak
James & Patricia May Agger ’63 (D)
Albert* & Rose Anne Alfisi Blomer ’47
Young-Shin Chang ’59
Barbara Cruse ’64
Estate of Robert H. Agnew
Kathleen Clauss Borkowski ’68
Patricia Chapman
Christopher Papa, M.D. & Regina Cuta, M.D. ’56
Eileen O'Rourke Atkinson ’54
Mary E. Brandt, Ph.D. ’76
Chappell Culpeper Family Foundation
Estate of E. Loretta Daly ’47
Estate of Elinor Balsama
Bruce & Elissa Imbriaco Breiling ’61
Chartwells College & University Dining Services, Inc.
Glenda Battistini Daulerio ’73
Estate of Grace Banks
Hilda E. Bretzlaff Foundation, Inc.
Pat & Renee Clifton
Frank Davey (D) & Elaine Bennett Davey ’65
Mary Ann Miller Beatty, Ph.D. ’59
Scott Browning, Ph.D. (F)
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania
Louis & Frances Horan Del Duca, Esq. ’50
Richard & Constance Murray Becker ’57
Anita Louise Bruno, SSJ ’62
Helen Devine Coen ’55
Joseph P. Denny (D) & April Denny
Harry J.J. Bellwoar, Esq. & Joan McDermott Bellwoar ’55
Estate of Betty Buckley
Marie Conn, Ph.D. (F)
Joseph & M. Kathy Tigh Detrano ’67
Sandra Bumgardner, Psy.D. ’76, ’89 SGS, ’03 SGS (S)
Joseph & Patricia Connolly (D)
Caroline M. Devine ’72
donor report 2014 » ASPIRE.BELIEVE.COMMIT. 16
Estate of Sally Donnelly ’53
Marguerite Kearns, SSJ ’39*
National Collegiate Athletic Association
Barbara Donovan ’61
Louis Keeler, M.D. & Margaret Mary McDermott Keeler ’57
The Navesink Foundation
Estate of Jane Harney Donovan ’45 Doran Family Foundation Estate of Cecile P. Driscoll Speranza Suzanne K. Dufrasne ’58
Francis X. Keeley, M.D. & Marie McDermott Keeley ’52 John & Kathleen Corcoran Keene ’68
Thomas & Jill Nerney ’83 SGS Jeff Niessen & Elizabeth A. Schlosser ’84 The Estate of Natalie Nevins ’47 Thomas & Margaret Conlan O'Brien ’62
Michael F. Dunleavy (D) & Nancy A. Dunleavy
Edwin Kellerman, M.D. & Wilma Carson Kellerman, M.D. ’55
Joan Enright ’58
John & Nancy Day Kelley, Ph.D. ’71
Anna Connor O'Riordan, M.D. ’53
Barrie Thomas Fahey ’59
Karen Spencer Kelly, Esq. (D)
Brian Ortale, J.D. & Lynn Ortale, Ph.D. (A)
Jane Marie Fearn-Zimmer, Esq. ’88 (AD)
The Patricia Kind Family Foundation
Mary Katherine Ortale ’16
Kevin & Lisa Feeley ’00 SCPS, ’13 SGS
Charles & Patricia Walsh King ’67
Bill & Mary Noel Page
The Honorable James J. Fitzgerald III & Carol McCullough Fitzgerald (D)
Joseph Kulkosky, Ph.D. (F)
C. Lowell Parsons, M.D. & JoEllen Noonan Parsons ’66 (D)
Estate of Mary Fitzsimmons ’35 Estate of Adele M. Foy Betty Lou Froustet ’43 James Galli Stephen A. Gardner (D) Marcia Gehman, SSJ ’63 James Ginty, J.D. (D) & Carol Ginty Steven Gordon, Ph.D. (D) & Mary Zuccarini Gordon ’85 The Greer Foundation for The Carl & Patricia Tichenor Greer ’62 Scholars Program Kent Griswold, Ph.D. (D) & Lori Griswold, Ph.D. Jack Gulati & Rosemary Murphy Gulati ’61 Robert & Isabelle Walsh Gundaker ’65 David & Deanna Drake Hagan ’63 George J. Hartnett, Esq. (D) Nan Hechenberger, Ph.D.* Eileen Long Hessman ’60 Kenneth Hicks (A) Estate of Mathilde Wackerman Higgins ’36 Shirley Kieser Hoberg ’47 Richard & M. Joan McGonigal Hofmann ’63 Estate of Mary-Jo Heile Hogan ’48 William & Anne Daly Holland ’56 James & Joan Edmund Husted ’68 Joseph E. Imbriaco Michael & Kathleen Boyle Jarvis ’62
Richard Lackman, M.D. & Doranne Lackman Ernest & Sandra Glynn Lippe ’62 Robert & Carol Lockyer Estate of Ellen Logue ’47 Thomas & Virginia Lynch Thomas Lynch, RADM, USN (ret.) (D) Estate of Jane MacDermott ’45 James & Frances Maguire John C. Del Buono & Bette A. Mammone Samuel P. Mandell Foundation Katherine Marschall, M.D. ’69 Rocco & Barbara D'Iorio Martino ’60 Estate of Theresa R. Mazeika Michael & Margaret Carney McCaffery ’77 (D) Peter J. McGlinchy (D) & Cheryl McGlinchy Austin & Margaret Bennett McGreal ’60 (D) Robert McNeil, Jr. Estate of Joan Menaquale ’53 Metanexus Institute Ellen L. Miller ’68 Marie E. Miller* George & Anne Duffy Mirsch ’52 David & Carolyn Sagendorph Montgomery ’97 Blanche Haviland Moore ’50 Sean & Catherine Lockyer Moulton ’92 (D) Ryan Murphy (S) & Krista Bailey Murphy (A)
Shaun F. O'Malley (D) & Lyn Buchheit
Kenneth J. Soprano, Ph.D. (F) & Dianne Soprano, Ph.D. Harold & Ann Rusnack Sorgenti ’58 J. Clark & Alice Steinman Peter & Sara Young Stoll ’62 Israel Concepcion & Lauri Strimkovsky, MBA (A) Surdna Foundation, Inc. Vincent & Angela Clement Tague ’61 John & Regina Voelker Tauke ’60 Alyce Taylor ’97 Robert & Anne Teufel Anne E. Tezak ’76 Alexis & Maureen Schmidt Thielens ’62*
Charles & Nancy McCarthy Pashley ’78
M. Regina O'Neill Thomas ’51
PA Dept. of Conservation and Natural Resources
Mary Connelly Tripodi ’37
Patricia Harper Petrozza, M.D. ’74
Clara Tucker, Ph.D. ’52*
G. Carter & Frances McCullen Pierce ’63
Kathleen Wagner ’60
Susan M. Pisano ’71
Richard & Denise Bonner Wall ’58
M. Nancy Burczewski Portland ’64
Harry & Marianne McGurk Wallaesa ’87, ’92 SGS
James Quaremba, Esq. & Amelia Petitti Quaremba, Ph.D. ’64
Karen S. Wendling, Ph.D. ’03 (F)
Kenneth & Janet Brown Quintal ’70 (D)
Woodrow Wendling, M.D., Ph.D. & Susan Wendling
Philip F. & Susan Roberts Radomski ’86
Vincent Zarro, M.D. & Barbara Hogan Zarro, Ph.D. ’73 SCPS (F)
Estate of Patricia Johnson Rauch, Ph.D. ’55
Ronald Zemnick (D) & Carol Voelmle Zemnick ’75
Laura Hentz Remmey ’52 Francis Reynolds ’94 SGS Stan & Sherri Retif ’09 SGS Robert Riethmiller, Jr. (D) & Anne Riethmiller The John Sabia Family Jack Sandoski (D) & Kathleen Sandoski John & Margaret Higgins Schmitt ’92 Mary Lou Sciarrillo ’66 Frank Sessa F. Michael Sharp Estate of Hugh & Joan Sinclair Sisters of Saint Joseph of Philadelphia Catherine Sladowski, M.D. ’66* David & Jodie King Smith ’94, ’01 SGS (A) The W.W. Smith Charitable Trust
ASPIRE.BELIEVE.COMMIT. » donor report 2014
17
Learning how to think with
Confidence
Judith Campbell ’69
S
he graduated from college at a time when women often went from cap and gown to wedding gown — expecting to be married and have children, not a career. For Judith E. (Judy) Campbell ’69, that may have been enough. Yet as she says — as a woman now just a dissertation away from her Ph.D. in history and with a long career in finance — “You never really know what life is going to send your way.” Campbell chose to attend Chestnut Hill College because of its strong academic program and because it was small enough that she could be an individual, but large enough that there was a lot going on. Originally majoring in psychology, Campbell became hooked on history, thanks to Professor John Lukacs, a prolific writer and renowned
“We came out [of Chestnut Hill] knowing that we could do certain things and never questioning that we could figure out how to do most anything else necessary.”
expert on the Cold War, and chair of the history department for nearly 30 years.
sold real estate. And then she got divorced and needed a job.
“In order to take his classes, I had to major in history,” she says. And she switched, never looking back. “I had more history credits than I needed. I took every one I could fit into my schedule. I learned how to think and analyze around a topic I loved.”
Through a real estate connection, she was introduced to someone at Chemical Bank in New York City, where she went to work, eventually working her way up to senior vice president, managing large parts of the retail bank division.
When not studying, Campbell played basketball for three years, lacrosse for a year and was a diver with the swim team. She also was the editor of the Aurelian in her senior year.
“Clearly the tools I learned at Chestnut Hill helped me succeed,” she says. “My ability to analyze problems and come up with solutions, to think clearly and to deal with a variety of people with confidence … We came out [of Chestnut Hill] knowing that we could do certain things and never questioning that we could figure out how to do most anything else necessary. We were challenged, which gave us self-confidence.”
Campbell did, indeed, marry shortly after graduation and had three children. She remained active in pursuits she found interesting — as a volunteer with the League of Women Voters and her local church, where she helped establish a preschool. And for a time she
Campbell ultimately retired, as chief information officer, from NY Life Insurance Co. Barely skipping a beat, she returned to the classroom, and earned her master’s degree in history in 2010 from Drew University, in Madison, N.J. She plans to defend her doctoral dissertation next year. Throughout her career, Campbell consistently contributed to her alma mater, and even though she has retired, NY Life continues to match her gifts. Aside from her financial support, Campbell also has served as a board member for several years. She received the Distinguished Alumni Achievement Award in 2004. “I’ve always thought I’ve had a very successful life in large part because of Chestnut Hill College,” she says. “I believe there is a direct correlation, and don’t think I would have been as successful without it.”
donor report 2014
19
TRIBUTE FUND
TRIBUTE
fund
During the 2014 fiscal year, Chestnut Hill College received
contributions honoring or memorializing the following individuals.
IN HONOR OF
IN MEMORY OF
The 80th birthday of Joan McDermott Bellwoar ’55
James Barry
The 50th wedding anniversary of Frank & Rosemary Magee Cicchiello ’61
Mary Jane Dougherty Barry ’48
Robert Duffy
Sister George Edward Conway, SSJ
The birthday of Joan Eaves ’52
Marie DiBerardino, Ph.D. ’48
Mary Levin Englebert ’50
Valerie Dixon’s brother
Alexandria Golding ’13
Maryanne Rafferty Dunmire ’57
Olivia Gorczynski
Frank Eaves
The marriage of Cathy Lockyer ’92 (D) to Sean Moulton, May 30, 2009
Sister Miriam Elizabeth, SSJ
The 90th birthday of Ruth Mulligan ’41
Nicholas J. "Pete" Englebert
The 95th birthday of Ruth Mulligan ’41
Mary Fabiani
The retirement of Christine Nydick ’94 SGS
Sara Marie Young Kane '40
Kathleen O'Boyle ’84, ’97 SGS
Angelina Marandola
John "Jack" O'Brien
Marie E. Miller
Lisa Olivieri, SSJ, Ph.D. ’76 SCPS (F)
Jacqueline O'Donnell
Carol Melvin Pate, Ed.D. (S)
Paul Rienzi
Nancy Diamond Roche ’65
Barbara Wilderotter Rinkor ’46
The 70th birthday of Phyllis Roche ’65
Leonard Siegel
Regina Maxwille Schwille ’65
Mark Ulakovic
Ann Rusnack Sorgenti ’58
William I. Weber
Kathleen M. Spigelmyer ’98 (S) Anne Brannan Tuefel ’60
donor report 2014 » tribute fund 20
DONOR REPORT
A
long with his five siblings, Timothy Croak decided to honor the life and memory of their mother by establishing a fund at Chestnut Hill College in her name. The Patricia Sullivan Croak ’49 Endowed Scholarship provides a partial tuition award to a full-time undergraduate student, with the first award made in the 2013-14 academic year.
CHILDREN HONOR A
Special Woman
“Although she had not an ounce of ego in her body in promoting herself, she would not shy away from this scholarship [in her honor]. She would be touched, and would recognize it as something good.” Katherine “Pat” Sullivan and her two sisters (Marguerite and Rosemary) all attended CHC; her older sister, Rosemary, then took her vows as a Sister of Saint Joseph. The College was important to the family — their mother believed strongly in the Chestnut Hill educational opportunity. “Our mother was a tremendous influence on each one of us in countless ways, and she passed away when she was only 53, from cancer after a long struggle,” says Croak. “When we decided we wanted to honor her life, we knew Chestnut Hill was the logical place. Her college was so important to her.” Pat Sullivan was involved on campus as a member of Sodality for four years, International Relations Club (IRC) for three, the Dorian
Club for two and the German Club for one year. Her faith and the church played important roles in her life and she lived this faith in a quiet, yet active, way. “All of us remember clearly when she befriended an elderly shut-in woman, inviting her to stay in our house for a time. And we had six kids and only four bedrooms,” Croak recalls. “The things she did, she did silently, and under the radar. Her time was always at a premium, but she was aware of what needed to be done for others. If there was a need, you could count on her to recognize it. She was life-inspiring. “I think I speak for all my siblings when I say that our mother lived with tremendous integrity and never boasted. We all remember that,” he adds. “But most of all, we remember her
Katherine Patricia Sullivan Croak ’49 in her senior yearbook.
reservoir of patience. That has stayed with us over the years.”
bathroom and a basement. She was amazing at doing projects,” he adds.
Croak also fondly remembered some of his mother’s habits when he read the inscription in her yearbook:
She knows every radio mystery.
She looks wonderful in hats, but refuses to wear them.
She always loved to read, especially mysteries,” he recalls with a laugh. “And she loved to watch Columbo and Murder She Wrote.”
“She was modest and shy about drawing attention to herself in public,” he says. “I do remember her wearing a pillbox hat once to church when I was about 10 and an altar boy.”
“Although she had not an ounce of ego in her body in promoting herself, she would not shy away from this scholarship [in her honor]. She would be touched, and would recognize it as something good,” he says.
Keeps a scrapbook for future in interior decoration.
“And she would have enjoyed the letter we received from the first recipient, thanking us and letting us know how much she appreciated it.”
“She painted watercolors of natural scenes, sewed her own curtains and renovated a
donor report 2014
21
SCHOOL OF UNDERGRADUATE STUDIES
Undergraduate
The percentage listed next to each class represents
STUDIES
the total participation rate for the fiscal year.
CLASS OF 1937 (1%) Conchetta Di Maria McCausland
Sarah Hodson Connor Helene Purtell McIntyre* Lucille Cox Novotny
CLASS OF 1940 (25%)
CLASS OF 1945 (27%)
Madeline Conti Mary Katherine Schubert Denny Lee Bailey MacMurtrie
Vera Kolarsick Balceniuk Mary Catherine O'Brien Fallon* Charlotte Maley Hall Mary Ann Keegan Catherine Winter McDonnell Isabelle Latorre Scaran
CLASS OF 1941 (5%) Ruth Mulligan
CLASS OF 1942 (24%) Katherine Hinches Forsythe* Rita Cook Lade Delia Schiavi Melograna Jeanne Sweeney Nelson Eileen Hanks Suermann Dorothy Platner Way
CLASS OF 1943 (15%) Betty Kane Daily Rosemary McCarron Flannery, Esq. Betty Lou Froustet
CLASS OF 1944 (20%) Jane Delaney Blank Mariagnes O'Neill Brown
CLASS OF 1946 (29%) Anne Locke Bansbach Anna Marie Hummert Bertram Nancy Curtis Duzy Mary Therese Joyce Peggy Grant Malone Marjorie Erickson McDevitt Barbara Wilderotter Rinkor* Joan Kinney Yanni
CLASS OF 1947 (23%) Joan Van Bourgondien Condit Anne M. DeVenuto Grey Patricia Garrity Kasper Helene Boffa McGuinn Ann Brady McIntosh Jeanne Grant O'Neill Eileen Regan Plichta Mary Alice Dick Zink
CLASS OF 1948 (38%) Mary Jane Dougherty Barry* Marie DiBerardino, Ph.D.* Gertrude O'Donnell Donze A. Klair McGlynn Filarsky Frances McCarron Harper Mary Claire O'Keefe McIntyre Loretta C. Moya Janet Smith Murphy Catherine Wilson O'Brien Mary Grace Uttinger Palis H. Jacqueline Jaixen Rabinovitz Mary Frances Reilly Rochford Doris Black Schaefer Mary Campbell Simons Marguerite D'Auria Szawlewicz
CLASS OF 1949 (29%) Patricia Tully Bannan Maude Meehan Belli Doris M. Byrnes Roberta Rini Cartlidge Adlyn Calomeni Ciampoli Kathryn Lippman Conte Mary Grace Coleman Crerand Margaret Roe Diemer Elizabeth Webb Dixon Helen Austermehle Dykhoff Isabel O'Connor Egan Margaret Kilbride Fausone Ruth Jones Hausheer Dorothea McEvoy Jordan
donor report 2014 Âť school of undergraduate studies class giving 22
Florence Jurewicz Korzinski Agnes Butsko Leonard Marylou Morgan Mullen Angela Sollami Tarangel Jeanne Marx Young
CLASS OF 1950 (35%) Irma Ashenbrenner Mary Connor Brandt Barbara MacCausland Clarke Frances Horan Del Duca, Esq. Rosemary McGranery Dougherty Mary Levin Englebert Joan McGuigan Evans Therese Garvey Fox Elizabeth Meier Greene Mary Crecca Kenny Marie Rosato King Helen Kurz Elizabeth Laufer, M.D. Patricia Lawson McDaniel Blanche Haviland Moore Joan Byrne Murphy Virginia Mitchell O'Neill Margaret McKernan Pfeifer Sally Quinney Ryan Patricia Stillmun Shelton* Marianne Taulane Ann Meagher Williams Helen Zeiser
CLASS OF 1951 (35%) Bernadette Power Barnhurst Patricia Whalen Bolger Caryl Brown Anne Callery Carney Phyllis Metz Carroll Carolyn Baldino Conboy Mary Mahoney Corini Kathleen Gillespie Patricia Higgins Green
DONOR REPORT
Patricia Boston Kelly Phyllis Basenfelder Kennedy Joan Amberg Kineke Helen Gross King Susan Maloney Joan Fitzpatrick Marvin Nancy Schmidt Murphy Mary Elizabeth Murphy Murray Ellen Mullany O'Laughlin Adelaide Brothers Palmer Helen Miller Sexton Genevieve Koehler Sweet M. Regina O'Neill Thomas Therese Zogby
CLASS OF 1952 (47%) Mary Merz Berko Louise Bradley Barbara Carli Joan Coyne Joan Mathers Eaves Eileen Downey Farrell Elizabeth Wright Fury Bettyanne Geikler Helen Gruber Mary Clare Martin Guinther Marie McDermott Keeley Geraldine Menzler Kelsey Joan Gerard Larkin Elizabeth Dinan Lutz Louise McCoy Anne Duffy Mirsch Mary Brady Mommessin Margaret Stehli Morris Anne Toroni Murdock Anne Crowhurst O'Brien* Joyce O'Neill Marita Howard O'Rourke Cornelia McCue Rath Laura Hentz Remmey Betty Ann O'Donnell Richter Joan Toohey Rochford
Clara Tucker, Ph.D.* Rosemary Boccella White
CLASS OF 1953 (33%) Rita Ciotti Altman, Ed.D. Josephine Sciarrotta Bagley Patricia Malloy Cavanaugh Peggy Derham Dolan Constance Peacock Feraco* Mary Silcox Gleason* Marilyn Heitzman Kehoe Colette Robillard Kelly Eileen Kelly Lammers Maureen Reilly Leonhardt Eileen Connors Linehan Barbara Piga Marcouiller Mary M. Martire Kathleen Canedo Mee Joan Menaquale* Nancy Leonard O'Connor Stephanak Anna Connor O'Riordan, M.D. Anne Reynolds Smart Carmen Costanza Veit Selma Koury Wunderlich
CLASS OF 1954 (46%) Eileen O'Rourke Atkinson Mary Nagle Bell Marie McCridden Burke Joan Alford Callahan Rose Ann Baron Clarke Madeleine Gercke Costigan Carole Sarubbi de Castro Clara McNierney Doyle Mary Wiesner Edell Ann Wiesner-Glickman Pamela Orsini Grimmé Virginia Redmond Grover Grace Corr Haenn Anne Smith Jahn Mary Harrington Leonard Patricia Crane Lynch Dorothy Wludyka Matthews, M.D. Ann Brosseau McCall Evelyn McCrossen McChesney Mary Lou Stafford McGill Ernestine Petorella Medeck Mary Resinski Murphy, M.D. Catherine O'Flaherty Elizabeth MacDuffie Reger Janice Arleth Reilly Maria MacCabe Ronca
Kathryn Gruber Satori Judith Sullivan Elizabeth Krug Ulrich Anita Esposito Varga Aileen Maguire Walsh Irene Wagman Zielinski
Marylou Dughi Sklar Eleanor Craig Utzig Agnes Costello Walker Patricia Andris Walsh Lynn Murray White Joan Huber Winters
CLASS OF 1955 (30%)
CLASS OF 1957 (38%)
Joan McDermott Bellwoar Mary Juel Rockwell Boast Joan Yates Carroll Helen Devine Coen M. Carol Snyder Collins Kathleen Buhrman Dalena Joanne Rossberg DeSantis Joanne Waldron Dwyer Catherine Condon Johnston Wilma Carson Kellerman, M.D. Joan Kay Lally Lois Steppacher Lazzarino Barbara Beers Oberle Patricia Johnson Rauch, Ph.D.* Judith Dougherty Reidy Barbara Ellis Ryan Elvira Cordasco Sax Jean Schwartz, M.D. Gwendolyn Feaster Trautwein Madeleine Glynn Whittaker*
Marie Meaney Adolph Judith Simcoe Alexander Anne Dever Bancroft Anna Marie Barone Constance Murray Becker Marie Pelliccio Berenato Rosemary Mahoney Boyle Mary Ellen McClain Carson Rosemarie Schmitt Clark Kathleen Daniel Margaret Walsh Davies Maryanne Rafferty Dunmire ’57* Mary Jane Harford Ferro Kathryn Peters Hill Audrey Ward House Margaret Mary McDermott Keeler Roxanne Talley King Elizabeth Harvey Majane Theresa Mazeika* Mary Spence McCue Beverly Johnston McIntyre Clare Kelley McKinney Murphy Irene Nowak Musman Diane Napoli O'Grady Joan McGrath Reynolds C. Patricia O'Hara Rutter Joan McFadden Sawoski Lynne Fowler Scarpiello Kathleen Gercke Silk Phyllis Sullivan Stacy Miriam Fenerty Sullivan
CLASS OF 1956 (47%) MaryEllen McFadden Barry Maryann Wessel Beitel Constance Bissell Bissell Gleeson Janet Rutan Bowers Barbara Costigan Brennan Ellen Whiteside Byrne Catherine Malloy Byron Mary Sue Williamson Carney Beverly Kray Connolly Christine Brennan Conover Beatrice Jungblut Dante Nancy Quinton Falls Charlotte Branagan Farley Margaret Fleming, SSJ Anne Daly Holland Jane Ellen Higgins Kelly, Ed.D. Esther Moriarty McCarthy Marianne Miller Patricia Belcher Monaghan Barbara Griffiths Olivieri Martha Freiling Peterson Carroll Griffey Ryan
CLASS OF 1958 (48%) Mary Dugery Brandenstein Loretta Martin Brown Clare McConnell Brown Jolande Jong Chiu Rosemarie O'Brien Cleaver Virginia Reilly Coester Patricia Burke DeLucia Suzanne K. Dufrasne Elizabeth Solnek Farrell Patricia Gallagher Fleck Joan McDermott Forry
Mary Jane Pasha Franco Maryann Boehmer Froehlich Sarah Mansell Guilfoyle Myra Hayes Sonia Gotay Hernandez Gwendolen Forsyth Hurley Barbara Merck Kearns Suzanne Sanders Lawson Marianne Sim Lee Joanne Ryan Luecke Cecilia Greene McCarthy Regina Gercke McConnell Maureen MacLean McCord, Esq. M. Eileen Foxhill McGlone Anna Marie McKenna Margaret Quinn Mohr Angela Romano Moore Miriam Butler Newlon Nora Golden O'Malley Joanne Pascuzzi Mary Pollitt Helen Penza Powers Carolyn Inglesby Rusin Barbara Hurlbrink Schwitzer Margaret Walsh Shubnell Ann Rusnack Sorgenti Jean Campbell Sterling Anna Palermo Streeter Lois Hoffner Udicious Denise Bonner Wall Janice Kitley Yurasek Marguerite Stein Zuccarello
CLASS OF 1959 (33%) Hattie Davey Baier Mary Ann Miller Beatty, Ph.D. Helen Nolan Bischoff Aminta J Woodley Burnett Margaret Dickinson Campbell Veronica McLaughlin Connor Barbara Harron Delaney Anne Caruso Desy Kathleen M. Donnelly Barrie Thomas Fahey Deborah Dougherty Flint Eleanor Mason Gulczynski H. Barbara Johnson Hock Anne Harvie Howard Patricia Harford Hueber Raimonda Binkis Kontrimas Janet Dugansky Lonney Carole Storch O'Dwyer Margie Dechet Reller
Barbara Stoll Russell Ann Scanlan Phyllis Gott Shea Jane Grasso Sinek Kathleen McDermott Strott Marguerite McLaughlin Thomas Ann Brennan Toner Colleen Ward Volpe Elizabeth Dolaway Woolson
CLASS OF 1960 (31%) Carol Cheleden Alcorn Anastasia Hagan Bacon, Ed.D. Patricia Doran Benkovic Aida Berzins Deborah Daly Bohan Bernadine McGrath Brown Marion Gioffre Buddo Mary Lee Rothwell Corr Mildred Murphy DeRiggi, Ph.D. Marie Micale Dumbra Mary Doyle Hanna Eileen Long Hessman Anne DePiano Holderness Madeline Horrigan Mary Serroi Jaklevic, M.A. Judith Bourgeois Jensen Patricia Kisielewski Juenger Susannah Linton Kirchner Barbara Wenthe McCarthy Margaret Bennett McGreal (D) Michele Mustello Mary Magee Onofrietto, Ph.D. Mary K. Reeber Margaret Ryan Joanne Grimm Seaver Christine Desrochers Smith Patricia Walsh Sterner Marie Gallagher Sweeney Regina Voelker Tauke Anne Brannan Teufel Helen Mikula Vassily Kathleen Wagner Mary Gallagher Wattis
CLASS OF 1961 (32%) Ellen Barrett Elissa Imbriaco Breiling Maripat Martin Brophy Lynne Smith Brown Maureen Gillen Chan Rosemary Magee Cicchiello
school of undergraduate studies class giving » donor report 2014 23
Jo Ann Ewadinger Connelly Ann Tushim Csink Barbara Donovan Kathleen McCarthy Doyle-Kelly Barbara Gallo Draper Joanne McGee Espenshade Jeanne Labrecque Gagliano Sarah Bean Gentry Mary Isabel Lambert Glenn Rosemary Murphy Gulati Sandra Johnson Helverson Maureen Dearie Husk Kathryn Coyne Keegan Patricia Orna LeVarn Judith Hadden Lutolf Miriam Gibbons Mandell Marilyn Johnson McCarron Margaret Gordon McLaughlin V. Sheila Boyle Otto Margaret Lynch Panas Linda McKenna Roxe Susan Enright Ryan Nancy Koonmen Schmidtmann Rosemary Amberg Spezzo Verna Brugger Stockmal Mary Louise Tackas Angela Clement Tague Elaine Bevevino Trevey Mary Alice Warwick Suzanne Pfizenmayer Wiley
CLASS OF 1962 (32%) Catherine Albanese, Ph.D. Carol-Ann Klauser Black Clare Cannon Breene Marylin Unger Burke Mary E. Christenson, M.D. Eileen McCoy Cioffi Kathleen Braun Dollenberg Marian Brogan Ehnow Adrienne Donaghue Gallagher Margaret O'Donnell Garrett Eileen D'Arcy Garvey Kathleen Gavigan, Esq., Ph.D. Linda Hirsh Glasgow Patricia Tichenor Greer Kathleen Boyle Jarvis Kathleen Kugler Sandra Glynn Lippe Catherine Ondrey Mailloux Kathleen Kane Mann Denise Love McDaid Margaret Mary Green McLaughlin
Diane Gillies Momich Margaret Conlan O'Brien Annemarie Fliegel Quigley Mary Petriella Ruvo Margaret Clark Schott* Ellen Kelley Sheehan Sara Young Stoll Maureen Schmidt Thielens Gertrude Walsh Vernot
Anne De Stefano Salvatore, Ph.D. Carroll Scleppi Carol Lee Sendell Rosalie Papa Shaw, Ed.D. Martha Shockey Constance Stark Joanne Cardelia Thorn Mary Ludwig Weinmann Elizabeth Tucker Werner
CLASS OF 1963 (35%)
CLASS OF 1964 (33%)
Patricia May Agger (D) Mary Ruth Wiegard Becker Carolyn Bensel, Ph.D. Natalie Nolan Berkey Marion Williams Berry Carole Wimberg Cadora Mary Flannery Calise Catherine Devlin Marie Micale Dumbra Mary Jo Calhoun Egoville Kathleen Heidere Ford Gertrude Dearie Frekko Marcia Gehman, SSJ Anita Jeutter Gledhill Lynn Cozza Goodman M. Paula Nyhart Gowen Cecilia Hunt Gregory Mary Jo Collins Griffin Sandra Cupini Hagenbarth Geraldine Eble Hamilton Catherine O'Donoghue Helwig Jeanne Bireline Henderson Kathleen Brown Hyland Alison Turnbull Kelley M. Catherine Kronbar Kibler Cecile Heebner Knies Zenaida Ancheta Krablin Eleanor Lang, Ph.D. Susan Murray Lybrook Patricia McAdams, Ph.D. Joanne McFadden McBride M. Eileen McDonough, Ed.D. Angele Vial McGrady, Ph.D. Cynthia Burlick Murphy Sara Lee Hayden Murphy Nancy Hoffner Orr D. Sue Horrigan Ozar Frances McCullen Pierce Jane Wylie Quest Joanne Casacio Regli Elizabeth Sieburg Richter Gertrude Carlin Rutledge
Marylee Noonan Amato Mary Moore Baker Pamela Ann Black Patricia Kocak Corsello Barbara Cruse Geraldine Kaczorowski Dabrowski Lois Love Deibert Anne O'Shea Devlin Margaret Jarosh Doyle Diane Neary Ewing Mary Tynebor Fearn Regina Fleming Dolores Furlan Paula Murphy Gallagher Mary Goldschmidt Galloway Joy Finnegan Garrison Marianne Carlson Hall Georgene Mann Hartmann Virginia Hayes Agnes Hendrick Bethia Howes Howes Donnelly Eileen Franz Janssen Margaret Sewell Krivda Ellen Burns Laden Mary Jo Bonner Lubas, M.D., Ph.D. Lorraine Cajano Minecci Marie Costello Moore Phyllis Coppola Neill Carol Neri Alice Reilly Paduch Dorothy Palatucci Gail Larkin Peach Eileen Weber Phillips Denise Murphy Phillips M. Nancy Burczewski Portland Amelia Petitti Quaremba, Ph.D. Margaret Jackson Quinn Sharon Marie Rooney, M.D., Esq. Susan Berry Sapra Mary Ellen Scanlan, Ph.D. Jo-Anne Fatibene Semmel Diana Stango Smoluk
Nancy Connelly Straka Sally Cavanaugh Strike Kathleen Olsen Sullivan Jerilyn Louis Tierney Lois Trench-Hines Maureen Clarie Ulakovic Mary Ann Yankosky
CLASS OF 1965 (23%) Anonymous Carol Lowe Ambacher Patricia Chiri Bell Rosemary Jingoli Canuso Helen Chaykowsky Elaine Bennett Davey Sheila Corcoran Doyle Marie Sclafani Goldkamp Isabelle Walsh Gundaker Mollie Brown Ingram Elizabeth Newmiller King Mary Hennessey Krutulis Marybeth Honeyman Leary Bernadette Bennis Marshall Patricia Jeskey McDermott Martha Wilderotter McDevitt Bonnie Vasey McDonald Elaine Palmer Meisinger Sheila Murphey, M.D. Evelyn Dunsmore Nosker Nancy Diamond Roche Regina Maxwell Schwille Isabel Grass Sheridan Zdanna Krawciw Skalsky Loretta Canalichio Steinmetz
CLASS OF 1966 (25%) Kathleen Rex Anderson, Ed.D. Jane Bentz Atesoglu Martina McCarthy Ball Frances Coyle Brennan Nancy Denny Chancler Elizabeth Burns Cusack Elizabeth Jachimowicz Fanuzzi Maribeth O'Connor Gentile, Ed.D. Carol-Jane Piltz Guardino E. Michelle Sprague Guerard Sandra Denenberg Hohberger Mary Heller Howard, Esq. Julia Heitzman Koechlin Jo Anne DiGiacomo Lechowicz Marie Ryan Leonard Catherine Lawlor Long
Mari Lucey Mary Mulderry Mattson Donna Carlino McCoyd Joan Coletti Metallo Nonie Glennon Murphy Mary Delia Tye Neuman, Ph.D. Elaine Miskuff Olson JoEllen Noonan Parsons (D) Bernadette Cosenza Prozzillo Suzanne Stanton Regan Lorraine A. Revello Mary Kaufmann Ryan Mary J. Salzmann Mary Lou Sciarrillo Patricia Brumberger Shields Christine Eidsness Tan-Tisunthorn
CLASS OF 1967 (30%) Louise Loia Aaronson Constance Miller Anderson Margaret Madden Bell Mary Gallagher Boyle Judith Brown, Ph.D. Joanne Bonavita Budwick Noreen Kraska Caivano Frances Gercke Carey Margaret Kress Carson Eileen Menegus Debesis, Ph.D. Tina Rita DeLucia, Esq. M. Kathy Tigh Detrano Catherine Devlin Marilyn Hennessey DiMuro Linda Taraborrelli Donahue Kathleen Keirle Dougherty, Ph.D. Sandra Kuback Dowling Eugenie Dausey Fleming Suzanne Dames Gibbs Diane Taglialatela Green Barbara Jani Nancy Culligan Jennings Joan McFadden JernĂŠe (AD) Joan Burger King Patricia Walsh King Katherine Ferguson Knox Catherine Galloway Lewandowski Dorothy Kushlis Macfarlane, M.D. Dorothea Klebacher Magyar Kathleen Malaney, M.D. Margaret C. Moran (AD) Mary Jane Briggs Morgan Pilar Pinili-Silva, Esq. Jean Brennan Pivetz Mary F. Quinn
school of undergraduate studies class giving Âť donor report 2014 25
Stephanie Genova Quirk Mary Louise Goldkamp Ryan Kathleen Campbell Schugsta Elizabeth Ann McGarvey Smith Margaret DiSanto Storti Carmela Buccieri Sullivan Marilea Swenson Mary Kunberger Wehrmann Kathleen Weibel
CLASS OF 1968 (17%) Rosalie Marinari Akouka, M.D. Kathleen Clauss Borkowski Eleanor Mueller Cugini Molly Walsh Donovan, Ph.D. Joyce Maurin Fonash, Ph.D. Jane Foulkrod Galvin Maryann Campbell Gans Judith Vanstone Golderer Margaret Hagerty Patricia Egan Hardy Patricia Quinn Hayden Joan Edmund Husted Joan Lunney, Ph.D. Margaret McKee Madison Rosemary Marino Mangano Constance Brown Masciangelo Paula Ippolito McCarthy Ellen L. Miller Miriam Berry Moore Rosemarie Litterio Shannon Teresa Clark Trudeau Constance Parsons Wickersham Nina Buckley Yeager
CLASS OF 1970 (16%)
CLASS OF 1969 (18%)
CLASS OF 1971 (13%)
Eileen Husted Anderson Carol Dragonetti Avicolli Eleanor Yoa Ayers Barbara Maher Bur Judith E. Campbell Gioia Cianciosi Joan Fry Donahue Denise Gervase Ferrier, Ph.D. N. A. Gillen Kathy Fowler Goodyear Susan Rapp Halczenko Martha Bender Jollie Susan Taylor Kelly Barbara McCabe McCabe Ludlam Katherine Marschall, M.D. Margaret Matthews
Merle Mummert Anderson Julianne Kocan DeCore Roseanne O'Hanlon Duzinski Blanche Goffredo Haughton Barbara Sailer Hee The Honorable Frederica Massiah-Jackson Nancy Day Kelley, Ph.D. Rosemary Hunt Kurtz Ann O'Connor Levering Mary Virginia Ebbecke Mayer Rita McCloskey Miziorko Nancy Arauz Monnat Susan M. Pisano Mary Hutko Scholl Joy Supil Siegel Ann Marie Smith Sielski
donor report 2014 Âť school of undergraduate studies class giving 26
Kathleen McNicholas, M.D. Barbara Hrabrick McQuillen Judith Miers Eileen Walker Phoebus Joan Pollitt Rebecca Preece Katherine Safford Ramus, Ed.D. Judith Lee Rieder Melanie Schultz Scott Carolyn Maziarz Williams Teresa Rhodes Wolliard
Marilyn Sutton Adomanis Felicia Corsaro Barbieri, Ph.D. Patricia M. Canning (S) Barbara Walker Erhard Claudia MacFadden Fletcher Mary Catherine Gallagher Teresa Hagan Mary Ann Haggerty, M.D. Mary Margaret Hamill Maria Pugliese-Hieble, M.D. Bernadette Houghton, Ph.D. Joan Loreng Susan Forster Lowery Christine Peterson Lynn Diane Hugues McGinty Nadine Morse Noble Judith Anne Paul Judith Perkins Janet Brown Quintal (D) Donna Plamondon Scully Diane Stanczak
Mary McKenna Thorne Kathleen Wall Mary Kelly Whalen
CLASS OF 1972 (11%) Margaret Helbling Baumann Christine Scott Beck Maureen Dixon Cass Caroline M. Devine Anna Faris DiFranco Denise Errico Duffy Mary Lynne McCarthy Ekdahl Kathryn O'Neill Fisher Bonita Niechwiadowicz Getz Frances Bonanni Hay Kathleen Mooney Hennessey Ellen Loughran, Ph.D. Elizabeth Lunney Joanne Schmidt, Ph.D. Margaret Hetzer Stuart Rose Betz-Zall
CLASS OF 1973 (12%) Anne Brennan Janet Budzitowski Cooke Sally Ann Ayerle Corbley Glenda Battistini Daulerio Mary Ellen Brady Eck Carmencita Chafey Jimenez Norma Mannix Frances McCormick Murphy Barbara Mercer Panek Mary Elizabeth Green Perkins M. Gervase Rosenberger, Esq. Maria Colella Wiemken
CLASS OF 1974 (18%) Paula DeSanctis Bonavitacola Carlota Garcia Colberg Christine Fitzpatrick Marilyn Pepe Frazier Maureen Clearkin Glanzmann Teresa Hernandez Gonzalez Valerie Mikula Hughes, D.D.S. Elizabeth Mallon Hunter Anita Kan Mary Sher Kenney Mary Lenore Keszler, M.D. Susan Lyons Madelyne Kasper McKee
Mary O'Gorman Murray Rosemarie Robinson Nevergole Mary Kinahan-Ockay Patricia Harper Petrozza, M.D. Virginia Schwabenland Rowan Dorothy Salanik Mary Jean Frye Stewart Ann King Vaccaro Leona Valentine Elizabeth Sauter Weber, Ed.D. Virginia Bendinger Wischhusen Maureen Martin Wittenberg
CLASS OF 1975 (14%) Mary Ackroyd Linda A. Avila Myra DiNicola Marian Princivalle Ellis Wanda Feletski Jane Tomalonis Gursky Lynne Huddleston-Ruff Denise Roney McGonigal Nancie Ann Kenny Moebius Denise Haskins Paolella Cynthia Strolle Regina Williams Tate, Esq. Mary Capece Weinstein Angela-Jo Castranova Wetzel Carol Voelmle Zemnick
CLASS OF 1976 (13%) Sharon Cameron Baldwin Mimi Strolle Bender Mary E. Brandt, Ph.D. Sandra Bumgardner, Psy.D. (S) Regina Kenny Davenport Alida Scarafone Freeman Mary Ann Velten Gilman Katherine Crosson Hylinski Kathleen O'Pella Lisa Olivieri, SSJ, Ph.D. (F) Mary Degnan Phelps Ginger Soucy Anne E. Tezak
CLASS OF 1977 (10%) Lauren Maria Phillips Brennan Cecily Craig Alice Ann Gricoski Dachowski, M.D. Cecelia Englebert-Passanza (AD)
M. Chris Hemsley Aurora Marrero Hughes Lucille Palaszewski Kwasizur Margaret Carney McCaffery (D) Mariann Pokalo, Ph.D. Patricia Shustock Scott, O.D. Irene Ampthor Tori
CLASS OF 1978 (8%) Ann Curran Brown Mary Jo Dagney Maria De Luca Anna Giacalone-Gottschaldt, D.M.D. Laura McCandless Green Debra Lucas-McGady Cecilia Mohl McAleer Diana Oncheck Catherine E. Quinn (S) Helene Regetta
CLASS OF 1979 (7%) Mary Augustine Barbara McCormack Buonora Margaret Feraco Frampton Elisabeth Videira Levins Mary Brady Reil Mary Patricia Walsh Amy Doyle Welin Christina Demetrovits Woody
CLASS OF 1980 (5%) Joann Bowes-Taylor Lynne Silverio Carpenter Margarita Mongil-Kwoka (AD) Janice Prentice Michele Fella Przybylowski Carol Vernon Barbara Boyd Ward
CLASS OF 1981 (4%) Joanne Corini Burrell, D.M.D. Elaine Patelunas Copeland Ann Roman D'Aleandro Joan Lind Tracey Dever Simpson Genevieve Dagney Sparano
CLASS OF 1982 (14%) Amy Molloy Cordasco Ellen Seiberlich Hardy Siobhan McEnaney-Hayes Lisa Rounds Hoke Catherine Spollen Holt Lynnanne Kasarda, M.D. Carlene LaBella LaBella-Deon Mary Beth Tobin Macaluso Kathleen Madden Maryellen Britt Miller Suzanne Olivieri O'Donnell, M.D. Maria Pascale-Boni Carol Steinour, Esq. Deborah Sonntag Tredinnick Beverley Patrone Uniacke, M.D. Joyce Adams-Wert
CLASS OF 1983 (10%) Christina Ernst Ball Susan Wentland Brobst, Ph.D. Mary Anne Campellone Anne Dwyer Cyliax Gina DiGiuseppe Mary Fay Marion Clinger Hanuschek C. Christa McGlynn Virginia McKenna Anne Marie Maguire O'Connell Janine Stratton Maureen Jaster Whitham
CLASS OF 1984 (10%) Margaret Barry Lynne Brophy Collman Gillian Horna Dezzutto Mary Agnew Dunleavy Lisa Porter Kuh, Ph.D. Mary Beth Higgins Livolsi Kathleen O'Boyle (AD) Lisa Fiorillo Perfidio Renee Portu Elizabeth Anne Schlosser, M.S. Joanne Selinski, Ph.D. Marianne Shannon Smith Lydia Vender, D.O.
CLASS OF 1985 (7%) Catherine Ard Laura Malisheski Connelly
Claire Dente, Ph.D. Kathleen Dolan Pamela Gillespie Eldridge Mary Zuccarini Gordon Joann Gallagher Jones, Esq. Angela Vance
CLASS OF 1991 (5%)
CLASS OF 1986 (6%)
CLASS OF 1992 (2%)
Karen Prihoda Brown Brigid Castro, M.D. Susan Roberts Radomski Martha Ranc, Ph.D. Susan Vath Ana Mai Wong-Trainor, Esq.
Nancy Burton Dellavecchia Catherine Lockyer Moulton (D)
CLASS OF 1987 (8%)
CLASS OF 1994 (9%)
Linda Gambone H. Ashley Smith- Holton Diane Wasyluk Iardella Isemuan Ighodalo Anne Marie Mascari Kathleen Shea Pié Kathleen Prihoda Schwartz Lynn Mulvaney Sharp Marianne McGurk Wallaesa
Lisa Boylan Pamela Fiugalski-Prevoznik (AD) Kerry Freisen Lively Amy McLeer (AD) Christine Westrum Porter Carol Nash Purcell, Esq. Jennifer Severson Jodie King Smith (A) Odelee Wint
CLASS OF 1988 (6%)
CLASS OF 1996 (3%)
Karen Katelhon Blair Geri-Ann Pavonarius Deputy Elizabeth Farley Jane Marie Fearn-Zimmer, Esq. (AD) Beth Davey Rosso
Kristin Heiser Krywy Agnes Mukasa Joan Trainor Simmons
CLASS OF 1989 (6%)
Michelle Leshko Kaschak Ann M. Keer Jennifer Kelly Stacy McCrosson, M.D. Carolyn Sagendorph Montgomery Alyce Taylor Bridget Mahon Willoughby
Alice Campbell Caroline Reilly Dignan, M.D. Marjorie Scott Susan Monaghan Williams
CLASS OF 1990 (5%) Elena Pié Adkins Brenda Gala DeStefano Theresa Walsh Grabowski Renee Haggerty (AD) Lara Doyle Iannetta
Jessica Flattery Cole Rosemary Haenn Charis Lasky Gretchen Ann Reilly, Ph.D.
CLASS OF 1993 (1%) Dawnlynne Cute-Allen, D.C.
CLASS OF 1997 (7%)
CLASS OF 1998 (4%) Jessica Bowman Dodson Lauren Ann Rossi Maryanne L. Walsh
CLASS OF 1999 (3%) Mary Duffy Convery Andrea Desantis Kerr
school of undergraduate studies class giving » donor report 2014 27
CLASS OF 2000 (4%)
JULY 1, 2013 – JUNE 30, 2014
DONOR REPORT
REUNION GIVING FUND CLASS
E
very five years, alumni are asked to consider a special gift to honor their memories of Chestnut Hill and each other. For some, it is to increase their most recent gift, and for others, it is to make a special gift for the first time. Reunion year alumni are invited to choose from a variety of options that reflect their interest in specific needs of the College. You may choose to designate your gift to The Griffin Fund, the general endowment, scholarships, campus ministry, athletics, Logue Library, special class gift funds or specific academic programs. All Reunion class gifts received from July 1, 2013 through June 30, 2014 are counted toward the total dollars each class raises and toward their respective class participation rate.
REUNION YEAR
CLASS OF 2002 (1%) NO. OF DONORS
PARTICIPATION RATE
TOTAL LIFETIME GIVING
1944
70th
5
20%
$10,805
1949
65th
19
29%
$110,103
1954
60th
31
46%
$334,828
1959
55th
28
33%
$243,143
1964
50th
49
33%
$145,367
1969
45th
27
18%
$308,515
1974
40th
25
18%
$59,015
1979
35th
8
7%
$8,446
1984
30th
13
10%
$28,420
1989
25th
4
6%
$9,195
1994
20th
9
9%
$6,042
1999
15th
2
3%
$345
2004
10th
4
6%
$2,475
2009
5th
6
4%
$585
230
17%
$1,267,284
TOTAL
donor report 2014 » school of undergraduate studies class giving & reunion giving fund 28
Jacqueline Gura Ciaverelli Bridget McGovern Barbara Sliker Weikert
Heather Hadley
CLASS OF 2003 (3%) Anna O'Conor Hinson Margaret E. Mitchell (S)
CLASS OF 2004 (6%) Michelle Drazul Galbally Stephanie Rendine Morris Diana Pavlecka Jamie Dunn Roche
CLASS OF 2005 (4%) Theresa Klein Abraham Jennifer Johnson Kebea (AD) Frances Vorsky (S)
CLASS OF 2006 (1%) Patricia Duffy Shacklett
CLASS OF 2007 (3%) Keara Clauss Amie Simpson Stephanie Williams
CLASS OF 2008 (2%) Michelle Bauer Mark Hammons (AD)
CLASS OF 2009 (4%) Frances Boshell Kierstin Teske-White Capaldo Jessica Day Shukirryyah Jackson Anne Pearsall Jessica Rodriguez
CLASS OF 2010 (3%)
2014 SENIOR CLASS GIFT DRIVE
DONOR REPORT
GRADUATE
IN HONOR OF
BethAnn Weinstein ’12
Lucille Weinstein
Stephen Holts ’14
Walter C. Childs & April Fowlkes
CLASS OF 2011 (3%) Kelly Kolson Dana Maner Maria Pelone Shaina Ward
CLASS OF 2012 (1%)
Ivy Lloyd ’14
Valerie Horvath Owen Ward
Deirdre Still ’14
Linda Stone
Alexandra Fusco ’14
Annemarie & Alexander Fusco
Gail Sutton ’14
Dr. Richard Black & Dr. Deb Chiaradonna
Johneise Price-Walker ’14
Rahsheem & my children
Summer Thomas ’14
Shannon L. Threats
Michael Melnychenko ’14
Michael Terranova
Alicia Williams ’14
My Mother and my Nana
Latoya Hill ’14
William Jenkins "Pop Pop"
Britt Benner Cynthia Borgella Alexandra Fusco Marykate McShane Michael Melnychenko Michael T. Mitchell Bryan Mottershead Deirdre Still Mary Veach Alicia Williams
Cynthia Borgella ’14
Sister Nancy DeCesare, IHM, Ph.D.
CLASS OF 2015 (1%)
CLASS OF 2013 (1%) Alexandria Golding Caitlin Kain Jessica O'Neill Emmanuelle Vitello
CLASS OF 2014 (5%)
Alexis LeDonne Katherine Williams
Sharay Corbitt ’14
CLASS OF 2016 (1%)
Bryan Mottershead ’14
Honors Convocation award recipients, Allison Rae Eberly ’14 and Kelsey Ann Haugh ’14, pose with Associate Professor of Biology Joseph Kulkosky, Ph.D.
Jacquelyn Nevius Mancinelli Derek Pascarella Kathryn Sprandio Charquinta Sullivan
Mary Katherine Ortale
Maria Miranda ’14
Rafael Matos
Marykate McShane ’14
Tim & Sue McShane
donor report 2014 » school of undergraduate studies class giving & 2014 senior class gift drive 30
“I started to realize what a good education I had gotten … It took my moving to California for me to recognize the value of Chestnut Hill.”
LIFE'S
Kathleen Reilly Gallagher ’65
S
Serendipitous Moves
ometimes it takes leaving a
Because she likes to know how things work,
from large and well-known colleges and
matching gifts program that matched employee
place to realize what it really meant
Gallagher majored in biology with a minor
universities. People with whom she felt
giving dollar-for-dollar. Through a visit from
to you.
in chemistry. After her junior year, a National
comfortable and on-par.
Sister Carol Jean Vale to the graduates living
Such was the case for Kathleen Reilly Gallagher ’65 who not only graduated from Chestnut Hill College, but also was a member of the last high school class to graduate from Mount St. Joseph Academy while it was still housed in the College’s St. Joseph Hall. “The campus was already like home to me,” she remembers. About a dozen girls in her high school class stayed to attend CHC, and were fully immersed in campus life. “I worked on the student newspaper, had a story published in
Science Foundation grant allowed her to study at Cornell University in its plant pathology department, work which became the basis of her honors thesis in botany completed in her senior year at Chestnut Hill. “The original plan was for me to go to grad school, but I told myself I would go only if I got a fellowship. I only got an assistantship, so I didn’t go,” she says with a laugh. “That shows you how little I knew about how the world works.”
The Grackle and was class president in my senior
Within eight years, Gallagher was married
year. Somewhere, there is even a picture of me
and living in southern California and meeting
helping to carry books from the old library to
people from all walks of life who had graduated
“I was more-than holding my own with them thanks to my great liberal arts foundation,
around Los Angeles, she learned about CHC’s decreasing enrollment.
and none of them had heard of Chestnut Hill
“It struck me that this was the place that had
College,” she says. “I started to realize what
helped me and had given me a very good
a good education I had gotten, through my
education and background, and I was glad
comparisons with other people.
to put my oar in the water,” says Gallagher.
“You know, in the era I graduated, you tended to disparage the town and the area you came from, just because you came from there. It took
“I got into the swing of things as far as giving was concerned, and even made a provision [for CHC] in my will.”
my moving to California for me to recognize
“By then, I had the means along with the
the value of Chestnut Hill.”
matching program that allowed me to do more,
Gallagher was a senior public relations officer at Wells Fargo in Los Angeles, which had a
and I have been happy to be able to do so,” she adds.
the new one.”
donor report 2014
31
DONOR REPORT
ENDOWED SCHOLARSHIPS
scholarships
ENDOWED
Chestnut Hill College thanks the following donors for contributing to newly created or established scholarships during the 2014 fiscal year.
THE ROBERT H. AGNEW ENDOWED SCHOLARSHIP Estate of Robert H. Agnew
THE GRACE BANKS AWARD Kevin & Jennifer Johnson Kebea ’05, ’08 SGS (AD) Arthur & Alice Lintgen
THE STEPHEN N. BERK ENDOWED AWARD William A. Cafiero Denise Costello (S) Merck & Company, Inc.
THE KATE BRITT ENDOWED MONTESSORI MEMORIAL AWARD Anonymous Mary Augustine ’79, ’85 SGS The Bala House Montessori School Noreen Brandt Boggi Marti C. Bondelid Ann O'Donnell Breen Robert & Cathlene Britt Michelle Carr Carriage House Enes Colaianni Carla Coyne Viveksheel Ghai
donor report 2014 » endowed scholarships 32
Greene Towne Montessori School, Inc. Marsha Kurman Hirschhorn Danielle DiLeo Kim Linda Kofa ’08 SGS Edward & Lisa Porter Kuh, Ph.D. ’84 Marjorie Lawless, SSJ ’82 SGS Mary C. LeFever Richard Maraschiello Mark & Colleen Arntz Mele ’01 SGS The Montessori School William & Maria Pascale-Boni ’82 Douglas & Cynthia Roberts The Walden School
THE BROWN/QUINTAL ENDOWED SCHOLARSHIP Kenneth & Janet Brown Quintal ’70 (D)
THE CLASS OF 1950 ENDOWED SCHOLARSHIP Mary Levin Englebert ’50
THE CLASS OF 1967 ENDOWED SCHOLARSHIP Margaret Madden Bell ’67 James & Eileen Menegus Debesis, Ph.D. ’67 Joseph & M. Kathy Tigh Detrano ’67 Catherine Devlin ’67
James & Linda Taraborrelli Donahue ’67 Edmond & Sandra Kuback Dowling ’67 Robert & Suzanne Dames Gibbs ’67 Glenn W. Howard, Ph.D. & Mary Angela Heller Howard, Esq. ’66 Barbara Jani ’67 Thomas & Nancy Culligan Jennings ’67 Joan McFadden Jernée ’67 Dorothea Klebacher Magyar ’67 John Cusack, D.O. & Kathleen Malaney, M.D. ’67 Margaret C. Moran ’67 (AD) Mary Jane Briggs Morgan ’67 Francis & Pilar Pinili-Silva ’67 Mary F. Quinn ’67 Robert & Elizabeth Ann McGarvey Smith ’67 Marilea Swenson ’67 Mary Kunberger Wehrmann ’67
THE MARYANNE CLIFFORD, SSJ ENDOWED SCHOLARSHIP FUND Ernst & Young LLP John & Maureen Tierney
THE ALICE AND IRA CONN ENDOWED SCHOLARSHIP Marie Conn, Ph.D. (F)
THE DALY-HOLLAND FAMILY ENDOWED SCHOLARSHIP William & Anne Daly Holland ’56
THE ADELAIDE AND MARIE A. DiBERARDINO, PH.D. ’48 ENDOWED SCHOLARSHIP Janet Andereck Irma Ashenbrenner ’50 John & Helene Belfi Joseph & Marianne Calabrese Mary E. Christenson, M.D. ’62 Louis & Frances Horan Del Duca, Esq. ’50 Mary Katherine Schubert Denny ’40 James Di Giovanni Frank & Donna DiBerardino Marie DiBerardino, Ph.D. ’48* Margaret M. Dougherty John & Denise Gervase Ferrier, Ph.D. ’69 Joseph & Lorraine Gagliardi Richard & Betsy Gagliardi Patricia McBride Haines Barbara Hayes John & Mary Claire O'Keefe McIntyre ’48 Lorraine Cajano Minecci ’64 Jeanne Mulcahy Janet Smith Murphy ’48 John & Catherine Wilson O'Brien ’48 Nancy Orr ’63 Anne Porreca Aaron & H. Jaixen Rabinovitz ’48 James & Mary Campbell Simons ’48
THE ANN DURKIN MONTANO ENDOWED FUND Sandra Bumgardner, Psy.D. ’76, ’89 SGS, ’03 SGS (S)
THE PATRICK MARIE FLOOD, SSJ, PH.D. SCHOLARSHIP Grace Corr Haenn ’54
THE BRIGID ERIN GAFFNEY MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIP John & Patricia Plunkett ExxonMobil Foundation
THE GENERAL ENDOWMENT FUND Barbara Carli ’52 Betty Lou Froustet ’43 Robert & Margaret Mary Fuss Eileen Long Hessman ’60 Ellen L. Miller ’68
M. Nancy Burczewski Portland ’64 Sharon Marie Rooney, M.D., Esq. ’64 John & Regina Voelker Tauke ’60 Anne E. Tezak ’76 Clara Tucker, Ph.D. ’52*
THE YUKI KUWATA TRAVEL FUND
THE MARILYN GIACOBETTI ’71 ENDOWED SCHOLARSHIP
L. Harvey Hewitt John Luciano Diane Shapiro Harmon & Betty Spolan
James Galli
THE KEOHANE/MCDERMOTT/ BELLWOAR ENDOWED SCHOLARSHIP Andrew Bellwoar H. Jay & Kathleen Bellwoar Harry J.J. Bellwoar, Esq. & Joan McDermott Bellwoar ’55 John M. Bellwoar Peter Bellwoar & Colette Bellwoar, D.O. Andrew & Jeanne Stallman Hartford Matching Gift Program
Thomas & Lynn Kluepfel
THE TERESA “CHI CHI” LUCIANO ENDOWED SCHOLARSHIP
THE EVA MARIA LYNCH, SSJ ENDOWED SCHOLARSHIP Anna Marie Barone ’57
THE MAGLIO ENDOWED SCHOLARSHIP Anthony & Camille Maglio Maglio Sausage Company
THE SIMON AND AGATHA MAZEIKA ENDOWED SCHOLARSHIP Estate of Theresa R. Mazeika
THE ANNE KEELER MCBRIDE ENDOWED SCHOLARSHIP Mark McBride Nancy Keeler McBride, Esq. Mary Beth McBride Peabody
Elizabeth House Gary & Virginia Gobetz KDS Consulting Michael & Margaret Carney McCaffery ’77 (D) James & Andrea McGill Estate of Marie E. Miller Marvin & Sheila Morganstein
JOSEPH AND CECILE P. SPERANZA ENDOWED SCHOLARSHIP Estate of Cecile P. Driscoll Speranza
THE CATHERINE MCDONALD, SSJ ENDOWED SCHOLARSHIP Margaret Mary Green McLaughlin ’62 Robert & Christine Nydick ’94 SGS
THE MARIE E. MILLER ENDOWED SCHOLARSHIP James & Patricia May Agger ’63 (D) James & Jeanette Bradley
endowed scholarships » donor report 2014
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SCHOOL OF CONTINUING & PROFESSIONAL STUDIES
DONOR REPORT
Shirley Allen ’13
Maria Torres Miranda ’14
John Bailer ’12
Mary Nocero ’99
E. Spence Baker ’12
Elizabeth Nolan ’11
Carol Fetterman Blauth ’78
Mary Ellen Norpel ’85
Mary Jo E. Bucceri ’98
Lynnette Perez-Santos ’99
Kathy McGee Burns ’86
Johneise Price-Walker ’14
Catherine Montgomery Carroll ’00
Joan MacFarland Rook ’91
Ruth Carver ’88
Robert Rullo ’10
Celia Clark ’07
Marianne Murphy Semchuk ’07, ’10 SGS (S)
Sharay Corbitt ’14
Elizabeth Shober ’96
Francine D'Amore ’96
Brenda Simmons ’12
Donna M. Davis ’11
Karen O'Neill Spencer ’85
Marylou Mongiven Delizia ’78
Jean Stotter ’73
Patrice M. DeMoss ’11
Summer Thomas ’14
Judith Espey ’94
Aly Traore ’11
Dineen Foley Filoramo ’00
Susan Matlack Troemel ’87
Mary Johnson Fitzpatrick ’73
Jo Marie Victor ’04 (AD)
Anthony Forte ’02, ’07 SGS
BethAnn Weinstein ’12
Saori Fujiyama ’95
Joan Underwood Whiting ’92
Bernice Fuller Garrison ’02
Pamela Larsen Zeuner ’05
Lorna Glassman ’80 Robert Gleba, Jr. ’09 Stephen Haraszkiewicz ’09 Gilda Caruso Gregori ’01 Carol Harrison ’95 Lori White Harvey ’03, ’07 SGS Kharma Hicks ’11 Stephen Holts ’14 Marcia Moore Jones ’92 Diane Kingsley ’87 Ivy Lloyd ’14 Mary Moran Mahal ’87 Joan Maier ’83 Margaret M. McGinley ’05 Romona Speakes Mercer ’13
donor report 2014 » school of continuing & professional studies 34
DONOR REPORT
SCHOOL OF GRADUATE STUDIES Marilyn Sutton Adomanis ’70, ’84 SGS
Christine Nydick ’94
Mary Augustine ’79, ’85 SGS
Kathleen O'Boyle ’84, ’97 SGS
Elise Artelt ’95
MaryBeth R. O'Neill ’10
Bettye Bolling ’91
Margaret Behre O'Neill ’95
Sandra Bumgardner, Psy.D. ’76, '89 SGS, ’03 SGS (S)
Patricia Veneziale Orlic ’87
Nancy LaSpada Dachille ’01 (S)
Kathleen Shea Pié ’87, ’92 SGS
Geraldine Stock DiLisi ’92
Arlene Prentice ’92
Valerie DeFelice Downing ’95
Francis M. Reynolds ’94
Johanna Bender Evangelou ’04
Leslie Richard ’08
Anthony Forte ’02 SCPS, ’07 SGS
Kimberly Phillips Rojas ’96
Robert Giglio ’04
Marianne Murphy Semchuk ’07 SCPS, ’10 SGS (S)
Mark A. Hammons ’08, ’10 SGS (AD)
Eileen Siegler ’92
Charlotte Neolus Harris ’01
Jodie King Smith ’94, ’01 SGS (A)
Lori White Harvey ’03 SCPS, ’07 SGS
Michele Smith ’12
Belinda Horn Heidenreich ’00
Gail Sutton ’14
Patricia Herbst ’94
Virginia Toliver ’94
Carol Albertson Herman ’13
Frances Vorsky ’05, ’07 SGS (S)
Latoya Hill ’14 Elizabeth Hughes Iaquinto ’85
Harry & Marianne McGurk Wallaesa ’87, ’92 SGS
Jo Anne Jacquette ’08
Maryanne L. Walsh ’98, ’02 SGS
Judith E. Jenkins ’00
Betty Kroupa Wells ’95
Carol Gels Jensen ’07
Teri Meniketti Wiedeman-Rouse, Ed.D. ’05 (F)
Jennifer Johnson Kebea ’05, ’08 SGS (AD)
Donna Harp Ziegenfuss ’02
Jeannette Briggs Klarman ’95 Linda Kofa ’08 Sharon Koob ’08 Barbara Forrester Landis ’07 Marjorie Lawless, SSJ ’82 Lauren Topps Malora ’87 Elizabeth McCaffrey ’91 Anne Campbell McDonald ’89 Maureen McGurk ’08 Madelyne Kasper McKee ’74, ’04 SGS Donna T. McVicker ’12 Colleen Arntz Mele ’01 Miriam Berry Moore ’68, ’92 SGS Jill Nerney ’83 Margaret Jones Newman ’95
donor report 2014 » school of graduate studies 36
Marion Dougherty Pallas ’05
GIVING IS PART OF
Who She Is
Marie Conn, Ph.D., stands with Roy Bourgeois in El Salvador in 2013.
N
ot only has Marie Conn, Ph.D., been a dedicated teacher in Chestnut Hill College’s religious studies department for 22 years, she has devoted her life and her resources, both on campus and off, to improving the lives of others.
community at-large are the beneficiaries of her tireless efforts, as she brings the world onto campus to educate and enlighten, teaching courses that support her outreach efforts, including bioethics, death and dying, contemporary moral issues and social justice.
Her outreach efforts began 25 years ago when she sponsored her first child, Mauricio, from El Salvador, through Save the Children, an organization whose children she continues to support. Then came St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital in Memphis, Tenn., and Pearl S. Buck International in Perkasie, Pa.
Through her oversight of the campus groups U4U and Fair Trade and support of campus sustainability and service-learning efforts, she inspires greater global and environmental understanding.
Conn also participates in the Peace Islands Institute, which brings together educators, politicians and business people to encourage mutual understanding and open dialog between members of the Jewish, Muslim and Christian communities. And she volunteers for the Project for Nuclear Awareness. Conn is not an armchair global observer. Photos of her with groups in Tanzania, El Salvador, Turkey, Rwanda and Auschwitz adorn her office walls. CHC students and the College
Conn, who earned advanced degrees from Villanova University, Marywood College and Notre Dame, chose long ago to offer her financial support to Chestnut Hill — along with her time and talent. The act of sharing, whatever the resource, is deeply ingrained, raised as she was by a mother who modeled the concept of sustainability. “I learned from my mother that there are always people who have less than you … about the importance of reusing things and being sustainable in life,” Conn says. “If you want something new, you first give away
Long-Time Professor Dedicates Resources to Chestnut Hill something old. I was a recycler before the term was popular.” Conn’s father passed away when she and her brother were 15 and 16, respectively, leaving her mother a widow at 44. Life was a challenge, yet their parents had managed to instill a love of learning and concern for the world and its people into the siblings — each of whom earned a Ph.D. and became a professor. Their mother lived a life of common sense with a belief in self-sufficiency, who always made time for others. “I absorbed a true caring for other people from her, and [although she didn’t have much money] she always gave of her time,” Conn remembers. “Once I got to the point I could do some good, I did.” And so, to honor her parents, Conn has established The Alice and Ira Conn Endowed Scholarship, which was given to a student in the fall 2014 semester for the first time. The scholarship — a retention award — will go to a sophomore who is doing well in her or his studies and overall in college life, yet is in danger of having to leave because of financial challenges.
“It may be just enough to help a student over the hump, with books, or something important and will help them stay in school,” she says. Conn’s worldview and belief in philanthropy was forged, in part, in high school, and by the memory of a young man she cared for and who was taken too soon. “Jimmy was my high school sweetheart who loved people and loved life,” Conn recalls. “He died of brain cancer in February of our senior year, but was so bright and so involved. Recently, I’ve thought that I’ve become the person he would have wanted me to be — one with a concern for others and a love of life. It is just who I am.” Marie Conn, Ph.D., established The Alice and Ira Conn Endowed Scholarship to honor her parents. The scholarship is a retention award and will go to a sophomore who is doing well in her or his studies and overall in college life, yet is in danger of having to leave because of financial challenges. This award was made in the fall 2014 semester for the first time.
donor report 2014
37
DONOR REPORT
PARENTS & FRIENDS Bob Agel Estate of Robert H. Agnew Wilbur Martinez & Ivette Alamo-Tirado Janet Andereck Richard & Kellie Anderson Douglas Andrews Leighton & Elizabeth Annis David & LuAnne Ashcom Mark & Jean Attaway Steve & Elsa Baerga Ann D. Claffey Baiada Gregory Bailey Kimberly Bainbridge Brian & Marguerite Baker The Bala House Montessori School Elinor Balsama* Lawrence & Katherine Barretta Thaddeus & Ann Bartkowski Andrew & Elsa Ann Behler John & Helene Belfi John M. Bellwoar Andrew Bellwoar H. Jay & Kathleen Bellwoar Peter Bellwoar & Colette Bellwoar, D.O. Edward Bertram Olivia Blaszka Janell Blue Rick & Kathy Blyler Noreen Brandt Boggi Robert Boles Marti C. Bondelid Sandra Bonner Arlene Bowden-Williams Sheri Bowell Earnest Boyd James & Jeanette Bradley Ann O'Donnell Breen Jason & Colleen Brennan Judith Breslin Russell & Susan Breslin Robert & Cathlene Britt Lisa Brooks Thomas & Debbie Bross Peter & Lisa D'Antonio Bryan Adam & Maureen Buchter Doris E. Bush Michael & Patricia Busk William A. Cafiero Joseph & Marianne Calabrese Nancy Calabrese
Patricia Caldwell Tess & Tom Campbell Sherald Carney Mitchell & Karen Carney Stephen Carr Michelle Carr Carriage House Mary Ann Casciato Lee A. Casaccio AIA Chalfont VFW Post 3258 Patricia Chapman Ellen Chase George & Marjorie Childs George & Carol Chmielewski Mary Ciotti (S) Joe & Mercedes Cipolloni Raymond Clouthier Richard & Joanne Cohen Michael & Reina Cohen Enes Colaianni Maria Reno Colby Richard Colvin Marie Conn, Ph.D. (F) Joseph & Claire Connelly Edward & Susan Connolly Joseph & Patricia Connolly (D) Patrick J. Connors Edward & Eileen Conroy Frank & Shirley Constantino Cheryl Constantino Nicholas & Gloria Constantino Glen & Amy Coral Marianne Cornely Denise Costello (S) Dominic J. Cotugno, Ed.D. (F) Carla Coyne Nicholas Crimeni Timothy J. Croak Douglas & Enid Crook Jo Ann Crowder Marie Czajkowski Mark Czajkowski Deborah Davies Charles J. Day John Day, Esq. & Sandra Day John & Debbie DeFazio Joseph & Paula DeLuca Raymond & Francine DeMartino Marty & Judy Dennis Joseph P. Denny (D) & April Denny
donor report 2014 Âť parents & friends 38
Brian DeSousa Margaret Devinney & Edward Devinney, Jr. Joseph Di Benedetto, DMD James Di Giovanni Phyllis DiBattista Frank & Donna DiBerardino Anthony & Carole Dieciedue Catherine DiPasquale Michael DiPietropolo Michael & Suzanne Dooley Margaret M. Dougherty Joseph & Rosanne Dour Megan Drew Patricia Drill Dr. Walter Drill Robert Duffy John Dufresne Michael F. Dunleavy (D) & Nancy A. Dunleavy Dennis & Debra Dunlevy Daniel Dunmire Gary & Linda Edwards Thomas & Mary Jane Ehret Elizabeth House Joan & Matthew Englebert Emmaus Community Donna & Timothy English Charles & Lynn Ann Faillace John Fallon Moussa & Gabriella Farhat Leo J. & Joan Farley Peter & Amy Fayette Christopher & Karen Fell Francis Feraco Rafael & Evelyn Fernandez Mark & Angela Fioretti Daniel & Cassie Florenzo Michael & Karen Fondots Barry & Mary Beth Day Ford Frosty's Plumbing & Heating Greg & Tonya Frye Robert & Margaret Mary Fuss William & Christine Gadbow Richard & Betsy Gagliardi Joseph & Lorraine Gagliardi Judith Gahr James Galli Robert & Patricia Gally Anne Gardner Stephen A. Gardner (D) Anne Gavaghan
Elizabeth H. Gemmill Viveksheel Ghai Diane Gibbs Kathleen Gillespie Sarah Gilman Thomas & Rita Ann Gilson James Ginty, J.D. (D) & Carol Ginty Michael & Judith Gitomer Francis Gleason Gary & Virginia Gobetz Irene Gorczynski Olivia Gorczynski Rita Gorczynski Elaine R. Green, Ed.D. (A) Greene Towne Montessori School, Inc. Terry Greer Estelle Grimes Kent Griswold, Ph.D. (D) & Lori Griswold, Ph.D. Jeff & Barbara Gruebel Michael Grzywacz Eric & Karyn Gumprecht Patricia McBride Haines David & Noel Hains Darrell Hammons George J. Hartnett, Esq. (D) Barbara Hayes Carl & Noreen Herring L. Harvey Hewitt Isaac & Patricia Hickerson Kenneth Hicks (A) Cynthia Higbee Robert & Kimberly Hilton Marsha Kurman Hirschhorn Ronald & Elizabeth Hjelm Daniel & Frances Hogan Patricia Holden Mark & Monica Holstrom John Holzwarth Sherry Hudson Timothy Hughes Joseph E. Imbriaco Robert & Patricia Innes Integrated Service Solutions, Inc. Miriam & Harold Irwin John Jester Ms. Linda Johnson Leonora Moreschi Karlock KDS Consulting Ann M. Keer Joseph Keffer Kenneth & Diane Kehr
Duke Kennedy Mr. and Mrs. Dennis T. Keough Danielle DiLeo Kim Ty Klippenstein Thomas & Lynn Kluepfel Mark Koczan James Koslowsky Walter & Andrea Kuczynski Joseph Kulkosky, Ph.D. (F) Lauren Kulp Robert Kurtz Richard Lackman, M.D. & Doranne Lackman Elliott & Bonnie Lasky Marcella M. Le Roy John & Lee Ann Leary Gary & Litzy Lebett Shakia Lee Guy & Rosemary Lee Mary C. LeFever Arthur & Alice Lintgen Paul & Joan Linton Jeff & Sharon Lites Lance & Michele Litty Anthony LoCastro Robert & Carol Lockyer John Luciano Thomas & Virginia Lynch Thomas Lynch, RADM, USN (ret) (D) Anthony & Camille Maglio Julie Magri James & Frances Maguire Carl J. Malisheski Mr. John C. Del Buono and Ms. Bette A. Mammone David & Judy Mantz Bruce & Nancy Mapes Richard Maraschiello Cecilia Marino Robert & Maria Martorelli Joseph & Margaret Mascio James & Teresa Mascoli Michael Mayden Jane Mc Cullough Nancy Keeler McBride, Esq. Mark McBride Mary McCarthy Kevin McCarthy, Ph.D. (F) Dennis P. & Janice McCrossen Edward McDonough Matthew McDonough Erin McElwee James & Andrea McGill
Peter J. McGlinchy & Cheryl McGlinchy Philip McGovern, Ph.D. & Mary McGovern Robert & Sharon McGrath Johns Ellen M. McGuinn (S) Robert McIntyre Leslie McJunkin Mary McKenna Maria Faillace McMahon Joseph McPhillips Donna T. McVicker ’12 SGS John Menditto Gabriel & Gloria Menei Curt & Sarah Merker Charles & Janice Miller Marie E. Miller* Bill Hine & Coco Minardi (S) Richard & Elizabeth Montenes The Montessori School Marvin & Sheila Morganstein John Motzel Mount Saint Joseph Academy Jeanne Mulcahy Ralph Munsie Ryan Murphy (S) & Krista Bailey Murphy, Ph.D. (A) Patricia Murphy-Hess Philip Murray Joan Murray-Reynolds Philip & Ruth Nelson Thomas & Jill Nerney ’83 SGS Kathleen M. Nerney, SSJ, Ph.D. (F) Christopher & Eileen Nolte Philip & Carole Norcross John & Patricia Nunnenkamp Andrea & Christopher O'Brien William O'Brien John K. O'Brien Shaun F. O'Malley (D) & Lyn Buchheit Brian Ortale, J.D. & Lynn Ortale, Ph.D. (A) Our Mother of Consolation Parish Robert Padilla Bill & Mary Noel Page Michael Palmer John L. Melvin, M.D. & Carol Melvin Pate, Ed.D. (S) Bud Paynter Mary Beth McBride Peabody Cara Peter Gary Pfizenmayer John & Barbara Pierantozzi John & Patricia Plunkett Allison Rapp Pollack (S) Anne Porreca William R. Powers Jr. Richard Powers Gilbert Pritchard Linda Rader Bernard & Joan Rafferty John Redmond Religious of the Assumption Joanna Renzi Jennifer Repici
Helen Rhodes Mark Richards Gayland Ridley Robert Riethmiller, Jr. (D) & Anne Riethmiller Jane Rivera Ed Rivera Douglas & Cynthia Roberts Jim Roese Agustin Rosales Michael & Rosemary Russo Catherine Ryan Deborah Ryan Frank & Paula Ryan Nicholas Sabia The John Sabia Family E. Jean Sabine Jack Sandoski (D) & Kathleen Sandoski Catherine & Robert Savage Maureen T. Savage John Schipper, III, Ph.D. John & Arline Schoenberger Louis Schott Charles & Carole Schreck Peter & Catherine Schulman Theodore Seabrook Lorraine Sears Scott & Vickie Semmel Diane Shapiro Michael & Colleen Sharp Eleanor Sharp Terence & Patricia Shea Joseph and Carole Sheehan Elisabeth Shellenberger Elizabeth Sher Constance Shereyka David & Cathy Shields Eileen Simons Jerrold & Patricia Sipocz Mr. & Mrs. Frank Sliker Jr. Diane Smith Rowland & Elaine Smith James & Harriette Smith Kenneth J. Soprano, Ph.D. (F) & Dianne Soprano, Ph.D. Estate of Cecile P. Driscoll Speranza Harmon & Betty Spolan Andrew & Jeanne Stallman Amandus & Pauline Steigerwalt Barry & Cora Steigerwalt J. Clark & Alice Steinman The Stevens Hotel Israel Concepcion & Lauri Strimkovsky, MBA (A) Albert Stroble (S) Shawn Synnestvedt Richard Teske & Janet White Alexis Thielens John & Maureen Tierney William & Dolores Tierno Bill & Heather Tierno Salvatore & Mary Ann Totaro
Regina Trainer Robert Trainor Rhonda Tredway Linda Trigueiro Jamie & Dawn Tringali Dominic Trnka Donald & Debora Trnka Lynn Tubman (A) Dolores Tunia Richard Ulmer Mary Ann Van Buskirk The Walden School Michael Wallace Terence Walsh Lawrence Walters Brian Ward Vinnie Ward Christopher & Debra Weidner Christopher Weidner Woodrow Wendling, M.D., Ph.D. & Susan Wendling George Werner Linda Whetstone Whitehall NYC Construction Corp. Robert Wiener James & Theresa Williams J. Charles & Jane Williams Mark & Gloria Williams Reginald & Muriel Williams Richard & Tina Williams Joseph & AnnCarol Wren Thomas & Anna Wrenn Bonnie Wydick Oldham Mary Yauch Vincent & Helen Zukauskas
parents & friends » donor report 2014
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MATCHING GIFT COMPANIES, GIFTS-IN-KIND & CORPORATIONS, ORGANIZATIONS & FOUNDATIONS MATCHING GIFT COMPANIES
Ace Charitable Foundation Aetna, Inc. Chevron USA, Inc. Colgate Palmolive Company Constellation Energy Group Dow Jones & Company, Inc. Ernst & Young LLP ExxonMobil Foundation General Electric Foundation Hartford Matching Gift Program IBM Corporation JBT Corporation Johnson & Johnson Mellon Bank Corporation Merck & Company, Inc. New York Life Insurance Company Pfizer, Inc. PPL Procter & Gamble Company Prudential Insurance Company of America Shell Oil Company State Farm Insurance Corp. The Bank of New York Foundation The Boeing Company Thomson Reuters Tyco Electronics Corporation United Technologies Corporation Vanguard Group, Inc. Verizon Foundation
GIFTS-IN-KIND
Rosalie Marinari Akouka ’68 Ambler Theater Cheryl Baker Christine Ball ’83 Mary Moore Baker ’64 Barbara B’s Jewels The Basket Tree LLC Scarlet Begonias Flo Berardinucci Mary E. Brandt, Ph.D. ’76 Bredenbeck’s Bakery The Brunette’s Bookshop Bakery Bruno’s Restaurant Nancy Butterly Campbell’s Place Mary Ellen McClain Carson ’57 Chestnut Grill Chestnut Hill College Admissions Office Chestnut Hill College Office of Student Life Chestnut Hill Gallery & Frame Shop Chestnut Hill Sports Inc. Quelque Chose Cin Cin Restaurant Marie Conn, Ph.D. (F) David Contosta, Ph.D. (F) Mary Mahoney Corini ’51 Denise Costello (S) Dr. Dawn Cute ’93, Optimum Health Chiropractic Theresa Cute (S) Thomas and Nancy Dachille (S) Mary Katherine Schubert Denny ’40 Joseph & M. Kathleen Tigh Detrano ’67 Peggy Derham Dolan ’53 DoubleTree by Hilton: Philadelphia-Valley Forge Dynamic Modern Dentistry From the Boot Dolores Furlan ’64 Anne Gardner Gigi’s Consignment Boutique Steve (D) & Mary Zuccarini Gordon ’85 Green Soul Restaurant Tricia Haber Renee Haggerty ’90 (AD) Handweaving by Sue Seif Heirloom Restaurant Kenneth Hicks (A)
Elizabeth Iaquinto ’85 Iron Hill Brewery & Restaurant Cecile Heebner Knies ’63 Amy & Jim Kolea Barbara Forrester Landis Joan G. Larkin ’52 Katherine Marschall, M.D. ’69 Michael & Margaret Carney McCaffery ’77 (D) Peter & Cheryl McGlinchy Marita McVeigh Donna McVicker ’11 Margarita Mongil-Kwoka ’80 (AD) Margaret C. Moran ’67 (AD) Kathleen O’Boyle ’84, ’97 SGS Teresa O’Boyle Shaun F. O’Malley (D) Paris Bistro and Jazz Café Judith C. Perkins ’70 Patricia Harper Petrozza, M.D. ’74 Karen Phelps Philadelphia 76ers Philadelphia Flyers Philadelphia Phillies Philadelphia Soul Philadelphia Zoo Poppy’s Seed Bakery Anne & Bob Riethmiller, Jr. (D) Rothkoff Law Group W. Ron Ryder, CPA Sague Auto Service, Inc. Salon90 Jack Sandoski (D) & Kathy Sandoski Maryellen Schwartz Jean Schwartz, M.D. ’55 Scoogi’s Italian Kitchen & Bar She Got Glass Sorrento’s Italian Restaurant Split Endz Salon The Hill Company The Pillow Works The Valley Green Inn Margie Thompson, SSJ (F) Threadwell Jo Marie Victor ’04 SCPS (AD) Fran Vorsky ’05, ’07 SGS (S) Kathleen M. Wagner ’60 Woodrow & Susan Wendling Ana Mai Wong-Trainor ’86 Woodmere Art Museum Zipf’s Candies
DONOR REPORT
CORPORATIONS, ORGANIZATIONS & FOUNDATIONS 160over90 Aegis Property Group Allied Barton Security Services Ambler Theater The Arthur Jackson Company Bellevue Communications Group, LLC Blank Rome, LLP Bredenbeck's Bakery Hilda E. Bretzlaff Foundation, Inc. Bruno's Restaurant The Budwick-Bonavita Foundation The Campbell Family Fund Carriage House Lee A. Casaccio, AIA Chartwells College & University Dining Services, Inc. Chestnut Hill Business Association Improvement District Chestnut Hill Dental Group Chestnut Hill Sports Cin Cin Restaurant Code Elevator, Inc. Collegiate Marketing Concepts, Inc. Colonial Electric Supply Company, Inc. Commonwealth of Pennsylvania Governor’s Office Crown Holdings, Inc. Design Network, Inc. Duane Morris, LLP Elizabeth House The Greer Foundation for The Carl & Patricia Tichenor Greer ’62 Scholars Program Emmaus Community Endocrine Specialists, P.C. The Gulati Family Foundation Trust Robert G. & Isabelle Walsh Gundaker Family Fund Hair Shop, LLC Haverford Trust Company The Honickman Foundation International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers - IBEW Local Iron Hill Brewery Jacobs Music Company T. James Kavanagh Foundation Charles Koch Foundation Christian R. & Mary F. Lindback Foundation Maglio Sausage Company The Maguire Foundation
Samuel P. Mandell Foundation The Martin Foundation Michael & Margaret McCaffery Family Fund John Miller, Inc. Morris Arboretum Mount Saint Joseph Academy Murphy Family Foundation The Navesink Foundation New York Life Insurance Company Office Basics Our Mother of Consolation Parish John Charles & Kathryn S. Redmond Foundation E. Allen Reeves Religious of the Assumption Russell Roofing Company Ryder & Company Inc. D. M. Sabia & Co., Inc. Sague Auto Service, Inc. Scarlet Begonias Shearon Environmental Design Company, Inc. Shoemaker Construction Co. SIDEARM Sports The W.W. Smith Charitable Trust Sorrento's Italian Restaurant The Stagecrafters Stradley Ronon Stevens & Young, LLP Valley Green Bank Voith & Mactavish Architects, LLP John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Wohlson Construction Company S.R. Wojdak & Associates Woodmere Art Museum Young Capital Zipf Associates, Inc.
donor report 2014 » matching gift companies, gifts-in-kind, corporations, organizations & foundations 40
IT's NEVER TOO SOON TO
Give Back
“Any amount is a good amount. It’s so important to do what you can.”
Mary Katherine Ortale ’16
I
t’s not every student who grasps the importance of giving back before even graduating. Then again, Mary Katherine Ortale ’16 is not just any student. Growing up as a child of the College — her parents work for CHC — she has always loved Chestnut Hill, but attending the College was never a done-deal. “I had options,” she recalls. “My parents told me I could go wherever I wanted. But I knew the people here and their commitment to the mission, and I wanted the college I attended to have the same sense of passion and commitment that I felt in the members of this campus community.” In speaking with Ortale, it seems she already possesses those qualities in great quantities. She loves the importance of CHC traditions, such as the annual Christmas decorating night and Carol Night. She appreciates that faculty and staff understand students beyond the classroom, and know that the student experience is more than simply a degree.
And she believes that she already is gaining the knowledge she needs to know how to live and reach her goals. “I aspire to do great things, and I believe CHC will allow me the ability to do them,” says Ortale. “And I’m committed to the missions of the Sisters of Saint Joseph and of Chestnut Hill College.” Ortale remembers hearing about plans for campus construction and improvements that will be done with the funds raised in the capital campaign, and about her growing understanding that she did not need to wait to donate. She remembers feeling that it is important for students to realize what they have while they have it. “I know Chestnut Hill is my alma mater, so why not give back as soon as I can?” Ortale asked herself. “It’s important for all students at any level to give. It’s important for us to appreciate the education we’re getting and the sense of community and partnerships with faculty, administration and the Sisters of Saint Joseph.”
Ortale works for the Pennsylvania Society, a non-profit based in Flourtown, Pa., and coordinates the Society’s Benjamin Franklin Scholar Awards program. She happily dedicates part of her paycheck to CHC, donating to the endowment and campaign for the past two years. She also has donated in the memory of Sister Regina Maria Brimmer ’40 whose gentle spirit, compassion and cheerful outlook on life inspired her. Ortale is one of the first to become a member of the President’s Circle as a student. Ortale majors in early childhood education with minors in special education and religious studies. She plans to teach first grade and continue as an advocate for people with learning disabilities one day. Although she’s been challenged by dyslexia, she decided not to let her learning difference own her, rather, she became a peer facilitator for the International Dyslexia Association and works with them at elementary schools and other locations around Pennsylvania and Delaware, helping others understand what it’s like to live with dyslexia.
In addition to her studies, Ortale has served the College as a resident assistant and admissions ambassador and is a founding member of the College’s 1650 Society. Ortale has held several positions in the Student Government Association. As a freshman, she was elected vice president of academic affairs; as a sophomore, she was vice president of the student body; and next year, she’ll be its president. “My main goal is to encourage students to have pride in CHC and take ownership of this great place. I want the outside world to know it too. Our students and alumni are out there day in and day out doing great things — serving, fundraising and educating the less fortunate. We want to be recognized for who we are and what we accomplish. “I truly loved my first two years and can’t believe I’m halfway through,” she adds. “I’m excited to see what the next two years will bring.”
donor report 2014
41
ANNUAL SCHOLARSHIP GALA COMMITTEE & SPONSORS SCHOLARSHIP GALA COMMITTEE Michael F. Dunleavy, Chair (D) Christopher Cordaro ’10 John L. Melvin, M.D. Kate Sprandio ’10 Jo Marie Victor ’04 SCPS
SCHOLARSHIP GALA SPONSORS PLATINUM SPONSOR Crown Holdings, Inc.
GOLD SPONSORS John L. Melvin, M.D. & Carol Melvin Pate, Ed.D. (S)
SILVER SPONSORS 160over90 The Haverford Trust Company Thomas Wynne Apartments, Robert and Carol Lockyer
BRONZE SPONSORS Bellevue Communications Casaccio Yu Architects Joseph and M. Kathleen Tigh Detrano ’67 Thomas Lynch, RADM, USN (ret.) (D) Optimum Health Chiropractic, Dr. Dawn Cute ’93 C. Lowell and JoEllen Noonan Parsons ’66 (D) S.R. Wojdak & Associates
SCHOLARSHIP GALA SUPPORTERS Rosalie Marinari Akouka ’68 Ambler Theater Cheryl Baker Christine Ball ’83 Mary Moore Baker ’64 Barbara B’s Jewels The Basket Tree LLC Scarlet Begonias Flo Berardinucci Mary E. Brandt, Ph.D. ’76 Bredenbeck’s Bakery Bruno’s Restaurant
DONOR REPORT
Nancy Butterly Mary Ellen McClain Carson ’57 Chestnut Hill College Admissions Office Chestnut Hill College Office of Student Life Chestnut Hill Gallery & Frame Shop Chestnut Hill Sports Inc. Quelque Chose Cin Cin Restaurant Marie Conn, Ph.D. (F) David Contosta, Ph.D. (F) Mary Mahoney Corini ’51 Dr. Dawn Cute ’93, Optimum Health Chiropractic Theresa Cute (S) Thomas and Nancy Dachille (S) Mary Katherine Schubert Denny ’40 Joseph & M. Kathleen Tigh Detrano ’67 DoubleTree by Hilton: Philadelphia-Valley Forge Dynamic Modern Dentistry From the Boot Dolores Furlan ’64 Anne Gardner Gigi’s Consignment Boutique Steve (D) & Mary Zuccarini Gordon ’85 Tricia Haber Renee Haggerty ’90 (AD) Handweaving by Sue Seif Elizabeth Iaquinto ’85 Iron Hill Brewery Cecile Heebner Knies ’63 Amy & Jim Kolea Barbara Forrester Landis Joan G. Larkin ’52 Katherine Marschall, M.D. ’69 Michael & Margaret Carney McCaffery ’77 (D) Peter & Cheryl McGlinchy Marita McVeigh Donna McVicker ’11 Margarita Mongil-Kwoka ’80 (AD) Margaret C. Moran ’67 (AD) Kathleen O’Boyle ’84, ’97 SGS Teresa O’Boyle Shaun F. O’Malley (D) Judith C. Perkins ’70 Patricia Harper Petrozza, M.D. ’74
donor report 2014 » annual scholarship gala committee & sponsors 42
Karen Phelps Philadelphia 76ers Philadelphia Flyers Philadelphia Phillies Philadelphia Soul Philadelphia Zoo Anne & Bob Riethmiller, Jr. (D) Rothkoff Law Group W. Ron Ryder, CPA Sague Auto Service, Inc. Salon90 Jack Sandoski (D) & Kathy Sandoski Maryellen Schwartz Jean Schwartz, M.D. ’55 Scoogi’s Italian Kitchen & Bar She Got Glass Sorrento’s Italian Restaurant Split Endz Salon The Hill Company The Pillow Works The Valley Green Inn Margie Thompson, SSJ (F) Threadwell Jo Marie Victor ’04 SCPS (AD) Fran Vorsky ’05, ’07 SGS (S) Kathleen M. Wagner ’60 Woodrow & Susan Wendling Ana Mai Wong-Trainor ’86 Woodmere Art Museum
2013 GOLF INVITATIONAL COMMITTEE & SPONSORS
GOLF INVITATIONAL COMMITTEE
GOLF INVITATIONAL SPONSORS
Rick Colvin Kim Kolesnick Patricia Jeskey McDermott ’65 Ellen McGuinn (S) Tom Oechsle Lynn Ortale (A) Albert Stroble (S) Jennifer Thorpe (S) Lynn Tubman (S) Charles Watkins (S)
160over90 Academy Bus Aegis Property Group James & Patricia May Agger ’63 (D) Allied Barton Security Services The Arthur Jackson Company Sandra Bumgardner, Psy.D. ’76, '89 SGS, ’03 SGS (S) Lee A. Casaccio AIA Chartwells College & University Dining Services, Inc.
Chestnut Hill Business Association Improvement District Chestnut Hill Dental Group Code Elevator, Inc. Collegiate Marketing Concepts, Inc. Colonial Electric Supply Company, Inc. Richard Colvin Peter & Therese Conn Marie Conn, Ph.D. (F) Crown Holdings, Inc. Design Network, Inc. Sheila Corcoran Doyle ’65
DONOR REPORT
Kathleen McCarthy Doyle-Kelly ’61 Duane Morris, LLP Endocrine Specialists, P.C. Thomas & Cecelia Englebert-Passanza ’77 (AD) Thomas & Pamela Fiugalski-Prevoznik ’94 (AD) Ford Flower Hasbrouck & King Elizabeth H. Gemmill Elaine R. Green, Ed.D. (A) Graphic Packaging The Gulati Family Foundation Trust Robert & Isabelle Walsh Gundaker ’65 Hi-Trend, LP International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers - IBEW Local Kevin & Jennifer Johnson Kebea ’05, ’08 SGS (AD) Duke Kennedy Mr. & Mrs. Dennis Keough Klenzoid, Inc. Richard Lackman, M.D. & Doranne Lackman LF Henry Paint Company, Inc. Robert & Carol Lockyer Kevin Lyden Thomas Lynch, RADM, USN (ret) (D) The Maguire Foundation Michael & Margaret Carney McCaffery ’77 (D) Gill & Patricia Jeskey McDermott ’65 Amy McLeer ’94 (AD) Miller Flooring Company, Inc. Margarita Mongil-Kwoka ’80 (AD) Mount Saint Joseph Academy Office Basics Shaun F. O'Malley (D) & Lyn Buchheit Our Mother of Consolation Parish C. Lowell Parsons, M.D. & JoEllen Noonan Parsons ’66 (D) John & Barbara Pierantozzi E. Allen Reeves Russell Roofing Company Mary Sabia Sague Auto Service, Inc. D. M. Sabia & Co., Inc. Jack Sandoski (D) & Kathleen Sandoski Shearon Environmental Design Company, Inc. Shoemaker Construction Co. SIDEARM Sports
Jerrold & Patricia Sipocz David & Jodie King Smith ’94, ’01 SGS (A) Stradley Ronon Stevens & Young, LLP Albert Stroble (S) Tee's Golf Center & The Proving Grounds Richard Ulmer Voith & Mactavish Architects, LLP Kathleen Wagner ’60 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. S.R. Wojdak & Associates Young Capital Zipf Associates, Inc.
2013 golf invitational committee & sponsors » donor report 2014 43
2013 - 2014
DONOR REPORT
CHC BOARD OF DIRECTORS CHAIR Margaret Carney McCaffery, M.S. ’77 Educator
VICE CHAIR Anne P. Myers, SSJ, Ph.D. President, Sisters of Saint Joseph
PRESIDENT Carol Jean Vale, SSJ, Ph.D. President, Chestnut Hill College
DIRECTORS Patricia May Agger, M.Ed. ’63 Regina Bell, SSJ, M.A. General Council, Sisters of Saint Joseph Patricia Connolly, M.A. Managing Director for the Center of Corporate Governance Drexel University LeBow College of Business
Shaun F. O’Malley* Chairman Emeritus PricewaterhouseCoopers
Constance Gilder, SSJ, M.A. General Council, Sisters of Saint Joseph
Jo Ellen Noonan Parsons ’66*
James B. Ginty, J.D., LL.M.* Commissioner Pennsylvania Gaming Control Board Steven J. Gordon, Ph.D.* Founder/CEO Intelligent Bio-Systems, Inc. Kent Griswold, Ph.D., M.B.A. President and CEO (former) GRISWOLD SPECIAL CARE George J. Hartnett, Esq.* Chairman of Executive Committee & Managing Partner White and Williams, LLP
Mary Dacey, SSJ, M.Ed. Vice President, Sisters of Saint Joseph
Karen Spencer Kelly, Esq.* Of Counsel, Stevens & Lee P.C.
Frank L. Davey, J.D. Chairman John Evans’ Sons, Inc.
Stephanie King. M.D. ’79 Director of Minimally Invasive Gynecologic Surgery Foxchase Cancer Center
Joseph Denny, B.S.* Senior Advisor to the Chairman (retired) Liberty Property Trust Michael F. Dunleavy, M.B.A.* Vice President of Corporate Affairs & Public Relations Crown Holdings, Inc. Antoinette Taylor Ford, M.S., M.B.A. ’63* Founder and Performer, Double Nickels Theatre Company
donor report 2014 » chc board of directors 2013-2014 44
Stephen A. Gardner, B.S.* Partner Deloitte & Touche, LLP
Thomas Lynch, RADM, USN (ret), M.S.* Managing Director The Musser Group Margaret Bennett McGreal, M.A. ’60 Catherine Lockyer Moulton ’92 Project Manager Merloc Partners, L.P.
Janet Brown Quintal, M.A., M.B.A. ’70* Robert Riethmiller, Jr., B.S.* PTR Baler & Compactor Company (retired) Catherine Robinson, SSJ, M.A. Ministry Coordinator, Sisters of Saint Joseph Jack J. Sandoski, B.S. Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer Abington Community Bancorp Ronald Zemnick, B.A.* Senior Manager MEP Services Shoemaker Construction Company Carol Zinn, SSJ, Ed.D. General Council, Sisters of Saint Joseph *Missing from photo
BOARD OF DIRECTORS 2013 - 2014
CHC ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
DONOR REPORT
PRESIDENT Renee Haggerty ’90
VICE-PRESIDENT Jo Marie Victor ’04 SCPS*
SECRETARY Margaret Moran ’67
DIRECTORS Cecelia Englebert-Passanza, R.N. ’77* Joanne Fink ’76* Pamela Fiugalski-Prevoznik ’94 Jonathan Collier Freeman ’98 SGS Mark Hammons ’08, ’10 SGS Amy McLeer ’94* Joan McFadden Jernée ’67* Max Kaplan ’11 Jennifer Johnson Kebea ’05, ’08 SGS Margarita Mongil-Kwoka ’80 Tan T. Tang ’07* Leslie Zemnick ’11
DIRECTORS-AT-LARGE Jane M. Fearn-Zimmer, Esq. ’88* George Roitzsch ’07, ’09 SGS*
EX-OFFICIO MEMBERS Carol Jean Vale, SSJ, Ph.D* President Catherine E. Quinn ’78* Director of Alumni Relations * Missing from photo
chc alumni association board of directors 2013-2014 » donor report 2014
45
DONOR REPORT
SUPPORTING THE FUTURE OF CHC The needs of a private college in today’s world
A Gift to the Endowment
are many. As a small Catholic institution
Contributions to the College’s endowment
dedicated to teaching and the liberal arts,
are invested and only the income from the
Chestnut Hill College is largely tuition driven.
earned interest is used each year. You can make
Although tuition for undergraduates at
a designated gift to the general endowment
Chestnut Hill College exceeds $31,000,
or choose to invest in the College’s future by
it provides only 70 percent of the real cost of
funding a new or supporting an existing named
educating a student. To maintain its tradition of
scholarship, academic lecture series and other
excellence in education, Chestnut Hill College
specially designed programs.
is grateful for your generous contributions since the College receives no financial assistance from the Catholic Church or the Archdiocese of Philadelphia, and funding from state or federal agencies is given only for specific projects or programs. Contributions from you to any of the designations listed below are investments in the College’s future and help ensure that a Chestnut Hill College education will be available for future generations.
Designating Your Gift A Gift to The Griffin Fund
A Reunion Gift Every five years, you celebrate the anniversary of your graduation. We invite you to consider making a special gift to your alma mater during your reunion year. You may choose to designate your gift to The Griffin Fund, the general endowment, scholarships, campus ministry, athletics, Logue Library, special class gift funds or specific academic programs.
A Tribute Gift Often in our lives someone comes along who has touched us in a very special way. You can
Carol Jean Vale, SSJ, Ph.D., visits with students during Harry Potter weekend 2013.
A Gift of Securities
If you need further information or assistance,
Your gift of securities to Chestnut Hill College
please contact Denise Costello, associate
can be sent electronically to the College’s
director of donor relations, at 215.248.7089
broker, Haverford Trust.
or costellod@chc.edu.
The online form to complete this process is
A Matching Gift
located on our Web site at:
If you or your spouse is employed by a
www.chc.edu/giftofsecurities
company with a matching gift program
These gifts are used to supplement the general
pay tribute to that individual by making a gift
operating budget by providing assistance with
in his or her honor or memory. A personalized
everything from library acquisitions and faculty
card is sent from the College to the designated
DTC #901
salaries to utilities and instructional supplies.
individual(s) advising them that a gift has been
Institutional ID #94679
This fund is critical to the day-to-day operations
made on their behalf.
A/C #302466
of the College.
A/C Name: The Haverford Trust Company Reference: Chestnut Hill College Subaccount / A/C #011653
donor report 2014 » supporting the future of chc 46
you can provide additional support for Chestnut Hill College by designating the College as the recipient of matching funds. To learn whether your contributions may be eligible, contact either your company’s
personnel office or the Office of Institutional
If you have any questions, please contact
Advancement at the College. Matching gift
Denise Costello, associate director of
funds are not tax deductible for employees of
donor relations, at 215.248.7089 or
matching gift companies.
e-mail costellod@chc.edu.
In administering matching gifts, the College
For assistance with any payment plan option,
follows national guidelines. You may have
or to discuss, in confidence, specific
your gift matched by your employer and receive
opportunities for providing support,
recognition for the value of your out-of-pocket
please contact:
gift plus the value of the matching gift. Hence, you may make a gift of $750 that is matched with $750 and you will receive recognition for $1,500. Designation of matching gift funds is determined by each matching
Kathleen Rex Anderson, Ed.D. ’66 Interim Vice President for Institutional Advancement Phone: 215.248.7085 or e-mail andersonk@chc.edu
gift company. Funds are used for the same
Chuck Watkins
purpose as the employee’s gift when received
Director of the Griffin Fund
from corporations that so stipulate. For funds
Phone: 215.753.3692
received from corporations that designate the
or e-mail watkinsc@chc.edu
match as unrestricted, the purpose is determined by the College.
Mary Theresa Shevland, SSJ Director of Planned Giving
Supporting Chestnut Hill College
Phone: 215.753.3617 or e-mail shevlandm@chc.edu
Chestnut Hill College is a tax-exempt charity, acknowledged by the Internal Revenue Service as rating 501-C- (3) status. Your contributions to Chestnut Hill College are fully tax deductible. For your convenience, you can make a gift online by visiting www.chc.edu/donate. Contributions may be sent to: Chestnut Hill College Office of Institutional Advancement 9601 Germantown Avenue Philadelphia, PA 19118
supporting the future of chc » donor report 2014
47
DONOR REPORT
WHEN, HOW, AND WHY TO PLAN A GIFT Cash
Securities
Real Estate
Personal Property
Bequest
How does it work?
Give cash
Give appreciated securities
Give appreciated real estate
Give artwork, collectibles, equipment or other types of tangible property
Simplest form of gift planning (plan now, give later)
What do you want to do?
Maximize the deduction; minimize the gift details
Avoid tax on capital gains; afford a larger gift to us
Make a substantial gift, avoid capital gains tax, receive a large income tax deduction
Put assets you no longer need or can maintain to good use
Make a gift that costs nothing during your lifetime
How do you make the gift?
Write a check payable to Chestnut Hill College or give online now at www.chc.edu/donate
Contribute long-term appreciated stock or other marketable securities
Donate the property to us
Donate tangible personal property related to our tax-exempt function
Name us in your will or living trust by designating a specific amount or a share of the residue
Reduce estate tax
Removes taxable assets from estate
Removes taxable assets from estate
Removes taxable assets from estate
Removes taxable assets from estate
Donation exempt from federal estate tax
Reduce income tax
Immediate deduction for full value
Immediate deduction for full value
Immediate deduction for full value
Immediate deduction for full value if we can use the asset
Complete avoidance
Complete avoidance
Complete avoidance
Donor Benefits
Reduce or eliminate capital gains tax
Complete avoidance
Get income back from the gift Control of assets during lifetime
Give an asset but keep enjoying it Still like the stock? Use your cash to buy at today’s price and lock in a higher cost
More How does it benefit us?
Delivers immediate benefits
Delivers immediate benefits
donor report 2014 Âť when, how and why to plan a gift 48
Delivers immediate benefits
Can be used to make a significant gift without cash outlay
Make a substantial gift when you no longer need the assets
Delivers immediate benefits
Ensures our future strength
www.CHC.plannedgiving.org
DONOR REPORT
RETIREMENT PLAN ASSETS, IRA
Life Insurance
Retained Life Interest
Bargain Sale
Charitable Gift Annuity
Charitable Remainder Trust
Charitable Lead Trust
Name us as the beneficiary of the plan
Give old or new policy with us as beneficiary and owner
Give real estate but keep the right to use and enjoy it for life
Sell real estate or other valuable property to us for less than fair value
Simple gift contract that provides lifetime payments to one or two persons
Trust that pays income for life or a term of years to donor and/or others. Assets ultimately benefit us
Trust that makes payments to us for a period of years. Assets ultimately pass to donor or heirs
Avoid double taxation at death; give tax-advantaged assets to heirs
Make a large gift at little cost
Make a significant gift that doesn’t affect your lifestyle
Make a significant gift while still receiving lump sum or cash flow from asset
Supplement income with steady payments that are partially tax-free
Diversify assets, avoid capital gains tax, secure often greater income and possible inflation protection
Reduce gift and estate taxes on assets you pass to heirs; lower income tax liability; retain control of assets
Name us as whole or partial successor beneficiary on your plan’s form
Donate a paid-up policy you no longer need or take out a new policy
Give real estate to us but retain a life estate
Sign a contract to sell property to us at a discounted value
Establish a gift annuity contract with us that pays a set amount for life
Create a trust that pays income to donor and/or others, principal (remainder) ultimately goes to us
Create a trust that pays income to us, principal (remainder) ultimately returns to heirs or donor
Donation exempt from federal estate and income tax
Donation exempt from federal estate tax
Removes taxable assets from estate
Removes gifted portion of value of asset from estate
Removes taxable assets from estate
Removes taxable assets from estate
Can remove taxable assets from estate
Your heirs will avoid income tax
Current income tax deduction for paid-up policy. Future deductions for premium payments on new policy
Deduction for value of the asset, less value of your right to keep using it
Deduction for discount from fair market value
Deduction for gift portion of asset
Deduction for gift portion of asset
Limited
Complete avoidance
Partial avoidance
Partial avoidance
Partial avoidance
Varies
Determined by your agreement with us
Fixed payments for life for one or two individuals
Variable or fixed income for life
Continue to take withdrawals from plan during your lifetime
Property reverts to donor, or to heirs with reduced gift and estate taxes
Use of asset during lifetime
Often overlooked and easily given
Simple to set up; small financial commitment for large ultimate gift
Ensures our future strength
Ensures our future strength
Use proceeds to help fund needs at a later stage in life (retirement facility, etc.) Ensures our future strength
Chart courtesy of PlannedGiving.com
Great retirement income supplement
Delivers immediate benefits Ensures our future strength
Significant income and estate tax advantages
Best for assets expected to appreciate rapidly
Ensures our future strength
Delivers immediate benefits
when, how and why to plan a gift Âť donor report 2014
49
DONOR REPORT
DONOR REPORT CONTRIBUTORS Kathleen Rex Anderson, Ed.D. ’66
Catherine E. Quinn ’78
Founded in 1924 by the Sisters of Saint Joseph,
Please include your full name, address, phone
Interim Vice President for Institutional Advancement
Director of Alumni Relations
Chestnut Hill College is a four-year Catholic
number and class year.
215.248.7137
college in the Ignatian tradition offering a
215.248.7085
quinnc@chc.edu
traditional liberal arts undergraduate program,
andersonk@chc.edu Mary Theresa Shevland, SSJ
as well as accelerated undergraduate degrees,
Editor
graduate and doctoral degree programs.
Chestnut Hill College Donor Report
Kathleen M. Spigelmyer ’98
Director of Planned Giving
Director of Communications, Editor
215.753.3617
The College is an equal opportunity employer
215.248.7025
shevlandm@chc.edu
that recruits, advertises and hires without
spigelmyerk@chc.edu Chuck Watkins Brenda Lange
Director of the Griffin Fund
Publications Manager, Associate Editor
215.753.3692
215.248.7110
watkinsc@chc.edu
langeb@chc.edu Photography Denise Costello
Linda Johnson
Associate Director of Donor Relations
Brenda Lange
215.248.7089
Jim Roese
costellod@chc.edu Stacy Gillins Director of Constituent Records 215.248.7127 gillinss@chc.edu
In keeping with the mission of Chestnut Hill College and our concern for the earth, this Donor Report was printed with soy ink on paper that contains ten percent recycled content. Please recycle after use.
donor report 2014 » donor report contributors 50
Address all correspondence to:
regard to race, creed, color, national origin, age or sex. Reprinting any material herein requires written consent of the College. The editor of this report makes every effort to include accurate information. Comments, questions, concerns, and opinions are welcome in the form of letters to the editor.
Chestnut Hill College 9601 Germantown Avenue Philadelphia, PA 19118 Email to: spigelmyerk@chc.edu The information in this donor report recognizes gifts received from July 1, 2013 through June 30, 2014.
ANNUAL SUPPORT OF THE GRIFFIN FUND from alumni, parents and friends is the foundation of giving at the College. Your yearly gift ensures that all students have the opportunity to receive a superior education in the liberal arts, sciences and professions within a dynamic learning environment.
WE DEPEND ON YOUR SUPPORT OF THE GRIFFIN FUND
Gifts under
$250
added up to $226,194 last year.
STUDENTS RELY ON FINANCIAL AID AND SCHOLARSHIPS TO MAKE COLLEGE AFFORDABLE More than
90%
of full-time students receive financial support.
Last year, students received
$14.2 million in financial aid.
The Griffin Fund raised
More than
1,100
$586,107
in unrestricted dollars for the 2014 fiscal year.
donors made gifts to the Griffin Fund this past fiscal year.
Let’s increase that to
1,600
donors next year.
BE THE DIFFERENCE and support THE GRIFFIN FUND with your GIFT.
DID YOU KNOW THIS ABOUT CHESTNUT HILL COLLEGE? Chestnut Hill College was named one of 226 institutions by the Princeton Review, in the “Best in the Northeast” section of its “2014 Best Colleges: Region by Region.” Chestnut Hill College students represent 22 states and 21 foreign countries.
18 – The number of Steinway pianos on campus since the College received the prestigious “All-Steinway School” designation in 2011—the only Philadelphia Catholic college to have this distinctive status.
9 – The number of international universities where Chestnut Hill College students can study abroad through the College’s Global Education Office.
480
– The number of students living on campus. Improvements to the residence halls—Fontbonne, Fournier, Fitzsimmons and Loyola Lodge—are made possible through funding from the Griffin Fund.
SUPPORT THE GRIFFIN FUND BY MAKING YOUR GIFT BY JUNE 30, 2015. THE GRIFFIN FUND Chestnut Hill College :: PO Box 41552 :: Philadelphia, PA 19101-1552 215.248.7085 :: Make a gift online at www.chc.edu/gift
1,352 – The number of hours provided in tutoring sessions through the Office of Student Success. Free tutoring is available to students in math, writing, foreign language and more.
48 – The number of Biomedical Lecture Series speakers since its inception in 1994.
World renowned scientists—including two Nobel Laureates—have presented on topics such as gene therapy, cancer research, and infectious diseases.
1 – The number of people it takes to make a difference in a Chestnut Hill College student’s life, regardless of the size of the gift. Please make your gift today.
NON PROFIT ORGANIZATION U.S. POSTAGE PAID PERMIT #511 FORT WASHINGTON, PA
9601 Germantown Avenue Philadelphia, PA 19118 www.chc.edu
CHESTNUT HILL COLLEGE IS CELEBRATING
OUR 90TH ANNIVERSARY! SAVE THE DATE Saturday, May 16, 2015 Cocktails, Dinner and Dancing
• Live music from “All About Me” • Tower of Treasure, iPad Raffle, 50/50, Live Student Support Auction • Libris Society Induction Since 1924, students who attended Chestnut Hill College have had the opportunity to benefit from a mission-based, curriculum rich, Catholic liberal arts education. Now, more than ever, academic scholarships play a crucial role in the pursuit of higher education. Please plan on joining us in celebration of our 90th anniversary as we raise funds for academic scholarships. For more information, visit www.chc.edu/gala