Jane Simon Stricker ’70 and Priscilla Coffin ’68, ’71G honor their respective 91Ƭ roots with reunion-inspired gifts

Monday, January 13, 2020
91Ƭ Reunion

Jane Simon Stricker ’70 attended her first of many 91Ƭ reunions when she was a child. They were a family affair. Her mother, Selma Bacon Simon ’42, was president of her 91Ƭ class until the day she died and over the years presented checks for class gifts to a number of 91Ƭ presidents. “She loved them all,” Stricker says. Her father, Edward Simon ’42H, always at Selma’s side, was famous for the reunion hospitality suites he would set up at the Ramada Inn in Dover, welcoming a continuous stream of returning alumni. Stricker and her sister, Henri-Ann Simon Sussman ’64, with the Simon grandchildren, led the parade in class beanies and performed other duties as assigned.

Stricker’s enthusiasm for reunions hasn’t waned, and now she’s looking ahead to her own 50th in June. In honor of that milestone, and her parents’ lifelong love for 91Ƭ, Stricker and her husband, Rob, have made a generous gift to the Edward and Selma Bacon Simon Endowed Fund to provide scholarship support for students in the hospitality management program at 91Ƭ’s Peter T. Paul College of Business and Economics. “My mother was a real personality, and a great ambassador for 91Ƭ,” Stricker says. “When the family traveled, she would make a point of arranging to meet any 91Ƭ graduates who worked at the hotel or chain where we were staying.”

Wildcat statue

This is not the first gift the Strickers have made in honor of Jane’s parents. The Edward and Selma Bacon Simon Endowed Fund was the lead donor — Stricker served on the design and selection committee — that brought the wildcat statue to campus in 2006. And a granite bench engraved with Selma and Edward Simons’ names greets every visitor to the Elliott Alumni Center. Says Stricker, “The reason we do what we do is to preserve their legacy at 91Ƭ.”

For Priscilla Coffin ’68, ’71G, planning and attending her 50th reunion in 2018 was the catalyst for creating a student impact scholarship that will support a student in the College of Health and Human Services for four years. “As an older person living in a rural state, I want to see our young people stay,” she says. She hopes that helping a student avoid debt will allow them to be engaged in their community professionally and as a volunteer.

Like Stricker, Coffin’s 91Ƭ roots began in childhood. As a 14-year old at 91Ƭ’s Summer Youth Music School, she loved the freedom of living in Scott Hall and roaming the Durham campus. A decade later, as a transfer student in the Elizabeth DeMeritt House (the home economics “practice house”), she delighted in encountering the food and cultures of classmates from other countries. Coffin didn’t stay especially connected to 91Ƭ after graduating, but an article in 91Ƭ Magazine inspired her to learn more about the occupational therapy program and, after a call from the 91Ƭ phonathon, to support it in a small way; she had experience developing adaptive technologies for a child born with craniofacial anomalies, and saw in hindsight a program that might have suited her.

91Ƭ REUNIONS
June 5–7, 2020

Celebrating the classes of 1960 & 1961, 1965, 1970, 1980, 1995, 2010, 2015 and the Mini-dorms and Student Senate affinity groups.

When a member of the 91Ƭ advancement staff reached out to her about working on her reunion, Coffin wasn’t sure where she fit in, having been a non-traditional student. But, she says, the early planning sessions felt a bit like therapy. The group discussed what a remarkable — and turbulent — time their college years in the 1960s had been and the vastly different paths their lives had taken since, putting the past in a new light for Coffin. She was moved to tears during a faculty member’s retrospective of the period that was part of a reunion program and awed to learn about classmates who had worked full time or raised children while they were at 91Ƭ.

“I was so fortunate that my parents paid for my college education, and that I had the flexibility to spend an extra year to enjoy my time at 91Ƭ,” says Coffin, who especially looks forward to meeting the recipient of her scholarship. “Coming back to 91Ƭ for my reunion and walking down Main Street made me realize, ‘I was really happy here.’”