Mr. Peter J. Knapp 20 Buena Vista Rd. West Hartford, Conn.
06107
TRINITY REPORTER VOLUME 3 NUMBER 1
TRINITY COLLEGE, HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT
OCTOBER, 1972
THE CLASS OF 1976 Approximately 500 freshmen, the largest class to enter Trinity, reported to the campus Thursday, August 31, for a week of orientation. The class includes 198 women as the College begins its third year of coeducation and its 150th academic year. Last year's freshman class numbered 397 (157 women, 240 men) with an approximate 20% increase in enrollment in the Class of 1976.
The Class of 1976 brings the total enrollment of the College to a new high of 1675. Connecticut supplied the greatest number of freshmen to the class with 133 entering. Massachusetts supplied 83, New York 65, Pennsylvania 63 and New Jersey 38. The remaining students come from 29 states- plus the District of Columbia, England, Germany, Mexico, Nigeria and Puerto Rico.
150th Anniversary October 1, 1972 To All Alumni, Parents, Students, Colleagues and Friends of the College: With the arrival of the Class of 1976 and the first cracking of books last month, Trinity began her 150th year, an anniversary well worth celebrating. The College has come far since those first days in 1823 when the faculty numbered only six and the student body nine. And despite the serious pressures on higher education - and Trinity - which I have discussed on other occasions, I am confident for the College's future. With careful management and strong support, Trinity will continue to thrive, to maintain a fine faculty, and to draw outstanding students. May_ 16, 191-3, is the 150th annivi!rsary pf_jhe signing of the College's - Charter, and several days of celebration are being ptanned for that period. In addition, various events throughout the academic year will be designated as 150th Anniversary Events. The College Seal, which is printed at the top of this issue of the Trinity Reporter, has been redesigned for the anniversary year. This is an occasion to take especial pride in Trinity. We hope you will join with us in the various forms of celebration which will take place this year, and let your loyalty show for a College we feel is growing more graceful with age. It will be a good year. Cordially,
~ Theodore D. Lockwood President
COEDUCATION'72-Senior captain Bob Haff (left) and freshman Ruth Veal (right) lead practice for the upcoming cross-country season. Ms. Veal, a veteran of AAU competition, runs 5-10 miles with the team every day in addition to doubling as the manager (See story, page 16)
RalphS. Emerick Takes Over As Trinity's Head Librarian
90 Choose Foreign Study
Ralph S. Emerick, librarian at Hobart and William Smith Colleges, Geneva, N.Y., has been appointed Head Librarian and College Professor at Trinity, succeeding Donald B. Engley, who has become Associate University Librarian at Yale. A native of Franklin, Ohio, Emerick received a B.A. degree from Xavier University in 1951, an M.A. from the University of Cincinnati in 1953, and an M.L.S. (master of library science) from the University of Michigan in 1956. He was assistant, then associate librarian at Lawrence University, Appleton, Wis., from 1956-64; library director at Stephens College, Columbia, Mo., from 1964-67, and librarian at Hobart and William Smith from 1967 until this year. He is a member of the American Association of University Professors .and the Modern Language Association. His wide range of experience includes acquisition work and cataloguing,
In 16 Different Nations When Trinity College's 1,600 undergraduates started their fall semester classes last month, nearly 90 of them weren't anywhere in sight. They weren't in the country for that matter, but scattered throughout the world, engaged in the fantastic opportunity -called "foreign study." Nationwide, the age of air travel has turned the number of students going abroad each year from a trickle into a river. Tens of thousands, from high schoolers to graduate students, leave the country annually to study abroad. The mass movement appears to have created a minor industry, and college administrations have had to gear up to
accommodate the growing numbers of young men and women who want their perspectives to have a global scale. Records of the International Institute of Education show, for example, that from the period between 1919 and 1955, less than 2,000 undergraduates went abroad for study, while during the single academic year of 19 56-57, more than 1,000 went overseas. In 1965, the State Department handed out passports to some 32,000 people who indicated they were going abroad for educational purposes. For that same year, the Institute of International Education reported nearly 25,000 Americans (see FOREIGN, page 3)
administration, and audio-visual. He was involved in the substantial expansion of the Stephens College • Library and in planning for a new building as well as expanding the staff and collections at Hobart and William Smith.
Page 2
CAMPUS NOTES Dr. DREW A. HYLAND has completed two books, "The Origins of Philosophy" which will be published by Putnam in the fall, and "Plato's 'Charmides' and the Nature of Philosophy" now in manuscript form. Hyland will be on sabbatical during the Trinity term when he will be studying Hegel and Aristotle in preparation for teaching and further research, concentrating on the nature of reason. He plans to study near Lausanne, Switzerland, with several friends who will be on sabbatical from other universities at the same time.
***
"The Gothic Tradition in Nineteenth-Century American Literature: A Symposium in Two Parts," edited by Dr. RICHARD P. BENTON, associate professor of English, recently appeared in the first two issues of "ESQ, A Journal of the American Renaissance," published at Washington State University. Benton has been appointed a member of the , Editorial Board of the "ESQ." He has been for .• some years a member of the Editorial Board of ····"Poe Studies" as well as an editorial consultant for publications of the Modern Languages Association and the "American Quarterly."
***
Dr. MARTIN G. DECKER, associate professor of education, who has been acting chairman of the department this past semester, will be on sabbatical next year. During the year he will be doing research for the Competence Based Teacher Education Program sponsored by the City University of New York, Office of Teacher Education. He will work with a team of research assistants to develop evaluation systems to assess teacher competence in 12 areas of teaching being developed by committees at CUNY, will assist in the field testing of existing materials designed for competence based training of teachers in the . New York City Public Schools and will assist in the development and management of workshops for CUNY faculty members.
***
JUDY DWORIN '70, instructor in dance and coordinator of the modern dance program, spent six weeks studying dance at the Connecticut College American Dance Festival. This was the 25th anniversary of the festival which draws noted dancers and choreographers throughout the country to teach in this special program. Miss Dworin participated in workshops in dance technique and improvisation taught by Shirley Ririe of the Ririe-Woodbury Company and Gay DeLange of the Lucas Hoving Company. Also participating in the festival were Rudy Perez and Gay Taliaferro who gave master classes at Trinity
last year and Raymond Johnson who was artist-in-residence at Trinity for one semester.
***
Dr. HARVEY S. PICKER, assistant professor of physics, was a visiting assistant professor of physics, a full academic position, at the University of Maryland at College Park last summer. His duties included research and the examination of a doctoral thesis. He also contributed a paper to be read at the International Conference on "Few Particle Problems in the Nuclear Interaction," sponsored by the International Union of Pure and Applied Physics at Los Angeles in August.
***
At the June meeting of the Trustees' Executive Committee the reappointment of three department chairmen was announced. Dr. GEORGE B. COOPER, who was appointed Chairman of the History Department in 1964, was reappointed for a period of three years to July 1975. Dr. RICHARD SCHEUCH, who was appointed chairman of the Economics Department in 1967, has also been reappointed for a period of three years to July 1975. Dr. WALTER J. KLIMCZAK, who has served as chairman of the Mathematics Department since 1967, was reappointed for a one-year term to July 1973.
***
JOHN L. HEYL '66, alumni secretary, and LEWIS J. GOVERNMAN '68, assistant registrar, will enter the Master of Science in Management Program at R.P.I. (Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute) in Hartford beginning in September. They hope to gain a better understanding of business technics which can be applied to management of colleges .
***
President LOCKWOOD has announced the following administrative appointments effective September 1, 1972: Miss ELISABETH BELDEN, Administrative Assistant, President's Office; Miss MARGARET COLLINS, Assistant Director of Personnel ; Mrs. AGATHA GALLO, Administrative Assistant, Development Office; Mrs. ANN W. GRIEVE, Administrative Assistant, Treasurer's Office; Mrs. CAROLE M. LAWSON, Administrative Assistant to the Dean of the Faculty (includes Graduate and Summer Studies) and Mrs. AMELIA SILVESTRI, Assistant Director, News Bureau.
***
HARRY 0. BARTLETT, who has served as Assistant to the President since 196 8, has been named Director of Administrative Services. His duties include personnel and labor relations, staff housing, space coordination, parents association, coordination of information on Federal programs and affirmative action.
RUB-A-DUB-DUB - It wasn't Washington crossing the Delaware, but Athanson crossing the Connecticut. His craft pulled by four Trinity oarsmen, Hartford Mayor George A. Athanson "invaded" East Hartford Sept. 12 to protest legislative action which moved the city's boundary from the eastern shore to the middle of the river. Wearing a tricorne and cape, and carrying Hartford's new gold flag, the mayor pledged the city "would not be sold down the river." Trinity oarsmen were Dave Brown '73, Rick Ricci '73, Charlie Pitnam '74, and Tom Martin '75. A corps of pressmen followed the mayor's antic voyage in two boats provided by the Trinity crew.
William Conklin, left, of the Distribution Committee of the Hartford Foundation for Public Giving, discusses terms of new Foundation grant with Robin Wassersug, Director of Financial Aid, and President Lockwood. Grant will support financial aid program for transfer students.
Foundation Grant Provides Aid For Transfer Students The Hartford Foundation for Public Giving has granted $60,000 to Trinity to support an innovative scholarship program for area transfer students. Students who have completed two years at a state community college in Connecticut, or a junior college in the Greater Hartford area, and who are in financial need, would be eligible for the scholarships to attend Trinity for their junior and senior years. As an additional stipulation, the students must be residents of the 22 nearby towns in the area served by the Hartford Foundation. The Foundation grant, being made available from the Howard Hunt Garmany Trust, will be distributed over a 30-month period, beginning with $5 ,000 for the spring semester of this academic year, with $25,000 and $30,000 distributed over the next two academic years respectively. In his will, Mr. Garmany, who never attended Trinity, asked the Foundation to consider periodically the needs of the college. This is the second time in three years that the Foundation and Trinity have combined to initiate a community service program. In 1969 the Foundation awarded the College $52,772 to establish an Office of Community Affairs and initiate programs matching College resources to meeting community needs. The costs of the Community Affairs office are now borne by the College. At the end of the 1973-74 academic year, Trinity expects to support the community college scholarship program from its own resources. According to President Lockwood, "The Hartford Foundation grant will initiate an important new part of Trinity's program of financial aid which will make it possible for more students from the Hartford area to transfer to Trinity and complete their college
education." And he said, "With 42% of all students in this country now attending two-year institutions we are persuaded that four-year colleges must provide greater opportunity for transfer." Some 35 to 50 transfer students are expected to be assisted during the grant period. Lockwood explained that since the bulk of Trinity's financial aid is committed to students who began as Freshmen, "there has in the past been little or no financial help available for promising students who transfer to Trinity as Juniors. The College is grateful to the Foundation for helping this program get started."
TRINITY REPORTER October 1972
Vol. 3 No.1
Issued nine times a year in October, November , Decemb e r , January, February , March, April, May, and June. Published by the Office of Public Information, Trinity College, Hartford, Conn . 06106. Second class postage paid at Hartford, Connecticut. The R E PORTER is m~lect to a! umni, parents, faculty , staff and fri ends of Trinity. Copies are available to students. There is no charge. Letters for publication must be no longer than 200 words and signed. The pr i nting of any letter is at the discretion of the Editor and may be edited fe~r brevity, not substance. Editor , L. Barton Wilson '37 ; Associate Editor, Alfred C. Burfeind '64; Assistant Editor, Milli Silvestri; Sports Information, Richard J. Mazzuto '71 ; Photographer, David R. Lowe; Alumni Secretary, John L. Hey! '66 .
Page 3
Student Activities In 'Renaissance' The use of College facilities last year declined slightly from 1970-71 - with 2,608 events held, down from 2,651 - but greater staff support was required as the events became more complex, according to a report by Del A. Shilkret, dean for student services. Shilkret noted an increase in requests for meeting and lecture space, and a decrease in the number of requests for space for rehearsals, interviews, tutoring and recruiting. More dances and fewer cultural events were held, Shilkret observed. Last year was "a renaissance year for student activities," Shilkret reported. " Many nearly defunct groups found a new burst of energy and new special interest groups were born regularly. Students returned to nonrelevant but fun activities like sock hops and mixers and the year had a busy social calendar of near-weekly dances, concerts and parties. The Women's Organization and the Trinity Coalition of Blacks had special weeks for a variety of events and other organizations sponsored numerous lectures and discussions."
Foreign (from page 1)
registered in some institution of higher learning outside of the United States. At Trinity, the number of students who went abroad 20 years ago-and even a decade ago- was not large enough to warrant keeping separate records. Vice President Thomas A. Smith recalls that in the 1950's, "about a handful" of Trinity men went abroad, on what he called an "informal basis." In the early '60's, the number grew to about 10 or 12, he said. By the late '60's, foreign study was in full swing nationwide, and Trinity experienced a similar surge in interest. In 1969-70, there were 15 students abroad. In 1970-71 , the number dropped to nine. But in 1971-72, the year just ended, there were 60 Trinity students abroad. For the current academic year, there will be 89, studying in 16 foreign lands. Forty-one of them will be in Rome, studying for a semester at Trinity's Rome Campus, under the direction of Professor Michael Campo, chairman of the Department of Modern Languages and Literatures. The Trinity College/Rome Campus was started last year as a summer program and, like foreign travel in general, has grown in popularity. Besides the 41 Trinity students, 10 students from other colleges will be studying at the Rome Campus. The other 48 Trinity students will be in England, France, Israel, Hong Kong, Spain, Greece, Germany, Italy (in programs other than Trinity/Rome), India, Belgium, Uganda, Scotland, Austria, Ethiopia, Switzerland, and the Philippines. Interviews with a few of the students gives some insight into what foreign study can mean, and the variety of reasons that there are for going abroad. Christopher Merrow, of West Hartford, is attending the Rome Campus. Merrow, 20, and a Trinity junior, says he felt that after two years at the College, he "just had to get out," to avoid "falling into a rut." He feels he needs a "radical change . in my physical environment," but doesn' t want to "pull up roots and simply leave." He sees the Trinity College/Rome Camp us, "with its loosely structured academic environment accompanied by the simple fact . that it is thousands of miles from the cozy confines of Hartford," as his answer.
1+1
ALUMNI AND FRIENDS at the Kennedy International Airport prior to leaving for two weeks in Russia this past August. Future plans call for a trip to Columbia , South America, and a trip to East Africa , both in February. Interested alumni and parents should contact the Alumni office for details.
But, he adds, he isn't going abroad as a tourist. A tourist , he says, " can only view a country superficially and its people not at all. Going to Europe as a student, on the other hand, enables an individual to gain mo re than just a cursory insight into a way of life different from his own. Exposure to diverse experience affords an individual an excellent opportunity for both intellectual and emotional growth," a kind of growth which is only possible abroad. "One learns through experience," Merrow says, " Or better yet , experience is learning; and I feel that an individual with a real desire to learn should open himself up to as broad a range of experience as possible. This is perhaps the main reason I choose to go to Rome ." Carla Johnson, 20, of Andover, Mass., is in Nantes, France, to study at the Institute of European Studies Program. She says she has two main reasons for going: "First, I am looking forward to completely immersing myself for five mo nths in the life and culture of France," and second, she wants to become fluent in French. But she also adds that she has "come to the realization that this is the one opportunity of my entire lifetime . I will have to be a student among students in a country other than my own- too potentially rewarding an opportunity, I feel, to be missed." Miss Johnson is staying with a French family , rather than living in a dormitory, because she feels it is the " best way to become familiar with the life style and customs of a foreign country." She also says she is going to Nantes, rather than Paris, because in the smaller city she will " learn more of French life than I would in the more cosmopolitan setting of Paris." Two others also attending the Rome Campus are Gail Burns, 20, of Woburn, Mass ., and Nancy Bruckner, 19, of Thomson, Ill. Miss Burns, a studio arts major, wants to learn Italian, but most of all wants to take advantage of the fact that "Rome is one of the best places to be for studying art history." She adds that her teachers in Rome will more than supplement the instruction she gets in Hartford. Like Merrow, she says that she is "very restless now" and looking forward to a " much-needed change in routine from . .. the regular college scheduling." She also will use Rome as a jumping-off point for travel in other European countries.
Miss Bruckner, a psychology major, says her reasons for applying to the Rome Campus "did not include academic ones," since the U.S. has much better programs in her field . But, she says, the Rome Campus " puts one into a totally new and different culture where you experience ideas and people first-hand." She plans to study and hopes that being a student rather than a tourist "will make the city more min.e, make it mo.re ac_cessible." She, too,will travel in Europe when the program is over. "What this semester offers to me personally," she says, "is travel; knowledge, experience, fun, -and a different point of view. It's a whole new world out there , and as a student, I've been given an 'in' to that world. I hope to take full advantage of it." Experts who have studied the phenomenon of foreign study cite not only these but other reasons for the growing interest in foreign study. In their book, "New Guide to Study Abroad," John Garraty, Walter Adams and Cyril J . H. Taylor note that foreign travel is "a reflection of the times in which we live," with people "far more conscious of the rest of the world than they used to be." They also observe that the " national interest demands that speci_alists be trained who know (foreign) lands, their people and their problems firsthand." Students go abroad, they say, because " every year travel becomes faster and more comfortable ," or an answer to the " thirst for travel and adventure." And they also find some students who "go abroad to try to develop good will for their country and to further their own understanding of other nations." Robbins Winslow, dean for educational services at Trinity, observes a relation between the surge in interest in foreign travel and the fact that Trinity went coeducational in 1969 . He notes that many women who are majoring in art , language or literature would want to take advantage of foreign study, while many of the men, who are majoring in the sciences, would benefit more by remaining in the U.S. 0 f the 89 Trinity students going abroad this coming year, 33 are men and 56 are women. But at any rate, and for whqtever reasons, it appears that foreign study, on a large scale, is here to stay. Or better, here to go.
Dr. Robert Vogel Named Director Of Consortium Dr. Robert M. Vogel, former dean of Trinity College and president of Bradford College , has been named the first executive director of the Greater Hartford Consortium for Higher Education. The appointment is effective immediately . The Consortium, founded this year, is a cooperative educational venture involving Trinity, the University of Hartford, St. Joseph College, Hartford College for Women, and the Hartford Graduate Center of Rensselaer
Vogel
Polytechnic Institute. Dr. Vogel was a faculty member and administrator at Trinity from 1947 to 1967, when he left to become president of Bradford. Dr. Vogel, who served Trinity first as an assistant professor of English, then as director of Evening Studies and Summer Session, as dean of Graduate Studies and finally as dean of the College, earned a reputation as an effective educational administrator. He originated and developed the Trinity "Transition to College" plan 路which permitted selected 11th and 12th graders to work for college credit in some undergraduate courses. The innovation was widely emulated at colleges elsewhere. He developed a program which, in cooperation with several corporations, (see VOGEL, page 4)
Page4
BOOK REVIEW AN ANATOMY OF LITERATURE
Edited by Dr. Paul Smith, Chairman and Professor of English Department, Trinity College and Dr. Robert Foulke, Chairman and Professor, English Department, Skidmore College Harcourt, Brace, Jovanovich, Inc. 1972, 1,125 pages
Reviewed by Dr. Leo Rokas, Associate Professor of English, University of Hartford The publication in 1957 of Northrop Frye' s "Anatomy of Criticism" stunned and still stuns the literary and critical world. In the opinion of some observers Frye's was the most significant or the only significant work of criticism since Aristotle's "Poetics," published some 2300 years earlier. Like Aristotle's work, Frye's was an attempt to organize the possibilities of literature, to suggest certain finite areas within which the infinite human imagination operates, much as music is organized into certain keys within which an infinite number of compositions can be imagined. But there was a brilliantly poetic, somewhat erratic quality about Frye's thought and style that left many readers baffled. Frye generalized vastly and exemplified sketchily, adding, with magnificent humility, "there are many questions of 'where would you put so-and-so?' type that cannot be answered by the present writer." Since 1957 Frye, who is a University Professor of Massey College at the University of Toronto, has published a number of small books, mostly collected lectures, which may be taken as introductions to or applications of his big book, but not directly or fully enough explanations of it. Now two professors and critics, colleagues at Trinity College until Mr. Foulke moved to Skidmore, have done mu~h of the thought and fleshed out much of the system that Frye's "An atom y" left in shimmering uncertainty. Because their work is an anthology for college students they have had to take their stand on literary examples from English and American literatures; in addition they have offered ample introductions and commentary to the four sections of their book, which realize Frye's insights with new and clear explanations and examples. They have centered their attention on Frye's third essay on archetypal myths, and partly on his first essay on historical modes, the two best received sections of Frye's book. (Frye's fourth essay on genres is suggested only in a final "Generic Table of Contents.") Frye implies that however many stories, poems, and plays can be written, they will all range within a circular system of four myths-the romantic, the tragic, the comic, and the ironic - and these comprise the four sections of the present book. It is difficult to explain how respectful the authors have been to Frye and yet how fully free they have felt to amend or simplify his work as they saw fit. Unlike many textbooks, this one gives the impression of an intelligence at work on every page that will report only what can be accepted on its own careful reconsideration. Frye has sometimes said that he feels his systematic criticism is teachable as early as the elementary school. But teachers, even of graduate courses in college, have often been reluctant to mention his work. Still some colleges have made real attempts to introduce
something of his system. At Trinity the undergraduate curriculum, no doubt through the labors of the present authors, has introduced the four myths from Frye; at the University of Hartford the tragic and comic myths have so far been introduced. Now the four myths are presented and available to all. It is to be hoped this splendid new book will be widely used in colleges. Other teachers and general readers who want to inform themselves of the most significant recent advance in criticism will find this book both an agreeable and an edifying introduction to the subject. Readers of this book will come to a new respect for literature and the study of it - not as the academic frill it is sometimes considered, but as the inescapable study of the dimensions of the human imagination.
Vogel (from page 3) enabled Connecticut youths to take summer courses at Trinity in engineering and philosophy of science. He also served on evaluation teams of the New England Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools in accreditation work. In his new post, Dr. Vogel will be the chief administrator for the Consortium, which was organized to pool the resources of the member schools, to reduce duplication of efforts, to provide increased services to their students and to the community and to create a broader selection of courses for students at each institution. The Consortium, funded under a three -year grant from the Hartford Foundation for Public Giving, is the outgrowth of a limited cross-registration program over the past several years involving students from Trinity, the University of Hartford, St. Joseph College, and the Hartford Seminary Foundation. Under that program, the Intercollegiate Registration Program, students from one college were allowed to register at another college for courses not available at the "home" institution, and without paying additional tuition. Dr. Vogel will be responsible to the Governing Board of the Consortium, which includes the presidents of the five institutions. Dr. Vogel, a native of Indiana, was graduated from Wabash College in 1935. His master's degree was earned at the University of Michigan, and his doctorate in education at Columbia. Besides his long career at Trinity, Dr. Vogel also taught at Adrian College (Michigan) and the University of Rochester.
Cross Country (from page 16) teams in the future. Senior captain Bob Haff is the team's outstanding performer and a veteran of three years of intercollegiate competition. Senior Rick Ricci is the only other returning letterman. Among the newcomers, sophomore Marty Dodd and freshman Jim Forbes are outstanding runners. In early season practice sessions, Forbes has been pushing Haff for the top spot. Another new addition to the cross-country team is freshman Ruth Veal. A Manchester, Connecticut native, Ms. Veal ran cross-country in high school and was the state's AAU women's mile champion in 1971. Although Ruth cannot participate in intercollegiate meets, she runs with the team and doubles as the manager.
TRINITY'S FINEST-Dave Brown (left) and Rick Ricci cross the finish line 13 seconds ahead of the ~ompetition in the quarter-finals of the Olympic Trials held at Lake Waramaug, Connecticut in July. The Collegiate Championship pair were eliminated from the competition in the semi-finals.
Rowing Champs Pull Hard Along The Olympic Route EDITOR'S NOTE: The following is a summary of the rowing events in which Trinity's National Champion crew pair, Dave Brown '73 and Rick Ricci '73, participated this past summer. On June 3, two Trinity students- Dave Brown '73 and Rick Ricci '73-became one of the few small college crews ever to win a national collegiate rowing championship. Rowing in the final of the pairs without coxswain event at the Intercollegiate Rowing Association's (IRA) Championships held on Lake Onondaga, New York, Brown and Ricci pulled away from the likes of the University of Wisconsin, Yale, Dartmouth, and San Diego State, to win the title with over 13 seconds separating them from the rest of the field. The race represented a breakthrough for small college crews as a pair from Morris Harvey College of West Virginia-its first entrant even in the IRA Championships - took second place honors. It was at this point, that the Trinity pair and their coach, Norm Graf, were invited to compete in the Olympic Trials, July 2 0-22 at Lake Waramaug, Connecticut. In preparation for the trials, the pair rowed in three Elite Class races which were reserved for international level competition. The first test took place in Philadelphia (as did the other two) in the Schuylkill Navy Regatta on June 16. The Bantams again rowed away from the competition- U Penn. and Vesper Boat Club of Philadelphia-to take first place by two lengths. With another victory under their belt, the pair, who were now practicing on Cape Cod at Coach Graf's summer house,
returned to the Schuylkill River on July 2 for the Independence Day Regatta in which the finest pairs in the Eastern United States were participating. This time Brown and Ricci were not victorious but still took third place. The final test before the trials was the National Amateur Championships, July 14-15, in which every competitor had already been invited to Lake Waramaug for the following week. Brown and Ricci recorded the fourth best time on the preliminary heats but were not among the six teams chosen for the finals. The pair had placed third in their heat, but under competition rules, only the top two crews from each of the three heats were selected for the final event. Brown and Ricci got back on the winning trail in the quarter-finals of the Olympic Trials as the pair easily outdistanced the rest of the field with a Dartmouth tandem taking second place more than 12 seconds behind. The semi-ji路nals, held July 21, brought the pair up against the finest in the country. The Bantams took fourth place (the first three finishers qualified for the final} and the dream of a trip to Munich came to an end. The winners of the event and the US. representatives to the Olympic games were Dick Lyon and Larry Hough of the Stanford (Calif.) Crew Association. In commenting on the race, Norm Graf said, "The boys and I concurred that they rowed a good race. I think they really accomplished something over the past seven or eight weeks. The true realization of the whole thing won't settle in for a few weeks. I think this will be even more true for Dave and Rick, because they still are the National Collegiate Champions and have won several medals. "
PARENTS WEEKEND NOVEMBER 3-5 Special class visits, sports, director's meeting at the State Capitol, dinner at the Hartford Hilton, panel discussions on academic programs and c~reer opportunities, dance program, carillon recital, coffee hour at President Lockwood's home and more ...
Page 5
Special Feature Trinity Reporter -October 1972
ANNUAL GIVING REPORT JULY
to
I,
JUNE 3o,
Again Trinity alumni, parents, business associates and other friends have achieved new levels of generosity with their gifts to the College during the past year. The statistical results are impressive, as you will note from reading the accompanying report. But certainly of equal importance is the personal response of thousands who gave of themselves for Trinity College. It is reassuring to me, as I am certain that it is to you, that so many recognize the necessity to preserve and sustain Trinity as a vital force for 路 learning. As we all know, successful results just don't happen; there must be positive resolution and conscientious effort. I salute all who participated in this magnificent campaign-Andrew Onderdonk '34, Chairman of the Alumni Fund; Willard W. Brown, Chairman of the Parents Fund; Ostrom Enders, Chairman of the Friends of Trinity Fund; Seymour E. Smith '34, Chairman of the Business and Industry Associates; and the scores of other alumni and friends who served in the ranks of volunteers. To those who served and to those who gave, Trinity is profoundly grateful. Theodore D. Lockwood President
SUMMARY OF GIVING I. Annual Giving for Unrestricted General Purposes:
Alumni Fund . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Parents Fund ......................... . Business & Industry .................... . Associates Friends of Trinity Fund ................. . Foundations ........................ .
$
Memorial Gifts ......................... . Scholarships .... ... .................... . Miscellaneous ..................... . .... .
248,996 88,099 60,714
$345,092 HI. Bequests and Other Deferred Gifts:
23,964 18,700 $440,473
II. Annual Giving for Restricted Designated Purposes Academic Departments and Faculty . . . . . . . . . . $ Buildings & Grounds Improvements ......... . Friends of Art -Trinity College . ....... ... . Friends of Trinity Rowing ................ . Hockey Association .... . ... .... ....... .. . Library Associates ....... ...... ........ .
195,859 26,800 7,050 12,428 3,511 4,682
23,435 61,926 9,401
Bequest Receipts ....................... . $ 3,147,461 * Life Income Fund Receipts ............... . 23,840 Life Insurance Receipts ................... . 5,235 Total ............................ . $ 3,176,536 *Less: Estimate reported last year for The Estate of Charles A. Lewis '93 . . . . . . 2,000,000 $ 1 ,176,536
TOTAL GIFTS AND PLEDGES FROM ALL SOURCES . ........ $ 1,962,101
Page 6
Annual Giving for Unrestricted General Purposes as of June 30, 1972 Goal Alumni Fund Parents Fund Business and Industry Associates Friends of Trinity Fund Foundations (non-corporate)
Gifts and Pledges
No . Gifts & Pledges Gift Average
$ 250,000 $ 85,000 $ 60,000
($200,000) ($ 75,000) ($ 50,000)
$248,996 $ 88,099 $ 60,714
($242,838) ($ 84,628) ($ 53,874)
2,925 630 94
$ $
15,000 15,000
($ 15,000) ($ 10,000)
$ 23,964 $ 18,700
($ 12,858) ($ 6,328)
64 4
Total $ 425,000 Figures in ()=Amount Last Year
($350,000)
$440,473
($400,526)
3,717
%of Goal
$ 85 ($ 98) $ 139 ($ 159) $ 646 ($ 769)
99.5% 103.6% 101%
45) 4)
$ 374 ($ 286) $4,692 ($1 ,582)
159.7% 124.6%
(3,140)
$ 119 ($ 128)
103.6%
(2,489) ( 532) ( 70)
( (
1962 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967
Onderdonk '34
Brown
Smith '34
E nders
TRINITY COLLEGE ANNUAL GIVING 1971-72 * Barclay Shaw, '35 Chairman, Board of Trustees National Chairman, Annual Giving ALUMNI FUND Steering Committee Andrew Onderdonk '34 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. National Chairman Martin D. Wood '42 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Vice Chairman John L. Bonee '43 ................. Distinguished Gifts Chairman James R. Glassco, Jr. '50 .............. Leadership Gifts Chairman Lispenard B. Phister '18 .............. ... Special Gifts Chairman Arthur H. Tildesley '53 ... ..... ...... .... . Special Gifts Chairman Scott W. Reynolds '63 .. .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . Special Gifts Chairman Benjamin J. Williams '58 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Promotion Chairman Thomas M. Meredith '48 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. Class Agent Chairman Lillian N. Kezerian MA '61 . . . . . . . . . . . . . Masters Degree Chairman PARENTS FUND Steering Committee Willard W. Brown, Cleveland, Ohio . . . . . . . . . . . National Chairman Ralph J. Taussig, Philadelphia, Pa . . . . . . . . . . Special Gifts Chairman RichardS. Knapp, New York, N.Y. . . . . . . . . . Past Parent Chairman Milton L. Levy, Boston, Mass . . . . . . . . . . . . . Class of 1972 Chairman Francis C. Farwell, Chicago, Ill. . . . . . . . . . . . Class of 1973 Chairman Charles M. Barringer, Chadds Ford, Pa . . .. ... Class of 1974 Chairman Charles S. Walker, Providence, R.I. ........ Class of 1975 Chairman BUSINESS AND INDUSTRY ASSOCIATES Seymour E. Smith '34 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Chairman FRIENDS OF TRINITY FUND Ostrom Enders . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .... Chairman *Deceased
Rodney D. Day, III Thomas E. Calabrese Joseph R. Martire, M.D. Frederick C. Schumacher, Jr. Robert F. Powell, Jr. The Rev. Calhoun W. Wick Assistant Agents: William Block, Jr. Robert E. Brkkley Gilbert G. Campbell Horace J. Caulkins David Downes William E. Eckert Jeffrey J. Fox William P. Getty, III David W. Haight Penn Hughes Edward B. Hutton, Jr. Lynn M. Kirkby Lt. Jg. Charles Kurz, II Alexander H. Levi James H. Oliver John R. O'Neal Nicholas R. Orem Richard W. Rath, Jr. G. Theodore Ruckert, M.D. Geoffrey A. Sawyer, Jr. George R. Sommer, Jr. Michael A. Weinberg Geoffrey J. White Lt. Kenneth K. Wright 196 8 Sheldon Tilney Assistant Agents: Donald A. Barlow WilliamS. Bartman, Jr. Stuart M. Bluestone David M. Borus Samuel H. Elkin Elric J. Endersby Dennis H. Farber George M. Feldman The Rev. Michael H. Floyd Capt. Walter L. Harrison Alexandros G. Kairis Robert L. King George D. McClelland Christopher McCrudden Richard G. Meloy Thomas I. Nary Joseph M. Perta Lt. Stephen Peters Capt. Parker H. Prout Joseph L. Reinhardt Barry M. Sabloff Lt. RichardS. W. Shepard Lawrence J. Slutsky William E. Snow David C. Soule Paul K. Sutherland Alan B. Thomas 1969 Lt. Jg. Larry H. Whipple Assistant Agents: Laurence E. Ach Edward A. Adler David L. Beatty Michael J. Beautyman Franklin L. Bridges, III Michael J. Cancelliere Michael D. Cleary Theodore F. Cook, Jr. John P. DeLong Peter H. Ehrenberg Peter T. Elvin
1970
1971
Carl H. Fridy Jeffrey W. Gordon JosephS. Hessenthaler Edward S. Hill Richard H. Lamb John F. Levy Llo yd A. Lewis, Jr. Lt. Michael M. Michigami Earl Millard, Jr. Stanton C. Otis Michael A. Peck Kenneth R. Phelps Nathaniel S. Prentice Lt. Leighton L. Smith William G. Young Scott M. Donahue Assistant Agents : Eric E. Aasen David J. Agerton Fredrico 0 . Biven, Jr. John L. Bonee, III W. Stephen Bush Peter N. Campbell Michael A. Chamish Philip J. Davis Tom B. Ewing David W. Fentress, Jr. John F. Gallo, Jr. Joel R. Greenspan Stephen R. Gretz Norman J. Hannay John S. Harrison Mic;hael F. Jimenez PaulS. Marshall Pvt. Ernest J. Mattei William J. Millard, III Walter F. Moody, Jr. Eugene L. Newell James M. O'Brien William E. Pomeroy David W. Steuber Warren V. Tanghe James H. Tonsgard John M. Verre William N. Booth Assistant Agents: Peter W. Adams Louis K. Birinyi, Jr. William P. Borchert Jeffrey R. Clark Margaret H. Clement Ronald E. Cretaro Thomas R. DiBenedetto Christopher L. Evans Kathleen L. Frederick G. Keith Funston, Jr. John 0. Gaston James H. Graves Robert V. Haas, Jr. Albert Humphrey Peter J. J enkelunas Laura J. Kaplan L. Peter Lawrence Alan L. Marchisotto Susan E. Martin George G. Matava Robert H. Osher John P. Reale John D. Rollins David McB. Sample Richard H. Schaefer Robert D. Steigerwalt, Jr. Clinton A. Vince Howard Weinberg Kenneth P. Winkler
Class Agents 1900 1902 1903 1904 1905 1906 1907 1908 1909 1910 1911 1912 1913 1914 1915 1916 1917 1918 1919 1920 1921 1922 1923 1924 1925 1926 1927 1928 1929 1930 1931
Frederick C. Hinkel, Jr. Frederick C. Hinkel, Jr. Frederick C. Hinkel, Jr. Frederick C. Hinkel, Jr. Allen R. Goodale Frederick C. Hinkel, Jr. Frederick C. Hinkel, Jr. Frederick C. Hinkel, Jr. The Rev. Paul H. Barbour George C. Capen Allan K. Smith Clarence I. Penn William P. Barber, Jr. Richard F. Walker Bertram B. Bailey The Rev. Frank Lambert Arthur Rabinowitz (deceased) Sydney D. Pinney Harmon T. Barber Dr. George A. Boyce Arthur N. Matthews Frederic T. Tansill The Rt. Rev. Conrad H. Gesner R. George Almond George Malcolm-Smith Norman D. C. Pitcher The Rev. Robert Y. Condit A. Henry Moses Morris J. Cutler The Rev. Canon Francis R. Belden Arthur D. Weinstein
1932 1933 1934 1935 1936 1937 1938 1939 1940 1941 1942 1943 1944 1945 1946 1947 1948 1949 1950 1951 1952 1953 1954 1955 1956 1957 1958 1959 1960 1961
Everett S. Gledhill Thomas S. Wadlow John A. Mason John L. Shaw Albert M. Dexter, Jr. William G. Hull Gregory T. McKee Ethan F. Bassford Carmine R. Lavieri Louis E. Buck Robert P. Nichols Samuel B. Corliss John T . Fink James J. Rhein berger Siegbert Kaufmann Merritt Johnquest Thomas M. Meredith Joseph A. DeGrandi Wendell S. Stephenson Samuel W. P. McGill, Jr. Charles C. Buffum Elliott H. Valentine James A. Leigh Lee A. Lahey Francis J. Duggan William E. Learnard Benjamin J. Williams Brian E. Nelson Dr. William G. deColigny Douglas T. Tansill
THE ALUMNI FUND GROWTH RECORD FISCAL YEAR 1960-61 1961 -62 1962-63 1963-64 .1964-68 1968-69 1969-70 1970-71 1971 -72
AMOUNT AVERAGE RAISED CONTRIBUTORS GIFT $111,203 2,820 $39.43 125,635 3,126 40.19 135,255 3,191 42.39 152,436 3,395 44.90 FORD CHALLENGE CAMPAIGN 173,665 2,448 70.94 187,118 2,251 83.12 98.00 242,838 2,489 248,996 2,925 85.00
CHAIRMAN Robert A. Gilbert '38 John L. Bonee '43 John L. Bonee '43 Harry K. Knapp '50 John T. Wilcox '39 John T. Wilcox '39 Andrew Onderdonk '34 Andrew Onderdonk '34
Page 7
Alumni Contributors 1883 Frank D. Woodruff-Endowment Income
1884 Lawson Purdy (In Memoriam)
1887 Howard A. Pinney - Endowment Income
1898 Dudley C. Graves (In Memoriam)
1899 .J. H. Kelso Davis (In Memoriam) Adrian H. Onderdonk (In Memoriam)
1901 James A. Wales (In Memoriam)
1902 Agent - Frederick C. Hinkel, Jr. +Bentley, Gooden
1905 Agent-Allen R. Goodale, +Goodale, Harriman
1906 Agent-Frederick C. Hinkel, Jr., Cowper, Hinkel, Lauderburn, Hill Burgwin-Endowment Income, Robert P. Butler-Endowment Income
1907 Agent-Frederick C. Hinkel, Jr., Bradford G. Weekes (In Memoriam)
1908 Agent -F rederick C. Hinkel, Jr., Zoubek, Thomas B. Myers-Endowment Income
1909 Agent-Paul H. Barbour, *Anonymous, Barbour, +Buchanan, Gilbert, Kean, Roberts, Snow, *R. J. Wean Foundation, Clinton J. Backus (In Memoriam), +William Dwyer (In Memoriam)
1910 Agent-George C. Capen, +Capen, Carpenter, Cook, Gamerdinger, *Geer, Judge, McElroy, +Turner, *Webster, Matthew G. Back Endowment Income, Richardson Wright-Endowment Income, Charles H. Bassford (In Memoriam), George S. Francis (In Memoriam) , Albert M. Smith (In Memoriam) 1911 Agent-Allan K. Smith, Christie, Foster, Maxon, Pomeroy, Rosebaugh, *Smith, William W. Buck (In Memoriam)
1912 Agent-Clarence I. Penn, Breed, Foote, Herrick, *Penn, Rankin, George T. Bates (In Memoriam), C. Edwin Blake (In Memoriam) 1913 Agent- William P. Barber, Jr., +Barber, Barnett, +Case, Deppen, Fairbanks, McGee, Noble, Raymond H. Bentley (In Memoriam), Thomas G. Brown (In Memoriam)
1914 Agent-Richard F. Walker, Baridon, Barton, Cross, Moore, Noyes, O'Connor, A. W. Walker, R. F. Walker, Arthur F. G. Edgelow (In Memoriam), Peter P. Lawlor (In Memoriam)
1915 Agent-Bertram B. Bailey, +Bailey, +Chapin, Edsall, +Kinney, Kyle, Peck, +Pressey, B. L. Smith, R. R. Smith, *Young, +Zipkin, Ward E. Duffy (In Memoriam), Louis M. Schatz (In Memoriam)
*Johnson, Kendall, Kneeland, Miller, Nordlund, *Parker, Reynolds, Richman, +Tansill, Tucker, Benjamin B. Styring (In Memoriam)
1923 Agent-Conrad H. Gesner, Gammell, +Gesner, Hartt, Merritt, Miller, Newell, Newton, Norman, Webster
1924 Agent-R. George Almond, Almond, +Browning, Dorison, Hawley, +Morton, Rich, Sutcliffe, Yeomans
1925 Agent-George Malcolm-Smith, Birch, Carey, Fleming, +Geetter, Goodridge, Guillard, +Hadlow , Hawley, +LeWinn , Lischner, Malcolm-Smith, McNally, Merchant, Montgomery, Noble, Phelps, +Ricci, Samponaro, Smith, Stone, Thorburn, Valerius, Weiner, +Wilcox
1926 Agent-Norman D. C. Pitcher, +Burr, Cook, Dann, +Ford, Gamble, Hamilton, Hull, Jackson, Keena, +Lieber, Linnon, Loeffler, Messer, Newell, Nicol, Noble, O'Brien, Parke, Pitcher, Riley, Roisman, Thomas, Wallad, Robert W. Sheehan (In Memoriam)
1927 Agent-Robert Y. Condit, Bashour, +Bell, +Cahill, Chapnick, Condit, Forrester, Hartt, +Langdon, Manierre, Meade, Segur, Wilbur, Willard G. Keller, Jr. (In Memoriam)
1928 Agent-A. Henry Moses, Alford, *Bent, Berger, Condon, Even, FitzGerald, Gibson, +Gordon, Green, *Jackson, Lacy, Libbin, +Meier, *Moses, Nugent, Platt, Rulnick, Walter, Young, Harry Tulin (In Memoriam)
TELEPHONE SOLICITORS James R. Glassco, Jr. '50, Chairman Samuel Bailey, Jr. '62 Ethan F. Bassford '39 John L. Bonee '43 Louis E. Buck '41 Thomas E. Calabrese '63 James T. Canivan '59 Harrv C. Jackson, Jr. '58 Siegbert Kaufmann '46 Norman C. Kayser '57 George P. Lynch '61 Alfred M. C. MacColl '54 George Malcolm-Smith '25 Roger E. Martin '56 John A. Mason '34 Thomas M. Meredith '48 Robert P. Nichols '42 Andrew Onderdonk '34 Stephen L. Perreault '63 Benjamin Silverberg '19 Theodore T. Tansi '54 JosephS. Van Why '50 Donald J. Viering '42 Bernard Wilbur '50 John T. Wilcox '39 Martin D. Wood '42
1916 Agent - Frank Lambert, Baker, Berkman, +Easterby, English, *Ferris, Johnson, Lambert, Linton, Maxon, *O'Connor, Pierce, +Pierpont, Redding, Schmitt, +Tiger, Townsend, Ernest J. Caufield (In Memoriam), Norton lves (In Memoriam)
1917 Agent-- Arthur Rabinowitz (Deceased), Creamer, Dworski, Fenton, +Gummere, Hasburg, Hungerford, +McCoid, +McKay, Rabinowitz, Racioppi, Schwolsky, Tree, Stanton J. D. Pendell (In Memoriam), John H. Pratt, Jr. (In Memoriam), Arthur Rabinowitz (In Memoriam), Richmond Rucker (In Memoriam), Einer Sather (In Memoriam)
1918 Agent-Sydney D. Pinney, Beach, *Beers, Brandt, Buffington, *Caldwell, Carlson, Gaberman, Glassman, +Griffith, Grime, +Hatheway, Johnson, + Phister, *Pinney, Pollock, Robertson, Shulthiess, Silverman, Simonson, *Title, Wessels, Thomas K. James (In Memoriam), John McK. Mitchell (In Memoriam), William L. Nelson (In Memoriam), Louis Noll (In Memoriam), Friend of the Class
1919 Agent-Harmon T. Barber, Armstrong, +Barber, +Kallinich, Kenney, Leeke, Potter, Pressey, +Silverberg, Skau, Traub, Tuska, Valentine, Wyse, Louis Antupit (In Memoriam)
1920 Agent - George A. Boyce, Adkins, Boyce, Hartzmark, +Kolodny, Levin, Lyon, Miller, Nichols, Perkins, Porter, Puffer, Shulman, +Tilton, +Whipple, William J. Cahill (In Memoriam)
1921 Agent-Arthur N. Matthews, Ameluxen, Clark, Hersey, +Matthews, Neiditz, Newsom, Rachlin, Ransom, +Reitemeyer, Frederic L. Bradley (In Memoriam)
1922 Agent-Frederic T. Tansill, Buckley, Case, *Clapp, Cram, Doran, Gable, Guertin,
Coit, Cowles, Craig, Daut, +Day, DeBonis, Dixon, Donley, Dumont, Eddy, Ely, Ewing, Farrell, Ferris, Fidao, Gallaway, Gane, +Gay, Gladwin, Goddard, Grafe, Green, Grenfell, +Haring, Henebry, +Holland, Holst, Jackson, Kelly, +Kingston, Lokot, *Mason, +Mayo, McClure, McCornick, Merriam. Midura, Mullarkey, Newman, A.H. Onderdonk,Jr.,*A. Onderdonk, Rankin, Remkiewicz, Reuber, Rollins, Rosenfield, Rostek, Schack, Schmolze, Schneider, Schultze, +Shaw, Shenker, +S. E. Smith, +Snowdon, Souney, Sutherland, W. T. Thomas, Thomson, Towne, Tucker, Uhlig, Ward, Wheeler, Zlochiver, Francis H. Ballou (In Memoriam), Hyman H. Bronstein (In Memoriam), Orrin S. Burnside (In Memoriam), Nathaniel T. Clark (In Memoriam), Frank G. Cook (In Memoriam), Joseph D. Flynn (In Memoriam), Robert E. Fowler (In Memoriam), Charles A. Fritzson (In Memoriam), Albert W. Hanninen (In Memoriam), Ernest H. Higgins (In Memoriam), John P. Hodgson (In Memoriam), Rex J. Howard (In Memoriam), Lionel L. Long (In Memoriam), Raymond A. MacElroy (In Memoriam), Patrick L. McMahon, Jr. (In Memoriam), John C. Melville (In Memoriam), James V. Shea (In Memoriam), Charles B. Smiley (In Memoriam), James B. Webber, Jr. (In Memoriam), Friend of 1934
1929 Agent-Morris J. Cutler, +Cole, +Comstock, Cutler, Ellis, Fitzgerald, +Hey, Kneeland, Koenig, May, Rowland, Spekter, Toomajian, Turney, +Uhlig, Wardlaw, Whitney, Zinner, George D. Hardman (In Memoriam), John F. Walker (In Memoriam)
1930 Agent-Francis Belden, Belden, +Bobrow, *Brainerd, Dignam, +Keeney, Knurek, +Linn, +Lovering, Nye, +Regnier, Rosenbaum, Slossberg, Squillacote, Strong, Tonken
1931 Agent-Arthur D. Weinstein, +Blakeslee, _ Blauvelt, Childs, Dann, H.D. Doolittle, +Dunbar, Giffin, Gooding, *Jacobson, Keating, Mackie, Mannweiler, Meeker, Roots, Tobin, +Twaddle, Waterman, +Weinstein, Wilkinson, Wyckoff, Rober 0. Muller - Endowment Income
1932 Agent-Everett S. Gledhill, Abbott, +Adams, Bialick, Boeger, *Campbell, Carlton, Christy, +Elliott, *Funston, Garrison, Glassman, Gledhill, Grainger, Greene, +Kibitz, Lawton, Meier, Meloy, Muzio, Ouellette, +Phippen, Prior, Reynolds, Sidor, Slater, Smart, J. Smith, Sykes, White, Zazzaro, Daniel S. Andrus (In Memoriam)
1933 Agent-Thomas S. Wadlow, Bernstein, Carey, Duksa, +Egan, Eichacker, Frothingham, Lacoske, Melrose, Norvell, Ogg, Pratt, +Prutting, Richardson, Sheafe, Steeves, Thayer, L. A. Wadlow, T. S. Wadlow, Zujko, John F. Butler (In Memoriam), Edward L. Sivaslian (In Memoriam)
1934 Agent-John A. Mason, Albani, Allyn, Ananikian, Arnold, Baker, Baldwin, Basch, Bashour, Bayley, +Benjamin, Berndt, Bierkan, Bose, Bremer, Brewer, Childs, Civittolo, Coale,
CLASS OF 1934 WINS '34 TROPHY Established in 1949 by the Class of 1934, the Trophy is presented to the class receiving the highest point score in the Alumni Fund. Scoring is based on a point system covering percentage of givers, average amount of gift, total number of contributors, and improvement. The ten leading classes for the Trophy were: CLASS AGENT POINTS 117 John A. Mason 1934 Benjamin J. Williams 88 1958 Charles C. Buffum 1952 80 Lee A. Lahey 79 1955 James A. Leigh 1954 71 Rodney D. Day 1962 58 William G. deColigny 1960 57 Wendell S. Stephenson 53 1950 Everett S. Gledhill 1932 52 Thomas M. Meredith 52 1948
1935 Agent - John L. Shaw, Adams, Amport, Baskerville, Bennett, +Boeger, +Bullock, Cacase, Cosgrove +D'Angelo, Duennebier, Fleisch, Hagarty, +Hanaghan, Hart, Irvine, *0. F. Johnson, Junker, +Kellam, Lau, Maher, Marquet, +McCook, McKenna, Olson, Parsons, *B. Shaw, J. L. Shaw, Slater, Trantolo, Ward, Wilding, Barclay Shaw (In Memoriam)
1936 Agent-Albert M. Dexter, Jr ., Benson, Bonander, Brezina, Buckley, Clark, Collins, +Crawford, Dexter, Dunne, Greenberg, +Hanna, Henderson, +Hollins, Hurewitz, +Jennings, Kelly, Littell, McKee, Miller, More, Ogilvy, Piacente, Podorowsky, Reynolds, +Rogers, Scott, Scull, Stein, Williams
1937 Agent- William G. Hull, +Alpert, Bainbridge, Bald win, Barrows, Bauer, Bellis, +Brooke, +Budd, Burdett, Carter, +D'Angelo, Dexter, Doty, Downes, Dunn, +Egan, +Fien, French, Gillespie, Haight, Hamilton, Haskell, Henderson, Hull, Kelly, Kobrosky, Lehan, Lepak, *Lindell, Lusk, McEldowney, McVane, Musgrave, Nelson, Onderdonk, Payne, Randall, Sanders, Urban +Wilson, John T. Lloyd (In Memoriam)
1938 Agent-Gregory T. McKee, Anderson, +Astman, Barbour, Benjamin, +Blake, Clapp, Corso, Culleney, DeMonte, DiCorleto, Drury, *Fuller, Gilbert, Griswold, Hagarty, Hodgdon, Hoegberg, +Kenney, Lindsay, McCafferty, McKee, +O'Malley, +Peterson, +Pfanstiel, Richman, Sherman, +Spring, +Tulin, B. Walker, +L. M. Walker, Zaretsky, William H. Pomeroy (In Memoriam), Mrs. Leon Podorowsky (In Memoriam)
1939 Agent-Ethan F. Bassford, Anderson, +Barrett, Bartlett, Bassford, Buths, +Clow, +Colton, Decker, Driggs, +Flynn, Follansbee, Glaubman, Gorman, +Gualtieri, Haight, +H. J. Hall, Hamilton, Hanson, R. J. Harris, Hart, Hope, R. H. Johnson, Kemler, Leggett, +Madden, Mador, +W . S. Morgan, North,. Pickles, Sackter, Schmuck, Skelley, E. L. Smith, +Spink, +Starkey, Tulin, +Twiss, Weeks, +Wilcox
1940 Agent-Carmine R. Lavieri, Andrian, Bilka, *Bland, Bodkin, +Burnham, Canfield, +Chandler , Collins, Ferguson, Gallagher, Harrison, Hazen, Hopkins, Howe, Kerr, +Lavieri, McLaughlin, Morris, Pankratz, Riley, Rinehart, Ritter, Rockwell, Rountree, Shapiro,Speed, Stubbs, Vogel, Walker, Wolf
1941 Agent- Louis E. Buck, K. Adams, Barnes, Blaisdell, Buck, +Callaghan, Carpenter, Chauser, Clapis , +Conway, Day, +DeBona, Ewing, Flanagan, Foley, *Fuller, Goodrich, J. W. Harris, +Holcombe, Hurwitz, +Insley, +A. V.
*Founders Society for gifts of $1,000 or more. +Anniversary Club for gifts of $150-$999.
Johnson, +Kaplan, +F. A. Kelly, Jr., Kiley, Lavieri, Mancall, Molumphey, Mulcahy, + Pedicord, Prendergast, +Randall, Reese, Roberts, *Russo, Sehl, E. S. Smith, Thomsen, Welcher, Williamson, Alfred E. Gavert (In Memoriam)
1942 Agent-Robert P. Nichols, +Anderson, Ayer, Barber, Beaty, Bestor, +Birmingham , Bonsignore, Colton, Czarnota, Dickson, Earle, Eddy, +Fasi, Fisher, Ford, Getz, +Hotchkiss, +Hunnewell, +Jacobsen, Jensen, Jerome, C. F. Johnson, III, H. G. Johnson, +Kloss, Lightfoot, Manning, Meshenuk, Mirabile, Morris, +Nichols, North, +Paddon, Payne, Pillsbury, Rhines, Rosenthal, +Ross, Scully, Simpson, +Smellie, P. V. C. Stoughton, Sweetser, Taber, Tamoney, +Tuttle, +Viering, +Weeks, Wilson, +M. D. Wood, George C. Meng (In Memoriam)
1943 Agent-Samuel B. Corliss, Bailly, Beck, Bolton, * Bonee, +Brinckerhoff, +Bromberg, Brown, Burk, Byers, Casalino, Cobb, +Corliss, Cunningham, Daley, Denny, +Dickinson, +Fay, +Gager, Glidden, M. E. Guillet, R. B. Hall, +Healey , Heu bner, Jesse!, McAndrews, +McLaughlin, Miller, Peck, +Pomerantz, Puffer, Rackemann, A. V. Resony, Richardson, Rossi, Scott, Steitz, +Tamoney, +Tracy, Tullar, Tyler, Upham
1944 Agent-John T. Fink, Arnstein, +Balfe, Baxter, +Bellizzi, Boardman, Chambers, Conant, +Danyliw, Desmond, Eichhorn, Farnsworth, Fay, Fink, Fried, Gossling, Haskell, Hastings, Kelly, Ohrenschall, +Peelle, S. Peterson, Roberts, Root, T. A. Smith, Starkey, Stein, +Toland, 路+Vanderbilt, Zak,
1945 Agent-James J. Rheinberger, *Brennan, Dix, Frommelt, Gerent, Goodspeed, Kapteyn, Marzialo, Meyer, +Milligan, Moyer, Pinsky, Rheinberger, Schroeder, M. C. Smith, W. B. Wildman
1946 Agent-Siegbert Kaufmann, +Ahern, Asbel, +Cramer, Ferrante, K. F. Golden, Goldfarb, Haight, Harris, Hart, Hazen, Holmquist, Kaufmann, +Kelly, Knight, Laschever, D. Loomis, Marra, +Milling, +Moskow, Ruhf, Shafer, Stu dwell, Sturges, Tietze, Walker, Walsh, Weaver, Wilson, Frederick D. Beckwith (In Memoriam)
1947 Agent - Merritt Johnquest, Bonifazi, Daly, Dubinsky, Egan, Eichacker, Ellis, Emch, Friedland, Gallone, Goodman, +Hayes, Hotez, Hunt, +Jennings, J ohnquest, Kent, Kingston, +Kinsella, +Koeppel, Lorenzo, _Lozier, ....Marr, O'Connor, Odentz, +O'Neil, Piligian, +Poliner, Rosen, Rosenberg, Sceery, Schroeder, +Tapogna, Verdi , Welling, +Wickenden, Woodward
1948 Agent-Thomas M. Meredith, Anthes, Arnold, Brand, Brown, Bryngi, +Burns, Charles, Claughsey, Cogswell, Davidson, Dolan, Donnelly, +Dunn, Durick, Faber, Fandel, Frankel, +Ger shman, Glazier, Goldstein, *Gottesman, +Greenberg, Helman, Huntington, Jacobs, Krinsky, +Kuehn , Lambert, Lichtenberger, *Lockwood, Loegering, Longo, +Meredith, S. Mitchell, Nicholson, Norris, +Nourse, +Proctor, E. Reynolds, W. H. Reynolds, Richman, Rivkin, Roedel, +Savoy, Schachter, +Scharff, Shippy, Simmons, Tyler, Walmsley, +Werner, Wilson, Winquist,
1949 Agent-Joseph A. DeGrandi, Beattie, Berger, Bingham, Blake, Bowden, *Boyle, Church, Cohen, Cotter, Coughlin, Crafts, Davis, +DeGrandi, Duerr, Duy, Goldberg, +Gunning, Howard; Jurczyk, King, Later, Loveland, Missel, +Norman, Phelan, Prigge, Redden, Richardson, Root, Rorick, Sherman, Simons, S. E. Smith, Straley, +Surgenor, Tenney, +Trant, Waugh, Weatherly, Williams, Wolfe, Wood, George W. Stowe (In Memoriam)
1950 Agent-Wendell S. Stephenson, Aldeborgh, W. T. Armstrong, +Barrows, Beirne, Bellis, *Billyou , Blum, Brundage, Bunnell, Carter, Chidsey, Claros, Cohen, Corcoran, Cromwell, DeLuca, Detwiler , DiLorenzo, Dorison, Dougherty, R. S. Dunbar, Durbas, Gavens,
DJSTINGUISHED GIFTS SOLICITORS John L. Bonee '43, Chairman Matthew T. Birmingham, Jr. '4 2 Herbert R. Bland '40 Richard P. Brainerd '64 Drew Q. Brinckerhoff '43 Winthrop W. Faulkner '53 Brenton W. Harries '50 Charles T. Kingston, Jr. '34 John A. Mason '34 Stewart M. Ogilvy '36 Andrew Onderdonk '34 Sydney D. Pinney '18 William M. Polk '62 J. Ronald Regnier '30 Alfred Steel, Jr. '64 Melvin W. Title '18 Henry J. Uhlig '29 Martin D. Wood '42
Page 8 +Glassco, Goodyear, Grill, Hadlow, Halasz, +Hall, *Harries, Hickok, Katzman, Kestenbaum +Knapp, Knight, Lohnes, +Long, MacKesson, Marte, Martino, Mazotas, Meskill, Mullane, Paddock, +Page, Palmer, Robinson, Romaine, Rosenlof, Ross, Rowney, Schear, Segall, Sherman, Soulos, Stephenson, G. L. Stewart, III, J. M. Stewart, Styles, Sutton, Tansill, Tiedemann, B. H. Torrey, Tsu, VanLoon, Van Why, Wadsworth, Wainman, Watson L. B. White, Wilbur, +Wildrick, Wolford, +Young, Zazzaro, Zenowitz 1951 Agent - Samuel W. P. McGill, Allen, *Andre de la Porte, Behley, Berg, Blair, Bomberger, Bridge, Browne, Buckley, Blumer, Burbank, Byers, Camilleri, Collier, Coote, Curtin, Cutting, Dickey, +Dorman, Dudley, Edwards, Elliott, +Ferguson, W. W. Fiske, II, Freeman, F riday , Groves, Hansen, Harding, Hinkel, Hollyday, Hurwitz, Kirschner, Kulp, Lawrence, L ee d s, Loveland, Martel, McGill, McKean, Mecaskey, +Minturn, Muir, Nash, +Oberg, O ' Connor , Peterson, Petrinovic, +Pugliese, +Quortrup, +Raden, Redden, Reynolds, Ricci, Rome, Shaw, Shelly, Simoni, +Sinaguglia, L. S. Smith, Stevens, Sturges, VanHorne, Vaun, von Schrader, +Weikel, J. S. Wilson, Charles J. Paul (In Memoriam) 1952 Agent-Charles C. Buffum, Aiken, Aldrich, Angelastro, Becker, Beers, Bleecker, Bolinger, +C. C. Buffum, R. C. Buffum, +Christakos, Clipp, Cohen, DePatie, Diana, Downs, J. R. Foster, Fuller, Geary, Goralski, Gurwitt, Hatfield, +Head, B. B. Hopkins, J. V. Hopkins, Hubbard, R. N. Hunter, Keyes, Kirschbaum, Kunkel , La ub, Lee, MacLean , Mather, McElwee, +J. H. Miller, Milliot, Minton, Moller, Morrisey, Morse, Nesteruk, Nicholson, Norman, H. H. Northrop, O'Brien, O'Connell, Park, J. B. Parson s, Petro, Phelps, Post, Quinlivan, R a ft er y, R a t cliffe, Rathbone, Rigopulo s, Ringrose, +Russell, Schild, Shapiro, +Shaw, Simmons, +D . R. Smith, G. E. Smith, Spears, Stark, Stewart, Taylor , +Trowbridge, Washington, Waterman, Welna, Wentworth, Werdelin, Wiberg, Wilmot, Woodruff, Wynne, *Young 1953 Agent-Elliott H. Valentine, Astlett, Barber, Barrows. +Bendig, Berdick, Bernhard , Blackler, +Brown, Burns, Burton, J. P. Campbell, Clifford , Coulter, Crawford, Davis, Dean, Douglas , + E . F. Dwight, Jr., Faulkner, Fitz-Randolph, Hamblett, Hanford, Hayward, +Heller, Holmquist, +Hooper, Howard, Joslin, Keller, J(unz, Larson, Lecrenier, Longobucco , Lyford , Marden , McCandless, Merriman, Michie, Mortell, Moses, Moskow, Nelson, *Nutt, Paquette, Perkins, Pollock, Rhodes, Roback , Romaine, Rowland, Sencabaugh, Simmons, F. C. Smith, Soares, Tildesley, Tinsz, Toole, Valentine, Vogel, Walsh, D. L. Werner, Whitmarsh , Wollenberger 1954 Agent - James A. Leigh, R. J. Adams , Aiken, Ainsworth , Alexander, J. R. Anderson, R. C. Anderson, Atwood, Austin, Backenstoe,, Benton , Bloodgood, C. C. Bowen, G. H. Bowen , Braskamp, Brown, Bunnell, Burroughs, Butts, +Campbell, Carlough, Chatfield, Christako s, Clark, Condron, Conner, Cosby, Craig, Crosier, D'Abate, J. J. Davis, J. C. E. Dillon, U, D o brovir, Duff, Dyar, Eggert , Engelhardt, Esquirol, Farnham, E. A. Fowler, Franchere, +Gillooly, Gilson, Godfrey, Griffith, Hennigar, Hi ginbotham, G. T. Hill, Hirsch, Hodges, Holm es, Homa, Hooker, Howard , Hunter, J ager, J e ll i ffe, D. F. Johnston , Kaelber, Kalin ows ki , Kimmi ck , Knight, Knutson, +Koeppel, Kronholm , Laub, Lawler, Leigh, Libby, *MacColl, +MacKenzie, Mackimmie, MacLea, Marshall, Mayer, Mazurek, McCauley , McMahon, Mease, Moylan, Muirhead, Murray, Mutschl er, Newman, Niemann, Oberender, O'Connor, Oxholm, Paris, Piotrowski, Pizzella, Rathbun, Robinson, Russo, Sauvage, Saypalia, S chenker, Schneeberg, Schoyer, Schreiber, Scott , Searles, Shechtman, Silverberg, Sivaslian, +A. L. Smith, Jr. , E. H. Smith, Storms, Stuer, Sukosky, Taft, +Tansi, Teece, Thatcher, G. M. Thomas, III, Tompkins, Tucker, Van Brott, +V a nd erb ee k, VanLanen , Von Thaden, Waldman, Wallace, Weinberg, West, Wilson, Wind es h eim, Winner, Woodward, Wormer, Zembko 1955 Agent - Lee A. Lahey, Anonymous, Allocco, Bemis, Bittner, Blogoslawski, Brody, Brotman, Callen, Cardwell, L. D. Carlson, P. C. Carlson, Cerveny, +Champenois, Close, Detzler, DiBella, Dickinson, Dimling, Donahue, Eberle, Fedden, Ferraro, +Filewic:i:, A. Fisher, Jr., Fitzpatrick, F ord, Freeman, Gardiner, Geetter, Gelman, Gladwin, Colledge, Haeberle, Hansel, Hoag, Islamoff, Johnson, Karsky , +Kopp, Kozlin, Kram e r, Lahey, Lapham , LaPorte, Logan, +Lunt, Magelaner, Maitland, McCully, Mehldau, R. N. Miller , +Moock , Morgan, Moss, Mountford, Nash, Nelson, Nixon, O'Hara, Pal shaw, Pedevill, Penfield, Peterson, Petrakis, Pierucci, +Price, Ralph, *Reed, Reineman, Riccardo, Roberts, E. S. Rose, Royston, Rudy, Scheinberg, Shaw, Shay , Simons, +Sind, R. D. Smith, Snyder, Solomita, +Squires, Starr, Stebbins, Stephens, Tompkins, Trefts, Truitt, Valentine, Vars, Wainman, Welsh, Werner, Wright, Yeomans, Zampiello 1956 Agent-Francis J. Duggan, Abrams, Ahlberg, B.
by Class
1971-72 Alumni Giving Totals Total No. Solicited
Class Agent Prior to 19 00 1901 F .C. Hinkel, Jr. 1902 F. C. Hinkel, Jr. 1903 F. C. Hinkel, Jr. 1904 F. C. Hinkel, Jr. 1905 A. R. Goodale 1906 F. C. Hinkel, Jr. 1907 F . C. Hinkel, Jr. 1908 F. C. Hinkel, Jr. 1909 P .. H. Barbour
% of Participation
4 ,618.96 10.00 520 ;00
100%
260.00
420.00 668.94 35.00 614.88
100% 75%
210.00路 222.98
11 %
614.88
7
2,563.02
78%
2,500
103 %
366.15
9
3,639 .04
69%
5,000
73 %
404.34
19% 52% 89% 96% 84% 64%
5 End. & 4 I.M. 1 I.M.
1
2
2
Class Goal
% of Goal
Average Gift
1 2
2
4 3
1 End. 2 I.M. 1 End. 1 End. 1 Fr. 1 End. 3 I.M.
9 9 13
1910 G. C. Capen
_,_
Amount Contributed
No. of Contributors
3
5 5 7 8 11 16 12
185.00 1,300.00 797.50 480.00 4,622.50 4,461.43 1,790.00
42% 42% 78% 53% 50% 67% 67%
1,000 2,500 900 500 5,500 7,000 2,500
72%
37.00 260.00 113.92 60.00 420.22 278.84 149.16
20
1 I.M. 2 I.M. 2 I.M. 3 I.M. 2 I.M. 3 I.M. 13 I.M. 4 I.M. 1 Fr. 1 I.M.
21 13
5,833.00 1,042.17
91 % 65 %
5,000 1,000
117% 104%
277.76 80.16
25 17 31
1 I.M. 1 I.M. 1 I.M.
14 9 17
9 I.M. 1 I.M. 1 I.M. 2 I.M.
9 8 24 23 12 19 16
1,000.00 860.00 3,030.00 395.00 480.00 1,910.00 1,760.94 831.88 4,210.00 1,110.00
56% 53% 55 % 41 % 31 % 59% 50% 38% 39% 39%
1,000 900 5,000 850 600 2,000 1,500 1,200 6,000 1,800
100% 96% 61 % 46% 80% 96% 117% 69% 70% 62%
71.42 95.55 178.23 43 .88 60.00 79.58 76 .56 69.32 221.57 69.37
15 20 30 19
6,996.00 3, 791.00 6,990 .00 1,036.00
34% 36 % 53% 31 %
6,500 5,000 10,000 1,000
108% 76% 70% 104%
466.40 189.55 233 .00 54.52
83 29 29 40 31 38
8,759 .03 6,675.00 2,915.00 3,467.50 6,810 .94 3,912.81
87% 28% 33 % 44% 32% 34%
7,500 5,000 4,000 3,500 7,500 5,000
117% 134% 73 % 99% 91 % 78%
105.53 230.17 100.51 86 .68 219.70 102.96
29 39 48 41 29 15 27 36 52 42
2,540.00 6,018.50 4,646.25 3,090.00 2,031.00 1,807.00 1,605 .00 2, 710.00 6,847.00 2,155 .00
31% 36% 38% 33 % 28% 21 % 29% 33% 29% 25 %
2,000 4,500 5,000 3,500 2,000 2,000 1,300 7,000 5,000 1,500
127% 138% 93 % 88% 101 % 90% 123 % 39% 137% 144%
87.58 154.32 96 .77 85.12 70.03 120.26 59.44 75 .27 131.67 51.30
74 61 79 62 129 96 71 70 86 75
5,019.35 5,258.50 11 ,077 .25 3,915.50 5,311.00 7,282.25 2,700.00 2,886.00 8,089.00 3,462.80
28% 28% 34% 32% 59% 41 % 35 % 36% 41 % 32%
4,500 5,000 6,000 3,500 5,000 8,000 2,750 5,000 3,000 3,500
112% 105% 185 % 112% 106 % 91 % 98% 58% 267% 99%
67.82 78.48 140.21 63.15 41.17 75.85 38.02 41.22 94 .10 46.16
5,101.00 3,828.22 4,421.38 3,100.63
32% 31 % 32% 36 %
4,000 4,000 5,000 3,000
103% 96% 88% 103%
56 .19 51.73 51.41 32.98
4,063.00
34%
4,500
90%
44.64
72
2,387.00 1,990.00 3,184 .50 1,542.50 1,611.32
27% 23 % 33% 25% 22%
2,000 3,000 3,000 1,500 1,500
119% 66 % 106% 103 % 107%
33.15 29 .55 37.02 21.13 22.37
71 60
888 .00 1,080.50
23% 18%
1,000 800
89% 135%
12.50 18.34
*8,140
8 End.2709 90 l.M. 5 Fr. 1 Hon.
$222,191.19
33%
$222,600
99.8%
$82.01
146 1,250 96
36 74
25% 6%
$ 26,000 1,400
96% 92%
$707.82 17.41
2
$ 25,481.63 1,288.00 35.00
COMBINE D GRAND TOTAL 9,632
2,925
$248,995.82
29%
$250,000
99 .5%
$ 85.46
12 12 9 15 .
1911 A. K. Smith 1912 C. I. Penn 1913 W. P. Barber 1914 R. F. Walker 1915 B. B. Bailey 1916 F. Lambert 1917 A. Rabinowitz (dec.) 1918 S. D. Pinney
22
1919 H. T. Barber 1920 1921 1922 1923 1924 1925 1926 1927 1928 1929
G. A. Boyce A. N. Matthews F. T. Tansill C. H. Gesner R. G. Almond G. Malcolm-Smith N. D. C. Pitcher R. Y. Condit A. H. Moses M. J. Cutler
1930 1931 1932 1933 1934
F. Belden A. D. Weinstein E. S. Gledhill T. S. Wadlow J. A. Mason
56 57 62 93
1935 1936 1937 1938 1939
J. L. Shaw A. M. Dexter W. G. Hull G. T. McKee E. F. Bassford
103 87 90 96 112
1940 1941 1942 1943 1944 1945 1946 1947 1948 1949
C. R. Lavieri L. E. Buck R. F. Nichols S. B. Corliss J. T. Fink J. J. Rheinberger S. Kaufmann M. Johnquest T. M. Meredith J. A. DeGrandi
95 108 127 123 102
1950 1951 1952 1953 1954 1955 1956 195 7 1958 1959
W. A. Stephenson S. W. P. McGill C. C. Buffum E. H. Valentine J. A. Leigh L.A. Lahey F. J. Duggan W. E. Learnard B. J. Williams B. E. Nelson
267 240 234 195 217 232 205 195 212 233
1960 1961 1962 1963 1964
W. G. deColigny D. T. Tansill R. D. Day T. E. Calabrese J. R. Martire
276 243 266 262 279
1965 1966 1967 1968 1969
24 18 23
22 26 41 46 32 49 41
44
1 I.M. 1 I.M.
91 110 178 168
1 I.M. 1 I.M. 1 I.M.
89 74 86 94 1 Fr., 1 Hon 91
271 291 261 291 323
72
67 86 73
1 Fr.
315 337
1970 S.M. Donahue 1971 W. N. Booth
Honorary Masters V-12
1 I.M. 1 I.M.
72
F. C. Schumacher .R. F. Powell C. W. Wick S. Tilney L. H. Whipple
Total
1 I.M. 2 I.M. 19 I.M. 1 Fr. 2 I.M.
1 I.M.
*Active Alumni (8,893 minus 753 inactive)
f . Anderson, D. W. Anderson, Barton, Bates, Beren, Bergerman, Callen, Casale, Daley, Diefendorf, Dodds, Duggan, +Eastburn, Ericson, Even, Guertin, Hammaker, Huther, Jarvis, Jewett, Johnston, Kelley, Klee, Knight, Kotch, Kramer, Limpitlaw, B. N. MacDonald,
Martin, McAllister, McCanless, Mongillo, Montgomery, Muirhead, Murphy, Nissi, O'Brien, Pauley, Pengel, Perens, Pickett, Piper, Plotts, Price, Renkert, Rice, P. 0 . Ritter, Schuh, Sivitz, Skinner, +William Rodney Smith, Steams, Stehle, Steinmetz, Stiles, Streeto,
*Founders Society for gifts of $1 ,000 or more. +Anniversary Club for gifts of $150-$999.
Stuart, Swanson, D. M. Taylor, Townley, Townsend, Tulk, Vaughan, Warren, Weisburger, Wilkman, Willis, Wood, Woodward, Zachs, Zimmerman 1957 Agent- William E. Learnard, Becherer, Behr, Bennett, J. R. Bradley, L. Brown, Bulkley, Case, Channell, Clinton, Couch, Caine, +Curran, J. M. Daniels, Darcey, Day, Douglas,
Page 9 +Drabowsky, Elliott, Finkbeiner, Fleishman, Fox, +Frank, Gocht, +Harlow, Jones, +Kayser, Kelleher, Kenefick, Kratz, Kuiper, Kylander, Learnard, Letcher, Luke, MacDonald, Macisaac, Mann, Marion, Miner, Morhardt, Morrison, Myerson, Percy, Pierce, Pillsbury, Piesetsky, Pitchell, Popowics, +Raynard, Reichard, Richard, Richards, Rosenfeld, Shannon, Shaw, Sheffield, Slater, Solano, Solmssen, Spear, Stout, Szamier, Tews, Tobin, Varat, Vincent, Webster, White, Williams, J.D. Wilson, Winslow 1958 Agent- Benjamin J. Williams, Addison, Back, Bailey, Barrett, Barth, Baxter, Blumstein, Bogert, Buchanan, Buswell, Cass, Catlin, Chekas, Clarke, Corbett, Crandall, Crombie, J. P. Crowe, +Crystal, Drago, Edgerton, Elliott, +Elsas, Farr, Ferrucci, Fuchs, Garrett, Gibson, Gladfelter, Gleason, Hall, Harrison, Hasson, Blick, Jackson, James, Joslin, Kenefick, Kenny, Kilty, Krupp, Kulas, Larsen, Loeffel, Lorson, +Lowenstein, McClenahan, Mcllwaine, Merrill, Miller, Muench, Nevins, Noble, Norris, O'Reilly, Painter, Park, Parker, *Reed, Renard, Renelt, Repole, Ringland, +Roschen, M. A. Schacht, Scharf, Schaupp, Shenkan, Shuster, D. A. Smith, F. S. Smith, J. D. Smith, S. W. Smith, Spencer, Studley, Terry, Thorpe, Traut, Uphoff, Wallace, +Werner, Wilkinson, B. J. Williams, Wolk, Wood, Zoob 1959 Agent-Brian E. Nelson, Abeles, Adams, Belmont, Beristain, Borus, Bozzuto, Canivan, Clarke, Coykendall, Dorwart, Dubel, Elwell, Fairbanks, Fineshriber, Fischbein, Fitts, Frost, W. J. Graham, Harnish, Harrod, Hartz, Henriques, Hoag, Holland, Houston, Hunter, Jacklin, Jaffe, Joy, Judge, Kennedy, Kenney, Krim, LaRochelle, Lessell, Lieber, Lukens, Mayo, Mcilvaine, Moorin, +Morgan, Murray, Nolan, Olson, Olton, +Owen, Paslaski, Pfeffer, Polk, Price, Reopel, Rewa, Rovno, Salver, Scheibe, Schoff, Schram, Schreiner, +Seastrom, Sgro, A. R. Smith, II, 0. T. Smith, R. A. Smith, Spielman, Spivak, Stebbins, Taylor, Thurston, Ward, Wassong, Weeks, Weinstein, Wischenbart, Wright, Wyckoff, Yahn, Zinner, 1960 Agent-William G. deColigny, H. Anderson, Bacharach, Barlow, Bassett, Beaven, Beech, Bergh , Bergmann, Bredine, Brink, Broder, Chalker, Chase, Coogan, Costley, Coxhead, Crane., Curry, Dagata, D'Anzi, Davenport, deColigny, Emley, FitzSimons, +Fox, Foy, Frank, Gavin, Gerundo, Gordon, A. J. Green, Greenlee, Greenwald, Haddad, R. P. Hall, R. T. Hall, Hammaker, Harland, Hokanson, Jago, Jennings, M. E. Johnson, Jr., R. G. Johson, +Koenig, Kotch, Kroh, LaMothe, Langen, +La Valle, +Leof, +Levine, +Lloyd, Lyons, Macho!, Mackey, Mason, +McKelvy, Middleton, Narins, Paterson , Pedemonti, +Peterson, Phillips, Phippen, Plank, Rockwell, Royden, R. N. Russell, Ryder, Sallinger, Salm, Salmon, Schulik, Shulthiess, Spahr, Stockton, Strasser, *Strawbridge, Sweet, Tiffany, Tilzer, Tsairis, Varbalow, Wachs, Wardell, Weinstock, Wilcox, +Winans, Wyckoff, Zitt 1961 Agent- Douglas T. Tansill, . Anello, Angell, Bernstein, Brault, Bridge, Brosgol, Cantor, Carter, Colen, *Colket, Cramer, Dinsmore, Dove, Draper, Druckman, Ewart, Fish, Fitzpatrick, Fitzsimmons, Forrester, Gerber, Gianetti, Gregg, Guertin, Gulotta, Gummere, Hamilton, Henry, E. C. Hughes, Jr., Illick, Johnson, Kahl, Karvazy, Kilborn, Koretz, Kreisel, Lazay, LeSt age, Lowe, Lynch, McCammon, +McRae, Mixter, Morse, D. A. Myerson, P. J. Myerson, O'Brien, Pare, Perlman, Quigley, Rawson, Reese, Rodney, Roten, +Schnadig, Schumacher, Seibert, Shilkret, Slater, Steiner, Stempien, Swift, +Tansill, Turner, Tuttle, Wachtel, Waggoner, Waldeck, Waxler, Wiener, Williams, T. B. Wilson, Wood, +Zimmerman, +Zousmer 1962 Agent-Rodney D. Day, III, Alberts, D. K. Anderson, Bailey, Baker, +Banghart, Bartol, Bashwiner,_ Berkley, C. H. Bishop, Jr., Borawski, Boyd, Brown, Bundy, Carroll, Classen, Coyne, Cummings, Cunneen, Cutler, Daniels, R. D. Day, III, Densem, D'Oench, Duncan, Elwell, Goodman, Gough, Granger, Hageman, Harris, Harting, Hill, Hoffman, Hopkins, Johns, +T. S. Johnson, Kelly, Ketchum, +Kraft, Kuehnle, Lackey, Leddy, Lee, Levy, +Lipkind, M. Lloyd, T. Lloyd, Lockton, Lynde, 路MacLeod, Mason, McAlister, McConnell, McCurrach, McKnight, McNamara, McNulty, Meehan, Mehringer,+Meyer,Miller, W. H. Mitchell, III, Morgan, Nardiello, Nelson, Niven, Pedini, Pine, Platts, +Polk, Pryor, Raymond, +Richardson, Rudnick, Sharpe, Shechtman, +Sheley, F. C. Smith, Spink, Stetler, Strawbridge, Sullivan, Sweeney, Thayer, Tuerk, Wadhams, Wagner, Warren, +Whitters, Zakarian, Zuill 1963 Agent- Thomas E. Calabrese, Aldrich, Alvord, Bailey, Baum, Bordogna, Brewster, Bylin, Calabrese, Chang, Childs, Clark, Corbin, Coxhead, Daly, Densen, DePrez, Dickson, Farrington, Field, Files, Foster, Fox, Fraser, Friedman, Gale, Gold, Gooden, Goodridge, Guiliano, Haarstick, Haddad, Halloran, Harris, Haskell, E. B. Hill, 111, Holbrook, Howland, Hutch, Imrie, T. W. Johnson, +S. P. Jones, Keen, R. C. Knox, III, Kollett, Kraut, Kriteman, Kroll, LaMotte, Lenicheck, Lewis, Linberg, Lippitt, Lundborg, Mackie, Marcuss,
Masius, McCord, McCutcheon, McElwain, McGawn, McGill, Millar, Minifie, Molinsky, Moore, Moyer, Nygard, Odium, Ostapko, O'Sullivan, Parlee, Perreault, Potter, Raff, +Reese, L. L. Reynolds, +S. C. Reynolds, J. M. Richardson, Ricketts, Rubel, +Scott, Scull, Sherin, Sirianni, Southworth, Tozer, Trickett, Vickery, Wardlaw, Watson, Wetzel, Wicks, Winer, Winfield, Winner, Yocum 1964 Agent-Joseph R. Martire, Anonymous, Adelstein, Ahlgren, Allen, M. P. Anderson, R. S. Anderson , Atherton, Avery, Bennett, Bobruff, Borden, Brackett, +Brainerd, Bralove, Brasfield, Burnham, W. F. Campbell, Churchman, Cone, Craig, Crawford, Daley, Dearington, Ehrhardt, Ewing, Feingold, Feirstein, Fenrich, Ferrara, Fiordalis, Friedman, Frier, Gilson, Gordon, Gregory, Grossman, Haring, Harrison, Heldt, Huntoon, Jacobs, Katz, Kellner, Kinzler, Kirkpatrick, Koretz, Lapenn, Levy, Loi, Martire, McCann, McLagan, McQuaid, Milbank, Monahan, Moor, Mosher, Nelson, Niles, Ogden, Orr, Palmer, Pettus, Pyle, Ratches, Roberts, Rowan, Rushmore, Sachs, Saklad, Sanzo, +Silansky, Sinicrope, I. R. Smith, Spencer, Stanley, B. L. Stevens, Sweet, Thomases, Todd, Tower, Twerdahl, Wadlow, Wallace, Watson, Waxman, Weaver, Westney, Wiltbank, Wiltsek, Zickler, Zinser, Albert C. Williams (In Memoriam)
CLASS OF 1964 WINS '16 TROPHY Established in 1959 by the Class of 1916, the Trophy is awarded to the class, out ten years or less, which achieves the best record in the Alumni Fund. The scoring is based on percentage of givers, average and total gift, and total number of contributors. CLASS AGENTS POINTS 1964 Joseph R. Martire 46 1962 Rodney D. Day 44 1963 Thomas E. Calabrese 41 1967 Rev. Calhoun W. Wick 38 196 5 Frederick C. Schumacher 30 1965 Agent-F. C. Schumacher, +Arms, Aron, +Bangert, Basch, Beckett, Berkowitz, Bernstein, Beyer, Bishop, Bory, Carlson, Chapin, Cook, +Deutsch, Duennebier, Dunlop, Ellwood, Fairfield, Gamson, Gann, Garson, Gay, Gish, Gould, Gregg, Guenther, Hance, Hartman, Henry, Hollenbeck, Hopke, Hurwitz, Huskins, Katz, Kelsey, Kolb, Liebowitz, Lodge, Losse, Mason, McDaniel, Mott, O'Neil, Oswecki, Parlin, S. Perkins, III, Potterveld, J. Richardson, II, Rogow, Rohman, Roosevelt, Rorer, Rosenfield, Roth, Rozett, Sawicki, +Schumacher, Silverman, Simonian, A. D. Smith, R. A. Smith, Jr., Snedeker, Sprague, Stolz, Stone, Stroud, Wallis, Wendell, Whalen, D. 0 . Williams, Winter, Woodcock, Woodworth 1966 Agent-Robert F . Powell, Jr., Andrews, Armentano, D. D. Baker, +Barrett, Barringer, Bartlett, Beers, Bougere, Boulanger, Bradford, Brown, Burt, W. R. Carlson, Carter, Chaplin, Clune, Connolly, Cooper, +Deland, Diesel, Diner, Dorrier, Gall, Gilley, Golub, Grimes, J. E. Harris, Jr., Henriques, Hey!, Hopkins, Junod, Keane, Krisiloff, Kuehn, Lee, Lloyd, Lombardo, MacGregor, Marden, Martineau, Mason, McClure, McNally, J. J. Moore, III, Ochs, Peake, Perhonis, Pogue, Powell, Risse!, Sargent, Sartorius, Scarlett, Schweitzer, Shepard, Shipman, Sigman, Sniffen, +C. R. Snyder, III, Spence, Studds, Sulkowski, Tilki, VanSciver, Walmet, Weston, Wiedemann, T. E. Williams, Witherwax 1967 Agent-Calhoun W. Wick, D. A. Anderson, Bartko, Birnbaum,,Bishop, Block, Boas, Bose, Brewer, Brosnahan, Browne, Campbell, Carlson, Caulkins, B. Clark, Clarke, Cummings, Davison, Derderian, Dombroski, Downes, Ebinger, Farnham, FitzSimons, J. J. Fox, Gordon, Graves, Griggs, Haight, Heckscher, Heller, Herbeck , Hicks, Honiss, Hutton, Israel, Jacobini, Jaggers, Kataja, Katz, Keller, +Kemper, Kent, Khoo, Kirkby, +Kroekel, + Kurz, +Levi, Loeb, McCulloch, McLean, O'Connor, Oliver, O'Neal, Orem, Polemis, Powers, Prevost, Purdy, Rath, Ratzan, +Raws, Ray, Rosenbaum, Ruckert, Safran, Salomon, C. Sanders, Sanger, Sawyer, Scheinberg, +Scott, Seibert, Shapiro, J. K. Smith, J. J. Smith, Sommer, Speer, Stein, Stultz, Trainer, Tuttle, Ward, Webster, Weinstein, West,+ A. W. White, Wick, Wiegand, Witter, Wrzosek, Zarr 1968 Agent-Sheldon Tilney, Angelica, Atwater, Baer, Barrante, Barrows, Behrend, Bellows, Bluestone, Borus, Callaghan, Cancelliere, Cassarino, Cogoli, Costello, W. G. Coward, Jr., Coyle, Dickey, Dickstein, DuVivier, Elkin, Enck, Everson, Feldman, W. B. Fisher, Floyd, C. F. Fox, IV, George, Goldberg, Goverman, Grant, Hamsher, Harrison, Hesford, Howard, Hyde, Jaffee, Kersteen, Kosloski, Madorin, McClelland, McCrudden, Meloy, Miles, Minukas, Monks, Monti, Morrill, Morris, Musinski, Nary, +Neff, Noonan, Pavel, Peters, Pine, Powel, Price, Prout, Richmond, Riker, Rohfritch, Rundquist, Sabloff, Schott, Shepard, Stites, Stuhlman, Thomas, Tilney,
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White, E. H. Williams, Jr., Woodruff 1969 Agent- Larry H. Whipple, Adler, Atashian, August, Barkhausen, Barlow, Beatty, Behn, Berger, Brooks, Bushueff, Cantwell, Carroll, Casalone , Chick, Clair, Cleary, Connors, Cordner, Davidson, DeLong, Dowd, Duffney, Dugan, W. T. Duncan, Ehrenberg, Elliott, Freeman, Fridy, Friedman, Godfrey, Goldfrank, A. R. Gordon, Gregg, Griffin, +Grinnell, Harwood, Hastings, Hayes, Haynes, Heller, Hendee, Hershey, E. S. Hill, D. P. Johnson, Kenworthy, Lackner, Lenik, Levy, Lowe, Marimow, Maxson, Mears, Mendelson, Millard, Osborne, Otis, Patteson, Pinter, Reid, Rice, Sample, Seaverns, Siegfried, Simchak, Simon, L. L. Smith, Snowdon, +Stephens, Stern, Tewell, Titus, Whipple, Wigder, Winter, Young, Zartarian 1970 Agent-Scott M. Donahue, Anonymous, Aasen, Agerton, Alfred, S. A. Anderson, Andrus, Baetjer, Baker, Bamberger, Belida, Bingham, Bonee, Branstator, Campbell, Carmen, R. C. Dale, Jr., S. N. Dale, Davidson, Dershaw, Dight, Donahue, Drury, Duncan, Ewing, Farnell, Fentress, Fenwick, Flaherty, Forzani, Fox, E. M. Gallo, J. F. Gallo, Jr., Gamber, Glowa, Gohsler, Gordon, Greenspan, Gretz, Hagaman, Hale, S. P. Hamilton, Hannay, Harm, Helsdon, R. C. Hoffman, IV, James, Jones, Kaynor, Kerr, W. C. Lawrence, Leeson, Man, Mattei, McClaugherty, Milbank, Moody, Munkwitz, Newbury, Newquist, Peelle, Phillips, Pottash, Reed, Reilert, Richards, R. T. Robinson, Sadayasu, Sager, Scherer, Schinfeld, Mr. & Mrs. Nathan Schor, Simon, Tody, Webber, Weinstein, Wheelwright, Wiles, Wilson, Wyland, Zielinski, Zitin, Langdon W. Tyler (In Memoriam) 1971 Agent - William N. Booth, Adams, Ayres, Benjamin, Birinyi, Birmingham, Booth, Borchert, Bradford, Clark, Clement, Cohn, Colman, Coriale, Davis, DiBenedetto, Enders by, Evans, Filer, Forastiere, Frederick, Funston, Garrett, Gilbert, Griffith, Haas, L. K. Hankin, Heffner, Humphrey, Jacobson, Jenkelunas, Jianakoplos, Kalbacker, Kaplan, Kelley,
Kennedy, Knight, Lawrence, Lewis, Lines, Marchisotto, J. Miller, Milliken, Moore, Olander, Osher, Phillips, Pratt, Price, Reinsel, Richards, +Rohlen, Ross, Sarasohn, Schott, Slocum, Steigerwalt, 'Thomson, Tom, Vince, Waterman, Winkler, Winton, Wood, Woodruff, Woolsey 1972 Lalli, Savage 1973 Kupfer berg 1974 Starkey 1975 Huoppi MASTERS DEGREE ALUMNI L. S. Adams, B. H. Anderson, H. B. Anderson,
M. P. Barker, E. G. Berger, N. Bestor, Biloon, P. S. Brown, J. L. Butler, Butterworth, B. S. Carpenter, Cebelius, Cohen, Comerford, Coughlin, Davoren, Deephouse, Dickstein, W. L. Eddy, Enders, J. F. Gallo, Gilman, Greenblatt, Grubbs, V. Harris, Hillard, Hinman,_ Hyde, L. B. Johnson, C. W. Johnson, Juke, Kane, Kelsey, Kezerian, Klein, Krawcazyk, Larkin, Larson, McM. Lewis, Lord, Mackesson, Manciagli, Marottolo, Marshall, McLane, M. D. Meder, G. H. Murray, Nabel, E. L. Ogden, Parkyn, J. A. Patterson, Perret, J. C. Richardson, *Risdon, Rowe, Ryba, Saif, Salsburg, Saman, Savin, Seaverns, Shanahan, M. M. Sheridan, Shia, Shookus, Sica, Stanton, Storms, Styring, Swanson, Talcott, Thivierge, B. S. Welch, Whelan, Wise, HONORARY DEGREE ALUMNI Appleyard, +Baker, Baldwin, Beach, Beecher, +Blum, *Boyer, +Braceland, Butterfield, *Day, *Deeds, *Enders, Etherington, Feldman, Fraser, +Fuller, Glover, Goldsmith, Goodwin, +Gray , Grubbs, *Gwinn, +Hamilton, Hickmott, Horner , Jacobs, Kennedy, Langlykke, *Magowan, Martin, +Morency, Parsons, *Randall, Roosa, Rose, *Seaverns, Smith, +Suisman, *Wean, V-12ALUMNI O'Hare, Warwick
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Anonymous Anonymous Mr. & Mrs. Robert W. Abendroth Mr. & Mrs. Morris Adelman Dr. & Mrs. H. Henry Adler Mr. & Mrs. Ramon Albo AbrahamS. Albrecht, Esq . Mrs. Antoinette S. Allegra Mr. & Mrs . John J. Allen Mr. & Mrs. Gilman Angier Mrs. Donald Anthony Dr. & Mrs. Frederick M. Apfelbaum Mr. & Mrs. Paul Arcari Mr. & Mrs. Chester L. Arnold Mr. & Mrs. D. Richard Ashburn Mr. & Mrs. James T. Ashford Mr. & Mrs. Thomas G. Aspinwall, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Russell W. Babb Mr. & Mrs. Albert E. Back Mr. & Mrs. Daniel B. Badger Mr. & Mrs. David C. Bailey Mr. & Mrs. Loring MacK. Bailey Mr. & Mrs. Frank A. Baker, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Robert C. Baldwin Mr. & Mrs. Frank J. Bamberger Mr. & Mrs. Lee A. Banash Mr. & Mrs. Charles S. Barans Mrs. J. Russell Barlow Mr. & Mrs. C. Minor Barringer Mr. & Mrs. William A. Barron, III Mrs. Catherine Barth well Mr. & Mrs. John E. Bartlett Mr. & Mrs. Samuel R. Basch Mr. & Mrs. R. Bruce Bass Mr. Alexis I. duP. Bayard Dr. & Mrs. Samuel B. Beaser Mr. John T. Beaudouin Lt. Col. & Mrs. Alexander J. Belida Dr. & Mrs. HermanS. Belmont Mr. & Mrs. Bruce N. Bensley Mr. & Mrs. Jack J. Bernstein Mr. & Mrs. Nelson Bigelow Mr. & Mrs. Wasyl Bileckyj Mr. & Mrs. Harvey W. Bingham Mr. & Mrs. Arthur 0. Black Mr. EdwardS. Blackwell, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. JosephS. Blank, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Alfred W. Blanken Mrs. Arlene Z. Bloom Mr. & Mrs. Roger G. Blum Mr. & Mrs. Paul J. Bock Mr. & Mrs. Richard P. Bodine Mr. & Mrs. Alexander W. Borawski Mr. & Mrs. Bartholomew H. Bossidy Mr. & Mrs. Donald H. Bosworth Mr. & Mrs. Raymond L. Boulanger Mr. & Mrs. John P. Boynton Mr. & Mrs. Jay R. Braus
*Founders Society for gifts of $1,000 or more. +Anniversary Club for gifts of $150-$999.
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Dr. & Mrs. Willard M. Bright Mr. & Mrs . John H. Brinckerhoff Mr. & Mrs. John Bristow Mr. & Mrs. Bernard Brown Mr. & Mrs. Howard H. Brown Mr. & Mrs. John A. Brown Mrs. Mary C. Brown Mr. & Mrs. Willard W. Brown Mr. & Mrs. Bernard Brownstein Mr. & Mrs. Wilber M. Brucker, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Alexander J. Bruen Mr. & Mrs. A. G. Bryant Dr. & Mrs. Julius Buckwald Dr. & Mrs. Donald P. Burt Mr. & Mrs. Halleck A. Butts Mr. & Mrs. Wilbert J. Buxton Mr. & Mrs. Anthony A. Calabro Mr. & Mrs. Henry B. Caldwell Mr. & Mrs. Victor Cardell Mr. & Mrs. Harry V. Carey Mr. & Mrs. Peter R. Carley Dr. & Mrs. Charles 0. Carothers Mr. & Mrs . Donald W. Carroll Dr. & Mrs . Douglas Carroll, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Clarence U. Carruth, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Philip S. Carter Mrs. Nino Casadei Mr. & Mrs. E. William Chapin Mrs . Frances C. Chapman Dr. & Mrs. Bertram W. Charap Mr. & Mrs. Aaron Charney Dr. & Mrs. Mortimer R. Cholst Mrs. Aline M. Clark Mr. & Mrs. John R. Clark Mr. & Mrs. Lewis H. Clark Mr. & Mrs . Robert E. Cleary Mr. C. Francis Clement Mrs. Irene G. Clothier Mr. & Mrs. Arthur M. Cohen Mr. & Mrs. Craig Colgate, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Samuel Collado Mr. & Mrs. Harley J. Conaway Mr. & Mrs. G. Gardner Cook Mr. & Mrs. Seabury Cook Mr. & Mrs. William Coons Dr. & Mrs. Irving S. Cooper Mr. & Mrs . John F. Copeland Dr. & Mrs. Reuben Copperman Mr. & Mrs. Fairman C. Cowan Mr. & Mrs. Willis G. Coward Mr. Owen T. Coyne Mr. & Mrs. Frank W. Crabill Mrs . L. Robert Crandall Mr. & Mrs . Michael J. Crimi Mr . & Mrs. Robert Crimmins Mrs. W. K. Cromwell, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Richard P. Cuminale Mr. & Mrs. Walter J. P. Curley, Jr. Dr. & Mrs. Simon Dack Mr. & Mrs. Norman Dansker
Page 10
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THE PARENTS FUND GROWTH RECORD
FISCAL YEAR
AVERAGE AMOUNT RAISED CONTRIBUTORS GIFT
1960-61 1961-62 1962-63 1963-64 1964-68 1968-69 1969-70 1970-71 1971-72
$38,531 424 $ 93.01 40,739 584 69.74 40,049 630 63.56 50,230 619 81.14 FORD CHALLENGE CAMPAIGN 68,958 121.40 568 468 59,603 127.36 84,628 532 159.00 88,099 630 139.00
Dr. & Mrs. Chester C. d'Autremont Mr. & Mrs. Richard L. Davies Mr. & Mrs. Albert H. Davis Mr. & Mrs. Thomas M. Debevoise Mr. & Mrs. George F. Degen Mr. & Mrs. Howard M. DeLaittre + Mr. & Mrs. Warren Delano Mr. & Mrs. F. L. DeMeulenaere + Dr. & Mrs. Samuel Dershaw Mr. & Mrs. Louis J. Devendittis Mr. & Mrs. Sidney G. Dillon Mr. & Mrs. Harry L. Dow Mr. & Mrs. Saul C. Downes Mr. & Mrs. Stanley Downs Mr. & Mrs. Charles E. Doyle + Mr. & Mrs. Stanley B. Doyle, Jr. Mrs. Harold W. Duennebier Mr. & Mrs. John F. Duffy Mr. & Mrs. Carroll Dunham, IV * Mr. & Mrs. Robert G. Dunlop Mr. & Mrs. William P. Durkee, III Mr. & Mrs. Hy C. Dworin Mrs. Frederick J. Eberle Dr. & Mrs. Norman D. Edelman Mr. & Mrs. Agustin E. Edwards Mr. George P. Egbert, Jr. Dr. & Mrs. Frank R. Egloff Mr. & Mrs. Alfred Eliot Mr. & Mrs. Richard A. Ellinghaus Mr. & Mrs. William P. Ellwood + Mr. & Mrs. Elric G. Endersby Mrs. Elizabeth A. Endicott Mrs. Donald G. Enoch Mr. & Mrs. Charles H. Erhart, Jr. 路* Mr. & Mrs. Carl K. Erpf Mr. & Mrs. Basil Estreich Mr. & Mrs. James D. Evans, Jr. Mr. Walter F. Evers Mr. & Mrs. John A. Ewing Mr. & Mrs. Robert S. Eynon Mr. & Mrs. Edward A. Fahrner + Mr. & Mrs. Phillip F. Faneuil Mr. & Mrs. Francis P. Farnsworth Mr. & Mrs. Francis C. Farwell, II + Mr. & Mrs. Leon Fassler * Mr. & Mrs. Waldron Faulkner Mr. & Mrs. Marvin Fein Mr. & Mrs. Francis E. Fennerty Mr. & Mrs. Anthony C. Ferrara Mr. & Mrs. Fank A. Ferrari Mr. & Mrs. Russell W. Field, Jr. Mrs. Joan C. Fierri + Mr. & Mrs. Samuel Filler Mr. & Mrs. William C. Finkenstaedt Mr. & Mrs. Frederick Firestone Mr. & Mrs. Frederick Fish Mr. & Mrs. Benjamin Fisher Mr. & Mrs. John N. Fisher Mr. & Mrs. Robert C. Fisher Mr. Henry Fishzohn Mr. & Mrs. Patrick Fitzpatrick Mr. & Mrs. Robert W. Fleming Mr. & Mrs. Eldra M. Floyd, Jr. + Mr. Horace C. Ford + Mr. & Mrs. Charles D. Fox, III Mr. & Mrs. Israel R. Freelander Mr. & Mrs. Donald H. Freeman Mr. & Mrs. I. M. Fried Mr. & Mrs. Felix T. Galvin * Dr. & Mrs. James L. Gamble, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Stephen S. Gardner Mr. & Mrs. Philip Garnick + Mr. & Mrs. Alfred A. Garofolo Mr. & Mrs. Richard J . Gates 'Mr. & 'Mrs. Joh n 1'>. atsos Mr. & Mrs. Nathan A. Geetter Mr. & Mrs. Saul German Mr. & Mrs. Arthur H. Getz Mr. & Mrs. Bernard S. Gidding Dr. & Mrs. David Ginsberg + Mr. & Mrs. Jules D. Gittin + Mr. & Mrs. Irving Gladstein Dr. & Mrs. Carl I. Glassman Mr. & Mrs. Solomon B. Glater Dr. & Mrs. Joseph B. Godick Mr. & Mrs. Alvin I. Goldberg Mr. & Mrs. Frederick T. Goldberg Mr. & Mrs. Alfred S. Goldreyer Dr. & Mrs. Edward Goldstein Mr. & Mrs. Melvin S. Goldstein Mr. & Mrs. J. Donald Goodwin Mr. & Mrs. Elias S. Gottlieb Mr. & Mrs. Lyttleton Gould, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. John M. Graham + Mr. & Mrs. Eugene M. Grant Mr. & Mrs. William R. Grant Mrs. Frances F. Graves Mr. & Mrs. Ralph A. Graves
CHAIRMAN Joseph V. Getlin Clarence U. Carruth, Jr. Robert G. Dunlop F. Stanton Deland, Jr. Charles Wright, III A. Dix Leeson Alfred Raws, Jr. Willard W. Brown
Mr. & Mrs. Nathan R. Greenbaum Mr. & Mrs. Ted H. Greene Mr. & Mrs. Howard Greenfield Dr. & Mrs. William Greenspan Mr. & Mrs. Maurice Greenspon Mr. & Mrs. David Gregg, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Charles J. Greve * Mr. & Mrs. Frank K. Griesinger Mr. & Mrs. Eldon A. Grimm Mr. & Mrs. Mortimer Grossman + Mr. & Mrs. JosephS. Grover Mrs. Jennie Guiliano Dr. & Mrs. Paul F. Gryska Mr. & Mrs. Alvin P. Gutman Mr. & Mrs. C. Barse Haff, Jr. + Mr. & Mrs. Richard 0. Hails Mr. & Mrs. James M. Hall Mr. & Mrs. W. Rush G. Hamilton Mr. & Mrs. E. Wesley Hammond Mr. & Mrs. Donald H. Hamsher + Dr. & Mrs. Harry Harhay Judge & Mrs. Roy W. Harper Mr. & Mrs. David T. Harris + Mr. & Mrs. Irving Harris Mrs. Taylor Harris Mrs. Lester M. Harrison + Mr. & Mrs. Charles E. Hart, III Mr. & Mrs. Raymond E. Hartz Mr. & Mrs. Edmund B. Hawley Mr. & Mrs. Alvin M. Hayim Mr. & Mrs. William G. Heckman Mrs. Elisabeth B. Helsdon + Mr. & Mrs. Myron H. Hendel * Mr. & Mrs. Gerald B. Henry + Mr. & Mrs. James J. Henry Mr. & Mrs. John E. Heppe Mrs. Walter Herrick Dr. & Mrs. Abraham J. Hesche! Mr. & Mrs. BernardS. Hirsch Dr. & Mrs. Dwight C. Hoeg Mr. & Mrs. Jack Hoffman Mr. & Mrs. Martin L. Hoffman Mr. & Mrs. Philip D. Holden Mr. & Mrs. Mark Hollingsworth Mrs. Hilary H. Holmes Mr. & Mrs. Robert A. Horn Mr. & Mrs. Raymond J. Hornfischer + Mr. & Mrs. Frank T. Howard Mr. & Mrs. Fred Howard Mr. & Mrs. George H. Howard, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Robert C. Howland Mr. & Mrs. Jacob Huberman Mr. & Mrs. Wolcott Humphrey, Jr. + Mr. & Mrs. Richard Hunnewell Mr. & Mrs. S. Knox Hunter Mrs. Agnes G. Huntley Mr. & Mrs. Osmo Huoppi Mrs. Charles G. Hurd Mr. & Mrs. Richard W. Hyde Mr. & Mrs. Carl H. Imlay + Mr. & Mrs. Paul M. Ingersoll Captain & Mrs. Henry A. Ingram Mr. & Mrs. Rene A. Isaac Mr. Leo Israel Mr. Ronald Jacobs Mrs. Hilger P. Jenkins Mr. & Mrs. Barron P. Je n k s, I[[ Mr. & Mrs. Alden P. Johnson + Mr. & Mrs. Ernst Johnson + Mr. & Mrs. Benjamin F. Jones, III Mr. & Mrs. Thomas P. Jones, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Hung Wah Jue Mr. & Mrs. Edwin H. Kahn + Mr. & Mrs. Sidney L. Kahn, Jr. i>r. & Mrs. Edwin B. Kalan Mr. & Mrs. J. William Kapouch + Dr. & Mrs. Lester Karafin + Mr. & Mrs. Richard H. Kashe Dr. & Mrs. Jacob D. Katz Mr. & Mrs. Herman B. Kaufman + Mr. & Mrs. Howard B. Kelsey Dr. & Mrs. Roland L. Kennedy Mr. & Mrs. Edgar H. Kent Mrs. Margaret King Mr. & Mrs. F. Shallus Kirk Mr. & Mrs. John G. Kirk Mr. & Mrs. Clarence J. Kjorlien Mr. & Mrs. Patrick Klein * Mr. & Mrs. Robert C. Knox, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. John T. Koehler * Mr. & Mrs. Harvey L. Koizim + Mr. & Mrs. Geza D. Koncz Mr. & Mrs. Robert J. Koretz Mr. & Mrs. Stanley Kosloski, Sr.
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Mr. & Mrs. John A. Kroh Mr. & Mrs. Robert A. Kubicek Mr. & Mrs. George A. Kuhn, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Jack Kupferberg Mr. & Mrs. Abe B. Kupperman Mr. & Mrs. Adolph B. Kurz Dr. & Mrs. Thomas E. Lake Mr. & Mrs. John D. LaMothe Dr. & Mrs. William W. Lander Dr. & Mrs. Christopher L. Landry Prof. & Mrs. Warren W. Lane Mr. & Mrs. Carl G. Langen Mrs. Mary E. Lankester Mr. & Mrs. Fritz H. Larson Mr. & Mrs. Loewy S. Latz Mr. & Mrs. Robert A. Lawrence Mr. & Mrs. William N. Lazares Mr. & Mrs. James C. Leigh Mr. & Mrs. Monroe Leigh Mr. & Mrs. Leonard Leight Mr. & Mrs. John J. Leighton Mr. & Mrs. Richard A. Leonard Mrs. H. W. Lester Mr. & Mrs. Geoffrey J. Letchworth Mr. & Mrs. George M. Levine Mr. & Mrs. Milton L. Levy Mr. & Mrs. Richard L. Levy Mr. & Mrs. Eugene J. Lewis Mr. & Mrs. Howard Lewis, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Herman Liebenson Mr. & Mrs. George J. Lincoln, III Dr. & Mrs. Frank H. Lindeman Mr. & Mrs. Stephen V. Lines Mr. & Mrs. Frank E. Lingard Mr. & Mrs. Max Lipkirld Mr. David Livingston Dr. & Mrs. L. Maxwell Lockie Mr. & Mrs. Carl J. Lombardo Mr. & Mrs. Edward C. Lord, II Mr. & Mrs. John W. Losse, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Franklin 0 . Loveland Mr. & Mrs. Alan H. Lowenthal Mr. & Mrs. H. Thomas Luke Mr. & Mrs. Mortimer F. Luria Mr. & Mrs. Milton I. Luxemburg Mr. & Mrs. John M. Lynham Dr. & Mrs. James MacCallum Dr. & Mrs. Alexander S. MacDonald Mr. & Mrs. Ian K. MacGregor Mr. & Mrs. Charles S. Mack Mr. & Mrs. Alexander A. Mackimmie, Jr. Dr. & Mrs. W. Brandon Macomber Mr. & Mrs. John B. Macreery Mr. & Mrs. Robert E. Maier Mr. & Mrs. Albert E. Makin Mr. & Mrs. James J. Malone Mr. & Mrs. Benjamin Mandell Mrs. Theodore L. Mander Mr. & Mrs. Harold Mandly, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Andrew K. Marckwald Mr. & Mrs. Jay Marimow Mr. Julius J. Marion Mrs. Rachel R. Marks Mr. & Mrs. Leroy C. Marshall Mr. Bertram T. Martin Mr. & Mrs. Briton Martin Dr. & Mrs. John E. Martin Mr. & Mrs. Andrew T. Martinez Mr. & Mrs. J. Floyd Massey, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. A. Harper Massie Mr. Kenneth C. Matthews Mr. & Mrs. Robert C. McAdoo Dr. & Mrs. William U. McClenahan Mr. & Mrs. Francis L. McClure Mr. & Mrs. Peter F. McKay Mr. & Mrs. John D. McKinney Mrs. Densil McMorris Mr. James W. McNally Mr. & Mrs. Samuel L. McSorley Mr. & Mrs. Alexander J. Meigs Mr. & Mrs. W. Knox Mellon Mr. Ezra Melrose Mr. & Mrs. Thomas W. Merritt, Jr. Dr. & Mrs. Joseph D. Messler Mr. & Mrs. John ll:fezochow Mr. & Mrs. Keith C. Miles Mr. & Mrs. Frederick Milholland Mr. & Mrs. Robert G. Millar Mr. & Mrs. William J. Miller Mr. & Mrs. G errish ff. Nfillike n Mrs. Joseph Minsky Mr. & Mrs. Harry E. Mitchell Dr. & Mrs. David W. Molander Mr. & Mrs. Paul E. Molitor Mr. & Mrs. Rudolph M. Montgelas
SPECIAL GIFTS SOLICITORS 1971-1972 PARENTS FUND Ralph A. Taussig, Chairman Chester I. Arnold C. Minor Barringer Bruce N. Bensley Willard W. Brown Dr. Charles 0 . Carothers Clarence U. Carruth, Jr. Francis C. Farwell, III Mrs. William C. Finkenstaedt Milton L. Levy Richard F. Nelson Alfred Raws, Jr. Warren S. Tenney Joshua C. Whetzel
*Founders Society for gifts of $1,000 or more. +Anniversary Club for gifts of $150-$999.
Mr. & Mrs. Robert K. Mooney Mr. & Mrs. Philip R. Moonves + Mr. & Mrs. James S. Morgan Mr. & Mrs. Jesse J. Morgan, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. David D. Morgans Mr. & Mrs. John A. Morris Mr. & Mrs. William D. Morrisol), Jr. Dr. Chester W. Morse Dr. & Mrs. John B. Moses Mr. & Mrs. Gilbert B. Moyer * Mr. & Mrs. William K. Muir Mrs. Stanley N. Muirhead Mr. & Mrs. William E. Mulkeen Mrs. Alexander F. Murenia Mr. & Mrs. Edgar J. Nathan, III Mr. & Mrs. Charles K. Nazarian + Mr. & Mrs. Richard F. Nelson + Mr. & Mrs. S. Page Nelson, Jr. + Mr. & Mrs. Clarence L. Neuner Dr. & Mrs. AJlthony V. Nevulis Mr. & Mrs. Egbert S. Newbury, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Willard G. Newell + Dr. & Mrs. Edward A. Newman Dr. & Mrs. Ernest B. Newman + Mr. & Mrs. George Newman Mrs. Adamarie L. Newquist Dr. & Mrs. Robert W. Nichols + Mr. & Mrs. Alexander R. Norden + Dr. & Mrs. Charles M. Norris Mr. & Mrs. Raymond F. Obrock Mr. & Mrs. Ernest L. Oliver Mr. & Mrs. John C. Oliver, Jr. Robert D. O'Malley, M.D. + Mr. Norris L. O'Neill Mrs. William D. Orr Mr. & Mrs. Stewart Orton Mr. & Mrs. John B. Osborne Mr. & Mrs. Gosta W. Oscarsson Mr. & Mrs. A. R. Ostrow * Mr. & Mrs. Mandell J. Ourisman Mr. & Mrs. Frank J. Pandolfo Mr. & Mrs. Jefferson D. Parker + Mr. & Mrs. William M. Parry + Mr. & Mrs. Murray R. Pearlstein Mr. & Mrs. Silvio Pedemonti + Mr. & Mrs. Steven E. Perakos Mr. & Mrs. Seymour Perkins, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Raymond T. Perron Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth E. Perry + Mr. & Mrs. Richard D. Phippen Mr. Raymond J. Picard + Mr. & Mrs. John Picone Mr. & Mrs. JohnS. Pingel Mr. & Mrs. Parker Poole, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Richard G. Poole Mr. & Mrs. William H. Pope Mr. & Mrs. L. Abbett Post, Jr. Dr. & Mrs. Ralph Post + Mr. & Mrs. Tom R. Potter Mr. & Mrs. Arthur L. Powell Mr. & Mrs. Bolling R. Powell, Jr. * Mrs. Charles F. Powell + Mr. & Mrs. John W. Powell, II Mr. & Mrs. Francis M. Powers Mrs. Elizabeth K. Pratt Mr. & Mrs. Frank W. Prejsnar Mr. & Mrs. Leonard Preminger Mr. & Mrs. David Price Mr. & Mrs. Converse Prudden Mr. & Mrs. EliotT. Putnam Mr. & Mrs. Francis X. Quinlan Mr. & Mrs. Arthur L. Rack, Sr. Mr. Brendan G. Rafferty * Mr. & Mrs. Lenwood W. Raglin + Mr. & Mrs. Alfred Raws, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Joseph J. Reale Mr. & Mrs. J. Woodward Redmond Captain & Mrs. Dale C. Reed Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Reed + Mr. & Mrs. Joseph H. Reese * Mr. & Mrs. Willis L. M. Reese Dr. & Mrs. Harold Reilert Mr. & Mrs. Cyril F. Reynolds Mrs. Doane W. Rhines Mr. & Mrs. Richard L. Ricci Mr. & Mrs. Samuel H. Rice Mr. & Mrs. William S. Richardson + Mr. & Mrs. Ralph R. Riehl, Jr. Mrs. Martin C. Risse! Mr. & Mrs. Herman J. Ritter Mr. & Mrs. Bernard Robbins Mr. & Mrs. Edward W. Robinson Mr. & Mrs. Frederick J. Robinson Mr. & Mrs. Robert C. Robinson Dr. & Mrs. Rochester R. Roby Mr. & Mrs. Samuel B. Ro~ers Dr. & Mrs. William P. Rogers, Jr. Dr. & Mrs. Irving Rosenberg Dr. & Mrs. Lee S. Rosenberg Dr. & Mrs. Philip Rosenblatt Mrs. Oscar A. Rosenthal Dr. & Mrs. James L.A. Roth Mr. & Mrs. Horace V. Rumsey Mr. Nicholas J. Russo Dr. & Mrs. Jack Sabloff Mr. & Mrs. Gordon W. Sanford Mr. & Mrs. Alfred F. Savage Mr. & Mrs. Geoffrey A. Sawyer Dr. & Mrs. Louis P. Saxe Mr. & Mrs. G. Ellis Schaefer Mr. & Mrs. J . Peter Schaeffer + Dr. & Mrs. Alfred S. Schloss Mr. & Mrs. Samuel S. Schoen Mr. & Mrs. Gordon T. Schofield Mr. & Mrs. Manny Schor + Mr. & Mrs. Lewis M. Schott Mr. & Mrs. Robert Schumacher Mr. & Mrs. Leo Schumer Mr. & Mrs. Harold A. Schwartz Mr. & Mrs. Robert E. Sears
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Mrs. Martha T. Seelbach Mr. & Mrs. James B. Seelye Dr. & Mrs. Stephen B. Sello Mr. & Mrs. Domer N. Shaw Mr. & Mrs. Irving R. Shelnitz Mr. & Mrs. Harry W. Shepard Mr. & Mrs. Winston Sheppard Mr. & Mrs. Stephen Shutran Col. & Mrs. William C. Sibert Mr. & Mrs. Walter 0. Siegel Mr. & Mrs. Murray Sieger Mr. & Mrs. Charles M. Siegfreid Mr . & Mrs. Edmund R. Siegrist Mr. & Mrs. Harry J. Sigman Mr. & Mrs. Robert L. Silverman Mrs. Morag M. Simchak Mr. & Mrs. Edward P. Simonian Mrs. Reginald Sinclaire Mr. & Mrs. Peter M. Sivaslian Mr. & Mrs. Louis N. Slocum, Jr. The Reverend Birney W. Smith, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Carter Smith Mrs. E. Eldridge Smith Mr. & Mrs. Halsey Smith The Hon. John L. Smith, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. PaulK. Smith Mr. & Mrs. Richard A. Smith Mr. & Mrs. Robert 0 . Smith Mr. & Mrs. Sumner Smith, Jr. Mr. William M. Smith Mr. & Mrs. Sol Smoland Mr. & Mrs. Marne K. Snyder Dr. & Mrs. Arthur R. Sohval Mr. & Mrs. David H. Solis, IV Mr. & Mrs. Richard D. Solo Dr. & Mrs. Wi~iam G. Speed, III Mrs. Jane G. Sprenger Mr. & Mrs. Osmon R. Springsted Mr. & Mrs. Cyril S. Stanley The Hon. & Mrs. George Starke Dr. & Mrs. Abraham 0. Stein Mrs. Howard Stephens Mr. Donald E. Stevens Mr. & Mrs. Edward B. Stevens Mr. & Mrs. J. J. Stevenson, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Joseph J. Stewart Mr. & Mrs. James C. Stone, Jr. Mr. G. Carroll Stribling Mr. & Mrs. Stanford L. Strogoff Mr. & Mrs. Donald R. Sutherland Mr. & Mrs. William G. Sutherland, Jr. Mrs. William R. Talbot Mr. & Mrs. Albert L. Tanghe Mr. & Mrs. Ralph J. Taussig Mr. & Mrs. William M. Taussig Mr. & Mrs. Reuben C. Taylor, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. WarrenS. Tenney Mrs. Anne G. Therman The Rev. & Mrs. J. Moulton Thomas Mr. & Mrs. Fred Thomases Mr. & Mrs. Fred D. Thompson Mr . & Mrs. George H. Tilgham Mr. & Mrs. Norcross S. Tilney Mr. & Mrs. Frederick D. Tobin Mrs. Sarah W. Todd Mr. & Mrs. Robert Toland, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Joseph R. Tomlinson Mrs. Ralph L. Tompkins Mr. & Mrs. Earle J. Tonsgard
Mr. & Mrs. Robert E. Toomey Mr. & Mrs. Ernest A. Tosi + Mr. & Mrs. James W. Tower * Mr. & Mrs. Robert F. Tulcin Mr. & Mrs. Horace Turner + Mr. & Mrs. Stanley A. Twardy + Mr. & Mrs. Charles P. Twichell Mr. Richard F. F. Tyner The Rev. & Mrs. Alfred Vail + Mr. & Mrs. AbramS. Valentine * Mr. & Mrs. P.R. van der Stricht Mr. & Mrs. Harold C. Veith, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Michael N. Verdi Mr. & Mrs. Jesse A. Volk Mr. & Mrs. John W. Waggett Dr. & Mrs. Joseph A. Wagner Dr. & Mrs . Seymour Wagner Mr. & Mrs . David P. Wakefield + Mr. & Mrs. Charles S. Walker * Mr. & Mrs. John F. Walton, Jr. + Mr. & Mrs. John W. Warrington + Mr. & Mrs. Charles A. Watson Mr. & Mrs. Solomon Waxman + Dr. & Mrs. Samuel Weinberg Mr. & Mrs. Jesse Weiss Mr. George B. Wendell Mr. & Mrs. John D. Wendler Mr. Thomas L. Wentling Mr. & Mrs. Malcolm F. Wheeler Dr. & Mrs. Henry J. Wheelwright * Mr. & Mrs. Joshua C. Whetzel, Jr. + Mr. & Mrs. John R. White Mr. & Mrs. William G. White + Mr. & Mrs. Robert A. Whitehead, Sr. Mr. & Mrs. Robert B. Wilcox Mr. & Mrs. H. Philip Williams Dr. & Mrs. Michael D. Williams Mr. & Mrs. Palmer Williams + Mr. & Mrs. W. Harry Willson Mrs. John C. Wilmerding Mr. & Mrs. Robert D. Wilson, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Thomas S. Wilson Mr. & Mrs. Richard J. Wolfheim Dr. & Mrs. Julius Wolfram * Mr. & Mrs. Millard F. Wood Mr. & Mrs. Arthur V. Woodworth Mr. & Mrs. Theodore D. Woolsey Mr. & Mrs. Herbert L. Wright + Mr. & Mrs. William Wright Mr. & Mrs. Pete Wybenga * Mr. & Mrs. George W. Wyckoff Mr. & Mrs. Vernon C. Wyle Mr. & Mrs. Donald T. Wynne, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Everett B. Yelton Mr. & Mrs. John G. Yerkes Mr. & Mrs. S. Anders Yocom Mr. & Mrs . John T. Young Mr. & Mrs. M. K. Zachariasewycz Mr. & Mrs. William B. Zachry, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Valois A. Zarr Mr. & Mrs. George B. Zelldt Mrs. Simeon S. Zickler Mr. & Mrs. Samuel H. Zimmerman Mr. Edward Zinser Mr. & Mrs. Morris Ziplow + Mr. & Mrs. Nat Zivin Mr. Merle M. Jacob In Memory of Mr. F. Hamilton Storrs In Memory of John M. Parker +
Friends of Trinity Contributors
*Anonymous Mrs. Wilma M. Achatz Mr. George Adams Miss Marie Adams Dr. Josef Albers Mr. & Mrs. Irwin L. Alberts Mr. Winthrop W. Aldrich Mrs. Edward N. Allen Alpha Chi Rho, Phi Psi Chapter Miss Bluma Altman Mr. Charles H. Anthony Mrs. Graham H. Anthony Mrs. Dorothy C. Archibald Mr. & Mrs. Alfred E. Armstrong Miss Ruth Aronson * Mrs. A. Everett Austin, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Allan P. Ayers Mr. & Mrs. Joseph A. Baer Miss Sandra L. Bagnall Professor Thomas .Baird Mr. Larry M. Baizen Mr. Gladden W. Baker Mr. Henry P. Bakewell Mr. Kenneth Barber + Mrs. Austin D. Barney Mr. Robert E. Barrett Mr. Harry 0. Bartlett Mr. & Mrs. Edward A. Bates Dr. & Mrs. Robert A. Battis Myer Becker Family Mr. & Mrs. Maxwell Belding Dr. & Mrs. Maurice 0 . Belson Mr. & Mrs. Samuel Belson & Roy Mr. & Mrs. William Berman Miss Nancy Bestor Dr. & Mrs. Robert C. Black, III Mrs. Ethel Bladd + Mr. & Mrs. John A. Blanchfield Mr. & Mrs. David Bland Mrs. Edmund B. Boatner Mr. & Mrs. Clifton M. Bockstoce Mr. William Booth Mr. & Mrs. Leonard Bovarnick Mr. David Bowen Mr. Maxwell L. Brainard Mrs. Morgan B. BrainaFd, Jr. Dr. Kenneth F. Brandon * Mrs. Irene Braus + Miss Eleanor L. Brewster Mrs. Jeannette K. Brinch William R. Bronson, M.D. Mr. & Mrs. Albert Bronstein Miss Caryn L. Bronstein Mrs. Philip G. Bronstein
Corporate Contributors of Matching Gifts The A.S. Abell Co. Foundation Aetna Life & Casualty Allied Chemical Foundation American Airlines, Inc. American Metal Climax Foundation, Inc. American Optical Co. Anaconda Asarco Foundation Associated Spring Corporation Bank of America Foundation Burlington Industries Foundation Chase Manhattan Bank Chemical Bank Chrysler Corp. Collins & Aikman Corp. Combustion Engineering, Inc. Connecticut General Life Insurance Company Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance Company Continental Can Co., Inc. Continental Illinois National Bank & Trust Co. The Covenant Group Copley Newspapers CPC International, Inc. Cummins Engine Co. Diamond Shamrock Foundation Eighty Maiden Lane Foundation Equitable Life Assurance Society of the U.S. Esso Education Foundation First National City Bank Foundation Ford Motor Co. General Electric Foundation Gillette Co. Goldman, Sachs & Co.
W. T. Grant Co. Great Northern Paper Co. Gulf Oil Corp. Gulf & Western Industries John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Co. Harsco Corporation Fund Hartford Electric Light Co. Hartford Insurance Group Hartford National Bank & Trust Co. Haskins & Sells Foundation, Inc. Hatheway-Steane Corp. Hercules, Incorporated Hershey Fund Hoffman-La Roche Foundation Hughes Aircraft Co. INA Corporation International Business Machines Corp. International Salt Company International Telephone & Telegraph Corp. Irving Trust Company Johnson & Higgins Kendall Company Foundation Loyal Protective Life Insurance Co. Manufacturer's Hanover Trust Co. Foundation Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Co. McGraw Hill Publishing Co. Mead Johnson & Co. Foundation, Inc. Mellon National Bank & Trust Co. Merck Co. Foundation Mobil Foundation, Inc. Morgan Guaranty Trust Co. Mutual of New York National Distillers & Chemical Corp. North American Rockwell
Northeast Utilities Service Co. Norton Company Occidental Petroleum Charitable Foundation, Inc. Olin Corp. Charitable Trust Owens-Corning Fiberglas Corp. Paul Revere Life Insurance Co. Phelps Dodge Foundation Phoenix Mutual Life Insurance Co. Pitney-Bowes, Inc. Provident National Bank Prudential Insurance Company of America Raytheon Company Rohm & Haas Co. Sanders Associates, Inc. Scott Paper Co. Joseph E. Seagram & Sons, Inc. Smith, Kline & French Foundation The Sperry & Hutchinson Co. Stone & Webster Texaco, Inc. J. Walter Thompson Co. Time, lnc. Transamerica Corp. Travelers Insurance Company United Aircraft Corp. United States Trust Co. Upjohn Co. Warnaco Fund Co. Warner-Lambert Pharmaceutical Co. Western Massachusetts Electric Co. Westinghouse Educational Foundation Winn-Dixie Stores Foundation Xerox Corporation Young & Rubicam Foundation
*Founders Society for gifts of $1,000 or more. +Anniversary Club for gifts of $150-$999.
Brooks, Harvey & Co., Inc. Miss Josephine E. Bryant Buena Vista Property Owners' Association Mr. & Mrs. John L. Bunce Miss Priscilla Ann Burnaby Mr. Nelson R. Burr Mr. & Mrs. Robert W. Butcher Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Calt Dr. Kenneth W. Cameron Mr. & Mrs. J. Leo Carp Mr. Ed Carrier Mr. & Mrs. Thomas G. Carrier Miss Candice Carter + Mr. Edward J. Casey + Mr. & Mrs. Frank B. Chase Mrs. Kimberly Cheney Cinestudio (Film Society Students) Mr. & Mrs . Samuel Citron Mr. Brian Clemow Mr. & Mrs. Merrill Cohen Mr. & Mrs. Samuel H. Cohen Mr. & Mrs. Charles J. Cole Mr. & Mrs. William K . Cole * Mr. & Mrs. H. Bacon Collamore Mr. Atwood Collins, II Mr. & Mrs. John M. Colombo Mr. & Mrs. Walter J. Connolly, Jr. Dr. F. Woodbridge Constant Dr. George B. Cooper Mr. & Mrs. FrankS. Costelloe Mrs. Louis L. Coudert Miss Misti Covitz Miss Ruth C. Cowles + Mr. & Mrs. William Sheffield Cowles Mrs. Warren M. Creamer Mr. & Mrs. I. Frank Crystal Mr. & Mrs. William T . Curley, Jr. Miss Mary Lee Curry * Mrs. Richard C. Cushman Mr. Ralph D. Cutler, Jr. Mr. Henri M. David Miss Diana J. Davis Mr. & Mrs. John M. K. Davis Mr. Julius G. Day, Jr. Mr. Marvin B. Day --~ William 6: De Lana, Esq. Mr. & Mrs. George A. Demos Mr. Richard J. Dillon Mr. Horace W. B. Donegan II Dr. & Mrs. George W. Doten * Dr. & Mrs. Norton Downs Mr. & Mrs. Sumner Dubinsky Mr. Norman J. Dufour, Jr. Dr. Leroy Dunn East Hartford Art League Mrs. William S. Eaton Miss Anne Marie Egeberg Mrs. Elizabeth Z. Elliott Mr. & Mrs. John E. Ellsworth Mr. Fred Emerson * Mr. & Mrs. Ostrom Enders Mr. & Mrs. Donald B. Engley Mr. & Mrs. James F. English, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Sidney Epstein Mr. William B. Ewart Mr. & Mrs. Melvin Fallman Mr. Francis T. Fenn Mr. Michael J. Fish Mr. Thomas D. Forbes Miss Ethyl M. Francis Mr. Armin C. Frank, Jr. Miss Martha C. Fransson The Eli Freedman Family Mrs. David Friedman John and Ruth Fritz + Mr. & Mrs. Avard E. Fuller Mrs. Carolyn Swartz Gallaway Mr. & Mrs. David A. Gardner Sgt. Timothy B. Gee Mr. Michael T. Geiser * Mr. & Mrs. E. Clayton Gengras + George H. Gilman, Jr., Esq. Miss Sadie Glanz Miss Eleanor Gleason Mr. Milton H. Glover Mrs. Al Goldberg Miss Joyce Goldberg Mr. & Mrs. Marc H. Goldberg Mr. & Mrs. Miles J. Goldberg Dr. & Mrs. Carol Goldenthal Mr. & Mrs. Robert Goldman Mr. Alan R . Gordon Mr. & Mrs. Richard H. Gordon Mr. Richard J. Gordon Mr. Roger H. Gordon Mr. Timothy W. Goodrich, II Mr. Francis Goodwin, II * Mr. Henry Sage Goodwin * Mrs. James L. Goodwin Dr. Cyril W. Grace Mrs. David H. Grace Mr. & Mrs. Norman T. Graf Mr. & Mrs. Ellsworth Grant Greater Hartford ORT Mrs. Max Greenbaum * Mr. & Mrs. Nathan R. Greenbaum
Page 12 Mr. & Mrs. Sidney L. Greenbaum Mr. & Mrs. John Greene Mr. & Mrs. StevenS. Greene Cmdr. Arthur W. Gregory, Jr. Mr. Spencer Gross Mr. & Mrs. William T. Gruhn Mr. George Gruzen Mrs. Thomas Hanright Mr. & Mrs. Penn Hargrove Mr. William T. Harris Hartford Area Superintendents Assn. liartford Barge Club Mr. C. S. Hastings Mr. Grom M. Hayes Mrs. William G. Herrman Mr. & Mrs. Philip Hewes Mr. & Mrs. David C. Hewitt Dr. & Mrs. Everett M. Hoffman Mrs. Gertrude Hooker Mrs. Bernard S. Horne Mr. & Mrs. Gerald A. Horowitz Mr. & Mrs. Frederick D. Houghton Dr . Albert J. Howard, Jr. Mrs. Margaret A. Hubbard Mr. E. Harold Hugo Miss Jeanne M. Hunciker Mrs. Charles A. Hunter * Mr. Godfrey Hunter + Mrs. Mary M. C. Hyde Miss Elinor L. Ickes Mr. Edward Ingraham Mark W. Izard, M.D. Mr. Melancthos W. Jacobus Mr. Wilson C. Jainsen + Mr. Sherwood F . Jeter, Jr. The Jewish Theological Seminary of America Mr. Harry J. Johnson Dr. F . Shirley Jones Mr . Richard F. Jones, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Robert B. Kaemmerlen Mr. & Mrs. Bennett Kaplan Mr. & Mrs. Bernard Kaplan Mr. & Mrs. Ted Karger Mr. Harold B. Katz Mr. & Mrs. Samuel Katz Miss Janet Kaull Mr. Thomas J. Kelleher Kenz, Inc. Dr. Austin Kilbourn Mr. & Mrs. Peter Kokinis Mr. George M. Kofsky Capt. & Mrs. Wendell E. Kraft Shirley & Harold Krasnoff Mr. & Mrs. Howard Krasnow Dr. & Mrs. M. Curtis Langhorne Landsman, Abelson & Weisberg Mr. & Mrs. Valle Lattanzio Mr. W. Harmon Leete Mr. & Mrs. Edward Levy Mr. & Mrs. Edward E. Levy Arthur M. Lewis, Esq. Mr. Lawrence R. Libby Mr. Albert K. Lim Dr. Robert Lindsay Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Lipps Mr. Boardman F. Lockwood Mr. & Mrs. Jerome H. Lowengard & Family Mrs. Edward W. Madeira Dr. Michael R. T. Mahoney Mr. Robert H. Mahoney Marblehead High School, Class of 1967 Mr. & Mrs. Frank Marchese Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Markel The Marsh Family Samuel Mayer, M.D. Mr. & Mrs. Frederick C. Maynard, Jr. Miss Diane Mazonson Miss Kathryn L. McCabe * Mrs. Julia B. McCullough Mr. John M. McGann, Jr. Mr. Thomas C. McKone Mrs. George J. Mead Miss Joan E. Merrill Miss Marcia C. Michelson Mr. & Mrs. Bernard Miller Dr. Charles Miller Miss E. Jane Miller Mr. Hyman Miller Mr . & Mrs. James A. Minges Mr. & Mrs. Maurice Mintz Mrs. RobertS. Morris Mr. & Mrs. Walter N. Morrison Mr. William H. Mortensen Mr. Louis E. Nassau 'Neath the Elms Garden Club Dr. & Mrs. Rex C. Neaverso n Dr. & Mrs. Daniel M. Neiditz Mr. Percy L. Nelson * Mrs . William J. Nelson Mr. Robert L. Newell New England Merchants National Bank Mr. Albert H. Newfield + Mr. & Mrs. Robert W. Newman Mr. & Mrs. Hercules Nezames Miss Pearl Nickels Mr. & Mrs. Robert Nickels Mrs. Edward Abbe Niles Mr. & Mrs. Arnold Novick Dr. Frederick Novis Mrs. Eva Nussbacher Dean & Mrs. Edwin P. Nye * Dr. & Mrs . Maurice F. O'Connell Mrs. Linda S. O'Halloran Olin Corporation Mr. & Mrs. Ray Oosting Mr. Michael Papantonio The Pastimers Club Conn. State Dept. of Education Mr. Charles Paul Dr. Bradley W. Perry
Dr. & Mrs. Maurice M. Pike Mrs. Louisa W. Pinney Mr. & Mrs. Sidney D. Pinney, Jr. Dr. Mario J. Poliferno Mr. Laurence Posner Mr. Robert H. Powell Dr. Herbert Presson Mr. Albert D. Putnam Mr. Douglas T. Putnam Mr. Lyonel H. Putnam Mr. & Mrs. Judson M. Rees Mrs. Karl A. Reiche Mr. & Mrs. John H. Reid Mr. A. Lawrence Riker Miss Martha J. Riley + Mr. & Mrs. William R. Robbins * Mrs. Edward C. Roberts Mr. & Mrs. J. Kenneth Robertson Mr. & Mrs. Barclay Robinson, Jr. Mr. Henry S. Robinson, Jr. + Mr. & Mrs. Richard Rockwell Miss Arlyn Roffman Mr. Andrew T. Rolfe Mr. James Rooks Mr. Paul Rosner Mr. & Mrs. Julius Rothstein Mr. Earle S. Russell Mr. Isaac D. Russell Mrs. James W. Sack Mr. & Mrs. Robert M. Salter Mr. Robert M. Salter, Jr. Mrs. Shirley Sanfield In Memory of Arlene Sanfield Glichman Professor August E. Sapega Mr. William F. Sargent Mr. Henry L. Savage, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Peter Savin The Hon. Max M. Savitt Miss Grace J. Schaefer Mr. & Mrs. Arthur H. Schatz Mr. Julius B. Schatz Mr . & Mrs. S. Michael Schatz Mr. & Mrs. Nicholas Schaus Mr. & Mrs. Bernard A. Schultz Mr. Robert H. Schutz Mrs. Adolf Seibel Miss Frances W. Shaffer Mrs. A. A. Shechtman Shelmar, Inc. The Shoe String Press, Inc. Mr. & Mrs. Samuel Shrago Miss Beatrice Shulman Dr. & Mrs. Charles Shulman * Dr. & Mrs. Morris Silverman * Mr. Robert K. Skinner, Jr. Mrs. Marta Skrybailo Mr. Joseph E. Slights Dr. & Mrs. Sterling B. Smith Social Service Dept. Staff- Hartford Hospital Mr. Clayton B. Spencer Mr. & Mrs. W. Howard Spencer Mr. Paul D. Spiess Mr. Arnold E. Squires E. Myles Standish, M.D. Mr. Frank J. Stangle Mr. Clifford D. Stark Miss H. Stevens Professor Robert C. Stewart Mrs. Harry I. Stoller & Family Stanford L. Strogoff, Esq. Mr. Norman H. Strouse Miss Susan K. Sudman Mr. Michael Sugarman Mr. & Mrs. William L. Swett * Dr. & Mrs. D.G. Brinton Thompson Mr. & Mrs. Samuel Title & Family Mr. & Mrs. Max H. Tobin Miss Mary W. Todd Mr. Bryant F. Tolles * Mr. & Mrs. Crampton Trainer Mr. & Mrs. Samuel Trainor * Mrs. Clarence E. Trevor Trinity Club of Hartford Trinity College Cheer Fund The Trinity College Girls Club Trinity Graduate Students Association Mr. & Mrs. Leonard M. Traub Professor Randall W. Tucker Mrs . Robert Tuckerman Mr. RichardS. Turk Mrs. B. Floyd Turner Mr. & Mrs. Jack Turner Mr. Oscar Turran WalterS. Underwood, Esq. Mrs. Jean H. van Heiningen Mrs Elizabeth W. Van Why Mr. Robert P. Volpe Wadsworth Atheneum Mrs. Lorna Wasilieff Mrs. George Watson Professor Clarence Watters Western Conn. State College Student Activity Fund The West Hartford Music & Art Club, Inc. Mr. & Mrs. Theodore Wezowic Benjamin B. Whitcomb, M.D. Miss Ann M. White Mr. Egbert White Mr. & Mrs. Jack White & Gerold Mr. Nelson White . + Mr. & Mrs. Harry V. Williams Dr. & Mrs. David Winer Mr. & Mrs. Isadore Wolf
Mr. Stuart C. Woodruff Mrs. Mary Kennedy Woodward Miss Linda J. Wyzanski Mr. & Mrs. George W. Young Mr. & Mrs. Stanley Yudin Miss Judy Zeckhauser
+
Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr.
& Mrs. Michel Zemil E. Robert Zenke & Mrs. Morris Zimbel & Mrs. Charles J. Zimmerman
Bequests Mrs. Helen L. Blake Mrs. Elsie Burks Brainard Newton C. Brainard, Hon. '46 and '59 William J. Cahill '20 EdmundS. Carr '05 MortonS. Crehore '14 Ernest A. Hallstrom '29 Thomas K. James '18 Charles A. Lewis '93 Mrs. Mary R. Lyman Anson T. McCook '02 Clarence A. Meyer '16 Mrs. Edith S. Needham John H. Pratt, Jr. '17 Thomas W. Russell Charles B. Smiley '34 Lloyd E. Smith '23 Mr. & Mrs. Charles B. Spofford, Jr. '16 Robert P. Withington '13
Foundations (NON-CORPORATE) The Braitmayer Foundation The Maurice Greenberg Family Foundation Stella and Charles Guttman Foundation Aaron Hollander Fund Simon Hollander Fund Morris Joseloff Foundation, Inc. The Knox Foundation The Charles E. Merrill Trust Charles Stewart Mott Foundation The Edward C. and Ann T. Roberts Foundation Margaret Dorrance Strawbridge Foundation, Inc. The Thomas J. Watson Foundation The Raymond John Wean Foundation
Business & Industry Contributors The Acme Plumbing & Heating Co. A-Copy, Inc. Aetna Life & Casualty American Linen Supply Co., Inc. American Telephone & Telegraph Company Ames Department Stores, Inc. Arrow-Hart, Inc. The Arrow Window Shade Manufacturing Company Automatic Comfort Corp. Barney's of Hartford, Inc. Frank A. Blesso, Inc. Bristol Laboratories Division of Bristol-Myers Co. Building Maintenance Corp. Camera Bar, Incorporated C. & N. Auto Service Peter Cascio Nursery, Inc. Celanese Coatings Co., Devoe Paint Division Goleco Industries, Inc. Combustion Engineering, Inc. Connecticut Bank and Trust Company Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance Company Connecticut Printers, Inc. Covenant Group The Dew Construction Co. The Dexter Corporation Dillon Chapin, Inc. Dillon Mailing Bureau, Inc. Dow & Condon, Realtors Dunham-Bush, Inc. Eagle Sheet Metal Works, Inc. Eastman Kodak .Company The Ensign-Bickford Foundation, Inc. Otto Epstein, Inc. The Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United States Esso Education Foundation T. D. Faulkner Co. A. G. Fields & Co. of Manchester Fisher's Package Store, Inc. G. Fox & Co. The Fuller Brush Company General Fireproofing Company The Gerber Scientific Instrument Company Daniel Goodison, Inc. The Hartford Courant Foundation, Inc. Hartford Despatch The Hartford Electric Light Company Hartford Federal Savings The Hartford Insurance Group Hartford National Bank and Trust Company Hartford Office Supply Company, Inc.
The Hartford Steam Boiler Inspection and Insurance Company The Hartford Wire Works Company The Harvey and Lewis Company Heublein Foundation, Inc. M. Frank Higgins and Company, Inc. Household Finance Corporation Industrial Refractories Corp. Kalart Victor Corporation Kaman Corporation John Leavitt, Inc. Libby & Blinn, Inc. The Liner-Atwill Co. Lipman Motors, Inc. Loctite Corporation Lupachino and Salvatore, Inc. Lybrand, Ross Bros. & Montgomery Mark Supply Company, Inc. Metal Lathers Local 46 Funds Neiditz Bros. Onderdonk, Lathrop & Coel, Inc. Parma Restaurant & Grill Pratt & Whitney Aircraft Division of United Aircraft Corp. The Procter & Gamble Fund Radio Corporation of America Rohm and Haas Company Roncari Industries, Inc. The Sears-Roebuck Foundation Security Insurance Group The South End Bank and Trust Company The Southern New England Telephone Company The Spencer Turbine Company The Sperry & Hutchinson Foundation, Inc. Standard Builders, Inc. State Farm Companies Foundation The Stauffer Chemical Company Foundation Suisman and Blumenthal, Inc. Talman Federal Savings & Loan Association The Travelers Corporation Tull Brothers, Inc. The United Tool & Die Company United Aircraft Corporation VanZelm, Heywood & Shadford Veeder Industries, Inc. Bernard Vinick Associates, Inc. Walsh Brothers Travel The Wiremold Company
PARENTS WEEKEND November 3- 5 ALUMNI HOMECOMING/REUNION WEEKEND November
*Founders Society for gifts of $1,000 or more. +Anniversary Club for gifts of $150-$999.
IO-I2
Page 13
President's Message at Annual Convocation A convocation is a conventional affair. My use of the term "Conventional" is not political; we are not in Miami anyway. In officially opening the 150th year of Trinity College, I am preserving a tradition, and a tradition has all the marks of an inevitable occasion. But the fact that Trinity celebrates its 150th anniversary makes of this occasion something unusual, however customary the language of greetings. In welcoming all of you this fall, I wish to open with a few remarks about the old Trinity. First, it wasn't Trinity. The college began as Washington College on the grounds where the State Capitol now stands. It overlooked the Park River, now not only difficult to find but far less romantic than early lithographs suggest it may once have been. The Founders lit bonfires to celebrate the occasion, without a permit. Although the local papers were appropriately loud. in their praises that Hartford finally had a college about to surpass Yale, one dissenter observed that Washington College represented that mania to create new universities, a fad that would soon pass. He was a bad prophet, for there are now twenty-five times as many colleges as in 18 23. The trustees adopted Swiss costumes of green and white as emblematic; the Blue and Gold came later. Trinity became the official name in 1845 when, incidentally, tuition was $33. The panic of 1857 drove it up to $50. Among the early heroes was a custodian affectionately known as Professor Jim. His assertion that 路"It's your own fault if your mind ain't furnished with a good education to go anywhere" might well serve as the theme of a talk on higher education. One other historical footnote: One of the earliest student protests at Trinity occurred when the College ruled that no one could walk on the lawns. Presumably the same restrictions would have applied to an outdoor convocation. In the course of this academic year we shall have other occasions on which to draw attention to Trinity's history. So for now I shall turn to some contemporary issues. Or better: to some of those continuing ambiguities which so differentiate a college from other forms of enterprise. We dedicate ourselves to liberating the mind, but repeatedly appear obsessed with freeing ourselves from financial woes. All too often people expect us to resemble Brook Farm but want us to operate like General Electric. We are supposed to maintain a placid facade while turning on minds and simultaneously functioning with corporate efficiency. Actually, these ambiguities merely define the circumstances within which we try to carry out our mission. It is to those circumstances that I initially wish to speak. With complete disregard for the traditional three parts into which all academic lectures are divided, I will discuss four items. They are: The condition of Trinity, instruction, student affairs, and taxation as a form of death. I Trinity is in good shape. Although that comment has all the earmarks of a typical presidential observation at an alumni dinner, I hope it has more substance than that. We closed the 1971-72 year with a balanced budget. Our revenues covered our anticipated expenditures and we were able to take care of some long overdue maintenance. Most gratifying was the response to our Annual Fund: We received more gifts for that annual fund-raising effort than ever before in the history of Trinity. We are sufficiently optimistic about this current year that we count on closing the books in a balanced
condition again. Careful stewardship explains in part this success at a time when so many colleges are continuing to run deficits. But forebearance is another reason. That is why Trinity's success has its gray side. We know that, despite the favorable public reaction to our management of resources, there are troublesome features to our situation. Despite annual salary increases, the faculty at Trinity are not as well compensated as their colleagues at those institutions with whom we so often compare ourselves. The patience, the hard work of the Trinity faculty deserve commendation, for in the economist's jargon the faculty have increased their productivity twenty-five percent in four years; that is, in gross terms they are handling that many more students per faculty member than they did in 1968. I hardly want to dwell on such mundane measurements, but the public has never fully understood the obligations of
students, I hope we shall achieve better results. One thought recurs in thinking about financial aid, especially as seen within the context of the College's financial situation. Can we simultaneously improve our ability to hold down overall costs and increase the opportunities for students to meet expenses by using more student labor? Are there jobs which students could perform every bit as well as others and thereby help themselves more easily pay for their education? I am not sure and I do wonder how many students are willing to accept this approach, but I think it is worth exploring and I shall ask the Trinity College Council to review this problem and make any recommendations it considers appropriate. In other respects also, Trinity is in basically good shape. We now have sufficient curricular flexibility in the programs begun in 1969 and expanded since then. I am also persuaded that, by and large, we have the requisite academic
faculty. The popular image of the "leisure of the theory class" is especially unfair today, and I think the continuing debate about efficiency in higher education has misled us. Our real task remains to find the most effective way in which to teach and to learn - and that involves far more than numbers measured in average dollars. There is another ominous aspect in Trinity's general situation. Financial aid has leveled off. We deeply regret that we could not offer to 路help more members of this year's entering class. We hope to enlarge . the amount of aid we can offer in the future, but it is beyond our capacity to return to the time when at least one-quarter, or even one-third, of the students at Trinity received some scholarship assistance. It is clear that the State of Connecticut cannot remedy this situation, especially for colleges with national constituencies. Only a program of federal scholarship aid will meet this country's long commitment to make higher education available to all who wish to avail themselves of it and who can profit from it. Unlike some college presidents, I am against institutional subsidies, and I shall continue to argue in behalf of federal money being made available to individuals who may then choose the institution they want to attend. But something must happen now, and Washington is moving too slowly. None of us wishes to lessen the diversity represented in Trinity's student body; rather we would like to increase it. But that is beyond our control unless Congress and the Administration act. Now that the voting age includes most
solidity in our faculty and programs. Every once in a while someone comes to me and anxiously asks whether I am about to push yet another "reform" or "innovation" or, less kindly yet another "poorly conceived experiment" down the faculty's throat. Of course, being totally objective, I have never understood these reactions, but there is only one obvious answer: Not this month! But seriously, I see our present task to carry out and evaluate the commitments already made. We have a wide enough range of programs that other institutions are now imitating us. We owe ourselves, and others, a careful study of the effectiveness of those programs. On the whole, I think that the New Curriculum of 1969 has brought most favorable results and the programs which emerged from the summer task force of 1971 promise to do the same. But gut reactions are a pale substitute for careful evaluation - and accordingly I hope we can both consolidate and analyze out these curricular changes over the next year. Physically the College is in better shape. We are making progress on deferred maintenance; and, though the list of overdue projects was far too long, at least the chemistry classrooms are brighter. More of the plumbing and heating has a twentieth-century look to it. We have enlarged the post office so that you may actually get at your box, which you no longer share with others. And are even paying for these projects rather than adding to our indebtedl)ess. We have renderings on a long-term beautification of the quadrangle to the East of Mather Student Center, and I
hope that, as part of our 150th anniversary, we ca.n all work together on some one aspect of that improvement. But I hardly need to add that much remains yet to be done. To those who begrudge expenditures on physical plant I can only reply that we must preserve one of this country's most attractive campuses in a state of repair conducive to effective learning. II If learning is to be effective, there ought to be some constant elements. Surely there must be a universal quality against which we measure our contemporary configuration of organized learning. Recently Robert Hutchins, once the puckish, boy-wonder president of the University of Chicago, acidly commented: "The substance of learning should be independent thought and criticism, and the purpose of learning be understanding of the world in which we live ....What goes on in most institutions that call themselves educational is some education, some child care, some training, and some vocational certification ... " He correctly identified our predicament. We talk about a lifetime of learning and then act as if we ran an information center for today's exhibition. We must revivify the community of learning. Some of you may recall my elegant (at least I thought it was elegant) call for a sense of community at Trinity in 1969. The timing was mistaken, for we promptly divided into political factions in response to national events. I kept quiet and then found, in response to skeptical questioning on my part, that, as one student remarked, "Mr. President, you don't understand: we do have a sense of -co mmunity; you're just behind the times." I hope he is ri~t, for we need to agree in keeping Trinity an independent and intellectually vital community. We need what Robert Wolff has called that "flow of sentiment which makes the preservation of the community an object of desire, not merely a matter of pr.udence or a command of duty." (Robert Wolff, The Ideal of the University, p. 127 .) Of course, that is an ideal, but it still should be our goal to preserve and advance knowledge, to pursue the truth, to enhance collectively our moral aspiration to improve the condition of mankind. That, if you wish, is the religiou-s commitment of education - not its magnificent temples, honored texts, exclusive rituals, and ministering priests. In this respect some have criticized me for not exerting leadership more vigorously, presumably on the assumption that dicta fro.m over the arch would miraculously create agreement. As an ard_ept believer in democracy, I have always assumed that we would do better by working forward through less autocratic demonstrations towards a consensus about what is worthwhile at Trinity. At the same time, I have never wanted to be merely a consensus-taker. But, as I have studied the predicament of the university, to use the title of Professor Henry Aiken's incisive book, I do accept the responsibility of reminding all of us that we shall serve ourselves best by fostering a sense of community. Central to this notion is the matter of instruction and learning. And here I have some worries. We are pulled in two directions. Teaching in this country is not in as good repair as it should be. On the one hand, we often become caterers as we try to make the material we present "relevant;" on the other hand, by not exposing ourselves to the freshening winds of student unbelief
(see CONVOCATION, page 14)
Page 14
Convocation (from page 13) we can perpetuate a middle-aged insensitivity equal to the insularity of the high-rise executive whom we sometimes chastize. We forget that what matters is that the material we explore together be significant and contribute to what Whitehead called "an understanding of the insistent present." We have to bring to that material our highest possible standards of thought, free of extraneous considerations of politics,- professional career, or economic payoff. Nor can we merely reassemble parts, like putting the old quadrivium and trivium together and calling it education. It reminds me of that old advertisement : "Four vitamins and three minerals - seven in all!" The critical question is seven of what? I remember Professor Gilbert Murray's admonition, dated 1923: "We must be careful always to seek for truth and not for our own emotional satisfaction, careful not to neglect the real needs of men and women through basing our life on dreams, and remembering above all to walk gently in a world where the lights are dim and the very stars wander." I apply that warning to all: students, faculty, and administrators. We are all guilty now and then of unbecoming arrogance. Arrogance has no place in the academic community. Any reading of the history of the intellectual arts should chasten us. A community of learning must remain open; it must enjoy mutual respect, a quality earned not proclaimed. Trinity must be that kind of community, one in which we consider rationally important matters freely. There is no place for obstruction in the pursuit of truth , no place for the casual accumulation of credit as a means to graduate. Graduation should confirm the successful start of an unending search for understanding in its broadest sense. The love of learning is this community's standard. III
There are other aspects to this community . Since it does not come ready-made like the family or hometown, it survives in whatever style we adopt. I have great affection for this place. I do not expect all to share that affection, but I hope that many of you will take some delight in this campus and give it a sense of style. Sometimes style is conspicuously lacking. Let me illustrate. Periodically someone complains to me that people are using the drinking fountains to wash their dogs' dishes - without benefit of a cleanup afterwards. Purina is no more attractive to stare at than chewing gum. It still appalls us to learn that the reason some neighborhood kids hang out at the College is that sooner or later some student will give them marijuana or alcohol. Any such action detracts from the entire Trinity community. I suppose that I am merely invoking an old principle: to act as you would prefer others to act towards you. If we can exert humaneness in all that we do , we may be surprised by the results. One development could help us. I have always been struck by the inconsistency between our claim that the best learning is self-education and the residue of those regulations which presume an absence of adult responsibility on the part of students. Four years ago I was among those who urged that the age of majority be lowered to eighteen. This past year Connecticut adopted such a law, to become effective October 1,. 1972. We have been studying the possible ramifications. We have reached no final decisions because, on the one hand, Trinity no longer acts in loco parentis and, on the other hand, many students with whom I have spoken about this legal change seemingly do not wish to accept all the theoretical implications which may
flow from this law. Therefore, I am asking the Trinity College Council to study this question and to make recommendations. Whatever those recommendations, I do hope that ending the ambiguities surrounding the years between eighteen and twenty-one may help us become a more cohesive community, in which all members clearly recognize their responsibilities. With some trepidation as to the appropriateness of the word "integration," I continue to hope also that we may move closer to an integrated society. The Dean of Community Life, in his annual report, draws attention to the serious criticism of many about the quality of the environment provided by the majority for minority students, black and Puerto Rican. Although I am encouraged by the progress we have made in what has been a comparatively short time , I realize that we have far to go. I do not intend to review the complaints on both sides. I prefer to cite, for example, the efforts last year to organize special dinners where all of us got together, and the efforts of blacks to advise their fellow -students during the year and new students in a special three-week program this August. What concerns me now is that we not allow either majority insensitivity or minority separation to deflect our efforts to achieve an integrated community. If we cannot do so on a college campus, what chance is there that our 路 society as a whole will succeed in ending racial injustice and inequality? Once again I am driven back to a simple suggestion; namely, that we regard one another with greater respect than, on occasion, we have shown in the past. That requires individual effort. It also presumes confidence in the processes by which we try to reach agreement about the many issues which inevitably arise during the year. There has been, and will continue to be, a nagging uneasiness about those processes, whether they involve academic appointments, adjudication of disputes, or simply resolution of requests for an exception or a change. I suppose very few people, especially off campus, appreciate the effects of the academic tradition of objectivity upon these processes. After all, as President Brewster of Yale noted, there are many who have become quite cynical about academic neutrality and the efficacy of reason in the resolution of issues. There is an understandable call for positive, passionate assertion as preferable to deliberate assessment; the world may go up in flames while we spin out our reasoned arguments. Even if we remain skeptical of the objectivity of what we call reasoned academic due process, is there a better alternative? Doubt is so essential to our intellectual mission and reason so central to learning itself that we would jeopardize our own credentials if we acted otherwise. This is an open community, and I intend to preserve it as such. Passion, dogmatism, and impatience will only close it. IV Unhappily something else might close this community. My last topic differs in its reference , but its potential impact is ominous. The fiscal problems of states and urban communities have led many city fathers to look at presently tax-exempt institutions as a possible new source of revenue . Much as I sympathize with the financial plight of the City of Hartford, I cannot endorse the taxation of its non-profit institutions as the solution to its fiscal limitations. The original decision to exempt such organizations-and that exemption appears in Yale's Charter and by precedent in our own-was a wise recognition of the service which educational institutions in particular could perform for the State. What is often overlooked in the current debate is
Mohamed ]ibrell, David Lee Appointed to Administration Mohamed Jama Jibrell and M. David Lee have been appointed to administrative positions in the offices of community life and student services. Jibrell, who will be assistant dean of Community Life, will also be a lecturer in African social and political thought. He
served as a special assistant in the Office 路 of Community Life and as a lecturer in Non-Western Studies. He has taught at the University of New Haven, Central Connecticut State College and the Somali Public Institute in Mogadiscio. He has coordinated cultural and language training programs for Peace Corps volunteers in Somalia and worked as program writer for the South Arsenal Neighborhood Development Corporation of Hartford. Jibrell is a member of the Board of Directors of the Community Film Workshop, the Connecticut Valley African Studies Association and the Association of African and Black-American Studies.
Jibrell
Lee
received his B.A. from the University of Bridgeport and is a candidate for his masters in history at Trinity. Last year he
that, by implication, that original decision also anticipated the disservice which forcing colleges to become proprietary agencies would cause. Taxation would have led to not only political intrusion but also a profit mentality quite at odds with a college's dedication to truth. I do not wish to sound like a "Last Ditcher" in the House of Lords in England before World War I when some conservatives sought to protect their privileges against society as a whole . But their prediction of dire consequences would apply, in my judgement, to the independent colleges of this country if we are taxed for our property and buildings. To meet the tax rate proposed in some legislation before the General Assembly, we would have to raise tuition at Trinity more than $1 ,000 per student. We could not do that and stay in business. There a re many other arguments private colleges can cite in their opposition, but I think they are of little moment so long as the fiscal problem of the cities remains intractable. Therefore, I think that we must propose an alternative. Since our own livelihood as an institution is at stake, I feel permitted to argue publicly for a State income tax . I
Lee, who will be assistant dean for student services, received a B.A. from Pacific Lutheran University and an M.A. in college union administration from New York University. He is listed in Who's Who in American Colleges & Universities.
know of no other equitable solution to the need for more revenues if we are to serve our citizens as we have concluded they should be. I have inserted this statement in these remarks, both to let you know where I personally stand and to alert you {o the threat which we may face this winfer if the General Assembly passes a law allowing the cities and towns to tax non-profit institutions. It is an issue vital to our future.
v Conclusions have a way of being elusive or repetitive. I shall therefore close abruptly by quoting the advice of a former college president: "It takes less time to touch bases than to mend fences." Our community could do worse than remember that advice. But then, as one dean remarked, "Most of our problems have no solutions; the best we can do is seek some resolution, and then pray earnestly for absolution." I am more optimistic because after four years at Trinity, I am impressed by the goodwill and deep concern which so many of you bring to your daily tasks and to the broad issues before higher education. I wish you all the very best in this, our I 50th year.
TANSILL SPORTS ROOM DEDICATED- Given by Glover Johnson '22 (second from right) and his wife, Dorothy, to honor a friend and classmate, Frederic T. Tansill (second from left) , the new sports room in the Ferris Athletic Center was dedicated September 16. President Lockwood (left) and Director of Athletics Karl Kurth (right) and a number of alumni were present for the ceremonies. Tansill was captain of football in 1921 , captain of basketball in 1922 and was recipient of the Eigenbrodt Cup in 1962.
Page 15
A. A. Mackimmie Dies; Education Professor, Emeritus Alexander A. Mackimmie, Jr., professor of education emeritus and former chairman of the Department of Education, died July 31, 1972, after a long illness. He had served Trinity for nine years prior to his retirement in 1971. A memorial service was held in the College Chapel on August 5. Contributions in memory of Professor Mackimmie are being made to the Trinity College Scholarship Fund. Mr. Mackimmie leaves his wife, Marguerite Mackimmie, a son, Alexander A. Mackimmie III, Class of 1954, a brother and sister, and two grandchildren. Burial was in Amherst, Mass. President Lockwood said of Professor Mackimmie: "Those who knew him will remember well his outstanding achievements as chairman of the Department of Education; they will also recall the countless ways in which he served others so cheerfully and so effectively." Mr. Mackimmie "dedicated his life to education," Dr. Lockwood observed. "He knew Hartford and Trinity well; he brought to both a quality that we shall sorely miss. 'Mac' was a great friend to all. In behalf of the Trinity College community I extend to his family and friends our condolences." James B. Lyon, of West Hartford, former president of the Northern
IN MEMORY JOSEPHINE BOARDMAN CRANE, HON. 1936 Mrs. Winthrop Murray (Josephine Boardman) Crane, who received an Honorary M. A. in 1936, died July 8, 1972 at Falmouth (Mass.) Hospital. A resident of New York, Mrs. Crane spent summers at Woods Hole, Mass. Her husband was governor of Massachusetts from 1900-1902 and served in the state senate from 1904-1914. He died in 1920 during his second term in the U.S. Senate. After the Senator's death, Mrs. Crane moved to New York City. Her daughter, Miss Louise Crane also of New York, recalled that along with Mrs. John D. Rockefeller, 2nd, Mrs. Crane founded the Museum of Modern Art in 1929. She also recalled that her mother was a founding trustee of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Morgan Library and the Dalton School of New York. In 1935, Mrs. Crane was named to the original executive committee of the newly organized American National Theatre and Academy, the first organization of its kind to receive a federal charter. At the family home in Woods Hole, Mrs. Crane often entertained such guests as Somerset Maugham and Marianne Moore. In addition to her daughter, she is survived by two sons, Bruce, of Dalton, Massachusetts and Stephen of Los Angeles; two grandchildren; and nine great-grandchildren. LUTHER DECK MILLER, HON. 1946 Major General Luther D. Miller retired, the recipient of an Honorary Doctor of Divinity degree in 1946 , died at his home in Washington, D.C. on April 27, 1972. Chaplain Miller received his B. A. from Thiel College, Greenville, Pennsylvania, in 1911 and his B.D. degree from Chicago Theological Seminary in 1917. He entered the Army as a chaplain in 1918 and was commissioned in the Regular Army in 1920. In 1945 Chaplain Miller was appointed Chief of Chaplains, U.S.A. He became the first Protestant Chaplain to attain the rank of major general. His service ribbons include Southwest Pacific with five campaign stars, Liberation of Philippines with one star, American Theater, American Defense, World War I, World War II and the Legion of Merit. He leaves his wife and two children, Mrs. Theodore Herdey of Fort Sam Houston, Texas, and the Rev. Luther D. Miller, Jr. of Washington, D.C. JAMES KIRTLAND EDSALL, 1908 James K. Edsall, who received his B.A. degree in 1908, passed away on July 18, 1972. Until his retirement in 1955, Mr. Edsall was branch manager of the First Wisconsin National Bank in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. He had been employed by the bank since 1919, when it was
Connecticut Chapter of The National Football Foundation and Hall of Fame, and currently -chairman of the Chapter's Awards Committee, said: "Mac Mackimmie was instrumental to the success and growth of our Chapter. He organized, and for five years chaired our key committee, the Scholar-Athlete Awards Committee, through which 30 outstanding college and secondary school players were honored for superior achievement in the classroom and on the football field, and for citizenship. His high standards, and devotion to quality rather than expediency and quantity, assured the public approval of the selection process. His loss is deeply felt by the members of the Chapter." Professor Mackimmie's career in the field of education spanned 44 years, the last 20 of which were spent in Hartford. For 11 years he was a teacher and administrator in the city school system, and for. nine years professor of education and chairman of the Education Department at the College. Mr. Mackimmie, a native of Truro, Nova Scotia, attended Amherst (Mass.) High School and Deerfield Academy, graduating from the latter school in 1924. In 1928 he graduated from Amherst College, following which he took graduate work at Massachusetts State C allege (1928-29) , Boston University (1942), the University of Vermont (1947) and the University of Connecticut (1948-52). Boston University granted him the degree of Master of Education in 1942, and in 1958 his alma mater, Amherst College, awarded him an
prominently associated through the years with Rotary and Kiwanis and with his church. In Trinity's recent "Program of Progress" campaign, he served as chairman of the Parents Division of the Greater Hartford area. A writer of numerous articles, Mr. Mackimmie has contributed editorials and articles to the Connecticut Interscholastic Athletic Conference Bulletin, as well as articles to the Bulletin of the National Association of Secondary School Principals and to the Amherst College Alumni Bulletin. In 1966 Mackimmie was selected for many honors, among which were naming of the A.A . Mackimmie Chapter of the National Honor Society at Windahm High School, Willimantic, Conn., and a certificate of honor from the National Conference of Christians and Jews. He was a trustee of Watkinson School, a director of the Civic Music Association of Greater Hartford, the Henry Barnard Memorial Fund and director and member of the executive committee of the Connecticut Institute for the Blind and the Junior Achievement of Hartford. He was former president of the New England Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools, vice chairman of the National Council of Christians and Jews, a trustee of the Joint Council of Economic Education in New York City, former director of the Connecticut State Teachers Association (1935-43), a member of the executive committee of the Connecticut Interscholastic Athletic Conference, a member of the University Club and Rotary, and Mt. Olive Lodge AF & AM in Essex.
honorary M.A. degree. Mr. Mackimmie had a distinguished career in secondary school education. After a year at Sanderson Academy in Ashfield, Massachusetts, he moved to Essex, Connecticut, where he spent 19 years at Pratt High School, teaching history and coaching from 1929 to 1933, and then serving as supervising principal from 1934 to 1948. From 1948 to 1951 he was supervising principal at Windham
A. A. Mackimmie, Jr.
High School in Willimantic, and during the following eight years served as supemsmg principal at Bulkeley High School in Hartford. In 19 59 he was appointed assistant superintendent of schools in Hartford, a post he held until coming to Trinity in 1962 as professor of education and chairman of the Education Department, from which post he retired in June, 1971. Mr. Mackimmie has been an active member and officer in the many important professional organizations that are associated with secondary school education. He has been active in community services, in particular being
previously known as Merchants and Confederation, which have been housed since Manufacturers Bank. 1952 in the National Archives. He also directed the Cooperative Acquisitions Project, which While at Trinity, Mr. Edsall was a member of secured several million documents on research Alpha Delta Phi Fraternity. He was president of produced in Europe before and during the war. Medusa and was a member of the Tripod staff In 1946, he succeeded in obtaining from from 1906 to 1907. His brother, Samuel Edsall, was a member of Russian military authorities many books that the Class of 1915, and his nephew, Samuel C. had been ordered by American libraries befoE_ Edsall, was a member of the Class-of 1949. At路~-.--,= e war and were being heldin the eastern zone this point, the College has no further ofGermany. information regarding survivors. A year earlier, Mr. Clapp had been asked to set up a library for the United Nations Conference on International Organization in CLIFFORD HENRY PERKINS, 1916 San Francisco. From this evolved the present Clifford H. Perkins, who received his B.S. in United Nations Library, which he served as a 1948, after a 33-year interruption of his consultant. education due to the first World War, died In 1947, Mr. Clapp was named chairman of February 25, 1972. the United States library mission to Japan, Mr. Perkins became an expert in business which advised on the establishment of a machines while in the Army and was head of national library and bibliographic services for the Commercial Department of Keene (N.H.) the Diet (parliament) of that country. High School from 1935 until 1957 when he From July 4, 1953, to September 1, 1954, retired. Following that he became executive he served as acting librarian of Congress. director of the Keene Community Chest. He resigned from the Library in 1956 to We have no further information at this time. become head of the newly formed Council on Library Resources, a non-profit organization set up with a $5 million grant from the Ford STUART ST. CLAIRE PURVES, 1920 Foundation. It was designed to help libraries Retired Navy Commander Stuart S. Purves generally, and particularly research libraries in of Arlington, Virginia, died July 20, 1972 at this country . He served the council as president Bethesda Naval Hospital after a long illness. until1967. A member of the class of 1920, Cdr. Purves At the time of Mr. Clapp's resignation, was graduated from the U.S. Naval Academy in Librarian of Congress L. Quincy Mumford said: 1921. He had served on a number of ships His incisive mind, his broad perspective before retiring in 1943. He was commanding and his extensive knowledge of the officer of the U.s .s: Wondak in 1939, when it Library of Congress and library world salvaged the U.S .S. Squalus, a submarine that have served splendidly his intense went down during a practice dive off devotion to the ideals of librarianship. His Portsmouth, N.H. leadership has greatly enriched this Cdr. Purves remained on limited duty after institution and has rebounded to the retirement for physical disability. He was a benefit of the entire library world. professor of seamanship at the Academy and Mr. Clapp, who was born of American later was Navy liaison director for the Selective parents in Johannesburg, South Africa, where Service Commission, retiring in 1950. his father was in business, came to this country He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Mary A. as a youth. Purves, of Arlington. During his career, he was the recipient of many honors, including the Joseph Wharton VERNER WARREN CLAPP, 1922 Lippincott A ward for distinguished service in Verner W. Clapp, known as the "librarian's librarianship. He contributed to numerous professional journals. librarian," died June 15, 1972 at Alexandria (Va.) Hospital. Mr. Clapp was a member of the American Library Association, the Special Libraries The former president of the Council on Library Resources and chief assistant librarian Association, the American Documentation of Congress received his B.A. from Trinity in Institute, the American Antiquarian Society, 1922. the Bibliographical Society of America, the Mr. Clapp joined the Library of Congress in American Institute of Graphic Arts and the 1923 as a reference librarian in the main American Association for the Advancement of Science. reading room. He later was put in charge of special services for members of Congress when He is survived by his wife, Dorothy, of Chevy Chase, Md.; three children, Mrs. Joseph the Library's congressional unit was organized. There followed positions as assistant H. Roe Jr., of Reston, Verner W. Clapp Jr., of superintendent of the reading rooms, director Juneau, Alaska, and Mrs. William F. Bromley, of Bethesda; and 11 grandchildren. of the acquisitions department, and, in 1947, chief assistant librarian of Congress. ASA BARTHALOWCARMICHAEL, 1936 During World War II, Mr. Clapp was in Asa B. Carmichael, a member of the class of charge of the evacuation and preservation of such 1936, died of a heart attack June 10, 1972. historic and irreplaceable documents as the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution A member of the class of 1936, Mr. of the United States and the Articles of Carmichael was a retired partner of Paine,
Webber, Jackson and Curtis, a brokerage house in Hartford. His nephew and god-son, Frazier Scott, received his B.A. in 1971. He leaves his wife of South Laguna, California. -
BA-R-b-ELLIOTT s-PR0UL, II, 1952~ Earl E. Sproul, II died at his home in Greenwich, Connecticut on June 20, 1972. Upon his graduation from Trinity in 1953, Mr. Sproul spent several years in the Air Force and then ventured to the Arctic Circle as a field representative of Western Electric, working on the DEW line. More recently he was sales manager of Price Paper Corp., New York City. He leaves his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Vosburgh Sproul of Highland Park, Illinois; his wife, the former Juliet Collier; three daughters, Katherine, Juliet and Jennifer, all at home; and a sister, Mrs. William Collins of Charlotte, N.C. RAYMOND ALLEN SLATER, 1961 Raymond A. Slater, who received his B.S. in 1961, died of cancer on June 1, 1972. A top mathematics student at Trinity, Mr. Slater continued his education at the University of Pennsylvania where he received an M.A. in 1963. Since that time he worked with computers and was most recently a senior systems analyst for Bradford Computer and Systems, Inc. of New York City. He leaves his mother, Mrs. Mary Jacobs Bromfeld of New York City. LANGDON WILLIAM TYLER, 1969 Langdon W. Tyler, a member of the class of 1969, accidentally drowned at the West Hartford, Connecticut Metropolitan District Reservoir June 23, 1972. He was the son of David A. Tyler, Jr. '43. :Mr. Tyler had been swimming with friends at the reservoir. When he didn't surface the friends summoned police who found him within minutes. He leaves his parents, Mr. & Mrs. David Tyler, Jr. of West Hartford; a brother David of Northampton, Mass.; a sister, Mrs. Mark McMahon of Hartford; and his grandmother, Mrs. Elizabeth Langdon of West Hartford_ GEORGE LACY COYLE, III, 1972 George L. Coyle, III, disappeared 路 July 1, 1972 while skin diving with his father in Florida. Mr. Coyle, who had just received his B.A. this past June, was drowned in 55 feet of water about 12 miles from the coastline_ His father said, "He had surfaced from a dive about 200 feet away and was swimming toward the boat when he just went under. He didn't call for help or anything. He just went down." The Coyles had been visiting relatives in Venice, Florida when the accident occurred. Mr. Coyle is survived by a brother, Clay; three sisters, Julia, Lucy and Isabell; and his parents, Mr. & Mrs. George L. Coyle, Jr., all of Charleston, W. Va_
Page 16
TRINIT.Y SPORTS Varsity Soccer Success Hangs on For ward Line If head coach Roy Dath can find replacements for his depleted forward line among the 38 candidates who turned out for pre-season practice, the Bantam varsity soccer team could move back over the .500 mark for the first time since 1969. After 18 consecutive winning seasons, Dath suffered through the 1970 campaign without a win. The Bants improved to 5-5 last fall and the return of 12 lettermen should make the Bants a dangerous opponent in 1972.
15 Runners Out For Cross-country For the first time in a number of years the forecast for the cross-country season is an optimistic one because of a sharp rise in the number of runners out this fall. The harriers haven't won a meet since 1968 and have run three 0-7 seasons together but coach Craig Phillips feels that his 15 man team (the usual turnout has been half that number) has the potential to break into the win column in 1972. One of the most encouraging aspects about the turnout is that II of the 15 runners are freshmen and sophomores who should set the basis for stronger
Co-captain John Suroviak and Don Burt lead back a group of seven starters including last fall's recipient of the Most Improved Player Award, Rick Marshall '73. Dath's big concern is at forward where Marshall is the only returning starter. The Bants have three top sophomore prospects - Pete Mindnich, Roger McCord, and Robert Andrian - to fill vacant starting berths but lack of varsity experience will be a problem in the early season. Suroviak and Scott Fitzpatrick are veterans at the "feeder" position in Coach Dath's offensive alignment and should provide a good backup for the so phs. Another depleted area is at halfback with the graduation of four starters. Junior fullback Bill Brouse may shift over to half to provide some experience but the rest of the starting berths will most likely be filled by inexperienced players. Fortunately the team has some depth at fullback with the return of Brouse, Burt and Dave Eckels. Junior Glenn Preminger and Bill Lawson divided time in the goal last fall and are back for their second year. The 1972 schedule is filled with rugged opponents. Included are Williams and Tufts, last year's NCAA Tournament qualifiers, and two perennially powerful opponents, Wesleyan and Amherst.
(see CROSS COUNTRY, page 4)
WOMEN COACHES Jane Millspaugh (left) and Jane Fox make preparations for the coming season. Ms. Millspaugh will handle the Women's tennis team this fall while Ms. Fox will coach the field hockey squad.
Co-captains Joe McCabe (left) and Ray Perkins flank Trin head football coach Don Miller.
88th Football Season Opens With Optimism A combination of 17 returning lettermen and the arrival of a fine sophomore class which produced an undefeated season a year ago is generating considerable optimism on campus as Trinity's varsity football team prepares for the opening of its 88th campaign, hosting Williams College on September 30. Among the nine returning starters on the offensive unit is a pair of talented juniors-Saul Wiezenthal and Ron Duckett- who established themselves last fall as one of the finest passing-receiving combinations in New England. Although Wiezenthal did not receive a starting assignment at quarterback until the third game of the 1971 season, his passing accounted for 12 touchdowns and 1,325 yards - for the fourth best total in Trin history - and was ranked statistically tied for second among New England College Division quarterbacks. Ron Duckett was on the receiving end of 51 of Wiezenthal's passes and was the New England Receiving Champion in his first year of varsity competition. At season's end, Duckett was ranked fifth in the nation among receivers in the nation's College Division. Three seniors on the offense are shooting for a third consecutive year in the starting lineup. One of them is co-captain Joe McCabe who has already accumulated 1,170 yards from his fullback position in two seasons and has also doubled as the squad's punter since his sophomore year. Center Ed Raws missed most of the 1970 season with a knee injury after initially winning a starting berth but came on last fall to be one of the team's outstanding lineman. At present, he is also the leading candidate to take over the extra point and field goal kicking chores left by Quentin Keith '72. Guard Bob Ghazey was the lightest member of the offensive line last fall at 180 pounds but was the recipient of the Dan Jessee Blocking Award. The development of defensive linemen and linebackers appear to be Trin's most difficult problem despite the return of last fall's outstanding defensive player, 1inebacker Phil Poirier, and two-year starter at defensive end, Bob Thiel. Senior tackle Mark Ziven and junior linebacker Barry O'Brien are the only other experienced varsity players in this area. Fortunately the team has a number of good prospects up from the freshman
defense which allowed its five opponents a total of 42 points. Jack Holik (6-1 ,240) and Lew Labbadia (6-0,200) have been impressive during pre-season practice and are the leading rookie candidates for the tackle slots. Junior Adron Keaton (6-3, 260) saw some action last fall at defensive tackle and should be-in the thick of battle for starting berth. Trin has a fine pair of veteran
a
Duckett
Wiezenthal
cornerbacks in the secondary in senior George Sutherland and co-captain Ray Perkins. The latter has led the team in interceptions for the last two seasons. Although the squad has the potential to have a fine season, it will be facing one of its most rugged schedules in years. As always, the Little Three teams- Amherst, Wesleyan, and Williams - will field 路powerful and talented teams. The Bants will also be facing a rejuvenated Coast Guard outfit which won eight of I 0 games last fall after several poor seasons. Yet the toughest encounter may come on October 28 in New York when the squad meets the University of Rochester Yellowjackets in Rochester. The varsity defeated its other three opponents- Bates, R.P.I., and Colby- last fall, but by an average margin of less than seven points.
REUNION WEEKEND November
10-12