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MARIST
CONTENTS
I
Spring
4
Launching The
Campaign
for
Marist
More
than
400
alumni,friends, parents,
fawlty, staff,
and
trustees of Marist gathered
in
New
York
City
in
November for
the public
kickoff
of
Marist's first
comprehensive capital
campaign,
The
Campaign
for
Marist.
10
From
the Wheelhouse
to
the White House
An
unforgettable internship at the White
House
has
shaped future plans for political
science
major
Vinny
O'Neill
'09.
11
An Enduring
Gift
A
dream
of
the
Foy
Brothers
four decades
ago, the Peter and
Virginia
Foy
Scholarship
endowment
has
grown from
a
gift of
$5,195
to
nearly
$112,000
today and
has
helped more
than
30 students complete
tl1eir
college education.
Red Fox Roundup
The
women's basketball
team earns
its
third
consecutive
trip
to
the NCAA
Tournament,
men's and
women's
swimming
and
diving
pull
off
upsets to
win the
Metro
Atlantic Athletic
Conference Championships,
and women's
soccer
and football
secure
regular-season
MAAC
titles.
Mansi Magazine
,s
published by the
Office of College
Advancement al
Marist
College for alumni, friends, faculty,
and
staff or
Mansi
College.
Vice
President [or
College Advancement:
Robert
L.
West
Chief Public
Affairs Officer:
T1mmia11
Massie
Editor:
Leslie Bates
Executive Director
of
Alu mm Relanons:
An!)' Coppola Woods
'91
An
Director:
Richard Deon
Co,•er
illustration:
Victor Van Carpels
Marist
College,
3399
North
Road,
Poughkeepsie,
NY
12601-1387
www.manst.edu

leslie.ba1es@mans1.edu
/J
©
Mixed Sources
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group from well-managed
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i;,o:)
forests, controlled sources and
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recycled
wood or fiber
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2437
Back to the NCAA,
Page
12
Arts and
sciences,
Page 14
ALUMNI
PROFILES
14
Excelling
with
Instruments
Music
and science
have been
passions
since
childhood
for
each of
the
young
Gupta brothers.
Now
Robert,
after graduatingf
rom
Marist at
age
17
and
earning
a
master's
in music
at Yale,
is
the
youngest
violinist
i11
the
Los
Angeles
Philharmonic. Akshar Patrick will graduate
this May at
17
and
is
headed for a master's
in
public health and then medical school.
16
d_parture
spa
Takes
Off
Entrepreneur Gina Egel Stern
'99
has
made her unique
concept of airport spas
a
millio11-dollar
success and
is
sharing
her
vision
with at-risk youth.
DEPARTMENTS
2
Marist Drive
What's
happening
011
campus
18
~Bm\N~¥-
A1umni News
Notes about Marist graduates
Gina
Egel
Stern
'99
Page
16




























:MARIST
I
NEWS & NOTES
FROM
T H E
CAMPUS
Dr. Elmore Alexander
Named Dean of the
School of Management
D
r.
Elmore Alexander has been named
dean of the School of Management.
He
served as
interim
dean since
January
2007. Prior to joining Marist,
he
was
dean
of
the
School of Business Administration at
Philadelphia University. Previously,
he
served
as director of
the
Division of Business and
Management at
Johns
Hopkins University,
associate dean and chair of the Management
Department within the
Kogod
School
of Business Administration at American
University
in
Washington, D.C., and as
professor of management and
director
of the
Fogelman Executive Center al the University
of Memphis.
He has
a PhD and MA in organizational
behavior
from
the Terry School of Business at
the University
of Georgia and a BA in econom-
ics and communication from Wake
Forest
University. His research interests include
various aspects of organizational communi-
cation and verbal and sexual harassment in
the workplace. He
has
authored more than
70 articles, papers, and presentations.
His
research has been
published in
the
journal
of Conflict
Resolution,
Journal of Management,
Management
Communication
Quarterly,Journal
of
Information
Technology
Management,
and
Personnel
Psychology.
He
has made
presemations
at numerous
professional conferences including the
Academy of Management, the American
Accounting Association, Decision Sciences
Institute,
and
the
Society for General Systems
Research. He has served as a consultant for
organizations such as
the
Army Research
Institute,
Federal
Express, Hunt-
Wesson Foods,
and the U.S.
Postal Service.
Maris;t To Join Pioneer Football League in 2009:
Red F:oxes Will Become 10th Member of League
M
atrist football has not only a new home that exemplifies the standards and overall
--Tenney
Stadium at Leonidofffield
experience that we strive
to
provide for our
-but ailso a
new
conference. Marist has
student-athletes at Marist."
accepted an invitation
to
join the Pioneer
"[ am very excited about the opportuni-
Footbalh
League, beginning in 2009. The Red ty to join the Pioneer League in 2009," says
Foxes
will
become
the 10th
member
of the
Marist Head Coach Jim Parady, who will
league,joining
Butler,
Campbell, Davidson, be entering his 17th season at the helm in
Dayton, Drake,Jacksonville, Morehead State,
2008.
"The Pioneer
League
is very competi-
San Diego, and Valparaiso.
tive, with the last three Mid-Major National
"We are proud
to
be included in a league Champions coming from it. The league gives
with schools known nationally for
their
us
an opportunity
to
play a national sched-
accomplishments in the classroom and on
ule with games
from
Florida
to
California.
the foot.ball field," says President Dennis
J.
This
will help us with recruiting and enable
Murray. "Marist fosters an appreciation of
us Lo anract student-athletes from all across
what it means to be a true student-athlete,
the country."
encouraging success
in
academics as well as
"The Pioneer Football League enthus1ast1-
athletic:s. The colleges and
universities
in the
cally welcomes MarisL
as our newest member,"
Pioneer League share
this
◄ ■

says PFL commissioner
same philosophy, so we
R
I
O
n e e r
Patty Viverito.
feel we have found
the
Marist
football
right home for our foot-
football
league
was established as a
ball
pmgram."
club sport in 1965.
In 2009, each Pioneer League team will The program was ele\'ated
to
varsity status
play eight conference games in a round-robin
in 1978
and began competition at
the I-AA
format. Each team will have four
league
home
level in
1993.
From 1994
to 2007, the Red
games and four
league
road games. The Pioneer Foxes competed in the Metro Atlantic Athletic
League.,
established in 1991, competes in the
Conference Football League. Marist earned
NCAA Football Championship Subdivision. its first conference championship as a varsity
All of the league's members are committed to
program in 1990, when the Red Foxes won the
the non-scholarship football model.
Atlantic Collegiate Football Conference
crown
"The Pioneer League is a great fit for our
with a 5-0
league mark.
The Red Foxes won
footbal I program, and I'm excited
that
we
the MAAC
crown outright in 1994 and earned
will have a chance to showcase our student-
a share of the
league
title in 2006 and 2007.
athletei; and institution on a national level,"
Marist will compete as an FCS indepen-
says Mmist Director of Athletics Tim Murray. dent in the 2008 season. Fans can visit www.
"We wi II be competing in a stable conference gored foxes.com for more information.

Mari:st Students Win Prestigious Sakaiger Award
E
ight Marist graduate students were
presented with a "Sakaiger" award at the
Sakai conference
in
Newport Beach, Calif., in
December for
their contributions
to
Sakai's
quality assurance efforts.
The Sakai
Project
is
a
landmark venture
to create open-source course
management,
collaboration, and online
research
support
tools
for
the
higher
education community.
Begun
through
a collaboration
involving
the
University of Michigan,
Indiana
University,
MIT, and Stanford University,
it now includes
approximately 100
universities,
colleges,
and
institutions
of learning around
the
world.
Marist has
been
a Sakai
Partner
since 2005.
'09, Venkatesh Subramanian '08, Vidhya
Kolappa Pillai
'09, and Vidhya
Rajan
'08.
Their work in
Marist's
Office of Academic
Technology and eLearning gives them
the
opportunity for significant
hands-on
expe-
rience
with Sakai.
Marist faculty and staff are
becoming
known as leaders in
the
Sakai communi-
ty. Sakai
development
work is
underway
through the IBM
Joint Study
project,
and
Director
of Academic
Technology
and eLearn-
ingjosh
Baron
has
been elected to the Sakai
Foundation Board. Marist faculty members are
also
increasingly
adopting the Sakai course
management
system.
Thi! students are Ajay
Parimi
'08,
Lochan
Chhetri '09, Pashupathinath
Rajendran
'09,
-----1
Sravant:hi
Tipirneni '08, Omprakash Vadapalli
The Sakaiger was introduced in 2007 as
the
mascot of the Sakai community.



















Receptions Highlight
Capital Campaign
President Dennis J. Murray has been
attending regional
receptions
to update
Marist alumni and friends on The
Campaign for Marist, the College's newly
launched
capital campaign (please
see page 4).
In
February, more than 80
alumni and
Marist
friends attended a
reception
hosted
by the Long Island
alumni chapter at Pomodoro Ristorante
in
Huntington
Village, N.Y. In Palm
Beach, Fla., Dennis and Marilyn Murray
hosted a reception for alumni and
friends at the
Ritz-Carlton.

Guests at the
Long
Island alumni chapter
event included Cynthia Bodenheimer Sheehan
'74 and David Sheehan '74
Left
to right, Marie Wicks
'86,
Maureen Doolan Boyle
'81,
Jack
Boyle '78, and John
O'Shaughnessy
'82
enjoy themselves at
the
Long Island reception.
Among those at the Palm Beach reception were (left to ri!~ht) Chris Edelstein
'98,
Nicole
Lauck
Edelstein '98, President Dennis Murray,Joann Puma-Pfaffenberger
'9S,
and Walter
Pfaffenberger.
( I N
BRIEF)
Marist College's strong financial position
was affirmed by two financial rating agencies
in
advance of a bond issue on behalf of the
College. Fitch
Ratings, in its initial
rating of
Marist, assigned an "A" rating on new and
outstanding debt issues of the Dutchess
County Industrial Development Agency issued
on behalf of the College. Moody's gave an
upgrade from "A3" to
"A2,"
the equivalent
of the
"A"
rating by Fitch.
This
high rating
follows an
upgrade
of
Marist
bonds last
summer by Moody's from
Baal
to A3.
Fitch
and Moody's both declared the College's
outlook to be
"stable."
Fitch and Moody's
cited several reasons for the assigned credit
ratings
such as
Marist's
stable enrollment
trends, which
have
resulted in solid operating
margins and
healthy
balance sheet
liquidity;
a moderate
debt burden;
and proven
fund-
raising
capabilities. Conservative financial
management and
debt
issuance
policies,
and above average student selectivity, also
underpin the rating.
Marist
College has
named
Dr. Helen
Rothberg
and
Dr. Eitel Lauria
recipients
of its 2007-2008
Faculty Recognition
Award.
Rothberg
is a professor of strategic
management and
Lauria is
an assistant
professor of
information
systems. School
of
Management
Dean Elmore Alexander
acknowledged
Rothberg for
establishing "a
substantial stream of research in the area
of competitive intelligence" and praised her
ability
to
"inform
practitioners and students
while bringing
recognition
to the College."
Lauria was
recognized
for his publication
and presentation list that is "nothing short
of spectacular," according to School of
Computer Science and
Mathematics Dean
Roger Norton.
"Dr.
Lauria
has nearly 20 ac-
cepted papers in some of the top-ranked
journals and conferences in the world."
In
November the
president
of Argentina,
Cristina
Fernandez
de Kirchner, presented
Argentina's most prestigious IT award, the
Sadosky
Prize,
to
Lauria
in Buenos Aires for
his paper, "Statistical Machine Learning for
Network Intrusion
Detection:
A Data Quality
Perspective,"
co-authored with Giri Tayi of
the University at Albany.
Marist's Board ofTrustees voted unanimously
in November to bestow the title of professor
emeritus on
Gerard Cox,
associate profes-
sor of English, and
PeterO'Keefe,
associate
professor of history.

SPRlt\G
2008
3

















Cover
Story
........
L
h
.
I
aunc
1111g
The
A
Brian and Karen Mcsherry, parents of Katharine
'08
Left to right,
Michael Flynn
'96,
Candida Fink, MD, Michael LaCugna
'96,
and Rebecca
Bowes
'96
C
Trustee Brendan Burke
'68
and his wife, Betsy
D
President
Dennis Murray and Trustee Dan Hickey
'66
E
Left
to
right,
Karen Fusaro
'97, Christina
Adzima
'96,
and Scott Haywood '95
F
Lauren Moran
'07
and
herfather,
William Moran
G
Angela Harris and her
husban~I,
Trustee Stan
Harris, MD,
'68/'06M
H
Left to right, Dr. Barbara Carvalho
'79,
director
of the Mari
st
Poll; Rob Dyson, chair of the Board ofTrusteus; and Dr. Lee
Miringoff, director of the Marist College
Institute
for Pub,lic Opinion
4
MARIST
MAGAZINE
More
than 400 alumni,
friends,
parents,
f acuity,
staff, and trustees
of
Marist
gathered
at the
Metropolitan
Club
Nov.
9 in New
York
City
for
the public
kickoff
of The
Campaign
for Marist.




















A
college is all about students, so it was
only fitting
that the party
couldn't start
until
the students arrived.
More than
400
alumni, friends, parents,
faculty, staff,
and trustees
of Marist had
gathered at the Metropolitan Club Nov.
9
in
New
York
City for
the
public
kickoff
of The
Campaign
for Marist, the
College's
first compre-
hensive
capital campaign
in
61 years. The
Marist
Singers Chamber Choir was to open
the
festivities, bm their bus
was
delayed in
Friday
rush-hour
traffic.
Nobody at
the
party seemed
to
mind.
Guests had
plenty
of people to talk
to,
and a
lot
to
eat,
drink,
and look at-not only two
large
video screens offering a slide show of campus
and student
images but
also
the
magnificent,
historic
club itsel[, which was designed by
Stanford White and built in 1894.
The Marist Singers were worth waiting
for. The 36-member choir entered
the hall
performing "Bonse Aba," a
traditional
Zambian
song of celebration, accompanied
by
a student
playing a
djembe,
an African hand-drum. The
performance
was a natural segue
to
what Marist
Trustee and Campaign Chair Tim Brier '69,
stepping to
llhe
podium, wanted
to
say.
"I can't 1hink of a better, timelier example
of what Mar
ist
College
is
all about: harnessing
the talents, hard work, and service commitment
of young
me:n
and women to make
their
mark
on our world and change it for the better," he
said.
Brier, a co-founder of Priceline.com, then
opened the program by describing how
his
career
had
been directed by
the
experience
of spending his
junior
year in Europe as pan
of Marist's
inaugural
Study Abroad Program.
"Many of you have had your own special
encounter with a Marist person or situation that
was
transformational
to your life. For those of us
who have gone
to
Marist or have
been
inrnlved
in
some other way ... we really are who we are
because
of ciur
time
there."
Marist President Dennis
J.
Murray
then
told
the
crnwd
that
every great educational
institution
in America has had a
pivotal
point
in its history when those who
loved the
institution
made extraordinary commitments
to ensure
its:
future success. "Marist is now at
such a pivotal point as we
launch
our capital
campaign. The Campaign for Marist will be a
transformational
moment in
the
life of our College."
The
president
said the
campaign would improve every
facet of the
institution
and
target
the College's
endowment.
Endowment
is the
capital that
provides ongoing income for
an
institution.
Rob
Dyson, chair of
Marist's
Board
ofTrustees, then
announced the campaign goal
of $75
million. He
added that
$45
million had
already been
I
Director of Choral Activities
Sarah Williams
leads the
Chamber Choir
J
Left to right,
Allen Tobin
'93,
Denis Clifford
'93,
and Margot Tobin
'93
The Campaign
for Marist
will focus on:

constructing
and expanding
academic
facilities

building
the endowment

creating
faculty chairs
and enhancing
academic
support
to retain and recruit
first-rate
professors

attracting
highly
talented
and competitive
students by
ensuring
access
to Marist
through
endowed
scholarships
and
increased
financial
aid

enriching
student life through
support
for music,
art, theatre,
and athletics

creating
in each of Marist's
seven
schools
"centers
of excellence"
like the Marist
College
Institute
for Public
Opinion
and the Hudson
River
Valley
Institute

ensuring
that Marist
continues
to support
the less fortunate
in
society
through
Campus
Ministry
and community
service
programs
raised toward that
goal in gifts from trustees,
friends, and alumni during the initial, Silent
Phase of the campaign.
The success of the campaign, he said, is
"not just about large gifts from generous
donors.
although we are grateful for them.
It is about
a vote of confidence for
the
future of Manse
College,
and a chance
to
participate
in
securmg
the
College's
future.
Please consider your love
for Marist and the impact the College has had
on your own life and could potenttally
have
on
another student's life when you too are asked to
make a commitment to the Campaign.
"It's up to all of us to give back-and, in
turn, mo,·e Marist forward. Please be a part
of
it."
SPRING
2008
5



















The
Campaign
for Marist
Constructing
and Expanding
Academic
Facilities
The construction and expansion of new
academic facilities
that
has marked Marist's
transformation over the past 30 years will
continue
to
be
important to meeting the needs
of students.
Among projects The Campaign for Marist
will support is the Hancock Technology
Center,
named
for Marist's Board of Trustees vice chair,
Ellen
Hancock,
and her husband.Jason, who
provided
the leadership
gift. The center will be
not
only a hub for information technology but
also a facility where students from all academic
disciplines
can learn and experience how
technology
plays
a role in their particular field
of study. The new facility will contain smart
classrooms.
a 250-seat presentation center,
seminar rooms. research space, compULer
labs,
and a
data
center.
l
t
wi
II
consolidate Marist's
technology research,
teaching, and training
activities while strengthening the College's
expertise
in
the areas of large-scale
data centers,
distributed networking, cyber-security, virtual
servers, open source software,
delivery
of rich
media content, and e-learning environments.
The campaign will also enhance other
academic facilities on campus and will
include
construction of an
lnvestmem Institute
and a
trading room for the School of Management.
K
Left
to right,
Dr.
Jim Johnson, executive direc-
tor,
Hudson
River Valley Institute;
HRVI
Advisory
Board members Barnabas
McHenry
and
Todd
Brinckerhoff, also a Marist
trustee;
and Dr. Thom
Wermuth '84, vice
president
for academic affairs
L
Marilyn
Murray, Jason Murray
'83,
and President
Dennis Murray
M
Trustees Ross Mauri
'80
and Ellen
Hancock
N
Trustees Tom Ward '69 and Chris McCann
'83
0
Trustee
Pat
Lavelle
'73 and Jim Streibel, father
of Kelly Ann '09
P
Trustee Pat Connolly Pantello '76
and
her
husband,
Ron
6
MARIST
MAGAZINE
Creatin~1
Faculty
Chairs
and Enhancing
Academiic
Support
to Retain
and
Recruit
!First-Rate
Professors
A campaign priority will be
funding
faculty
chairs and efforts to
retain
and recruit
talented
professors.
Faculty chairs help distinguish the College
as a
leader
in
the
field
in
which the chair is
established. They can bring special prestige
to the
College's academic image.
They
offer
Marist an opportunity to add
to
its faculty an
eminent a1uthority
in the
designated field that
the
institution otherwise could not afford.
Marist's first endowed chair was the Dr.
Richard
Foy Chair
in
Computer Science,
named
in
honor of Dr.
Richard
Foy
'50,
president emeritus of the College.
The
chair
was co-founded in 1979 by Marist
Trustee
Arthur Brook and the McCann Foundation,
under the leadership
of
John
J.
Gartland
Jr.
who was
president
of
the
McCann Foundation
and a Ma1rist
trustee.
The Foy Chair
recognizes
a special interest
and expertise of its
namesake. It
was
largely
through
Richard Foy's efforts
that
all of
the
College's
key
administrative offices adapted
their functions
to
computer use
beginning
as
early as 1967. Throughout the 21 years
he
served
as Marist's
president,
he chose to teach at least
one
undergraduate
course
in
mathematics or
computer science during each semester.
Attracting
Talented
Students
by Ensuring
Access
to Marist
Through
Endowed
Scholarships
and Increased
Financial
Aid
The College's
leadership has
always strived
to keep a Marist education high
quality
and
accessible. Now
more than
ever, the support of
others
is
needed
to
make this possible.
As a
relatively
young
institution
with a
modest endowment,
Marist
is very
tuition-
reliant. Under
the
leadership of
President
Dennis]. Murray,
astute fiscal
management
has
provided Marist with a strong
financial base
and continuous balanced budgets. Meeting
enrollment goals, though,
remains
paramount,
and
financial
assistance is especially important
for
the
average
Marist
family.
There
is no
greater need at Marist
than
helping students finance
their
education.
Increasing
tuition costs coupled with decreasing
state and federal aid for
private
colleges
have
caused Marist to dramatically
increase
its
institutional aid budget since
1990.
More
than ever, endowment
is
needed
to provide
a
permanent base from
which scholarship funds
can be
drawn
reliably.
Scholarships offer a
range
of
naming
opportunities.
The
nearly 100 scholarships
offered at
Marist
include ones
that
remember
a
loved
one such
as
a spouse or child;
honor
a
parent;
dedicate
funds
to
promising
students
in a specific discipline; encourage
leadership
development and community service;
pay
tribute
to
faculty or staff members;
honor
trustees;
support students
in
certain geographic
areas; and support students attending high
schools administered by Marist Brothers or
where
the Brothers
have a
presence.
Many Marist scholarships
are
designated
for
upperclass
students. Scholarships designated
for incoming freshmen can
help make Marist
an affordable choice.



















Enriching
Student
Life Through
Support
for Music,
Art, Theatre,
and Athletics
The campaign will enhance
the
collegiate
experience outside the classroom by supporting
the
arts and athletics.
The campaign
has
already
made a
significant
impact on athletics at Marist with the
construction and
dedication
of
Tenney
Stadium at
Leonidoff
Field (please see page 9).
Construction of the stadium started in October
2006 and was completed in October of 2007.
The
architectural firm of Skidmore, Owings &
Merrill LLP designed and oversaw the
project,
which enhanced and developed
two
key areas of
the facility-the playing surface and spectator
seating. The stadium is now
used
by five varsity
programs-football,
men's soccer, women's
soccer, men's
lacrosse,
and women's
lacrosse-as
well as
by
intramural and club
teams.
The facility
also has improved the spectator experience for
all students and
parents.
The capital campaign will also fund
renovation
of the James
J.
McCann Center. Plans
call
for refurbishment
of seating and locker
rooms that
have
remained
unchanged since
they
were built 25 years ago. At that
time,
Marist
athletes numbered
125
and were mainly
men.
The upgrades would serve
the
now 600 male
and
female
Marist athletes. Improvements
to
gym/track seating will
provide
more
attractive
and comfortable accommodations, potentially
increasing revenue from
athletic and cultural
events.
Campaign support for arts programs would
include
appropriate rehearsal space for Marist's
Music
Department,
sorely needed by the
College's much-lauded
bands
and choirs.
Creating
·"Centers
of Excellence"
in Each
o1r
Marist's
Seven
Schools
A successful campaign will also mean the
development
of more
"centers
for excellence"
at
Marist-concentrations
of expertise,
resources,
and services
that not
only
foster teaching
and
learning,
but also share the
results
of their work
to
benefit
external communities.
One such existing center
is the
Marist
College
Institute
for Public Opinion,
now in
its 30th
year.
MIPO
becomes most visible
in
a
presidentia I election
year as sLUdent
pollsters
take
the pulse of both
the region
and the nation
and
results
are circulated to
the media. But
students al:so conduct public opinion polls on
matters
besides
politics,
resulting in data
that
decision-makers can use to shape policy.
The
Hu,dson
River
Valley
Institute is
another
Marist-based center
that
does valuable work
for the community.
HRVI,
which celebrates
its sixth anniversary in June, is
dedicated
to
studying and promoting
the Hudson River
Valley and
1to
providing educational resources
for heritage
tourists,
scholars, elementary
school
educators, environmental organizations,
the
business
community, and
the
general public.
Its
many
projects
include the publication of the
academic
journal
Hudson
River
Valley
Review
and
the
management
of a dynamic
digital library
and regional portal.
II
Ensuring
that Marist
Continues
to Support
the Less
Fortunate
Through
Campus
Ministry
and
Community
Service
Programs
Marist
is known
for
its tradition
of service,
a legacy of
the
founding Marist Brothers.
This
tradition
continued during the fall 2007
semester as the campus
responded
to a variety
of Campus Ministry
programs.
In
November,
Mari st contributed more than
$6,500 through annual
Hunger
Month activities.
The
money
was donated
to
organizations
that
help
in
the
fight
against hunger.
In
addition,
students
filled
and distributed 50 boxes of food
to
families in Dutchess County as part of their
annual Thanksgiving food drive.
In
December,
faculty,
staff, and swdents
donated
more than
700 presents as part of the annual Giving Tree
project,
bringing a
merrier
Christmas to 31
families, including 83 children,
in
the City of
Poughkeepsie.
Service
is
also a major part of activities of
other
organizations
on campus. For example,
in
October the Student Government Association
sponsored a walkathon
for
Special Olympics
Miles for Medals,
raising $17,000.
Approximately
450 people participated
in the
event,
held
in
the
McCann Center.
S
upport for
The Campaign
for
Marist will allow Marist to continue fulfilling its mission,
sayi;
Robert
L.
West, vice
president
for college advancement.
"Everyone
who's been
associat,ed with Marist takes pride in
the
College's transformation over the
past
30 years.
They
ali;o recognize
the
importance of increasing Marist's endowment for the future.
The
Campaign for Marist is a new
and
different undertaking because it centers on
people-
faculty and students-as much, if not more than, on buildings."
Here's
IHow
You
Can
Help:
• Adv•~cate
for Marist
Spread
the word
about
Marist.
Encourage
classmates
and
othe!r
friends
to support
The
Campaign
for Marist.
• Make a Gift
Start
with an annual
gift to the Marist
Fund
and
then, if possible,
make
an additional
gift to help
the capital
campaign.
• Bring
Your
Friends
Along
Ask
others
to join you
in giving.
• Volu1nteer
for Mari
st
Join
the on
line Marist
Alumni
Career
Network.
Help
Marist's
Center
for Career
Services
arrange
an internship
for a Marist
student
in ycJ1ur
workplace.
Help
our Alumni
Relations
office
plan
your
class
reunion.
Assii;t
with plans
for Homecoming
Weekend
Oct.
4-S,
2008.
Help
organize
alumni
events
in your
area. Host
a Marist
event
at your
home,
workplace,
or
club
.. Tell us
about
classmates
interested
in volunteering
for Marist.
For more information
or to volunteer, contact Robert
L.
West, Vice President for College
Advancement, at (845) 575-3412 or robert.west@marist.edu.
SPRING
2008
7















The
Campaign
for Marist
What
is an Endowment?
C
ollege and university endowment funds
are
important
sources of revenue.
Endowments are very complex.
They
usually
consist of many-sometimes thousands-
of different
funds.
Most of these
funds
are
subject
to
restrictions
that donors
impose and
that
institutions
are legally
required to
uphold.
Endowment funds
are managed to
provide
a
permanent source of
income to
support
the
teaching,
research,
and public ser\'ice
missions of institutions.
Charitable donations are the primary
source of
funds
for endowments.
Donors
typically restrict
their gifts to specific
purposes such as establishing student
scholarships, creating professorships,
instituting new programs,
or constructing
new facilities. Some donors provide
unrestricted gifts
that
enable
institutions
to
support general operations or special
initiatives.
Endowments
typically
grow
over
time
and
through
a combination of
donations
and investment
returns.
Colleges and uni,·ersities spend
endowment
income
on a wide variety
of purposes. At institutions with large
endowments, endowment spending
contributes significant resources
toward
their operating budgets; in some cases, it
is the
largest
source of revenue for
the institution.
Thus
endowment spending helps to
keep
tuition below
the level
that would be necessary
if tuition
alone
paid
the true cost of educating
a student.
A typical college or university endowment
includes many individual
funds
that
are
restricted
(most often by
donors, but
also
by
the
institution)
to
student financial aid.
Faculty chairs or professorships
are another leading
purpose for
which
individual
endowment
funds
are dedicated. As with
endowment funds for student
scholarships, investment income
earned by faculty endowment
funds is
used annually
to fund
the professorships. Endowed
professorships
are often awarded
to leading scientists and scholars
who are contributing significantly
to teaching and research in their
respective disciplines.
Some alumni and
donors
make charitable endowment
gifts
for
the
restricted
purpose
of supporting intercollegiate
athletics.
Colleges
and
uni\'ersities
use
investment
income from
such
gifts to fund athletic scholarships, facilities,
salaries, and equipment.
-Excerpted
and reprinted
with permission
from
the Council for Advancement and Support of
Education
8
MARIST
MAGAZINE
Q
Leftt1) right, Jim Joyce
'74
and
Trustees
Mary
Joyce
'74 and Mark Dennis
R
Left to right, Joe Finnerty
'83,
Sha ileen Kopec, senior development officer for planned giving and endowment support, Greg
Welsh
':76,
President Dennis Murray, and
Brian
Morris
'76
S
Left to right, Vice President for College
Advancement Bob West,
Trustee Tim Brier
'69,
and Ian Green
'88
T
Caroline Kretz
'84 (second
from
left) and her
husband,
Charles Liu
(far
left), with
Trustee
Jim Barnes '84 and his wife, Donna






















Tenney
Stadium
at Leonidoff
Field
Is Dedicated
A
new chapter
in
Marist athletics began
on Oct. 6, 2007, with
the
dedication
of Tenney Stadium at
Leonidoff
Field. The
event, which LOok
place during
Homecoming
&
Reunion
Weekend, drew 4,621 spectators
including many alumni and local government
officials.
During the opening festi\'ities, Marist
Trustee
Tim
Tenney, CEO of Pepsi Cola of the
Hudson Valley,
was honored for his
leadership
gift. Four other Marist benefactors were also
honored for
their leadership
commitments:
Matthew Daly '91; Susan and
Jack
Eberth
'69; Tom Taylor '66; and CRM Holdings, Ltd.,
represented
by Dan Hickey
Jr. ln
addition, a
$50,000 grant for
the
stadium was received
from
the
j.
M. McDonald Foundation. Marist
Trustee
Pat
Lavelle '73, president and CEO of
Audiornx Corp., and Audio\·ox
donated several
nat-screen TVs for the stadium's press
box
as
well as
for
other campus
locations.
The stadium construction project consisted
of
remo\'ing the former
grandstand and press
booth
along
the
west side of
the field
and
building
a
new
precast grandstand structure
along with a modern press booth,
media
booths,
and VIP suite:s along
the
east side. An athletic
training
room,
team
and officials'
dressing
rooms,
restmoms,
concessions, and storage
space were incorporated in
the
area
located
under the spe:ctalOr
seating. The
new
seating
includes
1,7H
chair-backs in
the
grandstand,
with addition.al seating located on
the
West
Berm, giving Tenney Stadium
a
capacity of
5,000.

U
President
Dennis
Murray
(far
left) and Director
of Athletics
Tim
Murray (far right) with
Trustee
Tim Tenney
(second
from
right) and his family
V
Matthew Daly
'91
and his son, Jack, who repre-
sent, along with
Matt's father,
three generations of the Daly famiily involved with
Mari
st-the
Hon.
T. F.
Gilroy Daly served on Marist's Board ofTrustees from
1Sl94
to
1996
W
Jack Eberth
'69
and
his
wife, Susan
X
Tom Taylor
'66
(left) and
Tim
Murray
Y
Dan
lfiickey
Jr. (left), representing
CRM
Holdings,
Ltd., and
Tim
Murray
I
























>
1/
Students
From
the Wheelhouse
to1
the White
1
House
An unforgettable
internship
at the White ~louse
has shaped
future plans for political
science
major
Vinny
O'Neill
'09.
V
inny
O'Neill Jr. was
measuring
a
lobster's
carapace on the 42-foot
Rebecca
E.B.
in
the middle of Long Island Sound when
the
White House called.
He had his hands
full
at
that
moment with
his summer
job
working for
the
New York State
Department of Environmental Conservation on
its
western Long Island Sound
lobster
survey.
So he wrote the caller's number down on a
cardboard
bait
box and
returned
the call
later.
IL
was
then
he
learned
that the White House
wanted to interview
him
for the internship he
had
applied for. The
interview
wok place
that
night by
phone.
The next time
the White House called,
the
Marist junior was
installing
a bilge pump on a
boat in the DEC
equipment yard. When it came
to boats, he
had
been
the
go-to guy all summer;
he
grew
up
around
the marine
business his
father owned in Bohemia, N.Y.
It didn't take him
long to
accept
the
offer
of an
internship in the
White House Office of
Presidential Correspondence. "For a political
science major,
it
was the pinnacle of success,
the
be-all and end-all," says O'Neill.
The
internship,
which he heard about
through
American University's WashingLOn
Semester program, proved
to be
a full-time
commitment.
From September
to mid-December
2007,
O'Neill
lived
on American
University's
campus
in
Washingwn, D.C.-one of the few
students who left his dorm each
day
wearing a
suit-and worked at
the
White
House
Monday
through
Friday from 8 a.m. until 7
p.m.
and
sometimes
on Saturdays. Known as
"Intern
Vinny,"
he
was
the
only
intern
assigned to the
presidential
writers;
during
his
time
there
he
took
pant in
the composition of proclamations,
executiv,e
orders, and correspondence to heads
of state :and often assisted staff members by
proofreading
their work before a final edit.
As a
Republican,
he was
in
his element.
"Every
ti
me
1 walked out [of the West Wingl,
I was awed."
He met President George W. Bush several
times and found him LO
be a very nice man who
would ask
how
he was doing and
thank
him
for
his
hard work.
He
also met former Kansas
senator Bob Dole, who co-chairs the President's
Commission on Care for America's Returning
Wounded Warriors; Vice President Richard
Cheney; Secretary of Homeland Security
Michael Chenoff; and White House Chief of
Staff
Joshua
Bolten. He watched Marine One
arrive with
the
president on board.
He
and eight
other interns sat in
the
Presidential Box during
a concert by
the
National Symphony at
the
Kennedy-
Center, tickets that arrived
in
a special
envelope
bearing
the
presidential seal
Through the internship, he made contacts,
earned ireferences, and forged
many
strong
friendships.
"We
spent so many hours together.
Even
though
it's the White House, it's still an
office. We have fun just like [employees
in) any
other building."
Comiing
back
to
college
after the internship
was
difficult,
he says.
"I
miss it every day.
lt's
hard to go from doing
to
practicing.
I
was
immersed in the world of politics."
"Intern
Vinny" at the White House
Still
in
Washington mode,
he
checks the
online news networks
10
times a
day. He
returned
LO
D.C.
over the Christmas
break
to
visit his
friends.
They wok him
to
watch
Marine One
land
on the South Lawn, where
the president greeted
him
and paused for a
photo.
A former volunteer
for the Rudy
Giuliani
campaign, O'Neill
hopes to
land a
position
with
the
John McCain campaign
this
summer in
Washington, D.C.
If
the
Republican
candidate
wins, he will try for a
job
in
the
White
House
after college graduation.
If
not, he will go to
law school.
His White House internship showed
him
how
the real
world works, he says.
"I
can
honestly say it was
the
best experience of my
life."




























Endowed
Scholarships
An Enduring
Gift
A dream
of the Foy
Brothers
four decades
ago, the Peter
and Virginia
Foy
Scholarship
endowment
has grown
from
a
gift of $5,195
to
nearly
$112,000
today
and has helped more
than
30
students
complete
their
college education.
~e
Foy
Brothers-Richard
and
Peter
I
:.:_were
born three
years apart in the 1920s
in
a house on
237th
Street
in
the Wakefield
section of
the
Bronx. Their
mother,
the former
Virginia McKeon,
was a native New Yorker
with
family roots in
Ireland. Their
father,
Peter,
emigrated from
Ireland
and
fought
with the
U.S. Army
in
France
in
World War
I.
His
sons
recall his
personal diary describing
how horses
pulled ammunition wagons on the battlefield
in 1918.
Peter
Sr.'s early ambition was to be a jockey,
but he
grew to
be
six-foot-two.
(Son
Peter
topped
him
at six-foot-six;
Richard
stopped at six-foot-
one.)
To
support
his
family-and that term came
to
include
many
relatives
from Ireland-the
senior Foy
became
an enterprising businessman
who established 14
neighborhood
grocery
stores,
mostly in Yonkers
and the vicinity.
While the introduction
of supermarkets
in 1938
brought an end to
Royal
Food Stores,
the
Foy
parents'
example of
hard
work, commitment
to
family,
and
faith in
God created enduring
values for their sons.
Peter
served in the
Marines
during World
War
11
and after
his
discharge enrolled at MIT
to
study electrical engineering on
the
GI bill.
His
career path took
him
into the emerging
field of computers, and he
became
a lifelong
Californian.
Richard
entered the Marist Brothers
graduated from Marist College, and earned
~
PhD in
mathematics
from
the
Courant Institute
at New
York
University.
Appointed president of
Marist College at 28, he was regarded
then
as
the youngest
college president in
the
country.
ln
time,
Richard
left the
Marist order but
remained
as Marist's leader
for
21 years.
Among
President Foy's many challenges
was
to create a sound
financial
base for his young
institution. Older colleges had well-established
endowments, and it was clear
that
some effort
should
be
made to start such a permanent
fund
for
Marist.
The
Foy
brothers
teamed up
-Richard researching funds
at other schools
and
determining
a good
model
for
the
College,
Peter
making
the
first contribution.
"I
beat him
BY
SHAILEEN
KOPEC
During
the
pe?riod
when Richard
Foy
'SO (left)
was president of Marist, his brother, Peter, established
the College's first endowed scholarship to honor their parents, Peter and Virginia Foy.
to
it.
I
take full
credit," says
Peter laughingly,
adding, "Of course, he was
a
Brother."
In 1964,
Peter
and his wife, Eileen, gave
$5,195
to i:nitiate
the Peter and Virginia
Foy Scholarship, named
in honor
of
Peter's
and
Richard's late parents.
The criterion for
Marist's first endowed scholarship, which has
endured for 44 years, was to
help
students
with significant financial
need
achieve a Marist
education. Over
the
years,
more
than 30 Foy
Scholars have been able to do just
that.
The
$5,195 given so many years ago,
to
help
a young college and to
honor beloved
parents,
has grown
through prudent investment
into
a fund valued today at $lll,639.09. The
endowment currently enables Marist
to
annually
award a $5,500 scholarship, as well as to
continue
building
the
fund
for
the
future.
"Our
fat her received the equivalent of
a sixth grade education in
Ireland,
and our
mother
graduated from Newtown
High
in
Queens,"
Richard
recalls. "Both of
them
were
caring and
imtelligent,
but
that
was
all the
opportunity available
to them.
Today college
is
the expectation. Our
parents
stressed the
importance
of
higher
education
to
us, and
we
both pursued it.
The Peter and Virginia
Foy Scholar:;hip
is
designed
to
ensure
that
bright young people
like
our
parents
are able
to
complete
their
college education-and
at Marist."

Establishing a Scholarship
at Marist College
D
uring
The
Campaign
for Marist, one
of
the College's highest priorities is
to
increase
scholarship endowment.
The College
has
established a
minimum
gift
level
of
$25,000 for a donor
to
found a
named
endowed scholarship. A donor
may
establish
a scholarship
to
support students in a specific
major or
to help
students where
the
need is
greatest. The scholarship may
be
named for
the donor,
a loved one, or as a memorial.
An individual scholarship
fund
becomes
pan of
Marist's
overall
endowment
for purposes
of
financial management, but
each fund is
individually tracked with respect
to
principal
and annual award. A scholarship's annual
award is based on 5 percent of
the
current
principal
's
value for
the
individual fund and
is
derived
from
annual
interest.
The principal is
never invaded, with
interest
beyond 5
percent
reinvested.
Endowment
investment
is
regularly
reviewed
by
Marist trustees.
For further
information
about establishing
an endowed scholarship at Marist
now
or
through your estate, contact Shaileen
Kopec,
senior development
officer for planned giving
and endowment support, at 845-575-3468
(private
line)
or shaileen.kopec@marist.edu.
SPRING
2008
11





















Athletics
Red
Fox
Roundup
The women's
basketball
team earns its:
third consecutive
trip to the NCAA
Tournament,
men's
and women's
swimming
and diving pulll
off upsets to win the Metro
Atlantic
Athletic
Conference
Championships,
and women's
soccer
arid football secure regular-season
MAAC
titles.
A
nother year, another Metro Atlantic
ffAthletic
Conference Tournament gone
by
with
the
Marist women's basketball team
winning
the
championship. Sounds like just
another ordinary year, right?
Well, this year has been anything but
ordinary for
the
Red Foxes, who continue
to
pile
up
victories at a record pace while gaining
more attention at the national
level.
On March 9, Marist earned its third
consecutive trip
to
the NCAA Tournament
and fourth
in the
past five years with an 83-63
triumph over
Iona in
the MAAC
Championship
game.
In
Baton Rouge, La., Marist
defeated
DePaul 76-57 March 22
in
the first NCAA
round before falling to LSU 68-49 March 24
in
the
second round, ending the Red Foxes'
22-game
winning streak,
the longest
in the
country. Marist finished
the
season with a
program-best
record of 32-3.
The excellence achieved by
the team
was
displayed in the numerous honors earned by
the
team's
players and coaches. Brian Giorgis
was
named
MAAC Coach of the Year for
the
fourth time
in
five years. Rachele Fitz
'10
earned MAAC Player of the Year honors just
a year after winning MAAC Rookie of the
Year.
Erica
Allenspach
'11
followed in Fitz's
footsteps by being named MAAC
Rookie of the
Year,
and
Lynzeejohnson
'lO
was recognized
as the conference's top performer coming off
the bench as she was
lauded
as Sixth Player
of
the
Year. Sarah Smrdel '08 was named
MAAC Tournament Most Valuable Player,
while Fitz and Nikki Flores
'08
earned MAAC
All-Tournament Team honors.
The outstanding team and
individual
achievements were not lost on
media
and
coaches alike across the country. For
the
first
time
in program history,
the Red
Foxes were
ranked
in
the Associated
Press
poll and
the
ESPN/USA Today Coaches' poll during the
season. Entering the NCAA
Tournament, Marist
was ranked 22nd
in
both.
On March 6, Marist was named the MAAC
winner of
the
"Pack
the
House" challenge, an
NCAA
initiative
designed
to
increase auendance
at women's
basketball
games. In an effort
spearheaded by Assistant Athletics Director
Travis Tellitocci,
Marist sold out its Jan. 25 game
against Siena as 3,200 fans filled the McCann
Center and were
treated
to a 78-48 victory
for
the
Red
Foxes.
BY MIKE FERRARO
'01
12
M A R I
S
T M A G A Z
l
N E
The storylines in the 2007-08 school year
through
early March have been plentiful.
Men':s Basketball
The men's basketball team reached the MAAC
Tournament semifinals for
the
third consecmive
year and
put
together a record of 18-14. The Red
Foxes have had
the
best record in conference
play
(3,7-17)
of any team
in the
MAAC
over
the
past three
seasons.
While the Red Foxes' starting
lineup
generally consisted of four seniors, newcomers
in
the
backcourt
offered
plenty
of hope for the
future. Freshman
guard Jay Ga\'in led the team
in
sco:ring at 12.3
points
per game and was
named MAAC
Co-Rookie
of the Year,
becoming
the first Red Fox to earn MAAC Rookie of
the Ye:ar
honors. Red-shin sophomore David
Devezi
n
stepped
into
the lineup at point guard
and started all but one game, also finishing
third on the team
in
scoring at
just
under 10
points
per
game.
Men',s and Women's
Swim1ming and Diving
After a
regular
season
in
which the men's
team
lost a pair of conference
meets
and the women
lost one as well,
neither
squad was tabbed as a
favorit,e
for February's MAAC
Championships.
But under the
leadership
of Head Men's and
Women's Coach Larry Vanwagner and Head
Diving Coach Melanie Bolstad, both the
Soccer player Maria Baez
'10
men's and women's teams pulled off upsets
and emerged as MAAC champions. The two
championships now give
the
Red Foxes' men's
and women's
programs a total of22 since joining
the
MAAC for the 1995-96 season.
Women's Soccer
Under the direction of third-year Head Coach
Elizabeth Roper,
the
Red Foxes
took
a
leap
forward to become one of the MAAC's elite.
Marist won
the
conference's regular-season
championship and advanced
to
the
MAAC
Tournament
final. The Red Foxes won a
program-record
11 games while also setting
single-season
records
for longest
unbeaten
streak (six games), goals scored (40), fewest
goals allowed (20), and shutouts (seven).
The program also earned a regional ranking
from
Soccer Buzz Magazine
for the first
time
in program history as
the
Red Foxes were
rated 14th in the Northeast in
the
final poll.
Roper was named MAAC Coach of
the
Year,
and sophomore Maria Baez was named First
Team
AII-MAAC.
Football
Marist celebrated the opening of Tenney
Stadium at LeonidoffField
on Oct. 6 as
the
Red
Foxes
drew 4,621
fans on a sun-splashed day
for
their
game against Duquesne. After a rough
Cross
country/track
runner Girma Segni
'09

















Marist earned its
third
consecutive trip
to
the NCAA
Tournament
with an 83-63 triumph over Iona
in
the MAAC Championship game.
start, the
team
rebounded
in
the second half of
the
season to claim
its
second straight share of
a MAAC Football League championship. On
Senior Day, Marist earned a thrilling 37-31
triple overtime victory and
followed it
up
with a 17-14 win at
Iona
in the season finale
to
clinch a share of
the
MAAC crown. A total
of 14
players
earned All-MAAC
honors,
and
Head Coach
Jim
Parady
was named MAAC
Coach of
the
Year.
Men's and Women's Cross Country
The men's team
had a strong second-place
finish at
the MAAC
Championships, trailing
only
Iona,
which just so
happens
to
be ranked
second
in
the country. Girma Segni
'09,
David
Raucci
'09,
and Mike
Rolek
'08
were named
AII-MAAC
after placing in the top 15 at the
MAAC Championships. Segni and
Raucci
went on to earn All-East
honors
following
their
performances
at the
IC4A
Championships. The
women's team
placed
fourth behind a fifth-
place overall
finish from
Brittany Burns
'10,
who was named All-MA
AC for the second year
in
a row.
The
teams combined for 20 MAAC
All-Academic:
selections, with
the
men having
a conference-high 11 selections.
Men's and Women's Indoor Track
The Red Fox:es
had
a strong indoor season
athleticallya,nd academically. Caitlin Garrity
'08
won the 5
Kat
the
MAAC
Championships,
and
Girma
Segni
broke
a school
record
in the
5,000 meter:s at the
IC4A
Championships.
Marist
led
the conference with 31 All-
Academicselections, including
18comingon
the women's side. Mike
Rolek
becomes the
first student-athlete in school
history to
earn
an NCAA po:stgraduate scholarship, making
him
just
one· of 174 studem-athletes across
the country
rto
earn
the honor.
Men's Soc•~er
Under the
direction
of first-year Head Coach
Matt Viggiano
'99,
the
Red Foxes
laid
the
foundation for a promising future. Marist
finished sixth in
the
MAAC
at 6-8-4 overall and
3-3-3
in
the co,nference.
The Red Foxes improved
from start
to
finish
in
a season in which six
freshmen
were often
in the
starting
lineup.
Three first-year players-Nico Mossa, Steven
Morales, and Joe
Touloumis-were
named
to
the
MAAC
All-Rookie
Team, while Shareif Ali
'08, Marcelo
del Rio
'09, and Chris
Nacca
'09
were MAAC
All-Academic
selections.
Volleyball
The Red Foxes finished the 2007 season
with records of 10-20 overall and 6-12 in the
conference. Sophomore Alexandra Schultze
was
named
Second Team All-MAAC
following
a season in which she set the program'ssingle-
season
record
for kills with 488. Schultze
notched a career-high 27 kills
in
Marist's
triumph
over Manhattan
on Sept. 15. In addition
to
her
achievements
on the court,
Schultze
was
also
lauded
for her work in the classroom, as
she was one
of
five Red Foxes named to the
MAAC
All-Academic
Team. She was joined b}'
Christy
Lukes
'08,
Kelsey
Schaefer
'09,Jordan
Rowe
'09,
and Dawn
Jan
'10.

Mike Ferraro
'01
is
interim
sports
informa!lon
director
at Marist.
He
was
previously
a
sports
writer
and
copy editor
for
the Poughkeepsie
Journal.
S P
R I
N G
2
0 0 8
13




















Excelling
w
1
ith Instruments
Music
and science have been
passions
since childhood
for each
of the young Gupta
brothers.
Now Robert,
after graduating
from Marist
at age 17 and
earning a master's
in music
at
Yale, is the youngest violinist in
the Los
Angeles
Philharmonic.
Akshar
Patrick
will graduate
this May
at 17 and is headed for
a master's
in public
health and
then medical
school.
M
arist senior Akshar
Patrick
Gupta
may
be
his brother
Robert
'05's
biggest
fan-and
earliest critic. While
Roben
prac-
ticed his violin at an age when most
kids
were
just learning to tie their shoes, Akshar, who
is
three
years
his
junior, often sat contentedly,
eating
Cheerios. lfhis brother
made a mistake,
Akshar would look
up from
his cereal and say,
"Wrong
note!"
When
he
was old enough
to play
himselr,
Akshar took
up
the violin, and
then the
piano,
primarily so the two could play duets.
"Growing
up
we played tons of
recitals
wgether," says
Robert,
who
last June
became the youngest
member of
the
Los Angeles Philharmonic at age
19.
"He's
a
phenomenally
gifted musician.
He's
completely embraced
the
amount or hard work
and drive it
takes
to go into the sciences."
"!
like
the fact that a violin and
piano
can
collaborate," says Akshar, who will graduate
from Marist this
spring at age
17
with a
major
in biology
and
minors
in chemistry and music.
And while
his
sights are set on
medical
school-
"!
hope to
practice in something that
involves
pediatrics
because I've always wanted
to
work
with children,"
he
says-Akshar
hopes
the
opportunity to
return
to the stage with his
brother
will
present itself
soon.
"I
like
to
think
of
my music
as an enhancement
in
my life,"
he
adds.
"I
don't
like
to use the word
hobby."
As Chandana Gupta
tells
the story,
by
the
time
Robert
started nursery school
in
Montgomery, N.Y.,
"he
pretty much knew the
colors and he
knew his
alphabet.
He
couldn't
tell
us he was
bored, but the
only thing we could
let him do independently was to watch TV."
While he sat
passively through
Mister
Rogers'
Neighborhood
and its ilk on
PBS,
whenever a
musical
program
came on,
"you
would see
BY DICK ANDERSON
14
M A R
I
$
T
M A
G
A Z
I
N E
"My
inspiration
is Zubin Mehta because he embraces
music
with
his
whole
heart,"
says Robert
Gupta 'OS, who performed as a soloist with Mehta at age 12 in
Tel
Aviv.
























his hands going all over the place,"
she says.
"We
couldn't
buy
a $50,000
piano,
but we
got
him a small keyboard." Not long after, Robert
switched to violin,
"and
he
took
off."
"It
became
very serious,
something
that
stemmed from a very deep
love
that
I
had for
playing
this
music," says
Robert,
who
enrolled
in the
Juilliard
School's
Pre-College
Division
at age 6 and
performed his
first
solo
two
years
later.
His music took
him
across
the
United
States and Europe, as well as to Israel,
India,
and
Japan.
While he was
flourishing musically,
he
found
little
support
in
his home school
district.
After six years of traditional school and skipping
a grade as a 12-year-old,
Robert did well enough
on
his SATs
to win a scholarship to Mount Saint
Mary College
in
Newburgh,
NY
There he
dove
into his
other passion-biology-and
by his
third summer was invited
to
do spinal cord
research at
Hunter
College
in
Manhattan.
During his sophomore and
junior
years,
he
also began studies at the Manhattan
Conservatory of Music.
"My
parents were
commuting
me
back and forth every other
day,"
says
Robert.
(By her own estimation, Chandana
was
driving
60,000
to
70,000 miles each year
taxiing
her children
to
their schools.)
"It
became
insanely
difficult
for them."
Then Akshar, who had been home-schooled
!
while also studying piano and composition at
-
Juilliard, transferred from Mount Saint Mary
~
to
Marist.
"One of
the things
that
drew
me to
i
,J
Marist
was that
I
could
be
a music minor," says ~.._ __
_
t
Akshar, who completed that course of study with
"Akshar
is very strong in
his
opinion when he wants something to be
done,"
says his mother,
a
4.0 GPA.
He
is now finishing his studies while
Chandana.
"HE!
knows what
he
wants."
waiting to hear
back
from graduate schools
(he
plans to pursue his
master's in public
health
en
route to a career in health
management).
According to
his mother,
it took a little
coaxing to convince Robert, who was 15 credits
away
from
graduating from Mount St. Mary's,
to transfer
to Marist.
But
the
College's
strengths
in
the sciences, coupled with its library and
scenic
locale
along the Hudson River, went a
long
way toward
persuading him.
"Robert
is
a
book
addict," Chandana notes.
"If
you give
him a lot of
books, he
will vacuum the house
for me."
Temporarily, at least, music t0ok an
intermission during
Robert's year at Marist.
He
studied
the
neurotoxicity of
platinum
group
metals with a group that
presented
its
research
at a conference
in
Washington,
D.C.,
and
researched
Parkinson's disease at a
laboratory
at Harvard
run
by
famed neuroscientist Dennis
Selkoe.
"I
wanted
to
have that breadwinning
degree-the one where it would have facilitated
my
interests to
become a doctor or
researcher,"
says Robert, who
has
long been fascinated
with
the
healing capacity of music.
"But
I
loved
playing
so much
because
it
came from
something
deeper inside.
It
was something
I
needed to do."
After finishing
his
degree,
Robert
strongly
considered
going straight to
medical
school,
but
instead enrolled in a master's of
music
program
at
Yale,
where he completed his second degree
last spring. And
it
was there that his
journey
to
the
LA
Philharmonic began
last
May.
"I
didn't
think I had a chance of winning
an audition," admits Robert, who was invited to
Los
Angeles to
try
out for one of two openings
at violin. He went
through
two
rounds
of
blind auditions, where
the
committee made
its
decisions
based
solely on the music, before
being called
back
for a third, decisive day.
"I
don't
like
eating very heavily before an
audition or a
p,erformance,"
Robert says, so
the
final
day
of auditions he ate an omelet in the
morning
and
at
cup of yogurt in the afternoon
before going on at 5:30 p.m.-90
minutes
past
his
expected call time. A second, unscreened
round
followed around 7:45, when the then-
starving
teenager
saw the audition committee
and conductor for the first time. "I was so
exhausted
I
oouldn't even feel
nervous,"
he
recalls.
"I
just wanted to go om and play."
(Afterward,
an assistant slipped him several
small
plates
of food
that
had been prepared
for the
judges.)
His
last
c.illback came at 10:30 p.m. An
hour
later,
they announced
the two
winners:
Robert and
Russian-born
David Chernyavsky.
Three performances
into
his trial week, Robert
was offered the job. He
made
his professional
debut, complete with fireworks, with the LA
Phil at the Hollywood Bowl on July 2.
"It's
a very welcoming group, and they
didn't have to
be,"
says
Robert,
who
is
the
orchestra's youngest member by about eight
years. Following a glowing profile of Robert
by
Los Angeles
Times
columnist
Steve Lopez in
January-"I wasn't sure whether I wanted to
interview
him, clone
him
or strangle
him," Lopez
wrote-the wunderkind violinist took his share
of ribbing from his fellow performers.
"There
are some great characters in this orchestra-
some amazing people," he says.
"But
they can
rip on you,
that's
for sure."
While
he
has his hands full
right
now
learning the LA Philharmonic's repertoire-a
three-year task, at least-Robert hopes
10
get
back
to
science
somewhere
down the road.
"If
that opportunity makes itself available, I'll go
for it.'' Meanwhile,
Akshar-who last performed
with Robert at the Grand Montgomery
Chamber
Music Series
in
May 2007-hopes that he and
his brother will
someday
live
closer again,
so
that
"we can share our children's childhoods
and
our
families."

Dick Anderson
is
af
rcelance
writer
in
Los
Angeles
and
publications
editor
for Occidental
College.
S P R I N G 2 0 0 8
15



















PROFILES
d
_part11re
spa
Takes
Off
d_
arture
spa
Gina
Stern '99 is
president
and owner
of d_pa1rture
spa,
a full-service
salon with three
locations
in
airports in Newark
and Orlando.
16
MA R I ST M A G A Z I N E
Entrepreneur
Gina
Egel
Stern
'99
has made her unique
concept
of airport
spas a million-dollar
success
and is sharing
her vision
with at-risk
youth.
G
ina Stern's 5-year-old son, Maddox, is
methodically removing items
from her
purse and spreading
them
on a
table in
the
food court
in
Terminal B of Newark Liberty
International
Airport.
He
is sitting in the food court next
to
his
mother while she has a
meeting.
Gina Egel Stern
'99
tries to
include
Maddox
and her other son,
Beckham,
2,
in her
work.
She
is president
and
owner of d_parture spa, a full-service salon
with
locations in
terminals Band C of Newark
Liberty
International
Airport and
Terminal
A of
Orlando
International
Airport. The spa offers
everything from hair cutting, color, and styling
to manicures, pedicures, waxing, massages,
and facials.
The
company
has
63
full-time
and
five
part-time
employees,
and revenues
in 2007
were
more
than $1.3 million.
In 2006
Stern was one of20entrepreneurs
chosen out of almost 500 applicants
to
participate in "Make Mine a Million$ Business,"
a program
to
help women whose small
businesses have potential. The distinction
has
led
to TV, print, and online media coverage
including an interview on The Mantel Williams
Show.
She is also an inspirational speaker and
has founded a program to help at-risk youth
realize
their dreams.
The Last Stop
Stern has
had to
chisel
her
own
route
up,
carving a
foothold
each step of the way.
Growing up in the Bronx, she was an A
student through
the
ninth grade at
ThomasC.
GiordanojuniorHigh. Upon her sophomore
year, the school
district reorganized,
splitting
up
longtime
schoolmatesamongseveral high
schools. She was placed at
Harry
S.
Truman
High
School, an hour from her home, where
cliques had already formed, where teachers,
she says, were unenthusiastic, and where she
was
in the
racial minority. After witnessing
a gang-related beating in a stairwell one
day,
she and other student witnesses we
re
escorted
home
for security reasons and transferred the
next
day
to
another school, Walton High.
The
events stunned her.
Home life,
meanwhile, included a number
of difficulties as her family struggled in many
respects. Circumstances sometimes made it
an effort
to
go to school each day despite
the
pep
talks
she gave herself as she
left
home
each morning.





















Walton was "the
last
stop"
for teachers,
she
says, and one of
them told her
she might as well
drop out. So she did, in the eleventh grade.
The
sudden
death
of her grandfather from
a
heart
attack
led
her to go to California.
Her
brother's dire illness related
to
a rare
heart
condition brought her back to New York. His
death
motivated her
to
achieve.
"1 strive to
prove him
right about
me,"
she
says
now.
"He always
told me
l was special,
that
1 had
greatness inside of me.
He
told
me
l
would
do
big things
in
this world."
You Start with a Swatch
Unsatisfied with where she was
in her
Ii
fe,
she
had
enrolled, at age 25, in Marist's
Fashion
Program. "Marist College as a whole
really
embraced
me, nurtured me
and
helped meto
grow into the
person 1
am
today.
lt
was the
right
place
for me
to be.
The
environment
and faculty held such standards
that
they
quietly molded
me."
The Fashion Program was
demanding,
the caliber of the instruct0rs
high. There
were
deadlines
and an expectation that she would
perform. Ripping
out seams, she says, was "an
amazing, character-building experience.
"You get
to
the point where you
trust
your
creative ability."
Fashion
faculty
member Sue DeSanna
remembers
Gina as an extraordinary student:
talented, enthusiastic,
responsible,
and creative.
"She worked very hard both
in
school and at
jobs to
pay for
her
tuition.
As a non-traditional
student, she was
more
mature
than
the others,
but
managed to integrate
very well with
her
classmates.
She was a good cook
-
she
would often
bring
an electric pan and food
to cook a
late-night
snack for her classmates.
I always enjoyed
her
sense of humor, which
was often brought
forth
LO
counter a stressful
situation."
Stern's
first job
was with John Anthony
Couture, which discovered her during Marist's
Silver Needle Fashion Show at the Time
Life
Stern
(center)
1talks with cosmetologist Yuri Gonzalez (left) and massage therapist Jose Aponte
inside d_parture spa.
Building
in
New York City
in 1999. It
was her
dream
job: cutting
patterns,
working with
the
best
fabrics, embellishing, assisting with
the creation of gowns that sold for
tens
of
thousands. On
the bus ride to
work she read
Think and Grow
Rich.
Then one
day
at home,
her platform
sandals
caused
her
lO
stumble and fall
down
a flight of
stairs.
Her therapy
called for
bed rest
for three
weeks
plus
daily chiropractic visits, a regimen
that
led
LO
the
loss
of
her
job.
lt
was while
recuperating
that she wrote
a 28-page
business plan
for what
became
d_
parture spa, drawing on
her
Fashion
Program
experience of building
things from
concept
to
creation.
The
concept was inspired by a
six-hour flight delay at Newark
during
which
she walked around
the
terminal
trying
to
make
the
best use of the time.
After several months of trying-"with zero
network,"
she
;adds-she
got a foot
in
the door
to present her idea
LO
Newark airport
retail
developers.
They liked
the
concept but had
already
leased
all their space. Two weeks later,
however, they
called.
They had redesigned
their merchandising
mix
and offered
her
the
last
space availlable.
Still paying off her college
loan,
she obtained
a personal
loan
to pay for construction of the
spa. "All
things
are possible," she says simply.
Again, she recalls
her Fashion Program
education.
"You
start with a swatch.
l
had the
focus,
I
had the passion, like I
did
when I had
a collection."
She opened her first
d_parture
spa at
Newark Liberty International Airport in
Terminal C
in
November 2000.
In
2003 she
opened
two more
spas:
the
one in Terminal B
at Newark and
the
one at Orlando.
Make Mine a Million
In
October 2006 Stern
became
a finalist
in
the "Make Mine a Million
$
Business"
program sponsored
by the
nonprofit Count
Me
ln
for Women's
Independence
and its
partner,
OPEN
from
American Express®.
Count
Me ln
launched
the
program
to
inspire
one
million
women entrepreneurs to reach
annual
revenues
of $1 million
by
2010.
The program
awarded
the
finalists
money,
mentoring, marketing,
business services,
and technology assistance.
lt
made
Stern
realize
that there were not a
lot
of women
in her
position. "The program is
so empowering.
It's
changing
people's lives."
The
spa
in Terminal B of Newark
Liberty International
Airport
She herself hopes to change lives
through
a project she created last year at Union
High
School in Union Township, NJ. Students in the
Trust
Project
are divided
into
groups, and each
group is given $100 via a credit card. The money
is then entrusted for 24 hours
to
an indi\'idual
in each group with
instructions
to spend it
mentally and
repeatedly.
At
the
end of the 24
hours
the
student writes about the experience
and passes the $100 to
the
next student.
~
"I believe
there is
such a thing as the
millionaire
mindset," Stern says. ''The mindset
isn't
necessarily about money. Man)' urban
youth are stricken by circumstances that hm·e
limited
their ability
LO
dream, taken away the
magic
that comes from belie\'ing there are no
limitations
in
this
life.
I
want to inspire that
mindset
in at-risk youth."
This
past
year she changed
her
own
mindset when she advanced
to
a higher le\·el,
"Make Mine a Multimillion$ Business,"
of the
empowerment program. By networking with
women who face the same challenges,
she again
has learned something about herself.
"l had to readjust my vision. 1 wasn't
dreaming big enough. God has steered the ship
all
this
way. Now my challenge
is to listen
even
more closely-to
live
the path
He
has lain for
me-and realize my full
potential."

SPRING
2 0 0 8
17







































Keeping
Up With Marist
Graduates
Send Your News
If you have news to
share,
let your
fellow alumni hear from you.
E-mail
maristalumni@marist.edu
Online
www.marist.edu/alumni/alupdate
Mail
Office of Alumni Relations
Marist College,
3399
North Rd.
Poughkeepsie, NY
12601-1387
18
Phone
845-575-3283
MARIST
MAGAZINE
1
9 5 3
Bro. James Kearney, FMS,
was
honored in April
2007 by
the
Dominican
Sisters o,f Blauvelt and
recei\'ed the
Mary Ann Sammon
Award for Compassion and Service.
The
award
is named after the
founder
of
the
Sisters. Brother.Jim
is
president
of the board of
trustees
of
the
Lavelle
School for the Blind
ini
the Bronx, N .Y.
The Dominican Sisters
have
staffed
the
school since 1912.
Brother
Jim is
a
Marist College
trustee.
1
9 5 4
After eight years of parish ministry
in rural West Virginia,
Bro.
William
Lavigne,
FMS, is
a pastoral associ-
ate for two neighboring
parishes in
Rahway, NJ, that are eventually
to
merge.
1
9 5 6
James
Friel
is edito1r
of Humanities
Magazine, which m.arked
its
35th
year
in 2007. He
is also co-chair of
the
Long
Island
Phil,osophy
Society
and
publisher
at
Jusl.in
Books Co.
I
Bro. Patrick
McNuhty, FMS,
is still
on
the
job at
Marist
High School.
He
started his career in
1956
at SL Ann's
Academy in New
York.
~r::
1 9 5 8
Dr. Roger Fernandez
is retired
and
spends
his
time
traveling
and writ-
ing
in English
and Spanish. His
books
include
Odyssey
to Opportunity,
Odyssey
Resumed,
Odyssey Fulfilled,
and Beyond
My Odyssey.
1
9 6 2
William
Lenehan
is
enjoying
retirement
and is always
happy
to
hear from former
crew and
football
athletes.
1
9 6
4
Bro. Rene D. Roy,
FMS, traveled
to
Rwanda,
Africa, to
auend the
ordination of his former student,
Jean
Baptiste Mvukiyehe,
to
the
priesthood.
1 9 6 5
While
Robert
O'Handley
continues
to teach and do research at MIT, a
small company he co-founded a few
years ago, Ferro Solutions,
has
won
a three-year, $2
million
Ad\'anced
Technology
Program
award from
the
National
Institute
of Standards and
Technology.
The company
develops
a
new, more
effective means of wire-
lessly transferring
electric power into
the bod)' for
medical
therapy. The
company's web site
is
www.ferrosi.
com.
1
9 6 6
Jack Broderick
had a month-long
show of his artwork at
the
Wood
Memorial Library in South Windsor,
Conn.,
in
October. Jack
is
a plein-air
and studio painter who has traveled
and painted
in
Argentina, Spain,
Cuba,
and Ireland.
Most recently he
was in
Japan
and Italy,
exhibiting
and
ceaching.
lJohn
Hart, PhD,
published
his fourth
book
in September 2006,
Sacramental Commons: Christian
Ecological
Ethics.
He
was elected presi-
dent of
the
board of directors at
Montana Environmental
Information
Center. He was also awarded a
research
grant
from
the Center of
Theology
and the Natural Sciences
to be principal
investigator for a
science-theology-ecology
project,
"Extraterrestrial
Contact:
Human
Placement
in the Cosmos,"
on which
he will work with scientists in SETI
(Search for Extraterrestrial
Intelligence).
He is
director
of social
ethics
doctoral
programs at Boston
University.lPete
Nesteroke
is retired
and "loving
it."IDr.James Sullivan
retired
in
July 2006
as deputy super-
intendent
of
the
South
Huntington
(N.Y.) School District.
He is now
supervising student teachers at
Dowling
College.
1
9 6 7
Dr. Joseph Gajda
and his wife
have
celebrated their 50th
wedding
anni\'ersary.1
Anthony
LaRocco
was
reelected to a third term
on
the
board
of directors
as
vice
president
of
the
Fire
Island
Pines Ans Project.
Anthony also sits on
the board
for
the
Prescott
Fund
for
Children
and
Youth in
New York
City.
I
Charles
McDermott
Jr.
moved
from New
York
in December
2006 and
spends
winters in Naples,
Fla.,
and
summers
in St. Augustine,
Fla.
l11m
1MS
--
1 9 6 8
Richard
Amodeo is
planning lo
retire
from his
position
as
adminis-
trator
of
Katonah Medical
Group.
ln
2008, he will
be
semi-retired
as
a tax
practitioner
and accountant.
I
Robert
Bailey, Esq.
has
been
elected to the
National Academy of Arbitrators
Board of Governors.
He
conducted
an NCAA
accreditation review
of
Penn
State's Athletics Department.
He is also
a
member of
the
draft-
ing
commiltee for
the National
Conference of Commissioners on
Uniform State
Laws.
I
Dr. James
Croteau is
president and
CEO
of
Elder Care Services,
Inc .• a nonprofit
serving elders in Leon and
Franklin
counties
in
Florida.
He recently
retired
from Leon
County
Schools
after
35 years in
positions
ranging
from
elementary school teacher
to
Above (left to right), Daniel Kuffner
'68,
Peter
Hayden
'69,
William
Kuffner
'68,
and Robert D'Errico
'68
get together at a Brooklyn
Cyclones game. The Kuffner family frequently gathers to go on
minor
league
baseball tours. Since
1994
they
have
gone on eight
tours
covering
the Midwest, North Carolina, Oregon, Texas, cen-
tral and western New York, and
New
York City.
In
2007
they had
two great family reunions and went
to
Cyclones, SI Yankees, and
Newark Bears ball games.
Jn1mj\•IZ:
The flag denotes
classes
chat will celebrate
reunions
in 2008































Above,
John McGinnis
'97 (left) and Pat Mara
'97
reach the summit
of Mt.
Hood
in Oregon. They summitted on June 17 at sunrise,
their
second attempt on Mt.
Hood;
poor weather conditions prevented
them from getting to the top the first time.
In
2002 they climbed Mt.
Washington
in
New
Hampshire
together and then decided
to
do all
484,000-footers in New
Hampshire.
They
have
since climbed about
25 state
high points
including Boundary Peak
(Nev.),
and Whiitney
(Calif.),
the
highest in
the
lower
48.
In
2004 Pat climbed Rainier
(Wash.),
the "prep" mountain for Denali/Mt. McKinley in Alaska
which
he plans
to take on in 2009.
This
summer
he
will attemp,t Mt.
Elbrus
in
Russia,
the
highest peak in Europe.
Augustine
High
School
in
Florida
and still enjoys playing
ba:;ketball
and
studying
international relations
and
political
theory.
"Thank you,
Lou
Zuccarello,"
he writes.
llRobert
Maguire
volunteers in
the Finance
Department of Saratoga
Hospital.
I
Thomas Nolan
has owned
his
own
practice for the
past
25
years, focus-
ing on individual,
marria,ge,
and
family
therapy.
1 9 6 9
William Coby
reports that
he
finds
it
hard to
retire from
a job where he
works by
himself, but
he's work-
ing
on itl
I
Brian
Flanagan
recently
returned from
New Orleans
after
escorting foreign police officials to
the annual International
Association
of Chiefs of Police Conference. Next
year
the
conference will be
held
in
San
Diego. He
calls
this
a "work-
ing
retirement!"
I
Stephen Johnson
recently accepted a sales
position
with XO Communications in
New
York City. His son,
Kevin,
attended
Marist's
Summer Business
Institute.
IJoseph
Kastrup
was
named
direc-
tor-head of
real
estate capital
markets
for
Ireland
by
Wachovia
Bank in
February 2007. As a member of
the senior management team, he
is
responsible
for creating and manag-
ing Wachovia Bank
International in
Dublin,
lreland.
He and his wife,
Kathleen,
relocated to Dublin and
are enjoying traveling throughout
Europe. ln addition,
they recently
purchased
a
residence
in Connecticut
to
be
near their
children and first
grandchild.
lJohn
Moccio
has retired
from the Mount
Vernon
(N.Y.)
School
District after 29
years of service. He
taught students with
disabilities
and was
a
school counselor clini-
cian.
He
has
moved
from Carmel,
N.Y.,
to
Aylesford, Nova Scotia.
I
Vincent
Mooney's
son, Chris, is
the
library/media specialist at
John
Jay
High School
in
East
Fishkill,
N.Y.
His
daughter,
Erin,
works
in the
devel-
opment office at the College of
the
Holy Cross.
lJohn
Noonan, MD,
has
been named
chief of
plastic
surgery
in
the
Department of Surgery at St.
Peter's
Hospital in
Albany, N.Y.
ln
private
practice
in
Albany,
he has
served
as
an attending physician at
St.
Peter's
since
1980
and as co-direc-
tor of St.
Peter's
Craniofacial
Center
since
1987.
1 9 7 0
Art
Jung
recently completed
his
third
trip
to Antarctica, including
the
McMurdo and Amundsen-Scott
South
Pole
U.S. research stations,
to
conduct environmental
impact
evalu-
ations.
I
Larry
Kazemier
retired after
36 years of teaching and adminis-
trative
work in
the
West Islip (N.Y.)
interim superintendenL.
He has
also
held adjunct faculty appointments at
Florida
State University,
Florida
A&M
University, Jacksonville University,
Barry University, and the College
of St. Rose and made presentations
at many state and national confer-
ences. Jim and his wife,
Theresa,
enjoy
living
in Tallahassee
but look
forward to
visiting
their
children
and grandchildren whenever they
can.
I
Carl
Di
Cesare is
a financial
and estate planning representative
for
Northwestern
Mutual Life
Insurance
Co.
lJohn
Forbes recently
returned
from a 36-month assignment at the
Asian Development Bank in Manila,
Philippines, for the U.S. Treasury
Department.
He
worked as an advisor
on
matters
concerning anti-money
laundering, border
controls, and
port
security.
I
Dr.
Chuck
Howlett
received
the
2007 Graduate Faculty
Recognition
Award
presented
by the
graduate
education
students at Molloy
College.
Chuck is also an award-win-
ning
historian
and continues to serve
as an Air Force Academy admis-
sions liaison officer.
I
William Karl
has retired after 32 years of
teach-
ing
special education in Saratoga
Springs.
He
continues his work as a
New York State
licensed real
estate
agent throughout the Capital
District.
I
Daniel Kuffner
Bill Dourdis '70
(right),
editor of the Wappingers Congress
of Retired Teachers p1ublication
Postscript, was recognized
for his work at the New York State United Teachers
(NYSUT)
was elected to the Dutchess
County (N.Y.) Legislature
on Nov. 6, 2007.
He repre-
sents District 7.1
Kenneth
Maass
is
completing
his
25th year of
teaching
at SL.
Rep1resentative Assembly Journalism Awards
luncheon in
2007.
Bill
won a first-place
~
plaque for best editorial or column and
an award of
merit
for general excel-
lence.
During
his
eight-year tenure
as editor of the
WCT Commentator,
he
won six NYSUT awards and
five American Federation of
Teachers
awards for general
excellence, best
news
story,
best editorial or column, and
best feature. At left, NYSUT
President Richard Iannuzzi
presents the award to Bill
in Washington, D.C.
UNIONS
1956
John Duggan's
daughter,
Sheila
Duggan,
and
Geoff Hatch,
May
26, 2007
1971
Christine
MonteFerrante
and
Thomas Ferrara,
March
21, 2007
1988
Jacqueline
and
Kevin
Kennedy,
Sept.
30, 2006
1990
Donna Jeannette
and
William
Bailey,
October
2007
1991
Cyndy
and
Scott Tummins,
Dec. 31, 2005
1992
Jennifer
Boulay
and
Eli Acosta,
September
2007
Andrea
and
David D'Arco,
Dec.
16,
2006
1996
Lisa Goddard
and
Fred
L. McGhee,
PhD,
July 6,
2007
1997
Leo Byron
and
Debbie
Moolick,
June
3, 2006
Jacqueline Turner
and
Keith
Puri,
Sept.
21, 2007
1998
Tom
Gallagher
and
Elaine
Cohn,
Aug. 5, 2006
Rebecca
Spearrin
and
Michael
Paholski,
March
2007
Dana Coghlan
and
Charles
Stabile,
Nov.
4,
2006
1999
Allison Glaser
and Justin
Spillane,
July
1, 2007
William Mills Jr.
and Elizabeth
Del Saito,
Nov. 25, 2006
Jessica Spencer
and Matthew
Delorenzo,
Oct. 21, 2006
Lisa Urgola
and
Dan Wagnes,
Oct. 14, 2006
S P R
I
\J
G 2 0 0 8
19



































Alumni
A
UNIONS
2000
Kristi Bouthillette
and
William
Mount, June
30, 2007
Katie Daley
and
David
Gatta, July 10, 2004
Jessica
Decicco
and
Anthony
Stalters,
Dec. 3, 2006
Katie Feeney
and
Bill
Marko,
Sept.
9, 2006
Diana
Gennaro
and
Philip Walsh
'01,
July
21,
2006
David
Orser
and
Jamie Augienello
'01,
Nov. 20,
1995
Anthony Pesce
and
Dawn
DeCandido,
July 6, 2007
Rachel Tollen
and
Paul
Schnabl,
June 10,
2006
2001
Jamie
Augienello
and
David Orser
·oo,
Nov.
20, 1995
Joseph
Cannerelli '01
/'02MA
and
Katherine Romeo
'02,
July
15, 2006
Joseph Catrino
and
Holly Angelbeck
'02,
Sept. 30, 2006
Sheila Conturso
and
Scott O'Neill,
April 20, 2007
Jennifer Latham
and
Ryan
Kelley,
Aug. 5, 2006
Mark
Lynch
and
Lori Yelenovic
'02,
April 28, 2007
20
Nicole
and
Joseph Parizo,
Aug.
18,
2007
Leigh
Shillington
and
Andrew
Neys,
Jan.
27,
2007
Mary
Tomm
and
Richard
Knowlton,
June
30, 2007
Jessica
Weissman
and
Steven Hill, June
8, 2007
MARIST
MAGAZINE
Members of the Class of
'57
were honored at their 50th-anniversary reunion during Homecoming and
Reunion Weekend in October. Seated (leftto right) are 1957 graduates Bro. Kevin
L. O'Neill, FMS, Ludwig
A. Odierna, Martin Cullinan, Robert E. Grady, and Rudolph M. Ramirez. Standing (left to right) are Jim
Daly '72, president of the Alumni Association, and President Dennis Murray.
School District.
He
is
the
director of
continuing
and professional
devel-
opment at
Dowling
College.
I
Col.
David
Stevener
is
starting
his
eighth
year as a seventh grade social stud-
ies teacher following
his
retirement
from
the
U.S.
Air Force.
1
9 7
1
Thomas
Ferrara's
daughter,
Eve
Lyons, completed her
first
year of
college at
the
Fashion
Institute
of
Technology. She is
majoring
in
commercial
photography.
lJim
Pratt-
Heaney
works with
Merrill
lynch
Private Banking
and
Investment
Group
in
Westport, Conn.
lPatrick
Quinlan
was appointed a member of
the adjunct faculty
of Roger
Williams
University School of Law
in Bristol,
R.I. He is
teaching
two
courses on
mediation
and settlement facilita-
tion.
He practices
law and operates
a
lobbying
practice
in
Providence,
R.
l.
He
is
the father of
five
children
and
has
one grandchild
in
Florida.
I
Patricia
Rittenhouse
continues to
teach
Latin
and Spanish at
Tyburn
Academy
in
Auburn, N.Y.
1 9 7 2
Ellen
Reigle
MacMillan
lives
in
Athens, N.Y.,
and works in the
devel-
opment office at Bard College. Over
the
years,
Ellen
and
her
husband
have
moved
to Virginia, New Jersey,
and Michigan
because of
their
work.
I
Susan Pratt-Heaney
has
a
business,
the World of Susie Pratt. She creates
one-of-a-kind pieces for the
home
such as
lamps,
pillows, and sculp-
tures
using items
including
vintage
fabric, buttons, needlepoint,
and
jewelry.
I
Michael Smith
is
vice pres-
ident of
the
corporate compliance
office at Elant,
Inc.,
a
large
health-
care and housing provider based in
Goshen, N.Y., that
has
facilities
in
four counties including
Dutchess.
I
Robert
Volk
retired from full-time
practice
as
a lawyer
on Sept. 1, 2007,
after celebrating
his
25th
anniversary
with Ryan, Roach
&
Ryan.
ltnuw•n•
---
1
9 7 3
John
Bardong's
daughter,
Lindsay,
completed
a
bachelor's
degree
in
business
at Marist
in
December
2007.
I
Anthony DiRosa
retired
as
a
nurse
in December
2001.1
Patrick
Lavelle
has been named chairman of the
Consumer Electronics Association.
Patrick
is president and
CEO of
Audiovox
Corp. and
is a
Marist
trust-
ee.I
Mark Mahoney
is
president
and
CEO of
Energy
Brokers,
Inc.,
which
deals
in
the
buying and
selling of
gasoline,
diesel,
and jet
fuel.
1 9 7 4
Juan
Campos,
Esq.,
has
been prac-
ticing
law
in
the
Bronx, N.Y.,
doing
criminal defense work, for
the
past
25
years.
I
Charles
Huber
retired
from
the
U.S. Postal Service
in
June
2007.
IJoseph
McCann, Esq.
was
sworn in
as
city court judge for the
city of Glen Cove, N.Y.,
in
January
2007.
I
Robert
Piersa
took a
job
as director of employee benefits at
Lutheran
Healthcare
in
Brooklyn,
Joe Rubino '71 has been selected to conduct a nationwide trans-
portation research study for
submission
to the Federal Transit
Administration. Joe will perform the study on behalf of Easter Seals
Project Action. The study will
chart current
best practices
in
public
transit for the nation's disabled population. Joe is a consultant in
the field of passenger ground transportation. His firm, J.M. Rubino
Consulting, works with both municipalities and private companies
across the U.S. His recent projects have included a major California
paratransit program and the State ofTexas Medicaid transportation
contract. He lives on Anastasia Island, Fla., with Diane, his
wife of
33
years. They have two daughters, Natalie, 27, and Malorie, 22.
lJ,•
1
t1MT
The flag deno1es
classes that
will
celebrate
reunions
in
2008




























N.Y., in April 2007.
He
and
his
lifetime
partner, Lawrence, are cele-
brating 20 years
together.
I
Dennis
P.
Whalen
was appointed New York
State's deputy secretary for Health
and Human Services in December
2006
and reports
to
the go,·ernor of
New York.
He had
served as exec-
utive deputy commissioner for
the
state's Department of Health, where
he oversaw all of the department's
programs and operations,
since 1996.
He
began
his career with
New
York
State al the Department
of
Health
as a
public health educator. He is a grad-
uate of the National Preparedness
Leadership Institute al
Harvard's
Kennedy
School of Government.
1
9 7 5
Rich
Beaney is
general
manager
of
Red Rock
Brewing Company in
Salt
Lake
City, Utah.
I
Dr. Dorothy
Decastro
Escribano
has
been
appointed senior vice president for
academic
affairs
at the College of
New
Rochelle.
As
the
chief academic
officer
for
the college, she super\'is-
es the operations of the college's
four schools,
the
library,
and vari-
ous academic support services.
Previously she was
interim
vice
president for
academic
affairs and a
tenured member
of
the
Languages
and Literature Department at
Worcester
State College
in Worcester,
Mass.
After earning a BA
in
Spanish
at Marist, she
received
an MA
in
liberal
studies at SUNY
Stony Brook,
an MA
in
Spanish literature at
the
University
of
Rhode
lsland, and a
PhD
in
Hispanic studies at Brown
UniYersity.
IJohn
Cecilia
has
completed 25 years with
Kimberly
Clark Corp., where
he
is senior direc-
tor
of global operations.
I
Maureen
O'Toole
and
Karl Reimer's
young-
est daughter,Jaclyn, graduated with
an MS from Florida State University.
Their daughter
Meghan graduated
with an Associate
in Ans degree from
lndian
River
Community
College
and
is
working full-time.
1
9 7 6
Dr.
Jeffrey Burdick
is
a neurolo-
gist
in
private
practice in
Albany,
N.Y.IWilliam
Kudlacik
is
director
of security, parking, and
traffic
for
the Meadowlands and Monmouth
Park Racetracks. Monmomh Park
was
host
of the 2007 Breeders' Cup
World Championship races.
I
Peggy
Madden
and
James
Stevens'
son
James graduated from the University
of Vermont
in
May 2007. Their son
Thomas graduated from Columbia
University
in
May 2007. Their
daughter Kerry is a freshman at
the
University of Maryland.
I
Kathleen
Manning
was
promoted to
full
professor in 2006 at the Universit)'
of Vermont.
In
March 2007, Kathleen
was honored by the National
Association of Student Personnel
Administrators
with
its
Outi,tanding
Contribution
to
Scholarship
Award.
I
Kenneth Muckenhaupt
was promot-
ed
to
executive IT specialist at IBM,
where
he has
worked for
29
years.
His wife.Judith, teaches at Dutchess
County BOCES,
and their dlaughter,
Sara, is in
her
junior
year at
Fordham
University.
lr:nmu•na
1 9 7 8
Rose Marie
Castano
is
an adjunct
instructor
at Marist.
I
Debra
Citrone
graduated from Mercy College in
May 2007
with an
MS in
childhood
education.
I
Dennis
Cosgrove
is
a
regional
vice
president
for Compass
Group and lives in Park Ridge,
NJ,
with
his
wife, Stephanie, and their
children, Chris and
Jacquie.
I
Sam
Delgado
was appointed vice
pres-
ident of external affairs of Verizon
New
Jersey in
2006.
I
William
McLaughlin's
twin sons, Matthew
and Michael, both graduated from
Villanova University. His daughter,
Michelle,
had
a
daughter in
February
2007.
1 9 7 9
Eugene
Bryan
is the CEO and owner
of HispanicAd.com and AdNotas.
com.
I
Grace Deeken,
RN, BCT,
recei\·ed
the S.C.
Health
Science
Technology
Teacher
of the Year
award
in January
2007. In
June
2007 she
was elected president of the S.C.
Association of Career and Technical
Education
(SCACTE) and also
received the
SCACTE
Teacher
of
the
Year award. She will represent South
Carolina as Teacher
of the Year
at
the
ACTE
regional
conference
in
October
2008.1
Reene
Courtney 0'
eill
earned a second BS in
nursing from
the
College of New Rochelle
in
~lay
2007
and
is a
nurse
at Greenwich
Hospital.lSadie
Effron
was featured
in an article in
the
June 2007 issue
UNIONS
2002
Holly
Angelbeck
and
Joseph
Catrino '01,
Sept. 30, 2006
Patricia
Collins
and
Gilby Hawkins '03/'03M,
July
27, 2007
Andrew B. Lennon
and
Sara Jackson
'04MBA,
Nov.
11,
2007
Lisa Miller
and
Andy Kulp,
Sept.
16,
2006
Missy
and
Michael Reilly,
Aug. 26, 2006
Katherine
Romeo
and
Joseph
Cannerelli
'01/'02MA,
July 15,
2006
Scott Snyder
and
Andrea Cotsonas '03,
July
14,
2007
Crystal VanDeMark
and
Sethu
Sundaramoorthy,
May 14,
2007
Lori
Yelenovic
and
Mark Lynch '01,
April
28, 2007
2003
Eric Cadestin
and
Yahaira Conde '04,
Aug.
12,
2007
Andrea Cotsonas
and
Scott Snyder
'02,
July
14, 2007
Dana C. Ferro
and
Michael N. Fassnacht,
Sept.
29, 2006
Jaime Gillespie
and
Brian
McHugh,
Aug.
10,
2007
Jennifer Guiliano
and
Ralph
Carusillo,
July
7, 2006
Gilby Hawkins '03/'03MA
and
Patricia Collins
'02,
July
27, 2007
Jacquelyn
Henderson
and
Randall
Ingham,
June
29, 2007
Megan Lizotte
and
David
McNally,
Aug.
12,
2006
Laura Roy
and
Charles
A.
Kibort
111,
Aug. 25, 2007
Brian Sands
and
Kathleen Vazoulas,
Nov.
11, 2006
Kimberly Snyder
and
Eric
Schleif,
Oct. 5, 2007
S
P R
I
N G 2 0 0 8
21











































Alumni
~
A1!
UNIONS
2004
Yahaira Conde
and
Eric Cadestin '03,
Aug.
12, 2007
Lauren
Ducatelli
and
Andrew
Turley,
March 4, 2006
Jennifer Frisenda
and
Christopher
Malone, May 26, 2006
Sara Jackson '04MBA
and
Andrew
B. Lennon
'02,
Nov.
11,
2007
Katie Martyniuk
and
Jeremy
Watson,
Oct.
20, 2007
2005
Brooke
Blackiston
and
Garrett Bergen
11,
May 26, 2007
Jennifer
Heinsman
and
Steven
Glassen,
Sept. 8, 2007
Kerri Oliveira
and
Capt. Nathan
C.
Whitten, May 5, 2007
2006
Michele and
Zachary
Spalding,
Oct.
21, 2007
of Bridge
Bulletin,
a magazine of the
American Contract Bridge League.
The story highlighted the fact
thaL
she turned 100
in
March 2007 and
is
a very active player in duplicate
games of the Dutchess
County Bridge
Association, where she is an honor-
ary life master.
1
9 8 0
Vincent
and
Patricia Trombley
Barone
'8l's daughter, Gina, grad-
uated from St.
Thomas
Aquinas
College with a teaching degree.
Their son, Joe, plays varsity base-
ball for Nyack (N.Y.)
High School.
I
Dave Powers
was
inducted
into the
New York State BaskeLball
Coaches
Hall of Fame and has completed
his
27th year of teaching.
1
9 8
1
Tim
Anderson
owns a company
called Executive Branches
that
does
high-end property management
and
landscape design. He plays grand-
master's
lacrosse
with Team FCA
(Fellowship
of Christian Athletes).
He
played goalie on Marist's
first lacrosse
league-championship
team in
1981.
He
lives
in Maryland with
his
wife,
Donna
I
Matthew
Cole
is a volun-
teer at
the
YMCA.
I
Sarah
Herman
recently
completed her seventh mara-
thon
in
Boston.
I
Patricia Hodde r's
artwork was featured in 1999 Artist
Trading
Cards by Patricia Bontonas
as well as Somerset
Studio Magazine
and Newsday.1
Cicely
Perrone
and
Rosemary
Molloy
'91
have
opened
an art gallery called Simply Art in
Red Hook, N.Y. Friends since 1980,
Cicely and Rosemary have individ-
ually pursued their artisLic
interests
over the years.
1 n
October
Lhey
decided to offer original, affordable
paintings
in
watercolor, pastel, and
oil
in
Red Hook, which is
increas-
ingly becoming a center for antiques
Ceal Salinovich Murray
'81 (right)
and her
husband, Richard, were recognized in spring
2007 by the Friends of the Cos Cob (Conn.)
Library for extraordinary dedication to the
Friends organization. In 200S Cea
I
was named
the library's Volunteer of the Year. One of
22
MARIST
MAGAZI
her contributions
was
to help establish the
library's Genealogical
Speakers
Series,
which has become
a Cos Cob commu-
nity institution.
Rick O'Donnell
'84
has been named director of supply manage-
ment for UTC Power, a division of United Technologies focused on
the development and manufacture of alternate energy solutions.
His wife, Karyn Magdalen O'Donnell
'84,
is a special education
educator for Somers Public Schools in Connecticut.
An active
volunteer, she is president of the Somers Music Patrons, leads the
Middle School Student Volunteer Organization, and coordinates
local soup kitchen operational support. Their daughter, Allyson, is
in her freshman year at Mari st, majoring in international business
and fashion merchandising. Their son, Ricky,
is
in his junior year
at Somers High School. The O'Donnells live in Somers.
and art. Both ha\'e exhibited their
work in Connecticut and regional-
ly over the past few years. They are
excited about this venture and hope
area alumni will visit when in Red
Hook.
Ijames
To,vnsend
along
with
Terence Smith
'91 produced the
2007 Women's U.S. Open Bowling
Championships for ESPN in Reno,
Nev.
I
Patricia Trombley
and
Vincent
Barone
'80's daughter,
Gina,
graduated from St. Thomas Aquinas
College
with a
teaching
degree. Their
son,
Joe,
plays varsity baseball for
Nyack (N.Y.)
High School.
1
9 8 2
BG Fergal
Foley is
vice president
of operations for American Defense
Systems.
I
Edward Tucker
has start-
ed a
Lravel
business,
Tucker
Travel
Associates, www.ytb.com/ea1.
llnmn+c
,,
1
9 8 3
Karen
Scott
Dylong
is coordinator
of inpatient Lobacco
cessation service
at Albany (N .Y.)
Medical
Center. She
helps
inpatients
who want to quit
smoking.
IT0111
Gagliano
and
ancy
Brigandi
'84 have been married for
21 years. They recently moved
to
the
beautiful town of Madison, Conn.
1
9 8 4
Nancy
Brigandi
and
Tom Gagliano
'83 have been married for 21 years.
They
recently
moved
to
the beautiful
town of Madison, Conn.
I
Michele
Muir
is a professional
photographer
who has photographed weddings
and other rites of passage for Marist
graduates.
IJohn
Petacchi
is in
his
sixth year of
teaching
physical
education
at
Poughkeepsie
Middle
School. He coaches girls' varsity
soccer, girls' junior
high
basketball,
and girls' varsity softball. Prior to
teaching, he was a sports producer
for Major League Baseball, WNBC-
TV,
and ESPN productions.
I
Eileen
Wallace
teaches
Lhird
grade in the
Huntington (N.Y.) School District.
She lives in Northport with her
husband, Bill, and their three daugh-
ters,
Kacey,
Ali, and Meghan.
IJoan
Ducey Wetzler
works pan-time
for a kitchen design company. Her
husband,
Richard
'85, is the COO
of Oliver Wyman Consulting in New
York City.
1
9 8 5
Lisa Farabaugh
and her husband,
Thomas
Pilewski,
celebrated their
15th wedding anniversary with
children Kelsey,
Daniel, Olivia, and
Brendan.
I
Michael LaVergne's
daughter,
Amanda,
enrolled in Marist
this
past fall and is a member of the
Class of 201
l.l
Michael
Lowen lives
in New York City and Lido Beach,
N.Y., with his wife, Tara, and son,
Luke.
I
Nora
Sakell Malley
has
been
elected chairperson of the Phoenix
Chapter of Americans for the Ethical
Treatment of all Flora and Fauna.
I
Danny Maniscalchi
is
returning to
Marist
LO
pursue an MBA.I
Edmund
jpl'ltli'Z
The flag denotes classes
that
will
celebrate
reunions
in
2008






























McKenna
co-authored
Word-Doku,
a
letter-based
Sudoku puzzle book. He
was also elected deputy grand knight
of
the
LaGrangeville Knights of
Columbus.I
Nancy Moody
and
her
husband,
Dwight
'86MA, celebrat-
ed
their 50th
wedding anniversary
on Aug. 28, 2007.
I
Richard
Wetzler
is the COO of Oliver Wyman
Consulting
in
New York City. His
wife.Joan '84, works part-time for
a
kitchen
design company.
1
9 8 6
Tom
Begg
Sr.
completed the 2007
lronman Lake Placid
Triathlon
in
14:04:26. The triathlon
requires
a
2.4-mile
swim, 112-mile bike
ride,
and 26.2-mile
run.
I
Sandra
Carroll's
husband, Ed, started
his
own
business
in the
Hudson
Valley in April
2006
called Edward
R.
Carroll
Heating
and Cooling.
I
Anthony DeBarros
is
database
editor at
USA Today.
His reporting
on college safety
issues
won
the 2007
Missouri
Lifestyle
Journalism
Awards
in
the Consumer Affairs category.
I
Karen
Szklany Gault is
co-manag-
er and CFO of a business promoting
her husband's
photography, Forest
River
Creations (www.forestriver-
creations.com).
Several of her poems
have
been
published
on www.pali-
bra.com.lDavidJoyce
was promoted
to
di rector
of inside sales for W.W.
Grainger Inc.
He now
resides
in
Alphareua, Ga., with his wife and
two children.
I
Michael
Masterson
is director
of sales and marketing at
the Ritz-Carlton, Kapalua,
on Maui
in
Hawaii.
I
Martin McParland Jr.
was
promoted
to police
lieutenant
and
assigned
to
the training divi-
sion/accreditation
unit
operating out
of police headquarters in
Rockaway,
N.J.
I
Karen
Neevel
is
the
literacy
specialist for
the
Wappingers (N.Y.)
Central School District.
1
9 8 7
James Boland
has
been appointed
director
of operations for Creditex,
a
derivatives
interdealer
brokerage
firm in Manhauan.lKim
Borell is
an artist living
in the
Hudson Valley.
She
is
a member oft
he
Colored Pencil
Society of America and
the
Kent Art
Association.
Her work
is
displayed at
the
Gallery at Kent in Kent, Conn.,
and the
Hudson
Valley Gallery
in Cornwall, N.Y., owned by
Paul
Gould
'70.IMaria
Gordon
Shydlo
joined
Padilla
Speer Beardsley
Public
Relations
as vice president after eight-
and-a-half
years with Oxford
Health
Plans/United Health
Care.
Joseph Mirrione '74 will be
recognized by the Con,necticut
Trial Lawyers Associ.ation in
June for his contributions to
the legal profession and to the
CTLA. He will be a co-recipient
of the T. Paul Tremont Advocacy
Award, last presented
in
2001,
for his
contribution:s
to the
development of a tri,~I advo-
cacy program at the University
of Connecticut School of Law.
Joe teaches an Intensive Trial
Advocacy course thEire that
culminates in an entry to the
American Association lfor Justice annual trial advocacy compe-
tition. Joe was also rec:ently honored by the law
school,
which
presented him with a plaque recognizing his dedicated service
over the past decade.
An attorney for m,ore than three decades, Joe earned his
JO from Vermont Law School in 1977. He
is
certified as a civil
trial advocate by the National Board of Trial Advocacy and was
listed in
Connecticut Mlagazineas
a medical malpractice "Super
Lawyer" in
2006
and
2~107.
He was elected president of the CTLA
in June
2007.
Joe's practice in New Haven
specializes
in personal injury and
medical malpractice. t-le lives in Guilford, Conn., with his wife,
Cynthia, and children Anastacia and Joseph.
~B!IN·HW:
:
1
9 8 8
Roger Ardanowski
has joined
inde-
pendent PR agency Gibbs & Soell
as
vice
president and group head of
its professional/financial
:services
group. The agency is headquartered
in
New
York City.
IJoe
Esposito
is director of basketball operations
at
the
Uni\·ersity of Minnesota.
I
Robert Hock is
enjoying reitirement
from IBM.
He
especially enjoys
golfing
in
North Carolina .and
had
his
first
hole-in-one
in
February
2007.
I
Kevin Kennedy
complet-
ed a master's
in
physical education
at Manhattanville College.
lJohn
Lanza
now lives
in
Eltingville,
Staten
Island,
N.Y.,
with his wife, Erin, and
their
children Thomas.Jacklyn, and
Madeline.
I
Peter Prucnel
has been
named first vice president for human
resource policy and compliance at
Washington Mutual's corporate offic-
es.
Ijames
Selby is
a case manager
with
the
New York State Office of
Children and Family Services.
I
Paul
Ziegler
is vice president of post clos-
ing at American Home Mortgage.
1
9 8 9
Deborah
Kuffner recently
started a
new position as a K-1 speci,al educa-
tion
teacher at North Park Ele:mentary
School in the Hyde Park
(N.Y.)
School District.
I
Karen McGetrick
is a freelance special events; produc-
er. She lives in Babylon, N.Y., with
her
husband,
James, and their four
children.
lJane
Regan
Emig
teaches
early education classes called Clever
Kids at the
retail
store
Toys
and More
in Wappingers Falls, N.Y.
1
9 9 0
Donna Jeannette
Bailey
and
her
husband, William, bought a house
in Mill Valley, Calif. They work for
software companies in Silicon Valley.
I
Mary Berean is treasurer
for
the
Poughkeepsie City School
District.
She is married
to
Anthony
lvich
and
has two children.I
Michael
DeCosta
was promoted
to
senior client
part-
ner at Korn/Ferry
International,
a
global executive search firm.
He
is
based
in
the firm's Stamford, Conn.,
office.
I
Stephen LoCicero
is the
head football coach at
Lynbrook
High School in New York.
I
Patrick
Norman
is a
teacher
for the Wake
County School District. He lives in
Wake Forest, N.C., with his wife,
Kerry, and daughter, Kellyn.
I
Laura
FitzPatrick Tamke has
four children:
Farrell, Connor, Anna, and Mark.
1
9 9
1
Shamus Barnes
works with Fitco
Moving and Storage, a company
that
continues
to
grow, adding new
accounts such as Citigroup, NHL,
Merrill
Lynch,
and Conde Nast.
I
Thomas Coyne's
agency, Coyne
Public Relations,
has been
named
the
best agency in America to work for
by
the
Holmes
Report,
a public rela-
tions
and marketing
industry trade
publication.
The SO-person
agency
is
based in Parsippany,
NJ
The annual
NEW
ARRIVALS
1966
Helen
and
Michael Ward Ill,
a granddaughter,
Giana
Grace
Richard,
July
16,
2007
1967
Palma
and
Dennis
A. Mega,
a
grandson,
Marcus
Sam
Mega,
on
Sept.
9,
2007
1978
Ellen Burnett
and
Michael
Woods,
granddaughters,
Charlotte
Griffin, Apr.
18,
2007,
and Claudia
Marie,
July
29,
2007
Rebecca
and
William
Mclaughlin,
a granddaughter,
Mary
Grace
Melchionda,
Feb.
20,
2007
1983
Nancy
and
Stephen Pryor,
a
granddaughter
and
a grandson,
2006
1987
Ellen Fitzpatrick
and
Robert Saunders,
a daughter,
Kyra
Jade,
Sept.
12,
2007
Beth Willems
and Dan
Rylaarsdam,
a
son, Willem
Hartman,
June
18, 2007
1988
Kimberly Graziano
and
James
McClelland,
a daughter,
Kaleigh
Rose,
Nov.
1, 2007
Mary Hegarty
and John
Dodd,
a
son, Liam
Anthony,
Oct.
26, 2005
1990
Judith Connolly
and Joseph
Rebholtz,
a
daughter,
Braedon
Catherine,
June
22, 2007
Dawn Newsome
and
Carl Marinaccio,
a
son, Christopher
William,
June
15,
2007
1991
Kimberly
and
Gerard Battista,
a
daughter,
Brooke,
July
19,
2007
Kym Eggers
and
Jeff
Sorbel
adopted
a son, Jacob
Michael,
June
24, 2007
Dr. Stephanie
Brewer
and
Dr. James
Jozefowicz
adopted
a daughter,
Abigail
AnMarie
ZiYi, born Nov.
2, 2006,
from
the
Guangdong
Province
of China,
July
9,
2007
Nicole
and
Chris Russell,
a daughter,
Maggie
Rey,
Sept.
27, 2007
SPRING
2008
23




































Alumni
NEW
ARRIVALS
1992
Danielle
and
Michael Dumont,
a
daughter,
Julia
Grace,
July
11,
2007
Melissa Hard
and George
Leyva,
a
son,
Daniel
Tristan,
July
3, 2007
Marie
and
Kenneth Kantor,
a
daughter,
Paige
Maria, April 19, 2007
Kristen
and
Matthew Kruger,
a son,
Henry
Michael,
Aug. 22, 2007
Christine
Mccann
and
Peter,
a
son, Peter Robert,
Sept. 7, 2007
Maureen McGuire
and
E.
Christopher
Schmid,
a son, Daniel,
Apr. 28, 2006
Stephanie
and
Paul
Molinari,
a
son, Jason,
Sept. 12, 2006
Jennifer
Riat
and Stephen
Kerrigan,
a
daughter,
Samantha
Anna,
Nov.
6, 2007
Tara Robertson
and
Matthew Notine,
a
son, Andrew Patrick,
April
10,
2007
Stacy
Swierk
and
Thomas
Ashburn,
twins: a
daughter,
Caitlin Emma,
and
a
son, Brady
Christopher,
Oct. 14, 2006
Karen Wiese
and Kenny
Osterndorf,
a daughter,
Maggie,
Aug. 2, 2007
1993
Carey
Allaband, Esq.
and Timothy
LeRoux,
a daughter,
Sophia
Grace,
Aug.
17,
2007
Susan Brown
and
David
Williams,
a
daughter,
Grace,
March 6,
2007
Susan
Lewis
and
Stephen Domizio,
a son, Timothy
Stephen,
Aug. 4, 2005
Lisa MacFarlane
and Bryan
Reiser,
a
son, Nathaniel
Walter,
Jan. 9, 2007
Tara
Pantony
and
Edward
Moore, a
daughter,
Michaela
Lauren,
Sept. 28, 2007
Leanne Rafferty
and
Trinidad
Gonzalez,
a daughter,
Karyna,
Sept. 20, 2006
Michele
Rubis
and Jeffrey
Francisco,
a son, Colin William,
June 18,
2006
Tracey Saal
and
Paul Czajak,
a
daughter,
Abigail, Sept. 21, 2007
Teresa Sorrentino
and
John
Dezio,
twin
daughters,
Savanna
and Sienna,
Aug. 4, 2007
Tricia Taskey
and Mark Modifica,
a son, Oct. 13, 2007
Margot
Power
and
Allen Tobin,
twins,
a daughter,
Carla Claire,
and a
son, Shane
Martin, Jan. 9,
2007
24
MARIST
MAGAZINE
award is
based
on :several
factors
including
an extensive
review
of
the
agency's
human
n!source policies,
staff
initiatives, and
an
anonymous-
employee survey.
I
Kristin Fay
is a
special education
te:acher
at
Happy
Hollow
School in Wayland,
Mass.
I
Steven Giannone
ha!; three children:
Allison, Caroline, and
Mauhew. He
still stays
in touch
with
Bro. Richard
Rancourt,
FMS, wh,om
he
says
left
a lasting
impression
on
his
life.
I
Jason
Green
was named general
manager of Ovations
Food
Services
at
the
Solomon
P
Ortiz International
Center
in
Corpus
Christi, Texas.
Ovations Food Services is a subsid-
iary of sports
and
entertainment
firm
Comcast-Spectator.
I
Maureen
Louney
Heffernan
and
her family
moved from
Alexandria, Va.,
to
Newbury,
Mass. Her husband
start-
ed a
new
job in Boston
and she is
a
stay-at-home
mom.
They
have
three
children.
I
Roi;emary Molloy
and
Cicely Perroue
'81 have opened
a gallery called Simply An in
Red
Hook,
N.Y.
Friends since 1980,
they
have individually
pursued their
artis-
tic interests over
the
years.
ln
October
they decided
to
offer original,
afford-
able
paintings in watercolor,
pastel,
and oil
in the
charming village of
Red Hook, which
is
increasingly
becoming
a
center for
antiques and
art.
Both have
exhibited
their
work
in
Connecticut and
regionally
over
the
past
few years. They
are
excit-
ed about
this ventun!
and
hope
area
alumni will visit when
in Red
Hook.
I
Kevin St. Onge
recently
opened a
private
law practice
i1n
Mountainside,
NJ, focusing on
wills, trusts,
and
estates
for
high
net
worth
business
owners
and their families.lTerence
Smith along
with
James
Townsend
'81
produced
the
2007 Women's
U.S.
Open
Bowling
Chaimpionships for
ESPN
in
Reno,
Ne,.-.
IThomas
C.
Stanton '91/'92MA
,graduated
from
the University
of
Wyoming
College
of
Law
and
lives in Jackson
Hole,
Wyo.
IJeffThibeault
is
going on
his
10th
year of employment with
Maui Jim
sunglasses, selling in Colorado.
1
9 9 2
Tom
Ashburn is middle
school
principal at Newark Academy
in
Livingston,
NJ
He and his
wife,
Stacy Swierk,
had
twins in
October
2006.1
Denise
Jamt!S Malario
is
a
new
franchise owne:r of
Image
Sun
Tanning Centers
in Bristol,
Conn.
I
Paul
Molinari recently
joined
Digitas
of Boston, Mass., as vice
president/
associate
director
of marketing. He
handles General
Motors
owner
reten-
tion and loyalty programs.
I
Stephen
Popper
joined
SageView
Advisory
Group as
managing director
of
new
business and product development
in
its
Boston
office.
The
company
acts as co-fiduciaries for corporate
and
not-for-profit retirement plans,
serving
more than
170 employers
and advising on
almost
$6
billion
in
plan assets.
IR.
Allen
Roy
was
named regional
sales
director
of
JoS.
A.
Bank Clothiers for the
Northeast
Ohio-Pinsburgh Metro
region.
He
and his
wife,
Julie
Shrider
Roy
'94,
live
in the
Cleveland area
with
their two daughters. Julie
is
a special
projects producer for WEWS,
the
ABC-TV
affiliate
in Cleveland.
I
Joey
Stanford
works for Europe-
based
Canonical
Ltd., the makers
of
Ubuntu
Linux
(www.ubuntu.com).
He is
the manager of
the Launchpad
Release
Team (www.launchpad.net).
He
lives in Colorado,
where
he
joined
the
Boulder County Sheriff's SWAT
team
(www.co.boulder.eo.us/sheriff/
field_ops/swat.htm).
l1nmtNR
,,
1
9 9 3
Greg Caires
recently
changed
employers and
relocated
to
Washington, D.C.,
for a
promotion
as
the
principal
spokesperson for
BAE
Systems
in
the United States. He
was promoted
10
lieutenant
in
the
U.S. Navy
Reserve on
Dec. 1 and
is
assigned
to the
Na\'al
War
College
in Newport, R.I.IAnne
Delomba
earned a
master's degree in 1997.
She
is the
clinical director at a
residential
school in southeastern
Massachusetts.
I
Teresa
Sorrentino
Dezio
was
pan
of a
team
of
producers
that received
an Emmy Award
nomination in
March
2007
in
the Outstanding
Lifestyle Program
category
for
The
Manha Stewart Show.
I
Patrick
Dolan
married in
August
2006 and
bought
a
house
in
Florham Park,
N.J.
He
was tenured and
promot-
ed
to
associate
professor
at
Drew
University.
lJennifer
Ubert
Eraca
recently launched
a company that
designs and
sells
labor
and
delivery
wear for
women
who are expecting.
Digna-Ware: Labor with Dignity is
trademarked with
a
patent pending
and
is
available at www.digna-ware.
com
IJohn
Favazzo
moved
back to
Boston. He
is senior
member
services
representative
at
Edu\'entures, Inc.,
in
Boston.
I
Charlene Fields
lives
with
her fiance,
1
wo sons, and future
stepson and stepdaughter. She
teach-
Andrea Hadhazy
'96
returned in
November from Macau, China,
where she spent almost three
months training
65 new gon-
doliers at the Venetian Hotel
&
Casino. Andrea reports that the
casino/resort,
which opened
Aug. 28, is the
largest
in the
world at 10.2 million square feet
and one of the
largest
air-con-
ditioned buildings in existence,
second only to the NASA facil-
ity
in Houston,
Texas. She is a
gondolier at the Venetian
Hotel
in
Las
Vegas,
Nev.,
and has a sec-
ond career as a licensed financial
planner in the states of Nevada,
New York, and California. Above,
Andrea is in a boat in Macau in her
training
uniform.
es fourth grade
in
Schenectady, NY.
I
Elisa Kinsman
lives in
German}'
while her husband, Patrick,
is
deplored
10
Afghanistan
in support of
Operation Enduring
Freedom for
15
months.
I
With
a verr
long
commute
to work and
an
infant
son,
Maria
Licari-Cohen
doesn't have much
free
time.
She
reads a lot
on
the train ride,
enjoys cooking at
home and,
most
important,
lo\'es
spending time
with
baby
Mau hew and husband David.
Maria
does
miss
her theatre
days and
once
in
awhile
makes an appearance
singing the National Anthem at a
Marist homecoming game.
Together
with her
sister,
Antonella
Licari
'94,
she chairs
the
Alumni
Division
of
the
2008 Marist Fund.
I
Robert Melillo
was
named
president of sales and
marketing
for White
Hat
Marketing,
LLC, an
Internet
marketing and
search engine optimization firm.
1 9 9 4
Three
plays by
Ken
Collins have
been produced
in
New York
and New
Jersey. They include
Off
the
Beaten
Path,
showcased most
recently
in the
Hudson
County One Acts Festirnl,
and
5
Easy
Payments,
shown at
the
27th annual Samuel French Festival
in Manhauan.
I
Edgar
Glascou
is
the
principal of Poughkeepsie Middle
School.
I
Chang-Yu
Hsiao
has been
a children's librarian
in
the Maryland
public
library
system for the
past
piTl•tl\·IZ:
The flag denotes classes
that
will celebrate reunions
in
2008


































Some of the many Mari st alumni who work at ESPN gathered on the
set of SportsCenter at ESPN in Bristol, Conn., for a group phot,o this
past summer. Seated (left to right) are Korin Daniels '00, gra1phics
developer, Creative Services, and Marissa Cucolo
'04,
senior pmduc-
tion coordinator, Event Production; standing (left to right) are Maura
Shea
'05,
coordinator, Commercial Operations; Marty Sina cola
'97,
manager, Commercial Operations; Chris Smith
'98,
coordin1ator,
Commercial Operations; Eric Kimmel
'OS,
operations techniician,
Production Operations; Rob Adamski
'01,associate
producer, Event
Production; Ken Menard '98, producer, Event Production;
•Craig
O'Brien 'OS, broadcast editor; Paul Palmer
'84,
producer, ou,tside
the Lines;
Mike Dumont
'92,
manager, Broadcast Promotions:; and
Brittany King O'Connor '98, manager, Event Production.
seven years.
In
2001 she created
the first Chinese and English bilin-
gual story
time
which draws popular
auendance from all over Maryland.
I
Jeffrey Hurley
is
the
section chief
of environmental
health
safety for
the
New York City Depanment of
Environmental
Protection.
lThomas
Kirwan
was
named
advertising
direcwr
of
the
Consumer
Healthcare,
Hospital,
and
Pharmaceuticals
Group
at
the
New
York Times
Co.
in
New
York
City. His responsibilities
include
overseeing
all aspects of advertising
related to healthcare
both in the
New
York
Times
newspaper
and on
the
web site www.nytimes.com.
I
Jay LaScolea
is an ordained
minis-
ter in
the
Wesleyan Church.
He is
a staff
pastor
at Victory Highway
Wesleyan Church in Painted Post,
N.Y.
He and his wife, Cheri, celebrat-
ed
their
one-year anniversary
in June
2007.1
Antonella Licari
worked on
ABC's
One Night, Two Parties-The
New Hampshire
Debates
in
Manchester,
New Hampshire
and ABC's
Countdown
to Oscar
show and will work on the
conventions
this
summer. Together
with her sister,
Maria Licari-
Cohen
'93, she chairs
the
Alumni
Division of the 2008 Marist
Fund.
I
Ann Marie Lopane,
CPA,
opened
a certified public accounting prac-
tice in September
2006.
IMary
Ann
McGovern
is
working for
the
Garden
City (NY.)
Public
Schools
as a special
education/living environment inclu-
sion
teacher.
I
Julie Shrider Roy
and
her
husband, R. Allen Roy
'92,
li\'e
in
the
Cleveland area with
their
two
daughters. Julie is a special
projects
producer for WEWS, the ABC-TV
affiliate
in
Cleveland.
R.
Allen is
regional sales
director
of JoS. A. Bank
Clothiers
for
the Northeast Ohio-
Pittsburgh
Metro
region.
I
Peter
Tartaglia
is
the co-executive produc-
er
for the Bravo
television series
Real
Housewives
of Orange
County.
1
9 9 5
Jeannine Brescia
Castaldi
was
promoted to manager of
technical
accounting
at
Pepsi Bottling Group
in
Somers, N.Y.
I
Paul Di Giacomo
is
a senior editor
for
Stats LLC in
Chicago, a company that
de:als
with
online spons stories, headlines,
and statistics.
I
Brian Kenworthy
lives
in
Arcadia, Calif., with his
wife, Virginia, and baby daughter,
Victoria.
He
is director of t,echnical
services
at Deluxe Digital
Studios
and frequently
works with Pitxar,
Fox,
Paramount,
and Universal Studios.
I
Kim Mahoney
is pursuing an MS
in
criminal justice and security from the
University
of Phoenix.
I
Steven Rice
accepted
an
account superv·isor posi-
tion with Eric Mower
and A:;sociates
in
Atlanta, Ga.
lJonathan
Sorelle,
MD,
is opening a hand-surgery prac-
tice in a new surgery center and office
in
Las Vegas.
He
receh·ed the
Society
of Laparoendoscopic Surgeons
Outstanding Laparoendoscopic
Resident
Award in June 2007.
1
9 9 6
Christopher Berinato
was awarded
an Emmy
for
Outstanding Newscast
in
the
evening/medium-market
category from the National Capital
Chesapeake Bay chapter of the
National Academy of Television
Ans
and Sciences.
He
is
a news producer
at
WBFF
TV
in Baltimore,
Md.
I
Stacey
Dengler Girard
has
been working
for
more
than 10 years with various
NBA and WNBA
teams.
I
Gregory
Donohue
is married to Kristen, an
employee
of
Double
Click,
Inc.,
locat-
ed in New York City. They have a son,
Bobby.
I
Susan Gullotta
is a stay-at-
home
mom
of
two
boys and started
a
home-based
business
making and
selling baby quilts and nursery acces-
sories.
I Ramon
Hache
is COO and
head of sales management in
the
Private Wealth Management/Latin
America Division of
Deutsche
Bank.
He is responsible
for managing
the
Americas
investment
platform
and
helping wealthy
Latin
American
clients with
investments.
He O\·ersees
$3. 7
billion
of assets under manage-
mem.
lJoeJarjura
is a deputy sheriff
in the San Diego (Calif.) Coumy
Sheriff's
Depanment.
lJason
Lopes
has been promoted to lieutenant
fire-
fighter in the LaGrange (N.Y.) Fire
Department.
I
Stacey unes-Ranchy
teaches French at Newtown (Conn.)
High
School.
I
Dr. Joseph Phillips
has been named to staff as auending
physician at Ochsner Medical
Center
in the Department
of Hematologr
and
Oncologr His work
includes
train-
ing and teaching oncology fellows at
the
hospital.
1 9 9 7
Danny
Basile
is physical education
and health
teacher/athletic
direc-
tor at University Academy Charter
High School in
Jersey
City, NJ He is
also head coach of the New
Heights
Warriors AAU team for ages 14 and
under.
I
Kimberly Byda
is
an event
sales manager at Jillian's Boston.
IJessica
Alfieri Casamento is
a
stay-at-home mom. She
has
start-
ed a business painting
murals.
She
also
helps
run
the
Mothers' Club at
Vassar Brothers Medical Center in
Poughkeepsie.
I
Kristen Koehler
received a Doctor of
Education
degree
from
Seton Hall Universit}'
in
NEW
ARRIVALS
Jennifer Ubert
and Greg
Eraca,
a
daughter,
Ava, March
20, 2007
1994
Julie
and
Martin Feeney,
a son,
Liam Martin,
Oct. 15,
2006
Danielle
and
Edgar Glascott,
a
son,
Kevin
Patrick,
Oct.
1,
2006
Erin Flannery '97
and
Thomas Kirwan,
a
son, Thomas
Finnbar,
June
8, 2007
Jennifer Uttley
and Edward
Andres,
a
daughter,
Stacey
Marie, March
13,
2007
Pamela Ricigliano
and Mark Gnapp,
a
daughter,
Alexa
Sophia,
June
2007
Stephanie Stewart
and
Joseph
Barry,
a
daughter,
Bridget,
June
30,
2006
Rishika
and
Peter
Tartaglia,
a
daughter,
Maya
Joan,
May 2,
2007
Stephanie
and
Jeremy Thode,
a
daughter,
Olivia
Paige,
May
30, 2007
1995
Linda 8aron
and
Raymond
Necci,
twins, a daughter,
Kaylin
Rose,
and a
son,
Brayden
William,
August
2007
Laurie Bianchi
and Matthew
Pirog,
a son, Nathan,
Feb.
26, 2006,
and
a son, Thomas,
July 25, 2007
Erin Butler
and
Mark
Lombardo,
a
daughter,
Katherine
Butler,
July
14,
2007
Jillian Caci
and Michael
Kukelka,
a
son, Ronan
Francis,
Aug.
13,
2007
Jennifer Donza
and
Michael
Giammusso,
a
daughter,
Caroline
Mae,
Oct. 14, 2004,
and
a daughter,
Sara
Elizabeth,
July
16, 2007
Marlo Dyson
and
Kevin
Schorling,
a
son, Jake
Robert,
March
8, 2007
Carrie Gallagher
and
Dan
Coughlin,
a
daughter,
Norah
Jeanette,
Feb.
21,
2007
Sandra
and
Matthew Gillis,
a son,
Richard
Joseph,
April 24, 2007
Melissa Miller
and
Donald
Pecora,
a
daughter,
lily Grace,
July 16, 2006
Vita Marie
and
Brian Murphy,
a
son, Brian
Peter,
Aug.
7, 2007
Kristen Rath
and Robert
Velasco,
a
daughter,
Alena Lauren,
Jan.
11,
2007
SPRING
2008
25



































Alumni
NEW
ARRIVALS
1996
Jenny Benedetti
and Antonios
Rousos,
a son, Dean
Anthony,
May 2, 2007
Marnie
and
Steven Dardanello,
a
daughter,
Melissa
Rose,
June
6, 2007
Stacey Dengler
and David
Girard,
a
daughter,
Jane
Elizabeth,
April 22, 2007
Megan
Dowden
and Mike Carrete,
a
son, Patrick
Joseph,
April 20, 2007
Christine Dube
and Robert
Mathers,
a son, Melvin
Albert, March 15, 2006
Joann
and
Michael Flynn,
a son,
Gavin
Meyers,
May 3, 2007
Lisa Goddard
and Fred
L. McGhee,
PhD,
a
son, Alexander
Nanepashemet,
May 2, 2007
Amanda
Howard
and Paul
Fanuele,
a
son, Andrew
Brennan,
July
23,
2007
1997
Jessica Alfieri
and Ken Casamento,
a son,
Bryce
Lum,
March 30, 2006
Mary Ann Blanco
and Bryan
Kimes,
a son, Bryan
Charles,
Dec. 19, 2006
Allison and
Bryan Christian,
two
sons,
John
Jackson
and Cooper
Linfante,
Nov. 23, 2007
Amy Coppola
and Schuyler
Woods,
a
son, Cameron
Jack,
June
20, 2007
Claudia Corso
and Scott Healy,
a
daughter,
laurel Maris,
Aug. 28, 2007
Jennifer De Marco
and Michael
Nyhuis,
a
son, Anthony
Michael,
Oct. 27, 2006
Erin Flannery
and
Thomas Kirwan
'94,
a son, Thomas
Finnbar,
June
8, 2007
Tania Gojdycz
and David
Sones,
a son, Alexander,
April 4, 2005,
and a son, Aiden, July 21, 2006
Erika Harnish
and Rich
Bello,
a
daughter,
Alyssa
Rose,
April 5, 2007
Anne Henry
and
Jim
McNiff, a
daughter,
Caelan
Erin, Feb. 15, 2007
Amy Hunt
and
Jared Breault,
twin daughters,
Addison
Rose
and
Alexis Lily, Dec. 18, 2006
Michelle
Lopez
and
Fredrick
Dalton
Hughes
111,
a son, Jake
Dalton,
Dec. 16, 2006
Casey
and
Eric Mandeville,
a
daughter,
Addison
Sue,
April 30, 2007
26
MARIST
MAGAZINE
May 2007
Her
dissertation was titled
The
Role of
the President
in Balancing
Athletics
and Academics
at
Division
1-A
Institutions.I
Kyle Reeves
is a
market-
ing
communications specialist
at
FUR
Systems,
Inc.,
in
North
Billerica,
Mass.
lTania
Gojdyc,i Sones
opened
her
own photography
business,
Tania
Sones
Photography,
1in
Connecticut
in 2005. She also sta)'S at
home
with
her
two
sons, Alex and Aiden.
-r:::
1
9 9 8
Michael Benevento
h:as
been
working
for
Bloomberg LP
in
the Bloomberg
Television
Traffic Department since
November
2006.
I
Rachel Carter
launched an independent market-
ing and
public
relations
consulting
business
in Burling1ton,
Vt.,
called
Rachel Carter
Public Relations.
I
Kerriann Redmond Doyle
married
a fellow
Red Fox, Desmond
Doyle.
They
have
two young children.
I
Irene
Henderson
O'Brien married
Paul
O'Brien
in
2002
and
lives in
Stamford, Conn. She
has
worked for
A&E
Television
Networks for the past
seven years and last year was promot-
ed
to managing prnducer
of
post
production. In
200'6, she won the
A&E
Television
Networks President's
Award.
I
Christine
Rosenvinge
was
commissioned as a ,cryptology offi-
cer
in
the U.S.
Navy
in
2004 and
serves
in
a reserve st21tus.
I
Giuseppe
Sarrica
'98MS writes
that
his son,
Gregory, graduated
from
Marist
in
May 2007.
Gregory iis now married,
and his
wife is attending
medical
school.
I
Bethann
Steiner is
chief
of staff
to Massachusetts
state sena-
tor
Benjamin
B.
Downing.
Fellow
alumna
Elizabeth Mahony
'99 was
hired
as counsel.
I
Ke:ith Sunderland
is
in his
sixth year working at his
high
school alma mater;
1t
is
his third
year as dean of students. He recently
participated on
the
validation
team
for
the Middle
Statei: Association for
Colleges
and
Schools.
I
Dr. Brian
J.
Webber
graduated!
in
June 2007
from
the
five-year
diagnostic
radi-
Rachel Carter
'98
Above, some of the 55
members
of the
1970 undefeated club foot-
ball
team
reunited
at the
dedication
of
Tenney
Stadium at
Leonidoff
Field in October. Inset is the original team.
ology
residency
program at Nassau
University
Medical
Center, where he
served as chief resident for 2006-07.
He is
attending the University of
Rochester/Strong
Memorial
Hospital
for a one-year sub-specialty fellow-
ship in MRI
that began
in
July
2007.
I
Mario
Wilson
has moved to
Albuquerque, N.M., and works for
the
University of New Mexico as an
assistant
track and
field
coach.
1
9 9 9
Russell R. Boedeker
was
named
director of finance for the Check free
Corp. in Portland, Ore.
Russell
was
awarded
the
Lybrand
Gold Medal for
outstanding finance publication of
the
year for
his
article on offshor-
ing,
"A
Journey
O,·erseas,"
published
in Strategic Finance in
March
2007.
I
Carrie Amrich
Bowen
served for
the second year on
the
committee for
the Des Moines (Iowa)
Playhouse's
Hollywood
Halloween
fund-rais-
er. She
recently
started on a new
career path as a data specialist with
a global nutritional
ingredient
manu-
facturer.
Her
husband,
Seth
Bowen,
is in
his
third year in information
security at
the
Principal Financial
Group
in
downtown Des Moines.
In
2007
he
was promoted to associ-
ate for process/procedure/projects.
I
James Byrne
moved
to Boston from
San
Francisco
after six years on the
West Coast.
He
is
a
senior
helpdesk
engineer at Bain Capital,
LLC,
in
Boston.
lJennifer
Canonico is
on
maternity
lea,·e
from
teaching third
grade in Harrison, N.Y., to spend
time with baby daughter Marissa.
Her husband, Bryan Auroch
'00,
continues
to
teach at a middle school
in
Stamford, Conn.
I
Donna-Marie
Facilla
earned more
than
75 graduate
credits above her master's
degree
and
currently
teaches
fifth grade special
education in Lindenhurst, N.Y. She
also
teaches an
after-school
sports
program.
I
Michael
Frisch
and
his
wife, Dr. Anna
Frisch,
MD,
PhD,
live in Atlanta, Ga., with
their two
young
daughters. Michael
graduat-
ed from Harvard University
graduate
school in June 2007 with a business
degree.
I
Kenneth
Gerrish
returned
this
past summer from his
third
tour
in Afghanistan.
He
deployed with
D Company
l-l02nd Infantry,
29th
Infantry Division.
He worked as a fire
team
leader
and was part of a secu-
rity
force
that
protected
Provincial
Reconstruction
Team Asadabad. He
is
a corrections officer in
Danbury,
Conn.
I
Colleen
Hoffman
teach-
es
pre-Kat
the
Half Hollow
Hills
Central School
District in Dix Hills,
N.Y.
She also coaches crew for
Half
Hallow Hills. Her love
for crew
stems
from
her days spent at Ma
rist.
I
Mandy
Liles
recently
moved
back
to New York City
from
San Antonio,
Texas, for
a
job
opportunity and to
be closer to
home.
She
is research
manager
for Univision
Radio
National Sales. She
is
on
the
board
of directors
for
American Women
in
Radio
and Television's
New York City
chapter and
previously
served
on
the board
of
the
San Antonio
Media
Alliance.
I
Summer
Lopes
is pursu-
ing a master's at Columbia
Unh·ersity
in the
nurse anesthetist program.
I
Amy Cotter Merrow
is an online
content manager
for
Pearson Higher
Education's
Global Production and
Manufacturing
Group in Boston,
Mass.
She
lives
in
Manchester,
N.H.,
with
her
husband,
Christopher
p;n~m-iZ::
The flag denotes classes that will celebrate
reunions
in 2008
































ALUMNI
Melissa Maples Cassidy
'99
has
illustrated her
first children's
book,
Divco,
the Little
Milk
Truck.
Written
by
her
sister-in-law,
Colette Cassidy,
the
book
is
about
a vintage milk
truck
that
comes
to
life. The
char-
acter is
based
on an actual truck
produced by
the Detroit
Industrial
Vehicle Company.
The
distinctive
delivery
trucks,
produced from
1926
until
1986,
were
used
not only
for
the
delivery
of
milk but
also baked
goods, laundry, and
newspapers.
Melissa
works
full-time in
the
fash-
ion
industry
as a
design director
of
beuer women's
sportswear.
She looks
forward
to
illustrating
more books.
Ken Foye
'89
wrote
Smart Choice
3
Teacher's
Resource
Book,
pan of an ESL
textbook
series, published by Oxford
University
Press
in 2007.
Margaret
Kearney'86's
second book,
The Secret
of
Me,
is
a
novel
in verse for
teens.
Published
by Persea Books
in
2005,
it was
to
go
into paperback in
December
2007,
along with a
teach-
er's guide
for
those
who want
to
use
the book
to
teach
poetry
in
the
class-
room. Meg is
the director
of creative
writing
programs
at Pine Manor
College.
Ray Landry
'60's
second
book
of
poetry,
Growing
into
Infancy: A
Collection
of Self-Proclaimed
Award-
Winning
Poems,
is
to be
published
soon.
Edmund
McKenna
'85
co-authored
Word-Doku,
a
letter-based Sudoku
puzzle
book.
Merrow
'97,
and
two
sons, Noah and
Brady.
I
Lindsay White St. Lucia
was
promoted
from
account executive to
senior
account executive at Manino
Flynn,
LLC,
an advertising and
PR
agency
based
in
Rochester, N.Y.
AUTHORS
James Dziezynski
'98's recently
published
book
Best
Summit
Hikes
in
Colorado
features 50 of
the
best
mountain
hikes in
the
state.
James
spent
plenty
of
time playing
in
the
Catskills, 'Gunks, and Adirondacks
during his
time
at
Marist,
he says.
"It
was
a natural
progression
to
seek out new wildernesi; areas."
Each summit
is included because
of a notable
feature
such as a ghost
mine, airplane
wreckage,
thun-
dering
waterfalls, colorful
floral
meadows,
wildlife, or accessibility.
Some
peaks
offer unique opportu-
nities, such as
a trailhead
accessible
only via a steam-powered railroad.
The
book, published
by
Wilderness
Press,
covers all of Colorado's
major
mountain
ranges from the well-
known Sangre
De
Cristo, Gore,
Sawatch, Indian Peaks, and Maroon
Bell
wilderness areas
to the
lesser-
known Grenadiers, Medicine Bow,
and Outer Sanjuan peaks.
If
you would like news of y,our book
included in Alumni Authors, please
send the title, name of p1ublisher,
date of publication,
and description
of
the
content to leslie.bates@marist.
edu or to Alumni Authors,
c/o
Marist
Magazine, Advancement, Maris!
College,
3399
North
Rd.,
Poughkeepsie,
NY 12590-1387.
Feel
free to have your
publisher
e-mail us a pdf of the book's
cover.
2 0 0 0
Bryan Auroch
continues
to
teach
at a middle school in Stamford,
Conn.
Jennifer Canonico
'99
is
on maternity leave
from teaching
third
grade in
Harrison,
N.Y., to
spend
time
with their
baby <laugh-
ter,
Marissa.
IJackie
Baker
ran the
Nike Women's Marathon
in
San
Francisco
in October as pan of the
Leukemia
and Lymphoma Society
Team in
Training. She raised more
than
$6,000 in memory of her uncle,
Robert
Patterson.
lAlyson
Fink
was
one of 65 teachers chosen to partic-
ipate in
an academically
rigorous
program at the Mark Twain House
&
Museum in Hartford, Conn., in
July.
In 2004 she received the James
Madison Memorial
Fellowship.
One
teacher per year, per state,
receives
this fellowship in American
history
and attends Georgetown
University
for a summer
institute
as part of his
or
her
graduate work. Alyson teach-
es
history
at James B. Castle High
school
in
Kaneohe,
Hawaii.I
Dave
Gianna
'00MS/'02MBA
and Denise
Zottola adopted a daughter, Ava
Maria. Ava was born Dec. 8, 2006, in
Guatemala.
Her
first stop in the U.S.
was Disney World-her family was
vacationing
in
Florida when she was
ready
to come
home.
She joins her
brother, Anthony, who
is
also from
Guatemala. Dave is a senior security
consultant at Verizon Business and
works out of
his
home.
He is
also a
senior
member
of
Civil Air Patrol.
I
James Hunter left
his job of seven
years at Finalsite in East Hanford,
Conn.,
to
become a web produc-
er within the Enterprise Systems
Department of Yale University in
New Haven, Conn.
I
Ryan Hunter
works as an assistant district attor-
ney
in
the
narcotics bureau at the
Suffolk County district attorney's
office.
I
Matthew Marino
has been
promoted from district sales manag-
er of the New York City market for
Staples Business
Advantage
to
region-
al sales director for Minneapolis.
I
Thomas
Mirabella
went to New
Orleans this past summer to help
rebuild homes with a company he
owns, LIHome411.com,
a directory
service of
Long
Island home imprO\·e-
ment contractors.
"We
drove down
in
a
16-foot
box truck filled with
donations from fellow
Long Islanders
including tools, housewares,
clothes,
and furniture for the residents of the
area," Tom writes. LIHome4
l J.com
teamed with a not-for-profit orga-
nization, Phoenix of New Orleans,
for
the
project.I
Kristi Bouthillette
Mount
and her
husband,
William,
recently
bought a house
in
Bristol,
Vt.
I
Michael Musgnug
has become vice
president of marketing at Inverness
Medical.
I
After graduating from
Marist,
Nicole T.
Ornek
traveled
in
Europe for three months before
work-
NEW
ARRIVALS
Kristen
and
Charlie Melichar,
a daughter,
Olivia
Charlotte,
Sept. 13, 2007
Amy Cotter '99
and
Christopher
Merrow,
a son,
Brady
Norman,
April 21, 2007
Kristin
Richard
and Fred
Aguilera,
a
son,
Brandon
Thomas,
Sept.
26, 2006
Tracy
and
Adam Towne,
a son,
Alexander
Richard,
June
1,
2007
Danielle Vecchia
and Peter
Torres,
a
daughter,
Isabella
Rose,
Jan.
16, 2007
1998
Michele Araneo
and Michael
Anderson,
a daughter,
Emily
Rae,
Nov. 8, 2006
Lisa Buhler
and
Douglas
Vigo, a
daughter,
Emma
Grace,
Aug.
17,
2005
Jamie Scott '99
and
Mark Conway,
a
daughter,
Sophia
Elizabeth,
June
26,
2007
Traci Davis
and
John Lanner,
a
son, Justin
John,
April 25,
2007
Cybil Golas
and Eric
Lovly,
a
daughter,
Olivia,
May
23,
2007
Danielle
and
Patrick
Holton,
a son,
Ryan
Patrick,
Aug.
22, 2007
Kelly Mitchell
and Aaron Batt, a
daughter,
Brooke
Lindsay,
Sept.
25, 2007
Shannon O'Rourke
and Ray
O'Connor,
a son, Aidan Robert,
June
7, 2007
Kathryn Robinson
and Andres
Gonzalez,
a son, Gabriel
Eduardo,
Jan. 14, 2007
Lorraine Scotti
and
Christopher
Daly,
twins,
a daughter,
Ava, and
a son,
Ryan,
Aug. 25, 2006
Gyna Slomcinsky
and
Ryan
Soucy,
a
son, William
Albert, Sept.
20, 2007
Alison Spanovich
and Michael
Ricca,
a
son, Michael
Anthony,
April 30, 2007
MaryEllen Siegrist '01MA
and
Domenic Trocino,
a daughter,
Ava Marie,
Oct. 15, 2007
1999
Missie Backes
and Larry
Dunn,
a
son, Sullivan
Zander,
Feb.
22, 2007
Erin Minor '00
and
John Black,
a
daughter,
Kylie
Taylor,
May 30, 2006
Elizabeth
"Beth"
Clarke
'99/'03MBA
and
Brad Cookinham,
a son, Brayden,
Oct. 10, 2007
SPRING
2008
27
























Alumni
NEW
ARRIVALS
Amy Cotter
and
Christopher Merrow
'97,
a son, Brady
Norman,
April
21, 2007
Anna
Frisch,
MD,
PhD,
and
Michael
Frisch,
a
daughter,
Julia,
Dec.
31, 2003,
and a
daughter,
Karolina,
Dec.
21, 2005
Kristen Germana
and Lee
Nolan,
a
daughter,
Grace,
Apr.
12,
2007
Jessica Hawkens
and
Chris Cardella,
a
daughter,
Elizabeth
Rose,
May
24,
2007
Julie Morin
and
George Heudorfer,
a daughter,
Ella
Mary,
June 7, 2006
Jamie Scott
and
Mark Conway '98,
a
daughter,
Sophia
Elizabeth,
June 26, 2007
Jessica Spencer
and
Matthew
Delorenzo.
a daughter,
lzabella
Lorelai,
Nov.
5, 2007
Heather Vir
and Chris
Hildebrandt,
a
daughter,
Caitlin
Elisabeth,
Feb. 19, 2007
Barbara Glass '00
and
Justin Chase,
a
son,
Jakob
Logan,
Nov.
15, 2007
2000
Katie Daley
and
David
Gatta, a
daughter,
Emma
Rose,
Oct. 3, 2006
Dave
Gianna 'OOMS/'02MBA
and
Denise
Zottola
adopted
a
daughter,
Ava Maria,
born
Dec.
8, 2006,
from
Guatemala.
Barbara Glass
and
Justin Chase
'99,
a son,
Jakob
Logan,
Nov.
15, 2007
Kristen Hoey
and
Ben Amarone
'01,
a son, Benny
Andrew
111,
Nov.
13, 2006
Elizabeth Johnson
and
John Shibles,
a son, Ryan
Joseph,
March
1,
2007
Erin Minor
and
John Black '99,
a
daughter,
Kylie
Taylor,
May
30, 2006
Shelly Napoli
and
Chris Yapchanyk
'01,
a daughter,
Anna
Joyce,
April
5, 2007
Melissa Ranslow
and
Jason
Beland,
a son,
Joshua
James,
May
19,
2007
Megan Williams
'01
and
John Ragozzine,
a daughter,
Hazel
Lucia,
May
15,
2007
2001
Elaine Findlay
and Lloyd
E.
Perryman,
a son, Lloyd
Evans
Jr., Nov.
5, 2007
Kristen Hoey '00
and
Ben Amarone,
a
son, Benny
Andrew
Ill,
Nov.
13,
2006
Shelly Napoli '00
and
Chris Yapchanyk,
a daughter,
Anna
Joyce,
Apr.
5,
2007
28
MARIST
MAGAZINE
ing
at
the
Guggenheim Museum
in
New York City as an assistant cura-
tor.
After two years, she followed her
dream of becoming a social studies
teacher. She taught for three years at
Windsor High School
in
Connecticut
and also coached the girls' soccer
team there. She now has changed
careers once again and
is
project
manager for
Reliance
Realty Partners,
a real estate im·estment deYelopment
company
in
Stamford.,
Conn.I
David
Orser
and his wife.Jamie
Augienello
'01,
recently
bought a house
in
Washingtonville, N.Y., and adopt-
ed a baby pit bull named Maggie.
I
Elizabeth
Owens
is
,1
physician sales
representative
for Becton, Dickinson
and
Co.lJared
Parker,
senior service
representative
for
Travelers,
and
his
wife, Joanna, b,:iught a beauti-
ful house
in Chicop,ee, Mass. They
live
there with several pets: a cat,
Lynx; three rats, Isis, Ninlin, and
Flower; a hamster, Mal; and a beta
fish, Finnegan Fishington II.I
Susan
Goulet Synan
'OO/'Ql4M
will receive
her
second master's degree
in
May
2008.1
Adam Weissman
appeared
on CBS's
The Early Show on Oct. 3.
The segment was about finding your
"GoogleGanger"-what
comes up
when you Google your own name. It
all came about after Adam was quoted
on Googling yourself in an article
that
appeared in
the
St.
Paul Pioneer
Press. Adam is a senior account exec-
utive
at OBA
Public Relations.
He
has
been reelected as
the
president of the
Hoboken Ski Club in Hoboken, N.j.,
where he resides.
2 0 Cl
1
Christopher
Asmamn
is finishing
his
master's at Fordham and will
graduate in spring
:wos.
He's been
accepted by a sign language inter-
preter program and will begin in fall
2008.
IJamie
Augiienello
and her
husband,
David 01rser
'00,
recent-
ly bought a house in Washingtonville,
N.Y., and adopted a baby pit bull
named
Maggie.lJamie
Veley
Batcher
opened a
law
practice
in
Cobleskill,
N.Y.,
in
September 2006.
I
Kristin
Burke
teaches kindergarten for
Fulton County
(Ga.)
Public Schools.
She received an MA
in
teaching from
Mercer University
in
Atlanta
this
past summer.
lJos1!ph
Cannerelli
Ol/'02MA
became· an operations
executive for Target at the company's
import warehouse in Suffolk,
Va. His
wife,
Katherine Romeo
'02, earned a
master's from
LeMo,yne
College and
teaches at Kings Fork High School
in
Suffolk, Va.
I
Michael
Cunningham
Former Marist
basketball player Bobby Joe Hatton
'00
came out to
see
the
Red
Foxes
when
the Marist men's basketball team played
in the ESPNU
O'Reilly
Auto
Parts Puerto Rico Tip-Off in San Juan in
November.
Above,
Bobby Joe
(right)
talks on the air with longtime
Marist
radio broadcaster Ed
Weir.
graduated cum laude
from
St.
John's
Universit)' School of Law.
He
is an
associate
in
the Structured Finance
Department at Thacher, Proffitt
&
Wood, LLP.
IJim
Lieto
teach-
es second grade and coaches girls'
junior
varsity lacrosse and modi-
fied volleyball in Mahopac, N.Y.
I
Nicholas
Loeser
and his wife
live
in Hamden, Conn. He has launched
the web site www.customerfriendly.
org.
I
Mark
Lynch is
a police offi-
cer. He and his wife,
Lori Yelenovic
Lynch
'02, a flight attendant, live
in
Hillsborough, NJ Their bridal
party included eight
fellow
Marist
grads.
llee
Shillington Neys
is a
study abroad integration coordina-
tor at
the
Uni\'ersity of Minnesota
Duluth.
I
Anne
Perkins
is a physi-
cian assistant
in
surgery in Queens,
N.Y.
I
After producing
the
6 p.m.
news for New England Cable News
in the Boston area for
two
years,
Ian Philbrick
has
moved into news
management. He
is
now executive
producer for WVTM, the NBC TV
station in Birmingham, Ala. He is
responsible
for on-air content and
presentation
in four
e"ening
news-
casts.
lChristina
Schwab
Pontilena
has
been a buyer for Linens
'n'
Things since July
2006.1
Tim
and
Cristina Sorensen
purchased
their
first
house,
in Monroe, Conn.
I
Edward
Synan
'OI/06M completed
his
first year teaching social stud-
ies
at Commonwealth Academy
in
Alexandria, Va.
He
was
to
finish his
second master's degree in December
2007.
IJessica
Weissman
and
Steven
Hill
were married mJune and bought
their first home,
in
Nesconset, N.Y.
I
Kyle Wood
received tenure
in
the Social Studies
Department
at
Brewster
(N.Y.)
High
School.
2 0 0 2
Gary Albaugh
and his wife, Misty,
changed duty stations from
Germany
to Fort
Lewis,
Wash.
Their
second
son was born Sept. 12,
2007.ISarah
Beamish
was
promoted
in
summer
2007
and
is
now
managing
Global
Capital Markets MBA Campus
Recruiting
at Cili.
Her
responsibili-
ties include
recruiting
for
full-time
and
summer associate
programs
in
capital markets restructuring
and
origination, sales
and
trading and
fixed income strategy and analysis.
I
Katherine
Romeo
Cannerelli
earned
a master's from
LeMoyne
College
and
teaches
at
Kings
Fork
High
School
in Suffolk, Va. Her
husband.Joseph
Cannerelli Ol/'02MA,
became an
operations executive for Target at
the company's import warehouse
in
Suffolk, Va.
lPete
Frisoni
'02MPA
was
promoted
to
detective
captain
of
the
Schenectady (N.Y.)
Police
Department in May
2007.
I
Lori
Yelenovic
Lynch
and
her
husband,
Mark Lynch
'01, a
police
officer,
live in Hillsborough, N.J. She
is
a
flight attendant.
Their
bridal party
included eight
fellow
Marist grads.
IJeremy
Meyers
recently
became
head editor for
Time
Warner Cable
Capital News 9's
High School Sports
Kickoff Show.
The
program airs
weekly
Thursday nights and again
Fridays and kicks off the local
high
school football game of
the week.
He
continues
his
normal duties of
editing all video content for
news at
the station.
I
Thomas
Murray, CFA,
was recently
promoted to
vice
pres-
P,"itiHZ·
The flag denotes
classes
that will celebrate
reunions
in
2008
































ident
at Goldman Sachs.
I
Michelle
Pantaleo
is
celebrating
her
fifth year
in her job
as a special investigator
for
USIS.
I
Christopher Parfett
gradu-
ated with a
master's in
social work
from
Adelphi University in August
2007.1
Michael Reilly
helps lead
the
youth ministry
program
with
his
wife,
Missy,
at Cross Point Community
Church
in Knightdale,
N.C.IJoanna
Waters
is
currently
team-teaching
a
third
grade inclusion classroom and
recently won an outstanding teach-
ing
award
from
the Massachusetts
Down
Syndrome Congress.
~Bw!NR
John
C.
Tkazyik
'03
wa1s
elected City of
Poughkeepsie mayor in
November. Above, Marist President Dennis Murray
(right)
con-
gratulates John
(left)
at his inauguration.
2 0 0 3
Steven Black
continues
to
work
as a
database analyst
for IPSOS-
ASI.
His
wife.Jillian
Duffy Black,
teaches third grade in Westport,
Conn.
I
Traci Cillis
received
a
master's degree
in literacy and is
now
a certified reading
teacher.
I
Brad Cook
is
in
his
fourth year of
teaching eighth grade special educa-
tion in Johnson
City (N.Y.)
Central
Schools.
In
his
first
season as varsity
baseball
coach,
his team
went 20-3
and
finished
second
in the
New York
State Class A state
rankings.
I
Jaime
Gillespie
McHugh
is in her fifth
year of teaching special education.
IJacquelyn
Henderson Ingham
is
pursuing
an
MS
in early child-
hood special education at Southern
Connecticut
State University.
I
Jaclyn
Jacobsen
is
a postgraduate
student at
City University London,
training
in
international
print journalism. She
earned an
MA
at McGill University
and was
a professor
of political
science at CUNY-Staten Island
from
2005
to
2007.1
Brian Kelly
teaches history
and government at
Rockland
and Dutchess commu-
nity colleges.
lJeff
Kuznekoff
has
a
new title
at
the
School of Visual
Arts
in
New
York
City. He has moved
from
research
associate to associate
director of
institutional research.
I
Thomas McGerty
was hired by
the Sewanhaka
(N.Y.)
Central High
School District as a business teach-
er at Floral Park Memorial
High
School.
lTiffany
Metti
graduated in
May 2003 with a BA in communica-
tions and a minor in psychollogy.
She
li\'eS in San Diego.I
Kelly
Naughton
graduated from Albany
Lavv
School
in
May 2006 and recei\·ed
the Capital
District Trial Lawyers Association
Award. She has been admitled
to
practice in Massachusetts 2111d
New
York
as well as in the federal court for
the Northern District of N,ew York.
She practices law
in
Goshen, N.Y.
I
Rebecca
Scribner is
a therapeutic
social worker at Abbott
House,
work-
ing
with foster children.
I
Michelle
Warren
is a promotions coordinator
at
Parenting
Magazine.
2 0 0 4
Richard
Ambrosio is
teaching in
Japan
\'ia the Japan Exchange and
Teaching
OET)
Programme.
llJeanine
Branham
recei\•ed a master's of
education
in
adolescent
biology from
Mount Saint Mary College in 2006.
ln
2007, she was awarded tenure at
Middletown (N.Y.)
High
School.I
Benjamin Brenkert,
SJ,
'02 (center)
took
vows
this past summer at a
religious ceremony con-
ducted at Lemoyne
College
in
Syracuse, N.Y.,
where the Society of Jesus has
its novitiate.
Ben has embarked
on
11
years of
study
to
be ordained a Jesuit priest and is taking
courses in philosophy
and sociology
at the
Jesuit House of
Studies at St.
Louis
University.Joining Ben
to mark
the occasion are Father Richard
LaMorte, Marist
chaplain, and Jess
Boyle
'09,
Marist
chapel
sacristan.
Kimberly Cuccia
is enrolled in the
organizational
leadership/communi-
cation master's program at t-larist.
I
Stephen
Harrison
was recently
promoted to chief operating officer,
vice president of human resources,
and vice president of finance at Seva
Technologies, LLC, in Tallahassee,
Fla.
He
remains active in the commu-
nity and supports a variety of local
organizations. He was recently elect-
ed vice president of the board of
directors for a local contemporary
art
gallerr, 621 Gallery
(www.62lgallery.
org).
IJenae
Jones
received an MS
in TESOL (Teachers of English to
Speakers of Other Languages)
from
Queens College.
I
Kristin
Mancini
is teaching high school Spanish
on
the
Connecticut shoreline after
receiving
an MA in Spanish literature
from
the
University
of Connecticut.
I
Mike Massa
is a producer for Voice
Coaches. He works in a recording
studio and produces voice-overs
for
clients. ln addition he travels around
the country teaching introductory
adult education classes about the
voice-over
industry. When he
recent-
ly
taught a class in New London,
NEW
ARRIVALS
Amanda Kelly
and
Ryan
Coyle,
twins,
a daughter,
Aubrey
Madison,
and
a
son, Landon
Emerson,
June
30, 2007
Charissa O'Reilly
and
Rob Zbikowski,
a daughter,
Brenna
Rae,
June
4, 2007
Danielle Patterson
and
George
Omondi,
a daughter,
Sanaa
Marie,
Oct. 29, 2006
MaryEllen Siegrist
and
Domenic
Trocino
'98,
a daughter,
Ava
Marie,
Oct
15,
2007
Katie Twist
and George
H.
Rowlinson
V,
a son, George
Henry
VI, March
25, 2007
Jennifer Vaiana
and
Ian Becker,
a
daughter,
Caitlin
M.,
Sept.
26, 2006
Amanda Whelan
and Andrew
Weiss,
a
daughter,
Lauren
Alexandria,
April 20, 2007
Megan Williams
and
John Ragozzine
'00,
a daughter,
Hazel
Lucia,
May 15,
2007
2002
Misty and
Gary Albaugh,
a son,
Brandon
Miles,
Sept. 12,
2007
Alyssa Bobb
and
Rory S. Boice '03MA,
a daughter,
Riley
Alexis,
Dec. 2, 2006
Heather Corkins
and Brian
Hunt
Sr.,
a
son,
Brian
Thomas
Jr.,
Jan.
23, 2007
Jennifer
and
Christopher Parfett,
a
daughter,
Gabriella
Rose,
Oct.
26, 2007
Denise
Zottola and
Dave Gianna
'OOMS/'02MBA
adopted
a daughter,
Ava
Maria,
born
Dec.
8, 2006,
from
Guatemala
2003
Kimberly Espey,
a daughter,
Peyton
Nicole,
Dec.
10, 2006
Megan Lizotte
and David
McNally,
a
daughter,
Madison
Rose,
Aug.
10, 2007
Alyssa Bobb
'02
and
Rory
S. Boice
'03MA,
a daughter,
Riley
Alexis,
Dec.
2, 2006
2005
Stephanie
and
Jeremy Thode,
a
daughter,
Olivia
Paige,
May 30,
2007
2007
Mary Elizabeth Lass '07MA
and
Edward Eberling '88,
a
daughter,
Ava Grace,
May 1, 2007
SPRING
2008
29

























Alumni
IN
MEMORIAM
Trustees
Jay
P.
Rolison
Jr.
Jack
Newman
Former Trustees
John
F. Hanifin
Orin Lehman
'88
Faculty & Staff
Carl J. Bryson
Adjunct
Professor
Dr. Jayne
Calabro
Adjunct
Instructor
in Graduate
Psychology
Dr. Edward
J. Cashin
'52
Professor
of History
and
Academic
Vice
President
Rev.
Richmond
J. Egan,
SM
Professor
of Broadcast
Journalism
William
Michael
Healy
Adjunct
Instructor
for College
Writing
Joseph
F.
Leary
Oirecror
of Safety
&
Security
Margaret
Melochick
Secrerary
Stefano
Netti
Oinmg
Services
Leo
Salvayon
Housekeeping
Staff
Friends
Janet
Holden-Adams
Dr. Winifred
Asprey
Dr. Harvey
L.
Berger
Dr. Anna Buchholz
Mrs. Charles
Byrd
Mary Patricia
Connolly
John
J.
"Jack"
Durkin
Helen
G. Hart
Claire
M. Hirst
Michael
P.
Landers
Charles
J.
Maneri
Jr.
Tung
S. Moy
Michael
Murphy
Thomas
B. Rice
Dr. Bruce
Schenker
Leonard
Shankman
Catherine
M. Weiss
30
MARIST
MAGAZINE
Conn .. a reporter from
theday.
com wrote an article
and
created a
slideshow about the course.
I
Ellen
Oman
and her
husband,
Brian,
still live
in
Colorado.
Ellen
is
the
assistant director of an environ-
mental nonprofit organization and
received
an MPA
from the University
of Colorado at Colorado Springs.
I
Sophia Sarantakos moved to
New
Orleans to attend
Tulane
University
two
weeks before Hurricane
Katrina
struck the city. After the hurricane
she moved to
Houston
to begin
her
first semester
in the MSW
program at
the University
of
Houston.
She moved
back to New Orleans in December
2006
to
complete
her
degree from
Tulane.
Immediately
after graduat-
ing she began working as a social
worker there.
I
Kirsten Waage
has
her
own personal training business
and works
independently,
going
to
people's
homes.
She works mainly
with young athletes.
Mari st alumni group the Wall Street Club
held
a
reception
this past
fall at the New York Athletic Club in New York City.
The
event offered
an opportunity to
network
and gain industry insight from speaker
Bruce Kamich of Smith Barney Citigroup. Alumni guests included
(left
to right) Stephanie Koutsares
'01,
Shannon Jergens
'00,
and
Maura McCabe
'04.
2 0 0 5
Alexander
Bea
is
pursuing an MA
in
communication studies at Virginia
Tech. He and
John Mullady
walked
from Yankee
Stadium
to
Fenway
Park
this past summer and
filmed
inter-
views about
the rivalry
between
the
Yankees and Red Sox for a potential
documentary.
They were featured in
an episode of the Boston UPN show
Red Sox Stories.
I
Danny Bellew
has
been working for
the
New York City
Fire Department since January 2006.
He
works in Harlem, N.Y.
He
also
plays for
the
FDNY
lacrosse
team.
I
Katherine Brauer
is corporate
administrator for Morris Energy
Group,
LLC.
a company that owns
six power plants supplying power
to
the Northeast market.
I
Kerry Casey
is
the text designer of educational
books for young adults published
under the imprints of Facts on
File and Chelsea House. The sets
include
Whal Can I Do Now, Reform
Movements
in
American
History,
and
Physics
in
Our World.
In
her
spare
time
she runs a small business called
Pies&: Fix (www.picsandfix.com)
where she sells
her
original photog-
raphy and offers digital photo repair
service.
I
Melissa Davis
is a Junior
Fellow with
the
United Way.
The
Junior Fellows program is
designed
to provide professionals
from
New
York City-based
nonprofits
with
a strong foundation in
nonprof-
it
management. She is a student
organizer associate with
GLSEN.1
Kate Daymon
is pursuing an MS
in rehabilitation counseling at San
Diego
State University.
I
Leslie Giffin
Egiziano
relocated
to
her
home
state of Pennsylvania
and now lives
near Hershey. She was promoted
to human
resources
representative
II
at Paychex, Inc., after obtain-
ing a Pennsylvania life, accident,
and
health insurance
license and
professional
human
resources certi-
fication
from
the Society for Human
Resource
Management.
I
Amy
Gillespie
became the
head
volley-
ball coach at Seminole
State College
in
Seminole, Okla.,
in July
2007.1
Margaret M. Quinlan
'03,
a health communication
doctoral candidate at Ohio University, is
pictured
with Dr. Albert Bandura
(center),
the renowned
Stanford University psychologist, and
Dr.
Arvind
Singha!, a mentor, at the Entertainment-Public
Health Summit at the Rollins School of Public
Health at Emory University in May 2007. A
psychology-special education
major
while
at Marist, Maggie credits Marist Assistant
Professor of Communication and Director
for Undergraduate
Research Dr. Daniel
Cochece Davis with encouraging her to pursue
a
master's in communication at Illinois State
University, which she completed in 2005.
Jennifer
Heinsman
Glassen
was
promoted
to associate
graphic design-
er of girls' sleepwear at American
Marketing Enterprises
in
New York
City.
I
Matthew Grant
earned
an
MS
in
journalism from Columbia
University.I
Olivia Haley
is pursuing
a Doctor of Education
degree
from
Walden University.
lJordan
Plante
has
completed a year-long train-
ing
program for
the National Auto
Dealers Association and a course
in
financing
and
insurance.
After gradu-
ation, he traveled across the country
for
two months,
camping and
hiking.
Then
he
traveled to Australia and
New
Zealand
to
backpack
for
five
weeks.
He
has
since joined
his fami-
ly's
auto
dealership-Tri-City
Dodge
and Subaru-and can be reached at
jplante®tricit
ydodge.com.
I
Everett
Reiss
does
technical
writing, systems
implementation,
and software train-
ing for Applied Systems Technology.
He also volunteers for a church
youth group,
mentors
for
McQuade
Children's Services, and is trying to
read the Bible in one year.
I
Brandon
Richter
owns his own insurance





































Kirk Dornton '04, a Marist record-holder, led a strong
contingent of Marist Alumni Racing Team members
at the ING New York City Marathon Nov. 4.
best marathon time set at
the
2006 NYC Marathon.
Sean
lfiopkins
'OS
was 397th in the men's race
in
2:53:07 in his debut over the 26.2-mile distance.
Th,e Marist Alumni Racing Team was formed two
years ago as an outlet for competitive former
Red
Fox runners to continue to represent their school in
road racing and track and field.
Als,o in the race, Ned Kenyon
'99,
running
for the
New York Police Department team, improved
his
perso11lal best in the marathon by seven
minutes
with a time of 3:21
:SO.
Ned is a police officer for
the
NYPD
..
-Pete Colaizzo '86
Kirk placed 39th in the men's race and was the
12th American finisher across the
line
with his
personal-best time of 2 hours, 33 minutes, and 25
seconds (2:33:25), which was two minutes faster
than his previous marathon best, set at the 2006
Philadelphia Marathon. More than 38,000 runners
participated in the race. Kirk still holds the Marist
record in
the
10,000-meter
run and is among the
fastest Red Fox cross country runners all time at Van
Cortlandt Park. He is a science teacher at Arlington
High
School in Poughkeepsie.
Two of Kirk's college teammates also placed in
the
top
500 of the race. Patrick Driscoll
'02
was 140th
in the men's race in 2:43:27, equaling his personal-
Editor's Note: Another Marist alumnus who ran in the
2007 /ltYC Marathon was Pete Colaizzo
'86.
Pete is in
his 17th year as head coach of the men's cross country
and tmck and field programs at Marist.
company,
Ridgefield Insurance
Services, LLC, in
Ridgefield,
Conn.
I
Scott Semple
is a third-year law
student at
Boston
College.
I
Lauren
Talbot
works at UBS Financial
Services in Weehawken, N.J., as a
senior associate.
2 0 0 6
Patrick
Bean
is in
graduate school
at
Duke
University.
I
Matthew
Borchers
continues
to
teach
math
in
New
Jersey. He
stays
in
touch
with many Marisl
classmates.
I
Lauren Chiarello is pursuing
a
master's
in speech-language pathol-
ogy and audiology at
Loyola
College.
I
Edward Grosskreuz
will gradu-
ate
rrom Adelphi
University in May
2008
with an MA
in
adolescent
education, specializing
in
English.
He
continues
to participate
in
theatre. He
toured
Long
Island and
New
Jersey during the
summer
in
Damn
Yankees
and
Hamlet. He
has
been hired as the director for
grades
3
through
5
performing workshops
at the
new
South Shore
Performing
Ans Academy.
The theatre
compa-
ny
he
formed with fellow actor
friends,
the
Winter
Theatre
Co.,
produced
its
second play
in
New
York
City.
He has been
selected
to
serve as a swdent teacher/intern
in
the
Bellmore-Merrick
Central
High
School District where he will spend
the year teaching eighth amd tenth
grade English courses.
II
Brooke
Heithoff
is pursuing a master's
in
higher education/studem affairs
at Iowa State University.
II
Melissa
Herpfer
li\'eS in
Honolulu
while
teaching
I
welhh grade English
in Oahu.
I
Matthew
Hilllenmark
is pursuing an MPA
in nonprofit
management
at
Baruch College.
He is
athletic director at Hyde Leadership
Charter School
in
the Bronx.
He
coaches
three
Lillie
League teams.
I
Michael
Kaste
'06MPA was
promot-
ed 10 assistant special agent
in
charge
of the St. Louis Field Divisiion
of the
FBI
in
July 2007.IMoses
Kmalemwa
was
to
move to Uganda, Africa,
LO
start an organic food farm this
past
December but will visit Maris! often.
IJaclyn
Nolan
works
in public
rela-
tions
at the
Highwa1erGrou1p
in
New
York City.
I
Kevin
Parsons,
finished
his first
year as an admissions coun-
selor at the University of Delaware.
This past summer he was
the
assis-
tant coordinator for
the
Uni\'ersity
of Delaware's 20-day freshman
orientation
program, DdaWorld
101,
managing
student oT'ientation
leaders
and acting as the on-site
supen·isor for
the
entire Jprogram.
I
Cyndi Pierre
has relocated
for
at
least
four
years
to
Sydney, Australia.
She
is marketing
and advertising
coordinator at
Your
Trading Edge
in
Belrose, New South Wales.
I
Lauren
Rowland's
father, Dick
Rowland,
was
elected town supervisor in Greenfield.
He
began
his
two-year
term
on
Jan.
I,
2008
I
Zachary Spalding
is a
systems manager for
the
Southeastern
New
York
Library
Resources
Council.
He
is
also
a
volunteer
firefighter
in
the Esopus (N.Y.)
Fire Department.
He
got
married
on Oct.
21,
2007.1
David
Violante is the
recipient of
the American
Red
Cross
Hometown
Hero award.
He is pursuing
a master's
Hillary
Saeger '07 was selected to
rep-
resent the
United
States at the World
Orienteering Championships in
Kiev,
Ukraine, in August.
In
November she
won
the
U.S. Sprint Championships
held in Virginia. She
has
attended
numerous
international orienteering
competitions including four Junior
World Orienteering Championships
and the 2006 World Championships.
She is
ranked
third
in
the
United
States and fourth in North America.
Hillary is a former member of the
Marist crew team.
IN
MEMORIAM
Graduates
of the College
Dr. Denis
D. Murphy
'49
Bro. Joseph
Malatak,
FMS
'58
Robert
J. VanAernem
'64
Bro. Denis
Caverley,
FMS
'67
Anthony
Joseph
Kondysar
Sr. '69
CDR
Francis
X. Kraemer
'69
Gerald
E. Fay
'71
John
J. Goonan
Jr. '73
Michael
M. Saintomas
Sr. '76
Peter
A. Gamble
'77
Robert
D. Hurley
'78
Arnoldo
Canelas
'79
John
F.
Boylan
'80
Frank
L.
Quattrociocchi
'81
Thomas
J. Hopkins
'82
Jack
Neustadt
'84
Mary Elizabeth
Walsh
'85
Douglas
Maloney
'87M
Ronald
R. Powers
'91 M
Thomas
P. Logan
'93
Frederick
H. Lantz
Ill '95
Gina Marie
Fonseca-Wowk
'98
Claude
L.
Bennett
'99
Anthony
A. Pugnali
'99
Maureen
O'Brien
'02
David
M. Skiba
'05
$
P
R I N
G
2 0 0 8
31























Alumni
Keep Us Up to Date
To receive
Marist Magazine, news,
and information from the Alumni
Relations office, be
sure
to keep
Marist posted concerning your
snail mail and e-mail addresses.
It's never been easier:
1.
Go
to www.marist.edu/alumni
2.
Click on
"Online
Update Form"
3.
Enter your information in
the spaces provided
4.
Click on
"Submit"
That's it!
Don't Miss the Fun
Visit the alumni web
site
at
www.marist.edu to find out
when and where chapter
events will take place.
at Columbia University
and recently
returned
from
doing public
health
work
in Kenya
and Cuba.
I
Colleen
Walsh
spent a year
teaching
in
Hawaii,
"an
incredible
experience."
She
is
now concentrating on
teach-
ing and pursuing a
master's
degree.
I
Mary Zicari
survived the 2006 elec-
tions working to elect pro-equality
candidates with
the Human
Rights
Campaign in Washington, D.C.
2 0 0 7
Following
graduation
Todd Bivona
worked as an on-set
production
assistant for the
horror
movie
Manslaughter,
for the TV
programs
The Next Iron Chef
(at the Culinary
Institute of America) and
Iron
Chef
America,
and for
live HBO
Boxing
events
in
the tri-state area. He also
did audio work for
HBO's
boxing
series
Boxing
After
Dark.
He is
now
a
full-time sports writer/photographer/
videographer for the weekly
Coast
Star
in Manasquan, N.J.
I
Bridget
Burns
is
attending graduate school
at
the
London School of Economics
and
Political
Science.
I
Elissa Carrick
is attending Fordham University
School of Law. She
plans
to
receive
a JD
in
May 2010.
ISarita
Chitkara
is working
as
a treasury
analyst
with
American Sugar
Refining, Inc., part
ofDomino Foods.I
Kristen
DeMeo
is
attending graduate school at
John
Jay
College of Criminal Justice.
I
JoAnna DePino
is
working at Yale
University's
Department
of Psychiatry
on a substance abuse treatment
program.
I
Bernadette Harden-
Eldridge is living in
Guantanamo
Alumni of Marist lacrosse got together for a golf
outing this past spring in Rockland County, N.Y.
The group included
(left
to right) Robert Naylor
'91,
Chris Feldmann
'92,
Kevin Breen
'87,
Steve Maloney
'90,
Desmond Galla hue
'90,
Chris Corwin
'91,
Robert
Novotny
'91,
Glenn Mattson
'91,
Chris Malet
'04,
Kevin Eversen
'90,
and
Carl
Marinaccio
'93.
32
MARIST
MAGAZlNE
Left to right, Jim Daly '72, president of the Alumni Association, pres-
ents the 2007 Alumni Legacy Scholarship to John Becker
'11,
who is
accompanied by his parents, Carol
'78
and Kevin Becker, and Bob
West, vice president for college advancement. John was one of many
applicants for the competitive scholarship awarded each year to a
Marist student who is the son or daughter of a Marist graduate.
Bay,
Cuba, on
the
U.S. Naval Base.
I
Robin
Henderson
is
pursuing
a master's in
humane
education
through
an online
program
at
Cambridge College.
I
Stephen
Furst
recently
finished
applying to veteri-
nary school.
He has been
working
at a vet clinic in Ardsley, N.Y.,
and
volunteering at the Bronx Zoo's
Department
of Herpetology.
I
Jaime
Kenworthy
is an
account coordina-
tor at Gregory
FCA
Communications
in
Ardmore, Pa.
lJohn
McGovern
'07MPA was promoted
to
lieutenant
commander
detective
in the New
York
Police Department
in June 2007.
I
Edgardo
Perez
is
a departmental
assistant
in
the Viewer Services
and
Public Affairs division
of
MTV
Networks Kids and
Family
Group,
which
includes
Nickelodeon, Nick
Jr., Noggin, the N, and GAS.
He
assists
in
managing
viewer corre-
spondence, tracking and reporting
viewer
trends,
and diffusing
potential
legal
liability
issues.
He also
moni-
tors regulatory and
policy
issues and
develops
campaigns and outreach.
I
Mark Perugini
is pursuing an MBA
from
Fairfield
University, concen-
trating
in finance. He has
received
a
graduate assistantship from Fairfield.
I
Nicole Dellairo Phillips
is
pursu-
ing an MS in physician
assistant
studies at Albany
Medical
College.
I
Amanda Russell
is in graduate
school at Old
Dominion
University
and is
a
graduate assistant.
What's
Marist Minute?
Marist Minute is an e-newslet-
ter produced by the Alumni and
Advancement offices at Marist
tokeepMaristalumniconnected
with the College. Every two
months a new issue is released
that includes alumni profiles,
feature articles, campus news,
a calendar of upcoming events
(both
on and off campus), and
much morel Subscription is free
and requires only your e-mail
address.
Just submit the request form
at
www.marist.edu/alumni/
maristminute.html
and you
will soon receive an e-mail mes-
sage that includes a link to the
latest issue of
Marist Minute.
""'l'D'll6$\'llJl1Pl\'.I
lmill'•lllli ••ii&ihl

































Be Part of
MaristN FuttLre
Become
a Charter Member of
the Marist College Heritage Society
T
he
College
is indebted
to our founders for
acting on
their
deeply
held belief in the power
of education.
As Marist looks
to
the future,
a new
generation
of
pioneers
is needed to
financially
secure
our
mission
of
developing the intellect
and
character
of our students.
You
are
invited
to
become
a
Charter Member
of
the
Marist College Heritage
Society,
a
newly
founded
organization that
honors
alumni,
trustees,
friends,
faculty,
staff,
and parents who
make
a planned
gift
or estate commitment
to
Marist.
Securing such
gifts-bequests, charitable gift annuities,
trust
provisions,
or
naming
the College beneficiary of
life insurance
policies and
retirement plans-
is vitally
important
to
Marist's financial future.
Find
out
more
about
the
Marist College
Heritage Society
and
how
you can
become
a
founding member. A mission
promoting
academic excellence and service to others
is worth passing
on.
For further information,
please
conwct Shaileen
Kopec,
Senior
Development
Officer for
Planned
Giving, at 845-575-3468
or
shaileen.kopec@marist.edu,
or
return the response
form below.
0
Please
send
information
about Charter
Membership
in
the
Marist
College
Heritage
Society.
0
Please
send
information
about
how
to
include
Marist
College in my
estate
plans, including material that
can
be
shared
with my
advisors.
0
Please
send
information
about
Marist's
Charitable
Gift Annuity program, where
I
can
make
a gifa
to Marist
and
receive
fixed payments
for
life.
(Note: Minimum
age
is
60; available
to
residents
of
New York
an<l Florida.)
0
I
would
like
to
report in
confidence
that I/we have
included Marist
College
in
my/our
estate plans.
Name
______________
Class __
_
Address
_________________
_
E-Mail _________________
_
Phone
(optional)
______________
_
Please return to:
Shaileen
Kopec
Senior
Development
Officer for
Planned
Giving
Marist
College, 3399 North
Rd.,
Poughkeepsie, NY 12601-1387
MARIST COLLE~:;E
HERITAGE
SOCIETY
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MARIST
3399 North Rd.
Poughkeepsie, NY
12601-1387
Address Service Requested
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Fulton'•
Sud,nl,oat an,!
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Modem
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of
Co,,unm,
Nonprofit Org.
U.S. Postage
PAID
Poughkeepsie, NY
Permit
No.
34
An interdisciplinary journal
dedicated to our region
As the academic arm of the Hudson River Valley National Heritage Area, the
Hudson River Valley
Institute
at Marist College is increasing public awareness
about the significance of America's First River in the history of New York and the
United States.
Its
mission is to study and to promote the Hudson River Valley.
To subscribe or
learn
more, visit
www.hudsonrivervalley.org/hrvr.php
or call 84S-575-3052
Hudson River Valley Review
Hudson River Valley Institute
Marist College
3399 North Rd.
Poughkeepsie, NY 12601-1387


front cover
inside cover
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pg 33
pg 34back cover