Chestnut Hill College Donor Report 09

Page 1

DONOR REPORT

CHESTNUT HILL COLLEGE


DONOR REPORT

MISSION STATEMENT 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. Chest 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

CONTENTS Letter from the President

1

Master Plan 2008

3

Letter from the Chair of the Board

7

Financial Reports

8

President’s Circle

10

Associates Club

14

• Gold Associates

14

• Scarlet Associates

14

• Silver Associates

15

respects the contributions made by other faith traditions in the development of the whole person. The College nurtures a sense

Hallmark Society

20

of integrity, spirituality, and social justice in all.

Tribute Fund

22

Alumni Giving

24

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

• School of Undergraduate Studies

24

• School of Continuing & Professional Studies

34

• School of Graduate Studies

36

Reunion Giving Fund

31

2009 Senior Class Gift

33

Corporations, Organizations & Foundations

37

and career preparation. The College guides students in applying theoretical learning through experiential education designed

Parents & Friends

38

collaboratively by faculty and students.

Gifts-in-Kind

40

Matching Gift Companies

42

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,

• to uphold an atmosphere of communal respect in which all may clarify and articulate personal values and beliefs while

CHC Board of Directors

43

exploring the ethical and moral dimensions underlying all relationships. The College encourages inter-faith opportunities

Alumni Association Board of Directors

44

by acquainting all students with Catholicism, its theology and its Judeo-Christian roots, and by engaging in dialogue with

Supporting the Future of CHC

45

women and men of other beliefs.

Donor Profiles: Faces of Philanthropy

• 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

ON THE COVER: The Chestnut Hill College Master Plan 2008 vision for the integration of the SugarLoaf Hill and main College campuses.

• Michael and Margaret Carney McCaffery ’77

11

• 160over90

13

• Michael Sharp

17

• Mary Jackson Fitzsimmons ’35

21

• Betty Buckley

23

• Richard A. Canning

27

• Class of 1967

29

• Andréa Fernandes ’09

35

• Joseph Kulkosky, Ph.D.

39

• Philip F. Radomski

41


DONOR REPORT

LETTER FROM THE PRESIDENT MY DEAR FRIENDS & BENEFACTORS OF CHESTNUT HILL COLLEGE, ONCE AGAIN, I OFFER MY GRATITUDE FOR YOUR FAITHFUL SUPPORT OF

Such dramatic increases, especially in a time of

our benefactors. As you know, donor gifts take various forms and range

Chestnut Hill College. Given the difficult economic situation, I am

declining enrollments nationally, must be met

in size. Every gift is valued. Every gift is needed. This year, you will share

especially appreciative that you have chosen to continue to make the

with decisive action and strategic initiatives.

in the “reasons of the heart” that motivate the multi-million dollar gift as

College a priority for your charitable donations. These are momentous

Once the number of entering students escalates,

well as those that prompt smaller, equally generous donations. The goal is

times for the institution, and your contributions help us to respond more

it is ill-advised to limit acceptances, lest we

to give you a sense of who our benefactors are, the varied ways in which they

effectively to the increasing needs of our growing student population.

squander a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity

support us, and their motives for choosing to do so. Naturally, reasons vary,

for the institution.

but at the center of each story is a love for the College — this special place

This fall, we introduced to the public our newly completed Master Plan,

whose mission, legacy, and values have touched the lives of countless people.

which integrates the College on two hills architecturally, aesthetically,

Over the years, your contributions have made

and visually. With the transition to coeducation and the ensuing population

it possible for dreams to become realities.

As you read the stories and peruse the report, you might ask: “What is it

explosion, the SugarLoaf Hill campus provides the space and the place

Your decision to contribute to the College

that I love about Chestnut Hill College?” Perhaps, like the poet, you may

for future growth. Ten buildings (academic, residential, cultural, social,

demonstrates your commitment to the essential

find it necessary to count the things you treasure — memories, people,

and religious) are planned. Enhanced by a series of beautifully landscaped

and timeless values of a Catholic education

the academics, the life preparation, the campus, the spirituality,

courtyards, gardens, and lawns, the campus will resemble a European

in the tradition of the Sisters of Saint Joseph.

the ambience. Chestnut Hill College is a special place,

city on two hills.

Your gifts empower us to establish a learning

and it holds a special place in many hearts.

environment in which students can flourish

For the great gratitude that marks

both academically and personally while

your gifts, I give you thanks.

As is evident from the artist’s watercolor renderings included in these pages, the Master Plan is a brilliant design conceived to create

appropriating the value of service to one

a magnificent campus capable of educating and housing a full-time

another and to the world. Now, more than ever,

population of 1,500 undergraduate students while also welcoming

we need your support as a bold, daring Master

a burgeoning number of adult students in both the graduate and

and Strategic Plan chart the course for the

undergraduate schools.

College to move into the future with the style,

In August, we welcomed 350 new students to campus. This number

elegance, and professionalism that characterize

exceeds the total population in the traditional undergraduate school

the unique tradition of this College on two hills.

the year we announced the transition to coeducation. The current growth is phenomenal and must be supported by an infrastructure that can provide the diverse spaces necessary to accommodate the curricular and co-curricular programs of the College.

Gratefully,

Sister Carol Jean Vale, SSJ, Ph.D. President

This year, we have decided to present the Annual Report in a slightly different format. We thought it would be interesting for you to know the personal stories of some of

1 » letter from the president » donor report 2009



DONOR REPORT

MASTER PLAN 2008 “REALIZING OUR FUTURE OF HOPE, CHESTNUT HILL COLLEGE — THE STRATEGIC PLAN: 2005-2008” challenged the College to build upon strong traditions to become a “College of distinction.” A focus of the strategic plan was the development of a curriculum that promotes a living/learning experience for each student. In addition to advancing its educational vision, the College’s strategic plan also called for a successful transition to a coeducational institution (now complete), and increased enrollments to ensure institutional viability. The purpose of the Chestnut Hill College Master Plan 2008 is to address the facilities needs of an ambitious College Strategic Plan. As a hallmark of good campus planning practices, the time had arrived to conduct a periodic assessment of the 1995 Site and Facilities Master Plan for Chestnut Hill College. However, this reassessment had gone beyond minor adjustments to an existing plan. Instead, the Master Plan sets the course for a much greater campus expansion, and it further promotes imperative environmental stewardship. Realizing the goals of the strategic plan makes many demands of the College’s existing facilities and grounds. Given the recent increases in enrollment over consecutive years in all three schools at Chestnut Hill College, and the desire to continue to grow, the need for new and improved facilities is immediate. The term for implementation of this Master Plan is not based upon a time scale, but rather is based upon the ability to provide the minimum required space for selected target enrollment levels. In order to project future needs, the plan uses fall 2006 enrollment levels as a benchmark, the completed semester prior to the commencement of the space needs studies. The term for the Master Plan is then set out on a scale of target student enrollments prescribed in the College’s strategic plan, culminating in an ideal operating enrollment — Target C.

Master Plan 2008 overall site plan.

3 » master plan 2008 » donor report 2009


STRATEGIC PLAN GOALS FALL 2006

TARGET ENROLLMENT A

TARGET ENROLLMENT B

TARGET ENROLLMENT C

Student Headcount = 1,892

Student Headcount = 2,274

Student Headcount = 2,531

Student Headcount = 2,841

includes: 1,024 SUS students

includes: 1,250 SUS students

includes: 1,500 SUS students

800 SGS students

831 SGS students

864 SGS students

450 SCPS students

450 SCPS students

450 SCPS students

Staff Headcount = 240

Faculty Headcount = 102

Faculty Headcount = 173

Faculty Headcount = 197

Staff Headcount = 287

Staff Headcount = 382

Staff Headcount = 433

STRATEGIC PLAN SPACE REQUIREMENTS: Existing Gross Square Feet:

276,741

273,287

273,287

273,287

New Construction:

105,695

291,228

400,900

525,354

Total Gross Square Feet:

382,436

564,515

674,187

798,641

820

1,000

1,200

506 (evening)

999 (evening)

1,182 (day)

STUDENT HOUSING: Beds: 560 (existing)

PEAK PARKING DEMANDS: 468 spaces (existing supply)

Table – Summary of Strategic Plan Targets and Facilities Needs

Iconic architecture creates anchor point destinations along the path through the “hilltown” on SugarLoaf Hill.

donor report 2009 » master plan 2008 » 4


Before embarking on planning proposals, the developed understanding of future goals

APPROACHES TO COLLEGE FACILITIES AND LANDSCAPE

and existing campus conditions revealed:

Further recognizing the dynamic setting of Chestnut Hill College, the Master Plan

INITIAL PRIORITIES OF THE MASTER PLAN ARE:

approach to the landscape leverages the assets The first requirement in the development of the

of the hills, the woods, the open greens,

STEP ONE: Parking & SugarLoaf Hill Connections

Master Plan is understanding the amount and

Projects:

will be required to respond to

the creek, and the historic architecture to

type of spaces that will be necessary to serve the

enrollment growth.

weave “The College on Two Hills” into one

mission of the College. Having conducted a

unified campus. First, physical connections

study of facilities utilization and space needs,

are established by improving roadways,

analysis data was used to propose new structures

increasing pedestrian access and connections,

and renovate existing buildings to fulfill

and establishing visual linkages across the hilltops.

• Student life and student amenity space

space needs for strategic enrollment levels.

The pedestrian experience is carefully considered

is currently severely lacking, and new

This analysis was inclusive of campus access

with new woodland boardwalks and creek-

space is a priority.

and transportation issues, and solutions for

crossing bridges that offer an anthology of

present and future parking demands were

environmental encounters ranging between

also developed.

STEP TWO: First Priority Improvements

bucolic solitude and bustling campus life.

Projects:

needed immediately, while long-term

Qualities of campus life issues are not ignored,

A unified campus is also derived through

demands will likely not be fulfilled

and the Master Plan serves to promote

an individual’s indirect or unintentional

without the construction of multi-level

development of an academic community of

engagements with place; therefore, the Master

parking structures.

intentional learners. Utilizing existing patterns

Plan consciously creates implied experiential

• Creation of a campus piazza.

of tightly knit, mixed-use buildings as the

connections between the Chestnut Hill and

model for new development, the Master Plan

• SugarLoaf parking garage.

SugarLoaf campuses by dictating a common

seeks to enhance community interactions and

palette of materials and similar architectural

fellowship in a living/learning environment.

forms and spatial scales. The plan also unifies

The architectural language of the European

The Master Plan could take as many as 25 years

by considering the Wissahickon not as a divide

hill town gives character to the development

to complete and comes with an estimated price

to be crossed but as a natural power to behold,

of “The College on Two Hills.”

tag of $350–$500 million. Plans for the

and a destination in itself. The establishment

SugarLoaf property include several academic

of the creek as the heart of the campus is the

buildings and residence halls, a performing arts

completion of the campus plan tapestry.

center, and a 600-car parking garage with a

• Significant newly constructed facilities

• New student housing is the largest component of this new growth.

• Parking supply does not serve current demands and short-term solutions are

• Athletics programs are under served by the existing fields, and more suitable fields are needed wherever open space is available on campus or off. • Environmentally sustainable approaches to land development will be an integral component of the Master Plan implementation. • Accommodation of the natural processes

The challenges of an environmentally dynamic location have limited the availability of suitable building sites. These limited sites are maximized

of hillside storm water run-off and the

through the construction of buildings or

Wissahickon Creek’s flood cycles are

installation of green-roof courtyards on top

not only necessary, but an outgrowth

of proposed parking structures, thus creating

of the College’s mission to value and

“new land.”

care for the earth.

• Safe and convenient pedestrian connections between the Chestnut Hill and SugarLoaf campuses. • Parking improvements to meet current parking space demands and riparian restoration. • Road improvements for safe vehicular access to SugarLoaf Hill.

• Creation of student amenity space through the construction of a College Center with structured parking.

• SugarLoaf Hill residence hall one.

green roof. The College hopes to complete the construction of a new entrance to SugarLoaf at the intersection of Hillcrest and Germantown avenues and the building of the roads and parking garage in the next couple of years. Within five years, the College anticipates building a new student center and underground parking garage on the main campus.

5 » master plan 2008 » donor report 2009



DONOR REPORT

LETTER FROM THE CHAIR OF THE BOARD DEAR FRIENDS, WALK WITH ME THROUGH OUR CAMPUS ON TWO HILLS. BEHOLD ITS

We are now at a critical moment, directing a

spectacular views, with each side of campus affirming the other as

course of events that will determine the future

partners in a great new adventure.

of Chestnut Hill College. We have come this

Together, we have reached this vantage point, this vision of the future, by inculcating the missionary spirit of the Sisters of Saint Joseph with strategic, long-range planning, in addition to the support and encouragement from you, our donors, alumni, friends, and “dear neighbors.” Ten years ago, on the occasion of the 75th anniversary of Chestnut Hill College, Mary Helen Kashuba, SSJ, D.M.L., wrote a book on the history of the College, “Chestnut Hill College 1924–1999: Tradition and Risk.” It chronicled the progress of this institution in its mission to educate and challenge women to excel academically while upholding the values of an inclusive Catholic community — to be “women for others.”

far only with your faithful support. The collective response of benefactors, the board of directors, alumni, faculty, administration, staff, and students has led us to this juncture in our history, and we are forever grateful. We exceeded our bold expectations of a decade ago because you believed in the mission of the College. I ask you now to walk with us into the future that stretches before us. I ask you to continue to invest in the education of our students and the future generations of the

Today, a decade later, in a coeducational setting, we have taken up

women and men who will carry on the legacy

that challenge to imbue that same missionary spirit in students of the

of this institution of uncommon excellence.

21st century. This requires the expansion of curricula, facilities, and athletic opportunities. We have realized our growth, in great measure,

Sincerely,

by your involvement, loyalty, and financial support. We have continued the tradition and taken the risks, emerging as an institution on the move. We embrace the global community with its diversity of cultures and advanced technologies. Once again, I thank you most sincerely for helping us to achieve our goals.

Barbara D’Iorio Martino ’60 Chair, Board of Directors

As I finish my first year as chair of the board of directors, I, too, feel the awesome responsibility to promote the legacy of the Sisters of Saint Joseph and their vision to unite all with God and with one another.

7 » letter from the chair of the board » donor report 2009 The new College Center atrium serves as the front door of campus.

I ask you now to walk with us into the future that

stretches before us.


DONOR REPORT

JULY 1, 2008 - JUNE 30, 2009

VOLUNTARY FINANCIAL SUPPORT FOR CHC FACILITIES SugarLoaf Hill ALUMNI

ANNUAL OPERATIONS Unrestricted Purposes1

ANNUAL OPERATIONS Restricted Purposes2

ENDOWMENT3

$4,505

$158,080

$318,426

$254,950

76,165

122,132

CORPORATIONS, ORGANIZATIONS4 & FOUNDATIONS

137,515

143,798

GOVERNMENT

750,000

PARENTS & FRIENDS

TOTAL

$1,121,760

$737,017

103,677

21,400

323,374

55,003

1,124,686

1,461,002

813,237 $584,356

1,563,237

$1,226,867

$4,505

Includes unrestricted gifts to Griffin & Reunion Funds; Golf Invitational; Casino/Auction fundraiser; unrestricted bequests; Tribute Funds; miscellaneous other.

2

Includes restricted gifts; gifts/grants for academic & non-academic departments/programs; library acquisitions; campus ministry, academic scholarships; tuition awards.

3

Includes restricted gifts/bequests to the general endowment; specific endowed scholarships; academic programs; library acquisitions; lectures.

4

Includes contributed services of the Sisters of Saint Joseph.

GIVING BY CONSTITUENCY

TOTAL

$1,055

1

GOVERNMENT 38%

GIFTS-IN-KIND & SERVICES

$1,147,141

$4,084,630

GIVING BY PURPOSE

GIFTS-IN-KIND & SERVICES 28%

ALUMNI 18%

PARENTS & FRIENDS 8% CORPORATIONS, ORGANIZATIONS & FOUNDATIONS 36%

FACILITIES SugarLoaf Hill 27.5%

ENDOWMENT 0.1%

ANNUAL OPERATIONS Restricted Purposes 30%

donor report 2009 » voluntary financial support for chc » 8

ANNUAL OPERATIONS Unrestricted Purposes 14.4%


DONOR REPORT

STATEMENT OF ACTIVITY OPERATING REVENUE TUITION & FEES, NET OF FINANCIAL AID

% OF TOTAL 21,876,559

68.8%

FEDERAL GRANTS & CONTRACTS

208,623

0.7%

STATE & LOCAL GRANTS & CONTRACTS

626,365

2.0%

PRIVATE GIFTS, GRANTS & CONTRACTS

940,372

3.0%

INVESTMENT & ENDOWMENT INCOME

82,504

0.3%

CONTRIBUTED SERVICES - NET OF EXPENSES

1,119,686

3.5%

SALES & SERVICES OF AUXILIARY ENTERPRISES

4,949,772

15.6%

OPERATING REVENUE

TUITION & FEES, NET OF FINANCIAL AID 68.8%

NET ASSETS RELEASED FROM RESTRICTION 5.3%

OTHER SOURCES 1% SALES & SERVICES OF AUXILIARY ENTERPRISES 15.6%

OTHER SOURCES NET ASSETS RELEASED FROM RESTRICTION TOTAL

323,316

1.0%

1,670,232

5.3%

31,797,429

100.0%

CONTRIBUTED SERVICES - NET OF EXPENSES 3.5%

FEDERAL GRANTS & CONTRACTS <1% STATE & LOCAL GRANTS & CONTRACTS 2%

PRIVATE GIFTS, GRANTS & CONTRACTS 3%

INVESTMENT & ENDOWMENT INCOME <1%

OPERATING EXPENDITURES OPERATING EXPENDITURES INSTRUCTION

% OF TOTAL 11,608,498

36.2%

ACADEMIC SUPPORT

3,096,815

9.6%

STUDENT SERVICES

4,679,141

14.6%

INSTITUTIONAL SUPPORT

7,353,691

22.9%

AUXILIARY ENTERPRISES

5,359,567

16.7%

32,097,712

100.0%

TOTAL

INSTRUCTION 36.2%

ACADEMIC SUPPORT 9.6% STUDENT SERVICES 14.6%

AUXILIARY ENTERPRISES 16.7%

INSTITUTIONAL SUPPORT 22.9%

9 » statement of activity » donor report 2009


DONOR REPORT

PRESIDENT’S CIRCLE FOUNDERS SOCIETY ($100,000 TO $999,999) Mr. & Mrs. John R. Cochran, III

FOURNIER SOCIETY ($5,000 TO $9,999)

Harry & Marianne McGurk Wallaesa ’87, ’92 SGS (D)

Frank (D) & Elaine Bennett Davey ’65

George & M. Paula Nyhart Gowen ’63

Mrs. Deborah Davies

Carl & Patricia Tichenor Greer ’62

A. Clarice Zaydon, M.D. ’70

Francis & Patricia Turvey Dellomo ’59

Mr. & Mrs. Fred Griesbach

Deloitte & Touche, LLP

Donald & Pamela Orsini Grimme ’54

Robert & Eileen O’Rourke Deneen ’54

Helen Gruber ’52

Mary Katherine Schubert Denny ’40

John & Sarah Mansell Guilfoyle ’58

Mary E. Brandt, Ph.D. ’76

Joseph & Bernardine Keeler Abbott ’51

Joseph & M. Kathy Tigh Detrano ’67

Judith E. Campbell ’69

Rosalie Reardon Albers, M.D. ’39

Marie DiBerardino, Ph.D. ’48

Patricia Chapman

Allied Barton Security Services

Joan Coyne ’52

American Masonry Corporation

Douglas & Kathleen Braun Dollenberg ’62

Robert G. & Isabelle Walsh Gundaker Family Fund (Isabelle Walsh Gundaker ’65)

James & Patricia May Agger ’63

Mary Jackson Fitzsimmons ’35 Estate

James F. Barr Estate

Michael & Margaret McCaffery Family Fund (Margaret Carney McCaffery ’77) (D)

Mary Ann Miller Beatty ’59

PA Dept. of Conservation and Natural Resources

GRIFFIN SOCIETY ($50,000 TO $99,999)

Kathleen Clauss Borkowski ’68

CLEMENT SOCIETY ($1,000 TO $4,999)

Mr. & Mrs. Joseph P. Denny (D)

ARAMARK

Grace Banks, Ph.D. (F)

Catherine Devlin ’63

James & Anastasia Hagan Bacon ’60

Suzanne K. Dufrasne ’58

Theodore & Deborah Dougherty Flint ’59

John & Maude Meehan Belli ’49

Robert & E. Michelle Sprague Guerard ’66

Vincent & Marion Williams Berry ’63

LOGUE SOCIETY ($25,000 TO $49,999) Hilda E. Bretzlaff Foundation, Inc. The Navesink Foundation (J. Hugh & Anne O’Shea Devlin ’64) The W.W. Smith Charitable Trust

FONTBONNE SOCIETY ($10,000 TO $24,999) Young-Shin Chang ’59 Joseph & Barrie Thomas Fahey ’59 Marguerite Kearns, SSJ ’39 Robert & Carol Lockyer Katherine Marschall, M.D. ’69 Bill & Mary Noel Page (D) Mr. & Mrs. John D. Plunkett Kenneth & Janet Brown Quintal ’70 Mr. & Mrs. Philip F. Radomski (D) Bill & Trudy Rutledge Foundation (Gertrude Carlin Rutledge ’63) John & Margaret Higgins Schmitt ’92* Frederick M. Sharp

The Gulati Family Foundation Trust (Jack (D) & Rosemary Murphy Gulati ’61)

Mary Merz Berko ’52 William & Clare Hamilton Bohnett ’71 Sandra Bumgardner, Psy.D. ’76, ’89 SGS, ’03 SGS (S) James & Margaret Kress Carson ’67

Haverstick-Borthwick Company

Joseph & Roberta Rini Cartlidge ’49

The Arthur Jackson Company The Maguire Foundation

Chartwells College & University Dining Services, Inc.

Robert & Peggy Grant Malone ’46

John & Rosemarie O’Brien Cleaver ’58

Samuel P. Mandell Foundation (Miriam Gibbons Mandell ’61) (D) The Martin Foundation

Kathleen M. Donnelly ’59

Elizabeth Du Ban Hansen ’51 Frances McCarron Harper ’48

Mr. & Mrs. John H. Doody

Mr. & Mrs. Raymond Hartman, Jr.

Anthony & Kathleen Keirle Dougherty ’67

George J. Hartnett, Esq. (D) Nan Hechenberger, Ph.D. (D)

John & Ruth Wingel Doyle ’52

Kenneth Hicks (A)

Albina Dunleavy

Thomas & Marie Schauder Hindman ’49

Mr. & Mrs. Michael F. Dunleavy

Lois Deacon Hofmann ’36

Francis & Joan Mathers Eaves ’52

Barbara Hogan-Zarro, Ph.D. ’73 SCPS (A)

Exxon Education Foundation

The Honickman Foundation

James & Elizabeth Jachimowicz Fanuzzi ’66

Quita W. Horan Gwendolen Forsyth Hurley ’58

Helen Tansey Farhat ’43

Judith Bourgeois Jensen ’60 Francis & Marie McDermott Keeley ’52

James & Gloria Perla Coe ’46

The Honorable and Mrs. James J. Fitzgerald, III (Carol McCullough Fitzgerald) (D)

Helen Devine Coen ’55

Rosemary McCarron Flannery, Esq. ’43

Colgate Palmolive Company

Mr. & Mrs. Michael D. McCarthy

Betty Lou Froustet ’43

Marie Conn, Ph.D. (F)

Loretta M. McLaughlin ’74 SCPS

Mary Catherine Gallagher ’70

George & Beverly Kray Connolly ’56

Merck & Company, Inc.

Carol Consorto (S)

William & Adrienne Donaghue Gallagher ’62

Francis X. & Nonie Glennon Murphy ’66

Edwin Kellerman, M.D. & Wilma Carson Kellerman, M.D. ’55 Colette Robillard Kelly ’53 Karen Spencer Kelly, Esq. (D) Stephen & Rosanne Bonner Kendra ’53 Keough Electric, Inc. Patricia Kilmartin ’40

Elizabeth Marron Cooper ’71

Mr. & Mrs. Stephen A. Gardner (D)

Mr. & Mrs. Shaun F. O’Malley (D)

Paul & Sally Ann Ayerle Corbley ’73

Garrison Printing Co., Inc.

Drs. Paul Curcillo & Stephanie King ’79

Anna Connor O’Riordan, M.D. ’53

Anthony Corbo & Susan Vath ’86

Bettyanne Geikler ’52

Patrick & Julia Heitzman Koechlin ’66

The John C. & Kathryn S. Redmond Foundation

Martin & Mary Lee Rothwell Corr ’60

GlaxoSmithKline

Robert & Ellen Jane Pariset Crosson ’50

Mary Isabel Lambert Glenn ’61

Mary Lou Sciarrillo ’66

Crown Holdings, Inc.

Steven Gordon, Ph.D. (D) & Mary Zuccarini Gordon ’85

Anne E. Tezak ’76 George & Lois Trench-Hines ’64

donor report 2009 » president’s circle » 10

Drs. Edward & Alice Ann Gricoski Dachowski ’77

Barbara L. Forrester Landis ’07 SGS Ms. Barbara Leighton Rosemary Hagan Lignelli ’58 Christian R. & Mary F. Lindback Foundation


Boosts Alumna

IMPACT OF ANNUAL GIVING

“They’re completely committed to their mission and don’t deviate from it. We cherish the opportunity to be a part of the College’s terrific future.”

MARGARET CARNEY MCCAFFERY ’77 FONDLY

“I know that Sister Carol, the Sisters of Saint

education at the College and a master’s degree

a Sister of Saint Joseph, helped her earn a

recalls a conversation she had several years ago

Joseph, and the entire administration will

in special education at Santa Clara University,

scholarship to attend the College.

with her husband, Michael, on their annual giving

be good stewards of our gifts,” she added.

serves on the College’s board of directors.

to their alma maters. The verdict? Time to

“They’re completely committed to their

She also teaches math, reading, and study

dramatically “step up” their giving to the College.

mission and don’t deviate from it. We cherish

skills part-time at the California parish school

the opportunity to be a part of the College’s

her children attended. Michael, who runs

terrific future.”

his own investment company, studied at

“I had received a letter from [College President Carol Jean Vale, SSJ, Ph.D.] asking us to increase our donation, and after Mike and

The McCafferys’ substantial gifts to the

I talked, I called her and said ‘I’m going to

SugarLoaf campus demonstrate their life-long

make your weekend,’” McCaffery said.

commitment to education. Margaret, who

“She practically fell over.”

earned a bachelor’s degree in early childhood

Princeton University, Stanford Graduate School

“The College hadn’t been on my radar, but as the oldest of nine children, I didn’t really have a choice,” McCaffery said with a laugh. “But it was an honor, and I received a wonderful education.”

of Business, and, as a Rhodes Scholar, the

In addition to the close-knit environment at

University of Oxford. While the McCafferys

the College and the role the Sisters of Saint

considered their gifts to Michael’s alma maters

Joseph played in bolstering her Catholic faith,

important, they knew that giving a greater share

McCaffery appreciated the opportunity to

to the College would make more of an impact.

perform in a singing group, Looking Glass, and

“We made the conscious decision to support Chestnut Hill College because of its focus on undergraduate education,” McCaffery said.

play varsity basketball for a year. Her memories of the latter help to explain why she’s so excited about today’s Chestnut Hill College.

“We value its mission to educate women

“We played basketball down in the basement

and men who will contribute to society

back then,” she said. “But now...with the move

intellectually, economically, and spiritually.”

to Division II and the new and expanding

The value of an affordable, high-quality education is not lost on McCaffery. She attended Saint Mark’s High School

facilities...when I look at the new gym and see men and women playing, I get chills.” Michael and Margaret Carney McCaffery ’77.

(Wilmington, Del.), where her history teacher,

11 » faces of philanthropy » donor report 2009


Ellen Logue ’47

Loretta Brennan O’Brien ’46

James & Patricia Duffy Shacklett ’06

Francis & Patricia Crane Lynch ’54

Diane Napoli O’Grady ’57

Ellen Shields ’59

Dorothy Kushlis MacFarlane ’67

Margaret Richardson O’Rourke ’51

David & Jodie King-Smith ’94, ’01 SGS (A)

John & Elizabeth Harvey Majane ’57

Lowell & Jo Ellen Noonan Parsons ’66

Patricia So ’67

James & Joan Schmitt Markham ’52

Lisa Fiorillo Perfidio ’84

Drs. Kenneth and Dianne Soprano (A)

The Rocco & Barbara Martino Foundation (Barbara D’Iorio Martino ’60) (D)

Patricia Harper Petrozza, M.D. ’74

Carol Steinour, Esq. ’82

The Philadelphia Trust Company

Robert & Verna Brugger Stockmal ’61

Carter & Frances McCullen Pierce ’63

Israel Concepcion & Lauri Strimkovsky (A)

Jeffrey Kopp, M.D. & Susan Pisano ’71

John & Kathleen McDermott Strott ’59

Daniel Mathews & Kathleen O’Boyle ’84, ’97 SGS

Rev. Jami & Mitch Possinger

Robert & Margaret Hetzer Stuart ’72

PPL

Marilea Swenson ’67

Dorothy Wludyka Matthews, M.D. ’54

Susan Prince ’75

Vincent & Angela Clement Tague ’61

Maven Benefits Partners

James & Margaret Jackson Quinn ’64

Robert & Anne Brannan Teufel ’60

John & Maureen MacLean McCord ’58

Mr. & Mrs. Bernard J. Rafferty

Clara Tucker, Ph.D. ’52 Tyco Electronics Corporation

Joseph & Joanna Rizzo Mastronardo ’72

Philip & Catherine Winter McDonnell ’45

Martha Ranc, Ph.D. ’86

Donald & Joanne McFadden McBride ’63

Religious of the Assumption

United Technologies Corporation

Richard & Anna Dechet Reller ’59

Phyllis Martin Upham ’42

Mary Lou Stafford McGill ’54

Reynolds American, Inc.

Eleanor Craig Utzig ’56

Mr. & Mrs. Peter J. McGlinchy (D)

Joan Toohey Rochford ’52

Dr. and Mrs. Richard W. Vassallo

Margaret Mary Green McLaughlin ’62

Ida Mae Rollin

William & Helen Mikula Vassily ’60

John L. Melvin, M.D. & Carol Melvin Pate, Ed.D. (F)

Albert & Linda Nolan Rosecan ’65

Verizon Foundation

Russell Roofing Company

Richard & Denise Bonner Wall ’58

Philip & Barbara Stoll Russell ’59

Margaret Seidel Walton ’66

Arthur & Mary Kaufmann Ryan ’66

James & M. Joyce Renzulli Wuenschel ’62 Ralph & Nina Buckley Yeager ’68 Ronald (D) & Carol Voelmle Zemnick ’75 Mr. & Mrs. Vincent M. Zukauskas

George & Anne Duffy Mirsch ’52 Boulton & Margaret Quinn Mohr ’58 Carolyn Sagendorph Montgomery ’97 SCPS Jacques & Blanche Haviland Moore ’50 Duane Morris, LLP Stephen & Virginia Flynn Morris ’75 Frances McCormick Murphy ’73 Catherine Myers ’71

S.R. Wojdak & Associates Mr. & Mrs. John Sabia, Jr. (D) Ms. Mary Sabia Rosemary Scheirer, SSJ, Ed.D. ’58 (A) Jean Schwartz ’55 Stephen G. & Regina Maxwell Schwille ’65

President ’s Jeanne Sweeney Nelson ’42

The President’s Circle donor categories provide an opportunity for Chestnut Hill College to recognize the generosity of our leadership donors whose consistent

The Griffin Fund Gifts to The Griffin Fund each year are the cornerstone of Chestnut Hill College’s giving program in support of annual unrestricted operations. The generous financial support of these donors is critical to the success of each academic year.

Fleur de Lis Members Fleur de Lis members are donors who contribute $1,000 or more each year to The Griffin Fund in support of unrestricted operations. Donor names listed in this Annual Report reflect the donor’s total contribution, for all purposes, received by the College between July 1, 2008 and June 30, 2009.

Donor List Designations A

Chestnut Hill College Administration

D

Chestnut Hill College Board of Directors

F

Chestnut Hill College Faculty

S

Chestnut Hill College Staff

SUS

School of Undergraduate Studies

SCPS School of Continuing & Professional Studies SGS

School of Graduate Studies

*

Deceased

annual support is essential to the College’s financial strength. Members of the

Fleur de Lis member

President’s Circle are individuals who have made a minimum contribution of

Griffin Fund donor

CIRCLE

$1,000 to the College for any purpose.

donor report 2009 » president’s circle » 12

President’s Circle donor names that are bolded indicate 10+ years of consecutive giving of $1,000 or more.


LEADING UP TO FALL OF 2003, THE COLLEGE AND ITS BRANDING AGENCY faced a dilemma: How do you promote your vision for a coed campus when your recruitment materials are all female-focused?

UNIQUE

Partnership BENEFITS COLLEGE AND AGENCY

Shannon Slusher and Darryl Cilli of 160over90.

The answer was an immediate, “flip the switch”

overflow of traffic. The agency’s partnership

agency recently made a generous gift

“Sister Carol understood the institution’s

transition — a holistic branding effort that even

with the College has flourished throughout this

pledge toward the development of the

challenges but also recognized its potential,”

included hiring male models to convey coed

decade, as its consumer and cultural expertise

SugarLoaf campus.

he said. “It was that vision and commitment

campus life in brochures.

informed the re-shaping of the College’s brand.

“We produced materials that reflected the change to coed while retaining the fundamental values upon which the College was built,” said Shannon Slusher, chief executive officer of the

And working with the College — the agency’s first higher education client — has helped 160over90 to grow and expand, said Darryl Cilli, chief creative officer.

“To us, they’re more than a client — we view the College as a partner,” Slusher said.

that inspired our confidence and began the partnership.”

“Client-agency relationships of this kind are

Thanks to that bold vision and the efforts of

rare, and we’ve felt compelled to give back to

160over90, steady progress is being made

the community that has trusted our expertise,

toward the College’s goal of becoming

Philadelphia-based branding agency 160over90.

“The insight and experience we’ve gained

played a role in our growth and success,

a premiere national Catholic liberal arts

“Every touch point between the College and

through our work with the College has

and allowed us to be such a big part of its

institution. This year, the College attracted a

prospective students was considered.”

proven useful in every part of our agency’s

continued development.”

record-high 350 new students — more than

The effort yielded immediate results, as an overwhelming number of prospective male and female students signed up for an Open House. But the work of 160over90 didn’t stop

business,” he said. “The community is focused on purposeful learning and is committed to educating and shaping empowered, informed, and responsible citizens.”

there; indeed, employees of the agency even

160over90 has also donated various creative

came to the Open House to help direct the

services to the College over the years, and the

When it was first approached by the College, 160over90 saw a school with a sound

the entire undergraduate population prior to the move to coed.

educational philosophy and, with College

“We no longer have to hire male models for

President Carol Jean Vale, SSJ, Ph.D.,

photo shoots,” Cilli said. “There are plenty

strong leadership in place, said Slusher.

of smiling students who are sincerely thrilled about living and studying at the College.”

13 » faces of philanthropy » donor report 2009


DONOR REPORT

ASSOCIATES CLUB GOLD ASSOCIATES ($500 - $999) Rita Ciotti Altman, Ed.D. ’53 AT&T Mary Ellen McFadden Barry ’56 Joan McDermott Bellwoar ’55 Marie Badecker Benas ’48 Marie Pelliccio Berenato ’57 Pamela Ann Black, Ed.D. ’64 The Boeing Company Mary Ann Ballisty Bonner ’71 Sallyann Bowman, M.D. ’72 Rosemary Mahoney Boyle ’57 Susan Wentland Brobst, Ph.D. ’83 Catharine Gallagher Brockway ’51 Martha Wohlfert Cacciamani ’59 Patricia Canning ’70 (S) Katherine Alcamo Cardali ’61 Barbara Carli ’52 Catherine Budenbender Carolan ’60 Carol Brokars Carr ’59 Frances Ciurcina ’73 Class of 1959 - 50th Reunion Collegiate Marketing Concepts, Inc. Mary Little Collins ’73 Constellation Energy Group Dominic J. Cotugno, Ed.D. (F) Cox & Co., Inc. Cross Cabinetry & Carpentry, LLC Dawnlynne Cute-Allen, D.C. ’93 Mary Jo Nelligan Daly ’59 Kathryn Brown Davis ’33 Caroline Devine ’72 Gillian Horna Dezzutto ’84 Clara McNierney Doyle ’54 Regina Mellor Dudney ’69 ESF, Inc. Denise Gervase Ferrier, Ph.D. ’69 Bettyanne Geikler ’52 Elizabeth Stroud Giordano ’50 Concetta Giuliano, D.O. ’91 Roberta Bushey Glackin ’54 GlaxoSmithKline

Marie Sclafani Goldkamp ’65 Theresa Walsh Grabowski ’90 Rita Cianciarulo Grayum ’50 Elizabeth Meier Greene ’50 Guardian Life Insurance Company of America Frances Schuhsler Hadden ’65 Sandra Cupini Hagenbarth ’63 Mary Ann Haggerty, M.D. ’70 Helen Hall ’70 Eileen Long Hessman ’60 Shirley Kieser Hoberg ’47 Anne Daly Holland ’56 Betsy Flynn Hollo ’70 IBM Corporation Johnson & Johnson Kathryn Coyne Keegan ’61 Mr. John Keleher Patricia Kelleher ’48 Diana Barnett Kudes, M.D. ’97 Kathleen Kugler ’62 Anne Cashman Lilly ’67 Elizabeth Lunney ’72 Margaret Judge Lynch ’67 Janice Maffei ’75 Mr. & Mrs. Anthony Maglio, Jr. Joan Maier ’83 Kathleen Malaney, M.D. ’67 Barbara Piga Marcouiller ’53 Paulette Kruk Mattia, D.C. ’76 Barbara Wenthe McCarthy ’60 Helene Boffa McGuinn ’47 Mary McManus ’49 Marian Fanning McNamara, M.D. ’67 Kathleen McNicholas, M.D. ’69 Margaret McNierney McPhillips ’57 Merrill Lynch Company, Inc. Annunciata Torrese Milani ’57 Helen Baum Miller ’61 Penny Grelis Morrison ’68 Sean & Catherine Lockyer Moulton ’92 Janet Smith Murphy ’48 Joan Byrne Murphy ’50

donor report 2009 » associates club » 14

Mary Delia Tye Neuman, Ph.D. ’66 Robert & Christine Nydick ’94 SGS Barbara Griffiths Olivieri ’56 Michele Petrucci ’89 Amelia Petitti Quaremba, Ph.D. ’64 W. James & Annemarie Fliegel Quigley ’62 Anna Dechet Reller ’59 Phyllis Roche ’65 Lorraine Gardner Rogers ’49 Helen Cunningham Roney ’44 Kim Ocasio Cabrera Sanchez, D.M.D. ’79 Roberta Rothwell Schillo ’71 Joanne Sidoti Schmidt, D.D.S. ’72 Kathleen McBride Shoup ’61 Stephanie O’Connell Siegrist, M.D. ’84 Mary Jane Maher Smith ’54 Mary Schuhsler Spangler, Ed.D. ’64 Melvin & Kathleen M. Spigelmyer ’98 (S) Mr. John Sprandio Diane Stanczak ’70 Mr. & Mrs. J. Clark Steinman Cynthia Strolle ’75 Cecily McDonald Suchy ’59 Katherine Roach Sullivan ’63 Kathleen Olsen Sullivan ’64 Maryangela Sharkey Tait ’80 Mr. Henry R. Taylor Mary Margaret O’Connell Truschel ’50 Beverley Patrone Uniacke, M.D. ’82 Carol Jean Vale, SSJ, Ph.D. ’78 SCPS (A) (D) Susan Vath ’86 Voith & Mactavish Architects, LLP Colleen Ward Volpe ’59 Barbara Boyd Ward ’80 Mary Gallagher Wattis ’60 Wolf, Block, Schorr & Solis-Cohen, LLP Mr. & Mrs. Woodrow Wendling Helen McCann Williams ’58 Mr. & Mrs. Richard Williams Janice Kitley Yurasek ’58

SCARLET ASSOCIATES ($250 - $499) Anne Albarelli ’63 Sylvia Ximines Allen ’43 Christine Binkowski Andrews ’74 Bernadette Power Barnhurst ’51 Margaret Helbling Baumann ’72 Mary Ruth Wiegard Becker ’63 Margaret Betz, Ph.D. ’71 Miriam Quinn Blimm ’59 Mary Juel Rockwell Boast ’55 Janet Rutan Bowers ’56 Louise Bradley ’52 Barbara Brand ’71 Roseanne Burke Brennan ’60 Mary Ellen Carroll Brown ’52 Janice Glocheski Brunner ’63 Rita Luczynski Brzezinski ’47 Ellen Whiteside Byrne ’56 Doris Byrnes ’49 Joan Calhoun ’06 Joan Alford Callahan ’54 Rosemary Griffin Carolan ’72 Phyllis Metz Carroll ’51 Chevron USA, Inc. Jolande Jong Chiu ’58 I. Carole Christ ’06 Claire Harrison Cocklin ’52 Elizabeth Moleski Colonna ’71 Elaine Burchill Corcoran ’53 Madeleine Gercke Costigan ’54 Marjorie Piga Crain ’48 Barbara Cruse ’64 Mary Catherine Curran ’58 Carole Sarubbi de Castro ’54 Anne Bradley De Masi ’86 Frances Horan Del Duca, Esq. ’50 Barbara Harron Delaney ’59 MaryLou Mongiven Delizia ’78 Rita DeLucia, Esq. ’67 Carol Parrish Derba ’59 Mildred Murphy Deriggi, Ph.D. ’60 Brenda Gala DeStefano ’90

Margaret Roe Diemer ’49 Joan Fry Donahue ’69 Kathleen McCarthy Doyle-Kelly ’61 Margaret Durkin, Esq. ’72 Janine Delaveau Dwyer ’75 Alice Ellis ’08 Mary Levin Englebert ’50 Johanna Bender Evangelou ’04 SGS Marybeth Egan Fedyna ’74 Mary Garneau Feketie ’47 Mary Jane Harford Ferro ’57 Eugenie Dausey Fleming ’67 Kathleen Heidere Ford ’63 Mr. & Mrs. George S. Forde, Jr. Amy McLeer Frangione ’94 Gertrude Dearie Frekko ’63 Concetta Vitullo French ’36 Jeanne Labrecque Gagliano ’61 Mr. James F. Gallagher Kathleen Reilly Gallagher ’65 Jane Foulkrod Galvin ’68 Carmen Echevarria Garcia ’49 Ms. Elizabeth Gemmill Mary O’Connor Gentile, Ed.D. ’66 Ellen Moran Giermann ’76 N. A. Gillen ’69 Jane Tomalonis Gursky ’75 Geraldine Longo Hadley ’64 Susan Rapp Halczenko ’69 Geraldine Eble Hamilton ’63 Jeanne Carpenter Hanes Romano ’47 Ellen Seiberlich Hardy ’82 Gloria Massey Harkins ’53 Arlene Hausmann ’57 Maureen Burns Heacock ’68 Agnes Hendrick ’64 Berna Schmidt Herrick ’50 Kathryn Peters Hill ’57 Sandra Denenberg Hohberger ’66 Anne DePiano Holderness ’60 Maureen McFadden Holley, D.M.D. ’86 Home Sweet Home Pet Sitting Services Mary Angela Heller Howard, Esq. ’66


Associates CLUB

Members of the Associates Club are donors who have made a minimum contribution of $100 — for any purpose — to help sustain the College’s tradition of academic excellence.

Joan Edmund Husted ’68 Charlotte Kelley Hyer ’59 Elizabeth Hughes Iaquinto ’85 SGS IMS Health The Honorable Frederica Massiah-Jackson ’71 Joann Gallagher Jones, Esq. ’85 Karen Wilderotter Judge ’87 Mr. & Mrs. Charles Kahn, Jr. Lynnanne Kasarda, M.D. ’82 Mary Ann Keegan ’45 Nancy Day Kelley, Ph.D. ’71 Anna Kerr ’69 Mary Lenore Gricoski Keszler, M.D. ’74 Mary Laffan King ’62 Katherine Ferguson Knox ’67 Ann Kohoot ’73 Dolores Dezii Kreal ’60 Margarita Mongil-Kwoka ’80 Elizabeth Laufer, M.D. ’50 Margaret Keegan Lawn ’54 Jo Anne DiGiacomo Lechowicz ’66 Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Lennon Margaret Kirby Lucia ’69 Mary Moran Mahal ’87 SCPS (S) Mr. & Mrs. Carl J. Malisheski Mary Martire ’53 Mary Mulderry Mattson ’66 Dorothy Stemmler Maurer ’55 Regina Gercke McConnell ’58 Mr. & Mrs. Kerin McCue Patricia McDonald ’53 Kathleen Martin McFadden ’65 Jeane Rossberg McGinn ’53 Denise Sheehan McGookin ’49 Margaret Bennett McGreal ’60 Rita Squires Meehan ’46 Joan Menaquale ’53 Ellen Miller ’68 Margaret Mitchell ’03 (S) Mary Brady Mommessin ’52 Sandra Moore ’90 SGS Margaret Stehli Morris ’52

Mr. William Munz Karin Stangler Murphy ’96 Ryan & Krista Bailey Murphy (S) Mary O’Gorman Murray ’74 Mr. & Mrs. Rowland H. Myers New York Life Insurance Company Miriam Butler Newlon ’58 Amanda Adasavage Nowicki ’93 Mary Kinahan-Ockay ’74 Jacqueline Carroll O’Donnell ’45 Carole Storch O’Dwyer ’59 Catherine O’Flaherty ’54 Rita O’Loughlin ’49 Patricia Parrella Orlando ’68 Dorothy Palatucci ’64 Mary Ann Stahl Patton ’87 Judith Anne Paul ’70 Judith Perkins ’70 Pfizer, Inc. Ms. Janet Polidora Mary Pollitt ’58 Prudential Insurance Company of America Rita Cresci Quinn ’41 Frances Rafferty, Esq., Ph.D. ’71 Lorraine Revello ’66 Joan Murray Reynolds ’52 Ms. Shannon Roberts (S) Rosemary Campbell Romasco ’50 Roberta Cartlidge Roth ’83 Lynne Huddleston Ruff ’75 Carolyn Inglesby Rusin ’58 Patricia Kearns Ryan ’84 Mary Ellen Scanlan, Ph.D. ’64 Mary Lentz Schuhsler ’37 Patricia Shustock Scott, O.D. ’77 Stacy Davis Serwinski ’06 Phyllis Gott Shea ’59 Mr. & Mrs. Terence F. Shea Patricia Stillmun Shelton ’50 Elizabeth Shober ’96 Ann Marie Smith Sielski ’71 Sovereign Bank

Margaret Callaghan Steficek ’77 Strategic Products and Services Margaret Greene Stubee ’54 Miriam Fenerty Sullivan ’57 Genevieve Koehler Sweet ’51 Regina Williams Tate, Esq. ’75 Regina Voelker Tauke ’60 The Northrop Grumman Foundation Virginia Toliver ’94 Ann Brennan Toner ’59 Mary Ann Fiori Tysko ’61 Elizabeth Krug Ulrich ’54 Kathleen Wall ’71 Aileen Maguire Walsh ’54 Walt Disney Company Foundation Lorene Cardinal Welsh ’52 Helen West ’48 Wheeler, Wolfenden & Dwares, CPA Katherine Barrett White ’70 Christina Demetrovits Woody ’79 Therese Zogby ’51 Mr. & Mrs. Vincent M. Zukauskas

SILVER ASSOCIATES ($100 - $249) Mr. Michael T. Abbene Beth Beyer Abbott ’05 SGS Ellen Evans Adams ’63 Elena Pié Adkins ’90

Marie Meaney Adolph ’57 Elizabeth Allen ’51 Marcia Allen ’03 Marylee Noonan Amato ’64 Carol Lowe Ambacher ’65 Mr. & Mrs. George Ambrose Betty O’Hara Anders ’38 Kathleen Rex Anderson, Ed.D. ’66 Mr. & Mrs. Anthony Andreacchio Maryanne Reilly Andrews ’65 Mrs. & Mr. Gloria Andrzejewski Ankelsons, LLC W. Scott Armington ’03 Mary Conway Arnone ’78 Irma Ashenbrenner ’50 Linda Avila ’75 Eleanor Yoa Ayers ’69 Virginia Pachence Azzariti ’64 Mr. & Mrs. Jack Bachmann Ms. Ann Baiada Rieke Baize ’98 Sharon Cameron Baldwin ’76 Martina McCarthy Ball ’66 Margaret Waltz Baloga ’70 Joan Hartmann Bamberger ’54 Anne Dever Bancroft ’57 Patricia Tully Bannan ’49 Mr. & Mrs. Paul Bannon Felicia Corsaro Barbieri, Ph.D. ’70 Kathryn Agle Barry ’60 Margaret Kelly Baumgardner ’40 Constance Murray Becker ’57 Patricia Chiri Bell ’65 Carolyn Bensel, Ph.D. ’63 Martha Berry ’56 Hilda Casanave Bertotti ’55 Mary Hurley Birch ’60 Adele Schmitz Bissonette ’73 Jane Delaney Blank ’44 Deborah Daly Bohan ’60

Grace Cavanagh Bolen ’49 Mr. & Mrs. Robert J. Bolger Patricia Elder Bonacarti ’49 Paula DeSanctis Bonavitacola ’74 Anna Bondi ’06 Mr. Karl Bortnick Mary Pat Gallagher Boyle ’67 Margaret Smith Braca ’53 Mary Tanney Bradley ’61 Patricia Nichols Brady ’53 Mary Dugery Brandenstein ’58 Mary Connor Brandt ’50 Michelle Raymond Bray ’89 Stacie Bray ’06 Barbara Costigan Brennan ’56 Pura Bigles Brennan ’52 Mr. & Mrs. Edward Breslin Marguerite Heiken Breslin ’54 Judith Brown, Ph.D. ’67 Mariagnes O’Neill Brown ’44 Ann Curran Brown ’78 Clare McConnell Brown ’58 Jacqueline Brown ’06 SCPS Mary Caryl Brown ’51 Mary Gorman Brown-Jednak ’42 Nancy Benner Brubaker ’00 SGS Bruno’s Restaurant Mary Jo Bucceri ’98 SCPS Linda Buchanan, M.D. ’86 Jane McGuckin Buczkowski ’53 Marion Gioffre Buddo ’60 Joanne Bonavita Budwick ’67 Margaret Burns Bulfer ’61 Mr. & Mrs. Richard Burke Marie McCridden Burke ’54 Marylin Unger Burke ’62 Maria Fella Cain ’84 Margaret Dickinson Campbell ’59 Blanca Gonzalez Canney ’92 Mrs. Lucy Canning

15 » associates club » donor report 2009


The College Center dining room.

Mr. Richard A. Canning Lynne Silverio Carpenter ’80 Joan Yates Carroll ’55 Mr. & Mrs. William Castone Caterpillar, Inc. Maureen Gillen Chan ’61 Mr. & Mrs. James Chapman Frances Chicchi ’90 Pauline Chung ’72 Cigna Corporation Mr. & Mrs. Dennis Ciletti Cisco Systems, Inc. Rose Ann Baron Clarke ’54 Virginia Reilly Coester ’58 Carlota Garcia Colberg ’74 Class of 1953 Mr. & Mrs. John Collins M. Carol Snyder Collins ’55 Lynne Brophy Collman ’84 Mr. Eugene M. Conboy Carolyn Baldino Conboy ’51

Lisa Grice-Concepcion ’87 Jo Ann Ewadinger Connelly ’61 Veronica McLaughlin Connor ’59 Maureen Newman Considine ’54 Kathryn Lippman Conte ’49 Madeline Conti ’40 Marie Zdebski Conti ’80 Mary Mahoney Corini ’51 Ms. Denise Costello (S) Monica Cetrullo Costlow ’71 Rosemary Tighe Cozzolino ’61 Carol Crisci, Esq. ’72 Ann Tushim Csink ’61 Barbara McNamara Cubby ’68 Louise McCloskey Cullinan ’41 Rosemary Dempsey Cunniffe ’65 Geraldine Kaczorowski Dabrowski ’64 Mr. & Mrs. John D’Agostino Mr. & Mrs. Larry Dale Kathleen Buhrman Dalena ’55 Kathleen Daniel ’57

donor report 2009 » associates club » 16

Christine Ferraro Daniels ’76 Beatrice Jungblut Dante ’56 Joanne Malatesta Davidoff ’54 Elizabeth Kilraine Davis ’69 Therese Schreiber DeFoney ’57 Catherine Stroud DelDuca ’48 Barbara Murray Dennen ’51 Patricia Casey D’Entremont ’50 Mr. & Mrs. Michael Derbyshire Design Network, Inc. Anna Faris DiFranco ’72 Elizabeth Webb Dixon ’49 Mary Jo Abrachinsky Doherty ’61 Peggy Anne Derham Dolan ’53 Adele Bateman Donahue ’52 Mr. & Mrs. Paul Donahue Donald Miller & Co. Deborah Matis Donnelly ’96 SCPS Barbara Donovan ’61 Jeanne Collins Donovan ’62 Gertrude O’Donnell Donze ’48

Kathleen Dougherty ’87 SCPS Connie Dougherty ’05 SCPS Dow Jones & Company, Inc. Margaret Jarosh Doyle ’64 Maureen Colleran Doyle ’68 Michelle Drazul ’04 Muriel Watman Dreswick ’54 Lydia Maiorca Driscoll ’70 Denise Errico Duffy ’72 Ms. Elizabeth Duffy Marie Micale Dumbra ’60 Mary Agnew Dunleavy ’84 Maryanne Rafferty Dunmire ’57 Catherine Brannan Dunn ’61 Janet Powers Dunne ’74 Ann Durshaw, Psy.D. ’98 SGS Nancy Curtis Duzy ’46 Frances Shumen Dwyer ’67 Mr. & Mrs. Daniel Echt Mary Wiesner Edell ’54 Camelia Gallardo Eisenhart ’43 Michele Dipasquale Elkes ’02 Marian Princivalle Ellis ’75 Margaret M. Englebert ’74 Mr. Matthew J. Englebert Annamarie Baker Ennis ’71 Environmental Management Group, Inc. Theresa Zambelli Esperdy ’60 Diane Neary Ewing ’64 Mary Catherine O’Brien Fallon ’45 Charlotte Branagan Farley ’56 Mary Jane Tynebor Fearn ’64 Mary Alice Stein Feichtel ’66 Constance Peacock Feraco ’53 Mary Claire Dougher Filippelli ’43 Dineen Foley Filoramo ’00 Mr. & Mrs. Robert Fink, Jr. Alicia Bogie Fitzpatrick ’87 Donna Fiugalski ’01 SCPS Claudia MacFadden Fletcher ’70 Dorothy Murray Foley ’85 Mr. & Mrs. James Forsythe Mr. & Mrs. Conrad Fountaine Dr. William Frabizio Margaret Feraco Frampton ’79 Barbara Bridi Frampus ’75 Eileen Gillis Francke ’57 Charlotte McClaskey Friel ’53 Paula Murphy Gallagher ’64 Sharon Smith Gardlund ’61 Margaret O’Donnell Garrett ’62 Joyce Finnegan Garrison ’64 Mr. & Mrs. Charles Gassert Kathleen Gavigan, Esq. ’62

Kathleen Freiert Geiger ’49 General Electric Foundation Joanne Fay Gibbs ’58 Robert Giglio ’04 Irene Smith Gillespie ’49 Kathleen Gillespie ’51 Mary Jane Gillespie ’56 Barbara McAninch Giuliano ’72 Margaret Mascioli Giuntini ’74 Linda Hirsh Glasgow ’62 Susan Berko Glass ’75 Mary Silcox Gleason ’53 Joan Haran Gloe ’46 Ms. Mirna Gonzalez Melanie C. Goodman, Ph.D. (F) Lynn Cozza Goodman ’63 Kathleen Boran Gotthelf ’75 Beatrice Gallagher Grabish ’61 Virginia Ott Grant ’66 Eileen Rauscher Gray ’79 Elaine R. Green, Ed.D. (A) Gilda Caruso Gregori ’01 SCPS Anne DeVenuto Grey ’47 Carol-Jane Piltz Guardino ’66 Shirlee Repak Gubernat ’50 Eleanor Mason Gulczynski ’59 Mr. & Mrs. Martin Gullen Mary Ann Conway Gursky, Esq. ’63 Lisa Anne Roney Haas ’86 Denise Haffner ’79 Phyllis Flaherty-Hakeem ’91 SCPS K. Patricia Carville Haley ’50 Marianne Carlson Hall ’64 Mary Margaret Hamill ’70 Mr. & Mrs. Darrell Hammons Jean Williams Harris ’57 Patrice Owens Hartung ’80 Frances Bonanni Hay ’72 HCR Manor Care Frances Goldkamp Heim ’68 Sandra Johnson Helverson ’61 M. Chris Hemsley ’77 Kathleen Mooney Hennessey ’72 Patricia Herbst ’94 Sonia Gotay Hernandez ’58 Mr. Donald Heron Diana Platt Hinners ’59 Mary-Jo Heile Hogan ’48 Eileen Pollock Holden ’61 Kathleen Magee Holemans ’84 Mary Tyler Muldoon Holmes ’73 Catherine Spollen Holt ’82 Patricia Kelly Holt ’59 Anne Marie O’Donnell Housel ’76


BEVERLY SHARP DIDN’T ATTEND THE COLLEGE, BUT HER LIFE’S WORK REFLECTED ITS MISSION. “She spent 35 years in special education, working with kids in need,” said her husband, Michael Sharp, who has established a scholarship at the College in her memory. “She had incredible compassion and drive to help those less fortunate, and from what I’ve gleaned from conversations and observations at the College, that’s a big part of the mission there.”

Compassion

“The sense of community appeals to me, and I feel strongly that the direction and mission [at the College] coincide with what my wife would have liked.”

PAVES DONOR’S PATH TO THE HILL

It was that spirit of serving the underserved

a Sister of Saint Joseph whom Beverly had

“I appreciate the decision to retain the

that inspired Sharp to give to the College.

been fond of suggested he consider giving to

College’s character and kind of niche status,

But it was the suggestions of friends in the clergy

Chestnut Hill College. Sharp liked and agreed

as opposed to becoming a different school

that brought him to The Hill in the first place.

to that idea — and then wasted no time in

or trying to gain university status,” he said.

becoming a part of the community.

“The sense of community appeals to me,

When Beverly passed away in July 2008, Sharp considered making a donation in her memory

From having lunch with College President

to the high school she attended, Saint Hubert

Carol Jean Vale, SSJ, Ph.D., to volunteering

Catholic School for Girls in Philadelphia.

for the College’s 27th Annual Golf Invitational

But after speaking with friends of his in the

last October, Sharp has embraced what he deems

priesthood, he felt that his generosity could

the College’s warm, close-knit environment.

and I feel strongly that the direction and mission there coincide with what my wife would have liked.”

make a bigger impact at a college. At that point,

Michael and Beverly Sharp.

17 » faces of philanthropy » donor report 2009


Anne Harvie Howard ’59 Cheryl-Ann Montano Hughes ’80 Valerie Greco-Hunt, M.D. ’82 Kathleen Brown Hyland ’63 Joan Koenig Hynes ’60 Diane Wasyluk Iardella ’87 Gertrude Jackson ’05 SCPS Lisa Cooper Jackson ’05 SGS Barbara Jani ’67 Kathleen Boyle Jarvis ’62 Kelly Baisley Jenkins ’91 Carol Gels Jensen ’07 SGS Elisabeth Steuble-Johnson ’98 SGS Isabel Porreca Johnson ’63 Margaret Johnson ’69 Pamela Grimme Johnson ’80 Catherine Condon Johnston ’55 Martha Bender Jollie ’69 Sarah Williams Jones ’02 SCPS Dorothea McEvoy Jordan ’49 Jessica Kahn, Ph.D. (F) Joanne Kaminski, Psy.D. ’05 SGS Louise Burgoyne Kane ’52 Kathleen Debow Karsch ’69 Barbara Merck Kearns ’58 Margaret Mary McDermott Keeler ’57 Christine Irwin Keenan ’90 Jessica Masso Keenan ’91 Ann Keer ’97 Kathleen Allen Kehoe ’49 Caterina Giampa Kelly ’88 SGS Jane Ellen Higgins Kelly, Ed.D. ’56 Patricia Boston Kelly ’51 Susan Taylor Kelly ’69 Phyllis Basenfelder Kennedy ’51 Ursula O’Reilly Kennedy ’43 Mary Sher Kenney ’74 Mary Crecca Kenny ’50 Susan Magee Kephart ’85 Catherine Lavelle Kessmeier, Esq. ’91 Anne Marie Kiehne ’70 Cynthia Killion ’90 Helen Gross King ’51 Kristin MacDonald King ’91 Marie Rosato King ’50 Patricia Walsh King ’67 Zita Levy King ’59 Diane Kingsley ’87 Jean Peters Kinney ’59 Mernee Derham Kinter ’58 Lois Curti Kittredge ’64 Margaret Garr Knoblock ’58 Raimonda Binkis Kontrimas ’59 Karen Korman ’91 SCPS

Mr. & Mrs. Ronald J. Kostka Zenaida Ancheta Krablin ’63 Margaret Marshall Kramer ’66 Phyllis Hartman Kravinsky ’84 Mary Hennessey Krutulis ’65 Janice Kuklick, M.Ed. (F) Helen Kurz ’50 Rita Cook Lade ’42 Jane Serrada Lang ’70 Katherine Gallagher Langan ’59 Joan Gerard Larkin ’52 Mr. & Mrs. Robert Larkin, Sr. Janell Lavender ’09 Helen Anne Quinn Lawlor ’66 Suzanne Sanders Lawson ’58 Lois Steppacher Lazzarino ’55 Marybeth Honeyman Leary ’65 Marianne Sim Lee ’58 Doris Cadigan Lefkowitz, Ph.D. ’80 Therese Martin Lehigh ’50 Mary Harrington Leonard ’54 Rosemary Leone ’74 Maureen Reilly Leonhardt ’53 Anne Branagan Letter ’54 Rhonda Jones Levy, Esq. ’97 SGS Elizabeth Lamb Lillie ’71 Roberta Evanoff Lindquist ’55 Eileen Connors Linehan ’53 Margaret O’Neill Lipinski ’53 Sandra Glynn Lippe ’62 Ann Gilsenan List ’66 Kerry Freisen Lively ’94 Mary Beth Higgins Livolsi ’84 Mary Pfister Lodes ’50 M. Elizabeth Logan ’54 Marianne K. Loney ’95 Joan Loreng ’70 Emily Loscalzo ’06 Ellen Loughran, Ph.D. ’72 Barbara McNulty Lowrey ’62 Barbara McCabe Ludlam ’69 Jeannette Echevarria Lugo ’50 Judith Hadden Lutolf ’61 Elizabeth Dinan Lutz ’52 Marilyn Schuler Lynch ’49 Marlene Bonacci Lynch ’67 Joan Rook MacFarland ’91 SCPS Patricia Klammer MacCluen ’84 Lee Bailey MacMurtrie ’40 Margaret McKee Madison ’68 Katherine Magee, Esq. ’65 Clare Ammend Magee ’71 Mr. Anthony L. Maglio Julia Koenig Maher ’64

donor report 2009 » associates club » 18

Louise Mann ’63 Jennifer Marazzo ’02 Mrs. Cecilia Marino Bernadette Bennis Marshall ’65 Mr. Joseph A. Martino (S) Constance Brown Masciangelo ’68 Nancy McDonald Mason ’66 Margaret Risko Mathers ’59 Margaret Matthews ’69 Suzanne Hoban Matunis ’55 Nan Gifford Mayland ’64 Theresa Mazeika ’57 Cecilia Mohl McAleer ’78 Joan Pietras McAuliffe ’63 Anne Keeler McBride-Manion ’48 Marilyn Johnson McCarron ’61 Patricia Gavin McCarthy ’51 Evelyn McCrossen McChesney ’54 Louise McCoy ’52 Micheline Paquet McCracken ’51 Mary Spence McCue ’57 Patricia McCutcheon ’88 Marjorie Erickson McDevitt ’46 Bonnie Vasey McDonald ’65 Marilyn McDonald, M.D. ’07 SGS Joan Wood McEnaney ’53 Marguerite Barrett McEwen ’54 Margaret Flaherty McFarland ’46 Denise Roney McGonigal ’75 Mr. Philip McGovern Angele Vial McGrady, Ph.D. ’63 Barbara McGurn ’55 Mr. & Mrs. Francis L. McIntyre, Jr. Mary Claire O’Keefe McIntyre ’48 Virginia Haenn McKee ’88 Anna Marie McKenna ’58 Diane Lacorte McLaughlin ’06 SCPS Anita McLaughlin ’59 Mr. & Mrs. James McLaughlin Joan Shelley McLaughlin ’54 Margaret Vernon McLaughlin ’50 Ms. Margaret C. McNally Mr. John McNelis Margaret Anderson Meade ’63 Ernestine Petorella Medeck ’54 Kathleen Canedo Mee ’53 Elizabeth Ryan Meehan ’73 Mrs. Dorothy Meehan-Ripa Janet Mele ’98 Delia Schiavi Melograna ’42 Judith Motto Miers ’69 Gertrude Betz Mihalcik ’69 Donna Talluto Mihelick, M.D. ’86 Mr. & Mrs. James J. Mikula

On SugarLoaf Hill, the circulation path is anchored by the Performing Arts Center and the Chapel, with academic and residential buildings in between.


Marianne Miller ’56 Maryellen Britt Miller ’82 Lorraine Cajano Minecci ’64 Rita McCloskey Miziorko ’71 Elizabeth Wible Molloy, Ph.D. ’65 Nancy Arauz Monnat ’71 Mr. Kenneth Monsey Mr. Arthur Montano Anna Stawitzke Mooney ’44 Miriam Berry Moore ’68 Margaret Moran ’67 Mary Jane Briggs Morgan ’67 Helen Kenny Motzenbecker ’50 Helen Rosmilia Mourino ’58 Marylou Morgan Mullen ’49 Ruth Mulligan ’41 Jacquelyn Bechtold Mullin ’49 Mary Resinski Murphy, M.D. ’54 Mr. Philip Murray Michele Mustello ’60 Kimberly Giordano Myler ’90 Clare Bennett Nafe ’67 Rhoda Dietrich Nary ’53 Phyllis Coppola Neill ’64 Sally Dolly Nester ’51 Rosemarie Robinson Nevergole ’74 Mr. & Mrs. Thomas C. Nichols Nadine Morse Noble ’70 Mary Ellen Norpel ’85 SCPS Marion Seckler Novack ’51 Barbara Beers Oberle ’55 Dorothy O’Brien ’50 Margaret Conlan O’Brien ’62 Louise Sullivan O’Connor ’43 Sandra Schlott O’Donnell ’59 Ellen Mullany O’Laughlin ’51 Elaine Miskuff Olson ’66 Virginia Mitchell O’Neill ’50 Jeanne Grant O’Neill ’47 Mary Magee Onofrietto, Ph.D. ’60 Lisa Blackwell-Opher ’04 Marita Howard O’Rourke ’52 Kathleen Boyle Ortino ’50 Mary Vernier Ozzello ’50 Alice Reilly Paduch ’64 Christine Page ’92 Adelaide Brothers Palmer ’51 Maureen Moffatt Parassio ’75 Cecelia Englebert Passanza ’77 Betsy Patterson-Patterson ’68 Mr. & Mrs. Robert Paul Gail Larkin Peach ’64 Sean Pearson ’03 SCPS Mary Young Peck ’81

Immaculata Pelone Elizabeth Green Perkins ’73 Martha Freiling Peterson ’56 Bernadette Fortune Pettine ’51 Rachel Ray Petyk ’98 PFM Asset Management LLC Eileen Walker Phoebus ’69 Joan Pirundini ’54 PJM Interconnection Eleanor Walsh Plumb ’70 Mariann Pokalo, Ph.D. ’77 Beth Griech-Polelle, Ph.D. ’87 Bernadette Clark Polizzi ’49 Joan Pollitt ’69 Dolores Topoleski Pontone ’49 Christine Westrum Porter ’94 SCPS M. Nancy Burczewski Portland ’64 Renee Raymond Portu ’84 Evelyn Guarnieri Powers ’69 Rebecca Preece ’69 Arlene Prentice ’92 Pamela Fiugalski-Prevoznik ’94 Procter & Gamble Company Kathleen Pasco Proud ’94 SGS Bernadette Cosenza Prozzillo ’66 Mimi Whiteside Pruett ’59 Jane Wylie Quest ’63 Catherine Quinn ’78 SCPS (S) Katharine Toland Quinn ’44 Stephanie Genova Quirk ’67 Annette Anderson Rafalowski ’78 SCPS Alexandra Masiuk Rakowsky ’62 Katherine Safford Ramus, Ed.D. ’69 Cornelia McCue Rath ’52 Mr. William Rath Patricia Johnson Rauch, Ph.D. ’55 Kathleen Green Redrup ’65 Mary Reeber ’60 Elizabeth MacDuffie Reger ’54 Gretchen Ann Reilly, Ph.D. ’91 Janice Arleth Reilly ’54 Mr. & Mrs. Carlos Richter Elizabeth Sieburg Richter ’63 Rosemary Carr Rinehart ’50 Mr. & Mrs. Gilberto Rivera Lydia Forte Roberts ’69 Mr. & Mrs. Michael J. Robinson Nancy Diamond Roche ’65 Patricia Hamborsky Roddy ’59 Rodgers Realty Advisors Joan Kochenash Rogers ’71 Jennie Romano ’00 Maria MacCabe Ronca ’54 Ms. Phoebe Rosenberry

Linda McKenna Roxe ’61 Suzanne Talarico Russo ’70 Mary Jane Petriella Ruvo ’62 Susan Enright Ryan ’61 Joan McFadden Sawoski ’57 Ann McNamara Scanlan ’59 Lynne Fowler Scarpiello ’57 Maureen Schmidt-Thielens ’62 Nancy Koonmen Schmidtmann ’61 Megan Schumacher ’91 Kathleen Prihoda Schwartz ’87 Betty Anne Power Schwarz ’62 Marie Mullen Sciarretta ’49 Arlene Diziki Scott ’61 Joanne Grimm Seaver ’60 Joanne Selinski, Ph.D. ’84 Catherine Yavarone Sewnig ’84 Clare Shanahan ’56 Rosemarie Litterio Shannon ’68 Patricia McGee Sharkey ’63 Lynn Mulvaney Sharp ’87 Shell Oil Company Mary Jane Mogey Shelly ’52 Alice Wisgo Sheppard ’59 Patricia Brumberger Shields ’66 John Shirley ’89 SGS Mr. Edward W. Siebert Catherine Simon ’85 SCPS Tracey Dever Simpson ’81 Jane Grasso Sinek ’59 Katherine Labrecque Skiba ’57 Marylou Dughi Sklar ’56 Beatrice Gosik-Smith ’84 Christine Desrochers Smith ’60 Mrs. Eugene M. Smith Theresa Smith ’82 Diana Stango Smoluk ’64 Janet Piedmonte South ’50 Dr. & Mrs. George Spaeth Karen O’Neill Spencer ’85 SCPS Mr. & Mrs. Richard Spinka Joan McCafferty Stapleton ’54 Jane Maguire Starke ’54 Lauren Steele ’99 Carolyn Stemmler ’49 Roses O’Leary Stephens ’52 Mr. & Mrs. William Stephenson Mary Louise Steppacher ’58 Jean Campbell Sterling ’58 Pauline Liebert Stitzinger ’63 Sara Young Stoll ’62 Eileen Bradley Stonier ’62 Jean Stotter ’73 Mr. & Mrs. Robert F. Stranix

Sally Cavanaugh Strike ’64 Donna Harrington Strok ’65 Rev. Gary Studniewski Mr. & Mrs. Robert Sucharski Mr. & Mrs. Ed Sudo Mr. Mark D. Sutton Juanita Covas Swain ’47 Marguerite D’Auria Szawlewicz ’48 Joyce Rafidi-Tatum, Psy.D. ’05 SGS Joann Bowes Taylor ’80 Alyce Taylor ’97 Elizabeth Shafer Tetenbaum ’70 The Independent Traveler Marguerite McLaughlin Thomas ’59 Joanne Cardelia Thorn ’63 Mary McKenna Thorne ’71 Jerilyn Louis Tierney ’64 Deborah Warner Toms ’76 Irene Ampthor Tori ’77 Dora L. Townsend ’05 SGS Ana Mai Trainor, Esq. ’86 Elaine Bevevino Trevey ’61 Carole Trone, Ph.D. ’89 Teresa Clark Trudeau ’68 Helene Hornyak Tuckwood ’53 Mr. Joseph Tumolo Jocelyn Orallo Valencia ’91 Mr. & Mrs. Philip Valvardi, Jr. Anita Esposito Varga ’54 Carmen Costanza Veit ’53 Villanova University Office of Graduate Studies Kristin Godleski Vincze ’93 SCPS Josephine Getman Von Jess ’50 Mr. & Mrs. Paul Von Zech Helen Gleeson Wachendorfer ’58 Theresa Brown Wade ’93 SCPS Mary Thompson Wagman ’39

James Walker ’04 Dolores Mitchell Wallace ’53 Mary Patricia Wallace ’59 Maryanne L. Walsh ’98, ’02 SGS Mary Patricia Walsh ’79 Patricia Andris Walsh ’56 Barbara Walter ’61 Adrienne Wardell ’57 Andrea Wargo, Ph.D. ’72 and Roger F. Sies Mary Alice Butler Warwick ’61 Joan Cawley Watson ’74 Dorothy Platner Way ’42 Eileen Kirby-Webb ’07 SCPS (S) Mary Capece Weinstein ’75 Betty Kroupa Wells ’95 SGS Janet MacCausland Welsh ’53 Elizabeth Tucker Werner ’63 Lynn Murray White ’56 Teri Meniketti Wiedeman-Rouse ’05 SGS Maria Colella Wiemken ’73 Cheryl Clifford Wilderotter ’66 Ann Meagher Williams ’50 Bridget Mahon Willoughby ’97 Virginia O’Brien Winslow ’42 Virginia Bendinger Wischhusen ’74 Teresa Rhodes Wolliard ’69 Sarah Bennett Wood ’59 Frances Pickess Woods ’50 E. Barry Dolaway Woolson ’59 Jeanne Marx Young ’49 Kathleen Oakes Young ’89 Andrea Cherubin Zapczynski ’63 Mrs. Margaret Miller Zenner Irene Wagman Zielinski ’54 Marguerite Stein Zuccarello ’58

Nicole Hartley.

19 » associates club » donor report 2009


DONOR REPORT

HALLMARK SOCIETY

hallmark

society

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.

Bernardine Keeler Abbott ’51 Elinor Balsama+ Anna Marie Barone ’57 Marita K. O’Reilly Beckum, Esq. ’61 Margaret Betz ’71 Louise Bradley ’52 Elissa Imbriaco Breiling ’61 Catherine Gallagher Brockway ’51 M. Elizabeth Buckley* Madeline Conti ’40 Joan Coyne ’52 Marjorie Piga Crain ’48 Elizabeth A. Croake ’52 Ellen Jane Pariset Crosson ’50+ Barbara Cruse ’64+ Ann Tushim Csink ’61+ Regina Cuta, M.D. ’56 Theresa Stepkowicz Cute (S) E. Loretta Daly ’47*

Eileen O’Rourke Deneen ’54 Mary Katherine Schubert Denny ’40+ Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Tigh Detrano ’67+ Sally Ann Donnelly ’53 Suzanne K. Dufrasne ’58 Mr. & Mrs. John O’Brien Fallon ’45+ Mary Patricia O’Conor Farley ’47*+ Mary Jackson Fitzsimmons ’35* Kathleen Heidere Ford ’63 Betty Lou Froustet ’43 Bettyanne Geikler ’52 N.A. Gillen ’69 Lynn Cozza Goodman ’63 A. Marie Fath Greenwood ’33* Helen A. Gruber ’52 Joan Burnham Guokas ’40 Marguerite Maguire Hauser ’53* Paul* & Barbara Henkels Mathilde Wackerman Higgins ’36*

donor report 2009 » hallmark society » 20

Mary Jo Heile Hogan ’48 Ruth Horcher* Elizabeth A. Rowley Jones ’66 Mary Ann Keegan ’45 Margaret Mary McDermott Keeler ’57 Kathleen Corcoran Keene ’68 Wilma Carson Kellerman, M.D. ’55 Noriko Kikumoto ’92 Patricia Kilmartin ’40 Cecile Heebner Knies ’63 Joan M. Kristoff ’65 Ellen Logue ’47 Patricia E. Lyons+ Jane M. MacDermott ’45*+ Elizabeth A. Harvey Majane ’57 Peggy Grant Malone ’46 Patricia Lawson McDaniel ’50 Catherine Winter McDonnell ’45 Anna Marie McKenna ’58

Joan Menaquale ’53 Lisa Rounds Miles ’82 Ellen Miller ’68 Anne Moore ’51 Robert L. & Christine Nydick ’94 SGS Virginia Mitchell O’Neill ’50 Kathleen O’Pella ’76 Anne Connor O’Riordan, M.D. ’53 Dorothy Palatucci ’64 Mr. & Mrs. John Plunkett Mariann Pokalo, Ph.D ’77 Mary Pollitt ’58 Joan Pollitt ’69 Christine Westrum Porter ’94 M. Nancy Burczewski Portland ’64 Janet Brown Quintal ’70 Mr. & Mrs. Bernard Rafferty+ Joan Toohey Rochford ’52 Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Schriver

Clare Shanahan ’56 Mr. & Mrs. Hugh Eichenberg Sinclair*+ Christine Desrochers Smith ’60 Mary Schuhsler Spangler ’64 Mary Louise Steppacher ’58 Marilea Swenson ’67 Rosemarie Walsh Taima ’57*+ Regina Voelker Tauke ’60 Anne E. Tezak ’76 Maureen Schmidt-Thielens ’62 Kathleen Wagner ’60 Andrea Wargo, Ph.D. ’72 & Roger F. Sies Ann Meagher Williams ’50 * Deceased + New Member


RESPONDING TO A QUESTION ON A 1974 ALUMNAE SURVEY ABOUT THE ROLE OF THE COLLEGE in the future, Mary Jackson Fitzsimmons ’35 wrote: “To continue to give the best education and moral foundation to young women. Where else can a girl get an education for her soul as well as for her mind and body? [The College] can be a tremendous force of good, as it has been over the past half century.”

A

Tremendous FORCE OF GOOD Thanks to the generosity of Fitzsimmons and other alumni who have named the College in

“She was always doing things for other people,

“I feel that the College gave me a strong

their wills, that mission will continue for another half century and beyond.

and very generous with her time,” Giordano said.

moral background and the general learning

Fitzsimmons’ lifetime giving and the proceeds of her estate amounted to nearly $3 million for

Fitzsimmons’ understanding of the importance

the College, supporting a variety of enhancements across campus, including a new residence hall

of education began at an early age. Her father

in her name that opened in 2006. Shortly thereafter, the College held a dedication ceremony at

was a self-made man intent on sending his

which Fitzsimmons’ goddaughter, Kathy Collins Giordano, reflected on Fitzsimmons’ life.

daughters to college, which was not common

“The College meant a lot to her, so it was really nice for our family to see them recognize her like that,” Giordano said. “She was very particular about the institutions and charities she honored.”

at the time, Giordano said. A devout Catholic interested in a school whose campus blended

that I use to make decisions even today,” Fitzsimmons wrote on the 1974 alumnae survey. “Further, it taught me how and where to find the answers to things I had not mastered but needed along life’s way.” Mary Jackson Fitzsimmons ’35.

city and country, she chose Chestnut Hill and

Preceded in death by her husband Leo, Fitzsimmons became the chief executive officer of her

majored in mathematics. Going back to her

husband’s businesses, M.A. Jackson Holding Co. and the Staunton Co., Inc. Prior to her death

alumnae survey, it’s clear she was happy with

at the age of 92 in 2004, she was active in Catholic education and charity at Our Lady of

her decision.

Good Counsel (Newark, N.J.) and various other nonprofits, including the Girl Scouts.

21 » faces of philanthropy » donor report 2009


DONOR REPORT

TRIBUTE FUND

fund

TRIBUTE

During the 2008-2009 fiscal year, Chestnut Hill College received

contributions honoring or memorializing the following individuals.

IN HONOR OF

IN MEMORY OF

Regina Brimmer, SSJ ’40 (S)

Alice Fitzpatrick Abbene ’52

80th birthday of Helen Robertshaw Emge ’50

Consuelo Maria Aherne, SSJ ’36

70th birthday of Barbara Martino ’60

Grace Banks, Ph.D. (F)

80th birthday of Rocco L. Martino

Antoinette Maselli Belisari ’48

90th birthday of Ruth Mulligan ’41

Rita Schwartz Boyle ’37

Retirement of Christine Nydick ’94 SGS (S)

Betty Buckley Elizabeth Kincaid Canapary ’58 Eugenie Loscalzo Canning ’49 Christina D’Ippolito ’79 Barbara Burke Downey ’47 Patrick Marie Flood, SSJ

donor report 2009 » tribute fund » 22

Marguerite Maguire Hauser ’53 Mary Mullahy Healy ’48 Virginia Anne Hogan ’53 Eva Maria Lynch, SSJ, Ph.D. Jane Fraser Mahan ’42 Dorothy Miller Madelaine Conlan Pierson ’66 Helen Branagan Thomas ’52 James J. Walsh Mary Alice Turvey White ’57 Ann Butler Wigmore ’57


“They respected her gentle, low-key manner that, in a paradoxical way, inspired them to excitement and often a wild enthusiasm for winning.”

Outpouring of

Gifts & Sentiment

HONORS “MISS B”

In the months following the news that “Miss B,”

A professor and chair of the College’s physical

“It was always a marvel to see this slight, quick,

as she was affectionately known, had passed

education department, Buckley made physical

neat woman manage Herculean tasks,” she added.

away in April, the College received more than

education classes mandatory and stressed the

“Canoes, pool, tennis courts, schedules, people,

50 donations in her memory. Many of the

value of continuous exercise in one’s life.

and the multitude of paraphernalia involved in

checks came with hand-written notes attesting

From 1942 to 1975, she led a dramatic expansion

any sporting activity.”

to the impact Buckley had on students in her

of sports and recreation — from archery and

four decades of directing the athletics program.

canoeing to volleyball and lacrosse. In 1989,

“She was great — a constant source of encouragement,” wrote Janet Smith Murphy ’48, who competed in swimming and field hockey at the College. “She was always upbeat, and inspired many of us,” added Helen Robertshaw Emge ’50. Betty Buckley.

she wrote about that growth in the book “Sixty Years of Sports at Chestnut Hill College 1924-1984.” In the foreword, the late Ann

Buckley has become an iconic figure in the College’s history. As Berna Schmidt Herrick ’50 writes, “She was Chestnut Hill College.”

Edward Bennis, SSJ, former professor of English,

And Buckley’s support of the College endures.

explained what it was about “Miss B” that

By remembering the College in her will and

forged such strong connections with students.

becoming a member of its Hallmark Society,

“They respected her gentle, low-key manner that,

“I treasure the memories of my basketball days

in a paradoxical way, inspired them to excitement

THEY SAY ACTIONS SPEAK LOUDER THAN WORDS,

at CHC with Miss B,” wrote another alumna,

and often a wild enthusiasm for winning,”

but the passing of Betty Buckley drew

Catherine Winter McDonnell ’45.

Sister Ann wrote. “‘Miss B’ never seemed

waves of both.

It is for these reasons and more than Betty

“Miss B” helped to ensure that the students of today and tomorrow would receive the wellrounded educational experience to which she devoted her life.

to be flustered or lose her ease and serenity.

23 » faces of philanthropy » donor report 2009


DONOR REPORT

SCHOOL OF UNDERGRADUATE STUDIES CLASS GIVING

Undergraduate

The percentage listed next to each class represents the total class

participation rate for the fiscal year. For the 2008–2009 fiscal year,

STUDIES

the SUS alumni participation rate was 23 percent.

CLASS OF 1933 (50%) Kathryn Brown Davis

CLASS OF 1935 (20%) Mary Jackson Fitzsimmons Estate

Lee Bailey MacMurtrie Mary Barbara O’Neill Philpott Margaret Walsh Ryan

CLASS OF 1941 (20%)

Concetta Vitullo French Lois Deacon Hofmann

Alice MacMunn Burke Eugenia Cooper Comerford Louise McCloskey Cullinan Ruth Mulligan Rita Cresci Quinn

CLASS OF 1937 (8%)

CLASS OF 1942 (31%)

Mary Lentz Schuhsler

Mary Gorman Brown-Jednak Madeleine Bennis Degnan Rita Cook Lade Delia Schiavi Melograna Jeanne Sweeney Nelson Regina Baust O’Donnell Phyllis Martin Upham Dorothy Platner Way Virginia O’Brien Winslow

CLASS OF 1936 (50%)

CLASS OF 1938 (17%) Betty O’Hara Anders Margaret Golden

CLASS OF 1939 (29%) Rosalie Reardon Albers, M.D. Alyce McNamara Hines Marguerite Kearns, SSJ Mary Thompson Wagman

CLASS OF 1940 (35%) Margaret Kelly Baumgardner Madeline Conti Mary Katherine Schubert Denny Patricia Kilmartin

CLASS OF 1943 (48%) Sylvia Ximines Allen Camelia Gallardo Eisenhart Helen Tansey Farhat Mary Claire Dougher Filippelli Rosemary McCarron Flannery, Esq. Betty Lou Froustet Aileen Murphy Johnson

Ursula O’Reilly Kennedy Jane Faunce King Louise Sullivan O’Connor Ave Little Rawdon

CLASS OF 1944 (33%) Jane Delaney Blank Mariagnes O’Neill Brown Geraldine Kelly McDonough Helene Purtell McIntyre Anna Stawitzke Mooney Juanita Ripoll Moore-Koecher Lucille Cox Novotny Dorothea Buchy O’Connor Katharine Toland Quinn Helen Cunningham Roney

CLASS OF 1945 (23%) Vera Kolarsick Balceniuk Mary Catherine O’Brien Fallon Mary Ann Keegan Catherine Winter McDonnell Jacqueline Carroll O’Donnell Claire Sweeney Regan Pia Badt Troutman

CLASS OF 1946 (28%) Gloria Perla Coe Nancy Curtis Duzy Joan Haran Gloe

Peggy Grant Malone Marjorie Erickson McDevitt Margaret Flaherty McFarland Rita Squires Meehan Loretta Brennan O’Brien Barbara Wilderotter Rinkor Roberta Pike Semmett

CLASS OF 1947 (38%) Rita Luczynski Brzezinski Mary Garneau Feketie Elizabeth Brown Foley Anne DeVenuto Grey Jeanne Carpenter Hanes Romano Marian McCreary Heckerman Shirley Kieser Hoberg Patricia Garrity Kasper Ellen Logue Helene Boffa McGuinn Barbara Swanson Mooney Jeanne Grant O’Neill Eileen Regan Plichta Juanita Covas Swain Marianne Connor Warnick

CLASS OF 1948 (42%) Mary Jane Dougherty Barry Marie Badecker Benas Claire Little Burton Marjorie Piga Crain Catherine Stroud DelDuca Adelaide DiBerardino Marie DiBerardino, Ph.D. Gertrude O’Donnell Donze Mary Farley Ewen Frances McCarron Harper Mary-Jo Heile Hogan Patricia F. Kelleher Ellen Richardson Klammer Anne Keeler McBride-Manion Mary Claire O’Keefe McIntyre Janet Smith Murphy

donor report 2009 » school of undergraduate studies class giving » 24

Grace Uttinger Palis Mary Frances Reilly Rochford Doris Black Schaefer Marguerite D’Auria Szawlewicz Margaret Schachte Wells Helen M. West

CLASS OF 1949 (50%) Patricia Tully Bannan Maude Meehan Belli Grace Cavanagh Bolen Patricia Elder Bonacarti Doris M. Byrnes Roberta Rini Cartlidge Anne Mauch Conboy Kathryn Lippman Conte Mary Grace Coleman Crerand Margaret Roe Diemer Elizabeth Webb Dixon Helen Austermehle Dykhoff Rita Sokol Eisler Carmen Echevarria Garcia Kathleen Freiert Geiger Irene Smith Gillespie Ellen Kiernan Hetzel Marie Schauder Hindman Dorothea McEvoy Jordan Kathleen Allen Kehoe Florence Jurewicz Korzinski Marilyn Schuler Lynch Anna Gene Hurst Madonna Denise Sheehan McGookin Mary McManus Marylou Morgan Mullen Jacquelyn Bechtold Mullin Miriam Esther Naughton, SSJ Rita O’Loughlin Regina Brennan Origoni Bernadette Clark Polizzi Dolores Topoleski Pontone Lorraine Gardner Rogers Marie Mullen Sciarretta


Carolyn Stemmler Jeanne Marx Young

CLASS OF 1950 (60%) Irma Ashenbrenner Dolores Everling Audet Mary Connor Brandt Ellen Jane Pariset Crosson Patricia Casey D’Entremont Frances Horan Del Duca, Esq. Rosemary McGranery Dougherty Helen Robertshaw Emge Mary Levin Englebert Joan McGuigan Evans Therese Garvey Fox Elizabeth Stroud Giordano Rita Cianciarulo Grayum Elizabeth Meier Greene Shirlee Repak Gubernat K. Patricia Carville Haley Berna Schmidt Herrick Mary Crecca Kenny Marie Rosato King Gerda Steinhauer Koetter Helen Kurz Elizabeth U. Laufer, M.D. Therese Martin Lehigh Mary Pfister Lodes Jeannette Echevarria Lugo Patricia Lawson McDaniel Margaret Vernon McLaughlin Blanche Haviland Moore Helen Kenny Motzenbecker Joan Byrne Murphy Dorothy O’Brien Virginia Mitchell O’Neill Mary O’Neill Kathleen Boyle Ortino Mary Vernier Ozzello Rosemary Carr Rinehart Rosemary Campbell Romasco Patricia Stillmun Shelton Janet Piedmonte South Veronica Petrusky Suppa Marianne Taulane Mary Margaret O’Connell Truschel Josephine Getman Von Jess Ann Meagher Williams Frances Pickess Woods

CLASS OF 1951 (56%) Bernardine Keeler Abbott Elizabeth Allen

Bernadette Power Barnhurst Patricia Whalen Bolger Angela DeSantis Boyle Catharine Gallagher Brockway Mary Caryl Brown Phyllis Metz Carroll Carolyn Baldino Conboy Mary Mahoney Corini Barbara Murray Dennen Kathleen Gillespie Patricia Higgins Green Elizabeth Du Ban Hansen Theresa Hunt Imms Patricia Boston Kelly Phyllis Basenfelder Kennedy Suzanne Gleason Kennedy Joan Amberg Kineke Helen Gross King Patricia Gavin McCarthy Micheline Paquet McCracken Eunice Holley Meyer Nancy Schmidt Murphy Sally Dolly Nester Marion Seckler Novack Ellen Mullany O’Laughlin Margaret Richardson O’Rourke Adelaide Brothers Palmer Bernadette Fortune Pettine Joan Reardon Kathryn Roberts Rooney Genevieve Koehler Sweet M. Regina O’Neill Thomas Therese Zogby

CLASS OF 1952 (52%) Mary Merz Berko Louise Bradley Pura Bigles Brennan Mary Ellen Carroll Brown Barbara Carli Claire Harrison Cocklin Joan Coyne Adele Bateman Donahue Ruth Wingel Doyle Joan Mathers Eaves Bettyanne Geikler Mary Alexander Graham Helen Gruber Mary Clare Martin Guinther Louise Burgoyne Kane Marie McDermott Keeley Geraldine Menzler Kelsey Joan Gerard Larkin

Elizabeth Dinan Lutz Joan Schmitt Markham Louise McCoy Dorothy Zeller Miller Anne Duffy Mirsch Mary Brady Mommessin Margaret Stehli Morris Anne Crowhurst O’Brien Joyce O’Neill Marita Howard O’Rourke Cornelia McCue Rath Joan Murray Reynolds Betty Ann O’Donnell Richter Joan Toohey Rochford Mary Jane Mogey Shelly Roses O’Leary Stephens Clara Tucker, Ph.D. Lorene Cardinal Welsh

CLASS OF 1953 (52%) Rita Ciotti Altman, Ed.D. Josephine Sciarrotta Bagley Marilyn Bryan Birkmeyer Margaret Smith Braca Patricia Nichols Brady Jane McGuckin Buczkowski Elaine Burchill Corcoran Annette Seiler Coyle Peggy Anne Derham Dolan Constance Peacock Feraco Charlotte McClaskey Friel Mary Silcox Gleason Odette Scharr Goodsite Gloria Massey Harkins Colette Robillard Kelly Rosanne Bonner Kendra Eileen Kelly Lammers Maureen Reilly Leonhardt

Eileen Connors Linehan Margaret O’Neill Lipinski Barbara Piga Marcouiller Mary M. Martire Patricia McDonald Joan Wood McEnaney Jeane Rossberg McGinn Anne McGeehan McGovern Kathleen Canedo Mee Joan Menaquale Rhoda Dietrich Nary Nancy Leonard O’Connor Anna Connor O’Riordan, M.D. Agnes Dorasavage Palko Mary McCabe Shields Helene Hornyak Tuckwood Carmen Costanza Veit Dolores Mitchell Wallace Janet MacCausland Welsh

CLASS OF 1954 (59%) Joan Hartmann Bamberger Marguerite Heiken Breslin Marie McCridden Burke Joan Alford Callahan Rose Ann Baron Clarke Maureen Newman Considine Madeleine Gercke Costigan Joanne Malatesta Davidoff Carole Sarubbi de Castro Eileen O’Rourke Deneen Clara McNierney Doyle Muriel Watman Dreswick Mary Wiesner Edell Roberta Bushey Glackin Ann Wiesner-Glickman Pamela Orsini Grimme Virginia Redmond Grover

Grace Corr Haenn (S) Margaret Keegan Lawn Mary Harrington Leonard Anne Branagan Letter M. Elizabeth Logan Patricia Crane Lynch Dorothy Wludyka Matthews, M.D. Evelyn McCrossen McChesney Marguerite Barrett McEwen Mary Lou Stafford McGill Joan Shelley McLaughlin Ernestine Petorella Medeck Mary Resinski Murphy, M.D. Catherine O’Flaherty Joan Pirundini Elizabeth MacDuffie Reger Janice Arleth Reilly Maria MacCabe Ronca Mary Jane Maher Smith Joan McCafferty Stapleton Jane Maguire Starke Margaret Greene Stubee Elizabeth Krug Ulrich Anita Esposito Varga Aileen Maguire Walsh Irene Wagman Zielinski

CLASS OF 1955 (43%) Joan McDermott Bellwoar Hilda Casanave Bertotti Mary Juel Rockwell Boast Joan Yates Carroll Helen Devine Coen M. Carol Snyder Collins Joanne Rossberg DeSantis Mary Ann Kenny Devine Joanne Waldron Dwyer Catherine Condon Johnston

25 » school of undergraduate studies class giving » donor report 2009


Elizabeth Harvey Majane Theresa Mazeika Mary Spence McCue Margaret McNierney McPhillips Annunciata Torrese Milani Diane Napoli O’Grady Dolores A. Reiff Rosemary Peacock Rychlewski Ann Malaney Savage Joan McFadden Sawoski Lynne Fowler Scarpiello Kathleen Gercke Silk Katherine Labrecque Skiba Miriam Fenerty Sullivan Adrienne Wardell

CLASS OF 1958 (48%)

The view of Chestnut Hill College and the Wissahickon Creek from lower SugarLoaf Hill.

Jane Keating Wilma Carson Kellerman, M.D. Lois Steppacher Lazzarino Roberta Evanoff Lindquist Suzanne Hoban Matunis Dorothy Stemmler Maurer Barbara McGurn Barbara Beers Oberle Mildred Renner Pfeifer Carolyn Deiter Piccone Patricia Johnson Rauch, Ph.D. Judith Dougherty Reidy Barbara Ellis Ryan Jean Schwartz, M.D. Renee Hipkins Tracey Madeleine Glynn Whittaker

CLASS OF 1956 (44%) Mary Ellen McFadden Barry Maryann Wessel Beitel

Martha Berry Janet Rutan Bowers Barbara Costigan Brennan Ellen Whiteside Byrne Catherine Malloy Byron Beverly Kray Connolly Beatrice T. Jungblut Dante Charlotte Branagan Farley Anne Daly Holland Jane Ellen Higgins Kelly, Ed.D. Betty Amici Larson Esther Moriarty McCarthy Marianne Miller Patricia Belcher Monaghan Barbara Griffiths Olivieri Martha Freiling Peterson Clare Shanahan Marylou Dughi Sklar Eleanor Craig Utzig Patricia Andris Walsh Lynn Murray White

CLASS OF 1957 (43%) Marie Craig Adolph Anne Dever Bancroft Constance Murray Becker Marie Pelliccio Berenato Rosemary Mahoney Boyle Mary Ellen McClain Carson Rosemarie Schmitt Clark Kathleen Daniel Margaret Walsh Davies Therese Schreiber DeFoney Clare Anne McDonald Diviny Maryanne Rafferty Dunmire Mary Jane Harford Ferro Eileen Gillis Francke Jean Williams Harris Arlene Hausmann Kathryn Peters Hill Margaret Mary McDermott Keeler Roxanne Talley King

Mary Dugery Brandenstein Clare L. McConnell Brown Jolande Jong Chiu Rosemarie O’Brien Cleaver Virginia Reilly Coester Mary Catherine Curran Suzanne K. Dufrasne Elizabeth Solnek Farrell Patricia Gallagher Fleck Joan McDermott Forry Mary Jane Pasha Franco Joanne Fay Gibbs Sarah Mansell Guilfoyle Janet McAninley Hallermeier Myra Hayes Sonia Gotay Hernandez Gwendolen Forsyth Hurley Barbara Merck Kearns Mernee Derham Kinter Margaret Garr Knoblock Suzanne Sanders Lawson Marianne Sim Lee Rosemary Hagan Lignelli Joanne Ryan Luecke Regina Gercke McConnell Maureen MacLean McCord, Esq. M. Eileen Foxhill McGlone Anna Marie McKenna Margaret Quinn Mohr Helen Rosmilia Mourino Miriam Butler Newlon Mary Pollitt Carolyn Inglesby Rusin Rosemary Scheirer, SSJ, Ed.D. (A) Mary Louise Steppacher Jean Campbell Sterling

donor report 2009 » school of undergraduate studies class giving » 26

Kathryn Hibbs Voit, Ed.D. Helen Gleeson Wachendorfer Denise Bonner Wall Helen McCann Williams Janice Kitley Yurasek Marguerite Stein Zuccarello

CLASS OF 1959 (60%) Mary Ann Miller Beatty, Ph.D. Helen Nolan Bischoff Miriam Quinn Blimm Martha Wohlfert Cacciamani Margaret Dickinson Campbell Carol Brokars Carr Young-Shin Chang Veronica McLaughlin Connor Mary Jo Nelligan Daly Barbara Harron Delaney Patricia Turvey Dellomo Carol Parrish Derba Anne Caruso Desy Kathleen M. Donnelly Barrie Thomas Fahey Deborah Dougherty Flint Eleanor Mason Gulczynski Diana Platt Hinners H. Barbara Johnson Hock Patricia Kelly Holt Anne Harvie Howard Charlotte Kelley Hyer Nancy Egan Kenneally Zita Levy King Jean Peters Kinney Raimonda Binkis Kontrimas Katherine Gallagher Langan Margaret Risko Mathers Anita McLaughlin Barbara Berryhill Murray Patricia O’Keefe O’Brimski Sandra Schlott O’Donnell Carole Storch O’Dwyer Mary Rose Gallagher O’Neill Mimi Whiteside Pruett Anna Dechet Reller Patricia Hamborsky Roddy Barbara Stoll Russell Ann McNamara Scanlan Phyllis Gott Shea Alice Wisgo Sheppard Ellen Shields, Ph.D. Jane Grasso Sinek Kathleen McDermott Strott Cecily McDonald Suchy


In

Memory OF A LIFE WELL LIVED

HER THREE PASSIONS WERE FAMILY, SERVICE,

at Chestnut Hill, “although she was always

which Dick suggests has contributed to the

“spiritual, but not in an outwardly way.

and faith. She was committed to her college

sensitive to injustice, a product to some degree

effectiveness of their careers in marketing,

It was subtle.” When asked toward the end

and to her Class of 1949. After myelofibrosis

of growing up with an Italian ancestry.”

medical sales, real estate, and finance.

of her life what she wanted from the rest of her

Seven of Jean and Dick’s eight children were

Jean founded Jersey Kids on the Block,

born in the first 10 years of their marriage.

an educational puppeteering program that was

When Theresa, their eighth, came along,

“wildly successful,” Dick notes, all over New

Jean was 45 and pursuing a graduate degree

Jersey and especially well known in Newark

Thirty-five years ago, Eugenie Loscalzo

in special education at Rutgers (M.Ed., 1977)

and Trenton for its impact in the classroom.

Jean served as president of her class in the late

Canning ’49 (music) identified the value of

and managing a household while Dick often

“These are not hand puppets or commercially

’50s and continued to volunteer on its Alumnae

her college experience when she wrote:

traveled in his sales position with E.R. Squibb

available,” he emphasizes, “but custom-made,

Council throughout the 1980s and later.

“My years at Chestnut Hill broadened my

& Sons.

approximately three feet high, to demonstrate

Daughter Denise Canning ’83 (psychology),

the special needs of children with, for example,

a physical therapist now residing in Utah, joins

spina bifida, or a child with leg braces, or a

her mother and aunt, Patricia Loscalzo Griffin

child who needs to wear a helmet.” If done

’60 (biology), as the only other CHC alumna

correctly, Dick says, “the puppet comes alive

in the family (with no relation to alumni

to the children, primarily to elementary school

director Pat Canning ’70). “Jean loved

kids, and they see how the special child will

Chestnut Hill,” Dick says, and he is pleased

need their understanding.”

to continue sharing in this life well lived by

claimed her in April 2005, she continues to remain a partner in advancing her college’s mission through her husband’s commitment to the SugarLoaf property purchase.

vision of life by stretching my desire for learning and stimulating me to a continuing search for new knowledge. My activities both at home and in the community do reflect in a positive way my education at Chestnut Hill.”

She had taught in Philadelphia public schools, at Ravenhill Academy, and the Academy of Notre Dame. She had also worked for the New Jersey Department of Education as a parent training consultant. This classroom

time on earth, Jean answered, “Jesus lived His life on earth as His Father would have wanted him to. I just hope that I can also live as Jesus did — living for our Father.”

Richard A. Canning, Jean’s husband of close

experience, coupled with the perspective that

to 49 years, is “glad to help Chestnut Hill in

comes with being the parent of a child — their

any way because Jean loved the college, and

first — born with a developmental disability,

Jean’s faith was unshakeable throughout her

it’s appropriate for me to especially support it

prompted Jean’s graduate studies and eventual

life. Son Mike notes it was “unwavering to the

Richard and Jean Loscalzo Canning ’49 with

during this time of growth.” So much of Jean

professional focus. It also sensitized their

end, and much of her strength emanated from

daughters Denise ’83, Theresa, and Eileen at

and what she accomplished, he says, originated

other children to varying kinds of disabilities,

a love of Mary.” Daughter Eileen says Jean was

Theresa’s wedding in 2004.

supporting the College in its work.

27 » faces of philanthropy » donor report 2009


Marguerite McLaughlin Thomas Ann Brennan Toner Colleen Ward Volpe Mary Pat Wallace E. Barry Dolaway Woolson

CLASS OF 1960 (40%) Carol Cheleden Alcorn Anastasia Hagan Bacon, Ed.D. Kathryn Agle Barry M. Claudette Rupp Bayer Aida Berzins Mary Hurley Birch Deborah Daly Bohan Roseanne Burke Brennan Marion Gioffre Buddo Catherine Budenbender Carolan Mary Lee Rothwell Corr Mildred Murphy Deriggi, Ph.D. Marie Micale Dumbra Theresa Zambelli Esperdy Jean Nagel Frei Eileen Long Hessman Anne DePiano Holderness Joan Koenig Hynes Mary Serroi Jaklevic Judith Bourgeois Jensen Patricia Kisielewski Juenger Dolores Dezii Kreal Henriette Horchler Leanos, Ph.D. Barbara D’Iorio Martino (D) Barbara Wenthe McCarthy Margaret Bennett McGreal Michele Mustello Mary Magee Onofrietto, Ph.D. Mary K. Reeber Anne March Roan Joanne Grimm Seaver Margaret Kuhn Sharkey Christine Desrochers Smith Patricia Walsh Sterner Regina Voelker Tauke Anne Brannan Teufel Joan Guiniven Trippetti Helen Mikula Vassily Mary Gallagher Wattis

CLASS OF 1961 (46%) Ellen Barrett Mary Tanney Bradley Elissa Imbriaco Breiling Maripat Martin Brophy Lynne Smith Brown

Margaret Burns Bulfer Katherine Alcamo Cardali Barbara Piontek Carpenter Maureen Gillen Chan Rosemary Magee Cicchiello Jo Ann Ewadinger Connelly Rosemary Tighe Cozzolino Ann Tushim Csink Mary Jo Abrachinsky Doherty Barbara Donovan Kathleen McCarthy Doyle-Kelly Barbara Gallo Draper Catherine Brannan Dunn Jeanne Labrecque Gagliano Sharon Smith Gardlund Mary Isabel Lambert Glenn Beatrice Gallagher Grabish Rosemary Murphy Gulati Sandra Johnson Helverson Eileen Pollock Holden Maureen Dearie Husk Kathryn Coyne Keegan Patricia Orna LeVarn Helen Giorgi Logue Judith Hadden Lutolf Miriam Gibbons Mandell (D) Marilyn Johnson McCarron Rose Fabio McKenna Helen Baum Miller Barbara Folsom Murch V. Sheila Boyle Otto Linda McKenna Roxe Susan Enright Ryan Nancy Koonmen Schmidtmann Arlene Diziki Scott Kathleen McBride Shoup Verna Brugger Stockmal Angela Clement Tague Elaine Bevevino Trevey Mary Ann Fiori Tysko Barbara Walter Mary Alice Butler Warwick

CLASS OF 1962 (38%) Catherine Albanese, Ph.D. Mary Louise West Ball Marylin Unger Burke Eileen McCoy Cioffi Kathleen Braun Dollenberg Nancy Quinney Dominis Jeanne Collins Donovan Adrienne Donaghue Gallagher Margaret O’Donnell Garrett

Kathleen Gavigan, Esq. Linda Hirsh Glasgow Patricia Tichenor Greer Ellen Brunot Greiner Kathleen Boyle Jarvis Mary Laffan King Kathleen Kugler Irene Loughman Kutner Sandra Glynn Lippe Barbara McNulty Lowrey Margaret Mary Green McLaughlin Diane Gillies Momich Margaret Conlan O’Brien Annemarie Fliegel Quigley Alexandra Masiuk Rakowsky Mary Jane Petriella Ruvo Betty Anne Power Schwarz Sara Young Stoll Eileen Bradley Stonier Maureen Schmidt-Thielens Mary Walker Tompkins Marie Genova Traxler Gail Hodgdon Valentine, M.D. M. Joyce Renzulli Wuenschel

CLASS OF 1963 (36%) Ellen Evans Adams Patricia May Agger Anne Albarelli Mary Louise Malfatto Alexander Mary Ruth Wiegard Becker Carolyn Bensel, Ph.D. Marion Williams Berry Janice Glocheski Brunner Carol Scudo Delgado Catherine Devlin Diane Driscoll, SSJ Kathleen Finnegan Kathleen Heidere Ford Gertrude Dearie Frekko Lynn Cozza Goodman M. Paula Nyhart Gowen Mary Jo Collins Griffin Mary Ann Conway Gursky, Esq. Deanna Drake Hagan Sandra Cupini Hagenbarth Geraldine Eble Hamilton Rose Anne Di Santo Hannum Jeanne Bireline Henderson Kathleen Brown Hyland Isabel Porreca Johnson Alison Turnbull Kelley Zenaida Ancheta Krablin

Louise Mann Joan Pietras McAuliffe Joanne McFadden McBride Angele Vial McGrady, Ph.D. Margaret Anderson Meade Mary Aldrich Merman Frances McCullen Pierce Jane Wylie Quest Elizabeth Sieburg Richter Gertrude Carlin Rutledge Anne DeStefano Salvatore, Ph.D. Patricia McGee Sharkey Pauline Liebert Stitzinger Katherine Roach Sullivan Joan Willey Thirion Joanne Cardelia Thorn Adriana D’Alessandro Walheim Elizabeth Tucker Werner Andrea Cherubin Zapczynski

CLASS OF 1964 (34%) Marylee Noonan Amato Virginia Pachence Azzariti Pamela Ann Black, Ed.S. Carolyn Jones Crawford Barbara Cruse Geraldine Kaczorowski Dabrowski Margaret Jarosh Doyle Diane Neary Ewing Mary Jane Tynebor Fearn Regina Bennett Fleming Paula Murphy Gallagher Mary Goldschmidt Galloway Joyce Finnegan Garrison Geraldine Longo Hadley Marianne Carlson Hall Virginia Hayes Agnes Hendrick Grace McGlynn Herold Mary Holmes Lois Curti Kittredge Julia Koenig Maher Nan Gifford Mayland Lorraine Cajano Minecci Phyllis Coppola Neill Dorothea Newman Alice Reilly Paduch Dorothy Palatucci Gail Larkin Peach Denise Murphy Phillips Eileen Weber Phillips M. Nancy Burczewski Portland Amelia Petitti Quaremba, Ph.D.

donor report 2009 » school of undergraduate studies class giving » 28

Margaret Jackson Quinn Mary Ellen Scanlan, Ph.D. Jo-Anne Fatibene Semmel Diana Stango Smoluk Mary Schuhsler Spangler, Ed.D. Nancy Connelly Straka Sally Cavanaugh Strike Kathleen Olsen Sullivan Jerilyn Louis Tierney Lois Trench-Hines Mary Campbell Wild

CLASS OF 1965 (29%) Carol Lowe Ambacher Maryanne Reilly Andrews Patricia Chiri Bell Joan Goldschmidt Browne Rosemary Dempsey Cunniffe Elaine Bennett Davey Kathleen Reilly Gallagher Marie Sclafani Goldkamp Isabelle Walsh Gundaker Frances Schuhsler Hadden Elizabeth Newmiller King Mary Hennessey Krutulis Marybeth Honeyman Leary Katherine Magee, Esq. Bernadette Bennis Marshall Patricia Jeskey McDermott Bonnie Vasey McDonald Kathleen Martin McFadden Catherine Hebson McVicker, Ph.D. Elizabeth Wible Molloy, Ph.D. Susan Brown Penrose Kathleen Green Redrup Nancy (Anne) Diamond Roche Phyllis M. Roche Linda Nolan Rosecan Judith Falconiero Schaefer Regina Maxwell Schwille Zdanna Krawciw Skalsky Donna Harrington Strok Denise Duckworth Tumelty

CLASS OF 1966 (29%) Kathleen Rex Anderson, Ed.D. Martina McCarthy Ball Elizabeth Burns Cusack Elizabeth Jachimowicz Fanuzzi Mary Alice Stein Feichtel Mary O’Connor Gentile, Ed.D. Virginia Ott Grant Carol-Jane Piltz Guardino


“It’s a great feeling to bring the good fortune and memories IN THE YEARS LEADING UP TO ITS 40TH REUNION, the Class of 1967 began discussing how it could

we had as students full circle.”

do something special — to make its mark.

Class of ’67 Scholarship

Opens Door FOR PROMISING SENIOR

The Class of 1967 at its 40th reunion.

“A group of us got

“It’s primarily because of [the Class of 1967

questions. The opportunity built upon the

student with excellent grades and financial need.

together online to

Endowed Scholarship] that I’m able to attend

extensive layout and Web management training

The latter resonates with Jani and other

generate interest in

the College,” said Babic, a computer and

she received in courses and extracurricular

classmates who relied on scholarships to

our reunion while

information sciences major with an English

opportunities at the College.

attend the College.

doing something

minor. “It offset enough of my costs that

good for the

I was able to pay for school by myself without

“I’ve been the layout go-to girl and Web go-to

“The cost has increased so much since we

College,” said

taking on loans. I feel incredibly fortunate and

child, which would not have happened at a

attended Chestnut Hill College that it seemed

Barbara Jani, class

grateful for that.”

larger school,” Babic said. “It’s one of the joys

like a good thing to help a deserving student

of a small Catholic college where every teacher

succeed,” Jani said. “Our reunion campaign was

Planning to graduate in May, Babic has applied

really does know your name, and exciting

a group effort with many classmates sending

for graduate programs in cognitive science.

opportunities are offered. It’s shaped the

letters and e-mails to do all they could to help

The result of their effort was a strong turnout

Last summer, she earned an internship with

person I am today.”

raise funds to help today’s students. It’s a great

at the reunion. And, more importantly, a pivotal

Rutgers University and the National Science

opportunity for Anitra Babic ’10.

Foundation, where she wrote a paper on

Anitra Babic.

secretary/treasurer.

“The consensus was to fund a scholarship.”

improving the security of online authentication

Established to honor the 40th anniversary of the Class of 1967, the scholarship goes to a

feeling to bring the good fortune and memories we had as students full circle.”

29 » faces of philanthropy » donor report 2009


E. Michelle Sprague Guerard Sandra Denenberg Hohberger Mary Angela Heller Howard, Esq. Julia H. Heitzman Koechlin Margaret Marshall Kramer Helen Anne Quinn Lawlor Jo Anne DiGiacomo Lechowicz Ann Gilsenan List Nancy McDonald Mason Mary Mulderry Mattson Joan Coletti Metallo Nonie Glennon Murphy Mary Delia Tye Neuman, Ph.D. Joan Brown Odell Elaine Miskuff Olson Jo Ellen Noonan Parsons Bernadette Cosenza Prozzillo Suzanne Stanton Regan Lorraine A. Revello Mary McDonald Rosenhagen Mary Kaufmann Ryan Mary Lou Sciarrillo Patricia Brumberger Shields Christine Eidsness Tantisunthorn Margaret Seidel Walton Cheryl Clifford Wilderotter

CLASS OF 1967 (29%) Mary Pat Gallagher Boyle Judith Brown, Ph.D. Joanne Bonavita Budwick Margaret Kress Carson Patricia Barr Colfer Cecelia Eble Coyne Tina Rita DeLucia, Esq. M. Kathy Tigh Detrano Catherine B. Devlin Kathleen Keirle Dougherty, Ph.D.

Frances Shumen Dwyer Eugenie Dausey Fleming Suzanne Dames Gibbs Diane Taglialatela Green Margaret Brabazon Henry Barbara Jani Nancy Culligan Jennings Joan McFadden Jernée Margaret Coffey Kelleher, Ph.D. Patricia Walsh King Katherine Ferguson Knox Anne E. Cashman Lilly Marlene Bonacci Lynch Margaret Judge Lynch Dorothy Kushlis MacFarlane, M.D. Dorothea Klebacher Magyar Kathleen Malaney, M.D. Marian Fanning McNamara, M.D. Margaret C. Moran Mary Jane Briggs Morgan Clare Bennett Nafe Mary F. Quinn Stephanie Genova Quirk Kathleen Campbell Schugsta Elizabeth McGarvey Smith Patricia So Margaret DiSanto Storti Carmela Buccieri Sullivan Marilea Swenson Kathleen Weibel

CLASS OF 1968 (25%) Rosalie Marinari Akouka Kathleen Clauss Borkowski Barbara McNamara Cubby Faith Peoples Dillon Maureen Colleran Doyle Jane Foulkrod Galvin

Maryann Campbell Gans Judith Vanstone Golderer Patricia Egan Hardy Barbara Jo Aherne Hartzell Maureen Burns Heacock Frances Goldkamp Heim Joan Edmund Husted Rosa Teresa DiFrancesco Lee Margaret McKee Madison Rosemary Marino Mangano Constance Brown Masciangelo Maryanna Kane-Massey Paula Ippolito McCarthy Ellen Miller Miriam Berry Moore Penny Grelis Morrison Patricia Parrella Orlando Betsy Patterson-Patterson Katherine Ryan Alicia Davey Schumache Rosemarie Litterio Shannon Teresa Clark Trudeau Nina Buckley Yeager

Susan Taylor Kelly Anna Gibino Kerr Stephanie Comerford Kramer Margaret Kirby Lucia Barbara McCabe Ludlam Katherine Marschall, M.D. Margaret Matthews Regina McKeever Kathleen McNicholas, M.D. Judith Motto Miers Gertrude Mihalcik Rita Mulville Kathleen Nugent O’Driscoll Eileen Walker Phoebus Joan Pollitt Evelyn Guarnieri Powers Rebecca Preece Katherine Safford Ramus, Ed.D. Judith Lee Rieder Lydia Forte Roberts Sally Ruttle Mary Lou Smith Waltrich Teresa Rhodes Wolliard

CLASS OF 1969 (27%)

CLASS OF 1970 (24%)

Eileen Husted Anderson Eleanor Yoa Ayers Judith E. Campbell Elizabeth Kilraine Davis Joan Fry Donahue Regina Mellor Dudney Nancy Himmer Esposito Denise Gervase Ferrier, Ph.D. N. A. Gillen Susan Rapp Halczenko Margaret Johnson Martha Bender Jollie Kathleen Debow Karsch

Margaret Waltz Baloga Felicia Corsaro Barbieri, Ph.D. Patricia Canning (S) Lydia Maiorca Driscoll Claudia MacFadden Fletcher Mary Catherine Gallagher Mary Ann Haggerty, M.D. Helen Hall Mary Margaret Hamill Betsy Flynn Hollo Anne Marie Kiehne Jane Serrada Lang M. Patricia Richmond LeBon Joan Loreng Patricia Cholewinski Nicholson Nadine Morse Noble Judith Anne Paul Judith Perkins Eleanor Walsh Plumb Janet Brown Quintal Suzanne Talarico Russo Donna Plamondon Scully Diane Stanczak Elizabeth Shafer Tetenbaum Katherine Barrett White Kathleen Beaty Young A. Clarice Zaydon, M.D.

Conceptual view of College Center.

donor report 2009 » school of undergraduate studies class giving » 30

CLASS OF 1971 (24%) C. Jane Caldwell Adams Margaret Betz, Ph.D. Clare Hamilton Bohnett Mary Ann Ballisty Bonner Barbara Brand Elizabeth Moleski Colonna Elizabeth Marron Cooper Monica Cetrullo Costlow Annamarie Baker Ennis Mary Anne Mokriski Girard Susan Beyer Henschel Frederica Massiah-Jackson Nancy Day Kelley, Ph.D. Elizabeth Lamb Lillie Maria Cikalo Mackey Clare Ammend Magee Rita McCloskey Miziorko Nancy Arauz Monnat Catherine Myers Geraldine Nuzzo Susan M. Pisano Frances Rafferty, Esq. Joan Rogers Roberta Rothwell Schillo Ann Marie S. Smith Sielski Rosemary McGroarty Sullivan, Esq. Mary McKenna Thorne Kathleen Wall Mary Kelly Whalen

CLASS OF 1972 (17%) Margaret Helbling Baumann Sallyann Bowman, M.D. Maureen Dixon Cass Pauline Chung Carol Crisci, Esq. Caroline Devine Anna Faris DiFranco Denise Errico Duffy Margaret Durkin, Esq. Kathryn O’Neill Fisher Margaret Schwind Gestaut Barbara McAninch Giuliano Frances Bonanni Hay Kathleen Mooney Hennessey Kathleen Mallon Lewis Ellen Loughran, Ph.D. Elizabeth Lunney Joanna Rizzo Mastronardo Joanne Sidoti Schmidt, D.D.S. Margaret Hetzer Stuart Andrea Wargo, Ph.D.


CLASS OF 1973 (22%) Adele Schmitz Bissonette Anne Brennan Frances Ciurcina Mary Little Collins Sally Ann Ayerle Corbley Margaret Grady Helene Becker Hoffsommer Mary Tyler Muldoon Holmes Ann Kohoot Joan Courtney Leicht Mary Catherine Lowery Jean McWilliams, Ed.D. Elizabeth Ryan Meehan M. Katherine McCarty Monaghan Frances McCormick Murphy Frances O’Brien Elizabeth Green Perkins Deborah Breidinger Vicario Maria Colella Wiemken

JULY 1, 2008 - JUNE 30, 2009

REUNION GIVING FUND EVERY FIVE YEARS, ALUMNI ARE asked to consider a special gift to honor their memories of Chestnut Hill College 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

CLASS OF 1974 (28%) Christine Binkowski Andrews Marsha Humphries Boex Paula DeSanctis Bonavitacola Carlota Garcia Colberg Janet Powers Dunne Margaret M. Englebert Barbara Barth Faherty Marybeth Egan Fedyna Christine Fitzpatrick Margaret Mascioli Giuntini Maureen Clearkin Glanzmann Valerie Mikula Hughes, D.D.S. Elizabeth Mallon Hunter Anita Kan Mary Sher Kenney Mary Lenore Gricoski Keszler, M.D. Rosemary Leone Susan Lyons Mary O’Gorman Murray Rosemarie Robinson Nevergole Mary Kinahan-Ockay Patricia Harper Petrozza, M.D. Rosemarie Tort-Schroeter Kathleen Liebel Scioli Mary Jean Frye Stewart Eden Eisler Sullivan Ann King Vaccaro Leona G. Valentine Joan Cawley Watson Virginia Bendinger Wischhusen Anne Guardino Yaccarino

DONOR REPORT

that reflect their interest in

CLASS

REUNION YEAR

NO. OF DONORS

PARTICIPATION RATE

1939

70th

3

21%

1944

65th

10

33%

1949

60th

35

48%

1954

55th

43

59%

1959

50th

49

59%

1964

45th

43

34%

1969

40th

36

27%

1974

35th

31

28%

1979

30th

10

11%

1984

25th

18

16%

1989

20th

10

17%

1994

15th

8

9%

1999

10th

4

7%

2004

5th

5

9%

305

28%

specific needs of the College. These options include: • The Griffin Fund – essential unrestricted support for day-to-day operations. • Endowment – restricted gifts for student scholarships; academic programs. • Other Gift Designations – such as student life, campus ministry, athletics, counseling center, Logue Library, special class funds, or specific department programs. All Reunion class gifts received from July 1, 2008 through June 30, 2009 are counted toward the total dollars each class raises and toward their respective class participation rate.

TOTAL

31 » school of undergraduate studies class giving & reunion giving fund » donor report 2009


CLASS OF 1979 (11%) Mary Augustine Barbara McCormack Buonora Margaret Feraco Frampton Eileen Rauscher Gray Stephanie King, M.D. Kim Ocasio Cabrera Sanchez, D.M.D. Stephanie P. Smith Patricia Gallo Terrenzio Mary Patricia Walsh Christina Demetrovits Woody

Jeremy Triplett ’10, Nicholas Raspanti ’11, Meghan Agnew, and Gary Hughes ’09.

CLASS OF 1975 (25%) Linda Avila Elizabeth Y. Young Bruno Catherine Tucker Carman Constance Way Dempsey Janine Delaveau Dwyer Marian Princivalle Ellis Wanda Feletski Barbara Bridi Frampus Susan Berko Glass Kathleen Boran Gotthelf Jane Tomalonis Gursky Janice Maffei Denise Roney McGonigal Nancie Ann Kenny Moebius Virginia Flynn Morris Ngozi Onyewuenyi Oleru, Ph.D. Maureen Moffatt Parassio Susan Prince Lynne Huddleston Ruff Cynthia Strolle Regina Williams Tate, Esq. Mary Capece Weinstein Angela-Jo Castranova Wetzel Carol Voelmle Zemnick

CLASS OF 1976 (23%) Sharon Cameron Baldwin Marguerite Brady Mary E. Brandt, Ph.D. Sandra Bumgardner, Psy.D. (S) Christine F. Ferraro Daniels Marianne Valvardi Dwyer Joanne Fink Alida Scarafone Freeman Ellen Moran Giermann Mary Ann Velten Gilman

Anne Marie O’Donnell Housel Paulette Kruk Mattia, D.C. Kathleen O’Pella Karen Platt Kathleen Sikora Anne E. Tezak Deborah Warner Toms

CLASS OF 1977 (13%) Alice Ann Gricoski Dachowski, M.D. Joanne Thomer Facci M. Chris Hemsley Margaret Carney McCaffery (D) Mary Lounsberry Miller Cecelia Englebert Passanza Joan Dougherty Pierson Mariann Pokalo, Ph.D. Patricia Shustock Scott, O.D. Margaret Callaghan Steficek Irene Callaghan Tori

CLASS OF 1978 (14%) Mary Conway Arnone Alison Franks Babiarz Ann Curran Brown Maria DeLuca Eileen Blessington Fee Laura McCandless Green Maryanne Kane, Ph.D. Patricia Killion Cecilia McAleer Mary Prendergast Murray Nancy McCarthy Pashley Bernardine Hugues Steinmetz Denise Vernon Toland

CLASS OF 1980 (13%) Lynne Silverio Carpenter Marie Zdebski Conti Deborah Kocher Fellows Patricia Waldron Gray Patrice Owens Hartung Cheryl-Ann Montano Hughes Pamela Grimme Johnson Margarita Mongil-Kwoka Doris Cadigan Lefkowitz, Ph.D. Barbara Hynes MacIntosh Susan Corcoran Pigg, Ph.D. Valerie Rengel Reeth Maryangela Sharkey Tait Joann Bowes Taylor Barbara J. Boyd Ward Nancy Meiklejohn Wolgamot

CLASS OF 1981 (6%) Jeanne Baffa, M.D. Patti Sisselberger Dohn Sandra Ruscica McDevitt Mary Young Peck Virginia Hylton Scott Tracey Dever Simpson

CLASS OF 1982 (14%) Ellen Seiberlich Hardy Marie Hejnosz Catherine Spollen Holt Valerie Greco-Hunt, M.D. Lynnanne Kasarda, M.D. Mary Beth Tobin Macaluso Lisa Rounds Miles Maryellen Britt Miller Louise-Anne Pulli, D.C. Kathleen Sokolowski Sexton Theresa Smith Carol Steinour, Esq.

Deborah Sonntag Tredinnick Beverley Patrone Uniacke, M.D.

CLASS OF 1983 (12%) Stefania Luciani Binnick Susan Wentland Brobst, Ph.D. Anne Dwyer Cyliax Gina DiGiuseppe, Esq. Roseanne Kane Fulmer Grace Voigt Kozrad Amy Nadley Lessman Wendy A. Madonna Roberta Cartlidge Roth Bridgette Martin Speights Janine Granieri Stratton Alice Mary Connolly Zenner

CLASS OF 1984 (16%) Maria Fella Cain Lynne Brophy Collman Gillian Horna Dezzutto Luz Mercado-Diaz Mary Agnew Dunleavy Kathleen Magee Holemans Phyllis Hartman Kravinsky Lisa Porter Kuh Mary Beth Higgins Livolsi Patricia K. Klammer MacCluen Kathleen O’Boyle Lisa Fiorillo Perfidio Patricia Kearns Ryan Joanne Selinski, Ph.D. Catherine Yavarone Sewnig Stephanie O’Connell Siegrist, M.D. Beatrice Gosik-Smith Patricia McCunney-Thomas

CLASS OF 1985 (9%) Laura Malisheski Connelly Donnamarie Marbet-Eckhardt Dorothy Murray Foley Mary Zuccarini Gordon Joann Gallagher Jones, Esq. Susan Magee Kephart Jacqueline Urbach Linse Jill Kelton Minor

CLASS OF 1986 (13%) Linda Buchanan, M.D. Ann McGee Carbon, Esq. Anne Bradley De Masi

donor report 2009 » school of undergraduate studies class giving » 32

Lisa Anne Roney Haas Maureen McFadden Holley, D.M.D. Sheila Marshall Lisa Kords Mastrogiovanni Donna Talluto Mihelick, M.D. Martha Ranc, Ph.D. Ana Mai Wong Trainor, Esq. Susan Vath

CLASS OF 1987 (20%) Maureen Cleary Argentieri, Esq. Lisa Grice-Concepcion Maura Kehoe Davis Alicia Bogie Fitzpatrick Linda Gambone Diane Wasyluk Iardella Karen Wilderotter Judge Maureen McGlynn Koerwer Patricia Haenn Le Brun Sheila M. Murphy Palermo Mary Ann Stahl Patton Kathleen Shea Pié Beth Griech-Polelle, Ph.D. Catherine Tucci Roberts Amita Bhala Russell Kathleen Prihoda Schwartz Lynn Mulvaney Sharp Marianne McGurk Wallaesa (D)

CLASS OF 1988 (13%) Elizabeth Albertoli Becker Teresa Haenn Margaret Falcone-Hindley, Ph.D. Patricia McCutcheon Virginia H. Haenn McKee Kathleen Beitel Murphy Maureen Kelsey O’Hara Marybeth Eskesen Pavlik Beth Davey Rosso Cecilia Haenn Turner

CLASS OF 1989 (17%) Michelle Raymond Bray Alice Campbell Bonita Freeman Yolanda Gonzalez Margaret Prendergast Kumar Michele Petrucci Mary Sylvester Thompson Carole Trone, Ph.D. Audra Meckler Wallis Kathleen Oakes Young


CLASS OF 1990 (13%) Elena Pié Adkins Susan Polarine Ciabattoni Brenda Gala DeStefano Elena Tedesco Gajes Kristin Durski Gartner Theresa Walsh Grabowski Lisa Settanni Guillet Christine Irwin Keenan Frances Cawley Lathrop Kimberly Giordano Myler Monica Hadfield Russo

CLASS OF 1991 (19%) Joanne Brown Jessica Flattery Cole Concetta Giuliano, D.O. Rosemary Haenn Kelly Baisley Jenkins Jessica Masso Keenan Catherine Lavelle Kessmeier, Esq. Kristin MacDonald King Karen A. Korman Gretchen Ann Reilly, Ph.D. Beth Ann Jarrell Romberger Megan Schumacher Jocelyn Orallo Valencia

CLASS OF 1992 (9%) Eileen Borne Blanca Gonzalez Canney Maria Santoro Conway Nancy Burton Dellavecchia Catherine Lockyer Moulton Christine Page Rebecca Warner Von Nieda

CLASS OF 1993 (7%) Susan Pagliaro Clark Dawnlynne Cute-Allen, D.C. Sharon D. Fields Amanda Adasavage Nowicki Dianne M. Vagnini

CLASS OF 1994 (9%) Amy McLeer Frangione Kerry Freisen Lively Nicole Gemborys McGurin Bridget Hill Panza Pamela Fiugalski-Prevoznik Julie Turner Prichett

Carol Nash Purcell, Esq. Jodie King-Smith (A)

CLASS OF 1995 (4%) Andrea Capozzi Brecker Dianne McCullough Christopher Christine Cunniffe McIntire

CLASS OF 1996 (6%) Heidi Landes-Cox Tamara J. Friend Kristin D. Heiser Kristen Merrick Matkowski Karin Stangler Murphy

CLASS OF 1997 (9%) Cindy Marx Davidson Debra Washington Hathorn Michelle Leshko Kaschak Ann Keer Jennifer M. Kelly Diana Barnett Kudes, M.D. Alyce R. Taylor Bridget Mahon Willoughby

CLASS OF 1998 (12%) Anonymous Rieke C. Baize Jessica Bowman Dodson Bridget A. Glaeser Sandra Clauson Nesbitt Rachel Ray Petyk Kathleen M. Spigelmyer (S) Maryanne L. Walsh

CLASS OF 1999 (7%) Julia King Gorniak Andrea Desantis Kerr Renee Wildermuth Latona Jannet Platonova

CLASS OF 2002 (3%) Jennifer A. Marazzo Deanna Leonard Miller

CLASS OF 2003 (7%) Erika DeLong Jillian T. Getting Anna O’Conor Hinson Melissa L. McCoy Sarah E. Reedy

CLASS OF 2004 (9%) Tarren E. Crudup Michelle L. Drazul Colleen P. Mooney Stephanie Rendine Morris Karen L. Speers

CLASS OF 2005 (11%) Theresa Klein Abraham Samantha L. Blazic Sara E. English Jennifer P. Johnson Jennifer L. Mowad Robynlin D. Pietrzykowski Christina A. Tomaselli Frances Vorsky Adrianne C. Zemnick

CLASS OF 2006 (9%) Stacie A. Bray Joan M. Calhoun Angela C. Garofalo Emily Loscalzo Stacy Davis Serwinski Patricia Duffy Shacklett

2009 SENIOR CLASS GIFT GRADUATE

IN HONOR OF

Jeffrey Ambrose

Mask & Foil

Katelyn Arsenault

Jeffrey & Kathleen Arsenault

Frances Boshell

Frances & Mary Koren, Kevin Boshell

Andréa Fernandes

Sisters of Saint Joseph

Landra Ginder

Lance, Sandy, Austin & Grandpa G

Francis Gormley

Lisa Olivieri, SSJ, Ph.D.

Katerina Huertas

Katia Ocasio, Ricardo Huertas, Veronica Sanchez

Larz Jeter

Chestnut Hill College Basketball Team

Alexander Kowalski

Diane & Jim Kowaslski

Brian Lackman

Sisters of Saint Joseph

Samuel Little

Logue Library

Alex Roth

Kimberly Leahy, Ph.D.

Alexandra Scheirer

John, Rosemary, Greg & Linda Scheirer

Brian Taylor

Jacqueline Reich, Ph.D.

Natalie Trevino

Honor Keirans, SSJ, Ed.D.

Cara Wallin

Joan Cassidy and the Wallin Family

Kathryn Williams

Pat Williams and Joan Crimmins

CLASS OF 2007 (2%) Elise F. Jacoby Andrew S. Wiemken

CLASS OF 2000 (5%) Bridget E. McGovern Christina M. Reddington Jennie J. Romano

CLASS OF 2001 (2%) Annie K. Sampson

33 » school of undergraduate studies class giving & 2009 senior class gift » donor report 2009


DONOR REPORT

SCHOOL OF CONTINUING & PROFESSIONAL STUDIES Marcia Allen ’03

Suzanne Groves ’06

Christine Westrum Porter ’94

Angela Andrews ’06

Denise Haffner ’79

Catherine E. Quinn ’78 (S)

Carol Fetterman Blauth ’78

Phyllis Flaherty-Hakeem ’91

Annette Anderson Rafalowski ’78

Anna Bondi ’06

Barbara Hogan-Zarro, Ph.D. ’73 (F)

Lynnette Santos ’99

Jacqueline Brown ’06

Gertrude Jackson ’05

Jane Williamson Schoeniger ’91

Mary Jo Bucceri ’98

Marcia Moore Jones ’92

Elizabeth Shober ’96

Phyllis Albrecht-Carty ’88

Sarah Williams Jones ’02

Catherine Simon ’85

Frances D. Chicchi ’90

Raymond Jordan ’05

Karen O’Neill Spencer ’85

I. Carole Christ ’06

Joseph King ’79

Lauren Steele ’99

Judith Clark ’87

Diane Kingsley ’87

Jean Stotter ’73

Joan Murray Conmy ’91

Karen Korman ’91

Kathleen Devlin Stull ’96

Ann Marie McAleer Cullen ’94

Frances Lutz ’98

Janice Tennant ’08

Judith Foster Cute ’90

Joan Rook MacFarland ’91

Susan Matlack Troemel ’87

MaryLou Mongiven Delizia ’78

Mary Moran Mahal ’87 (S)

Carol Jean Vale, SSJ, Ph.D. ’78 (A) (D)

Geraldine Dever ’85

Joan Maier ’83

Jo Marie Victor ’04

Paul Dixon ’05

Alan McCouch ’03

Kristin Godleski Vincze ’93

Deborah Matis Donnelly ’96

Janice Edwards McGowan ’86

Theresa Brown Wade ’93

Connie Dougherty ’05

Diane Lacorte McLaughlin ’06

Eileen Kirby-Webb ’07 (S)

Kathleen Dougherty ’87

Janet Messner ’78

Joan Underwood Whiting ’92

Eugene Dudley, Jr. ’05

Susan Miletta ’08

Caroline Martin Williams ’03

Lucille Fielding Emmerson ’74

Deborah Miller ’85

Christopher Wofford ’06

Dineen Foley Filoramo ’00

Margaret Mitchell ’03 (S)

Pamela Larsen Zeuner ’05

Donna Fiugalski ’01

Carolyn Sagendorph Montgomery ’97

Saori Fujiyama ’95

Mary Ellen Norpel ’85

Lorna Glassman ’80

Michelle Simmons Obalaja ’08

Deborah Gleeson ’03

Lisa Olivieri, SSJ, Ph.D. ’76 (F)

Betty Jane White Green ’83

Kathryn Palermo ’96

Gilda Caruso Gregori ’01

Sean Pearson ’03

Free Spirit.

donor report 2009 » school of continuing & professional studies » 34


“I want other students to be able to have the same experiences I had here.”

Recent Graduate

Pledges SUPPORT FOR CUSTOMIZED EDUCATION

FOR ANDRÉA FERNANDES ’09, IT WAS LOVE AT

in particular, that led her to make a pledge to

“A customized major is an opportunity that

“This generation is keenly aware of the

first sight.

her Senior Class Gift Drive — a pledge that

not many other schools provide. My hope is

importance of lending a helping hand,” said

she hopes will inspire others to follow suit.

that this pledge will give students a little extra

Coco Minardi, the College’s associate director

incentive to create one.”

of development, who coordinates the program.

“Driving down Germantown Avenue and seeing the campus for the first time, I said, ‘Mom,

Fernandes particularly appreciated the

this is it!’” Fernandes said. “I was right —

liberal arts curriculum offered at the College.

While many recent graduates face school loans

looking back on my time at the College,

She initially focused on journalism but was

and an uncertain economy, Fernandes said she

I loved everything about it.”

drawn to non-degree classes in anthropology

understands the importance of getting into the

and philosophy, leading her to design a

habit of giving back early on. She was one of

customized major: publications and culture.

many members of the Class of 2009 to pledge

Grateful for that rare opportunity, Fernandes

their support. Led by class president Fran Boshell,

made her pledge.

the Gift Drive committee completed one of the

Fernandes raved about the friendliness of the College’s staff and faculty and the Sisters of Saint Joseph, traditions like Christmas Decorating Night, and beautiful buildings like the Motherhouse Chapel, at which she dreams

“I want other students to be able to have

of one day being married. But it was academics,

the same experiences I had here,” she said.

“The Senior Class Gift Drive provides them that opportunity, and Andréa provides them a wonderful example of support.” Andréa Fernandes speaking at commencement.

College’s most successful undergraduate philanthropic efforts in recent history.

35 » faces of philanthropy » donor report 2009


DONOR REPORT

SCHOOL OF GRADUATE STUDIES

Beth Beyer Abbott ’05

Patricia Byrne Devine ’87

Lisa Cooper Jackson ’05

Marilyn McDonald, M.D. ’07

Susan Howell Smith ’96

W. Scott Armington ’03

Mary Ann Opp Domanska ’03

Jo Anne Jacquette ’08

Carol Renzulli McGinley ’06

Kathleen Spess ’06

Jane Banach ’05

Suzanne Donovan, Ed.D. ’91

Carol Gels Jensen ’07

Elizabeth Clauss McGovern ’99

Pamela Flesher Stralo ’92

Denise Basile ’92

Ann Durshaw, Psy.D. ’98

Elisabeth Steuble-Johnson ’98

Donna Rimmer McManus ’04

Joyce Rafidi-Tatum, Psy.D. ’05

Kathleen Brady ’86

Michele Dipasquale Elkes ’02

Joanne Kaminski, Psy.D. ’05

Mary Charles McNally ’85

Virginia Toliver ’94

Brian Brogan ’98

Alice Ellis ’08

Caterina Giampa Kelly ’88

Janet Mele ’98

Dora Townsend ’05

Nancy Benner Brubaker ’00

Johanna Bender Evangelou ’04

Cynthia Killion ’90

Joyce Toman Mooney ’05

Kristi Varillo ’05

Kadima Bukasa ’07

Susan Paine Fisher ’93

Jeannette Briggs Klarman ’95

Sandra K. Moore ’90

Michael Varlaro ’03

Gale Grasmeder Carlin ’05 (S)

Robert Giglio ’04

Colleen Kolakowski ’07

Christine Nydick ’94

Margaret Ovecka Vincent ’90

Kathy Cheston Caruso ’91

Mary Belle Gilroy ’98

Barbara Forrester Landis ’07

Lisa Blackwell-Opher ’04

James Walker ’04

Susan Cohen ’99

Jeanne Cavalieri-Grover ’04

Rhonda Jones Levy, Esq. ’97

Arlene Prentice ’92

Betty Kroupa Wells ’95

Eileen Coutts ’92

Charlotte Neolus Harris ’01

Marianne Loney ’95

Kathleen Pasco Proud ’94

Aubrey Dick White ’04

John Coyne ’05

Patricia Herbst ’94

Francine Umerich Lukacik ’04

Mary Ann Demichael Schwenk ’02

Teri Meniketti Wiedeman-Rouse ’05

Nancy LaSpada Dachille ’01 (S)

Elizabeth Hughes Iaquinto ’85

Jonathan Lynch ’94

Amanda Shields ’08

Stephen Williamson ’95

Robert DeFinis ’05

Yoshiko Toyomaki Ishikawa ’03

Lauren Topps Malora ’87

John Shirley ’89

donor report 2009 » school of graduate studies » 36


DONOR REPORT

CORPORATIONS, ORGANIZATIONS & FOUNDATIONS Allied Barton Security Services

The Martin Foundation

American Masonry Corporation

The Rocco & Barbara Martino Foundation

Ankelsons, LLC

Maven Benefits Partners

The Arthur Jackson Company

Michael & Margaret McCaffery Family Fund

Hilda E. Bretzlaff Foundation, Inc.

The Navesink Foundation

Bruno’s Restaurant

New York Life Insurance Company

Chartwells College & University Dining Services, Inc.

PFM Asset Management LLC

Collegiate Marketing Concepts, Inc Cox & Co., Inc. Cross Cabinetry & Carpentry, LLC Crown Holdings, Inc. Deloitte & Touche, LLP Design Network, Inc. Donald Miller & Co. Duane Morris, LLP Environmental Management Group, Inc. ESF, Inc. Garrison Printing Co., Inc. The Gulati Family Foundation Trust

The Philadelphia Trust Company PJM Interconnection The John C. & Kathryn S. Redmond Foundation Religious of the Assumption Rodgers Realty Advisors Russell Roofing Company Bill & Trudy Rutledge Foundation The W.W. Smith Charitable Trust Sovereign Bank Strategic Products and Services Ventresca Travel Villanova University - Office of Graduate Studies Voith & Mactavish Architects, LLP

Robert G. & Isabelle Walsh Gundaker Family Fund

Wheeler, Wolfenden & Dwares, CPA

Haverstick-Borthwick Company

Wolf, Block, Schorr & Solis-Cohen, LLP

Home Sweet Home Pet Sitting Services

S.R. Wojdak & Associates

The Honickman Foundation J.O.B. Design & Construction Co, Inc. Keough Electric, Inc. The Maguire Foundation Samuel P. Mandell Foundation

Richard Abram ’11.

37 » corporations, organizations & foundations » donor report 2009


DONOR REPORT

PARENTS & FRIENDS Mr. Michael T. Abbene Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Albright Mr. and Mrs. George Ambrose Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Andreacchio Mrs. and Mr. Gloria Andrzejewski Mr. Donald Ashe Mr. and Mrs. Jack Bachmann Ms. Elaine W. Baer Ms. Ann D. Baiada Grace Banks, Ph.D. (F) Mr. and Mrs. Paul Bannon James F. Barr Estate Mrs. Rita T. Boland Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bolger Mrs. Columbina Bonanni Ms. Kathleen Borseti Mr. Karl Bortnick Mr. and Mrs. Earnest H. Boyd Mr. and Mrs. Edward Breslin Ms. Martha Browne Mr. and Mrs. Richard Burke Mrs. Lucy Canning Mr. Richard A. Canning Mr. and Mrs. John Capozzi Mr. and Mrs. William Carr Mr. and Mrs. Micaelina J. Carter Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Cashman Mr. and Mrs. William Castone Mr. and Mrs. James Chapman Ms. Patricia Chapman Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Ciletti Mr. and Mrs. John R. Cochran, III Mr. and Mrs. John F. Collins Mr. Eugene M. Conboy Marie Conn, Ph.D. (F) Ms. Sheryl Connell Ms. Carol Consorto (S) Martin J. Corr, Esq. Ms. Denise Costello (S) Dominic J. Cotugno, Ed.D. (F) Mr. and Mrs. Ronald F. Cunningham Mrs. Theresa M. Cute (S)

Mr. and Mrs. John D’Agostino Mr. and Mrs. Larry Dale Mrs. Deborah Davies Ms. Milagros Davila Suzanne Del Gizzo, Ph.D. (F) Mr. and Mrs. Joseph P. Denny (D) Mr. and Mrs. Michael Derbyshire Mr. and Mrs. John Devine Mr. and Mrs. Paul Donahue John M. Donohie Estate Mr. and Mrs. Harry Donovan Mr. and Mrs. John H. Doody Ms. Elizabeth S. Duffy Mrs. Albina Dunleavy Mr. and Mrs. Michael F. Dunleavy Ms. Kathy Duran Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Echt Mr. John Emge Mr. Matthew J. Englebert Mr. and Mrs. Donna English Mr. Timothy D. English Mr. James Feuda Mr. and Mrs. Robert Fink, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. George S. Forde, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. James Forsythe Mr. and Mrs. Conrad Fountaine Dr. William Frabizio Mr. James F. Gallagher Mr. and Mrs. Stephen A. Gardner (D) Mr. and Mrs. Charles Gassert Ms. Elizabeth H. Gemmill Mr. and Mrs. Michael Gibbons Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Golderer Mr. and Mrs. Francisco Gonzalez Ms. Mirna Gonzalez Melanie C. Goodman, Ph.D. (F) Elaine R. Green, Ed.D. (A) Mr. and Mrs. Fred Griesbach Mr. and Mrs. Martin Gullen Mr. and Mrs. Darrell Hammons Mrs. Concetta L. Hart Mr. & Mrs. Raymond Hartman, Jr.

Ms. Sandra Johnson Helverson Mr. Donald Heron Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Hickerson Mr. Kenneth Hicks (A) Mr. and Mrs. James E. Hogan Mrs. Quita W. Horan Ms. Becky Huber Mr. and Mrs. Ricardo Huertas Ms. Mary P. Ingelsby Mr. Stephen Irving Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Judson, II Mr. and Mrs. Charles Kahn, Jr. Jessica Kahn, Ph.D. (F) Mr. John Keleher Karen Spencer Kelly, Esq. (D) Mr. and Mrs. L. B. Kershaw Ms. Lea Kolson Mr. and Mrs. Walter Kuczynski Mrs. Janice Kuklick, M.Ed. (F) Ms. Jeanne W. Ladd Mr. and Mrs. Chris Lang Mr. and Mrs. Robert Larkin, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. Elliott Lasky Ms. Barbara Leighton Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Lennon Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Lepera Ms. Kathleen Lewin Lions Gate Sunshine Club Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lockyer Dr. and Mrs. Hubert C. MacDonald Mr. & Mrs. John H. MacDonald Mr. Anthony L. Maglio Camille & Anthony Maglio, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Carl J. Malisheski Mrs. Cecilia Marino Mr. Joseph A. Martino (S) Mr. & Mrs. Michael D. McCarthy Mr. and Mrs. Kerin McCue Mr. & Mrs. Peter J. McGlinchy (D) Mr. Philip McGovern Mr. & Mrs. Francis L. McIntyre, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. James McLaughlin

donor report 2009 » parents & friends » 38

Margaret McNally Mr. John McNelis Mrs. Dorothy Meehan-Ripa Mr. and Mrs. James J. Mikula Mr. and Mrs. Donald J. Miller Rosalie Mirenda, Ph.D. Mr. Michael J. Mondoro Mr. Kenneth Monsey Mr. Arthur Montano Mr. William Munz Ryan & Krista Bailey Murphy (S) Mr. Philip Murray Mr. and Mrs. Rowland H. Myers Mr. and Mrs. Thomas C. Nichols Mr. David O’Brien Mr. and Mrs. Michael P. O’Brien Mr. and Mrs. Shaun F. O’Malley (D) Bill & Mary Noel Page (D) Mr. and Mrs. John Palko Mr. and Mrs. Paul E. Pallas John L. Melvin, M.D. and Carol Melvin Pate, Ed.D. (F) Mr. and Mrs. Robert Paul Ms. Immaculata Pelone Mr. and Mrs. John D. Plunkett Ms. and Mrs. Janet Polidora Rev. Jami & Mitch Possinger Mr. and Mrs. Bernard J. Rafferty Mr. William Rath Mr. and Mrs. James A. Ray Mr. and Mrs. David Reitz Mr. and Mrs. Daniel A. Rendine Mr. and Mrs. Carlos Richter Mr. and Mrs. Gilberto Rivera Ms. Shannon Roberts (S) Mr. and Mrs. Michael Robinson Ida Mae Rollin Ms. Phoebe Rosenberry Mr. and Mrs. Joseph G. Rudawski Ms. Mary Sabia Mr. Anthony Scarpiello Ms. Mary Patricia Schell Ms. Kathryn Scott

Mr. Frederick M. Sharp Mr. and Mrs. Terence F. Shea Miss Elizabeth Shellenberger Ms. Elizabeth Sher Mr. Edward W. Siebert Mr. and Mrs. Frank Sliker Mrs. Eugene M. Smith Ms. Helene B. Smith Drs. Kenneth and Dianne Soprano (A) Dr. and Mrs. George Spaeth Mr. and Mrs. Richard Spinka Mr. John D. Sprandio Mr. and Mrs. J. Clark Steinman Mr. and Mrs. William Stephenson Ms. Cindy Stiles Mr. and Mrs. Robert F. Stranix Israel Concepcion & Lauri Strimkovsky (A) Rev. Gary Studniewski Mr. and Mrs. Robert Sucharski Mr. and Mrs. Ed Sudo Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Sutherland Mr. Mark D. Sutton Mrs. and Mr. Vera E. Swahl Mr. Louis Taddei Ms. Avery Tatnall Mr. Henry R. Taylor Mr. and Mrs. Robert Teufel The Association of Owners of the Gardens Plaza Condominium Mr. Joseph Tumolo Mr. and Mrs. Philip A. Valvardi, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Richard W. Vassallo Mr. and Mrs. Garry Vizak Mrs. Anita VonZech Mr. and Mrs. Carl Wallace Mr. and Mrs. John P. Walsh, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. Woodrow Wendling Mr. and Mrs. Richard Williams Ms. Mary K. Yauch Mrs. Margaret Miller Zenner Mr. and Mrs. Vincent M. Zukauskas


“I wanted to do everything possible to make things a little easier for them and boost their [MCAT] performance.”

Support PROFESSOR’S

HELPS STUDENTS REACH MEDICAL SCHOOL

AS IF THERE AREN’T ENOUGH HURDLES FOR

the value of education, and goes to high-

faculty, I have absolutely no regrets about

medical school applicants to clear, the valuable

performing students who declare an interest

transferring to the College — it was one of

Kaplan MCAT preparation course costs

in taking the Kaplan course.

the best decisions I ever made.”

nearly $2,000.

Bestowed upon students at Honors

“I thank God for many things, and one of

“That’s a severe impediment for some of our

Convocation during the spring semester, the

them is the people He put into my life who

students and their families who are struggling

award typifies the commitment of the College’s

blessed me,” added Raul (Angel) Garcia ’09,

and just can’t absorb that,” said Joseph

faculty in preparing students for the professional

who received the award last spring and is now

Kulkosky, Ph.D., who established a fund at

world. Recent recipients expressed gratitude

in a program at Drexel University’s College of

the College to offset half of the cost. “I wanted

for it as part of the personal attention and

Medicine that extends preparation for medical

to do everything possible to make things a

networking opportunities they received here.

school admission. “I believe Dr. Kulkosky is

little easier for them and boost their [MCAT] performance.”

“It really shows how much you care about your students, how much you want them to

one of those people, and I am so grateful for what he’s done.”

Kulkosky, associate professor of biology and

succeed, and how you help them in any way

And just in case Kulkosky wasn’t giving enough

chair of the biology department, established

you can,” Branden Youngman ’06 — the first

to the College, he’s been known to play piano

the Academic Achievement in the Biological

recipient of the award, who is now enrolled at

in the Rotunda, filling the halls with beautiful,

Sciences Award to help students at the College

The Lake Erie College of Osteopathic Medicine

peaceful music.

gain admission to medical school. It honors

(LECOM) — wrote to Kulkosky. “Because

Kulkosky’s father, Paul, who instilled in him

of you and the entire Chestnut Hill College

Dr. Kulkosky instructs Nicole Fernandez ’12 and Andrew Donofry ’11.

39 » faces of philanthropy » donor report 2009


DONOR REPORT

GIFTS-IN-KIND

Karen Guwuriro ’10.

donor report 2009 » gifts-in-kind » 40

3000 B.C. Spa

Marie Fatima, SSJ

Ruth O’Neill, SSJ (S)

Alliance for Effective Organizations

James Feuda

Marie St. Paul, SSJ

Ambler Theater

French Bakery & Café

Peoples Light and Theater

American Swiss Foundation

Nyomi Gonzalez ’09

Lisa Fiorillo Perfidio ’84

Anthony Andreacchio

Elaine R. Green, Ed.D. (A)

Philip F. Radomski (D)

Mr. & Mrs. John Andrzejewski

Mr. & Mrs. Fred Griesbach

Jacqueline Reich, Ph.D. (F)

Anonymous

Mr. & Mrs. Christopher P. Harewood, III

Connie Henry Reid

John Anthony ’10

Heather Hutchinson Harris ’09 SGS

Donald & Laura Hentz Remmey ’52

Diane Arnold (S)

Nicole Hartley

Robertsons Flowers

Bella’s Boutique

Hershey Resort

Catherine Robinson, SSJ (D)

The Bone Appetite

Kenneth Hicks (A)

Veronica Roche, SSJ ’96 SGS

Bredenbeck’s Bakery

Roger Dwight Hill

George Roitzsch ’07, ’09 SGS

Samantha Brenneman

Barbara Hogan-Zarro, Ph.D. ’73 SCPS (A)

Aelita O. Sadykova ’08 SGS

Chantilly Floral

Michael S. Hogan ’09 SGS

Rita Michael Scully, SSJ (F)

Chestnut Hill Sports

Becky Huber

Arthur B. Shostak, Ph.D.

Cin Cin

Keswick Theatre

Mary Small, SSJ ’66

Elizabeth Clark, SSJ

Sara Kitchen, J.D. (F)

Margaret Mary Smith, SSJ

Janet Colaianni

Steve & Mary MacAvoy-Strawitz ’74

Solaris

Marie Conn, Ph.D. (F)

Bruce & Patricia Bednarski MacGloan ’76

Robert Steele

Suzanne Conway, M.A. (F)

Edward & Elizabeth Bateman Malloy ’58

Rev. Gary Studniewski

Margaret Cooper

Rocco & Barbara D’Iorio Martino ’60 (D)

Elizabeth Sweeney, SSJ

Denise Costello (S)

Joseph A. Martino (S)

Sweet Magnolia

Ashlee Culver ’10

Stephen & A. Klair McGlynn Filarsky ’48

Kathleen Szpila, SSJ, Ph.D. (F)

Dawnlynne Cute-Allen, D.C. ’93

Janice McGrane, SSJ ’98 SGS

Tavern on the Hill

Heather Davis

Brother Michael O’Neill McGrath, OSFS

Henry R. “Ted” Taylor

Elizabeth de Sales, SSJ

Susan McGroaty, Ph.D. (F)

The Independent Traveler Co.

Nancy DeCesare, IHM, Ph.D. (F)

Rev. Francis X. McKee

The Shanachie Irish Pub and Restaurant

Designed Treasures

Georgia McWhinney, Ph.D.

William T. Walker, Ph.D.

Diamond Spa

Melting Pot

Ellen Wall

Karen Dietrich, SSJ ’75

Merck & Company, Inc

Walnut Street Theatre

Kathleen Duffy, SSJ, Ph.D. (F)

John & Barbara Berryhill Murray ’59

John Durante ’09

Catherine Nerney, SSJ, Ph.D. (F)

Fabrics on the Hill

Rev. Terry M. Odien


THE RENOVATION OF THE CARRIAGE HOUSE ON THE SUGARLOAF PROPERTY AS a residence for Sisters of Saint Joseph took weeks, but the results were immediate.

Generosity Board Member’s

GIVES SISTERS A HOME

“The College has a warm, intimate feeling to it. You’re a person, not a number. I appreciate that.”

“To see the looks on the faces of the Sisters

“They kept the façade and face of the building, so it still has that class

when they first saw it was special for us,” said

and character,” said Ann McAdams, SSJ, M.Ed., associate registrar of

Phil Radomski, a member of the College’s

the School of Graduate Studies, who resides there. “It’s just beautiful.

board of directors and vice president of the

You look out the windows and see the green trees, and it’s so peaceful —

general construction company Frank V.

you’d never know there was a [student] dormitory nearby.”

Radomski & Sons, Inc. “It was our pleasure to help them out in their time of need.” Radomski’s company donated the labor and materials to create a home out of an outbuilding that previously housed horse-drawn carriages. Among their tasks was renovating

Sister Ann moved into the carriage house with three other Sisters in September 2008, after shuttling between the monastery, a student dormitory, and the Spirituality Center. “We’re very happy here,” she said. “Now, when we go home, we’re home.”

the first floor to include a bedroom, bathroom,

Radomski — whose wife, Susan, graduated from the College in 1986 —

kitchen, and dining room, and modifying three

has served the board of directors for four years. During that time,

bedrooms on the second floor. Along with

he’s witnessed the extraordinary growth of the College and relished

electrical and HVAC work donated by

its “family atmosphere” that reminds him of his alma mater,

Keough Electric, Inc. and Walter A. Dwyer, Inc.,

Spring Garden College.

respectively, this restoration project created a warm living space without losing the charm of

“My wife used to always stress that about the College, the family

the historic building that was once part of the

environment, and it’s true,” he said. “The College has a warm,

Albert M. Greenfield estate.

intimate feel to it. You’re a person, not a number. I appreciate that.”

Phil Radomski at the carriage house.

41 » faces of philanthropy » donor report 2009


DONOR REPORT

MATCHING GIFT COMPANIES Abbott Laboratories The Ace INA Foundation Matching Gifts Program Aetna Air Products & Chemical, Inc. ARAMARK AT&T The Boeing Company Caterpillar, Inc.

Chevron USA, Inc. Cigna Corporation Cisco Systems, Inc. Citizens Financial Group Colgate Palmolive Company Constellation Energy Group Dow Jones & Company, Inc. Exxon Education Foundation General Electric Foundation

GlaxoSmithKline Guardian Life Insurance Company of America HCR Manor Care IBM Corporation IMS Health Johnson & Johnson Lockheed Martin Corporation Merck & Company, Inc.

Merrill Lynch Company, Inc. The Northrop Grumman Foundation Pfizer, Inc. PJM Interconnection PNC Bank Corporation PPL Procter & Gamble Company Prudential Insurance Company of America Reynolds American, Inc.

Shell Oil Company Tyco Electronics Corporation United Technologies Corporation Vanguard Group, Inc. Verizon Foundation Walt Disney Company Foundation

Conceptual view of College Center and Piazza.

donor report 2009 » matching gift companies » 42


2008 - 2009

DONOR REPORT

CHC BOARD OF DIRECTORS CHAIR Barbara D’Iorio Martino ’60

VICE CHAIR Patricia Kelly, SSJ President Sisters of Saint Joseph

PRESIDENT Carol Jean Vale, SSJ, Ph.D. President, Chestnut Hill College

DIRECTORS Mary Barrar, SSJ Member, General Council Sisters of Saint Joseph Joseph Coradino* President PREIT Services, LLC Mary Dacey, SSJ Member, General Council Sisters of Saint Joseph Frank L. Davey Chairman John Evans’ Sons, Inc. Joseph Denny* Senior Advisor to the Chairman Liberty Property Trust Carol McCullough Fitzgerald Executive Director Pennsylvania Society

Steven J. Gordon, Ph.D.* Intelligent Bio-Systems, Inc. Jack Gulati Founder/Owner Safety Care Technologies George J. Hartnett, Esq. Chairman of Executive Committee & Managing Partner White and Williams, LLP Nan Hechenberger* Higher Education Consultant Karen Spencer Kelly, Esq. Deputy State Treasurer & Chief Counsel to the Treasurer of the State of Pennsylvania Miriam Gibbons Mandell ’61* Margaret Carney McCaffery ’77* Peter McGlinchy Executive Vice President Aviva Life & Annuity, NY Anne P. Myers, SSJ Vice President Sisters of Saint Joseph Shaun F. O’Malley* Chairman Emeritus PricewaterhouseCoopers

Philip F. Radomski* Vice President Frank V. Radomski & Sons Catherine Robinson, SSJ Ministry Coordinator Sisters of Saint Joseph John Sabia, Jr. President D.M. Sabia & Company Alma Rose Schlosser, SSJ President Saint Hubert Catholic High School for Girls Ann Rusnack Sorgenti ’58* Christophe Terlizzi* Executive Vice President of Commercial Real Estate Citizens Bank Dorothy Urban, SSJ Member, General Council Sisters of Saint Joseph Marianne McGurk Wallaesa ’87, ’92 SGS* Ronald Zemnick Senior Manager MEP Services Shoemaker Construction Company *Missing from photo

Mary Noel Page*

Stephen A. Gardner* Partner Deloitte & Touche, LLP

43 » chc board of directors 2008-2009 » donor report 2009


DONOR REPORT

BOARD OF DIRECTORS 2008 - 2009

CHC ALUMNI ASSOCIATION PRESIDENT Patricia Cholewinski Nicholson ’70

VICE-PRESIDENT Kathleen O’Boyle ’84, ’97 SGS

SECRETARY

Anne Duffy Mirsch ’52 Sandra Moore ’90 SGS* Stephanie Rendine Morris ’04 Chair, Young Alumni Committee

Patricia Kane-Vanni, Esq. ’75

Maryanne L. Walsh ’98, ’02 SGS

PAST PRESIDENT

DIRECTOR-AT-LARGE

Joanne Fink ’76 Chair, Bylaws Committee

Elaine Bennett Davey ’65 Chair, Nominating Committee

DIRECTORS

EX-OFFICIO MEMBERS

Elizabeth Marron Cooper ’71 Marylou Mongiven Delizia ’78 SCPS Chair, Awards & Honors Committee Marianne Valvardi Dwyer ’76 Elizabeth Iaquinto ’85 SGS* Kathleen McGinley, D.O. ’00*

donor report 2009 » chc alumni association board of directors 2008-2009 » 44

Carol Jean Vale, SSJ, Ph.D.* President, Chestnut Hill College Kenneth Hicks* Vice President for Institutional Advancement Patricia Canning ’70* Director of Alumni Relations *Missing from photo


DONOR REPORT

SUPPORTING THE FUTURE OF CHC education, Chestnut Hill College is grateful

ministry, athletics, Logue Library, special class

in his or her honor or memory. A personalized

for your generous contributions since the

gift funds, or specific academic programs.

card is sent from the College to the designated

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

The Chapel at SugarLoaf.

The needs of a private college in today’s world

A GIFT TO THE ENDOWMENT Contributions to the College’s endowment are invested and only the income from the earned interest is used each year. You can make a designated gift to the general endowment or choose to invest in the College’s future by funding a new or supporting an existing named scholarship, academic lecture series, and other specially designed programs.

A GIFT FOR SUGARLOAF

A GIFT TO THE GRIFFIN FUND

SugarLoaf Hill, a 30-acre property situated

These gifts are used to supplement the general

diagonally across Germantown Avenue from the

operating budget by providing assistance with

College’s existing campus, offered the College a

everything from library acquisitions and faculty

once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to nearly double

salaries to utilities and instructional supplies.

the size of its campus and allow for expansion

This fund is critical to the day-to-day operations

to accommodate a growing student body.

of the College.

The College is raising the substantial funds needed to assist in the renovation and

are many. As a small Catholic institution

A REUNION GIFT

dedicated to teaching, Chestnut Hill College

Every five years, you celebrate the anniversary

is largely tuition driven. Although tuition

of your graduation. We invite you to consider

for undergraduates at Chestnut Hill College

making a special gift to your alma mater during

A TRIBUTE GIFT

exceeds $26,000, it provides only 70 percent

your reunion year. You may choose to designate

Often in our lives someone comes along who

of the real cost of educating a student.

your gift to The Griffin Fund, SugarLoaf Hill,

has touched us in a very special way. You can

To maintain its tradition of excellence in

the general endowment, scholarships, campus

pay tribute to that individual by making a gift

development of this property. You can be part of the excitement!

individual(s) advising them that a gift has been made on their behalf.

SUPPORTING CHESTNUT HILL COLLEGE 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 and may be given using any of the following assets: Gifts of cash may be given for any purpose. Checks or money orders should be made payable to Chestnut Hill College. Funds or gifts of securities may also be transferred directly to the College’s account via wire transfer. VISA, MasterCard, American Express, or Discover charge service is also available. Secure online donations can be made at www.chc.edu/donate. Gifts of appreciated marketable securities may be transferred to Chestnut Hill College for any purpose. Securities may be given via electronic transfer or by re-registering the shares in the name of Chestnut Hill College

45 » supporting the future of chc » donor report 2009


and mailing the certificates to the Vice

received from corporations that so stipulate.

for your lifetime or for a term of years, and pays

Kenneth M. Hicks

President for Institutional Advancement.

For funds received from corporations that

annual income to us. Chestnut Hill College

Vice President for Institutional Advancement

To avoid paying capital gains tax, you should

designate the match as unrestricted, the purpose

benefits from the assured income stream from

215.248.7085

give the shares directly to the College. As a tax-

is determined by the College.

the lead trust, while your family enjoys several

hicksk@chc.edu

exempt organization, the College is able to sell the shares without paying tax. Your income tax deduction is based upon the value of the shares on the date they are given to the College. Gifts of real estate, gifts-in-kind, appreciated property, paid-up life insurance policies, closely held stock and other holdings

OTHER WAYS OF SUPPORTING THE COLLEGE Gift plans may be funded through outright

215.248.7137 quinnc@chc.edu

A charitable bequest, one of the simplest gifts

Mary Theresa Shevland, SSJ

Life income options include:

to make, will not affect your cash flow during

Director of Planned Giving

your lifetime. You may elect to name the

215.753.3617

College as the recipient of a specific amount or

shevlandm@chc.edu

managed trust funds that provide income to

Hill College by designating the College as the

found at www.chc.planyourlegacy.org

assets, including those mentioned above.

and acceptance by the College.

you can provide additional support for Chestnut

Director of Development

BEQUESTS

CHARITABLE REMAINDER TRUST — separately

company with a Matching Gift Program,

Catherine Quinn

More information on planned giving can be

contributions or by pledges of a variety of

may be given based upon their valuation

If you or your spouse is employed by a

tax advantages.

you for life. These may be established as annuity trusts, which provide a fixed amount of income, or as unitrusts, which provide income based upon a percentage of trust assets.

designate the College to receive a percentage of your estate. You may even indicate a specific use for the funds or designate that the funds are unrestricted. Contributions may be sent to:

recipient of matching funds. To learn whether

CHARITABLE GIFT ANNUITY — offers a way

your contributions may be eligible, contact

to make a meaningful and major gift while

either your company’s personnel office or

benefiting you. This is an agreement between

the Office of Institutional Advancement at

you and the College in which you transfer assets

the College. Matching gift funds are not tax

to Chestnut Hill College and receive fixed

deductible for employees of matching

payments for the rest your lifetime and/or the

For your convenience, you can make a gift

gift companies.

lifetime of another person.

online by visiting www.chc.edu/donate

In administering matching gifts, the College

DEFERRED GIFT ANNUITY — like a charitable

If you have any questions, please contact

follows national guidelines. You may have

gift annuity, a deferred annuity is a type of

Denise Costello, associate director of

your gift matched by your employer and receive

contract that provides a fixed income for you.

advancement services, at 215.248.7089

recognition for the value of your out-of-pocket gift

With this method, however, you contribute

or costellod@chc.edu

plus the value of the matching gift. Hence, you

currently but do not begin receiving income

may make a gift of $750 that is matched with

until a later date.

$750 and you will receive recognition for $1,500.

Chestnut Hill College Office of Institutional Advancement 9601 Germantown Avenue Philadelphia, PA 19118

For assistance with any of the above payment plan options, or to discuss, in confidence,

Designation of matching gift funds is determined

CHARITABLE LEAD TRUST — generates income

specific opportunities for providing support,

by each matching gift company. Funds are used

for Chestnut Hill College now, while reducing

you may contact:

for the same purpose as the employee’s gift when

your tax costs. The lead trust holds gift assets Michael Goldstein ’13.

donor report 2009 » supporting the future of chc » 46


DONOR REPORT

DONOR REPORT CONTRIBUTORS

Kenneth M. Hicks

Joseph Martino

Founded in 1924 by the Sisters of Saint Joseph,

Please include your full name, address,

Vice President for Institutional Advancement

Director of Advancement Services

Chestnut Hill College is a four-year Catholic

phone number and class year.

215.248.7085

215.248.7169

college in the Ignatian tradition offering a

hicksk@chc.edu

martinoj@chc.edu

traditional liberal arts undergraduate program,

Kathleen M. Spigelmyer ’98

Catherine E. Quinn ’78

Director of Communications, Editor

Director of Development

215.248.7025

215.248.7137

The College is an equal opportunity employer

spigelmyerk@chc.edu

quinnc@chc.edu

that recruits, advertises and hires without

Ryan Dougherty

Mary Theresa Shevland, SSJ

Publications Manager, Associate Editor

Director of Planned Giving

215.248.7110

215.753.3617

doughertyd@chc.edu

shevlandm@chc.edu

Patricia M. Canning ’70

Photography

Director of Alumni Relations

David Jackson

215.248.7144

Linda Johnson

canningp@chc.edu

Jim Roese

Denise Costello Associate Director of Development Operations

Address all correspondence to:

as well as accelerated undergraduate degrees,

Editor

graduate and doctoral degree programs.

Chestnut Hill College Donor Report

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,

Chestnut Hill College 9601 Germantown Avenue Philadelphia, PA 19118 E-mail: spigelmyerk@chc.edu The information in this report recognizes gifts received from July 1, 2008 through June 30, 2009.

questions, concerns, and opinions are welcome in the form of letters to the editor.

In keeping with the mission of Chestnut Hill College and our concern for the earth, this Donor Report was printed on 100# Galerie Art gloss cover and 80# Galerie Art silk text with Soy Ink. Galerie Art paper contains up to 30 percent recycled content.

215.248.7089 costeollod@chc.edu

47 » donor report contributors » donor report 2009



EVERY DAY, ORDINARY PEOPLE DO EXTRAORDINARY THINGS.

Do something extraordinary by supporting CHESTNUT HILL COLLEGE. We have space for you.


NON PROFIT ORGANIZATION U.S. POSTAGE PAID PERMIT #511 FORT WASHINGTON, PA

9601 Germantown Avenue Philadelphia, PA 19118

CHESTNUT HILL COLLEGE

Annual Scholarship Gala SAVE THE DATE Saturday, March 13, 2010 Cocktails and Dinner

Chestnut Hill College strives to keep a college education rooted in Catholic values within reach for students and families. Now, more than ever, academic scholarships play a crucial role in the pursuit of higher education. Please join us at the ďŹ rst Annual Scholarship Gala at Chestnut Hill College. For more information, contact Jessica Hannan at 215.753.3666 or hannanj@chc.edu.


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.