.~ -TI1 NDERBIRD
THE ALUMNI MAGAZINE OF THE AMERICAN GRADUATE SCHOOL OF INTERNATIONAL MANAGEMENT
FULFILLING A DREAM:
The
In terna tional
Center for
Entrepreneurial
Studies
This is the story of
dreams-the dreams of
those who envision owning
their own business; the
dreams of a professor who
sees Thunderbird as a center
for entrepreneurial cultivation;
and the dreams of
an alumnus who is the catalyst
for making these
dreams come true.
The professor is Dr. Paul
R. Johnson, who has been
teaching the entrepreneurship
course since its inception
in 1985.
The alumnus is]. Michael
O'Shaughnessy '71, whose
gift of $25,000 has been the
seed money for the start of
the International Center for
Entrepreneurial Studies.
O'Shaughnessy has pledged
a like amount each year for
10 years, plus a yearly
$25,000 challenge grant in
matching funds for the same
period.
O'Shaughnessy recalls his
days in Colombia when
many men "who had spent
many years of productive
careers with companies like
Grace, Pan American, or
Shell, were dealing with
the fact that these companies
suddenly pulled out of
these countries and left
thousands of highly trained
engineers and business people
stranded without jobs
or prospects. It disturbed
me that these men did not
understand that their 20 or
25 years of experience in
Latin America, managing
large units of these companies
. .. were valuable tools
in starting their own operations.
I'd like to give people
confidence in setting up a
business plan, to think in
those terms, and I regard it
simply as a very important
survival skill.
"Entrepreneurial in the
broadest and best sense, I
think, simply recognizes
that if you bring the proper
tools of analysis, of conception,
of courage, and a vision
to the problem, you can
bring a creative solution,
and business is just one
aspect of that," says
O'Shaughnessy.
"Look atJohn Crosby,
who created the Santa Fe
Opera out in the middle of
the southwest desert. I
think it equally applies to a
woman . .. out in the poorest
county in New Mexico,
where she's attempting to
use developmental skills to
create employment in
Rio Arriba County. That's
entrepreneurial. "
Both O'Shaughnessy and
Johnson see Thunderbird as
a natural place to foster
entrepreneurial talent. The
Thunderbird student is an
entrepreneur-that's one of
the primary reasons he or
she came here!" says
Johnson. "When one looks
at the leading graduate management
schools, one sees
the traditional graduate in
a three-piece suit with the
idea of going into a large
corporation. 1 don't believe
Dr. Paul R. Johnson teaches students
how to write a business plan during
the second half of his three sections
in Entrepreneurship, offered through
the Department of World Business.
J. Michael O'Shaughnessy 71 visits
with students in Thunderbird's
SOOO-level Entrepreneurship class.
PHOTO BY JACK KUSTRON
this is the kind of student
we get at Thunderbird," he
says, citing the fact that
over 3,000 alumni claSSify
themselves either as selfemployed
or the head of a
small company.
And, this is not strictly
an American phenomenon.
"Our proportion of foreign
students in the entrepreneurship
class is far higher
than the student population
in general. As many as
55 to 58 percent are foreign
students," he says.
Johnson's class has an
international focus, and
both he and O'Shaughnessy
see the international aspect
of the new center as the
feature that distinguishes
Thunderbird's center from
some 300 or more entrepreneurship
programs in
universities across the
United States.
"Originally, we started
with one section of 18 students
in the fall of 1985,"
says Johnson. "This semester,
we had 98 applications
and we were able to accommodate
20 in each of three
sections. I have students
coming to me in their first
semester saying, 'I want the
entrepreneurship course to
be the culmination of my
work here. What do I need
to do in preparationi"
The course has a reputation
for being one ofThunderbird's
most demanding,
but most meaningful
courses. Students do two
major projects. In the first
half of the semester they
perform an evaluation of an
existing business. "This has
several benefits: it provides
a student with the opportunity
to find out exactly how
a small business operates,"
says Johnson. "They see the
amount of, or lack of
accounting records that are
available. It gives the student
a feeling of confidence
that many of these people,
by working 14 hours a day,
seven days a week can make
it in a small business and if
they can make it, many of
them recently new to this
country and not able to
speak the language, certainly
someone with an MIM
from Thunderbird should
be able to accomplish this."
During the second half
f the class they write a
usiness plan. "I have no
llusions that they are going
o graduate and go out and
o this ... but, what I hope
s that whether it's five years
rom now or 10 years from
ow, they have the basis
nd the wherewithal to say,
It's not so difficult, I can
o it.'"
Gaining the confidence
o strike out on your own is
major part of the developent
of an entrepreneur.
Both Johnson and
O'Shaughnessy suggest that
a major role for the International
Center for Entrepreneurial
Studies will be to
provide that confidence.
Johnson would like to see a
business incubator program
as part of the center. '~n
entrepreneur needs a certain
amount of comforting,"
Johnson says, "because in
many cases he feels
extremely isolated. He's worried
about his cash flow, his
managerial ability, and his
competence in many of the
fields he will be dealing
with. "Johnson proposes giving
him that confidence by
surrounding him with faculty
"consultants" in the
various areas-a marketing
expert to help develop the
channels of distribution, an
accounting expert to make
sure that accepted accounting
principles are used.
"We encourage the entrepreneur
not to work out of
his home," says Johnson.
"It's too easy not to be the
professional that's required.
We strongly urge him to
find office space somewhere,
no matter how small, and
have a phone or answering
device, and a business atmosphere
even if no customers
actually call on that facility.
It gets him up in the morning,
out of his residential
environment. The incubator
would go a long way
toward encouraging that. It
sees that the person is there
in the morning, that he's
working with his associates,
with the files he has,
with the market environment
that's required. The
incubator is there to provide
that comfort feeling,
and people are there to
back him up."
While all the elements of
the center have not yet been
fully outlined,Johnson indicates
it might begin with
some modest furnishings ,
journals, periodicals, and
copies of previous business
plans and evaluations.
"Looking to the future ," he
says, "I can readily envision
a facility in the International
Business Park, in
which we could have an
incubator arrangement
surrounded by consulting
faculty. We might even
'rent out' small cubicles to
entrepreneurs for a period
of time ."
Johnson also sees an
entrepreneurial council as
a valuable asset: alumni who
could speak to students,
evaluate business plans, and
possibly allocate and monitor
a venture capital fund
for new endeavors.
O'Shaughnessy feels that
everyone can benefit from a
course or courses in entrepreneurship.
"I think the
discipline of thinking
through a business plan is
something that you use at
every level, whether you're
going into entrepreneurship
or you're assigned to analyze
the mission of a division
of a large corporation.
1'd like to see all 0 f our
students have that skill."
By Nelda S. Crowell
Editor's Note:
The references to the entrepreneur
in the masculine
form in the preceding article
are for ease in reading. The
intent is for the entrepreneur
to be viewed as either male
or female.
CONTENTS
2
MARKETING TO HISPANICS:
AMERICA:S SECOND lARGEST ETHNIC GROUP
6
A SUMMER IN BEIJING:
THREE STUDENTS SHARE THEIR NOTES
9
CAMPUS NEWS:
TRAINING TODAY'S INTERNATIONAL LEADERS
14
NETWORK:
HAWAlIJOINS THE FIRST TUESDAY TRADITION
18
ALUMNI UPDATES
BEHIND THE SCENES WITH WilliE CONE '79
26
THE THUNDERBIRD COllECTION
Thunderbird MagazIne
Fall 1988
Quarterly maililZine of
the Alumni Relations
OffICe of the American
Graduate School of
International Management.
Thunderbird Campus,
Glendale, AZ 85306
(602) 978-7135
TELEX 1117123
FAX (602) 439-5432
American Graduate
School of International
Management
Thunderbird Alumni
AssocIation 1987-88
Board of Directors
Director of Communication Chairman of the Board
and Editor: Stephen F. Hall '69
Nelda S. Crovvell President
Managing Editor and Writer: William M. Johnson, Jr. '60
Carol A. Naftzger
Communication Secretary:
Joann Toole
Design:
Pat Kenny Graphic Design
Director of Alumni
Relations and Publisher:
Bobbie M. Boyd
Alumni Relations Staff:
Catherine Snelling
Executive Secretaryl
OffICe Manager
Donna Cleland
Data Base Administrator
Pearl L AncIerson
Data Entry Clerk
Janet M. Mueller
Secretary
Jane Kidney
Receptionist
Usa Travis
Administrative Assistant
Brencla Woolf
Records Assistant
On the CCMlr:
. Vice Presidents
John c. Cook '79
Jack E. Donnelly '60
Larry K Mellinger '68
Peggy A. Peckham '74
Thomas A. Peterson 'n
Treasurer
Douglas R. Quelland '72
Secretary
Bobbie M. Boyd
Past President
Charles M. Stockholm '56
Ex Officio Members
William C. Turner
William Voris
Board Members
Eric A. Denniston '80
John A. Florida '62
Deborah Camper '89
Robert G. Lees 'n
Gary L. I;'acific 72
Mariya A. Toohey '78
Jeri R. Towner
Denniston '78
Roger N. Voegele '78
Daniel D. Wrtcher 'SO
Clarence H. Yahn, Jr. '62
Honorary Board Members
Joseph M. Klein '47
Berger Erickson '86
Carla Trum '82 Is a vtce president and
account supervisor for Siboney AcMrtislnlln
New York C~ Tl1Im is actively
I~ In Hispanic rnarlceting. Siboney
currently ~ six T'blrds.
Challenge and Opportunity
for the Marketing Professional
merica's second largest ethnic
roup-Hispanics-is transfonning
the status quo of advertising
and marketing.
"The Hispanics are growing at a
faster rate than the white population.
Along with this growth, the purchasing
power of this minority is steadily
increasing," said Bert Valencia, a
nationally recognized expert in the
Hispanic market and an associate professor
in Thunderbird's Department of
World Business. While blacks now
comprise the largest ethnic group in
the U.S., Valencia expects the Hispanic
population to surpass them by the year
2020.
The potential of the Hispanic market,
according to Valencia, should not
be overlooked. And with a purchasing
power estimated at $141.6 billion for
1989, the u.s. Hispanics have forced
many firms to sit up and take notice.
Among those most capable of tapping
this market are T'birds, who have
knowledge of the language and of
conducting business across ethnic
boundaries.
Apparently the business world is
responding to the surge in the ethnic
population growth: Many ad shops,
specializing in marketing to ethnic
groups, are thriving. One such agency
is Siboney Advertising in New York
which has been in the business for over
30 years and boasts big- name clients
such as Pepsi Cola, RJRlNabisco, and
Citicorp.
Siboney employs several T'birds,
including Carla Trum '82, who is a
vice president/account supervisor with
the firm. lium says that Siboney has
benefited from the growing awareness
of the Hispanic market.
"Our client roster, billings, employee
base and even our prestige in the
marketplace has greatly increased in
the past few years," lium said.
She mentioned that her Thunderbird
education has played a special role
in her own personal success on the job
THUNDERBIRD MAGAZINE
2
today. "Every day 1 have the opportunity
to use the language skills and
sensitivity to cultural differences that I
developed at Thunderbird," lium said.
Also employed with SiboneylNew
York is David fIyan '86, a media
planner who believes he experiences
more diversity in his job than if he
worked in the Anglo advertising market.
"1 have a direct input into our
agency's projects and philosophies. I
have more opportunities than I'd have
at other agencies," he said.
Another Hispanic agency on the rise
in New York is Conill, which employs
Henri-Pierre Valdeolivas '85.
Valdeolivas says that a few of the
largest U.S. agencies are meeting the
ethnic challenge by adding a Hispanic
branch to their firms. But most have left
Hispanic marketing to the experts,
such as Conill which is the oldest
Hispanic agency in the U.S.
"Most Anglo agencies would rather
align themselves with a shop like ours
rather than dealing with the Hispanic
market themselves. Many agencies are
scared to death because of what they
don't know and don't understand about
the market," he said. With its domina-
tion of the market, Conill and other
agencies are looking forward to the
future with eager anticipation.
"We're excited about the prospects.
While Anglo advertising has a projected
growth rate of zero to five percent
over the next ten years, Hispanic
advertising is expected to grow by 20
percent," Valdeolivas said.
But Hispanic marketers have paid
their dues. They have struggled for
years to win respect in the marketplace,
from the Hispanic marketing boom is
Steve Cabrera '87. Cabrera is an account
executive with Boone &: Deleon Communications
in Houston.
Cabrera, whose parents are Ecuadorian,
attributes his success to his
Thunderbird education and his inherent
predisposition toward understanding
the Hispanic market.
Cabrera said a Hispanic family background
is not required for success in
the field. However, he suggested that
those who have lived in a Spanishspeaking
country "will have learned a
lot more and understand how some
Hispanics think than those who have
just taken the Spanish language as a
class." Cabrera added, "The combination
of language, international studies
and world business at Thunderbird did
an excellent job of preparing me for my
career.
and the majority of growth has come I .--~..."
only in the last few years.
"Hispanic marketing has earned a
level of credibility and sophistication
that was sorely lacking just five or six
years ago. Clients didn't see it as a
segment worth targeting," Valdeolivas
said.
"Our shop has been very busy lately.
Not only has our number of clients
grown, but we've also increased the
billings with the clients we've had for
years." Con ill's client roster includes
such blue chip names as McDonald's,
Campbell's Soup, Procter &: Gamble,
Western Union, and New York 1elephone.
While it is clear the Hispanic market
offers a wealth of opportunity, many of
the Tbirds working in the business
point out that it takes a special type of
person to be successful.
Kimberlee Reimann '86, an account
executive with Berry Brown Advertising
in Dallas, is confronted daily with
complex challenges.
'The most difficult thing for me is
trying to move Anglos out of their
Anglo frame of mind. Anglos are used
to marketing toward different types of
people. They often don't understand
Hispanic marketing requires completely
different research, advertising
and marketing strategies than what
they may be familiar with," Reimann
said. "The constant challenge is to take
a typical product used by Anglos and
reach Hispanics with Hispanic marketing
and advertising.
"Weve found a good way to reach the
Hispanic market is through Hispanic
women. And a good way to reach the
women is at ethnic festivals and concerts.
However, many of our clients
assume we mean Pink Floyd when we
talk about concerts. But we're talking
about family-oriented festivals and
events such as the Hispanic State Fair
in San Antonio, Texas," Reimann
explained.
Another Tbird who has benefited
FALL 1988
3
Sieve Cabrera '87 worked on Clasico
Internacional, a campoign cosponsored
by Procter & Gamble to use
soccer as a means of reaching the
Hispanic market
Sieve Cabrera '87 (right) is an
account executive with Boone &
Deleon Communications in Houston.
He is shown presenting a prize to
Bill Klies, winner of the halftime
•••• kick, during Clasico Internacional.
left is Jossie lackman, American
Airlines marketing manager American
donated a roundtrip ticket to
Madrid.
SOUTH AM
Marketing professionals can only
profit from addressing the rapidlygrowing
Hispanic population says
Dr. Bert Valencia, a nationally
recognized expert in the Hispanic
market and an associate professor
in Thunderbird's Department of
World Business. Dc Valencia will
teach a course in Marketing to
Hispanics during Winterim, January
2-20, 1989.
Henri-Pierre Valdeolivas '85 is
employed by ConilllNew York, the
oldest Hispanic agency in the
United States.
The marketing industry is responding
and adapting to Hispanic influences
says Lori J. Gwynn '86, account
supervisor, Martinez & Associates,
Dallas.
THUNDERBIRD MAGAZINE
4
"Every day, I use the Spanish I
learned. When writing copy, I 'transcreate'
the language, I don't translate it.
When you literally translate a language,
you may often corne up with a
different meaning than you intended.
Therefore, everything from straight
copy to slogans and logos must be very
carefully 'transcreated.' "
One of Boone &: Deleon's greatest
campaign successes of this year has
been "Clasico Internacional," cosponsored
by the firm's client, Procter &:
Gamble.
The campaign even grabbed the
attention of Advertising Age, which
recently reponed Clasico lnternacional
~ one of several marketing techniques
using soccer as a means of reaching the
Hispanic market. According to the
article, soccer is the number one spon
among Hispanics.
Clasico lnternacional is a nationwide
campaign conducted annually in
US. cities with large Hispanic markets.
This year, the Clasico games paired the
US. Olympic team against Hispanic
squads representing countries such as
Chile, Mexico, and Ecuador. With the
purchase of P&:G brands such as Tide,
Ivory and Downey, fans could buy
tickets to the games at half price.
Cabrera reponed that the campaign
'was extremely successful.
Cabrera is presently working on a
campaign which marks the SOOth anniversary
of the discovery of America, by
one of the world's best known Hispanic
explorers, Christopher Columbus. The
gala celebration, which will be known
as the "Quincentinary," is being tested
this October in nonhern California.
The event is being sponsored by several
P&:G brands. If the gala is a success, it
will be incorporated in an increasing
number of US. cities over the next few
years. By 1992, Cabrera hopes the
campaign will be done on a national
scale and, possibly, at the international
...----,[ leveL
The marketing/communications
industry is, indeed, responding and
adapting to the Hispanic influence,
according to another Thunderbird
graduate, Lorij. Gwynn '86. Gwynn is
an account supervisor with Martinez &:
Associates, a Hispanic marketing firm
in Dallas.
"It's encouraging to see that the
ethnic language media vehicles have
become very sophisticated. This allows
our marketing efforts to be more effective
and pervasive," she said.
Gwynn expects marketing to tum
more toward the regionalization and
segmentation or ethnic group$. "The
Hispanic market, as well as the Anglo
market, is extremely diverse due to
rqionali%atiOlt, In order to understand
the diversit;y of edmicity. you have to
condUCt e:xten$Ve research," she said.
GW)'Il!l #e5 her toughest .cha1J.enge as
i~na iBid targeting the particular
n1JaI)05 existing within the different
HtspaiUc gt'QUps.
"TheilrosCdianenging part of my job
is fu:\dihg mw.anD cUlturallyappropria~
~o&nal ~ that will reach
the various sept.ents. of the complex
Hispanic malket," Gwynn said.
\hlen~ ~ that one of the most
diBlcuh ~es f.lcing the marketing
comm~ today is that each
Hispanic subgilmp can have Significant
differences that may require marketing
campaign adaptations.
"The Hispanic market, for example,
is a heterogenous group composed of
Mexicans, Puerto Ricans, Cubans and
others," Valencia said. "They have significant
differences among them that
can't be ignored.
"The marketing community must
realize that the 'Melting Pot' theory,
which combines all of the ethnic
groups into one mold, probably won't
work," Valencia continued. He prefers
another method which he refers to as
the "Salad Bowl" theory. "This suggests
that the people within each ethnic
group do blend together, but they are
still made up of unique segments
which distinguish them from each
other," said Valencia.
The increasing importance of Hispanic
and other ethnic groups to marketing
is reflected in the curriculum at
Thunderbird. Case studies and projects
involving ethnic groups have
already been included in current marketing
classes. Valencia's students, for
example, recendy conducted studies
on the Hispanic market for Eastman
Kodak and PepsiCo.
Due· to student demand, a specialized
seminar course, Marketing to Hispanics,
will be added to Thunderbird's
1989 Winterim session. Valencia, who
will be teaching the class, planS to
feature many of the "biggest names in
the business" as guest ~kers. They
will include the vice presiaent of
Univision, one of the largest Hispanic
television networks in the U.S.; the chief
of ethnic statistics from the Buteau of
Labor Statistics; and top manageIS from
ad agencies.
''\Wre training Thirds to conduct
Carla Trum '82, vice president!
account supervisor, SiboneylNew
York, • her firm has benefited
from the growing aworeness of the
Hisptmk marlcet
fALL 1988
international marketing and that
includes Hispanic marketing in the
u.s. Hispanic marketing can be viewed
as international marketing at home.
'Weve been in the business, we are in
business and we will penetrate the
market further," Valencia said.
"Marketing professionals can only
profit from addressing the Hispanic
population and those who aren't sensitive
to the ethnic markets will be hun,"
Valencia said. " don't think international
companies can ignore targeting
the largest Spanish-speaking consumer
market in the world, besides Mexico,
espedally when it is in your own
baCkyard."
By Julie amberg
Students
Share
The Many
Faces
of China
Each year, Thunderbird students
study on campuses around the
globe in special programs designed to
augment their international management
curriculum and increase their
exposure to other cultures. The program
in the People's Republic of China,
held each Winterim and summer
semester at the University of International
Business and Economics
(UlBE) in Beijing, has been in existence
since 1981. UlBE is the premier
training school for foreign trade specialists
in the PRC, and under the fiveyear
agreement of educational cooperation
first signed by Thunderbird and
UlBE in 1981, the two schools
exchange not only students, but also
faculty, as well as library and curriculum
materials. This semester, three students
and two professors from UlBE are
studying and teaching at Thunderbird.
This past summer eight Thunderbird
students, accompanied by International
Studies Professor John Frankenstein,
attended Chinese business practices
and Mandarin Chinese courses at
UlBE. While there, they replicated a
study of the emerging China business
environment first completed by Dr.
Frankenstein during his summer 1984
semester at UlBE.
Following are excerpts from the
travel journals of three Thunderbird
students, Theo Miller, Janet Almroth,
and Tom Newman, who saw and
recorded the many faces of China.
• The steps of the Great Hall of
the People, Beijing, where the
U. S. and China joint session on
trade, industry. and economic
development was held in June.
Thunderbird students and faculty
member, Dr. John Frankenstein.
were actively involved in the
fou r-day conference.
SKETCHES
OF CHINA
By Tom Newman
Daily life for the language student
in China is an endless series of
tests, the success or failure of which
determines existence. Simple day-today
communication became a tedious
process as I was forced to think about
every word said, and compose and
rehearse complete sentences over and
over in my mind before they were
needed. Even negotiating a simple
purchase of a train ticket was quite
exhausting, and its accomplishment,
after many hours of mind-taXing,
THUNDERBIRD MAGAZINE
6
• A Children's Day celebration at
the University of International
Business and Economics in
Beijing. Children of faculty and
staff members line up by grade
level to participate in the parade
and ceremony.
vocabulary-building negotiation was
more satisfying than passing any difficult
finance test at Thunderbird.
But it was not simply a matter of
mastering the spoken language. for
there is an unspoken language of symbolism
and predetermined attitudes
that governs any interaction in any situation.
"Yes" means "maybe;' and
"maybe" means "no:' and the meaning
behind any comment is between the
lines.
But along with the frus tration of life
in. China comes success and opportunity.
Dr. John Frankenstein summed it
up best: "When you are in China as a
'student,' you can see, learn and discover
things impossible for a 'Western
businessman.'"
As I traveled about in Beijing, I
passed through many small worlds of
existence at many conflicting levels of
productivity, satisfaction, and affluence.
For example, life for the bus driver
was defined as dutiful management of
his route for ten or more hours a day
(overtime pay is not a concept),
returning home at the end of his shift
to his wife, one child, and very small
apartment.
With a state-set quota that is easily
met each month, taxi drivers were
rarely anxious to take a fare. It was a
challenge to see what would motivate
them: offering popular American music
tapes to listen to during the ride or
refUSing a receipt and paying in hard
currency-money they could keep and
use to buy an imported Japanese-made
television set.
The factory worker parked his
"Flying Pigeon" brand bicycle every
morning, including Saturdays, in front
of the plant where he helps produce
Jeep Cherokees-about 200 a day, for
export only-something he could never
afford in all his life on a salary equivalent
to $300 per year.
The young girl behind the counter
at the new two-story, 500-seat Kentucky
Fried Chicken restaurant dutifully
dished out 3,000 pieces of
chicken every hour. She works in the
largest Kentucky Fried Chicken franchise
in the world, directly across the
street from Chairman Mao's mausoleum
in Tian An Men Square. And she
brings home more money in one
month - the franchise is part of a joint
venture-than do her parents together
in six months.
The waitresses at the Lido Holiday
Inn-a micro U.S.A. on the outskirts
of Beijing-all knew how to say, "May
I bring you a Coke?" while outside
horses pulled a flat wagon loaded with
bricks past the hotel entrance.
It was amazing to me that in a city
of lO million every person had some
work to do; there were very few idlers.
It was not uncommon to be up past
midnight and hear the pound of hammers
or see the eerie shadows cast by
the welder's torch on the skeletal walls
of a new high rise. Similarly, as early
as I got up [or class each morning,
the bustle of life had already been
going strong for hours.
THE WALL
By Theo Miller
The other day, we went tQ the Wall.
Not 'The Great Wall" - that's a
Sheraton Hotel here in town, and
there's nothing there but $3 beers. No,
I mean the real Wall, the one that
snakes for 5,000 miles across northern
China. In China there are walls everywhere,
from the walls around people's
homes to the 800-year-old Yuan
Dynasty wall right by our school, now
breached by hundreds of streets,
railbeds and bike paths, no longer
securing Beijing from the outside
world. But the Wall of Walls, the
Motherwall, the only wall the moon
can see, passes by just north of the
city, only two hours away by bus.
FALL 1988
We got there on a Sunday, and
fought our way up along its spine
through the hordes of local and foreign
tourists enjoying the country air,
up to the Pavilion of Heavy Breathing,
to take a rest before walking on past
the reconstructed portion to the old
A view of The Great Wall from
Badaling.
wall. Standing on the old wan, looking
off into the distance, I could see the
ancient rubble line looping over the
ridges and riding every peak, a wall
that has seen thousands of laborers
building it, thousands of barbarians
attacking it, and thousands of soldiers
defending it for more than a thousand
years.
Just perching on an old rampart, I
could feel the history emanating from
under my feet, and I thought how petty
the summer of '88 must seem to this
wall, yet how grand it was for me. In
some places overgrown by weeds, in
other places looking almost new, the
Wall seems to tell a tale of the past, a
tale with relevance to the future. I
listened to this tale, awed by the air of
permanence, as a disciple to an old
master, frustrated that he will never
have all secrets revealed, but content
to bask in the reflected glory of infinite
wisdom.
The day wore on, and I turned to
climb down, back to the present.
Someday I will walk the whole wall, 1
thought wistfully, and discover it hidden
under the ravages of time, blown
over by the sands of the Great Gobi
Desert, and washed by the Sea of Bohai
Bay. But not today, not today. Today
there was too much to see, and too
little time. Regretfully, I cast one last
glance over the ancient hills, and
vowed I would be back.
MORNING
IN BEIJING
By Janet Almroth
" I s there hot water?" It's the first
question I ask myself as I part
the curtains each morning checking
the perpetual bicyclists on the road
behind the hotel for umbrellas and rain
slickers. Rain means mud, lots of it;
mud flaps for humans - now that's
an idea - protecting the back of legs,
trousers, and knee-high nylons. Let's
see ... 2 billion of those would equal...
I'm in luck this morning. No rain. The
shower is hot.
Six-thirty a.m. and the city is wide
awake. Once I came home at dawn
and discovered that for many Chinese
the day starts at 5 a.m. By 7:00, many
have exercised, eaten and dressed and
are up on their "Flying Pigeons" heading
for work.
As I step out of the door of our airconditioned
oasis, I am greeted by the
now familiar Sights, sounds and smells
of a Beijing morning. Wood and coal
smoke commingle in the humid air.
Among the bicyclists and trucks, mule
drawn carts weave, already laden with
bricks, sand, concrete and steel on their
way to the latest construction site. I
think about what it must have been
The day begins
with the five Qigong routines.
THUNDERBIRD MAGAZINE
8
like to be in Europe after World War
11. Beijing is building.
There's no hesitation as 1 step off
the curb; one discovers that early in
one's experience here. The trick is to
keep moving at a slow and steady pace;
somehow the constant stream of movement
parts and flows around you. On
the comer a huge wok is already bubbling
over a fire in a rusty metal drum,
frying twisted loaves of dough sold as
roadside breakfast snacks. We made it
across the intersection; we strike up a
conversation. It was funny to discover
that as long as you're talking, expelling
air, there seems to be no smell.
Scattered in front of trees in the
weedy school park Chinese students
are meditating, practicing Tai qi quan,
or Qigong. Their slow-moving fluidity
is unbroken by the background cacophony
of horns, bicycle bells and whips
cracked over donkey heads. The cicadas
sing loudly in the bamboo-like
trees overhead as I gaze far into the
distance, a half smile on my lips, my
tongue touching my upper palate ready
to begin the five Qigong routines and
my day in Beijing.
CAM PUS NEW S
NEW GOODYEAR
CHAIR NAMED
Dr Dennis Guthery has been named
the Goodyear Professor of Industrial
Marketing. The chair was inaugurated
in 1985 and it continues to exemplify
the strong relationship that Goodyear
and Thunderbird have maintained
since 1947. Goodyear'S financial support
of the chair is used to finance
research in the field of industrial
marketing and to support the chairholder's
salary.
Dr Guthery jOined the Thunderbird
faculty in 1983 as an associate professor,
coming from Auburn University
where he was assistant professor of
marketing. On an international level,
he has been visiting professor of marketing,
Federal University of Rio
Grande do Sui, Brazil; and in 1985 he
served as a United Nations consultant
to Pakistan where he directed seminars
on exporting to the United States.
The new Goodyear professor is also
president of the Business Association
of Latin American Studies and serves
on the board of editors of The Journal
of Business and Industrial Marketing, The
Journal of Business and Economic Perspectives'
and the Multinational Management
Review. In addition, he served as editor
of The International Executive for
three years.
Dr. Guthery says the appointment
was a "somewhat unexpected honor"
and it assures him the financial backing
to begin new research projects in the
field of advanced industrial marketing
without having to solicit funds. "It basically
allows me more flexibility to plan
research and to know that if I want to
fund multiyear or longitudinal research,
that the money is there and I can count
on it:'
In addition to teaching courses in
marketing research and industrial marketing,
he is currently working on three
research projects: response rate to
facsimiles in international industrial
marketing; assignment and career
advancement in MNCs; and environmental
scanning, a complex worldwide
information system serving
corporations.
By Michael Eckhout
PHOTO BY GARY FORBUSH
The Goodyear Chair of Industrial
Marketing has a new professor, Dr.
Dennis Guthery, Department of
World Business.
FACUITY RESEARCH
AND PUBLICATIONS
Dr. Taeho Kim, World Business
Department, attended the Asian Studies
on Pacific Coast Conference
(AS PAC) where he presented a paper,
"Internationalization of Banking With
Special Reference to the Case of Korea~'
He was named to serve on the editorial
board of ASPAC publications.
Dr. Tahirih Foroughi, World Business
accounting professor, presented a paper
entitled, 'The 21st Century: Women
and Their Role in International
Accounting" at the continuing education
symposium of the 1988 annual
meeting of the American Accounting
Association.
Dr. Marshall Geer is the author of
the following recent publications: ClEE
occasional paper #25 entitled, "Hallmarks
of Successful International Business
Programs" and "Evaluating the
Overseas Program: Personal Observations"
published in the Journal of the
Association of International Education
Administrators.
FALL 1988
9
Professor John Conklin attended
the meeting of the Congress of the
Americanists held in Amsterdam. Professor
Conklin presented a paper,
coauthored with Professor Dale Vor der
Landwehr, entitled Economic Policy Making
in the United States: The Formation
of An International Monetary/Financial
Elite. He is spending the fall semester
teaching at the European Business
School in West Germany.
The July 1988 issue of Management
Review, published by the American
Management Association, carries an
article 'i\dvice From the Field: Essential
Training for Japanese Duty:' written
by International Studies Professor
John Frankenstein, and World Business
Professor Hassan Hosseini. The article
focuses on the need to combine language,
area, and business skills.
Robert M. Ramsey, Department of
Modem Languages, was re-elected to a
two-year term as executive secretary of
AZ-TESOl. At the international TESOl
convention in Chicago, Ramsey was
elected to a three-year position as
council representative for the ESl in
Higher Education Interest Section. Dr.
Ramsey's new textbook, English Jar
International Business, was just published
by Scott, Foresman.
Dr. Jorge Valdivieso, Department of
Modem Languages, has a new textbook
published, Negocios y Communicaciones.
Published by D.C. Heath and Company,
the text was co-authored by l. Teresa
Valdivieso, Arizona State University.
Professor Akihisa Kumayama of the
Modem Languages Department presented
three papers at a conference on
"Languages and Communication for
World Business and the Professions"
sponsored by Eastern Michigan
University. He presented a workshop
entitled 'Japanese/American Cross
Cultural Business Negotiations." His
papers were on Japanese gift exchange,
Japanese business socializing, and
assessment of hypothetical business
negotiations based on real situations.
Professor Suguru Akutsu coordinated
the Japanese Language Program of the
Intermountain Pacific Rim Institute at
the University of Utah this summer.
CAM PUS NEW S
WHAT MAKES AN
EFFECTIVE
INTERNATIONAL
LEADER?
"We are entering the second American
revolution in which the entrepreneur
is going to take precedence:' said
Dr. James Crupi, president of the International
Leadership Center in Dallas,
Texas, and commencement speaker at
the August 1988 graduation. Dr. Crupi,
whose nonprofit organization has
been established to study and develop
leadership skills in corporations, cities,
and on college campuses, identified
trends that continue to change the
international business environment. He
emphasized the importance of effective
leadership in operating successfully
across international borders, adapting
to technological and social change, and
understanding the significance of both
in global transactions.
'The technology that likely will be
of major significance 10 years from
now hasn't even been invented:' Dr.
Crupi told the audience of students,
family and T'bird staff. Continuing his
emphasis on technological and social
adjustment, he said, "international
managers can expect to be retrained
10 times during their careers and make
six career changes."
Dr. Crupi also noted geographic
trends that are shaping the international
business environment. These
changes are determining the location
of a majority of international transactions
as well as the target markets.
'We are operating in a world increasingly
comprised of city-states;' he said.
"Dallas, New York, Tokyo, Paris and
Hong Kong are the types of entrepreneurial
units which will gain in significance
and importance as centers of
international activity We are also seeing
a movement of business to the west
and to us this means the Pacific Rim:'
In assessing the personality traits and
skills needed for effective international
leadership, Dr. Crupi emphaSized that
requirements are different for each
person.
"Everybody has the capability to be
a leader:' he stressed. "The trap that
many fall into is to believe that in order
to be successful one must manage a
certain way. In contrast, the most effec-
PHOTO BY LINDA ENGER
... "The fastest growing export is intellectual
property," Dr. James Crupi
told an audience of 191 graduates
and friends at commencement ceremonies
in August
PHOTO BY LINDA ENGER
tive leaders blend both their personal
characteristics and unique environment
in building an optimal management
style.
"Successful international leaders
understand how to build a coalition of
people. The ability to motivate involves
hiring people into a position that is a
'creative extension' of who they are. If
you put a person in a job that utilizes
his inherent qualities, then motivation
will not be a problem."
Finally, Dr. Crupi indicated that a
broad approach to international
THUNDERBIRD MAGAZINE
10
Barbara Bunten DeVoe '82
(pictured) presented the Barton Kyle
Yount award to Laura Kozlowski, the
outstanding student in the August
1988 graduating class. Graduates
voted Robert Moran, International
Studies, Beth Stoops and Lilith
Schutte, Modern Languages, and
Robert Sherman '75, World Business,
outstanding professors. T
management education, encompassing
business skills as well as culturaladaptative
skills, is a critical preparation
for the complexities of multinational
management. 'The language
curriculum clearly relates to communicating
across a broad spectrum:' he
said. "Language training also incorporates
a cultural and historical perspective
that is especially important in the
international environment:'
By Steve Dolman
FACUITYIN
THE NEWS
Barbara Jackson was promoted to
associate professor in the Modem
Languages Department and Dr. Jutta
Bailey is a new full-time faculty member
teaching in the German section.
Professors John O'Connell and Frank
Tuzzolino, World Business Department,
were granted tenure effective with
the 1988-89 academic year. Richard
Bossert, associate professor of World
Business, was promoted to assistant
vice president for academic affairs.
Dr. Joaquim Duarte was appointed by
President William Voris to a three-year
term as chair of the International
Studies Department upon recommendation
of the department faculty.
Dr. Clifton Cox will serve another year
as chairman of the World Business
Department, and Professor Maria Pinheiro
will serve another year as chairman of
the Department of Modem Languages.
Dr. Cox has been awarded the
Winston Churchill Medal of Wisdom
in recognition of his accomplishments
at the School and as a distinguished
American business leader and consultant
in the fields of finance and industry.
Professor Duarte recently partiCipated
in a distinguished national panel of
experts as a social sciences consultant
to select finalists to the Jacob K Javits
Fellows program competition for 1988.
This was his second invitation to serve
on this panel.
Modem Languages Professor Leon
Kenman has been elected president of
Arizona Teachers of English to Speakers
of Other Languages (AZ-TESOL) for
the term June 1, 1988 to May 31, 1989.
EXPORr CONTROL
NEWS
Courtesy issues of Export Control
News, a publication devoted to government
export control policy, are available
to Tbird alumni by calling Gail
Kalin, (202) 463-0998, or writing
Export Control News, 1920 N Street,
NW, Suite 650, Washington D.C.
20036. A direct subscription at a 10
percent savings is also available to
alumni. Richard Gilbert '77, president,
MK Technology Associates arranged
for a subscription to the School.
11 tL IN[ )ERB1Rl)
PHOTO BY JACK KUSTRON
, I "til! H )\
\~ :, ,\,1 \\1"\\
Rod Taylor '75, president, R.A. Taylor
& Co., Ltd. spoke to students at
Opening Ceremonies in August. He
told them, "When you pay your tuition,
you have invested in a partnership
with 22,000 other T'birds in
every country on the planet earth."
FALL 1988
II
L. Roy Papp
L. ROYPAPP
ELECTED TO BOARD
OF TRUSTEES
l. Roy Papp is the newest member
of the Thunderbird Board of Trustees.
He is the president of l. Roy Papp and
Associates, an investment counseling
firm established by him in 1978 in
Phoenix. Mr. Papp is a member of the
Phoenix Committee on Foreign Relations
and the Hong Kong Min Chiu
Society. He has served on the board of
directors of the Federal National Mortgage
Association and held a presidential
appointment as the U.S. director
of the board of the Asian Development
Bank, holding ambassadorial rank. He
lived in Manila for two years and has
traveled extensively in Asia.
CHARGE IT!
Thunderbird and Valley National
Bank have joined forces to offer all
domestic alumni the Thunderbird
Gold MasterCard. A portion of revenue
generated from use of the credit card
will be credited to the alumni scholarship
fund. The Phoenix chapter of the
alumni association was instrumental
in the formation of this new
Thunderbird service.
CAM PUS NEW S
PHOTO BY JACK KUSTRON
Gina Enders-Stenner
1988
GRADUATE
PLACEMENT DATA
Salary Range 55,000-20,500
90/10th Percentile 45,000-25,000
Mean Salary 33,738
Median Salary 32,500
Number of Employer Visits 242
Number ofInterview Schedules 381
NumberofInterviews 3,192
Average Number of
Interviews per Student 4.2
*In order to provide comparability with
other published data. sallll}' Information
contained in this report rejlects Spring
mester, 1988 activity mid inclul.fes
onlr offers frO!" those organizations who
activelY recruIt on campus.
FUNCTION
Marketing/Sales
AccountinglFinance
Control
Commercial Banking
Advertising
Other
INDUSTRY
BankinglBrokerage!
Investment
General Manufacturing
Office Equipment!
Computers/Electronics
FoodlBeveragel
Consumer Products
ChemicallPharmaceutical
and Petroleum
GovemmentINon-Profit
and Other
Automotive! Aircraft
lhmsportation
Advertising
Accounting/Consulting
Business ervices
THUNDERBIRD MAGAZINE
12
%
52
22
20
5
1
%
25
20
14
13
9
7
5
4
3
ALUMNI
PLACEMENT NEWS
Alumni Placement Services has a
new face and an expanded focus. Gina
Enders-Stenner is the new assistant
director of career services, coming to
Thunderbird with an MBA and experience
in career counseling/placement.
Gina is developing an Alumni Opportunities
Bulletin to be published every
two to three weeks and mailed to
alumni with at least three years experience
in the same or a related field
who are registered with the alumni
placement service. Individuals will
respond directly to any employment
opportunity posted in the bulletin. This
direct contact will result in better
qualified, more interested applicants
responding to prospective employers.
The computerized match service will
no longer be available.
The Graduate Update will still be
offered to alumni out of school for less
than one year. For further infonnation,
contact Gina Enders-Stenner, Career
Services, (602) 978-7245.
SAlARY RANGE MEAN
$48,000-$22,000 $32,080
50,000- 25,000 35,246
55,000- 31,000 40,357
39,000- 26,000 30,200
21,000- 20,500 20,750
SALARY RANGE MEAN
$55,000-$25,000 $37,105
48,000- 27,500 35,875
40,000- 24,000 32,117
45,000- 23,500 33,863
40,800- 30,000 34,900
50,000- 22,000 29,000
37,500- 29,600 32,647
30,000- 26,000 28,000
2450
.. David and Joan Lincoln admire the
National Geographic Society World
Clock presented to them by Dr.
William Voris in recognition of their
contributions to Thunderbird.
~ Thelma Kieckhefer is honored by
Dr. William Voris during the
Thunderbird Annual Trustees
Banquet.
AN INTERNSHIP
UPDATE
The Thunderbird Graduate Management
Internship program completed
the summer 1988 cycle with 24 interns
placed in locations all over the world.
Knight-Ridder joined the program with
an intern in New York City, as did
CitibankiIndia with a student in
Chicago. Coca Cola placed four students
in Latin American countries.
Phoenix employers included the u.s.
and Arizona Departments of Commerce,
Sigma Real Estate, and Citibank
just to name a few.
Interest in the internship program
is growing rapidly and new employers
are being sought. Individuals interested
in learning more about the program
or who know an employer who may
be interested should contact the director,
Barbara Olson, (602) 978-7242.
George Getz receives a World Clock
from Dr. Voris. Getz and the Lincolns
were initiated into the Barton Kyle
Yount Society for having donated
more than $250,000 to the School.
FALL 1988
13
THUNDERBIRD
BENEFACTORS
HONORED
More than 120 friends of the School
gathered for the Thunderbird Annual
Trustees Banquet honoring major
donors. The event highlighted the
School's four major benefactors: Thelma
Kieckhefer, George Getz, Joan and
David Lincoln, and the Starr Foundation,
whose combined gifts over the
years total more than $3 million. During
the event, the National Geographic
Society world clocks were presented to
Joan and David Lincoln and George
Getz, who were initiated into the
Barton Kyle Yount Society for having
donated more than $250,000 to the
school.
The event was held at the Paradise
Valley Country Club and featured Dr.
Robert Scalapino who spoke on the
topic of "Prospects for Future U.S. Relations
With Japan and the PRC: The
Economic and Political Implications. "
He is described as one of the country's
leading and most influential thinkers
on international and Asian affairs
and has taught in the political science
department at the UniverSity of California
at Berkeley since 1949. He is
currently Robson Research Professor
of Government, Director of the Institute
of East Asian Studies, and the editor
of Asian Survey. Scalapino has
written some 320 articles and 30 books
or monographs on Asian politicS and
U.S. Asian policy.
Dr. Robert Scalapino spoke on Prospects
for Future U. S. Relations
With Japan and the PRC during the
trustees banquet held in October.
THUNDERBIRD NETWORK
ARIZONA
Phoenix area alumni have
been entertained and enlightened
by a local TV personality
and a former u.s. ambassador
during First Tuesdays this summer.
Elizabeth Vargas from the
local ABC affiliate, KTVK, gave
Tbirds insight into television
news. Dr. Lewis lambs, former
u.s. Ambassador to Colombia
and Costa Rica spoke to a gathering
of over 100 people on
drug trafficking.
CALIFORNIA
Greater Los Angeles
Dodger Day, organized by
Diane Carter '86, was a rousing
success with over 50 Tbirds
and guests getting together for
a tailgate party prior to the game
between the Dodgers and the
Pittsburgh Pirates. Unfortunately,
the Dodgers lost, but the
group enjoyed the Dodger dogs,
peanuts, and good company.
For those with a sense of
adventure, Diane Carter also
arranged for sky diving lessons
and jumping at Lake Elsinore
during the month of July.
The "Last Thursday" event in
Santa Monica has a new location:
Arriba, 11240 West Pico,
just west of the #405 Freeway.
Coordinator is Clare Brown '82.
San Diego
Tbirds from San Diego
joined with Arizona Tbirds for
the fine weather, sand, and surf
in San Diego in August. Vince
Zamis '70 coordinated travel
arrangements for alumni from
Arizona. Highlights of the weekend
included a dinner cruise
aboard the Invader, a champagne
brunch on Sunday, and
an afternoon at the Kona Kai
Club hosted by Jerry Van Der
Klomp '6l. Jerry has a 46' sailboat
moored at the club and
the group spent the afternoon
sailing, sunning on the beach,
swimming, and eating at the
nearby watering hole. Los
Angeles and Orange County
alums were also invited, and
Jeri Towner Denniston '78 coordinated
reservations for the California
group.
San Francisco
San Francisco Tbirds have
been enjoying the fine summer
weather by scheduling outdoor
events. Bart Kohnhorst '83
organized a picnic, including
softball and volleyball for family
and friends in Portola Valley
in July. Tbirds also enjoyed a
moonlight cruise on San Francisco
Bay in August.
Many Tbirds in the San Francisco
area have joined the World
Affairs Council. In June, John
Kenneth Galbraith and Stanislov
Menshikov, Soviet Union, spoke
at a World Affairs Council function
at the St. Francis Hotel.
Robert Peizer '84, is executive
vice president of the San Francisco
Thunderbird Alumni
Association and also handles
Tbird membership for the
World Affairs Council.
CONNECTICUTtWESTERN
MASSACHUSETTS
An inaugural meeting of
Tbirds from Connecticut and
Western Massachusetts was
held on the First Tuesday in
August, at El Torito's in East
Hanford. Beth Manitsas '84 and
Bill Marvin '85 have been in
contact with both Boston and
New York alumni organizations
and are encouraged by their
willingness to coordinate
meetings and activities with this
new New England group.
SOUTH FLORIDA
South Florida alumni enjoyed
Vietnamese cuisine at the Viet
House and in August got
together on First Tuesday for a
sunset party on Bell Island. Paul
Simons '70 and Amy Lonowski
Eastlund '85 organized these
events.
GEORGIA
Alums in the Atlanta area
have been meeting for Last
Thursdays each month atJohn
Henry's or Studebakers. Contact
Janet Entrekin '87, (404)
521-5414, for location and
times this faU. Lisa Donovan '85
hosted an international dinner
for Georgia alums in August.
THUNDERBIRD MAGAZINE
14
... Professor John Lindholtz recently
visited the Blodgett Group in
Burlington, Vermont to prepare a
case study. Blodgett T'birds Tom
Dirloc '84, and Jon Esping '74 had
dinner with Professor Lindholtz and
fellow alum Chris Kroos '76.
• Frank D. Mairui '86 and Katherine
A. Knight '86 were married in May
at a ceremony in Saratoga, California.
T'bird guests, all from the Class
of 1986, included (I-r) Susie Hale,
Brad Rugger, Jean Elsasser,
Pam Sparkowski, Teddy Mol/att,
Frank and Katie, Linda Johnson,
Ivanka Jotic, Eric Dormoi, and
Bruce Nelson.
T Thunderbird alumni in Turkey
gathered for a dinner cruise on the
Bosphorus in Istanbul during August
The event was arranged by David
Carpita '67.
... Wheaton, Illinois, was the site for
the marriage of Jim Atten '84 and
Laura Thomas. T'birds from around
the U.S. and Canada attended the
wedding. (I-r) Gaby Neiman '84;
Elyse Small; Kathy Dohse '84; Kathy
McKee '84; and Claudia Worthington
'86. Back row: Jeff James '84;
Scott Goldstein '84; Laura and Jim
Atten; Stewart Anderson '85; and
Randy Betnar '85.
~ Attired in the famous Thunderbird
alumni t-shirts, (I-r) Jeri Towner
Denniston '78, San Diego chapter
editor and coordinator; Ken Nelson
'54, president of the Arizona chapter;
and Skipper Jerry Van Der
Klomp '61, enjoy the great San
Diego weather and good company.
HAWAII
The First Tuesday tradition
was initiated in Honolulu at the
Columbia Inn with 15 people
in attendance. Tbirds Jeff
Sangster '84, John Campbell
'67, and Dennis Oshiro '72, are
coordinating the monthly event
for the 73 Hawaiian Tbirds.
First Tuesdays will be held at
Fisherman's Wharf, 1009 Ala
Moana Blvd. , corner of Ward
Avenue, Honolulu, beginning
at 5:00 p.m.
ILLINOIS
Chicago
Tbirds enjoyed a good old
down-home Chicago time at a
popular northside blues night
club. Besides good blues music,
everyone enjoyed all-you-caneat
pizza and beer. The event
was organized by Bilquid
Hameed '84.
Billed as the "Fresh Air
Family Event of the Season;' the
Chicago biennial family picnic
was held at Langendorf Park in
August. Everything from swimming
to golf was offered.
FALL 1988
15
MICHIGAN
Michiana
Kathy Ramming '83, hosted
a beach party on Klinger Lake
in July. Along with the usual
beach activities, the event also
featured a potluck dinner in the
evening. Michigan area alums
also got together at Mi Ranchito
in Oshtemo, west of Kalamazoo.
Michigan area contacts are Tom
Guetzke '86 and Paul Tillman '86.
Troy
First Tuesdays in Troy, Michigan
are being held at Casa
Lupita, 2085 West Big Beaver,
at 5:30 p .m. The contact person
is Jean Ann Larson '85.
NEW ENGLAND
Elizabeth Rodgers '85 and
Markai Plange '85 hosted the
association's first cultural dinner
of the year, featuring Mexican
food, in July. In August, the
annual international potluck
picnic was held at the home of
Elisabeth Miller '82, in Greenville,
Rhode Island, on the
shores of a lake. Everyone
enjoyed the swimming, rafting,
and wonderful summertime
food.
UNDERBIRD NETWORK
NEW JERSEY
The tradition of Tbird Tuesdays
in New Jersey has been
revived . The site is Bennigans,
at the Headquarter Plaza,
Speedwell Avenue, in Morristown.
The date is the Third
Tuesday of every month, beginning
at 6:30 p.m. Contacts are
Michele Pieropan '87, and Bjorn
Kirchdorfer '87. In August, Professors
Bill Hoskins and Martin
Sours were special guests of the
New Jersey group in conjunction
with their involvement in
the AT&T Externship Program.
NEW YORK
Tbirds joined alumni from
the University of Texas, SMU,
and the University of Arizona
for an evening cruise around
New York Harbor in August
aboard the Andrew Fletcher.
Helen Covington '82 was in
charge of reservations.
The second annual Thunderbird
picnic was held at Egypt
Park in Perrington, New York
inJuly. Frisbee, softball, and the
usual summertime fare were
enjoyed by everyone.
OHIO
Jon Goodman '86 and Kathy
McKee '84 arranged a Cleveland
Indians baseball outing for loyal
Tbird fans in August with
alums and friends getting
together at the Ninth Street Grill
prior to the game.
OREGONIWASHINGTON
First Tuesdays in the Portland!
Vancouver area are back. They
are being held the First Tuesday
of each month at Alessandros
Restaurant, 301 Southwest
Morrison, Downtown Portland,
beginning at 5:00 p.m. Contacts
are Simeon Acheson '71,
Suelynn Weeks Callahan '83,
and Bill Klutho '83.
TENNESSEE
Nashville is the scene for
Tbird Tuesdays held in August
at Nine Point Mesa, 26 Music
Square East, on Music Row in
Nashville. Contact is Jennifer
Alcantara, (615) 736-6223.
TEXAS
DallaslFort Worth
The sixth annual splash day
was hosted by Mark '77 and
Marlene Gebhardt at their Plano
home. Alums enjoyed a day of
tennis and swimming as well
as an international potluck.
San Antonio
Tbirds in San Antonio can
meet on the First Tuesday of
every month at a new location,
Marie Callender's, 4788 NW
loop 410, beginning at 5:30
p.m. Contacts are R. Jay Casell
'62, Ben Miedema '77, and
Dorothy Tenczar Faria '84.
WASHINGTON, D.C.
A "Potomac River dinner
cruise" was held by the pool at
the Kelsos in Arlington, Virginia,
for Washington D.C. area
Tbirds in August. Everyone
enjoyed international music,
volleyball, swimming, croquet,
Frisbee, and a potluck. The
event was hosted by Richard
Kelso '67, and organized by
Abbey Alpern '81 and Kathy
Parker '83.
GERMANY
Dusseldorf
Claudia Scheibler '86 has
organized Tbird gatherings at
the Schiffchen Brauerei in
Dusseldorf.
Frankfurt
First Tuesdays in Frankfurt
are held at Das Kleine Haus,
Spohrstrasse 46, 6000 Frankfurt,
7:30 p.m. Pascal Crepin
'86 has organized the event
since the beginning of the year.
Crepin also planned a wagon
ride and picnic for alums and
friends in August.
Munich
Fred Koppl '52 gathered area
Tbirds together for a tour of
the BMW faCility in September.
PUERTO RICO
A group of past and present
alumni association leaders met
recently to confirm the election
of]. Wright Witcher as president
of the Puerto Rico alumni
group. Monthly get togethers
are now held on First Tuesday
at El San Juan Hotel.
A group phoro of the T'bird dragon
boat team decked out in their Thunderbird
Alumni Club of Hong Kong
t-shirts. Photo courtesy of Taco
Proper 7 9. T
.. Hong Kong T'birds enjoy an evening
at a local pub. Executive Committee
Chairman Bill Ung 73 (glasses)
is joined by committee members
David Brayer '83 and Taco Proper
79. Other T'birds include Chris
Johnson '86; Nancy V. Baldwin
'84; Ben Williams '87; Choy Shu
Fun 74; Diane Wilcoxson; and
Tom Dahmer '86.
THUNDERBIRD MAGAZINE
16
The first Thunderbird alumni meeting
and dinner in Bangladesh was
held recently at the home of PhiliP
79 and Denise Appel 79 Hughes
(left). Also attending the inaugural
dinner in Dhaka were Carol Stengel
Briam '81 , Gary Vanderhoof '84,
and Fazlul Karim '85. T
DONOR _
REPORT: Thank
. you for helpe us
reach 2~:: ,e' 'IOn!
Fbr the first time in the
School's history,
contributions fl,~M[~AseE~~
exceeded $2 million.
ue want to
- thank those who
made this 87-
milestone 88
I........---.,-J2ossible.
A good portion of the total $2 million Barton Kyle George F. Getz, Jr. Dana Schneider, '69
Yount Society Chairman and Chief President
carne from alumni. Ui> received Executive Officer Valley Chemical
Globe Corporation Corporation
Membership limited Richard L. Gilbert, '77 J. Kenneth Seward, '57
3,432 alumni gifts resulting in to those who have given President Senior Vice President and
over $250,000 International Inventory Director
$297,878. Alumni also initiated 348 Management Johnson & Higgins
American Management Gary K. Herberger Brenda D. Sexton Ryndak, '80
matching gifts from their corpora- Association President Vice President
Chase Manhattan Bank, N.A. Herberger Enterprises, Julien J. Studley, Inc.
tions, representing $93,852. Citibank, N.A. Inc. James P. Simmons
George F. Getz, Jr. Merle A. Hinrichs, '65 Chairman of the Board
Goodyear Tire & Rubber Managing Director and CEO
A special thank you goes to Chuck Company Trade Media Ltd . Valley National
S.c. Johnson & Company John l. House, '69 Corporation
Thelma H. Kieckhefer Self Employed Consultant Frank l. Snell
Yahn '62 and Larry Finney '52, who David & Joan Lincoln Robert C. Hunt Senior Partner
The C.V. Starr Foundation Chairman Snell & Wilmer
were co-chairrnen of the Annual Valley National Bank Huntcor, Inc. Richard B. Snell
The Heritage Edward B. Juliber Chairman of the
Fund campaign. Without their Edward B. Juliber Assoc. Board/President
Club Peter Kawakami, '58 Ramada Incorporated
enthusiasm and leadership we could The Grove Company Guy Stillman, '62
Alumni and friends who Joseph M. Klein, '47 Owner
generously donated a President Stillman Ranch
not have rnet our goal. minimum of $5 ,000 Pluess-Staufer Industries Charles M. Stockholm, '56
Alwyn C. Kuhn Managing Director
$25,000 and Chairman Emeritus Trust Company of the
To prove that it was not just luck that above Fred S. James & West
Company James F. Thornton
pushed US over the $2 million goal, J. Michael O'Shaughnessy '71
David C. Lincoln Chairman
Chairman Lummus Company (ret .)
Chuck and Larry have been asked to $5,000 - $24,999 Lincoln Laser Company Steven P. Tiberg, '71
Howard C. McCrady President
co-chair the Annual Fund again in Retired Chairman of the Risk Management, Inc.
Raymond G. Chambers Board and Chief Executive Don B. Tostenrud
Estate of Florine Friedlander Officer Chairman Emeritus
1988-89. Their honor as Thunderbird Joseph M. Klein, '47 Valley National Bank The Arizona Bank
Lyall (Amy) D. Morrill Timothy McGinnis, '68 Hon. William C. Thrner
graduates is at stake! Please help Guy Stillman , '62 Senior Vice President Chairman
H. G. Wick, '60 Chase Manhattan Bank, Argyle Atlantic Corp.
them to exceed last year's contribu- Presidents N.A. Diego Veitia, '66
G. Jeff Mennen, '65 Chairman
tions and make 1988-89 an even Council Vice Chairman International Assets
Mennen Company Advisory Corporation
Alumni and friends who Robert E. Mercer Dr. William Voris
more successful year. generously fund the faculty Chairman of the Board President
development program and The Goodyear Tire & American Graduate
actively participate in a Rubber Company School of International
Ui> would also lilce to thank George variety of School programs. Gerald Mirkin, '47 Management
J. Bruce Morse, '75 H. Gene Wick, '60
Tomaszewicz '69, for chairing the Robert E. Anderson, '47 Vice President Vice President,
Chairman Citicorp Investment Bank Operations
Thunderbird 500 Club, and Berger Langan, Haeger, Vincent F. Francis Najafi , '77 R.J. Reynolds
& Born President International
Erickson, Mr. Thunderbird,for John E. Berndt Pivotal Group Carl A. Wilson
Sr. Vice President Kenneth E. Nelson , '54 • President
AT&T Communications W. Scott Nix, '78 Barrington Homes
serving another year as chairman IntI. Vice PreSident and Daniel D. Witcher, '50
Earl l. Bimson General Manager Corporate Senior Vice
of the Founders' Club. Director Allied Corporation President
Valley National Bank E.V. O'Malley, Jr. Assistant to the President
Norman H. Blanchard, '59 President The Upjohn Company
Thunderbird continues to be the President The O'Malley Companies Winthrop Wyman, '56
SmilhKline Animal J. Michael O'Shaughnessy, '71 Chief Executive Officer
number one graduate school in Health Products President OMI Petrolink
Corporation Deala'n Production Inc. Corporation
international managernent thanks John F. Burlingame Dr. Harry R. Owens, Jr., '80 ClarenCI; H. Yahn, Jr., '62
Retired Vice Chairman International Health President and Chief
General Electric Company Consultant Executive Officer
to the continued support of our Dr. Clifton B. Cox Esperanca, Inc. Nappe-Babcock
Professor and Chairman Hon. l. Roy Papp • Funds donated by the
alumni, trustees, andjriends. Dept. of World Business Investment Counsel Arizona Alumni Chapter
American Graduate William H. Parker, '65
School Real Estate Broker
of International Richard E. Ragsdale, '67
Management Lee W. Rogers, '51 We appreciate Vincent S. Daniels, '74 President
President Trans Chemic Industries
Minequip Corporation J. Phillip Samper, '61
Gregory B. Dean Vice Chairman and
Senior Vice President Executive Officer
that supportl United Bank of Arizona Eastman Kodak Company
Jack E. Donnelly, '60 Mike A. Sante llanes, '60
President Partner
Bailey & Donnelly Price Waterhouse &
Assoc. , Inc. Company
Board of Robert E. Mercer Chase C. Rhee, '70 Gary L. Buckingham, '72 Robert M. Frehse, Jr. '50
Gerald Mirkin, '47 Allen D. Rogers, '80 W. D. Buckmaster, '57 Edward L. Frey, '64 Trustees and J. B. Morse, '75 David L. Ryan, '78 Joseph O. Bunce, lll , '64 Miguel T.K. Friedlander, '77
Board of F. F. Najafi, '77 James c. Schwartz, '70 Richard R. Bupp, '50 Griffith D. Frost, '80
W. S. Nix, '78 Margery Short Denise Burka, '78 Thomas K. Fuegner, '74 Fellows E. V. O'Malley, Jr. Max S. Sobol, '84 Jean F. Burns, '53 Keiji Fujimaki , '78
J. M. O'Shaughnessy, '71 Lloyd A. Straits, 11 , '66 Stephen C. Burrell , '69 Christopher J. Fussner, '82
Clay P. Bedford Dr. Harry R. Owens, Jr., '80 Eugene C. Sullivan , ll , '67 Walter A. Bustard, '58 Luis M. Garcia, '64
John E. Berndt Hon. L. Roy Papp Joseph T. Terazas, Jr. '74 Jack Butefish , '56 Bert Getz
Earl L. Bimson William H. Parker, '65 John E. Thberty, '60 Michael). Byrne, '81 R. Kelly Gibbs, '73
David A. Brooks Richard E. Ragsdale, '67 Roger N. Voegele, '78 Barbara). Byrnes, '77 Jonathan R. Giddings, '66
John F. Burlingame Lee W. Rogers, '51 Leon F. Westendorf, '59 John E. Calley, '" Mary Giese, '65
George F. Getz, Jr. ). P. Samper, '61 James A. Weybret, '79 Judith A. Canfield, '114 Richard L. Gilbert
Hon Barry M. Goldwater Mutaz lzzat Sankari, '83 John N. Wilson, '50 Robert A. Capwell, '70 David B. Goldman, '64
Stephen F. Hall Mike A. Santellanes, '60 Samuel). Wolf, '72 Harold R. Carpenter, Jr., '47 Walter Gonzales, Jr., '80
Gary K. Herberger ). K. Seward, '57 Raymundo A. Yu, Jro, '81 James M. Carrillo, '50 Catherine Gordon, '81
Dr. Thomas R. Horton James P. Simmons Founders Club Darrel E. Carver, '76 Jeffrey B. Gould , '82
Kenneth A. Jacuzzi Frank L. Snell Michael F. Chahine, '76 Frank M. Graebner, Jr. '70
Edward B. Juliber Richard B. Snell Charles T. Chartier, '78 George E. Grimmett, '68
Thelma Kieckhefer Julian M. Sobin Chairman: Robert H. Cheroske, '49 Elizabeth A. Griot Peterson , '112
Joseph M. Klein, '47 Charles M. Stockholm, '56 Berger Erickson Soren K. Christensen, '72 James T. Grossmann , '67
David C. Lincoln George R. Strohecker, '51 John W. Citti. '81 Theresa Gruber-Tapsoba, '85
Howard C. McCrady Edmond B. Thomson Alumni and friends who Charles E. Clapp, lll , '83 Thomas L. Guetzke, '86
Robert E. Mercer James F. Thornton donated a minimum of S Ull Neil M. Clark, '49 Mr. & Mrs. Roger Guichard , '79
W. R. Montgomery Steven P. Tiberg, '71
- S499
Mr. & Mrs. Don S. Geraldine M. Gurley
E. V. O'Malley, Jr. Valerie Tognazzini Kieser, '60 SlOI Coatsworth, '56 Lamonica, '70
Hon. L. Roy Papp Don B. Tostenrud Gordon U. Cobleigh , '70 William D. Hacker
J. Kenneth Seward, '57 Hon. William C. Thrner Mr. & Mrs. Patrick Adam, '84 Harry A. Cockrell, '73 Robert C. Hackett . Jro, '80
James P. Simmons Diego J. Veitia, '66 Mr. & Mrs. Frederick Wade H. Collins, '64 Peter Hammer, '62
Frank Snell Dr. William Voris Adams, '81 Johannes C. Combee, '72 Eleanor S. Hamric, '76
Richard Snell ). Charles WaJker Thomas). Alcedo, '80 Stephen M. Conger, '50 Gregor J. Hargrett, '68
Julian M. Sobin Lora). Wheeler Ronald T. Alonzo, '68 Jerry D. Conner, '73 Guy H. Harris. Jro, '7'
Guy Stillman, '62 Carl A. Wilson Abbey P. Alpern, '81 Ann L. Connors, '81 William M. Hayes, '71
Charles M. Stockholm. '56 Daniel D. Witcher, '50 James c. Alspach, '76 Kristanne Connors, '80 Col. Lindsey P. Henderson .
James F. Thornton Winthrop A. Wyman, '56 Brian D. Althaver, '79 Roger L. Coombs, '57 Jr., '47
Don B. Tostenrud Clarence H. Yahn, Jr., '62 Richard A. Ambrose, '72 Jeremiah F. Corcoran, '47 William E. Henley, '48
Hon. William C. Thrner Thunderbird Mark W. Andersen , '75 Bruce Corey, '49 John D. Henson , '48
Dr. William Voris George A. Anderson, '74 Daniel H. Cosentino, '81 John B. Hess, Jr., '73
Daniel D. Witcher, '50 500 Club Alvaro Aranibar, '85 Johannes 1. Costa , '70 Samir A. Himani , '82
C.H. Yahn , Jr., '62 Paul K. Arbo. '78 Leroy R. Craig, '49 Thomas B. Hitchcock . '"
Grand Chairman:
David S. Arms, '66 Frederik O. Crawford , '67 Thomas D. Hobson, '79 The George
Douglas M. Arnold, '74 Robert R. Crigler, Jr., '55 Leo D. Hochstetter, Jr .. '74
Patron Club Tomaszewicz, '69 JJoohhnn JH. .A Arsthhubyr,, '5'771 RKiecihtha rLd. LC. roCmumlemy, in'7g5s , ', 7 DKeernrnyi sB .P . HHooffdearkth, ,' 7'729
SI,OOO - S4,999 Alumni and friends who
lllriq M. Bajwa , '75 Abelardo S. Curdumi. '74 David E. Hoffman, '77
Yong S. Bak, '81 Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Raymond Hoffman, lll , '68 donated a minimum of S500 Arthur). Ballard, Jr. , '62 Curran , Jro, '82 Mr. & Mrs. John M. H. S. Affleck
Ali 1. AI-Hedaithy, '78 S500 - S999 Manuel C. Ballestero, '62 James E. Cushing, '55 Holliman, Ill. '77
Robert E. Anderson, Henri-Jean Bardon, '85 Fred N. Dahlkamp, '47 James F. Holson, '85 '4 7 Alexander L. Barge, '79 Lawrence C. Daniels, Jr., '80 William H. Holtsnider, '59 James B. Andres, '73 Bernard Anderson, '73 Christopher). Barltrop, '70 Jeffrey D. Davis, '71 Dr. Thomas R. Horton Steven A. Bergkamp, '79 E. Leon Anderson, '62
Joseph E. Barnes, '78 Paul C. Davis, ',5 Eldon E. Howard, '75 John E. Berndt George W. Austin, '49 George O. Barraclough Frederico Della Noce, '8:\ Charles C. Howell, Jr., '79 Earl L. Bimson Clay P. Bedford Jack B. Bartholf, '51 Luli H. Deleon, 'III Walter W. Howell , '84 Norman H. Blanchard, Jr., '59 James L. Bell, '52 Rene M. Batard, '72 Hercules A. Dellas, '85 Shelley L. Hurley, '78 John F. Burlingame Max E. Bissey, '66 D. Barker Bates, '51 W. D. DeMoss, '69 William C. Hutchinson, '57 Dr. Clifton B. Cox Steven F. Brandwein, '82
Norman H. Baum, '61 Christine B. DeWitt, '81 Mr. & Mrs. Marvin R. Huth , '76 Vincent S. Daniels , '74 Mr. & Mrs. David S. Brayer, '83 Robert L. Bean, '48 Werner E. Diehl , '48 James L. Hyek, '60 Thomas DeFeo James A. Bridgeman, '52 Robert F. Begani, '67 Scott M. Douglas, '78 Thomas Ingram, '81 Gregory B. Dean David A. Brooks Jack S. Beldon, Jr., '62 Deborah C. Doyle, '110 Andre ). Jacobs, '83 Robert A. Dilworth, '60 Harold D. Brown, '71 Joseph R. Bender, '50 Paul V. Draughn, Jro, '6:\ LCdr. Stephen). Jelinek, '83 Jack E. Donnelly, '60 Louis). Calligaro Kenneth L. Bennett , '61 Richard K. Dukes, '114 Sandra A. Jenkins, '77 Anna F. Duarte Kenneth C. Cogdill , '58 William M. Bennett, '61 William C. Dyer, '67 Dr. Herbert L. Jensen, '78 Prof Joaquim M. Duarte, Jr. Laurence E. Crabb, '77 Robert H. Berle, '79 George M. Dykes, '65 Craig T. Jephson, '76 Richard L. Gilbert , '77 Barbara). Culver, '81 Albert M. Biedenharn, 111 , '75 James R. Easter, '79 Farnham). Johnson , '50 George E. Grady, '57 Kara M. Diekemper, '78 Wesley D. Bigler, '79 James W. Echle, '72 Michael). Johnson, '711 John E. Hardy Keith K. Dixon, '60 Richard R. Bilbrough, '66 Jarulv G. Egeland, '55 William M. Johnson, Jr., '60 Nicholas D. Hardy Anthony F. Finnerty, '59 Del A. Bishop, '74 Dennis M. Egge, '711 James F. Johnson , '115 Patrick E. Hardy Paul S. Fitch, '86 Peter B. Blackford, '64 George T. Egry, '63 Janet Johnson-Collett , '82 Gary K. Herberger Michael H. Gross, '66 George B. Blake, '59 Hanna Tahsin EI-Fakir, '85 Rosalie L. Johnson-Fogg, '79 Merle A. Hinrichs, '65 Sehe J. Ha, '62 Anne R. Boer, '83 Mark A. Emkes, '76 David McEachran Jones, '82 Jerry L. Holmes, '60 Gregor J. Hargrett, '68 James M. Bogin , '85 A. R. Erickson , '70 Keith K. Kaneko, '66 John L. House, '69 John S. Hazelton , '72 Walter C. Boice, '64 Arthur S. Erickson, '54 Gerald H. Kangas, '60 Robert C. Hunt Richard A. Holt, '7\ Robert L. Bonham, '57 Berger Erickson Chris). Karlin, '86 Eileen Jackie Florence A. Hummer Robert L. Boverie, '7 \ John W. Ervin , Jr., '70 H. C. Karpf, Jr. , '57 Edward B. Juliber Reid G. Jenkins, '77 Garrett R. Bowden , '75 Leon D. Estes, '62 Patrick Kawasjee, '74 Peter Kawakami. '58 Minoru Kambayashi, '74 John F. Kieser, '60 Alwyn W. J. Bowen , '80 Thomas D. Farver '67 Langford Keith, III , '87 C. Kuhn Glenn Bowlus, '48 Peter Feddersen, '67 Ralph R. Kelly, '52 Thomas B. Kret, '81 Michael P. MCfigue, '70 Michael L. Boyatt, '60 William M. Ferry, '51 Sydney A. Kessler, '59 Frederick Lennertz Harold R. Miller, '56 John F. Brandenburg, 11 , '72 Willard T. Fields, '68 Mr. & Mrs. Gilbert R. Rolf K. Liebergesell, '59 Mr. & Mrs. Robert E. Miller, '76 Mr. & Mrs. David C. Lincoln Mr. Gates G. Brelsford , '76 Laurence M. Finney, '52 Khoury, '81 & Mrs. Stephen B. Johan Breukink, '80 David G. Fisher, '67 Deborah M. Kielt y, '81 Eleanor Machia Montgomery, '77 Dr. Thomas R. Bria John A. Florida, '62 Philip A. Kiger, '63 Mr. & Mrs. Charles H. Raymond Neag, '58 Carol A. Brittain , '77 Richard A. Floyd, '75 William R. Killeen, '76 Mannel, Sr. Elizabeth J. Nelson, '78 David L. Brothers, '78 Heidi Foglesong Sullivan David C. Kilmer, '48 lllryn McCown, '85 Patrick E. O'Sullivan , '61 W. L. L. Brown, Jr., '60 Barton A. Francour, '72 L. W. Kirby, Jr., '79 Howard C. McCrady Mr. & Mrs. Louis Pastor Mr. & Mrs. Peter D. Browne, '77 Paul L. Frantz, '85 Mr. & Mrs. Matthew Kirby, '80 Timothy McGinnis, '68 Douglas X. Patino Ernest H. Bruss, '62 Robert C. Fraser, '61 Philip F. Kirk, '54 G. Jeff Mennen, '65 Luis C. Pi-Sunyer, '64
James K. Bruton , Jr., '76 Laura S. Freedman Pedrick, '77 Leonard J. Kistner, '74
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ----------
John P. Klecker, '78
Terry L. Klipp, '72
Robert J. Knorr, '5 I
James H. Koessler, '66
James G. Kohl, Jr., '71
Marilyn A. Fairley Kolesar, '77
Mr. & Mrs. Nobuyuki
Kondo, '83
Haakon J. Korsgaard , Jr., '74
D. Lawrence Kroh, '69
Bruce E. Kuecker, '85
Shinichiro Kyozawa, '82
Charles F. laFond, '80
Larry R. Lamb, '69
Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth Lambert
George B. Lane, '75
Richard Lannin, '70
John H. Latham, '71
Harry j . Laubach, '56
Kirby M. Law, '82
Everard H. Lee, '49
David M. Leech, '72
Tai-Chen Li '81
Brayton Lincoln, '52
George R. Lindahl , Jr., '54
John T. Lindholtz, '48
Louis P. Lingua, Jr., '49
Lawrence R. Lippstreu, '60
William K. Liu, '82
Manfred L. Locher, '69
Robert M. Londono, '69
Ray C. Lopez, '55
Mr. & Mrs. Robert M.
Lorenz, '55
Mr. & Mrs. John G. Lowe
Mr. & Mrs. Lewis Lucke, '77
Clayson W. Lyman, '64
R. A. Magnuson, '78
Robert E. Mahaffey, '73
Dennis W. Mahoney, '69
Kendra L. Mahoney, '79
Glenn E. Mallory, '78
Charles H. Mannel , Jr. , '82
Laura K. Mannel-Beard, '83
Lowell K. Marcus, '48
Robert H. Marquardt, '74
Merrie S. Martinson , '85
Barry j . Mason , '58
john G. Matt-Gongora, '81
Craig G. McBurnett, '78
Ian C. McCluskey, '82
john R. McDermott, jr., '81
Sandra J. McDevitt, '78
William M. McDougal, '79
Marianne McIlvain, '79
Shaun E. McIntosh, '74
John R. Mclaughlin, '77
Parker Mclaren '57
William G. McMullen, '78
Martin P. McNamara, '69
Lynn McNeal, '75
Tom). McSpadden , '65
Richard A. Meade, 'SO
Joseph Melnyk, '48
George A. Mendenhall, '62
William J. Messett, III , '67
James A. Methe, '82
Mr. & Mrs. Alwin Miller, '7S
David Miller, '57
Lorrie M. Miller Buirge, '77
Prof james Mills
Charles C. Mitchell, jr., '50
F. V. Moller, '61
Cartier Rr. Momberger, '72
Samuel P. Moncure, '78
Thomas A. Monroe, '73
William G. Moore, '70
Jeronimo A. Morales, '53
Ricardo Moreno-Campoy, '79
Earl M. Morgan , '56
Yvette B. Morrill, '83
john P. Moynier, '67
John L. Muncy, '70
Gerald H. Murray, '59
Richard K. Murison , '49
Charles C. Muse, '50
Lucile M. Myre
Samuel A. Neblett , '53
Deborah T. Neilson, '75
Ryota Nemoto, '65
John F. Nielsen, '47
Brian J. O'Connor, '78
Mark E. O'Malley, '71
Terrance P. O'Malley, '69
Sten-Olof adman, '82
Caralie Bea Olsen '73
Earl K. Oman, '67
Jerry J. Ong, '75
Mr. & Mrs. Stephen Orr, '79
Dennis T. Oshiro, '72
William J. Paden, '48
A. ). Paine, '47
Won K. Pak, '74
William N. Parker, '86
Fred J. Parmentier, '50
Jerome K. Pascoe, '65
James B. Patterson, '61
John C. Paxson, '80
Randal G. Pearson , '74
George). Peckham, '52
Robb K. Peglar, '72
Polly Penney, '82
Robert). Peres, '77
Michael Phelps, '78
John M. Phillips, '76
Richard K. Phillips, '71
Edmund O. Piehler, Jr., '68
Charles A. Platt , '66
Jose Antonio Porth , '82
Janet E. Pratt, '76
Peter W. Prims, '80
Dr. Marvin S. Priske, '51
David). Purkrabek, '77
Doug Quelland, '72
Mary R. Quist Newins, '80
Thomas). Radl, '76
Douglas L. Red, '81
John G. Reddan, '56
Peter). Reitz , '62
Stephen F. Rendon, '85
Charles L. Rensfield, '62
Carroll M. Rickard, ';6
Rodney F. Ritchie, '52
Alvin G. Robins '50
John T. Rogstad, '51
G. S. Root, '70
Richard C. Row, '79
James B. Rudd, '77
Jules H. Rudick, '77
William J. Rush, '57
William H. Ryan , '55
Janet R. Sam, '77
Robert H. Sands, '74
Jose M. Santos, '74
Mr. & Mrs. Charles H.
Saywer, III , '84
Robert E. Schlegel, '68
Deborah R. Schiller, '77
Steve A. Schleisman , '72
Alban W. Schuele, '70
Samuel Schulman, '52
Paul A. Schwamm, '80
Alexander I. Schwartz, '80
Gerard C. Scott, '57
Mark J. Scott, '77
Jorge Segarra, '77
D. D. Segars, '84
Douglas H. Short , '75
W. J. Short, '76
Kathleen M. Sifer, '81
Ronald V. Sigler, 'S8
Frederick P. Sill , '58
Mark F. Silverman, '80
L. T. Simonin, '80
Robert J . Siobe, '80
Bonnie Smalldridge
Alex C. Smith, '82
Loren D. Smith, '58
Kenneth A. Sperling, '69
Steven C. Spitts, '83
Isabel M. Stainow Wilcox, '81
Robert L. Standfast , '60
Emmett D. Steed, '75
Charles N. Sturtevant, III , '81
Toshiya Sugiyama, '81
K. S. Sullins, '68
Thomas L. Sumner, '77
Thomas F. Surrency, '62
john R. Svalander, '67
Petter Svenkerud, '53
Gwendolyn Swift , '83
Ronaldo Martin P.
Sy-Facunda, '87
Mr. & Mrs. Robert S. Tancer
Michael F. Taricano, '80
Timothy A. Tarnowski. '84
Claude P. Tellef, '81
jim E. Terril, '74
Harry A. Tiber, '53
John R. Timmel, '51
Philip A. Toll, '50
H. G. Townsend, III , '84
Harry B. Thrner, '51
Norval O. Tyler, '64
Shigehiro Uchida, '61
M. A. Udvardy, '78
Nils A. Urman, '77
Arnt Vagle, '74
Nancy M. Valencia, '76
Dr. Gerald C.
Van Der Klomp, '61
William E.
Van Goidtsnoven, '62
George Van Wageningen , '75
Mike R. Vann, '72
Colin D. Veater, '85
). ). Verduzco, '75
Daniel I. Videtto, III , '87
Martha R. Von Hillebrandt. '110
Michael K. Voris, '80
Pieter A. Vos, '58
John W. Waddell, '74
Lester H. Wakefield, '47
William T. Walsh , jr., '71
john A. Warner, Sr., '48
B. C. Warren, '56
Clarence L. Wasson, Jr., '49
Albert j . Waszok, '78
Frederick B. Weiss, '70
Allan P. Welch , '72
J. G. Wellman, '77
John M. Werner, '70
Donald E. Whisman, '65
James w. Whitehead, Jr., '75
T. j. Whitehurst , '76
William C. Whitman, '72
Jerry C. Whitted, '70
john R. Wickersham, '73
Bruce G. Wilcox, '80
Robert S. Wilcox, '68
Leighton A. Willgerodt, '61
William F. Williams, '67
Hilary W. Wilson, '52
Jesse G. Wilson , '73
Henry H. Windsor, 111. '60
Paul A. Winter, '76
Daniel E. Wise, '78
j. Wright Witcher, '77
Gary A. Withall, '73
Robert E. Withers, 111 , '68
Dr. William F. Withers, 's.,
Dr. Stephen B. Wright. '70
Joseph N. Wyble, '50
Alex K. Ying, '77
Hajime Yo,hitake, '83
Juwhan Yun, '73
Margo Zender Wiviott, '83
H. Lee Woosley, 111 '86
Notes
Boldface indicates a
consecutive donor who
made a contribution in
1986-87 and 1987-88.
M indicates participation
in the corporate matching
gift program
• indicates membership in a
gift club
A special tbank you to all
donors whose gifts were
received after the June 30th
deadline. Your name will
appear in the 1988-89
report. Also, Th underbird
expresses appreciation to
those donors who wished to
remain anonymous.
CLASS OF 1947
Total Gifts $9,256.00
Number of Donors 42
Number in Class 115
Percent Donating ~6.52
Average Gift $ 220.~8
'Anderson, Robert E.
M 'Backer. john C.
'Barley. George
'Bodie, Morgan P. Jr.
Boyce, James B.,III
M 'Carpenter, Harold R. Jr.
'Chartraw, Raymond R.
'Corcoran, Jeremiah F.
'Dahlkamp, Fred N.
Dietz. George }.
'Edmiston. Charles W.
Engelsen, Edward G.
'Eriksson. Alfred G.
Gonzalez, Carl G.
'Henderson,
Lindsey P. Jr.
'Hutnek, Stephen L.
'Jankus, Alfred P.
'Kalmans, Harold
'Klein, Joseph M.
'Klomann, Karl O.
Lindstrom, Herbert H.
'Marks, Irwin
'Mcintire, Robert L.
Michael. Rober! E.
'Mirkin, Gerald
'Mitchell, William E.
Moynahan, John H.
'Nielsen, John F.
'O'Connor, Thomas P.
'Paine, A. Jordan
'Plculell, William J.
'Reed, William l. Jr.
Ritter, Charles O.
Schaeffer, Wm. L.
Schneider, Elton R.
'Smith. Robert W. Sr.
'Wakefield. Lester H.
'Walters, George H.
CLASS OF 1948
Total Glfts S2,9~2.00
Number of Donors ~6
Number In Class 1I~
Percent Donating ~1.86
Average Gift $ 81.44
'Bean, Robert L.
'Bocci, Lawrence J.
'Bowlus, Glenn
M 'Brock. Robert C.
'Diehl, Werner E.
'Gray, Norman L.
M 'Hastings, Tracy K.
'Heitman, Wilbert F.
Helms, Sherwin P.
M 'Henley, William E.
'Henson, John D.
'Hessert, Richard C.
'Kilmer, David C.
Lekls, Walter R.
'Lindholtz. john T.
MacCachran, Robert F.
'Marcus, Lowell K.
'Melnyk, Joseph
M 'Moyer, Robert B.
Munger, Robert D.
'Nazro, John Jr.
'Nettleton, Julia M.
'Neumann, William O.
'Oliver, William G.Jr.
'Paden, WIIllam J.
Paltenghi. Richard E.
'Roberts, Richard S.
Skuplen, Peter P.
'Slemons, William C.
'Wanek, Norman E.
'Warner, John A.,Sr.
'Weldon, Fallon j .
'Wright, Harold A.
M Zimberoff, Allan L.
CLASS OF 1949
Total Gifts 13,016.00
Number of Donors 41
Number in Class 139
Percent Donating 29.50
Average Gift $ 7~.56
'Allen. Rober!jr.
M 'Austin. George W.
Beaman, Chester E.
'Bourke, Thomas G.
'Cheroske, Robert H.
'Clark, Lloyd C.
'Clark, Neil M.
Cook, Charles W.
'Corey, Bruce
'Craig, Leroy R.
Darnell, Reynold E.
'Demee, Leon A.
'Enck, Mark B.
'Hohmann, Robert A.
M Kemp, Lester B.
M 'Lee, Everard H.
'Lee, F. J.
'Lingua, Louis P. Jr.
'Lodico, A. Thomas
'Maguire. james G.
'Miller, Kenneth J.
'Moir, DavId W.
'Murison, Richard K.
Paimeter, Charles M.
'Prochnik, Edgar S.
'Rawlings, Ruth E.
'Savage, William J.
'Skaggs. Addison M.
'Smith, Arthur J. Jr.
M 'Steffen, Dwight A.
Viner, Joseph A.
'Wadleigh, Frank L.
Wahl, Thomas B.
M 'Wasson, Clarence L. Jr.
'Winter, Kenneth D.
CLASS OF 1950
Total Gifts $5,1~8.00
Number of Donors 43
Number In Class 116
Percent Donating ~7.07
Average Glft $ 119.49
'Ashley, Alton L.
'Bender, Joseph R.
Bertocchl, Robert P. Jr.
Bevens, louis S.
'Blcocchl, Anthony C.Jr.
M 'Bjerklie. George S.
Bower, Ralph R.
'Bupp, Richard R.
'Carrillo, james M.
Clarke, James W.
'Conger. Stephen M.
'Frehse, Robert M. Jr.
'Gambrill. George T.
M 'Gettlg, Ralph G.
'Gleason, Malcolm F.
'Goldsborough, James R.
M Heidbrink, Virgil E.
Hastey, Robert P.Jr.
'Hunt, William H.
'Johnson, Farnham J .
Kuhlman, Elizabeth G.
'Meade, Richard A.
'Mitchell, Charles C. Jr.
'Mowry, Duane D.
'Muse, Charles C.
Myers, Charles E.
'Parmentier, Fred J.
'Plazibat, Robert
'Robins, Alvin G.
Scott, Peter D.
'Tejeda, Alexandro M.
M 'Toll, Philip A.
'Tooke,Joseph C.
'Wilson, John N.
M 'Witcher, Daniel D.
'Wyble, Joseph N.
CLASS OF 1951
Total Gifts $~,871.00
Number of Donors 26
Number In Class 97
Percent Donating 26.80
Average Gift $ 148.88
'Bartolf, Jack B.
'Bates, D. Barker
'Cardinale, Maurice
'Correll, Dale E.
'Eichmann, Victor D.
'Ferry, William M.
M 'Gustafson, Royal D.
jaks, Carl E.
'jeRoy, Frederick D.
johnson, Donald M.
'Kersten, Cecil A.
'Knorr, Robert J .
'Miller, Walter L.
Moss, Jack J.
'Priske. Marvin S.
'Rogers, Lee W.
M 'Rogstad, John T.
'Strohecker, George R.
'Tlmmel, John R.
'1\Jrner, Harry B.
'Watkins. Frank E.
CLASS OF 1952
Total Gifts $~,448.00
Number of Donors ~8
Number In Class 87
Percent Donating 4~.68
Average Gift $ 90.74
'Bell, James L.
'Berrey, Milton J.
'Black, Paul C.
'Blackle, Norman
'Bridgeman, James A.
'Cornell, L. S.
'Duncanson. Robert L.
'Edmunds, BarbaraJ.
'Finney, Laurence M.
'Gillen, Raymond T.
'Johnson, Richard I.
'Kelley, Walter R.
'Kelly, Ralph R.
'liddicoat, George W.
'Lincoln, Brayton
Macy, John A.
'Madison, 10by R.
Nelson, Dana A.
'Peckham, George J .
Pellegrini , Louis
'Ritchie, Rodney F.
'SangUinetti, Norman H.
'Schuiman, Samuel
Swanson, Richard D.
Volsard, Raymond L.
'Wilson, Hilary W.
'Withers, H. T.
'Wood, Charles M.
Notes
Number in class is based
on the number of alumni
with current addresses.
CLASS OF 1953
Total Gifts S1,690.00
Number of Donors 26
Number In Class 84
Percent Donating ~0.95
Average Gift $ 65.00
'Burns, Jean F.
M 'Calley, John E.
M 'Campeau, Edward C.
'Choyce, Cynthia
DeMente, Boye L.
Dougherty, Margaret E.
'Drake, Gilbert N.
Elkenberry, JohnH.
Goldsberry, john W.
M 'Hitchcock, Thomas B.
'Manning, James F.
'Morales. jeronimo A.
'Morehouse, Robert H.
Myrick, Robert L.
M 'Neblett, Samuel A.
'Rels, Virginia
Schollard, William Jr.
Shultz, Eugene H.
'Stimson, Robert C.
'Svenkerud, Petter
M 'Tiber, Harry A.
'Wood, Charles T.
CLASS OF 1954
Total Gifts S1,020.00
Number of Donors 2~
Number In Class 119
Percent Donating 19.33
Average Gift $ 44.35
Bernatz, Fred T. Jr.
'Blood. Eugene H.
Craig. Wallace C.
Crooks, Howard H.
'Erickson, Arthur S.
Fischer, Merton H.
'Gale, Wllllam M.
Hale, George E.
'Ittner, Charles
Keller, Charles G.
' Kirk, Phllip F.
'Lindahl, George R. Jr.
'Lorenz, Florence S.
Lowe, Richard E.
Martinoli, Frank L.
Monaghan, James P.
Nelson, Ken
Petrequln, Harry J.
Senkfor, Robert C.
'Sidel,Philip S.
Wallace, W. B.
CLASS OF 1955
Total Gifts S1,841.00
Number of Donors 23
Number In Class 112
Percent Donating 20.54
Average Gift $ 80.04
, Aston, John R.
Bohlke, Russell A.
'Crigler, Rober! R. jr.
'Cushing, james E.
'Davis, Paul C.
'Davis, Sharmon J .
'Egeland, Jarulv G.
Ericsson , Eric E.
'Hillock, Edward E.
'Lopez, Ray C.
'Lorenz, Robert M.
Moffatt, Ann
M 'Rainoff, George R.
M Richards, Victor
M 'Ryan, William H.
'Sheets, Dale L.
'Treat, Jerry
'Tyldesley, Robert J.
'Warren, Robert A.
Yunker, Barbara A.
CLASS OF 1956
Total Gifts SS,129.50
Number of Donors 40
Number in Class 122
Percent Donating ~2.79
Average Gift $ 128.24
' Box, Eugene L.
Bunnell, Richard G.
'Butefish, Jack
'Caliva, Narce
M 'Coatsworth, Don S.
M 'Daniels. Horst P.
M Duln, Robert M.
Dulaney, Paul
Evans. John N.
Fink, Marvin
M 'Fletcher, KIngston
'Friederich, Fritz H.
'Galt, Stewart S.
'Jackson, James R.
'Johnson, Roy W.
Kratoville, Harry J . Jr.
Kyte, Gilbert R.
Land, Marion P.
Land, Richard T.
'Laubach, Harry J.
'Lockman, Joseph B.
Meneely, James K. Jr.
'Miller, Harold R.
'Morgan, Earl M.
'Murison, David
Neal, Harry C.
'Peterson·Shuman,
Gloria G.
M 'Reddan, John G.
M 'Rickard, Carroll M.
Schulz, Henry W.
'Shuman, Robert A.
'Steinmetz, William Q.
'Stelzmiller, Warren G.
M 'Stockhoim, Charles M.
M 'Tiernay, William R.
'Warren, B. C.
'Winter, William H.
'Wyman, Winthrop A.
M 'Zvanovec, Ladimir J.
CLASS OF 1957
Total Gifts $5,12~.00
Number of Donors 42
Number In Class 16~
Percent Donating 25.77
Average Gift $ 121.98
, Arthur, John James
'Bagwlll, Robert E.
'Berkey. David W.
'Bonham, Rober! L.
'Buckmaster, W. D.
M 'Campbell, Donald L.
Clausen, Donald E.
'Coombs, Roger L.
'Cummings, Richard L.
'Davy. Edgar W.
'Fellers, Norman V. Jr.
'Flnty, Jerome
'Gilbert, John D.
'Grady, George E.
M 'Hay, John C.
'Haydel, Belmont Jr.
Huff, Robert L.
'Hutchinson, William C.
'Karpf, H. C. Jr.
Maggio, Charles W.
McKaig, William B.
'Mclaren, Parker
'Miller, David
'Mitchell Ewell, Glee
M 'Reed, Tlmothy S.
'Roberts, Donald B.
'Rush, William J .
'Ryan, David B.
'Schroeder, Donald F.
'Scott, Gerard C.
M 'Seward, J. K.
'Tomasi, Myron E.
Toner, Thayer
'Withers, William F.
CLASS OF 1958
Total Gifts $4,Z11.00
Number of Donors 41
Number In Class
Percent Donating
Average Gift
170
z4.12
$ 10Z.71
'Andersen , Arnold K.
'Atkison, Harry R. Jr.
'Bruno, Russell F.
'Busch, Edgar T.
'Bustard, Walter A.
M 'Cogdill, Kenneth C.
'Deakin, Richard W.
'Dethero, J. H.
'Forllne, Hamilton F.
'Gavanas, Denis
'Gil Del Real, Joaquin
'Harkness, Clifford E.Jr.
'Henry, William K.
'Hinkle, Robert A.
'Kawakami, Peter
'Kellogg, Walter A.
'Kendall. Michael F.
'LaPort, Robert E.
'Lee, George
'Mason, Barry J.
'Mathis Edwards, Nancy
'McGill, John P.
M 'Neag, Raymond
'Newman, Robert C.
'Peterson, Dwight T.
'Pinckard, Frank E. Jr.
'Poulios, Plouto J.
Robinson, John C.
Ryder, Jack D.
'Schmoldt, Donald H.
'Sherman, Elizabeth K.
'Sherman, John J.
'Sigler, Ronald V.
'Sill, Frederick P.
'Smith, Loren D.
M 'Vos, Pieter A.
CLASS OF 1959
Total Gifts $4,907.00
Number of Donors 44
Number In Class ZZ4
Percent Donating 19.64
Average Gift $ 111. 5Z
'Blake, George B.
M 'Blanchard, Norman H. Jr.
Bombarde:, Robert A.
'Bonnar, James P. Jr.
Boyle:, Mary F.
M 'Bronson, Donald A.
'Cave, Kenneth P.
Dralgh, Kenton E.
'Golley, James B.
'Finnerty, Anthony F.
Furlan, Andrew W.
Gilbert, Lawrence
'Gore, Richard M.
'Grayno, Theodore
'Hamilton, Robert C.
'Hartzell, Barton L.
'Hill, James J.
'Hoitsnider, William H.
M 'Jacobsen, Daniel T.
Johnson, Wallace L.
'Jones, Darrell S. Jr.
'Kessler, Sydney A.
'Uebergesell, Rolf K.
M Llnsenmayer, Robert R.
'Murray, Gerald H.
M Patterson, Thomas D.
'Pierce, Aldon L. Jr.
'Ramsey, Patricia M.
Samuels, Neil
Shaw, Edward L.
'Sisler, Gary
Slagle, John A.
'Smythe:, William H.
Thompson, C. Robert
Ward, Ead M.
'Westendorf, Leon F.
Whitman, James M.
'Zilai, Emil Z.
CLASS OF 1960
Total Gifts $ 19,011.00
Number of Donors 57
Number In Class 197
Percent Donating ZS.93
Average Gift $ 333.53
'Anderson, Susan S.
Ballinger, Robert M.
'Barasch, Richard A.
M 'Boyatt, Michael L.
M 'Bravender, David F.
'Brown, W.L. Lyons Jr.
'Burgess, Peter D.
Cosby, Stanley W. Jr.
'Delgado, Rodolfo L.
M 'Dilworth, Robert A.
'Dixon, Keith K.
'Donnelly, Jack E.
M 'Gist, Charles R.
'Goode, M. Lee
M 'Hall, Howard G. II
Hanck, Walter C.
Hogan, Thad R.
'Hyek, James L.
'Johnson, William M. Jr.
'Kangas, Gerald H.
'Kidney, Robert F.
'Kieser, John F.
'Life:, Wallace F.
'Uppstreu, Lawrence R.
Ludvik, Carl W.
Malcolm, Robert N.
Moklebust, Michael S.
'Morick, Sheldon F.
'Morse:, Thomas C.
'Parkinson, Chandler
'Picchetti , John D.
'Pondfield, Morris A.
M 'Ross, John J.
'Santellanes, Mike A.
'Schneider, Elwood H.
Jr.
'Standfast, Robert L.
Stanger, Robert R.
'lllylor, Thomas M.
'Tognazzini Kieser, Valerie
'Thberty, John E.
'Van Winkle:, James D.
'Vernon, Arnold A.
'Walker, Robert J.
M 'Wick, H. G.
'Windsor, Henry H. III
'Wood, Thomas R.
CLASS OF 1961
Total Gifts H,012.00
Number of Donors 43
Number In Class 159
Percent Donating 27.04
Average Gift $ 116.56
'Armenta, George
'Autenreith, Richard J.
M Barnes, Robert E.
'Baum, Norman H.
'Bell, Karen G.
'Bellmore, Duane E.
'Bennett, Kenneth L.
'Bennett, Wllliam M.
Benson, George
Bethke, Melvin T.
'Bowman, Horace L.
'Cole:, J. Steven, Jr.
M 'Dron, Richard J .
'Egan, John J .
'Estock, Gerald M.
'Fuller, Richard L.
'Fraser, Robert C.
'Haase, John G.
'Hellar, Eugene E.
Hodgin, David T.
M 'Mavlglia, Lewis J.
'Mayo, David P.
McGuckian, Paul A.
'Moller, F. V.
'Neustadt, Charles A.
'O'Sullivan, Patrick E.
M Parker, James H.
'Patterson, James B.
'Samper, J. P.
Scherzer, Paul L.
'Segerllnd, Ronald K.
'Stevens, Michael
'lllte, Jay H.
Taylor, Martin J.
'Thggle, John B.
'Uchida, Shlgehlro
'Van Der Kiomp, Gerald
C.
Wilbur, Tlmothy J.
M 'Willgerodt, Leighton A.
CLASS OF 1962
Total Gifts $9,716.13
Number of Donors 44
Number In Class 177
Percent Donating 24.86
Average Gift $ 220.82
'Anderson, E. Leon
'Ballestero, Manuel C.
M 'Ballard, Arthur J. Jr.
'Beldon, Jack S. Jr.
'Bruss, Ernest H.
'Chaffee, Jerome N.
'Chapin, Alan C.
Cortes, Carlos E.
'Estes, Leon D. a
Connie
M 'Florida, John A.
M 'Freitag, Miles D.
'Gersten , Jerome
Gilbert, Sheldon
'Ha, Sehe J.
'Hammer, Peter
'Hanning, Ralph G.
'Hartley, Shirley W.
'Hayes, Richard E.
'Lininger, Darrell Y.
'Lynch, Brian E.
Lyng, John H.
McMahon, KevinJ.
'Mendenhall, George A.
M 'Mendoza, Raymond J.
'O'Rourke, Ronald L.
M 'Pfister, Walter B.
'Plowman, Walter S.
'Reitz, Peter J.
'Rensfield, Charles L.
M Rosenthal, William A.
'Scheiffele, Christof].
Shuster, Robert A.
Speed, Horace III
'Stillman, Guy
M 'Surrency, Thomas F.
Trumbower, Titus R.
M 'Van Goidtsnoven,
William E.
'Yahn, Clarence H. Jr.
CLASS OF 1963
Total Gifts U,540.00
Number of Donors 26
Number In Class 135
Percent Donating 19.26
Average Gift $ 59.23
'Breyfogle, John W. III
'Burkard, Ronald P.
Cairns, Andrew
'Conant, John M.
M 'Church, Gerrald E.
'Coulter, Robert B.
'Draughn, Paul V. Jr.
'Egry, George T.
'Gienger, Ronald J .
'Gilmore; Marquis H.
Imrc:ady, Stephen A.
M 'Kaminski, Edward M.
'Kiger, Philip A.
'Lambrlx, Robert J .
'Lewis, Arnold M. Jr.
'Murphy, Donald B.
'Perdicas, Alexander J.
Romine, Bod
'Shaeffer, Harold B.
Smith, Michael R.
'1'wldwell, George E.
M Varricchlone:, Louis F.
'Williamson , Robert E.
CLASS OF 1964
Total Gifts U,911.00
Number of Donors 30
Number In Class 167
Percent Donating 17.96
Average Gift $ 97.03
M 'Babineau, Leonard J.
Berkey, W. J. Jr.
'Berlin, Ira G.
M 'Blackford, Peter B.
'Boice:, Walter C.
M 'Buchmann, ]. G.
'Bunce:, Joseph O. III
'Butler, M. J. Jr.
'Carr, Donald W.
'Charlesworth, Stephen
'Collins, Wade H.
'DeVries, Peter J.M.
'Frey, Edward L.
'Garcia, luis M.
'Gehl, Robert J.
'Goldman, David B.
'Hillary, Patrick E.
'Hord, Bruce T.
'Lagergren, Charles A.
Lutz, D. K.
'Lyman, Clayson W.
'Mackenzie, Harry W.
'PI·Sunyer, Luis C.
Stearns, Ronald O.
'Tyler, Norval O.
'Walsh, T. M.
'Winkelman, Charles L.
CLASS OF 1965
Total Gifts H,282.00
Number of Donors 42
Number In Class 185
Percent Donating ZZ.70
Average Gift $ 125.76
Avard, John
'Calkins, Philip F.
'Cool, Douglas B.
Datsopoulos, John G.
'Dykes, George M.
'Fairbanks, Mark E.
Fountain, Edward C.
'George, Eva J.
'Giese, Mary
'Goldsmith, Daniel J.
'Gravell, Robert W.
'Hardy, Charles B.
'Hinrichs, Merle A.
'Hutabant, Eden S.
'Koechlein, Richard A.
'Leite, Olav A.
'McSpadden, Tom J.
'Mennen, G. Jeff
'Michaelson, Tony
'Nemoto, Ryota
O,Keeffe, Michael A.
'Parker, William H.
'Pascoe, Jerome K.
'Pool, Robert C.
'Prager, Lawrence W.
'Preovolos, Peter E.
Preston, Thomas M.
'Schwab, I. C.
Shapiro, William M.
Thomas, Terence F.
'Thompson, Du Bois S.
Jr.
'Whisman, Donald E.
'Williams, Wyatt A.Jr.
CLASS OF 1966
Total Gifts $6,002.00
Number of Donors 43
Number In Class ZZ9
Percent Donating 18.78
Average Gift $ 139.58
'Arms, David S.
Baer, Peter
Best, Richard
'Bilbrough, Richard R.
'Bissey, Max E.
'Callahan, Ralph W. Jr.
'Conlin, George B.
'Daniel, Albro D.
M 'Douglass, Robert G. Jr.
'Fernandez·Fournier, Ed
Fischer, William
'Fisher, John R.
'Focque, Frank D.
'Fredette, Alan L.
M 'Giddings, Jonathan R.
Greene:, Gerald H.
'Griffin, D. Michael
'Gross, Michael H.
Hill, Edward D.
'Hunsaker, Oscar W.
'Hyland, James A.
M 'Kaneko, Keith K.
'Kercheville, Joseph B.
'Koessler, James H.
Lo Piccolo, Joseph M.
'Long, Frank L.
Mar, Richard E.
'Morse:, Thomas D.
'Mudford, Anthony L.
'Murphy, GeraldJ.
Nelson, Robert E.
'Norfleet, Robert K.
'Platt, Charles A.
'Richardson, James K.
Jr.
Rupp, Gerald & Barb
'Shalhoub, Richard M.
Skelly, James S.
'Straits, Lloyd A.
1lU1g, Donald T.
'Veltia, Diego J.
'Verity, Jonathan G.
White, Phillip B.
CLASS OF 1967
Thtal Gifts 57,008.00
Number of Donors 62
Number In Class 256
Percent Donating 24.22
Average Gift 5 113.03
M 'Anderson , Stewart G. Jr.
Archlbald, Dallas N.
'Begani, Robert F.
Berzins, Juris
'Blake, Leroy C.
Bower, Peter L.
'Bowman, Anthony W.
Bradford, Donald W.
Bradford, WlIlIam E. '
M 'Brown, William R.
'Busse, Horst M.
'Campbell, John L.
'Carpita, David D.
M 'Cary, Donald L.
'Corrigan, Dennis M.
'Craig, William F.
'Crawford, Frederlk O.
'Davis, Paul B.
Dennis, Martin W.
'Donnelly, Paul H.
Dudley, John E.
'Duerlnger, Richard E.
'Dub, William A.
M 'Dyer, William C.
'Farver, Thomas D.
'Feddersen, Peter
Ferguson, Ralph D.
'Fisher, David G.
'Frese, Frederick J.
'GlIson, William R.
'G rossmann, James T.
Gwizdala, Gary J.
Hansen, Erik M.
Harmon, Ralph M.
Hopper, Robert A.
'Jensen, Lance S.
KImmel, Edward K.
Klstlng, James R.
'Krumm, Donald M.
,LeLine, J. Brian
Marchant, Jeffrey).
'McCracken, David B.
'McDonald, Grant E.
'McFadden, Jerome W.
'Messett, William J. III
'Moynier, John P.
'Oman, Earl K.
'Paden, J. Mark
'Ragsdale, Richard E.
Simon, R. R.
'Strawn, Steven R.
Struthers, Harry R.
'Suarez, Frederick B. Jr.
'Sullivan, Eugene C. II
'Svalander, John R.
'Thne, Harold N.
'Williams, William F.
'Wlneburgh, Joel T.
CLASS OF 1968
Total Gifts 56,413.n
Number of Donors 81
Number In Class 351
Percent Donating 23.08
Average Gift 5 79.18
Adams, Dayton W. Jr.
'Allen, Leo D.
'Alonzo, Ronald T.
Bachhuber, Peter A.
'Banks, Kenneth A.
'Barringer, Charles M.
M 'Batchelder, Henry F. 11
'Battenfield, B. Wayne
'Berg, John P.
'Beyer, Barry M.
Blinn, Stephan B.
'Booker, Thomas J.
'Boston, David L.
'Br/sack, Phlllp R.
'Burkhart, Marianne C.
Butler, Sam J.
Carswell, Courtney H.
'Case, Ronald E.
M 'Comfort, John G.
Dickinson, John W. Jr.
Fagin, Vincent B. Jr.
'Fields, Willard T.
'Fletcher, George F.
M 'Georgeson, Carl L.
M 'Gllbaugh, John E.
'Grimmett, George E.
'Hargrett, Gregor J.
'Hatfield, Robert L.
Helmark, Donald B.
Hellman, Peter J.
'Hoffman, Raymond 111
Kohl, G. P. III
Kroeger, Kenneth E.
Kopek, Henry S.
'Lemon, James P.
'Lockwood, Jeffrey A.
'Long, David L.
Martin, William B.
M 'Mattison, WllUam C. Jr.
M 'McGinnis, Timothy
'Mellinger, Larry K.
'Melick, Richard W.
'Middleton, Finley N., JII
'Midgley, David R.
'Miller, P. O.
M 'Mlyar, Rafael
'Monell, Jerry
'Moore, Gary A.
'Mullennix, Gary A.
'Murray, Charles L.
'Nakamoto, Masaaki
Nason, Steven L.
'Noble, Peter M.
'Peace, Maclaren D.
M 'Plehler, Edmund O. Jr.
'Pina, Rudy A.
Ray, Dorsey B.
'Renchard, G. Ronald
'Repsher, Robert W.
M 'Richards, James P.
'Ringer, Joseph H.
'Schlegel, Robert E.
'Skuse, Kenneth P.
Stukuls, Voldemars
'Sullins, K. S.
'Vosylius, Algis
Weber, David P.
Westgor, John E. Jr.
'WlIcox, Robert S.
'Willoughby, Dan H.
'Withers, Robert E. JII
M 'Woods, Norman F.
'Wright, Henry P.
CLASS OF 1969
Total Gifts SS,796.56
Number of Donors 70
Number In Class 354
Percent Donating 19.77
Average Gift 5 82.81
Amesbury, Stephen C.
'Arena, M. S.
Barelll, John P.
Barro, Juan A.
'Berns, Peter N.
'Black, Suzanne ).
'Bloom, Fred D.
Borgens, Edward G. Jr.
'Brendel, Jurgen E.
'Burrell, Stephen C.
'Calllgaro, Warren E.
'Christie, Phillip W.
Cllzbe, Garth D.
'Coil, James R.
Corriveau, Ronald
'DeMoss, W. D.
DeVoe, Marvin J.
'Gauler. Brian W.
'Giacone, Dennis C.
• Gray, Thomas F.
'Groeber, Karl E.
'Gummere, John L.
'Hager, John D.
'Hall, Stephen F.
'Heard, John
'Hilliker, David C.
'Hoover, Thomas A.
'House, John L.
'Ives, John G.
'Jones, Gregory G.
M 'Jones, Timothy R.
'Julian, Michael F.
'Kearns, Robert). III
'Kidder, Kathleen M.
'Kroh, D. Lawrence
'Kruse, Wesley A.
'Lamb, Larry R.
'Locher, Manfred L.
'Londono, Robert M.
'Mahoney, Dennis W.
'Malden, Marshall R.
McKerahan, Ronald L.
M 'McNamara, Martin P.
'!\:Iendell , Steven C.
'Morales, Antonio P.
'Mullennix, Ted E.
'Murphy, Michael O. Jr.
'O'Malley, Terrance P.
'Owings, Frederic H.
'Pikuet, Randy C.
'Piotrowski, Dietrich
Poertner, Henry R.
Posegate, Bruce
Quan, Ross
' Rudolph, Jeffrey P.
'Stabler, Paul R.
,Scherkenbach, Glenn W.
Smith, Jason P.
'Sperling, Kenneth A.
'Springer, John F.
'Stone, Sanford).
Sullivan, John E.
Timmins, William A.
'Urbano, Ramon).
Watts, Sidney B.
'White, Jeffrey S.
CLASS OF 1970
Total Gifts $7,945.00
Number of Donors 100
Number In Class 547
Percent Donating 18.28
Average Gift 5 79.45
'Baker, James W.
'Ballantyne, Robert S.
Thp 10 Classes By Percent Participation
'Banks, Jeffrey G.
'Barltrop, Christopher
J.
M 'Bartlett, Douglas C.
'Bean, Kc:ith S.
Bennett, Claude H. III
Biddle, Paul L.
' Borona, James S.
Brady, John F.
Brassard, Eugene G.
Briggs, Houston W. II
Brodney, Lawrence G.
'Capwell, Robert A.
Cera1lo, Oscar B.
'Coblc:igh, Gordan U.
M 'Costa, Johannes I.
M 'Decker, Richard W. Jr.
Dennison, DanaI H.
'DI Leonardo, Alfred
M 'Drohojowski, Francisco
C.
Duston, Bruce R.
'Eaton Veblen , Linda J.
'Erickson, A. R.
'Ervin, John W. Jr.
'Ford, Gregory L.
'Fulcher, Wayne B.
'Gilmore, A. D.
M 'Graebner, Frank M.Jr .
M 'Gurley Lamonica,
Geraldine M.
'Hackett, David S.
'Hancock, T. Marvin
Hawes, Jerry L.
'Hewes, Robert W.
M 'Hoey, William C.
'Hubo, David L.
'Johnston, William G.
Jones, Jeffrey K.
'Juett, W. Dana
'Kaveny, David T.
Kingman, Peter H.
'LannIn, Richard
Laverty, John R.
Laverty, Ken F.
%
50
45
40
35
30
25
20
'MacKinnon, W. B.
'Magee, Gregory A.
,Mansene, James A.
'Matron , Philippe
M 'Matthews, Philip L. III
May, George D. III
'MITlgue, Michael P.
'Montagu-Pollock, S. H.
'Moore, Thomas A.
'Moore, William G.
'Morehouse, David B.
'Morrell, James E.
Muessel, Marilyn J .
M 'Muncy, John l.
'Muston, Donald G.
M 'Naughton, Alexander E.
Nixon, J. Gus
'O'Keefe, Thomas B.
O'Neill, Robert E.
'O'Rourke, Philip G.
Onuparik, Stephen P.
Pawlowski, Henry
Payne, Rod
,Pena, Gustavo J . Jr.
Perren , Michael D.
'Peters, Goran H.
'Peters, Leanne C.
Phillipps, Lawrence D.
Polson-Daniel, Carolyn
'Raggett, Jerome A. Jr.
'Rhee, Chase C.
'Root, G. S.
'Rush, John
'Schaefer, Susan H.
M 'Schuele, Alban W.
'Schwartz, James C.
'Scars Fillenworth, Dawn A.
'Seifert, Bo L.
'Shaffer, David E.
'Staggs, Gary V.
'Teutsch, Thcker B. Jr.
'Vaz, Joseph N.
'Velasco, John A,
'Walter, James l.
'Waters, Thomas R.
'Wattnem, Clark E.
'Wegner, Arthur A.
'Weiss, Frederick B.
'Wenz, George A.
M 'Werner, John M.
Westphal, Harold S. Jr.
'Whitted, Jerry C.
Wilkens, William T.
M 'Will, James M.
'Wright, Stephen B.
Young, Kenneth
Zamis, Vince
'Zarch, Pierre H.
CLASS OF 1971
Total Gifts $ 12,697.00
Number of Donors 71
Number in Class 356
Percent Donating 19.94
Average Gift • 178.83
Adams, Robert W ..
'Ashby, John H.
Baker, B. L.
'Becker, Joan W.
Betette, Robert M. Jr.
'Boverie, Robert L.
Brewster, David C.
Broderick, Joanna T.
M 'Brown, Harold D.
Cates, Jon
'Christensen, W. J.
'Codrea, Charles D.
Coughlin, William H.
'Cunningham, Gary
'DaSilva, Anthony B.
'Davis, Jeffrey D.
'Derby, Brian
Dwinell, Jon B.
'English, George T.
Hachem, Helen D.
'Harrison, J. G.
M 'Hayes, William M.
Healing, Kenneth E.
Herbert, Michael K.
Herrera-Guirola, Estuardo
Hogan, J. M. Jr.
'Holt, Richard A.
Huff, Robert R.
'Johnson, Jeffrey B.
Johnson, Robert A. Jr.
'Kohl, James G.Jr.
'Kozak, Donald F.
'Latham, John H.
Lessig, Verle G.
MacBride, Peter H.
'Major, Douglas M.
Malone, Charles B.
Marks, Jay G.
'Masvidal, Pablo A.
M 'Moorhead, Joseph S.
'Mowery, Bruce S.
'Murphy, William H.
'Nagel, Walter H. Jr.
'Nishihara, Ross S.
'O'Malley, Mark E.
'0 'Shaughnessy, J .
Michael
'Phillips, Richard K.
Reid, Hal G.
Reiner, Karl S.
'Reiner, Walter G.
'Renault, Lance M.
'Riggs, James A.
'Rocheleau, Franc A.
'Seay, Gerald R.
'Snyder, William D.
Steed , Herbert l.
Strongln, Phillip N.
'Tibbets, Leonard A.
'Tiberg, Steven P.
M 'Turner, George B.
'Walsh, William T. Jr.
'Watson Lupton, Margaret E.
Welles, Alexander
CLASS OF 1972
Total Gifts $7,698.79
Number of Donors 102
Number in Class 521
Percent Donating 19.58
Average Gift $ 75.48
'Ambrose, Richard A.
'Angle, Robert T.
Atwood, Thomas R.
Auble, Edward C.
'Barkell, William H.
'Batard, Rene M.
Beckwith, Katharine E.
Bivens, Dennis R.
'Brandenburg, John F. II
'Braun, Manfred
'Brukardt, Gary A.
M Buckingham, Gary L.
Carp, Ralph E.
M 'Carson, Donald P.
'Christensen, Soren K.
'Clennan, Michael G.
Colllns, Paul R.
M 'Combee, Johannes C.
M 'Corcoran, Susan J.
'Crooks, John D.
'DeSmet, Richard C.
'Dreis, Thomas A.
Driskell, Lawrence T.
,DudhOria, Goutam
'Duffer, John F.
M 'Echle, James W.
'Faysash, Gary J.
Fencl, Mary F.
Francls, David A. III
M 'Francour, Barton A.
M 'Fuller, Theodore J.
'Grant, William R.
Hachem, Khahil A.
'Hammerstad, Paul F.
Harris, Herbert L.
'Hays, Jack N.
'Hazelton, John S.
'Hensley, Dallas l.
M 'Hiller, George L.
'Hodak., Dennis P.
Hogenson, Gary l.
'Holcomb, Jonathan B.
'Hopkins, Michael C.
'Hurst, Donald W.
'Imendorf, Richard l.
'Johnson, Okey B. III
'Klipp, Terry L.
Koepke, David A.
'Kopec, Robert N.
M 'Kristy, William C.
M Lee, David W.
'Leech, David M.
Massey, A. I.
'Matus, Gary).
'McNulty, Bruce A.
M 'Messenger, McDiarmid
Read
Michel, Dieter B.
Miller, Gary A.
'Momberger, Cartier R.
M 'Mueller, Robert H.
'Myers, Cliff A.
'Nasman, Stephen K.
'Nlggeman, L. P.
'O'Dea, G. K.
M 'Ogilvy, David W.
'Oshiro, Dennis T.
Pacific, Gary
Pavelin, Thomas
'Peglar, Robb K.
'Piela, Joseph A.
Prudden, John D.
'Qualley, Gayhart F.
'Quelland, Douglas R.
Reese, Alan L.
'Renna, Nicholas F.
'Roberts, Gary C.
Ruedebusch, Gary B.
,Sagy Macario, Suzy A.
M 'Schle1sman, Steve A.
'Sherr, Robert J.
'Shilling, Oliver M.
Slesinger, Henry S.
M 'Smith, Lee F.
Staples, Lewis F.
'Stevenson, Cralg E.
Stockwell, Robert).
'lllylor, Keith L.
'Teelin, Tim D.
M 'Thurston, Harold G.
M 'Topoulos, ChrIstine
'Vann, Mike R.
'Waggoner, Jack l.
Wedwlck, Robert W.
'Welch, Allan P.
'Whedbee, James S.
M 'Whitman, William C.
Wilmer, Anthony R.
'Wolf, Samuel J.
CLASS OF 1973
Total Gifts $6,394.00
Number of Donors 89
Number in Class 451
Percent Donating 19.73
Average GIft $ 71.84
Adams, Gary E.
'Allen, Hal R.
'Anderson, Bernard
• Andres, James B.
Arnold, Ruth I.
M 'Beaty, Randall E.
'Bishop, Randall
M 'Breit, Richard J.
Buxton, Max J.
'Cockrell, Harry A.
'Cone, Stephen E. Jr.
M 'Conner, Jerry D.
Escobedo, Ernest
'Febiger, Christian
'Fitzhugh, James M.
'Gibbs, R. K.
'Glinka, John A.
'Gottlieb, Norman W.
'Graeber, Stephen W.
'Hamilton, Glenn E.
Hansen, Christopher W.
'Hardy, George F.
'Harvey, Thomas L.
'Haynes, Steven L.
M 'Hess, John B. Jr.
M Hooker, Russell W.
M 'Hunter, Willard B.
'Janovsky, Jim
'Kawakami, Brian
M 'Kerrest, Jacques D.
M 'Kilfoil, Arthur W.
'Kunz, Richard J .
'Kurtz, Ronald).
'Larsen, Richard L.
Lobdell, Richard L.
'Love, David A.
MacDonald, R.E.
M Machamer, Debra A.
'Mahaffey, Robert E.
'Marchant, James
'McDanid, Ronald R.
'McKn1ght, James S.
'Miller, Gary G.
'Mischnick, Mark M.
M 'Monroe, Thomas A.
'Moorhead, John K.
Morris, Kenn G.
'Murugasu, Sam
M 'Nebel, John l.
'Nordell, Alan G.
'O'Shea, Michael J.
'Olsen, Caralle B.
M 'Olson, Gary R.
'Perez, Gerard V.
'Peters, Louis R.
Prince, Laurence L.
M 'Roberts, David H.
'Roof, Bradley M.
'Rose, Robert F.
Salvatierra, George
'Schweyer Bolat, Valerie
Sell, Richard c.Jr.
Sheffield, Robert
'Sibley, Gerry O.
Silverstein, Roger S.
Smart, James W.
'Spindler, Eugene A.
Steffey, Frank A.
M 'Strasser, Jurgen F.
Thm, Kevin R.
'Thorne, Mary E.
Toma, Julius O. Jr.
'Velie, Dennis A.
'Wallin, Peter R.
'Wickersham, John R.
'Wilson, Jesse G.
'Wlthall, Gary A.
'Yun, Juwhan
'Youmans, Stephen D.
Youngken, John R.
CLASS OF 1974
10tal Gifts $9,568.21
Number of Donors 125
Number in Class 624
Percent Donating 20.03
Average Gift $ 76.54
'Abell Bishop, Lorraine
Alexander, Stephen M.
'Anderson, George A.
, Anderson, Jeffrey C.
'Arnold, Douglas M.
'Avrhami, Moshe
'Bagley, Gailian D. Jr.
Bauchman, Robert W.
'Beavers, Fred E.
M 'Bishop, Del A.
'Bjerke, Eric E.
'Boyer, Patrice
'Brady, Cindy
'Brady, John F.
'Brady, Robert C.
M 'Brewer, Rebecca A.
'Burleigh, Timothy S.
Burton, Terry I.
Campbell, James E.
Cann, Sharon L.
Carpentier, Laurier M.
Castro, John P.
'Chandley, Louis F.
'Coggins, Hal Q.
'Crotty, Michael D.
M 'Curdumi, Abelardo S.
'Daniels, Vincent S.
Denning, Richard U.
Devir, William
'Domarcck, MyronJ.
'Drimmer, Gary A.
'Dunlap, Bruce L.
Dunsmore, Douglas B.
'Duursma, William S.
'Eberly, Bruce J.
'Esch, WlllIam E.
'Esping, Jon A.
'Feller, Warren E.
'Findlay, Ralph F. Jr.
'Franke, Richard A.
'Fuegner, Thomas K.
'Ghall, Wacyf H.
'Goodrich, Julie H.
'Gram, Robert C.
'Gronlund, Heikki R.
Halderman, James A.
'Harper, James S.
'Harrison, Mark T.
Hatch, Robert S.
M 'Heimbigner, Barry L.
'Henderson, Walton A.
'Hibbltt, Jeffrey P.
Hinz, Michael D.
'Hitchcock, Scott V. Jr.
M 'Hochstetter, Leo D. Jr.
Hovanes, Michael E.
Howard, James W. Jr.
Howard, Mark E.
Johnson Wegert, Karen E.
'Kakert, Gary H.
'Kambayashi, Minoru
M 'Kawasjee, Patrick
'Keeler, Janet B.
'Keeler, Lawrence P.
'Kistner, Leonard J.
'Korsgaard, Haakon J.
Jr.
'Larson, Paul E.
'Lee, Chang Soon
Lee-Martinez, Marikay
'Utton, Michael R.
Lodge, Glenn R.
Long, Chris T.
Lonza, Juan C.
'Marks, Bruce C.
Loomis, Par Shaw
'Marquardt, Robert H.
'Martin, Frank W.
'Massimeeno, Jack D.
'MCintosh, Shaun E.
McManus, Terry l.
Meisterling, Richard E.
Melville, William G.
M 'Mericle, Kent C.
'Nakken, Kenton M.
'Pak, Won K.
'PadUla, Anthony R.
,Parameswaran, Ravi
Parr, Michael G.
Partain, Duane A.
'Pearson, Randal G.
Peckham, Peggy A.
Percival, Ronald G.
,.
~
II
'Peterson, Bruce A.
'Quinn, Robert G.
'Randall, Daniel).
'Sands, Robert H.
M 'Santos, Jose M.
'Schoettler, Michael J.
Selby, Roy L. Jr.
'Siman-Brady, Jana
M 'Smithers, Richard M.
M 'Solbrig, Herbert H.
Spence, Wendell III
'Suchan, Frank F.
Sweney, Randy P.
'Terrazas, Joseph T.
'1errll, Jim E.
'Thiele, Hans W.
Thieme, Michael A.
Trott, David B.
'Vagle, Arnt
'Verkaik, Wim).
M 'Waddell, John W.
'Wagner, John D.
'Walton, James E.
M 'Williamson, Craig K.
Wilson, Eugene H.
M Wold, Michael W.
'Yonovitz, Harold B.
CLASS OF 1975
Total Gifts $8,339.43
Number of Donors 131
Number In Class 699
Percent Donating 18.74
Average Gift $ 63.66
M 'Aka, Raymond H.
Allgood, Janna E.
M 'Andersen, Mark W.
'Archibald, Robert).
Atchison, Rainy R.
'Bajwa, Tariq M.
'Bell, Michael F.
M 'Benson, F~derlc C.
'Berges, Hector R.
'Biedenharn , Albert M. III
'Bowden, Garrett R.
'Bridewell, David W.
'Bursley, Barnett E.
Cattell, Dennis A.
'Cevallos, Jorge W.
Chamberlin, John W.
'Coleman, R. Wayne
M 'Collings, lllylor
'Colombl, Paolo E.
M 'Cooper, Catherine W.
'Cummings, K.A. '.
'Cummins, Robert B.
'Dam, Ole B.
Daniel, Kate C.
'Deckerhoff, Larry L.
'DeMotte, Roy F.
Derby, John M.
'Farr, Gerald W.
'Floyd, Richard A.
'Flynn, Michael R.
'Forbes, Robert D.
'Forman, Stuart W.
'F~nch, John S.
'Fronske, George M.
'Gilbertson Vogel, Paula
A.
M Godfroy, Richard E.
'Goode, Alan P.
Grant, James S.
'Grisham, John C.
'Hafkus, Peter L.
M Hamman, Thomas C.
'Harris, Guy H. Jr.
'Harvey, Gary S.
Hedges, Thomas J.
M 'Hemmelgarn, Richard A.
M 'Hesllngton, David C.
'Hild, Kenneth T.
'Hinckley, Howard L.
'Howard, Eldon E.
Hotzy, Horst J.
Jackson, Dale R.
'Jawetz, Plncas
'Kahn, Richard G.
'Kiegler, Donald F.Jr.
Kleinman, Ira A.
'Landa, Thomas).
'Lane, George B.
Laning, Christine
'Lee, llle W.
LePon, Gary
'Mann, Franklin H.
Mapes. Peter
Marshall. Robert E.
'Martin, Patrick H.
'May, Jon T.
'McBeth, Robert B. Jr.
McKey-Dry, Sally K.
'McNeal, Lynn E.
McPheely, Bernard M.
Mlesel, John H.
'Miller, Alwin M.
' Miller, Sandra J.
'Miller, WIlliam M.
'Morris, Michael J.
'Morse,J. B.
'Murphy, Patty J.
M 'Napier, Nancy K.
Nederburgh, David E.
'Neilson, Deborah T_
'Nicowski, David H.
'Nlms, David A.
'Nims, Jane W.
'O'Neil, William M.
'Ohata, Kellchi
M 'Olbrich, Anthony W.
'Ong, Jerry J.
M 'Pace, Hugh D.
'Perry, Vallie E.
'Pinto, Serge M.
Poe, George A.
'Pollack, Donna R.
Rastetter, William F.
M 'Rittenberg, Michel
Rogers, James S.
Ronnow, Allan
Sayers, Mark P.
'Schlichter, William Jr,.
'Sevier, Paul L.
'Shuler-Garner, Barbara).
Sherman, Robert G.
'Short, Douglas H.
Smith, Ruth C.
'Steed, Emmett D.
Swanson, David W.
'Szombathy, Robert R.
'lllsker Thompson,
Mary A.
Tenner, Robert J.
'Terrassa, Ricardo).
Terrazone, Dennis M.
Thomas, David R.
'Thompson, Douglas
E., IIl
'Thurwachter, Thdd N.
M 'Tltley, Roger W.
M 'Toyofuku, Jorge L.
'Van Valer, Robert A.
M 'Van Wagenlngen,
George
'Verduzco, J. Jorge
'VOIO Bernales, Andres
'Wagner Ross, Victoria
'Walker, Gregory B.
'Westbrook, Raymond
O.
M 'WhItehead, William G.
M 'Wilson, James D.
CLASS OF 1976
Total Gifts $7,513.50
Number of Donors 123
Number In Class 561
Percent Donating 21.93
Average Gift $ 61.09
'Abrams, Mark S.
Adair Ensign, Robin
'Alcazar, Paul
'Aledda, Mark P.
Allrich , Joseph F.
'Alspach, James C.
'Assis, Frank
'Austin, John R.
'Barnes Ricks, Patricia
W.
M 'Barrios, Kathryn D.
'Bellis Jacobs, Frances G.
'Besser, Peter B.
'Brand, Bernd
'Brelsford, Gates G.
'Bruton, James K. Jr.
'Burlington, Bruce H.
M 'Carver, Darrel E.
M 'Chahlne, Michael F.
'Chatnilbandh, Adul
'Collett, Leanne H.
'Cornelio, Bruno J. Jr.
'CralIe', David R.
Dawson, Dallas O.
'DeBerge, Cassandra S.
'Elmore, Christine M.
M 'Emkes, Mark A.
M 'English, Robert C.
Erkklnen, Ruby C.
M Ewing, Carol A.
Faber, Pam L.
M 'Fencl, Douglas B.
M Fleek, Melanie G.
'Fowler, Charles H.
M 'Frank, Rrlchard E.
'Galda, George M.
Goltz, Paol R.
'Gracia, Charles
'Grady, Thomas E.
M 'Grandstaff, Linda A.
'Hale, Mark P.
'Hamric, Eleanor S.
Hennessey, Michael D.
M 'Hodges, James H.
'Hoffman, Jon A.
Hunter Peden, Reelana C.
'Hurd, Gary
'Huth, Marvin R.
M Hyman, Debra A.
M 'Jephson, Craig T.
Josten, Norbert W.
Judd, Rebecca
'Killeen, William R.
Klinge Gibson, Katherine
A.
Kosewicz, Marie L.
'Limbers, Byron D.
'Linney, Steve
'Loeb, David W.
'Lonsbury, Robert L.
Loudon, Michael H.
'Maim, Steven E.
'Mamujee, Mustafa
'Manning, Bryan D.
'Martin Baron, Sara L.
'Matlock, Nancy M.
McCorry, George M.
'Messer, Paula
'MlUer, Michael M.
'Miller, Robert E.
'Montmorency, Patricia C.
'Morris, Robert T. Jr.
Morse, Sophia
M 'Nelson, Maegene
'Newill, Edw;ard R.
'Nicholson, Peter G.
M 'Noble, Carlos
'Nohl, Victor T. Jr.
'Noonan, Edwin J. Jr.
'O'Connel, Philip D.
'Orchard, Carlos G.
Orr, Robert T.
Pennell, Daniel
'Peters, James R.
'Phillips, John M.
.Popescu, Adrian V.
'Pratt, Janet E.
'Purze, Judy S.
'Raborn, Robin
M 'Radl, Thomas J.
'Rahn, Thomas
Ringdahl, Thomas R.
Roos, James O.
M 'Russ, Linda M.
'Sandvig, Christopher D.
Scattollni, Lynn B.
M 'Schall, Jack
M 'Schellentrager, Gayle
M.
'Schneider, Jeffrey L.
Schuh, Ronald B.
Shaw-Alvarez, Kimbe C.
'Sher Ramadan,
Virginia
'ShOft, W. J.
Singleterry, Tom C.
Skelley, John
'Snell, Frank W.
Spector Varkonyl,
Leslie
'Spofford, Scott B.
M 'Stein, Susan L.
'Tenden, Marine
M 'Thatcher, Constance L.
Udall, Larry
'Valencia, Nancy M.
M 'Vandenburg Westcott,
Nancy C.
Varkonyl, Irvin S.
Weier, Gregory B.
'West, Henry R.
M 'Whitehurst, T. ).
'Winter, Paul A.
'Yaroschuk, Thomas P.
'Zapp, Thomas E.
CLASS OF 1977
Total Gifts $ 15,166.50
Number of Donors 212
Number In Class 773
Percent Donating 27.43
Average Gift $ 71.54
'Amaral-LeBlanc, Marla
F.
'Ambrozaitis, Ramune M.
Anderson Skelley, Janet
L.
Babich, Beth E.
Baker, Michael J.
M 'Baldwin, Barry R.
'Bardoff, Lau~nce J.
M 'Bartley, T. M.
'Bassi, Joseph K.
'Baylis, Gary C.
Bennett, William D.
Benziger, Peter L.
Berzins, Valdis
Blackman, Joan
Blivas, Larry H.
Bowman, Steven R.
'Branaman, Barbara
'Brittain, Carol A.
'Broskey, Mark E.
M 'Browne, Peter D.
BurnS-Boyd, Patricia
'Byars, Dale E.
' Byrnes, Barbara J.
' Chalk, Richard F.
'Chammah, Walid A.
'Chlcka, David M.
Christiansen, Paul B.
M 'Colby, Valerie C.
'Compton, Danielle M.
'Compton, David B.
Conoway, Patricia J .
Cook, Cynthla F.
'Cook, Ronald G.
'Laurence E. Crabb
M 'Cracco, James A.
DeMaio Warden, Maria C.
Devine Tognaccl,
Arlene
Dixon, Michael M.
'Dombroski, Edward J.
'Erickson, Steven M.
'Erlanger, David K.
'Fairley Kolesar,
Marilyn A.
Feldman Deal, Sidony
M.
'Flowers, James C.
M 'Foster, Clifton A.
Frasche, James W.
'Freedman Pedrick,
Laura S.
'Friedlander, Miguel T.K.
'Fuchs, N. J.
Gardner, Douglas W.
'Gebhardt, Mark D.
'Gilbert, Richard L.
'Goldberg, Barry A.
'Gurovitsch, Robin R.
'Hacklm, Thomas G.
M Hager, John K.
M 'Hallett, Gerald W.
HamlIton, Noble III
' Hamilton Fritz, Lisa
Handly, Joseph J.
'Harrison, Gregory P.
'Hartshorn, Randy L.
'Hernandez, Elizabeth
'Herring, Edwin B.
'Hill, Von R.
Hitchcock, Lewis H.
'Hoffman, David E.
'Hoffman, M. J. III
'Holliman, Dawn
'Holliman, John M. III
'Hollingsworth, Scott D.
'Holloway Dobson,
PamelaJ.
Holmshaw, Peter A.
M 'Hughes, Daniel T.
'Hunter, John G.
'Irons, Edward A.
Jehovics, James S.
'Jenkins, Reid G.
M 'Jenkins, Sandra A.
'Johnston, James S.
'Jones, Jeffrey B.
M 'Kakuda, Jack I.
'Kawas, Ricardo B.
'Kim, Ky C.
Kistler, James O.
'Kolehmainen Lambert,
Mary
Koit, Elizabeth J.
'Kovacs, Nimrod J.
'Kramer, Dale G.
'Kramlich lllylor, Kim
D.
'Kranz, Jonathan E.
'Krempley, George D.
'Lambert, Kenneth E.
'Larson, Joan L.
Lavin, Jack A.
'Lie, Jorgen H.
Lilly, Jimmy E.
'Loechel, Barbara V"
M 'Loechel, David J.
M Long, Glenn E.
'Lucke, Lewis W.
Ludington, Julie
Macbeth, William R.
'Mackney, Richard S.
'Madison, William C.
Maisch, Thomas
'Mark. Frederick
'Martin, Gary).
'Martin, Philip E.
M 'Matricardi , Edith L.
'Matthews, Donald E.Jr.
McGlasson, lizanne
'McKeen, Harold R.
'Mclaughlin, john R.
'Mclean, Roland M.
Mclinden, Kevin M.
McNamara, James M.
'Meckenstock, Bobb A.
'Metzger, Nolan N.
M 'Michael, Guy E.
'Miedema, Bernard).
'Miller, Ross P.
Miller, S. M.
M 'Miller Buirge, Lorrie M.
M Minarich, Michael j .
M 'Montgomery, Stephen B.
'Mysorewala, Anwer
'Najafi, F. F.
'Nelson, Ross E.
'Nevitt, Mark T.
'Newton Meese, Nelle A.
Nino Roca, Armando J.
'Nones, Phillip L.
'Norton, George L.
Olson, Keith D.
'Ostroff, Morris
'Peres, Robert J.
Peterson, Thomas
Porter, john F.
'Puig, Rafael M.
'Purkrabek, David J.
'Quinn, Christine C.
Rizzi , Arthur F. jr.
'Roberts, Elizabeth H.
M Robinson, james D. IV
'Roeser Larsen, Faith E.
'Rudd, james B.
'Rudick, jules H.
'Sam, Janet R.
Sardinas, Eloy
Sauer, Kelly R.
'Schalch, Sarah A.
'Schiller, Deborah R.
'Schlesing, Mary C.
'SCOII, Mark j .
M 'Seavey, David A.
M 'Segarra, Jorge A.
'Shanahan, Michael G.
'Shelley, L. C.
Shoots, Craig A.
'Silbert, Teresa K.
'Skidmore, Robert M.
M Spahn, Robert W.
M Spurgeon, Richard D.
'Steiner, Karen A.
'Stern Browne, Susan B.
M 'Stevens, John T.
M Stevens, Richard l.
Stevenson, Elizabeth M.
'Stevenson, Steve B.
Stromberg-ArulI, Karen
A.
Stone, David L.
Stone, Julia D.
M 'Sturniolo, Louis
'Sumner, Thomas l.
'1llrbox, Max R.
'Tolnai, Paul
'Tonkin, Barry M.
Tracy, James R.
'Urman, Nils A.
Vasquez, Javier G.
Viney Grimm, Rhonda
Wahoski, Martha H.
'Ware, Stephen L.
'Warren, Vicki L.
Wason Christiansen,
Elaine C.
'Weber, Craig D.
Wehrle, Charles j .
'Wellman, j . G.
'White, Millar). III
'Willeford Lucke, joy W.
M 'Witcher, J. Wright
'Ying, Alex K.
M 'Young, Mary Ellen T.
Yuan, SO-Cheng
'Zoller, Henry E. ,IV
M 'Zullo, Ralph J. Jr.
CLASS OF 1978
Total Gifts S 13,359.00
Number of Donors 180
Number in Class 684
Percent Donating 26.32
Average Gift S 74.22
'AI-Hedaithy, Ali I.
'Andershem, Per
'Aoki, Yasumichi
'Arbo, Paul K.
Armitage, Douglas R.
'Asten, Peter E.
'Atteridge, C. J.
'Barnes, Joseph E.
Barnes, Leslie).
'Beale, john E.
M Behnisch, Daniel M.
Benzel, Mark A.
M 'Beske, Gall P.
'Bigger, Donald J.
M 'Blauvelt, Lon
Boiarsky, Marc E.
'Brothers, David l.
'Bukowski, James B.
'Burka, Denise
'Butler, Michael L.
'Byington, Michael D.
Chang, Peter D.
Chang, Alice
'Castro, Leslie A.
'Chapman Dillon,
Constance I.
'Chartier, Charles T.
Cirino, Michael C.
M Cobb, Reed j .
'Cole, Douglas W.
'D'Antonio, Anthony R.
DeGemmis, Alfred
'Delucas, Louise S.
M 'Dereiko, Debra M.
'Diekemper, Kara M.
M 'Dillon, Michael T.
'Douglas, Scott M.
M 'Durbin, John E.
'Easler, Teresa B.
M 'Egge, Dennis M.
M 'Erdman, Karl V.
'Erickson, Kenneth A.
'Farrell, Wendell C.
Ferrell, jacqleen
'Flaherty, Peter M.
Freda-French, Anne l.
'Fujimaki, Keiji
'Gadda, Dean B.
'Ghlldyal, Ashok
'Gibson , Richard C.
'Gibson, Richard J.
'Gibson, Martha D.
Gilroy, Theresa E.
'Gomez, Paul G.
'Green, B. Theodor
'Green, Edwin M.
'Hemphill, Deanna M.
Hoing, Charles W.
Holland, Rolla (Skeet) &
Marline
'Honstein, Roderick N.
M Horton, Steven L.
'Hurley, Shelley L.
'Hutchinson, J. S.
'Jensen, Herbert L.
M 'Johnson, Michael J.
Joslyn, Gregory R.
'joyner, Craig E.
'Judy, Wliliam A.
'Kane, Samuel M.
'Kehne, Nancy B.
M 'Klecker, John P.
'Kloehn, Ted O.
'Korompis, Piter
'Kovaleski, Joy A.
Kriss, William J.
Landis, Robert B.
'Langvardt, Guy D.
'Larsen , Mark O.
Lavelle, Timothy C.
'Lee, Howard B.
'Liston, Stephen L.
'Livingston, Shirley A.
Lueck Zeitz, Nancy E.
'luke, Annick M.
'Maes, Herbert R.
M 'Magnuson, R. A.
'Mallory, Glenn E.
M 'Manners, D. J.
Mason, Robert H.
'Matthews Coquis,
Michele
'McBurnett, Craig G.
McCartney, Jo Ann
'McDevill, Sandra).
'McKinney, John E.
McKnight, Robert T.
'McMullen, William G.
' McReddie, George B.
'Melillo, joseph ).
M 'Miller, David L.
Miller, Paul D.
'Moncure, Samuel P.
'Murphy, Sharon L.
M 'Nelson, Elizabeth).
M 'Nix, W. S.
O'Brien, Dennis).
'O'Connor, Brian J .
'Peevey, John
'Perry Doyle, Diana
'Phelps, Michael
M 'Pike, Randall E.
Pohison, Debra J.
M 'Powell, Patricia A.
'Powell, R. jay, III
Powers, Maureen
Prasad, Raghavendra
'Quackenbush, Gall R.
'Rainwater, Don R.
'Rathvon, Kathryn P.
Rechsteiner, John C.
'Rectenwald, Theodore
J.Jr.
'Richardson, Gerald F.
'Ritchie, Naomi F.
'Rock, jack L.
M 'Rudolph , Mark L.
M 'Ryan, David L.
M 'Sabin, William M.
Sanzo, Jerome S.
'Schmieder, Joseph C.
'Schoyer, Penelope T.
M 'Segundo, juan A.
Sheriff, Donald L.
'Shimoli, Sterling G.
'Shindel, David A.
'Simpson, Robert F.
M 'Skybak, Jan O.
Soyars, William B. III
'Stadmiller, Michele W.
'Stoehr, Klaus K.
Stone, Catherine M.
Syler, jeb S.
M 'Taverner, Michael
'Thomas Modlin,
Barbara l.
M 'Thohey, Mariya A.
Towner Denniston, Jeri
'Udvardy, M. A.
'Vanden-Heuvel, Stephen
H.
'Voegele, Roger N.
'Von Metzger, Hanni K.
Vycital, Richard K.
M 'Walck Foster, Patricia
M 'Walker, Thomas R.
'Walters, W. B.
M 'Walton Tse, Cynthia G.
M 'Waszok, AlbertJ.
Weeks, Craig C.
'Whelan, Robert G.
'Williams, jack R.
'Winkeimann-Hammel,
Heidi
'Wilson, Arnaud).
'Wise, Daniel E.
'Yo, Heng
'Zurcher, Steven D.
CLASS OF 1979
Total Gifts S 10,671.15
Number of Donors 176
Number in Class 769
Percent Donating 22.89
Average Gift S 60.63
'Althaver, Brian D.
'Arfa, Farhad).
'Allix, Richard A.
'Barge, Alexander L.
'Baron, Mary
Beals, David A.
M 'Becker, Kevin M.
M 'Bergkamp, Steven A.
'Bell, Andrew).
M 'Berle, Robert H.
'Berry, J. S.
'Bemhling, Roy A.
'Bevans, joan E.
M 'Bigler, Wesley D.
Biller, Michael E.
M 'Blllbymer, Mark
'Boyer, Randolph W,
Bredenberg, R. E.
'Brodnitz, Caroline F.
'Brown, Steve W.
Burkholder, Kelly B.
Cazenave, Annette A.
'Cole, Judith K.
'Cone, Willie W.
M 'Cooney, William J. III
Costello, joan M.
'Crow, William R.
Curtis, Randall K.
Curtis, Caroline
'Dillon, Joseph F. Jr.
M 'Dzvonik-Byrne, Mary j .
Eager, Christopher A.
M 'Easter, james R.
'Eidsness, Carl W.
'Elshimy, Ahmedm H.
'Farmer, Brian T.
Ford, David W.
Fuhrman Martin,
Nancy
'Gagnon, Damian L.
'Galdi, Gary O.
Ghaly, Mounir I.
Geltman Susz, Rachel
'Gerber, Doug R.
'Gething, Thomas B.
'Glaser, Gary E.
Gleeman, Andrew S.
'Glen, Jack D.
'Graham, Mary M.
'Guichard, Martha A.
'Guichard, Roger H. Jr.
'Gunn, Han-Beng
Haas, Deborah L.
'Hair, Bradley J .
M 'Hampson, Jane J .
'Hanlon , Carol M.
Harms, Dennis M.
'Harris, Michael D.
Hartenstein Ernst,
Nancy
'Harvey, Thad H.
'Hays, Timothy B.
'Hetherington , Robert H.
M 'Hobson, Thomas D.
'Hofferth, Kerry B.
'Holstein, Daniel T.
Homa, Diane
'Howell, Charles C. Jr.
M 'Humphrey, Arthur F.
III
'Hunter, J. Bradford
'liter, Murat A.
'jacobson, Brian H.
'jacuzzi, Kenneth A.
'Jalal, Sami M.
jans, Barbara A.
johnson, Sandra K.
M 'Johnson-Fogg, Rosalie
L.
Jones, Williani M,
'Jones Cornelius, Kathy
l.
Karaffa, Debora B.
'Karl, Vincent p,
'Kastner, David K.
'Kelly, Thomas S. Jr.
Kempczenski, Leo j.
Kent, Kyoko I.
'Kinzer, Karen L.
'Kirby, L. W. jr.
Konold, Liz
'Krimbill, Theodore W.
'Lamberton, Peter G.
Leahy, Wade P.
Lewis, Kenneth
M 'Longmire, C. H.
M 'Mahoney, Kendra L.
'Maloll, Robert S.
'Marcyes, Richard j . jr.
'Markell, Jonathan J.
'Marsico, Eugene A.
'Martin, Peter J.
Mayyasi, Kim A.
'McDougal, William M.
M 'Mcilvain, Marianne
McQueen, Max E.
'Milo, Paul A. jr.
'Moore, William R.
'Moreno-Campoy, Ricardo
M Myers, Jo A.
'Myers, J. Scott, Jr.
'Nagy, Jane L.
'Ng, Chung Man
'Norman, Kirk E.
O'Grady, William M.
Oi, Jiro
Oi, Karen L,
'Orr, Carol C.
'Orr, Stephen K.
Ortega, Jose H.
'Peeche~John W.
'Pena, Jorge O.
M Persenda, James A.
'Pinet, Jean-Francois
Probasco, Frank T.
Proper, 'laco F,
Reinharz Roussos, Lea M.
Resly, J. Alexander
'Rinz, Jeffrey J.
M 'Banks Rinz, Kathryn A.
'Row, Richard C.
Saeterli , Terje
'Sahakian, Moses V.
M Schnell, Karl P.
M 'Schroder, Eric D.
M 'Seryak, Mark T.
'Signer, Charles
'Sirtioglu, Ibrahim
'Smith, Keith L.
Smith, Thomas G.
'Smith Maurer, Valerie
A.
'Smythe, Peter Scot
'Stambaugh, Frederick
B.
M Stangle, Brian M.
'Stone Doucelle, Barbara
A.
'Stratton, R. K.
M 'Susik-Ribalta, Gail D.
M Suu, Martin E.
'Thomas, Debra A.
'Thomas Krag, Gayle W.
'Tischler, Sally L.
Tidball, Alyce).
'Tsuchiya, jun
ThtherlY-RFsly, Diane
'Valderrama, Carlos j .
Vandevoort, Patricia
'Vandevoort, Robert J,
'Velikanle, Gary P.
'Vincent, Doris M.
'Vind, jeffery E.
'Von Gimbut, Alexander
'Wartman, john F.
M 'Watson, Stevon P.
Wallerworth, jerry j .
M 'Waycon, Rebecca R.
'Weybret, James A.
Whittemore, Robert W.
'Wickham, Marie F.
'Yamagishi, Masakazu
M 'Zepeda, Jose L.
CLASS OF 1980
Total Gifts $ 13,049.50
Number of Donors 200
Number In Class 768
Percent Donating 26.04
Average Gift S 65.25
M 'Adams, Peter T.
'Alcedo, Thomas J.
'Aile, Anthony R.
M 'Anderson, James E.
'Archibald, Greg K.
Arn