Orange at pencil point, bells at tapping, we are bells. Shells molded to the
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Westport success story, shells releaved of molten 11 excess, 11 shells to emit one pitch when touched-:-
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Friend, what is this "Trinity?" An equaled triangle held firm with chewing gum and rare books-smoke your pipe, Junior Scholar.
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Sacred place of miracles, grotto of pilgrimage, our walking sticks
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and solid legs you hang from yellowed stone faces, carved smiling. Joy!
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We are cured, released. We are frozen vacuums then, crusts.
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We are chapel bells. Then . You, Trinity Man, Shake Your Head!
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tor: Michael Norris Tousey. ~ S' Wood. Copy 'Editor: Howard ,· vities Editor; \Yllyy Anderson) if
Atiti~ity ·Assi,stant:: Anthony B~inton\~'olbarst.
Biograph(-
cal A~sistants:. ~.Raymon<.t :Peter Boulanger, Paul Harvey , Brundage, Milton K'iislloff, ':T.o hh Cdrtstantine Telischak, *:Keq.ileth·. A. Thoren, }r: JJiterary 4ssistartt: Peter Page~ Lqngfykke; Mant!soript Prepar{ltion:. .Thomas ,Garrett Johnston/ Frederic Blaine Sargent. Poem Beginni;,g
Page ,Thirty-three~ Pete~JB. Hollen,b&~. 0 f)nae;grailu~te Photographe,rs:· William :A~hbel Br~gl:ia:n£ Arthur Thomas : <·-. . •,': · _,,,_ . . "'.r. ·, _,:_ _ __, _ _ · _. . ", . M Curren, Jr., ~anford A. FideJH · Wa~d' 'I:rowtJridge Kelsey, · ~
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;Williani Qary .J<;pisel . p~ )~obert McDapielf 'Edward Pierce RqbC:rtsi ·J'r.; .Fred~iicil Qar4 Scqutrurcbe!~ ]~obert Brewing Trainer, Jr.; Geoffrey· Brooks Walton.
Faculty Advisor: Professor Cha~les Benne.r Ferguson.
The IVY has been published by the undergraduates of '}'rinity College, Hartford, Cgn.necticut' sit]ce 1873. This
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Prologue
... , ......... ,... Geology' , .......... .
94
Go~ernment ......... : . . . . • . . . . . . .
95
~
Title Page .... , ..... : ........... ; Table of Contents ............... : .
10
History ................. : . . . . . . . . 102
President . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
12
Mathematics ............... •. . . . . . 114
Trustees ..... ~ .. , .........•.. , ....
Modern .Languages . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . 119
Deans
Music
. ·.....
Air Science . ·. . . . . . . . . . . .......... .
127
Philosophy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 8
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Physical Education . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 141
Chemistry ....................... · 28
Physics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17 4
Biology ......... : . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Psychology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 179 Trinity Women ................... 184
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Robert Frost at Trinity . .· . . . . . . . . . . . .
51
Religion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 195
Economics
64
Administration
Education
70
Library ......................... 211
Engineering . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
71
Greek Letter Clubs ................ 213
Portrait of Two Buildings . . . . . . . . . .
74
Epilogue
English
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81
Advertisements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 234
Fine Arts ·. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
91
Index ........................... 253
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( 1) An avid fan of baseball on campus and the traditional "first baseman" for the faculty in the annual Delta Kappa Epsilon softball benefit, the President watches a varsity game. (2) President Jacobs is shown here with former President Eisenhower during his visit to Hartford last fall. At Columbia University Dr. Jacobs served as Provost under General Eisenhower and in 1952 was a member of the National Advisory Committee of Citizens for Eisenhower. At the request of President Eisenhower, Dr. Jacobs served as Chairman of the United States Delegation to the 41st (Maritime) Session of the International Labour Organization at Geneva, Switzerland.
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ALBERT CHARLES JACOBS, President; A.B. Michigan, 1921; B.A., B.C.L., M.A. Oxford, 1923, 1924, 1927; LL.D. Syracuse, Columbia, Temple, University of Colorado, Colorado College, Wesleyan, Denison, Long Island University, .Kenyon, Amherst; D .P.S. Denver; D. -Can. L. Berkeley Divinity School; D. Hum. Hartt; D.C.L. The Divinity School, Philadelphia; Lecturer in Jurisprudence, Oriel College (Oxford University), 1924-1925; Fellow and Lecturer in Jurisprudence, Oriel College, 1925-1928 and Lecturer in Jurisprudence, Brasenose College (Oxford), 1925-1928; at Columbia University: Lecturer in Law, 1927-1928, Assistant Professor of Law, 1928-1929, Associate Professor of
Law, 1929-1937, Professor of Law, 1937-1949, Provost of the University, 1947-1?49; Chancellor (equivalent of President), University of Denver, 1949-1953; During World War II: Director, Dependents Welfare Division, Bureau of Naval Personnel (separated from service with the rank of Captain, USNR); Author: A Research on Family Law, Cases and Materials on Landlord and Tenant, Cases and Materials on Domestic Relations, . Annals of Psi Upsilon; Chancellor, The Episcopal Diocese of Connecticut; Appointed President in 1953; Phi Beta Kappa, Phi Delta Phi, Omicron Delta Kappa, Pi Gamma Mu.
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TRUSTEES: Seated, left to right :_ McCook, Clement, Jacobs, Brainerd, Moses. Standing, left to right : Enders, O'Connor, Hickmott, Wyckoff, Prior, Hallden, Morris, Funston, Gray, Beers, Cook, Ferris, Shaw, Adams, Johnson, Young, Kingston.
JAMES LIPPINCOTT GOODWIN, B.A. 1905, M.F. 1910 (Yale) MARTIN WITHINGTON CLEMENT, B.S. 1901, L.H.D. 1951 (Trinity); D .Sc. 1935 Dickinson; LL.D. 1936 (Lafayette), 1937 (Pennsylvania), 1937 (Wesleyan), 1943 (Temple) ; D.Bus.Ad. 1942 (Northwestern) ; D.Eng. 1944 (Lehigh) , 1946 (Bucknell), 1946 (Drexel) ROBERT BARNARD O'CONNOR, B.A. 1916 (Trinity) , M.F.A. 1920 (Princeton), D .F.A. 1959 (Colgate) LYMAN BUSHNELL BRAINERD, B.A. 1930 (Trinity) ARNOLD HENRY MOSES, B.A. 1928 (Trinity) JEROME PIERCE WEBSTER, B.A. 1910, M.S. 1937 (Trinity); M.D. 1914 (Johns Hopkins), 1952 (University of Bologna) JOHN RICHARD COOK, B.S. 1910 (Trinity) ROBERT SEYMOUR MORRIS, B.S. 1916, M.S. 1917 (Trinity) KARL WILLIAM HALLDEN, B.S. 1909, M.S. 1948, SC.D. 1955 (Trinity) JOHN REINHART REITEMEYER, B.A. 1921 (Trinity) THE RT. REV. WALTER HENRY GRAY, B.D. 1928, D.D. 1941 (Virginia Theological Seminary); S.T.D. 1940 (Berkeley Divinity School) , 1941 (Trinity) GEORGE KEITH FUNSTON, B.A. 1932, LL.D. 1962 (Trinity); M.B.A. 1934 (Harvard) ; L.H.D. 1947 (Wesleyan); LL.D. 1948 (Pennsylvania), 1948 (Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute) , 1953 (Philadelphia College) RAYMOND JOHN WEAN, B.S. 1917 (Carnegie Institute of Technology), D.Sc. 1954 (Trinity) HENRY SAMUEL BEERS, B.A. 1918 (Trinity) OSTROM ENDERS, B.A. 1925 (Yale)
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GEORGE MALLETTE FERRIS, B.A. 1916 (Trinity) ALLERTON CUSHMAN HICKMOTT, B.S. 1917 (Dartmouth), LITT.D. 1958 (Trinity) GEORGE WARREN WYCKOFF, A.B. 1929 (Yale) VERTREES YOUNG, B.S. 1914 (Trinity), 1916 (Harvard); B.S.M.E. 1916 (Massachusetts Institute of Technology) BARCLAY SHAW, B.A. 1935 (Trinity),LL.B. 1938 (Harvard) GLOVER JOHNSON, B.A. 1922, LL.D. 1960 (Trinity); LL.B. 1925 (New York University) PAUL WINFREY ADAMS, B.S. 1935 (Trinity), LL.B. 1938 (Yale) HARRIS KING PRIOR, B.A. 1932, M.A. 1935 (Trinity); D.F.A. 1959 (California College of Fine Arts) CHARLES THOMAS KINGSTON, Jr., B.S. 1934 (Trinity) EDGAR FRANCIS WATERMAN, B.A. 1898, M.A. 1899, LL.D. 1958 (Trinity) THOMAS WRIGHT RUSSELL, B.A. 1901 (Yale) JAMES LEWIS THOMPSON, Ph.B. 1898 (Yale) GEORGE STANLEY STEVENSON, A.B. 1903, A.M. 1904 (Harvard) ; LL.D. 1949 (Smith) JOSEPH CAMPBELL, A.B. 1925, A.M. 1927 (Columbia) NEWTON CASE BRAINARD, A.B. 1902 (Yale); M.A. 1946, LL.D. 1959 (Trinity) PHILIP JAMES McCOOK, B.A. 1895, LL.B. 1899 (Harvard); LL.D. 1920 (Trinity), 1938 (Columbia) BERN BUDD, B.A. 1908 (Trinity), LL.B': 1910 (New York Law School)
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sixteen
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(1) ARTHUR HOWARD HUGHES, Vice President, Dean, Professor of Modern Languages and Chairman of The Board of The Cesare Barbieri Center for Italian Studies; B.A., M.A., Ph.D. Johns Hopkins, 1927, 1929, 1931; M.S., L.H.D. Trinity, 1938, 1946; Assistant Professor in German, George Washington University, 1931-1934; Acting President, Trinity College, 1943-1945 and 1951-1953; Appointed to the faculty in 1935; Phi Beta Kappa, Pi Gamma Mu .
(2) ROBERT MAIER VOGEL, Dean of Graduate Studies and Director of Summer School; B.A. Wabash, 1935; M.A. Michigan, 1940; Ed. D. Columbia, 1953; Secretary-Treasurer, New England Graduate Conference; Appointed to the faculty in 1947. ( 3) OSBORNE WILSON LACY, Dean of Students and Associate Professor of Psychology; B.A. Hampden-Sydney, 1947; A.M., Ph.D. Pennsylvania, 1951, 1955; Assistant Professor of Psychology and Associate Director of the Guidance and Counseling Center, Hampden-Sydney, 1953-1955; Appointed to the faculty in 1955; Pi Gamma Mu, Sigma Xi, Tau Kappa Alpha, Eta Sigma Phi, Sigma Upsilon, Pi Delta Epsilon, Psi Chi. ( 4) Dean with umbrella, raincoat, flat-top, and smile #1. (5) Dean with bermudas, terry cloth, flat-top , and smile #2.
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seventeen
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RICHARD BARTLETT OLNEY, Professor of Air Science; B.S. Citadel, 1940; M.A. Trinity, 1961; Lieutenant Colonel, United States Air Force; Appointed to the faculty in 1959.
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JOHN FRANCIS LaMAR, Associate Professor of Air Science; B.S. Florida Southern, 1958; M.A. Trinity, 1961 ; Lieutenant Colonel, United States Air Force; Formerly Flight and Academic Instructor, Air Force Transport School; Appointed to the faculty in 1959; Pi Gamma Mu.
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( 1 ) Flag lowering at the annual spring AFROTC Review. ( 2) The plastic scope of Air Force flyers. ( 3)
At the Spring Review.
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(1) JACK ANTON BIRNKAMMER, Assistant Professor of Air Science; B.S. St. Lawrence University, 1951; Captain, United States Air Force; Appointed to the faculty in 1962.
(2) JOHN FRANCIS REGAN, Lecturer in Air Science; B.S. Springfield, 1940; M.A. New Haven Teachers, 1953 ; Major, United States Air Force Reserve; Appointed to the faculty in 1956.
Arnold Air Society The Society is an honorary organization within the Air Force ROTC. Its purpose is one of service to the civic and College communities. It is known as the Edward P. Nolin, Jr. Squadron, in honor of the late Major Nolin who served as an Associate Professor of Air Science at Trinity prior to 1959. Standing, left to right: Singleton, Schilpp, Stowell, Case, Randmaa, Querida, Hussey. Seated: Strammiello.
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Air Force ROTC Rifle Team This .organization competed in shooting matches throughout the academic year. Although membership is presently limited to ROTC, next year's plans call for acivilian unit. Kneeling, left to right: Boultbee, OeNoie, Murphy, Mcilvaine. Standing, left to right: Jacobs, Randmaa, Campbell, Hoff, Fichman.
( 1) U.S. A ir Force Drum and Bugle Corps Band at the Spring Review.
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( 1) Reviewers at the Spring Review. (2) Presentation of an Air Force commission.
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( 1) JAMES WENDELL BURGER,. J. Pierpont Morgan Professor of Biology; A.B. Haverford, 1931; A.M. Lehigh, 1933; Ph.D. Princeton, 1936; Managing Director, Mt. Desert Island Biological Laboratory, 1948-1951; Commissioner, Connecticut State Geological and Natural History Survey; Director, H artford Hospital; Research Grants: New York Hearst Association a11d National Institute of Health ; Appointed to the faculty in 1936; Phi Beta Kappa, Sigma Xi. (2) JAMES MORRILL VAN STONE, Associate Professor of Biology; B.A. Wesleyan, 1949; M.S., Ph.D. Princeton, 1953, 1954; Research Grants for work in Experimental Embryology; National Science Foundation, 1955-1958 and National Institutes of Health, 1958-1962; Member, American Society of Zoologists; Member, American Association of Anatomists; Member, Society for the Study of Development and Growth; Appointed to the faculty in 1954. (3) DONALD BARRETT GALBRAITH, Instructor in Biology; B.S. Grove City College, 1958; Sc.M., Ph.D . Brown, 1960, 1962; United States Health Service Trainee in Genetics, 1960-1962; Appointed to the faculty in 1962; Omigron Delta Kappa, Beta Beta Beta, Sigma Xi. twenty three
IRWIN DAVID BERNSTEIN BROOKLYN, NEW YORK BIOLOGY and PRE-MEDICAL WRTC-FM; Hillel; Brownell Club; Prepared at Midwood High School.
ERROL LEON BERMAN HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT PRE-MEDICAL Hillel; Psychology Club; Companion Program at Connecticut State Hospital; Prepared at Weaver High School.
ROBERT LINDSAY BURGER HITCHCOCK, TEXAS BIOLOGY and PRE-MEDICAL Junior Advisor; Acolyte; Senior Lay Reader; Freshman Football; Freshman Baseball; Lacrosse; Sigma Nu, Treasurer; Prepared at Howe Military School.
twenty four
LEE GEORGE CHIRGWIN WEST HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT BIOLOGY Prepared at William Hall High School.
KENNETH STEELE FLETCHER, III SPRINGFIELD, MASSACHUSETTS PRE-MEDICAL and CHEMISTRY Pi Kappa Alpha; Prepared at Lenox School.
ROBERT PHILIP BORDOGNA HAVERTOWN, PENNSYLVANIA PRE-MEDICAL Sophomore Dining Club; Jesters; Class Secretary-Treasurer; Soccer; Alpha Chi Rho; Prepared at The Haverford School.
JOHN ELLIOT GAINS NEW YORK, NEW YORK PRE-MEDICAL Corinthian Yacht Club, Secretary, Commodore; Psi Chi; Junior Advisor; Psi Upsilon; Prepared at The Choate School.
EDWARD THOMAS FLYNN, JR. UNIONVILLE, CONNECTICUT BIOLOGY Newman Club; Le Cercle Francaise; Delta Phi Alpha, President; Brownell Club; Prepared at Farmington High School.
FRANK PAUL FRIEDMAN HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT BIOLOGY and PRE-MEDICAL Campus Chest; Hillel Society; Chapel Cabinet; Brownell Club; Prepared at Weaver High School.
JACOB SEYMOUR KRITEMAN MALDEN, MASSACHUSETTS BIOLOGY and PRE-MEDICAL Hillel, President; French Club; Chapel Cabinet; Track, Manager; Q.E.D. ; Prepared at Malden High School.
ALAN BRUCE LIPPITT NORWICH, CONNECTICUT BIOLOGY and PRE-MEDICAL Chapel Cabinet; Hillel, Treasurer, Vice President; Freshmen Football; Brownell Club; Prepar.ed at Norwich Free Academy.
CARL BURTON LUNDBORG WEST HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT BIOLOGY and PRE-MEDICAL Acolyte; Football; Alpha Chi Rho; Prepared at William Hall High School.
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JOHN RODNEY MATTISON HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT BIOLOGY and PRE-MEDICAL Prepared at William Hall High School.
ROBERT HALLDEN PARLEE WEST HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT BIOLOGY and PRE-MEDICAL Trinidads; Glee Club; Le Cercle Francais; Brownell Club; Prepared at Conard High School.
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EMMETT EMMANUEL MILLER, III JAMAICA, NEW YORK MATHEMATICS and PRE-MEDICAL Sigma Pi Sigma, Secretary; Math Club; Basketball; Track; Cross Country; Prepared at Jamaica High School.
BRIAN HILTON ODLUM WEST HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT BIOLOGY and PRE-MEDICAL Glee Club; Newman Club; Freshmen Swimming; Q.E.D. Prepared at Conard High School.
DANIEL RAYMOND ROMANOS WEST HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT BIOLOGY Alpha Chi Rho; Prepared at William H. Hall High School.
RICHARD WERNER ULBRICH WELLESLEY HILLS, MASSACHUSETTS PRE-MEDICAL Psychology Club; Young Republicans; Sports Car Club; Swimming; Sigma Nu; Prepared at Gamaliel High School.
THEODORE ANSTEY WAGNER BRYN MAWR, PENNSYLVANIA PRE-MEDICAL Young Democrats; Tripod; Senate; Crew Association, President; St. Anthony Hall; Prepared at Haverford School.
DAVID HAMMOND WEBSTER FARMINGTON, CONNECTICUT BIOLOGY Prepared at Watkinson School.
SAMUEL DAVID WINNER HUNTINGDON VALLEY, PENNSYLVANIA PRE-MEDICAL Senate; Cerberus; Pipes; Campus Chest; Football; Baseball; Alpha Chi Rho; Prepared at William Penn Charter School.
IHOR ZACHARIASEWYCZ HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT PRE-MEDICAL Phi Beta Kappa, Newman Club; Fencing; Brownell Club; Prepared at Hartford Public High School.
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( 1) ROBERT HENDERSON SMELLIE, JR., Professor of Chemistry; B.S., M.S. Trinity, 1942, 1944; Ph.D. Columbia, 1951 ; Appointed to the faculty in 1943; Phi Beta Kappa.
( 4) RAYMOND FLETCHER SNIPES, Instructor in Chemistry; B.S. North Carolina, 1956; M.S. Yale, 1957; Appointed to the faculty in 1959; Phi Beta Kappa.
(2) STERLING BISHOP SMITH, Scovill Professor of Chemistry; Ph.B., M.S. Yale, 1920, 1923; Ph.D. New York University, 1927; Appointed to the faculty in 1923.
(5) EDWARD BOBKO, Associate Professor of Chemistry; B.S. Western Reserve, 1949; Ph.D. Northwestern, 1952; Formerly taught at Northwestern and Washington and Jefferson College; Appointed to the faculty in 1955; Phi Beta Kappa, Sigma Xi.
(3) JAMES KENNETH HEEREN, Assistant Professor of Chemistry; B.S., M.S. Tufts, 1951, 1952; Ph.D. M.I.T., 1960; Appointed .to t he faculty in 1962; Sigma Xi.
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RICHARD FRANK GOLD SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH CHEMISTRY WRTC-FM; CODE; American Institute of Physics, Student Section, Secretary; Q.E.D.; Prepared at Highland High School.
MICHAEL ANDREW PLEVA WINDSOR LOCKS, CONNECTICUT CHEMISTRY WRTC-FM; Newman Club; Prepared at Windsor Locks 路 High School.
STEPHEN SHEPARD WASHBURNE OCEANPORT, NEW JERSEY CHEMISTRY Band; Sigma Pi Sigma; American Institute of Physics, Student Section; Acolytes; Pi Kappa Alpha; Prepared at Middletown School.
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The main chemistry laboratory.
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Summer School students performing an experiment in the laboratory.
TIMOTHY WALTER JOHNSON NEWINGTON, CONNECTICUT CHEMISTRY Glee Club; Brownell Club; Prepared at Newington High School.
THOMAS GORDON McCORD PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA CHEMISTRY and MATHEMATICS Sigma Pi Sigma, Secretary; Delta Phi Alpha; Choir; Cantores Sancti; Prepared at Central lfigh School of Philadelphia.
KURT ALBIN WETZEL HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT CHEMISTRY Air Force ROTC; Pi Kappa Alpha; Prepared at Hartford Public High School.
thirty one
A POEM . by Peter B. Hollenbeck illustrated by Richard D. Tuttle
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We walked as one with shadows underneath the elms and
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,...
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•
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'":''di~~ ·
slowly were the shadows 1noved by night descending from the afternoon.
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:. ,: I / · - ' . ' ·· '·
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.
The sun its new increase began to sow: .
The grass was trapped in trembling amber, and shadows there began the begged but unforgiven prophecy, a sign held frozen to a
I
to draw the lines of what prophetically we had to drawrune: vain swords across the shadow of the stone.
And we sly wanderers at brookside, Could not contain the ache to pluck it out, The timeless hyacinth shuddering in gold-
But autumn measured out its steps in gold
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And ours into a whispering of russet Leaves beneath the wind of night that passedJ Awakening cruel slumber from the boughs .
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The Gold might all but signify the time Of presences alone in memory Whose chaste and perfect past made them immune To ftttures ravished seed} When all the blades of waging g1~'ass stood gilded by the sun.
Some year, we so approach to stand some year Above a suddenly real, a fallen tree That shaded us who paced the gold below.
Mark now, soft eyes, when fallen to your scope, hotv far these limbs
contend to touch a sun which all their blinking leaves were blind to.
,.,
forty eight
(1)
(1) JAMES ANASTASIOS NOTOPOULOS, Hobart Professor of Classical Languages; B.A. Amherst, 1928; B.A., M.A. Oxford, 1930, 1934; Visiting Professor, Princeton, 1955-1956; Visiting Professor, Harvard, 1961-1962; Author of The Platonism of Shelly; Guggenheim Fellow, 1952-1953; Coeditor of Classical Journal; Appointed to the faculty in 1936; Phi Beta Kappa.
(2) ALBERT MERRIMAN, AssoCiate Professor of Classical Languages; B.A., M.A. Harvard, 1933, 1937; Appointed to the faculty in 1948; Phi Beta Kappa. (3)
(2)
(3) GOODWIN BATTERSON BEACH, Lecturer in Latin; A.B. Harvard, 1907; M.A. Trinity, 1931; Litt.D. Leeds, 1953; Four times received honorable mention in the Certamen Capitolinum (Internationl Competion for Original Latin composition) ; Appointed to the faculty in 1954; Phi Beta Kappa.
forty nine
RICHARD SUI ON CHANG HONOLULU, HAWAil HISTORY and CLASSICS Episcopal Vestry, Junior Warden, Senior Warden; Acolytes; Tripod; Chapel Cabinet, Chairman; Junior Advisor; Fencing Team, CoCaptain; Delta Phi; Prepared at Iolani School.
fifty
DAVID DENNIS HOLROYD ASHBY, MASSACHUSETTS CLASSICS and HISTORY Young Republicans, Recording Secretary; Junior and Senior Lay Reader; Acolytes; Ivy; Chapel Vestry; Intramural Board, Secretary; Q.E.D., Treasurer; Prepared at Fitchburg High School.
Robert Frost at Trinity: the late poet laureate made one of his last public appearances here on October 11 and 12, 1962.
fifty one
Campus Chest
This organization canvases the student body to raise money for several and various charities. It is the only charity drive conducted on campus. Its activities are climaxed by a great and wonderful horror-show known as "The Finale." Front Row, left to right: Jacobs, Pyle, Todd, Spencer. Back row, left to right:
McCann, Fiordalis, Jones.
fifty two
Cerberus
The Cerberus is an honor society for Sophomores and J un.iors which acts as the host for the College to visitors and prospective students. The members, picked for their personal integrity and demonstrated willingness to serve the College, also provide various other services. First Row, bottom to top: Watson, Campbell, Gregory, Steel, Gilson, Elwood, Fish. Second Row, bottom to top : Freeman, Potterveld, Losse, Fairfield, Brackett, Schilpp. Third Row, bottom to top: . Stanley, Pyle, Davison, Garson, Miller, Meyers, Klotz, Jansen, Kadyk.
fifty three
Nihil Academia
A sombre group devoted to the study of sybaritism in the New England collegiate community. These hardy voyageurs have traveled countless miles in search of an American tradition which they belive exists. It is a belief in the truth, sometimes realized by the greats, Ovid and others, the
quest for archetypical sparagmos regresses without the addition of Freudian interpretation. The old motto of Socrates is always apropos with regard to imbibing hemlock cocktails as seen by J. Edgar Hoover. Seated: Bordogna. Standing, left to right: Stram-
miello, Post, Daly, Vickery.
fifty four
Freshman Executive Council
Chosen at random from the incoming freshmen by the Administration, this group manages freshman social activity and reports their complaints to the proper authority.
Seated, left to right: Barrett, Hart. First Row, left to to right: Snyder, Stavens-, Diner, Williams, Bent, Wodatch, Carlson. Second Row, left to right: Rothbard, Seckler, Morrow, Parks, Perkins, Turner, Duckworth, Siegel, Telischak, Sniffen, Ferguson.
fifty five
Mather Hall
Board of Governors
This group plans and organizes different activities in Mather Hall for the benefit and enjoyment of the general student body. Under the guidance of Leonard Tomat, they offer a prize in the animal student art show held in their headquarters. Seated, left to right: Minifie, Marcuss, Vickery. Standing, left to right: Rosenthal, Davison, Bailey, McGill.
fifty six
Junior Advisors
The task of the Junior Advisor is to inform the green freshman of the strange and wonderful ways of the College. The Dean utilizes his psychological insight in conjunction with their selection. Seated, . left to right : DeMone, Watson, Kirkpatrick, Schilpp, Schiro, Schaefer, Lapenn, Doles, Witherington, Freeman, Tousey, Miller, Moor, Smith. Standing, left to right : Deschamps, Ogden, McNeill, Cone, Brackett, McLagan, Ewing, Stanley, Wallace, Feingold, Stevens, Coulson, Anderson, Zinser, Ahlgren, Gregory.
fifty seven
Medusa
The Senate has appointed disciplinary power to this group although the former body retains appellate jurisdiction. Membership is self-perpetuating and resides within the Medusa itself. It is classified as a non-academic honor society. Front Row, left to right: Keen, Schulenberg, Waggett. Back Row, left to right: Reynolds, Taylor, Kent, Howland.
fifty eight
I vy
The IVY is one of those or~anizations which rises and falls like a shaky rowboat on a heavy. sea. The past two years have seen the traditional conservatism, which ~haracterized the book, pass away. This edition-volume ninety of the annualdeparts even more from the tradition. But do not fear ; the sea will calm. First Row, left to right: Vickery, Ferguson, .Tuttle. Second Row, left to right : Tousey, Garson, Pyle.
fifty nine
Senate
The Senate is the student legislative body composed of representatives from all sectors of campus life. In addition to supervising all student organizations, the Senate exists to quibble over the initiation, organization, and . expression of student opinion. Seated, left to right: Thomas, Casey, Marcuss, Smith, Potterveld, Watson, Stanley. Standing, left to right: Langlykke, Jones,
Minifie, Anderson, Tozer, Hill, Waggett, Yeaton, Campbell, Williams, Miller.
sixty
International Students Organization
The aim of this organization, open to all interested students and faculty members, is to develop mutually beneficial relations between foreign and American students. To facilitate this goal, the group expects to conduct panel discussions on significant international topics, informal discussions on specific countries and their problems, and joint meetings with other groups of a similar nature. Kneeling, left to right: Whitney, Roger Bernstein, Loi, Depetris, Mseka . Standing, left to right: Brown, Richard Bernstein,
Sgoutas, Anderson, Sallah , Bridegroom, Ferrara, Marshall.
sixty one
Tripod
The Tripod, the semi-weekly student newspaper of Trinity College, covers campus news and this year was awarded second prize for World News Reporting and Interpretation at the Fifth Annual College Editors Conference in New York. Left to right: Jones, Osowecki, Kinzler, Landay, Watson, Burfeind, Liebowitz, Rosenthal, Kelsey, Powell, Carter, O'Neil, McDaniel, Benjamin, Thomas, Rowan, Kuehn, Stavens, Perreault, Wallace, Kirby.
sixty two
WRTC-FM
The student run radio station broadcasts programs for the education and pleasure of the College and Connecticut; many of路 these programs originate in the station's studios and exhibit the talents of its seventy-five members. WRTC-FM operates with an effective radiated power of three-hundred fifty watts at 89.3 megacycles. First Row, left to right: Crane, McGill, Carruth, Faxon, Wadlow, Heid. Second Row, left to right: Craig, Severns, Schlatter, Draper, Miller. Third Row, left to right: Gold, Wiltbank, Bosch, Townsend, Bernstein. Fourth Row, left to right: Case, Benjamin, Erdos, Geetter, Bangert. Fifth Row, left to right: Parks, Smith, Nolan, Chew, Bailey, Huntoon, Haslach, Heilemann.
sixty three
(1)
( 1) LAWRENCE WILLIAM TOWLE, G. Fox and Company Professor of Economics; B.A. Bowdoin, 1924; M.A., Ph.D. Harvard, 1927, 1932; Principal Economist, Office of Alien Property Custodian, 1942-1943; Author of Time Deposits and International Trade and Commercial Policy; Appointed to the faculty in 1942; Phi Beta Kappa, Pi Gamma Mu. (2) RICHARD SCHEUCH, Associate Professor of Economics; A.B., M.A., Ph.D". Princeton, 1942, 1948, 1952; Teaching Assistant and Preceptor, Princeton, 1946-1950; Woodrow Wilson Fellow, 1946-1947; Appointed to the faculty in 1950; Phi Beta Kappa, Pi Gamma Mu.
(2)
(5)
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(3) RANDALL WILLIAM TUCKER, Associate Professor of Economics; B.A. Northeastern, 1939; M.B.A. Chicago, 1942; Appointed to the faculty in 1946; Pi Gamma Mu. (4) ROBERT ALDEN BATTIS, Associate Professor of Economics; B.S.B.A. Rutgers, 1948; M.A., Ph.D. New York, 1952, 1958; Appointed to the faculty in 1959; Pi Gamma Mu .
(5) WARD SCHENK CURRAN, Instructor in Economics and George M. Ferris Lecturer in Corporation Finance and Investments; B.A. Trinity, 1957; M .A., Ph.D. Columbia, 1958, 1961; Appointed to the faculty in 1960; Pi Gamma Mu. (6) LEROY DUNN, Assistant Professor of Economics; B.S. American University, 1949; Ph.D. London, 1956; Formerly Instructor, Brown University, Research Assistant, London School of Economics, 1952-1955; Research Assistant, Board of Governors, Federal Reserve System, Washington, D.C., 1950-1955; Senior Research' Officer, U.S. Treasury, 1962; Appointed to the faculty in 1957; Pi Gamma Mu.
(7)
JAMES WARREN WIGHTMAN, Instructor in Economics; B.S. Franklin
& Marshall, 1954; M.A. Clark, 1956; Formerly Teaching Fellow, Clark Univer-
sity; Appointed to the faculty in 1961; Pi Gamma Mu.
(7)
sixty five
BAYARD DICK ANDERSON PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA ECONOMICS Athenium; Delta Kappa Epsilon; Prepared at Phillips Academy, Andover.
DAVID CHARLES BREWSTER NEW YORK, NEW YORK ECONOMICS Economics Club, President; Undergraduate Evaluation Report; Basketball; Alpha Delta Phi, President; Prepared at Friends Seminary.
sixty six
FREDERICK LINCOLN ASHWORTH, JR. BETHESDA, MARYLAND ECONOMICS Air Force ROTC, Drill Team Commander, Group Commander; Swimming, Co-Captain; Alpha Chi Rho, Steward; Prepared at The Longfellow School.
JONATHAN KENISTON BAILEY AMESBURY, MASSACHUSETTS ECONOMICS Pipes and Drums; Mather Hall Board of Governors; Folksingers; Young Republicans; Corinthian Yacht Club; Sports Car Club; Prepared at Governor Dummer Academy.
WALTER GEORGE BURINSKAS, JR. NEW BRITAIN, CONNECTICUT ECONOMICS Freshman Baseball; Air Force ROTC; Brownell Club, VicePresident, Treasurer; Prepared at New Britain Senior High School.
ROBERT ELDER BOND LOUISVILLE, KENTUCKY ECONOMICS Co-rinthian Yacht Club; Campu Chest; Economics Club; Psychology Club; Crew; Soccer St. Anthony Hall; Prepared at Louisville Country Day School.
EDWARD GEORGE CASEY SUMMIT, NEW JERSEY ECONOMICS Senate; Student Fine Arts Committee; Economics Club; Newman Club; Football; Baseball; Lacrosse; Pi Kappa Alpha; Prepared at Morristown Preparatory School.
PETER MICHAEL DENSEN NEW YORK, NEW YORK ECONOMICS Psychology Club; Sports Car Club; Political Science Club; Hillel; Freshman Soccer; Lacrosse; Phi Kappa Psi, Corresponding Secretary, VicePresident; Prepared at Riverdale Country School.
ROBERT STEWART EBERSOLD HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT ECONOMICS Golf; Sigma Nu; Prepared at Williston Academy.
HORACE KELLOGG CORBIN, III WEST ORANGE, NEW JERSEY ECONOMICS Economics Club; Corinthian Yacht Club; Squash; Saint Anthony Hall; Prepared at The New Preparatory School. -
MALCOM SMITH GRAHAM AUSTIN, TEXAS ECONOMICS Air Force ROTC; Football; Delta Kappa Epsilon; Prepared at S. F. Austin High School. 路
WILLIAM PIERSON HALLIN NEWINGTON, CONNECTICUT ECONOMICS Brownell Club, Treasurer; Prepared at Newington High School.
sixty seven
PAUL THOMSON HASKELL, JR. SALEM, MASSACHUSETTS ECONOMICS Campus Chest; Corinthian Yacht Club; Young Republicans; Interfraternity Council; Psi Upsilon; Prepared at The Hill School.
JAY BARBOUR HOWARD BRIDGEPORT, CONNECTICUT ECONOMICS Cheerleaders; Political Science Club; Phi Kappa Psi; Prepared at Roger Ludlowe High School.
RAY HANS HUTCH WEST HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT ECONOMICS Football; Theta Xi; Prepared at Blair Academy.
VICTOR FORD KEEN PUEBLO, COLORADO ECONOMICS Freshman Executive council; Junior Advisor; Interfraternity Council, President; Medusa; Economics Club, Vice-President; Cerberus, Vice-President; Track; Basketball; Alpha Delta Phi; Prepared at Central High School.
LEWIS MARTIN LeBUS HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT ECONOMICS Flying Club, President; Economics Club; Track; Alpha Delta Phi; Prepared at St. Andrew's School.
STANLEY JOSEPH MARCUSS, JR. HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT ECONOMICS Senate; Political Science Club, Vice-President; Cerberus, President; Economics Club; Archive; Newman Club, Treasurer; Junior Advisor; Pi Gamma Mu; Glee Club; Mather Hall Board of Governors, President; Delta Phi, President; Prepared at Holy Trinity High School.
sixty eight
WILEY ANDERSON JONES, JR. BALTIMORE, MARYLAND ECONOMICS and HISTORY Ivy, Activities Editor; Tripod; Christian Association; Pi Kapp Alpha, Treasurer; Prepared at Catonsville Senior High School
ROBERT JAMES POPE MONTGOMERY COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA ECONOMICS WRTC-FM; Economics Club; Sailing Club; Squash, Captain; St. Anthony Hall; Prepared at William Penn Charter School.
DAN TYLER MOORE, III CLEVELAND HEIGHTS, OHIO ECONOMICS Freshman Executive Council; Class Vice-President; Sophomore路 Dining Club, Secretary; Young Democrats; Economics Club; Track; Alpha Delta Phi; Prepared at University School.
THOMAS CARR O'SULLIVAN NAZARETH, PENNSYLVANIA ECONOMICS Economics Club; Glee Club; Track; Pi Kappa Alpha; Prepared at Nazareth High School.
STEPHEN LLOYD PERREAULT PITTSFIELD, MASSACHUSETTS ECONOMICS Tripod, Sports Editor; Interfraternity Council, SecretaryTreasurer; Pi Kappa Alpha; Prepared at Assumption Preparatory School.
SCOTT WALTON REYNOLDS MOUNTAIN LAKES, NEW JERSEY ECONOMICS Medusa; Cerberus; Junior Advisor; Senior Lay Reader; Junior Lay Reader; Tripod; Lacrosse, Manager; Theta Xi, Junior Steward, Vice-President, President; Prepared at Mountain Lakes High School.
MICHAEL A. SCHULENBERG RED WING, MINNESOTA ECONOMICS Medusa; Senate; Sophomore Dining Club; Crucifier; Cerberus; Campus Chest; Football, Captain; Track; Alpha Chi Rho, President; Prepared at Central High School.
WILLIAM JAMES TOZER, JR. SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH ECONOMICS Senate, Corresponding Secretary; Vestry; Economics Club, Secretary-Treasurer; Pi Gamma Mu, President; Junior Advisor, Junior Lay Reader; Young Republicans; Chapel Usher; Cuttington College Committee; Theta Xi, Treasurer; Prepared at East High School.
sixty nine
(1)
(2)
( 1) ALEXANDER ANDERSON MACKIMMIE, JR., Professor of Education; 'B.A., M.A. Amherst, 1928, 1958; M.A. Boston University, 1942; Supervising Principal, Bulkeley High School (Hartford), 19511959; Assistant Superintendent of SchoolS, Hartford, 1959-1962; Appointed to the fac路 路 ulty in 1962. (2) RICHARD KNOWLES MORRIS, Associate Professor of Education; B.A. Trinity, 1940; M.A., Ph.D. Yale, 1949, 1951; Appointed to the faculty in 1951; Pi Gamma Mu. (3) WILLIAM EDWARD BUCKLEY, Lecturer in Education; B.A. Yale, 1913; M.A., L.H.D. Trinity, 1927, 1957; Member, Board of Education, Manchester, Connecticut; Retired History Teacher, Hartford Public High Scbool; Appointed to the faculty in 1962.
(3)
seventy
(2)
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(4) (3) (1) ALVIN RICHARD REINHART, Assistant Professor of Engineering; B.S. New Hampshire, 1930; Appointed to the faculty in 1958.
( 2) EDWIN PACKARD NYE, Hall den Professor of Engineering; B.S. New Hampshire, 1941; Sc.M. Harvard, 1947; Formerly a faculty member at Pennsylvania State University; Appointed to the faculty in 1959; Phi Kappa Phi, Pi Tau Sigma. (3) AUGUST EDWARD SAPEGA, Associate Professor of Engineering; B.S., M.S. Columbia, 1946, 1951; Appointed to the faculty in 1951.
( 4) WILLIAM RUTHVEN SMITH, III, Instructor in Engineering; B.S. Trinity, 1956; B.E.E., M.S.E. Georg<! Washington, 1958, 1959; Appointed to the faculty in 1961; Sigma Tau.
(5)
(5) WENDELL EVERETT KRAFT, Associate Professor of Engineering and Assistant to the President; B.S. United States Naval Academy, 1924; M.S. Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1929; Retired in 1954 as a Captain in the United States Navy; Appointed to the faculty in 1954. ( 6) THEODORE ROBERT BLAKESLEE, II, Associate Professor of Engineering; B.S. in Naval Architecture and Marine Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1945; M.S. in Mechanical Engineering, Lehigh, 1952; Faculty Member, Lafayette College, 1947-1956; Appointed to the faculty in 1958.
(6)
seventy one
JOHN MOODY ALVORD RIVERSIDE, CONNECTICUT ENGINEERING Tennis; Football, Manager; Prepared at The Hill School.
STEPHEN HOPKINS HAARSTICK VILLANOVA, PENNSYLVANIA ENGINEERING Corinthian Yacht Club; Pi Kappa Alpha; Prepared at Solebury School.
seventy two
THOMAS EBEN CALABRESE A VON, CONNECTICUT ENGINEERING Junior Advisor; Interfraternity Council, Representative; Football; Baseball; Alpha Chi Rho; Prepared at Canton High School.
DANIEL LAWRENCE OSTAPKO NORFOLK, CONNECTICUT ENGINEERING Jesters; Junior Advisor; Pi Kappa Alpha; Prepared at The Gilbert School.
JOHN DENNISON ST. CLAIR, JR. CANTON, OHIO ENGINEERING Trinity Folksingers; WRTC-FM; Engineering Club; Prepared at Western Reserve Academy.
WILBUR SHENK, III LAKE CITY, PENNSYLVANIA ENGINEERING Glee Club; Sophomore Dining Club; Football; Alpha Delta Phi; Prepared at Fairview High School.
JOHN ANDREW SZUMCZYK WEST HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT ENGINEERING Engineering Club; Newman Club; Football; Track; Alpha Chi Rho; Prepared 路at William H. Hall High School.
WINFIELD GEORGE VIERING HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT MECHANICAL ENGINEERING Air Force ROTC, Drill Team; Freshman Football; Phi Kappa Psi; Prepared at Avon Old Farms.
THEODORE ANTHONY WRIGHT PROSPECT, CONNECTICUT ENGINEERING Air Force ROTC Rifle and Drill Teams; Cerberus; Senate; Football; Lacrosse; Phi Kappa Psi; Prepared at Mt. Hermon School.
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(2)
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seventy seven
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seventy eight
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seventy nine
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(24) (23)
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(4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) ( 11) (12)
eighty
Radiator in Boardman. North facade at ground level with porch of Boardman. Doric capitol in Boardman. Gas lighting fixture in Jarvis. Ivy vines on Boardman. Decorated desk brace. Romanesque arch in Jarvis. Cluttered corner in Jarvis. Lindsey in Physics area of Jarvis. Elephas Indicus with geranium. Basement window of Boardman. Titanosaurus.
( 13) (14) (15) (16) (17) (18) (19) (20) (21) (22) (23) (24)
String course on Boardman. Ram. Pelican skeleton. Glyptodon Clariws with cleaning equipment. Facade of Boardman. Section of human skull. Geology class room. Light switch in Jarvis. Walrus skull. Skeleton in Boardman. Time in Boardman. Jarvis class room.
(1)
(1) FREDERICK LANDIS GWYNN, James J. Goodwin Professor of English; A.B. Bowdoin, 1937; A.M., Ph.D. Harvard, 1938 1942; Has taught at Harvard, Penn State, and University of Virginia; Author of Sturge Moore and the Life of Art; Co-author of The Fiction of J. D. Salinger; Co-editor of The Case For Poetry: A New Anthology and Faulkner in the University: Class Conferences at the University of Virginia; Editor of College English Magazine, 1955-1960; Appointed to the faculty in 1958; Phi Beta Kappa. 路
(2) RALPH MERLIN WILLIAMS, Professor of English; B.A. Amherst, 1933; Ph.D. Yale, 1938; Instructor in English, Boston University, 1938-1942; Instructor in Composition, Welles1ey College, 1942-1946; Coauthor of Private Charity in England, 17471757; Co-editor of The Correspondence of Horace Walpole and flenry Zouch; Author of Poet, Painter, and Parson: The Life of John Dyer; Author of Phonetic Spelling for College Students; Appointed to the faculty in 1946. 路 (3) JOHN BARD McNULTY, Professor of English; B.S. Trinity, 1938; M.A. Columbia, 1939; Ph.D. Yale, 1944; Appointed to the faculty in 1944.
(3)
(2)
eighty one
( l) JOHN ARTHUR DANDO, Associate Professor of English; B.A., M.A. McGill, 1938, 1945; Appointed to the faculty in 1950. (2) GEORGE EMORY NICHOLS, III, Associate Professor of Drama; B.A., M.F.A. Yale, 1938, 1941 ; Appointed to the faculty in 1950. (3) KENNETH WALTER CAMERON, Associate Professor of English; B.A., M.A. West Virginia, 1930, 1931; S.T .B. General Theological Seminary, 1935, Ph.D. Yale ; 1940; Fellow of the American Antiquarian Society; Appointed to the faculty in 1946; Phi Beta Kappa. ( 4) DANIEL BOND RISDON, Associate Professor of English; B.A. Amherst, 1930; M.A. Trinity, 1938; M .A. Yale, 1947; Military service, 1943-1945; Appointed to the faculty in 1947.
(3)
(1)
(2)
eighty two
(2)
(1)
(4) (5)
(3)
(1) RICHARD PAUL BENTON, Assistant Professor of English; B.S., M.A., Ph.D. Johns Hopkins, 1952, 1953, 1955; Appointed to the faculty in 1955.
( 2) JAMES LAIN POTTER, Assistant Professor of English; B.A., M.A. Wesleyan, 1944, 1946; Ph.D. Harvard, 1954; Appointed to the faculty in 1955.
(3) PAUL JAMES SMITH, Jr., Assistant Professor of English; B.A., M.A. Rochester, 1950, 1951; Teaching Fellow in General Education and History and Literature, Harvard, 1956-1959; Appointed to the faculty in 1959. ( 4) STEPHEN MINOT, Lecturer in English; B.A. Harvard, 1953; M.A. Johns Hopkins, 1955; Formerly Assistant Professor of English, Bowdoin College; Appointed to the faculty in 1959.
(5) ROBERT DANA FOULKE, Assistant Professor of English; A.B. Princeton, 1952; M.A., Ph.D. Minnesota, 1957, 1961; Formerly a member of the English Department, University of Minnesota; Fulbright Scholar, University of London, 1959-1960; Appointed to the faculty in 1961 ; Phi Beta Kappa.
eighty three
ROBERT DOAN HOPKINS ANNING CINCINNATl, OHIO ENGLISH Sophomore Dining Club; Campus Chest; St. Anthony Hall; Prepared at The Asheville School.
RICHARD COULTER BRITTAIN BRYN MAWR, PENNSYLVANIA ENGLISH Ivy; Jesters; Soccer, Manager; Fencing; Delta Kappa Epsilon; Prepared at The Haverford School.
RALPH JOHN COFFMAN, JR. MARBLEHEAD, MASSACHUSETTS ENGLISH Athenaeum; Jesters; WRTC-FM; Le Cercle Francais; Prepared at Governor Dummer Academy.
eighty four
WATSON LEWIS CAMPBELL WYNNEWOOD, PENNSYLVANIA ENGLISH WRTC-FM; Glee Club, Secretary; Rifle Team, Captain; Corinthian Yacht Club; Air Force ROTC; Phi Kappa Psi; Prepared at The Haverford School.
RUFUS PUTNAM COES, JR. LONGMEADOW, MASSACHUSETTS ENGLISH Freshman Baseball; Alpha Delta Phi; Prepared at South Kent School.
LAURENCE LEE DAWSON MAHOPAC, NEW YORK ENGLISH Freshman Executive Council; Band; Chamber Players; Jesters; Young Democrats; Prepared at New Paltz High School.
MORRILL DUNN, III WINNETKA, ILLINOIS ENGLISH Jesters; Pipes and Drums; Corinthian Yacht Club; Rowing Association, Manager; Delta Kappa Epsilon; Prepared at New Trier High School.
RICHARD DOERING FIELD PROVIDENCE, RHODE ISLAND ENGLISH Senior Lay...Reader; Trinidads, Founder, Manager; WRTC-FM; Freshmen Soccer; Hockey; Cross Country; Alpha Delta Phi; Prepared at The Salisbury School.
MICHAEL EDWARD HILL HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT ENGLISH WRTC-FM; The Bishop's Men, Manager; Glee Club; The Archive, Editor-in-Chief; Philosophy Club; Junior Advisor; Delta Phi; Prepared at Lanphier High School.
CHARLES WILLIAM JOHNS WEST CHESTER, PENNSYLVANIA ENGLISH Canterbury Club; Chapel Choir; Philosophy Club; Acolyte; Senior and Junior Lay Reader; Le Cercle Francais; College Fellowship, Vice-President; Prepared at The Hill School.
JOHN RICHARD HEBEL HARWICH, MASSACHUSETTS ENGLISH Junior Advisor; Brownell Club; Prepared at Hartford Public High School.
DONALD ROGER HERSEY HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT ENGLISH Baseball; Alpha Chi Rho; Prepared at East Hartford High School.
STEPHEN POWELL JONES GATES MILLS, OHIO ENGLISH Campus Chest; Senate; Tennis; Soccer; Delta Kappa Epsilon; Prepared at The University School.
eighty five
DONALD EDWARD McCORMICK HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT
ANDREW BUTLER LEWIS AKRON, OHIO ENGLISH and HISTORY Junior Advisor; Senate; Soccer; Swimming; Sigma Nu, President; Prepared at Western Reserve Academy.
ENGLISH Glee Club; Newman Club; Junior Advisor; Prepared at Hartford Public High School.
CHARLES JACKSON MINIFIE NEW YORK, NEW YORK ENGLISH Trinidads; Senate; Vestry, Junior Warden; Mather Hall Board of Governors; Chapel Cabinet; Senior 路Lay Reader; Chapel Usher; Crucifer; Prepared at Lenox School.
eighty six
WILLIAM FREEMAN NILES MENDHAM, NEW JERSEY ENGLISH Tripod, Managing Editor; Psi Upsilon; Prepared at G roton School.
PAUL ROBERT MILUS HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT ENGLISH Corinthian Yacht Club; Campus Chest, Publicity Chairman; Intramural Board; Psi Upsilon; Prepared at The Tower Hill School.
LEE ALLEN PERRON WELLESLEY HILLS, MASSACHUSETTS ENGLISH Review, Managing Editor; Delta Kappa Epsilon; Prepared at We llesley Senior High School.
DAVID MARTIN POST MADISON, NEW JERSEY ENGLISH Alpha Chi Rho, Recording Secretary, Social Chairman; Prepared at Madison High School.
MANSFIELD KIRBY TALLEY, JR. WESTMINSTER, MARYLAND ENGLISH Art League; The Review; Tripod; Fencing; Delta Phi; Prepared at Westminster High School.
PETER MORRIS SHERIN MARBLEHEAD, MASSACHUSETTS ENGLISH Class President; Sophomore Dining Club; Don F. Porter Award; Community Chest; Steering Committee for Honor Code; Steering Committee for Fine Arts Building; Soccer; Alpha Chi Rho; Prepared at Governor Dummer Academy.
WILLIAM RICHMOND TALBOT, JR. PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA ENGLISH Freshman Executive Council; Glee Club, 'Librarian, Secretary; Sophomore Dining Club; Cerberus; Committee of 100; Chapel Sacristan; Vestry; Prepared at The Episcopal Academy.
NICHOLSON BARNEY WHITE LEESBURG, VIRGINIA ENGLISH WRTC-FM; Chapel Vestry; Senior Lay Reader; Junior Lay Reader; Chapel Usher; St. Anthony Hall; Prepared at Randolph-Macon Academy.
STANLEY ANDERS YOCOM, JR. ASBURY PARK, NEW JERSEY ENGLISH Pipes; WRTC-FM; Chapel Usher, Head Usher; Theta Xi, Secretary, Vice-President; Prepared at William Penn Charter School.
eighty seven
Archive
The Archive is a magazine dedicated to the publication of serious, academic, and non-literary works by Trinity Students. The editors consider many reports and papers written by students for academic credit at the College. Left to right : Taylor, Roncaioli, Harrison, Tousey, Dols, Telischak.
eighty eight
]esters
The Jesters are what their name implies-actors and mimes. The apogee of their performing season was shared by two student-written works-David Curry's tragedy, Electra, and a musical comedy, The American Way, by Raymond Drate and Rich ard DeMone.
First Row, left to right : Mellon, Lloyd, Basch, Gann, Jay, Crays, Eakins, Hamblen, Female person, Shepard. Second Row, left to right: Geremia, Strammiello, Murdock, Childs, Hutchins, Coryell, Cimilluca, Liebowitz, Fish, Burge, Stocek. Third Row, left to right: Hill, Hawthorne, Bard, Dunnebier, Coale, Morrow, Johnston, Correll. Fourth Row, left to right: Bordogna, Post, Daly, Westney, Vickery, Drate, De Mone, Gardner, Dawson, Haslach, Levine, Snyder, Wodatch.
eighty nine
Review
The Review Society publishes路 student-written literary nonsense for the enjoyment and benefit of the College's critical eye. Most of these bi-yearly journals, therefore, have found repose in Mather Hall waste baskets. Left to right: Haslach, Talley, Perron, Hollenbeck, Griffin, Tuttle, Langlykke.
ninety
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(1) JOHN CORWIN EMERSON TAYLOR, Professor of Fine Arts; B.A., M.A. Yale, 1926, 1940; Attended the Academie Julian, an art school in Paris, 1926-1928; Member, ex officio, of Hartford's Fine Arts Commission; Formerly a teacher of Art and French at the Lawrenceville School; Appointed to the faculty in 1941.
(2) MITCHEL NICHOLAS PAPPAS, Associate Professor of Fine Arts ; B.F.A., M.F.A. Yale, 1941, 1947; President, New England Intercollegiate Golf Association, 1960; Appointed to the faculty in 1947 (3) CHARLES BENNER FERGUSON, Instructor in Fine Arts; B.A. Williams, 1941 ; M.A. Trinity, 1959; Studied at The Art Student's League, New York City; Appointed to the faculty in 1959. (2)
ninety one
GEORGE ALEXANDER CREIGHTON GAINESVILLE, FLORIDA FINE ARTS Vestry, Treasurer; Swimming; Alpha Chi Rho; Prepared at Berkshire School.
JOHN CHARLES CROWLEY YORK, PENNSYLVANIA FINE ARTS Prepared at York Country Day School.
CHARLES THEODORE STIER SIOUX FALLS, SOUTH DAKOTA HISTORY and FINE ARTS Pipes; Chapel Choir; Young Republicans; Senior Lay Reader ; Political Science Club; Advisor to St. James Youth Group; Delta Phi; Prepared at Washington High School.
RICHARD DEAN TUTTLE ROSELLE, NEW JERSEY FINE ARTS Jesters, President, Vice-President; Ivy , Editor-in-Chief, Designer; Review, Designer; Freshman Track; Prepared at Abraham Clark High School.
ninety two
PETER LITCHFIELD DUNKLE WEST HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT FINE ARTS Glee Club; Bishop's Men; Canterbury Club; Hockey Club; Golf, Captain; Psi Upsilon; Prepared at Noble and Greenough School.
ROBERT MEAD MURDOCK NEW YORK, NEW YORK FINE ARTS Jesters; Le Cercle Francais; Italian Club ; Delta Kappa Epsilon; Prepared at Deerfield Academy.
PETER FREDERICK von STARCK BRYN MAWR, PENNSYLVANIA FINE ARTS Delta Kappa Epsilon; Prepared at St. Andrew's School.
"Bull" by Rufus Coes, the winner of the first Mather HalJ Board of Governors Purchase Award .
ninety three
(1)
(2)
(1) RANDOLPH WALLACE CHAPMAN, Professor of Geology; B.S. New Hampshire, 1929; A.M., Ph.D. Harvard 1932, 1934; Visiting Professor of Geology, University of Saint Andrews, Scottand and the University of Wales, 1949-1950; Geologist with the United States Geological Survey, 1952-1954; Visiting Professor of Geology, University of Libya, 1960-1961; Appointed to the faculty in 1954; Sigma Xi, Phi Kappa Phi, Sigma Pi Sigma.
RICHARD LAWRENCE KEOLL HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT GEOLOGY Brownell Club; Prepared at Bulkely High School.
ninety four
SIDNEY SAYRE QUARRIER, JR. WEST HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT GEOLOGY Prepared at Pomfret School.
(2) THOMAS CARTWRIGHT MENTZER, Instructor in Geology; A.B. Williams, 1956; M.S. Lehigh, 1958; Graduate Assistant, Lehigh, 1957-1961; Appointed to the faculty in 1961; Sigma Xi.
ALBERT WILLIAM RUDIS, JR. HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT GEOLOGY
Basketball; Brownell Club; Prepared at Bulkeley High School.
(2)
(1)
路 路~
(3)
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( 1) REX CHARLTON NEAVERSON, Assistant Professor of Government; B.A., M.A., Ph.D. Harvard, 1952, 1954, 1959; Appointed to the faculty in 1955; Pi Gamma Mu. (2) VERNON LeROY FERWERDA, Associate Professor of Government; B.A., M.S. Massachusetts, 1940, 1941; Ph.D. Harvard, 1954; Assistant Professor of Government, University of Massachusetts, 1946-1951; Leader, Crossroads Africa, 1961; Appointed to the faculty in 1954; Pi Gamma Mu, Phi Kappa Phi.
( 3) PAUL WALTER MEYER, Lecturer in Government; B.A. Denver, 1923 ; Foreign Service Officer of the United States, 19241959; Appointed to the faculty in 1960. (4) LEON SALOMON, Instructor in Government; B.A. Brooklyn, 1953; M.P.A. New York, 1954; Formerly Lecturer in American Government and Politics, Brooklyn College; Appointed to the faculty in 1962.
(5) ALBERT LODEWIJK GASTMANN, Instructor in Government; B.A., M.A. Columbia, 1949, 1953; Appointed to the faculty in 1954 as an Instructor in Modern Languages; Member of the Government Department since 1961; Pi Gamma Mu; Delta Phi Alpha.
ninety five
ALFRED ROLF HAEMMERLI WEST HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT GOVERNMENT and MODERN LANGUAGES Le Cercle Francais; Political Science Club; Young Democrats; Soccer; Tennis; Track; Delta Kappa Epsilon; Prepared at Gymnasium Schloss Glarisegg (Switzerland) .
WARREN LEONARD LINBERG, JR. BRISTOL, CONNECTICUT GOVERNMENT Young Republicans; Political Science Club; Tripod; Theta Xi; Prepared at Bristol High School.
JOHN WALLER WARDLAW, JR. RALEIGH, NORTH CAROLINA GOVERNMENT Sophomore Dining Club; Cerberus; Committee of 100; Senior Lay Reader; Air Force ROTC; Football; Track; Alpha Delta Phi; Prepared at Needham B. Broughton High School.
ninety six
ROBERT RANDOLPH TYNDALL WOODMERE, NEW YORK GOVERNMENT Sophomore Dining Club; Swimming; Lacrosse; Alpha Delta Phi; Prepared at Deerfield Academy.
RICHARD WENDELL WHEELOCK RANCHO SANTA FE, CALIFORNIA GOVERNMENT Young Republicans; CODE; Lacrosse; Crew; Theta Xi; Prepared at The Cate School.
Political Science Club
The Political Science Club sponsors campus and outside speakers of note who bring new and interesting ideas of a political nature to the College community. These speakers cover a wide range of current political thought and in their lectures are encouraged by the club to present original and personal opinions.
First Row, left to right: Wejuli, Feinschreiber, Foreign visitor, Osowecki, Snyder, Barber. Second Row, left to right: Champany, Sallah, Bory, Baynard, Yeaton, Townsend, Wendell, Gilley, Geremia, Kinsler, Watson, Marcuss, Levine.
ninety seven
Atheneum Society
This group, a forensic society, is active in intercollegiate debate, public speaking at local service clubs and high schools-, public debates on issues of local or national interest, and intraclub debating. It sponsors the annual High School-Prep School debate tournament held
ninety eight
here, the semi-annual novice tournament, and an annual debate with Cambridge or Oxford. First Row, left to right: Schwartz, Gregory, Berger, Foster, Sweeney, Jackson, Churchman. Second Row, left to right: Aldrich, Frier, Rushmore, Suplee, Bley.
Young Democratic Club
The purpose of the Young Democratic Club is to afford an outlet for the politically-oriented student to gain an intimate knowledge of practical politics and to generally promote the position of the Democratic party at Trinity. Throughout the year the club has participated in the various activities of the state organization, and has had several leaders of the Party
at its meetings. Kneeling, left to right: Palmer, Champany, Schwartz, Marshall, McNally, Kirby, Baynard. Standing, left to right: Bernstein, Madama, Pataky, Langlois, Sweeney, Feingold, Simonian, Geremia, Osowecki, Armentano, Barber, Goldberg.
ninety nine
Young Republicans
This fall the Young Republicans were engaged in the State Republican campaign in attempts at reducing Hartford's heavy Democratic plurality. In such activity and from lecturers, the members learn much of the operations and ideals of their party, manifesting this knowledge in several conferences. First Row, left to right: Graybill, Worsley, Wendell, Lucas, Suplee. Second Row, left to right : Bernstein, Townsend, Fish, Snider, Hutchins, Bent. Third Row, left to right: Coale, Kunkelman, Bory, Bailey, Monahan, Baker, Daley.
one hundred
Economics Club
The purpose of the Economics Club is to afford the opportunity for those interested students to assemble and discuss contemporary problems in economics. The club works with the faculty of the Economics Department. Seated: Keen. Standt'ng, left to right: Tozer, Drate, Marcuss, Osowecki, Wood, Miller, Brewster, Craig, Monahan, Anderson, Schaefer, Daley, Wendell, McCann, Bernstein.
one hundred one
(1)
(3)
(5)
(4)
one hundred two
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( 1) GEORGE BRINTON COOPER, Professor of History; B.A. Swarthmore, 1938; M.A., Ph.D. Yale, 1942, 1948; Vice Consul and Political Analyst, United States Embassy, London, 1-944-1946; Managing Editor, Journal of British Studies; President, Hartford Board of Education, 1961; Member of National Advisory Cancer Council since 1962; Appointed to the faculty in 1941; Phi Beta Kappa, Pi Gamma Mu. (2) DANIEL GARRISON BRINTON THOMPSON, Northam Professor of History and Political Science; B.A. Pennsylvania, 1920; B.S. Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1923; Ph.D. Columbia, 1945; Faculty member, Lafayette College, 1943-1945; Author of Ruggles of New York and Gateway to a Nation; Appointed to the faculty in 1945; Phi Beta Kappa, Pi Gamma Mu.
EUGENE WOOD DAVIS, Professor of History; B.A. Texas, 1940; M.A. Harvard, 1941; Ph.D. North Carolina, 1948; Appointed to the faculty in 1948; Pi Gamma Mu. (3)
( 9)
(4) GLENN WEAVER, Associate Professor of History; A.B. Catawba, 1941; B.D. Lancaster Seminary, 1944; M.A. Lehigh, 1947; A.M., Ph.D. Yale 1951, 1953; Appointed to the faculty in 1947; Pi Gamma Mu.
(10)
(5) NORTON DOWNS, Associate Professor of History; B.A., M.A., Ph.D. Pennsylvania, 1940, 1947, 路 1950; Lecturer, Swarthmore, 1948; Editor of Basic Documents in Medieval History; Appointed to the faculty in 1950; Pi Gamma Mu.
(6) IGOR VINOGRADOFF, Visiting Professor of History; Studied at Winchester; B.A. Oxford, first class honors Modern History, 1924; Formerly a faculty member at
Edinburgh University; Published articles in the EnRlish Historical Review, Oxford Slavonic Papers, Manchester Guardian, Listener, Spectator; Appointed to the faculty in 1962. (7) PHILIP CHARLES FARWELL BANKWITZ, Associate Professor of History; A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Harvard, 1947; 1948, 1952; Awarded Toppan Prize for doctoral disertation, W ey gand: A Biographical Study, at Harvard, 1952; Awarded Koren Prize for Best Article on French History in North America, 1961; Grants for research and writing in Modern French history: American Philosophical Society (19581959), Danforth Foundation (1961); Appointed to the faculty in 1954; Pi Gamma Mu. ( 8) PHILIP KINTNER, Assistant Professor of History; B.A. Wooster, 1950; M.A., Ph.D. Yale, 1952, 1958 ; Instructor, Reed College, Oregon, 1957-1958; Danforth Faculty Summer Research Grant, 1959; Appointed to the faculty in 1954; Pi Gamma Mu, Phi Alpha Theta. (9) ROBERT CLIFFORD BLACK, III, Associate Professor of History; B.A. Williams, 1937; M.A. University of Denver, 1947; Ph.D. Columbia, 1951; Instructor, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, 1945-1948; Author of Railroads Of The Confederacy; Appointed to the faculty in 1950; Pi Gamma Mu.
(10) THOMAS EDMUND WILLEY, Instructor in History; B.A. Butler, 1959; M.A. Yale, 1960; Assistant Instructor at Yale, 1961-1962; R. R. McCormick Fellow, 19601962; Tew Prize, Yale, 1960; Lecturer, Summer Session, Butler, 1961-1962; Appointed to the faculty in 1962. one hundred three
ROGER LYTTON BAUM NEW YORK, NEW YORK HISTORY Glee Club; French Club; Tripod; WRTC-FM; Campus Chest; Delta Kappa Epsilon, Secretary; Prepared at Trinity School.
RICHARD P. BERNSTEIN DALLAS, TEXAS HISTORY Freshman Executive Council; Young Democrats Club; Economics Club; Junior Year Abroad at University of Edinburgh; Prepared at Highland Park High School.
JAMES FRANKLIN BLAIR RAMSEY, NEW JERSEY HISTORY Campus Chest; Senior Lay Reader; Cheerleader; Glee Club; Young Democrats; Freshman Baseball, Manager; Delta Kappa Epsilon; Prepared at Ramsey High School.
NICHOLAS LEWARNE CHILDS NORRISTOWN, PENNSYLVANIA HISTORY Campus Chest; Canterbury Club; Jesters; Companion Program; Prepared at A. D. Eisenhower High School.
DANIEL DAVID COTTA DARIEN, CONNECTICUT HISTORY Glee Club; Tripod, Managing Editor, Editor-in-Chief; Q.E.D.; Prepared at Darien High School.
MICHAEL JOSEPH DALY HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT HISTORY Freshman Executive Council; Basketball; Air Force ROTC; Alpha Chi Rho; Prepared at Suffield Academy.
ALAN COSTAIN ELWELL GRANBY, CONNECTICUT HISTORY Canterbury Club; Corinthian Yacht Club, Fleet Captain; Football; Swimming; Alpha Chi Rho; Prepared at West Islip High School.
RICHARD BRADLEY EMERYi MILTON, MASSACHUSETTS HISTORY Political Science Club; Phi Kappa Psi; Prepared at Hebron Academy.
one hundred four
HOWARD ALLEN EMSLEY, JR. FORT LAUDERDALE, FLORIDA HISTORY Protestant Fellowship; Campus Chest; Interfraternity Council; Political Science Club; Phi Kappa Psi; Prepared at Phillips Academy, Andover.
STEPHEN HENRY FARRINGTON BRONXVILLE, NEW YORK HISTORY Young Republicans; Soccer; Alpha Delta Phi; Prepared at Choate.
GEORGE WILLIAM FOX HADDONFIELD, NEW JERSEY HISTORY Sophomore Dining Club; Football; Lacrosse, Captain; Alpha Delta Phi; Prepared at The Peddie School.
ROBERT WALLACE GARDNER WETHERSFIELD, CONNECTICUT HISTORY Glee Club; Political Science Club; Young Republicans; Prepared at South Kent School.
ALFRED AUSTIN FAXON, III MOORESTOWN, NEW JERSEY HISTORY WRTC-FM, Chief Announcer, Business Manager; Connecticut ETV; Phi Kappa Psi; Prepared at Moorestown High School.
WESLEY VINCENT FESHLER MANCHESTER, CONNECTICUT HISTORY Soccer; Baseball, Co-Captain; Alpha Chi Rho; Prepared at Manchester High School.
PETER ANTHONY GIORGIO WINDSOR, CONNECTICUT HISTORY Young Republicans; Mather Hall Board of Governors; Brownell Club; Prepared at Loomis School.
one hundred five
JAMES COATES GOODRIDGE PITTSBURGH, PENNSYLVANIA HISTORY Glee Club; Band; Political Science Club; Delta Phi; Prepared at Brentwood High School.
THOMAS CONDON HALLORAN STORRS, CONNECTICUT HISTORY Freshmen Basketball; Baseball, 路 Co-Captain; Sigma Nu; Prepared at E. 0 . Smith University High School.
EDWIN BRUCE HILL, III PITTSBURGH, PENNSYLVANIA HISTORY Freshman Executive Council; Cerberus; Senate, Vice-President; CODE; Committee of 100; Class Vice-President; Junior and Senior Lay Reader; Evaluation Committee; Soccer; Alpha Chi Rho; Prepared at Shady Side Academy.
PETER TRUESDELL KANE MILTON, MASSACHUSETTS HISTORY French Club; Economics Club; Young Republicans;_Junior Advisor; I F C Representative; Freshmen Swimming; Hockey Club; St. Anthony Hall; Prepared at Milton Academy.
one hundred six
HUNTER BRYAN HARRIS, JR. SIMSBURY, CONNECTICUT HISTORY French Club; Young Republicans; Freshmen Soccer; Basketball; Crew; Alpha Delta Phi; Prepared at Saint Andrew's School.
ELIAS HARRY KARSON BRATTLEBORO, VERMONT HISTORY Freshman Executive Council; Class Secretary-Treasurer; Interfraternity Council, VicePresident; Jesters; Air Force ROTC; Freshman Football; Theta Xi; Prepared at Brattleboro Union High School.
ROBERT GAMBRELL KIRK GREAT NECK, NEW YORK HISTORY Chanticleers; Fencing, Manager; Delta Phi, Secretary; Prepared at Great Neck North Senior High School.
WILLIAM GARY KNISELY FAIRLESS HILLS, PENNSYLVANIA HISTORY Junior Advisor; WRTC-FM; Tripod; Ivy; Arts Council; Jesters; Phi Kappa Psi; Prepared at Pennsbury High School.
THOMAS RICHARD KNOX ALEXANDRIA, VIRGINIA HISTORY Political Science Club, Treasurer; Junior Advisor; Air Force ROTC; Phi Beta Kappa; Pi Gamma Mu; Freshman Soccer; Phi Kappa Psi; Prepared at Sidwell Friends School.
JOHN ELWOOD LAMPHEAR, JR. WILLIAMSTOWN, MASSACHUSETTS HISTORY Jesters; Junior Lay Reader; CODE; Head Crucifer; The Review; Theta Xi; Prepared at Shattuck School.
MICHAEL SWAVELY LEINBACH OCEAN CITY, NEW JERSEY HISTORY Freshman Executive Council; Junior Advisor ; WRTC-FM; Alpha Delta Phi; Prepared at Quakertown Community High School.
TIMOTHY FABER LENICHECK MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN HISTORY Jesters; Senate; Freshman Executive Council, President; Band; Junior Advisor; Honor Code Steering Committee; Campus Chest; Cerberus; WTRC-FM; Alpha Chi Rho; Prepared at Shorewood High School.
MICHAEL BENJAMIN MAS IUS NEW YORK, NEW YORK HISTORY Hillel Society; Young Democrats; Campus Chest; Intramural Board; Lacrosse; Phi Kappa Psi; Prepared at Riverdale Country School.
HUNTER MARSTON MARVEL NEW YORK, NEW YORK HISTORY Campus Chest; Glee Club; St. Anthony Hall; Prepared at Brooks School.
CHARLES HARRY McGILL, III EASTON, CONNECTICUT HISTORY WRTC-FM, Program Director; Mather Hall Board of Governors; Senior Lay Reader, Chairman; Junior Lay Reader; Campus Chest; Chapel Usher; Delta Phi; Prepared at Fairfield College Preparatory.
one hundred seven
RICHARD DARROCH McGLENNON SALEM, MASSACHUSETIS HISTORY Campus Chest; Corinthian Yacht Club, Vice-Commadore; Psi Upsilon; Prepared at Proctor Academy.
HALLIE MAUDE WEST HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT ANCIENT and TEXAS HISTORY Registered 路 by the American Kennel Club as Sugar Plum of Headways; Born in Texarkana, Texas on April 4, 1954.
ROBERT DAVID PERRIN NEW YORK, NEW YORK HISTORY Tripod; Hillel, Secretary; Pi Gamma Mu; Phi Kappi Psi, Secretary; Prepared at Peddie School.
JOHN HENRY PITCAIRN PITISBURGH, PENNSYLVANIA HISTORY Freshmen Soccer, Captain; Freshmen Swimming; Baseball; Soccer; Captain; Alpha Chi Rho, Vice President; Prepared at Shady Side Academy.
one hundred eight
LELAND LYON MOYER WILMINGTON, DELAWARE HISTORY Semite; Campus Chest; Undergraduate's Admissions Committee; Intramural Council; Golf; Psi Upsilon; Prepared at The Hill School.
LOCKETI COLEMAN PITMAN DARIEN, CONNECTICUT HISTORY Trinidads; Football; Tennis, CoCaptain; Hockey; Psi Upsilon; Prepared at The Gunnery.
DAVID ALLEN RAYMOND WATERBURY, CONNECTICUT HISTORY Freshman Executive Council; Campus Chest; Soccer; Swimming, Co-Captain; Baseball; Alpha Delta Phi; Prepared at Williston Academy.
WILLIAM WILLIS REESE NEW HAMBURG, NEW YORK HISTORY Tripod, Circulation Manager; Young Republicans, Recording Secretary; Air Force ROTC; Delta Kappa Epsilon; Prepared at M illbrook School.
LLOYD LEWIS REYNOLDS BALA-CYNWYD, PENNSYLVANIA HISTORY Trinidads; Vestry; Cheerleader; Athletic Advisory Council; Rowing Association, Treasurer, Captain; Prepared at The Peddie School.
JOHN McLEMORE RICHARDSON GREENWICH, CONNECTICUT HISTORY Air Force ROTC, Drill Team; Campus Chest; Alpha Chi Rho, Treasurer; Prepared at Hotchkiss School.
ROWLAND RICKETTS, JR. MERCHANTVILLE, NEW JERSEY HISTORY Glee Club; Pipes, Manager; Canterbury Club; Prepared at Moorestown Friends School.
LAWRENCE GENE ROBERTSON THOMASTON, CONNECTICUT HISTORY Newman Club; Pi Kappa Alpha, Rush Chairman, Secretary, VicePresident, President; Prepared at Torrington High School.
THEODORE WIEDERSHEIM SCULL BRYN MAWR, PENNSYLVANIA HISTORY Acolyte's Guild; WRTC-FM; Ivy; Middletown HospitalPsychology Department; Psi Upsilon; Prepared at St. George's School.
ROBERT CLARK SPITZER RIVER FOREST, ILLINOIS HISTORY Jesters ; Sophomore Dining Club; Undergraduate Committee on Admissions; Young Republicans; Theta Xi; Prepared at Lake Forest Academy.
DON FAIRFAX TAYLOR MITCHELLVILLE, MARYLAND HISTORY Medusa; Senate; Cerberus; Sophomore Dining Club; Air Force ROTC; Football; Baseball; Alpha Delta Phi; Prepared at The Longfellow School.
one hundred nine
HAROLD KIRBY VICKERY, JR. WEST BOYLSTON, MASSACHUSETTS HISTORY Mather Hall Board of Governors; Jesters; Air Force ROTC; Ivy, Managing Editor, Editor-inChief; Freshman Swimming; Basketball, Manager; Prepared at West Boylston High School.
DAVID OVERLOCK WICKS, JR. WABAN, MASSACHUSETTS HISTORY Young Republicans; Psychology Club; Rowing Association, CoFounder, Secretary; Crew; Psi Upsilon; Prepared at Belmont Hill School.
one hundred ten
HENRY CURTIS WHITNEY VINCENTE LOPEZ, ARGENTINA HISTORY Tripod; Ivy; Spanish Club; Economics Club; Corinthian Yacht Club; Campus Chest; Soccer; Track; Football; St. Anthony Hall; Prepared at Holderness School.
JOHN SPALDING WAGGETT MEXICO, MISSOURI HISTORY Medusa; Senate, President, Recording Secretary; Athletic 路 Advisory Council; Cerberus, Secretary; Freshman Executive Council;. Campus Chest; Junior Advisor; Archive; Basketball; Football; Alpha Delta Phi; Prepared at Mexico Senior High School.
STEPHEN HINMAN YEATON SKOWHEGAN, MAINE HISTORY Jesters; Political Science Club; Fencing, Co-Captain; Q.E.D.; Prepared at Gould Academy.
Pi Gamma Mu
Pi Gamma Mu is a national honorary society in the social sciences. Membership is limited to students outstanding themselves in the study of History, Government, Economics, and Sociology. First Row, left to right: Thomas, Tozer, Reynolds, Marshall, Yeaton, Chang. Second Row, left to right: Dickson, Knox, Watt, Marcuss, Perrin, . Trickett.
one hundred eleven
Who's Who m American Colleges and Universities
Membership in this group is honorary and presumptuous. It is comprised of members of Medusa, editor of The Tripod, one or two football highlights, president of the Senate, and any other name in the mr at the time the list is being drawn up. Front Row, left to right: Thomas, Sherin, Reynolds, Blume, Carruth. Second Row, left to right: Waggett, Schulenberg, Kent, Hill, Marcuss, Tozer.
one hundred twelve
Phi Beta Kappa
Phi Beta Kappa is an honorary society in general scholarship. Members are elected for their achievement of high grades. First Row, left to right: Drate, Zachariasewycz, Brewster. Second Row, left to right: Knox, Flynn, Dickson. Third Row, left to right: Molinsky, Berger, Blume. Fourth Row, left to right: Thomas, Bylin, Marcuss.
one hundred thirteen
(1)
(2)
one hundred fourteen
(4)
(5)
( 6)
(7)
(1) HAROLD LAIRD DORWART, Seabury Professor of Mathematics and Natural Philosophy; B.A. Washington and Jefferson, 1924; Ph.D. Yale, 1931; Has taught at Yale, Williams, and Washington and Jefferson; Appointed to the faculty in 1949; Phi Beta Kappa, Sigma Xi.
(2) ROBERT CLARENCE STEWART, Associate Professor of Mathematics; B.A., M.A. Washington and Jefferson, 1942, 1944; M.A. Yale, 1948; Assistant in Instruction, Department of Mathematics, Yale, 19461950; Appointed to the faculty in 1950; Phi Beta Kappa.
(3) WALTER JOHN KLIMCZAK, Professor of Mathematics; B.S., M.A., Ph.D. Yale, 1937, 1939, 1948; Appointed to the faculty in 1951.
(8)
(4) EMMET FINLAY WHITTLESEY, Associate Professor of Mathematics; A.B., M.A., Ph.D. Princeton, 1948, 1955, 19-57; Appointed ~o the faculty in 1954. (5) MARIO JOSEPH POLIFERNO, Assistant Professor of Mathematics; B.A., M.A., Ph.D. Yale, 1952, 1954, 1958; Appointed to the faculty in 1958.
(6) STEPHEN PETER HOFFMAN, JR., Associate Professor of Mathematics ; B.A., M.A., Ph.D. Yale, 1949, 1951, 1957; Appointed to the faculty in 1957. (7) DAVID SOLOMON SALSBURG, Instructor in Mathematics; B.A. Pennsylvania, 1952; M.S. Trinity, 1963; Appointed to the faculty in 1961. (8) MARJORIE VAN EENAM BUTCHER, Lecturer in Mathematics; B.A., M.A. University of Michigan, 1947, 1949, Instructor, University of Michigan, 1952-1956; Appointed to the faculty in 1956; Phi Beta Kappa, Phi Kappa Phi. one hundred fifteen
MARSHALL EDWARD BLUME II NORTHBROOK, ILLINOIS MATHEMATICS Tripod, Circulation Manager, Business Manager; Economics Club; Track; Delta Kappa Epsilon; Prepared at Shattuck School.
ROBERT KIMBALL DICKSON, JR. WEST HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT MATHEMATICS Campus Chest; Phi Kappa Psi, President; Prepared at Conard High School.
one hundred sixteen
GEORGE D. CRAIG DEERFIELD, ILLINOIS MATHEMATICS WRTC-FM; Philosophy Club; Prepared at Highland Park High School.
ROBERT EARL BYLIN CORONA, CALIFORNIA MATHEMATICS Freshman Executive Council; Delta Phi Alpha; Junior 路 Advisor; Campus Chest; MatMr Hall Publicity Committee, 路 Chairman; Phi Kappa Psi; Prepared at Corona Senior High School.
CHARLES HOWARD DIETRICH WESTPORT, CONNECTICUT MATHEMATICS Sophomore Dining Club; Intramural Board, President; Swimming; Lacrosse; Alpha Chi Rho; Prepared at Phillips Exter Academy.
RAYMOND ALLEN ORATE BROOKLYN, NEW YORK MATHEMATICS Jesters; Band; Chamber Players; Archive; Fencing; Prepared at James Madison High School.
JOHN WILLIAM FITZGERALD KINGSTON, PENNSYLVANIA MATHEMATICS Glee Club; Pi Kappa Alpha; Prepared at Kingston High School.
MALCOLM MUIR MeGA WN WEST CHICAGO, ILLINOIS MATHEMATICS Delta Phi Alpha, SecretaryTreasurer; Cross Country, Captain; Track, Captain; Q.E.D. Vice-President; Prepared at West Chicago Community High School.
GEORGE FREDERICK BASHOUR HADDAD HARTFORD. CONNECTICUT MATHEMATICS Prepared at Charleston (West Virginia) High School.
FRANCIS WILLIAM KOLLETT UXBRIDGE, MASSACHUSETTS MATHEMATICS Sigma Pi Sigma; Pi Kappa Alpha; Prepared at Uxbridge High School.
ROBERT BENJAMIN RUBEL PITTSFORD, NEW YORK MATHEMATICS Band; Pi Kappa Alpha; Prepared at Pittsford Central High School.
one hundred seventeen
The Set
The Set is the mathematics club on the Trinity campus. It is unique in that faculty and students have equal membership rights. Due to the strict academic standards maintained, students generally cannot enter the society until their senior year. Meetings are informal. Left to right: Poliferno, Craig, Hoffman, Miller, Drate, Stewart, Berger, McGawn, Kollett, Rubel.
one hundred eighteen
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( 1) LOUIS HASTINGS NAYLOR, Professor of Modern Languages; B.A., M .A., Ph.D. Johns Hopkins, 1917, 1922, 1923; Fellow of the Belgian-American Foundation, Liege, Belgium, 1920-1921; Fellow by Courtesy, Johns Hopkins, 1929-1930; Author of Chateaubriand and Virgil; Appointed to the faculty in 1923; Phi Beta Kappa. (2) GUSTAVE WILLIAM ANDRIAN, Professor of Romance Languages; B.A. Trinity, 1940; Ph.D. Johns Hopkins, 1946; Appointed to the faculty in 1956; Phi Beta Kappa. (3) HANS FRIEDRICH FRESE, Associate Professor of Modern Languages; B.S., M.A. New York University, 1933, 1935; Ph.D. Marburg, 1937; Appointed to the faculty in 1951.
(1)
(3)
(2)
(4)
one hundred twenty
(6)
( 5)
(7)
(8)
( 1) CARL VICTOR HANSEN, Associate Professor of Modern Languages ; B.A., M.A., Ph.D. Yale, 1941, 1948, 1952; Assistant Professor of German, University of Rhode Island, 1953-1956; Fulbright Teacher Exchange Grant to Innsbruck, Austria, 1959-1960; Appointed to the faculty in 1956; Phi Beta Kappa, Delta Phi Alpha. 路 ( 2) ROBERT PALMER WATERMAN, Associate Professor of Modern Languages; B.A., M.A., Trinity, 1934; Ph.D. Yale, 1948; Taught at Amherst, 1938-1944; Editor (in collaboration) of Bibliography of Critical and Biographical References for the Study of Contemporary French Literature; Appointed to the faculty in 1936.
(5) DONALD DWIGHT HOOK, Assistant Professor of Modern Languages; B.A. Emory, 1950; M.A. Duke, 1957; Ph.D. Brown, 1961; Appointed to the faculty in 1961. (6) ARNOLD LEWIS KERSON, Instructor in Modern Languages; B.A. Yale, 1953; Appointed to the faculty in 1960.
(3 ) MICHAEL RICHARD CAMPO, Associate Professor of Modern Languages and Director of The Cesare Barbieri Center of Italian Studies; B.A. Trinity, 1948; M .A., Ph.D. Johns Hopkins, 1953 , 1954; Editor of The Cesare Barbieri Courier; Appointed to the faculty in 1952; Pi Gamma Mu.
(7) EDWARD WEISER LANIUS, Instructor in Modern Languages; A.B. Dickinson College, 1957; M.A. Middlebury College, 1958; French Government Fellow, 1957-58; Appointed to the faculty m 1962.
(4 ) WALTER DAVID LEAVITT, Associate Professor of Modern Languages; B.A. Bates, 1947; M .A., Ph.D. Yale, 1949, 1954; Appointed to the faculty in 1949.
(8) LAWRENCE ROBERT STIRES, JR. , Instructor in Modern Languages ; A.B. Rutgers, 1952; M .A. Duke, 1957; Appointed to the faculty in 1960.
one hundred twenty one
KENNETH DAVIS ALDRICH LAUREL SPRINGS, NEW JERSEY FRENCH Junior Year in France; Athenium; Christian Association; Le Cercle Francais; Freshman Executive Council; Senior Lay Reader; Prepared at Overbrook Regional High School.
PAUL THOMAS HANNIGAN HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT MODERN LANGUAGES Newman Club; Delta Phi Alpha, Vice-President; Prepared at Hartford Public High School.
one hundred twenty two
HIRAM RICHARD GOODEN BALBOA, CANAL ZONE MODERN LANGUAGES and SPANISH Glee Club; Choir; Senate; Cerberus; Sophomore Dining Club; Chapel Cabinet; Junior Advisor; Class Secretary-Treasurer; Air Force ROTC; Swimming; Crew; Saint Anthony Hall; Prepared at Harvard School.
PHILLI.J:> WARREN CORRELL BENTON, ARKANSAS ECONOMICS and MODERN LANGUAGES WRTC-FM; Chapel Choir; Le Cercle Francais; Glee Club, Manager; Prepared at Benton Senior High School.
THOMAS CHARLES MARSHALL NEWINGTON, CONNECTICUT HISTORY and MODERN LANGUAGES Le Cercle Francais, President; Young Democrats, President; Christian Association; Prepared at Bulkeley High School.
BARRY DUFF McCUTCHEON GLEN RIDGE, NEW JERSEY ENGLISH and SPANISH Spanish Club; Freshmen Baseball; Q.E.D.; Prepared at Glen Ridge High School.
RICHARD CHARLES NYGARD NEW ROCHELLE, NEW YORK MODERN LANGUAGES WRTC-FM; Political Science Club; Glee Club, Treasurer; Chanticleers; Delta Phi, Treasurer; Prepared at New Rochelle High School.
ARTHUR PERROW, III NEW YORK, NEW YORK MODERN LANGUAGES Jesters; Carillonneurs; Junior Advisor; Choir; Senate; Track; Lacrosse; Delta Kappa Epsilon; Prepared at Trinity School.
ROBERT MERRIAM McELWAIN NEWTON CENTER, MASSACHUSETTS FRENCH Campus Chest; Young Republicans; Le Cercle Francais; Soccer; Saint Anthony Hall; Prepared at Noble and Greenough School.
STEVEN JERRY MOLINSKY HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT MODERN LANGUAGES Phi Beta Kappa; Junior Advisor; WRTC-FM; Glee Club; Advertising Manager of Freshman Handbook; Undergraduate Evaluation; Theta Xi; Prepared at Weaver High School.
JOHN DAVIS WATSON PELHAM, NEW YORK ROMANCE LANGUAGES Glee Club, Secretary, President; CODE; Le Cercle Francais; Theta Xi; Prepared at Pelham Memorial High School.
one hundred twenty three
Delta Phi Alpha
Delta Phi Alpha is a national honorary society in German whose members are elected for excellence exhibited in the study of the language and literature of Germany. Front Row, left to right : Orr, Flynn, McCord, Cook. Back Row, left to right : Winer, DeMone.
one hundred twenty four
Le Cercle Francais
This club is devoted to the furtherance of active interest on campus in French language and culture. In addition to its regular program ot' discussions, seminars, and films, the Cercle has presented two student recitals of French music. Front Row, left to right: Grimes,- Carlson, R., Correll, Kirby, Pastore, Miele, Depetris, Leichtling. Back Row, left to right: Harrison, Marshall, Chapin, Lee, Carlson, W., Casson, Aldrich, Baker, Johns, Martineau, MacGregor, Williams.
one hundred twenty five
Spanish Club
The Spanish Club organizes lectures, movies, and social affairs which will familiarize its members with Spanish-speaking countries, their culture, and language. Meetings are conducted fortnightly and Spanish spoken exclusively. Left to right: Osowecki, Ratner, Depetris, Orellan;;l., Horowitz, Bridegroom, Bailey,
Sandberg.
one hundred twenty six
(1)
(1) CLARENCE EVERETT WATTERS, Professor of Music; Organist and Choirmaster of the Chapel; Mus.M. Trinity, 1935; Studied music in Paris with Marcel Dupre; Fellow, American Guild of Organists ; Appointed to the faculty in 1932.
(2) CLARENCE HOWARD BARBER, Associate Professor of Music; B.A., M.A. , Ph.D. Harvard, 1940, 1942, 1954; Appointed to the faculty in 1954; Phi Beta Kappa.
(2)
WILFRED COLLISON FILES, JR. WRANGELL, ALASKA MUSIC Band, President; Christian Association, Chairman; Vestry; Chapel Cabinet; WRTC-FM; Chamber Players; Lacrosse; Delta Phi; Prepared at Saint Paul's School.
PETER PAGE LANGLYKKE PLAINFIELD, NEW JERSEY MUSIC Glee Club ; Choir; Senate; Delta Phi Alpha; Senior Lay Reader; Review; Ivy; Prepared at Pingry School.
one hundred twenty seven
Carilloneurs
The Plumb Memorial Carillon is the concern of the Carilloneurs. They play before each chapel service and after football victories, give occasional concerts, instruct interested students in the carillon, and annoy the student body in general. Seated, left to right: Chapin, Bowie. Standing, left to right: Carlson, Sargent.
one hundred twenty eight
Chapel Choir
Activities of the Choir number singing Sunday services in the chapel and several special services with girls' schools. Members of the choir also join with the boys from St. John's Church, West Hartford to form the Cantores Sancti. In all its singing, the Choir concentrates in the polyphony of the Tudor and Ren-
aissance periods.
.
First Row, left to right: Watters, Correll, Wharton, Bowie, Card. Second Row, left to right : Grenhart, Munson, Merryman. Third Row, left to right: Thomas, Johns, Ward, Hiatt, Stone.
one hundred twenty nine
Chamber Players
This small instrumental group performs baroque and Renaissance music and plays for the College and various groups in the Hartford area. Left to right: Dawson, Hiatt, Drate, Bowie, Ward, Pierce.
one hundred thirty
Glee Club
The Glee Club specializes in compiling and maintammg a repertoire of music from all ages. The group is known in the East especially for its oratorio work with women's colleges, much of whieh is premier. Traveling throughout the country on concert tours, the Club has also managed to maintain familiarity on the Trinity campus.
First Row, left to right: Sawicki, Wallace, Grenhart, Goodrich, Correll, Watson, Coale, Wright, Carlson, Kirby. Second Row, left to right: Gibson, Dixon, Burr Wellborn, Bory, Thurman, Nygard, Rebmann, Mitchell, Barber, Third Row, left to right: Roncaioli, Stocek, DeMone, Brackett, Campbell, Mead, Blackman, Cooper, Barkley.
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Pipes
The oldest of Trinity's prolific octet tradition is the Pipes. Founded in 1938, they might be considered the grand-daddy of them all. They follow the prescribed routine for performing. Seated: Minot. Standing, left to right: Alves, Morgan, Stanley, Wells, Williams,
Jansen, Whittemore, Francis.
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Pipes and Drums
Besides providing entertainment for the College, this organization offers private lessons to any neophyte interested. Their uniforms are bright, colorful, and imported from Scotland. Belonging to the Pipes and Drums is an unusual, enjoyable, and unforgetable experience. Left to right: Root, Melchior, Stribling, Pratt, Grant, Letchworth, Dunn.
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Chanticleers
One of the myriad of octets at Trinity College, Hartford, the Chanticleers have followed diligently in the footsteps of their older brothers by singing to audiences here and at other New England Colleges. Left to right: Storms, Jewett, Hamblen, Wellborn, Chew, Williams, Nygard.
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Travelers
Trinity's newest octet, the Travelers, have repeated their limited repertoire before several receptive audiences. They were formed within the Glee Club in 1961, but have since severed relationships. Kneeling: Dupree. Back Row, left to right: Beyer, White, Dixon, Stone, Arterton, Seckler, Gibson, Coale.
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Trinidads
Another small singing group, the Trinidads have distinguished themselves by winning again the annual Sarah Lawrence Intercollegiate Singing Festival. With Spartan zeal, they maintain the musical vogue current. Left to right: Raff, Dawes, Field, Schilpp, Klein, Oldershaw, Hoerr, Chappell, Minifie, Parlee, Ward, Barringer, Ogden, Wiedemann.
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Folksingers
The Folksingers is a loose collection which meets about once a week to share songs and stories which, for the most part, have arisen from the heritage of the Americas and England. Its purpose is not only to entertain, but also to instruct. Seated, left to right: Miele, Foster, Erdos, Kirby, Atherton. Standing, left to right:
St. Clair, Trickett, Gamson.
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(1)
(2)
(4) (3)
( 1) BLANCHARD WILLIAM MEANS, Brownell Professor of Philosophy; B.A., Ph.D. Yale, 1927, 1932; Appointed to the faculty 路in 1932; Phi Beta Kappa, Pi Gamma Mu. (2) RICHARD THOMPSON LEE, Instructor in Philosophy; B.A. Emory, 1958 ; M.A. Yale, 1960; Ph.D. Yale, 1962; Appointed to the fac ulty in 1962; Phi Beta Kappa.
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(3) HOWARD DeLONG, Assistant Professor of Philosophy; B.A. Williams, 1957; Ph.D. Princeton, 1960; Appointed to the faculty in 1960; Phi Beta Kappa. (4) MYRON GEORGE ANDERSON, Assistant Professor of Philosophy; B.A., M.A. Minnesota, 1951, 1954; Ph.D. Brown, 1959; Appointed to the faculty in 1956; Phi Beta Kappa.
DAVID CURTIS BRACKETT WAYZATA, MINNESOTA PHILOSOPHY Glee Club, Assistant Manager; Philosophy Club; Psychology Club; Track; Q.E.D.; Prepared at Minnetonka High School.
BRUCE LEE BERKHOLTZ WEST BEND, WISCONSIN PHILOSOPHY Philosophy Club, Vice President, President; Prepared at West Bend High School.
RICHARD JAMES MOORE WATERLOO, IOWA PHILOSOPHY Senate; Freshman Executive Council ; Football; Brownell Club; Prepared at West Waterloo High School.
JOHN DUDLEY CLARK, III PRINCETON, NEW JERSEY PHILOSOPHY Psychology 路Club; Philosophy Club; Tennis; Hockey; Psi Upsilon; Prepared at Proctor Academy.
HARVEY WINTON THOMAS, JR. COLCHESTER, CONNECTICUT PHILOSOPHY Phi Beta Kappa; Philosophy Club; Senate; Pi Gamma Mu; Prepared at Nathan Hale-Ray School.
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Philosophy Club
Once a month, the Philosophy Club, a member with Yale, University of Connecticut, Connecticut College for Women, and Wesleyan of the Connecticut Valley Philosophical Association, meets to hear guest speakers and to discuss contemporary philosophical problems. Kneeling, left to right: Ornato, Drate, Thomas, Craig. Standing, left to right : Heldt, Wellen, Johns, Miller, Sitney, Berk-
holtz, Bracket.
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[JUl] RAYMOND OOSTING, Professor of Physical Education and Director of Athletics; B.P.E., M.Ed. Springfield, 1924, 193 1; President, National Association of College Basketball Coaches, 1956-1957; Member, National Basketball Rules Committee; Selected as Athletic Consultant for United States Army, Navy and Air Force clinics in the Philippines and Japan in 1945, and in Hawaii and Japan in 1953, 1956 and 1957; Appointed to the faculty in 1924. (1)
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(2 ) KARL KURTH, JR., Professor of Physical Education; B.S.; M.Ed. Springfield, 1942, 1947; Participated in United States Department of State International .Educational Exchange Program in Africa in 1959; Appointed to the faculty in 1952.
~
(3) DANIEL EDWARD JESSEE, Professor of Physical Education ; B.A. Pacific, 1926; M.A. Columbia, 1931; Author of Baseball; Appointed to the faculty in 1932; Phi Delta Kappa. ( 4) ROY ALFRED DATH, Associate Professor of Physical Education; B.S. West Chester State Teachers, 1951; M.A. Trinity, 1956; Member, Pan American and United States Olympic Soccer Committee; Appointed to the faculty in 1952.
(2)
(3)
(4)
8
I
(1)
(2)
(4)
( 1) ROBERT DENNIS SLAUGHTER, Assistant Professor of Physical Education; B.S., M.S.Ed. Springfield, 1948, 1952; President, New England College Swimming Coaches Association, 1957; Registered Physical Therapist in Connecticut; Appointed to the faculty in 1951.
(3) CHARLES JAY McWILLIAMS, Assistant Professor of Physical Education; B.S. Pennsylvania State, 1937; M.P.E. Springfield, 1947; Formerly a faculty member at Alfred University; Vice President, New England Basketball Coaches Association; Appointed to the faculty in 1957; Alpha Tau Delta.
(2) ROBERT ELLIS SHULTS, Assistant Professor of Physical Education; B.A. Oberlin, 1951; M.E. Bowling Green, 1957; Instructor of Physical Education, Oberlin, 1955-1956; Appointed to the faculty in 1957.
( 4) CHESTER HERMAN McPHEE, Assistant Professor of Physical Education; B.A. Oberlin, 1951; M.A. Ohio State, 1957; President, New England Lacrosse Coaches Association; Member, N.C.A.A. Lacrosse Rules Committee; Appointed to the faculty in 1957.
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Varsity Soccer
"The varsity soccer team had an unusual and frustrating season. A squad of thirty-five reported on September 8th, including twelve returning lettermen and an assortment of outstanding sophomores that figured heavily in the teams success. "The week of the first scheduled game brought two disappointments and tended to get the squad off on the wrong foot. Captain John Pitcairn suffered from a badly twisted knee and sprained ankle and was out of action for almost six weeks. Our second disappointment was the cancellation of the opening game against M.I.T., a club which narrowly and luckily defeated Trinity in the previous two seasons. The team had 'been up for this one' and confident of victory. "After losing the opener to the University of Massachusetts the following week, the team stepped onto the right track and was defeated only once again during the season. The all New England champions from Williams nipped Trin,
2-1 . Homecoming featured Amherst, only to be let down by a second cancellation, causing an air of 'incompleteness' in the schedule. "It was a frustrating season for the Dathmen because of their inability to score. There were many individuals, both on the first team and on the bench, with scoring ability, but no combination could produce more than two or three goals in a game. Most games were won or lost by the margin of a single goal. "Next September Coach Dath will again welcome twelve returning lettermen in additic:m to the members of 1962's undefeated freshman squad. To Roy, to Captain James de Vou, and to my former teammates I wish the best of luck for 1963." John H. Pitcairn First Row, left to right: Josephson, Markovich, Rimer, Rozett, Lazzerini, Richardson, Palmer, Earnshaw, Doorley,
Hill. Second Row, left to right: Fairfield, Raymond, Rianhard, Sherin, Tomkins, Pitcairn, Sallah, Sturrock, Brasfield, Jacobs, Brittain. Third Row, left to right: Seibert, Auchincloss, Ravizza, Van der Schroeff, Rhine, deVou, Bordogna, Anderson, Haemmerli, Jones, Plass, Feshler, Swander, Dath.
Trinity Opponent M .I.T. canceled U. of Massachusetts 2 4 Tufts 2 1 U. of Hartford 1 0 Williams 1 2 Amherst canceled Coast Guard 3 1 Wesleyan 1 1 Won 3 Lost 2 Tied 1 Coach: Roy Dath Captain: John Pitcarin Manager: Richard Brittain
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Varsity Football
"The Wesleyan game not only officially ended another season, it culminated the efforts of four years work by eleven seniors. Since the fall of 1959, when the freshman squad went undefeated, these eleven have contributed immensely, either as substitutes or members of the starting unit. And although the success of a season depends on the full team, cooperation, determination and participation, few can deny that the seniors justly deserve recognition for their accomplishments. "The Dan Jesse Blocking Award, for the last three years, has been given to members of this senior group. The Chicago Bears saw fit to draft one of the leading halfbacks as a result of his three year achievement at Trinity. For two consecutive years, the ability of one of the Bantam's record breaking ends gained him a position on the All New England Team. This same end combined with the team's outstanding quaterback to
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break college records for passes thrown, caught and yards gained. One lineman was selected for the All East Team of the Week after an upset victory over a traditional rival, Amherst. In the past three years many were selected for the All New England Team or received honorable mention. I have mentioned only a few of their honors. "These men have finished their football careers at Trinity. But the rest of the squad, led by Captain William Campbell, will return next fall with the promise of more achievements and Coach Dan Jesse will preside over another successful season." Michael A. Schulenberg First Row, left to right: Hartman, Guiliano, Howland, Fox, Schulenberg, Taylor, Winner, Lundborg, Wardlaw. Second Row, left to right: Levy, Slaughter, Campbell, Hutch, Whitney, Szumczyk,
Calabrese, Wright, MacDougall, Haring, Jesse. Third Row, left to right: ~ Sticka, Kolewe, Clark, Oulundsen, Me Kune, Fenrich, Stowell, Avery, Pabich, Day, Hopkins, Kurth. Fourth Row, ' left to right : Crawford, Silver, Fiordalis, Marmesh, Oldershaw, Barnard, DiFazio. Fifth Row, left to right: Parsons, Prillaman, Huskins, Kadlic, Williams, Yavinsky, DePrez. Trinity Opponent 0 13 Williams 1 St. Lawrence 26 6 Tufts 8 42 Colby 22 8 Susquehanna 16 20 Coast Guard 16 16 Amherst 25 23 Wesleyan 36 24 Won 4 Lost 3 Tied 1 Coach: Dan Jesse , Captain: Michael A. Schulenberg Manager: Donald Levy
Varsity Swimming
"I am quite perplexed as to what to say. I have decided not to write about Dave Raymond, Ian Smith, Fred Prillaman, Bill Koretz or myself, who have received more than our share of headlines. Instead, I'd 路 like to comment on those men on the team who have backed us up and have really been the backbone of the Trinity swimming team. The first who comes to mind is Don McLagan. Don has for the past two years, stood behind Smitty in the breaststroke and has been one of the hardest workers this team has seen in a long time. Don is rapidly catching up with Ian and promises to be a big asset next year. "AI Hutzler is another who has given tremendously of himself for the team. When Bill Koretz hurt his arm Hutz took over and by pure tenacity pushed
himself through that grueling 200 yard butterfly. This deserved admiration in anyone's book. "Other members like Ward Ewing, Bob Hevner, George Coryell, Tom Shortell and Cris McNeill all deserve mention for their dedicated hard work in keeping the team together and moving. "A final word on Coach Bob Slaughter. Bob never once gave up hope of having a good season and was forever implanting his optimism into the hearts of us all. For this I salute Bob and wish him, along with the entire team, the best in the years to come." Frederick L. Ashworth, Jr. First Row, left to right: Cargill, Ewing, Smith, Raymond, Ashworth, Bishop, Hevner, McNeill. Second Row, left to right: Lorch, Me Lagan, Shortell, Hutz-
ler, Smith, Slaughter.
Waterhouse,
Prillaman,
Trinity Opponent 27 Tufts 68 62 Worcester Tech 33 Coast Guard 58 35 Bowdoin 61 34 Springfield 36 59 41 53 M.I.T. R.P.I. 60 35 69 . Amherst 26 Union 35 60 Wesleyan 35 56 Won 3 Lost 7 Coach: Robert Slaughter Captains: Frederick Ashworth and David Raymond Manager: George A. Creighton
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Varsity Basketball
"Unlike most athletic teams at Trinity, the basketball team is somewhat handicapped since the season is disrupted by two vacations. Therefore, we actually have to make a new start on our return from each recess. However, most of our opponents continue their competition during these breaks and consequently have a much greater opportunity to develop and improve as a team. "Since we were lacking in the very important aspect of teamwork throughout much of the season, I feel that our last two games were the most gratifying to me, to the team as a whole, and to everyone connected with the team. I also believe that the true ability of our team and the worth of the season can be measured by these final two contests. I say this because this is when we actually played as one unit and not as horde of individuals.
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"If one recalls these games, in which we came from 17 points back to beat Brandeis and in which we smothered MIT, a team which we had beaten by one point in overtime in our first game of the season and a team which had won 12 out of their previous 13 games before meeting us in the last encounter of the year, he will surely understand my sentiments. "This feeling of finally accomplishing a sense of playing together as one team was the most rewarding experience of the season." Brian B. Brooks
Kneeling, left to right: Voorhees, Wellen, Brooks, Stone, Kelly. Standing, left to right: McWilliams, Steele, Lawrence, Morisse, Miller, Gish, Leghorn, Uphoff, Swander, Vickery. Absent from picture: Fenrich.
Opponent Trinity 72 M.I.T. 73 U.S. Merchant Marine Academy 76 57 76 Middlebury 51 Williams 65 74 Clark 88 92 72 48 Coast Guard Tufts 61 60 Wesleyan 50 59 Worcester Tech 83 69 Amherst 69 70 54 Bowdoin 76 Colby 66 76 Coast Guard 70 66 University of Hartford 62 68 Wesleyan 65 81 Rochester 60 62 Union 68 60 Brandeis 77 70 M.I.T. 62 80 Lost 10 Won 9 Coach: Charles J. McWilliams Captain: Brian B. Brooks Manager: Harold K. Vickery
Varsity Squash Racquets
"Squash at Trinity this season was a
for next year lies in continuing to faith-
perfect illustration of what a player may
fully condition, which was the deciding
get out of a sport if he is willing to put
factor in our ability this year." Robert J. Pope
his all into it. This is best shown in the 'come from behind' win of Bill Minot, which in turn helped the team beat Wes-
Seated, left to right: Minot, Crosby,
lesyan. This was also evidenced in the
Hemphill,
long hours which the team gladly prac-
right: Clark, Auchincloss, Dath. Absent
ticed before each meet. Trin's big hope
from picture: Pope.
Mciver.
Standing,
left
to
Navy Amherst Army Wesleyan Williams Yale Seton Hall Amherst M.I.T. Wesleyan Fordham
Trinity 1 0 0 8
1 0 9 1
6 5 9
Opponent 8 9
9
1 8 9 0
8 3 4 0
Won 5 Lost 6 Coach : Roy Dath Captain: Robert J . Pope
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Fencing
"It is most difficult to attempt to pick from and analyse an unusual aspect of any fencing season. Every season is unusual and unique since by definition the sport itself is unusual and unique. There are no good seasons in fencing; there are no bad seasons. But there are perpetual building seasons. "This year, Trinity fielded a defending New England champion team. Next year, Trinity will field a team-a team that will try to once again be a defending champion team. It will be a team which will be rated number two in New England competition. "This year, Trinity fielded a team
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with a past record unparalled for excellence in several years. Next year, Trinit; will field a team which will seek to reverse the score of that one bout margin match with the Middle Atlantic Champions. It will . be a team which will go all out to be a winning team, an objective which its predecessor missed by that one bout margin match." Richard S. 0. Chang Stephen H. Yeaton First Row, left to right: Haff, Yeaton, Chang, Pols. Second Row, left to right: Kirk, Taylor, Pratt, Levine, Melchoir, Horstick, Schaler.
Trinity Opponent 14 Pace 13 M.I.T. 12 15 Bradford Durfee 16 11 Brooklyn College 10 17 H arvard 12 15 Brandeis 16 11 Stevens 13 14 Won 3 Lost 4 Coach: Kendall Sha:iler Captains : Richard Chang and Stephen Yeaton Manager: Robert G. Kirk
Hockey
"A hectic series of events preceded formal game competition which began in late January. The Hockey Club was able to secure Colt Park in Hartford for Sunday morning practice sessions in return for two goal cages, which were donated to the City. We found that the City of Hartford is trying desperately to overcome 路 the apathy of some quarters by encouraging skating and hockey at the city-owned rink. "The season itself was very credible from all standpoints. After winning the first game over a team from Durham, Connecticut, we lost our next four contests to American International College, St. Mark's, the Croquet Club and a hard-fought game to Wesleyan, the first intercollegiate hockey game ever held in Hartford.
"It was 路after Wes that a complete offensive shake-up was made. This shift gave the team two evenly balanced lines and thus resulted in four victories in a row, the most satisfying being the 6-4 defeat of Amherst. "It is now generally felt by those close to hockey that the sport is at Trinity to stay, not so much 011 the basis of its 5-4 record, but rather on account of the enthusiasm and determination of its players, coaches, parents and friends." Peter L. Dunkle
Kneeling, left to right: Hemphill, Williams, Bird, Zolto, Glendinning, Snedeker. Standing, left to right: Hargrove, Wood, Whittemore, Sulkowski, Studds, Deland, Twining, Miller, Dunkle, Clark, Pitman, McCann, Birnkammer.
Trinity Opponent 4 United Aircraft 9 American International College 1 21 Wallingford Croquet Club 0 8 Yale JV's 1 26 Wesleyan 3 4 4 St. Mark's School 0 Worcester Tech 4 8 Amherst 4 6 Coast Guard 11 2 Wesleyan 8 5 Won 5 Lost 5 Coach: J . Penn Hargrove Assistant Coach: J. Birnkammer Captain: Peter Dunkle
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Varsity Tennis
"The 1963 edition of the Trinity College tennis team. ended the season with a trip to Dartmouth in Hanover, N.H. The quartet of William Minot, Lockett Pitman, Nick Mciver and myself made the journey io the north with our coach, Roy Dath. Having to fight off the pressure of the coming exams and the thought of missing the last day of classes, we arrived in Hanover on Thursday evening. We looked over the courts and then left to find our quarters for the night. The next morning the matches began and we began to nave our problems, Mciver played the No. 4 man from Dartmouth (Tucky Mays) and lost in a good match, Pitman lost in straight sets to the No. 3 man from Dartmouth (John Morrison), and after winning against the No. 1 man from Vermont, Minot lost to the No. 2 man. from Dartmouth (Doug Floren) in another good
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match; I lost to a player from Spring.field and if I had won I too would have played another Dartmouth player (Dave Smoyer No. 1). In the doubles Mciver and Pitman played the No. 1 team from Rhode Island of Sauer and Gray; McIver, Lockett and Nick lost in straight sets and this left Bill and me. We played a team from Holy Cross and won in straight sets, then in the second round came what I consider to be the highlight of the season, our loss to the No. 1 team from Dartmouth (Floren and Morrison). We lost in straight sets but this was a close match and we were in it the whole way, it is the best doubles that Bill and I have played and was a fitting clima.:< to the season with the next one to look forward to especially with a Southern trip scheduled for Spring Vacation. "This effort in the New Englands placed us ahead of teams like Wesleyan
and Amherst in the teani standings and made this a successful season." David A. Hemphill Kneeling, left to right: Crane, Hemphill, Katz. Standing, left to right: Alvord, Wallace, Stevens, Stroud, Minot, Pitman, Dath.
Trinity Opponent Rhode Island 7 2 Union 4 2 Amherst 7 2 Worcester Tech 1 8 Holy Cross 2 7 Wesleyan 6 0 Won 3 Lost 3 Coach: Roy Dath Captains: David Hemphill and Lockett Pitman Manager: John Alvord
Northam Towers Lawn Croquet Association, Ltd.
"Although this up-and-coming team is not recognized by the Athletic Advisory Council as a Varsity Sport, it is the only organization on campus chartered by the Trustees and Administration to practice the fine and outstanding tradition of discrimination. Due to the tremendous demands placed upon the team by anxious neophytes, the Association, at its own expense, has engaged the services of a social secretary to schedule interviews for membership. Numerous faculty donations of cigarette holders, cologne, walking sticks, and foulard handker-
chiefs have greatly contributed to the gracious and gentlemanly demeanor of this redoubtable sport. "We cannot begin to express what trials and tribulations, what utter despair, what trauma followed the news that our Primary suffered a compound sprain of the wrist while affecting a most difficult and exhausting Double Wicket Roquet. Hurriedly, he was whisked to the sidelines whereupon he was ministered unto with rare ungents and Darjeeling tea. "We do wish with all our hearts that
the Evelyn Waugh Fund Drive will realize sufficient resources to purchase a new Croquet Ensemble embodying the following necessities: rococo chinoiserie design, japonaise lacquer mallots, sculptured and tufted velour handles, and an ebony and ivory inlay carrying case. Next year, at our initial tourney, lady fingers, cumquats, and Jasmin tea will be served to one and all. R. S. V. P." Sitting, left to right: Childs, Perrin. Standing, left to right: Lacy, Grenhart, Hall, von Stark, Dols, Talley, Langlykke.
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Varsity Baseball
"The record speaks for itself. It was
desire that hurt us. I especially think
a long and disappointing season. Perhaps Dan Jesse's analogy of playing night baseball when it was first introduced in
that seniors like Wes Feshler, Pete Lan-
the late '20's can be applied here-'It was like Diogenes with a lantern groping through the gloom of Hades look-
derman, Sam Winner, John Pitcairn, Don Taylor, Tom Calabrese and Dave Raymond did their best and played well enough to deserve a better fate . "I'd like to wish the best of luck to
ing for the honest man.' The honest man
next year's team, and, perhaps contrary
we were looking for this year was the winning ball game and we found it all too rarely. It was said that we snatched defeat from victory and I guess that oftentimes this was true-we couldn't coordinate good batting with good pitching路; we couldn't capitalize on the op-
to popular opinion, I don't think they
posing team's mistakes while they seemed to pounce on ours. "Though it was a dismal season, I
ler, Halloran, Towle. Standing, left to
don't think it was a lack of hustle and
kins, Winner, Jesse.
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will need that much of it to do fairly well." Thomas C. Halloran Seated, left to right: Landerman, Feshright: Cavanaugh, Moore, McNeill, Tay-
lor, Williams, Calabrese, Pitcairn, Jen-
Opponent Trinity 7 University of Delaware 4 16 Navy 4 George Washington 11 0 4 M.I.T. 9 11 Coast Guard 5 15 Yale 13 4 Columbia 3 9 Colby 1 5 Springfield 3 University of Massachusetts 5 2 3 2 Amherst 4 8 A. I. C. 3 Wesleyan 1 13 Williams 8 0 13 Coast Guard Wesleyan 6 7 Worester Tech 1 5 rained out Tufts Won 4 Lost 13 Coach: Dan Jesse Captains: Wesley V. Feshler and Thomas C. Halloran Manager: Raymond Cavanaugh
Varsity Track
"Most noteworthy about our season is the team's record; no other track team in Trinity's history has finished a season of seven meets, indoors and out, undefeated. While the tie with W.P.I. prevented a perfect record, the fact remains that a fraction of a point could have fallen to Worcester as easily as to us, so that we were well content with a draw. " If the meet with Worcester was its climax, the successful Season began with our win over Wesleyan before spring vacation. So few Trinity teams____:'on the order of three in recent history-have ever beaten Wesleyan on the track that even without winning again our season would have been to a large extent successful. The indoor victory not only started us on the way to our undefeated climax, but also preserved the string of six in a row begun outdoors last year.
"Also noteworthy, and an additional indication of the caliber of this year's team, is the fact that four school records were set by its members: Bob Schilpp's 24.4 in the low hurdles, Dick Ravizza's 1:56.8 in the 880, and my own 4:22.1 in the mile and 9 : 35.4 in the two mile. "A further indication of the power on the squad is that we were able to achieve our record despite the loss for various reasons of some key performers, most notably Vic Keen in the quarter. The handicap was not as great as it might have been, however, since the losses were for the most part limited to events in which there was enough depth to fill the gap to a successful extent." Malcolm M. McGawn First Row, left to right : T. Smith, Wardlaw, Hoerr, McGawn, Miller, Schulenberg, Szumczyk. Second Row, left to
right: Gardner, Ladewig, Schilpp, Rianhard, Brackett, Moore, Chandor. Third Row, left to right: Wiltbank, W. R. Smith, Wood, Mosher, Campbell, Prillaman, Ogden, Daley, Kqrth, Bosch, Chapin. Fourth Row, left to right: McWilliams, Woolman, Clark, Gamson, Ravizza, Lodge, Wellen, Kurth.
Trinity Opponent Wesleyan 56 46 Coast Guard 78 48 Union 80 46 Middlebury 76 50 Vermont 73 53 Worcester Tech 63 63 Amherst 93 33 Won 6 Tied 1 Lost 0 Coach : Karl Kurth Captain: Malcolm McGawn Manager: Thomas Wiltbank
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Varsity Golf
"The 1963 edition of the golf team was plagued with the same problems as its previous one, the inability to win at important positions in the line-up. It seems to be the prediction of every New England golf coach that if a team can win at the lower positions, they will win their share of matches . Unfortunately, it was not until the last four such matches that Trinity was able to capitalize on this strategy. "Th~ team's overall record of 4-7 is not impressive, but three matches were lost by a score of 4-3 to strong Williams, Amherst and Bowdoin contingents. "On May路 8th five representatives traveled to Williamstown, Massachusetts and the New England's, where despite adverse weather conditions (a must
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for any New England Golf Tournament), Trinity placed fifteenth out of thirty-two teams. Buzz Tomkins, captainelect, and Bob Ebersold were 'medalists for the team. "Much credit should be given to sophomore Rhodes Zimmerman who won nine of his eleven matches, playing at "the number four position. His effbrts earned him the most valuable player award. Buzz Tomkins should also be praised for his fine 73 against Wesleyan and his victory in the annual Wycoff Trophy thirty-six hole medal tournament." Peter L. Dunkle Left to right: Tomk,ins, Dunkle, Eber-
sold, Zimmerman, Pappas, Reyburn.
Opponent Trinity M.I.T. 1'h 5'h Williams 3 4 Worcester Tech 1 6 Amherst 3 4 Rhode Island 1 6 Wesleyan 5 2 Bowdoin 3 4 University of Massachusetts 1 6 Lowel Tech 6 1 Springfield 4 3 American International 5 2 Won 4 Lost 7 Coach: Mitchel Pappas Captain and Manager: Peter Dunkle
Varsity and Junior Varsity Crews
"Warmer weather, that is warm enough to melt the unpredictable Connecticut River, provided the opportunity to test the enthusiasm of some forty participants under the direction of the new coach, Ronald Johnson. Once again, Spring Vacation allowed the "die-hards" to enjoy the balmy weather of Philadelphia. Returning with invaluable experience as well as the taste of.victory. The Trinity oarsmen once again faced the threat of Spring floods but overcame their problem with a mQve to nearby Batterson Park Reservoir. New luxury arrived in the safety minded ways of daily bus service to and from practice. Few will forget the pleasure and comfort of being driven to the boathouse by the time-conscious 'Rufus.' "Unfortunately the freshmen ranks had been somewhat diminished by academic tribulations; however, the survivors were encouraged by the volunteered assistance of coach Dave Spraker. Meanwhile, the increasingly confident Junior Varsity daily challenged a surprised Var-
sity boat. Only the verbal encouragements of 'silent Hunter' as well as 'underweight, lane-conscious coxswain Charlie Todd' provi,ded the necessary measure to become victorious. "Efforts were rewarded when the little informal Trinity Crew almost swept the President's Cup Regatta leaving host Marist College lighter by copping the Varsity and Junior Varsity trophies." Lloyd Reynolds
Varsity Crew Kneeling: Todd. Standing: Reynolds, Wicks, McGlennen, Gooden, Johnson, Wagner, Roberts, Harris, Millar, Lynch.
Philadelphia : placed first ahead of St. Joseph's and Fordham Poughkeepsie (President's Cup): placed first ahead of Marist, Iona, St. Peter's and C. W. Post South Windsor: placed third behind Boston University and Amherst Worcester (Rusty Callow Regatta): placed second behind Amherst and ahead of Marist
Philadelphia (Dad Vail Regatta): placed ninth out of 23 entrants Coach : Ronald Johnson Captain:路 Lloyd Reynolds Officers of Trinity College Rowing Association : Theodore Wagner (President), David Wicks (Secretary), Edwin P . Roberts, Jr. (Treasurer)
Junior Varsity Crew Kneeling: B. Perkins. Standing : Bishop, Mackie, S. Perkins, Miller, Johnson, Rohman, Scott, MacPherson, Sotter.
Philadelphia: placed second behind St. Joseph's and ahead of Fordham Poughkeepsie (President's Cup): placed first in a field of five South Windsor: placed third behind Boston University and Amherst Worcester (Rusty Callow Regatta) : placed first ahead of Amherst Philadelphia (Dad Vail Regatta): placed fifth out of 14 entrants Coach: Ronald Johnson
Cross Country
"The outstanding highlight of our season was probably the freshman team's first place showing at the Easterns. It was in fact these freshmen, able to enter varsity competition because of cross country's informal status, who contributed the most toward our remarkably successful season, there being but five regular upperclassmen on the squad. "For the team as a whole our double victory over Amherst and Worcester Polytechnic Institute was no doubt the most rewarding achievement of the year. Upsetting a strong Amherst team was perhaps as unexpected and pleasing to us as the football team's win, although, regretably, the cross country squad did not receive the recognition for its efforts that its gridiron counterpart enjoyed.
one hundred fifty six
This is usually the case with cross country, however, a sport hardly conductive to spectator interest since even the coach can't know what is occurring during the greater part of many contests. "Our coach, Bill Smith '56, of the Engineering Department, the Mihaly lgoli of Trinity College, can not be given enough credit for his part in formulating this year's somewhat expanded schedule and in equipping the team to meet it so ably." Malcolm M. McGawn First Row, left to right: Wadell, True, Jackson, Emmett, McGawn, Rohlfing. Second Row, left to right: Rosen, Mac Gregor, Martin, Kassow, Mosher, Porne-
man, Gardner, Smith. Third Row, left to right: Chapin, Brown, Bremer, Charlesworth, Bois. Trinity Opponent University of Hartford 18 40 Coast Guard 40 21 A von Old Farms 21 35 Manchester High School 25 32 Amherst 38 39 Worcester Tech 38 43 Central Connecticut 24 32 Won 6 Lost 1 Coach: William R. Smith, III Managers: William Chapin and Barry Rosen
Varsity Lacrosse
"In the past decade the game of lacrosse has spread from a few Southern schools to a national sport. Because of the nature of the sport, with the next 10 years lacrosse will undoubtedly see greater expansion. The game at Trinity is a prime example of trus national trend. It may be equated to a 路 young child learning to walk; to take those first few steps requires months of frustrating practice-but once they have been taken, the child is impossible to hold down. Trinity lacrosse has just taken its first few steps- it will soon be running. "The '63 season was a disappointing one in that the team won only three out of eight games. But the three wins do not show how decisive the team's first few steps have been. Throughout the season the team out-shot all but two of its opponents, and in the process set seven new college records. "Unquestionably the high point of the season was our victory over Wesleyan. Wesleyan was riding on a three game
winning streak, with one of those wins against Williams, a perennial New England lacrosse power. As usual, when Trinity meets Wesleyan, the struggle is never decided until the final gun has sounded. Our victory was due to a combined team effort led by a tremendous performance by goalie, Will Files. Files made thirty-four saves to place him at the head of New England goalies, perhaps national goalies, in single game saves. "Lacrosse is a game that its participants not only love to play, but love to practice. In football one cannot wait for school to start and double sessions to end. In lacrosse, even though our double session practices came during Spring Vacation and were optional, eighty percent of the team was present, and none of them were eagerly awaiting the beginning of classes. Baseball and track have a real rival in the infant who is just learning to walk." George W. Fox
First Row, left to right: Oulundson, Gilson, Parsons, Fox, Kelley, Horstick, Finley. Second Row, left to right : Files, Neulander, Howland, Casey, Haskins, Tyndall, Southworth, Wood, Densen, LaSelle. Third Row, left to right: McPhee, Sturrock, Mcintire, Phelps, Dietrick, Kadlic, Gish, Hopkins, Barker, Schaefer, Barnard, Born, Crosby.
Middlebury Amherst Union Worcester Tech Tufts M.l.T. Wesleyan Siena Won 3
Trinity 5 2 8 10 6 3 7 18
Opponent 6 8 9
6 12
5 6 1
Lost 5
Coach: Chester McPhee Captain: George W. Fox Manager : Frederick Born
one hundred fifty sevt;n
Freshman Football
Freshman Soccer
First Row, left to right: Dawes, Andrews, Ross, Weeks, Carlson, Hourihan, Spoor. Second Row, left to right: Doll, Brundage, Israel, Reydel, Vogel, Williams, T., Williams, B., Alves. Third Row, left to right: Me Phee, Cooper, Leach, Doll, Rissel, Kelly, Kunkelman, Locke, Dunham. Fourth Row, left to right: De Pree, Scarlett, Pogue, Glendinning, Fiodalis, Wentworth.
First Row, left to right: Evarts, Moore, Seddon, Baker, Bartlett. Second Row, left to right: Wolbarst, Diamant, Anderson, Sgoutas, Hodgson, Cooley, Doerge, Taylor, Golub. Third Row, left to right: Loomis, Walton, Parks, Hart, Van Sciver, Tribkin, Gibson, Cantrell, Oakes, Schweitzer, Shults.
Trinity 14 6 0
Coast Guard Kent School Springfield Wesleyan
6
Won
Lost 3
Coach: Chester McPhee Captain: Andrew Weeks Managers: John A. Mason and William C. Pickett
Brown Springfield Williams Wesleyan Won 4
one hundred fifty eight
Opponent 32 0 16 31
Coach: Robert E. Shults Captain : William H. Schweitzer Manager: Gunnar Walmet
Trinity 4 3 2 5 Lost 0
Opponent
2 2 0 1
Freshman Basketball
Kneeling, left to right: Braun, Risse!, Hourihan, Schweitzer, Belfiore, Bremer. Standing, left to right: Shults, Harris, Landes, Koehn, Vogel, Bartlett, Dixon.
Coach: Robert E. Shults Captain: Joseph Hourihan Manager: Larry Dixon
Seated, left to right : Me Allister, Grimes, Draper, Andrews. Standing, left to right: Bodner, Peake, Dunham, Cantrell, Dath.
Coach: Roy A. Dath
Freshman Squash Racquets
Trinity M.I.T. University of Bridgeport Yale Clark JV's Coast Guard JV's St. Thomas Seminary Wesleyan Worcester Tech JV's Amherst Leicester Junior College Coast Guard JV's University of Hartford Wesleyan St. Thomas Seminary M.I.T. Won 15
Wesleyan Williston Choate Yale Amherst M.I.T. Wesleyan Williston Won 4
68 94
Opponent 43
75
66 69
78
73 50
65
47
95
51
95
85
90
66
92
68
94 71
69 96 95. Lost 0
Trinity 5 4 1 0 2 9 2 3 Lost 4
60
62
59
52 67 56
Opponent 4 1 6
9 7 0 7 2
Freshman Swimming
Gerald H. Bausek Thomas M. Beers C. Anthony Bougere James S. Emmett William C. Kunkleman Richard J. Lombardo Ian C. MacGregor Christopher J. McCurdy Gerard R. Miller J. Roberto Orellana Richard B. Root Richard D: Rothbard Victor Schoen Jeffrey R. Seckler Thomas E. Spence William R. Switky Robert B. Trainer John M. True Jeffrey T. Witherwax
Freshman Swimming Freshman Track
"It is unusual for a team with our kind of record to have the kind of high spirit which everyone who came in contact with the freshman swimming team immediately noticed. I believe that in view of this spirit, the only reason we didn't have a better record was that many of us had had little, or no, previous experience in competitive swimming. "As the season progressed, nearly every member of the squad showed significant improvement as a result of hard work and plenty of encouragement from 路 our coach, Chet. By the end of the schedule the Frosh team had produced many formidable competitors who should prove to be of great value to future varsity clubs." Jeffrey R. Seckler
First Row, left to right: Brundage, Sulkowski, Landes, Sargent. Second Row, left to right: Charlesworth, Evarts, Carlson, Bornemann, Sgoutas. Third Row, left to right: McWilliams, Martin, Pouge, McClure, Williams, Bremer, Tribkin, Spoor.
Coach: Jay McWilliams Captain: David Bremer Manager: John M. Rozett
one hundred sixty
Trinity 27 Williston 20 Mt. Hermon Canterbury 46 Rensselaer Poly Tech 33 Hotchkiss 26 Suffield Academy 50 Westminister 47 Wesleyan 29 Won 1 Lost 7 Coach: Chester McPhee Captain: Jeffrey Seckler Manager: Richard Lombardo
Trinity New Britain High School Cheshire Academy Amherst Loomis Central Connecticut Hotchkiss Won 4
57
Opponent 68
75 49
62 69
45 48 66
Opponent 64
43
74
76
46
66~
66
75
Lost 2
55~
52 47
Freshman Baseball
Freshman Lacrosse
'1RINITY~
n•t•
Seated, left to right: Dunham, Boyd, Schweitzer, Hourihan, Dunn, Boulanger. Standing, left to right: Dierman, Weeks, Shipman, Belfiore, Pickett; Henriques, Shults. Coach: Robert E. Shults Captains: Joseph Hourihan and Roger Macaione Manager: Robert Cooley
First Row, lefi to right: Gall, Hurlock, McNally, Zolto, Ture, Reydel. Second Row; left to right: Baker, Lenhart, Ocko, Krisiloff, Brown, Whittemore. Third Row, left to right : Sticka, Studds, lgou, Kelly, Dawes, Edmonds, McCrudden, Schwartzman. Coach: Charles Sticka Captain: Kingdon Hurlock Manager : Henry Heffner
Yale Kent School Wesleyan Bridgeport St. Thomas Seminary University of Massachusetts Sprinfield Wesleyan St. Thomas Seminary Won 5
Loomis University of Massachusetts Choate Kingswood Wesleyan Lenox School Won 1
Trimty 4 8 0 6 6 0 11
7 5 Lost 5
Trinity 3 11 2 5 3 1
~~
Opponent 5 1 8 7 0 1 3 6
8
Opponent 8 7 9 10 8 2
Lost 5
one hundred sixty one
Freshman Crew
Freshman Tennis
Kneeling: Diamant. Standing: Sutherland, Dorrier, Fairbanks, Ocko, Van Sciver, Hall, Locke, Israel. Philadelphia: placed third behind Fordham and St. Joseph's
Poughkeepsie (President's Cup): placed third behind Iona and Marist South Windsor: placed third behind Boston University and 路 Amherst
Left to right: Andrews, Lewis, Root, Waterman, DePree, Merrill , Dath.
Coach: Roy A. Dath
Worcester (Rusty Callow Regatta): placed third behind Clark and Amherst Andover, Massachusetts: lost to Phillips Academy Philadelphia (Dad Vail Regatta): did not place Coach: David Spraker
Trinity 7
Taft School Amherst Kent School Choate Loomis Wesleyan Kingswood Westminister
5 1 1 3 4 9
Won 4
one hundred sixty two
7 Lost 4
Opponent 2 4 8 8 6
s
0 2
Corinthian Yacht Club
"The Trinity Corinthian Yacht Club has experienced what might be termed its most successful season. With the assistance of Mr. Neaverson, Mr. Foulke, and Mr. Holland, the Commodore was able to organize a fund drive, the result of which permitted the purchase of four tech dinghies from Yale University. Also, through the kindness of Alan Elwell, storage facilities and lake frontage in Granby, Connecticut have been made available. Finally, an upsurge of enthusiasm from the undergraduate corps, demonstrated by our unblemished N. E. I. S. A. sailing record for the last three successive seasons, promises to maintain and nurture the yacht club so that it may continue to provide entertainment and experience for the students of Trinity College." John E. Gaines Seated, left to right: Notman, Brainerd, Stolz. Standing, left to right: Beers, Sniffen, McGlennen, Snedeker, Williams, Gaines, Parlin, Wendell.
one hundred sixty three
Cheerleaders
The duty of the Cheerleaders is to inspire the enthusiasm of students at intercollegiate football games. Frenetically, these boys try to maintain the school spirit rampant in the days ofthe raccoon coat. Kneeling, left to right: Heffner, Reynolds. Standing, left to right: Westney, Schwennesen, Niles, Twerdhall.
one hundred sixty four
(4) (5)
(1)
Szumczyk.
(2)
Taylor.
(3)
Campbell.
(4)
Gish.
(5)
Brooks.
(6)
Fenrich.
(6)
one hundred sixty seven
( 8}
(7)
(7)
Freshman lacrosse.
( 8)
Sticka and Freshmen.
( 9)
Varsity Baseball
(9)
(1 0)
Calabrese.
( 11 )
Crew on the Connecticut River.
( 12)
Chaplin Thomas and Mrs. Goodwin with new shell.
(10)
(12)
one hundred sixty nine
(14)
(13) (15)
one hundred seventy
(16)
(13)
Schulenberg.
(14)
Mciver.
(15)
Calabrese and Szumczyk.
(16)
Hemphill.
(17)
Minot.
(18)
Football fans.
(17)
(1 8)
one hundred seventy one
Intramural Board
The members of the Intramural Board are chosen from the various walks of Trinity life to serve as the governing body for intramural college athletics. Their principal function is to plan the yearly athletic program in eleven sports. Left to right: Thomas, Lewis, Rimer, Ehrhardt, Holroyd, Mciver, Howser.
one hundred seventy two
Sports
This organization is concerned with making the otherwise sedate student scream like a high school coed at Trinity athletic contests. To facilitate this purpose, members of Sports advertise, with sparkling copy and ingenious art work, sporting events and prod the inhibited cheerleaders into frenzied performance. Left to right: Barnard, Anderson, Kelly, Ogden, Bridegroom.
one hundred seventy three
(1)
(2)
one hundred seventy four
(3)
(5) (4)
( 1) FRANK WOODBRIDGE CONSTANT, Jarvis Professor of Physics; B.S. Princeton, 1925; Ph.D. Yale, 1928; Taught at Duke University from 1930 to 1933 and from 1934 to 1946; Fellow, American Physical Society; Appointed to the faculty in 1946; Phi Beta Kappa, Sigma Xi, Sigma Pi Sigma. (2) ROBERT LINDSAY, As7 sociate Professor of Physics; Sc.B. Brown, 1947; M.A., Ph.D. Rice, 1949, 1951; Appointed to the faculty in 1956; Sigma Xi.
(3) ROBERT FREEMAN KINGSBURY, Associate Professor of Physics; B.S. Bowdoin, 1934; M.S. Cornell, 1939; Ph.D. Pennsylvania, 1956; Appointed to the faculty in 1950. (4) CHARLES ROBERT MILLER, Assistant Professor of Physics; B.S., Ph.D. California Institute of Technology, 1952, 1962; Appointed to the faculty in 1961. (5) ALBERT JOSEPH HOWARD, JR., Assistant Professor of Physics; B.S., M.S. Yale, 1958, 1959; Formerly Assistant in Research, Yale; Appointed to the faculty in 1962. one hundred seventy ,five
THOMAS ROBERT BERGER SUNNYVALE, CALIFORNIA MATHEMATICS and PHYSICS Freshman Executive Council; Athenium Society, Treasurer, President; Sigma Pi Sigma, President; Student Member AlEE; Junior Advisor; Senior Lay Reader; Pi Kappa Alpha, Treasurer; Prepared at Fremont High School.
WILLIAM COWLES HOWLAND METUCHEN, NEW JERSEY INTERDEPARTMENTAL SCIENCE Sophomore Dining Club; Senate; Medusa; Football; Lacrosse; . Saint Anthony Hall; Prepared at Lawrenceville School.
one hundred seventy six
CLINTON CLIFFORD JOHNSON HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT INTERDEPARTMENTAL SCIENCE Young Republicans; Glee Club; Corinthian Yacht Club; Sports Car Club; Soccer; Delta Kappa Epsilon; Prepared at Loomis School.
JAMES LAURANCE DAVISON . DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA INTERDEPARTMENTAL SCIENCE Glee Club; Folk Singers; Delta Kappa Epsilon; Prepared at Saint Albans.
ALLEN RUSSELL MILLER EAST HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT INTERDEPARTMENTAL SCIENCE WRTC-FM; Glee Club; Prepared at East Hartford High School.
STEPHAN REPETTO BROAD BROOK, CONNECTICUT INTERDEPARTMENTAL SCIENCE Baseball, Manager; Football, Manager; Prepared at East Windsor High School.
CONRAD van der SCHROEFF NEW YORK, NEW YORK INTERDEPARTMENTAL SCIENCE Jesters, Business Manager; WRTC-FM; Junior Advisor; Soccer; Theta Xi; Prepared at Trinity School.
GARY CARROLL STRIBLING, JR. ST. LOUIS, MISSOURI INTERDEPARTMENTAL SCIENCE Pipes and Drums, Pipe Major; Interfraternity Council; Sports Car Club; Delta Kappa Epsilon; Prepared at John Burroughs School.
CYRIL YONOV SEA CLIFF, NEW JERSEY INTERDEPARTMENTAL SCIENCE Junior Advisor; Track; Cross Country; Pi Kappa Alpha; Prepared at North Shore High School.
one hundred seventy seven
Sigma Pi Sigma
Members are elected to this national physics honor society on the basis of high standing in general scholarship, outstanding achievement in physics, and promise of professional merit. At Trinity, Sigma Pi Sigma's activities are carried out in conjunction with the local student branch of the American Institute of Physics. Left to right: Miller, Berger, Kollett, Mosher, Drate, McCord, Wadlow.
one hundred seventy eight
(1)
(8)
(2)
( 1) MAURICE CURTIS LANGHORNE, Profes- . sor of Psychology; A.B., M.A. Washington and Lee 1925, 1926; Ph.D. Ohio State, 1932; Faculty member, Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia, 1926-1959; Appointed to the faculty in 1959; Phi Beta Kappa, Sigma Xi, Psi Chi. (2) AUSTIN CLAUD HERSCHBERGER, Assistant Professor of Psychology; B.S. Columbia, 1948; M.S., Ph.D. Illinois, 1950, 1955; Assistant Professor, Kenyon College, 1955-1960; Appointed to the faculty in 1960; Sigma Xi, Pi Gamma Mu, Psi Chi. (3) ROBERT DALE MEADE, Associate Professor of Psychology; A.B. Indiana University, 1950; A.M., Ph.D . Pennsylvania, 1952, 1956; Consulting Editor, Canadian Journal of Psychology; Appointed to the faculty in 1955; Pi Gamma Mu, Sigma Xi, Psi Chi.
one hundred seventy nine
CRAIG BAILEY ADAMS HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT PSYCHOLOGY Psi Chi; Psychology Club, Vice President; Brownell Club, President; Prepared at Weaver High School.
ERNEST JOSEPH ANASTASIO WOODBRIDGE, CONNECTICUT PSYCHOLOGY Psychology Club; Sports Car Club; Young Republicans; Newman Club; Interfraternity Council Representative; Hockey Club; Sigma Nu; Prepared at Hopkins Grammar School.
BRUCE KIRKWOOD BROWN, JR. NORWAY, MAINE PSYCHOLOGY Young Republicans; Psychology Club; Sports Car Club; Canterbury Club; Hockey Club; Interfraternity Council Representative; Sigma Nu; Prepared at Salisbury School.
SAMUEL CHARLES FOSTER MANCHESTER, CONNECTICUT PSYCHOLOGY Psychology Club; Sports Car Club;. Young Democrats; Corinthian Yacht Club ; Football; Lacrosse; Alpha Chi Rho; Prepared at Manchester High School.
one hundred eif?hty
BRIAN BASIL BROOKS FORESTVILLE, CONNECTICUT PSYCHOLOGY Psychology Club; Intramural Council, Secretary; Basketball Captain; Sigma Nu; Prepared ~t Plainville High School.
ROBERT CHARLES KRAUT NEW BRITAIN, CONNECTICUT PSYCHOLOGY Junior Advisor; Psi Chi; Campus Chest; Psychology Club; Tennis; Alpha Chi Rho, House Manager; Prepared at New Britain Senior High School.
ROBERT HILL LA MOTTE, JR. BREVARD, NORTH CAROLINA PSYCHOLOGY Junior Advisor; Psi Chi, VicePresident; Chamber Music Club, President; Glee Club; Delta Kappa Epsilon; Prepared at New Trier Township High School.
PETER OWEN DEWEY LAN DERMAN HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT PSYCHOLOGY Psychology Club; Freshmen Football; Baseball; Sigma Nu, Vice-President; Prepared at Weaver High School.
PERRY DELAFIELD RIANHARD MIDDLEBURY, CONNECTICUT PSYCHOLOGY Freshman Executive Council; Soccer; Track; Alpha Delta Phi; Prepared at Berkshire School.
WINTHROP HORTON RICHARDSON NEW BRITAIN, CONNECTICUT PSYCHOLOGY Prepared at Taunton High School.
THOMAS HOWE SMITH HASTINGS-ON -HUDSON, NEW YORK PSYCHOLOGY Psychology Club, President; Air Force ROTC; Football; Swimming, Manager; Track; Alpha Delta Phi, Treasurer; Prepared at Hastings High School.
KENNETH ALDEN SOUTHWORTH, III MILLBURN, NEW JERSEY PSYCHOLOGY Psychology Club; Football; Lacrosse; Prepared at Millburn High School.
EDISON JEAN TRICKETT DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA PSYCHOLOGY Freshman Executive Council; Trinidads; Folksingers; Psi Chi; Junior Advisor; WRTC-FM; Interfraternity Council; Q.E.D. Secretary, Vice-President, Duke; Prepared at St. Albans School.
ROBERT THOMPSON WATT GROVELAND, MASSACHUSETTS PSYCHOLOGY WRTC-FM, Record Librarian; Psychology Club; Q.E.D. Prepared at Haverhill High School.
GERALD ALAN WINER WEST HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT PSYCHOLOGY Psychology Club, SecretaryTreasurer; Tripod; Hillel; Psi Chi, President; Delpha Phi Alpha; Brownell Club; Prepared at Conrad High School.
one hundred eighty one
Psi Chi
Psi Chi, a national honor society, strives to promote scholarship in psychology. Qualifications include general high scholarship and excellence in specific psychology courses; contributions to the College number a lecture series, purchase of books for the society's library and journals for the college library. Seated, left to right: Orr, Trickett, Winer, Meade, LaMotte, McKune. Standing, left to right: Webster, Kraut, Haslach, Baran, Watt, Adams, Zeissig, Gaines.
one hundred eighty two
one hundred eighty six
one hundred eighty eight
A stiff drink is good for a lot of things. A pint, if consumed quickly, will dull the senses and offer relief from the annoying sounds of cheap bands and incoherent, sociable chatter.
More usually, though, it is taken to stimulate, to get one into the swing of things, to sharpen the senses for an endless _night of physical exertion.
A balloon and a beautiful, naive smile would be better ~unning across an open beach; a good figure not quite able to coordinate itself to the latest rage could be disciplined to move expressively.
one hundred ninety two
one hundred ninety three
one hundred ninety four
(1)
(2)
( 1) EDMOND LaBEAUME CHERBONIER, Professor of Religion; B.A. Harvard, 1939; B.D. Union Theological, 1947; B.A., M.A. Cambridge, 1948, 1952; Ph.D. Columbia, 1951; D.D. Vermont, 1959; Assistant Professor, Associate Professor of Religion, Barnard College and Lecturer, Union Theological Seminary, 1951-1955; Author of Hardness of Heart and The Broken Covenant; Appointed to the faculty in 1955.
(8)
(2) WILLIAM ALEXANDER JOHNSON, Assistant Professor of Religion; B.A. Queens, 1953; B.D. Drew, 1956; Teo!. Kand., Teo!. Lie., Teo!. Dr. Lund University (Sweden), 1957, 1958, 1962; M.A. Columbia, 1958; Ph.D. ColumbiaUnion, 1959; Author of The Philosophy of Religion of Anders Nygren; Appointed to the faculty in 1959. (3) THEODOR MARCUS MAUCH, Associate Professor of Religion; A.B. Elmhurst, 1943; B.D., S.T.M., Th.D. Union Theological, 1946, 1947, 1958; Taught at Wellesley College, 1950-1956; Author of articles in The Interpreter's Dictionary of the Bible; Appointed to the faculty in 1957. one hundred ninety five
-
(1)
~
(4
(1) HARVEY K. McARTHUR, Lecturer in Religion; Ph.B. Wheaton, 1933; Th.B. Westminister Theological Seminary, 1939; S.T.M. Hartford Theological Seminary, 1940; Ph.D. Hartford Seminary Foundation, 1941; Hosmer Professor of New Testament, Hartford Seminary Foundation; Appointed to the faculty in 1962. CHARLES FREEMAN SLEEPER, Instructor in Religion ; B.A. Colby, 1954; B.D . Yale Divinity, 1958; Ph.D. Vanderbilt, 1963; Studied at Vanderbilt University Graduate School, 1958-1961; Appointed to the faculty in 1961; Phi Beta Kappa, Pi Gamma Mu. ( 2)
one hundred ninety six
(3) FRED DENBEAUX, Lecturer in Religion; B.A. Elmhurst, 1936; B.D., S.T.M. Union Theological Seminary, 1939, 1940; Professor of Biblical Hi~>tory, Literature, and Interpretation, Wellesley College; Appointed to the faculty in 1962. ( 4) PETER L. 路BERGER Lecturer in Relig'ion; B.A. Wagner, 1949; M.A., Ph.D. New School for Social Research, 1950, 1954; Professor of Social Ethics, Hartford Seminary Foundation; Appointed to the faculty in 1962.
(2)
ROBERT BROWN BOOTH NORTH STAMFORD, CONNECTICUT HISTORY and RELIGION Political Science Club; Young Repub licans; Young Democrats; Christian Association; Le Cercle Francafs; Phi Kappa Psi; Prepared at Stamford High School.
T HOMAS EDWARD FRASER ATLANTA, GEORGIA RELIGION Campus Chest; Tripod, Advertising Manager; Freshmen Track; Alpha Chi Rho; Prepared at Westm inster Schools.
CLARENCE URI CARRUTH, III SCARSDALE, NEW YORK RELIGION Young Republicans ; WRTC-FM, Technical Director, Station Manager; Campus Chest; Mather Hall Board of Governors; Pi Kappa .Alpha; Prepared at Hackley School.
STONE DOUGLASS COX HEAD WEST ORANGE, NEW JERSEY RELIGION WRTC-FM; Spanish Club; Christian Association; Junior Lay Reader; CODE, Chairman; Delta Phi; Prepared at Saint George's School.
STANLEY OBERMANN HOERR, JR. CLEVELAND, OHIO RELIGION Trinidads, Director; Campus Chest; Basketball; Track; Alpha Delta Phi; Prepared at The University School.
one hundred ninety seven
JOHN ARNOLD KENT BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS HISTORY and RELIGION Glee Club ; Medusa; Senate; Campus Chest; Track; Theta Xi; Prepared at He bron Academy.
' EDWARD HURST RAFF, JR. HARTVILLE, OHIO RELIGION Trinidads; Sophomore Dining Club; Freshmen Swimming; Alpha Delta Phi; Prepared at University School.
one hundred ninety eight
FRED JAY NEULANDER KEW GARDENS, NEW YORK RELIGION Sophomore Dining Club, President; Freshmen Swimming; Lacrosse; Alpha Delta Phi; Prepared at Jamaica H igh School.
JAMES DONALD WHITEHILL BLOOMFIELD, CONNECTICUT RELIGION Chanticleers; Glee Club; Archive; Philosophy Club ; Delta Phi; Prepared at Manchester High School.
RONALD WALKER WRIGHT HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT RELIGION Glee Club; Chanticleers; Prepared at Hartford Public High School.
Committee Organized to Defend Equality
Students in CODE strive to help eliminate discrimination and also increase College awareness of civil rights, thus providing motivation for the individual to apply himself to this problem as a citizen. Left to right: Mitchell, Hodgson, Somma, Bowie, Aldrich,
Bridegroom.
one hundred ninety nine
Crucifers
The three seniors chosen to be Crucifers lead the Sunday service processionals each week in the chapel. Left to right: Minifie, Lamphear, Schulenberg.
two hundred
Hillel Society
The Hillel Society of Trinity College has been organized to serve the needs of the Jewish Students on campus and to add to their intellectual understanding of Judaism. Meetings include lectures, mixers, rides to synagogues, Piissover meals, and occasional brunches.
Kneeling, left to right: Rosenthal, Basch, Lippitt, Gann, Miller. Standing, left to right: Bernstein, Hutzler, Adelstein, Fein-
schreiber, Schwartz, Ferrara, Feingold, Drate, Trachtenberg, Craig.
two hundred one
Newman Club
The Newman Club is a facility for Roman Catholic students. Under the leadership of their chaplain, the group sponsors lectures and socials. Sitting, left to right: Osowecki, Mozzicato, McGurkin, Querido, Craig, DePietro. Standing, left to right: Grimes, Pastore, Geremia, Jackson, Monahan, Depietris,
Ferrara, Hodgson, Lynn, Tilki, Drate, Miller.
two hundred two
Senior Lay Readers
The Senior Lay Readers, including membership from each fraternity and the independents, prepare and read the proper Chapel service every Tuesday in the academic year. They have also been instrumental in other religious endeavors. Front Row, left to right: Faxon, Stier, Reynolds, Wardlaw, McGill, Thomas. Back Row, left to right: Johns, Aldrich, Holroyd, Blair, Graham.
two hundred three
Vestry
The Vestry coordinates the efforts of Episcopal students. They sponsor retreats, Canterbury Club for the Class of 1966, and the organization of yarious special chapel services. Standing, left to right: Hussey, Ewing, Cooper, Minifie, Creighton, Thomas. Seated, left to right: Holroyd, Chang, White, Tozer.
two hundred four
Chapel Cabinet
The Chapel Cabinet acts to coordinate the various activities of the three reli, gious groups on campus by means of 路exchange discussions, joint meetings, and the annual Embassy program. Left to right: Querido, Martire, Friedman, Ewing, Minifie, Thomas, Kriteman.
, two hundred five
(~)
(1)
(3)
( 1) ALBERT EDWARD HOLLAND, Vice President; B.A., M .A. Trinity, 1946, 1958; Winner of the Eigenbroot Trophy in 1958; Appointed to the administration in 1946; Pi Gamma Mu.
(3) DOUGLAS LEE FROST (Middle), Assistant Director of Development; B.A. Trinity, 1959; M.A. Yale, 1960; Appointed to the administration in 1960; Pi Gamma Mu.
(2) DEAN HEWES KELSEY (Middle), Associate Comptroller; B.A. Oberlin, 1934; Formerly Comptroller at Miss Hall's School; Appointed to the administ1"ation in 1958.
SHERMAN PERSONS VOORHEES (Right), Consultant for Development; Attended Columbia University; Major, U. S. Air Force, Retired; Member, Holland Society; Formerly Executive Director Pittsburgh Chamber of Commerce; Appointed to the administration in 1961.
JOSEPH THOMAS SCHILLING (Left), Assistant Comptroller; Attended Bentley College of Accounting and Finance; Appointed to the administration in 1958. HAROLD WARING MESSER (Right), Cashier; B.S. Trinity, 1926; Appointed to the administration in 1937.
two hundred six
JOHN EDWIN GRIFFITH, JR. (Left), Consultant for Development; B.S. Trinity, 1917; Retired Vice President, Aetna Life Insurance Company; Appointed to the administration in 1960.
(4) FRANCIS GARDINER F. BRIDGE (Right), Director of Admissions; A.B. Dartmouth, 1942; Formerly Assistant to the Director of Admissions at Dartmouth College; Appointed to the administration in 1956. WILLIAM HOWIE MUIR, II (Middle), Associate Director of Admissions; B.A. Trinity, 19 51, Appointed to the administration in 1955. JACOB WARDWELL EDWARDS (Left), Assistant Director of Admissions; B.A. Trinity, 1959; Trustee, Phi Kappa Society; Appointed to the administration in 1959. (5) JAMES KENNETH ROBERTSON, Treasurer and Comptroller; Ph.B. Yale, 1930; M.B.A. Harvard, 1932; Formerly Business Manager of the Taft School, Watertown, Connecticut; Appointed to the administration in 1951.
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(1)
(2)
(1 ) WALTER EDWIN CARLSON (Seated) , Assistant Director of Buildings and Grounds; Appointed to the administration in 1957.
DENNIS PRATT TINSLEY (Standing) , Chief Plant Engineer; Lieutenant Commander, U. S. Navy, Retired ; Appointed to the administration in 1962. (2) FRANCIS LUDWIG LUNDBORG, Medical Director; B.S., M.S. Trinity, 1924, 1925 ; M .D. Yale, 1930; Staff Member, Hartford Hospital ; Appointed to the administration in 1935.
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( 3) THOMAS ALOYSIUS SMITH, Registrar, Assistant to the Dean of the College, Veterans Counselor; B.A. Trinity, 1950; M .A. Columbia, 1952; Member, West H artford Board of Education ; Formerly English Instructor, Dean Junior College ; Appointed to the administration in 1953.
(4) JOHN ANDREW MASON , Alumni Secretary; B.A. Trinity, 1934; Appointed to the administration in 1946.
(3)
(4)
(5)
(5) NORMAN ATWOOD WALKER, Director of Buildings and Grounds; B.S. Yale, 1929; Appointed to the administration in 1947.
(6)
(6) JOHN FRANCIS BUTLER, Director of Placement and Admissions Counselor; B.S. Trinity, 1935; Appointed to the administration in 1947; Pi Gamma Mu.
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(2)
(3)
(1) JAMES MOULTON THOMAS, Chaplain; A.B. Princeton, 1925; B.D. Virginia Theological Seminary, 1929; .Formerly served in Parishes in Maryland, Pennsylvania and West Virginia; Ap. pointed to the administration in 1956.
(2) LEONARD RAYMOND TOMAT, Director of Mather Hall; B.A. Vermont, 1950; M.A. New York University, 1956; Formerly with the Riverdale Country School, New York City. Appointed to the administration in 1960; Kappa Phi Kappa. (1)
(3) KENNETH COOLIDGE PARKER (Right), Director of Public Relations; A.B. Middlebury, 1931; M.A. Columbia, 1936; Formerly a member of the faculty and administration of the Taft School, Watertown, Connecticut; Appointed to the administration in 1955; Pi Delta Epsilon. ROBERT MALCOLM SALTER (Left), Assistant Director of Public Relations; B.S. University of Rhode Island, 1958; M.S. Boston University, 1960; Appointed to the administration in 1960.
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Left to right : Wright, Ives, Clarke, Tincovich, Schatz, Eisenlohr, Engley, Seibel.
DONALD BROWN ENGLEY, Librarian and Librarian of the _Watkinson Library; B.A. Amherst, 1939; B.L.S. Columbia, 1941; M.A. Chicago, 1947; M.A. Amherst, 1959; Librarian, Norwich University, 1947-1949; Appointed to the library staff in 1949; Pi Gamma Mu. MARIAN G. M. CLARKE, Chief of Readers' Services and Curator of the Watkinson Library; A.B., A.B.L.S. Michigan, 1932, 1933; Appointed to the library staff in 1955. EUGEN BIGELOW EISENLOHR, Reference Librarian; B.A. Bard College - Columbia University, 1934; B.L.S. Pratt Institute, 1949; Formerly principal reference librarian, Newark Public Library, Newark, New Jersey; Appointed to the library staff in 1959. LAURA BLINN SCHATZ, Order Librarian; Appointed to the library staff in 1922.
ELIZABETH N. IVES, Catalogue Librarian; B.S. Elmira College, 1926; B.L.S. Columbia, 1927; Formerly Assistant Librarian, Elmira College; Appointed to the library staff in 1950. MARGARET ALICE WRIGHT, Associate Catalogue Librarian; B.A. Connecticut, 1948; M.S.L.S. Columbia, 1954; Formerly Reference Librarian, General Theological Seminary, New York; Appointed to the library staff in 1957. ADOLF JOSEPH SEIBEL, Serials Librarian ; M.A. University of .Lvov (Poland), 1939; Instructor of German Language at Lvov, 1940; Formerly with the Tolstoy Foundation, Munich, Germany; Appointed to the library staff in 1959. MARY ELIZABETH TINCOVICH, Watkinson Catalogue Librarian; B.A. American International, 1939; B.S. Simmons, 1948; Formerly Librarian, Western Psychiatric Institute and Clinic; Appointed to the library staff in 1962.
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Greek Letter Clubs
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Alpha Chi Rho
Mother ship SS Crow, anchored temporarily in the projected North Campus quad, is a stepping stone for the future rocks of the Navy Officer Candidate School. Food cooked in the galley is the ship's mess, and his Harley is cleaner than his pots . This same cook, a peculiar cross between Henry VIII and Elvis Presley, whipped the cream of the Crows into shape for their cup
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winning rendition of "Earth Angel" at the 1-F. C. Sing. She-boom, she-boom, la - te - de - da - te - de - da - te - de da; she-boom, ~he-boom . Kneeling, left to right : Woodworth, Romford, Oulundson, Chaplin, Ellwood, Garson, O'Neil. First Row, left to right : Richardson, Post, Pitcairn, Ashworth, Fraser, Sherin, Daley, Hill,
Lundbourg, DePetris. Second Row, left to right: Mcintire, Bordogna, Graybill, Kraut, Arterton, Parsons, Lenichek, Upoff, Winner, Guiliano, Calabrese. Third Row, left to right: Lodge, Henry, Jay, Haskins. Fourth Row, left to right : Fenrich, Martire, Cone, Williams, Potterveld, Leonard, Deschamps, Kadlic, Steele, Benjamin, Meyer, Rimer, Parsons, Niles.
Alpha Delta Phi
The mid-nineteenth century saw the rise of several great intellectual movements; their exponents were Marx, Darwin, and Wagner. Alpha Delta Phi, also a product of the zeitgeist of that age, has tried to maintain this tradition in its fine collection of wall-to-wall Reader's Digest and leather bound printer's edition (with concordance) of the Classic Comic Series, all of which can be found housed in the library of
their neo-Ogilby chapter house. As indicative of the broad basis found in their search for the profundities and truths of the world, the brothers exhibit an avid interest in fields ranging from baseball to Southern Railways, football to Existentialism, lacrosse to Dada.
Galvin, McCann, Field, Raff, Brainerd, Hoerr, Schilpp, Daley, Barnard, Monahan, Stone, Waggett, Neulander, Fiordalis, Markovitch, Ladewig, Tyndall, Oldershaw, Marmesh, Schaeffer, Hopkins, Smith, Kelly, Anderson, Brewster, Rianhard, Feirstein, Malm. Second Row, left to right: Robinson, Farrington.
First Row, left to right: Leinbach, Notman, Shenk, Keen, Barker, Chandor,
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Delta Kappa Epsilon
Desciples of Isadora Duncan, Peter V. D. Fish, Life Buoy, and Oscar Wilde, the paisleyed Dekes come and go Talking .of Michaelangelo. Among their many accoutrements the group sports a back right parlor, back left parlor, carmel drawing saloon, subterranian cuisine, and several dumb waiters. Outside winged termites fly about a pri-
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mary hued, stained glass night light while their wingless cousins dance with the silverfish inside. But Deke is possibly the only frat minus a pool tableathletics are such a bore. First Row, left to right: Murdock, Blume, Anderson, Graham. Second Row, left to right: Blair, Robinson,
Davison, Scott, Brittain, Baum, Barnard. ThirdRow , lefttoright: Thomas, Perron, Barnes, Bancroft, Griffin. Fourth Row, left to right: Mackie, Stribling, Pierce, Dunn, Lee, Lindert. Fifth Row, left to right : Smith, Rohman, Perrow, Rowan, Jones,. Haemmerli.
Delta Phi
Located at the bottom of Vernon Street, this picturesque, Neo-Gothic manse attracts all types. Next door, to accommodate the adhesive brotherhood, a fine example of perpendicular, asphalt-shingle, Industrial tenement has been allowed to remain standing by the Greater Hartford Urban Renewal Commission. St. Elmo's, with its signal traditions, attempts to uphold the finer
social graces maintained in its frat houses across the country. Originally instituted as a dining club, the brothers still enjoy genuine paper napkins and sticky oak tables. First Row, left to right: Stier, Nygard, Files, McGill, Marcuss, Roberts, Goodridge, Coxhead, Chang, Westney, Brown, Hoff, Schwennesen. Second
Row, left to right: Levine, Ehrhardt, Twerdahl, Storms, Tousey, Beckett, Bailey, Jewett. Third Row, left to right: Kirk, Thoren, Roncaio!i, Bernstein, Curren. Fourth Row, left to right: Sprague, Lambert, Taylor, Chew. Fifth Row, left to right: Beck, Kirkpatrick, Dols, Ewing, Huntoon.
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Phi Kappa Psi
Phi Psi, the only house on campus to have the honor of a personal invitation to Dick Clark's American Bandstand, abides in a charming, new Hunter Green and Cardinal Red social facility. This individual, varied clot congealed around the purcha~e of the only known replica of the Mather Hall Stu U juke box. Last summer workmen engaged in the demolition of the old Phi Psi house unearthed their three
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successful entries in the annual Trinity Phi Bete competition. Numbered among their many contributions to Trinity College life. First Row, left to right: Koretz, Palmer, Faxon, Campbell, Howard, Emery, Densen, Bylin. Second Row, left to right: Dearington, Bowen, Laselle, Crane, Moore, Powell, Hurwitz, Abrams, Stroud, Coryell, Herdeen,
Stansfield, Conover. Third Row, left to right: Sevin, Boultbee, Candee, Wadlow, Kadyk, Brown, Galvin, Roth , Morisse, Kardon, Berkowitz. Fourth Row, left to right: McNeil, Roosevelt, Brackett, Jenkins. Fifth Row, left to right: McLagen, Wiltsek, Stevens, Shortell. Sixth Row, left to right: Brasfield , Hussey, Rosenfeld, Towle.
Pi Kappa Alpha
Marble fireplaces and retmng demeanors mark this fraternity's Southern origin. Although comparatively unknown in this part of the country, the brothers have made several concrete contributions to the Trinity Community-maintainance of academic excellence (facilitated by stringent study habits imposed by their heriarchy and rewarded, until the foundation of a newer fraternal organization more dedicated in academic pursuits, with
the I. F. C. cup); maintnance of firefighting facilities to avert the Caprices of less astute college fellows; and a collection of brightly colored banners to imbue the whole college with the flame of patriotism. First Row, left to right: James, Geeter, Richardson. Second Row, left to right:
Carruth, Wallace, Jones, Wetzel, Fletcher, Washburn, Haarstick, Winfield, Perreault, Ostapko, Yonov, Robertson.
Third Row, left to right: McGurkin, Smith, Rubel, Katz, Schaltegger, Rogow, Hallowell. Fourth Row, left to right: Phelps, Grossman, Jervey, Mather, Woodcock. Fifth Row, left to right: Tetro, Moor, Bauseg, Baran, Osowecki. Sixth Row, left to right: Stevens, Wadsworth, Duennebier, Casadei, Coulson, Orr. Seventh Row, left to right: Moeling, Henry, Coale, Cargill, Born.
two hundred nineteen
Psi Upsilon
Another year has passed and Psi Upsilon has maintained its homogeneity despite the absence there of traditional and mystical "brotherhood." Excluded on the southern side of Vernon Street in a pseudo-Georgian lodge (of the variety which would make
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the venerable Palladia puke) , the bevested P. D.'s once again succumbed enjoyably into the bonds of unctified Heffnerian comraderie. First Row, left to right : Twining, Clement, Pitman, Williams, Wicks,
McGlennon, Hemphill, Crosby, Gaines, Dunkle, Stiasni. Second Row, left to right : Parlin, Mott, Snedicker, Rorer, Brigham, Niles, Minot, Shields. Third Row, left to right: Scull, Dewey, Haskell, Moyer, Mciver, Clark, Roberts. Brinkerhoff.
Q. E. D.
Idealistically founded in 1959 as a nonfraternity, this fraternity tries to eliminate racial bias in its pledging, but its members are exclusively four-eyed (if not needed, at least for the image) and book grinds. Houseless, the club eats occasionally in the basement of Cook where they also party on big fraternity weekends. "That which is proven" can
only be taken optimistically, then, for geometry is a lot easier than the prol5lem or "social comraderie" for this group. First Row, left to right: Morris, Kirby,
Krietman, Gold, Bobruff, Bowie, Pastore, Bard, Yeaton, Burfiend. Second Row, left to right: Trickett, Kinsler,
Creys, Carlson, Liebowitz, Holroyd, Cotta, Ahlgren, Basch, Rosenthal, Burr, Chapin, McCutcheon, Shilton. Third Row, left to right: Bloomstein, Pavlich, Sweet, Lipitt, Gann, Bosch, Kelsey, Jarman, Barber, Gardner, DeMone, Churchman.
two hundred twenty one
Saint Anthony Hall
Although Delta Psi's official college address is Summit Street, the college's officials have seen fit to grant the brotherhood squatting rights on Vernon Street-semi-officially Fraternity Row. Officially a college dormitory, Ogilby Hall provides boarding facilities for the brothers and a base for their operations in the sanctified surroundings of Vernon Street. The brothers, however, under the leadership of their anonymous officials, retreat back to
two hundred twenty two
Summit Street to relive in all its religious and orgiastic splendor the Temptations of St. Anthony-a feat accomplished in the ethereal regions of that quaint building affectionately designated "Hall." First Row, left to right : Jacobs, Perkins, White. Second Row, left to right : Petersen, Whitney, Perkins, Todd, Kane, Gooden, Stowell. Third Row, left to right: Bond, Pyle, Craig, Wood,
Miller, Pope. Fourth Row, left to right: McElwain, Hance, Gilson, Marvel, Howland. Fifth Row, left to right : Wallis, Millar, Zimmerman, Anning, McClennahan. Sixth Row, left to right: Schumacher, Bishop, McKune, Auchincloss, Morgan. Seventh Row, left to right: Pettus, Avery, Crawford, Corbin. Eighth Row, left to right: Francis, Borden, Freeman, Haring. Ninth Row, left to right: Lynch, Swander, Baker.
Sigma Nu
This well mottled assemblage represents the idee fixe of "The Fraternity at Trinity"-diversification and individuality. Its membership has attained such prowess in this area that those age-old ideals of fraternity have fallen into the same state of dilapidation as Sigma Nu's crumbling yet proud domicile. Its brothers are proud of the pro-
gresslVlty they have exhibited and firmly believe that neighboring houses should follow suit thus proving beyond any reasonable doubt the benefits which are to be reaped- from fraternalism.
Carrad. Second Row, left to right: Auerbach, Shea, Gordon, Halloran, Josephson, Burger, Sinicrope, Moroze. Third Row, left to right: Johnson, Golann, Loi, Mitchell, Camp, Blocksidge, Doorley, Meech, Ulbrich, Silver, Boyle, Thomases, Leghorn, Saklad.
First Row, left to right: Pabich, McQuaid, Grinch, Arms, Finley, Hooker,
two hundred twenty three
Theta Xi
As one more of this years civic projects, Theta Xi established the Mother Chapter of the National Antimacassar League. This League suffered a temporary retardation in its humane endeavors when the extensive collection of fine and elaborately embroidered tidies, crocheted . and exhibited by the brothers on their Radio-modem and early Woolworth furniture, was lost to fire. Because plans for their new lodge, a darling showcase designed in the rec-
two hundred twenty four
tilinear perfection of pastel cinder block, met the hearty approval of our Trustees, that astute body advanced funds necessary for its accomplishment as well as the services of the Artiste, Brother Pappas, who rendered the South Fac;:ade, complete with draw bridge over sunken patio. Seated, left to right: M. Campbell, Cooper, Davison, Molinsky, Fish, Jenkins, de Vou, Klotz, Reynolds,
MacDougall, Galaty, Bralove. Second Row, left to right: Miller, Clark, Deutsch, Sotter, White, Mason, Hevner, Kolb, Sturrock, Burnham, O'Neil, Steel, Weaver, Voorhees, A. Campbell, Meek, Jansen, Fairfield. Third Row, left to right : Losse, Dunlop, Stanley, Smith, Plass, Spencer, Spitzer, Wells, Bragdon, Pearson, Levy, Peckham, Kent, Waterhouse, Waxman, Makin.
Brownell Club
Newly housed in a charming white colonial reproduction and finally reaching their ideal of a house on "fraternity row," Brownell collects the local color and their book bags. Their new location (reached after the old brown Brownell Club was torn out from under
them for the Math-Physics building) provides the group with a chance to identify with the Greek letter groups. Front Row, left to right: Woolfson, Parlee, Hallin, Adams, Moore, Burinskas, Flynn, Case. Second Row, left to
right: Wenger, Harrison, Ratches, Kroll. Third Row, left to fight: Adelstein, Formeister, Price, Gould, Miller, Feingold. Fourth Row, left to right: DePietro, Friedman, Langlois, Querido, Lowenthal, Nielsen, Hornfischer.
two hundred twenty five
Interfraternity Council
This organization is staffed by one representative from each fraternity. The purposes of the Council are to govern rushing in all its phases, to
two hundred twenty six
promote amicable interfraternity relations, and to guard the fraternity system against destruction.
Kneeling, left to right: Kane, Stribling, Ahlgren, Tousey. Standing, left to right: Haskell, McQuaid, Perreault, Keen, Karson, Calabrese.
And with the big "frat" weekends comes release from Trinity's taxing curricular programs. Some doors are opened wide; others are shut and private. Some bands play twist-rock 'n roll sounds; some try jazz. Booze is the common denominator combined with a street length frenzy to do more, get more, and see more until the ending of exhaustion.
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two hundred twenty nine
And if bells we are and ring we must, ring loud, Trinity Man.
Soft ringing is not heard, and there is confidence in loud ringing and a certq in thoughtlessness.
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HARTFORD -
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Monday thru Friday, 5 to 11 p.m. Saturday and Sunday, All day to 10 p.m. Arborists for Trinity College ONE DAY SERVICE ON SHIRTS AND DRY CLEANING
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BLAIKIE MILLER & HINES, COLLEGE VIEW TAVERN Over the Rocks
INC. Food service management and consultants
where the Men of Trinity meet for the finest draught beer and sandwiches in town
with offices in NEW YORK 22, N. Y. 527 Madison Ave.
TEmpleton 8-5440
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RE 5-1506 HARTFORD, CONN.
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968 Farmington Ave.
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L. L. ENSWORTH
& SON, INC.
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Steel Distributors at BROAD STREET & MAPLE AVENUE 270 LOCUST STREET We feature delicious sandwiches HARTFORD 14, CONNECTICUT
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and CONTRACTORS
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ASSOCIATION
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•
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•
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fine clothing and furnishings for men
the stereo shop, inc.
227 ASYLUM STREET • HARTFORD, CONN. 102 ASYLUM ST., HARTFORD 3, CONNECTICUT
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Compliments to THE Cl 路ASS OF 1963
from the
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Telephone : 236-2501
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e
CATERING
WETHERSFIELD, CONNECTICUT
Just over the Rocks Open 24 Hours a Day
243 ZION STREET
HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT
NATIONAL TYPEWRITER CO., INC. MIRAMAR
DINER
OlYMPIA TYPEWRITER DEALER
Sales - Rentals - Repairs on all makes of
Breakfasts, Luncheons, Dinners, Sandwiches
Typewriters, Duplicators, Adding Machines and Checkwriters BERLIN TURNPIKE -
NEWINGTON
Duplicators and Office Supplies Just a Few Minutes from Trinity
Special Rental Rates to Students 247 ASYLUM STREET
527-1115
PARK PLUMBING SUPPLY CO., INC.
HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT
OF CONNECTICUT. INC. First in Motor Bus and Charter Service
Wholesalers
•
Distributors
For the Foremost in . . . SERVICE
Plumbing, Heating and Oil Burner Supplies 1477 PARK STREET
-
HARTFORD 6, CONNECTICUT
•
COURTESY
CHARTER A SHORT
•
RATES
LINE BUS!
Keep Your Group Together in Buses with Reclining Seats Anywhere - Anytime Across The State Or The Nation Bus Trips To Any Historic Area In Connecticut, New England Or N'ew York
Special Consideration Given to School Children FOR CHARTER SERVICE TEL. 289-3651
Telephone: 527-5203
12 JAMES ST.
•
EAST HARTFORD
STANDARD BUILDERS Compliments of
INCORPORATED Genera/ Building Contractors
T-BOWL NEWINGTON, INCORPORATED Duck Pin Lanes
Industrial
•
Institutional BERLIN TURNPIKE at COSTELLO ROAD
55 AIRPORT ROAD
HARTFORD
NEWINGTON, CONNECTICUT
Manager: Fran Garrett- Telephone 666-5651
THE
TOBACCO
SHOP
Complete Smokers' Supplies
Trinity Students' Favorite Barber Shop
TOMMY'S
31 PEARL STREET 105 NEW BRITAIN AVENUE HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT
(near corner of Broad Street)
ROBINSON
t WILLIAMS co.
MOTOR MOTEL BERLIN TURNPIKE
INDUSTRIAL SUPPLIES
(Rts. U.S. 5 & Conn. 15) WETHERSFIElD, CONNECTICUT Phone 529-8226
HEATED SWIMMING POOL
TRINITY
HARTFORD 14, CONNECTICUT
110 AIRPORT ROAD
Phone 522-7211
62 DELUXE UNITS
BARBER
SHOP
WE SPECIALIZE IN COllEGIATE HAIRCUTS
THE================ WADHAMS & MAY
===============CO. BUILDERS
"Across the Rocks" 15 lewis Street 209 ZION STREET
THE WASHINGTON DINER
HARTFORD 3, CONNECTICUT
THE 1963 GRADUATES
175 WASHINGTON STREET
of Good Food . . . Good Service Steaks, Chops, Seafood - Always Quick and Courteous
DElTA KAPPA EPSilON
TRY OUR DINING ROOM FOR THE BEST IN BOTH
extend congratulations to
Plenty of Space and Free Parking Phone 247-6272
their classmates
(Pictures printed here are of the 137th Commencement)
Faculty , Administration and Library 138 119 103 127 65 49 83 196 20 103 71 29 207 70 23 115 209 82 120 208 94 195 211 174 102 65 82 141 102 13 8 196 114 102 65 207 211 211 91 95 83 119 206 23 95 206 81 120 29 179 115 206 121 175 16 211 12 141 195 206 121 175 103 114 71 141 17 19 179 121 120 138 174 208
Anderson, M. G. Andrian, G . W. Bankwitz, P. C. F. Barber, C. H. Battis, R. A. Beach, G. B. Benton, R. P. Berger, P. L. Birnkammer, J. A. Black, R. C. Blakeslee, T. R. Bobko, E. Bridge, F . G . F . Buckley, W. E. Burger, J. W. Butcher, M. V. Butler, J. F. Cameron, K. W. Campo, M. R. Carlson, W. E. Chapman, R. W. Cherbonnier, E. LaB . Clarke, M. Constant, F. W. Cooper, G. B. Curran, W. S. Dando, J. A. Dath, R. A. Davis, E. W. DeLong, H. Denbeaux, F. Dorwart, H. L. Downs, N. Dunn, L. Edwards, J. W. Eisenlohr, E. B. Engley, D. B. Ferguson, C . B. Ferwerda, V. Foulke, R. D. Frese, H. F. Frost, D. L. Galbraith, D. B. Gastmann, A. L. Griffith, J. E. Gwynn, F. L. Hansen, C. V. Herren, J. K. Herschberger, A. C. Hoffman, S. P. Holland, A. J. Hook, D. D. Howard, A. J. Hughes, A. H. Ives, E. N. Jacobs, A. C. Jesse, D. E. Johnson, W. A. Kelsey, D. H .. Kerson, A: L. Kingsbury, R. F. Kintner, P. L. Klimczak, W. J. Kraft, W. E. Kurth, K. Lacy, 0. W. LaMar, J. F. Langhorne, M. C. Lanius, E. W. Leavitt, W. D. Lee, R. T. Lindsay, R. Lundborg, F . L.
70 Mackimmie, A. A. 209 Mason, J. A. 195 Mauch, T . M. 196 McArthur, R K. 81 McNulty, J. B. 142 McPhee, C . H. 142 McWilliams, C. J. 179 Meade, R. D. 138 Means, B. W. 94 Mentzer, T. C. 49 Merriman, A. 206 Messer, H. W. 95 Meyer, P. W. 175 Miller, C. 路 83 Minot, S. 70 Morris, R. K. 207 Muir, W. H. 119 Naylor, L. H. 95 Neaverson, R. C. 82 Nichols, G. E. 49 Notopoulos, J. A. 71 Nye, E. P. 18 Olney, R. B. 141 Oosting, R. 91 Pappas, M. N. 210 Parker, K. C. 115 Poliferno, M. J. 83 Potter, J. L. 20 Regan, J. F. 71 Reinhart, A. R. 82 Risdon, D. B. 207 Robertson, J. K. 95 Salomon, L. I. 115 Salsburg, D. S. 210 Salter, R. M. 71 Sapega, A. E. 211 Schatz, L. 64 Scheuch, R. 206 Schilling, J. 211 Seibel, A. 142 Shults, R. 142 Slaughter, R. 196 Sleeper, C. F. 28 Sme1lie, R. H. 83 Smith, P. 28 路 Smith, S. B. 209 Smith, T. A. 71 Smith, W. R. 29 Snipes, R. F. 114 Stewart, R. F. 121 Stires, L. R. 91 Taylor, J. C. E. 210 Thomas, J. M. 102 Thompson, D. G. B. 211 Tincovich, M. E. 208 Tinsley, D. P. 210 Tomat, L. R. 64 Towle, L. W. 64 Tucker, R. W. 23 Van Stone, J. M. 103 Vinogradoff, I. 16 Vogel, R. M. 206 Voorhees, S. P. 209 Walker, N. A. 120 Waterman, R. P. 127 Watters, C. E. 102 Weaver, G. 115 Whittlesey, E. F. 65 Wightman, J. W. 103 Willey, T. E. 路 81 Williams, R. M. 21"1 Wright, M. A.
Seniors 180 Adams, C. B.
122 Aldrich, K. D. 73 Alvord, J. M . . 180 Anastasio, E. J. 66 Anderson, )3. D. 84 Anning, R. D. R 66 Ashworth, F. L. 66 Bailey, J. K. 104 Baum, R. L. 172 Berger, T. R. 139 Berkholtz, B. L. 24 Berman, E. L. 24 Bernstein, I. D .. 104 Bernstein, R. P. 104 Blair, J. F. 116 Blume, M. E. 66 Bond, R. E. 197 Booth, R. B. 24 Bordogna, R. P. 139 Brackett, D. C. 66 Brewster, · D.· C. 84 Brittain, R. C. 180 Brooks, B. B. 180 Brown, B. K. 24 Burger, R. L. 66 Burinskas, W. G. 116 Bylin, R. E. 73 Calabrese, T. E. 84 Campbell, W. L. 197 Carruth, C. U. 67 Casey, E. G. 50 Chang, R. S. 104 Childs, N. L. 24 Chirgwin, L. G. 139 Clark, J. D. 84 Coes, R. P. 84 Coffman, R. J. 67 Corbin, H. K. 122 Correll, P. W. 104 Cotta, D. D. 197 Coxhead, S. D. 116 Craig, G. D. 92 Creighton, G. A': 92 Crowley, J. C. . 104 Daly, M. J. 172 Davison, J. L. 84 Dawson, L. L. 67 Densen, P. M. 116 Dickson, R. K. 116 Dietrich, C. H. 116 Orate, R. A. 92 Dunkle, P. L. 84 Dunn, M. 67 Ebersold, R. S. 104 Elwell, A. C. 104 Emery, R. B. 105 Emsley, H. A. 105 ;Farrington, S. 105 Paxon, A. A. 105 Feshler, W. V. 85 Field, R. D. 127 Piles, W. C. 117 Fitzgerald, J. W. 24 Fletcher, K. S. 25 "Flyrt,n, T. E . . 180 Poster, S. C. 105 Fox, G. W. 197 Fraser, T. E. 25 Friedman, F. P. 25 Gaines, J. E. 105 Gardner, R. W. 105 Giorgio, P. A. 31 Gold, R. F. 122 Gooden, H. R. 106 Goodridge, J. C. 67 Graham, M. S. 73 Haarstick, S. H. 117 Haddad, G. F. B. 96 Haemmerli, A. R. 67 Hallin, W. P. 106 Halloran, T. C. 122 Hannigan, P. T. 106 Harris, H. B. 68 Haskell, P. T.
Hebel, J. R. Hersey, D. R. Hill, E. B. Hill, M. E. Hoerr, S. 0. 50 Holroyd, D. D. 68 Howard, J. B. 172 Howland, w. c. 68 Hutch, R. H. 85 Johns, C. W. 172 Johnson, C. C. 31 Johnson, T. W. 85 Jones, S. P. 68 Jones, W. A. 10() Kane, P. T. 10() Karson; E. H. 68 Keep, V. F. 198 Kent, J. A. 94 Keoll, R. L. 106 Kirk, R. G. 107 Kni~ely, W. G. 107 Knox; T. R. 117 Kollett, F. W. 180 Kraut, R. C. 25 Kriteman, J. S. 180 LaMotte, R. H. 107· Lamphear, J. E. 181 Landerman, P. 0. 127 Langlykke, P. P. 68 LeBus, L. M. 107 Leinbach, M. S. 107 Lenicheck, T. F. 86 Lewis, A. B. 96 Linberg, W. L. 25 Lippitt, A. B. 25' Lundborg, C. B. 68 Ma:r.:.cuss, S. J. 122 Marshall, T. C. 107 Marvel, H. M. 107 Masius, M. B. 26 Mattison, J. R. 108 Maude, H. 31 McGord, T. G. 86 McCormick, D. E; 123 McCutcheon, B. D. 123 McElwain, R. M. 1 I 7 MeG awn, M. M. 107 McGill, C. H. 108 McGlennon, R. D. 172 Miller, A. R. ·· 26 Miller, ~· E. 86 Milus, P. R. 86 Minitle, C. J. 123 Molinsky, S. J. 69 Moore, D. T. 139 ·Moore, R. J. 10 .Moyer, L. L. 92 M1Jtdor;k~ R. M. 198 .N~ulander, F. J. 86 ]'liles, w. F. 123 Nygard, R. C. 26 Odium, B. H. 73 Ostapko, D. L. 69 O'SUllivan, T. C. .26 Paflee, R. H. 69 I?erreault, S. L. 108 Perrin, R. D. 86 Perron, L. A. 123 Perrow, A. 108 Pitcairn, J. H: 108 Pitman, L. C. 31 Pleva, M. A. 69 Pope, R. J. 87 Post, D. M. 94 Quarrier, S. S. 198 Raff, E. H. 108 Raymond, D. A. 109 Reese, W. W. 173 Repetto, S. 109 Reynolds, L. L. 85 85 106 85 197
69 Re)'nol~, S. W. 181 Rianhard, P. D.
109 Richardson, J. M. 181 Richardson, W. H. 109 Ricketts, R.
109 26 117 94 73 69 109 73 87 181 181 109 92 173 74 87 87 109 139 69 181 92 96 26 173
Robertson, L. G. Romanos, D. R. Rubel, R. B. Rudis, A. W. St. Clair, J. D. Schulenberg, M. A. Scull, T. W. Shenk, W. Sherin, P. M. Smith, T. H. Southworth, K. A. Spitzer, R. C. Stier, C. T. Stribling; G. C. Szumczyk, J. A. Talbot, W. R. Talley, M. K. Taylor, D. F. Thomas, H. W. Tozer, W. J. Trickett, E. J. Tuttle, R. D. Tyndall, R. R. Ulbrich, R. W. van der Schroeff, C.
110 Vickery, H. K. 74 Viering, W. G.
92 110 27 96 31 123 181 27 31 96 87 198 110 110
181 27 198 74 110 87 173 27
von Starck, P. F. Waggett, J. S. Wagner, T. A. Wardlaw, J. W. Washburne, S. S. Watson, J. D. Watt, R. T. Webster, D. H. Wetzel, K. A. Wheelock, R. W. White, N. B. Whitehill, J. D. Whitney, H. C. Wicks, D. 0. Winer, G. A. Winner, S. D. Wright, R. W. Wright, T. A. Yeaton, S. H. Yocom, S. A. Yonov, C. Zachariasewycz, I.
Undergraduate Organizations 21 88 20 98 52 128
Air Force ROTC Rifle Team Archive Arnold Air Society Atheneum Society Campus Chest Carilloneurs 53 ·Cerberus 130 Chamber Players 134 Chanticleel.'s 205 Chapel• Cabinet 129 Chapel Choir 164 Cheerleaders 199 CODE 163 Corinthian Yacht Club 200 Crucifers 124 Delta Phi Alpha 101 Economics Club 137 Folksingers 55 Freshman Executive Council 131 Glee Club 201 Hillel Foundation 226 Interfraternity Council 61 Internatidnal Student Organization 172 Intramural Board 59 IVY 89 Jesters 57 Junior Advisors
125 56 58 202 54
Le Cercle Fran9ais Mather Hall Board of Governors Medusa Newman Club Nihil Academia Ill Pi Gamma Mu 132 Pipes 133 Pipes and Drtl,l:llS 113 Phi Beta Kappa 140 Philosophy Club 97 Political Science Club 182 Psi Chi 90 Review 60 Senate 203 Senior Lay Readers 118 The Set 178 Sigma Pi Sigma 126 Spanish Club 173 Sports 135 Travelers 136 Trinadads 62 Tl'ipod 204 ·VestrY· 112 ·Who's Who in American Colleges and Universities 63 WRTC-FM 99 Young Democratic Club 100 Young Republicans
Greek Letter Clubs 214 215 225 216 217 218
Alpha Chi Rho Alpha Delta Phi Brownell Club Delta Kappa Epsilon Delta Phi Phi Kappa Psi
219 Pi Kappa Alpha 220 Psi Upsilon 221 Q.E.D. . 222 St..• Anthon,y Hall 223 Sigma Nu · ' 224 Theta Xi
Sports 152 161 146 159 155 155 162 156 148 144 158 154 149 157
Baseball (Varsity) Baseball (Freshman) Basketball (Varsity) Basketball (Freshman) Crew (Varsity) Crew (Junior VarsitY) Crew (Freshman) . Cross Country Fencing Football (Varsity) Football (Freshman) Golf Hockey Lacrosse (Varsity)
161 Lacrosse (Freshman) 151 Northam Towers Lawn Croquet Association, Ltd. 143 Soccer . (Varsity) 158 Soccer (Freshman) 147 Squash (Varsity) 159 Squash (Freshman) 145 Swimming (Varsity) 160 Swimming (Freshman) 150 Tennis (Varsity) 162 Tennis (Freshman) 153 Track (Varsity) 160 Track (Freshman)