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Annual Report 2013

The Laundromat Project: 2013 Annual Report

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The Laundromat Project had an incredible year of firsts. Read all about our amazing growth in 2013!

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Page 1: The Laundromat Project: 2013 Annual Report

Annual Report 2013

Page 2: The Laundromat Project: 2013 Annual Report

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TABLE OF CONTENTS 3. Letter from the Executive Director 4. About Our Work 5. Programs 8. Fundraising 9. Testimonials 10. Press Highlights 11. Who We Are

“I think the responses to the workshops are awesome, because it allows the young kids in the neighborhood to have something else to do. They get to be creative, they get to show their artistic side. Some of them don't even know they have an artistic side.” – A Harlem neighbor

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LETTER FROM THE EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR The Laundromat Project had a nourishing, challenging, and invigorating year of firsts. I served my first full year as executive director. Since joining our long-time program director in fall 2012, we have grown to a total of four full-time staffers, thus expanding our capacity tremendously as we served over 6,000 New Yorkers during the year. In the spring, we completed a rigorous strategic planning process during which we refreshed our mission and theory of change while also articulating the seven values and committing ourselves more fully to the cultural organizing principles that compel our work every day. In 2013, we also committed ourselves to working deeply in three culturally rich neighborhoods across three boroughs: Bedford-Stuyvesant, Harlem, Hunts Point. While we continue to have a citywide presence, our three anchors allow us to get to know and support our neighbors over the long term as we make the strong, resilient communities we want to live in together. We grew programmatically in numerous ways. Our Create Change program served a total of 18 artists: 3 as residents and 15 as fellows. Together, they helped plan our very first Field Day, a new annual festival of neighborhoods celebrating the people, creativity, businesses, and organizations that already exist in our three anchor communities. One participant captured it best with a chalk sign that read, “On Field Day, I allowed art space.” That’s what it’s all about. Ever striving for new ways to engage and connect, The LP’s Works in Progress program also piloted our first in-school initiative—Power of Perception—in partnership with the Rada Film Group and Brooklyn Community Art & Media High School. Over two iterations, 25 students made short films that upended conventions as they portrayed life as black and brown skateboarders, mentors, and LGBT youth, among other truths. We also tried new ways to draw our amazingly generous, creative, and dedicated friends and supporters ever closer. We raised a record amount from individual supporters around the country and the world, including our inaugural People-Powered $10K Challenge in which we met our 10 day goal and even exceeded it by half. To help artists and communities ignite, amplify, and revel in their own creative capacity and ability to make the world they want to see, The LP relies on an active and encouraging community of individuals and partners. We are humbled and grateful for everyone who made our eighth year our best one yet. We continue to build, grow, and strive for more art, more creativity, more love. On behalf of The LP board and staff, thank you for your support! Warmly,

Kemi Ilesanmi

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MISSION, VISION, THEORY OF CHANGE, & VALUES

As part of our new strategic plan, we refreshed our mission statement and articulated the values that guide our work.

Our Mission We amplify the creativity that already exists within communities by using arts and culture to build community networks, solve problems, and enhance our sense of ownership in the places where we live, work, and grow. Our Vision We envision a world in which artists are understood as valuable assets in every community and everyday people know the power of their own creative capacity to transform their lives, their relationships, and their surroundings. What We Do We bring socially relevant and socially engaged arts programming to laundromats and other everyday community spaces in order to reach as many of our neighbors as possible. We are particularly committed to long-term and sustained investment in communities of color as well as those living on modest incomes. Why We Do It We believe art, culture, and engaged imaginations can change the way people see their world, open them up to new ideas, and connect them with their neighbors. When artists have the opportunity to build and contribute their unique skills and perspectives to the needs of their neighborhoods, they can be invaluable assets in furthering community wellbeing. When the skills and strategies for igniting creativity are made broadly available to everyday people and purposefully applied as tools for visioning a new and better world, these can be powerful forces for positive, transformative change. We know we have been successful when, over time, our neighbors—artists and everyday people, newcomers and oldtimers, individually and collectively—become more involved in the civic and cultural affairs of their communities, feel more deeply connected to the places and people where they live and work, and bring a sense of creativity to community concerns. Our Values As we strive to achieve our mission and embody our vision, the following values infuse all of our work. We are:

• Creative Catalysts • Community-Centered • Neighborly • People Powered • Active Listeners and Learners • Collaborative and Cross-Pollinating by Design • Propelled by Love

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WORKS IN PROGRESS

Laundromat-based workshop series. In 2013, we expanded our free arts education offerings to Bed-Stuy & Hunts Point, offering 35 workshops across 3 neighborhoods from June to August.

Power of Perception. We developed and piloted a curriculum that empowers high-school students to craft their own narratives about power, perception, and bias as they relate to black male experience, based on award-winning documentary American Promise. • Engaged 25 students at Brooklyn Community Arts and Media High School. • Co-hosted screening / Q & A about curriculum with American Promise directors at IFC Center.

Community Collaborations. We hosted arts workshops at venues throughout NYC, including: • New Museum’s IDEAS CITY Streetfest. • The Hunts Point Fish Parade with The POINT CDC. • The Studio Museum in Harlem’s “Hands On” Workshop Series. • Hunts Point Alliance for Children (HPAC) Back-to-School Fair. • 9th Annual Bed-Stuy Alive Festival. • Northern Manhattan Perinatal Partnership’s Club MOM group. Number of people engaged through Works in Progress: over 4,500.

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CREATE CHANGE

Create Change Fellowship We supported 15 artists from a broad range of disciplines and backgrounds (our largest cohort ever!). Fellows developed community-based arts programs for inaugural Field Day (see following page). Nancy Agabian, Raul Ayala, Bridget Bartolini, Claro de los Reyes, Divad Durant, Noelle Ghoussaini, Audrey Hailes, Sukjong Hong, Ladi'Sasha Jones, Joyce LeeAnn Joseph, Christopher Lopez, Sydnie Mosley, Kameelah Rasheed, Lisa Sikorski, and Didier Silvain Create Change Residency We decided to ground the residency in our three anchor neighborhoods, and thus were able to offer more support, including a dedicated Artist Assistant Intern, to each Artist-in-Residence.

• Aisha Cousins: Mapping Soulville (Bedford-Stuyvesant) Aisha Cousins invited neighbors to imagine a map of Malcolm X Blvd full of intersecting streets that create a walkable timeline of Malcolm’s life.

• Art Jones: Portrait of the Community as a Block (Hunts Point) Together with Hunts Point residents, Art Jones recorded stories about experiences buying and selling in the neighborhood, culminating with a multimedia exhibition of community portraits.

• Shani Peters: The People’s Laundromat Theater (Harlem) Shani Peters screened independent films by over 30 contributing artists at her local laundromat. She invited her neighbors to offer feedback, participate in workshops, and attend a VIP red-carpet finale.

4th Annual Public Art Potluck

In 2014, we held our largest ever Public Art Potluck, our annual dinner that celebrates our Create Change artists, with over 81 guests attending.

Number of people engaged through Create Change: over 1,500.

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FIELD DAY

In 2013, we presented our inaugural Field Day, a festival of neighborhoods showcasing the full range of our programs—as well as collaborations with local artists and organizations—in our three anchor neighborhoods: Harlem, Bed-Stuy, and Hunts Point.

Our Create Change Fellows took the lead in organizing the day’s programs, which were supported by local businesses, community sponsors, and volunteers from across the city: The Harlem Story Walk: a traveling storytelling walk transforming Lenox Avenue (116th -130th St.) with Harlem stories, music, poetry, dance, film, art-making, and more. Produced in collaboration with Art in Flux Harlem.

Renter’s Archive: a series of artist-led, interactive workshops empowering participants to create narratives of their own experiences as renters. Produced in collaboration with Adeola Enigbokan (Archiving the City). A Cultural Feast: a food-focused event featuring games, cooking demos, recipe-sharing, photobooth, free giveaways, and more. Produced by in collaboation with The BLK Projek. Number of participants engaged on Field Day: over 500.

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FUNDRAISING EVENTS & INITIATIVES

In 2013, we took a fresh approach to our fundraising strategy that focused on community-building, friend-raising, and a more inclusive approach to fundraising from individuals.

Cultivation Events & Fundraisers

Supported by our Board members and alumni artists, we threw parties in the summer and fall to raise new support from new and old friends. Both were wonderful evenings of conversation, connection, and cultivation, yielding new members of our Catalyst Circle and raising general operating funds.

Our June Fundraiser was held at the home of Board member Chris Montgomery. The program included featured artist Sonia Louise Davis (Create Change 2011), and Board Chair Risë Wilson.

Our October Fundraiser was held at Third Streaming Gallery in SoHo. The program included featured artist LaTasha N. Diggs (Create Change 2011), and Board Members Chris Montgomery and Erika Faust.

People-Powered $10K Challenge

We launched the People-Powered $10K Challenge to leverage support from the broadest range of our constituency, and recognizing that traditional fundraising methods often overlook potential supporters with modest incomes. Together with our committed supporters or People Movers, we set a goal of raising $10,000 by each asking 10 friends to each donate $10 or more over 10 days. With the assistance of a small matching grant, we met our goal and exceeded it by half!

• 40 People Movers participated, including Board, staff, alumni, volunteers, friends, and more!

• 345 donors from 4 countries and 24 states contributed, raising over $15,000 in total

• Participation felt rewarding, and exceeding our goal became a collective achievement.

“Thanks for allowing me the awesome opportunity to give back to The LP and to help sustain the non-profit's programs!” -A Create Change Alumna & People Mover

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TESTIMONIALS “Amazing project. Thank you all for spreading creativity!” -A neighbor "Participating in the program has sparked many interesting conversations with people outside of the program about the impact art can have in a community and how an artists can go about making work that brings change or inspiration outside of the traditional gallery setting." -Create Change Fellow "A neighbor's 3 year old saw us setting up and she was so excited to come that she ran out of the house with her mother in her (mismatched) fuzzy house slippers-one green frog and the other a princess." -Works in Progress Teaching Artist “I believe in programs that impact communities from the roots up." -Contributing Artist “People really sat down and engaged with each other.” -Works in Progress Teaching Artist “The program addresses many needs by creating a framework for artists to create relationships within their own neighborhoods.” -Create Change Resident “The LP have helped me see the world through the eyes of artists and change makers.” -Supporter and Former Board Member “I am an artist that is interested in working in the community and also in reaching out to people that wouldn't normally be interested in art, so the Laundromat Project seems like a perfect fit.” -Contributing Artist “I love working in front of the laundromat and have had great experiences there. The adults and youth that come to take the drop-in workshops are so eager to create.” -Works in Progress Teaching Artist “We're really interested in being part of the community—enhancing the relationship between the community and the laundromat. We want people to feel comfortable and welcome.” -Laundromat Owner “The residency has re-defined how I think about what it means to make art in my own neighborhood.” -Create Change Resident

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PRESS HIGHLIGHTS

• 18 Amazing Ways to Give Back with $5 or

More, by Arianna Davis, O, the Oprah Magazine, December 2013

• Alice Mizrachi: An Art Teacher Preserves the History of Harlem, While Creating Her Own Legacy, by Sandra Garcia, New York Times, November 19, 2013

• National spotlight: Public art transforms the

urban canvas, by Elaine Labalme, ElevationDC, November 5, 2013

• Hunts Point Field Day Explores Creativity, by Steven Trader, Hunts Point Express, September 28, 2013

• Street Signs Become a Map to the Soul, by C. Zawadi Morris, Bed-Stuy Patch, August 9, 2013

• Let’s Get Weird in 2013: Lessons on How to Innovate, Motivate, & Take a Leap of Faith (e-book), National Arts Marketing Project, August 2013

• Arts Innovator: The Laundromat Project, United States, Americas Quarterly, Summer 2013

• New Kids on the Block | “Mapping Soulville” with Aisha Cousins, by Jacquelyn Gleisner, Art 21 Magazine, May 13, 2013

• Change Beyond Nickels and Dimes - The Laundromat Project, Bonfire Impact, by Gianina Thompson, March 23, 2013

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WHO WE ARE

Board of Directors Naomi Beckwith, Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago Stephanie Dinkins, SUNY Stony Brook Dr. Erika Faust, Elite Orthodontics

Christopher Montgomery, KPMG Kavita Rajanna, Foundational Questions Institute Risë Wilson, Robert Rauschenberg Foundation

Catalyst CircleEdgar Arceneaux, Artist Richard Flood, New Museum Ian Fuller, WestFuller Advisors Kathy Halbreich, Museum of Modern Art Colleen Keegan, Keegan Fowler Companies Steve Kest, Service Employees International Union Thomas Lax, Studio Museum in Harlem

Ruby Lerner, Creative Capital Foundation Maureen Mahon, New York University Dawn McGee, Independent Business Consultant Annette Mitchell Scott, ABC Brian Tate, Tate Strategy Group, CurateNYC Sara Zuiderveen, NYC Dept. of Homeless Service

Staff & ConsultantsKemi Ilesanmi, Executive Director Petrushka Bazin Larsen, Program Director Akiva Steinmetz-Silber, Dev. & Comm. Associate

Yvette Ramírez, Program Associate Ebony Noelle Golden, Cultural Organizing Consultant

Teaching Artists Sonia Louise Davis Tanya Fields Rajeeyah Finnie-Myers Frank R. Hooker Jr. Kathleena Howie-Garcia Alice Mizrachi

Maia Cruz Palileo Claro de los Reyes Elena Stojanova Rosemary Taylor Maya Valladares Jessica Valoris

Laundromat Partners Clean Rite Center Fulton Street Laundry

The Laundry Room Lucky Laundromat Marmy Laundromat

Business & Community Partners Adeola Enigbokan / Archiving the City Art in Flux Harlem Astor Row Café Barawine Bedford-Stuyvesant Community Garden The BLK Projek Boulevard Bistro Bronx Auto Glass Brooklyn Community Arts and Media High School Community Voices Heard Corner Social Fara (formerly Les Ambassades) For My Sweet Groundswell Harlem Arts Festival Harlem Business Alliance

Harlem Haberdashery Harlem Shake Julio Shoe Repair M & T Bank Majora Carter Group MoCADA Naturally Occurring Cultural Districts - NY Working Group New York Restoration Project Pa-Paya Seed Frozen Yogurt Cafe Pioneer Supermarket The Point CDC Rada Film Group Restaurant Opportunity Center New York Settepani Tonnie's Minis Victor's Barber Shop

Volunteers & InternsSara Abdullah, Rachel Adell, Marnie Alon, Tomie Arai, Kate Bancks, Beatriz Beckford, Kourtni Beeb, Roger Bennet, Paul Blouin, Eva Brooks, Mercedes Brown, Maritza Burgos, Claudia Carrera, Cassandra Chrispin, Elvira Clayton, Marissa Corwin, Chelsea Davis, Latasha Diggs, Glory Edim, Margit Edwards, Ashleigh Eubanks, Beth Fiedorek, Julia Gallyot, Aliyah Hakim, Elizabeth Hamby, Alexis Harbour, Luis Henriquez, Ivy Hurwit, Bronwyn James, Daniel Keltz, Alexandra Kimchy, Gabrielle Krumins, Michelle Lai, Ashley Lewis, Ame Lia Lia, Amy Luebke, Belynda M’Baye, Sonya Meyer, Bianca Mona, Naila Moore, Shahrezad Morssal, Irene Ottolini, Marisela Palafox, Mayra Cecilia Palafox, Matthew Patrick, Kurt Peloquin, Samantha Plakun, Tanea Pugh, Fernanda Rafaela Fernandes, Christopher Ramirez, Jaclyn Reyes, Larrin Robertson, Yhanna Rodriguez, Johanna Rosario, Nelson Salcedo, Arleen Santana, Tallulah Schwartz, Nada Seet, Anthony Snowden, Rachel Soares, Andy Stringfellow, Jessica Svenson, Brent Terry, Tara Themis, Yuko Torihara, Marianne van Ooij, Danielle Vasquez, Vonnie Verner, Laura Vladimirova, Ken Weisensee, Kate Welsh, Chad Wheeless, Sharon Wong. Institutional Supporters

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A Blade of Grass, The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, David Rockefeller Fund, Dedalus Foundation, EILEEN FISHER, Joan Mitchell Foundation, Lambent Foundation, Lily Auchincloss Foundation, Materials for the Arts, Nathan Cummings Foundation, National Endowment for the Arts, the New York Community Trust, the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council, The New York State Council on the Arts, The Rockefeller Foundation New York City Cultural Innovation Fund, the Theo Westenberger Estate, the Union Square Art Awards. Individual Supporters Anonymous, Sharon A. Abbott, Roseann Abraham, George Abraham, Genia Abram, Wendell Adjetey, Nancy M. Agabian, Merritt Agabian, Namita Agravat, Martha I. Aguilar, Zamil Ahmad, Monique Aiken, Amadou Aminu, James Aquino, Edgar Arceneaux, Emily Arean, Dolores Arevalo, Amy Armstrong, Mark Aronson, Idit Ashkenazi, Caron Atlas, Ken Bailey, Hashem Bajwa, Quincy Ballon, Kate Bancks, Leslie Barber, Carole Bartolini, Jessica Bartolini, Juliana Bartolini, Bridget Bartolini, Joseph Bartolini, Aaron Bauhs, Petrushka Bazin Larsen, Paul Beatty, Naomi Beckwith, Cathie Behrend, Lauren Bergman, Valerie Berlin, Louis Bernstein, Anselm Berrigan, Carel Bertram, Shriya Bhargava-Sears, Debby Bielak, Angelica Bihary, Maureen Bihun, Christa Blatchford, Sarah T. Boehm, Aliya Bonar, Seth Borgos, Taylor Bradley, Amelia Brenner, Joe C. Brewster, Aimee M. Brockman, Janneke Brombacher, Eva Brooks, Gloria A. Brown, Gasby Brown, Gloria Brown, Ashley Browne, Gavin Browning, Tisa Bryant, Yakubu Budu-Saaka, Gayla Burks, Kyle Burris, Kelley Bussey, Sarah Calderon, Michael Calhoun, Amy L. Carlson, Majora Carter, Nicole J. Caruth, Mary Cavanaugh, Kahlil Chaar, Kiran Chandra, Nina Chandra, Maria E. Chaney, Aisha Chang, Donna Chin, Cecile Chong, Andrew Chy-Burns, Regan E. Clarke, Elvira Clayton, Alessandro Cocco, Gregory P. Cohen, Tomme Kael Coleman, Renata Coleman, Jane Collins, Jennifer Wright Cook, Christiamilda Correa, Marissa Corwin, Shannon Coughlin, Stephanie Cozzi, Elizabeth Crane, Shawn Crosby, Heather M. Cruce, Julie Cummings, Lisa A. Cunningham, Erlene Curry, Maria Damon, Shannon Daugherty, Erodney Davis, Sonia L. Davis, Charles C. Davis, Claro De Los Reyes, Lauren Del Balso, Elaine Delgado, Thomas Demary, Karen A. Devries, Marit Dewhurst, Kevin Dinkins, Stephanie Dinkins, Lori Dodde, Tyra Droegemueller, Mario Drummond, Kamilah Duggins, Margit Edwards, Tameika Edwards, Ana Egas, Salih Omar Eissa, James F. Emery, Eric England, Lisa Falcocchio, Larry Farmbry, Anoka Faruqee, Erika Faust, Betty Fellner, Roderick Ferguson, Elizabeth B. Finnie, Rajeeyah Finnie-Myers, Jay Fitzgerald, Eileen C. Flannery, Richard Flood, Renee B. Floresca, Helena Fogarty, Rhonda Forcer, Kianga Ford, Dina Foster-Osbourne, Luis Francia, Lisa Frank, Rich Frank, Polly Freeman, John French, Caroline Friedman, Cindy Friedman, Holly Frindell, Anne Fugett, Ian Fuller, Colette C. Gaiter, Katrina L. Gamble, Linda M. Ganjian, Nettrice R. Gaskins, Paul Gehring, Njoki Gitahi, Eliana Glicklich, Amanda Goldman, Alicia Goodwin, Monica Grant, Tamara Greenfield, Barbara Gross, Dionne Gumbs, Catherine Gund, Scott M. Gustafson, Melissa Hacker, Kathy Halbreich, Michael Hall, Elizabeth Hamby, Richard A. Hamilton, Jessica Hamlin, Diedra Harris-Kelley, Anna Harsanyi, Candice Heberer, Judith Helfand, Jill Kay Heller, Taraneh Hemami, Sophie Henderson, Michael Hermann, Pearl Herskovitz, Margari Hill, Edward Hillel, Michael F. Hilliker, Rhonda Hinds, Caroline Hinkley, Rujeko Hockley, Karmael E. Holmes, Linda Holmes, Sukjong Hong, Joshua Horowitz, Zoe Hudson, Seung Yeon Huh, Tolawo Ilesanmi, Olukemi Ilesanmi, Ashley M. Inokuchi, Gayle Isa, Ariel R. Jackson, Danielle Jackson, Karla Jackson, Candace Jackson, David P. James, Bronwyn A. James, Billiam James, Erika H. Jenssen, Juanita Jeys, Nasreen Jilani, Angela Jimenez, Deborah E. Jones, Ladi'Sasha Jones, Renee Jones, Rochelle Jones, Melanie Joseph, Kate Kahan, Sarah Kang, Fungai Kanogoiwa, Doel Kar, Alyssa Katz, Nancy K. Kaufman, Colleen Keegan, Heather Kelley, Martin Kest, Ruth Kest, Steve Kest, Priscilla Kiessig, Silvana Kim, Jamilah King, Michelle Klein, Kyla Kupferstein, Candace Kurtz, Jana La Sorte, Ramona Lall, Krystal Languell, Judy Larsen, Maria-Giuliana Latini, Thomas Lax, Donna Le, Joseph O Legaspi, Simone Leigh, Ruby Lerner, Christine Licata, Phil Lieberman, Frances Liu, Alan Lock, Jeremy Lowry, Jacques Le Magueresse, Maureen Mahon, Andrea Mamani, Julie Marino, Lisa A. Markuson, Makenzi A. Marshall, Allison Maxwell, Alison Mazer, Meghan McDermott, Dawn McGee, Gwyn McGee, Larry McGee, Dorothy McGivney, Karen McInnis, Justin McIntosh, Erin McLachlan, Mary Frances McLaughlin, Doris E. McMillon, Lisa Middag, Meg Miles, Kate Milkens, James Miller, Michelle Miller, Sid Miller, Scott E. Millstein, Jennifer D. Ming, Annette Mitchell Scott, Hank Mitchell, Elizabeth Mogel, Bianca Mona, Mary-Ann Monforton, Lurlene Monteiro, Chris Montgomery, Eve Mosher, Thylias Moss, Brisa A. Munoz, Jennifer Murphy, Patricia Lawson Muse, Nontsikelelo Mutiti, Mary S. Myers, Darrell Myles, Jo Ann Myles, Valeria M. Myles, Bhaskar Narayanappa, Asa Nathanson, Maria Christina Newhard, Patricia Nguyen, Steffen B. Niemann, Wura-Natasha Ogunji, Karlene E. Ohara, Karyn Olivier, Shin Otake, Katerina Papson-Rigby, Armetta Parker, Elizabeth Pascuzzi, Piero Passacantando, Jessica A. Peavy, Maria Pecchioli, Christine Peng, Albeliza Perez, Vanessa Perez, Meghann Persenaire, Shani Peters, Cyrille Phipps, Lynn Pono, Serena L. Poole, Anne Pope, Stuart I. Post, Seymour Preston, Jr., Diego A. Pulido O., Jason Quarles, Ginnette Quesada-Kunkel, Ronny P. Quevedo, Rahman, Laura Raicovich, Kavita Rajanna, Sharada Rajanna, Hatuey M. Ramos-Fermin, Gwendodlyn Rasheed, Aarthi Rayapura, Prerana Reddy, Blithe Riley, Larrin Robertson, Eb Robinson, Daniella Romano, Rahoul Roy, Katy Rubin, Olivia Scarlett, Adria Scharf, Karla Schickele, Margaret Schotte, Nina Schulman, Jill Schumacher, Shane Selzer, Paul Sepuya, Lousine Shamamian, Syed Shamin, Pegeen Shen, Mitchel Shenassa, Romauli Sianipar, Sara Siegel, Lisa Sikorski, Martin J. Sikorski, David S. Silber, Moshe Silver, Julie Simon, Mae Singerman, Alan Skvirsky, Jennie Smith, Paula Smith, Manushka Solomon, Suran M. Song, Keita De Souza, Susan Squire, Anita Starosta, Akiva Steinmetz-Silber, Abaye Steinmetz-Silber, Beruria Steinmetz-Silber, Sarah E. Steward, Sergei Stravkos, Marcus W. Strickland, Arthur Strimling, Anantha Sudhakar, Barbara Sullivan, Tom & Heidi Sutton, Didier Sylvain, Laura M. Tamman, Tattfoo Tan, Claire A. Tancons, Brian Tate, Marlisse Taylor, Trish Tchume, Niloo Tehranchi, Rowan G. Tepper, George Thomas, Cynthia B. Thompson, Sarah M. Thurer, Jenny Tornow, Daniel Treglia, Agnieszka Trojniak, Farra Trompeter, Tasha Tucker, Christine Tuttell, Wendy Twardzik, Annisah Um'Rani, Lily Ung, Marie Ung, Maya Valladares, Lisa Vasquez, Garrett Velasquez, Philippe Vergne, Sadiki Waithe, Andreas Waldburg-Wolfegg, Billie E. Walker, Susan Ware, Shara C. Watkins, Benjamin Weber, Levi Weinhagen, Lucie Wellner, Aaron Whitby, Pariece M. Wilkins, Courtney J. Williams, James Williams, Eloisa Wilson, Frank Wilson, Risë Wilson, Thomas Wilson, Justina Wong, Shirlyn J. Wong, Annette Wong, Sarah Nelson Wright, Midori Yamamura, Trecarcia L. Yancey, Lynne D. Yeamans, Sarah E. Yonkman, Alicia Young, Laura Zabel, Nate P. Zuiderveen, Sara Zuiderveen. The LP makes every attempt to ensure the accuracy of our donor list. If your name has been omitted or is not listed as you prefer, please email [email protected] or call our office at 718-574-0798. Thank you.