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ENRICHING THE COMMUNITY MAKING BINGHAMTON BETTER INSPIRING STUDENTS BINGHAMTON UNIVERSITY FOUNDATION

Binghamton University Foundation Annual Report 2008-09

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Binghamton University Foundation Annual Report 2008-09: Making Binghamton Better, Inspiring Students, Enriching the Community

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Page 1: Binghamton University Foundation Annual Report 2008-09

enrichingTHEcommunitymakingBinghamtonbETTEr inspiringsTudEnTs

bingHamTon univErsiTy foundation

Page 2: Binghamton University Foundation Annual Report 2008-09
Page 3: Binghamton University Foundation Annual Report 2008-09

annual report 2008-09

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hese are difficult times as our nation is experiencing one of

the most economically challenging climates in a generation.

New York state and the SUNY system are no exception. This year,

Binghamton University has seen the largest reductions in its state

support in decades. The University has responded to these reductions

with creativity and innovation — finding new ways to accomplish

our goals, developing new partnerships with regional and national

businesses and institutions, and using new technologies to cut costs

and position the campus for the future.

In meeting these challenges, the University has benefitted significantly

from the continuing support of the Binghamton University Foundation.

Over the years, the Foundation has built alliances with thousands of

generous supporters — committed individuals and organizations

whose selfless involvement provides the University with resources

essential to our mission. The support provided by the Foundation

now, morE THan EvEr

t

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report’s story about the Manley’s Service-Learning Project, in which

School of Management students consult with 12 nonprofits each

spring, applying to real-world situations cutting-edge business

practices just learned in the classroom. This innovative collaboration

not only gives students hands-on consulting experience, but also

strengthens nonprofits, enabling them to more efficiently carry out

their missions and save thousands of dollars a year.

It is clear that the Binghamton University Foundation continues to

provide the margin of excellence that helps keep our campus at

the forefront of public higher education. Binghamton’s reputation

as the premier public university in the Northeast continues to grow,

highlighted by accolades in such prominent publications as Forbes,

BusinessWeek, Fiske Guide to Colleges and Kiplinger’s; and for the

13th year in a row, Binghamton has been recognized by U.S. News &

World Report as one of the 50 best public institutions in the country.

As president, I am proud of all the achievements of our students,

faculty and staff. Yet I know that in the face of our funding challenges,

many of these successes would not be possible without support from

the Binghamton University Foundation. Thank you to all of you who

have committed yourselves — through time, money and deeds — to

opening doors and creating opportunities. Your efforts are essential in

helping Binghamton University accomplish extraordinary things.

Lois B. DeFleur

President

ensures that our students have the best public education in the

country, helps the University develop innovative academic programs

and assists our researchers in the pursuit of new knowledge. These

investments pay significant dividends to our communities, the state

and the nation. More importantly, the work of the Foundation assists

us in educating an ambitious and talented workforce while fostering

technological advances that are changing the world.

Through the Foundation and our supporters, the University is

providing many needed scholarships and other recognition for our

bright and talented students. This helps the University continue

to attract and retain some of the best students anywhere. The

scholarships and grants also help ensure that our students can

continue to pursue their dreams for higher education and meaningful

careers. For example, in this report you will read about Laura Vollmer,

who, even though she works, needed the Unger Family Scholarship

to help pay for books. The Foundation also offers critical emergency

support for students with special circumstances. This year, following

a statewide tuition hike, Ilan Hadar, an Israeli doctor attending the

Decker School of Nursing, would have had to withdraw without

completing his degree work, if not for emergency assistance made

available through the Gertrude E. Skelly Charitable Foundation

Nursing Student Emergency Fund.

Through the Foundation’s efforts, Binghamton faculty are able

to collaborate with researchers in Asia and Africa, while new

technologies bring the other side of the Earth into our classrooms.

Yet even as the University’s global reach has widened, so has its

involvement with the local community, as is demonstrated in this 3

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fter 38 years of involvement with Binghamton University —

from student to adjunct faculty to donor and volunteer — last

spring I expanded my commitment and assumed the responsibility of

being chair of the Binghamton Foundation Board of Directors. I did so

for one reason: I believe in the Foundation’s mission.

I believe in helping the University’s extremely talented

students — who, among their many qualitative talents

also have the highest average SAT score of any SUNY

university — by building an educational environment

where they are free to follow their passions, even if those

passions take them across disciplines, across campus or

across the world. It is in the pursuit of our passions that

we overcome inevitable adversity and accomplish the

good and great things that define our lives.

I believe in supporting faculty members with state-

of-the-art technology that brings the world into the

classroom and in providing those faculty members with opportunities

to conduct some of the most innovative research in the country —

research they do side by side with students, sharing insight and ideas.

I also believe in helping the surrounding community through creatively

sharing resources and seeding community improvement projects

because when we enrich the lives of others, we enrich our own lives

as well.

And all that I believe in is embodied in the Binghamton

Foundation. Over the years, hundreds of alumni, donors

and friends have proven that they, too, believe in the

Foundation’s mission by donating time, talent and

property to ensure that Binghamton remains one of the

premier public universities in the country. The University,

the Foundation and I are deeply thankful. Binghamton

University wouldn’t be the great school it is today

without your help.

But the cause continues. In the current economic climate

of constrained budgets, your private support is essential to the

Foundation’s being able to supply resources to where the University

and its students need them most. Our goals are much larger than

merely sustaining our record of academic excellence. We want to go

farther. We want to put the world at our students’ fingertips.

And with your continued support, there is nothing Binghamton

University can’t accomplish. In this, I believe.

Lawrence J. Schorr ’75, MA ’77

Chair, Foundation Board of Directors

in this, i bEliEvEa

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The Binghamton University Foundation was established for one

main reason: to further the purpose and mission of Binghamton

University. A not-for-profit corporation, the Foundation raises funds by

partnering with alumni, parents, friends and members of the University

community. It also educates others about charitable giving, matches

institutional fundraising priorities with donors’ charitable intentions

and provides stewardship of all assets held in trust for the benefit of

Binghamton University.

Like all public universities, Binghamton University builds its budget

from four income streams: tuition and fees, sponsored funding, private

giving and state funding. Since the 1980s, however, the percentage

of the overall budget supported by the state has steadily decreased

and is currently only 43 percent, which makes private gifts even more

critical to continuing Binghamton’s trajectory toward becoming the

country’s best public university.

With the generous support of our donors, the Foundation opens

opportunities for Binghamton students through scholarships, awards

and fellowships, and jump-starts their careers with networking

bingHamTon univErsiTy FoundaTionmission and PurPosE

making a difference EvEry dayprograms and job placement assistance (for top-starting salaries,

Forbes found that our graduates are fourth in the nation and first in

the Northeast among public universities).

Because of our donors, the Foundation can fund the recruitment and

retention of an incredibly talented faculty, 93 percent of whom hold

the highest degrees in their fields and who are conducting some of

the most innovative research in the country — research requiring

assistants, updated labs and equipment.

But, perhaps most important, private support allows the Foundation

to react to a constantly changing economic environment, giving

Binghamton University the flexibility it needs to ensure that access to

a great public education is not disrupted.

The Foundation takes its role as wise steward of donated resources

very seriously, and works continuously and diligently to help the

University achieve its strategic goals. The people and programs

profiled on the following pages illustrate the tangible impact the

Foundation’s efforts have on the Binghamton campus each day.

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makingBingh

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whether it’s implementing innovative programs or

upgrading infrastructure, Binghamton university

is continually working to make the educational

experience richer and more fulfilling for its students,

faculty, staff and community — because we know no

matter how good we get, we can always become better.

amtonbETTEr

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ur international programs are innovative

and comprehensive — from inside the

classroom to out of the classroom,” Binghamton

University President Lois B. DeFleur said. “We

bring the world to campus with students from

more than 100 nations, and now we’re bringing our campus to the world.”

That’s why Visiting Assistant Professor Harald Zils’s class in Current

Trends in German Studies is an ideal selection for the Lois B. DeFleur

International Innovation Fund.

Using videoconferencing technology, Zils invites scholars from all over

the world — Berkeley, Alberta, Freiburg, Yerevan — into his classroom

to discuss current research projects. “It not only connects undergrads

with the world,” Zils said. “They also get to hear about projects as they’re

happening, before they reach the textbooks two years later, which makes

it far more engaging for them.”

The DeFleur Fund’s goal is to prompt increased global awareness, global

respect and global competence. Three other projects received grant

funding: Dan Polhamus to develop a global alumni network; Tom Sinclair

to initiate scholar and student exchanges with Shenzhen University in

China; and Dora Polachek to enhance the experience of Binghamton

students studying in France by immersing them in French culture.

President DeFleur established the fund with $25,000 she received when

she was awarded the Harold W. McGraw, Jr. Prize in Education in 2007.

“o makingBinghamtonbETTEr

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ne aspect of Binghamton University really stood out over other

places I had looked at,” chemist Eriks Rozners said as he talked

about examining institutions across the country during a job search in

2008. Unlike some universities where administration and faculty are rigidly

separated, one dictating to the other, he noticed that Binghamton fostered

a different climate — “I could clearly see a very nice collaboration and

understanding between the two.”

This atmosphere of cooperation is part of the University’s faculty

development strategy, which uses funds like the Jean-Pierre Mileur

Faculty Development Fund for Harpur College to attract, support and

retain faculty.

Before hiring Rozners, the University promised to use faculty development

funds to renovate a decades-old teaching lab, with an antique blackboard,

old equipment, too many sinks and not enough space, into a state-of-the-art

research facility.

“The students and I might have been able to do some of the research in the

old lab,” he said. “But it would have been much less efficient, with a high risk

of damaging the equipment. And some of the more sensitive equipment just

couldn’t be maintained there.”

Recently, Rozners used Harpur faculty development funds to help the

chemistry department leverage a $550,000 National Science Foundation

grant to purchase powerful nuclear magnetic-resonance equipment. With

the new instrument — which will be used by a number of departments —

Rozners and others can expand their research in directions they never

dreamed possible in the old lab.

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makingBinghamtonbETTEr

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inghamton University is certainly one of the premier public

universities in the country, but it hardly has a monopoly on

talented professors doing in-depth research.

That’s why the University brings preeminent scholars from around

the world to the Binghamton campus to share cutting-edge research

and fresh ideas through the Mario and Antoinette Romano

Lecture Series and the Edgar W. Couper Lecture Series.

Endowed in 1984 by former Binghamton University student Mario

Romano, the Romano Lecture Series sponsors talks by experts

in history, economics, art history and medicine. “Mario wanted to

give Binghamton University the opportunity to invite lecturers that

it wouldn’t normally have access to,” said Distinguished Teaching

Professor of History Gerald Kaddish, who was instrumental in

establishing the series. “He used to tell me, ‘if you do well, you need

to give something back.’”

The Couper Lecture Series, established by the family of educational

pioneer Edgar W. Couper, honors Couper by inviting education

scholars to share the latest research and concepts with students

and professors in the University’s School of Education and the

community at large.

B

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makingBinghamtonbETTEr

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inspiring

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as Binghamton university strives to provide the best

public education in the nation, we adhere to one

dominant principle: inspire students to find and explore

their passions. Because that’s the journey that unlocks

possibility, expands horizons and changes the world.

sTudEnTs

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hen accounting major Laura Vollmer was a sophomore,

she led a five-person team to the national finals in

PricewaterhouseCoopers’ xTAX competition, proving why she

was an Unger Family Scholarship recipient — and a School of

Management student of merit — as only five teams were selected

out of a field of 775 from more than 80 schools.

Established in 2004 by Howard Unger ’82 and Mindy Unger ’82,

the four-year scholarship is awarded to four students a year and

requires that they hold positions of leadership in extracurricular

activities relating to business.

Now a senior, Vollmer has demonstrated her many leadership qualities

in different ways — as a teaching assistant for Accounting 211,

a tutor in the University’s Center for Academic Excellence, and a

founding officer of the Binghamton chapter of Alpha Kappa Psi,

a business fraternity. She’s now its executive vice president and is

proud that the organization will be helping business students

navigate their way to successful careers for years to come.

“I feel like a lot of people want to leave a legacy when they

graduate,” she said. “So it’s nice to know that I’ve made my mark

in one way.”

w

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inspiringsTudEnTs

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e want to do everything we can to offer opportunity to our

undergraduates who want to do research,” said

Jennifer Jensen, associate dean of Harpur College of Arts

and Sciences.

That’s why this year the school used the Undergraduate

Award for Research and Creative Work Fund — an

award open to all Binghamton students — to supply environmental

psychology major Natalie Carmeli with a grant that supports

her capstone project. Carmeli’s project is the creation of a “green

map” documenting natural, environmental and cultural resources in

the Binghamton area — such as recycling centers, heritage sites,

community gardens and green businesses.

The grant paid for licensing fees to the Green Map® System (a nonprofit

agency that enlists local mapmaking teams), as well as promotional

materials that helped her engage with the local community.

Although the grants supported by the Binghamton University

Foundation are relatively modest — each academic year, the college

awards 80 to 100, each with a $250 maximum — they are viewed by

students and faculty alike as motivating undergraduates to achieve.

“One of the best ways to learn is to get students really involved in their

own inquiry into something that interests them,” Jensen said. “This

does that.”

“winspiringsTudEnTs

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f it weren’t for the Gertrude E. Skelly Charitable Foundation

Nursing Student Emergency Fund, Ilan Hadar — who was in the

top 10 percent of his class with a 3.95 GPA — wouldn’t have been able to

graduate.

Enrolling in the Decker School of Nursing, Hadar had budgeted very

carefully to bring his family here from Israel — where he was a physician

— but one semester before completing the RN program, the state raised

tuition and Hadar couldn’t make ends meet.

“I was very upset that I was that close and not able to finish,” Hadar said.

But when he explained the situation to Decker Dean Joyce Ferrario, she

suggested the Skelly Fund, founded in 1999 to help nursing students with

unexpected financial difficulties.

“This is a wonderful fund to have when students run into these

situations,” Ferrario said. They don’t know what to do, and we can

calm them down and get them this money.” A major advantage of

the fund is that grants — from $300 to $3,000, though typically

about $500 — are made at the dean’s discretion, which means

they can be channeled to students quickly and without red tape.

“I didn’t need a lot of money,” Hadar said. “But it was just

enough to let me graduate.” After graduation, Hadar found work

as an RN and stayed in Binghamton to raise his family.

i

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inspiringsTudEnTs

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THE communityenriching

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enriching the lives of others through discovery and

education enriches our own lives. that’s why one of

Binghamton university’s most fundamental missions

is working to improve the community around us by

sharing resources, talent and ideas.

THEcommunity

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his year the Philanthropy Incubator Project launched students in

the Master’s in Public Administration and Master’s in Social Work

programs into the nonprofit worlds they hope to inhabit after graduation.

Created by CCPA Public Administration Assistant Professor David

Campbell with an $18,000 grant from the Fidelity Charitable Gift Fund

and Campus Compact, the project made students responsible for

distributing $12,000 to local nonprofits.

To do so, students designed a grant-making process that had them

soliciting applications, building evaluation criteria, visiting grant sites

and developing a process to make decisions as to who would receive

money and who would not.

“I’ve gotten more hands-on experience than I ever expected while in the

program,” MPA student Sarah Maximiek said.

And that’s just what Campbell is after.

“The ultimate outcome is that while students grant money to local

nonprofits, they are learning about those organizations and the

difference they make in people’s lives,” he said. “But more than that,

they learn about what it takes to be leaders in the nonprofit world.”

t

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enrichingTHEcommunity

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o a child, a playground can be anything — a fortress to be defended from

marauding pirates, or Mount Everest, begging to be climbed. And it’s

through this kind of play that children explore their environments and

develop social skills.

But to a child with autism spectrum disorder, a typical playground can be an

unfriendly mix of commotion, strange people, loud noises, confusing colors

and enclosed spaces.

To help these children and evaluate their progress, Binghamton University’s

Institute for Child Development used generous donations from the Shamrock

Five Foundation, the National Mah Jongg League Foundation, the Community

Foundation for South Central New York on behalf of Larry and Jenny Schorr,

and many others to build the Social Learning Center, which at first glance

looks like an oversized playground.

“The playground is not designed to be a typical playground,” though, said

Raymond G. Romanczyk, Distinguished Service Professor of psychology and

director of the institute. “It’s designed to enhance interaction, to help with

the spectrum of social-learning deficits the children have.”

Nationally known, the Institute for Child Development serves as a regional

resource for almost 50 children with autism — some of whom travel 180 miles

a day to use it. Because children with autism are three times more likely to

suffer injuries than typical children, the ground was covered with a state-

of-the-art impact-absorbing surface and more space was left between play

stations, so the environment remains challenging yet not overwhelming.

t

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enrichingTHEcommunity

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his program saves a nonprofit about $50,000 to $75,000 in consulting

fees,” the School of Management’s

Associate Professor Kimberly Jaussi said.

“You times that by the 12 organizations

we serve each spring and that adds up

to a lot of money.”

Sponsored with a $150,000 grant from Manley’s Mighty Marts and Big Al’s

Pizza, the Manley’s Service-Learning Project gives students seeking a

concentration in consulting and leadership a unique opportunity to actually

serve as real-world strategic consultants for local nonprofits.

This year, Lou Ligouri, executive director of the Endicott Performing Arts

Center, had a chance to work with one of the 12 teams — each made up of

five students — and he noted their analysis and advice was invaluable to

EPAC’s mission.

“Having a team dedicated to looking at the big picture with objective eyes

was vital to providing a fresh look and fresh ideas to help the organization

overcome problems and strategize for the future,” Ligouri said.

Jaussi sees the program as win-win because in addition to helping

nonprofits strengthen their missions, students are building their skills

as leaders.

“When our students go on job interviews, employers are astonished that

this work was produced by undergraduates,” she said. “Recruiters have

told me that Ivy League schools aren’t producing anything like it.”

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donorrecognitionsoCiETiEs

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33

n anonymous donor has given the

University a gift totaling $6 million.

Of the total donation, $4 million was used to

establish the American Dream Scholarship Fund

for scholarships and financial aid to women

and minority students. The $2 million unre-

stricted portion of the gift was designated for an

Academic Program Enhancement and Faculty

Support Fund.

“This gift offers unprecedented potential for

Binghamton to enhance student access and

provide support for the University,” President

largest individual gift ever

a

leadershipsoCiETyThe Leadership Society recognizes donors with giving to the

Binghamton University Foundation totaling $1,000 or more

between July 1, 2008, and June 30, 2009.

$6,000,000 anonymous

$250,000 to $499,999dr. g. Clifford & Florence b. decker

Foundation

$100,000 to $249,999CiT group inc. ◊mr. mark l. deutsch ’81 ◊mr. Carl T. Ernstrom ’61mrs. rita Chirumbolo ErnstromHelene Fuld Health Trust, HsbC bank

usa, n.a., Trusteenational mah Jongg league

Foundation, inc.Estate of benjamin r. surovy, ms ’72 + *mrs. Eve b. Tucker ’85mr. Jeffrey s. Tucker ’84

$50,000 - $99,999anonymousErnst & young llP ◊Fidelity Charitable gift Fund ◊The new york Community Trustms. Jennifer brink schorr, mba ’81 + ◊mr. lawrence J. schorr ’75, ma ’77 ◊sodexo Campus servicesmr. Howard d. unger ’82mrs. mindy s. unger ’82The mark Zurack & kathy Ferguson

Foundation

$25,000 to $49,999anonymous (2)barnes & noble College booksellers, inc.mr. steven H. bloom ’78mrs. susan a. bloom ’80ms. monica E. Casey

deer Creek Foundationdr. lois b. deFleur +ms. Cathleen m. Ellsworth ’86Estate of anthony giusto *The barry and alison goodman

Foundationmrs. alison goodmanmr. barry a. goodman ’79mr. Joseph W. Haleski ’88mrs. katherine C. Haleski ’88Edwin E. Hatch Foundationmr. robert s. mancini ’80Estate of John merges *The a. lindsay and olive b. o’Connor

Foundation, inc.mr. owen C. Pell ’80PricewaterhouseCoopers llP ◊mrs. marilyn H. schumannmr. robert F. schumannmildred Faulkner Truman Foundationmr. Paul r. Turovsky ’73ullmann Family Foundation, inc. ◊

$10,000 - $24,999anonymous mr. richard l. alpern ’69 ◊ms. sandra r. alpern ’70 ◊baE systems Platform solutions ◊

Lois B. DeFleur said. “It comes at a crucial time

in the University’s development and we are

deeply grateful for this extraordinary generos-

ity. Our Binghamton University Foundation will

administer and invest this important gift.”

“We are honored that this donor has such strong

faith in Binghamton University and has chosen to

invest in us,” said Marcia R. Craner, vice presi-

dent for external affairs and executive director of

the Binghamton University Foundation. “This gift

will help motivate others who may wish to simi-

larly support the University’s future and enrich

the educational experience of our students.”

mrs. Jill bernstein-degen ’94 ◊ms. anita J. borkenstein ’86 ◊mr. randall l. borkenstein ’87 ◊The botnick Family FoundationThe bowers Foundation, inc.brenner buildersmrs. Jill T. brenner ’84mr. kevin s. brenner ’84mr. Peter H. bridge ◊dr. Harold Cohen ’59ms. Jo Cohenmr. Joel m. Cohen ’83mrs. stacey b. Cohen ’84Estate of derek Colville *mr. george W. Curth Jr. ’90mrs. rose Curthms. Jacqueline Cyranmr. michael E. Cyran ’87The donald F. & maxine b. davison

Foundationmr. marc s. dieli ’89mr. sean g. doherty ’89The samuel and rae Eckman Charitable

Foundation, inc.Emerson Charitable Trust ◊Emerson network Power surge

Protection, inc. ◊mr. maynard g. Fahs Jr.ms. megan H. Fahsmr. stephen P. Feehan, mba ’90 ◊dr. karen E. Fuhrman kerner ’86dr. marilyn gaddis rose +The gaffney Foundationdr. bhagwan W. gajwanigE Foundation ◊mr. kenneth a. goldblatt ’87 ◊ms. annmarie gaiso goldfarb ’93mr. michael g. goldfarbmr. sheldon i. goldfarb ’72goldman, sachs & Co. ◊goldman sachs gives ◊dr. Jodi guttenberg-lipkin ’81The stewart W. and Willma C. Hoyt

Foundation inc.ibm Corporation ◊mr. Frithiof v. Johnson ◊dr. dikran karagueuzian +ms. rita marie kepner ’66mr. michael g. kerner ’86The Conrad and virginia klee Foundation

mr. and mrs. anthony F. klineruthanne koffman Charitable Foundationmr. burton i. koffmanmrs. ruthanne koffman ’82, ma ’84kPmg Foundation ◊ms. Charlene kahlor kramer ’73mr. roger g. kramer ’72mr. mitchell J. lieberman ’80 ◊mrs. susan lieberman ◊mr. scott H. lipkin ’81lockheed martin Corporation ◊lockheed martin systems integrationmr. alan l. luchs ’83manley’s mighty mart llCmrs. gale a. nadelson-Paul ’94nbT bancorp, inc.mrs. marcy r. needle ◊dr. michael n. needle ’81 ◊The newman Foundation inc. ◊mr. mark newman ’71 ◊mrs. sharon newmanmr. James W. orband ’81mrs. Theresa a. orbandmr. brian s. Paul ’94mr. Terry C. Peet ◊dr. beatrice rogoff Plasse ’72mr. Jonathan m. Plasse ’72mr. larry ricemrs. ann s. rosenthal ◊mr. Charles l. rosenthal + ◊The schwab Fund for Charitable giving ◊mr. samuel H. schwartz ’85 ◊senior Class Council, Class of 2009 ◊ms. amy shapiroThe Harvey and Elizabeth Prior shriber

Charitable Foundation ◊The gertrude E. skelly Charitable

FoundationunitedHealthcarems. marie van deusen, ma ’78vanguard Charitable Endowment

Program ◊vital spark Foundationmr. John W. Walker ’78 ◊mrs. victoria Walker ◊

$5,000 - $9,999anonymous (3)mr. Charles s. adams Jr. ’81mrs. georgia s. adams

+ Faculty/staff/retiree, * deceased, ◊ binghamton Fund donor

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aT&T ◊mr. William E. baldwin ’85mr. keith ball, ms ’79ms. donna baron ◊mr. mark baron ◊mr. lee bearschbehrman brothers management Corp.dr. alfred bendixen ’73mr. Jay s. benet ’74 ◊ms. Jeanne P. benet ◊ms. doris E. braun ’83mrs. lauren m. brown ’90mr. michael J. brown ’89michael J. brown PCmrs. regina m. burke-Jones ’85 ◊The busfield Foundation ◊ms. anne b. Clark +Cleaner’s supply, inc.The Community Foundation of middle

Tennesseemrs. Patricia Pogue Couper ◊mr. Hans a. dalmolen ’98 ◊mr. daniel J. damon ’88 ◊mrs. rhonda dunnmr. vincent dunnmr. glenn m. Engelmann ’77 ◊mrs. michelle Tuman Engelmann ’77 ◊ms. Jeanne gardnermr. keith J. gardner ’80mr. richard J. gibney ’76 ◊ms. rebecca guilbert ’90 ◊mrs. lisa guinanmr. stephen T. guinanThe Heichemer Family Foundation, inc.mrs. nancy Heichemermr. rick Heichemermr. keith l. Horn ’80Jack sherman Toyota, inc.mr. richard r. Jones ’87 ◊mr. david F. klein ’81, mba ’82mrs. Judith F. klein ’82mr. Prabhakar n. kudvamr. gary kunis ’73lane development, llCmr. michael W. lanemrs. sue lanemrs. ruth E. levin, msT ’72dr. saul levin +mrs. melanie H. and dr. Chih-Ping J. lu ◊macy’s Foundation ◊

mrs. betty marcus ’89mr. michael marcus ’87mr. gary C. meltzer ’85mrs. rina r. meltzer ’85ms. gerda mignanims. diana lee morabito ’77, ms ’79ms. marilyn m. myers, ma ’73naC Enterprises, ltd.ms. suh neubauer ◊new york life insurance Co ◊mrs. Emily a. nielsendr. orville F. nielsenmr. albert nocciolinoopen society institutemrs. Janet Paperin ’68mr. stewart J. Paperin ’68, ms ’70The Pauline r. Parker Trustmr. Eugene E. Peckhammrs. Judith C. Peckhammr. William o. Perkins iiidr. Charles P. Pfleeger ◊dr. shari lawrence Pfleeger ’70 ◊Procter & gamble ◊The raymond Corporationms. karen reinsteinmr. richard m. reinstein ’80ms. lisa Frasco ryanmr. stephen m. ryanmr. anthony J. scaranomrs. Janet scarano +mr. dennis m. schneck ’97 ◊mrs. Tracy a. Caliendo schneck ’97 ◊dr. david a. schultz ’80, ma ’86ms. Helene levy schultz ’81, ma ’83southern Tier Foundation for medical

Care, inc.dr. nicholas J. stamato ’76 ◊mrs. susan F. stamato ◊martha Washington straus - Harry H.

straus Foundation, inc.mr. donald b. swain + ◊dr. mary ann swain + ◊mr. Jeffrey l. Tanenbaum ’73 ◊mrs. karen s. Tanenbaum ’76 ◊mr. marc F. Thewes ’88mr. gary m. Tischler ’84mrs. aleta arthur Traugermr. byron Traugermr. Thomas C. Triebwasser ’05mr. James r. van voorst + ◊

+ Faculty/staff/retiree, * deceased, ◊ binghamton Fund donor

34

visions Federal Credit union ◊Wachovia Foundation ◊mr. david sloan Wilson +mrs. Cynthia a. Winter ◊mr. michael r. Winter ’75 ◊

$2,500 - $4,999anonymous (3)ms. michelle adams ’94 ◊ms. karen E. ahrend ◊mr. kristopher E. ahrend ’92 ◊mrs. beth akel ◊mr. ronald akel ◊american international group ◊mr. Elliot r. arditti ’76 ◊astraZeneca ◊ms. susan beallor-snyderdr. lori a. ben-Ezra ’87 ◊mr. marc a. ben-Ezra ’87 ◊dr. andrew bergman ’65dr. aldo s. bernardo + ◊mrs. reta a. bernardo, ma ’72, ma ’74,

Phd ’79 ◊dr. linda b. biemer + ◊dr. sheryl s. birke ’85 ◊mrs. denise b. birnbaum ’73mr. gary l. birnbaum ’73mr. Cyrus borzooyeh ’93dr. abraham J. briloff ◊mr. Charles g. brink ◊mrs. nancy m. brink ◊mr. brad E. Cetron ’97 ◊mrs. gail Chadwick ’90 ◊mr. keith d. Chadwick ’76, ma ’83 ◊mrs. mary l. Churchmr. richard r. ChurchThe Community Foundation for south

Central new york ◊Frederic W. Cook & Co. inc. ◊ms. marcia r. Craner, ma ’94 + ◊dart group ii Foundation ◊mr. William r. davies ’51 ◊deloitte & Touche Foundation ◊mr. michael J. destefano ’87mrs. adrienne deutschmr. ronald E. deutsch ’79deutsche bank ◊mrs. sadev k. dhillon ’92, ’95dr. upinder s. dhillon +mr. stanton m. drazen

dr. melvyn dubofsky +mr. robert d. Eicher ’81 ◊Emmes asset management Company

llCExxon mobil Corporation ◊dr. Joyce a. Ferrario +Fidelity investments ◊Flashbacksmr. Eugene d. Flood ’57 + ◊mr. J. keith gorham ’73, ma ’75mr. Joseph gottliebmr. gary l. greenstein ’78mrs. sharyn greensteinThe guardian life insurance Company

of america ◊ms. Patricia H. Hamlin ’68 ◊mr. William Hamlin ’71 ◊Hinman, Howard & kattell, llPmrs. sharon l. Hohauser ’82mr. William a. Hohauser ’81Hollander & strauss llPmr. larry b. Hollander ’78mrs. Phyllis s. Hollander ’80dr. Eric J. Howell ’82 ◊mr. Charles o. ingrahamdr. Patricia Wallace ingraham, ma ’78,

Phd ’79 +ms. margaret E. iwobi, ms ’75 +mr. samuel o. iwobiJohnson & Johnson ◊mrs. Carolyn Joseph ◊mr. Elliot Joseph ’76 ◊mrs. nancy k. kelly ◊dr. Thomas F. kelly + ◊mr. stuart F. koenig ’73 ◊mrs. Carol J. korutz ’78 ◊mr. William korutz ◊mrs. kimberly E. kump ◊mr. robert d. kump ’83 ◊William H. lane incorporatedmr. steven d. lash ’87 ◊leadership institutemrs. Jill lerner ’72mr. Jonathan J. lerner ’70dr. Eric s. lesser ’84 ◊miss marilyn C. linkmr. david F. lorden ’84 ◊mrs. Jessica E. lorden ’83 ◊mr. allan r. lyons ’62 ◊mrs. diana lyons ◊

matrix, llCmbia Foundation, inc.dr. michael F. mcgoff ’70, ma ’74,

Phd ’80 +ms. robin l. mead ◊merrill lynch & Co. Foundation, inc. ◊microsoft Corporation ◊dr. morris milman ’73mrs. anna montovano ◊mr. John l. montovano ’97 ◊mr. gary T. moran, ms ’81ms. rebecca d. moshief ◊ms. kim myersmr. Timothy C. myersms. nancy r. nelson ’83 ◊new England Complex systems institutemr. John nissenbaum ’87 ◊mr. lee H. Perlman ’80Perry Capital, llCms. donna Pylypciwms. linda s. riefberg ’81mr. Joseph J. robilotto ’55mrs. adriana rollo ◊mr. James J. rollo ’84 ◊James rollo state Farm agent ◊mrs. bonnie russolillo ’80 ◊mr. raymond g. russolillo ’80 ◊sadler machine Co., inc.mr. Thomas E. sadlerdr. Hiroki sayama +ms. Carole lee (Eustis) schwomeyermr. Warren a. schwomeyerms. Jennifer m. shmulewitz ’96mr. Jonathan sloan ’94, ms ’96mr. stuart Craig snyder ’81dr. John F. spring ◊mr. John alger stevenson ’82 ◊mr. Harris Z. Tilevitz ’78 ◊Time Warner CableTowers Perrin ◊ubs ◊Wegmans Food marketsmr. Charles i. Weissman ’78 ◊mrs. Joan Weissman ◊dr. albert Wolkoff ’61 ◊

$1,000 - $2,499anonymous (3)mr. donald a. adams, mba ’75 ◊mrs. E. kay adams ’75 ◊

Page 37: Binghamton University Foundation Annual Report 2008-09

mr. Ferris g. akel ’59 ◊ms. louise akel ◊ms. lucille albergo ’82 ◊alliance With The broome County medical

society inc.amphenol Corporationms. katherine andersonThe anglo-american Charitable

Foundation ◊aPEX network services, inc.baE systems Controls Employees

Community service Fundms. gayle kraden baio ’90dr. saeed a. bajwa ◊The bank of new york mellon ◊mr. Joseph mark bartner ’75mr. James l. bauer ’68mrs. Jill W. bauermr. ronald H. beardmr. arthur d. becker ◊mr. bruce o. becker ◊mrs. Christine k. becker ’75 ◊ms. rebecca a. benner + ◊dr. nancy s. berg ’85 ◊dr. marsha J. berger ’74 ◊mr. boaz n. berkowitz ’98ms. danielle berkowitzms. dabeiba bernal rubio ◊mrs. debra b. bigman ’88dr. mitchell a. bitter ’74 ◊mr. daniel r. black ’94ms. lisa J. black ’95dr. ralph blanchard, Phd ’72 ◊mrs. Patty bloomermr. george s. bobinski Jr. + ◊mrs. Judith d. bobinski ◊mr. bruce E. borton +mrs. nanette bortonmr. neil E. botwinoff ’78 ◊ms. nancy boyd-goff, mba ’80 + ◊mr. donnie braunstein ’79 ◊mr. Peter E. breckling ’92mr. Joseph m. bress ’66 ◊dr. daniel E. britton ◊dr. geraldine r. britton, Phd ’04 + ◊mr. ian s. brock Jr. ’91 ◊dr. richard a. brodkin ’71 ◊dr. karen m. bromley +mr. robert g. bromleymrs. beverly lynn brown ’78

mrs. Cheryl s. brown ’74, ma ’88 +mrs. Janet E. brown +dr. Thomas C. brown ’61buckingham manufacturing Co.mrs. lois buerkle ◊mr. Jeffrey P. bump ◊dr. Caryn l. burg-kurland ’78 ◊mr. John J. burns Jr.dr. Paul burns ’73mrs. shelly burnsmr. ronald J. butler ’72mrs. Patricia Carretta ’68, ma ’74dr. vincent a. Carretta ’68, ma ’71mr. James a. Carrigg ◊mrs. loretta J. Carrigg ◊mr. salvatore P. Caruana ’73ms. mary rose Cassa, ma ’80dr. keith F. Cavayero ’85Century 21 sbarra & Wells ◊dr. Cathy m. Chapman ’84 ◊The J.P. morgan Chase Foundation ◊mr. yang Chen ’87 ◊ms. rose Cheney ◊ms. umit Cizre + ◊Clark Patterson leems. Cynthia P. Cobbs ◊mr. Eric J. Cohen ’72mr. ira a. Cohen ’83 ◊Coleman Family Campsmrs. beth a. Coleman ’88 ◊mr. george g. Coleman ’68mr. kenneth l. Coleman ’66, ms ’68 ◊mrs. marla Coleman ’68Columbian Financial group ◊Connelly Foundation ◊Court Jester ◊ms. lisa l. Court +mr. E. grant Courtright ’50 ◊mrs. susan a. Cummings-Walder ’81 ◊mr. barry s. daneman ’73, ma ’78mrs. Patricia a. daneman ’75, ma ’80mr. vincent daniel ’94 ◊mrs. ann davies * ◊mr. Jeffrey s. davis ’88 ◊dr. douglas r. deCorato ’82 ◊ms. andrea J. delorenzo ◊dr. lawrence J. delorenzo ’73 ◊mrs. Catherine a. deutsch ’79 ◊mr. dominic di stefano Jr. ’79, ms ’85 ◊mrs. donna J. di stefano ’01, ma ’05 + ◊

mr. Carl Patrick diCesare ’03ms. molly donnellan ’84 ◊mr. Thomas P. dougherty ’81, ma ’83 ◊ms. kei downey ’94 ◊duke Energy Foundationmr. John P. Egitto ’84mrs. yvonne a. Egitto ’83dr. kenneth a. Egol ’89mrs. lori J. Egol ’91ms. katharine F. Ellis + ◊Empire state regional Council of

Carpenters ◊Energy East Corporationms. Elsa Eng ’92 ◊mr. James E. Fahs ◊dr. Pamela stewart Fahs, ms ’85 + ◊mr. david a. Farber ’96dr. Fred Farley, Phd ’03 ◊The Feehan Financial groupmr. geoffrey F. Feidelberg ’76mrs. dorothy E. Feiseldr. lyle d. Feisel +mr. brett m. Fiden ’88mr. douglas Figarymr. david s. Figatner ’95 ◊First investors Corporationdr. barbara H. Edell Fisher ’82dr. Eric b. Fisher ’81FJC ◊mr. allen b. Frank ’67, ms ’69 ◊mrs. anita H. Frank ’70 ◊ms. sheila l. Frank ’70 ◊mrs. debra Ellen Friedman ’77 ◊mr. martin d. Friedman ’75 ◊ms. kim m. Fuchs ’77mr. marc Fuchs ’77mr. gavin l. gallagher ’89 ◊mrs. barbara l. gallo ’85dr. Francesco a. gallo ’84mr. dennis C. garcia ’89 ◊mr. John C. gatto ’85dr. ross geoghegan +mrs. suzanne geogheganmr. armond r. georgedr. Jennifer germann ’93 ◊dr. roger mills gilbert ’76 ◊ms. lisa m. gilroy ’91, mPa ’02 + ◊mrs. stephanie glace ’90 ◊dr. barry J. glaser ’84 ◊mrs. Tracy lieber glaser ’84 ◊

mr. Elliott m. glass ’77 ◊mr. lawrence m. goland ’80dr. geoffrey d. gould +ms. linda J. grabel ’71 ◊mr. Todd d. green ’87 ◊mr. richard l. greenberg ’79 ◊mr. Wayne d. greenfeder ’77 ◊mr. michael s. greenstein ’87mr. William H. groner ’77mrs. mallory a. grossman ◊mr. steven m. grossman ’83 ◊mrs. marilynn gruber ◊The Harry Frank guggenheim

Foundation ◊mr. mark r. gumble ’88, ma ’93mr. mark C. gustinis ’93 ◊mr. dae k. Ha ’02 ◊Jack o. Hall & mary lou bartle Hall

Trust ◊mr. Jack o. Hall ’49 ◊ms. mary bartle Hall ◊Hallmark Corporate Foundationdr. ali Hammoud ’91 ◊ms. Jennifer scheer Hammoud ’90 ◊mr. david arthur Hardy, ma ’81 ◊dr. Carol C. Harter ’64, ma ’67, Phd ’70 ◊dr. michael T. Harter ’64 ◊mr. Jon H. Heinrichsdr. Floyd r. Herzog + ◊dr. david Heskiaoff ’72 ◊mr. david Ho ◊ms. martha Ho, ma ’78 ◊mrs. ann Wax Hoffer ◊mr. mark d. Hoffer ◊ms. diane m. Hogan ’75 ◊mr. Joseph J. Hogan ’72 ◊mr. Paul C. Hogan, mba ’91ms. robin Holland ’74dr. donald C. Hood ’65 ◊mrs. Christine l. Howe ◊mr. lloyd m. Howe + ◊ms. Julie Hsieh ◊mrs. grace Humr. stephen g. Hundiak ’89 ◊mr. alex Huppe ’69insurance services office, inc. ◊intercollegiate studies institute, inc.international sport surfacesisrael Emergency alliancems. beverly a. Jackson ’76

miss Jatinder k. Jassal ’03 ◊mr. adeel H. Jivraj ’93Joemax Telecom, llCmr. Edward C. Jones ◊k-6, inc.ms. kamila kaliszuk ’05 ◊ms. alice r. kaminskymr. david J. kaplan ’89mr. Jay s. kaplan ’82 ◊dr. roy a. kaplan ’66 ◊mr. brad karp ◊mrs. roberta schuhalter karp ’80 ◊ms. lynn kasner-morgan ’72 ◊mrs. Courtney katzenstein ◊mr. michael E. katzenstein ’81 ◊dr. Jody l. kaufman ’90 ◊mrs. lynn r. kaufman ◊dr. Terence m. keane, ma ’76, Phd ’79mr. John m. keelerms. marcella m. keeler, ma ’86 +keep syracuse Wrestling inc.mr. anthony kendall ’83, mba ’85 ◊mr. Clifford r. kern + ◊dr. douglas r. kerrms. Elizabeth b. kerrdr. daniel kesslermr. glenn kiriyama +mr. and mrs. Joseph a. kleemr. bruce david klein ’84 ◊dr. david a. klein ’89 ◊mr. ronald l. klein ’80 ◊mr. david s. kogan ’86 ◊ms. melissa r. kogan ’86 ◊mr. John kong, mba ’88mr. stephen a. kost ’73 ◊mr. barry kramer ’67, ma ’72mr. steven b. kreinik ’97 ◊ms. mini P. krishnan ’90 ◊mr. Jason m. kroll ’87ms. sandra krolldr. darryl b. kurland ◊ms. Terry kwan ’67 ◊dr. richard lawrence ◊mr. Jae Hwa lee ◊mr. richard Edwin lee, ma ’89, Phd ’94 +mr. stuart leeder ’64 ◊dr. melvyn P. lefflerdr. Phyllis k. lefflermrs. isabel leibowitzmr. marvin H. leibowitz

+ Faculty/staff/retiree, * deceased, ◊ binghamton Fund donor

35

Page 38: Binghamton University Foundation Annual Report 2008-09

mr. Frederic i. leif ’91 ◊mrs. lori b. leif ◊mr. Charles lesko Jr. ’56 ◊ms. Eillie leungmr. Edward r. levene ◊mrs. karen d. levene ’88 ◊ms. Elissa m. levimr. brian m. levy ’89mr. brent lin, ms ’74 ◊ms. Joyce lin, ma ’76 ◊mr. Eric J. lobenfeld ’71ms. Trish lobenfeldmr. James E. ludwig ’81 ◊ms. kathleen m. lynn ’77 ◊mr. daniel mams. geraldine macdonald ’68, ms ’73dr. William W. maclaughlin ’77 ◊mr. manoj T. mahtani ’03mrs. rosalie maimone ’74 ◊mr. Thomas P. majewski ’95 ◊mr. michael l. mallow ’88 ◊ms. Carolyn m. mancini ◊mr. Joseph marinucci ’96mr. John m. marion Jr. ’94 ◊mr. raul k. martynek ’88 ◊mr. anthony a. mascolo ’77mrs. marie a. mascolo ’77dr. david mastrianni ◊mr. daniel J. mcCormack +mr. Peter H. mcCracken ◊mcFarland-Johnson, inc.mr. gregory J. mcgahan ’89The mcgraw-Hill Companies ◊mr. gerald d. mclain ’59 +mr. Harold n. meaker ’54mr. ken P. mebert ’78mrs. rebecca l. mebertmrs. leora mechanic ◊mr. steven r. mechanic ’85 ◊mr. Craig s. medwick ’74 ◊mr. gerald m. miller ’67dr. Evan b. mintz ’82 ◊ms. lisa s. moss ’95mothers & babies Perinatal network of

south Central new yorkmrg Consultingmr. William b. murray ’80 ◊mr. sandy nager ’76 ◊mr. anthony J. nappo ’94 ◊mrs. Jennifer nappo ◊

mr. ben nathanson ◊national Philanthropic Trustnelnet business solutionsbarry and Judith nelson Family

Foundation, inc.dr. lucie g. nelson, Phd ’76 +mr. Phillip J. nelson +mrs. laurie nesser ◊mr. lee r. nesser ’92 ◊new york Carolina Express, inc.dr. John g. newby ’70 ◊dr. karen y. ng ’94 ◊mr. and mrs. gary nintzelmr. Franklin l. noel ’74 ◊mr. michael E. novogratzoakdale mallmr. robert okin ’77mrs. susan goodman okin ’78mr. John o’neilmrs. lisa o’neilmr. matthew a. ouimet ’80mr. Chris Pagan ’97mrs. beverly Palmermr. John W. Palmerdr. yin Pan, ms ’97, Phd ’97mr. William J. Paolillo ’83 ◊mr. John P. Parise ’82 ◊mr. Paul C. Parker + ◊ms. laurel a. Parrilli ’82mr. matthew Parrilli ’82ms. Tonya o. Parris ’92 ◊ms. nancy a. Paul +Paxar Corporation, a division of avery

dennisondr. Fred neil Peck ’66 ◊mr. maxim Penskydr. Patricia d. Perry ◊dr. and mrs. michael g. Persico ◊mr. gerald d. Pietroforte ’74 ◊mr. Patrick m. Popoliziomr. Thomas J. Porcelli Jr. ’96 ◊Price, rosenberg & bassik, CPa’s PC ◊Primuslabs.commr. Thomas J. Puthiyamadam ’97mr. gerald E. Putman ’76, mba ’84 ◊mr. Thomas d. reahl ’82 ◊mr. mark v. reed +mrs. sally reedms. margaret J. b. reesms. nancy J. reich ’77 ◊

The relief Pitcher, inc.ms. maureen a. renick, ms ’95dr. michael J. reynolds ’55 ◊mr. Thomas E. riley ’76 ◊mrs. audree Freije rincker ◊mr. William H. rincker ’55 ◊dr. martin ringle ’70, ma ’72, Phd ’76 ◊mr. Christopher ritter ◊roberts Eyecare associatesdr. raymond g. romanczyk +mr. Joel E. rosenberg ’79 ◊mr. Todd g. rothman ’99mrs. lana k. rouff, ma ’72dr. lawrence n. rouffglen s. ruben, ddsdr. glen s. ruben ’81ms. Tami rubenmr. Eric s. rubin ’80ms. amy g. rudnick ◊mr. lawrence rusoff ◊mrs. leslie Fear rusoff ’87 ◊mrs. kathleen samulkamr. michael J. samulkamr. brian savitchmrs. susan savitch, ma ’88mrs. deborah J. sbarra ◊mr. Thomas a. sbarra ◊ms. gisela schecterdr. William P. schecter ’68mrs. Elizabeth d. schetinamr. gregory d. schetinamrs. dawn P. schlich ’85, maT ’86 ◊mr. William J. schlich Jr. ’87 ◊ms. ginger d. schroder ’87 ◊mr. dean P. schuckman ’73mrs. ilyse n. schuckman ’73mrs. lora seeley ’72 ◊mr. Peter J. seeley ’71, mba ’75 ◊dr. andrew d. seidman ’81 ◊mr. mark l. serlen ’72mr. Paul m. shapses ’80 ◊ms. susan shapses ◊mrs. Jennifer shreck ◊dr. michael s. shreck ’80 ◊dr. michael s. silber ’84 ◊mr. marc d. silverman ’85mr. seth silversteinmr. alan J. sims ’69 ◊mrs. Cristin m. singer ’96mr. matthew r. singer ’96

mr. mark s. slotnick ’80The smile designersmr. Todd H. smithmrs. amy middleton snyder ’76 ◊mrs. Elizabeth sonnenfeld ◊dr. gerald sonnenfeld + ◊southern Tier Pain management Centerms. nicole J. speier ’00 ◊mr. Howard T. spilko ’89 ◊dr. nancy E. stamp +mr. brian m. steele ◊mrs. lucinda steele ’97 ◊mr. James g. stehli ’88 ◊mrs. Jayne r. stein ’83 ◊mr. kevin m. stein ’01mr. richard a. stein ’83 ◊mr. george b. stephens ◊mrs. susan g. stephens ◊mr. ronald strauss ’76mrs. gloria J. sullivanmr. James b. sullivan + ◊ms. Jennifer b. sullivan ’98 ◊mrs. margaret sullivan ◊mr. William T. sullivandr. Pamela summers ◊dr. rodger summers + ◊ms. Claudia l. Taft ’71 ◊dr. marilyn Tallerico + ◊mrs. Carleen J. Taylormr. John g. Taylorms. Jian lin Teng ’98Textron, inc. ◊Thorn Family Foundation ◊mr. Thomas l. Thorn ◊Time Warner, inc. ◊ms. Christine m. Torkelson ’91 ◊Totalcare medical, P.C.ms. Jane m. True ’02, mm ’03mr. david y. Tu ’06 ◊dr. Elizabeth g. Tucker +mrs. barbara W. Turner ◊mr. kent Turner ◊dr. Christian d. Tvetenstrand ◊mrs. Jody b. Tvetenstrand ◊mr. michael l. unger ’89united auto supplyunited Health servicesunited university Professionsunited Way ◊mrs. geralyn van gorder ’81 ◊

dr. Thomas r. van gorder ◊mr. John E. vestal +mrs. Ebony m. vick ’00mr. John W. visser ’73 ◊ms. m. Jacqueline visser ’69 ◊Wachovia securitiesmr. Jay H. Walder ’80 ◊mr. shu yao Wang ’95 ◊mr. kenneth Waskie + ◊mrs. mary Waskie ◊ms. liane v. Watkins ’95 ◊mr. robert l. Weigel ’78 ◊The Weinreb-berenda-Carter

Foundation, inc.mr. adam Weisman ’77 ◊mr. michael J. Weisman ’98 ◊dr. Jacqueline Wellman ’75 ◊dr. scott d. Wellman ’75 ◊mrs. kelly m. Wemette, ma ’02 + ◊Wendy’smr. gregory J. White ◊mr. Harrison E. White ’64mrs. maureen C. White ’76, ma ’79 +mrs. susan J. White ◊dr. William s. Whittaker ’64mr. Howard Wiener ’77 ◊mr. James a. Wilcox ’74mrs. anne Williamsmr. goldburn H. Williams Jr.mrs. mary Ellen Williams ’75 ◊mr. mitchell Williams ’73, ma ’75 ◊dr. Thomas W. Williams, ma ’68dr. leo Wilton ’93 +ms. Theresa m. Wizemanms. Patricia ann Wrobel, ma ’78,

mba ’82 + ◊mr. robert Wu ’95mrs. alison g. yablonowitz ’96mr. david s. yass ’83 ◊mrs. kara yass ◊dr. bo yuan, Phd ’96mr. michael F. Zeldin ’73 ◊mr. steven J. Zwick ’74 ◊mr. allen s. Zwickler ’79 ◊

+ Faculty/staff/retiree, * deceased, ◊ binghamton Fund donor

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37

anonymous anonymous (3)mr. J. donald ahearn *ms. monica E. Caseyms. esther w. couper and estatedr. g. clifford & florence B. decker

foundation leopold Eckler scholarship Trust dr. marilyn gaddis rose +dr. bhagwan W. gajwaniEstate of alice gansdorf ms. leona s. Hine and Estateibm Corporation mr. burton i. koffmanmrs. ruthanne koffman ’82, ma ’84ms. Charlene kahlor kramer ’73mr. roger g. kramer ’72roger l. kresge Foundationmr. gary kunis ’73link Foundationms. marion C. link and Estatems. geraldine macdonald ’68, ms ’73 mr. mark newman ’71mrs. sharon newmanmr. ray osterhoutmrs. wanda s. osterhoutmrs. Janet Paperin ’68

mr. stewart J. Paperin ’68, ms ’70mr. stanley J. reifer ’64mrs. susan m. reifer ’65dr. israel J. rosefsky *mrs. ann s. rosenthalmr. Charles l. rosenthal +dr. stephen david ross +mrs. Patricia a. saunders ’65 mr. Paul C. saunders ms. Jennifer brink schorr, mba ’81 + mr. lawrence J. schorr ’75, ma ’77 mrs. marilyn H. schumannmr. robert F. schumannshamrock Five Foundationmr. benjamin r. surovy, ms ’72 and

Estate + *mr. Paul r. Turovsky ’73estate of paul weigand + Estate of Elinor C. Whitson The mark Zurack and kathy Ferguson

Foundation

anonymous (16)mr. J. donald ahearn * dr. aldo s. bernardo + mrs. reta a. bernardo, ma ’72, ma ’74,

Phd ’79 dr. Paul b. bertan, ma ’74, Phd ’95 dr. sharon s. Brehm mr. Peter H. bridge mr. charles g. Brinkmrs. nancy m. Brink mr. Bruce richard cameron, mat ’88 mrs. gail Chadwick ’90 mr. keith d. Chadwick ’76, ma ’83 estate of lawrence g. clayton * mr. carleton a. cleveland Jr. Estate of stanley H. Cohn * + ms. esther w. couper * miss mary W. Couper * mrs. Patricia Pogue Couper mrs. Carolyn J. Cummings mr. John b. Cummings * mrs. Patricia l. Custer ’68 dr. lois b. deFleur + mr. mark l. deutsch ’81 ms. anne marie dunford, ma ’80 mr. carl t. ernstrom ’61 mrs. rita chirumbolo ernstrom dr. david a. Fanning ’76 mr. Peter H. Feehan ’76 mr. stephen P. Feehan, mba ’90

mrs. dorothy E. Feisel dr. lyle d. Feisel + mr. eugene d. flood ’57 +dr. marilyn gaddis rose +ms. alice gelb mr. steven E. gillette ’75 ms. loretta goldstein mr. sol goldstein * dr. christian p. gruber * +mrs. marilynn gruber mr. todd a. gurvis ’84 estate of sidney s. harcave * +mrs. mary Jane harris estate of leona s. hine * mr. alex Huppe ’69 estate of virginia l. Johnson ’56 * mr. lawrence c. Jones +mr. John m. keeler ms. marcella m. keeler, ma ’86 + mrs. shirley W. keller mrs. nancy k. kelly dr. thomas f. kelly +mrs. Betty knaphle mr. lawrence c. knaphle * dr. seth a. koch ’61 mr. david l. kushner ’70 ms. Terry kwan ’67 mrs. mary g. lake, msEd ’87 miss marilyn c. linkms. marion c. link *

ms. kathleen m. lynn ’77 ms. kathryn grant madigan mr. anthony a. mascolo ’77 mrs. marie a. mascolo ’77 mrs. karen i. mess mr. robert l. mess +dr. sandra d. michael + estate of Janet orant * dr. Camille a. Paglia ’68 mr. Terry C. Peet dr. anthony l. Pellegrini + dr. charles p. pfleeger dr. shari lawrence pfleeger ’70 mrs. nancy J. powell dr. Judith Becker ranlett ’64mr. James ross rinker dr. israel J. rosefsky * mrs. ann s. rosenthal mr. Charles l. rosenthal + dr. stephen david ross + mrs. lana k. rouff, ma ’72 dr. lawrence n. rouff mrs. bonnie russolillo ’80 mr. raymond g. russolillo ’80 dr. roberta d. schlosser +mr. Timothy o. schum + mrs. marilyn h. schumann mr. robert f. schumann mr. alan J. sims ’69dr. nancy E. stamp + ms. marcia J. steinbrecher ’90 + Estate of benjamin r. surovy, ms ’72 * + mr. Theo J. Totolis ’54 mrs. Barbara w. turner mr. kent turnerms. annette van howe, ma ’66 *mr. richard arden ward ’57ms. katharine couper watrous *mrs. dorothy Weir + mr. robert J. Weir

The Pegasus Society recognizes alumni and friends with

cumulative giving to the Binghamton University Foundation of at

least $250,000 and organizations, foundations and corporations

with cumulative giving of at least $1 million, as of June 20,

2009. Alumni and friends who have given $1 million or more are

recognized as distinguished members of the Pegasus Society.

Similarly, this status is conferred upon organizations, foundations

and corporations with cumulative giving of at least $5 million.

Planned gifts are everlasting and represent some of Binghamton

University’s most important building blocks. They permit donors

to be good stewards of their assets by increasing the benefits

for themselves, their family members and the students and

faculty of Binghamton University. More than 100 individuals have

indicated that they have named Binghamton University in their

estate plans. Those who have documented their intentions with

the Foundation are recognized as members of the Esther W.

Couper Heritage Society. The society was named in honor of one

of the University’s most generous donors and pays tribute to the

following members:

pegasus soCiETy esther w. couper heritage soCiETy

+ Faculty/staff/retiree, * deceased, Bold distinquished member of the society + Faculty/staff/retiree, * deceased, Bold Founding member of the society

Page 40: Binghamton University Foundation Annual Report 2008-09

gifts in honorAlumni and friends of

Binghamton University may

choose to honor a person

with their donation to the

Foundation. The following

people were honored with

one or more donations during

the fiscal year of July 1,

2008, through June 30, 2009.

ms. susan E. barker ’80, ma ’00dr. aldo s. bernardoms. Efrat s. birenbaum ms. allyce brand mr. michael a. Castellano ’05ms. Tara davis dr. lois b. deFleurmr. miles lawrence Fink dr. lynn gamwellms. sylvia m. Hallmr. Thomas Headmr. dan Hogan mr. larry b. Hollander ’78mr. sam ko mr. benjamin J. krakauer ’05, mPa ’07dr. saul levinmrs. ruth E. levin dr. stephen lismandr. michael a. littlems. Frances d. littlefield, mba ’87mr. stephen markman ’79mr. owen C. Pell ’80dr. anthony Preusmr. James a. starkms. alexis Z. stecker ’08ms. dana stecker mr. Jordan stecker ms. victoria stecker dr. H. stephen straightdr. Joel Thirerdr. ira Tolbertdr. gary l. Trucems. annmarie vanoostendorpmrs. mary d. Woolson

dr. John arthurdr. glenn g. bartle mr. Paul battaglia ’00dr. ruth W. berenda mr. david g. browndr. morris budinms. ruth davis mr. Charles E. dicksondr. martin dillonmr. arthur doyle ’79dr. laurence Evans mr. dominic r. Ferrantemr. louis Fiacco mr. Harry Fischermr. Edward giegucz dr. sidney s. Harcavems. brandi Hare

mr. albert v. Housedr. Heinz k. kleinmrs. Judith k. klipstein ’65ms. Cynthia saeli kudva ’87 mr. matthew J. lacey ’85ms. mary mcCarthy leonard mr. Thomas v. leshendok ’71mr. Jonathan k. leung dr. kenneth lindsaymr. darryl ridgeway macFall ms. Harriet T. marsimr. John J. mckenna iv ’98ms. June bailey mckenna mr. Walter ronald mcnultymr. robert F. melvillemrs. marie E. morisawamr. John P. murray dr. John P. Pryor ’88mr. Timothy l. reilly ’08mr. Theodore a. resnick ’89ms. Jeanne C. rockwellms. Julia romanczyk dr. israel J. rosefsky dr. robert T. shannahan ’56mr. donald smith dorothy and Theodore s. stacy mr. delvin sullivanmr. Joseph P. sullivan ’04dr. benjamin r. surovy, ms ’72mr. rollin l. Twiningms. Celia arkush Wisemandr. noel k. yeh

new awards and scholarshipsAwards, scholarships and fellowships help maintain the margin

of excellence that distinguishes Binghamton University as one

of the nation’s top-ranked public universities. The following

awards and scholarships, provided to our students through the

generosity of alumni and friends, will be awarded for the first

time in fiscal year 2009-10.

awards

Flipper Award — established in honor of Glenn Dolphin by

friends and colleagues

Pappy Parker Players Alumni Award

Yammarino Leadership Award — established by Cathy and

Francis Yammarino

scholarships

American Dream Scholarship — established anonymously

Binghamton University Athletic Club (BUAC) Women’s

Scholarship

Cleaner’s Supply School of Management Scholarship —

established by Jeffrey Shapiro and José W. Moreira ’00,

MBA ’03

Cynthia Kudva ’87 Memorial Scholarship —

established by John F. Saeli Jr. and Prabhakar N. Kudva

Justin A. Marchuska II Scholarship

Monroe County Scholarship for Harpur College —

established by the Donald F. & Maxine B. Davison

Foundation

William B. Stein and Gertrude M. Stein Scholarship Fund

Michael Sudnow ’93 and Risa Cohen Sudnow ’91 Scholarship

Benjamin R. Surovy Endowed Scholarship

Gary Truce Scholarship for Women’s Cross Country —

established by Cathleen Ellsworth

Southern Tier Scholarship — established anonymously

gifts in memoryAlumni and friends of

Binghamton University

may choose to memorialize

a loved one with their

donation to the Foundation.

The following people were

memorialized with one or

more donations during the

fiscal year of July 1, 2008,

through June 30, 2009.

38

Page 41: Binghamton University Foundation Annual Report 2008-09

mrs. germaine adlerms. Colleen mcnulty adour, ma ’02mr. david adourmr. abdulsalam al-Zahranianalog devicesCan d. aticidr. Harold babbmr. robert l. basmannmrs. lisa berkmr. martin bidneybinghamton Country Clubbinghamton Press & sun-bulletinbinghamton university masters

swim Teammr. david blodgettbonadent dental laboratoriesms. adele browndr. Clifford m. brown ’59mr. mark budmanmrs. margaret CarpenterChristian appalachian Project, inc.Citadel broadcasting Companydr. Carrol F. CoatesConti JewelersCopacabana gemsmr. John C. Copoulos ’73Cork Connectiondr. Eric CottsCoughlin & gerhart, llPms. alice P. davisdelhi business and Professional

Women’s associationdick’s sporting goods, inc.

gift-in-kind donorsGifts-in-kind are non-cash

donations directed to Bing-

hamton University through

the Foundation. These may

include works of art, manu-

scripts, literary works, labora-

tory equipment, software

licenses and other items that

are directly related to the

University.

top 25 matching gift companies

mrs. anita knopp doll, ma ’98mr. stephen duartedr. Thomas dublinmr. James dutkodr. Xiao Fangdr. byrne Fone ’58mr. benjamin Fordhamms. michelle l. gardnerdr. James F. geer ’62ms. maria mazziotti gillanmr. newton i. greenbergmr. david l. Hansonms. nancy E. Henrydr. Floyd r. Herzogmr. daniel J. Hoffman ’82mr. Harold Hortonmr. leon Horwitzms. laura m. HouseHuff ice Creamms. E. Helen insinger ’94mrs. yvonne a. Johnston ’93, ms ’97ms. Theresa a. Josephkathy’s Hallmark shopms. martha klionsky ’63dr. george J. klirmrs. kathryn a. kowalczik ’80Estate of Helena T. kramniczdr. mark kulikowski ’76, ma ’77, Phd ’82guohui liaomr. mitchell J. lieberman ’80mr. Eric J. lobenfeld ’71dr. Fritz loewensteinmrs. lucy loewensteinms. betty lomonacomr. allan r. lyons ’62mrs. diana lyonsmr. John W. machlica, ma ’85ms. Carol marchesanims. Joy a. mareanms. roadena marleymr. James a. martinmary kay Cosmeticsmr. Jeffrey mcFigginsmrs. marianne g. mcgouldrick, ma ’73mr. george d. mckeemr. ken P. mebert ’78mrs. rebecca l. mebertmiracle recreation Equipment Co.mr. ajay k. mishrams. meg mitzel

american international groupastraZenecaFrederic W. Cook & Co. inc.deloitte & Touche Foundationdeutsche bankErnst & young llPExxon mobil CorporationgE Foundationgoldman, sachs & Co.ibm CorporationJohnson & JohnsonkPmg Foundationlockheed martin Corporationmacy’s Foundationmbia Foundation, inc.merrill lynch & Co. Foundation, inc.microsoft Corporationnew york life insurance Co.open society institutePerry Capital, llCPricewaterhouseCoopers llPProcter & gambleTowers PerrinubsWachovia Foundation

39

Please note: If your name has been listed incorrectly, please accept

our apologies and bring this fact to our attention by sending mail

to Cindy Lupo, Director of Donor Relations and Stewardship,

Binghamton University Foundation, PO Box 6005, Binghamton,

New York 13902-6005, or e-mail to [email protected].

mr. david moreanmr. george b. mrozowski, ms ’76ms. yaroslava mrozowski ’91The m&T Charitable Foundationdr. Taysir nashif, Phd ’74ms. bonnie newberryoakdale malldr. robin s. ogginson Track Physical TherapyPacemaker steel & Piping Companymr. brian Palmermr. ming-te Panms. rosemary desantis Paradis, Phd ’98Phil’s gift shopmr. Joseph Pickerilldr. dora E. Polachekms. diane PollackPricewaterhouseCoopers llPPurple awning bakerymr. donald Quataertmr. stanley J. reifer ’64ms. susan reinboldrhino Entertainment Companyroberts Eyecare associatesmr. Eugene robinsonJames rollo state Farm agentmr. scott rosmarindr. stacey kaplan rosmarin ’81dr. stephen david rossdr. benita rothmrs. Patricia a. saunders ’65mr. Paul C. saunderssea Hag soapsdr. Charles J. semowich ’70mrs. Catherine J. sentzmr. ronald m. sentzmr. melvin shefftzms. kathryn kish sklardr. victor a. skorminms. Eleni smolendr. david stahldr. nancy E. stampmr. michael E. starzakmrs. sheila J. stephensstony Hill greenhouses, llCmr. robert J. sullivandr. d.C. sunms. laura E. swiftms. Tonie TaftTarco steel, inc.

mr. donald TarrTeamworlddr. James a. Terzianmr. bruce E. Tucker ’79ms. sara levy Tucker ’80universal instruments Corporationupstate office Furnituremr. derrick van schoonhovenmrs. katherine vladescumr. andrew r. Walklingmrs. Julie WangWatkins glen business and

Professional WomenWhite rose day spa & Hair designWiCZ-Tv Fox 40dr. david sloan Wilsonms. Helene T. Wollin, mba ’78mr. sin kiong Wongmr. darryl m. Wood, mba ’78guanhan yangmr. onur y. yemiskendr. bong Joon yoondr. Elmer n. Zinner

Page 42: Binghamton University Foundation Annual Report 2008-09

financial overview, 2008-09 THE FoundaTion’s FisCal yEar is From July 1 To JunE 30.

giving By constituency

alumni 7,190 $1,853,182

Corporations/organizations 522 $1,965,863

Faculty, staff and retirees 504 $166,993

Foundations 57 $1,232,974

Friends 2,018 $6,534,374

Parents 1,667 $189,418

students 90 $1,918

Total 12,048 $11,944,722

External support to the University also includes $36,563,590 from 328 research and

program grants and contracts. At Binghamton, as at many public universities, support of

this nature is administered through the Binghamton University Research Foundation.

revenue

unrestricted donations* .....................................................................$2,633,248

restricted donations* ........................................................................$7,485,828

other income .....................................................................................$2,291,867

investment income/Capital gains (losses) ......................................($13,015,219)

Contributed university support ...........................................................$1,480,120

service Charges, agency Fees, other .................................................$1,196,081

binghamton university Forum ...............................................................$109,378

Housing Corporation ..........................................................................$5,835,478

total revenue $8,016,781

expenditures

Fundraising ........................................................................................$2,193,007

university Program support, student aid, admissions, other ..............$6,786,510

management and general .....................................................................$756,850

binghamton university Forum ...............................................................$132,690

Housing Corporation ..........................................................................$5,917,851

total expenditures .........................................................................$15,786,908

net change to endowment and unrestricted fund Balance ($7,770,127)

mil

lio

ns

of

do

ll

ar

s

7 –

6 –

5 –

4 –

3 –

2 –

1 –

0 –1999-2000 2000-01 2001-02 2002-03 2003-04 2004-05 2005-06 2006-07 2007-08 2008-09

$6,325,933

*Includes pledge activitysupport to campus

40

Page 43: Binghamton University Foundation Annual Report 2008-09

student scholarships, fellowships, faculty and academic programs need continued support to maintain the margin of excellence that distinguishes binghamton university as one of the nation’s top-ranked public universi-ties. Creating an endowment preserves capital, overcomes inflation and provides long-term, reliable income to the univer-sity. a gift designated as an endowment is invested by the binghamton university Foundation, and a portion of the earnings is then used to fund the scholarship or program for which it is designated. an endowment continues to grow over time, supporting the scholarship or program for as long as the university exists. support for scholarships, study abroad, laboratory and multimedia equipment and athletic grants-in-aid help to open the doors of discovery for thousands of deserving students.

character and to honor or memorialize loved ones, friends, colleagues, teachers, or other individuals.

investment oBJective The investment objective for the endowment, special purpose and operating funds is to provide current income to support the programs of the Foundation and the university and to achieve growth of principal and income over time that will preserve or increase the purchasing power of the fund.

statement of investment philosophyContributions to the binghamton university Foundation are given to support and strengthen the academic mission of the university and its service to students. Providing immediate income to fulfill each donor’s intentions, preserving capital and investing for long-

about 80 percent of binghamton’s student population qualifies for need-based financial aid. our incoming freshmen boast the highest average saT scores of any suny university center, making merit-based scholarships another priority. To assist with these needs, the Foundation administers 292 named scholarships, 131 named awards and 21 fellowships. Combined with internships, graduate-travel support and emergency loans, the Foundation provided nearly $1.5 million in aid to deserving binghamton students in Fy2008-09. gifts of endowments offer many benefits, both to the university and to donors. Endowments increase binghamton’s institutional autonomy and provide it with the resources it needs to stay at the cutting edge. Endowment donors have the opportunity to have a lasting influence on the university’s

term growth are the guiding principles for investment. Therefore, funds will be invested to maximize Foundation income, under the proviso that the investments are sufficiently diversified to ensure long-term growth of principal in restricted endowed and special purpose funds. To achieve these objectives and ensure the proper level of diversification, the funds will be allocated among a number of asset classes. The majority of the Foundation’s portfolio is managed by The Commonfund of Westport, Conn.

target asset classesEquity strategies 62.3%Fixed strategies 31.2%inflation Hedging strategies 6.5% 100%

spending planThe endowment’s spending plan protects and enhances the long-term growth of endowed funds. using the investment earnings from each account, a pre-determined percentage (as approved by the Foundation board of directors) is designated as expendable, while earnings in excess of this fixed rate are returned to the principal of the fund. The spending Plan achieves a balance between providing support for the university’s current programs while supporting the perpetual nature of the endowment.

endowment as of June 30, 2009Total market value $62,563,430

return on investments -20.68%

endowment

mil

lio

ns

of

do

ll

ar

s

70 –

60 –

50 –

40 –

30 –

20 –

10 –

0 –1999-2000 2000-01 2001-02 2002-03 2003-04 2004-05 2005-06 2006-07 2007-08 2008-09

$62,563,430

endowment market value

41

Page 44: Binghamton University Foundation Annual Report 2008-09

memBers

Mrs. Sally AkelBinghamton, N.Y. Community Volunteer

Mr. James L. Bauer ’68Garden City, N.Y. Self-Employed, ConsultantFormer VP for Strategic Planning, JPMorgan Chase

Mr. Lee BearschBinghamton, N.Y. Architect/Managing Partner, Bearsch, Compeau, Knudson Architects

Mr. Steven H. Bloom ’78Armonk, N.Y. Former Senior Managing Director, Silver Creek Capital Management

Ms. Doris E. Braun ’83Cortlandt Manor, N.Y.Director, Customer Service and Implementation, Deutsche Bank

Ms. Marcia R. Craner, MA ’94*Vestal, N.Y. Vice President for External Affairs, Binghamton UniversityExecutive Director, Binghamton University Foundation

Dr. Lois B. DeFleur*Vestal, N.Y.President, Binghamton University

officers

Chair Mr. Lawrence J. Schorr ’75, MA ’77Vestal, N.Y. CEO, Boltaron Performance Products, LLC

Vice ChairMs. Kathryn Grant Madigan Binghamton, N.Y. Partner and Attorney, Levene, Gouldin & Thompson, LLP

TreasurerMr. James E. Ludwig ’81Summit, N.J. Managing Partner, Box Canyon Trading LLC

SecretaryMs. Linda J. Grabel ’71Rockville, Md. Attorney, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services

Past Chair Mr. Keith D. Chadwick ’76, MA ’83Binghamton, N.Y. President/CEO, United Methodist Homes

binghamton university Foundation members during fiscal year July 1, 2008 - June 30, 2009

Binghamton university foundation, 2008-09

42

Page 45: Binghamton University Foundation Annual Report 2008-09

Mr. Stephen P. Feehan, MBA ’90Windsor, N.Y.Managing Director, Northwestern Mutual Financial Network

Ms. Katherine A. Fitzgerald*Vestal, N.Y. Attorney, Hinman, Howard & Kattell, LLPChair, Binghamton University Forum

Dr. Bhagwan W. GajwaniVestal, N.Y. Physician

Mr. Alex Huppe ’69Castine, MaineConsultant

Mr. Anthony S. Kendall ’83, MBA ’85*New York, N.Y.Managing Partner, Mitchell & Titus, LLPPresident, Alumni Association Board of Directors

Ms. Carolyn M. ManciniEndicott, N.Y.President, OGGI Concrete Forms & Accessories, Inc.

Dr. Michael F. McGoff ’70, MA ’74, PhD ’80*Endwell, N.Y. Vice Provost for Strategic and Fiscal Planning, and Vice Provost

for Undergraduate Education, Binghamton University

Mr. Timothy C. MyersVestal, N.Y.Philanthropist/Businessman

* Ex-officio

Dr. Michael N. Needle ’81Morristown, N.J.Vice President, Strategic Medical Business Development, Celgene

Mr. James W. Orband ’81Endicott, N.Y. Managing Partner, Hinman, Howard & Kattell, LLP

Mr. Owen C. Pell ’80New York, N.Y.Partner and Attorney, White & Case

Mrs. Patricia Saunders ’65New York, N.Y.Volunteer/Philanthropist

Mrs. Karen S. Tanenbaum ’76Mount Kisco, N.Y.Registered Nurse

Mr. Paul R. Turovsky ’73Larchmont, N.Y. Principal, Real Estate, True North Management Group

Mr. Mark A. Zurack ’78New York, N.Y. Adjunct Professor of Finance, Columbia University, Cornell UniversityConsultantRetired Managing Director, Goldman, Sachs & Co.

43

Page 46: Binghamton University Foundation Annual Report 2008-09

university Boards and officers, 2008-09state university of new york Board of trusteesCarl T. Hayden

Chair

Aminy I. Audi

Robert J. Bellafiore

Edward F. Cox

Stephen J. Hunt

H. Carl McCall

Melody Mercedes

John L. Murad

Pedro Antonio Noguera

Kenneth P. O’Brien

Michael E. Russell

Linda S. Sanford

Carl Spielvogel

Cary F. Staller

Harvey F. Wachsman

Gerri Warren-Merrick

Nancy L. Zimpher Chancellor

John J. O’Connor Vice Chancellor and Secretary of the University

Binghamton university council memBersKathryn Grant Madigan

Chair

Rayan S. Aguam

Thomas F. Doty

Anthony F. Fiala Jr., MBA ’99

Nathaalie N. Maxwell ’02, MPA ’03

Albert Nocciolino

James W. Orband ’81

Brian M. Prew

John F. Spring

Peter D. Spaet ’08 Student Representative

alumni association Board of directorsOFFICERS

Anthony S. Kendall ’83, MBA ’85 President

Michelle Adams ’94 Vice President, Programming

Nicole Speier ’00, Vice President, Long-Range Planning and Marketing

Kristopher Ahrend ’92 Vice President, Development

Raymond Russolillo ’80 Treasurer

Tonya Parris ’92 Secretary

Joseph Bress ’66 Past President

MEMBERS

Sandra Alpern ’70

Paul Aversano ’93

Carol D. Dean MA ’83, EdD ’03

H. Fred Farley PhD ’03

Dennis C. Garcia ’89

Todd Gurvis ’84

Monique Hacker ’00

Alex Huppé ’69

Terry Kwan ’67

Anthony Mascolo ’77

Gerald E. Putman ’76, MBA ’84

Jim Rollo ’84

Cynthia Santiago-Guzman ’91, MBA ’93

Samir B. Shah ’00

Lawrence J. Schorr ’75, MA ’77 Foundation Board Representative

officers of Binghamton universityLois B. DeFleur

President

Marcia R. Craner, MA ’94 Vice President for External Affairs and Executive Director of the Binghamton University Foundation

Michael F. McGoff ’70, MA ’74, PhD ’80 Interim Vice President for Administration

Brian Rose Vice President for Student Affairs

Gerald Sonnenfeld Vice President for Research

Mary Ann Swain Provost and Vice President for Academic Affairs

Upinder S. Dhillon Dean of School of Management

Joyce A. Ferrario Dean of Decker School of Nursing

S.G. Grant Dean of School of Education

Patricia Ingraham, MA ’78, PhD ’79 Dean of College of Community and Public Affairs

Donald G. Nieman Dean of Harpur College of Arts and Sciences

Krishnaswami (Hari) Srihari Dean of Thomas J. Watson School of Engineering and Applied Science

Nancy E. Stamp Vice Provost and Dean of the Graduate School

Joel Thirer Director of Health, Physical Education and Athletics

university board members and officers during fiscal year July 1, 2008 - June 30, 2009

44

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Page 48: Binghamton University Foundation Annual Report 2008-09

PO Box 6005

Binghamton, New York 13902-6005

607-777-6208

http://www.binghamton.edu/giving