connections - columbia club of new york · audubon’s aviary: part i of the complete flock at the...

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connections from the president NEWSLETTER OF THE COLUMBIA CLUB OF NEW YORK Tel: 212.719.0380 Fax: 212.944.6944 [email protected] www.columbiaclub.org BOARD OF GOVERNORS 2012-2013 EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE President Mark L. Amsterdam ’66CC, ’69LAW VICE PRESIDENTS David A. Evans ’99EN David Gibson ’75GSAPP Justin Ifill ’06CC Donna Rosenthal ’67SW Tiffany Woo ’87BC TREASURER Gerald Sherwin ’55CC SECRETARY Jay Rao ’08LAW PRESIDENT EMERITUS Laurance J. Guido ’65CC, ’69P&S MEMBERS-AT-LARGE Donna H. MacPhee ’89 CC Nicholas Rudd ’64CC, ’67BU GOVERNORS Nabeel Ahmad ’09TC Kenneth Catandella Senior Executive Director for CAA and University Relations John Celock ’04JRN Michael Foss ’03CC, ’12GSAPP Patricia Francy ’84BUS James Gerkis ’80CC, ’83LAW Angela Holuba ’09BC, ’10P&S, ’12PH William Jordan V ’06CC Michwael Shiba ’08LAW Anne-Renée Testa ’91TC Regen Wallis Royce Flippin, Ex-Officio The Princeton Club of New York EXECUTIVE OFFICE Jennifer Shaw Executive Director inthe club house jointhe conver sation PAGE 2 PAGE 4 PAGE 6 onthe town APRIL / MAY 2013 from the president Dear fellow Columbians, What to do during April showers? The answer is obvious. Come to the Columbia University Club of New York. Escape the wet weather and take shelter in a warm, hospitable clubhouse filled with photos of campus, not to mention a great bar, good food and wines, a welcoming gym, and even a barber. The food is terrific, the wine will warm your spirits, and the spirits will stop any whine. When May flowers, celebrate Happy Hour on the terrace. Invite a friend or two. Enjoy what midtown has to offer. Both the Grill and the formal dining room are perfect settings to entertain clients, family and friends. Think about bringing your whole family to the Club to celebrate Mother’s Day, or just a special meal. In addition, whether you are hosting 5 people or 250, the Club can accommodate your out of office meetings, conferences, social events, parties, weddings and any other special occasion. One of the benefits of membership in the Columbia Club is our network of reciprocal Clubs that stretch from Philadelphia to the Philippines, from Tennessee to Thailand and from South Africa to South America. Located in all the major cities of the United States and across the world these reciprocal clubs offer a home away from home. My kids and I have stayed in reciprocal clubs and found them to be friendlier, warmer and more hospitable than hotels. Like our clubhouse in New York City, the reciprocal clubs are centrally located and most often the rooms are more economical than equivalent hotel rooms. In addition to business locations in cities across the United States, many of the reciprocal clubs are in prime vacation destinations with golf and tennis and spas. For example, take a look at our reciprocal club in Bermuda to see what membership in the Columbia Club can bring you. We know how important these reciprocal clubs are to our members and we continue to work to bring more clubs into the network. Most of all, please remember that the Club is here to serve you. Please let me know what we can do to make your membership more pleasurable or your event or banquet more enjoyable. Warmest regards from midtown, Mark Lemle Amsterdam ’66 CC, ’69 Law President, Columbia University Club of New York [email protected]

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Page 1: connections - Columbia Club of New York · audubon’s aviary: Part i of the CoMPlete floCk at the neW york historiCal soCiety THursday, april 11 11:00am Cost: $55 (includes tour,

c o n n e c t i o n s

f rom the president

NEWSLETTER OF THE COLUMBIA CLUB OF NEW YORK

Tel: 212.719.0380Fax: [email protected]

BOARD OF GOVERNORS2012-2013

EXECUTIVE COMMITTEEPresidentMark L. Amsterdam ’66CC, ’69LAW

VICE PRESIDENTSDavid A. Evans ’99ENDavid Gibson ’75GSAPPJustin Ifill ’06CCDonna Rosenthal ’67SWTiffany Woo ’87BC

TREASURERGerald Sherwin ’55CC

SECRETARYJay Rao ’08LAW

PRESIDENT EMERITUSLaurance J. Guido ’65CC, ’69P&S

MEMBERS-AT-LARGEDonna H. MacPhee ’89 CCNicholas Rudd ’64CC, ’67BU

GOVERNORSNabeel Ahmad ’09TCKenneth CatandellaSenior Executive Director forCAA and University RelationsJohn Celock ’04JRNMichael Foss ’03CC, ’12GSAPPPatricia Francy ’84BUSJames Gerkis ’80CC, ’83LAW Angela Holuba ’09BC, ’10P&S, ’12PHWilliam Jordan V ’06CCMichwael Shiba ’08LAWAnne-Renée Testa ’91TCRegen Wallis

Royce Flippin, Ex-OfficioThe Princeton Club of New York

EXECUTIVE OFFICE Jennifer ShawExecutive Director

inthe clubhouse

jointhe conversation

PAGE 2 PAGE 4 PAGE 6

onthetown

APRIL / MAY 2013

f rom the presidentDear fellow Columbians,

What to do during April showers? The answer is obvious. Come to the Columbia University Club of New York. Escape the wet weather and take shelter in a warm, hospitable clubhouse filled with photos of campus, not to mention a great bar, good food and wines, a welcoming gym, and even a barber. The food is terrific, the wine will warm your spirits, and the spirits will stop any whine.

When May flowers, celebrate Happy Hour on the terrace. Invite a friend or two. Enjoy what midtown has to offer.

Both the Grill and the formal dining room are perfect settings to entertain clients, family and friends. Think about bringing your whole family to the Club to celebrate Mother’s Day, or just a special meal. In addition, whether you are hosting 5 people or 250, the Club can accommodate your out of office meetings, conferences, social events, parties, weddings and any other special occasion.

One of the benefits of membership in the Columbia Club is our network of reciprocal Clubs that stretch from Philadelphia to the Philippines, from Tennessee to Thailand and from South Africa to South America. Located in all the major cities of the United States and across the world these reciprocal clubs offer a home away from home. My kids and I have stayed in reciprocal clubs and found them to be friendlier, warmer and more hospitable than hotels. Like our clubhouse in New York City, the reciprocal clubs are centrally located and most often the rooms are more economical than equivalent hotel rooms.

In addition to business locations in cities across the United States, many of the reciprocal clubs are in prime vacation destinations with golf and tennis and spas. For example, take a look at our reciprocal club in Bermuda to see what membership in the Columbia Club can bring you. We know how important these reciprocal clubs are to our members and we continue to work to bring more clubs into the network.

Most of all, please remember that the Club is here to serve you. Please let me know what we can do to make your membership more pleasurable or your event or banquet more enjoyable.

Warmest regards from midtown,

Mark Lemle Amsterdam ’66 CC, ’69 LawPresident, Columbia University Club of New [email protected]

Page 2: connections - Columbia Club of New York · audubon’s aviary: Part i of the CoMPlete floCk at the neW york historiCal soCiety THursday, april 11 11:00am Cost: $55 (includes tour,

in the c lubhouse in the clubhouse

2 www.columbiaclub.org www.columbiaclub.org 3

inthe clubhouse

Claudia l. Johnson, Murray Professor of english literatureJane austen’s Cults and CulturesTuesday, april 2

6:00pm: Wine reception6:30pm: lectureCost: Free for members, $10 for guests

Join Claudia Johnson, 2012 CHOiCe Outstanding academic Title award winning author, to discuss how Jane austen went from writer to cult figure. professor Johnson considers the most important monuments and portraits of austen, exploring how the author’s image has become inseparable from the characters and fictional worlds she created.

Chris Margallo Winning isn’t everything: an interaCtive session on sPorts and inJury PreventionTHursday, april 4

6:00pmlocation: Fitness CenterCost: $10 for members and guests

This hands-on workshop will focus on injury prevention and improving your current athletic skill level. led by Chris Margallo (co-founder/owner of progressive Movement physical Therapy and sports rehab and board certified sports Clinical specialist), attendees will actively participate in learning basic techniques to avoid injuries and enjoy a 15-minute personal consultation.

dr. anne Marie slaughter & andreW roMano“Why WoMen still Can’t have it all” Wednesday, april 10

6:00pm: Wine reception6:30pm: lecture8:00pm: dinner Cost for reception & lecture: Free for members, $10 for guestsCost for reception, lecture & dinner: $55++ for members, $65++ for guests

last summer’s article for The atlantic, “Why Women still Can’t Have it all,” stoked the ever-smoldering issue of women’s struggles for work-life balance. Join the author, dr. anne Marie slaughter, in discussion with andrew romano (senior newsweek writer and co-author of “Men’s lib…Why it’s Time to re-imagine Masculinity at Home and at Work”). Judith Hole suratt (co-author of “rebirth of Feminism”) moderates.

Money & PoWer: hoW goldMan saChs CaMe to rule the WorldTuesday, april 16 *Rescheduled from Tuesday, October 30

6:30pm: Wine reception7:00pm: lectureCost: Free for members, $10 for guestsevent Host: patty Tobin

new york Times bestselling author, William Cohan, joins us for a fascinating look at one of the biggest financial players of our time. a former senior Wall street M&a investment banker at lazard Frères & Co, Merrill lynch and Jp Morgan Chase, Cohan is a graduate of Columbia university’s school of Journalism and Graduate school of Business.

dr. Mary solantoattention-defiCit/hyPeraCtivity disorder: Myths & realityMOnday, april 22

6:00pm: Wine reception6:30pm: lectureCost: Free for members, $10 for guests

dr. Mary solanto’s research focuses on the cognitive and behavioral functioning of children and adults with adHd, the effects of psychostimulants, and the characteristics of other forms of adHd. she has developed a novel cognitive- behavioral intervention that targets problems of time-management and organization in adults with adHd.

lorenzo Prendini, Ph.d., Curator of araChnida and MyriaPoda, aMeriCan MuseuM of natural history, neW yorkliving fossils: the fasCinating World of sCorPionsWednesday, april 24

6:30pm: reception7:00pm: lectureCost: Free for members, $10 for guests and non-members

spend an evening delving into one of the oldest lineages of terrestrial organisms – scorpions. dr lorenzo prendini will explore a spectrum of topics: the antiquity and diversity of scorpions, their medical importance and pharmaco-logical potential, their courtship rituals and parental care, their role as indicators of environmental change and human threats to scorpion survival.

stePhen sChulhoferMore essential than ever: the fourth aMendMent in the tWenty-first CenturyWednesday, May 1

6:00pm: Wine reception6:30pm: lectureCost: Free for members, $10 for guests

The Fourth amendment grants citizens the right to be “secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures.” in the digital age, our personal privacy has become much more complicated. Join legal expert, professor stephen schulhofer, for a discussion of safety versus privacy. He argues intense policies such as airport body scanning, drug testing and law enforcement patrol have a negative effect on minorities, dissenters and unorthodox thinkers, though they can affect us all.

an evening With aMbassador J. staPleton royTHursday, May 7

6:00pm: Wine reception6:30pm: lectureevent Host: arlyne Krum

ambassador J. stapleton roy was born in China and spent much of his youth there during the upheavals of World War ii and the Communist revolution. after a 45 year career in the us Foreign service (which included, among other intrigues, his participation in the 1978 secret negotiations establishing us-prC diplomatic relations), ambassador roy retired with the rank of Career ambassador, the highest in the service. in 2008, he joined the Woodrow Wilson international Center for scholars to head the newly created Kissinger institute on China and the united states.

an evening With dr. Max goMezTuesday, May 21

6:00pm: Wine reception6:30pm: lectureCost: Free for members, $10 for guestsevent Host: Trish Belfatto

respected medical journalist, dr. Max Gomez, will join us to discuss adult stem cell research and the treatments that repair damaged hearts, restore sight, kill cancer, cure diabetes, heal burns, and stop the march of degenerative diseases. dr. Gomez is co-author of The Healing Cell: How the Greatest Revolution in Medical History is Changing Your Life, a result of a unique collaboration between the Vatican’s pontifical Council for Culture and the stem for life Foundation. it includes a special address by His Holiness Benedict XVi, urging increased support and awareness for advancements in adult stem cell research.

sCotCh & Cigar tasting on the terraCeTuesday, May 28

6:30pm-8:30pmCost: $115 per person (includes whiskies, wine, small bites, cigars, tax & gratuity)

scotsman nicholas pollacchi, founder and CeO of The Whisky dog, hosts a night of whisky and fine cigars on the terrace. nicholas has sourced an unbelievable array of rare and collectible whiskies for this special evening. Cigar aficionados will be cutting and lighting the davidoff Winston Churchill #10, a fantastic, medium-bodied smoke handmade in the dominican republic (Cuban seed).

all reservations are final sale.

Jay sullivanraising gentle Men: lives at the orPhanage edgeTHursday, May 13

6:30pm: Wine reception7:00pm: lectureevent Host: Christine loomis

in raising Gentle Men, Jay sullivan tells the real-life story of three nuns who raised more than 250 boys, along with a small group of american college grads, at the alpha Boys school in Kingston, Jamaica in the 1980s. in between receiving an english degree from Boston College and a law degree from Fordham, Mr. sullivan was one of those graduates. He plans to donate the proceeds from his memoir to support the continued work of the nuns at alpha.

vladiMir alexandrov the blaCk russianTHursday, May 14

6:00pm: Wine reception6:30pm: lecture and Q&a

dr. Vladimir alexandrov illuminates the biography of Frederick Bruce Thomas. Born to former slaves in Mississippi in 1872, Thomas ended up in russia by 1899, and finding no color line there, made Moscow his home. He renamed himself “Fyodor Fyodorovich Tomas,” and became one of the city’s richest and most famous owners of variety theaters and restaurants. after the Bolshevik revolution and near ruin, Frederick made a second fortune in Constantinople. He opened a series of nightclubs that introduced jazz to Turkey, before the reach of american racism, xenophobia and his own extravagance led to his demise.

for more information about the speakers and events, or to make reservations, please visit our website at www.columbiaclub.org.

Page 3: connections - Columbia Club of New York · audubon’s aviary: Part i of the CoMPlete floCk at the neW york historiCal soCiety THursday, april 11 11:00am Cost: $55 (includes tour,

on the town on the town

4 www.columbiaclub.org www.columbiaclub.org 7

PiPPin theater night Tuesday, april 9

6:00pmCost: $130 (includes 3-course meal with glass of wine, orchestra ticket, and talk-back)

after dinner at the Club, enjoy the new production of pippin, direct from an acclaimed run at Boston’s american repertory Theater, followed by an exclusive talk back with select cast and crew members. directed by diane paulus (Hair, porgy and Bess) and scored by stephen schwartz (Wicked, Godspell), pippin features sizzling Fosse-style choreography and breathtaking acrobatics.

all reservations are final sale. please meet at the Club for dinner.

audubon’s aviary: Part i of the CoMPlete floCk at the neW york historiCal soCiety THursday, april 11

11:00amCost: $55 (includes tour, lunch,tax & gratuity)event Host: Marilyn de lalio

Celebrating the release of the lavishly illustrated book Audubon’s Aviary: The Original Watercolors for “The Birds of America,” this sweeping three-part, three-year exhibition will showcase 474 stunning watercolors originally prepared by audubon (1827–38). alongside engaging state-of-the-art media installations, these works inspire a deeper understanding of the connection between art and nature.

all reservations are final sale. please meet at the nyHs, 170 Central park West.

enJoy a taste of lunCh & history at the Colony Club THursday, april 18

12:00pmCost: $98 (includes lecture, 3-course lunch, glass of wine, tax & gratuity)event Host: John Moore

you’re invited as Kathryn livingston Forgan, author of the new biography of lilly pulitzer, welcomes us to The Colony, considered by many to be the best of new york women’s clubs. From its forceful women founders (WWi ambulance drivers, Oscar Wilde’s literary agent, and a mother of american interior design) to the original clubhouse by architect stanford White, The Colony’s impressive history carries on today in its current building at 62nd and park.

all reservations are final sale. please meet the group at the Club, 564 park avenue. Gentlemen are kindly asked to wear a jacket and tie.

thornton Wilder’s “the skin of our teeth”sunday, april 28

7:00pmlocation: 150 e. 36th street, The amateur Comedy ClubCost: Free for members

This pulitzer prize- winning comedy portrays the family of George antrobus (Greek for “human” or “person”) as they face the ice age, noah’s Flood, and war, along the way inventing the alphabet and the wheel. With absurdist humor and playful anachronisms, the play caustically exposes the human condition – repeatedly risking its future, but somehow eking its way along. a wine reception will follow the performance, allowing Club members an opportunity to meet the actors.

onthetown

visit the barnes MuseuM in PhiladelPhia saTurday, april 27

9:15amCost: $90 (includes transportation, 2-course lunch & tour)event Host: Marilyn de lalio

Join us on a trip to the Barnes Museum’s world famous art collection in its new, philadelphia location. Our transportation from the Club will take us first to the Kite & Key restaurant for lunch before we venture across the street for a special audio tour of the museum. We will leave philadelphia at 3:30pm, arriving back at the Club at approximately 6:00pm.

all reservations are final sale and will be extremely limited. please meet the group promptly at 9:15am at The princeton Club.

at a glance

aPril

2 Claudia l. Johnson 6:00 pm

3 seniors Meet for lunCh 12:00 pm

4 Chris Margallo

sPorts and inJury Prevention 6:00 pm

9 PiPPin theater night 6:00 pm

10 dr. anne Marie slaughter

& andreW roMano 6:00 pm

11 audubon’s aviary 11:00 am

13 sPring art series 2:00 pm

16 Money & PoWer 6:30 pm

18 lunCh & history

at the Colony Club 12:00 pm

18 book Club 6:30 pm

22 dr. Mary solanto 6:00 pm

24 living fossils: the fasCinating

World of sCorPions 6:30 pm

27 visit the barnes MuseuM 9:15 am

28 “the skin of our teeth” 7:00 pm

May

1 seniors Meet for lunCh 12:00 pm

1 stePhen sChulhofer 6:00 pm

7 aMbassador J. staPleton roy 6:00 pm

13 raising gentle Men: lives at

the orPhanage edge 6:30 pm

14 vladiMir alexandrov 6:00 pm

15 ColuMbia global Centers 6:00 pm

16 tour the PrinCeton

art MuseuM 9:45 am

18 sPring art series 2:00 pm

21 dr. Max goMez 6:00 pm

23 book Club 6:30 pm

28 sCotCh & Cigar tasting 6:30 pm

30 Jazz at linColn Center 6:45 pm

tour the PrinCeton art MuseuM & lunCh at ProsPeCt houseTHursday, May 16

9:45amCost: $89 (includes transportation, buffet lunch, tour, tax & gratuity)event Host: Helen Mclaughlin

enjoy a docent-led tour of the critically- acclaimed Revealing the African Presence in Renaissance Europe at The princeton art Museum. during the 15th and 16th centuries, strong ties were formed between europe and africa, apparent in the works of many artists including dürer, rubens, and Veronese.

all reservations are final sale. please meet promptly in the lobby of the Club.

for more information about the speakers and events, or to make reservations, please visit our website at www.columbiaclub.org.

global sCholarshiP in a Modern WorldWednesday, May 156:00pm?Cost: ??

Globalization is the premier driver of change in the 21st Century. From business and telecommunications to arts and culture, the world is increasingly becoming interconnected and global in perspective. as a direct response to this new paradigm, Columbia university has established the Columbia Global Centers, an integrated network of centers creating opportunities in research, scholarship, learning and outreach, across major metropolitan cities throughout the world. There are currently eight global centers operating in Beijing, amman, paris, Mumbai, istanbul, santiago, nairobi and rio de Janeiro.

The Centers promote research projects and education programs that require working across disciplinary boundaries, having a presence in multiple regions, and engaging non-Columbia experts and scholars. The Centers provide facilities, staff with rich local expertise, and collaborative learning environments aimed at enhancing the specialized work done by faculty, students, and alumni. They connect Columbia to deeper networks of expertise and to people around the globe… and quite possibly connect these places back to you! The Centers host activities, bring together personal networks, serve as alumni connectors and regional homes for area alumni, and facilitate opportunities for engagement with a global community of scholarship and intellectual discovery.

Join professor safwan M. Masri, Vice president for Global Centers, and a distinguished panel, for a fascinating conversation about the global centers. included will be a discussion about current and potential alumni participation in this emerging and expanding global initiative of Columbia university.

Page 4: connections - Columbia Club of New York · audubon’s aviary: Part i of the CoMPlete floCk at the neW york historiCal soCiety THursday, april 11 11:00am Cost: $55 (includes tour,

jo in the conversat ion

seniors Meet for lunCh Wednesday, april 312:00pm

Wednesday, May 112:00pm

Wednesday, June 0512:00pm

seniors meet for lunch on the first Wednesday of the month. reservations are not required, but please try to arrive by noon, and stay for two happy hours. Gather in the lounge following our luncheon for more conversation and camaraderie.

6 www.columbiaclub.org www.columbiaclub.org 7

book Club THursday, april 186:30pmA Short History of Reconstruction, eric Foner

THursday, May 236:30pm Thomas Jefferson: The Art of Power (pages 1-250), Jon Meacham

please note that authors will not be in attendance.

For more information or to rsVp, email Jill Hurwitz ([email protected]).

new members

Helen doodysandra dorffi pezzulli ‘96nrserica dorfman ‘11CCBenjamin duke ‘93laWpolly rimer duke ‘85CuKatie dziaksusan dzieduszycka-suinat steven eaton ‘05sipaJulie egan ‘06sipapeter engelbach ‘64Bussheila engelbachHoward engelsen ‘63BusFemi enigbokan ‘01CCrachael esman ‘12CCCheryl Farrell ‘12sCerebecca Fattell ‘14CCreva Feinstein ‘95sipaalexander Fekula ‘12GsJessica Fields ‘12Busdavid Fischer ‘10Busshawn FitzGerald ‘80CCMichael Fitzsimons ‘14BusGloria Fitzsimons ‘78TCr. Michael Fitzsimons robert C. Fleder ‘69CC, ‘73laWlaura W. Flederandrea Foster ‘88JrnJoyce Francis ‘87sWalexander Frantzen ‘11Gsrobert Frech ‘14CCJill Frickenhaus ‘97nrspaul Frickenhausnewton Frohlich ‘56CC, ‘59laWMartha Frohlich Frank Furillo ‘70CC, ‘76seasJessica Galgano ‘05Gsas, ‘07Gsaspaul Gallagher ‘68CCpamela durborow Gallagher ‘69BCCharles Gallagher ‘96Bussalvatore Gambino ‘12laWCarroll Geldermann ‘15CCalexandros Georgiadis ‘85sipaKurt Getz ‘10CCimmanuel Gilen ‘12appMarco Giovannini ‘14Bussusan Gladstone ‘99BC, ‘13GsasTony Gleasonerin Glennon ‘12CCJoseph Goldschmid ‘14laWBhargava Gorty ‘13sCeedward Grace ‘83TCann Graham ‘81Gsemily Greer ‘14Gsasdavid Griffin ‘15laWJeffrey Grossman ‘05Buslalit Gurnani ‘11CCali Gursel ‘94laWalev Gurel Gurselsusan Hannah ‘82GsasKate Hansen ‘12seasdavid Hanson ‘09BusWilliam d. HarterKenneth Hatton ‘11BusJulian Hector ‘10seas, ‘17seasWilliam Herman ‘59laWelizabeth Hermansamantha Hicks ‘11BCKenneth Hirsch ‘69laWCorey Hirschserena Ho ‘11CCsimone Hoermannshalei Holway ‘13BCMarguerette Hosbach ‘76Bus Cassandra Hoy ‘12TCJames Hsieh ‘14BusMimi Huang ‘13sCe

Kathleen abate ‘86sWarthur abatedonia abdelaziz ‘12CCaaron abend ‘82Busphilip adkins ‘80CCnastassia adkins ‘15CCanagnostis agelarakis ‘88Gsaserman agirnasli ‘11appanstiss agnew ‘75sOCadeel ahamed ‘12BusJames ajello ‘14 BusJohn akasie ‘05Bus, ‘96JrnJosephine amin ‘13Gsalice anderson ‘78nrsdouglas Bruce andrewsannette anthony ‘89laWHenri arslanian ‘14Busalfredo axtmayer ‘15nrsBrad BakerFrancesco Bartolozzi ‘06appnancy Becker ‘92ls, ‘99TCpeter Belk ‘02laWevan Berger ‘09BusMatthew Bernard ‘88appJim Best ‘97TClandis Bestira Bezoza ‘72laWelizabeth Bibb ‘83Jrnsumner Billingsley ‘13Gsasandrew Blauner ‘90BusMarshall BlonskyTed Boesky ‘98TCJason BordoffFrank Brady ‘76sOaMaxine Bradysarah Brovman ‘11CCMelandee Brown ‘02pspeter Brunell ‘82BusMark Burch ‘83BusCaitlin Burk ‘12CClisa Burke ‘02Gsasalexander Burns ‘13Gspetra CahillChristian Caminiti ‘14GsasJolyne Caruso-FitzGerald ‘81BCJulie Castignetti ‘13Busrobert Cave ‘13Gsroberta Chapey ‘75TCCharlotte Chapman ‘07BC, ‘14Busdanielle Chen ‘14sWeun Cho ‘03seasamanda Clark MacMullan ‘79GsasMatthew Codner ‘12sCeedmond Coller ‘63CCMary ann Collini ‘64CCKathleen Collins ‘75CC, ‘79pHGerald ConroyJuliette Conte ‘12CCMichael Corasaniti ‘91BusTom Cordiner ‘08GsasJinelle Craig ‘07CCpaul Cronson ‘79CC, ‘83BusCaroline Cronson ‘89Buspaul Curley ‘94laWTamara daCosta ‘13Gsalan davidson ‘12laWKatie davies ‘12sipaTaylor davis ‘14BusJoseph de simone ‘92CCCarla de ycaza ‘07GsasJerome deluccio ‘74seasshanagh dely ‘13sCeJohn diMartino ‘75CCGeorgia diMartinoJames donaghy ‘11Busderek doody ‘14Bus

Beth a. Millersam Milliken ‘64GsVicente T. Millselihu Modlin ‘50Bus, ‘53laWdorothy Modlinsebastian Momtazi ‘12Gsaslore MonnigJames Moore ‘06CCdonald Moore ‘89sOaMark Moroses ‘85CCsusanMary Morris ‘10TCKaeley Morton ‘10CCKaren MouldingGuillaume Moyen ‘11Bussean Mullen ‘14Busshamsudeen Mustafa ‘06Bus, ‘15sipadavid MyersJason Myles ‘14JrnMarianna nash ‘12JrnKim navarro ‘04GsChristelle niamke ‘13sCeerik norland ‘00GsasJessiny nueces ‘15Gsafam nwandu ‘14sipaekrem Okyay ‘14seasJudy Onghai ‘89TCMichael Onghaishelley Orensteinleanna Orr ‘12JrnJuan Orvananos ‘95appTara Ostroweahmed OtokitiKatharina Otto-Bernstein ‘86CC, ‘92sOaGuner Oztuna ‘65GsClaudia paksarah parks ‘14CCramon parsons ‘83CCWilliam pasmoreMary pasmoresarita patankar ‘14CCMatthew pearsonsocrates pichardo ‘13sCeMichael piech ‘15sOaJoanna l. piligian ‘84TCJacqueline piluso ‘14TCalessandro pireno ‘13BusMolly poagJoseph pomp ‘13CCMonica puri ‘12BCTerence Quinnpraveen rawat ‘13sCeChris reitz ‘13sCeMorgan reitz aline reynolds ‘07BC, ‘09JrnTony rickertBrian robbins ‘88laWBrooke robbins ‘17CCKimberly robbins ‘89laWCorey robertsToni robinson ‘76laWdinorah rodriguez ‘00sWTomas rodriguez ‘11CCarthur romeo Jr. ‘12BusMelissa rosete-WolfeJohn rowan ‘01seasdavid rowe ‘11TC, ‘16TCBenjamin royce ‘13sCeThomas H. rudy ‘06CCnicole rumore ‘13CCMarc ruppenstein ‘12GsBenjamin l. russell ‘05CC Henry sackler ‘06CCdavide sattin ‘05laWCharles saunders ‘88Bussteven G. schiesel ‘89Gssusan schrenzel ‘60sW

Kara Hurst ‘93BCaaron HurstKatharyn-alexis Huseby ‘16CCFred Hyde ‘92eMBadana ibarra ‘12seaslance ignon ‘90JrnMorgan inman Gary irelandariel isaacs ‘11GsasJennifer Jaechevan Janis ‘82CCTuo Ji ‘11sCelauren Johnson ‘10TCTy JohnsonJeffrey Kashida ‘76sipaGregory Keilin ‘09CCstephanie Keogh ‘14GsJustin KeoghJoel Killion ‘05Busaki Kinjo ‘92Busyasuhiro KishimotoJamie KosmarTammy Kostelnikrobert Kubala ‘12Gsasruchit Kumbhani ‘14pHMotonobu Kurokawa ‘98appThomas Kurtz ‘13sCeleon lachman ‘51BCemmanuel lamouroux ‘13GsBJudit langhJonathan lawlor ‘69Gsdaniel leesrobert lehrman ‘58laWJane lehrmanMarc lemcke ‘96Jrnstefanie lemckeTobias levedag ‘08Busisabella levedagJiayi li ‘99Busrichard lichtenthal ‘62dOsBruce lieberman ‘78Buspatti s. lieberman ‘78sWderrick logan ‘13sCeJesse luke ‘16GsJonathan luttwak ‘14BusCarlyle Machargsalman Malik ‘05GsJulian Maller ‘04CCsophia Mancall-Bitel ‘15laWThomas Mandia ‘84CCsaul Mankes ‘13sCerobert Marcucci ‘94Buspamela Marcucciandrea Marshall ‘12BCJohn Marshall ‘13Buslynn Martellanton Mayr ‘14seasTracy Mcdaniel ‘14pHlisa Mcdonald ‘98pHleslie Mcdonald ‘78TCTodd McdonaldCassandra Mcdonough ‘13TCpatrick Mcelhone ‘13BusJohn Mcelligott ‘80sWshea McKeon ‘11seasJ. Gregory Mears ‘73psshalabh Mehrish ‘90CCGraziella Mehrishsonam Mehta ‘13MpHalexander Melecki ‘14BusTodd Melzer ‘07BusFrancisco Mena ‘12TCsarah Michet ‘05TCdaniel Millerevan Miller ‘78CCMargaret Miller ‘14sCe

jointhe conversation

darrell scott ‘14Busa. Barrett seaman ‘71Buslaura seaman Cengiz selman ‘87BusKaren selmanpaul sethi ‘07Busneil shahrestani ‘11Gsdonald shillingburg ‘93CC, ‘98Gsasdiana skerl ‘99BusMary lou skovron ‘76pH, ‘83pHThomas slanover ‘10CCJerry solomon ‘78sipadaniel southren s. david sperling ‘73Gsassean srichankij ‘13Gsr. Knight steel ‘65pslois steinberg ‘68GsasWilliam stetson ‘65Busnancy Z. stetsonedward stevens ‘67seasdavid stevensellen stevens-roseman ‘88sWalyssa strang ‘14TCColin strangHenry su ‘08BusOlivier suinat ‘92BusFrancis sypher ‘64Gsaspatrick Tangney ‘95laWKim TaylorJuliet Telford ‘08Buspeter Temes ‘94GsasVladimir Torgovnik ‘89seassandra TorgovnikGina Torino ‘09Gsasram Trichur ‘07Busandrea Tricoli ‘09BusTidjane ThiamMing Tian ‘14sipa nikul ukani ‘16GsasJasper Van santen ‘14GsJames Van schaick ‘90BusGillian Van schaick ‘90Busnina Varughese ‘99BCalyss Vavricka ‘12BClars Vercelli ‘12JrnHugo Vila ‘77BusJustin VincentMaryanne Waldman ‘79BusMary Waldrip ‘12BCGurpreet singh Walia ‘14pHdarren Walker ‘14Busryan Wallerstein ‘04sipasarah Q. Wang ‘11TCrenee Warren ‘97GsasTiffany Washburn ‘10Gsas, ‘11GsasMarie-andree WeissJennifer Williamsandrew Willis ‘97Bus, ‘97laWThomas Wilson ‘75BusCarolyn WiseJesse Wolfe ‘13sipaMichael WolferKevin Wolff ‘09TCJay Woodworth ‘65CC, ‘67Busshuofei Wu ‘12seasMichael yamashitaelisa yoo ‘04TCTarek younes ‘04Bussamantha Fillian younessamantha young ‘11sCeCristian young ‘13sCeWalter Zaryckyj ‘71CC, ‘11Gsassuzana Zayed ‘11Bus annie Zhou ‘13sipa

alan gilbert, Wynton Marsalis, and the Jazz atlinColn Center orChestraTHursday, May 30

6:45pmCost: $48 (Orchestra lC); $54 (Orchestra i)

all reservations are final sale. The concert will take place at avery Fisher Hall; tickets will be held at the Box Office under the member’s name.

sPring art series

Join Catherine lawrence for guided tours of some of the best art on view in nyC.

saTurday, april 132:00pmnational academy Museum: New Installations of Contemporary American ArtCost: $27

saTurday, May 18Chelsea art Galleries2:00pmCost: $20

saTurday, June 15The Civil War & American Art at the Metropolitan Museum of art2:00pmCost: $36

all reservations are final sale.

Page 5: connections - Columbia Club of New York · audubon’s aviary: Part i of the CoMPlete floCk at the neW york historiCal soCiety THursday, april 11 11:00am Cost: $55 (includes tour,

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EvEnt CanCEllation and no Show PoliCy

Paid Events: Cancellations for all paid events must be made with the Program office by calling 212.596.1261 during business hours, Monday through Friday, 9:00 am – 4:30 pm. no other department is authorized to accept any program reservation transaction. Unless stated otherwise, cancellations for paid events must be received by 4:30 pm two business days prior to the event. all cancellations after this time frame will be charged in full, regardless of whether the member/guest attends the event.

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thE GRillMonday – FridayBreakfast: 7:00 – 10:30 amlunch: noon – 2:30 pmdinner: 5:30 – 9:30 pmBar Service: noon – 11:00 pm

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