Meet the Team
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Executive Director
Lynn Golub-Rofrano
Lynn Golub-Rofrano is the Founding Executive Director of Georgetown Village. Since launching Georgetown Village in 2011, Lynn has guided the ...
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Assistance Director
Bethany Whitfield
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Product Manager
Ava Webb
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Meet Our Board

President
Judith Bunnell
Judith offers a unique background and perspective in entrepreneurship, finance, and complex budget strategies and implementation. She is a proven entrepreneur and investor. In addition, she has been an investment banker and has led the development and management of large municipal budgets and operations. Judith is a leader in concrete organizational growth, financial strategies and business acumen in K-12 education and state and local governments. Judith has decades of experience in programming and development for a variety of education-related non-profits and for-profits. She has managed outreach and financial campaigns both large and small, and started, grew and sold her own education for-profit company. Currently, she serves as an angel investor and volunteer leader on multiple boards including Harvard University, Georgetown Ministry Center and her Parish Council. She holds a Master’s in Public Policy from Harvard University and a B.A. from Yale University.

Vice President
Sherri Anne Green
Sherri Anne Green is an award-winning Luxury Property Advisor at TTR Sotheby’s International Realty, recognized for her market expertise, design sensibility, and sophisticated, client-first service. With a distinguished background in marketing, communications, contract management, and negotiations, she brings a creative and analytical approach to helping clients navigate the DC and Northern Virginia real estate markets. At the core of her practice is her Vision Creation philosophy that uncovers each client’s goals, aspirations, and lifestyle to craft a clear strategy for her clients’ real estate portfolios. Clients value her ability to bring structure, clarity, and creativity to the process, delivering a seamless, transparent and well-communicated experience tailored to their timeline and terms. A Certified Luxury Home Marketing Specialist (CLHMS) and Guild Elite™ designee, Sherri Anne is also a Seniors Real Estate Specialist (SRES), a Pricing Strategy Advisor (PSA), and an invited member of REALM—an exclusive global collective of top-performing agents committed to elevating client exposure through lifestyle-driven real estate matchmaking. Her industry credentials reflect both rigorous training and a commitment to market mastery across all price points. She has been featured in The Washington Post, Washingtonian, DC Modern Luxury, the Washington Business Journal, WAMU, syndicated across Modern Luxury titles and been a guest of numerous podcasts. Her clients include Cabinet members, national journalists, CEOs, U.S. Ambassadors, surgeons, attorneys, financial advisors, Bollywood entertainers, senior military leaders, and academics—reflecting the trust placed in her by those requiring discretion, precision, and world-class service. A 30-plus-year resident of the Washington, DC region. Her long-standing community involvement includes service as the Vice President of Georgetown Village and past Board Member of Friends of the Georgetown Waterfront Park. Sherri Anne resides in Georgetown and is a graduate of the University of Georgia with a joint degree in Advertising and Consumer Economics.

Treasurer
Michael Lacour-Little
Michael LaCour-Little is Professor of Finance-Emeritus at California State University Fullerton. Prior to retiring from the university in 2016, Dr. LaCour-Little was Chair of the Department of Finance and Executive Director of its Real Estate and Land Use Institute. He has also recently retired from Fannie Mae, where he was a Senior Director – Economics in the Economic and Strategic Research group for six years. In that role, he managed a portfolio of research projects and a team of economists. Dr. LaCour-Little was an executive in the mortgage industry prior to joining the faculty of Cal State Fullerton in 2006. From 2003-2008, he also served as Executive Vice President of the American Real Estate and Urban Economics Association. Prior to earning his doctorate in 1996, he spent decades in banking at both Wells Fargo and Citigroup. His main research interest is real estate finance. He has published over forty articles and book chapters on housing finance and mortgage markets in peer-reviewed academic journals, including Real Estate Economics, The Journal of Banking and Finance, The Journal of Real Estate Finance and Economics, The Journal of Housing Economics, The Journal of Real Estate Research, The Journal Fixed Income, and Housing Policy Debate, and serves on a number of editorial boards. A native of California, he earned his Ph.D. at the University of Wisconsin, Madison, and undergraduate and master’s degrees at the University of California.

Secretary
Betty Greenwold
Betty graduated from the University of Wisconsin with a psychology major and an MA degree from Lesley University. She has worked as a small business administrator and a mediator for the majority of her career. Betty has also been a volunteer in the field of senior services since 1970, a member and then long-time president of the National Council of Jewish Women, DC section, and worked in their joint program for seniors with the Washington JCC. She has served on the Hillandale Board where she resides and has been a Georgetown Village volunteer with Village for several years. She has been married to Mark Greenwold for 58 years, and has three children and six grandchildren. Fortunately, two daughters and four of their grandchildren live in DC.

Past President
Carol Kelly
With forty years of successful advocacy work, Carol A. Kelly is the founder and CEO of Kelly Advocacy Outcomes which assists clients in Washington and across the country with their legislative and regulatory needs for healthcare matters. She currently serves as Adjunct Faculty at the Milken Institute School of Public Health (George Washington University) and has served previously on the board of the Society for Women’s Health Research. Ms. Kelly has worked twice for the public sector and has represented companies and trade associations, giving her a wide-ranging view of the advocacy and policy environments of Washington. She joined the Board and Executive Committee of the American Benefits Council serving as its first Chairwoman from 2002-2003. Ms. Kelly has an MA from the University of Virginia and a BA from the University of Delaware.

Assistant Treasurer
Marjorie Corwin
Marjorie (Margie) Corwin is a volunteer with and a member of Georgetown Village. Margie has lived full time in Georgetown since 2019. Margie moved to Georgetown after retiring from a 38-year career as an attorney in private practice in Baltimore. She completed her legal career as a Member of Gordon Feinblatt LLC, leading the Firm’s Financial Services Practice. She focused on regulated financial services representing banks and credit unions with an emphasis on consumer credit, deposit issues, and residential lending and brokering. Margie’s activities in retirement include actively volunteering for Georgetown Village, acting as a docent at Tudor Place (an historic house in Georgetown), taking classes at Georgetown University (through its Senior Auditor program), and participating in programs at Adas Israel Synagogue (immediate Past President of Sisterhood). She enjoys hiking, walking, playing mah jong, and spending time with family. Margie grew up near Minneapolis, Minnesota, moving “out East” for college at Cornell University. With her husband, Neil Schechter, Margie raised two children in Severna Park, Maryland. They now have two grandsons who keep them busy when visiting.

Board Member
John Doolittle
John Doolittle grew up in LaGrange, Illinois a western suburbs of Chicago. He took an early interest in public speaking which lead to a fascination with first radio and by 1949 television. He attended Northwestern University majoring in communication with a specialization in Radio-TV and Film. After graduation he joined WBBM Radio, Chicago as a producer and later as the station’s press information director. He worked on air for stations in Hammond and South Bend, Indiana before moving to Atlanta to join WSB Radio where he covered the growing racial and anti-Viet Nam War events. The station is also where he met his future wife, Ellen Baker, who was employed in the television side of the facility. In 1970, John received a Masters degree in Journalism and Mass Communication at the University of Georgia. From there, he and his wife moved to Madison to pursue doctoral degrees at the University of Wisconsin, his in Communication Arts, hers in Psychology. After finishing their degrees, John and Ellen moved to Indiana University where he taught in the School of Journalism and she was a Post Doctoral student in Clinical Psychology. In 1980 Washington beckoned with new challenges. John joined the American University School of Communication faculty where he designed and taught courses in radio-television news production. He also served as Director of the Schools Journalism division for several years. In addition he kept his skills sharp working one summer as producer of WRC’s morning hours of talk radio and writing and producing news for the Voice of America. Subsequently, he was a visiting professor at Stanford University where he pioneered the Journalism programs which included student-produced newscasts on local cable tv outlets. Later years at A.U. he became an associate director of the University’s Center for Teaching Excellence which helped faculty develop their technical teaching skills. Research interests included studies of the effects and history of mass media. His book, Don McNeill and His “Breakfast Club” chronicled the development and growth of early morning network programing and sparked a renewed interest in one of the pioneers of broadcasting. Now an Emeritus Professor from American University since 2013, Doolittle volunteers with: The National Park Service and is a member of the Board of Directors for the Friends of Theodore Roosevelt Island, the Washington National Cathedral, the Washington Area Performing Arts Video Archive, and Georgetown Village. Doolittle and his wife are original owners of their Cloisters home moving there in 1987. As a Georgetown Village volunteer John’s most frequent assignment is to assist Village members with computer-related issues. His years working in electronic media environment and experience preparing faculty and students to use technology more effectively have paid off handsomely.

Volunteer Chair
Motrya Hanas Calafiura
Motrya Hanas Calafiura is a dedicated professional currently serving on the Board of Georgetown Village and the Hyde-Addison PTA. Since 2017, she has held leadership roles at Georgetown Village, including Board Member and Co-Chair of the Volunteer Committee, where she has contributed her expertise in strategic planning and organizational development to advance the mission and growth of the organization. In addition to her governance work, Motrya holds the position of Special Assistant to the Provost at Georgetown University, underscoring her broad professional experience. She is a Georgetown resident, is married, and has a son.

Events Chair
Sue Hamilton
Sue Hamilton is a native Washingtonian, growing up in American University Park. She graduated from Indiana University with a degree in Journalism and lived in the Midwest for 12 years. When she returned to DC, she moved to Georgetown and taught Organizational Communications at George Washington University. After a career in Corporate Communications, Sue founded Innovative Enterprise, specializing in event planning, marketing, and management. Her clients include non-profit organizations, historic locations, and professional associations. She currently serves as Executive Director of the Illinois State Society. Sue is very active in the Georgetown community as a business owner and resident. She is a member of the Citizens Association of Georgetown, Georgetown Main Street, and the City Tavern Club. She serves on the Board of the Washington, DC Chapter of the National Society of Arts & Letters.

Volunteer Chair
Motrya Hanas Calafiura
Motrya Hanas Calafiura is a dedicated professional currently serving on the Board of Georgetown Village and the Hyde-Addison PTA. Since 2017, she has held leadership roles at Georgetown Village, including Board Member and Co-Chair of the Volunteer Committee, where she has contributed her expertise in strategic planning and organizational development to advance the mission and growth of the organization. In addition to her governance work, Motrya holds the position of Special Assistant to the Provost at Georgetown University, underscoring her broad professional experience. She is a Georgetown resident, is married, and has a son.

Development Chair
Andrew Koenig
Born and raised in Buffalo, New York, Andy Koenig has been a member of the Georgetown community since 2008. He attended Georgetown University, where he graduated with a B.S. in Biology and later earned an MBA from the same institution. Andy currently serves as a senior assistant to Georgetown University President John J. DeGioia, in whose office he has worked for the past 12 years. In his current role, Andy works closely with the President, Chief of Staff, and other University executives to ensure alignment across functional units and to advance the President’s priorities and special projects. Aside from Georgetown Village, Andy is active in several Georgetown organizations, including the Potomac Boat Club, Epiphany Catholic Church, and formerly the City Tavern Club, where he served as Membership Chair. In addition, Andy volunteers on the staff of the Nantucket-Treweryn Beagles, a field sporting organization based in Clarke County, Virginia.

Board Member
Elizabeth Miller
Elizabeth Miller is a tireless supporter of the Georgetown community and a constant champion of Georgetown Village. Many of the great things about Georgetown have her fingerprints. Elizabeth spent 10 years working on Capitol Hill and political campaigns around the country. She served as Executive Director of the Citizens Association of Georgetown, creating the popular Concerts in Parks Series that has run consecutively for over 20 years. She was elected to Georgetown’s Advisory Neighborhood Commission and served as chair. She currently co-chairs the Georgetown Coalition for Public Spaces. Over the years, she has chaired many of the local fundraising events in Georgetown. She continues to be involved in local and national political campaigns and served as Councilmember Brooke Pinto’s Campaign Chair in the 2024 election cycle. Elizabeth is an outspoken fan of Georgetown Village and makes sure that everyone in Georgetown knows who we are and how we serve our community.

Board Member
Patricia Murphy
A native of New Jersey, Patty Murphy moved to Georgetown in 1965 after graduating from Saint Francis University. She has lived here in a variety of houses, from tiny Pomander Walk to her current “real” house on Dent Place. She had an interesting career in the Intelligence Community, primarily in the legal and legislative arena, and spent a year on a Congressional Fellowship working on legislation resolving the Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands. During those years she also completed a Masters at Georgetown University. Patty is a founding member and volunteer of Georgetown Village, and enjoys seeing the organization grow and prosper. She also volunteered at Medstar Georgetown University Hospital for twelve years, and briefly volunteered at the Peabody Room helping to preserve documents that were damaged after the library fire. Patty enjoys entertaining friends and family, cooking, gardening, and traveling.

Healthcare Committee Chair
Frederick R. Rickles, MD, FACP
Frederick R. Rickles, MD FACP, attended Indiana University as an undergraduate and received his MD degree from the University of Illinois. He trained in Internal Medicine and Hematology at the University of Rochester School of Medicine. Following training, he served in the Army Medical Corps as Director of the Coagulation Research Laboratory at the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research and is a Vietnam Veteran. Dr. Rickles was recruited to GWU as the Associate Vice President for Health Research and Technology Transfer in 1998, and joined the Division of Hematology/Oncology as Professor of Medicine, Pediatrics and Pharmacology and Physiology. He established a practice in his area of expertise, disorders of blood clotting (e.g. thrombosis and hemostasis), and has had a thriving practice with referrals from all over the world. Author of 110 peer-reviewed publications, 69 books, book chapters, editorials and reviews, and 115 abstracts, Dr. Rickles served as Vice President of the National Hemophilia Foundation and a member of multiple Study Sections of the NIH, American Cancer Society and American Heart Association. He was one of the co-founders of the Subcommittee on Cancer and Thrombosis of the International Society of Hemostasis and Thrombosis and a member of multiple scientific and education committees of the American Society of Hematology. He was an editorial board member of the Journal of Thrombosis and Hemostasis, Thrombosis Research, Thrombosis and Hemostasis and Blood Coagulation and Fibrinolysis. Before coming to GWU, Dr. Rickles had been on the faculties of the University of Connecticut, Emory University and was the Deputy Director of the Hematologic Disease Branch of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta, GA. He retired from active practice at The George Washington University Medical Faculty Associates, as of July 1, 2021, but continues to teach residents and fellows at the Veterans Administration Hospital in Washington, DC, GWU and the NIH. He remains an Emeritus Professor of Medicine at GWU, an honor he received in 2016. Dr. Rickles and his wife, Kathryn, a retired medical social worker, live in Georgetown and Kathryn is a volunteer for Georgetown Village.
