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brown university The Pembroke Center is pleased and honored to announce the inauguration of the Ruth Simmons Prize in Gender and Women’s Studies. The prize will be awarded annually for an outstanding honors thesis on questions having to do with women or gender. In the spring, the Pembroke Center will invite faculty in all fields to nomi- nate honors theses for the prize. A committee of faculty who teach and write in the area of gender studies will make the selection. The Ruth Simmons Prize carries with it an award of $1,000. In addition to the Ruth Simmons Prize, the Pembroke Center awards numerous other awards, grants, and internships to Brown students: Marie J. Langlois Dissertation Prize: awarded to a graduate student for an outstanding disserta- tion in the area of gender studies or feminist analysis. Joan Wallach Scott Prize: awarded to an undergraduate student concentrating in Gender and Sexuality Studies for an outstanding honors thesis in the discipline. Helen Terry MacLeod Research Grant: provides support for undergraduate honors research hav- ing to do with women or gender, or research that brings a feminist analysis to bear on a problem or set of questions. Barbara Anton Internship Grant: awarded to an undergraduate completing an honors the- sis that involves an internship or volunteer work in a com- munity agency. We are most grateful to President Simmons and our many generous supporters who have chosen to support prizes and research grants at the Pembroke Center. These prizes and grants make it possible for Brown students to embark on ambitious research projects each academic year. fall 2007 From the Director, p. 2 Pembroke Associates Visit San Francisco, p. 3 Upcoming Events, p. 4 New Gender and Sexuality Studies Director, p. 4 Meet Archives Volunteer Robin Alario, p. 5 Pembroke Associates Gifts, pp. 6 & 7 Pembroke Center Associates Newsletter inside President Simmons Endows Undergraduate Prize at the Pembroke Center

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The Pembroke Center is pleased and honored toannounce the inauguration of the Ruth Simmons Prize inGender and Women’s Studies. The prize will be awardedannually for an outstanding honors thesis on questionshaving to do with women or gender. In the spring, thePembroke Center will invite faculty in all fields to nomi-nate honors theses for the prize. A committee of facultywho teach and write in the area of gender studies willmake the selection. The Ruth Simmons Prize carries withit an award of $1,000.

In addition to the Ruth Simmons Prize, the PembrokeCenter awards numerous other awards, grants, andinternships to Brown students:

Marie J. Langlois Dissertation Prize: awarded to a graduate student for an outstanding disserta-tion in the area of gender studies or feminist analysis.

Joan Wallach Scott Prize: awarded to an undergraduate student concentrating inGender and Sexuality Studies for an outstanding honorsthesis in the discipline.

Helen Terry MacLeod Research Grant: provides support for undergraduate honors research hav-ing to do with women or gender, or research that brings afeminist analysis to bear on a problem or set of questions.

Barbara Anton Internship Grant: awarded to an undergraduate completing an honors the-sis that involves an internship or volunteer work in a com-munity agency.

We are most grateful to President Simmons and our manygenerous supporters who have chosen to support prizesand research grants at the Pembroke Center. These prizesand grants make it possible for Brown students to embarkon ambitious research projects each academic year.

fall 2007

• From the Director, p. 2

• Pembroke Associates Visit San Francisco, p. 3

• Upcoming Events, p. 4

• New Gender and Sexuality Studies Director, p. 4

• Meet Archives Volunteer Robin Alario, p. 5

• Pembroke Associates Gifts, pp. 6 & 7

Pembroke Center AssociatesNewsletter

inside

President Simmons Endows UndergraduatePrize at the Pembroke Center

When the Pembroke Center beganraising funds in 1984 to establish itsendowment, we knew that this workwas essential to securing the Center’sfuture. The National Endowment forthe Humanities, the Ford Founda-tion, and the Rockefeller Foundationhad provided generous funding forthe new Center—about three-quar-ters of a million dollars, which wasimpressive support at that time forhumanistically oriented research.But that funding was seed money,and the Center now needed money togrow and develop into the future. Thefirst years of research had made itclear that the kind of questions theCenter was asking were not likely toyield easy answers. Center researchhad begun exploring the cultural andsocial meanings of gender and theways those meanings intersect withother systems of difference such asrace, ethnicity, religion, economics,and so forth. It soon became clearthat there was hard work ahead. Ifrational analysis and good intentionssufficed, misogyny, racism, religiousbigotry, and ethnic hatreds wouldhave been defunct long ago. Thechallenge was—and is—to under-stand better how complex and inter-related categories of difference workto produce problematic and oftendangerous ways of thinking and act-ing. The Pembroke Center endow-ment was needed to enable the Cen-ter to work on these questions wellinto the future.

Marie J. Langlois’64, LLD’92 hon.,chaired this early and successfuleffort, which benefited from theextraordinary generosity of hundredsof donors who supported a vision fora robust Center that would engage ingroundbreaking research, provideacademic opportunities for Brownstudents and faculty, and honor thelegacy of Pembroke College.

Today, the Center has undertaken,through the Campaign for AcademicEnrichment, to increase the endow-ment raised by its early supporters.The Pembroke Center’s endowmentprincipal now stands at over $4 mil-lion, with an accumulated marketvalue of $9.5 million. Income fromthose funds enables the Center tosupport scholars in the humanities,the social sciences, and the life sci-ences at all levels of developmentfrom undergraduate students to themost distinguished senior scholars.Its interdisciplinary research pro-grams draw scholars from all over theworld and have earned Pembroke aninternational reputation for excel-lence. Its scholarly journal, differences,the premier journal of its kind in cul-tural studies, reaches a worldwidereadership. The Center supportsBrown’s innovative undergraduateconcentration in Gender and Sexual-ity Studies and continues to preservethe important histories of Brown andRhode Island women in its ChristineDunlap Farnham Archives.

Interdisciplinary research

programs draw scholars

from all over the world

and have earned

Pembroke an international

reputation for excellence.

These accomplishments are a lastingtestament to the farsightedness of theCenter’s generous donors. And yet, theneed to raise endowment moniesseems in some ways as urgent today asit did in 1984. For all of the enormousinsight Center research has gained intothe workings of gender and other sys-tems of difference, history continues toimpose new questions and to revitalizesome of the old intractable ones. Astrong and vibrant Pembroke Center

2 • pembroke center

From the DirectorPembroke Center Associates Council

OFFICERS

Diane Lake Northrop ’54, P’81Chair

Phyllis Kollmer Santry ’66Vice-Chair

MEMBERS (as of July 1, 2007)

Sara Agniel ’97Bernicestine McLeod Bailey ’68, P’99, P’03Joan Weinberger Berman ’74, P’05, P’11Nancy L. Buc ’65, LLD’94 hon.Linda Smith Buonanno ’67, P’95Elizabeth Castelli ’79Peggy Chang ’91Arlene Gorton ’52Ulle Viiroja Holt ’66, AM’92, PhD’00, P’93, P’03Diane Iselin ’81Carol Lemlein ’67, P’90Barbara Reuben Levin ’54Leslie Newman ’75, AM’75, P’08Ona Nierenberg ’80Nancy Northup ’81Jane O’Hara Page ’54Ava Seave ’77Elizabeth Munves Sherman ’77, P’06, P’09Leah W. Sprague ’66Jasmine Waddell ’99Henny Wenkart ’49Alice Wheelwright ’81Enid Wilson ’43

Ex Officio Members

Joan MacLeod Heminway ’83Jean Miller ’49Chelsey Carrier Remington ’61, P’89, P’92Eileen Rudden ’72, P’03, P’07Anita Spivey ’74, P’09Mary Aguiar Vascellaro ’74, P’07Beverly Heafitz Zweiman ’66, P’01

Pembroke Center Staff

Elizabeth WeedDirector

Christy Law BlanchardDirector of Alumnae/i Affairs

Denise Davis, AM ’97Managing Editor of differences

Donna GoodnowCenter Manager

Suzanne Stewart-SteinbergDirector of Gender and Sexuality Studies

Jane Lancaster, PhD ’98Consultant to the Christine Dunlap Farnham Archives

pembroke center • 3

On September 28th, Vice ChancellorJerome C. Vascellaro’74, P’07 andMary Vascellaro’74, P’07 graciouslyhosted a Pembroke Associates eventat their home in San Francisco. Morethan sixty members of the PembrokeCenter Associates, the Brown Club ofNorthern California, and other friends

who attended had the opportunity tolearn more about the Pembroke Cen-ter’s many activities and to discuss thequestion of women in politics withProfessor Jennifer Lawless.

Lawless, an assistant professor ofpolitical science at Brown and anaffiliated faculty member of the Taub-man Center for Public Policy, spokeabout her research on political ambi-tion and the effect gender has on thedecision to run for office. She is co-author with Richard Fox of the recentbook It Takes A Candidate: WhyWomen Don’t Run for Office (Cam-bridge University Press, 2005) basedon data from the Citizen PoliticalAmbition Survey, a national surveyconducted with almost 3,800 poten-tial candidates. Lawless and Fox’sresearch finds that women, even in

the highest tiers of professionalaccomplishment, are substantiallyless likely than men to seek electedoffice, be recruited to run for office,or express a willingness to run foroffice in the future. Lawless sharedher particularly interesting perspec-tive on the question, having run as acandidate for the U.S. House of Rep-resentatives in Rhode Island’s secondcongressional district in 2006.

The Pembroke Associates thankJerome and Mary Vascellaro for mak-ing this event possible. Please seepage four for dates and locationswhere this program will be offerednext year.

Jennifer Lawless

will allow new generations of studentsand scholars to bring their intelligenceand hard work to bear on questionsthat, in this fractured world, we deemas crucial.

We are happy to have the chance tostrengthen our endowment throughthe Campaign for Academic Enrich-ment. The Campaign offers remark-able opportunities to support under-graduate and graduate education,faculty excellence, research programslike the Pembroke Seminar, and therenovation of Pembroke Hall.

We acknowledge with deep gratitudethose who have already pledged theirsupport of the Pembroke Centerthrough the Campaign for AcademicEnrichment and who have madegifts to the Pembroke Center’sendowment funds:

James M. Baker ’70 and Jean E. Howard ’70

Elizabeth Bartman, Ph.D. ’75, P’09

Nancy L. Buc ’65

Elizabeth Castelli ’79

Ulle Viiroja Holt ’66, AM’92, PhD’00, P’93, P’03

Diane Lake Northrop ’54, P’81

Prof. James T. Patterson ADE’73 hon.and Cynthia Burdick Patterson ’65

Elizabeth Munves Sherman ’77, P’06, P’09 and David Sherman ’79, P’06, P’09

President Ruth J. Simmons

Anita V. Spivey ’74, P’09

Jerome C. Vascellaro ’74, P’07 and Mary Aguiar Vascellaro ’74, P’07

Gloria Rosenhirsch Wallick ’53, P’81

These lead gifts help ensure a brightfuture for the Pembroke Center. Wehope you will consider adding yoursupport to this effort. Please contactChristy Law Blanchard at (401) 863-3650 for information about how youcan help the Pembroke Centerthrough Brown’s Campaign for Aca-demic Enrichment.

Thank you for your support,

Elizabeth WeedDirector

Pembroke Associates Visit San Francisco and Discuss Women in Politics

New Director of Gender and Sexuality Studies Appointed

4 • pembroke center

Suzanne Stewart-Steinberg, Associate Professor ofComparative Literature and Italian Studies, is the newdirector of Gender and Sexuality Studies. Stewart-Steinberg has been a member of Brown’s faculty since2005. Her research interests focus on the literature, cul-ture, and politics of nineteenth and twentieth centuryItalian and German literature. She is the author of Sublime Surrender: Male Masochism at the Fin-de-Siècle(Cornell University Press: 1998) and has a forthcoming

book on the construction of modern Italian identity inthe post-Unification period entitled The Pinocchio Effect:On Making Italians (1860-1930).

In her role as Director of Gender and Sexuality Studies,Stewart-Steinberg will be overseeing the concentration,advising students, working with the faculty board for theconcentration, and overseeing the awarding of prizes inGender and Sexuality Studies.

Leadership for Change through Education AwardTuesday, November 27th, 7:00 p.m.List Art Center Auditorium, 64 College Street, Providence

The Pembroke Center Associates is pleased to announceits second “Leadership for Change through EducationAward.” The award, which honors outstanding womenwho have changed lives by helping others to see the worlddifferently, will be given this fall to Margot Stern Stromand H. Terri Adelman.

Margot Stern Strom is the founding executive directorand president of Facing History and Ourselves NationalFoundation. Facing History and Ourselves is an interna-tional non-profit organization that provides professionaldevelopment services and resources to teachers worldwideto enable them to lead their students in a critical examina-tion of history, focusing in particular on genocide andmass violence.

H. Terri Adelman is the executive director of VolunteersIn Providence Schools (VIPS). When she became theexecutive director of VIPS over fourteen years ago, theagency had only one program that recruited and trained700 volunteer tutors and served 2,000 students. TodayVIPS offers eight comprehensive educational support pro-grams during and after school that serve 10,000 students.

The recipients will make brief remarks during the pro-gram, which will be followed by a reception. The event isfree and open to the public.

Women in Politics: Why They Don’t Run for Office and What Happens When They Do – A Discussion with Assistant Professor Jennifer LawlessIf you were not able to catch this fantastic program in SanFrancisco (see page three for a full description), we haveterrific news: the Pembroke Associates are offering thisprogram in Washington D.C. and New York City in 2008!

Thursday, January 17, 20086:30 p.m. reception; 7:30 p.m. programThe City Club of Washington – Franklin Square1300 I Street, NW, Washington D.C.

Thursday, April 24, 20086:30 p.m. reception; 7:00 p.m. program229 West 97th Street, Apartment 7ENew York, N.Y.

The Pembroke Center Associates would like to thank Nancy L. Buc’65 and Ava L. Seave’77 for hosting these events in Washington and New York.

Christine Dunlap Farnham Archives ExhibitMarch 14 – April 9, 2008John Hay Library20 Prospect Street, Providence RI

Please plan to visit the John Hay Library to view an exhibitfeaturing selections from the Christine Dunlap FarnhamArchives. This exhibit will display a wide range of materialson women’s history including the papers of many Brownalumnae, women of Rhode Island, and feminist scholars.

Save the Date for Pembroke Associates Events

Pre-registration will be required for the Women in Politics events.Please visit the Pembroke Center’s website at www.pembrokecenter.org/associates/events, e-mail [email protected], or call (401) 863-3650 for more information.

Pembroke Center volunteer RobinAlario comes from a long line of writ-ing women: her father’s grand-mother, who was one of the few liter-ate people in her Italian village,served as the community scribe,while her mother’s great grand-mother kept a diary of her journeyfrom Scandinavia to America. So it isparticularly fitting that Robin hasspent every Friday for the last twelvemonths searching for women’s writ-ings in the John Hay Library.

The Hay, which houses the BrownUniversity Archives and special col-lections, has an outstanding collec-tion of materials pertaining towomen at Brown and in the widerRhode Island community, as well as arecent addition, the Feminist TheoryPapers. These materials, known asthe Christine Dunlap FarnhamArchives, comprise a wonderful col-lection much used by scholars; how-ever, its research guide has becomeout of date.

It has been almost twenty years sincearchivist Karen Lamoree producedthe Research Guide to the Christine

Dunlap Farnham Archives. It is a vol-ume the size of a phone book, butsince it was published in 1989,Brown has added many items to thecollection. Robin is helping the Pem-broke Center bring the guide up todate by locating the documents con-cerning women. Some are in collec-tions that escaped notice before,such as the letters from Brown’s firstpresident to his wife Margaret Man-ning, or letters from the ReverendStephen Gano to his daughter ElizaB. Rogers, who was one of thebusiest philanthropic women innineteenth-century Providence.

Most of Robin’s discoveries are, how-ever, more recent acquisitions. Someare from distinguished faculty: theyrange from Brown Professor AnneFausto-Sterling’s activities on theAffirmative Action Monitoring Com-mittee in the late 1970s to papersfrom Professor Karen Newman, for-mer director of the Pembroke Center.Others are from local women withconnections to Pembroke, such asEleanor Burges Green, sister ofTheodore F. Green(for whom RhodeIsland’s airport is named), who was

one of the founders of the ProvidenceDistrict Nursing Association. Shebecame an honorary member of theclass of 1918 in thanks for her gener-ous contributions to Pembroke Col-lege. Other papers are from studentsand range from a biblical historynotebook kept by Alice Marion Cros-bie, class of 1904, to lecture notesand essays by students in the veryrecent past.

Robin said she particularly liked someof the photographs she found, andshe was also impressed by many ofthe women. One she recalled wasPawtucket-born Justine Tyrell Snad-beck Priestley, class of 1943, whobecame a social worker then went onto direct a program that gave scholar-ships to African American students.

Robin earned a degree in literaturefrom American University in Wash-ington DC; she is now attendinglibrary school at the University ofRhode Island. She has no direct tiesto Pembroke or to Brown, but shehas nevertheless made a great contri-bution to the Pembroke Center andto the study of women’s history.

Please visit our website at www.pembrokecenter.org/archives/to view selected items in the Christine Dunlap Farnham Archives online.

Robin Alario: Volunteer for the Christine Dunlap Farnham Archives

pembroke center • 5

6 • pembroke center

Sarah Doyle Society ($5,000 +)Sabra Martin Hassel ’65Nancy A. Saggese P’06 and

Nicholas P. Saggese P’06Phyllis Kollmer Santry ’66Ava L. Seave ’77Elizabeth Munves Sherman ’77, P’06, P’09Jerome C. Vascellaro ’74, P’07 and

Mary Aguiar Vascellaro ’74, P’07

Anna Canada Swain Partners ($2,500 - $4,999)Elizabeth Bartman ’75, P’09Joan Weinberger Berman ’74, P’05, P’11Nancy L. Buc ’65 LLD’94 hon.Elizabeth A. Castelli ’79* Marie J. Langlois ’64 LLD’92 hon.Diane Lake Northrop ’54, P’81Anita V. Spivey ’74, P’09Elizabeth A. Weed AM’66 PHD’73

Elisha Benjamin Andrews Benefactors ($1,000 - $2,499)Amy Levine Abrams ’75AnonymousElissa Beron Arons ’66Kathleen W. Buechel ’77Elizabeth Zopfi Chace ’59 AB’96 hon.Ellen Chesler P’02Jeanne M. Donovan Fisher ’80Shirley Gorlick Ebenstein ’51 MAT’68, P’75Heather A. Findlay ’86Arlene E. Gorton ’52Martha Fraad Haffey ’65, P’95Anne S. Harrison ’76, P’08Ulle Viiroja Holt ’66 AM’92 PHD’00,

P’93, P’03Diane C. Iselin ’81Cynthia L. Jenner ’61Barbara Reuben Levin ’54Jean E. Miller ’49Nancy J. Northup ’81Chelsey Carrier Remington ’61, P’89, P’92Claudia Perkins Schechter ’66Joan Wernig Sorensen ’72, P’06, P’06Victoria Westhead ’83Alice Wheelwright ’81Enid Wilson ’43

Patrons ($500 - $999)Elaine Piller Congress ’63Judith Brick Freedman ’63Joan MacLeod Heminway ’83Carol M. Lemlein ’67, P’90William A. Levine ’64, P’88, P’91 and

Gail Caslowitz Levine ’63, P’88, P’91Leslie S. Newman ’75 AM’75, P’08Lillian Nolan P’98Jane O’Hara Page ’54Angelina M. Vieira ’91Women’s Committee of the Brown

University Club of Southern California

Sponsors ($250 - $499)Sara E. Agniel ’97Bernicestine McLeod Bailey ’68, P’99, P’03Suzanne Taylor Besser ’65, P’91Amy Finn Binder ’77, P’02, P’09Katherine Mitchell Constan ’88Sally Hill Cooper ’52 PHB’84 hon., P’74,

P’75, P’78Ann L. De LanceyHolly Hock Dumaine ’61Diana Coates Gill ’54, P’78, P’82, P’89Dian Shumate Gillmar ’57, P’86Elizabeth Wilen Halpern ’87Claire J. Henderson ’61Jean E. Howard ’70Janet L. Kemp ’75, P’06Jean Lahage Cohen ’75, P’07Barbara Martin Leonard ’46, P’75Louise Levien ’74Aleta Margolis ’89Elaine Bien Mei ’61, P’95Norma Caslowitz Munves ’54 PHB’82

hon., P’77, P’80, GP’06, GP’09Bettina K. Mutter ’81Ona I. Nierenberg ’80Sally Wilcox O’Day ’53, P’76Helaine Benson Palmer ’68Mary Hutchings Reed ’73 AM’73Judith Hexter Riskind ’62, P’88Judith Sims Roberts ’57Eileen M. Rudden ’72, P’03, P’07, P’11H. Cheryl Rusten ’79Elizabeth D. Taft ’59Eunice Whitney Thomas ’65Gretchen Ruedemann Walker ’46Judith A. Williams ’86

Sustaining Members ($100 - $249)Devon K. Addonizio ’94 MD’99Judith G. Allen ’79Tracey E. Aronson ’84Beatrice Powers Auty ’47, P’75, P’79Katherine E. Baccaro ’51Laura Shatto Barlow ’53, P’78, P’81Susan Bengtson Barnes ’57Nancy Silver Barry ’66Judith Watman Bernstein ’63Katharine MacKenty Bigelow ’53Rebecca T. Bliss ’92Ardell Kabalkin Borodach ’57, P’87, P’93Nancy Turner Bowers ’56Susan Haas Bralove ’67Anne Hunt Brock ’51Donna Lewiss Brock ’59Lee Ann Brown ’87 MFA’93Bonnie Good Buzzell ’72Cobi Faller Camberlein ’62Susan L. Caroselli ’69Claire E. Cavanah ’88Constance Sauer Clark ’68Carol Werlock Cobb ’57, P’86Mary S. Coe ’06Emily A. Coe-Sullivan ’99

Deborah Meyer Cohen ’87Diana Kane Cohen ’55Kimberly M. Collins ’81Carolyn B. Coughlin ’87Joan Hastings Crosby ’52Elizabeth A. Cullen ’85Dorothy Smith Curtis ’50, P’73Jane de Winter ’81Elaine M. Decker ’67Barbara D. Deller ’60Aliene Senechal Desmond ’65Mary Lou Stearns Detwiler ’61, P’89Melissa A. DickConnie J. Dickerson ’71Wendy E. Dietze ’79June Nyberg Diller ’59Rebekah Hill Eckstein ’60, P’90Asoong Len Elliott ’52Kathleen E. Euston ’64Jamie S. Evrard ’71Charlotte Tiedeman Feldman ’62Joan Yurkunas Fitzgerald ’55Marjorie Jenckes Fleischmann ’56Kathryn Quadracci Flores ’90Mary L. Frampton ’67Amy L. Freedman ’79Katherine L. Garrett ’84Nancy C. Garrison ’70Lisa Koteen Gerchick ’74Gail Cohen Ginsberg ’66, P’91Judith E. Ginsberg ’68 AM’68Marjorie Neifeld Grayson ’74, P’11Paul J. Haire ’76Helen Loughlin Herlitz ’49Ruth A. Hodges ’79Eleanor Verrill Hood ’63, P’90Eveline Portnoy Hunt ’56, P’83Wyeth Hare Jachney ’57Mary Duncan Jacobson ’45, P’73, P’80Audrey Laganas Jenkins ’85Nancy Kaufman Judkins ’54, P’84Adrianne Calfo Kalfopoulou ’80Rachel S. Karliner ’85June Suzuki Kawamura ’46, GP’10Elizabeth Goodale Kenyon ’39Karen Kadish Kieserman ’87 MD’90Jaime L. Kline ’87Kathryn J. Kostic ’87Janet L. Kroll ’86Priscilla Hosp Lambert ’60, P’85, P’88,

P’91Carol Landau ’70, P’09Christy J. Law BlanchardLyle Eckweiler Lawrence ’65, P’92Karen L. Leggett-Abouraya ’72Pamela Farrell Lenehan ’74 AM’74, P’03,

P’06Viola Lenk Leonard ’50, P’76, P’85Diane M. Lichtenstein ’79Susan Casey Lipsett ’77Pearl Schwartz Livingstone ’54, P’79, P’82,

GP’08, GP’10Susan S. Lukesh ’68 PHD’76June Fessenden MacDonald ’59Juman B. Malouf ’97

Sharon Marcus ’86Mary C. Mc Leod ’72Gail E. McCann ’75Carol Drescher Melamed ’67Teresa Gagnon Mellone ’39 AM’62, GP’99Ellen Shaffer Meyer ’61, P’94Susan Fiske Michelson ’62Mary Jane Minkin ’71, P’10Anne A. Morriss ’97Muriel Mulleedy Mulgrew ’48, P’79Mariko Yamaguchi Muto ’77Maryanne J. Nelson ’67Jean Baglione Panos ’80Linda Y. Papermaster ’72Pembroke Class of 1954Sandra Newman Penz ’61, P’91Barbara Cunningham Perkins ’46Deborah Karp Polonsky ’58Barbara Grad Robbins ’55, P’81Kathryn Lubrano Robinson ’91Barbara Gershon Ryder ’69, P’95Marilyn Davison Sanborn ’52Lila Sapinsley LHD’93 hon.Patricia McLellan Schaefer ’74, P’07Nancy C. Scull ’63Margaret Ellickson Senturia ’61Elizabeth J. Shaffer ’98Maureen O’Brien Sheehan ’54Susan Schoell Sheldon ’66Ann C. Sherman-Skiba ’66Barbara E. Simkin ’64Carolyn R. Spencer ’79Leah W. Sprague ’66Leora Tanenbaum ’91Michele E. Tepper ’91Gretchen Reiche Terhune ’56Judith M. Van Riper ’65Frances Vincentelli Verstandig ’62Melina H. WalkerSusan Ahrens Weihl ’68Cindy M. Weinbaum ’87Amy J. Weiner ’76Jane Albertson Weingarten ’57, P’86Nancy M. Weissman ’80Gretchen Gross Wheelwright ’56, P’81Anne Rodems White ’65Catherine C. Williams ’54Wendy C. Wolf ’71, P’08Nancy Siderowf Wolfson ’53, P’77Gail Williams Woolley ’59 MAT’63Phyllis Baldwin Young ’45, P’87

Contributing Members ($75- $99)Marsha Uehara Allgeier ’70Judith Nusinoff Boomer ’76, P’10Nancy K. Cassidy ’73Nancy Rich Comley ’71 PHD’77, P’80Sandra Sundquist Durfee ’57Ruth Burt Ekstrom ’53 LLD’88 hon.Jeanne Silver Frankl ’52Lynne FraserAmy E. Frisch ’90Susan W. Goldstein ’81Susan C. Greenfield ’83

Pembroke Center Associates Gifts Received July 2006 - June 2007

pembroke center • 7

Lynne Moore Healy ’69, P’05Patricia MacBride Hendrickson ’52, P’80,

PAM’88Robin J. Herbison ’83Karen L. Horny ’65Jane Loveless Howard ’58, P’89 SCM’91

PHD’95Carol W. Hurley ’78Elizabeth Forstall Keen ’59Anne Rossman Krause ’45Margot E. Landman ’78Jane Hamlett Malme ’56Phyllis Reynolds Manley ’49, P’74Elizabeth Skinner Maxwell ’47Carolyn Hamond Merriam ’52, P’79Mary D. Miller ’85Charlotte Cook Morse ’64Mary J. Mycek ’48Margaret Dworkin Northrop ’69Chaela M. Pastore ’89Cynthia Burdick Patterson ’65Jeannette Jones Pollard ’48, P’77, P’81,

P’85, GP’06, GP’08, GP’08Helene E. Rice-Rubin ’51, P’74, P’83 AM’84Dana A. Rosen-Perez ’91Joan M. Ryder ’73, P’09Linda M. Sanches ’86Helen Foster Thalheimer ’37Candace L. Trace ’95Judith Phillips Tracy ’61Elizabeth T. Wahls ’85Dorothy Williams Wells ’52, P’81, P’83

Associate Members ($50 - $74)Olga Ferreira Alfonso ’57Carin E. Algava ’97 MAT’01Rose Thomasian Antosiewicz ’54Joan Schmukler Atherton ’71Harriet A. Babcock ’57Maxine Israel Balaban ’51, P’74, P’80Emily K. Berger ’75Carol R. Bingham ’71S. Elizabeth Birnbaum ’79Roberta Trauger Blackmer ’54Susan L. Blake ’68 AM’68Sophia Schaffer Blistein ’41, GP’01Amy D. BonniciKarin Borei ’61Pauline Veneri Bowen ’57, P’84Barbara Shipley Boyle ’58Alice Guillemette Bransfield ’61Wendy Friedman Brest ’61, P’88, P’94Joyce Gillespie Briggs ’58, P’89Judith B. Brown ’52Joanna Slesinger Caproni ’54Carol Taylor Carlisle ’43Esther Bauhan Carroll ’43Rosemary F. Carroll ’57Kathryn Arnold Cawley ’75Judith Korey Charles ’46Judith Goldblith Clark ’69Abby J. Cohen ’78Nancy Chase Cowles ’55Christina Crosby PHD’82Jean Bruce Cummings ’40, P’67, P’70

Nicole J. Cunningham ’90Tori E. Currier ’96Pamela Kispert Dannelly ’72Sharon B. Drager ’67Cheryl J. Duarte ’76Lisa Dunham ’86Jettabee Christenson Edman ’54, P’78Jean Tanner Edwards ’45, P’76Marilyn Tarasiewicz Erickson ’57 AM’59, P’79Margaret Jolly Estey ’51Lois Jagolinzer Fain ’49Joan Gordon Flanagan ’58, P’54, P’79Jane Walsh Folcarelli ’47Jean Holland Foxman ’52Jane C. Friedrich ’81Susana Garcia ’01Sue Wotiz Goldstein ’71, P’02Bernice Markoff Gourse ’41, P’71 MAT’73

PHD’80, P’76Aileen Thrope Grossberg ’65Jill E. Hamburg-Coplan ’87Joy Shuler Harbeson ’51Mary Davis Hartness ’66Joan Rountree Hayes ’54Nina Salant Hellerstein ’68, P’02Phyllis A. Henrici ’72Judith Wright Hill ’57Mary E. Holburn ’50Joanne Vardakis Hologgitas ’47Molly Hong ’97 MD’01Janice S. Howard ’49Marilyn Leary Howe ’53Elizabeth S. Hughes ’61Lynn Philipp John ’76Martha White Keister ’60Suzanne L. Keough ’69Doris E. Kinder ’54Anita L. Kostecki ’87Sharon Kraus ’76Elaine Lipson Kroll ’48Doris Anderson Landau ’49Susie Langdon Kass ’58Barbara Smith Langworthy ’63Charlotte Meyersohn Lebowitz ’46, GP’04Frances H. Leimkuehler ’50Dana A. Levenberg ’86Judith Gellinoff Levy ’49Catherine J. Lewis ’75Joy A. Lo ’97Mary S. Louchheim ’52Susan Di Norscia Mc Millan ’70Margaret Morley McQuillin ’51, P’84Phyllis Burt Morton ’49Janice H. Murabayashi ’92Hope Ford Murphy MAT’79Ann J. Nelson ’56 MAT’59Deborah Kemler Nelson ’67 AM’70 PHD’72Dorothy Markoff Nelson ’35Miriam Maccoby Netter Esq. ’56, P’82Sarah Christian O’Dowd MAT’64 PHD’76Anita Powell Olson ’49L. Vail Berkman Palomino ’59Leslie Feifer Peltier ’58R. Elaine Remley Perachio ’62Grace Costagliola Perry ’44Mary I. Pett ’56

Miriam D. Pichey ’72Patricia Blacklock Power ’53Diane Shecter Pozefsky ’71Mary Auten Psarras ’67Barbara Raab ’81Sara Reichley P’77Barbara J. Reisman ’71, P’02 MD’06, P’05Susan Hines Rohrbach ’67, P’93Elizabeth Walker Rotter ’63Frances Tompson Rutter ’41Mollie Sandock ’72Barbara Merrill Schneider ’52Anne Jacobson Schutte ’61Diane E. Scola ’59Diane DiGianfilippo Scott ’75, P’05

MD’09, P’09 MD’13Susan A. Semonoff ’68Jane E. Sjoman ’62Louise Jessell Smith ’49Edna Coogan Snow ’43Ruth Weiss Soforenko ’50Judith Johnson Staudte ’62 MAT’64Jane Rosenthal Stein ’67Jane Golin Strom ’67, P’94Marleah Hammond Strominger ’47, P’76,

P’78Leslie Leopold Sucher ’63, P’98Jill Teehan ’02Margot E. Thomas ’65, P’97, P’99Phyllis Van Horn Tillinghast ’51Michelle C. Wallach-Schechter ’86Marjorie Lord Westphal ’62Miriam B. White ’75Leatrice Kagan Wolf ’67, P’67, P’71, P’82Alesandra Schmidt Woodhouse ’57Constance Worthington ’68Brewster P. Wyckoff ’71Dorothy L. Zinn ’86

Friends (Gifts less than $50)Anne Day Archibald ’49Anne Hupper Blacksten ’64Madeleine I. Boucher PHD’73Mary Birdsall Cervoni ’60Margaret Davis Crosbie-Burnett ’76, P’87Roberta L. deAraujo ’78, P’10Stavroula Balomenos Demitre ’53Josephine Mullen Digan AM’44, P’75, P’76Diane Schwimmer Ellison ’53Avis Goldstein Feldman ’47Kay Berthold Frishman ’65Christine Erisman Fuller ’72Vicki Schwartz Gale ’76June Johnson Gibbs ’50, PMD’82Betty Leaver Goff ’53Kate E. Grossman ’02Barbara Kirk Hail ’52, P’75, P’78, P’79, GP’08Susan Maikis Hans ’77, P’06Janice Horn Hartman ’65, P’95Eleanor W. Hull ’50Rosalind Kennedy Johnson ’58Linda S. Kandel ’87Patricia Eastwood Kann ’53Jane Konheim Kasov ’66Polly Welts Kaufman ’51, P’83Jane Christie Kraft ’61

Leslie F. Kramer ’82Mary Harris Marks ’51Eleanor R. Mc Elroy ’37Susan M. Meagher ’96Dorothy Kushner Miller ’60Alveretta Tupper Murphy ’54Mary C. O’Brien ’60B. Jane Little Parpart ’61William Ripley IIIBeverly Schwartz Rosen ’53Lynn K. Rudich ’75Janet Cole Seltzer ’60, P’87Kay Hellstrom Shields ’54Judith Ellson Sinche ’76Lenore Saffer Tagerman ’48Deborah Allen Thomas ’65, P’97Charlene Ingraham Underhill ’59Jasmine M. Waddell ’99Henny Wenkart ’49Angela Dadson Wood ’66Gail Erickson Woods ’54, P’81

* This gift was made to the Christine Dunlap Farnham Archives Fund

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