Shaker Schools Foundation Presents
SHAKER SCHOOLS ALUMNI HALL OF FAME
November 3-4, 2023
Shaker Schools Alumni Hall of Fame
Congratulations to the eight Class of 2023 Shaker Schools Alumni Hall of Fame inductees! These outstanding individuals join the ranks of renowned Shaker Heights High School alumni who exemplify what it means to be a Shaker graduate. They represent excellence and achievement in all walks of life, and have made significant contributions to the fields of K-12 public education, public service, law, advocacy, finance, public health, business, diversity, equity and inclusion. Just as important, they have put others before themselves by contributing to the greater good of their communities and to society as a whole. We could not be more proud of their achievements and the example they have set for future generations of Shaker graduates. The Shaker Schools Foundation’s Alumni Hall of Fame Committee selected this year’s inductees from an extensive pool of outstanding nominations gathered from the community at large. To be considered for this honor, alumni must be distinguished in their field, make significant contributions to the community and serve as positive role models to current students. The Shaker Schools Alumni Hall of Fame was established in 1986 and now includes over 326 inductees.
A Special Thank You to Our Shaker Schools Alumni Hall of Fame Committee Members: Jennifer Lawry Adams, Class of 1988 Laurie Mitchell Billowitz, Class of 1971 Michael Bowen, Class of 2005 Ifeolu Claytor, Class of 2013 Kim Cole, Class of 1992 Darlene Garrison, Class of 1988 Abby Goldstein, Class of 2001 Derek Green, Class of 1981 Gina Hobbs, Class of 1981 Denise Mack Johnson, Class of 2004 Kandis Williams, Class of 1992
We Appreciate the Support of:
Sonali Bustamante Wilson, Class of 1976 William McRae, Class of 1985 Dan Polster, Class of 1969 Cheryl Siegel, Class of 1962 Michael Summers, Class of 1994 Annette Tucker Sutherland, Class of 1977 Mitch Wasserman, Class of 1977 Brittany Webb, Class of 2002 Siraaj Woods, Class of 2017
Dr. David Glasner, Superintendent; Carter Strang, President of the Shaker Schools Foundation Board; Jennifer Lawry Adams, Class of 1988; and Brittany Webb, Class of 2002, who provided leadership as Shaker Schools Alumni Hall of Fame Committee Co-Chairs and Shaker Schools Foundation Trustees.
Hall of Fame Weekend Events Student Assembly Friday, November 3, 2023, Shaker Heights High School 10:00 - 11:15 am
Student Assembly
11:15 - 11:30 am
Shakerite Interviews
11:30 - 12:30 pm
Roundtable Discussions
12:30 pm
Inductee Luncheon
Hall of Fame Dinner Saturday, November 4, 2023, Cleveland Skating Club 6:00 pm
Cocktail Reception
7:00 pm
Dinner with Induction Ceremony to Follow
Nominations to Open in January for the Class of 2024 Now is the time to think about nominating an outstanding Shaker graduate for the Class of 2024 Shaker Schools Alumni Hall of Fame. Nominations will open in January 2024 on our website at shakerschoolsfoundation/alumni. All nominations must be received no later than Monday, April 3, 2024.
Stay Connected Subscribe to our Alumni & Shaker Schools Foundation Newsletters: shakerschoolsfoundation.org/e-newsletter-sign-up Follow Shaker Schools Alumni & Shaker Schools Foundation on Facebook, Instagram and LinkedIn.
Shaker Schools Alumni, 15600 Parkland Drive, Shaker Heights, Ohio 44120 shakerschoolsfoundation.org/alumni / shakeralumni@shaker.org / 216-295-4877
Shaker Schools Alumni Hall of Fame Class of 2023 Inductees Kevin Clayton, Class of 1977, is Senior Vice President, Head of Social Impact and Equity for the Rock Entertainment Group which includes the Cleveland Cavaliers, Rocket Mortgage Fieldhouse, Cleveland Charge, Cleveland Monsters and Cavs Legion Gaming Club. Under his leadership Kevin oversees Community Relations/Engagement, DEI, and the Cavaliers Community Foundation. Kevin previously held executive positions at Bon Secours Mercy Health, United States Tennis Association, Russell Athletic, American Cancer Society and was the managing partner of JumpBall LLC, an entity he founded in 2012. He started his career with Procter & Gamble where he was a successful sales and marketing executive. He is currently the Chair of the Greater Cleveland Urban League and Black Sports Professionals. He is a board member of United Way of Greater Cleveland, Shaker Schools Foundation, Cleveland City Club, and serves as an advisor to other local and national organizations. Kevin is an alum of North Carolina Central University and Wilmington College Ohio, where he was a member and captain of the basketball team. The Honorable Ellen Rippner Cohen, Class of 1958, served 10 years as the CEO of the American Jewish Committee and for 18 years as the CEO of the Houston Area Women’s Center. In 2006 she was elected to the Texas State Legislature serving for two terms. She was elected to the Houston City Council in January 2012 and in 2016 was named by Mayor Turner and elected by her fellow Council Members as Mayor Pro Tem. Ellen was appointed by President Bill Clinton to the National Violence Against Women Advisory Council. The Supreme Court of Texas appointed her to the Gender Fitness Implementation Executive Committee. Texas House Speaker Joe Straus appointed her to serve on the Texas Holocaust and Genocide Commission following her sponsorship of the bill. Ellen is presently serving on the Houston Forensic Science Center and as Chair of the Harris County Women’s Commission. Ellen is also a former President of Leadership Houston and the Medical Center Hospital Board. She graduated from The Ohio State University and Northwood University.
Aisha Fraser, Class of 1991, In Memoriam. As a beloved Shaker Heights educator, Aisha Fraser made a significant and lasting impact in the lives of thousands of Woodbury Elementary School students over her 15 year career. She excelled at teaching academic subjects and supporting her students through the emotional and social challenges that arise during this period. Her wholehearted allegiance to the success of young people in her community motivated her to leave her lucrative career with Ernst and Young to obtain her Master’s Degree in Education and return to Shaker Heights to teach. Aisha was also an exemplary representative for the Shaker Heights Teachers Association, SHTA, for many years. A SHTA Distinguished Service Award Winner, Aisha held the bar high for all those who seek to serve others through their union. She worked tirelessly to ensure that her students had equal access to inclusive education. Aisha was a member of the esteemed Cleveland-based Duffy Liturgical Adult Dance Ensemble and performed in many venues around Cleveland and nationally at the world-renowned Carnegie Hall. She performed internationally at events in Paris and Barcelona, and as a part of the U.S. Delegation at the Summer Olympics in 2000 in Sydney, Australia. As a member of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Aisha served on the scholarship committee, where she helped garner and award more than $25,000 in scholarships to deserving Cleveland area students. Aisha became President and Chief Executive Officer of Cleveland’s Granville Academy in 2002 and remained with the organization until 2010. Her bright presence is missed tremendously. James A. Goldsmith, Class of 1973, Partner and Co-Group Leader of Ulmer & Berne’s Trusts & Estates Group, has more than 40 years of experience in all aspects of trust and estate planning, administration, and succession planning. A Fellow of the American College of Trusts and Estates Counsel, Jim has earned numerous accolades and has been recognized for his impact throughout Northeast Ohio. He is extensively involved with several community and charitable organizations, including serving as Co-Director of the Joyce M. Stielau and Herbert W. Stielau Foundation, and as a former board member of both the Shaker Schools Foundation and the Hockey Humanitarian Award Foundation. Jim was past president of the Shaker Youth Hockey Association as well as a coach within the group. He is also a member and former Chair of the University Hospitals Diamond Advisory Group, which connects business professionals with hospital benefactors. He received his BSBA in Management from the University of Denver and his J.D. from Case Western University School of Law.
Heather Hanson, Class of 1995, is an infectious disease epidemiologist, athlete and community leader. As an undergraduate at Harvard University, she set school records with the women’s 4x400m relay team and she served as team captain from 1998-99. After completing a Master’s Degree in public health from Columbia University, Heather joined the New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene as a research scientist, where she led food-borne disease surveillance and outbreak investigations, while also playing key roles in the city’s response to the emergence of West Nile virus, SARS and H1N1 (Swine flu). In 2006 she worked in southern Africa as an epidemiologist consultant, analyzing data and evaluating programs intended to reduce maternalfetal transmission of HIV. Currently, Heather is the Manager of Emergency Planning, Response and Recovery at Public Health Ontario. During the COVID-19 pandemic response, she led Ontario’s contact tracing program which conducted over 1 million calls to prevent further transmission of COVID-19. She is a dedicated volunteer, organizing local food drives and mentoring diverse youth, and also rallying her community to repair a school in Haiti damaged by the 2010 earthquake and to sponsor a family fleeing Syria in 2016. Michael Jeans, Class of 1992, is the founding President and CEO of Growth Opportunity Partners (Growth Opps), a business advisory, investment, and lending community financial institution. Growth Opps provides capital, management consulting, and advisory services to support the growth of companies and the development of management teams. Growth Opps has a particular focus on impact in low to moderate-income and underserved communities. In 2020, Growth Opps established GO Green Energy, the first African American-led Green Bank in the United States. Michael brings vast expertise in corporate, non-profit, and municipal governance, enterprise risk and credit management, wealth management, deal structuring, and strategy. Prior to creating Growth Opps, he worked for established and respected leaders in the financial services industry including KPMG, Morgan Stanley, National City Bank, and KeyBank. Michael is a systems level leader and solves complex challenges. Michael currently serves in various Board capacities: Cleveland State University (CSU) Levin College of Public Affairs and Education Visiting Committee (Chair), CSU Foundation, Destination Cleveland (Treasurer), Karamu House (Chair), Cleveland Rape Crisis Center (Executive Committee), Playhouse Square, and Growth Opps. Michael’s corporate Board responsibilities include Ohio Farmers Insurance Company (OFIC)/Westfield Insurance, and NRP Group (Chair, HR Committee), a leading national commercial real estate developer, builder, and property management company. Michael earned a Bachelor’s Degree from Ashland University in Business Administration with a focus in Finance and a minor in Spanish. Michael later obtained several licenses with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).
Russell Stokes, Class of 1989, as President and Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of Commercial Engines & Services at GE Aerospace, he leads a $19B global business with more than 10,000 employees responsible for an industry-leading portfolio powering nearly 70% of the world’s airline fleet and carrying some three billion passengers annually. Russell has 25+ years of GE experience. Prior to joining GE Aerospace, he was Chairman and CEO of GE Power Portfolio, a collection of businesses that include GE Power Conversion, GE Hitachi Nuclear and GE Steam Power; CEO of GE Power; President & CEO of GE Energy Connections, an electrification, grid and controls business; and President & CEO of GE Transportation, a global leader in rail, mining and marine industries. He began his career in GE Lighting and spent seven years with GE Aerospace serving as the Sourcing General Manager, Services Chief Risk Officer and Customized Service Agreements Finance Leader. Russell is a member of the Board of Directors for UPS. He also is a member of the Board of Trustees for the Morehouse School of Medicine and for Three-Dimensional Education (3DE) by Junior Achievement, an association dedicated to re-engineering high school education. Russell graduated from Cleveland State University with a degree in finance and is a graduate of GE’s Financial Management Program. Ellen McWilliams-Woods, Ph.D., Class of 1980, is the President of Illumine Integrated Solutions, LLC, a company specializing in shining a light on solutions to complex community problems. She is currently leading a city-wide effort in Akron to expand equitable access to innovative after school and summer youth opportunities by galvanizing non-profit, civic, philanthropic and government organizations. Her 34 years in the Akron Public Schools, with the last 13 years as assistant superintendent, were deeply rooted in finding the synergy between organizations that result in breakthrough experiences for youth. Ellen collaborated with faculty, universities and businesses to have the district named as the first Ford Next Generation Learning community in Ohio where 100% of students in nine high schools select one of 57 different career pathways for their coursework, including experiences within 350 businesses. The success of the academies culminated in Ford Next Generation Learning announcing the district as a training site for districts across the country. As a nationally recognized trailblazer in education, she developed a peer assistance review program for teachers to mentor and evaluate their colleagues, codesigned the I Promise School with the Lebron James Family Foundation, opened two STEM schools in partnership with the National Inventors Hall of Fame, University of Akron and the City of Akron, and launched an Impact Network of turnaround school leaders in Akron with the Darden School of Business at the University of Virginia. Ellen graduated with a B.A., Audiology, Illinois State University; a M.Ed., Education of the Hearing Impaired, Kent State University (KSU), MEd, Counselor Education/School Counseling and Guidance Services, KSU and Ph.D., Educational Administration and Supervision, KSU.
Thank You to Our Board of Trustees Carter Strang, President Cathy Zbanek, Class of 1991, Vice President Christopher Hunter, Treasurer Ramona Lowery-Ferrell, Class of 1989, Secretary Jennifer Lawry Adams, Class of 1988 Eileen Anderson Michael Bowen, Class of 2005 Kevin Clayton, Class of 1977 Nicol Coxon Mity Fowler Mark Freeman, Life Trustee David Glasner, Superintendent Jeffrey Isaacs, Board of Education Liaison
Cliff Mendelsohn, Class of 1994 Jay Morgan, Class of 1987 Jonas Ng Barbara Nolan, Class of 1985 Phillip Rowland-Seymour, Class of 1993 Scott Shelfer Tricia Stevenson Stasia Vavruska Brittany Webb, Class of 2002
Comes Home to Shaker Please Join Us!
March 2, 2024 | Shaker Heights High School | 7 pm
Please Join Us!
A Night for the Red & White Comes Home to Shaker Saturday, March 2, 2024, 7 pm Shaker Heights High School For more information and to register for our annual fundraiser vist shakerschoolsfoundation.org/events.
About The Shaker Schools Foundation Celebrating its 42nd year, the Shaker Schools Foundation, established in 1981, was the first foundation in Ohio to support a public school system. Since its inception, the Foundation has raised over $10M in support of students and teachers in the Shaker Heights City School District. Every Student. Every Grade. Every School. The support of alumni, families and community members helps the Shaker Schools Foundation provide programs and resources for all Shaker students, including: • Classroom Learning - Technology for hands-on learning, Social Emotional Learning programs, supplies and equipment for new curriculum • Innovative Teaching - Enrichment grants for field trips, author visits, and other tools for creative study and exploration • Opportunities for All - Direct support for K-12 extracurricular activities and youth sports, and assistance for international high school travel • Career Exploration - Entrepreneurship, mentoring, job shadowing, and leadership experiences Your Gift Makes a Difference! Send a check made payable to the Shaker Schools Foundation, 15600 Parkland Drive Shaker Heights, Ohio 44120. For more information or to make an online donation visit shakerschoolsfoundation.org/donation-form or scan the QR code. For More Information: Holly Coughlin, Executive Director Shaker Schools Foundation coughlin_h@shaker.org / 216-295-4325 shakerschoolsfoundation.org
The Shaker Schools Foundation is a 501(c)3 non-profit organization that invites philanthropic support from individuals, corporations, and foundations. All donations are tax-deductible.
SHAKER SCHOOLS ALUMNI HALL OF FAME The 2023 honorees are among the following distinguished Shaker alumni who are members of the Shaker Schools Alumni Hall of Fame. Abby Goulder Abelson ’70 Aaron Abernathy ’01 Ronald Adrine ’65 Stephen J. Alfred ’52 Griffin Allen ’84 Harry Allen, Jr. ’59 Herbert Ascherman, Jr. ’65 Jamie Babbit ’89 Janice Green Baltimore ’60 Robert (Bob) Barber, ’67 Tom A. Bayless ’44 Carter Bays, ’93 Douglas P. Beal ’65 Hilary Beard, ’80 Ronald Bell ’49 Anne Womer Benjamin ’71 Carole Bennett ’72 Shoshana Stein Bennett ’71 Barbara Beran ’68 David Berger ’62 Peter Bergman ’57 Kenneth I. Berns ’56 Earl Biederman ’53 Daniel R. Biello ’65 Keith Black ’75 Janet Blair ’86 Eileen Savransky Blattner ’63 Pamela Bligh-Glover ’65 Daniel K. Bloomfield ’43 Sara Bloomfield ’68 Theodore R. Bloomfield ’41 Don Blumenthal ’70 Marie Daerr Boehringer ’31 Andy Borowitz ’76 Robert M. Boynton ’42 Marc Brenner ’65 Jim Brickman ’79
B. Holly Broadbent ’45 Richard Brubaker ’50 Zack Bruell ’71 Stephen Bucchieri ’58 Judith Butler ’74 Jane Campbell ’71 Jim Campbell ’76 Paul Campbell ’73 George Caplan ’61 Gilbert Cargill ’65 Robert Chamberlin ’47 James H. Christie ’38 Adrien Clarke ’99 Brian Patrick Clarke ’70 Roger F. Classen ’64 Kevin Clayton, ‘77 Nathan Clements, ’98 The Honorable Ellen Rippner Cohen, ‘58 Anne Cochran ’77 Anna Lupica Colagiovanni ’12 Jeffrey A. Cole ’60 Vivien Abrams Collens ’64 Robert I. Collins ’66 JudyAnn Cothran ’63 Charlotte Jaffe Cowan ’47 Reynold Crane ’65 Rebecca Frank Dallet, ’87 Hugh Danaceau ’47 Billy Newton Davis ’69 Kristen VanValkenburg DeStigter ’80 Thomas Deutsch ’50 Charan Devereaux ’87 George Divoky ’64 Paul Donaldson ’44 Jack A. Drewry ’67 Arlene Erlbach ’66 Robert Elton ’50 Arthur England, Jr. ’51
Jennifer Cohen Estlin ’83 Clothilde Ewing ‘96 William W. Falsgraf ’51 Michael Feigenbaum ’72 Betty Downes Fettinger ’49 John “J.P.” Fischer, II ’99 Nate Fish ’98 Barbara Fisher ’72 Lee I. Fisher ’69 Rob Fisher ’57 Aisha Fraser, ‘91, In Memoriam Glen Paul Freiberg ’70 Leonard E. Fribourg ’38 Gordon S. Friedman ’60 James M. Friedman ’59 Matthew Frymier ’86 Marcia Fudge ’71 James Gannon ’81 Peter Garson ’55 Victor Gelb ’44 Thomas D. Gelehrter ’53 Karen Stein Gelender ’67 Jeff Gerth ’62 David Gilliss ’64 Douglas Gilliss ’64 Neil Glazer ’64 David Gleason ’50 Morton Glickman ’55 Carolyn Gold, ‘74 James A. Goldsmith, ‘73 Richard Goldstein ‘59 Henry Goodman ’50 Irving I. Gottesman ’49 Phil G. Goulding ’38 Derek Green ’81 Ernest Green, Jr. ’83 Michael Green ’80 Zachary Green ’74 Burt W. Griffin ’50
Mark Davies Griffin, ’81 Adam Grossman ’98 Robert L. Grossman ’76 Matt Guerrier ’96 Clifford Gyves ’87 David A. Hansell ’71 Heather Hanson, ‘95 Ayesha Bell Hardaway ’93 Judy Harris ’66 Ric Harris ’82 Dorothy Hart ’40 Lorna Hartling ’83 Eleanor M. Hayes ’72 J. David Heller ‘83 Jerry Heller ’58 Herman Hellerstein ’33 Ralph Hexter ’70 Carl Hirsch ’64 Gerri Johnson Hobdy ’77 Anita Hollander ’74 Mildred Fried Hollander ’35 Providence Pedone Hollander ’44 Ronald D. Holman, II ’78 Stacey L. Holman ’89 Jack A. Horner, Jr. ’46 Dorothy Humel Hovorka ’38 Caroline M. Minter Hoxby ’84 David Icove ’67 Maxine Isaacs ’65 Michael Jeans, ‘92 Andrea Johnson ’94 Andrea L. Johnson ’74 Eric Johnson ’72 David Wickham Jones ’56 Peter Lawson Jones ’71 coleman a. jordan/ ebo ’81 Martha Joseph ’35 Nina Kaden ’51 Marc Kamionkowski ’83 Michael Kass ’78
Bram Kaufman ’78 Katherine Stone Kaufmann ’63 Rollin W. King ’50 Kara Kirby ’89 Donald J. Kirk ’51 Dennis B. Klein ’66 Jerome A. Klein ’39 Roger Klein ’60 Eugenie Kleinerman ’67 Nancy Klopper ’74 Richard Koblentz ’68 Marci Koblenz ’76 Shirley L. Koller ’38 Alan Kopit ’70 Edward Kovachy ’64 Charlotte Rosenthal Kramer ’37 Richard Krauss ’53 Harvey Laidman ’60 Amy Lazarus ’01 Adam Lehman ‘85 Sherelynn Lehman ’59 John Leibacher ’59 David Leu ’88 Freda Levenson ’69 Gerald Levert ’84 James Levin ’71 Joshua A. Levy ’90 Mark F. Lindsay ’81 Henry A. LiPuma ’39 Tommy LiPuma ’56 Jules R. Lodish ’63 Wesley Lowery ’08 Dennis Lustig ’62 Bruce E. MacNab ’48 James A. Malone ’72 Martha Hollander Marsh ’67 Paul S. Mason ’73 Ted Mason ‘68 Joan Finn McCracken ’54 Peter McDonald ’48 Michael D. McElroy ’85 Michael McGean ’45
Ted Mason, ‘68 Susan Bloomenthal Maynard ’59 Geoffrey Mearns ’77 Laura Meckler ’86 Judith Sue Meisner ’56 Steven Michel ’87 Aaron David Miller ’67 Norma Reiter Miller ’56 Kasumi Minkin ’67 Susan Lowe Modi ’60 Thomas B. Modly ’79 Loren C. Moore ’80 John L. Morgan ’86 Otis Moss III ’88 Kathy Urdang Mulcahy ’73 Clyde Nash ’51 Marc Nathanson ’65 Paul Newman ’43 Betsie Norris ’78 Edmund G. Norwick, Jr. ’38 Walter (Ted) Olson ’35 Susan Orlean ’73 Joan Pagano ’64 Jolyn Darden Parker ’70 Harvey Pekar ’57 Roger Penske ’55 Alan Perris ’60 Nancy Silber Pickus ’52 Carol Pineau ’77 Kenneth Plotkin ’78 David Pogue ’81 Dale Pollock ‘68 Daniel A. Polster ’69 James Polster ’65 Mary Jane Pories ’74 Robert Post ’41 James R. Pracker ’59 Douglas Price-Hanson ’81 Alan Ptak ’67 George Qua ’48 Kenneth Rainin ’56 Austin Ratner ’90 Bruce C. Ratner ‘63
Charles Ratner ’59 Mark Ratner ’60 Jane Rau ’40 Robert H. Rawson, Jr. ’62 Alan F. Reeves ’39 Cecilia H. Render ’79 Beth E. Richie ‘75 Laurel Richie ’77 Barbara Shultz Robinson ’47 Joseph W. Rock ’70 Marcia Rock, ’67 Linda Rocker ’58 David B. Roth ’67 Loren Roth ’57 Kathy Roth-Douquet ’82 Tim Roudebush ’48 Ann Rowland ’69 David Rubin ’63 John Morris Russell ’78 Todd Anthony Sams ’90 Marlene Sanders ’48 Amy Sands ’68 Nay Sanna ’45 Angelo SantaMaria ’50 Jean E. Schaffer ’78 Richard C. Schanfarber ’56 Michael Scharf ’81 Carol Scheffler ’75 Drew Schultz ’06 Benedict R. Schwegler, Jr. ’67 Larry Sears ’65 Ernest Van B. Seasholes ’51 John P. Sedlak ’43 Lee Seidman ’50 Sanford (Sebransky) Severin ’52 Melvin Shafron ’48 Arnold M. Shankman ’64
Lauren Shuler-Donner ’67 Scott Siegler ’65 Daniel Jeremy Silver ’44 Jerry Silver ’65 Phyllis Israel Silverman ’31 Sue Silverman ’57 Lawrence Singerman ’61 Charles Smith ’38 Jamil Smith ‘ 93 Kevin Snipes ‘81 Joe Solo (Douglas Klein) ’84 Scott Spero ’82 Edgar S. Spizel ’41 Russell Stokes, ‘89 Patricia Lee Stotter, ’67 Richard Stotter ’63 Duane J. Taylor ’78 Jerome D. Taylor ’92 Celeste Terry ’75 Kenny Thompkins ’77 Reynold D. Thompson ’44 Tom Thrailkill ’48 Milan Tiff ’68 Bennett Tramer ’65 J. Brian Tuffin ’83 Robert Tuschman ’75 William R. Van Aken ’30 George Veras ’68 Joan Oettinger Vogel ’60 David Wain ’87 Beatrice Wall ’17 Alyn E. Waller ‘82 Eugene W. Ward, Jr. ’72 Herbert Warden ’39 Amy Wasserstrom ’79 Eugene Weiss ’53 Leonard Weiss ’58 Kym Whitley ’80 Elizabeth Sessoms Wilkerson ’76
Abdul Williams ’90 Darryl L. Wilson ’81 Sonali Bustamante Wilson ’76 Britta Wilson-Uter ’79 Janet L. Wolfe ’59 Sidney M. Wolfe ’55 Jacqueline Dudek Woods ’65 Ellen McWilliamsWoods, ‘80 Helen Worth ’31 Jifunza Wright ’75 Gerold Yonas ’57 Howard Yonas ’63 Pamela Cross Young ’71 Thomas Young ’64 Robert Zimmer ’70 As of October 18, 2023