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                    <text>BINGHAMTON
UNIVERSITY
State University of New York
Binghamton University Department of Music

THURSDAY MID-DAY CONCERT
March 17, 2005 - Casadesus Recital Hall

Concerto No. 2, Mvmt. 1 .............................................................................. Carl Maria Von Weber
(1786-1826)
Theresa Perrone, clarinet
Margaret Reitz, piano
Premier Quator, Op. 53 (1857) ..................................................................... Jean Baptiste Singelée
(1812-1875)
Andante
Reconstitution: Jean Marie Londeix
Allegro
Quatour (1956) .................................................................................................... Pierre-Max Dubois
(b. 1930)
Spirituoso
III.
Cascades (1904) ............................................................................................................. Scott Joplin
(1868-1917)
The Binghamton University Saxophone Quartet
Amy Natiella, Emily Alkiewicz, Michael Marchisotto, Sam Reed
"Tre arietta" ........................................................................................................... Vincenzo Bellini
(1801-1835)
Il fervido desiderio
Dolente imagine di Fille mia
Vaga luna, che inargenti
Michaela Lisi, soprano
Chai-Kyou Mallinson, piano
Concerto in C minor ...................................................................................... Johann Christian Bach
( 1735-1782)
Allegro molto ma maestoso
Arr. Henri Casadesus
Melissa Lee, viola
Margaret Reitz, piano
Concerto, Op. 85 ......................................................................................................... Edward Elgar
(1857-1934)
Adagio
Alex Wiesendanger, cello
Margaret Reitz, piano
Kol Nidre ........................................................................................................................ Max Bruch
(1838-1920)
Heajung Kim, cello
Margaret Reitz, piano

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                    <text>lU

N

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BIN 

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U N I V E R S I T Y

\

. 

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L

T

.

State University of  New York

l  ‘J ­  J 
1 ' :;

Binghamton University Department of Music

C

Hh

THURSDAY MID­DAY CONCERT
March 10, 2005 – Casadesus Recital Hall

Lucia di L

c

d

n

a
t
S
Nachtgang
Zueignung,
4 

n ..

e

h

Richard Strauss
(1864­1949)

 

Leslie Hochman  ­ soprano
Margaret Reitz, piano
a

r

e

m

m

m

\

r

o

o

Scene and Aria: Regnava nel silenzio...

Gaetano Donizetti
(1797 ­ 1848)

Lucia – Nili Riemer ­ soprano
Alisa  – Ivy Gaibel  ­ mezzo­soprano
The Magic Fl ute W

f

l

o

g

a

n

Quintet: Hm,Hm,Hm...

 
g Amadeus Mozart
(1756 ­ 1791)

Papageno – Andrew Sudduth ­ baritone
Tamino – Mark Kratz ­ tenor
1* Lady – Julia Ebner ­ soprano
  ady – Stefanie Sudduth ­ soprano
2”L
3” Lady – Ivy Gaibel ­ mezzo­soprano

R
R
Les Roses D ’Ispahan
Notre Amour
Fleur Jetée

R

Timothy Fallon – tenor
Carol Wong ­ piano

The M e rry Wives of Windsor .....................

Opening Duet

Gabriel Fauré
(1845­1924)

Mistress Ford – Julia Ebner ­ soprano
Mistress Page – Melisse Weber ­ mezzo­soprano

..Otto Nicolai
(1810 ­ 1849)

�Translations ­ Faure
Mandoline
The givers of serenades

And the lovely women who listen
Exchange insipid words
Under the singing branches.

There is Thyrsis and Amyntas
And there’s th e eternal Clytander,
And there’s Damis who, for many a
Heartless wom an, wrote man y a tender
verse.
Their short silk coats,
Their long dresses with trains,
Their elegance, their joy
And their soft blue shadows,
Whirl around in the ecstasy
O fa  pink and grey moon,
And the mandolin prattles

Among the sh ivers from the  breeze.
Paul Verlaine

Les Roses D ’Ispahan
(The roses of lspa han)
The roses of Ispahan in their sheath of
moss,
the jasmines o f Mosul, the orange
blossoms,
have a fragran ce less fresh, an aroma

d ess sweet,

O pale Leila, than your light breath!

“ Your lips a re coral and your light
laughter
has a softer and lovelier sou nd than
rippling wate r,
lovelier than the joyous breeze that
rocks the orange­tree,
lovelier than the bird that sings near its
nest of moss.

O Leila, ever since in their airy ﬂight
all the kisses have ﬂed from your lips
so sweet,

there is no longer any fragrance from
the pale orange­tree,
no heavenly aroma from the roses in
the moss.

Oh, if only your youthful love, that
light butterﬂy,
would return to my heart on swift and
gentle wings,
and perfume once more the orange
blossom
and the roses of Ispahan in their sheath
of moss.
Charles­Marie­René Leconte de Lisle

Notre A mour
(Our love)
Our love is something light
like the perfum es which the breeze
brings from th e tips of ferns
for us to inhale as we dream.
Our love is something light.
Our love is something enchanting
like the morning’s songs
in which regrets are not heard
but uncertain hopes vibrate.
Our love is something charming.

Our love is something sacred
like the forests’ mysteries
in which an unknown soul quivers
and silences have voices.
Our love is something sacred!
Our love is something inﬁnite
like the paths of the evening,
where the ocean, joined with the sky,
falls asleep under slanting suns.

Our love is something eternal
like all that has been touched
by the ﬁery wing of a victorious god,
like all that comes from the heart.

Our love is something etern al!

Armand Silvestre

Fleur Jetée

(Discarded ﬂower)
Carry oﬀ my folly
at the whim o f the wind,
oh ﬂower which I picked while I sang
and threw away as I dreamed.
­ Carry oﬀ my folly
at the whim of the wind!
Like ﬂowers scythed down,
love dies.
The hand that once touched you
now shuns my hand forever.
­ Like ﬂowers scythed down,
love dies.
May the wind that withers you,
oh poor ﬂowe r,
a moment ago so fresh
and tomorrow all faded.
­ May the wind that withers you
wither my heart!
Armand Silvestre

Translations ­ Strauss

Standchen
(Serenade)
Open up, open up, but softly my dear,
So as to wake no one from sleep.
The brook hardly murmers, the wind
hardly shakes
A leaf on bush or hedge.
So, softly, my maiden, so that nothing
stirs,
Just lay your hand softly on the door
latch.

With steps as soft as the footsteps of
elves,
Soft enough to hop over the ﬂowers,
Fly lightly out into the moonlit night,

To steal to me  in the garden .

The ﬂowers are sleeping along the
rippling brook,
Fragrant in sleep, only love is awake.

Sit, here it darkens mysteriously
Beneath the lindens,
The nightingale over our heads
Shall dream of our kisses,

And the rose, when it wakes in the
morning,
Shall glow from the wondrous passions
of the night.
Nachtgang
(Night Walk )
We walked through the silent, mild
night,
Your arm in mine, your eyes in mine.
The moon poured silver light upon
your face,
As though gold rested on your
beautiful head.

And you appeared to me an angel,
Mild, mild and great and overﬂowing

with soul,
Holy and pure like the dear sun.
And in my eyes swelled urgent
warmth,
As of threatening tears.
I held you tighter and kissed you,
kissed you ve ry softly.
My soul wept.

Zueignung
(Blessing)
Yes, you know it, dearest soul,
How I suﬀer far from you,
Love makes the heart sick,
Have thanks.
Once I, drinker of freedom,

Held high the amethyst beaker,
And you blessed the drink,
Have thanks.

And you exorcised the evils in it,
Until I, as I had never been before,
Blessed, blessed sank upon your heart,
Have thanks.

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                    <text>1  \

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U N I V E R S I T Y

State University of  New York

Department of Music

Musica Nova
Music for Violin &amp; Piano

Patricia Sunwoo, violin
Ewa Mackiewicz­Wolfe, piano

Sunday, M arc h 6, 2005
3 :00 p.m.
Casadesus Recital Hall

�P rogram
L

Alfred Schnittke
(1934­1998)

Sonata No. 1 for violin and p1ano
Andante
Allegretto
Largo
Allegretto­scherzando­Allegro

II.
Isang Yun
(1917­1995)

Kontraste (1987) for violin solo

III.

Synchronisms No. 9 for violin and tape (1988) ........................ Mario Davidovsky

(b. 1934)

IV.
Who Let the Cat Out Last Night
from Three Country Fiddle Pieces

for violin, piano and optional percussion

... Paul Schoenﬁeld

(b. 1947)

­­Inrermission­­

a

8 

V.

Aria­Lament for solo violin (1991 ) .

..Aaron Jay Kemis

(b. 1960)

VI.
Sonata for violin and piano (1964)
Allegro
Andantino
Lento

Allegro

John Corigliano
(b. 1938)

�Composer’s Biographies an d P rogram Notes
LI
Alfred  Schnittke (1934­1998)  was  born  in  the Soviet  Union,  to  German­
Russian parents. Schnittke began his musical studies in Vienna where his father,
a journalist, had been posted.  In 1948 the family moved to Moscow, where
Schnittke studied piano and choral conducting, and  later composition at  the
Moscow Conservatory.  From 1962 to 1972, Schnittke taught instrumentation at
the Conservatory.  Thereafter, he supported himself mainly by composing ﬁlm
scores.  Like his predecessor (and inspiration) Dmitri Shostakovich, Schnittke
had many problems with the Soviet Ministry of Culture.  The authorities often
felt his music too anti­ideological, and tried to  prevent his music from being
heard.  This included attempts to take away foreign commissions and forbid the
purchase of his scores.  Despite these attempts, Schnittke found ways to keep up
with the compositional trends of the Western world, and develop his hallmark
“polystylistic” idiom.  He was supported by musicians such as Gidon  Kremer
and Mstislav Rostropovich, and was eventually commissioned by Camegie Hall,
Boston Symphony Orchestra an d New York Philharmonic, among others.  In
1990 he moved to Hamburg, where he died after his third stroke.  Today he is
regarded as Shostakovich’s “heir”.  His works have become staples of musical
literature, and more than ﬁfty recordings devoted exclusively to his music have
been released.  Included in this oeuvre are three  violin sonatas.
Sonata No. 1 fo r violin and piano (1963)
Violinist Midori writes:

Schnittke’s First Violin Sonata opens with a lonesome short soliloquy
on the violin, which is constructed on the 12­tone row.  Then, the piano
enters with staccato notes, aga in  using the tone  row, adding  to  the

“~

eeriness of the atmosphere.  The climax of the movement is the row in
reverse.  Sarcasm and irony prevail  in  the second movement, which
leads  with  pause  into  the  next  Largo.  In  this  third  movement,
Schnittke plays tribute to Bach.  As the violin holds the note G, the
upper line of th e piano plays th e notes C­B­D­C sharp.  These notes
correspond to B­A­C­H by a whole step.  The harmonics at the end of
this  movement  imitate  the  sound  of  a  Baroque  ﬂute.  The  ﬁnal
movement resembles a burlesque.
I also  feel  compelled  to  include a quote  from  David  K.  Nelson  of
Fanfare:  Schnittke ’s Sonata No. 1  calls for novel colors and methods
of attack, with ironclad execution.  There is plenty of pure pounding for
the pianist, and chances for the ﬁddle to shriek  like a banshee in this
tuneful­yet 12­tone sonata.  The music must have sounded ve ry modern
in  1963, rocketing dizzyingly  between a  mock­religioso  mood to  a
Prokoﬁev­like toccata to a jazz/pop segment.

IL

Isang Yun (191 7­1995) one of Germany’s foremost composers, did not hear a
major scale until he was eight years old, when the Western music world was
already throwing in the towel on tonality.  Yun was raised in the small southern

Korean ﬁshing town of Tong Yong.  His only contact with Western tonal music
was through the neighborhood missionary Church, which oﬀered simple hymns
not  unlike  Bradbury’s  1862  hit  “Jesus  Loves  Me”.  The  ﬁrst  European
instrument Yun laid eyes on, was the church harmonium.  Yun’s early musical
sphere consisted wholly of traditional Korean sounds.  This included harvest
songs sung in riceﬁelds, ritual songs of shamans, chants and drumming consoles

during  Buddhist  festivities,  traveling  Chinese  and  Korean  opera  troops
accompanied by  traditional instruments.  A Department o f Music was set  up at

the Seoul National University in  1946, which became the breeding ground for
European­style compositional studies.  Yun accepted a teaching position here
when the Korean War ended in 1953. He then tra veled to Paris and West Berlin
where he mastered European serialism, but quickly grew disinterested in it.  It
was only during this time that he realized the value of traditional music, and
thereafter consistently sought to incorporate it  into his works. In  1967, when
living  in  West  Berlin,  Yun  was  kidnapped  by  his  own  South  Korean
government, tried for high treason and sentenced to death for falsely suspected

communist activ ities during an earlier trip he too k to North Korea. As he sat in
prison for the next few years, an outraged German government  fought for his

freedom.  It  ﬁnally took a petition signed  by an elite group of international
musicians  to  save  his  life,  including  Boulez,  Stockhausen,  von  Karajan,
Klemperer, and Stravinsky.
An excerpt from their letter to then South Korean President Ch ung Hee Park
reads:
Mr. Yun is known, not only in Europe, but throughout the whole world,
as  an  outstanding  composer.  His goal  is always to un ite  the  most

distinguished  traditions  of  Korean  music  with  Western  musical
practices; _his  work  and  his  personality  must  be  regarded  as  an
inestimable  means  to  announce  Korean  culture  and  art  outside  of
Korea.  Without him, we would know very little about your country....
The international music world needs Mr. Yun.  His role as a mediator

between the Ea st and West i s  o f  utmost importanc e to us....Yun w as

indeed  released  and  returned  to  West  Germany, where  he  received
citizenship in  1971.  In an interview with his biographer Luise Rinser,
he  said  “Everyday,  I  would  like  to  stop  and  return  to  my  Korean
homeland, and there sit at sea,  ﬁsh, hear the sp irit o f  music without
seeing it, and ﬁnd myself in the large silence.  This homesickness is
beautifully  captured  in  Kontraste.  Yun  died  in  1995  without  ever
revisiting Korea.

�Kontraste (1987)
Yun  asks  the  violinist  to  evoke  traditional  Korean  instruments  by  way  of
unconventional techniques: the komungo, a plucked zither used in aristocratic
courts, produces a soft sound that mixes percussion and melody; the haegum, a
bowed two­stringed ﬁddle  held  like a tiny cello, has a peculiar nasal sound
quality; the taegum, a yellow bamboo ﬂute with reed tissues over the ﬁnger
holes and a very large blowhole, can produce a rasping, buzzing sound and 
accommodate  a  very  wide  vibrato  and  pitch  ﬂuctuations.  Yun  writes  in 
elaborate  pentatonic  ornaments  and  speciﬁc  instructions  for  vibrato  usage.

l
J

Practically every note has a dynamic scheme, and very often they cover the
extreme possibilities.  The last page consists of gradations of quadruple fortes
and triple fortes.  Almost every note is followed by a slide, sometimes covering
merely a quarter­tone.  In ancient Korean music, the single tone is an entity all
by itself.  It does not need another tone or a complete phrase to be fulﬁlled. The
natural vibration of each note is then used as a means of expression, manifesting
itself through embellishments, trills, glissandi and dynamic changes.

IV.
Paul Schoenﬁeld (b. 1947) a native of Detroit, is an accomplished pianist, and
has toured Europe, South America and the United States with diﬀerent groups,
including Musicians from Marlboro.  Among his recordings are the complete
violin and piano works of Bartok with Sergiu Luca.  He is also a scholar of
mathematics and Hebrew.  As a composer, he has received commissions and
grants from the National Endowment of the Arts, the Ohio Arts Commission,
Chamber Music America, and many other organizations.  His works have been
recorded on the EMI, Angel, Decca, BMG and New World labels.

II].

“ ~

Mario Davidovsky was born in  1934 in  Buenos Aires, Argentina.  He ﬁrst
studied composition with Guillermo Graetzer at the University of Buenos Aires.
Particularly interested in electronic music, Davidovsky visited the Tanglewood
Music  Festival  in  1958,  where  he  worked  with  Aaron  Copland  and  Milton
Babbitt.  In 1960, he took up permanent residence in New York City, ﬁrst as a
Guggenheim Fellow at Columbia University where he sat in on the seminars of
Otto Luening, and then as the leader of Columbia­Princeton Electronic Music
Center, where he remained until 1994.  In 1994, he joined the faculty of Harvard
University.  He is most widely recognized for his contributions in the realm of
electro­acoustic music, with his series of Synchronisms for live instruments and
prerecorded electronic sounds.  These include works for ﬂute, string quartet,
cello, chorus, percussion ensemble, piano (for which he won a Pulitzer Prize in
1971), orchestra, woodwind  quintet  and  solo  violin.  (Davidovsky  has also

Who Let the Cat Out Last Night  from Three Country Fiddle Pieces (1984)
This is the ﬁrst of three popular short pieces for ampliﬁed violin, piano and
optional percussion (played today without ampliﬁcation or percussion).  It draws
on the styles of jazz, blues, and country ﬁddling.  Schoenﬁeld carefully notates
the improvisational qualities o f these popular idioms.  For example, he uses
quarter tones and “1/6” tones to indicate the ﬂat bending of a pitch.  He infused
the piano part with Ivesian harmonies, and short witty quotations from Romantic
works, such as” Cesar Franck ’s  Sonata  for Violin and Piano, and Wagner’s
Tannhauser.

composed many works for “acoustic” instruments.)

Synchronisms No. 9 for violin and tape (1988)
This work was commissioned by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
The electronic tape was produced at  the MIT  Media  Laboratory and the
Electronic Music Center, Columbia University.  Eric Salzman writes for
Composers Recordings Inc.: 
Davidovsky was trained as a violinist and he was brought up on the 
traditions of what  he  calls  “turn­of­the­century violinism.”  He 
literally takes the technique of one generation and applies it to the
musical sensibility of another; Sarasate or Wieniawski serialized!
He also plays with the relationship between the live instrument and
the electronic part, one in the traditional Western tuning, the other

with the whole gamut of tonal possibility on a continuum.  “1 was,”
he  says,  “trying  to  embed  two  musical  spaces  into  one  and
hopefully come up with something that is more than the sum of its
parts.  The violin  initiates gestures that the tape ﬁnishes.  The
violin modulates the tape and the tape modulates the violin.”  Like
the other works in  the Synchronisms series, this piece  follows
traditional  classical  phrasing  but  neither  traditional  thematic
construction nor strict twelve­tone methods apply.  Davidovsky
describes  this  compositional  method  as a  “statistical  curve  of
density”; it is related to European serialism but distinctive.  Never
mind;  like  the  earlier  Synchronisms,  this  is  not  a  theoretical
statement  but  a  remarkably  coherent  piece  with  clarity  and
rhythmic integrity in its musical gestures.

V.

\ )
'
3

A aron J ay Kernis was born in Philadelphia in 1960, and studied composition at
the  San  Francisco  Conservatory,  the  Manhattan  School o f  Music  and  Yale
University, with John Adams, Charles Wuorinen and Jacob Druckman.  In  1998
he won the Pulitzer Prize for his Second String Quartet, which was recorded by
the Lark String Quartet.  He has also earned  Grammy nominations for Air for
solo violin recorded by Joshua Bell, and a recording of his Symphony No. 2 by
the Birmingham Symphony Orchestra. Kemis was commissioned by Disney to

�write a choral symphony, Garden of Light, to celebrate the millennium.  He
wrote the New Era Dance to commemorate the 1 50” anniversary of the New
York  Philharmonic.  He  was also  recently commissioned  by the American
Museum  of Natural  History  in  New  York  City to  create an ambient­sound
installation for the museum‘s new Rose Center.  Since 1998 he has been the
New Music Advisor to the Minnesota Orchestra.  His music is published by
Boosey and Hawkes and Associated Music Publishers.  Recordings of his works
can be found on the CRI, Nonesuch, EMI, New Albion and Argo labels.

faculty at City University of New York and the Juilliard School.  In 1991 he
was elected to the A merican Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters, and in
1992, Musical America named him their ﬁrst “Composer of the Year”.  His
music is published exclusively by G. Schirmer.
v

a

Aria­Lament
Kemis writes:

Aria­Lament was written in  1991  for violinist  Kate  Light,  It  is the

second work  that I composed as part of my cycle  of works which
respond and meditate on war in our time.  Some of the other works in
this  cycle  include  my  Second  Symphony,  Colored  Field,  Still
Movement with Hym n and Lament and Prayer for violin and  orchestra
written for Pamela F rank.  I wrote Aria­Lament as my own awareness
about the conﬂict in Bosnia­Herzogovinia led me to read extensively
on the Holocaust and look more deeply at my Jewish heritage. There
are elements in  this work  that come  from personal  impressions and
memories of cantorial singing.

variations of the ﬁrst.  The third movemen t caps a tense, emot ional

VI.
Jo hn  Corigliano  (b.  1938)  received  the  Pulitzer  Prize  in  Music  for  his
Symphony  No. 2  in  2001, which  was  premiered  by  the  Boston  Symphony
Orchestra under Seiji Ozawa.  In 2000, Corigliano won another coveted prize:
the Academy Award, for “The Red Violin,” his third ﬁlm score.  Esa­Pekka
~
Salonen  leads  soloist  Joshua  Bell  and  the  London  Philharmonia  in  Sony
Classical’s recording of the soundtrack.  Commissioned by the Metropolitan
Opera, where  it  premiered  in  1991, the immensely popular opera Ghosts of
* Versailles sold out two engagements at  the Metropolitan as  well as its  1995
production  at  the  Chicago  Lyric  Opera.  The  nationwide  telecast  of  the
Metropolitan ’s  premiere  was  released  on  videocassette  by  Deutsche
Grammophon.  Corigliano’s Symphony No. 1, commissioned by the Chicago
Symphony  Orchestra, was an  impassioned  response  to the  AIDS  crisis.  It
captured the 1991 G rawemeyer Award for Best New Orchestral Composition;
Chicago’s recording of the symphony won two Grammy awards for both Best
New Composition and Best Orchestral  Performance.  In  1996, the Cleveland
Quartet ’s recording of his String Quartet also won a G rammy Award for Best
New Composition, making Corigliano  the ﬁrst composer  to win twice in  the
history of that award.  Born in New York, Corigliano comes  from a musical
family.  His  father was concertmaster of the New  York  Philharmonic  from
1943­1966  and  his  mother  was an accomplished  pianist.  Corigliano  is  on

Sonata for Violin a nd Piano (1964)
This  popular  early  work  won  the  1964  Spoleto  Festival  Competition  for
Chamber Music.  It was premiered by Yoko Matsuda and Charles Wadsworth.
Corigliano writes:
This Sonata is an optimistic, ultra­rhythmic, tonal­and­then­some duo
for two masterful players.  I built the themes and harmonics of its four
movements  all  from  a  second  and  its  inversion,  a  seventh.  The
movements center, respectively, on C, D, G minor, and D—but I freely
included non­tonal and polytonal sections when needed.  I think its
eclecticism,  its  rhythmic  energy,  and  its  bright  character  give  the
Sonata a very American quality, though that wasn’t the goal of writing
it.  I didn’t so much develop the lively theme in the opening Allegro as
herald it with a brief opening fanfare and then embed it in a detailed
backdrop, like a stone in a mosaic.  Then, from those backdrop details,
I built the ﬁrst theme of the next movement, a gentle Andantino in a
modiﬁed  sonata  form.  Three  themes  seem  to  intertwine  in  this
movement, which peaks and peaks again before quieting—but a closer
look  should  reveal  that  both  the  second  and  third  themes  are  but
violin soliloquy with hushed echoes of th e sonata’s signal interval ( th e
second), and the fourth movement, a rondo with a diﬀerence, takes a
vivid  polytriadic  theme,  and  augmented  variation  on  it,  and
accompanimental ﬁgures from previous movements, and spins them all
into a breathless and exuberant polymetric ﬁnale.

*

­

o

�A bout th e  Performers
v

s

Violinist PATRICIA SUNWOO made her New York orchestral debut
in 1995, performi ng Berg’s Violin Concerto at Lincoln Center with the Juilliard
Orchestra.  As a member of the Whitman Stri ng Quartet, winner of the 1998
Naumburg Award, she performed to critical acclaim across the United States,
recorded works of Artur Schnabel and Michael  Whalen, and was frequently
heard on NPR.  In February, the Whitmans gave a reunion concert at Carnegie
Hall’s Weill Recital Hall, premiering a work for quartet and cantor by Kenji
Bunch.  She has also been a member of New York City’s new music ensembles
Sequitur and Continuum, and has worked with composers such as Joan Tower
and John  Corigliano.  She looks forward to giving the ﬁrst performance of
Marek Harris’s Duo in May with the Finger Lakes Chamber Ensemble, which
was commissioned by friends from the Binghamton University community last
spring.  Ms. Sunwoo tours with the Bard Festival String Quartet, and recently
joined the Finger  Lakes Chamber  Ensemble and th e Rochester Philharmonic
Orchestra.  She has been teaching at Binghamton University since 2001, and
now  resides  in Rochester  with  violinist  and husband David Brickman, and
daughter Claire.

—~

O

.

EWA  MACKIEWICZ ­ WOLFE,  the  winner  of  the  International
Competition  o f   Renaissance  and  Baroque  Music,  and  the  International
Competition  for  Young Pianists in  Warsaw, Poland,  is also the recipient  of
awards in international music competitions in Budapest, Hungary and Dresden,
Germany.  She appeared in  several music festivals such as the Young Artist
Festival o f Karol Szymanowski, the Festival o f Vladyslav Kedra  for Young
Pianists in Poland, Chamber Music Festivals in Germany and Hungary.  Her
career as a piano soloist developed further as a result of concerts arranged by the
Association of Polish Artists/Musicians, Government Art Agency (PAGART),
the  Karol  Szymanowski  Musical  Society, and  various music  colleges.  She
performed  solo  recitals  and  concerts  with  symphony  orchestras  throughout
Eastern Europe, Northeastern United States and Canada.
Ms. Mackiewicz­Wolfe received her bachelor’s and master’s degrees in
piano performance with honors and high distinction from the Academy of Music
in Lodz, Poland where she continued as Assistant Professor and Master Lecturer
in music.  Since 1984, she has been associated with the Binghamton University
Music Department.

�Coming Even ts
(Subject to Change )

Th ursday,  March  31  –  Mid­Day  Concert  with  faculty  and  student
performers – 1 :20 p.m. – Casadesus Recital Hall – free
Sunday, April 3  ­ Organist Jona than Biggers – Music for Organ and
Strings – 4:00 p.m. First Presbyterian Church, Binghamton ­ $15 general
public; $13 faculty/staﬀ/seniors; $ 7students

\

l

Th ursday, April 7 – Mid­Day Con cert with faculty and student performers –
1 :20 p.m. – Casadesus Recital Hall
Th ursday, April 7 – Master ’s Recital – Donald Truesdail, s tring bass – 8:00
p.m. – Casadesus Recital Hall – free
Saturday, Apri l 9 – Student R ecital – Jessica Cheng, piano – 3:00 p.m. –
Casadesus Recital Hall – free
Sunday, April 1 0 –­  Chamber Music Masterpieces – 3:00 p.m. – Anderson
Center  Chamber  Hall  ­  $15  general  public;  $13  faculty/staﬀ/seniors;  $7
students
Wednesday, Ap ril 1 3 – Master ’s Recital : Jenni fer Perkins, sop rano – 8:00
p.m. – Casadesus Recital Hall ­­ free
Th ursday, April 1 4 – Mid­Day Co ncert with faculty and student performers –
1 :20 p.m. – Casadesus Recital Hall – free
Th ursday, April 1 4 – Senior Hon or ’s Recital : Nancy Schned ier, piano –
8:00 p.m. – Casadesus Recital Hall – free

Saturday, April  1 6 – Senior Hono r ’s Recital : Talitha Phillips, string bass ­
3:00 p.m. – Casadesus Recital Hall – free

Saturday, Apri l 1 6 – University C horus and Orch estra – Coronat ion and
Confrontation – 8:00 p.m. – Anderson Center Osterhout Concert Theater ­
$10 general public; $7 facult/staﬀ/seniors; free for students
Sunday, April 1 7 – Piano Studio  Recital : Students of Chai­Kyou Mallinson –
3:00 p.m. – Casadesus Recital Hall – free
Th ursday,  April  2 1  –  Mid­Day  Concert  with  faculty  an d  student
performers – 1 :20 p.m. ~ Casadesus Recital Hall

L

l

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                    <text>BINGHAMTON
UNIVER SITY
State University of New York

Binghamton University Department of Music

THURSDAY MID-DAY CONCERT
March 3, 2005 - Casadesus Recital Hall

Image pour Flûte Seule .......................................................... ..................................... Eugène Bozza
(1905-1991)
Kelsey Bauer, flute

Nocturne, Op. 33 (Homage to John Field) ................................................................. Samuel Barber
(1910-1981)
Nancy Schneider, piano

Selections from Les Nuits d'été.................................................................................. Hector Berlioz
(1803-1869)
Villanelle
Le Spectre de la Rose
Sur les Lagunes
Absence
Leslie Hochman, soprano
Margaret Reitz, piano

Sonata in Eb, Op. 120, No. 2 ............................................................................... Johannes Brahms
(1833-1897)
Allegro amabile
Melissa Mattern, viola
Michael Salmirs, piano

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                    <text>LINLVN  J y '“
­—

t e c

U N I V E R S I T Y

~

)  ­ 
o

BINGHAMTON

h

  H

w

I

A

State University of  New York

Depart ment of Music

UNIVERSITY WIND ENSEMB LE
Timothy Perry, Conductor
Stephen Boel, Associate Conductor

Cinematic Signatures III :
G rea t W hite Wa y to the Silver Screen

Sunday, Feb ruary 27, 2005
3:00 p.m.
Anderson Center Cham ber Hall

�The Binghamton University Department of Music presents the

University Wind Ensemble

Dr. Timothy Perry, Director 

Stephen Boel, Associate Conductor

Cinematic Signatures lll: Musical Movies
Sunday 3:00 p.m. 

Chamber Hall

Febniary 27, 2005 

Program

Anderson Center for the Arts

Overture to Guys and Dolls (1955).................... Frank Loessing

Arr. Philip Lang

Three–cornered Tune – I’ve Never Been in Love Before
A Bushel and a Peck – Guys and Dolls

An American in Paris (1951)........... 

George Gershwin

Arr. Jerry Brubaker

South Paciﬁc  ( 1 9 csv c
5siv8rsase)seis.   «ee.......Richard Rodgers

Arr. Philip Lang

Some Enchanted Evening – A Wonderful Guy
Bali Ha’i ­­There is Nothin’ Like A Dame

The Music Man (1962)....................

Meredith Willson

Arr. Alfred Reed

The Wells Fargo Wagon.– ‘Till There Was You
Seventy­Six Trombones

My Fair Lady (1964) 

Frederick Loewe

Arr. C .  Paul Herfunh

On  the Street Where You Live – With a Little Bit of Luck
l’ve Grown Accustomed to her Face – I Could Have Danced All Night

Fiddler on the Roof(1971). . .. . .. ..  Sheldon Harnick and Jerry Bock

Arr. Bob Lowden
Tradition – Matchmaker – Do You Love Me? – Miracle of Miracles
Sunrise, Sunset – I f  Were a Rich Man –To Life

Les Miserables (1987) 

. .. . .. . .. . .. . .. .  Claude­Michel Schonberg

Arr. Warren Barker
At the End of the Day ­ I Dreamed a Dream ­ Master of the House
On My Own – Do You Hear the People Sing?

Phantom of the Opera (2004) .................Andrew Lloyd Webber
Think of Me – Angel of Music ­ The Phantom of the Opera

Arr. Warren Barker

All I As k of You – The Point of N o Return – The Music of the Night

University Wind Ensemble
Timothy Perry, Director

Stephen Boel, Associate Director
Piccolo
Amy Forgacs
Flute
Joanna Hunt
Nicole Kalisz
Subin Lim
Elise Martingale
Lauren Silinonte
Valerie Spiller

Clarinet
Heather Boland
Alice Choi

Shanika Cooper
Colin Edmunds
Michelle Grexer
Simon Hawk
Andrew Hsu
Andrei Lee

Bass Clarinet
Joshua Schaier
Christopher Strub
Alto Saxophone
Emily Alkiewicz
Amy Natiella

Tenor Saxophone
Kevin  Kneifel

Trumpet
Mark Alfes
Garret Clark
Philip Deitz

Derek Ersbak
Thomas Osa
Steven Pan
Andrew Sanfratello

French Horn

Megan Caruso
Greg Cecere
Patrick Lokken
Alfred Jacobsen

Trombone
Jamie Cepler
David Hennan
David Ricotta
Baritone/Euphonium
John Testa
Richard Mokan

Tuba

Erik Appleyard

Dan Gallagher

Percussion
Christopher Jacobson

Baritone Saxophone
Joe Sobel

A i Karasawa
Spencer Lo
Christine Jackson
Mark Turley

String Bass
Chris Zavala

Keyboard
Robert Magee

�Coming Events
Thu rsday, March 3 – Mid­Day Concert with faculty and student performers –
1:20 p.m. ­ Casadesus Recital Hall ­ free
Satu rday, March 5 – Master’s Recital – Leslie Hochman, Sop rano – 3:00
p.m. – Casadesus Recital Hall – free
Satu rday, March 5 – University Sym phony Orchestra – Around the Horn –
8:00 p.m. – Anderson Center Osterhout Concert Theater ­ $10 general public;
$7 faculty/staﬀ/seniors; free for students

Sunday, March 6 –  Musica Nova with Patricia Sunwoo, violin and Ewa
Mackiewicz­Wolfe, piano ­ 3:00 p.m. – Casadesus Recital Hall ­ $10 general
public; $7 faculty/staﬀ/seniors; free for students
Th u rsday, March 1 0 – Mid­Day Concert with faculty and student performers
­ 1:20 p.m. – Casadesus Recital Hall ­ free

Satu rday, March 1 2  ­ Master’s Recital – Timothy Fallon, tenor – 3:00 p.m.
­ Casadesus Recital Hall – free
Satu rday, March 1 2 – Master’s Recital – Jo d y Schum, piano – 8:00 p.m. –
Casadesus Recital Hall – free

Sunday, March 1 3 – Harpu r Chorale and Women ’s Chorus Concert – 3:00
p.m. – Anderson Center Chamber Hall ­­  free
Th u rsday, March 1 7  – Mid­Day Concert with faculty and student performers
–l :20 p.m. ~ Casadesus Recital Hall – free

Thursday, March 31 – Mid­Day Concert with faculty and student performers
– 1 :20 p.m. – Casadesus Recital Hall – free
Sunday, April 3  ­ O rganist Jon a than Bi ggers –  Music  for  O rgan  and
Strings – 4:00 p.m. First  Presbyterian Church, Binghamton ­ $15 general
public; $13 faculty/staﬀ/seniors; $7students
Sunday, A p ril 3 – Ha rpu r Tru m pet Ensem ble an d  Studio Concert – 7:30
p.m. – Casadesus Recital Hall –­  free

Thu rsday, April 7 – Mid­Day Concert with faculty and student performers –
1:20 p.m. – Casadesus Recital Hall – free

�</text>
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                    <text>UNIV ARC

Recit

BINGHAMTON

al

U N I V E R S I

t ape
2005
5-4
SPEC COL

T

Y

State University of New York
Department of Music

Undergraduate Student
Conductors' Concert

University Chamber Chorus
University String Orchestra
University Orchestra

Wednesday, May 4, 2005
8:00 p.m.
Watters Theater

�The Binghamton University Department of Music
presents the

Undergraduate Student Conductors' Concert
with the

University Chamber Chorus
University String Orchestra
University Orchestra

Program
Gloria, selected movements ..........Antonio Vivaldi (1678-1741)
I. Gloria in excelsis, conducted by Rob Magee
II. Et in terra pax, conducted by Deanna Bunal
IV. Gratias agimus tibi, and
V. Propter magnam gloriam, conducted by Nicole Kalisz
VII. Domine Fili Unigenite, conducted by Cari Begeal
XII. Cum Sancto Spiritu, conducted by Ryan Bagg
University Chamber Chorus, accompanied by Jody Schum
Capriol Suite .......................Peter Warlock (1894-1930)
Movements 1 and 6, conducted by Alex Wiesendanger
Film Music from Henry V ..........William Walton (1902-1983)
Movement 1, Passacaglia: Death of Falstaff
Movement 2, Touch Her Soft Lips and Part, conducted by
Emily Creo
University String Orchestra
Four Waltzes, op.39 (arr. Stone) .... .Johannes Brahms (1833-1897)
Movements 1 and 2, conducted by Juliana Maslen
Movements 3 and 4, conducted by Matt Cosnett
Purcell Suite (arr. Siennecki) ... . ...... Henry Purcell (1659-1695)
Movements 1 and 3, conducted by Matt Green
Movement 2, conducted by Remington A. Gregg
University Orchestra

�About the Conductors
Rob Magee is a Junior Music major studying piano with Jody Schum.
He hopes to focus on conducting and vocal accompaniment and one
-day work as a music director on Broadway (or something equally
prestigious). He would like to thank Dr.'s Borton, Perry, Rolls,
Goldstaub, and Reardon for fostering his passion for the divine art
of music.

Deanna Bunal, originally from Lee Center NY, is a Senior at
Binghamton University. Her specialization is voice, under the tutelage of Mary Burgess. She will be graduating this spring with a B.A.
in Music and plans to continue on to Syracuse University where she
will pursue an MST in Music Education.

Nicole Kalisz is a Senior Music (B.A.) and Biology (B.S.) major. She
plays the flute and piano and is a member of the University Wind
Ensemble. Originally from Buffalo, she will be teaching math next
year in New York City under the NYC Teaching Fellows program.

Cari Begeal, a native of Bath, NY, is a Junior at Binghamton. She is
double majoring in Political Science and Music, with a minor in
Spanish. She currently studies voice with Mary Burgess, and is a
member of the University Chorus. After graduation she plans on
pursuing a career in choral conducting. Cari would like to dedicate
this performance to her mother.

Ryan Bagg is a Senior Music major from Vestal. He plays guitar and
is the musical director of the Binghamton Crosbys. Ryan is currently
applying to graduate school to pursue a degree in Music Education.

Alex Wiesendanger is a Senior Music and Political Science double
major. He would like to thank Professors Borton and Perry for their

�hard work, as well as Professors Stalker, Sunwoo, Goldstaub, Loy
and Reardon for all their support, and his parents for forcing music
on him when he was three. Finally he would like to thank the
orchestra for putting up with him.

Emily Creo, a native of Vestal, is a Junior Music major studying both
cello and voice. Emily is a member of the University Orchestra and
Harpur Chorale. She credits her enthusiasm and success in music to
exceptional teachers Denise Heckel and Dennis Powell. She would
like to thank her parents for all their love and support.

Juliana Maslen is a Senior at Binghamton University. She is graduating with a degree in Music and Psychology. She studies piano with
Chai-Kyou Mallinson and is a member of the University Chorus.
After graduating she will be doing research and working as a
teacher's aid for children with autism. Juliana plans on getting her
Ph.D. in Clinical Psychology.

Matt Cosnett is a Senior majoring in Music at Binghamton
University. He has studied percussion for twelve years and is currently studying under Dan Fabricius. Matt is from Vestal, New York.

Matthew Green is a Senior percussionist finishing up his B.A. in
Music. After undergraduate studies, Matt will be pursuing a Masters
degree in Music Education.

Remington A. Gregg is a Junior majoring in Philosophy, Politics,
and Law. He is director of Classical Music at the campus radio station, WHRW, and a member of the University Chorus. He presently
studies piano under Jody Schum. Remington is an assistant to the
Organist-in-Residence at St. Mary's Episcopal Church in his hometown of Staten Island, New York, and Assistant Organist at Calvary
United Methodist Church, Vestal.

�String Orchestra
Violin 1
Christina Wan
Tiffany Chang
James Leddy
Karen Krause
Rosa Nam
Elizabeth Mansdorf

Violin 2
Claire Bryne
Micah Banner-Baine
Dana Kerker
Marie Mizuno
Jennifer Hsu
Rachel Jacobs

Cello
Matthew Woolever
Justin Wong
Yi-Eun Park
Kathleen Bradley

Bass
Elizabeth Bartlett
Donald Trusdail

Viola
Melissa Mattern
Melissa Lee
Beth Vayshenker
Cassandra Aikman
Janet Ievins

Full Orchestra
Violin 1
Akira Maezawa
Reme Doh
Alisa Selman
Samuel Wang
Tamara Potapova
Karen Tang
Jennifer Liebman

Violin 2
Corinne Paull
Jungsun Oh
Jennifer Paull
Stephanie Mawhirt
Richard Goldman
Mark Liu

Viola
HyunjungOk
Kerry Conway
Christopher Trow
Christopher Fiore

Cello
Heajung Kim
Katy Walker
Nicholas Capone
Mackenzie Wen

Bass
Christopher Hui
Andrew Eiche
Serena Murray

Flute
Kelsey Bauer
Kris Gilbert
Kira Slocum

Oboe
Rebecca Rodbart

Clarinet
Bethany Bonhof
Caroline Bravo

Bassoon
Kimberly Meeker
David Weinberg

Trumpet
Garrett Clark
Steve Pan

Horn
Diana Amari
Ernie Epelman
Al Jacobsen
Patrick Lokken

Trombone
Harris Brenner
David Hennan

Percussion
Matthew Chedister

�University Chamber Chorus
Soprano
Emily Burr
MayBelle Golis
Margaret Hays
Barbara Herne
Connie Lamando
Kerry Nienstedt
Mary Joan Ragard
Susan Sarzynski
Barbara Alhart Simon
Barbara Thamasett
Bass

Eric Bare
Anthony Biconish
Garret Clark
J. Scott Husted
Conrad Krebs
Phil Millspaugh
Joseph E. Nelson
Edward Orosz
Christian Ritter
David L. Schriber

Alto

Lois Bare
Barbara Barno
Maria Luisa Cook
Jeanne Fenzel
Grace Houghton
Cheryl Labban
Nancy McGee
Judie Meador
Ethel F. Molessa
Anna Nicholas
Joyce Printz
Jane Shear
Susan Szczotka
lnyoungYu

Tenor
H.B. King
Dennis Leipold
Sherry Williamson
Floyd R. West

The Conducting II class is under the direction of Professors Bruce Borton
and Timothy Perry.

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                    <text>UNIV

ARC

Recital

BINGHAMTON

Tape

UNIVERSITY

2005

State University of New York

Department of Music

5-2.J
S EC COL

Master's Recital
Robin Kindig, bassoon
with

Margaret Reitz, piano
Kira Slocum, flute
Theresa Perrone, clarinet

Monday, May 2, 2005
8:00 p.m.
Casadesus Recital Hall

�Program

Sonate....................................................................... Paul Hindemith
(1895-1963)
I. Leicht bewegt
II. Langsam, Marsch, Pastorale
Robin Kindig, bassoon; Margaret Reitz, piano

Trio II ...................................................................Francois Devienne
(1759-1803)
I. Allegro
II. Rondo: Allegro, Minore
Kira Slocum, flute; Theresa Perrone, clarinet;
Robin Kindig, bassoon

Concerto in F, F VIII no. 8 ..................................... Antonio Vivaldi
(1678-1741)
I. Allegro non mo/to
II. Andante
III. Allegro mo/to
Robin Kindig, bassoon; Margaret Reitz, piano

Please remember to turn offor silence all cell phones
and pagers during the performance. Thank you.

�About the Performers
Robin Kindig is a local from Endwell, New York. She attended
the Maine-Endwell Central Schools and was heavily involved in
musical activities while there. Her passion for music led her to
Houghton College, where she studied bassoon with Ed Wadin.
Robin graduated from Houghton in May 2003 with a Bachelor of
Music in Music Education. She is currently a Master of Music
student in bassoon performance and studies with Lynn Hileman.
Upon the completion of her degree, she hopes to teach elementary
or middle school band.
Margaret Reitz, piano, received her Bachelor and Master of
Music degrees in piano performance with accompanying emphasis.
She attended Boston University, New England Conservatory and
Binghamton University.
She has studied piano with Jean
Casadesus, Victor Rosenbaum, Seymour Fink and Walter Ponce
and accompanying with Allen Rogers. She has accompanied
throughout the United States, in England, South America, and at
the American Institute of Musical Studies in Graz, Austria . Reitz
has been on the faculty at Binghamton University since 1991 and
The Ithaca College School of Music since 1999.
Kira Slocum is a senior Music and Comparative Literature major.
She is a student of Georgetta Maiolo, and is currently a member of
the University Symphony Orchestra and Flute Ensemble. She has
also played in the Harpur Jazz Band and participated in the 2003
Concerto and Aria Competition.
Theresa Perrone earned her undergraduate degree in Music
Education at Ithaca College, studying the clarinet with Dr. Richard
Faria. She currently teaches Kindergarten, First, and Second Grade
vocal music and directs a Fourth and Fifth Grade chorus in the
Greene Central School District in Greene, NY. In addition, Theresa
has a private studio of woodwind students. She is also pursuing
her Masters in Clarinet Performance at Binghamton University,
studying with Dr. Timothy Perry.

�COMING EVENTS
Wednesday, May 4 - Student Conductors' Concert - 8:00 p.m. - Watters
Theater - free
Thursday, May 5 - Student Recognition Mid-Day Concert - 1:20 p.m. Casadesus Recital Hall - free
Thursday, May 5 Hurpur Chorale and Women's Chorus - 8:00 p.m. Anderson Center Chamber Hall - free
Saturday, May 7 - Master's Recital - Theresa Perrone, clarinet - 3:00 p.m.
- Casadesus Recital Hall - free
Saturday, May 7 - Student Recital: Christina Wan, violin - 8:00 p.m. Casadesus Recital Hall - free
Sunday, May 8- Student Saxophone Quartet- 3:00 p.m. - Casadesus Recital
Hall- free
Thursday, May 12 - Master's Recital: Donald Truesdail, string bass - 8:00
p.m. - Casadesus Recital Hall - free

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                    <text>UNIVARC

Recital
tap e
2005

BINGHAMTON
UNIVER SITY

State University of New York

Department of Music

5-1
SPEC COL

University Wind Ensemble

Il

Timothy Perry, Director
Stephen Boel, Associate Director

We Band of Brothers
The British Band Connection:
Folk-Song to l?uH Symphon ic

Sunday, May 1, 2005
3:00 p.m.
Anderson Center Chamber Hall

�Program
The Binghamton University Department of Music presents the

University Wind Ensemble
Dr. Timothy Perry, Director and Conductor
Stephen Boel, Associate Conductor

We Band of Brothers
Sunday 3:00 p.m.
May 1, 2005

Chamber Hall
Anderson Center for the Arts

Program

English Folk Song Suite (1923) .. ....... ..Ralph Vaughan Williams
I. March- "Seventeen come Sunday"
(1872-1958)
2. Intermezzo - "My Bonny Boy"
3. March- "Folk Songs from Somerset"

A' Bhirlinn Taibhseil (1993) .... .... ............... William Sweeney
"The Ghost Longship"
Oligopoly (2005) premiere performance..... .. Timothy Michael Rolls

Sketches on a Tudor Psalm (1971) ......... ............. ..Fisher Tull
Lincolnshire Posy (1937) ....... ..... ......... ......... Percy Grainger
1. Dublin Bay
(1882-1961)
2. Harkstow Grange
3. Rufford Park Poachers
4. The Brisk Young Sailor
5. Lord Melbourne
6. The Lost Lady Found
Thank you for attending today's concert. We congratulate all of our graduates,
thank all of our outstanding players and look forward to serving you
with more great Wind Ensemble music next season.

~Timothy Perry, Director
~Stephen Boel, Associate Conductor
~Robert Smith, Conductor-designate

�Wind Ensemble
Piccolo
Amy Forgacs
Flute
Joanna Hunt•
Nicole Kalisz
Subin Lim
Elise Martingale
Lauren Silinonte•
Valerie Spiller
Clarinet
Heather Boland*
Caroline Bravo
Alice Choi
Shanika Cooper
Colin Edmunds
Michelle Grexer
Simon Hawk
Andrew Hsu•
Andrei Lee•
Bass Clarinet
Joshua Schaier
Christopher Strub
Soprano/Alto Saxophone
Emily Alkiewicz
Amy Natiella
Tenor Saxophone
Kevin Kneifel
Baritone Saxophone
Joe Sobel
Trumpet
Mark Alfes
Garret Clark*
Philip Deitz*
Derek Ersbak
Thomas Osa
Steven Pan
Andrew Sanfratello*

French Horn
Megan Caruso
Greg Cecere•
Patrick Lokken
Al Jacobsen
Trombone
Jamie Cepler
David Hennan•
David Ricotta
Baritone/Euphonium
John Testa
Richard Mokan*
Tuba
Erik Appleyard*
Dan Gallagher
Percussion
Christopher Jacobson
Ai Karasawa
Spencer Lo
Christine Jackson
Mark Turley•
Keyboard
Robert Magee
Violin
Tina Chiu
Amanda Dumont
Lauren Moscowitch
Rosa Nam
*principals

�COMING EVENTS
Sunday, May 1 - Junior Recital: Melissa Mattern, viola - 7:30 p.rn. Casadesus Recital Hall - free
Monday, May 2 - Master's Recital: Robin Kindig, bassoon - 8:00 p.rn. Casadesus Recital Hall - 8:00 p.rn. - free
Wednesday, May 4 - Student Conductors' Concert - 8:00 p.rn. - Watters
Theater - free
Thursday, May 5 - Student Recognition Mid-Day Concert - 1:20 p.rn. Casadesus Recital Hall - free
Thursday, May 5 - Harpur Chorale and Women's Chorus - 8:00 p.rn. Anderson Center Chamber Hall - free
Saturday, May 7 - Master's Recital: Theresa Perrone, clarinet - 3:00 p.rn. Casadesus Recital Hall - free
Saturday, May 7 - Student Recital: Christina Wan, violin - 8:00 p.rn. Casadesus Recital Hall - free
Sunday, May 8 - Student Saxophone Quartet- 3:00 p.rn. - Casadesus Recital
Hall- free
Thursday, May 12 - Master's Recital: Donald Truesdail, string bass - 8:00
p.rn. - Casadesus Recital Hall - free

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                    <text>UNIV

BINGHAMTON
UNIVERSITY
State University of New York

Department of Music

Flute Ensemble
Georgetta Maiolo, director

Saturday, April 30, 2005
12:00 noon
Casadesus Recital Hall

�Program
Advent Music, Opus 8, No. 1............. ........ T. Donley Thomas
1. Prelude on "In Dulci Jubilo"
(b. 1929)
2. Interlude
3. Postlude on "Valet Will Ich Dir Geben
Marche Miniature ..................................... Peter Ilyitch Tchaikovsky
(1840-1893)
Arranged-by Arthur Ephross
Londonderry Air ............................... Arranged by Ricky Lompardo
Introduction to the Flute Family &amp; Childhood Favorites
Arranged by Ricky Lombardo
Chanson Triste ......................................... Peter Ilyitch Tchaikovsky
(1840-1893)
Arranged by Clair W. Johnson
Selections from the opera "Carmen" .......................... Georges Bizet
Introduction
(1840-1893)
The changing of the Guard
Masques ................................... ................................. Anne McGinty
(b. 1945)
The Pink Panther. ................................... ................... Henry Mancini
The Pink Panther Theme
(b. 1924-1994)
Shades of Sennett
Arranged by Amy Rice-Young
When The Saints Go Marching In .... Arranged by Ricky Lombardo

�About the Director
GEORGETTA MAIOLO is a member of the faculty of Binghamton
University and Broome Community College, teaching Flute and directing Flute
Ensembles. From 1977 to 1996, she held the position of Assistant Professor of
Flute at Ithaca College, Ithaca, New York. She also taught flute at West
Virginia University, Morgantown, West Virginia.

Mrs. Maiolo is a graduate of Duquesne University, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania and
attended graduate school at West Virginia University, Morgantown, West
Virginia. She studied with Bernard Goldberg, principal flutist of the Pittsburgh
Symphony, Marcel Moyse at Marlboro School of Music, and Victor Saudek. At
the age of 15, she made her solo debut with the Pittsburgh Symphony. Mrs.
Maiolo is the recipient of numerous honors, including the NCMEA National
Music Award, the Pittsburgh Tuesday Musical Club, the Enola M. Lewis
Scholarship and the Mu Phi Epsilon Sterling Achievement Award.
Mrs. Maiolo is the principal flutist of the Binghamton Philharmonic Orchestra,
Tri-Cities Opera Orchestra, Southern Tier Concert Band and Downtown Singers
Orchestra. In addition to her playing positions, she concertizes as a soloist,
recitalist and chamber musician. In 1983, Mrs. Maiolo was honored to conduct
the NYSSMA All-State Flute Choir. She served as the flute chairperson for the
NYSSMA Manual from 1981 to 2001. She is a "clinician" for the Selmer
Company.

Binghamton University Flute Ensemble
Stephanie Dodge
Michelle Grossman
Leah Hays
Stephanie Holleran
Joanna Hunt
Kelley Kimball
Nicole Lean
Caitlynn McMullen
Manessha Lal
Lauren Silinonte
Kira Slocum
Valerie Spiller
Meghan Tate
Jennifer Weintraub

�COMING EVENTS
Saturday, April 30 - Master's Recital: Amber Alarcon, mezzo-soprano 8:00 p.m. - Casadesus Recital Hall - free
Sunday, May 1 - University Wind Ensemble - We Band of Brothers - 3:00
p.m. - Anderson Center Chamber Hall - free
Sunday, May 1 - Junior Recital: Melissa Mattern, viola - 7:30 p.m. Casadesus Recital Hall - free
Monday, May 2 - Master's Recital: Robin Kindig, bassoon - 8:00 p.m. Casadesus Recital Hall- 8:00 p.m. - free
Wednesday, May 4 - Student Conductors' Concert - 8:00 p.m. - Watters
Theater - free
Thursday, May 5 - Student Recognition Mid-Day Concert - 1:20 p.m. Casadesus Recital Hall - free
Thursday, May 5-:- Harpur Chorale and Women's Chorus - 8:00 p.m. Anderson Center Chamber Hall- free
Saturday, May 7 - Master's Recital: Theresa Perrone, clarinet- 3:00 p.m. Casadesus Recital Hall - free
Saturday, May 7 - Student Recital: Christina Wan, violin - 8:00 p.m. Casadesus Recital Hall - free
Sunday, May 8 - Student Saxophone Quartet - 3:00 p.m. - Casadesus Recital
Hall-free
Thursday, May 12 - Master's Recital: Donald Truesdail, string bass - 8:00
p.m. - Casadesus Recital Hall - free

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                    <text>���•
4

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we have changed. isn't that wonderful?
isn't that sad? it is wonderful because
if a person stops changing he stops living.
it is sad because we have not changed together. the living people we arc now and
will be soon (tomoITOw . • • any minute! ! ! )
are not friends. it is not nice when we
cannot be friends . we used to be friends.
very good friends . i want to be your
friend again . but i don't know how we arc
to change again .
jannct

3

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��They say evetything must be replaced
They say every distance is not near
But I remember every face of every
man
who put me here .
I see my life come shining
from the west out to the east
Any day now, any day now,
I shall be released .
Bob Dylan

8

�9

�Perk up fair maiden, erase thy frown
For a male nymphomaniac pulled into town
An evil creature with lusts foul and base
"Moc Loogham is coming" a ll over the place
On billboards, on brickets, on toilet bowls
On signposts, in buildings, in students souls
Who is he? Where is he? Does anyone know?
Are you really alive? Please tell us Moe
Are you here to save us from SUNY at Hades
From midterms, papers, finals, and grades
Will drugs and boredom be things of the past
Will you give all our lives a true meaning at last
Are you the Messiah, the Holy ONE
Will you make your descent into lecture hall one
With cap and tassle and a blue nightie-gown
and little a ngels high flying around
and wander among us, our minds a ll a 'flipping
And give us the gift of eternally tripping?
Are you man or beast? Sinner of Saint?
Or just some dude with a can of paint
With nothing to do but act like some clown
just writing "Moe Loogham is coming to town."
Marty Bassis

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�Don't let it bring you down
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And you will come around.
Nl'il Young

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49

�Dear Graduating Class of 1973:
Jn a certain se11se 11 is perhaps artificial for me ro write vou a letter,
since few of us know each other on a personal basis. In part this 1s
because I have been here for only a few months, but it is also a
re flection of the fact that in a large university and SUNY
Bingham ton is now a large university with nearly 8,000 students it is
virtually impossible for a president ro come to know personally more
than a relatively small handful of students.
I suspect that most of us do nor really expect that a president and
the students at the university he tries to serve can rrnl_1· be 111t1mare
friends. Yer it is unfo rtunate that so few of us have a chance to get
acquainted, to exchange views, and perhaps to learn a little more about
each other.
Although the role of a president and the role of a student differ and
their experiences sometimes lead them to different conclusums about
certain things within the university, we nevertheless have much 111
common. We are all human beings and our lives have all intersected
within a u111vers11y. Being a university president is, 1 assure you, a
learning experie11ce (and at rimes a pleasurable experience), and I
believe that being a student is no less a learning experience a11d one that
also has its moments of pleasure and e njoyment.
I am certain that your years here have had their good and bad moments with experiences and learning
situations that vary dramatically in their usefulness and interest to you. I hope, however, that each one of you
can rake away from your experiences here, both the good and the bad, some knowledge and understa11di11g that
can assist you 111 the 1•ears ahead, nor only in vocational pursuits related to the human 11ecessity of "maki11g a
living," but also perhaps to the eve11 greater human necessity of trying to improve the quality of life in an
imperfect world. I hope, too, that you hove learned things here, both in your courses and other involvements and
experiences, that can assist you in acquiring more knowledge and understanding either co go on to further
educational opportunities or to other pursuits.
Finally, I would like to express 011e thought to you about a new role that you can assume if you wa11r
ro either now or at some time in the future. The word "alumni" may seem stra11ge in your ear, and you may
decide ro be alum11i i11 name only. I do 1101 make this comme11t with any thought of fu11d-giving that you might
eve11tually co11s1der, but simply because of a belief that srudents who have go11e through a university should retain
a special i11terest in what happens there, both educationally a11d in every other respect. Educario11 is a
complicated and difficult affair, and it has always seemed to me a shame that former students of the university do
11ot involve themselves in continuing to press for the things that they believe in and improvements they would
like to see made. As a consequence of th e intense public interest and often public misunderstanding about
higher educatio11, former srude11ts, 11ow the alumni, could serve an especially useful role in communicating both
ways between the university and the larger society of which it is a part.
You. 1101 I 11or anvone else, should define what constitutes "success" or achievement for you in the years
ahead. I sincerely hope that you fulfill your aspirations and that this university has in some significant way
contributed to that objective.
With all best wishes.
Cordially,
C. Peter Magrath

Pres1de11r

��BARRY ALBERTS

ANITA ABOU lAFIA

VIVIAN ABRAMS

WILLIAM AIELLO

AlAN ALBERT

EIBAN E. ALLEN

STIJART ALPERIN

52

EILEEN ABRAMSON

CHER AMERIKA

�VIC OBIH ARAH

BRENT ARNOID

BRAD ARISOHN

WILLlAM ATWATER

DENISE AVITABILE

AUCE AXELROD

DANIEL BAKER

KAREN ANN BAKER

SUSAN BALL

MARGOT BALLON

53

�VALERIE BENTLEY

LINDA ANNE BARNES

ELLEN MARCIA BARON

HELENE BARTE

LORELEI BEER

SUSAN L. BENDER

ALFRED BENDIXEN

STEVEN BERGER

BRUCE BERNSTEIN

54

JEFFREY BERNSTEIN

�ROCHELLE BIRNBAUM

CAROL BLANCHARD

M ICHAEL BERTENTHAL

NANCY A BIMMI.ER

VALERIE A. BIVONA

MERRILL BLACK

DAPHNE 1. BLACKBURN

DANIEL BlAZEJ

EILEEN BI.ECHER

JOAN BI.ECKMAN

�PERRY BRANSON

GREGG BOBIER

JILL BOGARD

TOM BONDY

DEBBIE BOREK

MARILYN BOWMAN

HAROLD BOXER

DEBRA BRAVER1'1AI\

SHERRY BRISK

MAXINE BRITT

56

�BREIT H. BROCKMAN

RICHARD ]. BROWN

HELAINE BROOKOFF

DAVID P. BUCHHOLTZ

PAUL BURNS

RICHARD B. BURSKY

THOMAS E. CALLAHAN

ROBERT A . CALLENDAR

JOHN W, CANNAVINO

57

JOSEPH CAPITUMMINO

�CASIMER CARROS

SALVATORE CARUANA

JOHN CAST AIDI

RONALD CAVEGUA

STEVEN CHARTAN

JULIET CHEN

IVAN CHESLER

GRACE CHOW

CATHERINE CHUNG

HEATHER CHURCH

RANDY COFSKY

58

ERIC COHEN

�FRED M. COHEN

JOSEPH COHEN

PAUL COHEN

DEBORAH A. COllINS

DEAN M. CORDIANO

GARY CORLISS

LEILANI COOTER

GAYLA B, COX

CLIFFORD S. CRAMER

DANIEL CRANE

DANIEL R. CROSS

59

�JEANNETTE DE LISA

TIMOTHY CURRY

THOMAS CZAJAK

RUTH DAVIDSON

NANCY DAWSON

CHARLES DELLl-IEIM

LAWRENCE DELORENZO

60

THOMAS DACEY

DAVID DEUTSCH

�,.,.
DANIEL DIAZ, JR.

CINDY DICKER

LAWRENCE DINKES

LUBA DJURDJINOVIC

DEBORAH DONNELLY

JEANETTE DOVER

JILL DUBE

KAREN DUBOW

61

HARRIET DUBOWSKI

�ALAN R. ELLIS

KATHRYN DUNCAN

KAREN EAGER

DONALD EDGELL

SUSAN EGELKO

JIM EWANCO

LAWRENCEFAGENSON

62

A . H. FAZIO

�MARY P. FINUCANE

MICHELE FEIBEL

STEVEN FEIN

MARC A, FEIDMAN

RICHARD FEIDMAN

MICHAEL FINZ

MITCHELL FISHBACH

63

NORA FITZGERAID

�PATRICIA FLOHR

DENISE FRANK

ROBERT FRAUENGIAS

JOEL FREEDMAN

BRUCE FREEMAN

STEPHANIE FRIDIE

EDWARD FRIEDMAN

IA WRENCE FRIEDMAN

PAUL FRIEDMAN

ROBERT A FRIEDMAN

64

�\1ICHAEL H. FRISCH

ROBERT S. FRITTS

GAIL FULLER

MICHELE GATENS

TRUDY GEFFIN

NOEL GENCO

ADINA C. GIIBERT

MIRIAM GILBERT

DAVID GLASSER

65

BARRY GLEE.N

�MARGIE GLENN

\10NTE GOIDITCH

RICHARD GLICK

DIANE GODDARD

DENNIS GOID

MITCHELL GOIDBERG

MICHAEL GOIDENBERG

SHEIDON GOIDFARB

LEAH GOIDSCHJ\UDT

GERRI GOIDSTEIN

LESLIE GOIDSTEIN

66

�.'vlADELEINE GOTTLIEB

CAROL GOUGER

JOHN C. GONSIOREK

JUDD GOOD!\1AN

DOUGLAS GORSLlNE

PHILIP GOTTLIEB

JERRY GOYNIAS

67

BEN GOODMAN

MELISSA GRABE

�ELLEN GRAPENSTETER

STEVEN GROSS!viAN

JOHN GRAVES

PENDR YL GRIFFITH

PATRICIA GROARK

EILEEN GROEGER

LEONARD GROSS

PHYLLIS GROSSMAN

THOMAS GUARNERA

NEIL GUTTEfu\11.AN

MICHAEL HAGELBERG

68

�DAVID HALLER\1AN

LESLIE

~1.

HAMILTON

DEBBI HANNES

DOUGLAS HARBRECHT

CRAIG HARCUP

DAVID HARRISON

ELLEN HEBRON

LA \\"REN CE HEFLER

69

GRETA ,\1.

HEl~'TZ

�PAUL HENNESSEY

EDWARD HELD

ROXANl\ HOFF

STEVE H.1RSCHHEI1\fER

JACK HERZBERG

JUDY LYNN HOAK

SAt'-!DY HOfF\,V\l\

SHERRY HOFFMAN

SUSAN HOFFMEISTER

70

�MICHAEL W. HOLLEY

BARRY D. JACOBSON

PAUL HORO\VITZ

GARY A. HOWARD

DORENE HYMAN

FRED J. ISAAC

MAXINE JACOBOWITZ

SUSAN JAFFE

71

ANNE E. JOHNSON

�KA TE JOSEPHSON

RALPH R . JOY

VINCENT JULIAN

CHARLENE KAHLOR

BOB KAHN

IRA C. KALB

AL KALTER

SHERRI KANDEL

ROBERTA KANDL

72

�BARBARA KANTOR

HEBERT KAPLAN

SANFORD B. KAPLAN

MARTY KARTAGENER

CLIFFORD KASDEN

EILEEN KATZ

LINDA G. KELLY

.\1ATTHE\\ C. KEN&gt;.C:DY

NANCY G. KEENEY

73

JAY KENNIS

�j

M\RK KIPPERMAN

CAREN KESSLER

VIVIAN KESTEN

DENNIS KillIAN

KATHY KING

CAROLE KINNEY

ROBERT KIRELL

FRAN KIRSCHENBAUM

LARRY KIRSCHNER

74

CHARLES KETCHUCK

�LEONA RD K LEVA I\'

JANET KLUTCH

ST UART F. KOENIG

l'v!ARK KOLBER

)J\INE KOPP

ROBERT L KOR.:-.IGUT

LARRY). KOS\10NT

DAVID L. KOSS

75

GLE1''N KRA.&gt;,,1ER

�DEBRA LASALlE

]A Y KRUGMAN

ELI KRUPNIK

ROCHELlE KURLANDER

CAROL LANDESJ\.1AN

MARK LANDMAN

MARCIA B. LANE

GERARD LA TOPOLSKI

HARVEY LATTERMAN

YUN - FA! LAU

76

�DANIEL LEONARD

RICHARD LA \VRENCE

JEFFREY LEBO\\"ITZ

MICHELE LEHR

DONALD LEIBOWITZ

DAVID E. LET A

DEBBIE LET AI

77

JUDITH LEVIN

�DEBRA LEVINE

BRUCE LIPSHUTZ

GARY C. LEVINE

RICHARD W. LEVITT

FRED LEWIS

SHERYL LEWIT

MADELYN LITTMAN

WILLIAM G. LOK

78

CHARLES LEVY

STEVE LIEBERMAN

PETER LORENZI

�EDWARD LUCY

MICHAEL LUSTICK

GLENN ARTHUR LYONS

ROBERT MAHLER

NINA MALAGOLD

lVIITCHELL G. MALLER

SUSAN E. MANLEY

ROBERT MANNING

DONNA IRENE MANKE

79

BRIAN MACPHERSON

LYNNE MARGOLIS

�CHRIS MARINICH

PAUL :-.1ELCHOR

CHRISTOPHER MARINO

MAR lON MARX

DOUGLAS McGILVRAY

MITCH MEDINA

JUSTIN MELLENDER

MICHAEL MENDELSON

80

LYNN MASON

DEBBIE METRICK

�PERRY MORTON

DAVID A. MUNRO

BARBARA MILLSTEIN

WILLIAM G. MOORE

BARBRA MOSKOWITZ

PAUL MUCCI

BETH MUNSON

PJ-ULIP S. NACHMAN

81

RENEE NALITT

�GERALD NATHAN

ROBERT NEARIER

VICTOR NG

RITA OLIVERIO

LINDA ORZELEK

ELLEN NEUFELD

EDWARD 1'.!EUKRUG

DON NOVICK

EUZABETI-I O ' CONNELL

ELLEN OSTROW

BRIAN 0 1 SUL LIVAN

�ROBERT OZER

PHILIP PACK

ELYSA E. PALANT

JAY PARKER

DARLENE K. PARRY

DAVID L. PASTRlCH

WILLIAM M. PHILION

LYLE PICKERT

GRETCHEN PETERSON

83

BILL PIEKARSKI

�RENEE PRAGALZ

SPERO PINES

JEFFREY PUSKIN

MARTIN POMERANTZ

ROBERT PORT

SUSAN PUNDYK

MARK RABIN

84

ALLAN PLUMSER

MARil.YN RAMNES

�MARIE B. RECANO

GAIL REIS

GAYEL. RHODES

PATRICIA RICCOBONO

DEBORAH E. RICHARDS

FRED RICI-Uv10ND

ROBERT ROBER TIEUO

JANET ROCHE

ELEANOR M. ROMA

85

GILBERT J. ROSEN

�CAREN ROYCE

IRIS ROSENFELD

WILLIAM ROSENFELD

BARRY ROSENMAN

BARBARA ROTHSCI-IlLD

JAMES ROWAN

ELIZABETH ROWLEY

EILEEN RUIZ

MILDRED RUIZ

86

FRANK A. SJ\J\S

�MICHAEL SASNOW

SANDRA RUTI-l SCHIFF

MITCHELL SA1v1EROFF

JOAN SAPERSTEIN

LEE SCHACHTER

HOWARD SCHANKER

PAMELA SCHNEIDER

DANA SCHNIPPER

87

DEAN P . SCHUCK..\.1AN

�EVA MARIA SEIFERT

STEVE SCHUSTACK

DANNY SCHWAGER

EUGENE SCHWARTZ

KATHRYN SEESING

MARILYN SEGAL

JEFFREY SEIBEL

PAUL SEIGEL

TERRY SELTZER

WILLIAM SEMON

88

�CINDY SEWARD

JOHN T . SHAFFER

JULI E ANN SHEKLOW

ROBIN D . SIEGEL

HOPE SILVERSTEIN

EILEEN SIMON

JANET SHAPIRO

MARC I A SIKOWITZ

JILL C. SIMON

89

LIDEY SILVER

ELLEN SINGER

�GREGORY SINOPOLI

NEIL SKOLNICK

JOSEPH SLATER

STEPHEN SMITH

LAURIE SNELL

JEFFREY SNOW

CARYN SOBEL

VIDA SOLOMON

RONNIE SOSINSKY

PETH ANN SOUTHERS

DEBBIE SOWUL

90

RONALD S. SMITH

�MAXYNE SPERGEL

ROGER SETH STEIN

SCOTT SPOLAN

LINDY LEE SPRY

SANDRA A. STEFLIK

JEFFREY F. STEIN

MAUREEN STEINHILBER

MARY A. STEVENS

91

ANDREW N. STOLZAR

�ADRIAN STRIZHAK

SUSAN SUSSER

DAVID SWANDA

LINDA SWANSON

RHODA SWEITZER

STEPHEN T ALERCIO

JEFFREY TANENBAUM

SHEILA TANNENBAUM

EUEN TANZER

JOY TARTTER

LOIS A. TEITELBAUM

92

DJ\ VID L. TILLEM

�MICHAEL TIMMENY

EUSE M. TISSOT

MARK R. TOLOSKY

LAURA J. TOTTEN

EVELYN TREISTER

ROBERT TURNER

JEFFREY UFFNER

JESSICA M. lITTS

LINDA J. VALJAOTS

93

ANDREA VAN ATTA

�RONALD VAN DYCK

VINCENT

J. VITO

ROBERT

J. VANEK

!SABEL VELEZ

CAROLYN VESPER

SANFORD O . VOIT

JEFFREY VORSANGER

94

LOUISE V ARCA

NANCY WAC KSTEIN

�MARYE. WALTER

ROBERT WALDMANN

IRAS. WALTER

JAMES E. WARD JR.

RICHARD WASHOUSKY

LAWRENCE WATT

BETH WEINER

BARRY WEINREB

MARK H. WEISBERG

LYNN WEISHOLTZ

�ANDREW M. WEISS

MITCHELL WILLIM1S

ANNETTE WEISS

ALLEN WELLS

STEVEN WEXLER

KATHLEEN WHEELER

PINLLIS WIESENTHAL

ANN WILLIG

ALFRED WILSON

ERICA WISE

96

�ANDREA

J.

YERMACK

DANIEL ZEIDMAN

LINDA ANN WOHLFELD

AMY WOLPIN

CAROLZARROW

SANDRA M. ZWEIG

ROBERT A ZUCKER

THOMAS

97

J.

ZUKOWSKI

LINDA A . ZECCOLA

�KAREN BLECHMAN

Karen would have liked the idea of a yearbook that almost did not exist. She
was not a dreamer and appreciated and understood the realities of life, but she
never hesitated to try to change things. She was never idle, from the lunatic
freshman days of making beds for a nickel , to the upper classman days when she
ran for every office possible. She even managed to win a few times, and was a most
conscientious member of Harpur College Council. Karen had won her last election
for Off Campus Representative to Harpur College Council in spite of the fact that
she was so busy helping S.C.B. set up the first concert for the year that she never
even had time to vote for herself! But she won anyway and would have continued
bringing home all those reams of paper and communiques and all the other
paraphernalia that we used to laugh at. What a joke it was when she became a
member of the Committee on Committees - the ultimate bureaucratic
organization, perfect for a girl who absolutely relished meetings and memos,
Robert's Rules of Order and Council gossip, faculty opinions and students' rights.
A memorial to Karen is so unfitting. She is not one who needs to be
remembered simply because she had an untimely death. Death plays no part in
Karen's story. She was too full of life. She had what one friend called a "Jewish
elan." She really enjoyed the whole Jewish thing - holidays and telling other
people about Judaism. Not that she was a missionary of any sort - Karen had too
much respect for people to be like that, besides she enjoyed hearing about other
people's religions as well. And enjoyment was very important to Karen. She had a
talent for finding crazy friends and being even crazier herself. So many nights the
accounting or math was dropped in a rush to F. and J .'s or Cosmo's or The Pub,
and being no different from any other Harpur student, she paid back for these
nights of indulgence by living on green salad for a week and promising to do all her
work before the day of the exam .
Really, Karen was no different from anyone else at Harpur, yet she was so
special, so vital, so much a part of what makes Harpur more than just a branch of
the State University of New York at Binghamton. Karen was so much a pMt of
things - Harpur College Council, treasurer of Zero Population Growth, and one of
the authors of the student handbook to Harpur College. But most of all, she was a
wonderful friend. She accepted people for what they were - not that she always
agreed with what one of her friends did. And Karen would tell you if she didn't
agree with you. She was a very special person, and perhaps the most wonderful
thing one can say is that her colleagues smile when they think of her and all her
friends laugh. She gave such texture, such color, such richness to life at Harpur. It is
this that should be remembered .

98

�Two roads diverged in a yellow wood,
And sorry I could not travel both
And be one traveler, long I stood
And looked down one as far as I could
To where it bent in the undergrowth;
Then took the other, as just as fair,
And having perhaps the better claim,
Because it was g~assy and wanted wear;
Though as for that the passing there
Had worn them really about the same,
And both that morning equally lay
In leaves no step had trodden black .
Oh, I kept the first for another day !
Yet knowing how way leads on to way,
I doubted if I should ever come back.
I shall be telling this with a sigh
Somewhere ages and :i.ges hence:
Two roads diverged in a wood, and I- I took the one less traveled by,
And that has made all the differ ence .
--Robert Frost

�100

��T\CKETS
SOLD HERE.

�\

\

•

103

�104

��T3ARBARA ABIS
Kaan Drive
Woodburne , New York

Honors in Biology
ALAN J. ALBERT
1 Edgewood Drive
New Hyde Par k, New York 11040

English Literature
SCB Blood Drive Chairman , Carnival
Chairman .

Biology
Carnival Weekend , Pipe Dr eam Reporter,
WHRW Staff, Dean's List, Harpur College
Theater Pr oduction Stage Manager.

ANITA ABOU LAFIA
69 Walnut Street
Binghamton , New York

If a man does not keep pace with his com-

English Literatur e

panions, per haps it is because he hears a
different drummer. Let him step to the
mus ic which he hear s however measured
or far away .
- -·-1 lenry David Thoreau

VIVIAN ABRAMS
278 First Ave.
Massapequa Park, New York 11762

BARRY S. ALBERTS
7 Balint Drive
Yonke r s . New York 10710

Biol ogy
Student Manager

Political Science &amp; Urban Studies .
EILEEN ABRAMSON
1785 Jasen Avenue
Valley Stream, New York
Accounting

ETHAN ELIOT ALLEN
41 Ar mour R oad
Princeton , New Jersey 08540

Secretary of Jewish Fellowship

13iology
Human Sexuality Committee

SI !ARON SUE ABRAMSON
2334 Boston Road
Bronx, New York 10467

STUART ALPERIN
150-02 77th Road
F lu shing, New York 11367

Theater
Drug Counseling, Carnival Weekend
Chairman .

Economi cs
I Iar pur Law Society, Intr amural Softball
Champions 1970.

WILLIAM P. AIELLO
22 Allen Street
Johnson City, iew York 13790

BARRY ANECHIARICO
33 Adcla id Str eet
Rye, New York 10580

Biol ogy

106

��Chairman, Education Planning and Policief
Committee, Academic Co-ordinator of
United Student Government.

learned a great deal about people--and
about myself.
The first thing that impressed me about
llarpur was the people, and although I
know when I leave I'll miss the hills and
trees , it will be the people who I'll remember as I Iarpur . To all those who have
at one time or the other enriched my life- I thank you . To the few who have been
there always , and who have helped me
more than I coul d ever explain, thanks
somehow do not seem sufficient. I love
you and will never forget what you have
done for me .

STEVEN G. BERGER
7 Dock Lane
Great Neck, New York 11024
Biology

BRUCE BERNSTEIN
67-7 1 Yellowstone Boulevard
Forest Hills, l\'ew York 11375

HELENE LOIS BARTE
3971 Gouverneur Avenue
Bronx, New York 10463

Sociolqgy
Triple Cities School of Judo and Karate,
Junior Year Abroad in Copenhagen,
Denmark.

Creative Writing
There is but one of you in all of time .
DANIEL BEClIARD
241 West Avenue
East Rochester, New York 14445

JEFFREY ALAN BERSTEI1
1630 East 102nd Street
Brooklyn, New York 11236

Biology

English Literature

Varsity Swimming, Water Polo Club, Resident Assistant.

Yearbook 1973, Student Center Board Publicity and Transportation Committees,
Games Room Manager, Al'\ID a Tim Curry
Concert Usher .

~1ARIA BELLOMO
46 Arden Boulevard
Hempstead, New York 11552

In the Fall of 1969, four years were an
eternity. Freshman year crawled. It was
weird but it was interesting and different.
The next three years zoomed. To all the
people I knew, I thank you for the moments spent together. To all the other
faces of the dining hall and the classroom
you, too, helped to create the mood . The
I Iarpur Person may have always been a
dream , but I believed in him.
A tasty farewell to Chenango Third Floor
and Newing College.
The memories will cling.

Studio Art
ALFRED BE TDIXEN
1240 Nostrand Avenue
Brooklyn, Tew York
English
Innovational Projects Board, Harpur College Council, Procedures Committee-

108

��RAYMOND S. BLOCll
226 ArUrnr Avenue
Johnson City, New York 13790

GREG DA YID BOBIER
634 Adams Avenue
West Hemstead, New York

Political Science

Economics

Off-Campus Representative to the United
Student Government and to the University
Assembly, Member of the Educational
Policies Committce(UA) , Member of the
Election Committee(USG), off-Campus
Representative to U1e I larpur College Coun -

Intramural Hurdling, Advisor to the Base ball Union of Little Leaguers , Kayak
Coxswain (1970).
The Conclus ion of a four year respite from
reality.
JILL BOGARD
English Literature
Do you. really smile when you smile?

DEBBIE BOREK
910 l Shore Road
Brooklyn, New York 11209
Biology
MARILYN E. BOWMAN
197 East 56th Street
Brooklyn, New York 11230
English
Black Student Union
We can make it if we try.
HAROLD STUART BOXER
24 Sunnyside Avenue
Harrison, New York
I listory

cil (l 97 l -72), Representative-at- Large
to the United Student Government and to
the Gniversit) Assembl), ;..1ember of the
Student Services Organization (USG) , Representative-at- Large to the Harpur College Council (1972-73), Member of the
Lndergr&lt;.H.luate '\'ominating Committee of
CSG (1972-73).

It's been almost OK - MDRS - KNITS- and
the New York Giants.
11ELAINE BROOKOFF
134 7 East 17th Street
Brooklyn, New York 11230

110

��Political Science

FRED MICHAEL CO! JEN
2150-84th Street
Brooklyn, New York 11214

I. M. Judicial Council; Chairman of Auction
I larpur Law Society.

Political Science
JULIET CIIEN
No. 7 Mars St. Bel Air I
'v1akati, Rizal, Ph ilippines
Accounti ng

Senior member, Political Science Undergraduate Committee; Executive Board
Member, Harpur Law Society; Executive
Board Member , Tri -County Ileal th and
Respiratory Disease Assoc .

GRACE-PO-SIIAN CHOW
9A Glee Path, 11th Fl., Mei Foo Sun Chuen
Kowlon, Ilong Kong

JOSEPH COHEr
800 Imperial Dr .
Baldwin, I ew York

Sociology

Psychology

Secretary of I long Kong Student Associa tion

RENEE LESLIE COHEN
969 E . 85 St.
Brooklyn, New York 11236

I !EATI IER CHURCH

Social Sciences and English Literature

56 Pennsylvania Ave.
Bi nghamton , New York

Chairman SCB Concert Commi ttee; SCB
Fall Weekend Committee.

Anthropology

Veni , Vidi, Vi ci.

llonor Roll, Dean's List, Zumawaukee fan .

DEAr M. CORDIANO
19 Southgate Ct.
Brooklyn, New York

RANDY A. COFSKY
2 03 \V • 8 1 st.
New York City, New York 10024

History

Geology

Phi Beta Kappa; Baseball Team- -2 years ;
Dean's List- -4 years .

ERIC COIIEN
80 Allen St.
Johnson City, New York 13790

Count where man's gl ory most begins and
ends, And say, My gl ory was I had such
friends .

llistory/Certificate in Urban Studies
GAYLA B. COX
3624 Watson Blvd.
Endwell, l ew York 13760

Tutor with the Broome County Urban
League; Dorm Council; I. M. A League
Football champs 1972; I. M. softball, basketball, volleyball .

Art l listory

112

��MARK STEVEN DILLOF
576 Barnard Avenue
Woodmere, New York 11098

LARRY DINKES
216-31 Sawyer Ave .
Queens Village , New York

Philosophy

CIIEMISTRY.

JEAl\'NETTE MARIA DE LISA
30 Daniel Low Terrace
Staten Island, New York

USG Treasurer; 1 ewing College Council;
.&gt;J. S. F. Undergraduate Research Participant; Chemistry Student Advisory
Committee
I did so much, but yet not as much as I
wanted to. I guess that's life.

NICI IO LAS J. DORIA
6617 Seville Dr.
Rome, N . Y.
Management Science
"What is done cannot be undone. "

JEANETTE DOVER
2685 llomecrest Ave.
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Linguistics
Jewi sh Fellowship and Students for Israel.
Feel free to be free.

KAREN DUBOW
2229 Knapp St.
Brooklyn, N. Y. 11229

Music
Resident Assistant; Student Center Board;
Yearbook Staff; Student Center Manager;
Editor Lake Lieberman Gazette; Italian
Club; College Editor--Pipe Dream; Orientation advisor-- '70-- '71; Delaware Day
Chairman; ;\'cwing College council secretary.
To the friends I love and the good times
I'll never forget--it was THE BEST!!

Resident Assi stant, Newing Library Staff.

HARRIET DUBOWSKI
Box 570 Ilarpur College
Binghamton, N. Y. 13901
Art I Iistory

114

��MARC A FELDMAN
75 Oxford Rd.
Rockville Center, N . Y . 11570

Orientation Cornrnitte, F r eshma n Advisor,
Pre - Med Society, Ass is tant in department
of Biology.

Anthropol ogy
NORA F . FITZGERALD
23 Franklin Ave.
II ill crest
Binghamton, N . Y. 13901

RIClIARD STEWART FELDl\1AN
22 1-46 Manor Rd .
Queens Village, N. Y. 11427

English Liter autre
History
Regents and National Meri t Scholarships,
a ctive in theater productions.

Cum Laude, I-Iarpur College Law Society
Executive Counsel , Intramur al Counsel,
Super visor of Faculty Childrens ' Swi m
Program.

DENISE FRANK
1833 Palmer Ave.
Larchmont, N . Y.

Chemisty
Better living thr ough Chemi stry and love.

ERI C L . FRANK
100- 4 De Kruif Place
Bronx, 1• Y.

DAVID S. FELLER
100-13 Dreiser Loop
Bronx, N. Y. 10475

IIistory
USG Rep. from Newing College, USG
T r easurer, USG Vice -President, Corn rnittee to Revi ew the Articles of Goverance.

l listory

MARY PI!I LOMENA F INUCANE
2322 Grand Ave.

ROBERT FRAUENGLAS
ll34 E. 72 St.
Brooklyn, N. Y . 11234

Bronx, N . Y . 10468
Anthropology and Geography.

History

Varsity and intramural sports.

Treasurer - -Bingham Hall, Newing College
Council; USG Advocate , Newing Co llege
Rep. to USG , Jewish fellowship, Execu tive Commi t tee- -I Iovevei T zion, co-founder Poalei Hovevei Tzi on, editor ofNACHLAH, Shromei Hatikva, Jewish radio show,
Dean's List, University cal endar com mittee, member of Uni veraity assembly,
May 1970 St r ike Committee, Member SMC.

MICIIAEL FINZ
642 Banner Ave .
Soci ol ogy
DA.NIEL FIRSHEIN
1565 Waring Ave .
Bronx, '.J . Y. 10469

There are three things whi ch are r eal:
G-d humar folly, and laughter. The first

Biological Science

116

��NOEL A. GENCO
22 Arrowhead Drive
Rochester, N. Y. 14621
Chemistry
Four years of college and what do you
get- -another day older and deeper in debt.
GEORGEOSP. GERAKOPOULOS
22 South Grand Avenue
Poughkeepsie, N. Y.
Sociology
ADINA GILBERT
75-15 173rd St.
Flushing, N . Y.
Sociology
TllOMAS W. GIULIANO
156 Jackson Avenue
Mineola, N. Y. 11501

Dean's List, John Battle l\lemorial Fund,
French Club, Yearbook 1973, SCATE,
Hinman College Little Theater, Junior
Year Abroad in Neuchatel , Switzerland
and in Grenoble, France.

a

Et Pangloss disait quclqufois Candide:
"Tous Les evenements sont enchaines dans
le meilleur des mondes possibles; car,
en.fin, Si VOUS n 'aviez pas CtC Chasse d'un
beau chateau a grands coups de pied dans
le derricre pour l'amour de Mlle. Cw1cgonde, Si YOUS n'aviez pas etc mis a l'In quistion, si vous n'aviez pas couru l 'Amerique' a pied, Si vous n a viez pas donne un
bon coup d'epee au baron, si vous n'aviez
pas perdu tous vos moutons du bon pays
d'Eldorado, vous ne mangeriez pas ici
des cedrats confits et des pistaches. "
"Cela est bein dit, "repondit Candide,
"mais it faut cultiver notre jardin."
---Voltaire, CANDIDOU L'OPTIMISME
I

1\!1ARGIE LORRAINE GLENN
805 East 156th Street
Bronx, N . Y . 10455

Cinema (Production)
Theater
MakingFilrns, lntrarnuralSoccer, Traveling, espec ially in Colorado, Arizona, and
Oregon.
If you know what n turtle is, then you know
what a pumpkin cou ld be.

DAVID GLASSER
290 West 290th St.
Bronx, N. Y.
Liberal Studies

BARR\ 110\VARD GLEEN
578 Grant Place
Cedarhurst, N. Y. 11516
French

Black Student Union, Vice President AfroAmerican TI1eater Workshop, WIIRW Staff,

��English Literature

PllILIP DANIEL GOTTLIEB
l 462 Moffit Avenue
Hewlett, New York 11557

But most numerous of the herd was such
Who though too little, and talked too much.

Chemistry
Business Manager- -Pipe Dream; University Chorus- -First Tenor; Research .

NANCY JO GUTNER
12 Ridgeway Circle
White Plains, i ew York 10605

MELISSA JANE GRABE
305 London Road
Staten Island, New York 10306

I Ii story

JA

TE A GUTTERMAN
63-65 Douglaston Parkway
Douglaston, New York 11362

Anthropology
Women's Varsity Basketball

llistory
E LLEl L. GRAPENSTETET
RD #1
Geneva , New York
Ad lloc,
Ad hoc ,
And Quid Pro Quo
so little time
so much to know.

Women's Liberation; Binghamton Women's
Abortion Action Coalition; Young Socialist
Alliance; Student Mobilization Committee;
Radical Arab Jewish Alliance.
NEIL GUTTERMAN
2 9 Abecl Street
Yonkers , New York 10705
Psychology

LEONARD GROSS
162 First Avenue
Gloversville, 'cw York

Wind Ensemble; Carnival Weekend Committee; Teen Center.

Ilistory

MICHAEL T. IJAGELBERG
181-11 Aberdeen Rd.
Jamaica Estates, New York

Captain- -Chess Team

Political Science
PIIYLLIS ANNE GROSSMAN
1278 East 56th Street
Brookl) n, New York 11234
Psychology
Tll0'.\1AS GC \RNERA
149-53 128th Street
South 07one Park, ?'\ew York 11420

_ _ _ _ _ _ 120

Silver Lake Marching and Eating Society
" . . . And to my friends, A Tl !ANK-YOUSONG For being kind to me:
Sleepy days, I have known some,
Twisted followings, I've shown some.
Ways to live, different from
The way I pray to die, Lord."
- -- L. Taylor

��Art I Iistory (architecture)
Editor- in -Chief 1973 Year book, Resident
Assistant, Student Center Manager, Con cert Chairman , Student Center Board,
SCB Fall Weekend Chairman, SCB Film
Chairman, Convocations Commi ttee , United Student Government, University Assem bly , SCB Winter Weekend, SCB Spring
Weekend, SCB Transportation Committee,
Undergraduate Art Majors Committee,
Medieval and Renaissance Society, Dorm
Council Treasurer, Interview Team Captain, Summer Activities Committee, et. al.

GRETA M. IJEINTZ
72 Board Ave .
Buffalo, New York 14214
Geology

SANDY IIOFFMAN
3 50 Lenox Rd.
Brooklyn, N. Y. 11226
llistory
Staff writer on Pipe Dream, Hinman
Halitosis.
These four years have flown! But they were
worth it. I learned to think, to work , to
goof-off, to make friends, to lose friends,
t o "rap", to love snow, to hate mud, to
curse, to love, to hurt, to pull "allnighters", to appreci ate good food, to
enjoy privacy, to relish college life and
its freedom. I'll miss these things- -to
Harpur my appreciation; to my friends,
love; to my acquaintances, thanks for being; to my teachers, my gratitude and,
just remember, there are no cums!
SHERRY HOFFMAN
8 Birch Place
Huntington, N. Y. ll743

Geol ogy Club, Outing Club, Ski Club.

ELLEN J. HELBERG
134-45 166 Place
Jamaica, New York 11434

Sociology

Sociol ogy, Certificate in Afro-American
Studies .

MICHAEL W. HOLLEY
2954 Jerusalem Ave .
Wantagh, N. Y.

Psychology
EDWARD A. l!ELD
854 East 24 Street
Brooklyn, New York

Resident Assistant, Intramurals, Kinks fan.
JUDY LYNN HOOK
27 Windsor Rd.
Great Neck, N. Y. 11021

Political Science
Pipe Dream Sports Staff

Psychology
Synchronized swimming,
Chorus.

ROXANN llOFF
119 Park Ave .
Binghamton, N. Y.

PAUL IVAN HOROWITZ
2754 Reservoir Ave.
Bronx, N. Y. 10468

Philosophy / Psychology

122

University

��ALAN H. KALTER
47 MacArthur Avenue
Plainview, N. Y.

I would Like to thank all my friends who
have acted as the guiding Light for my in creased maturity, both intellectually and
socially.

Liberal Studies
l\ewing College Council, Lake Lieberman
Gazette, USG, SASU.

CLIPFORD KASDEI\'
67-02 218th Street
Bayside, KY.

"To sin by silence, when one should protest, makes cowards of men. "
- - - Abraham Li nco Ln

Spanish
Baseball Team, Wind Ensemble.

SIIERRIKANDEL
80 Sproat Street
Middletown, 1 • Y.

EILEEN KATZ
L50 - 25 72nd Road
F lushing, N. Y.

Po litical Science

Sociology
Binghamton Women's Liberation

II ERBER T J. KAPLAN
54-37 Browvale Lane
Little Neck, 1 • Y.

NANCY C. KEENEY
255 Mullin Street
Watertown, N. Y.

I Ii story

Psychology

MITCHELL Al'tDREW KARLICK
74-26 260 Street
Glen Oaks, N. Y.

Co-designer of Newing Navy Sweatshirt.

Mathematics
MATTHEW C. KENNEDY
245 Riverside Drive
Johnson City, N. Y.

VP for Social Affairs of Hinman College,
Co-Founder of the Cleveland Hall Bridge
Club, Hinman Representative to SCB.

Biology

ever fear that your life may come to an
encl. Be afraid that it may never begin.

l

Varsity Wrestling Team, 4 years .
Does anybody Listen arolll1d here?

MARTIN H. KARTAGENNER
L474 Ocean Avenue
Brooklyn, T . Y.
Biology/ Pre-med

ROBERT KEN YO 1
165 Silver Lake Rd .
Staten Is Land, N. Y.

Pre-med Organization, KNITS , usher.

Philosophy

124

��MARCIA B. LANE
98-l5 llorace Harding Expressway
Queens, New York 11368

Geography
Varsity Tennis, Chairman -USG Athletics
Committee, Supervisor-i\'ewing Maintenance .

Mathematics

LARRY J. KOSMONT
335 East Beech Street
Long Beach, ~ew York

NANCY J. LEDERMAN
280 First A venue
New York, New York

Political Science

Art History

Pi Sigma Alpha, Summa Cum Laude, Har pur College Ski Club.

MICHELE LEHR
l48 Amherst St.
Brooklyn, New York Ll235

GLENN LEE KRAMER
69-l6 175 Street
Fresh Meadows , ;'\ew York

Creative Writing/Genera l Literature

English Literature

DONALDS . LEIBOWITZ
323 E . Mosholu Park\vay
Bronx, New York 10467

Don't let the sound of your own hee ls make
you crazy.

Philosophy
T INA KRAMER
840 Jerusalem Avenue
"forth Merrick, l\ew York

JANE LEIFER
76 Bengeyfiel d Ori ve
East Williston, New York Ll596

Political Science

French

JAY WOLF KRUGMA.i"\
l 99 I Iarvard A venue
Rockville Centre, New York

The point however is: is there ru1ything
out there in the uni verse? And why? And
must they be so noisy?

Anthropology
CAROL J. LA.i"\!OESMA!':
3lll Heath Avenue
l3ro1...x , Tew York 10463

AGNES DEBBIE LETA!
97-37 63 Road
Rego Park, New York 11374

Biology

Psycho logy

MARK LANDMAN
450 Cleveland Avenue
Ilornell, New York

DEBRA LEVINE
2300 Bronx Park East
Bronx, New York 10467

History

Sociology

126

��STEVE LIEBERMAN
3l25 Tibbett Avenue
Bronx, New York L0463

MUBARAK MAHOUD
640 Riverside Ori ve, Apt. 10- F
New York City, New York

I Iistory

Theater

IIarpur College Council; Member Moon
River Intramural Team .

Acting and Directing (Professional)
Go even unto China in search of knowledge.

BRUCE LIPSIIUTZ
115 DeIIaven Drive
Yonkers, i cw York 10703
Chemistry

NINA MALAGO LD
500 Ft. Washington A venue
New York City, l\ew York

Varsity Basketball; Dean's List.

French and Literature
French Student Advisory Committee.

MADELYN LITTMAJ.'\J
172-10 133 Avenue
Jamaica, New York

MITCHELL G. MALLER
223 - 08 l38 Avenue
Laurelton, New York ll4l3

Ilistory
PETER LORENZI
3158 East Church Street
Eden, New York 14057

Political Science (B . A. )

Administrative Science (B . S.)

Success in not final, and failure is not
fatal - -the only thing that matters is the
courage to go on.

Varsity Soccer and Varsity Baseball .

President, Sigma Tau Omega; Hinman
Administrati ve Assistant; Intramura l
Council; Audio-Visual Staff; Inter-Social
Club Council.

DONNA IRENE MAi'\IKE
35-04 203 Street
Bayside, New York

GLE0.1N LYONS
North Road
Cutchoque, New York

Theater
LYNNE MARGO LIS
4-10 Bogardus Place
New York City, New York l0040

Music
I Iad a piece for string quartet and oboe
performed at SU:\'Y Composers Festival
at Potsdam.

Anthropology

I found Ifarpur to be intcllcctunlly stimulating although somewhat sterile.

Pipe Dream Staff; Dickenson College Council 1969- 1970.

128

��BARBARA MILLSTE~
150-40 58 Road
Flushing, New York 11355

DAVID A. ~1UNRO
1 Nina Court
Elnora, New York 12065

Asian Studies/Geography

Sociology

"TIIEY SAY": They say I'm tough , They
say I'm bossy, But I still love my little
horsey."
- - -John Wayne.

lntramural s, Outing Club.
BETll MUNSON
11 Stanford Place
Binghamton, New York

DOREEN ELLEN MONITTO
3 Davis Street
Binghamton, New York

Sociology
Volunteer Community Nursery work through
Services for Youth, 1970-71.

French
ROSEMARIE E. MORESCO
35-31 85 th Street
Jackson Heights , New York 11372

PI II LIPS. NACHM.Ai'\J
24 Coolidge Avenue
Troy, New York

Accounting

American Studies
OCC Orientation Advisor '72 , Academ ic

PERRY MORTON
283 West 24th Street
Deer Park, New York 11729
Accounting
What, no Bosco?
BARBRA DIAN MOSKOWITZ
48 Trafalgar Square
Lynbrook, New York
Creative Writing
PAUL C. MUCCI
79 Beryl Drive
Cheektowaga, New York
Biology
Cross-Country Team (Captain), Outdoor
Track, Indoor Track, Intramurals- -Foot·
ball, Soccer, and Basketball.

130

��BRIAi'\i O'SULLIVAN
35 Risley Street
Fredonia, New York 14063

JEFFREY L. PLISKIN
31 Phipps Lane
Plainview, New York 11803

Economics

Economics

Intramural Sports- - "Moon River. "

ALLAN B. PLUMSER
Brooklyn, New York

ROBERT OZER
2045 East 56th Street
New York, New York

Biol ogy
Pr e-Med

Biology

The Clubbie Lives!

Baseball Team - - Pipe Dream Sports Staff.
MONICA POLLIN
221-69 Horace Harding Expressway
Bayside, New York 11364

There are other things important in college
besides getting an education.

Anthr opology
ALICE M. PANZER
1927 East 27th Street
Brooklyn, New York 11229

Orientation Advisor
Will we see the day when Harpur can have
a "Stepping-on-the-Raincoat" ceremony?

Music

MARTIN POMERANTZ
147-19 258th Street
Rosedale, New York

IIARVEY MICHAEL PARIS
Farmingdale Motor Lodge
RT 110, Farmingdale,

lew York 11735

Psychology

Jewish Studies

M*A "'S*H, S. T . 0., OHGM.

DARLENE K. PARRY
112 Woodgate Drive
Boonville, New York

ROBERT PORT
615 Demong Drive
Syracuse, New York 13214

History (European)

Political Science

GRETCHEN N. PETERSON
812 87th Street
iagara Fall, New York 14304

MARK J. POTEL
108 Bolmer Avenue
Yonkers, New York

Biology

Political Science and History

132

��man, and yet I was completely helpless and
without a goal in life. "
- - - "DEMIAN'' by Hesse
JOAN WOLF SAPERSTEIN
35-35 75th Street
Jackson Heights , N. Y. 11372

IRlS ROSENFELD
30 Rhodes Drive
New l Iyde Park, New York 11040

Sociology

Art I Iistory

Member of the Sociology Undergrad Student Committee.

BARRY ROSENiv1AN
2820 Ocean Parkway
Brooklyn, New York

HOWARD M. SCHANKER
4 Rose Lane
East Rockaway , 1 ew York ll518
Psychology

FRANK A. SAAS
.3 Colonial Street
E. Northport, N. Y. 11731

Carnival Weekend Charity Drive, Intramural Volleyball &amp; Softball, Psychology
tutor, Psychology research assistant.

Chemistry
PAMELA SCHNEIDER
10 Minisink Avenue
Port Jervis, New York

NEIL SCOTT SADICK
52-54 65th Place
1'1aspeth, New York ll378

Anthropology
Biology
DANNA F. SCH ITPPER
59 Park Way
Sea Cliff, New York 11579

Dean's List, Biological Sciences l lonors
Program, Newing College Council.
I'm up in the study lounge.

Political Science
MITCllELL MARC SAMEROFF
278 Caryl Drive
Lawrence, New York

DEBRA SCHUECKLER
103 Rockland Road
Tonawanda, New York 14150

Sociology

Mathematics
Fencing Team
Sec't. Ski Club '69-'70, Vice Pres. Ski
Club '71, Publicity Committee '71, Newing
Navy Day Chairman '70, '71, Resident
Assistant '72.

"I was still undecided, however, as to
where and what I was to study. I had
grown a thin mustache, I was a full grown

134

��Clevzee Club, I Iarpur College Academic

"I'm on my way . .
- - -Eric Anderson
"The wind blows hard and often sad"
- - -self

I Ionesty Committee.

BEYERLY SIL VER
21-25 34th Avenue
Long Island City, New York lll06

RONALD S. SMITH
67-11 Parsons Blvd.
Flushing, New York

Art l listory

Psychology
I IOPE SILVERSTEIN
235 Ft. Washington Avenue
New York, N. Y. 10032
Sociology

STEPHEN C. SMITI I
75-40 Bell Blvd.
Bayside, Kew York

Timer for men's swim team

Political Science
Intramural Volleyball, Pipedream Con tributor, Off Campus Store, Harpur Stu dents for McGovern.

JILL C. SIMON
22 Dyke Drive
Monsey, New York 10952

1. As a Po litical Science major:
Government is an agreement between you
and myself, You and myself are often
wrong!
- - -Kahil Gibran
2. In Reflection:
It was but yesterday I thought myself a
fragment quivering without rhythm in the
sphere of life. Now I know that I am the
sphere, and all life rhythmic fragments
move within me!
- - -Kahil Gibran
3. As a Male Chauvinist:
When you enjoy loving your neighbor it
ceases to be a virtue!
- - -Gibran
Four Years- - So It Goes!? !

Psychology
Ambulance Corps, Jewish Fellowship,
Dean's List, Pre-med, Dental Society.
"This day has ended. It is closing upon
us even as the water-lily upon i t own tomorrow. What was given us here we shall
keep, and if it suffices not, then again
must we come together and together
stretch our hands unto the giver. "
- - - Kahil G ibran
GREGORY SlNOPOLI
50 St. Andrews Pl ace
Yonkers , New York
I Iistory

LAURIE A. SNELL
140-08 28 Rd.
Flushing, New York 11354

"I'd rather model harmonica holders than
discuss Aztec Anthropology"
- - -Dylan

Sociology

"It's a mighty long road that my poor hands
have hoed."
- - -Guthrie

Volunteer --Wyoming Conference (Children's Home)

136

��ANDREW STOLZAR
357 Longacre A venue
Woodmere, New York 11598

smile--A tear to unite me with tho se of
broken heart; a s mile to be a s ign of my
joy in exis tence. "

Chemistry-Pre-med
STEPHEN C. TALERCIO
Ha llock Lane
Rocky Point, Long Is land

Newing College Council, Newing College
Hous ing Committee, University Health
Services Committee.

Halian
APRIL CHUN YEE SUNG
32-41 93rd Street
East Elmhurst, New York 11369

JEFFREY TANENBAUM
86-70 Francis Lewi s Blvd.
Hollis, New York 11427

Sociology
Math- His tory
Hinman College Pres ident '72- '73

SUSAN B. SUSSER
2402 Dickens Stree t
Far Rockaway, New York 11691

SHEILA TANNENBAUM
120-2 Darrow Place
Bronx, New York

Linguistics

Liberal Arts

DAVID MICHAEL SWANDA
109 Academy Street
Manlius , New York 13104

ELLEN TANZER
295 West 21st Street
Deer Park, New York

Business Administration
Harpur Chorale

Ec onomics
"It is just as easy for a m an to have not
gone to school and know something as it
is for a man to have gone to school and
know nothing. "
- - -Tom Jones

JOY ELIZABETH TAR TTER
141 Bower Road
Poughkeepsi e , New York
Studio Art

RHODA SWEITZER
33 1/2 Margaret Street
Binghamton, New York 13905

LOIS A. TEITELBAUM
139-10 28th Road
F lushing, New York 11354

Sociology

History

Women's Swim Team (soph., j r ., sr.
year)

I thank and love a ll those who touched my
life while I was here, who cared enough

"I wou ld that my life remain a tear and a

138

��To the Seniors of 1973- -Best of Luck,
Love, and Happiness in the Future. To
those remaining at Harpur, may you ach ieve the same accomp lishments as the
Class of 1973!!!!

ANDREA J. VAN ATTA
200 Wellington Road
DeWitt, New York 13214
Biology

LAURA J. TOTTEN
1 Grace Church Street
Rye, New York 10580

RONALD T . VAN DYCK
415 Cortland Avenue
Mamaroneck, New York

English Literature
Organizational Behavior
Games room Mgr., Ski Club Officer,
Intramural Sports.

EVELYN TREISTER
76 -15 35th Avenue
Jackson Heights, New York

Give me a break!!!!

Business
LOUISE E. VARGA
1955 West River
Grand Is land, New York

ROBERT TURNER
110-15 7 lst Road
Forest Hills, New York 11375

Math

Anthropology

Varsity Cheerleading (1-4) Capt. (3-4) .
There really are cheerleaders at Harpur.

JEFFREY D. UFFNER
79-10 34th A venue
Jackson Heights, New York 11372
Political Science

JOSEPH N. VARON
117 Williams Avenue
Binghamton, New York

Law Society, member of l\TDC, Ski Club,
Intramural Activities, Carnival Committee.

History
Photography, Soccer, Softball, R. A.

JESSICA UTTS
925 South Main Street
Pleasantville, New Jersey 08232

CAROLYN VESPER
1211 Arley Court
Valley Stream, New York

Math, Psycho logy
Resident Ass't., Dorm Council Sec't.,
Dorm Carnival Chairman, Synchronized
Swim Team.

Spanish
So I'm out--What do I do now?

140

��NANCY WACKSTEIN
58-03 190th Street
Flushing, New York 11365

MARYE . WALTER
1805 Ri vervicw Drive
Endicott, New York

I Ii story

Nursing

GEORGE R. WALDEN
301 E. 78th Street
New York, New York 10021

RICHARD C. WASHOUSKY
Neversink Road
Liberty, New York

llistory

History

Hinman College Pres. '71-72, Resident
Ass't.

Intramural Soccer and Basketball.
I made it! Just two more years to go.

ROBERT WALDMANN
86-37 25lst Street
Bellerose, New York

GARY WEIDBERG
286 Cherry Place
East Meadow, New York

l Iistory, Accounting
Political Science
Pres . Inter Social Club Council, SCB
member, Exec . Chairman IXTIIUS, Vice
Pres . Odeans, Student Mgr.

ANDREW MARC WE ISS
30 Fairview Road
Scarsdale, New York 10583

Best of Luck in the cold cruel world to all
my friends who have made this year and
all the years a pleasure. SMC remember
the big pink elephant of Burdick Avenue .

Political Science
SCB Entertainment Committee, Football,
Basketball, Volleyball, Paddleball
Intramurals .

LEONARD A. WAL LACE
4 Grandview Drive
Cobleskill, New York

Herc's looking up your prerequisites.

Psychology
Goliards, Soccer Team Mgr.

JON MARC WESTON
57 Cheltenham-on-the-Dunes
Lide Beach, New York

It's been an experience.

Bio logy, Pre- Med
Varsity Wrestling, Tau Alpha Upsilon
(TAU), Harpur's Ferry Ambulance Call.

IRAS. WALTER
2192 New York Avenue
Brooklyn, New York 11210

The moon never sets on Harpur Campus
(although it may "sit" sometimes).

Math

142

��Renaissance Society, Member--Harpur
College Admissions Committee.

SANDRA M. ZWEIG
223 Harrison Street
Johnson City, New York

After four years , you mean to tell me
I've got at least another three coming??
Eeecch!

!\\using

DANIEL ZEIDMAN
252-37 63rd Avenue
Little Neck, New York 11362
LA TE BUT NOT FORGOTTEN . . .
BRETT HART BROCKMAN
9 5 Main Street
Walworth, New York 14568

WALTER J. ZIMMERMAN, JR .
88 East Lewis Avenue
Pearl River, New York

Political Science

English Literature
SIMS/ IMS
JEFFREY BUSCH
3419 Irwin Avenue
Bronx, New York 10463

nistraigunyo bhav A:r juna- -Be Without The Three Gunas, Arjuna.
Bhagaved-Gita, II, 45.

English Literature
I have no tales, Creativity fails .
ROBER TA ZUCKER
270 Margaret Street
Johnson City, New York
SALVATORE CAR UNA
2632 West 2 Street
Brooklyn, New York 11223

Anthropology
god bless the child that's got her own.

History
President--Tau Alpha Upsilon
THOMAS J. ZUKOWSKI
R. D. #2
Port Jervis, New York

"Winning is not a sometime thing. It is
an all time thing. You don't win once in
a while, you don't do things right once in
a while, you do them right a ll the time.
There is no room for second place. There
is only one place, and that's first place. "
- - - Vince Lombardi.

Psychology
GROK--Crisis Call Volunteer

144

��BARRY LEE MYONES
53 Shelter Hill Road
Plainview, New York
Biology
Student Center Board; Fall and Carnival
Weekend Committees; Spring Weekend;
I3lood Drive; Transportation and Film
Committees of SCB; Social Activities Chairman of Bingham IIal l; Image Photography;
Innovational.
Projects Board; WSUB-TV; Co-rec Volleyball and Bowling; Intramural Swim ming; Instructor-Ambulance Service; Pros
from Dover.
! will never forget the place where I
began my life anew; it placed me on the
road of giving and understanding that I
\vill walk on for my life.
11

11

PIIILIP PACK
3019 Avenur R
Brooklyn, New York
Ilistory
Student Manager

ELLEN SINGER
1032 East 29th Street
Brooklyn, New York 11210
English Literature
"We're captive on the carousel of time
We can 't return, we can only look
behind from where we came
And go round and round and round
on the circle game.
---Joni Mitchell
11

146

��CAROL STUDIOS, INC.
OFFICIAL YEARBOOK PHOTOGRAPHERS
LYNBROOK, NEW YORK 11563

Negatives Kept on File For Future Orders

148

�Best Wishes
from

endico~~~~:~~
105.5 FM
~IE£f0

THANKS FOR LISTENING
BEST OF LUCK

Fam ily pleasi ng
affordable fashi ons
in fo otwear.

MERV GRIFFIN STATIONS

TH E SP IRIT SHOPPE
" H ou~e

CONGRATULATIONS CLASS '73

or Fi ne Win es"

COLONIAL MOTOR INN

.

"'!•
....,"k-°"

~:~TION -

Discipline of Mind, Training of Body

HIDY OCHIAl'S
Triple Cities School of Judo and Karate
290 Floral Avenue, Johnson City, N.Y.

Ia.....y I

VES TAL
PLAZA

PHOTOGRAPHIC
supplies &amp; service
100

Pl &amp;u 0 11 0

Y H t•I , , . , .
Y t JfOJ

81 n 9rt ~lon H

Phone 607· 729· 931 1
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11;

�CONGRATULATIONS
TO THE

CLASS OF '73
BROOME COUNTY
BANKER'S ASSOCIATION
BANKERS TRUST OF BINGHAMTON
THE BINGHAMTON SAVINGS BANK
DELAWARE COUNTY FEDERAL
SAVING AND LOAN
ENDICOTT BANK OF NEW YORK
ENDICOTT TRUST COMPANY
FIRST-CITY NATIONAL BANK
MARINE MIDLAND BANK-SOUTHERN
THE NATIONAL BANK
and TRUST COMPANY
OF NORWICH

150

�CONGRATULATIONS TO
THE CLASS OF 1973
FROM

THE
CAMPUS

STORE

CONG RA TULA TIO NS
AND BEST WISHES FROM
THE KENT DRUG STORE
FAMILY.

CONG RA TULA TIONS TO ALL
1973 GRADUATES

• aug{Jn, 1i CLOTHING, INC.
Men and Boys
ElfDICOTT (Union). N. Y. 13760
Phone 754-41112

FROM THE
Vl:STAL PLAZA

Phone 797-6292

SUNY-BJNGHAMTON
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION, INC.

To be fully informed
You better read both ...

THE

PRESS

The Sun• Bulletin
151

�LIBRARY TOWER, SUNY AT
BINGHAMTON
The Sl1NY Universicy library tower is a
famous Binghamton landmark to which ELN
points with pride for having constructed
it and is one of the many reasons why we
have risen to be among the nation's top
I 00 contractors.

EDWARD L. NEZELEK INC.
An Equal Opporluniiy Employer
JOHSSO~ Cll ) , X. Y.

e

I ORT LAUDERDALE, l-LOJl lOA

GENERAL CONTRACTORS
Architec ts: Moore &amp;. Hutchins

152

�-

PAGE'S BOOKS
PEACE
VEST AL PLAZA

-

-- - - -- -- - -- - -- ---- -.. ---

®

VEST AL PLAZA
ITHACA- CORTLAND

AMERICAN
HANDICRAFTS

PLEASE PATRONIZE
OUR ADVERTISERS

VESTAL PLAZA

BEST WISHES FROM THE 1973 YEARBOOK STAFF

Now is the time to think
of what you do not have.
Think of what you can do
with what there is.
Hemmingway

�����</text>
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&lt;p&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Acknowledgment of sensitive content&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Binghamton University Libraries provide digital access to select materials held within the Special Collections department. &lt;span&gt;Historical yearbooks provide a vibrant window into life at the University.&lt;/span&gt; However, they also expose insensitive, and at times offensive, racial and gender stereotypes that, though once commonplace, are now acknowledged to cause harm. The Libraries have chosen to make these volumes available as part of the historical record but the Libraries do not support or agree with the harmful narratives that can be found in these volumes. &lt;a href="https://www.binghamton.edu/libraries/about/collections/digital/"&gt;Digital Collections&lt;/a&gt; are created for educational and historical purposes only. It is our intention to present the content as it originally appeared.&lt;/p&gt;</text>
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