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1 pembroke center brown university fall 2010 Pembroke Center Associates Newsletter Kay Warren Appointed Director of the Pembroke Center K ay B. Warren, the Charles C. Tillinghast Jr. ’32 Professor of International Studies and Professor of Anthropology has been appointed director of the Pembroke Center. As director, Warren will provide intellec- tual leadership and strategic direction to the Pembroke Center’s research and teaching on transnational issues across the humanities and social sci- ences. The Center also will be devel- oping new courses for its interdisci- plinary Gender and Sexuality Studies concentration that deal with interna- tional issues and with theory and research framings that crosscut the humanities, social sciences, and cre- ative arts. “The faculty, postdoctoral fellows, and students involved in Pembroke Center research are grappling with global issues that get to the heart of the benefits and risks of social change,” said Warren. “The Center’s research activities bring scholars from all over the world to work with Brown faculty and students on global issues that call for interdisciplinary understanding.” “Since its inception in 1981, the Pembroke Center has played a crucial role in advancing research and teaching on gender, and more generally on the notion of difference,” said Rajiv Vohra, Dean of the Faculty. “The Center has been developing a richly international and cross-cultural research perspective. Professor Warren’s interests make her ide- ally suited to provide leadership as the Pembroke director.” Warren earned her Ph.D. in Cultural Anthropology at Princeton, began her career at Mount Holyoke Col- lege, and served on the senior faculties of Princeton and Har- vard before coming to Brown in 2003. She directed the Politics, Culture, and Identity Program at the Watson Institute for International Studies where she held a joint appointment from 2003 to 2009. In 2009-10, Warren directed the year-long Pembroke Research Seminar on “Markets and Bodies in Transnational Perspective.” “I look forward to expanding the Pembroke Center’s research mission to address critical issues like the global circulation of new health tech- nologies, labor migration, illicit trade across borders, emergence of new social media, and development strate- gies that target the poor,” said War- ren. “In studying these issues, Center research will continue to draw also on literary, medical, and artistic rep- resentations of difference, on investi- gations into forms of meaning, as well as into values and ethics.” Warren is on sabbatical for the 2010- 11 academic year to finish her book on transnational human trafficking. Suzanne Stewart-Steinberg, Associate Professor of Comparative Literature and Italian Studies, is serving as act- ing director of the Pembroke Center. Pembroke Center Director Kay Warren Hank Randall inside $1 Million Pembroke Challenge to Support New Research p.3 Journalism Today: What’s New in the News p.4 In Memory of Dorothy Brandon Stehle ‘54, P’81 p.5 Pembroke Center Hosts Scholars from Nanjing University p.5 Pembroke Center Associates Members p.7-8

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Page 1: brown university fall 2010 Pembroke Center Associates › research › pembroke-center › ... · across borders, emergence of new social media, and development strate-gies that target

1 • pembroke center

brown university fall 2010

Pembroke Center AssociatesNewsletter

Kay Warren Appointed Director of the PembrokeCenter

Kay B. Warren, the Charles C. Tillinghast Jr. ’32 Professor of

International Studies and Professorof Anthropology has been appointeddirector of the Pembroke Center. Asdirector, Warren will provide intellec-tual leadership and strategic directionto the Pembroke Center’s researchand teaching on transnational issuesacross the humanities and social sci-ences. The Center also will be devel-oping new courses for its interdisci-plinary Gender and Sexuality Studiesconcentration that deal with interna-tional issues and with theory andresearch framings that crosscut thehumanities, social sciences, and cre-ative arts.

“The faculty, postdoctoral fellows, andstudents involved in Pembroke Centerresearch are grappling with globalissues that get to the heart of the benefits and risks of social change,”said Warren. “The Center’s researchactivities bring scholars from all overthe world to work with Brown facultyand students on global issues that callfor interdisciplinary understanding.”

“Since its inception in 1981, thePembroke Center has played a

crucial role in advancing researchand teaching on gender, and

more generally on the notion ofdifference,” said Rajiv Vohra,

Dean of the Faculty. “The Centerhas been developing a richly

international and cross-culturalresearch perspective. ProfessorWarren’s interests make her ide-ally suited to provide leadership

as the Pembroke director.”

Warren earned her Ph.D. in CulturalAnthropology at Princeton, beganher career at Mount Holyoke Col-lege, and served on the seniorfaculties of Princeton and Har-vard before coming to Brown in2003. She directed the Politics,Culture, and Identity Programat the Watson Institute forInternational Studies where sheheld a joint appointment from2003 to 2009. In 2009-10,Warren directed the year-longPembroke Research Seminar on“Markets and Bodies inTransnational Perspective.”

“I look forward to expanding thePembroke Center’s research missionto address critical issues like theglobal circulation of new health tech-nologies, labor migration, illicit tradeacross borders, emergence of newsocial media, and development strate-gies that target the poor,” said War-ren. “In studying these issues, Centerresearch will continue to draw alsoon literary, medical, and artistic rep-resentations of difference, on investi-gations into forms of meaning, aswell as into values and ethics.”

Warren is on sabbatical for the 2010-11 academic year to finish her bookon transnational human trafficking.Suzanne Stewart-Steinberg, AssociateProfessor of Comparative Literatureand Italian Studies, is serving as act-ing director of the Pembroke Center.

Pembroke Center Director Kay Warren

Hank Randall

inside• $1 Million Pembroke Challenge to

Support New Research p.3

• Journalism Today: What’s New in theNews p.4

• In Memory of Dorothy Brandon Stehle‘54, P’81 p.5

• Pembroke Center Hosts Scholars fromNanjing University p.5

• Pembroke Center Associates Membersp.7-8

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Iam thrilled to have the opportu-nity to work with the faculty,

students, visiting scholars, alum-nae/i and friends who make thePembroke Center a place of suchgreat intellectual excitement atBrown. We are already hard at workdeveloping a range of initiatives toexpand the Center’s scope so we canpursue issues involving women’slives on the global stage. To accom-plish this, we want to bring togetherexperts from disciplines across thehumanities and social sciences towork on issues of common concern.

What makes the Center unique is itsfocus on transnational problems thatwe address through sustained studyin a variety of forums: year-longresearch seminars, conferences, grad-uate and undergraduate courses, lec-ture series, roundtables, and longerresearch initiatives. Our scholars aregrappling with global issues that callfor interdisciplinary understandingsand get to the heart of the risks andbenefits of social change. Throughnew research initiatives, the Pem-broke Seminar, our journal differences,the work of the Pembroke CenterAssociates, and other programs, theCenter will be engaging other depart-ments at Brown and forging connec-tions with academic institutionsaround the world.

This academic year, I will be taking asabbatical to finish my book, HumanTrafficking, Transnationalism, and theLaw. Although I will still be involvedwith planning and fundraising activi-ties for the Pembroke Center,

Suzanne Stewart-Steinberg, AssociateProfessor of Comparative Literatureand Italian Studies, is serving as act-ing director and is overseeing theday-to-day administration of the Pem-broke Center. We are extraordinarilyfortunate to have her leadership andexpertise at the Pembroke Center thisyear and look forward to workingwith her next year, when she will leadnext year’s Pembroke Seminar, “TheQuestion of Consent.”

I would like to extend my deep appre-ciation to Elizabeth Weed, who hasbeen with the Center from its found-ing in 1981, and served as director,and who has built Pembroke intosuch a vibrant and well-respectedresearch center. It is truly an honorto be entrusted with the leadership ofthe Pembroke Center and I cannotthank her enough for her persever-ance and vision, which made it possi-ble for the Center to evolve into theinstitution it is today.

Most importantly, I would like tothank all of you for your membershipin the Pembroke Center Associates.Your support of the Pembroke Centeris greatly appreciated.

Kay Warren, Director

From the Director

PEMBROKE CENTER FOR TEACHING AND RESEARCH ON WOMEN

Mailing Address:Pembroke Center Phone: 401-863-2643Box 1958 Fax: 401-863-1298Brown UniversityProvidence, RI 02912

Website: www.pembrokecenter.org

E-mail: [email protected]

Campus Location: Pembroke Hall, 172 Meeting Street, Providence

Pembroke Center Associates Council

OFFICERS

Elizabeth Munves Sherman ’77, P’06, P’09Chair

Leslie Newman ’75, AM’75, P’08, P’12Vice-Chair

MEMBERS (as of July 1, 2010)

Mary Kim Arnold ’93, MFA ’98Bernicestine McLeod Bailey ’68, P’99, P’03Joan Weinberger Berman ’74, P’05, P’11Emily Blistein ’01Nancy L. Buc ’65, LLD’94 hon.Anne Buehl ’88Elizabeth Castelli ’79Emily Coe-Sullivan ’99Arlene Gorton ’52Sonia Gupta ’06Kay Gurtin ’83, P ’13Ulle Viiroja Holt ’66, AM’92, PhD’00, P’93, P’03Carol Lemlein ’67, P’90Robin Lenhardt ’89Joan Hoost McMaster ’60Barbara Raab ’81Meg Saggese ’06Claudia Schechter ’66Gwenn Masterman Snider ’83, P’13Leah W. Sprague ’66Jasmine Waddell ’99Ulla Wilska P’04Enid Wilson ’43

Ex Officio Members

Joan MacLeod Heminway ’83Jean Miller ’49Diane Lake Northrop ’54, P’81, GP’13Chelsey Carrier Remington ’61, P’89, P’92Eileen Rudden ’72, P’03, P’07Phyllis Kollmer Santry ’66Anita Spivey ’74, P’09Mary Aguiar Vascellaro ’74, P’07Beverly Heafitz Zweiman ’66, P’01

Pembroke Center Staff

Kay WarrenDirector

Suzanne Stewart-SteinbergActing Director

Christy Law BlanchardDirector of Program Outreach and Development

Denise Davis, AM ’97Managing Editor of differences

Donna GoodnowCenter Manager

Amy GreerArchivist of the Feminist Theory Papers

Martha HamblettPrograms and Stewardship Coordinator

Deborah WeinsteinDirector of Gender and Sexuality Studies

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pembroke center • 3

With leadership from new directorKay Warren, the Pembroke Cen-

ter is launching an effort to expand itsresearch programs led by Brown fac-ulty. Building on the internationally-renowned Pembroke Seminar—anintensive one-year examination of anintriguing topic led by a Brown facultymember for other faculty, post-docs,graduate students, and select under-graduates—the Pembroke Center willexpand its interdisciplinary researchwith exciting new initiatives in the fol-lowing areas:

• Gender, Medicine, and Science• Gender and Public Policy • Families and Workers on the Move

As part of Boldly Brown: The Cam-paign for Academic Enrichment, thePembroke Center seeks to secureendowment funding for these newresearch initiatives. The Center’sefforts have been given a major boostby a new challenge from PembrokeCenter Associates Council Chair Eliz-abeth Munves Sherman’77, P’06,P’09. The challenge seeks to raise$750,000 in support of the innova-tive research initiatives at the Pem-broke Center. When the amount ismet, she and her husband DavidSherman’79 P’06 P’09 have pledgedto donate $250,000 to reach the $1million goal.

“I am awed by the work of the schol-ars we support and by the PembrokeCenter,” said Sherman. “Last year, theNew York Times did a magazine onwomen’s issues. Almost every topicthey included either had been or wasbeing researched by the PembrokeCenter and was being moved forwardby the work they’re doing.”

“What is so exciting about these newresearch initiatives is that they willmake it possible for Brown faculty toget to the heart of what happens topeople as a result of major currents ofsocial change,” explained PembrokeCenter Director Kay Warren.

“Research under the Gender, Medi-cine, and Science initiative couldexplore the circulation of new healthtechnologies,” said Warren. “Takethe example of the health technologyof organ transplantation, whichsaves lives but at the same time putspressure on the poor in some partsof the world to sell their organs andcreates a variety of ethical dilemmasfor families and religious leaders.With funding from the research ini-tiative, a Brown faculty membercould look at issues such as the cre-ation of new markets for humanorgans, medical ethics, legislationand law enforcement, illicit trade ofhuman organs across borders, andfamilial decision-making processesabout organ donation.”

“The research initiative on Gender andPublic Policy might explore how exper-iments in the creative arts have led tonew ways of conceptualizing the bodyand technology and the effect of thesenew understandings on public policy,”added Warren. “The research initiativeexploring Families on the Move couldexamine conflicts between labormigrants and Western European citi-zens and work toward identifying andexploring strategies to de-escalate con-flict and violence in these urban areas.”

The money provided by an endowedresearch initiative would provide theresources necessary for a Brown fac-ulty member to collaborate withscholars from other disciplines, con-duct field research or archivalresearch, convene conferences, pub-lish research findings, and hire stu-dent research assistants. “This type oftransnational research that reachesacross the humanities, social sci-ences, and creative arts is challengingto do because, by its nature, it breaksboundaries,” said Warren. “As aresult, it is not being done enough.By endowing these research initia-tives at the Pembroke Center, we canprovide sustained support for schol-ars who are taking on these impor-tant issues and whose research willfoster new understandings about realworld problems.”

“When we earn this challenge, theCenter’s supporters will have made ahuge difference,” says Sherman. “Itwill enable the Pembroke Center tobe in a more secure position to do itswork, and that is good for the Center,good for Brown University – andgood for the world.”

Pembroke Center Strives to Raise $1 Million to Support New Research

The circulation of health technologies is one area of new research that could be supported by the Pembroke Challenge.

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As part of Brown’s Family Weekend,the Pembroke Center hosted a

panel discussion to commemorate theyear that the Pembroke Record archiveswent digital. Panelists discussed thechallenges journalists and theirorganizations face in adapting to anever-evolving media environment.

The Pembroke Record was the studentnewspaper of Pembroke College inBrown University from 1922 to 1970.Because the newspaper is an irreplace-able part of the history of women atBrown University, the Pembroke Cen-ter Associates raised funds throughmembership donations to digitize theentire run of the Pembroke Record.

Pembroke Center Associates Councilmember Bernicestine McLeod’68,P’99, P’03 demonstrated the Pem-broke Record digital archives. Shepulled up the October 22, 1965 issue,which featured articles about the Uni-versity’s plans to raise tuition to$2,000 per year, the Pembroke Alum-nae Council’s exploration of urbandevelopment issues, Dean RosemaryPierrel’s welcoming fathers to cam-pus, and a visit by Lawrence Spivak,then host of NBC’s Meet the Press. Toview the archives please visit:http://pembrokecenter.org/associates/history.html.

Pembroke Center Associates Councilmember Barbara Raab’81, seniornewswriter for NBC Nightly News withBrian Williams and adjunct professor

at the City University of New York’sGraduate School of Journalism, servedas moderator and asked panelists totalk about how they came to pursue acareer in journalism and how theirBrown education has impacted theway they practice journalism.

Amy Goldstein’79, a staff writer forThe Washington Post, was a studentreporter for the Brown Daily Heraldand covered the Louise Lampherecase. After being denied tenure byBrown’s Anthropology Department in1974, Lamphere filed a class-actionlawsuit on behalf of women faculty atBrown, who numbered only 25 by themid-1970s, alleging that the univer-sity discriminated against women inthe awarding of tenure. The resultingconsent decree mandated the hiringof women faculty, and gave guide-lines for hiring and promoting all fac-ulty. When the decree was vacated in1992, Brown had increased its num-ber of tenured women faculty five-fold. In 2008, Lamphere gave BrownUniversity $1 million to establish avisiting assistant professorship ingender studies. Goldstein noted thatthis case taught her how to developsources and how to translate complexsubjects for readers.

Kavita Kumar’00, retail reporter forthe St. Louis Post-Dispatch, came toBrown intending to write short sto-ries, but then got a summer intern-ship with the Dayton Daily News and

became interested in journalism. Shewas inspired by her student work withthe Third World Center and the SarahDoyle Women’s Center to cover issuessuch as inequality and corruption.

Emmy Liss’11, deputy managing edi-tor of the Brown Daily Herald, assignsstories to student reporters. Liss saidthat the Brown Daily Herald is com-pletely independent of the University– both editorially and financially. Lissadded that the paper is also workingon digitizing its archives.

Goldstein observed that after shewrites a story and before she can sub-mit it to her editor, she first is requiredto provide data so her story can bemore easily found in search engineslike Google. She added that she nowmust write multiple versions of thesame story and provide online updatesthroughout the day.

The panelists discussed the challengefor the public in discerning betweenopinion and news reporting becauseso many news sources are doing both.Kumar suggested that online toolslike blogs and Twitter make reportersless hesitant to have a distinct voiceand that the Web is changing thenorms of journalism. Goldsteinobserved that the speed of the newscycle is increasing while there arefewer people to do the work. Liss saidthat because of all these pressures,journalism is not as attractive a careerfor students who currently work at theBrown Daily Herald.

Raab suggested that digital disruptionis creating new opportunities for jour-nalists and that there is a lot of experi-mentation underway such as special-ized online news publications andnews coverage by citizen journalists.Because the business has been evolv-ing so rapidly, the City University ofNew York now offers a degree pro-gram in entrepreneurial journalismthat helps students not only learn howto cover the news, but also how tothink about business models to sus-tain their work. She concluded thatthe digital train has left the station butthat it is not all gloom and doom.

(L-R): Emmy Liss ’12, Amy Goldstein ’79, Bernicestine McLeod ’68, P’99, P’03, Barbara Raab ’81, Kavita Kumar ’00

Hank Randall

4 • pembroke center

Journalism Today: What’s New in the News

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pembroke center • 5

As part of the Nanjing-Brown JointProgram in Gender Studies and

the Humanities, the Pembroke Cen-ter, along with East Asian Studies andthe Cogut Center for the Humanities,sponsored a visit by scholars fromNanjing University to Brown. Repre-senting a broad range of fields,including sociology, philosophy, Eng-lish, drama, French literature, genderstudies, Chinese, and history, the vis-iting faculty underscored the interdisciplinary potential of the Nanjing-Brown program.

While on campus for a week in June,the visiting scholars met PresidentRuth Simmons and Vice President

for International Affairs MatthewGutmann to discuss the future of thepartnership. They presented papersat a symposium and attended theannual meeting of the Consortium ofHumanities Centers and Institutesalso being held on the Brown campusat the time of their visit.

The central event of the scholarlyexchange was a day-long symposium,“Modern China from Socio-economicand Transcultural Perspectives.” Nan-jing faculty presented papers andengaged in critical dialogues with fac-ulty from Brown, Yale, the Massachu-setts Institute of Technology, andCornell on issues related to gender,

the environment, economics, andtranscultural exchanges in modernChina. The symposium received gen-erous support from InternationalAffairs, American Civilization, andthe Center for the Study of Race andEthnicity in America.

Inaugurated in 2008 as one of thePembroke Center’s research initia-tives, the Nanjing-Brown Joint Pro-gram on Gender Studies and theHumanities brings together outstand-ing scholars from the two universitiesto work on issues related to the globalfuture of gender, feminist studies,and the humanities. Since its found-ing, there have been two scholarlyexchanges, a number of lectures,roundtables, and symposia, and spe-cial publications, including the inau-gural issue of the Journal of GenderTheory and Culture, published in Chi-nese by Nanjing University Press thisyear. As part of the ongoing joint pro-gram this academic year, Wu Wen-qian, a graduate student in NanjingUniversity’s Department of Film andDrama, is studying at Brown. Hisresearch focuses on early Hollywoodcinema and its influence on early Chi-nese cinema in the 1920s and 1930s.

Scholars from Nanjing University Visit Brown

Scholars participating in the Nanjing-Brown Joint Program in Gender Studies and the Humanities metwith Brown University President Ruth J. Simmons

The Pembroke Center Associates mournthe loss of Dorothy Brandon Stehle’54

P’81, who passed away on June 10, 2010.Dot was a longtime member of the Pem-broke Center Associates. She earned herA.B. in American Civilization and was awriter for the Pembroke Record all four years,serving as editor her senior year. She servedon the Question Club, and was a counselorfor transfer students. She married DonaldStehle’53, P’81 in 1953.

She remained active in the Brown commu-nity and served as a class officer and on herclass reunion gifts committee, and volun-teered on the Brown Alumni Schools Com-mittee. Dot also was a devoted volunteer inher community. She served as president ofthe Junior League of Utica, Utica Planned

Parenthood, and the United Way of GreaterUtica. She was the first female member ofthe vestry of St. Stephens Episcopal Churchin New Hartford, New York. She served astreasurer for the New York State Ski RacingAssociation for thirteen years. An avid ath-lete, Dot raced sailboats with her familyand also enjoyed skiing and golf.

The Pembroke Center Associates havereceived numerous gifts in her memoryand appreciate the thoughtfulness of herclassmates in remembering Dot’s legacy inthis way. “Dot was a very genuine personwith a good sense of the ridiculous,”remembers Pat Crabtree Bradley’54. “Somany people liked her, and I’m not sur-prised to learn that so many people donatedin her name.”

In Memory of Dorothy Brandon Stehle’54, P’81

Dorothy Brandon Stehle’54, P’81

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6 • pembroke center

Sarah Doyle Society($5,000+)Diane Lake Northrop ’54, P’81, GP’13Elizabeth Munves Sherman ’77, P’06,

P’09 and David M. Sherman ’79,P’06, P’09

Mary Aguiar Vascellaro ’74, P’07 andJerome C. Vascellaro ’74, P’07

Anna Canada Swain Partners ($2,500 - $4,999)Amy Levine Abrams ’75Joan Weinberger Berman ’74, P’05,

P’11 and Frederick J. Berman ’73,P’05, P’11

Nancy L. Buc ’65 LLD’94 hon.Elizabeth M. DubbsLibby Hirsh Heimark ’76, P’10Ulle Viiroja Holt ’66 AM’92 PHD’00,

P’93, P’03Marie J. Langlois ’64 LLD’92 hon.Phyllis Kollmer Santry ’66Anita V. Spivey ’74, P’09

Elisha Benjamin Andrews Benefactors($1,000 - $2,499)Elissa Beron Arons ’66Elizabeth A. Castelli ’79Sheila K. Crump ’68Jeanne M. Donovan Fisher ’80Arlene E. Gorton ’52Martha Fraad Haffey ’65, P’95Joan MacLeod Heminway ’83 and

Merrit A. Heminway ’83Diane C. Iselin ’81Susan Wing Klumpp ’54Carol M. Lemlein ’67, P’90 and

Eric J. Natwig ’69, P’90Barbara Reuben Levin ’54Jean E. Miller ’49Pembroke Club of Northern CaliforniaChelsey Carrier Remington ’61, P’89,

P’92 and David F. Remington ’61,P’89, P’92

Claudia Perkins Schechter ’66Jill Schlesinger ’87Gwenn Masterman Snider ’83, P’13Joan Wernig Sorensen ’72, P’06, P’06Elizabeth A. Weed AM’66 PHD’73Victoria Westhead ’83Ulla Wilska P’04Enid Wilson ’43

Patrons ($500 - $999)Anne C. Buehl ’88Ellen Chesler P’02Elaine Piller Congress ’63Judith Brick Freedman ’63Kathryn S. Fuller ’68 LHD’92 hon.,

P’06Jennifer Chang Hetterly ’89Carol Landau ’70, P’09Gail Caslowitz Levine ’63, P’88, P’91Berit Spant Muh ’64, P’94

Leslie S. Newman ’75 AM’75, P’08,P’12 and Joel N. CoppermanP’08, P’12

Nancy J. Northup ’81Ava L. Seave ’77Women’s Committee of the

Brown University Club of Southern California

Beverly Heafitz Zweiman ’66, P’01

Sponsors ($250 - $499)Sara E. Agniel ’97Judith G. Allen ’79Amy Finn Binder ’77, P’02, P’09Susan Haas Bralove ’67Sally Hill Cooper ’52 PHB’84 hon.,

P’74, P’75 SCM’77, P’78Kristin Davitt ’88Ann L. De LanceyF. Ann duCille AM’73 PHD’91Holly Hock Dumaine ’61Madeleine Choquette Durkin ’93Suzanne Werber Dworsky ’60Heather A. Findlay ’86Sarah Maxtone-Graham

Francois-Poncet ’80, P’10Claire J. Henderson ’61Jean E. Howard ’70Claire Hughes Johnson ’94Tobi B. Klar ’76, P’05 AM’06, P’08Helen P. Klemchuk ’72Kathryn J. Kostic ’87Janet L. Kroll ’86Jean Lahage Cohen ’75, P’07Viola Lenk Leonard ’50, P’76, P’85Louise Levien ’74Mary Allen Lindemann ’82Aleta Margolis ’89Elaine Bien Mei ’61, P’95Stephanie A. Morimoto ’99Norma Caslowitz Munves ’54

PHB’82 hon., P’77, P’80, GP’06,GP’09

Ona I. Nierenberg ’80Vicky Oliver ’82Lydia Briggs Petty ’66, P’94Mary Hutchings Reed ’73 AM’73Judith Sims Roberts ’57Eileen M. Rudden ’72, P’03, P’07, P’11Eleanor Ekblade Seaman ’53Ann C. Sherman-Skiba ’66Elizabeth D. Taft ’59Gretchen Reiche Terhune ’56Eunice Whitney Thomas ’65Frances Vincentelli Verstandig ’62Angelina M. Vieira ’91Joan M. Wallach Scott ADE’81 hon.

LHD’92 hon., P’92Judith A. Williams ’86

Sustaining Members ($100 - $249)Marsha Uehara Allgeier ’70Barbara AntonMary-Kim Arnold ’93 MFA’98Tracey E. Aronson ’84

Jane Neide Ashcom ’55, P’91, P’96Kathryn H. Au ’69Katherine E. Baccaro ’51Mildred Seaquist Barish ’53Laura Shatto Barlow ’53, P’78, P’81Andrea Terzi Baum ’83Haiganush R. Bedrosian ’65Ruth Kenworthy Bergeron ’49

SCM’52Jeanne Hoberman Besser ’80Katharine MacKenty Bigelow ’53Marcia Walley Blenko ’83Rebecca T. Bliss ’92Emily D. Blistein ’01Barbara Shipley Boyle ’58Patricia Crabtree Bradley ’54Marilyn Rice Bray ’53Karen Henry Briggs ’68Karen Brinkmann ’83Brown Alumnae Club of

Kent CountyCarol Norris Brown ’74Susan A. Buffum ’74Susan L. Caroselli ’69Nancy K. Cassidy ’73Trina Dang Chu ’95Vivian Bergquist Clarke ’49Emily A. Coe-Sullivan ’99Diana Kane Cohen ’55Nancy Rich Comley ’71 PHD’77, P’80Hannah N. Copperman ’08Carolyn B. Coughlin ’87Mary Critikos ’58Joan Hastings Crosby ’52Dorothy Smith Curtis ’50, P’73Jane de Winter ’81Elaine M. Decker ’67Andrea E. Del Guidice ’00Jean Balle Denman ’66Aliene Senechal Desmond ’65June Nyberg Diller ’59Susan A. DiMeo ’75Sharon B. Drager ’67Mary Ellyn Dufek ’53, P’85Carol Spindler Duncan ’63, P’93Antoinette Loiacono Dupont ’50,

P’77, P’79, P’83, GP’06Rebekah Hill Eckstein ’60, P’90Ruth Burt Ekstrom ’53 LLD’88 hon.Joyce Leffler Eldridge ’64, P’01Diane Schwimmer Ellison ’53Joan Yurkunas Fitzgerald ’55Marjorie Jenckes Fleischmann ’56Mary L. Frampton ’67Lynne FraserAmy L. Freedman ’79Bonnie E. Freeman ’88Linda Casinghino Freeman ’72Katherine L. Garrett ’84Nancy Gidwitz ’70Diana Coates Gill ’54, P’78, P’82,

P’89, GP’12Dian Shumate Gillmar ’57, P’86Gail Cohen Ginsberg ’66, P’91Susan W. Goldstein ’81

Marjorie Neifeld Grayson ’74, P’11Toni Haida ’90Elizabeth Wilen Halpern ’87Martha Brown Hannon ’58, P’90Cynthia A. Harding ’80Tina V. Hartert-Peebles ’85Mary Davis Hartness ’66Patricia MacBride Hendrickson ’52,

P’80, PAM’88 PHD’08Robin J. Herbison ’83Nancy Frazier Herman ’63, P’86AnonymousEleanor Verrill Hood ’63, P’90 and

Henry H. Hood Jr. ’61, P’90Jane Loveless Howard ’58, P’89

SCM’91 PHD’95Marcia Lunt Howell ’62Mary Duncan Jacobson ’45, P’73,

P’80Lynn A. Johnson ’78Edith Veit Johnstone ’54, P’79M. Louise Tyrrell Kaczowka ’40Alice Kaltman ’80Rachel S. Karliner ’85Elizabeth Forstall Keen ’59Janet L. Kemp ’75, P’06Erna Willis Kerst ’69Doris E. Kinder ’54Jaime L. Kline ’87Sharon Kraus ’76Priscilla Hosp Lambert ’60, P’85,

P’88, P’91Margot E. Landman ’78Celia Lindsay Lang ’45Susie Langdon Kass ’58Faith A. LaSalle ’75Christy J. Law BlanchardJulia Graham Lear ’62, P’97Dana Su Lee ’88Susan Lee ’90Pamela Farrell Lenehan ’74 AM’74,

P’03, P’06Robin A. Lenhardt ’89Donna S. Levin ’80Diane M. Lichtenstein ’79Pearl Schwartz Livingstone ’54, P’79,

P’82, GP’08, GP’10Tamara Lothian ’79Christine Kim Lyng-Olsen ’90 and

Niels-Peter Lyng-Olsen ’90Judith A. Lyons MAT’67Jeanne C. Mahon ’59Ann Whipple Marr ’70, P’91 AM’92Ellen L. Mc Callum ’89Georgia L. Mc Creery ’89Gail E. McCann ’75Brenda Williams McLean ’58Marcia Band McReynolds ’79Teresa Gagnon Mellone ’39 AM’62,

GP’99Laura Rowe Ment ’70 MMS’72, P’08Carolyn Hamond Merriam ’52, P’79Susan Fiske Michelson ’62AnonymousAnne Jones Mills ’60

Pembroke Center Associates Gifts Received July 1, 2009 - June 30, 2010

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Muriel Mulleedy Mulgrew ’48, P’79Hope Ford Murphy MAT’79Mary J. Mycek ’48Dorothy Effange Njeuma ’66Jane O’Hara Page ’54Helaine Benson Palmer ’68Jean Baglione Panos ’80Linda Y. Papermaster ’72Edgar ParkerChaela M. Pastore ’89Patricia M. Patricelli ’58Cynthia Burdick Patterson ’65Pembroke Class of 1954Sandra Newman Penz ’61, P’91Barbara Cunningham Perkins ’46Grace Costagliola Perry ’44Lynn R. Perry ’05Mary I. Pett ’56Deborah Karp Polonsky ’58Patricia Blacklock Power ’53Carol Sheinblatt Press ’62Rosemary W. Prisco AM’74Lois A. Rappaport ’59Meryl Smith Raskin ’66, P’97Limary Rios-Camacho ’90Judith Hexter Riskind ’62, P’88Susan Rosenfeld ’64 AM’65, P’87Barbara Gershon Ryder ’69, P’95Barbara Zwick Sander ’64, P’94Lila Sapinsley LHD’93 hon.Marcy Miller Schaffir ’87Heather Adler Schoen ’00Nancy C. Scull ’63Ruth Kertzer Seidman ’60, P’88, P’90Jane P. Seigler ’73Ada Montecalvo Semple ’50Margaret Ellickson Senturia ’61Maureen O’Brien Sheehan ’54Barbara E. Simkin ’64Louis V. SorrentinoLeah W. Sprague ’66Dale Glass St. Lawrence ’83, P’14Mimi Ellis Storey ’81, P’13Carolyn A. Stuart ’90Elizabeth Turner Taylor ’54Helen Foster Thalheimer ’37Sara Dowty Toney ’35Judith Phillips Tracy ’61Julie Iselin Turjoman ’79Elizabeth T. Wahls ’85Pamela Silling Wald ’73Gretchen Ruedemann Walker ’46Vassie C. Ware ’75Kay B. Warren ADE’04 hon.Anne Rodems White ’65Elizabeth D. Whiting ’71Catherine C. Williams ’54Leatrice Kagan Wolf ’67, P’82, GP’13Nancy Siderowf Wolfson ’53, P’77Alesandra Schmidt Woodhouse ’57Gail Williams Woolley ’59 MAT’63Constance Worthington ’68Phyllis Baldwin Young ’45, P’87Suzanne Ross Zeckhausen ’55, P’85

Contributing Members($75 - $99)Rose Thomasian Antosiewicz ’54Bernicestine McLeod Bailey ’68,

P’99, P’03

Nancy Silver Barry ’66Emily K. Berger ’75Judith Nusinoff Boomer ’76, P’10Devra Miller Breslow ’54, GP’90Marion L. Crowley ’52Elizabeth Hymer Dudley ’59Sandra C. Finn ’80Sue Wotiz Goldstein ’71, P’02 and

Irwin Goldstein ’71, P’02Susan C. Greenfield ’83Joanne Vardakis Hologgitas ’47Elizabeth S. Hughes ’61Irma Rosengard Hyman ’45Karen L. Jerome ’84 MD’88Polly Welts Kaufman ’51, P’83Suzanne L. Keough ’69Doris Anderson Landau ’49Barbara Smith Langworthy ’63Andrea S. Levere ’77, P’10Jane Hamlett Malme ’56Elizabeth Skinner Maxwell ’47Ellen Shaffer Meyer ’61, P’94Charlotte Cook Morse ’64Ann J. Nelson ’56 MAT’59Margaret Dworkin Northrop ’69Sally Wilcox O’Day ’53, P’76Helene E. Rice-Rubin ’51, P’74, P’83

AM’84Caroline T. Schroeder ’93Jane Rosenthal Stein ’67Leora Tanenbaum ’91Phyllis Van Horn Tillinghast ’51Candace L. Trace ’95Jasmine M. Waddell ’99Susan Ahrens Weihl ’68Miriam B. White ’75

Associate Members ($50 - $74)Linda V. Aro ’81 AM’83Joan Schmukler Atherton ’71Harriet A. Babcock ’57Maxine Israel Balaban ’51, P’74, P’80Judith Mendlowitz Berman MD ’66Judith Watman Bernstein ’63Carol R. Bingham ’71Priscilla A. Birge ’56S. Elizabeth Birnbaum ’79Roberta Trauger Blackmer ’54Carla H. Blumenkranz ’05Pauline Veneri Bowen ’57, P’84Marion Kentta Calhoun ’65Sally A. Cameron-Mello ’58, P’80,

P’81, P’82 SCD’07 hon.Carol Taylor Carlisle ’43Esther Bauhan Carroll ’43Rosemary F. Carroll ’57Judith Korey Charles ’46Constance Sauer Clark ’68Judith Goldblith Clark ’69Mary J. Clinton ’54Kate R. Cook ’98Christina Crosby PHD’82Roberta L. deAraujo ’78, P’10Sheila Boberg Delhagen ’60, P’87

MD’92Connie J. Dickerson ’71, P’13Lisa Dunham ’86Jean Tanner Edwards ’45, P’76Barbara R. Feibelman ’73

Susan J. Ferber ’93Marjorie Kaufman Fieldman ’70Jane Medas Fleury ’70Jean Holland Foxman ’52Jane C. Friedrich ’81Nancy C. Garrison ’70Betty Wolf Greenberg ’67, P’92, P’06Frances Bell Griswold ’49Aileen Thrope Grossberg ’65Sonia M. Gupta ’06Joy Shuler Harbeson ’51Joan Rountree Hayes ’54 and

Charles E. Hayes Jr. ’54Lynne Moore Healy ’69, P’05Nina Salant Hellerstein ’68, P’02Lacy B. Herrmann ’50, P’82Mary E. Holburn ’50Barbara Clary Horner ’58Karen L. Horny ’65Katherine Cashman Hower ’56, P’91Eveline Portnoy Hunt ’56, P’83Melissa Bradford Jacobson ’72Nancy Anderson Johnson ’61Laura Q. Jones ’99Judith V. Jordan ’65June Brenner Judson ’50Deborah J. Kapp ’71Martha White Keister ’60Jane Christie Kraft ’61Elaine Lipson Kroll ’48Frances H. Leimkuehler ’50Dana A. Levenberg ’86Eleanor Smith Lienau ’66Susan Di Norscia Mc Millan ’70Deborah Hoyt McFarland ’69Joan Hoost McMaster ’60Margaret Morley McQuillin ’51, P’84Dorothy Pierce McSweeny ’62Rita Caslowitz Michaelson ’50, P’80Mary D. Miller ’85Diane Orson Moran ’79Carol Ferst Mott ’69, P’92Kristan Fee Munson ’68Deborah Kemler Nelson ’67 AM’70

PHD’72Maryanne J. Nelson ’67Caryl-Ann Miller Nieforth ’59, P’86

MD’91Colleen Mc Mahon Orsatti ’60Janice Davy Oursler ’65Miriam D. Pichey ’72Jeannette Jones Pollard ’48, P’77,

P’81, P’85, GP’06, GP’08, GP’08,GP’13

Diane Shecter Pozefsky ’71Mary Auten Psarras ’67Barbara Raab ’81Elizabeth Walker Rotter ’63H. Cheryl Rusten ’79Frances Tompson Rutter ’41Joan M. Ryder ’73, P’09Patricia McLellan Schaefer ’74, P’07Anita L. Schell-Lambert ’79, P’04Barbara Merrill Schneider ’52Karen L. Schneider ’00 AM’07

PHD’08Anne Jacobson Schutte ’61Leslie Dolby Schwam ’55Lois Winograd Seegal ’64Susan A. Semonoff ’68

Susan Schoell Sheldon ’66Kay Hellstrom Shields ’54Marilyn Carlson Simon ’54, P’78,

P’88Margaret Emory Stackpole ’66Judith Johnson Staudte ’62 MAT’64Marjorie Jones Stenberg ’54, P’81,

P’83Jane Golin Strom ’67, P’94Leslie Leopold Sucher ’63, P’98Carolyn Quinn Tew ’52Deborah Allen Thomas ’65, P’97Helen Tasman Tourigney ’41Brewster P. Wyckoff ’71Dorothy L. Zinn ’86

Friends (Gifts less than $50)Jane Doane Anderson ’60, P’86Judith B. Brown ’52Mary Birdsall Cervoni ’60Arva Rosenfeld Clark ’55, P’82

AM’86 PHD’89Margaret Reynard Clarridge ’54Lenore Donofrio DeLucia ’58 AM’61

PHD’63, P’88Caitlin E. Donovan ’05Jettabee Christenson Edman ’54, P’78Marilyn Tarasiewicz Erickson ’57

AM’59, P’79Margaret Jolly Estey ’51Kay Berthold Frishman ’65Anne Goslee-Jovovic ’66Marjorie Miller Gustafson ’62, P’92Barbara Kirk Hail ’52, P’75, P’78,

P’79, GP’08Janice Horn Hartman ’65, P’95Holly E. Holmes ’77Eleanor W. Hull ’50Jane Konheim Kasov ’66June I. KleinMargaret Ajootian Layshock ’45Charlotte Meyersohn Lebowitz ’46,

GP’04Karen L. Leggett-Abouraya ’72Joan Herbst Lumb ’54Mary Harris Marks ’51Eleanor R. Mc Elroy ’37Nancy Wernick Menzin ’59Louise Burdett Meyer ’59, P’86Dorothy Kushner Miller ’60Barbara Hobart Mitten ’54L. Vail Berkman Palomino ’59B. Jane Little Parpart ’61Leslie Feifer Peltier ’58Morris L. Povar ADE’68 hon., GP’06,

GP’10Carol Markovitz Raskin ’62, P’90,

P’91Alice Simister Reynolds ’42Susan R. Ritz ’78, P’12Enzina De Robbio Sammartino ’45Constance Hubbard Schoeman ’48Lou Chirico Schuyler ’68Diane E. Scola ’59Janice C. Sheftel ’63Kayla J. Strassfeld ’98Terry A. Tegnazian ’74Janice Synes Weissman ’50, P’80Amy L. Wolfson ’05

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8 • pembroke center

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