marylhurst unlimited - fall 2013

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In This Issue Terri Hopkins Retires from The Art Gym $100,000 Maybelle Clark Macdonald Fund Challenge $1 Million Eichholz Foundation Challenge 2012/2013 Honor Roll of Donors UNLIMITED FALL 2013

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A magazine for Marylhurst alumni and friends.

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Marylhurst Unlimited - Fall 2013

In This IssueTerri Hopkins Retires from The Art Gym $100,000 Maybelle Clark Macdonald Fund Challenge$1 Million Eichholz Foundation Challenge 2012/2013 Honor Roll of Donors

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Dear Alumni and Friends of Marylhurst,

as you may already know, Judith Johansen, who served as president at Marylhurst University since July 2008, has stepped down. Dr. Jerry E. Hudson, previously president of Willamette University, has been named interim president.

We are very appreciative of Judi’s outstanding work these past five years. Marylhurst has grown and prospered under her leadership and we intend to build on the foundation that she established, which has set Marylhurst on a secure course for the future.

Hudson served as president of Willamette University for 17 years and as executive vice president of the Collins foundation for 11 years. He has also served as a director and member of the executive committee of the National association of Independent Colleges and Universities.

He is immediate past board chair of the Oregon Historical Society and currently serves on the boards of The library foundation, Chalkboard Project and Japanese Garden Society. You can read more about Hudson on page 4.

That an academic leader of Hudson’s stature and reputation would respond to our call speaks well of all that Marylhurst has accomplished in recent years. His appointment as interim president assures continued strong leadership at Marylhurst as we conduct a thorough and deliberate search for the university’s next permanent president.

Please join us in thanking Judi for her dedication and service to Marylhurst and in welcoming Jerry to our community.

Blessings,

Andrew MacRitchieChair, Marylhurst University Board of Trustees

a letter from theBoard of Trustees

Marylhurst University TrusteesBoard Chairandrew MacRitchie

Secretary-TreasurerXandra McKeown

William BarrRuth a. BeyerScott Bolton ‘02Eileen Brown, SNJM ‘55Stephen BrownMary Burke, SNJM ‘65larry N. ChorubyRebecca DeCesaroRoswitha frawley, SNJM ‘68Michelle GarciaSylvia Giustina ‘56Judie HammerstadJane M. Hibbard, SNJM ‘69Greg HogensenDiana Pierce Knox ‘73Janina Kokorowski, SNJMKirk Mouser ‘12Cecilia Ranger, SNJM ‘55Martin RingleSam W. ShoenPatricia SmithKristin StathisChip Terhunelynda Thompson, SNJM ‘65Edward J. VranizanStephen P. Zimmer

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In This IssueOffice of University AdvancementMarylhurst University17600 Pacific HighwayPO Box 261Marylhurst, OR 97036-0261Phone: 503.534.4059Toll-free: 800.634.9982

Lynn E. Andrews, CFREVice President for University [email protected]

Kelly Ann CheeEditor, Marylhurst UnlimitedAlumni & Communications Program [email protected]

Pamela ClemDirector of Advancement Communications & [email protected]

Sandy PittengerOffice & Donor Stewardship [email protected]

Fran Walsh ’00Annual Giving [email protected]

Contributing WritersKelly Ann CheePamela ClemFran Walsh '00

Marylhurst Unlimitedseeking submissionsDo you create art or write poetry, prose or news stories? We are looking for YOU! Contact Kelly ann Chee.

Want to receive the magazine electronically?Interested in receiving Marylhurst Unlimited electronically only? Contact Kelly ann Chee.

Connect Online

Visit www.marylhurst.edu/alumni

Help us find “lost” alumniDo you know someone with whom the university has lost touch? Help us keep our database up to date. Contact Kelly ann Chee.

4 Short Features In the News, $100,000 Challenge Grant, Reunion Weekend, 2013 annual Dinner and more…

12 An Exercise in Creativity Terry Hopkins, co-founder and director/curator of The art Gym, to retire after 35 years at Marylhurst

17 $1 Million Challenge Grant from the Robert and Mercedes Eichholz Foundation Challenge is to endow the position of director/curator of The art Gym and Belluschi Pavilion

18 Alumni in Focus: Carl Maxwell, MBA ’13 MBa alum Carl Maxwell ’13 pursued his degree while his career took him far and wide

20 Class Notes find out what our alumni are up to…

22 2012-2013 Honor Roll of Donors THaNK YOU to the supporters of Marylhurst!

On the Cover: Terri Hopkins, director and curator of The Art Gym, is pictured during the Bachelor of Fine Arts thesis exhibition in June 2013. She will retire in January 2014. To read more about Hopkins, see page 12.

8 18 20

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Marylhurst art alum Peter Qualliotine is planning a memorial for the victims of Seattle's Green River killer. The memorial will be the first of its kind. a story about the memorial was featured in the april 2013 issue of Seattle Magazine.

Communication Studies alum Tony Coles '12 has been named senior vice president of programming for the west

region of Clear Channel Media and Entertainment. Coles began as an on-air personality in Columbus, Ohio, and shifted to management

in 1991. He held a variety of programming positions in New York, los angeles and Seattle before being named regional vice president of programming for Clear Channel.

Interdisciplinary studies alum Derek Neuts ’11 co-founded The Institute for Veteran Cultural Studies in Troutdale, Oregon. The Institute

for Veteran Cultural Studies is a privately held provider of continuing education and professional development courses for those in the helping professions who work with military members, veterans, and their respective families.

Interior Design students Abigail Marlatt and Katherine Park received top awards in a statewide student design competition sponsored by the International Interior Design association and american Society of Interior Designers in May 2013.

Education graduate student Daeh Christensen-Carney recently won two scholarships worth more than

$10,000: the american association of University Women’s (aaUW) National Educational foundation Career Development Grant 2013-2014 and the aaUW lake Oswego

IN THE NEWS

neuts

Christensen-CarneyColes

We are delighted to welcome Dr. Jerry E. Hudson to

Marylhurst as our interim president. He brings with him a wealth of experience in academia and philanthropy.

Hudson served as president of Willamette University for 17

years and then as executive vice president of the Collins foundation for 11 years. He is immediate past board chair of the Oregon Historical Society, and currently serves on the boards of The library foundation, Chalkboard Project and Japanese Garden Society.

He began his academic career as professor of history at Pepperdine University, where he became provost before accepting the presidency of Hamline University in St. Paul, Minnesota. later, during his tenure as president of Willamette University, he served as a director and member of the executive committee of the National

association of Independent Colleges and Universities.

Hudson has a B.a. in History from lipscomb University in Nashville; M.a. and Ph.D. in american History from Tulane University in New Orleans; and Honorary Doctorates from Pepperdine University, Tokyo International University, Willamette University and University of Portland.

"I come to Marylhurst with great enthusiasm," says Hudson. "as interim president, I plan to be fully engaged with campus, alumni and community matters as the Board of Trustees conducts its search for the next president. I hope to meet as many of you as possible in the next year."

Welcome, Dr. Jerry E. Hudson

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Branch Scholarship. She is the only Oregonian to win one of 65 national aaUW Career Development Grants for 2013-2014. Nationally, the aaUW has awarded $4.3 million in six grant categories this year.

Dr. Susan Marcus, chair, MBa programs, spoke at a Portland female Executives event at The Governor Hotel in June

2013. Her talk, Making the Most of the life Cycle of You, shared insight into a “life cycle” that has been anything but traditional, with plenty of barriers, yet full of opportunity and achievement.

Marylhurst faculty Stephan Belding, Libby Farr, Laura Hughes, Pamela Kaval, Petra Kern and Maya Story received grants from Marylhurst’s fund for faculty Teaching Excellence and Innovation. These grants will support innovative work in business, interior design, art, sustainability and music therapy.

Bob Burke, faculty member in the Department of Culture & Media, was elected president of the North american association for

Celtic language Teachers at its annual meeting in May 2013. This year’s meeting was held at the Official languages and Bilingualism Institute of The University of Ottawa in Ottawa, Canada.

marcus

Burke

• The Council for Interior Design accreditation re-accredited the Bfa in Interior Design program at Marylhurst University for a six-year term effective March 2013.

• The National associations of Schools of Music (NaSM) Commission on accreditation

voted to continue Marylhurst University’s accreditation in good standing at its June 2013 meeting, and the Bachelor of arts in Music and the Bachelor of Music Therapy programs have been given final approval. The next review will occur in the 2020-2021 academic year.

Art ExhibitionsStephanie Robison ’00 was a featured artist at the Berkeley art Center through august 2013.

Joanne Kollman ’12 and her paintings were featured in the Spring 2013 issue of Central Catholic magazine.

Norma Heyser ’80 was honored for her life’s contributions to the art world in June 2013 at the Hallie ford Museum in Salem, Oregon. (See painting above)

Nicole Waszak ’06’s first major solo exhibition opened at Distinction Gallery in San Diego in June 2013.

Renée Zangara ’96 presented Ruralization, a solo exhibition of paintings, at Nine Gallery in downtown Portland. The exhibition opened in May and continued through June 2013.

Rhonda Forsberg ’08’s new collection of photographs was displayed at the art Café Hemmingway in Kapa’a, Kauai, in an exhibition titled Re:constructions.

Norma Heyser

Program Accreditations

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The Maybelle Clark Macdonald fund, a local private grant-making foundation that supports the good works of Oregonians and longtime supporter of Marylhurst, has issued a generous $100,000 challenge grant to raise funds for Marylhurst’s new Master of Science in food Systems & Society program. This two-year, cohort-based degree focuses on educating future leaders who will create a healthy, just and sustainable food system.

The Maybelle Clark Macdonald fund will match — dollar for

dollar — your donation up to $10,000 when you designate your gift to the Master of Science in food Systems & Society program. We are profoundly grateful for this match!

To read a story that appeared in the spring issue of Marylhurst Unlimited about our new Master of Science in food Systems & Society program and Patricia allen, Ph.D., chair of the department of food systems & society, go to www.marylhurst.edu/munlimitedspring2013.

Challenge Grant to Benefit M.S. in Food Systems & SocietyHelp us reach our goal by December 31, 2013!

You can help!We are already more than halfway to our goal. Join those who have risen to the challenge. You can help make it happen!

Use the enclosed envelope or go to www.marylhurst.edu/give, go to GIVE NOW, choose “OTHER” and designate “FOOD” in the box that appears.

$100,000 Challenge Grantfrom the Maybelle Clark Macdonald Foundation

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Nearly 250 attendees celebrated Marylhurst’s successes at our annual Dinner in June. There was much to rejoice, including:

1) Our new Bachelor of applied Science degree, which will allow those with an aa degree from a community college to matriculate to Marylhurst and, and with two more years of study, the ability to earn a four-year degree.

2) a $100,000 challenge grant from the Maybelle Clark Macdonald fund to support our new Master of Science in food Systems & Society degree.

The annual Dinner is also a time for us to recognize individuals and organizations that have contributed to our success.

We presented the Mother flavia Dunn award posthumously to Richard D. alexander, a long-time member of our board of trustees. The award pays tribute to an individual who has given outstanding support and encouragement to the university and its educational mission. His wife, Carolyn alexander, accepted the award.

This year, we began a new tradition of recognition by honoring our Partners in Progress,

organizations that have made outstanding contributions to our university and our students. They fund scholarships, provide internships, sponsor events and add to Marylhurst's lively, rich culture.

The Bank of Oswego, which has long embraced our mission through shared advertising, sponsorship

and most recently as a donor to the Belluschi Pavilion, was named our Community Partner. Pacific Power, which has supported Marylhurst for 30 years by helping fund scholarships, capital projects and sponsoring events, was named our Scholar Partner.

2013 Annual Dinner

Clockwise from left: trustee Steve Zimmer & Carolyn Alexander, Bank of Oswego President dan Heine & former marylhurst President Judith Johansen, and Pacific Power executive and university trustee Scott Bolton '02 & Pacific Power employee Charlene King '12.

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Did you get a call from a phonathoner this past year? We're happy to share that $23,000 was raised from nearly 400 generous donors! Many thanks to everyone who supported Marylhurst!

a special thanks to the students and alumni who took time from their busy schedules to work the mini-phonathon held on campus last spring: Cyndi McKee, Shirley Wies, Debra Giannini ’09, Josephine Drain ‘53 and linda

flynn ‘12. They helped raise nearly $4,000 for The Marylhurst fund.

We also thank Marylhurst faculty members who donated prizes for the best results among our talented callers, including Interior Design faculty member and owner of Blank Brand Bags, Matt Geiger, for donating a shoulder pack messenger bag valued at $250; and English literature and Writing faculty members Jay Ponteri and Natalie

Serber for each contributing a signed copy of their recent books, Jay’s Wedlocked, and Natalie’s Shout Her lovely Name, which was featured in “O” Magazine.

Phonathons allow us to stay in touch with our alumni and friends. When you get your call this fall, please take a moment to speak with the caller and give generously. Our students thank you!

Phonathons Keep Marylhurst Connected

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Thanks to generous funding from the E. l. Wiegand foundation and a legacy gift from father Henri lacerte, OSB, a former Marylhurst chaplain and faculty member, E. l. Wiegand Hall Chapel has undergone a restoration that has beautified this loveliest of all campus spaces.

a private prayer space and sacristy were constructed in the rear of the hall and the tiered seating has been removed, as have the twin staircases to access it. We have replaced the tiered seating with sleek ergonomic chairs that provide

great flexibility in the ways they can be arranged.

We are still raising funds to finish the renovation of this sacred space and are offering the opportunity to sponsor one of the new chairs at $500. Every sponsor will be recognized on a plaque to be displayed in the newly restored chapel.

To sponsor a chair, please call 503.699.6251 or go to www.marylhurst.edu/give, go to GIVE NOW, choose “OTHER” and designate “CHaIR” in the box that appears.

adelina (Boitano) Paperini ’43 passed away on July 10, 2013 at age 90. Her love of Marylhurst spanned the decades and prompted her to remember the university in her estate plans. By doing so, she became a member of the 1893 legacy Society. Thanks to a very generous legacy gift, a scholarship will be established in her name that will provide funding in perpetuity to future Marylhurst students.

The child of Italian immigrant parents, adelina was born in Portland and spoke only Italian until she started school. She graduated from Immaculata academy in 1940 and then from Marylhurst in 1943, where she earned a teaching certificate. She began teaching immediately after graduation and went on to earn a Bachelor of Science degree from the University of Oregon in 1948.

adelina loved being a teacher and taught many grades in several schools in the Portland public school system. Though she and her

late husband Santino never had children of their own, she could count hundreds of children whom she guided and mentored during her 42 years of teaching.

Throughout her career and once retired, adelina remained connected to her profession as a member of the NEa, OEa and the Oregon Retired Educator’s association. She was also a member of Delta Kappa Gamma, the international society for key women educators.

She and Santino both felt strongly that education must be supported, and they were generous donors to Marylhurst over the years. Thank you, adelina, for remembering Marylhurst in your estate and helping make educational dreams come true for future generations.

When you remember Marylhurst in your estate plan, you become a member of the 1893 legacy Society. If you are considering a planned gift, Marylhurst offers a variety of free resources and expert planning

assistance to alumni. You may also be interested in learning about a gift annuity that will benefit both you and Marylhurst. Gene Christian, our representative, is well versed in the technical aspects of retirement and estate planning. Whether your estate is large or small, he can help you. for more information, please contact 503.534.4059.

Alumna and 1893 Legacy Society Member Leaves Generous Estate Gift

Adelina Paperini

E. L. Wiegand Hall Chapel Chair Campaign

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Honoring Achievement Graduation Class GivingMany thanks to our most recent graduates! The Class of 2011 raised a total of $3,980 and the Class of 2012 raised $503. The Class of 2013 has a goal of $1,000 for a new scholarship.

for more information about graduation class giving, please contact Kelly ann Chee, [email protected] or 503.534.4059.

This is an exciting time for Marylhurst. We have many wonderful opportunities, such as the two challenge grants supporting new initiatives and programs you will read about in this issue. and, like many other colleges and universities, we face challenges, including keeping tuition affordable and making sure that alumni remain connected through interesting activities and valuable services offered. Our alumni population is ever-growing and evolving, and with alumni of all ages who have different needs and wishes, a restructure of our alumni association will help us to better serve you.

The committee, made up of alumni from a wide range of graduation years and degrees, including online, has met over the last year to begin defining roles and responsibilities of alumni leadership council members. We found that alumni want to have a greater voice in areas that will benefit them, such as career services and opportunities for networking, continuing education, social events and leadership opportunities. The committee has

implemented improvements to make sure that we are answering alumni needs.

During our meetings, we determined that we needed to be more aware of the alumnae who graduated in 1974 and before, when Marylhurst College served women. We also know that graduates after 1974 had a different experience at Marylhurst, including those who received online degrees and may never have stepped foot on our beautiful campus until graduation or ever. Therefore, we are working on ways to connect all Marylhurst graduates in the ways that they find most beneficial and engaging. This will be one of the first priorities of the new alumni leadership council.

as always, we welcome your feedback. Watch for an alumni survey to come your way this fall. You can also reach us at alumni Relations at 503.534.4059 or [email protected]. We will inform you of the new leadership structure and alumni leadership council members in December.

Class of 2013: Join me in creating a legacy!as honorary chair of the 2013 Grad-uation Class Gift Campaign, I invite all my fellow graduates to join me in creating a lasting legacy of our time at Marylhurst by making a donation in the name of the Class of 2013.

Why is it important to support the Graduate Class Gift Campaign? Did you know that tuition only covers 80% of the true cost of a Marylhurst degree? The gap is closed by generous alumni and friends who believe in the value of a Marylhurst education. Gifts to Marylhurst help keep tuition costs low and provide funding for scholarships, classroom upgrades and a wide range of student services.

I encourage you to honor your education while helping others benefit from a Marylhurst education by donating to the 2013 Graduation Class Gift Campaign. When you do, you will help others benefit from a Marylhurst education in the same way that we did. all donations and pledges received by December 31 will be prominently recognized in the Spring 2014 issue of Marylhurst Unlimited, and are tax deductible to the fullest extent permitted by law.

Thank you and best of luck to you!

Tom Henderson ’13B.S., Real Estate Studies

For more information, please contact Kelly Ann Chee, [email protected] or 503.534.4059

Marylhurst University Alumni Association Update

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at Reunion Weekend 2013, which is open to all alumni, students, faculty, staff, friends and community members, we will celebrate Marylhurst’s 120th anniversary and classes ending in '3' and '8'. Traditional events such as Tea with the Sisters of the Holy Names, Distinguished alumni awards luncheon and the Marylhurst Memories Dessert Reception will provide ample time for visiting with old friends and making new ones.

We are also excited to celebrate the achievements of the recipients of the 2013 Distinguished alumni awards:

• Nancy Wilgenbusch Distinguished Professional award: linda Clarry Barber ’63

• Service to Society: Sr. Mary Rita Rohde, SNJM ’62

• Service to Marylhurst: Sr. Jane Ellen Burns, SNJM ’48

• Distinguished New Graduate: To be announced

Guest speakers Kyle Dittmer, department of science and mathematics faculty, will present a riveting seminar, Pacific Northwest Climate Change, Declining Salmon and Earthquakes, and Lana Veenker, founder and president of Cast Iron Studios, will share her film and television experiences at the Sunday Brunch when she discusses Casting for Success: Shapeshifting a Hollywood Career from Oregon and Beyond. Music, art, student work, an open mic and more round out the weekend.

To register, visit www.marylhurst.edu/reunionweekend. Please register by friday, October 11, 2013. Questions? Contact Kelly ann Chee at 503.534.4059 or [email protected].

Thanks to the 923 donors who contributed to The Marylhurst fund between July 1, 2012 – June 30, 2013, the university raised $535,000 in unrestricted funds for scholarships, student services and outreach, campus-wide historic preservation projects and other priorities.

like most private universities, Marylhurst relies on annual gifts to help enrich the learning environment.Support of The Marylhurst fund not

only makes a positive impact on the educational experience the university can offer students, it also helps keep tuition low.

Every gift counts and is much appreciated. Make yours today.

President’s SocietyGifts of $1,000 or more annually qualify donors for membership in the President Society, Marylhurst's prestigious recognition circle. Members receive invitations to

special events, such as an annual reception with the president, and are recognized in select university publications.

Matching GiftsDoes your employer have a matching gift program? If so, you can increase your generosity by including matching gift information when you make a gift. Please contact your human resources department for more information.

The Marylhurst Fund sees 15% increase in giving over last year

Reunion Weekend 2013Friday-Sunday, October 18-20

Celebrating 120 Years of Marylhurst!

Reunion

Reunion Weekend 2013 CommitteeCol Mary J. Mayer, USaf (Ret) ’69, Chair

Diane flack ’05

Sr. Carol Higgins, SNJM ’11

laura Mears Kirk ’08

Nancy E. (“Betsy”) lematta ’03

Sr. Joan Maiers, SNJM ’59

Connie Clifford Sanders ’73

Susan Schilke ’90

Julie Stoltz ’90 ’92

Sr. Carole Strawn, SNJM ’69 ’12

Victoria Wortham ’15

Joan Whitford-Schook ’81

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October• October 6 - The Art Gym Preview

Reception: Fernanda D’Agostino - The Method of Loci

• October 18-20 - Reunion Weekend

• October 21 - Founder’s Day

• October 24 - Mass of the Holy Spirit

November• November 7 - Professional

Development Center Seminar: Project Management Essentials

• November 13 - Science Lab Wednesday: Fun with Microscopes and Food Science

December• December 8 - A Christmas

Celebration: Annual Holiday POPS

January • January 12, 2014 - The Art Gym

Preview Reception: 21st-century Natives

February • February 23, 2014 - The Art Gym

Preview Reception: Heather Watkins

March • March 8 & 9, 2014 - Duke Ellington

– Sacred Concerts: A Department of Music event

This is only a sampling of events at Marylhurst! Visit www.marylhurst.edu/calendar for more event information.

Upcoming University EventsStarting this fall, Marylhurst will

offer students and alumni a free membership to SalT, a program available through the non-profit american Student assistance. This unique partnership will enhance the campus services we provide to students to help them find scholarships, internships and employment opportunities. It will give alumni tools to make smart financial choices for life by offering services that can help to manage

debt wisely and effectively, whether you incur it while paying for your education or through personal expenses. a wide range of tools and services will be available for customization, from webinars to personalized loan counseling.

If you have not yet heard from us via email about SALT, please update your contact information at www.marylhurst.edu/alumni/contact/.

SALT – a new “financial wellness” tool for students and alumni

We are proud of our community’s achievements, and this is just a small sampling! Discover more alumni, student, faculty and staff accomplishments, publications and projects at

www.marylhurst.edu/news.

Reunion Weekend is a wonderful time to meet with classmates. It is also a time to remember how Marylhurst helped shape your life.

Now is the time to ensure that current and future Marylhurst students have the same wonderful experience that you did.

Reunion Weekend is open to all alumni. This year, we are celebrating classes ending in ‘3’ and ‘8’. If you graduated in a year ending in ‘3’ or ‘8’, please consider making a Reunion Class gift.

Each donor in the class with the largest total gift and each donor in the class with the highest participation rate will receive a special token of our appreciation. all Reunion Class Donors who make a gift by December 31, 2013 will be recognized in the spring 2014 edition of Marylhurst Unlimited.

Please make your Reunion Class gift by December 31, 2013. Questions? Call Kelly ann Chee at 503.534.4059 or [email protected].

Make Your Reunion Class Gift Today

dolores marino O'Connell ’52 (standing, on left) and mary Francis Cavanaugh Barkshire ’52 (standing, on right) celebrate their 60-year reunion during reunion Week 2012.

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an ExErcisE in crEativity

An exhibition in the Art gym’s early days in the 1980s draws a good crowd.

By Pamela Clem

terri Hopkins, co-founder and director/curator of the art Gym, retires

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When Terri Hopkins closes the doors to The Art Gym at the end of the fall

exhibition in December, it will be the last time she does so as the only director/curator the gallery has ever known. It will also mark the end of a remarkable career. Since its opening in 1980, Terri and The Art Gym have been inextricably linked.

Thanks to Terri’s commitment to superb art beautifully presented, over the past 33 years The art Gym is now known as “the” place to view the works of talented artists of the Pacific Northwest. During those years, she has displayed the work of 500 artists, produced more than 65 exhibition catalogs, and sponsored numerous artist roundtables and public forums.

But Terri need not worry about The art Gym’s future after she retires. The groundwork she has laid, the connections she has made and the reputation she has earned will serve her successor well. It was largely due to these achievements that the Robert and Mercedes Eichholz foundation issued a $1 million challenge grant to endow her position. (see sidebar on page 17)

Her Career: A Process of Elimination When she arrived in 1978 at what was then Marylhurst College, Terri probably never thought she would stay at one place for her the rest of her career.

Terri admits that her career was “a process of elimination.” as a young girl growing up in Seattle, she wanted to be a teacher. at the time, she explains, that “women could be teachers, secretaries or nurses.” Terri purposely never learned to type, and decided when choosing a college that she wanted one with a good German program. While a teenager, she had lived in Germany for two years and was fluent in the language.

In her search for colleges, she sought out those that had a good German program, and Oberlin College in Ohio fit the bill. She recalls that she liked math growing up, but once in college, she realized that she never had to take another math class. When she read Oberlin’s course catalog, she was “ecstatic that there were so many amazing things to study.”

although her life has revolved around art for so many decades, Terri had never taken an art class prior to college. Rather, she was more interested in classical music and played the cello from age 10 through college in a youth orchestra and in a classical quintet, where she played chamber music.

“Music was everywhere at Oberlin,” she recalls. It was during her first term at Oberlin that she took an

introduction to sculpture class. “That class is probably why I became a curator, but I

didn’t realize this until many years later.”She remembers her first assignment was to work with

clay and the second to work with cement and sand. One classmate filled nine old glass bottles with cement and put them in a metal crate – Terri found a tennis shoe and

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left: Artist terry toedtemeier, terri Hopkins and a patron chat at toedtemeier’s 1995 exhibition terry toedtemeier: Basalt exposures — 1980-1995. Center: terri works with a student in 2002. right: terri and Prudence roberts, art historian and former curator of American art at the Portland Art museum (1987 to 2000), share a laugh during a 2008 reception for Women's Work: Contemporary Women Printmakers from the Collections of Jordan d. Schnitzer and his Family Foundation.

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filled it with cement. Through these assignments, Terri says, you learn that

you need a mold, finding that the “decisions people make and what materials to use” was very interesting.

She followed this with her first art history class in post-impressionism, which covered Van Gogh through surrealism. Thanks to a great teacher, she found the topic “fascinating and moving – meaningful to me.”

Terri went on to major in art history. While at Oberlin, she met her husband, Bob. Once she graduated in December 1970, she began a master of arts program in art history at the University of Chicago in January, where Bob was studying law.

Terri Arrives in PortlandIn 1973 when they had both completed their degrees, they chose Portland as their new home. Portland, in her opinion, was “progressive with a lot going on.”

“as an outsider, you could become involved in anything. It was an open society,” she recalls, “different from the Midwest or east. Young people could do things, start things. They were welcome to do it.”

Soon after arriving, she heard that her hometown of Seattle had just passed an ordinance that required one percent of the cost of a new building be used for art.

This intrigued Terri, and she pondered the type of art and issues involved. To learn more, she took a seminar, coming out of it certain that Portland and Oregon needed the same type of law.

She made an appointment to speak with the director of the Metropolitan arts Commission (now the Regional arts and Culture Council) and was hired by the Oregon arts Commission to research the issue.

Terri learned that when the Oregon state capital building was built, for example, five percent of the building cost was spent on art, as it was considered part of the design of the building.

“Modern buildings with all their glass and steel and aversion to 'decoration' had resulted in a divorce of art and architecture. The percent-for-art movement was an attempt to reintegrate the two.”

a meeting at the Portland art Museum to discuss the topic drew 500 people who were interested in a public mandate. at the end of the meeting, volunteers were recruited to be on a committee to help pass through legislation. Terri volunteered.

“I was a complete nobody,” she says, but nevertheless she joined notables such as arlene Schnitzer and John Gray, a major developer interested in art, on the committee.

“legislators sat up and paid attention when they spoke,” Terri says of her fellow committee members. “John Gray had great credibility, as did arlene.”

Terri and the late Michele Russo, a noted Portland artist, were fellow lobbyists in Salem. “We were a real Mutt and Jeff team,” Terri jokes. “I saw how the legislature worked.”

Terri also taught art history – ancient and early american - for one quarter at lower Columbia College. at that point she had an epiphany. after planning for her entire life to be a teacher, she realized that she didn’t like teaching art history.

It was then she decided that she needed to know how the arts function in society, as well as how they interact with economic and political systems. Indeed, she had never before thought about how the art got where it was exhibited, who planned the exhibitions, etc.

“I woke up to the fact that things don’t just happen.”for the next two years, she worked in a small com-

mercial art gallery that sold Native american baskets, beadwork and jewelry, as well as exhibiting some con-temporary art. She then took a part-time job as the first executive director of the albany Creative arts Guild, lo-cated in a small town 60 miles south of Portland. She coordinated a spring arts festival and the albany World

“Terri Hopkins has shone a light on hundreds of NW artists during her long and inspired tenure curating The art Gym. She promoted well-established and younger artists alike and made The art Gym one of the region’s consistently respected arts venues.”

Eloise Damrosch, Executive Director, Regional Arts & Culture Council

“Terri Hopkins is an exceptional curator, and her work has expressed the mission of The art Gym beautifully over the years. By showcasing the artists of our region exclusively, The art Gym stands apart from all other institutions in Oregon.”

Cynthia G. Addams, Executive Vice President of The Collins Foundation

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Championship Belly Dancing Competition, and initiated a performing arts series co-sponsored by the Guild and linn Benton Community College.

Terri and MarylhurstIn summer 1977, she had her first of three children. at that time, she started questioning where she belonged professionally. She didn’t want to be a teacher, nor did she want to work in a commercial gallery, community arts administration or the public sector. That was when she began to think of working at a university, not as an art history professor, but in another capacity.

Marylhurst had been in the news since Terri arrived in Portland. It had closed as a college for women and reopened as a college for adults.

“That’s an unusual place,” Terri recalls thinking. “Maybe I belong there.”

Terri had met Kay Slusarenko, Marylhurst’s art department chair from 1978-98, while she was lobbying. She called her to discuss job possibilities.

Kay told her that she might have a job for her. In fact, Kay created a job for Terri. from 1978-80, Terri was her assistant and also ran the Mayer art Gallery at Marylhurst.

The Art Gym comes into beingartists have a long tradition of finding space, the right space to exhibit their works. Slusarenko believed that Marylhurst’s gymnasium was a seriously underused, though beautiful space and that it would make a wonderful gallery. although all windows and very little wall space, the expanse was great, the windows arched and iconic and, most importantly, it was available.

The administration agreed and The art Gym came into being. Terri became its first director and faculty member Paul Sutinen, now co-chair of Marylhurst’s department of art & interior design, took over Terri’s job as assistant to the chair of the art Department.

top: the gymnasium in the 1930s awaited energetic student athletes. Bottom: the gymnasium in 1956 also provided a place for modern dance and other performances. right: the gymnasium is transformed into the Art gym. terri is the figure by the rightmost window.

“for those who are lucky enough to catch her attention, Terri keeps her kind, wise and discerning eye on the entire arc of an artist’s career from the earliest days on. That she can keep her finger on the pulse of the entire region, while still guiding so many individuals through the critical turning points in their careers is truly remarkable.”

Fernanda D’Agostino, artist

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Sutinen supervised the initial physical transformation of gym in disrepair into an art gallery. The community donated $1,500 and 400 hours of volunteer labor to help The art Gym come into being. It opened in fall 1980. Terri and Paul installed the inaugural exhibition all night and came back in the morning to work.

The Art Gym’s missionSlusarenko, Sutinen and Terri pondered the type of art the space would showcase. at the time, they realized that no one was taking a serious look at contemporary art – they decided The art Gym’s focus would be on contemporary art of the Pacific Northwest.

“We could do this with our resources,” Terri says. Then, they decided that The art Gym’s mission would

be to increase public understanding of contemporary art.The next question to answer was how would they

accomplish this? Terri explains that she has approached exhibitions as

one might a long magazine article – a serious look at a topic that can be engaged in an hour or so. Exhibitions

would have to be carefully curated and offering art patrons an in-depth, not cursory, look at an artist’s work or the work of several artists who were thinking about a topic. from the beginning she has wanted people to feel that a trip to The art Gym was worth their time.

Terri also believed that in addition to the exhibition itself, there should also be an information component. Writing about the art was also important. Brochures and modest to beautiful hardcover books have accompanied exhibi-tions from the beginning. artists also give talks about their works to stimulate discussion about their work.

“look, read, discuss - I think that is the way people learn,” she explains.

Which artists and whyartists are carefully selected. Terri approaches them, but they also approach her. It was not always that way. To establish credibility in the beginning, recognized artists such as Mel Katz at Portland State were exhibited.

“Some people did us a favor,” she remembers. “They saw it was a great resource – they were willing to lend their works to give us credibility. They were mentoring us to make our program a quality one. They kind of coached us. They had standards. We learned from them.”

Nevertheless, Terri says that The art Gym has always been a “beautiful and remarkable space – it makes artists want to exhibit in it.”

an avid visitor to local galleries, Terri is always on the watch for regional, nontraditional work that is contemporary.

“Work that pushes something,” she says. “The way (it pushes), what it’s about, because art is always about something.” She also wants to hear how the artist dis-

left to right: during the 30th anniversary celebration of the Art gym on September 30, 2010, terri addressed and thanked the crowd of artists, patrons and friends of the Art gym. the crowd, in turn, toasted terri’s many accomplishments and the continuing success of the Art gym.

“for decades, Terri has advocated for artists as contributors to our quality of life. She is the essence of what we look for in a partner to the foundation’s Visual arts Program. We are confident the resources we provide to The art Gym will be well used, whether they are to help retrofit the facility or support an exhibition or catalogue.”

Anne Kubisch, President of The Ford Family Foundation

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The Robert and Mercedes Eichholz foundation, established in 2011 by Mercedes Eichholz on be-half of herself and her late husband to support the arts, has issued a $1 million challenge grant to endow the position of director/curator of The art Gym and Belluschi Pavilion. The challenge grant, which must be completed by 2018, is ac-companied by a $250,000 outright grant to sup-port the position.

The Eichholz family has long supported the arts. The late Mercedes Eichholz was a trustee of the Santa Barbara Museum of art in 1985 and board president from 2001 to 2003. When she resided in Portland decades ago, she made the acquaintance of Pietro Belluschi, architect of the lake Oswego home that is now the Bellus-chi Pavilion at Marylhurst University.

Her son, Michael Davidson, a Portland-based tax consultant who serves on the Eichholz foun-dation board of trustees, has taught classes on business to aspiring artists at Marylhurst for years. He became acquainted with Terri Hop-kins and The art Gym during this time.

“The Robert and Mercedes Eichholz founda-tion is excited to provide the challenge to fund in perpetuity the director/curator position for The art Gym/Belluschi Pavilion,” says Davidson. “It is our hope that this grant will honor Terri Hopkins’ life’s work and will allow The art Gym to continue to be a powerful force in the arts of Portland and the entire Pacific Northwest.”

Terri Hopkins is delighted about the chal-lenge grant.

“I am beyond grateful to Michael Davidson and all the trustees of the Robert and Mercedes Eichholz foundation for allowing the work I have done championing artists of our region to continue.”

for more information about the challenge grant or to make a contribution, please call Sandy Pittenger in the Office of University ad-vancement at 503.699.6251.

Robert and Mercedes Eichholz Foundation Issues $1 million Challenge Grant to Endow Director/Curator Position

cusses his or her work and is particularly interested in the ambiguity and complexities that an artist’s work evokes.

“This is the kind of inquiry that art, literature and music excel at.”

“artists are very informed and educated and have given their work a great deal of thought,” she says. “Part of my job is to research what interests artists and how they articulate it. I do this for myself and to share it with the community.”

“Each artist has serious interests – animal, human, memory, drama, small incidents that happen. They are people who investigate things.”

A tradition of excellenceThe art Gym has received generous grants from lead-ing foundations, including the ford family foundation, the Collins foundation and the Robert and Mercedes Eichholz foundation, among many others. It has also garnered support from the Regional arts and Cultural Council, the Oregon arts Commission and Oregon Cul-tural Trust. The friends of The art Gym, individuals who admire what The art Gym offers, provide crucial ongoing support.

Thanks to Terri’s keen sense of the merit of an art-ist’s body of work, The art Gym has won widespread acclaim, including the Governor’s award in 2005. She collaborates with artists, writers, guest curators, and other Northwest arts organizations. Exhibitions have toured to other museums such as the Hallie ford Mu-seum of art at Willamette University in Salem, Oregon, the Schneider Museum of Southern Oregon University in ashland, Oregon and the Museum of Northwest art in Bellingham, Washington.

The $1 million challenge grant issued by the Eichholz foundation is yet another demonstration of the esteem in which Terri’s long career is held. When she closes the door to The art Gym this December, she will do it knowing that what she has so carefully built over more than three decades will continue to thrive under a new director/curator. MU

“ Look, read, discuss — I think that is the way people learn.”

—Terri Hopkins

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Marylhurst's Reach is Far and Wide:

Carl Maxwell, MBA '13

a S A YOUNG BOY growing up in Kotzebue, a small village 33 miles north of the arctic Circle on alas-ka’s western coast, newly minted Marylhurst MBa

Carl francis Maxwell '13 may have only dreamed of the faraway places he would visit later on in life.

Born when alaska wasn’t yet a state, his life’s journey started when he and his family “left to the U.S.” and moved to Oregon, where he spent his youth. He attended St. Joseph Grade School, Central Catholic High School, and graduated from the University of Portland’s School of Engineering.

after graduation, his life as an international traveler began. Carl served as a missionary in Peru alongside Maryknoll priests. There, he met and married Magda-lena. Vietnam followed, where he worked as a base de-velopment engineer for the U.S. army.

When he returned to the U.S., he began working for the U.S. forest Service under the U.S. Department of agriculture USDa. after several years doing that, he was asked to work for the U.S. agency for International Development (USaID) in Honduras building farm-to-market roads.

He enjoyed this job so much that he asked to be transferred from the USDa to the USaID. He was with USaID until he retired from the foreign Service, with

ALUMNI IN FOCUS

By Pamela Clem

postings throughout the world ranging from Monrovia, liberia to Banda aceh, Indonesia. Magdalena followed him for years and now it is only appropriate that he is following her – she is now the executive officer for the USaID mission in Tbilisi, Georgia (formerly part of the Soviet Union).

Though retired from the foreign Service, Carl hasn’t retired from work. He now works as an environmental consultant in asia, africa, Eastern Europe and the Middle East. In fact, it was when he was researching future overseas consulting positions that an ad for Marylhurst’s MBa popped up on the internet. Coincidently, his son-in-law graduated from Marylhurst as well. He considered a similar program at Duke, but the cost and requirements did not fit his situation.

Having made the decision to attend, it took Carl 18 months to earn his MBa in Sustainable Business, completing assignments while consulting in Monrovia, liberia and Tbilisi, Georgia.

Working on his degree from afar posed no problems for Carl.

“The earlier time zone has advantages,” he says, adding “but I had to finish (assignments) earlier.”

He adds “I missed the face-to-face contact — but little by little, the weeks turned into months — and the virtual

Detail from "Artist's Garden" painting by Carl Maxwell

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world helped upgrade my computer brain — which hasn’t been upgraded for years,” he jokes. “I feel like a new person — full of new information with ways to do things much faster and better.”

Carl says that while pursuing a degree online, one develops a picture of the professors and their characteristics and found the same true with his fellow students. When he came to Marylhurst for graduation, Carl had the opportunity to meet several of his professors and lightheartedly comments that they look better than he had imagined! He was also impressed by the beautiful campus and buildings.

“Shoen library was like meeting and old friend,” he says. “Its architecture and style were great!”

He also was impressed by the friendliness he encountered on campus.

“I met this nice lady and asked her ‘Who are you’? I found out she was the president of the university!”

Carl will soon start putting into practice many of the things he learned during his studies. He believes the business applications, methods such as SWOT (strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats), and sustainability concepts such as the Triple Bottom line (natural environment, economic vitality, and healthy communities) will be very useful in development projects in the countries where he normally works.

He has no problems finding consulting jobs. “The jobs find me because I have an extensive worldwide

network of friends and businesses that know my work and when they need someone with environmental knowledge and willing to go to places most people are reluctant to — they usually call me.”

In fact, during his 18-month MBa program, Carl turned down six consulting jobs. Since graduating, however, he is free to travel worldwide. He has been asked to work in Pretoria, South africa in august to do environmental examinations of several projects. In January, he is scheduled to go to Maputo, Mozambique to do the same with follow up work a few months later. The world is his oyster!

“I prefer these short-term contracts, which are short and sweet — one gets in and out — with no long-term commitments.” In fact, Carl just received an offer to work as deputy chief-of-party for a road construction project in Juba, Southern Sudan.

“I may go there instead of Maputo,” he adds.Of all the places he has worked, Carl counts Banda

aceh, Indonesia, as his favorite.

“I really liked working in the field, especially in a tropical wilderness area where I saw many wild animals, birds, insects, reptiles. I held a baby monkey in my arms, crossed fresh tiger tracks, waded through swamps, travelled by canoe, motorcycle, and trekked jungle trails."

“The people were wonderful and a happy people in spite of their loss of friends, family members, and their homes as a result of the (2005) tsunami.”

family plays important role in Carl’s life. His daughter and son-in-law attended his graduation along with two of his grandchildren. His two other children weren’t able to make it but they were “very proud of their dad.”

Magdalena, unfortunately, wasn’t able to attend either, having duties at the USaID mission to handle. But, she was very happy that Carl completed the program. What were her words to him on his accomplishment?

“finally! You can do the cooking and the dishes!”an avid photographer and a talented artist, Carl uses

his travels and postings to document his travels and homes pictorially. One of his works headlines this article.

If retirement ever crosses Carl’s mind, he has no idea where he and Magdalena might settle.

“We are world citizens and may live in different countries depending on the season.” During the summer (winter in the northern hemisphere) months, they may live in Peru or Costa Rica, and they may spend the summer on Vashon Island, Washington during the summer in the U.S.”

To learn more about our MBa programs, go to www.marylhurst.edu/mba. MU

Carl and wife magdalena at lake Sevan in Armenia.

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Sylvia Hester ’63 – I was so looking forward to our 1963 50th reunion but I am on pilgrimage to Italy, Spain and Portugal with my church at that time. Please pass on the word to everyone that I miss them and would have loved to have been there with them. I am very sad to miss this very important reunion.

Darthula Diane Goetz ’87 just received a Master of Science in Management and Organizational leadership from Warner Pacific College. This fall, she will pursue a Doctor of Business administration with a focus on Organizational leadership and Non-Profit Organizations.

Bernadette Howlette ‘99 - as of July 1, I am serving as the new Director of Scholarly activity and Institutional Effectiveness for Pacific Northwest University of Health Sciences. Prior to this I served as the Director of Research at Bingham Memorial Hospital in Blackfoot, Idaho, before transitioning to an affiliate faculty position with the Institute of Rural Health at Idaho State University. In 2012, I received a federal grant award from the Healthcare Resources and Services administration to establish a rural health network in SE Idaho.

I have also recently published a textbook, titled Evidence-based Practice for Health Professionals: an Interprofessional approach.

I want to thank Marylhurst, especially with regard to the publication of my book because it was my education at Marylhurst that engendered in me a valuing and understanding of interdisciplinary practice. Interdisciplinary collaboration is one of the central concepts behind the book and has, in fact, been the foundation of my entire career. I am able to work as a health care researcher and scholar because of the multi-disciplinary training and collaborations I have pursued ever since I graduated from Marylhurst. I often speak of the excellent education I received there!

Debra Rose Giannini, M.A. ’09after completing my M.a. in Health arts & Sciences at Goddard College in Vermont, I was offered the opportunity to train and teach through Think first Oregon’s Trauma Prevention team and the Balance laboratory at Oregon Health and Sciences University (OHSU). I am using the foundations of my interdisciplinary Marylhurst B.a. (in psychology and expressive therapy) in this role, along with the tenets of self-care and resilience that

Patricia leVan Hargis ’43, february 9, 2013, Yakima, Wa

adelina I. Boitano Paperini '43 July 10, 2013, Portland, OR

Pilar Elisa Walker ’48, July 29, 2013, San Jose, Ca

Sr. Theresa Stupfel, SNJM ’49, august 14, 2013, lake Oswego, OR

Sr. Miriam Philip friedrich, SNJM ’54, august 3, 2012, lake Oswego, OR

audrey Pearson Kelley ’54, December 21, 2012, Bellevue, Wa

annamae Jost Niedermeyer ’54, October 8, 2012, Portland, OR

comprised my master’s thesis.OHSU’s Think first Oregon is part

of a national network of prevention programs for brain and spinal cord injuries. They also administer Boston University’s acclaimed “fear of falling: Matter of Balance” (Copyright 1995 Trustees of Boston University) program and certification for this region. I obtained my certification to teach after completing the coaching course in 2012.

I’ll be teaching the series of Matter of Balance sessions, which include strategies for safety at home and on the town, as well as exercises designed to improve balance and prevent falls. Our class at Marylhurst University is being organized by Celina Ratliff, and will be open to staff, gerontology students and Mary’s Woods residents. By increasing our awareness, adapting to our surroundings and staying mobile, we can prevent the damage, cost and inconvenience of injury.

Jane O’Brien ’13 is pursuing a Master of Social Work at the University of Southern California with an expected graduation date of august 2015.

Yona Lunken ’13 - Thank you MU for a wonderful MBa in Sustainable Business program.

William (Bill) Crocker, husband of Elizabeth Brownlie Crocker ’65, august 25, 2013, Salem, OR

alice Schlenker ’78, april 27, 2013, lake Oswego, OR

Georgina Rossiter Pierr ’80, July 29, 2012, Salem, OR

anna C. Mock Busch ‘84, January 24, 2013, Portland, OR

arlene B. Pletsch ’88, february 22, 2013, Killdeer, ND

Patricia lou “Pat” Peterson ’93, May 10, 2103, Colbert, Wa

CLASS NOTES

Sr. Patricia Nizic, SNJM ’54, September 24, 2012, lake Oswego, OR

Sr. Rae Skinner, SNJM ’54, June 30, 2013, lake Oswego, OR

Sr. Dona Van Hoomissen, SNJM ’58, May 2, 2013, lake Oswego, OR

Clarine anchustegui Villeneuve ’59, March 18, 2013, Phoenix, aZ

Kathleen lockie ’62, May 2, 2013, Portland, OR

Sr. Mary McNassar, SNJM ’62, May 30, 2013, lake Oswego, OR

Kristi Claeys, daughter of ardith Vanderzanden Claeys ‘63, July 2, 2013, Portland, OR

In Memoriam

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Submit a Class NoteKeep in touch! We want to know what’s going on in your life and about the milestones you achieve and the adventures you’re on. New jobs, new degrees, new grandchildren, books published, travels near and far – we’d love to hear about these things from you and more. Contact alumni Relations to submit your class note.

Web: www.marylhurst.edu/alumni

Email: [email protected]

Phone: 503.534.4059 /Toll-free 800.636.9982

Mail: Marylhurst University17600 Pacific Highway (Hwy. 43), PO Box 261, c/o alumni Relations, Marylhurst, OR 97206

Students enjoy the annual Green Prelude Dance in 1949 in the gymnasium that is now The art Gym. a description of the dance in the 1955 yearbook states: "What gives the most hearty welcome to the new freshman? The most inviting? The most collegiate? The Green Prelude, of course, the first dance of the year and a special 'get-acquainted' opportunity for everyone."

Are you in this photo? If so, we'd love to hear from you! What kind of fun did you have while you were a student at Marylhurst? You can mail, call or email Alumni Relations using the contact information on the right.

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Benefactor $50,000+anonymousTracey and Mike Clarkford family foundationSylvia Giustina ‘56*Heather Schreiber Killough *lT

The l. S. (Sam) Shoen foundationBerry and Samuel* ShoenWheeler foundation-ORSamuel C. Wheeler †E. l. Wiegand foundationElizabeth and Stephen* Zimmer

Diamond $25,000-$49,999anonymousDebbie and William* BarrThe Collins foundationW.M. Keck foundationKinsman foundationCharles Patrick Memorial fund of The Oregon Community foundationMary lou lesenyie Taggart '65 and Richard Taggart

Platinum $10,000-$24,999anonymousaequitas Capital Management, Inc.The Bank of Oswegolinda and fedele BauccioRuth Beyer*Molly and Stewart *lT ButlerCambia Health Solutionslinda and John CarterKarla and William ChambersThe Clint foundationMaribeth Wilson CollinsColumbia BankRobert and Mercedes Eichholz foundationSue GriffithBernice and Wendell JeffreyJudith and Kirk JohansenMary frances Barthel Jones ‘56 and Michael Jones

Diana Pierce Knox ‘73* and William Knox, Jr.lifeMap assurance CompanyMaybelle Clark Macdonald fundRachel and andrew* MacRitchieHarry a. Merlo foundation, IncGary MichaelSisters of the Holy Names US-Ontario Province CorporationBarbara and Steven *lT Spence

Gold $5,000-$9,999anonymouslajos BaloghMarti and anthony BelluschiThe Campbell Group, llCCarole frank Carey ‘59Custom Decorators, Inc.Mary ann Divizia ‘65Van Evera and Janet M. Bailey fund of The Oregon Community foundationa. J. frank family foundationWilliam furmanMargaret Gonsalves ‘59 †The Greenbrier CompaniesEmily Huston ‘59Idaho Power Co.Kaiser foundation Health PlanHenri W. lacerte, OSB †Marie lamfrom Charitable foundationTamara lundgrenKeith McKennonMurphy CompanyTheresa lamb O’Hanlon ‘50 and James O’Hanlon *lT

Oregon arts CommissionOregon Education associationPacific PowerPearson EmbanetPort of PortlandPricewaterhouseCoopers llPMartin Ringle*

Harold & arlene Schnitzer CaRE foundationSchnitzer Steel Industries, Inc.Schommer & Sons, Inc.Sarah a. Stewart foundationStoel Rives llPCharles Terhune, III*Mary and Edward* VranizanJuan Young Trust

Silver $2,500-$4,999anonymouslynn andrewsarts action alliance foundationasset Recovery Group, Inc.Bank of the CascadesBecker Capital Management, Inc.Margaret linn Blue ‘56Trudy Traister and Scott Bolton ‘02*angela Marozzo and Todd BrinkmeyerJan and Robert ‘90 DaoustBecky* and Mike DeCesaroElizabeth leach GalleryMarilyn fellers fink ‘69 and Thomas finkRick Ganz, SJWayland HicksHomeStreet BankCandace Jennings and Gil Rodriguez*Kaiser PermanenteKPMG llPMagnacorpMargaret McElligott ‘96 and Jan DabrowskiXandra* and Joe McKeownPacific Power foundationPortland General Electric~Regional arts & Culture CouncilKatherine and lawrence *lT RemmersRoseburg forest ProductsMary Jackson Sammons ‘70 and Nick SammonsSchwabe, Williamson & Wyatt, P.C.

Trish* and Bill Smith The Robert C. & Nani S. Warren foundationNani S. WarrenUS BankVISa International~Wells fargo

Bronze $1,000-$2,499anonymousaKT llPChristina Eugenis and Stan amyBob BallinSusan and John BatesDebrah and Gary ‘02 BokowskiMary Jo Hardwick Bolton ‘54 and Bill Bolton, Jr.Whitney and Thomas BradenCathy and Jerry BrodieKimberly and Stephen* BrownJulie and Dale l. BurghardtDorothy Serres Canavan ‘59 and Joseph CanavanSusan CarterJoanne CastelloJudy Williams Caviezel ‘63 and Skip CaviezelJudith Rumgay Chambers ‘63Janice and larry* ChorubyPamela and Ronald ClemElizabeth Brownlie Crocker ‘65 and William Crocker †Patricia Irwin Crocker ‘46 and Jack CrockerKate and David DicksonMargaret adams Dooney ‘59 and Brian Dooneyfirst RepublicMargaret ‘06 and Douglas frankSheri and Roy GhazimoradDeborah Horrell and Christopher GillemWilliam GraberPearl li Gunsell ‘63Judie* and John HammerstadKathleen Sullivan Heath ‘53 and Edward Heath

Dianna and Gregory* HogensenTerri and Robert Hopkinslinda Hutchins and John MontagueIberdrola RenewablesKimberly Cooper-Jaqua and Jon JaquaSally and Ronald ‘93 KarstenPat and Michael lammersNancy lematta ‘03Mary Mayer ‘69Sylvia Postl McGill ‘81 and James McGillCecilia and Beau McNeff ‘10anne K. Millis fund of The Oregon Community foundation Craig MooreSheila Gerhardt Morgan ‘56New life foundationNorth Star foundationDeborah and Kenneth *lT NovackElizabeth NoyesPiper ParkPark academyDonna and Richard PeachDavid Plotkinleslie Sammons-Roth ‘11Barbara Sue and Bill SealCorene akerly Serres ‘56 and James Serresagnes firchau Smith ‘50 and Harold SmithKristin Stathis*Diana Hughes Stegner ‘60 and David StegnerMary StenderJane Muggli Stickney ‘68Carol Culley Storment ‘74 and Elton StormentVirginia Greeley Taylor ‘55 and Cornelius TaylorBobbie and alpo † TokolaKhiem M. TranTom TsurutaNancy Wilgenbusch *lT

Warner and Greta Wims

Donor Recognition

2012-2013 Donor Recognition

These recognition lists include all donors whose gifts were received between July 1, 2012-June 30, 2013. The list can be viewed online at www.marylhurst/donorlist.

A sincere THANK YOU to the many supporters of Marylhurst University. You understand the importance of Marylhurst’s mission. You value an education that is challenging, rich and diverse — one that meets the needs of serious learners of all ages. Marylhurst University, firmly rooted in the values of the Sisters of the Holy Names, has been able to offer an exemplary education for 120 years because of supporters like you.

President’s Society Gifts $1,000 and above

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Educator $500-$999anonymousRose Mary Bocek ‘46 *lT

Kathy CalcagnoThe Cambia Employee Giving Campaign~Charles CollopyColumbia River Inter-Tribal fish CommissionColumbia Weather Systems, Inc.Concordia Universityfrank ErismanErnst & YoungKregg arntson and Theodore fettig ‘04Irene Gleason ‘45linda Boise and Steven GoldbergSusan and Robert Haroldlisa and Michael HolzgangING financial GroupKaiser Permanente foundation Board Matching Program~Karen lynch ‘11M. J. Murdock Charitable Trust~Barbara Pavlicek ‘69Sandy and Jeff PittengerNeal PurcellCatherine and Paul QuackenbushMaryJo Radosevich ‘74Ronald Schoenheit ‘07Catherine Mullins Smith ‘43Wells fargo foundation~Janet D. and Donald W. WilliamsWomen’s architectural leagueCatharine Gleason Yates ‘43 and W. Ross Yates

Fellow $250-$499anonymousa-dec Inc.Katherine ahlertGreg aldredMargaret Riggs allee ‘87, ‘89Dianne anderson and Mel KatzKaren Bates-Smith ‘03 and Philip Bates-SmithClaudette and John BeahrsJoan BearziMadeline Schug Bednarek ‘88Rex BlackburnWalt Blomberg IIIKelly ann and Peter CheeVirginia ann latta Curulla ‘56John DifalcoJosette Enzler Dundon ‘67 and Edward DundonEton lane foundationPatricia ‘85 and Henry GrassBrenda and Raymond Grubbslinda Emery Hanberg ‘74 and Dennis HanbergMaureen Higgins ‘60Cindy and Stephen HuckinsDorothy Hango Hunt ‘43 and leigh Hunt, Jr.

Nancy and fred IsaacsPaula and Daniel KinneyJanet and H. William *lT KretzmeierMarsha and larry largeKristin lensen ‘94 and David WhitakerMary’s WoodsTim MatherMCM Construction, Inc.linda Coleman McTigue ‘64 and Michael McTigueKathleen Kirk Moore ‘43 and Joseph MooreKirk Mouser ‘12*Elizabeth O’Brien ‘62Callie PappasGertrude Parkinson and Peter OzzannePDX Contemporary artConnie-Marie Clifford Sanders ‘73 and Charles SandersSisters of St. Mary of OregonChristopher SweetMargaret little Thomas ‘54 and Hubert ThomasJane Eagleson Viehl ‘83 and lawrence Viehlfrances Walsh ‘00Kathleen Smith Weaver ‘62Joan Whitford-Schook ‘81 and Stan SchookSally WilliamsYoung audiences of Oregon

Associate $99-$249anonymousCatherine Wilson ‘01 and Richard aanrich ‘99Margaret and Gregory abbott Rosina Mauro albi ‘61 and frank albiRoger allenOregon Chapter of american Meteorlogical SocietyBarbara Jollo anderson ‘72Daniel andréMarcia Yadon arganbright ‘76 and James arganbrightJoann Weaver and Roland atkinsonla Verne Bagley Brown ‘51Bonnie and Jeff BakerMary Cavanaugh Barkshire ‘52 and arthur Barkshirelinda and Steven ‘93 Beaird Page fortna and Pete BeemanColette and David ‘93 BeluskoBillings & CronnElizabeth Blachly-DysonKaren Bloomer ‘65Robin Boles ‘12lynn BrownMarianne BuchwalterRebecca BurkeenTammi Burkhardtann Dillhoefer Bussard ‘77 and Steven Bussard

Kathleen Beeson Carney ‘64 and f. Michael CarneyMary Jo Jwayad ‘59 Carr and Norman Carrlou Schlak Chapman ‘97 and John ChapmanRoger CherryGene ChristianMary Joyce Cole ‘52Marylou ColverPatricia Bocek Conroy ‘49Constance frith Couch ‘69 and David CouchCarole Brown Cox ‘61 and Gary CoxPatricia Kelly Crowe ‘67 and frank CroweBarbara Brown Curran ‘69 and John Curran, Jr.Dorothy Rice Dasovich ‘61Patricia Johnson and Michael DavidsonMaureen Richardson Detz ‘68 and lewis DetzJanet O’Neill Dimm ‘49Claudia ‘87 and Richard Ditterann Doyle ‘62Joann Galarneau Doyle ‘48Noriko and Robert DozonoJosephine anzalone Drain ‘53 and Donald DrainDonna and Verne *lT Duncanlaurie and Randy DunnMary Kay Dyckman ‘63Jay DyerOdette Buzzell foster Edgar ‘70Nannette and Thomas EdwardsIsabelle Zior Egan ‘62Jane and John EmrickGary EppingJoseph ErcegMaryanne Smith Ernst ‘45akiko ‘05 and Robert Erwinlibby farrElizabeth farrington ‘11Judith and Thomas fawkesGeorgene Beeson finders ‘74 and John findersJoanne Kendle findley ‘66laura fisher ‘02Patsy Duffy fordney ‘45Sandra J. Cagle fox ‘88Gail Caswell freeman ‘63 and Joseph freemanMargaret Williams frieske ‘66 and Robert frieskeMichelle Garcia*leda Garside ‘10General Mills foundation~Mary anne Noseda Gennette ‘54lori Jon George ‘75Debra Giannini ‘09Teresa Gifford ‘05G. and Paul GilbargCarl GimplBonnie ‘70 and Bartley Glover-GriswoldMary alice Magladry Goodin ‘48 and George Goodin

James GossettMary anne Grams ‘52Gail and Walter GrebeCarol Conway Gregoire ‘56Warren GuestM.K. Guth and Gregory landryaudra Garbarino Hamilton ‘53Jo ann Sisemore Hannigan ‘56 and J. Gillis HanniganJoan Hansen, SNJM ‘56Shirley Shull Hansen ‘54 and Richard HansenMary Jo Bourke Harris ‘55 and Robert HarrisDianne Kornberg and John Hart '09, '11Mary Patt O’Brien Hawthorne ‘68Tracy Hawthorne ‘00, ‘05Elizabeth lamb Hayes ‘62 and Robert HayesMargaret HeatonKaren HeichelheimSherryll Hoar ‘01Ruth anne Davis Hobbs ‘68laurie Hoefer and alan laducaKathleen Wick Hoeger ‘66 and Donald HoegerJane Kotrik Horning ‘61Mary Beth Horton ‘02Shelley and Greg HumeIntel foundation~Gail Jackson ‘91, ‘95Jan Jacobsen ‘86 and Paul Hartantoinette Jaffe ‘05adelle Satterlee Jenike ‘68Douglas Jenkin ‘05Barbara Brooten Job ‘66 and Thomas JobJacquelyn North Johnson ‘93 and Stanford JohnsonMarilyn Wallace Johnson ‘88 and Raymond JohnsonDonna and andy JordanKay Nickels Juran ‘82 and Ben KasubuchiCarol Karlson ‘11Sharon Keigher ‘69ann KelseyVirginia Kelsh ‘67ann Kendellen and Jonathan HarkerJan KennedyValerie Kennedy ‘12Carma and frank ‘79 KingPeter Kiongo ‘11larry KirklandJanet Johnson Kirschen ‘72 and Borell KirschenPatricia Brelin Kirtley ‘65 and William KirtleyTherese and Philip KlaasRita Dobner Klym ‘66 and Emil KlymCarol and Michael KnutsonHelen Murphy Koppe ‘54 and Bruce Koppelake Oswego Preservation Society

Katherine and James larpenteur, Jr.lennox International~Diane Serres love ‘57 and Thomas loveMaggie and Robert ‘05 lowBeverly Mayer lutz ‘83 and Timothy lutzKathryn Heidenreich lytle ‘53Chris MaganaMelinda Maginnis ‘91 and William MaginnisMary Maletis ‘51Dolores ‘53 and Gordon MalloryKay Post Mally ‘58 and Michael MallySusan MarcusRichard MarkJoanne lucchesi Martin ‘68 and Douglas MartinMarianna VanRooy Mattecheck ‘53 and Robert MattechekValerie McCarthy ‘04Nancy ‘81 and J. Gary McClainChristine ‘01 and Don McClavePatricia McDonaldDonna McDonnell ‘49l. ‘08 and Dan McElligottKara McfallDiana Malloy McKennett ‘69 and Harold McKennettBeth Mclean ‘11Carolyn Menegas ‘65Deborah Merritt ‘73David MertensYvonne Miller Meuse ‘54 and Raymond Meuseleo MichelsonJudy MillenbachSusan Richardson Miller ‘69 and Robert MillerStephanie Moreau ‘07Joyce Powell Morin ‘76 and Tony MorinMary MullenMary ann Thalhofer Myers ‘60 and Hardy MyersMary ann Monks Nicholson ‘51 and Elmore NicholsonMichele Nielsen ‘06lillian NipotiMary Nixon ‘72 and larry DalrympleJudith Norton ‘96, ‘03Dolores Marino O’Connell ‘52Brian OliverPatricia ‘98 and David PageKathleen Paishon ‘73Shelly Parini-Runge ‘12 and Tracy RungeJulieanne Parrish ‘09annette Broschet Parrott ‘59 and Donald ParrottMary Mannila Patnode ‘66 and Howard PatnodeJames l. Pendleton †Rosemary Schwaegler Pendleton ‘40Rosemary Perisich, SNJM ‘61

*Marylhurst University trustee 2012-2013 and/or 2013-2014 ~ Matching gift corporation/foundation (in full or in part) † Deceased *LT = Marylhurst University life trustee *IK = In kind donor (in full or in part)

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lucy Phan ‘07Robert Pitts ‘10James Pollock ‘08Jeanne ‘89 and Trent PremoreElizabeth Ramsey and Donald RuffTracy ReisingerGary M. Repp, Jr. ‘13Katherine Enright Richards ‘64farroel Richardson, SNJM ‘58 *lT

Marsha ‘70 and Brian RichardsonMary ann Kosydar Ricketts ‘62 and Ronald Rickettsangela Kelly Rohrman ‘62 and a. Charles Rohrmanlaura J. Ross-Paul and alexander PaulSheila Rubin ‘89Deanne and Dick RubinsteinWendy James Rude ‘70Mary Ruhl ‘09Mary Jane and Stuart SawaiSusan Stietzel Schilke ‘90 and John SchilkeTitay and Steve SchommerSharon Schooley ‘09Janet Garrett Sciolaro ‘64 and Joe SciolaroSherilyn Godschalx Sellman ‘71 and John SellmanDavid Servatius ‘90agnes Schairer Shriver ‘57Jeff Sielicky ‘04Jessica Morrison Singh ‘06Shirley Skidmore and Ronald QuantMaribeth Carpenter Slawson ‘63 and Paul SlawsonRhea and Jim Sleemanfrancine Gasser Smith ‘67 and Joe SmithCarol Smith-larsonGilbert Souza II ‘12Carolyn StanleyJulia ‘92 and Raymond Stoltzanne Herold Stott ‘62 and Howard Stott, Jr.Jean and Milan StoyanovCarole Strawn, SNJM ‘69, ‘12Paul SutinenRobert Suzuki ‘03Melissa Swenson ‘04Ruth and John TalbottNancy Terry ‘70Mary Ellen Walsh Thimm ‘48 and Joseph ThimmPhyllis TowneCourtney VanderstekCynthia Wagner ‘11Michelle WalshMalia and Steven WassonMaxeen Miller Wegner ‘82Wendy Weil ‘98Helen White ‘10Kathy WilliamsCatherine Wilson ‘01 and Richard aanrich ‘99faye Wilson

Mary ann Sequeira Wilson ‘63 and James WilsonSusan and James WinklerDana and Christopher WoodMary Zaleski ‘69 and Richard lamkinWilliam Zuelke

Friend $1-$99anonymouslura Smith abbott ‘63 and Robert abbottamir abraham ‘10Barbara and Ronald ‘89 adamsGeorge adamsMargaret adams ‘93Mary frazier albrecht ‘57 and Peter albrechtCecily allenChristopher allenMarilyn anderson ‘59 and Jonathan GarlockGloria Moss andresen ‘00Kaye Mitchell andrijeski ‘57 and Harlan andrijeskiDeborah angleton ‘01arthur J. arellano †Jacque-Marie larios arellano ‘55Michael austinfrances avery ‘96 and Richard SherwoodToni avery ‘06 and Richard TruittWilliam BachhuberJean Bailey ‘78Dorothy fahrlander Baker ‘49Monica BarberMadeline Barker ‘01Susan Rearden Baroch ‘68 and James Barochannin BarrettJoyce Knuppel Barrett ‘93 and Emil Zurcherflorence Haberman Barta ‘49Irene Ybarzabal Bates ‘62 and Eugene BatesKathleen Murphy Batie ‘93 and Thomas BatieMary McIlraith Baumel ‘66 and Kenneth BaumelBarbara Senko Beaulieu ‘56Kendelyn BeckMargit Totzer Becker ‘60 and Helmut BeckerStefana BerceanuPamela BergRichard BettencourtDan BevensMelody Martin Biggs ‘75 and Charles BiggsKristine anderson Blodget ‘65, ‘92 and James BlodgetKaren Burgardt Blomquist ‘74 and Robert BlomquistPatricia and Jacob BoasThe Boeing Company~Rose BondDolores leingang Boone ‘60alice Booth ‘84

Isabel Booth ‘83Sarah Kaufer Bosserman ‘81 and Peter BossermanChristine BourdetteBarbara Bradford ‘92John BramsmanMary Ellen Ward Brawn ‘68 and Jack BrawnShawn Irish Brenizer ‘00, ‘02Charlotte Schnorenberg Brosnan ‘62Eileen Brown, SNJM ‘55*Dorothy Bruck ‘57Julie Buchl ‘10Rose Gawlista Buckles ‘48John BulmanMargaret J. leBrasseur Bulman ‘49 †Wayne BundStephanie Yandon Burchell and Peter BurchellJanice Nowak Bush ‘74 and Michael Bushandrea Cadenasso ‘74Joan Mitchell Caldwell ‘54 and Keith CaldwellMargaret Correia Caliendo ‘86, ‘98 and Jeffrey McMullinJanice Baker Carleton ‘75 and James CarletonCarla Carnegie ‘12Kathleen West Carry ‘68Patricia ‘84 and Donald CarverJoan Cassidy ‘86Kathleen Cassonarturo CeballosJeanne Kilwien Chambers ‘74 and Richard ChambersBimin Chan ‘06Barbara ‘56 and Raymond ChapmanMary and David CharnoPema Chogyal ‘09Gertrude Moran Christy ‘41 and Paul ChristySondra ChurchillMary arellano Clark ‘60 and Robert ClarkConnie Stellbrink Clausing ‘63 and Oliver ClausingTiffanie ‘06 and Joseph ‘06 CliffordMary ann ConstansMarsha and John ‘79 CordovaBarbara CoreySusan Hamstreet Couch ‘63 and Gary CouchJonnel ‘94 and Bruce Covaultalexander Craghead ‘10Mary Cebula Creitz ‘54Kathleen flynn Cunningham ‘57Gayla D. Cushman-Pike ‘12Ruth Rondeau Cutler ‘65adam Dabrowski ‘12lee ann Rohrer Davidson ‘66 and Robert DavidsonMarietta Sullivan DeBruhl ‘53antonia Del ValleBernadette Nebel Dick ‘65Hiroko Diehl

Verity Day Dierauf ‘59 and Edward DieraufJoanne Raab Dindia ‘51 and Don DindiaRenee Dion-JennesKathleen Wells Dodson ‘74Gerard DomierMargie ‘06 and Patrick DoolanCary Doucette and Bruce BarnardCamille Duboislinda Neal Duman ‘70 and Gerald DumanEmma Dye ‘09Kathleen Carollo Eldrige ‘72 and Steven EldrigeKathy McIlraith Ellestad ‘70 and larry EllestadEnvironmentsKarene Erdman ‘01Dolores Dober Ertler ‘63 and Carl ErtlerCarol Winkfield Espe ‘67 and James EspeMarco Espinoza ‘06Virginia fast ‘68Jerilyn ‘02 and George feltonMatthew ferrantoSylvia field ‘60Sean filzen ‘10Barbara Nelson Wall finnie ‘90 and Clifford finnieSusan aicher fish ‘66 and Keith fishMichael fisher ‘10Carley and Evan fledelllinda flynn ‘12Margaret amarantus foltyn ‘54 and John foltynPatricia Dollowitch foradori ‘62 and Peter foradori, Sr.Maureen forsloffMary ann Nelson fox ‘54 and Jack foxKay frenchVictoria freyMary Gunning frith ‘45 and fred frithDeanna fujita ‘60Carolyn fullerJean fultonDeborah GangwerDeborah Garcia ‘12Karen and Richard GardinerJoanne Murphy Garrity ‘55Kirsten Gauthier-NewburyPatricia Stephenson Gebhardt ‘89Joyce Willinger Geers ‘60 and Gordon GeersEleanor and Brian GentryDenice and Edward GhoresSharon Joseph Giansante ‘60 and Raymond GiansanteBarbara Gill ‘95Emily GinsburgWendy GivenChrista GlasgowMary Claire Bauer Glovka ‘64 and Robert GlovkaHeide Goertzen

Sarah Gomm ‘93Joann Morley Goth ‘53 and Bill GothRoberta Keenan Gray ‘60Bonnie landolt Green ‘64Karen GreenSusan Green ‘01Nadine Grogan, SNJM ‘60linda Grove ‘11Jeffrey GudmanPaula Guiles ‘70Myrtle Stangl Gunning ‘54 and Patrick GunningMarie Haener ‘62Gina Kokesh Haines ‘76 and William Haines, Jr.Katherine Hall ‘00Karen Belozer Hamil ‘71Christian Hanson ‘06Kathleen Donovan Hanson ‘64Natalie Harmon ‘11Marcie ‘96 and Randy HarrisEmma Hartman ‘01Ken HartmanMarlene Hartmann ‘79Marie HaslamDaisy Walker Hayes ‘82 and Daniel HayesPat Nevel Heerman ‘50Shirley Williams Hendrickson ‘98 and William HendricksonSally Heppner ‘07Kathryn ‘90 and Michael Herrleah Herzing ‘08Rita Hess ‘66Vicki Hess-Smith ‘65 and Roger SmithSylvia Hester ‘63Sue ann HiggensCarol Higgins, SNJM ‘11Hannah HigginsKatherine O’Neill Higgins ‘47Yvonne Broussard Hills ‘58 and Harold HillsNancy HissMarilee ‘84 and Steve HodgenMary HoffmanDiane Whittenburg Holm ‘62 and lloyd Holmlinda Crunican Holmbo ‘69 and David Holmbo ‘85Jonalyn and Michael ‘84 HorsfallColleen ‘81 and Ronald † HossSusan Iwata Housel ‘68 and James HouselGita Tanna-Howard and Charles HowardNancy ‘66 and Harold HowardBeverly Humphrey ‘71, ‘82Marilyn Vitus Hunter ‘61Dian and Robert HutchinBeth HutchinsHelen and leroy Hutzler, IIIDavid JacksonJulie Wiener Jacoby ‘64Sonia Gonzalez Jager ‘73 and Michael Jageramy Jaloviar ‘05Phyllis and George Johanson

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ava Barbee Johnson ‘98 and Downer JohnsonCarol Boisselle Johnson ‘94, ‘96 and Whitford JohnsonHelen Johnson ‘80 and David IbbotsonJoyce ‘67 and Ray JohnsonJulia Johnson ‘06Susan Henderson Johnson ‘68anthony Jones ‘09Glenice and lester JonesKimberly Jones ‘06Shelley JordonMarguerite Boyce Kasberger ‘52Mary Elfering Kavanaugh ‘58 and francis KavanaughKiku ‘81 and Teruo KawataPatricia Taylor Kays ‘64Tamara Kennedy ‘08Inez Nyser Keough ‘62 and Richard KeoughPerrin KernsNoor KhakiDavid Kinyon ‘11Marianne Klekacz ‘05Rachel Carr Klippenstein ‘91 and Marc KlippensteinShirley Huffman Klug ‘58 and Richard KlugShelly Kokkeler ‘73Marilyn KongslieMargueritte Jette Kosovich ‘65 and Jerald KosovichDave Kronsteinerlesley latourette Krueger ‘57 and Erlyn KruegerHelen Kelsh Krzmarzick ‘62 and andrew KrzmarzickGuyanne Pool Kucera ‘61Madeline Kwok-Dodd ‘73 and Joseph DoddCheryl farley labavitch ‘87Bonnie laing-MalcolmsonKenneth lajoyMary E. Brozene laJoy ‘45 †Steven lamb ‘05Kathleen lane ‘49Christine laptutaJoan Parker larsell ‘50 and David larsellDwyn anne Jones lean ‘66Janet Hill leBlanc ‘92 and Monty leBlancCynthia Kirk and Jim leisyMarilyn Zinnie lemm ‘58Dolores leonard ‘47Cathie Wong lime ‘57Margaret Wolfgram lindstrom ‘45 and Carl lindstromJane Grosulak liston ‘61 and Thomas listonJeanette Maresh little ‘74 and Robert littleSteve longanNancy looney ‘73allie ‘07 and Joel losliJoyce lozitoCarolyn Miotke lulay ‘69 and Thomas lulay

Doris Why lum ‘56Catherine Paiva lux ‘74 and Jeffery luxVirginia long lynch ‘52 and Donald lynchCheryl MacDonald ‘09Patricia allen Maddux ‘60ann Reynolds Madigan ‘59Susan Madison ‘06Gabriella Maertens ‘62 and Iwli KotubeteyBill MaierJames MalinRosemary Ruminski Maloney ‘49 †Kathleen Maney ‘58linda MarRoberta MargolisCorey Marks ‘10Kay Del leavitt Marshall ‘80, ‘85 and Michael DosterMarilyn ferretty Martin ‘61Brittney MastPatricia Kremer Mathews ‘54 and George MathewsSusan Matranga-Watson ‘99Ethan MatthesCindy Maulsbyann ‘99 and Scott MaxwellGwenda White McCall ‘69 and Terry McCallJulie M. McCannKathleen fletcher McCann ‘83 and Joseph McCannCarolyn Reif McClelland ‘59 and lee McClellandalissa McCrann ‘04Marguerite ‘81 and Daniel McDevittlucille Paulsohn McEntee ‘53 and Patrick McEnteeGoldie Oules Mcfadden ‘51Carl McfarlandNoreen Saltveit McGraw ‘53Patricia ‘90 and Bruce MclainSarah McMullen ‘12Patricia Nowak McPherson ‘72 and Steve McPhersonJanis McSharry ‘59Susan Handler Medak ‘69 and William MedakSarah and andrew Meigslinda Sue Weber Meskew ‘93 and James MeskewChristine and John Michelann Manning Mielke ‘54Betse Judd Miller ‘78 and David MillerRebecca and Robert '11, '13 MillerSharon Keating Miller ‘68 and Thomas MillerBeverly lundstrom Milliron ‘47 and Ray MillironCherene C. MillsJean Daugherity Mills ‘51 and Howard MillsPaul MissalBarbara Gay Mitchell ‘05 and Charles MitchellJean flynn Mitchell ‘53

Kathleen Custer Mitchell ‘68 and Joseph MitchellKathleen Sharp Mitchell ‘42Janet Rugen Mittelstaedt ‘84 and Ronald MittelstaedtKathleen Santelli Montavon ‘65 and Raymond MontavonJanet MooreSarah MorganSally Doherty Morris ‘51Catherine Sullivan Morrow ‘70 and Robert Morrowfrances fischer Munson ‘49 and Eugene MunsonPatricia Joy Natseos ‘71 and James NatseosCynthia Nawalinski and Charles TurnerEdward Nelson ‘77laureen Bloomer Nemerow ‘75 and Glen NemerowJohn NicholsPatricia Mullins Nichols ‘43 and alfred NicholsNancy Williams Nordeck ‘65 and Charles NordeckDelores NunnBarbara Nye ‘83Suzanne O’Connell ‘62akintomide Oladapo ‘11Marie Cray O’leary ‘52 and John O’learyBecky ‘03 and Bill OlsonTwylah Olson ‘78laura O’Neill ‘09Mary Shaw Onstott ‘71 and Edward OnstottPeggy O’Phelan ‘71 and Steven Schaubel ‘86Jennifer M. Ortiz ‘12Randolph Ortiz ‘11Kathleen Overton ‘65, ‘87Heidi OwensKathleen Padden ‘53Eugenia PardueKatherine ParkerMichael Paruch ‘10D.R. and M.E. PaulDaniel PeabodyJoanna Peacock ‘80Ellison PearsonJody ‘00 and Joel PearsonTeresa and Michael PearsonKaren PedersonPediatric Sensory TherapySandra PercivalScott Perkins ‘03Nathaniel PhillipsMary ann Duyck Plant ‘61 and Richard PlantVictoria Poarch ‘06Cristine and James Pontianne MacDonald Porter ‘63Gary PowersCheryl Puchrik ‘93, ‘95 and anthony Puchrik ‘95Maureen McMahon Ramos ‘64 and Joseph RamosKimberly and Guy RandlesCecilia Ranger, SNJM ‘55*

Mary lu McDonald Rappleyea ‘45Sandra ‘10 and Tom RaschMyrna and Thomas RattleDolores Hughet Raymond ‘88Margaret ‘64 and Chris ReedJulia ReisingerJane RickenbaughPrudence Robertslynne and James RoeVirginia Saladino Rolland ‘59 and Ron RollandSharon ‘00 and Stephen RosoJacqueline Rosini Rossini ‘59Kenneth Roth ‘87Valerie ‘87 and Raymond RouseZona RuhlBrenda and John RushRobert RyanJoan Saalfeld, SNJM ‘64Melania Smith Sarnowski ‘62 and George SarnowskiEugenia Scarpelli-Enslow ‘68 and larry EnslowPeggy O’Phelan ‘71 and Steven Schaubel ‘86Diane linker Schlack ‘91alice Bates Schlenker ‘78 and Harold SchlenkerJustin Schmick ‘04andy Schmidt ‘03lisa Schmidt ‘93Mary ann Hoffmann Schnorenberg ‘57 and Charles SchnorenbergCharles Schroeder ‘80Mary ann and Bruce SchroederElizabeth Skinner Sekreta ‘43 and John Sekreta, Sr.Rita francois Selin ‘59 and a. Richard Selinlaura SequeiraMarguerite Kelly Shanahan ‘53 and William Shanahananne Curran Sheahan ‘61 and James Sheahanann Sheridan ‘55 and James flynnMargaret ShirleyMargret ‘84 and David ShortJoanna Rood Simmons ‘97Maggie Doolen and John Slocomangela Kintz Smith ‘75 and George SmithBrenda Henderson Smith ‘73 and Whitley SmithBridget Smith ‘71 and Jim asperDixie Holden Smith ‘67Katherine Smith ‘90, ‘92Kinuko SmithVenus SmithWilda Smith ‘07Judith Daniloff Snider ‘91Stephanie and Jonathan SnyderColleen Joy Sobieski ‘66 and James Sobieski

Mary Kileen Sparks ‘71 and Clarence SparksChristine Stevens ‘08Mary Pinkerton Stevens ‘69 and Charles Stevensandrea Westwood Stine ‘61 and Charles StineEmily Stordahl ‘99Joan and James StrassmaierKathleen Stupfel, SNJM ‘41 *lT

Norma ling Sullivan ‘81 and Jack SullivanKelley and Joseph Sunderlandannabel Tadej Super ‘59 and Joseph Superlinda Ross Swanson ‘81Marilyn Swayze ‘78Darla and Keith Swensenlynn Szenderlinda and John Tesnerlois Thadei ‘83, ‘91Yvonne Smith Thomas ‘62 and Gary ThomasJohn Thompsonlynda Thompson, SNJM ‘65*Joseph ThurstonPatricia Tibbetts-Blair ‘01Gertrude agnew Tobin ‘40 and Robert TobinMargaret Mary Tobin ‘49Toni avery ‘06 and Richard TruittElena DeMartino Turple ‘36Joanne Brelin Urevich ‘61 and Ralph UrevichKelda Van PattenMelinda and anthony VelizRashell Ver Valin ‘12Patricia Paulsen Vincent ‘50 and James VincentCelia VolkMarjorie Wilkerson Vuylsteke ‘56lois Wagner ‘04Katharyne Sykes Waldon ‘82 and James Waldonanne and Paul WallaceTheresa Wallace ‘96Tyler WallaceMichael WalshHelen Wand ‘60Heather WatkinsJulia and William WayneChristine ‘64 and Robert Weber-KearneyNancy Welch ‘56Claudine Richardson Werner ‘64Denise ‘07 and Ken WetherellCatherine Wheatley ‘00Shoko White ‘06Namita WiggersDorothy Wilhelm ‘84Patricia Harrington Wilhelm ‘58 and George WilhelmChristina Williams ‘09Kevin WilliamsTerri Williams ‘97Delores Wilson ‘93

*Marylhurst University trustee 2012-2013 and/or 2013-2014 ~ Matching gift corporation/foundation (in full or in part) † Deceased *LT = Marylhurst University life trustee *IK = In kind donor (in full or in part)

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Chloe Ryan Winston ‘52Tania Wisotzke ‘06Jodi Wittnebel ‘11Pat franz Wolfe ‘82Judy Zimmerman Wolff ‘63 and Roy WolffBeverly Wong ‘82 and David liftonCarolyn forman Wood ‘62Rosemary and William WoodMary Pynes Woodford-Beals ‘81alan Woodward ‘11Scott Work ‘04Mary Wurdinger ‘94 and Howard WurdingerJudy and loren WyssOlivia Yeung ‘09, ‘12June Young ‘95Kyle Zeider ‘06Barbara O’Hanlon Zembsch ‘55Susan Prichard Zenner ‘64 and James Zenner

Mary and Ed* Vranizan should have been recognized at the President's Society - Silver level in the fY 11-12 Donor Recognition list. We regret the miscategorization.

Annual SponsorsPresentingBon appétit Management Co.

Platinum $10,000+aequitas Capital Management, Inc.lifeMap assurance Company

Event SponsorsAnnual DinnerPresenting Bon appétit Management Co.

Platinum $10,000+aequitas Capital Management, Inc.lifeMap assurance Company

Gold $5,000-$9,999The Greenbrier CompaniesPacific PowerSisters of the Holy Names US-Ontario Province CorporationElizabeth and Stephen Zimmer

Silver $2,500-$4,999lajos BaloghJudith and Kirk JohansenPearson EmbanetRoseburg forest ProductsSchommer & Sons, Inc.The Robert C. & Nani S. Warren foundationWells fargo

Bronze $1,000-$2,499anonymousWhitney and Thomas BradenKimberly and Stephen BrownMolly and Stewart ButlerColumbia BankPatricia Irwin Crocker ‘46 and Jack CrockerCustom Decorators, Inc.first Republic *IK

Heather Schreiber KilloughDiana Pierce Knox ‘73* and William Knox, Jr.Park academyMartin RingleSchwabe, Williamson & Wyatt, P.C.Tom Tsuruta

Educator $500-$999anonymousMarilyn fellers fink ‘69 & Thomas finkDianna and Gregory HogensenING financial GroupTheresa lamb O’Hanlon ‘50 and James O’Hanlon *lT

Golf ClassicPresentingBon appétit Management Co.Columbia Bank

Banquet SponsorBon appétit Management Co.

Corporate SponsorMurphy Company

Golf Umbrella Sponsorfirst Republic Bank

Hole SponsorBank of Oswego

Team Sponsorsaequitas Capital Management, Inc.asset Recovery Group, Inc.Bank of the CascadesBecker Capital Management, Inc.The Campbell Group, llCCustom Decorators, Inc.Iberdrola RenewablesIdaho Power Co.Candace Jennings and Gil RodriguezKaiser PermanenteDiana Pierce Knox ‘73 & William Knox, Jr.KPMG llPMaybelle Clark Macdonald fundMagnacorpPearson EmbanetPort of PortlandPricewaterhouseCoopers llPSchnitzer Steel IndustriesSchommer & Sons, Inc.Schwabe, Williamson & Wyatt, P.C.

Stoel Rives llPUS Bank

Half Team SponsorPortland General Electric

Summer on the Green

Sponsorsaequitas Capital Management, Inc.HomeStreet Bank

Gifts in KindanonymousSione aeschlimanartists Repertory TheatreBugatti’s RistoranteCoffman ExcavationColumbia Sportswear CompanyRosalina Simon Domondon ‘58Simeon DreyfussCarol l. ferrisfirst RepublicKayla GabrielsonGoose Hollow GardensJudith a. JohansenKaady Car WashesKnife River Corporationlakewood Center for the arts/lakewood Theatre Companylan Su Chinese GardenNike, Inc.Orenco Sash & Door Inc.Oswego Hills WineryParkin Electric, Inc.Portland Classic GuitarPortland SpiritStego Industries llCSusan TateKhiem M. TranTucci RistoranteThe Walking Company

Corporations & Foundationsanonymousa-dec Inc.aequitas Capital Management, Inc.aKT llPOregon Chapter of american Meteorlogical Societyartists Repertory Theatre *IK

arts action alliance foundationasset Recovery Group, Inc.The Bank of OswegoBank of the CascadesBecker Capital Management, Inc.Billings & CronnThe Boeing Company~Bon appétit Management Co.Bugatti’s Ristorante *IK

The Cambia Employee Giving Campaign~Cambia Health SolutionsThe Campbell Group, llC

The Clint foundationCoffman Excavation *IK

The Collins foundationColumbia BankColumbia River Inter-Tribal fish CommissionColumbia Sportswear Company *IK

Columbia Weather Systems, Inc.Concordia UniversityCustom Decorators, Inc.Robert and Mercedes Eichholz foundationElizabeth leach GalleryEnvironmentsErnst & YoungEton lane foundationVan Evera and Janet M. Bailey fund of The Oregon Community foundationfirst Republic *IK

ford family foundationa. J. frank family foundationGeneral Mills foundation~Goose Hollow Gardens *IK

The Greenbrier CompaniesHomeStreet BankIberdrola RenewablesIdaho Power Co.ING financial GroupIntel foundation~Kaady Car Washes *IK

Kaiser foundation Health PlanKaiser PermanenteKaiser Permanente foundation Board Matching Program~W.M. Keck foundationKinsman foundationKnife River Corporation *IK

KPMG llPlake Oswego Preservation Societylakewood Center for the arts/lakewood Theatre Company *IK

Marie lamfrom Charitable foundationlan Su Chinese Garden *IK

lennox International~lifeMap assurance CompanyMaybelle Clark Macdonald fundMagnacorpMary’s WoodsMCM Construction, Inc.Harry a. Merlo foundation, Inc.anne K. Millis fund of The Oregon Community foundationM. J. Murdock Charitable Trust~Murphy CompanyNew life foundationNike, Inc. *IK

North Star foundationOregon arts CommissionOregon Education associationOrenco Sash & Door Inc. *IK

Oswego Hills Winery *IK

Pacific PowerPacific Power foundationPark academyParkin Electric, Inc. *IK

Charles Patrick Memorial fund of The Oregon Community foundationPDX Contemporary artPearson EmbanetPediatric Sensory TherapyPort of PortlandPortland Classic Guitar *IK

Portland General Electric~Portland Spirit *IK

PricewaterhouseCoopers llPRegional arts & Culture CouncilRoseburg forest ProductsHarold & arlene Schnitzer CaRE foundationSchnitzer Steel Industries, Inc.Schommer & Sons, Inc.Schwabe, Williamson & Wyatt, P.C.The l. S. (Sam) Shoen foundationSisters of St. Mary of OregonSisters of the Holy Names US-Ontario Province CorporationStego Industries llC *IK

Sarah a. Stewart foundationStoel Rives llPTucci Ristorante *IK

The Robert C. & Nani S. Warren foundationUS BankVISa~The Walking Company *IK

Wells fargoWells fargo foundation~Wheeler foundation-ORE. l. Wiegand foundationWomen’s architectural leagueJuan Young TrustYoung audiences of Oregon

Oregon Alliance of Independent Colleges and UniversitiesScholarship DonorsBiMartBurlington Northern Santa fe foundationCarpenter foundationCostco WholesaleJElD-WEN foundationKeyBankKnife River Corpleupold & StevensNW NaturalPCC StructuralsPGE foundationRose E. Tucker Charitable TrustUnited Parcel ServiceUS Bancorp Wells fargo

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Belluschi PavilionanonymousBetty allenarcalus llC *IK

arts action alliance foundationThe Bank of Oswegoanthony BelluschiPeter BelluschiElaine BloomerMary lee BoklundDiane and John BradshawKimberly and Stephen BrownRichard BrownMolly Butler and Stewart ButlerDianne and Eric CarlsonMary Jo Jwayad Carr ‘59 and Norman CarrRoger CherryGene ChristianPamela and Ronald ClemCoffman Excavation *IK

Marylou ColverThe Confederated Tribes of Grand RondeDebbie and Dave CraigBarnes EllisEnyeart Cedar Products *IK

akiko ‘05 and Robert ErwinChristina Eugenis and Stan amyExpanko, Inc. *IK

libby farrfloor Solutions, llC *IK

Janet and Gregory fowlerDon frisbeeDebra Giannini ‘09Sylvia Giustina ‘56*Patricia ‘85 and Henry GrassPat and John GriffithSue GriffithElizabeth and Joachim GrubeGrummel Engineering, llC *IK

Jeffrey GudmanJudie and John HammerstadJoan Hayware

Kathleen Sullivan Heath ‘53 and Edward Heathlynn HerringSandra Hetzel *IK

Nancy HissKasey and Steve HolwerdaIvey Jacobson & Company CPasBernice and Wendell JeffreyDonna and andy JordanCarol Karlson ‘11Kinsman foundationKnife River Corporation *IK

Walt KrumbholzSusanna and frank Kuolake Oswego Preservation SocietyPat and Michael lammersGrace lockeGregory MacPhersonSusan MarcusRichard MarkKathleen and Stanley MartinMarylhurst University *IK

Susan MatherTim Mather *IK

Mary Mayer ‘69Michael and Michael McCullochIan McCutcheonPatricia McDonaldJudy and louis McGrawHelen J. McGuirealexander McIntyreEllie and Merrill McPeakDavid MertensMiller Paint Co., Inc. *IK

North Star foundationJudith Norton ‘96,’03Van Evera and Janet M. Bailey fund of The Oregon Community foundationOrenco Sash & Door Inc. *IK

Erin O’Rourke-MeadorsRebecca Ostrom ‘09Parkin Electric, Inc. *IK

Elaine PaulSandy and Jeff Pittenger

Every effort has been made to ensure the accuracy of this list. Please contact the Office of University advancement at 503.534.4059 with any questions.

Whether it’s $25 or $100 or $1,000 or more, we appreciate your gift! Each gift is a vote of confidence. It says that you believe that a Marylhurst education should be accessible to those who seek it.

late in 2009, Tim Mather, an admirer of the Mid-Century Modern style of architecture, saved from destruction a historically significant lake Oswego home built in that style and donated it to Marylhurst. It arrived on campus disassembled and stored in a freight container.

Designed by Portland-based Pietro Belluschi, f.a.I.a. (1899-

1994), a world-renowned architect and leader of the Mid-Century Modern movement, and built by local contractor John Kinsman, it was the home of the Griffith family for many years.

fast forward nearly four years. Thanks to the cash and in-kind contributions of many, including the Kinsman foundation, Pietro

Belluschi’s family and the Griffith children (now adults), the Belluschi Pavilion at Marylhurst University opened in September 2013. It will serve as an educational resource for our students, architecture aficionados and the local community, as well as a lasting tribute to Belluschi himself.

We honor those who have helped make the Belluschi Pavilion a reality.

The Belluschi Pavilion – Now Open!

Norma and l. Paden PrichardMary and J. David RichenCorinna Campbell Sack and Robert Sackleslie Sammons-Roth ‘11Ronald Schoenheit ‘07Malcolm J. Shaw †Carolyn StanleyGabrielle StarrChristopher SweetMary lou lesenyie Taggart ’65 and Richard TaggartNancy and John TonguePhyllis TowneValspar Paint *IK

Jule Vaughanfrances Walsh ‘00Bill and Barbara WarnerWendy Weil ‘98Stego Industries llC *IK

Patricia S. WilhusenWillamette Graystone *IK

Kathy WilliamsWoman’s architectural league

*Marylhurst University trustee 2012-2013 and/or 2013-2014 ~ Matching gift corporation/foundation (in full or in part) † Deceased *LT = Marylhurst University life trustee *IK = In kind donor (in full or in part)

Page 28: Marylhurst Unlimited - Fall 2013

17600 Pacific Highway (Hwy. 43) P.O. Box 261Marylhurst, OR 97036-0261

Educating in the Catholic tradition since 1893

Planning your estate? Make it smooth sailing!

Join us for an estate planning workshop on Friday, October 18, 2013, at Marylhurst University.

Educating in the Catholic tradition since 1893

Planning your estate? Make it smooth sailing!

Join us for an estate planning workshop on Friday, October 18, 2013, at Marylhurst University.

Educating in the Catholic tradition since 1893

Planning your estate? Make it smooth sailing!

Join us for an estate planning workshop on Friday, October 18, 2013, at Marylhurst University.RSVP by October 10 to Becky Burkeen at 503.699.6327 or [email protected] in the Catholic tradition since 1893

Planning your estate? Make it smooth sailing!

Join us for an estate planning workshop on Friday, October 18, 2013, at Marylhurst University.