Remember Stanford - Stanford Alumni Association

Transcription

Remember Stanford - Stanford Alumni Association
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f REMEMBER 2
S TA N F O R D
C H A R I T A B L E
E S T A T E
P L A N N I N G &
T A X
T I P S
S U M M E R
2 0 0 6
Creating a Legacy
STANFORD SCRAPBOOK Students enjoying a coffee break in front of the Cellar at the Old Union in 1960. The old post office can be seen in the background.
White Plaza has since replaced the thoroughfare at left.
H O N O R I N G T H E PA S T W I T H A G I F T F O R T H E F U T U R E
arcus Krupp, ’34, MD ’39, and Donna
Goodheart Krupp, ’42, have been married for
48 years. Their association with Stanford has lasted
even longer: 75 years. Although they grew up in very
different worlds—Marc in the small copper mining
town of Miami, Arizona, and Donna in San Francisco
—their early experiences instilled in each a profound
appreciation for education and a desire to give back to
Stanford, where they feel they gained so much.
M ARC BEGAN his freshman year at Stanford in the
fall of 1930, in the early days of the Great Depression.
The stock market had crashed, his parents could no
longer afford tuition, and the money he had saved
from working during summers was lost when the
banks failed. It was a time of hardship for many families. Stanford’s response to the Depression—and the
difficulties faced by its students—still touches him
deeply today.
M
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followed a few years later, graduating with a degree in
speech and drama, and minors in English and history.
Although the Goodheart family lived comfortably,
they were conscious of the hardships that many faced,
particularly in the early decades of the 20th century.
Donna’s father, who lived through the 1906 earthquake
in San Francisco, fostered in his children a strong desire
to help others.
“I’ve been in a family
“Stanford taught
that very much believes
me how to use
that you give back,”
Donna says. And she does
my mind. For
so regardless of her own
that you have
circumstances. “In the
1940s,” Donna continues, to give back.”
“I was the lowest thing you
— Donna Krupp, ’42
could be: I was a divorced,
single, working mother. I was earning $150 a month, but
I did volunteer work at night and took my child with me.”
At times Donna faced criticism for the path she had
taken. But she held firm to the values her family instilled
in her—and to the gift that would serve her throughout
her life.
“I always felt very grateful to my parents for sending
me to the school that I attended in San Francisco—
the Sarah Dix Hamlin School—and then to Stanford,
because Hamlin and Stanford taught me how to use my
mind,” says Donna. “For that you have to give back.”
LEFT: Marc’s Miami High School senior class picture (spring 1930). Marc used
this photo for his Stanford entrance application. RIGHT: Donna Goodheart,
Stanford Quad, 1940
“Stanford did a wonderful thing. They did so much
good for everybody,” he says. “Anybody who couldn’t
afford tuition was given a tuition note, which would bear
no interest until the person was working.” For Marc,
that meant attending Stanford as an undergraduate and
then a medical student, offsetting his other expenses with
scholarships and jobs. He then pursued residency training
and spent four years in the army before he was called
upon to begin paying for his education, 16 years after
entering Stanford.
“That’s one reason why I feel completely obligated,”
he says. Marc has never forgotten Stanford’s steadfast
commitment to its students or the remarkable faculty
who nurtured his interests in science and medicine.
Together, they inspired him to pursue a career devoted
to caring for and mentoring others. Since graduating,
Marc has repaid his “debt” to the university many times
over as a tireless volunteer, earning Stanford Associates’
Gold Spike Award in 1976 and the School of Medicine’s
J. E. Wallace Sterling “Muleshoe” Lifetime Achievement
Award in 1991.
I N 1958, Marc, a widower, and Donna married
and joined their young
families: Marc’s daughter
and three sons, and
Donna’s son and two
nephews. Meeting
through two of their children, they quickly discovered that they had
much more in common
than Stanford. For one
Marc, in front of the Palo Alto Medical
thing, both loved working Research Foundation in the spring of 1985
with young people.
After earning his degrees, Marc had followed in his
mentors’ footsteps and joined the teaching faculty at
Stanford School of Medicine. He had also become director of the Palo Alto Medical Research Foundation,* a post
F OR D ONNA , as a child, Stanford was a summer retreat
from city life. The Goodheart family would rent a home
on campus, as many faculty families traveled elsewhere
for the season, and spend several weeks immersed in the
intellectual and cultural activity on the Farm.
“When we came down in the summer,” she recalls,
“Mother used to take her two girls to lectures in the
evening. They would be on literature or history or something else that would interest us.” These summers sparked
both girls’ interest in attending Stanford. Judith enrolled
first as a member of the Class of 1937, earning a pre-law
degree and later studying at the law school. Donna
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he held from 1950 to 1986. “It’s been an extremely
important part of my professional life to be affiliated
with students and young people,” he says.
Donna’s professional life had also centered around
students and faculty. Prior to marrying Marc, she had
contributed to Stanford’s academic and artistic enterprises
for 10 years. Following a three-year post at the Veterans’
Administration, Donna had returned to the Department
of Drama to establish Stanford’s first box office. After
seeing the box office through several successful years,
she had been recruited to work in the Hoover Library,
where she eventually became secretary to the director.
Since their marriage, the couple has made philanthropy an important feature of their life together. Part of
their giving commemorates loved ones they have lost—
close family members who died long before their time.
The couple has chosen to honor them by helping other
young people.
“It’s been an
When Donna’s
extremely important
sister Judith passed
away in 1954, the
part of my profesGoodheart family
sional life to be affilicreated a Stanford
ated with students
scholarship in her
memory, one of three and young people.”
the family ultimately
— Marc Krupp, ’34, MD ’39
established.
Marc and Donna created their first scholarship,
the David M. and Marcus A. Krupp, M.D. Scholarship
Fund, after the untimely death of Marc’s middle son,
David. Gifted with boundless creativity and facility with
all things electronic, David was an avid amateur pilot.
Tragically, he died in a small-plane crash on the way to
Fresno, just short of his 28th birthday. Today, David’s
scholarship allows an undergraduate student-athlete
majoring in computer science or electrical engineering
to attend Stanford. While Marc and Donna are pleased
for the scholarship to be awarded to a man or a woman
in any sport, “it has to be someone in computer science
or electrical engineering,” Donna says. “That was
David’s passion.”
Marc and Donna try to meet each student who holds
the scholarship. Every year, they take past and current
scholarship recipients to lunch at the Faculty Club, an
P L A N N I N G
Marc and Donna talking with Elena Sherman, ’07, a recipient of the Donna
Goodheart Krupp Scholarship, in the garden of the Frances C. Arrillaga Alumni
Center in 2004
event that leaves everyone feeling inspired for the future.
“And of course, we just love it.” she says. “It makes us
want to go home and give some more.”
Over the years the couple has supported a number
of areas of the university, including athletics, the Stanford
University Medical Center, the Cantor Arts Center, and
the Faculty Club. Each of these gifts reflects their personal
interests and their love for Stanford, but they are especially proud of the scholarships they have created.
The couple has recently established a financial aid
award at the School of Medicine, the Dr. Marcus A. and
Donna Goodheart Krupp Scholarship. They are supporting
the scholarship through a charitable gift annuity, which
will pay them an annual income for the rest of their lives.
When the Krupps pass away, the remaining value will
become available for Stanford’s use.
T HROUGH THEIR WILLS , Marc and Donna intend to
support the Krupp scholarship at the medical school;
the Donna Goodheart Krupp Scholarship, which was
established by Donna’s parents; and the Faculty Club, a
place that holds special meaning for both of them. These
gifts will be a final tribute to the university that has
played such an important role in their lives.
Marc says he admires those who carry on Stanford
traditions. Over the years, he and Donna have shown
abundant generosity and inexhaustible kindness toward
the university, helping to educate generations of students
as well as leading by example. They are, indeed, a vital
part of the Stanford tradition. v
* In 1981, the Palo Alto Medical Research Foundation merged
with its affiliate, the Palo Alto Medical Clinic, and became the
Palo Alto Medical Foundation.
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GOOD COUNSEL
language drafted by the Office of Planned Giving which
can save your attorney time and you money.
BY JONRIE DÁVILA, ’81
Visit your attorney’s office to sign the documents and complete your plans.
STEP THREE:
A S S O C I AT E D I R E C T O R O F P L A N N E D G I V I N G
emember those halcyon days when
you were a Stanford student? I do,
though I barely recognize that girl in the
Dollie dress from so many years ago.
What fun we had, and how much we
learned from our Stanford experiences!
Jonrie Dávila, ’81
This issue of Remember Stanford
focuses on bequests and other arrangements that Stanford
alumni, parents, and friends can make to ensure that
future members of the Stanford family have wonderful
experiences like ours. The most common approach is a
bequest expressed in a will or revocable living trust, either
of which can be changed at any time during your lifetime.
Using this method, you can have full access to personal
assets during your lifetime, create a lasting legacy for
future Stanford generations, and, in many cases, benefit
from considerable tax savings.
To add Stanford to your plans, follow these three
simple steps:
R
When you have completed these steps, Stanford will
be delighted to enroll you in the Founding Grant Society,
in recognition of your generosity toward future Stanford
students, faculty, and programs.
Naming Stanford as a beneficiary of your qualified
retirement plan, such as an IRA, 401(k), or 403(b) plan,
offers another tax-friendly way to support the university.
The assets in these plans are not subject to income tax
until you decide to withdraw funds. If you die with assets
remaining in your plan, your heirs may receive less than
50 percent of the value of the plan, after estate and income
taxes, whereas amounts left to charities pass tax-free.
Consider doing what I have done—name Stanford
as a beneficiary of your retirement plan. It’s easy to do.
Request a beneficiary designation form from your retirement plan administrator; fill out the form, including
Stanford as a beneficiary of all
or a percentage of the plan;
and return the form to the
administrator. And, of course,
the last step: Let the staff in
Stanford’s Office of Planned
Giving know that you have
taken this action, so that we
can show Stanford’s appreciation by welcoming you into the
Founding Grant Society. v
Jonrie in her Stanford Dollie days
Call the Office of Planned Giving at
(650) 725-4358 and talk with one of our planned giving
officers. We are happy to discuss how you can support a
favorite Stanford school or program area. And we will
provide you or your attorney with the necessary language
to accomplish your goals.
STEP ONE:
Call your estate planning attorney to request
that Stanford be included in your plans, providing the
STEP TWO:
WHY JOIN THE FOUNDING
GRANT SOCIETY?
Once you let the Office of Planned Giving know
that you have included Stanford in your estate
plans, you will be invited to join the Founding
Grant Society.
The benefits of society membership include:
• A framed replica of the Stanford Founding Grant.
• An annual seminar and luncheon on campus
at the Frances C. Arrillaga Alumni Center. This
year’s luncheon speakers included the directors of Stanford’s Woods Institute for the
Environment, professors Barton H. “Buzz”
Thompson, Jr., ’73, JD/MBA ’76, and Jeffrey
R. Koseff, MS ’78, PhD ’83, who described
how Stanford is tackling some of the environmental challenges facing our planet. After
lunch, Nancy Packer, a professor emerita of
English at Stanford, gave a lively and educational talk on Wallace Stegner.
• Private lectures by top faculty and friends of
the university throughout the year. For instance,
in 2005, local members were invited to tour
the Leland Stanford Mansion in Sacramento
and listen to a lecture by the university’s
archivist Maggie Kimball, ’80, titled “The Life
and Legacy of the Stanford Family.”
• Recognition in Remember Stanford as a
member of the Founding Grant Society.
• A Founding Grant Society lapel pin.
• A Stanford Classic calendar mailed to you
each year.
How to qualify for membership:
• Make a bequest to Stanford in your will
or trust.
• Name Stanford as a beneficiary of your life
insurance policy.
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• Name Stanford as a beneficiary of your
qualified retirement plan (your IRA, 401(k),
or 403(b) plan).
• Name Stanford as a beneficiary of a charitable remainder trust or charitable lead trust.
• Make a gift to Stanford through a charitable
gift annuity or pooled income fund.
If you have remembered Stanford in your
estate plans but are not yet a member of
the Founding Grant Society:
Please contact the Planned Giving Office at
(650) 725-4358 or (800) 277-8977, ext. 54358 so that you can be welcomed into the
society and thanked for your generous gift.
E- mail: rememberstanford@stanford.edu
Web site: http://rememberstanford.stanford.edu
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I R E M E M B E R ...
ith this issue, Remember Stanford is introducing a new section featuring recollections and photographs submitted
by our readers. We invite you to share stories of your days at Stanford and to send in photographs, either to
illustrate the anecdotes or as stand-alone images. For more information or to make a submission, please write or call:
Susan Godstone, Editor, Remember Stanford
Office of Planned Giving, Frances C. Arrillaga Alumni Center
326 Galvez Street, Stanford, CA 94305-6105
Telephone: (650) 723-7663; Fax: (650) 723-6566; E-mail: sgodstone@stanford.edu
If you are sending a photograph, please try to identify those pictured and indicate when and where the photo
was taken. All photos will be returned.
W
Upon spotting this photo of the Quad covered in snow in our last issue, Roger Bourke, ’60,
MS ’61, PhD ’64, of Alta, Utah, sent the following:
“I liked the picture of the campus in the snow. My young wife and 18-month-old daughter
went out that day (I’m pretty sure it was a Sunday) to survey the snow-covered land. We
were surprised as we passed the golf course to see some intrepid players going at it, probably
with red golf balls.”
The photo also brought back memories for Steve Player, ’63: “I remember waking up that
morning to discover that everything was white. I headed out the door of the Sigma Chi house in
my go-aheads and was up to my ankles in snow. My fraternity brothers and I had a great time
throwing snowballs from the second story of Sigma Chi.”
Ray Alden, ’44, of Santa Rosa, California, contributed these two photos,
taken in the spring of his senior year.
The Oval (left), as it appeared in March 1944. A Palo Alto native, Ray
remembers riding his bike around this area in the 1930s when it was only
“vacant fields.”
The old Stanford boathouse on Lake
Lagunita (right), April 1944. For Ray,
the path along the northern shore of
Lake Lagunita holds special memories.
A tree there “has four initials carved
in it—now deep inside.”
Margaret Lazzarone Ricci, ’36, of Sacramento, California,
shared these two photos from her student days.
Margaret (left) and Jane Bauder, ’36, at the entrance to the
University Library (now Green Library) and the dorm room in
Casa Eucalypto, Lagunita Court, that Margaret shared with
Joyce Dunkerley, ’36
(Continued on page 6)
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R E M E M B E R I N G S TA N F O R D
enerous alumni and friends enrich Stanford with
gifts of every kind. Last fall, the university received
an invaluable piece of California history: John Steinbeck’s
Nobel Prize medallion.
Steinbeck, who attended Stanford intermittently
from 1919 to 1925 but never earned a degree, won the
Nobel Prize for literature in 1962. The medallion, under
glass in a gold frame, now resides in the university’s John
Steinbeck Collections thanks to Waverly Scott Kaffaga,
Steinbeck’s stepdaughter, and the estate of her mother,
Elaine Steinbeck, who died in 2003. John Steinbeck
died in 1968.
G
John Steinbeck’s Nobel Prize medallion, a recent addition to Stanford’s
Steinbeck Collections
I Remember... (Continued)
Florence Rodgers Dethlefsen, ’52, remembers the pranks the roughs used
to play on the coeds when she and her friends were living at Lathrop.
There was the morning the women awoke to find all of the furniture from
the ground floor of Lathrop moved across the street onto the lawn of the
Phi Delt house. And the evening a housemate’s future husband streaked
the row on a dare during the dinner hour—everyone was inside eating
and missed the show. And the time an anonymous trickster left a beehive
in Lathrop’s living room.
Pictured here on the Lathrop steps are (top step, left to right) Joan
McCormick, Kit Barr, and Martha Smith; (second step from top)
Margaret Gairdner and Florence; (third step from top) Jodie Lewinsohn;
and (bottom step) Janet Karahadian—all members of the Class of 1952.
Bud Eldon, ’48, MBA ’50, sent in these two Stanford recollections:
“During WWII, many of us started Stanford at odd quarters, not in the fall. Arriving from Hawaii in March,
I wasn’t used to the cold nights—especially on the sleeping porch of McKinley Hall, a fraternity house used as a
temporary dorm for freshmen. My memory of winter: huddled in my PJs and wrapped in blankets, I slept between
two mattresses, but still shivering.”
“The course was Vector Analysis, taught by the head of the math department, not exactly exciting—and given at
1 p.m. Suddenly, I was aware of quiet, no lecturing. I awoke to find the professor standing over me, looking at me,
as were the rest of the class. Surprise: I got a B+ in the course anyway!”
STANFORD’S OFFICE OF PLANNED GIVING STAFF
CHRIS YATES, ’81
JONRIE DÁVILA, ’81
KARA D. WERTHEIMER
Director of Planned Giving
(650) 736-0409, chris.yates@stanford.edu
Associate Director of Planned Giving
(650) 725 - 4363, jonrie.davila@stanford.edu
Associate Director of Planned Giving
(650) 725-5565, kara.wertheimer@stanford.edu
CAROL KERSTEN, JD ’82
STEPHEN W. PLAYER, ’63
CAROLYN SWANSON
Director of Planned Giving for Stanford University
Medical Center
(650) 725-5524, carol.kersten@stanford.edu
Associate Director of Planned Giving
(650) 725-5509, steve.player@stanford.edu
Assistant Director of Planned Giving
(Southern California)
(626) 965-1727, swansonc@stanford.edu
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Steinbeck’s medal joins a trove of manuscripts,
notes, correspondence, photographs, and other material
associated with the writer. Such an artifact helps crystallize other material held in the collections, says William
McPheron, the now-retired librarian for Special Collections
and curator for American literary studies. Stanford
library collections already contained numerous letters
from Steinbeck about receiving the Nobel Prize and the
typescript he read at the acceptance ceremony. “The
medal brings all of this into a coordinated and coherent
whole,” McPheron adds.
According to Andrew Herkovic, director of communications and development for Stanford University
Libraries, the gift also demonstrates how archives
R E C E N T E S TAT E G I F T S
Stanford is grateful to the generous friends and
alumni who remember the university in their
estate plans. These gifts make a difference
throughout the university. A sampling of recent
estate gifts appears below.
MARY LOUISE GARDNER AHEARN, ’55, left
one-sixth of the remainder of her trust estate,
approximately $71,000, to the university
without further restriction.
CHANTRY BELL, a friend of the university,
named Stanford as the beneficiary of a specific
gift of $10,000 from her IRA. The gift will be
used to support cancer research.
P L A N N I N G
grow almost organically, as items in a collection attract
more. Along with the medal, Stanford received from
Kaffaga a manila envelope of newspaper clippings from
1962—Steinbeck’s Nobel was awarded in the midst of
the Bay of Pigs crisis—and personal letters from Elaine
Steinbeck to her husband. Other recent additions to the
Steinbeck Collections include Steinbeck’s letters to his
sister Beth and unpublished manuscripts. Intriguing to
even the most casual reader, these items will be
treasured—and studied—by Steinbeck scholars for
generations to come. v
Adapted from Stanford Report, November 2, 2005
JOAN VIRGINIA MAYHEW, ’36, willed Stanford
a specific gift of $25,000 for general support.
JOHN A. PILAFIDIS, ’92, left a gift of $100,000
to create need-based scholarships for undergraduates majoring in computer science or
electrical engineering.
GEORGE A. RUDOLF, MBA ’33, left all the
assets of a closely held company to establish
an endowed scholarship fund, the income from
which will be used to support undergraduate and
graduate students majoring in environmental
sciences. The gift totaled more than $750,000.
ROBERT E. SANDERSON, ’49, LLB ’52, made
two gifts of $10,000, one to Stanford Law School
and one to the university for general use.
Medical School for cancer research. The gift
totaled more than $1.8 million.
DAN D. TARBELL, ’35, MA ’37, PhD ’54, left 15
percent of the residue of his trust to endow the
Dan Duncan Tarbell Library Book Fund to provide
books for the Stanford University Libraries, with
a preference for materials in the humanities and
sciences. The gift totaled more than $50,000.
MARK I. WEINBERGER, ’70, made a specific gift
of $25,000 to support undergraduate programs.
JOCELYN WILLIAMS, ’37, left the residue of
her trust, totaling approximately $500,000,
to Stanford to establish scholarship funds for
female students majoring in engineering.
gift of $500,000 to create the Albert T. Cook
Scholarship Fund, an endowed, need-based
scholarship fund for undergraduates, with a
preference for student athletes.
REGINA STUART, a friend of the university,
WALLACE KELLY WOODS, ’34, gave a specific
gift of $5,000 for Stanford’s general use.
gave the residue of her estate, totaling more
than $3 million, to Stanford Hospital for
psoriasis treatment.
BETH G. ZIEGLER, a friend of the university,
bequeathed $1,000 to the Stanford
Historical Society.
BARBARA FINBERG, ’49, named Stanford
RUTH STUCKEY, a friend of the university, left
the residue of her estate to Stanford University
ALBERT T. COOK, ’34, LLB ’39, made a specific
as a beneficiary of certain retirement accounts
and a portion of the residue of her estate.
These gifts, estimated at $10.2 million, will
be used for graduate fellowships and undergraduate scholarships.
JAMES D. KOWAL, JD ’59, and his wife, Patricia
A. Kowal, designated the proceeds from a life
insurance policy as well as the residue of their
estates to Stanford Law School. These gifts,
when fully distributed, will total approximately
$8 million.
EDWARD F. MANSFIELD, a friend of the univer-
sity, made Stanford a beneficiary of a portion of
his life insurance policy. The gift, which totaled
approximately $7,000, will support the men’s
and women’s tennis teams.
STANFORD SCRAPBOOK Lathrop House, circa 1950
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F O U N D I N G G R A N T S O C I E T Y:
C R E AT I N G A L E G A C Y
F O R S TA N F O R D
Members of the society as of June 1, 2006, who
have given us permission to publish their names, are
listed below.
If you think that you may qualify for membership
in the Founding Grant Society and would like to join,
or would like information about member events, please
contact the Office of Planned Giving at (800) 277-8977,
ext. 5-4358 or (650) 725-4358. v
he Founding Grant Society recognizes and honors
those extraordinary individuals whose gifts provide
future support for Stanford University, including the
medical center and the Hoover Institution. In recognition
of this generosity, the Office of Planned Giving holds
special events throughout the year for the Founding
Grant Society members, including an annual luncheon
at the Frances C. Arrillaga Alumni Center.
T
F O U N D I N G
Martha Sinden Addis, ’55, and Robert L. Addis, ’53*
Dona Adams Affleck, ’51, and
James A. Affleck, ’52, MD ’56
Monika E. and Aavo A. Agur, MS ’63
Susan and John Ryan Ahlering, ’73
Toby Levin Alexander, MA ’67, and
Michael Alexander, MD ’70
Barbara P. and William G. Alhouse, AM ’51
John Aliotta
Dot Soares Allen, ’65, MA ’66, and Bob Allen, ’65
James A. Allitto, ’63
Evelyn A. Amaral, MA ’39
Mary L. and Richard E. Amen, MS ’68, MBA ’73
Delores L. and Andrew Ames
Michael R. Amini, ’79
Betty Boehme Anderson, ’48, and Roy Anderson*
Jerome W. Anderson, ’66, JD ’69
Lysbeth Warren Anderson, ’54
Harry W. Andrews, ’50
David O. Antonuccio, PhD, ’75
Mary C. and G. Addison Appleby, ’51, MBA ’56
Ruth Appleby, ’40, MD ’44
Laura Aram
Steven M. Arentz, ’71
Eileen and Lawrence H. Arnoff
Thomas J. Atchison, ’54
Lyman D. Austin, ’60, MS ’66
Judith Avery, ’59
Averill Babson, ’73
Robert D. Bacon, ’73
Virgina W. and Robert Bailey*
Carol and Douglas M. Baker, MBA ’62
Edward W. Baker, ’34, MD ’38
Norman B. Baldwin, MBA ’47
Susan Ballinger
Troy W. Barbee, Jr., ’59, MS ’62, PhD ’66
Anita Murray Barbey, ’70
Joan Robbins Barkan, ’42, and Adolph W. Barkan, ’39
Richard C. Barkelew, ’33
Phyllis J. Barron
Marie Schoppe Bartee
Phyllis*and Maurice R. Barusch, ’40, MA ’41, PhD ’44
John W. Bassett, ’60
Leonie F. Batkin
Janet S. and James F. Battey
Lawrence S. Bauman, JD ’73
Jane Kindall Beamish, ’37
The photos in this section were taken by Carolyn Swanson,
a member of the planned giving team, at the Founding Grant
Society luncheon in April 2006.
G R A N T
S O C I E T Y
Robert P. Beckham, Jr., ’41
Toshiko K. and Robert D. Beeman, PhD ’67
Elizabeth and William E. Bell, ’44, MBA ’49
Lisa Thacker Bemis, ’52, and F. Gregg Bemis, Jr., ’50
Diane S. and Edmund J. Bennett, ’42
Carol L. Benz, ’85
Mildred and Paul Berg
Ida S. and Harry K. Berland
Philip A. Berman, ’55
Lillian V. and Harvey H. Bernhard, ’47
Deanna and Ronald C. Biggs, MS ’62, PhD ’63
Elizabeth Strauss Bing, PhD ’62, and Ralph A. Bing*
Dorothy M. and William H. Bissell, ’49, MBA ’51
David S. Bizer, MA ’86, PhD ’88
Lisa Berry Blackstock, ’82, and
Robert K. B. Blackstock, ’81
Katherine and Hugh M. Blake*
Esther and Richard A. Blanchard, PhD ’82
Susan Dekker Blois, ’51, and
Richard M. Blois, ’50, JD ’53
George E. Boardman
Mary Foucoult Bobel, ’70, MA ’71, MBA ’79,
and Philip L. Bobel, MS ’71
Marguerite C. and Walter Boiko
Alice Kwong Bolocan, ’54, and Hyam Bolocan
Sina and Anthony Bonacorso
Sue and Robert L. Boniface
MaryLou Openshaw Boone, ’52, and George N. Boone
Elizabeth G. Barmann Borgnino, ’44
Ursula M. and Robert L. Borrelli, ’53, MS ’54
Charlotte Downey Boutin, ’44, and
Frank J. Boutin, Sr., ’42, MD ’46
Polly*and R. Mitchell S. Boyd, ’35, LLB ’38
Mary E. Boyken, ’52
Lillian Tomalis Brabander, ’57, and
Wayne J. Brabander, ’56
Judith L. Bradley, ’66, and David L. Mitchell
Myrle R. and Douglas B. Bradshaw, ’33
Bonnie Brae, ’59
Mr. and Mrs. Robert M. Bragg
Ann Kendall Fair Branagan, ’51, and J. Miles Branagan
Pamela Flebbe Brandin, ’64
Betty O. and Turner G. Brashear
Jerome I. Braun, ’51, LLB ’53
Theodore A. Bravos, ’42
Marian E. Simpson Breed, ’39, and Warren Breed*
Josie C. and Douglas T. Breeden, MA ’76, PhD ’78
* Deceased
8
Doug Brown, ’59, MBA ’61, chairman of the Board
of Directors of the Founding Grant Society (left),
and Troy Barbee, ’59, MS ’62, PhD ’66
Sue A. and Robert R. Brenner, ’60
Donald R. Brewer, MBA ’64
Geoffrey Brewster, ’67
Maureen and James Brill
Monet Brock, MA ’65
Elizabeth Malarkey Brooke, ’52, and
John R. Brooke, ’44
Lisa D. and John L. B. Brooke, ’88, MA ’89
Adele S.* and Philip S. Brown
David Brown, ’36
Joan B. and Thomas R. Brown, ’59, MBA ’64
Karen L. and John W. Brown
Kathryn D. and Eugene F. Brown, ’34, MBA ’38*
Marilyn Schwartz Brown, ’50, and Allan F. Brown, ’49
Pauline Brown, ’41, AM ’59
Peggy and Lee G. Brown
Sarah and Douglas Minge Brown, ’59, MBA ’61
M. Wendell Brown, MBA ’55
David O. Brownwood, ’56
Gayle C. and J. Stephen Brugler, ’58, MS ’63, PhD ’68
Daniel E. Brunette
Virginia C. and Robert H. Brunner*
Nancy W. and John J. Bruno
Jeannette Alpen Bullis, ’57
Jeane Chambers Bulotti, ’42
Ellen P. and Kenneth A. Bump
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C H A R I T A B L E
Ruth Buneman
Melody and Fred H. Burbank, ’63, MD ’68
Richard G. Burge, MBA ’61
Claire*and John D. Burke, ’34, MBA ’34
Barbara Burnett, ’38
Roberta and Malin Burnham, ’49
Betty Legarra Burtis, ’48, MBA ’50
William S. Burtness, ’54, MBA ’60
Betye Monell Burton, ’45, and Gene Burton*
Jane Miner Burton, ’42, and Charles E. Burton, ’41
A. Scott Bushey, MBA ’54, Sloan ’58
Barbara and William H. Busse, ’52, MA ’53
Edgar M. Buttner, ’51
Mona B. and William M. Byers*
Allen B. Cagle, ’65
Patricia L. and John E. Cahill, Jr., ’65
Eleanor Cranston Cameron, ’32
Maria T. and James A. Cameron
Lenda Camp-Smith, and W. Bailey Smith, ’65
Frank L. Campbell, ’50, MS ’51
June Z. and Jack A. Campbell, ’56
Martha Hoer Campbell, ’35 and William A. Campbell*
Muriel Hart Campbell, MA ’53
Tanya Pine Capuano, ’93, MA ’99, MBA ’99, and
Michael G. Capuano
John Cardoza, ’56, MS ’62
Terry Huggins Carlitz, MBA ’82
Karen Booth Carlson, ’63, MA ’65
Blyth Coghlan Carpenter, ’64, and
Russell B. Carpenter, ’64
Virginia Hobbs Carpenter, ’45, and
William M. Carpenter, ’45
Jacquelyn Corker Carr, MA ’61
Barbara B. and John Carson*
Mary Starr Carstensen, ’72, and
Hans L. Carstensen III, ’70, MBA ’74
Philip S. Carter, Jr., MS ’51, PhD ’54
Susan H. and John P. Carver, ’57
Mason Case, ’43
Raymond J. Casey
Barbara J. and Sam R. Cataldo, Sloan ’75
Eleanor W. and R. Weston Caughlan, ’60, MS ’65
Lucille F. and Jim Cayton*
Jane Miller Chai, ’60
Sally Foote Chamberlain, ’50
June*and Robert L. Chambers
Susan and Douglas C. Chance, MBA ’66
Gene Chao, PhD ’71
Jane Thompson Chapman, ’62, and
John G. Chapman, ’62, MA ’64
Janice M. and Kenneth D. Chastain
Stacie S. Cheng, MBA ’99, and
Thomas C. Cole, MBA ’99
Donald O. Chessmore, ’50
Janey M. Young Cheu, ’60, and Richard A. Cheu, ’59
Chele Upton Chiavacci, ’88, MS ’91
Stephen D. Chicoine, ENG ’75
Georgie Steele Chivington, MA ’63, and
Thomas H. Chivington
C. Diane Christensen, ’65
Winfield Christiansen, MA ’50, EdD ’53
Donald A. Chu, PhD ’74
Diane M. Churchill and David F. Labaree
Louis Ciminelli
Ann Hammond Clark, ’62
Julia D. and Harold F. Clark, Jr., MA ’58
Marjorie J. Clark,
Robert J. Clark, ’34
Jean Y. and William H. Clark, ’40, MD ’44
E S T A T E
P L A N N I N G
Philip B. Clayburgh, ’40
Linda Hawes Clever, ’61, MD ’65, and
James A. Clever, ’58, MD ’62
William R. Cline, ’63, MD ’68
Roger D. Coates, MBA ’69
Jean Galt Coblentz, ’47, and Harry Coblentz*
Nancy Coffey, ’67, MS ’77
Charlotte C. and Wendell G. Cole, PhD ’51
Denis R. Coleman, PhD ’75
George J. Collins
V. Robert Colton
James M. Conner, ’48
Jo Carol Conover, MBA ’79, and Arthur J. Bennington
Lew W. Cook, ’51
Olive Freeman Cook, ’40, and Lyle E. Cook*
Lynn A. and H. James Cornish*
Margaret Pierson Cost, ’59
John C. Couch, MBA ’76
Harriet W. Coulson, ’48, MA ’55
Mary Lu Hanna Cowgill, ’54, and
F. Brooks Cowgill, ’54, MBA ’56
Jane and Lyle Cox
Janet Gervais Crandall, ’57, and
Kenneth H. Crandall, Jr.*
Dolly Miller Crane, ’42, and George E. Crane*
Mary Bailey Cranston, ’70, JD ’75, and
Harold D. Cranston, ’69, MBA ’72
Theodore J. Cranston, ’61, JD ’64
Mary*and Gordon B. Crary, Jr., ’43
Kathleen J. Crispell, MBA ’76
Marjorie H. and J. Hewes Crispin, ’37
Doreen Foo Croft, ’49
Kenneth S. Croker, ’57
Marian B. and James Cross*
R. Dougal Crowe, ’50
Mary B.* and J. Delbert Crummey, ’41
John P. Cull, Jr., ’42
Paul Curcio, ’74
Kathryn Moore Cusick, ’51, and
Joseph D. Cusick, ’51, Sloan ’73
Stewart E. Dadmun, ’55, MD ’58
Judith Fisher Dailey, ’52, and William F. Dailey, ’50
Norma and Setsuo Dairiki, ’42
Maxima A. Dandoy, EdD ’52
Joan Lewis Danforth, ’53
Betty Alter Dasteel, ’44, and Robert H. Dasteel*
Anne O'Neil Dauer, ’60, and Arther F. Dauer*
Timothy E. Daughters, MS ’82
Lou H. and Ralph P. Davidson, ’50
Joyce Stallfort Davis, ’47
Mark Cameron Davis, ’73
Shirley Ross Davis
Marjorie and Roger C. Davisson, MBA ’68
Marsha J. and Patric B. Dawe, ’62
Keith Defolo, ’48
Irving C. Deal, ’50
Hal S. Dean, MS ’50
Leonard DeBenedictis
Jerome H. Debs II, ’66, MBA ’68
Thomas D. Dee II, ’41
Lynda H. and James A. DeiRossi, ’60, MA ’63
Pauline DeKraker
Anthony R. Deluca, MA ’69, PhD ’74
Howard B. Demuth, MS ’54, PhD ’57
Kate and Robert R. Denning, ’53, MBA ’55
Margaret E. and Reid W. Dennis, ’50, MBA ’52
Franc R. J. deWeeger
Linda S. and James F. Dickason, MBA ’51*
Thomas Dicker
Susan McClure Diekman, ’65, MA ’67, and
John D. Diekman, PhD ’69
Irene Balcar Dillon, ’73, MD ’77, and William Dillon
Beverly and Stephen D. Docter, ’56, LLB ’59
Yvonne Jensen Dodd, ’56, and Arthur F. Dodd, ’57
Sally Wolfe Dole, ’59, and
Burton A. Dole, Jr., ’59, MBA ’65
Herbert Donaldson, LLB ’56
Mavis E. and Fred A. Donath, MS ’56, PhD ’58
Dolores A. Donovan, ’67, JD ’70
Laurence H. Dorcy, Jr., ’56
Mary Loomis Dorn, ’55, MA ’56, and
Ernest F. Dorn III, ’56
Barbara and Sanford M. Dornbusch
Susan Dorsey
David L. Douglass, MBA ’78, MA ’79
Winifred F. and Vincent M. Downey, ’33, MD ’38
Jean G. and Morris M. Doyle, ’29*
Diane I. and Richard E. DuNah, ’56, MS ’58
Carlyle M. Dunaway, Jr., ’66
Jean Shepherd Duncan, ’41, and Hugh S. Duncan*
Lois J. Durham, PhD ’59
Anna J. and Steve Durrett, ’74
Karen L. and William B. Early, ’58
Karen P. and James E. Eckles, ’62, MS ’64, PhD ’66
Mary A. Eddy, MBA ’85
Robert E. Edmondson, ’65, JD ’69
Kathryn C. and Woodrow W. Edmondson*
William C. Edwards, ’50
Ruth and George W. Egan, ’39
Lester E. Ehler
Joan and Mel Lane, ’44 (left and
center) with Barton H. “Buzz”
Thompson, Jr., ’73, JD/MBA ’76,
the Robert E. Paradise Professor of
Natural Resources Law and director
of the Woods Institute for the
Environment at Stanford. Buzz
co-presented a lecture on creating
an environmentally sustainable
future that was a highlight
of the luncheon.
9
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S T A N F O R D
Founding Grant Society (Continued)
Ellen R. and Thomas Ehrlich
Elin Eifler, MBA ’05
Betty Kahn Eldon, ’48, and
Charles A. Eldon, ’48, MBA ’50
Chatty Collier Eliason, ’59
Linda and Carter G. Elliott, ’55
Jane Cutler Ellis, ’40
Lynn Elsasser, MBA ’81
Shirley and Leonard W. Ely, ’48, MBA ’50
Dan A. Emmett, ’61
Edward T. Engle, Jr., ’64
Rachel and Patrick J. English, ’83
Carol Harris Erario, ’58, and Rocco Erario*
Jon A. Erickson, ’65
John M. Erskine
Nancy A. and Richard D. Esbenshade, ’50
Ron J. Esmilla, ’93
Nancy H. and John W. Etchemendy, PhD ’82
Ralph J. Evans, MBA ’71
Marietta Buttitta Everitt, ’57
David K. Evers, ’53
Elizabeth and Robert Falkenhagen*
Nancy Lagomarsino Farrar, ’50, and
William R. Farrar, ’50, MBA ’53
Merritt D. Farren, ’82
Diane Werthen Farthing, ’68, and
Daniel G. Farthing, ’62
Cynthia L. and Herbert I. Faulk, ’48, MBA ’51
Anita M. and Paul B. Fay, Jr., ’41
Annettte and Gary Fazzino, ’74
Willard E. Fee, Jr.
Marilyn Macfarlane Feininger, ’53
Jeffrey H. Fenton, MA ’81, MS ’82
Janet Martin Fenwick, MA ’60, and
Robert Fenwick, MS ’59, PhD ’63
Margaret L. Ferguson
Enrique Ferman-P
Kathleen Fernandes, PhD ’74
Joan R. and Clarence J. Ferrari, Jr., ’56, LLB ’59
Helene Fertig-Katzen, MA ’69
Jane Trevor Fetter, ’58, and
Thompson Fetter, ’56, MBA ’58
Robert J. Finger, ’70, MS ’70
Louis J. Fischl, ’45, MBA ’54
Dorothy Fish
Margaret McKee Fisher
Jeanne J. Fleming, MA ’77, PhD ’82, and
Leonard C. Schwarz, ’73, MBA ’78
Peter K. Fleming, ’50, MS ’51
Cynthia Roberts Floyd, ’55
Audrey C. Foley, ’39
Nyna Park Foley, ’47, and Robert J. Foley, JD ’49
John W. Fondahl
Mary Y. and Arthur Fong, MS ’68
Julita Chin Fong, MD ’58
Candace Templeton Forbes, ’68, and
Bert E. Forbes, MS ’67
Cynthia O’Brien Ford, ’70, and John B. Ford, ’71
Joan Butler Ford, ’75, MA ’76, PhD ’80
Susan and Stephen T. Ford, ’59
Myrna and Ira Forest, ’42
Kay S. and Warren Forsythe
Nancy Davis Fouquet, ’56, MA ’58
Margaret and Jon R. Fowler, ’60
Karen F. A. Fox, ’65, PhD ’73
Peter B. Fox, ’74
Merrill R. Francis, JD ’59
Frederick Frank, MBA ’58
Richard L. Frank, ’35
Bersita E. and Leroy Fraser*
(Left to right) Steve Player, ’63, associate director of planned giving at Stanford; Pauline DeKraker; Elaine
Triolo; and George Jedenoff, ’40, MBA ’42
Ralph C. Frates, Jr., ’65
Karen and James W. Freed, ’60
Bradford M. Freeman, ’64
Leigh M. Freeman, ’52
Edward J. Fremouw, ’56
Eleanor J. Friar, ’56
Wayne A. Frick, ’64
Rosalind Grymes-Friedland, PhD ’83, and
Peter E. Friedland, PhD ’80
C. Hugh Friedman, JD ’56
Jennifer Halise Friedman, ’94
Sharon and Joel P. Friedman, MBA ’71
Jean Tenneson Friedrichs, ’53, and
C. William Friedrichs, ’53, MBA ’57
Donald W. Fritz, PhD ’69
George A. Frye, ENG ’73
Geraldine* and Frederick Fuhrman, PhD ’44
Martha Hewitt Fuller, ’53, MA ’54, and Del Fuller*
William P. Fuller IV, ’60, MA ’65, PhD ’70
Elizabeth Collet Funk, ’91
Dore Selix-Gabby, ’48
Theo C. Gage, ’66
Susan G. and James C. Gaither, JD ’64
Martha Hitch Galloway, ’53, MA ’54, and
Gordon L. Galloway, ’54
Phyllis and James Gander*
Charles C. Gans, ’49
Jean S. and Paul F. Garrett, ’50
Mary H. Garton, ’69
Elizabeth Wilson Gates, ’59, and
Mark T. Gates, Jr., LLB ’62
Phyllis L. and Steven H. Gee, ’53
Bradley C. Geer, ’90, MA ’90
William F. Gerdes, ’60, AM ’61, MA ’69
Joel A. Getz
Lynn and James F. Gibbons, MS ’54, PhD ’56
Gary M. Gielow, ’57
Janet and M. Richard Giffra, ’38, MBA ’40
John B. Gilbert, Jr., ’65
Jean Holmes Gillett, ’39
Caryn F. Ginsberg, MBA ’87
* Deceased
10
Joseph A. Giordano, ’50, JD ’55
Noona and Mohan Giridharadas, MBA ’91
Nancy E. Glaser, MBA ’85
Lynn Ferguson Glaze, ’55, MA ’66, and
Harry S. Glaze, ’55, MBA ’67
E. Alexander Glover, MBA ’69
Charles O. Gnaedinger, ’87
Wilford D. Godbold, Jr., ’60
Peter L. Goedecke, MBA ’73
Phyllis Ludlam Gold, ’46
Barbara Aronson Goldenberg, ’50
Marianne Goldman, ’44
Warren R. Goldmann, ’66
Elizabeth Chandler Gonda, ’44
Rebecca Gruver Goodman, ’54
Colleen and Warren F. Goodrich, ’54
John B. Goodrich II, ’63
Artha D. Gordon, '31, MA ’32
Joseph H. Gordon, Sr., ’31
Anne Connelly Gould, ’72, MA ’80, and
Dick Gould, ’59, MA ’60
Laurie J. Gould, ’81
Anupam Goyal
Olga and Richard R. Gratton*
Barbara K. Gray, ’45
Charles M. Greeley
Jean Haber Green, ’40
Joan I. and Alan Green*
Alan E. Greener, MS ’56
Helen B. and Geofrey J. Greenleaf, MBA ’68
Annette L. Greslat, ’42
Barbara A. Babcock and Thomas C. Grey, ’63
Mary M. Griffin-Jones, ’43, MD ’46
Joan P. and Howard S. Gross, MBA ’72
Ruth S. Zeitman and Jerrold W. Grossman, ’70
Jean M. and Charles T. Groswith III, ’62
Ann Elliott Grube, ’74, and John P. Grube, ’70
Liselotte Gumpel, MA ’66, PhD ’71
Yvette Magagnose Gurley, MS ’65, and
John G. Gurley, ’42, PhD ’51
Jill Cornell Gwaltney, ’77, and Christopher A. Gwaltney
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C H A R I T A B L E
Charles P. Haber, ’41, MA ’42, PhD ’50
Emily Howard Haffner, ’44, and
Robert L. Haffner, ’44, MS ’49
Margaret and Donald C. Hagerman, PhD ’55
Grant K. Hagestad, ’59, MS ’60, MBA ’64
Francine E. Halberg, ’74
Robert A. Hall, ’37
Barbara Gould Hallows, ’57
Frank O. Hamilton, ’48
Willard E. Hamilton, ’49
G. Robert Hamrdla, ’59, AM ’64
Audrey S. and Robert L. Hancock, ’49
Marcia D. Hancock
Dent N. Hand, Jr., ’53, JD ’59
Mary S. Hand
William C. Hannemann, MBA ’64
Caryl Harms Hansen, ’51
Janet M. Hanson, ’51
John F. Hanson, Jr., ’35, JD ’38
Katharine Heard Hanson, ’69
Kenneth H. Hanson, ’70, MS ’70
John C. Harbert, ’59
Edith Stafford Harley, ’50, and James M. Harley*
Paula Hays Harper, PhD ’76
Nancy Dole Harriman, Jr., ’45
Betsy and Allan A. Harris, ’45
Barbara S. and Michael Harris
Dewilda*and William P. Harris
Jane and Lawrence W. Harris, Jr., ’32
Barbara Herrmann Hart, ’59, and David E. Hart
Gurnee F. Hart, MBA ’55
Carol E. Hartman, ’51
Barbara Hyland Hartmann, ’41, and
John J. Hartmann, MBA ’47
Julia A. Hartung, ’82
Fred M. Hartwick III, ’78
Barbara* and Richard E. Hastings
Barbara and Albert H. Hastorf
Deryck O. Hautau, ’57
Thomas H. Hawley, ’66, LLB ’69
Maryly Andrew Hayes, ’44, and Bruce Hayes, ’41
Catherine Stroube Hazlett, ’40
James F. Heady, ’54
Stephenie J. and Marc B. Hebert, MBA ’77
Jo Whitehouse and E. Michael Heffernan, ’64
Jeannette Jones Heidrich, ’73, MBA ’75, and
A. Grant Heidrich III, ’74
Franklin W. Held, ’50
David P. Helgevold
Mary Ann and William A. Heller
Susan C. and Andrew R. Heller
E S T A T E
P L A N N I N G
A. Carl Helmholz, ’38
Tom Hemphill
Albert T. Henley, ’38, LLB ’41
Amber Spinning Henninger, ’55, and
Larry E. Henninger, ’54
Eleanor Rudolph Herberg, ’52, and
Roland L. Herberg, MBA ’52
Julie A. and Leonard F. Herberth,
Jane McDermott Hergenreter, ’37
Lois M. Herrmann, MA ’68
Howard W. Herron, ’59, MS ’61
Carolyn Woolsey Hertel, ’55, and Ronald L. Hertel, ’55
Priscilla R. and George F. Hexter, MD ’56
Kelly and Randall A. Heyler, ’79, MS ’85
Lester T. Hibbard, ’41
RoseMarie and Louis C. Hickman, MBA ’50
Jack H. Hieronymus, ’44
Marjorie A. and Harold M. Hill, MD ’44
Shirley L. Hill, ’51, MA ’62
William S. Hill, Jr., ’59, MBA ’62, MA ’66, PhD ’80
Susan and William H. Hindle, ’52
Bernard L. Hinton, Sloan ’63, PhD ’66
Mary and James A. Hinz, MA ’69
Nancy Hand Hirst, ’47, and Omer Hirst*
Suzanne Desimon Hittman, ’52
Cynthia Nathan Hockey, ’60, and Robert W. Hockey
Robert S. Hockwald, ’45, MD ’48
Violet E. and John A. Hodges*
Ruth and Nicholas Hoff*
David G. Hoffman, MBA ’51
Nancy A. and Ellis L. Hoffman, ’54, MBA ’57
Evelyn Wadsworth Hoffman, ’52, and
Richard L. Hoffman, ’50, MBA ’52
Carol and Jon A. Hoffmann
Marilyn Krouser Hohbach, ’51
John M. Holkins, MD ’75
Elizabeth and Walter V. Holt, MBA ’62
Phillip C. Holt
John W. Houghton, Jr., ’64, MS ’66
Lucy L. Houser
Joseph E. Howland II, ’48, MA ’48
Sharon S. and Howard ‘Skip’ Hoyt, ’49, MBA ’51
Wendy Dea and Chang-Ping Hu, MS ’81
Josephine S. Huang, MS ’60
June and Howard C. Hubbard
Nancy Shepherd Hudson, ’49, and
Lawrence U. Hudson, ’45, MS ’47
Joseph L. A. Hughes, MS ’80, PhD ’86
Elizabeth Swindells Hulsey, ’84
Charles W. Humphrey, Jr.
Albert B. Hunt, ’32
Joan Lyon, ’51, MA ’52 (left);
Arthur Roth, ’47, MBA ’49;
and Dee Schumacher (guest)
11
Patricia A. Huntington, ’84
Alan S. Hutchinson, ’35
David L. Ichelson, ’43
Dorothea P.* and James D. Ingram, ’52
Margretta Young Jacobs, ’35, and
Charles J. Jacobs, ’33, MA ’34
Bette H. and Dean R. K. Jaedicke
Nancy MacNaught Jalonen, ’48, MA ’50, and
John W. Jalonen, ’50
Gail A. Jaquish, ’77, and Steven C. Kenninger, JD ’77
Charles H. Jarvis, ’52
Jonathan W. Jarvis,
Barbara Cull Jedenoff, ’43, and
George A. Jedenoff, ’40, MBA ’42
C. Bradford Jeffries, ’53, JD ’55
Georgianne and Christopher F. Jessen, ’63
John F. Jewett, ’55
H. Van Dyke Johns, Jr., ’50
Catherine Holman Johnson, ’51, and
Franklin P. Johnson, Jr., ’50
Deirdre Jones Johnson, ’50
Dixie Hayes Johnson, ’53, MA ’54, and
Eldon D. Johnson
Susan P. and Edward E. Johnson, MBA ’68
Harry E. Johnson, ’81
James A. Johnson, ’61
Mary C. Johnson and Russell L. Johnson, LLB ’58
Patricia Geary Johnson, ’51
Russell L. Johnson, LLB ’58
Patricia A. and William P. Johnstone
Jane Harrington Jones, ’41
Nyda Jopling Jones-Church, ’74
Shirley and John D. Jorgenson, ’47, LLB ’50
Waltraud and Nors Josephson
Sophia L. and Herbert Kaizer, MD ’65
Stuart M. Kaplan, LLB ’58
Marvin A. Karasek
William F. Kartozian, ’60
Marsha and James M. Kawakami, ’64, MS ’65
Frank J. Kawalkowski, ’52
M. K. St. Clair Keenan
Elizabeth Breedlove Keller, ’66
Robert A. Keller, JD ’58
Paul E. Kennedy, MS ’68, MBA ’73
Lauren Dunbar Keough, ’65
Monib Khademi, MBA ’90
Joseph C. Kice, ’46
Beverly Bunds Kimball, ’49, and
Merritt E. Kimball, ’49, MA ’50, EdD ’65
Collier C. Kimball, ’42
A. Thomas King, ’66
Francis P. King, MA ’48, PhD ’53
James P. King, ’68, MBA ’77
Lili Pratt King, ’71, MBA ’76
Mary Hines King, ’53, and Harvey C. King, ’52
Vincent V. King, ’89, MS ’93
Dan L. Kirby, ’68
Marvel B. J. and Robert G. Kirby*
Cassius L. Kirk, Jr., ’51
Noel W. Kirshenbaum, ’56, MS ’57, ENG ’68
Wendy and Michael W. Kirst
Jean L. and Robert K. Kistler, JD ’50
Norma Heck Kjeldgaard, ’49, and
Peter D. Kjeldgaard, ’50
Babette F. and Ed Klee*
Diane Goldstone Klein, ’53, MA ’54, and
Richard A. Klein, ’52, JD ’55
Ronald P. Klein, ’49
Sylvan H. Kline, Jr., ’52, MBA ’57
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S T A N F O R D
Founding Grant Society (Continued)
Thomas F. Kling, MBA ’48
John R. Klotz
Iris H. and J. Burke Knapp, ’33
Mary E. and Thomas A. Knapp, ’71
Joseph E. Knowles, Jr., ’63
Katherine Smith Knudsen
Jill and Donald E. Knuth
Gale G. and Steven W. Kohlhagen, MA ’71, PhD ’74
Ruth* and Ralph L. Kokjer
Marjorie D. and Max G. Kolliner, ’31*
Vivian and Sidney Konigsberg
Evelyn Konrad, ’49, MA ’49
Emily Howe Kooken, MA ’54, and
John F. Kooken, ’53, MS ’54, Sloan ’58, PhD ’61
Phoebe Korn
John R. Koza
Donna Goodheart Krupp, ’42, and
Marcus A. Krupp, ’34, MD ’39
John A. Kussmaul, LLB ’67
Gerald T. Kutchey, MBA ’73
Gladys Kwong
Richard L. Kylberg, ’56
Lois A. and George D. Ladas*
Susan M. Lammers, ’80
Ogden J. Lamont, ’50
Jean and L. William Lane, Jr., ’42
George W. Lane, ’50
Joan and Melvin B. Lane, ’44
Janna Smith Lang, PhD ’69, and Kurt F. Lang, ’58
Adele Golby Langendorf, ’50, and
Donald I. Langendorf, ’49
Mary Lanigar, ’38
Elizabeth and Alexander Lanz, ’61
Steven J. LaPointe, ’76
William R. Large, Jr., MA ’66
Geraldine E. LaRocque, PhD ’65
Pamela P. and Lonnie E. Laster
Nicholas T. Latham, ’74
Myra T. and Robert H. Lawrence, ’32, LLB ’35
Joyce Lawson
Milton J. Lear, ’38
Shirley T. and Charles H. Leavell*
JoAnne C. and Richard Leavenworth, ’61,
MS ’62, PhD ’64
Rudolph S. Lederer II, ’57
Nina Lee, ’87
Pei-Fang Lee, ’95, and Allen P. Chen, ’93, MS ’98
Richard D. Lee, ’57
Robert Lehrer, PhD ’62
Franklin A. Leib, ’66
Charles D. Leighton, ’53, MS ’59
Alice C. LeMaistre, ’67, MA ’71
Sharon B. Lesgold, MA ’68, and
Alan M. Lesgold, MA ’68, PhD ’71
James J. Letterer, ’68
John E. Leveen, ’49
Phyllis Leveen, ’47, MA ’51
Lanny D. Levin, ’71
Babette M. Levingston, ’47
Arthur Levinson, ’48
Kathy Levinson, ’77
Anne Lehmann Levison, ’50, and
Robert M. Levison, ’48*
Marcia Klein Levy, MA ’71, and James H. Levy
Galina I. and Lev J. Leytes,
Josephine Bufalino Libaw, ’73, and
Shawn D. Libaw, ’76
Daryl L. and John M. Lillie, ’59, MS ’64, MBA ’64
Joan and Dean R. Lindsay
Steven Lipson
Jack L. Littlepage, PhD ’67
May Shang Liu, ’64, and Chang-Keng Liu, PhD ’66
Frances E. Liu, ’72
Norman Livermore, Jr., ’33, MBA ’36
Diana B. and Ralph S. Lobdell, MBA ’72
Elizabeth Fishman Loftus, MA ’67, PhD ’70
Gail and Ralph E. Love, Jr., ’56
Frances L. Low and Robert A. Low, ’41
James E. Ludlam, ’36
Sarah L. La Fetra and Arthur J. Ludwick, ’62, MS ’63
Mrs. James B. Ludwig and Mr. James B. Ludwig, ’45*
Nancy and Tor Lund, MS ’69
Carolyn Crosby Lundgren
Doris S. and David A. Lush, JD ’49
Eric Lutkin, ’82
Michael A. Lutz, MBA ’79
M. Joan Lyon, ’51, MA ’52
Betsy and Jack Lyons
Janet Barbour MacDonald, ’50
Leanne Brothers MacDougall, ’63
Kenneth J. MacKenzie, MA ’65
Frank H. MacLaren, ’58
Bonnie B. Madden, ’65
Mary L. and Baxter C. Madden*
Elaine and Henry D. Magnin, ’43*
Jane K. Malbon, ’81
Frances* and Richard Mallery, JD ’63
Calvin Manning, ’39
Helen Amerman Manning, MA ’44, and John E. Manning
Dorothy V. and Arnold Manor, ’31, MD ’35
Thomas A. Maravilla, ’77
Linda Mickelson Marcuse, MA ’66, and
E. K. Marcuse, MD ’67
Jean B. and Larry H. Marks, Jr., ’40*
Mary Q.* and Charles E. Marshall
Doreen D. Marshall
Amanda J. Martin and Mark Cairns
Barbara and Donovan Martin
Linda and William L. Martin, ’61, MS ’62
Nancy C. Martin, ’61
William B. Marx, Jr., Sloan ’78
Virginia and George G. Mason*
Mary A. Corthell Matthews, ’50
Darle Hermann Maveety, ’51, MA ’52, and
P. J. Maveety, ’51, MA ’75
Catherine A. Mayer, ’67
George L. Mayer, ’66
Michael G. McCafferty, MBA ’64
Margaret A. McComas, ’67
Gretchen and Allen P. McCombs, ’51
Phyllis Richards McCreery, ’43, and
Henry F. McCreery, PhD ’47*
Darlene P. and Brian P. McCune, PhD ’80
Gayle S. and John C. McDonald, ’57, MS ’59, ENG ’64
Nancy and Patrick J. McGaraghan, ’66
Kay and Arthur T. McIntosh III, ’63
Loran Chandler McIvor, ’55, and
Robert R. McIvor, ’52, MD ’55
William C. McIvor, ’54, MD ’57
Reiko and David McKendry
Judith Kehoe McKibben, ’61, and
James H. McKibben, ’60, JD ’63
Christine McLeroy
Catherine A. and Stephen T. McLin, MS ’70, MBA ’72
Sharon Tettemer McLin, ’61
Deedee and Burton J. McMurtry, MS ’59, PhD ’62
Barbara G. and Denman K. McNear, MBA ’50
* Deceased
12
Carolyn Johnson McPhail, ’53, MA ’54, and
Ian D. McPhail
Linda Randall Meier, ’61, and Anthony P. Meier, ’57
Victoria Sperry Merchant, ’73, JD ’77, and
James P. Merchant, ’68, MBA ’70, JD ’72
Phyllis Martin Merrifield, ’40, and
Charles W. Merrifield, ’61*
Elizabeth Call Merrill
Sharon Merrill
Mary Mettler, ’59
Margaret A. Metzger, ’83, and
Douglas H. Clark, ’83, MS ’86
Inez F. and Myrl A. Meyer, ’52, JD ’53
Robert A. Meyer, Jr., PhD ’69
Sandra K. and Richard J. Michael
James I. Michaelis, ’60
Angela Chen Miksovsky, ’93, and Jan T. Miksovsky
Jayne Seydell Milburn, ’36, MA ’38
Patricia Smith Milburn, ’41
Holly Millar, ’62, MA ’63
Patricia A. and Junius W. Millard II, ’51, MS ’56
Roy J. Millender, Jr., ’60
Alan Elliott Miller, ’61
Eleanor W. and Howard J. Miller, ’50
J. Sanford Miller, JD ’74, MBA ’75
Luiza Miller
Lynn R. Miller, MA ’64
Patty Smith Miller, MA ’68, and William F. Miller
Roberta S. Miller
Samuel C. Miller, ’51
Amy Kommer Minella, MBA ’80
Susan Brookstone-Mirbach, ’80, and
William H. Mirbach
Bruce T. Mitchell, ’49, JD ’51
Carolyn G. and David W. Mitchell, ’57
Jean Bothwell Mitchell, ’36
William R. Mitchell, ’40, JD ’47
Eunice M. Mohrdick
Margaret and G. Douglas Moir, ’65
Jean R. and Clark A. Moore II, ’49, MA ’51
Nancy Huddleston Packer, professor
emerita of English at Stanford, entertained
the audience with her presentation on
renowned writer Wallace Stegner. Stegner
founded Stanford’s creative writing
program in 1946 and served on the
faculty until 1971.
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Elaine Walker Moore, ’62, MA ’64, and
Daniel E. Moore, ’62, MA ’64
Warren G. Moore, ’70, MBA ’72
Jeffrey J. Morris, ’67
Joan Welch Morris, ’55
Veronica and John K. Morrison III, ’60
Nancy Pettigrew Moser, ’37, and
James S. Moser, ’37*
Michael G. Mueller, MBA ’81
Anita Utt Muhs, ’31, and Fred R. Muhs*
Elizabeth A.* and William J. Muir
Henry Muller, ’68
Sherry Hossom Muller, ’58, MA ’63, and
Eric S. Muller, ’54
Sharon R. and Terry Mullin, ’43
Keith F. Mulrooney, ’54
Chris Mumford, ’68, MBA ’75
Ann J. and David M. Munro, ’63, JD ’66
Daphne A. and R. J. Munzer*
William E. Murane, LLB ’57
Gail A. and Robert W. Murphy, Jr., ’53
Ronald D. Murphy, MBA ’69
Steven S. Myers, ’74
Ronald J. Nachman, PhD ’81
Atsuko and Patrick N. Nagano, ’40
Edith R. Carlson* and Samuel Nakamura, MBA ’77
Joyce Donovan Nash, MA ’75, PhD ’77
Joanne Frye Nay, ’57, and Paul D. Nay
Ann Prescott Nelson, ’62, MA ’63, and
Warren R. Nelson, ’60, MA ’63
Doris A. and Bruce E. Nelson, MS ’49, ENG ’51
Charlene and Lee Nesbitt
J. Ryan Neville, ’49, MA ’51, PhD ’55
Alicia Crowell Newman, ’56, MA ’57, and
Merrill E. Newman, MA ’55
Pauline Newman-Gordon
Ann H. Nicholas, ’53, MA ’61
Carolyn D. Nicholson, ’52
Karen B.* and Nils J. Nilsson, MS ’55, PhD ’58
Rose Fox Noll, ’56
Theodore M. Norton, ’47, LLB ’49
Mary K. and Norman J. Novello
Claire Merrill O'Connell, ’53, and Richard O’Connell, ’52
Sandra Day O’Connor, ’50, LLB ’52, and
John J. O'Connor III, ’51, LLB ’53
Mary W. and Donald D. O’Neal, MBA ’85
Harley D. Oakley
Susan Page Ohrenschall, ’51, and Robert Ohrenschall
Jane E. and John G. Olin, MS ’62, PhD ’66
Marilyn Tower Oliver, ’57, MA ’58
Brigitte Steffe Olson, MA ’74, and Paul I. Olson
Gilbert S. Onaka, ’66
Martha Edwards Orcutt, ’75, and
John A. Orcutt, ’74, MBA ’76
Nancy Wilson Ordway, ’46, and William A. Ordway, ’49
Marilyn J. and Gerald J. Origlia, ’46, MBA ’48
Paul A. Ormond, ’71, MBA ’73
Susan Packard Orr, ’68, MBA ’70, and
Franklin M. Orr, Jr., ’69
Marion Shikamura Osborne, ’51, MA ’52, MD ’56, and
Maurice M. Osborne, Jr.
Donald C. Ostrus
Ellen Cook Otto, ’66
Chris J. Panopulos, MBA ’51
Elaine S.* and Jack S. Parker, ’39
Pauline W. and Henry W. Parker
Virginia and Benjamin H. Parkinson, Jr., ’43, JD ’49*
Virginia W. and Bradford W. Parkinson, PhD ’66
Annette S. and Robert M. Parks, ’59
E S T A T E
P L A N N I N G
The winners of the 2006 FGS luncheon “Trivia Quiz”
Diana J. Parsons, ’70, MD ’76, and
Paul H. Baastad, ’65, MBA ’68
Wilma J. Partridge
Susan J. Passovoy, ’67
Virginia Patterson, ’44, MA ’46
Sue K. Patton
Elizabeth M. Payne
Jerold E. Pearson, ’75
Mary Pease
Otis A. Pease
Jean* and Austin H. Peck, Jr., ’35, JD ’38
Catherine Clift Peck, ’35
William M. Pegram, ’73, MBA ’77
Diana I. and Shih-Wei Peng, ’90
Pamela Perkins
Marie and Joseph Perrelli*
Leonilla M. and William J. Perry, ’49, MS ’50
Carol Stearns Peters, ’47, and Colin M. Peters, JD ’47
Jeannetta Riding Peters, ’59
Audrey Noall Peterson, MA ’61
David Leroy Peterson, ’61
Janet Maines Peterson, ’75, MA ’76, and
Eric D. Peterson, ’74
Nancy Peterson
Lise A. Pfeiffer, ’75
Nadine and Edward M. Pflueger
Meredith Bowen Phillips, ’65
Helen Dietz Pickering, ’47, and
Joseph F. Pickering, ’48, MBA ’50
Billie K. Pirnie
Nancy M. and Stephen W. Player, ’63
Susan L. and Herbert F. Polesky, ’54, MD ’57
James M. Pollock, ’58
Stephen L. Poohar, ’70
Ruth Nusbaum Poole, ’54, MA ’55
Martha C. and James H. Poppy
John L. Porter, ’50
L. Timothy Portwood, ’76
Gary M. Post, ’71
Charlotte O. and Robert A. Pratt
Brenda C. Pratt III
Robert A. Pratt, ’69
Burr Preston, ’58
Marjo Langrell Price, ’49, and Albert M. Price
Robert B. Price, ’49, MD ’53
13
Helen C. and John A. Radway, Jr., ’58
Mary and Marc Ramniceanu*
Eugene B. Rauen, ’53, JD ’55
Claudia A. Ray
Shirley Stein Raymer, MA ’69, and Robert Raymer
Patricia and Rowland K. Rebele, ’51
Karen Schneider Recht, MBA ’75, and Richard Recht
Ann* and William A. Reeves, ’45, MD ’52
Dale C. Reid, JD ’61
William R. Reilly
Joan Reinhart, ’48, MS ’50
Walter B. Reinhold, ’49
Barbara Babson Renshaw, ’56, and Lauren Shaw
Margot Brownrigg Reppy, ’36, and William Reppy*
Lily and Tom B. Rhodes, ’39
Marilyn and Donald B. Richardson, Jr., ’50
Jill and Scott D. Richmond, ’60
Helen Ridge, ’50
R. Sanford Riley III, ’59, MS ’63, MBA ’64
Lynn Mason Rising, ’61, MBA ’68
Ethel M. and Milton H. Ritchie, MS ’75
Bradley D. Ritts, PhD ’98
Vanessa A. Roach
Viola and Richard J. Roberts*
Samuel A. Roberts, ’54
Arthur M. Robinson, MBA ’50
Tamara and Charles W. Robinson, MBA ’47
Helen L. and Russell G. Robinson*
Violet B. Robinson, EdD ’70
Frank Rockwell
Gregory G. Rockwell, ’66
Robert C. Rodert
Roberta Martin Rodgers, ’51, and
Joseph L. Rodgers, ’51, MS ’53
Mary Belle Rogers, ’64
N. Stewart Rogers, ’51
Virginia Claussen Rood, ’61
Judith and Louis H. Rorden, ’54, MS ’55
Stanford L. Rose, ’31
Stephen C. Rose, ’63, MS ’70
Lisbeth W. and Herman H. Rosenfeld, ’51
Rosemarie Frey Rosenfeld, ’53
Edith S. and George Rosenkranz
Barbara Rosenthal
Bernice H. Rosenthal, ’48
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S T A N F O R D
Founding Grant Society (Continued)
Elizabeth and Stephen Salveter
Elizabeth Boardman Ross, ’42
Norman A. Ross, ’43
Marjorie Nye Rossi, ’57, and
L. Jay Rossi, ’57, MBA ’62
Michael Roster, ’67, JD ’70
Lory E. Roston, ’50, MBA ’52
Arthur Roth, ’47, MBA ’49
Roger W. Rothenburger, ’64, MS ’66
Ellin Pear Royds, ’60
Andrew E. Rubin, JD ’74
Carol Tenenbaum Rudoff, ’63, and Arnold G. Rudoff
Dwight P. Russell, ’54, MBA ’57
Jane* and George F. Russell, Jr., ’54
Millicent J. Rutherford, ’47, MA ’66, PhD ’77
Barbara Morby Ryan, ’55
Martin F. Ryan, ’60
Robert F. Ryan, ’44, MD ’47
Mary L. and David D. Ryus III, ’39
Carol D. and Harry J. Saal
Nep S. Sabio
Joseph A. Sable, ’62
Diane Saltzberg, ’78
Elizabeth and Stephen J. Salveter
Dorothy Dey Stanford ’33
June and Nathan A. Sapiro*
Valerie Roelfsema Saul, ’76
Ellen* and Robert F. Sawyer, ’49, MBA ’50
Florence* and Samuel L. Scarlett, ’37, MD ’41
Clifford Schireson, ’75
Alice Eliot Schofield, ’46
Shirley H. Schoof
Kerry L. Schulz
Fred M. Schumacher, MS ’54
Patricia Dobson Schumacher, ’49, AM ’56
Georgia and Robert H. Schwaar
Helen and Charles R. Schwab, ’59, MBA ’61
Julie Yasuda Schwarz, ’82 and Michael E. Schwarz
Ruth A. and William H. Schwieger*
Scott E. Schwimer, ’78
Jack Scott, ’67
Barbara Taylor Sebastian, ’46, and
Frank P. Sebastian, Jr., MBA ’48
Jack H. Seeley, ’52
Ali A. Seif, MD ’61
Peter K. Seldin, MBA ’80
Eleanor D. and William F. Settle, ’47, MBA ’56
Ann Ribbel Seymour, ’59, and
Robert J. Seymour, ’56, MD ’60
Ann D. and Robert E. Shafer, ’58
Louise and Max D. Shaffrath, ’39, MD ’44
Dorothy* and William Shaftner
M. Adnan Sharkiah
Natalie* and Jon B. Shastid
Lauren Shaw
Patrick A. Shea, ’70
Anitra P. and Jack H. Sheen, ’50, MD ’55
Claus H. Shelling, ’51, MBA ’53
Barbaranne and Roger N. Shepard, ’51
Carole A. Sherman, ’65, MA ’68
Constance A. and Thomas H. Sherman, Jr., ’62
Christina H. Y. Shih, ’72, MD ’77
Gladys N. Kirby Siemens, MA ’39
Mary Sweningsen Sigworth, ’43
Donald C. Singer, ’37
Jane E. and Stephen J. Sinton, ’69
T. Pat Skeffington, ’70
Jeffrey S. Skoll, MBA ’95
Judith and Douglas A. Skoog
Betty D. Shaeffer Skov, ’65, MA ’72
Jeffrey S. Sloan, ’88
Virginia and Leon Sloss III, ’49
Joanne Briggs Slusser, ’50, and W. Peter Slusser, ’51
John H. Smissaert, ’49
Elinor Hall Smith, ’42
Gaither Hatcher Smith, ’63,* and W. Byron Smith
Gregory M. Smith, MA ’84, PhD ’89
Jane Weber Smith, ’42
Barbara P.* and William N. Snell, ’37, JD ’40
Cecil J. Snyder, ’59
Elliott* and Rixford K. Snyder, ’30, MA ’34, PhD ’40
AmyElin Anderson and George N. Somero, PhD ’67
Jane Sommerich, ’35
Richard A. Soref, PhD ’64
Vernice Hines Sorensen, ’43, MA ’46, and
Glenn W. Sorensen
Jean MacMillan Southam, ’38
Mary A. Southam, PhD ’81, and Jim Southam
Ruth Beahrs Spangenberg, MA ’65
Carl E. Sperry, ’50, MBA ’56
Marilyn J. and Ralph J. Spiegl, ’45, MD ’48
David G. Spokely, ’50, MS ’51
Margaret Keenan St. Clair
Mary A. Millas St. Peter, ’67
Patricia A. Stadel, ’60, MS ’72
Anne H. and Donald K. Stager, ’52
Shari K. and Garen K. Staglin, MBA ’68
George C. Stanley, Jr., ’54
Peter D. Stansky
Kristine J. and Douglas E. Stearley, MBA ’91
Nancy W. and Gary T. Steele, MBA ’75
Shirley P. and Robert J. Steinberg
Barbara W. and Alan B. Steiner, ’63
Verna Pace Steinmetz, ’45
Alice Condee Stelle, ’43, and A. Macneil Stelle, ’42
Elizabeth C. and Stuart B. Stephens, ’35, MD ’39
Clark Sterling, ’78
John Ross Stetson, ’55
Deborah J. Stipek
Marguerite and Carl G. Stockholm
Maryanna Gerbode Stockholm, ’60, and
Charles M. Stockholm, ’55
Constance Wright Stoldt, ’81, and
David J. Stoldt, MBA ’87
Daniel E. Stone, ’50
Joel W. Stratte-McClure, ’70
Betty Elliott Strauss, ’47
Harriet J. and Craig Strickland, ’47
Shirley Pettit Struble, ’46
Boris T. Subbotin, ’49, MS ’50, ENG ’52
Mary and Alan D. Suding
Elizabeth Y. Suffel
Joan Countryman Suit, MA ’55, PhD ’57, and
Herman D. Suit
Richard L. Sullivan, MA ’55
Shirley Ross Sullivan
Christine Patrick Suppes
John C. Suttle, ’68
Helen N. and Bernard R. Swanson, ’40
Esther L.* and Kenneth B. Swanson, ’41
Beth and Donald H. Sweet, ’46, MBA ’48
Ronald E. Switzer, ’62
Peter E. Sylvester, Jr., ’53, MBA ’55
Martha Smith Symonds, ’54
Jane Hubler Taber, ’71, and Merlin Jay Taber III, ’69
Henry* and Tomoye N. Takahashi
Stephen E. Tallent, ’59
Mary Mayer Tanenbaum, ’36* and
Charles J. Tanenbaum
David S. Tappan, Jr., MBA ’48
Dee A. and William A. Tasto, ’58
Jolene V. and Reese H. Taylor ’49
Keith E. Taylor, JD ’54
Patricia Westbrook Taylor, ’57
Richard S. Taylor
Linda Peterson Tebben, ’62, and Thomas H. Tebben
Jack E. Teeters, ’53, JD ’59
Nancy Telfer, ’51
Marjorie Horchitz Telleen, ’52, and
L. Sherman Telleen, ’52, MBA ’56
Karen Telleen-Lawton, ’78, and
David E. Telleen-Lawton, ’77, MS ’78
Barbara Riese Temby, ’46
Michael L. Tennican, ’60
Beulah Teravainen
Robert B. Textor
Lorraine Murray Thackery, ’43
Nadine Olsen Thaheld, ’55, and Ronald F. Thaheld, ’55
Nancy Thill
(Left to right)
Barbara Burnett, ’38; Virginia
Royden, ’48, MS ’49 (guest); and
Joan Reinhart, ’48, MS ’50
* Deceased
14
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C H A R I T A B L E
E S T A T E
P L A N N I N G
(Left to right) Deedee McMurtry; John
Lillie, '59, MS '64, MBA '64, former
member of the Board of Trustees; and
Burt McMurtry, '59, PhD '62, chair of
the Board of Trustees
Alice Palmer Thomas, ’51
Martin E. Thomas, ’33
Nancy and William P. Thomas*
Sally Halstead Thomas, PhD ’74
Mary C. Thompson, ’47, MD ’51
Morley P. Thompson, ’48
Vera Mae Thoms
Mary Getzoff Thorne, ’55, and John A. Thorne, ’53
Samuel D. Thurman III, ’61
Betty Callander Tight, ’48, and Dexter C. Tight
Carey Harding Timbrell, MBA ’81
Ruth Timbrell
Tod F. Tolan, ’71
Martha and Edwin L. Tolles (Parents ’81)
J. B. Townsend, ’47
Peter T. Toxby, ’60
H. Lee Trafford, ’50, JD ’52
Allan J. Farewell Trane, ’53, and Frank H. Trane, ’53
Elaine M. Triolo and James S. Triolo, ’35, MA ’36
Sally Thompson Truitt, ’56, MA ’57, and
George E. Truitt, ’56, MBA ’61
Peiti Tung, MBA ’83
Ellen Friedman Turbow, ’62, MA ’63, and
Myron M. Turbow, ’61, CRT ’79
Barbara Eickworth Turecky, ’69
Sara Little Turnbull
Mary Ittelson Tuttle, MBA ’85, and
Richard C. Tuttle, ’77, MBA ’83
Kristine and Robert A. U'Ren, ’72
Ellen E. Uhrbrock, MBA ’56
Nancy and Paul C. Valentine, LLB ’60
Richard W. Van Pelt, ’55
Jean and Cortlandt Van Rensselaer, ’44, MBA ’48
Gaylee and Richard W. Van Saun, ’59, MS ’60
Thomas van Straaten, ’57
Jeanne Schacht Vander Ploeg, ’78, and
Mark A. Vander Ploeg
Melitta* and Rex W. Vaughan
Anne W. and Donald E. Vermeil, ’68, MBA ’74
Darlene P. Vian
Cheryl and John E. Volckmann, MBA ’71
Achim von der Nuell, ’62, MBA ’64
Abbie Hicks von Schlegell, ’69
Ilse and Henry Von Witzleben*
David M. Voss, ’75
Elizabeth Johnson Wade, ’45, and Jeptha A. Wade, Jr.
Marcia Kenaston Wagner, ’56, and
Harold A. Wagner, ’57
Virginia E. Walbot, ’67
Robert M. Walker
Mary and Richard W. Wallace, PhD ’70
Mary* and George L. Wang
Calvin B. Ward, JD ’81
Priscilla A. Waring
Nani S. and Robert Warren*
Ryan T. Waters, ’95
Darlene Watt
Thomas W. Watts IV, ’80
Fay C. and John F. Weber, MD ’65
Julia Hirsch Wedekind, ’60, and Konrad F. O. Wedekind
Patricia and Marshall J. Weigel, ’41
Molly Weigent- Hayes, ’97
Richard W. Weiland, ’76
Amy C. and Peter M. Weiler, ’58, MBA ’61
Roberta S. Weinman, MA ’75, MLA ’94
Mrs. Rotraut C. Weiss, ’61
Scott D. Weiss, ’90
Diane S. and Michael R. Welch, ’77, MS ’77
Marjorie A. Wellington, ’54
Edwin A. Wells, ’49, MS ’50
Joan Coldren Wentz, ’53
Fred H. Werner
Laura Weisman Werner, ’82, and
Michael E. Werner, ’82, MS ’82
Marilyn L. Schuman Wertheimer, ’50
Bailey Robertson Westlake, ’59, and
George E. Westlake, ’60
Patricia A. Wetmore, ’45
Joan and Henry Wheeler, LLB ’50
Gwyla L. and William B. Whistler*
Douglas C. White, ’51, JD ’57
Joyce Nash White, ’75, PhD ’77, and
Morgan White, ’66, MS ’69, MBA ’74
Norma Hazlett White, ’47, and H. Kenneth White
Mary Berckelaer Whittier, ’57, and
Robert M. Whittier, ’57
Olga and Bruce Wholey*
Jean M. and Burton A. Wilder
Paul R. Wilkins, MBA ’84
Pamela M. Wilkinson, ’62
15
Edwin E. Williams, ’32
Phyllis Kenyon Williams, ’46, and Stanford E. Williams
Robert M. Williams
George Wilson III
Marty Wilson, ’72, MS ’73
Myron R. Wilson, Jr., ’54, MD ’57
Phyllis* and Robert H. Windeler, ’35
Joyce Grier Wire, ’56, MA ’57
Dale F. Witte, ’60
Valborg R. and Oliver D. Wolcott, MBA ’42
Bruce Wolfe, ’65
Sheila A. and Mark A. Wolfson
Carolyn C. Wong
Lily Wong
Carolyn C and Thomas A. Wong, Jr., ’63
Enid Kuchel Wood, ’39
Winifred (Wini) Wood
Baldwin C. Woods
O. James Woodward III, MBA ’61
Leslie Wittenberg Wraith, ’58, and
William Wraith III, ’54, MS ’58, MBA ’59
Robert F. Wulf, ’59
Michael Yachnik, ’79
David W. Yancey, ’70, JD ’74
Christopher G. Yates, ’81
Roberta C.* and Herman V. Yeager, MA ’51, PhD ’59
Albert Hoy Yee, EdD ’65
Patricia Dobson York, ’49, AM ’56
Carmel Derecho Yuen, ’85, and Eric C. Yuen, ’85
Lida and Alejandro Zaffaroni
David C. Zalk, ’70
Susan Zhang and Charlie Xiaoli Huang
Serl E. Zimmerman, JD ’99
Every attempt has been made to ensure that this list is
accurate. However, if you notice an error in your listing,
or if you would prefer that we list you differently in
future publications, please contact Velda Garcia Jones
at vgarcia@stanford.edu or (650) 725- 4346.
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R E M E M B E R
DESIGN: MADELEINE CORSON DESIGN, SAN FRANCISCO
9/25/06
S T A N F O R D
UPCOMING EVENTS
TA X T I P S
The Office of Planned Giving is organizing
its 2007 events. Mark your calendar!
Investment Management Conference
Estate, Gift, and Generation-skipping Tax Rates Decline
As of January 1, 2006, the maximum estate, gift, and generation-skipping tax rate is 46
percent; in 2007, it will drop to 45 percent. In 2006 through 2008, only taxable estates
of $2 million or greater will be subject to federal estate tax at death.
The Stanford Management Company and the
Office of Planned Giving present a yearly report
on Stanford’s charitable trust and life income
gift program and the Stanford endowment,
for participants in the program and endowed
fund donors.
Gift Tax Annual Exclusion Rises
The annual exclusion from gift taxes has risen to $12,000 per gift recipient per year.
This means that any U.S. taxpayer may make a gift of up to $12,000 to each of an
unlimited number of persons (other than his or her spouse) each year. Gifts to U.S.
citizen spouses may still be made in unlimited amounts.
TUESDAY, MARCH 6, 2007
THURSDAY, MAY 3, 2007
Founding Grant Society Luncheon
An annual celebratory event for members of
the Founding Grant Society featuring lectures
by top faculty and alumni, hosted by the Office
of Planned Giving.
WEDNESDAY, MAY 16, 2007
Stanford Conference on Charitable Giving
Sponsored by the Office of Planned Giving each
year, this daylong conference for attorneys,
accountants, and financial planners offers
programs on tax planning and drafting for
charitable gifts.
All events will take place on the Stanford
campus at the Frances C. Arrillaga Alumni
Center, 326 Galvez Street.
For more information about gift planning
at Stanford, please visit our Web site at
http://rememberstanford.stanford.edu or
contact the Office of Planned Giving:
Toll-free: (800) 227-8977, ext. 5-4358 (USA)
International: (001) (650) 725-4358
Fax: (650) 723-6570
E-mail: rememberstanford@stanford.edu
State “Death Taxes” Vary Widely
The credit against the federal estate tax permitted for payment of state inheritance
and estate taxes was phased out entirely as of the end of 2004. Some states, such
as California, Florida, and Texas, no longer have a state “death tax.” Others, such as
Washington, Pennsylvania, and Ohio, have adopted new broad-based death taxes, each
one different. Consult your tax advisor to learn the requirements of your state.
Tax Credits for Hybrid Vehicle Purchasers
Do high gasoline prices have you considering buying a hybrid vehicle? Under the Energy
Policy Act of 2005, a tax credit of up to $3,400 is available for those who purchase the
most fuel-efficient vehicles after January 1, 2006. The amount of the credit varies by
qualifying vehicle, and the full credit is only available for a limited time, so act quickly!
More information can be found at
http://www.irs.gov/newsroom/article/0,,id=157557,00.html and
http://www.irs.gov/newsroom/article/0,,id=157632,00.html.
Tax Credits for Energy-Efficient Home Improvements
A recent tax law change provides a tax credit to improve the energy efficiency of existing
homes. The law provides varying levels of tax credit for qualified energy efficiency
improvements, such as solar panels, storm windows, water heaters, furnaces, and
circulating fans. The items must be placed in service after December 31, 2005, and
before January 1, 2008. For more information, visit
http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-drop/n-06-26.pdf.
Office of Planned Giving
Stanford University
NON-PROFIT ORG.
U.S.
POSTAGE
Frances C. Arrillaga Alumni Center
P
326 Galvez Street
PERMIT NO. 28
Stanford, CA 94305-6105
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