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06107
TRINITY REPORTER VOLUME 3 NUMBER 9
TRINITY COLLEGE, HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT
JULY, 1973
Annual Giving Passes Half-Million Mark Goal Topped By $28,000
WIN AT HENLEY-Trinity stroked to a three length victory over Durham University in the opening round of The Ladies Challenge Plate at the Henley Royal Regatta. The Bantams were eliminated from competition the following day by the University of Wisconsin. (See story, page 12) ..WIDE WORLD PHOTOS.
5 CHARTER TRUSTEES RETIRE Five Charter Trustees of the College, whose service on the board of trustees totals 92 years, retired from the board at the end of the 1972-73 academic year and were named Trustees Emeriti. They are George M. Ferris of Washington, D.C., a trustee for 18 years; Glover Johnson of New York, 11 years; the Rt. Rev. Walter H. Gray of Hartford, 22 years; John R. Reitemeyer of Hartford, 23 years; and RaymonQ J. Wean of Warren, Ohio, 18 years. Their retirement became effective at the end of a regular trustees meeting May 19. Mr.-Ferris, for whom Trinity's George M. Ferris Athletic Center is named, is a 1916 graduate of Trinity. He was elected an Alumnus Trustee in 1955, and a Charter Trustee in 1958. Senior partner ofF erris and Company, a Washington investment banking firm, Mr. Ferris also provided endowment for the College's annual Ferris Lecture in Corporation Finance and Investments. The Ferris Athletic Center, a $2.4 million Complex, was opened in 1969. He served in the Air Force during World War I, and in 1919 entered the securities business by joining S.W. Strauss & Co. In 1932 he founded his own firm. He is a former president of the Washington Stock Exchange and a member of the New York Stock Exchange, and a director of several companies.
He served as officer and director of several hospitals in the Washington area, is former chairman of the board of the National Cathedral School for Girls, and is a member of the board of Gallaudet College and president of the Columbia Country Club. In addition to his service on the board of trustees, Mr. Ferris served Trinity as a member of the executive committee of
the alumni association, 1937-39, was a junior fellow, 1946-48, president of the Washington-Baltimore Alumni Association in 1946, and area chairman of the Program of Progress in 1958. He received the Eigenbrodt Trophy, the highest award of the Alumni Association, in 1964. Mr. Johnson, a partner in the law firm (see TRUSTEES, page 2)
The Annual Giving Drive has passed the half-million dollar mark for the first time in the College's history. The drive ended with gifts and pledges totalling $502,965. The total is nearly $28,000 above the campaign goal of $475,000, and more than $62,000 above the $440,421 contributed last year. The Annual Giving Drive, which is conducted between October and June each academic year, supports the College's operating budget, which was $8.5 million for the 1972-73 fiscal year. Contributions to the annual giving fund came from alumni ($287,631); parents ($109,581); business and industry ($65,416); friends of Trinity ($30,237); and non-corporate foundations ($10,1 00). Total gifts in each category were equal to or greater than the goals which were set when the campaign was planned. Alumni gifts totaled 104 percent of the $275,000 goal, and were up about $39,000 from last year's total of $248,944. Parents made 115 percent of their $95,000 goal, and gave nearly $22,000 more than last year, when gifts totaled $88,099. Of the 3,880 contributors, 31 percent, or 1 ,202, were new contributors. Eighty-four donors joined the Founders Society with gifts of $1 ,000 or more, and 637 made gifts between $150 and $999 to become members of the Anniversary Club. "This is a milestone year for Trinity in many ways," President Lockwood said, "because it is the year the College reached its 150th anniversary. It is to the credit of our contributors and those who volunteered to work on the campaign that this year's gifts passed the half-million mark. Such support goes a long way in keeping Trinity among the leaders of small private colleges."
16 Faculty Promotions Announced; DeLong, Brewer, Stewart Appointed as Chairmen Sixteen faculty promotions have been announced by President Lockwood including the promotion of Dr. John D. Brewer to chairman of the sociology department, Dr. Howard DeLong, who will also become a full professor, to chairman of the philosophy department, and Mr. Robert C. Stewart to chairman of the mathematics department. In addition, Dr. Frank M. Child III will become a full professor of biology; Dr. Henry A. DePhillips, Jr., a full professor . of chemistry; Dr. George C. Higgins, Jr., a full professor of psychology; Dr. Richard T. Lee, a full professor of philosophy; Dr. Chester H. McPhee, a full professor of physical education and Dr. Charles R. Miller, a full professor of physics. Also included among the promotions were Dr. John Gettier, chairman of the
religion department, to associate professor; George E. Chaplin, to associate professor of fine arts and director of the studio arts program; Dr. Francis J. Egan, to assistant professor of economics; Dr. Neil H. Garston, to assistant professor of economics; Dr. Thomas A. Reilly, to assistant professor of political science; Robert A. Cale, to artist-in-residence in studio arts and Jane A. Millspaugh, to instructor in physical education. Dr. Brewer came to Trinity last year from Wesleyan University . He has also taught at the University of California (Los Angeles) and York University in Toronto, and is the author of several articles in his field. Professor Stewart, a member of the Trinity faculty since 1950, succeeds Dr. Walter J. Klimczak, Seab.ury Professor of
Mathematics and Nat ural Philosophy, as chairman of the department. His major field of teaching is modern algebra. Dr. DeLong, who has taught at Trinity since 1960, is the author of a book, "A Profile of Mathematical Logic," and an article, "Unsolved Problems in Arithmetic." He is a member of the editorial board of the journal, Social Science. Dr. Child, who joined the faculty in 1965, previously taught at the University of Chicago, where he won the Quantrell Award in 1964 for excellence in undergraduate teaching. Dr. DePhillips, chairman of the department of chemistry since 1971, joined the Trinity faculty in 1963. In 1969-70 he was visiting associate (see PROMOTIONS, page 3)
Trinity Reporter July 1973 Page 2
CAMPUS NOTES Trinity was a participant in the Greater Hartford Festival of the Arts held in June. George E. Chaplin, director of the studio arts program, was represented with one of his "abstract landscapes," D. Mark Pappas, a junior, by two pieces of sculpture and Robert W. Starkey , a senior, with one of his graphics. Chase Twichell, a recent graduate, read some of her own verse. Milli Silvestri, assistant director of the new bureau, was a member of the " Industry Looks at Art" Committee and also acted as liaison for Trinity with the Festival.
*****
An article entitled "The Duty to Reveal and to Conceal" written by Dr. Samuel Hendel, professor of political science and former chairman of the department, and Dr. Robert L. Bard of the University of Connecticut Law School, appeared in the May issue of "Change," a magazine of higher learning. Dr. Hendel is a member of the National Board of the American Civil Liberties Union and also on the ACLU Academic Freedom Committee.
*****
Mrs. Paula I. Robbins, director of career counseling, attended the annual conference of the Northeast Region, Association of Advisors to the Health . Professions, held at Bucknell University, LeWisburg, Pa. She was re-elected secretary of the 250-member group and co-chaired a workshop on women in medicine.
**** *
Seventy-six students from across the nation were selected to study in ·Rome, Italy, this summer under a program sponsored by the College. The Trinity/Rome Campus, now in its fourth summer season, is open to students at other colleges, as well as Trinity students. The thirteen Trinity students in Rome are: Nicholas f< . Brady, Jr. '76 of Far Hills, N.J.; Karen C. Doyle '74 of Garrison, N.Y .; Elizabeth B. Hess '75 of Haddonfield, N.J.; Roberta L. Johnson '76 of St. Clair, Mo.; Maurice R. Landry '75 of Springfield, Mass.; Camilla 0. McRory '75 of Ashton, Md.; Katherine K. Miller '74 of Baltimore, Md.; Daniel P. Russo '73 of Hartford, Conn; Amy B. Schewe! '74 of Baltimore, Md .. ; Jill A. Silverman of Meadowbrook, Pa.; Paul A. Spinella '73 of Manchester, Conn.; Robert W. Starkey '74 of West Hartford, Conn.; Anne M. Warrington '75 of Cincinnati, Ohio. Non-Trinity students came from a number of institutions including New York University, Skidmore, Ohio Wesleyan University, American University, University of Oklahoma, Columbia, University of Pennsylvania, Michigan State, Stanford, University of Iowa, Brown, and the •I"' University of Minnesota.
*****
Trinity was host college for the annual meeting of the New England Deans Association recently. The Association includes the deans of 18 private colleges in the northeastern region. Topics discussed included admissions, career counseling, student concerns and the relation between the liberal arts and pre-professional training.
*****
Ivan A. Backer, director of community affairs, has been elected to the board of directors of the Better Business Bureau of Greater Hartford.
*****
Edwin P. Nye, dean of the faculty, was recently re-elected chairman of the University Research Institute of Connecticut, Inc. He held the position of Chairman-President since the death last spring of Dr. Joseph Wenograd of the University of Hartford, URIC's President at that time. Dean Nye is a founding member of URIC.
Several professors of the History Department are engaged in activities of their national professional organizations. Dr. Philip C.F. Bankwitz, is secretary of the Society for French Historical Studies. Dr. Norton Downs is assistant treasurer of the Medieval Academy. Dr. Glenn Weaver is one of the editors of the Trumbull Papers project at Yale.
*****
Mohamed Jibrell, assistant dean for c ommunity life and lecturer, intercultural studies, and James Miller, assistant professor of English and intercultural studies, participated in the Fifth Annual Conference of the African Heritage Studies Association held at Morgan State College in Baltimore. The conference was attended by educators from the United States, Caribbean and Africa. Jibrell read a paper on "Social Change in the 19th and early 20th centuries in Somalia." Miller was elected to the executive committee of the African Heritage Studies Association. Jibrell and Miller were appointed as representatives of AHSA in the Connecticut area and have been included in a delegation to attend the Sixth Conference of the Association in December 1973 to be held at Addis Abbaba, Ethiopia.
*****
Seven fmancial aid students will be studying at other institutions in the United States and abroad next fall under scholarships provided by the College. A new policy begun this year allows qualified students to take their fmancial aid with them when they study somewhere else for a semester. Purpose of the policy, according to Robbins Winslow, dean of educational services, is to allow students on financial aid to strengthen their major through foreign study. One student next fall will be studying in Washington, D.C.; two will be in France; one in Freiberg, Germany; and three in Madrid, Spain. Requirements for continuing financial aid under these circumstances include that the program of study be integral to the student's major field of study, and will offer significant opportunities not avialable at Trinity.
*****
Dr. Ralph 0 . Moyer, Jr., assistant professor of chemistry, and Jeffery S. Thompson '74 presented a paper "Ytterbium Ruthenium Hydride" before the Inorganic Chemistry Division's Symposium on Solid State Chemistry at the 16 5th national meeting of the American Chemical Society at Dallas, Texas. At the same conference, Dr. Moyer delivered a paper, "Synthesis and Structure: An Integrated Inorganic-Physical Chemistry Laboratory Experiment in Solid State Chemistry," at the Division of Chemical Education's Symposium on Improvements in Physical Chemistry Teaching. Supported by part of NSF-COSIP grant (National Science Foundation-College Science Improvement Program) Howard Keifer '72 assisted in the development of the laboratory procedure.
**** * Leo Hamel, athletic trainer at the College, received a 25-year pin at the annual awards dinner of the National Association of Athletic Trainers held in Atlanta, Georgia, in June.
*****
Dr. Clyde D. McKee, Jr., associate professor of political science, participated in this year's session of the Boys' State Program sponsored by the American Legion which was held at the U.S. Coast Guard Academy in New London. Dr. McKee spoke to 400 Connecticut high school representatives on "Politics and Government: Theory and Practice."
**** *
Dr. Frank G. Kirkpatrick, assistant professor of religion, has an article entitled "Process or Agent: Models for Self and God," in the Spring 1973 issue of THOUGHT.
Trinity has been accepted for membership in the annual National Student Symposium held under the auspices of the Center for the Study of the Presidency. Two Trinity students will be attending the symposium when it is held next year.
*****
* ** **
*****
COMMITIEE ON ENDOWMENT President Lockwood announced that John A. Mason '34 has accepted appointment as chairman of the Alumni Committee on Endowment to succeed the late Sydney D. Pinney '18, who had served as chairman since the formation of the Committee in 1954. Mr. Mason retains his position as assistant to the president for alumni affairs. The Committee, consisting of representatives for all classes out of college 25 years or more, has the primary purpose of encouraging their classmates and other friends to make gifts of endowment to the College.
HONORED-With appropriate ceremonies, the College honored members of the faculty and administration who retired at the end of the past academic year and those who reached milestones of service. Left to right, front row: Mr. and Mrs. Penn Hargrove, Managers of the Book Store, retired; Mrs. Archer S. Jackson, Chief of Technical Services, Library, retired; Mrs. Sere Johnson, retired after 42 years of service; back row: President Lockwood; Dr. Eugene W. Davis, Professor of History, 25 years of service; Dr. Ralph M. Williams, Professor of English, retired; Charles Paul, Technician, Physics Department, 32 years of service; Dr. Robert H. Smellie, Professor of Chemistry, 25 years of service; John A. Williams, Manager, Central Services, retired.
TRUSTEES (from page 1)
of White and Case, is a 1922 graduate of Trinity. He joined White and Case in 1926. In 1960 he was awarded an honorary doctor of laws degree (LL.D.) from Trinity, and in 1968 received the Eigenbrodt Trophy from the Alumni Association. He was elected to the board of trustees in 1962. In addition, he served on the senior board of fellows for six years, on the junior board of fellows for six years, was president of the national Alumni Association from 1960-62, and is former president of the New York Alumni Association. A native of Perth Amboy, N.J., he is a descendant of Thomas Hinckley of Barnstable, Mass., governor of Plymouth Colony (1681-92), and great-great-grandson of Alexander Glover, who fought at the Battle of Lexington. Mr. Johnson is the donor of the rounded gates located at Broad and Vernon Streets. Bishop Gray, bishop emeritus of the Episcopal Diocese of Connecticut, received an honorary doctor of sacred theology degree (S.T .D.) from Trinity in 1941 , and was elected to the board of trustees in 1951. A former lawyer, he studied at William and Mary and the University of Richmond Law School. He received a B.D. from Virginia Theological Seminary iri 1928. He was assistant rector of St. John's Church, West Hartford, from 1928-31, dean of Nativity Pro-Cathedral, Bethlehem, Pa., 1932-36; and dean of Christ Church Cathedral in Hartford from 1937-40. He was elected suffragan bishop of Connecticut in 1940, bishop coadjutor in 1945, and diocesan bishop in 1951. He . retired as bishop in 1969. Mr. Reitemeyer, retired publisher of The Hartford Courant, graduated from Trinity in 1921, and was elected a trustee in 1950. A native of Elizabeth, N.J., he began his career with the Courant as campus correspondent while a student at Trinity, joining the paper full time as a reporter after graduation. He subsequently rose to assistant city editor, Sunday editor, city editor, executive vice president, president and publisher.
During World War II, he was a colonel with 'the First Army and Eastern Defense Command. He received the Legion of Merit and the Army commendation ribbon. Before his retirement in 1956, he commanded the 1035th Military Intelligence Reserve Group. He served as a director of Associated Press for nine years, and is well known for his activities with the Inter-American Press Association, which he served as its president and director in 1964. Mr. Wean, a trustee since 1955, received an honorary doctor of science degree (D.Sc.) from Trinity in 1964. He is president, treasurer and director of Wean Engineering Company, Inc., which he established in 1929 as a manufacturer of steel, strip and tin mill equipment. An inventor of steel mill equipment, he holds 27 patents in the field. President Lockwood, commenting on the retirements, said, "The College is grateful for the many years of service these men have given. The fact that three of them are alumni is also gratifying. Trinity thanks all of them for their leadership, and we hope that, though retired from the board, they will keep their interest in the College for many years to come."
TRINITY REPORTER July, 1973
Vol. 3 No.9
Issued nine times a year in October, November, December , 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 REPORTER is mailed . to alumni, parents, faculty, staff and friends of Trinity. Copies are available to students. There is no charge. Letters for publication must be no longer than 200 words and signed. The printing of any letter is at the discretion of the Editor and may be edited for 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. Heyl '66.
Trinity
LONDON VACATION Alumni are invited to take advantage of this exciting, economical trip to London, November 1 through 8, 1973. Chartered TWA Boeing 707 Jet .. .first class hotel (6 nights) with private baths ... continental breakfasts ... sightseeing trips ... transfers, baggage handling and tips ...only $239 per person. For details, write Alumni Office, Trinity College, Hartford, Conn. 06106.
Lockwood Names Attorney as Aide Thomas D. Lips, an attorney formerly from San Francisco, Calif., has been appointed assistant to the president. A native of Wilmington, Del., Mr. Lips is a 1966 graduate of Dartmouth College, and earned a J.D. degree from Harvard Law School in 1969. He served in the U.S. Army from 1970-71, in the Systems Analysis section of the Office of the Secretary of Defense. From May, 1972 through last April he was an attorney with the San Francisco law firm of Bronson, Bronson & McKinnon.
John Hey! to Take Development Post John L. Heyl '66, who was named alumni secretary in 1970, will become assistant director of developm!!nt, effective October 1. He will replace Alfred M. C. MacColl '54 who has resigned to become assistant to the headmaster of The Rectory School in Pomfret, Connecticut.
Students Continue Scholarship Fund HeyI In his n.ew position, Mr.· Heyl will have responsibility for the Alumni Fund and Parents Fund in the Annual Giving Campaign. A native o{ Philadelphia, Mr. Heyl graduated from Loomis School and, after receiving his B.A. from Trinity, did graduate work at Brown University. He taught for two years in Thomaston, Maine and, during the year before his appointment as alumni secretary, at the Hyde School in Bath, Maine. Mr. Heyl succeeded John A. Mason '34 who now serves as assistant to the president for alumni affairs.
Trinity students have voted in a referendum to continue the $15,000 scholarship fund for disadvantaged students. Money for the fund comes from the student activities fee. Five Hundred and seventy-six students voted in favor of the proposal to continue the scholarship fund for two more years, when another vote will be taken. The scholarship fund was started by students in 1969, to meet the student commitment to provide scholarships for disadvantaged students. The money is credited to the student scholarship endowment in the Office of Financial Aid. Students also voted in favor of establishing a scholarship endowment fund which would eventually total $60,000.
ENGAGEMENTS 1967 TIMOTHY GEORGE BROSNAHAN to Martha Ann Millen DONALD M. BISHOP to Gemma Won-Ja Chong 1971 Evelyn de Rothschild to VICTORIA LOU SCHOTT ALEXANDER W. KENNEDY to Jill Anita Lindsay 1972 NEIL JOSEPH HOLLAND to Barbara Ann Burns LEWIS H. PAYNE to Clare J. Hudson 1973 GARY A. PLAGENHOEF to Ruth Elizabeth Birney Pat Anthony Colaiacovo to CHRISTINE MARY DRUMMOND Ronald Nathaniel Adams to KAREN ELIZABETH KARL
1915 THEODORE PECK to Ruth Boyer, October 14, 1972 1918 GEORGE C. GRIFFITH to Pauline B. Wojiewski, May 5, 1973 1954 Capt. DONALD KING BISSONNETTE to Clair Ruth Henry, June 9, 1973 1963 PETER GILTNER DePREZ to Debra Jo Stolen, June 2, 1973 1965 JAMES D. FINLEY to Anne Howes Goodman, May 19, 1973 Lt. RICHARD GOODWIN to Ann Campbell, March 20, 1973 E. WILLIAM CHAPIN, JR. to Marianne Hoover, June 9, 1973
1966 CHARLES KING McCLURE to Joanne Pryor Jackson, January 27, 1973 1967 MARK SHAPIRO to Laura Klein, August 5, 1972 1969 RICHARD CHARLES WELTON to Mary Ann Fries, June 16, 1973 H. NEIL WIGDER to Catherine M. Berens, May 27, 1973 1970 WILLIAM K. NEWBURY to Priscilla P. Christman, June 16, 1973 MICHAEL M. BUCHET to Julia K. White, April4, 1973 1971 PIETER JAMES CRUSON to KATHY FAY DONAGHEY, June 16, 1973 DAVID WILLIAM SHAPPELL to PATRICIA CATHERINE GIBBONS,May 12, 1973 PETER G. DODD to Lynette Sabol, June 2,1973 1972 JAMES FROST to Patricia Dennison, June 23, 1973. RICHARD PEARSON to ROBIN B. MESSIER, July 7, 1973 THOMAS H. CLARK to ANNE B. CRICHTON, June 2, 1973 RALPH RAYMOND RJEHL to Betsy Ann Berenstain, May 19, 1973 PETER K. WITTMAN to Margaret Anne Scott, June 9, 1973 JOSEPH DONALD GOODWIN to MARGARET JOHANNA FLEMING, June, 1973
(CLASS NOTES continued on pages 4-11)
NEW ALUMNI DIRECTORY Alumni should by now have received a first or second request for the essential information required to assure ·publication of the Sesquicentennial Directory to be published in January of next year. We sincerely hope that everyone will reply to this request. Publication will be handled by Bernard C. Harris Publishing Company, Inc. of White Plains, New York. In the contract with the college, the firm assumes all financial obligations, including the compilation, editing, billing and distribution of the directory, and will cover its costs through the sale of advertising and individual book sales (to alumni only). All advertising will be sold subject to the approval of the college. This new plan will eliminate the normal sizable cost to the college and Alumni Association, and through its self-sustaining operation assure the compilation of a professionally completed volume. The number of directories printed will be based on the number of advance orders received via the phone call, plus a limited number of copies for the college use only. No post-publication sale is planned. The Harris Company is the Alumni Association's sole authorized agent for the production and marketing for the directory, which will be made available to alumni only and will assume all cost, profits or losses involved. There is no charge to you for your listing-and full representation is essential. Whether or not you purchase a book, we ask that you comply with the information requested when you receive a phone call from the publisher.
·PROMOTIONS (from page 1)
A UNIQUE CONTRIBUTION-Raymond A. Mongtomery '25, who at 70 years is as spry as some undergraduates, spent 2% weeks in early June painting the concrete shields on both sides of Downes Memorial Arch. His painstaking work, which involved hand-picking the ivy which had grown over the shields, was a "gift" he wished to contribute ever since he saw similarly paintea shields in England. He researched the authentic colors for the ~hields, which included the Trinity College shield, the·shield of Trinity College, Cambridge, the Tudor Arms and the arms of Henry III, which is pictured above. Using acrylic paints, he worked from a 20-foot aluminum scaffold. His project attracted TV and newspaper reporters, and headline writers had a grand time describing it. Some samples: "Grad, 70, Brushes Up at Trinity;" "Trinity Grad Rates 'High' in Devotion;" and "Painter Goes High on Trinity." (ED NOTE: We'd add it demonstrates an overarching talent.)- Hartford Courant Photograph
July 1973 Page 3
Class Notes·
MARRIAGES
Lips He is a member of Phi Beta Kappa, the American Bar Association, the State Bar of California, and the San Francisco Bar Association.
R~porter
professor of chemistry at Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois. Dr. Higgins, who serves as college counselor, came to Trinity in 1963. His major field of research is in personality development in higher education. He is the author of several articles on youth culture. Dr. Lee was appointed to the faculty in 1962. He is a specialist in metaphysics, · the philosophy of language and the works of Alfred North Whitehead. He was chairman of the philosophy department since 1970 until Dr. DeLong succeeded him in July. Dr. McPhee was appointed to the faculty in 1957. In addition to teaching physical education classes, he coaches freshman football and swimming and varsity lacrosse. He is a past president of the New England Intercollegiate Lacrosse Association. Dr. Miller, chairman of the physics department since 1971, joined the faculty
in 1961. He has also taught at Bryn Mawr, Amherst and the University of California at Riverside. Dr. Gettier joined the faculty in 1966 and was appointed chairman of the religion department in 1972. He is the contributor of many book reviews to the Union Theological Seminary Quarterly. His specialty is the Old Testament. Chaplin has won numerous prizes for his painting. He has had over a dozen exhibitions of his paintings at various galleries and recently had a one man show at Trinity. Dr. Egan came to Trinity in 1967 from the College of New Rochelle. He is a member of the American Economic Association. Dr. Reilly came to Trinity in 1971 and is a specialist in the American government. Dr. Garst on who came to Trinity in 1969 has been a lecturer at the University of Connecticut. Cale, a graphics arts specialist, came to Trinity in 1972 as a Visiting Artist. Miss Millspaugh was the first woman to teach in the athletic department at Trinity.
Trinity Reporter July 1973 Page 4
DIRK R. DREUX to Adelaide A. Beacham, June 9, 1973 1974 James L. West to ELIZABETH A. ENDICOTT, June 2, 1973 PATRICK C. SCHEIDEL to Sharon L. Liebman, June 1, 1973 NEIL J. JOHANSON to Elizabeth Collins, May 26, 1973 Jeffrey M. Horowitz to LORNA THOMPSON, April23, 1973 ROBERT G. PICO to Barbara M. Uchneat, May 19, 1973 BIRTHS 1956 Mr. and Mrs. ED DALEY, son, February 14, 1973 Mr. and Mrs. VITO CALBI, son, Evan Francis, November 19, 1973 1960 Mr. and Mrs. KARL P. KOENIG, JR., daughter, Julia, October 11, 1972 1962 Mr. and Mrs. FREDERICK PRYOR, daughter, Margaret Fair, October 25, 1972 Mr. and Mrs. HENRY KISOR, son, Conan Henry Wheeler, March 24, 1973 Mr. and Mrs. ANDREW J. MILLER, son, Andrew Jr., April 26, 1973 1963 Mr. and Mrs. STEPHEN WASHBURNE, son, Matthew Courtenay, April 24, 1973 1964 Mr. and Mrs. WILLIAM RICHARDS, son, Joshua William, January 15, 1973 Mr. and Mrs. WILLIAM AVERY, daughter, Allison Southgate, November 26, 1973 Mr. and Mrs. DAVID PYLE, daughter, Lindsey Stephenson, March 30, 1973 1965 Mr. and Mrs. ROBERT GRAHAM, son, Jonathan Edward, April 2, 1973 1966 Mr. and Mrs. MALCOLM MARSHALL, son, Malcolm III, March 11, 1973 Mr. and Mrs. RANDOLPH LEE, daughter, Kerrith Susan, February 8, 1973 Mr. and Mrs. JOHN F. SNYDER, daughters, Meredith and Julie, January, 1973 Mr. and Mrs. WILLIAM P. CONNOLLY, son, Sean Richard, August, 17, 1972 Mr. and Mrs. GEORGE BENT, son, Colin William, May 9, 1973 1967 Mr. and Mrs. JAMES McCULLOCH, son, Michael James, March 9, 1973 Mr. and Mrs. ROBERT TRAINER, JR., daughter, Molly, March 22, 1973 1968 Mr. and Mrs. HOWARD SHAFFER, son, Matthew Todd, March 26, 1973 1969 Mr. and Mrs. DAVID STERN, son, Gabriel Jason, April 8, 1972
02
Mr. Frederick C. Hinkel, Jr. 63 Church Avenue Islip, Long Island 11751
The RT. REV. ROBERT GOODEN writes to announce the celebration of his 99th birthday next September 18. He is still preaching and reckons that he is one of the oldest Trinity alumni.
09
The Rev. Paul H. Barbour, D.D. 14 High St. Farmington, CT 06032
KEYES GAYNOR sends his regards to Trinity alumni. He celebrated his 89th birthday on May 23 .
12 S. HERBERT EVISON (Evvy), who retired from the position of chief of information, National Park Service, April 30, 1958, has been tape-recording the reminiscences of form er and present employees of the service over the past two years. He and his wife, Shirley, have recently completed an 8500-mile swing through the Southwest in which they battled several blizzards, making 61 recordings in a little more than nine weeks. Evvy - known as Herb to his NPS associates- celebrated his 81st birthday on April19.
14
Mr. Robert E. Cross 208 Newberry St. Hartford, CT 06114
OSCAR MONRAD has moved to 6015 Camino de Santa Valera, Skyline, Bel Air Estates, Tucson, Arizona, 85718.
15
Mr. William B. Pressey 6 Parkway Hanover, NH 03755
THEODORE PECK married Ruth Boyer Scott last October 14 and has recently moved to Apt. 421 , 210 E. Fairfax St., Falls Church,
Va., 22046. They merged 16 grandchildren. RONALD E. KINNEY sends his regards from 156 Palmetto Rd., Bellair Estates, Clearwater, Fla., 33516.
16
Mr. Erhardt G. Schmitt 41 Mill Rock Road Hamden, Ct. 06514
Our sincerest sympathy to The Rev. JOHN H. TOWNSEND on the death of his brother, James F. Townsend on June 26, 1973. LLOYD R. MILLER proudly announces his marriage to Mrs. Joseph Gray. They now live on Riverside Drive in Ogdensburg, New York where he has been active in the St. Lawrence Power Squad. Your SECRETARY has been disappointed that more of you did not show up for the Immortals Dinner at the Hartford Club in May. It was a most delightful affair and Dr. Ted Lockwood and his very able staff with their wives, were most gracious hosts. His report on the progress of the college, particularly since the advent of the women students, was most interesting. I trust that you are all interested in the "Friends of Trinity Rowing." You saw, I hope, in the UPI about the two Trinity crewman winning their second consecutive national title in the "pairs without coxswain" division, and the varsity 4-oar crew won the consolation with a second win over Princeton . Well, the crews are at Henley on Thames now and need our support. Please send in something, your check to the Trustees, marked "Friends of Trinity Rowing." They deserve our enthusiastic support. Please continue to send me your news.
19
Mr. Clinton B. F. Brill RFD No.1, Box 228D Tallahassee, FL 32301
Dr. JOHN W. WILLIAMS received an honorary degree, Doctor of Sciences, from Worchester Polytechnic Institute on June 2, 1973. Congratulations from the Class of '19.
22
Mr. Bert C. Gable 61 Clearfield Rd. Wethersfield, CT 06109
REINHOLD E. NORDLUND has changed his address to 53 Hill Rd., Apt. 401, Belmont, Massachusetts. 02178
24
Mr. Thomas J. Quinn 364 Freeman St. Hartford, CT 06106
Your SECRETARY and wife, Marge, attended the dedication of the Ethel Percy Andrus Gerontology Center in Los Angeles on February 12. The Center represents a cooperative venture-the first of its kind in the nation- between the University of Southern California and the National Retired Teachers Association and the American Association of Retired Persons. More than 400,000 members of the two associations contributed $2,000,000 for the construction of the $4,000,000 building. The center will be staffed by the University. After a few days in California we flew to Hawaii. There seems to be a dirth of news from the class of '24 . Cone on fellows, let's hear what you are doing in retirement. DONALD C. CHILDS has retired from his job as State Meat and Brand Inspector and is now living in Stanfield, Oregon. His family includes six grandchildren.
25
Mr. Raymond A. Montgomery North Racebrook Road Woodbridge, CT 06525
WHEELER HAWLEY reports that he is still going strong and won't be ready to retire for another ten years at least. With two daughters in high school, he is still keeping his nose to the grindstone. He is still serving as a vice president of Pi Delta Phi, the French honor society, but hopes to pass on the chairman's job at Stanford University to a younger colleague next year.
26
Mr. N. Ross Parke 18 Van Buren Avenu e West Hartford , CT 06107
To all 18 of you Good Classmates, I want to thank you for your kind and thoughtful answering of our little questionnaire sent you a short while ago. You too, will be interested and pleased to learn that you have much more in common -and have shown good common sense in watching your diet -temperance in drinking, and learning to take exercise and hard physical work in sensible moderation, and in having your doctor check you now and then. Keep up your good work- we're proud of you - congratulations! It was especially fine to hear from "Doc" FRISBIE (Truscott System of Chiropractic) for
the first time in 50 years. I am sure we all like it when he writes to say he is "an Americanist," adding "Under God." I'm sure we can commend this idea. It was similarly fine to hear from DICK O'BRIEN who advises "Live and enjoy it-accept life as it comes and kick 'the dickens' (original word censored) out of it." Good ole MAC writes: "If any of your 26ers get out this way, look me up. The only one I have seen in 50 years is good old "PITCH" and his very nice wife, Jean." If any of you can or are going to travel in the far West, please know that you will give great pleasure to Mac and his dear wife, Vera, by taking him up on his invitation to say Hello. The McBURNEY'S address is APT. 315, 4700 176th S.W., Lynnwood, Wash. 96036 . "Best to you, Old Crows." KEN STUER reminds us, saying in effect, "Let's all get together on our 50th in 1976" which also is the 200th anniversary of our GREAT UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. Let's mark this important event and year on our calendars and in our memories-and then, let us plan to get together at Trinity. It is great indeed to hear from you good Classmates and the very mention of the names of these Men who wrote in, will bring fond memories to all of us of 2T6. ED ANTOS R JIMMY BURR NR - MATTIE DANN R DICK FORD R - "DOC" FRISBIE R - The REV. FRED HICKS R- JACK LINNON R McBURNEY R - CHARLES MORHARDT R - REGGIE NEWSHOLE R - MORRIS ROISMAN R - BILL NICOL R - DICK O'BRIEN NR - The REV. FRANK PRYOR, III R - WALT RILEY R - MERRILL SHERMAN R - KEN STUER NR - DALE STEWART NR - A.R. AVITABILE R HOWARD TULE NR- and ROSS PARKE NR Perhaps it will be interesting to note, 4 out of the 18 are yet to retire. May you, your Loved Ones and All be ever blessed with good health and all good things. Keep up the fine work of helping yourselves and others all you can and God's Richest Blessings on you and all, as we of 2T6 e x tend our deepest congratulations to our GREAT ALMA MATER on the !50th Anniversary of TRINITY COLLEGE to whom we are eternally grateful for so much! (ED. NOTE: The following items of interest arrived after Mr. Parke's newsnotes were received.) FRANCIS J. PRYOR, rector emeritus, writes that he is still assisting regularly at "the old parish." A grandson, Francis J. Pryor V, was added to his family on April6, 1973 at San Pedro, Calif. The Rev. FREDERICK G. HICKS retired as rector of the Church of the Reedemer, Lorain, Ohio on December 31, 1972 and was presented with a 1973 Pontiac Catalina as a gift of appreciation. His present address is 2350 E. Water St., Apt. B-107, Tucson, Arizona, 85719. Your secretary, N. ROSS PARKE, was one of eleven artists whose works were chosen for permanent exhibition and bought by the Arts Festival Association of Hartford.
27
Mr. Winthrop H. Segur 34 Onlook Rd. Wethersfield, CT 06109
Capt. PHILIP MARK KERRIDGE is active at the California State University at Fullerton as president, member of the board of directors, and as a Patron of the Library. His interest in fishing has lured him into vice president and chairman of the Finance Committee 路 of the Federation of Fly Fisherman and author of angling literature.
28
Mr. Royden C. Berger 53 Thomson Road West Hartford, CT 06107
HARRY F. MEIER, retired from the Upjohn Company in February after 36 years of service, is now employed as a consultant by the Thomas Engineering Compan y in Chicago . His eight-year-old son, Bobby, is currently attending J.F. Kennedy School in Kalamazoo.
29
Mr. James V. White 22 Austin Road Devon, CT 06460
ARTHURS . BLANK was named chairman of Connecticut's Poison Prevention Week by the Connecticut Pharmaceutical Association shortly before his retirement from the post of technical director of the Poison Information Center in Hartford. Originally employed as a chemist with the Health Department, he has been in charge of the Poison Center since 1958. GEORGE HEY has moved to Derry, New Hampshire and bought a house that he proudly reports is located in a pine grove- "no grass to cut."
JOHN W. WARDLOW won first place in the nation in the Circle of Stars for personal paid production with Philadelphia Life Insurance. He is now residing in Raleigh, North Carolina.
KARL F. KOENIG visited his son's family, including a new granddaughter, Julia, last January in Alberq uerqu e, New Mexico. Afterward, Karl, his wife, and youngest daughter, Maria, toured the Mayan ruins in Yucatan, Mexico.
31
Dr. Robert P. Waterman 148 Forest Lane Glastonbury, CT 06033
G. LAURENCE BLAUVELT, headmaster of Friends Select School in Philadelphia, Pa., was a warded an honorary Doctor of Humane Letters degree by Haverford College on May 13, 1973. Cited in the presentation as a "teacher and educational builder, inspiration to a Friends' school and its students," Larry is credited with innovating the financing of the construction of a new building by leasing a portion of the school's center-city property to a private corporation for the construction of a 20-story office building. Dr. CHARLES E. JACOBSON, JR. received the Greater Manchester (Conn.) Chamber of Commerce "M" Award on May 3, 1973 . The award is presented for substantial, outstanding, noteworthy contribution to the Manchester community. LEW GIFFIN and his wife have been retired in Ajijic, Mexico, on the shores of Lake Chapala, since August 1, 1972. They have a lovely home with a flower-packed garden overlooking 30 miles on the lake. At 5000 fe et elevation, the climate is perfect. He reports that many interesting and stimulating people live in his community, and there is golf, swimming, reading, and music to keep them happy. "It is nice to see horses, cattle, goats, and Mexican people pass outside the doorway. Sure beats working for a living."
32
Julius Smith, D.M.D. 242 Trumbull St. Hartford, CT 06103
VICTOR J. OUELLETTE retired April 1, 1973 from the vice presidency of -Hartford Electric Light Company. He has been with HELCO since he was a student in 1929. The Hon. WALTER J. SIDOR was reconfirmed to the superior court in May for another eight-year term. MALCOLM SCOTT retired last November from the California Department of Motor Vehicles, following a massive heart attack in August of 1972. He was disappointed not to be able to attei!d the !50th anniversary events.
34
Mr. John A. Mason 564 West Avon Rd. Avon, CT 06001
The month of May struck hard. Our sympathy goes to the wives and families of GEORGE DeBONIS, DAN THOMSEN, and SAM COALE. The Class of 1934 also lost our Dean, Dr. Thurman L. Hood- a great scholar and a good friend. VAHAN ANANIKIAN has nearly completed a 600-pipe organ in his home. FRED BASHOUR had an article entitled "The Birds Around Us" in June 3 issue of the Hartford Courant. There were seven beautiful colored pictures with the story. ANDY ONDERDONK has been elected a director of the Episcopal Church Scholarship Society of Connecticut for three years. He is also this organization's treasurer. Your SECRETARY visited his son, Nat, in Flo by, Sweden before going to Henley, England to watch Trinity's crew row in the Ladies Plate. JAY FIDAO's nephew, Lloyd Fidao, Jr., will be 'Neath the Elms with the class of '77. JERRY ARNOLD has moved from Hastings, New York to 11 Ashland Avenue, Pleasantville, N.Y., 10570, and likes being his own landlord. CHARLES KINGSTON will become president of the Association for Advanced Life Underwriting on September 1 of this year. After 25 years of travelling as a district manager for Lenox and then Wedgewood, HAROLD BAYLEY, JR. has elected for early retirement. At this time he has no intention of moving from Devon, Pa., and is looking forward with pleasure to a leisurely summer.
35
Mr. Albert W. Baskerville 73 Birchwood Dr. Derry , NH 0303 8
A chatty, newsy le tt er from ERIC PURDON. Eric, whose current address is "Arden" Harwood, Maryland, (Don't ask your correspondent what that means. I don't know either.) has announced his retirement. Between his 20-odd (?) years with the Navy and the remainder in civil service, Eric has accumulated 30 years and retirement eligibility. Current plans sound rather impressive- a garden to combat rising food costs, sailing a ketch, (built for Eric last year in Nova Scotia), for charter as captain and starting another book. Hopefully this one will be reviewed by the Trinity Reporter. Eric reminisces about Louis Naylor
Trinity Reporter July 1973 Page 5
and his kindness to him and Tom Cassidy during our penny pinching days of the thirtys. Also joining the retirement ranks on June 30, is your SECRETARY, also with 30 years of VA, IRS and Army service. Plans are still indelmite with the exception of increased time on real estate sales with Hartwell Associates of Londonderry. Daughter Barbara sent your correspondent a clipping showing OLIVER "BRUNCH" JOHNSON chatting with Economist James Howell. No explanation of this tete a tete but Ollie seems heavily involved with everything that goes on in Hartford. A skip and a jump. TONY CACASE back to Connecticut from Florida. Current address 32 Gates Rd., Old Saybrook, Connecticut 06475. ART STOLZ switched abodes in Washington, DC, currently 3520 - 26th St. N.E. Colonel R . PEARCE ALEXANDER (USA, Ret.) has left Convair Aerospace and is now a principal engineer with the Electronics Division of General Dynamics Corporation, San Diego. His home is still in La Jolla," Cal. A note from TERRY MOWBRAY. "Retired in June, 1971. Am enjoying retired life. Hear from James Wales and Chuck Kingston now and then. I thoroughly enjoyed the Trinity Pipes here a few weeks ago. Miss the old Trinidads, but that is life. Seven grandsons in the USA ... no granddaughters. Cheers!"
36
Mr. Victor E. Bonander 90 Van Buren Ave. West Hartford, CT 06107
The Rev. OLIVER CARBERRY has retired as rector of St. Paul's Church in Fairfield, Conn., and has been made rector emeritus of that church. His current address is Meeting House Road, Box 417, R.F .D. No. 2, Wells, Maine, 04090. News from Honolulu where LARRY SINCLAIR is still interested in yacht design and a marine survey business. His third daughter was married in March, while his fourth daughter and son, ages 11 and 12, are still living at home. He writes that his wife is happy being grandmother to two boys and a girl.
37
Mr. Robert M. Kelly Hartford Board of Education 249 High St. Hartford, CT 06103
Dr. SIDNEY CRAMER was inaugurated as president of the Connecticut State Medical Society in May of this year. He is currently an assistant clinical professor in radiology at the University of Connecticut Medical Scho-ol. TED MUSGRAVE is now chief chemist at the Soda Products Division of Diamond Shamrock Chemical Co., Painesville (Ohio) Works. Eight grandchildren are now a part of his family. JOSEPH GRECO (Colonel USAF, Ret.) is teaching French and Spanish in Colorado schools. His oldest son is a captain in the Air Force in Texas, while his youngest son is in Army ROTC at the University of Colorado and living at home. Joe has recently moved to a new home across from the Air Force Academy "to be in the Air Force environment I love so well." ALBERT HASKELL retired from the Naval Reserve as captain, June 30, after 31 years. He has a new job as office administrator with Paxton and Seasongood, a 100-year-old law lum. J. BENEDICT O'CONNELL has joined Westledge Associates, Inc., as vice president. He and his wife, Helene, live in Glastonbury, Conn. STANLEY FISHER is vice president and director of IRMCO International, Ltd. of Hong Kong and London, and is now living in Makati, Rizal, Philippines. His eldest son, Bob, is running his own bo-okstore in San Francisco. Estelle, second oldest, is currently studying zoology at the University of Madrid in Spain. Elizabeth has just graduated from the
41 Katz '44 International School in Makati, and David, the youngest, has just completed second grade at the International School. DWIGHT CUSHMAN has been honored by the National Society, Daughters of Colonial Wars, as the first Californian to receive its Teacher Award. This award is given for "outstanding service by exemplification and encouragement of patriotism and interest in American history and in our American heritage."
38
Mr. James M. F. Weir 27 Brook Rd. Woodbridge, CT 06525
GREGORY T. McKEE's son, Greg Jr., is currently outdoor education director at Camp Stoner in Jackson, Michigan. His younger son, Tom, majors in radio and television communications at Ohio University. FRANK A. HAGARTY continues to play cello at the Bohemian Club in San Francisco where there is a full symphony orchestra. His daughter Kathy is also a cellist, and, after finishing her fifth year at Berkeley, is now a music teacher in Southern California. J. BARD McNULTY spoke at a meeting of the Connecticut Historical Society in April on "What the Ballonists Saw; 19th Century Views of Connecticut Towns."
39
Mr. Earl H. Flynn 147 Goodale Dr. Newington, CT 06111
EDWARD C. BARRETT, former principal of Barrington Junior High School in Barrington, Rhode Island, retired in June. The Rev. HENRY HAYDEN will be exchanging parishes with Herne Hill Congregational Church in Southeast London, England for this summer. The London pastor will serve San Carlos, California while he is there.
40
Mr. Herbert R. Bland R. C. Knox & Co. P.O. Box 930 Hartford, CT 06101
JACK S. WHITE had a grandson, Andre, and a granddaughter, Kristen, born in 1971. He and his wife, Kay, are currently enjoying their ranch in the Dragoon Mountains of Arizona. CHARLES P. HAMMILL has returned from a four-year assignment in London as manager of European Operations for A.O. Smith. He now works in Los Angelos as manager of western U.S.A., Alaska, Hawaii, and western Canada. J. JAY SHAPIR 0 's oldest child, Charles, a senior at Ber kely, has been elected to Phi Beta Kappa and accepted at Stanford Medical School for the fall of '73. Sari is now married and an undergraduate at the University of Wisconsin. Robin Ann, 16, and Shoshana, 13, are still living at home. HERBERT R. BLAND was elected a director and vice路 president of the YMCA of Metropolitan Hartford. C. DUNCAN YETMAN was named assistant superintendant of schools in Old Saybrook (Conn.).
21 Forest Dr. Newington, CT 06111
HAROLD A. HEAP became associate director of policyholder service at Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Co. in May. IRWIN MANCALL was named president of the Hartford Medical Society early this year. The Rev. WILLIAM B. VAN WYCK is associate rector for the All Saints' Episcopal Church in Phoenix, Arizona, and handles counselling in alcohol problems for the Arizona Health Service. WILMOT B. RECTOR wishes to notify his classmates that his new address is 311 East Clifton Ave., Apt. 7, Anaheim, Calif. 92805. WARREN CLOUGH, national salesmanager of Shiloh Farms, National Health Food Distributors, is now located in Sulphur Springs, Arkansas.
42
Mr. Martin D. Wood 19 Tootin Hill Rd. West Simsbury, CT 06092
KEN ALBRECHT's motel business is in its second year of operation. He writes in that he "hopes some alumni travelling on Highway 101 will stop in sometime. It's the Crown DD Lodge in King City, Calif., 150 miles south of San Francisco." Ken now has four grandchildren. From WALLACE M. WEBB - Don't let anyone tell you life begins at forty. It begins at fifty! After nearly three years of hard, physical effort, Wallace has just received his first degree black belt in karate. March 26 marked his 30th year with United Air Lines. In a letter to the editor of The Hartford Courant, FRANK F ASI was complimented on his prompt handling of a bus strike. As mayor of Honolulu, Frank had the city buy the bus company's franchises.
44
Dr. Harry R. Gossling 558 Simsbury Rd. Bloomfield, CT 06002
Dr. LEON KATZ was appointed vice president in charge of packaging, research and commercial development by the American Can Company. EARLE W. EPPS and his wife, Barbara, have been living in Lakeland, Florida since 1957. Earle is now chief of the department of anesthesiology-at-Lakelan-d General Huspital. LAURENCE H. ROBERTS, JR. is enjoying New Hampshire life as the chairman of the math department at Holderness School for Boys in Plymouth. His sons, Larry and Mark, are attending Holderness while Laurence's daughter, Hannah, is in Aberdeen, Scotland as part of her studies at Hampshire College. ARTHUR LITKE writes that his son has been appointed to West Point. Arthur now lives at 25 Tullip Tree Lane, Darien, Conn., 06820.
45
Mr. Andrew W. Milligan 15 Winterset Lane West Hartford, CT 06117
JOHN J. J. JONES was elected judge of Suffolk County, New York, and holds court in the lust district in Hauppauge. WALTER B. WILDMAN is the secretary-treasurer of the medical staff at the Christ Hospital in Cincinnati, Ohio . He also participates as junior warden at the Calvary Episcopal Church in Cincinnati. RALPH E. MARQUISS, partner 路 in the consulting engineering firm of Rummel, Klepper, and Kahl, resides with his wife at 618 Stevenson Lane, Baltimore, Maryland, 21204. His hobbies include fishing and flying. ROBERT J. MORAN was appointed judge of the Palmer (Mass.) District Court in May. FRANCIS J. CARMODY is currently serving with the U.S. Army in Europe with the grade of colonel. Located in Heidelberg, Germany, he is chief of the Community Support Division.
46
NEVER TOO OLD-Wallace M. Webb '42 (right) has received his first degree black belt in karate. (See Class Note.)
Mr. Frank A. Kelly, Jr.
Mr. J. William Vincent 80 Newport Avenue West Hartford, CT 06107
JOHN FERRANTE has just completed a six-week tour of the United States as the singing star of the P.D.Q. Bach comedy show. His schedule for the coming fall and spring includes concerts at Cal. Tech. in Pasadena, Town Hall in N.Y.C., and an hour-long TV special in Boston for network television. The Rev. WILLIAM A. STUDWELL and his wife, Peg, are leading a tour of "the India we learned to love" for three weeks in October, based on their ,experiences with Union Church in New Delhi. Bill is currently pastor of the United Methodist Church in Pleasantville, New York. CLIFFORD A. BOTWA Y has just returned from establishing Botway Marketing International, S.A. in Europe, which controls a group of advertising and marketing companies in several countries. JAMES L. MciNTYRE was elected to the board of directors of The Charter Oak Bank
and Trust Company (Hartford) last March. EUGENE K. HARRIS has been awarded a research work assignment by the National Institutes of Health for a one year stay in London with the Clinical Research Centre in Middlesex. His family leaves in August of this year.
48
The Rev. E." Otis Charles 231 East First South St. Salt Lake City, Utah 84111
MIL TON BRAND is celebrating the start of the fourteenth year of his marketing consulting fum, Brand, Gruber, Stander, and Company in the Detroit area. Dr. PAUL G. KUEHN lectured at Trinity in April during a "quit-smoking" clinic. He is a practising surgeon at Hartford Hospital. Dr . TOM SCHARFF and two of his colleagues are writing a book in dental pharmacology. He is presently a professor of pharmacology in the Schools of Medicine and Dentistry at the University of Louisville. His son David will be entering Trinity in the fall. EDWARD T. FABER is teaching at the graduate school of Armstrong College in Berkeley, California. His wife, Phyllis, was appointed a commissioner for the California Coastline Commission. They are still living at 212 Del Casa, Mill Valley, Calif., 94941, and plan to stay there . . ED BURNS and his wife are building a new house on the mesa near Las Cruces, New Mexico-"very slowly." Their two married daughters are in Dubuque and 路Los Angeles, while their youngest daughter is a music major at N.M.S.U. Ed's son is in high school in Las Cruces. THOMAS M. MEREDITH was named to the Management Advisory Board of Hornblower and Weeks-Hemphill, Noyes, Inc. WATSON LEORY MORRELL, JR., terri tory manager for Allis-Chalmers Corporation is living at 88 Brookside Dr. in West Hartford with his wife, Nancy, and two children, Glenn and Laura. Lt. Col. HAROLD W. GLEASON, JR . was appointed commanding officer of the 453rd Finance Section with headquarters at Indiantown Gap Military Reservation, Anneville, Pennsylvania. Harold is still a professor and the chairman of the English department of Shippensburg State College in civilian life. His son, William, is a freshman at Drexel University in Philadelphia. MORRIS NIRENSTEIN, president of Connecticut Education Association, spoke at the commencement exercises of Webster Academy on June 2.
49
Mr. Charles I. Tenney Charles I. Tenney & Associates 2 Bryrt Mawr Ave. Brn Mawr, PA 19010
The Rev. SHERMAN BEATTIE of New York City's General Theological Seminary spoke on "Striving for Wholeness: the Interrelationship of Healing to Learning" at the annual dinner meeting of the Stamford-Darien Council of Churches and Synagogues in May. The Rev. Canon ALLEN F. BRAY is rector and headmaster of the Bishop Whipple Schools in Faribault, Minnesota, 55021. He is also director of the Constance Wilson Center for Education and Psychiatry, the Independent Schools Association of the Central States, and is a trustee of the board of governors of the National Association of Episcopal Schools. JOSEPH F. LITTELL is presently a partner in the McDougal, Littell and Company, a four-year-old publishing company that specializes in publication of secondary-school English and social studies materials. His new home is at 2985 Arrowhead Trail, Riverwoods, Illinois where he lives with his wife, two English setters, and a Siamese cat. Mr. James R. Glassco, Jr. Aetna Life Ins. Company . 151 Farmington Ave. Hartford, CT 06105
50
PAUL R. WHITE is in his tenth year of teaching as chairman of the History Department at Blair Academy. He has bought property in Canada and is working on it while he recovers from two open heart surgery operations of last March and May . Paul reports that he "continues to be a very happy person doing what he likes doing, and wishing that others could be as fortunate. Still not married." RALPH C. LASHER has been named vice president of Imberman and DeForest, Inc. of Chicago and Houston, and is living in the Houston area. PHILIP WRIGHT has moved to Wide River, Montana where he is building a home on the banks of the Big Hole River. His hope is to start a fly fishing school next year. WILLIAM T. ROBINSON has been named vice president of the American Hospital Association. SCOTT M. STEARNS, JR. has been reelected to the board of directors of the National Association of Real Estate Boards. JOHN S. ROBOTTOM runs a small cattle ranch north of Dallas. Recently he was appointed the director of development, Dallas County, Community College District. Beth, his oldest child, is at the University of Texas.
Trinity Reporter July 1973 Page 6
;.
',:,.
Sarah, the youngest of five, and in the first grade, is seriously interested in the Little League. BENJ AMIN H. TORREY was awarded membership in the Honor Table by the Connecticut General Life Insurance Company. This honor is the highest a Connecticut General field sales representative can receive. R OBERT L . OBREY is presently an administrator with the Vocational Education Division of the San Mateo County Office of Education in Redwood City, California. During 1972-3 he has been president, Region V, As s ocia t ion o f California Schoo l Administrators, president of the California Directors o f Vocational Education, and chairman of the San Mateo County Auxiliary Manpower Planning Board. ROBERT TANSILL was appointed merchandise manager for terry cloth. for the West Point Pepperell Apparel, Fabrics Division. News from Japan where HENRYS. PALAU is now living in Yokosuka, about thirty miles from Tokyo. He is director of the Navy Law Center in Yokosuka, and staff judge advocate to the commander of the United States Naval Forces in Japan. His wife, Nancy, and sons, Mark, 14, and Richard, 11, are enjoying life in Japan, and they plan to remain until July 1974. RICHARD K. AVITABILE and his wife, Elaine, returned this spring from a combined business-vacation trip to six countries in Europe. He is now employed by Dow Chemical Company as group marketing manager for Chlor-Alkal Products. His three children Carol, Susan, and Mark are ages 12, 9, and 2. Elaine keeps active in music by playing and teaching piano. PAUL L. THOMAS presided over the National Convention of the American Guild of Organists in Dallas, Texas as general chairman in 1972. He was also elected to the Guild's National Council this past year. Paul, who is beginning his 14th year as the music director and organist of St. Michael and All Angels Church in Dallas, one of the largest Episcopal parishes in the country, has had numerous compositions published. Joyce and Paul, who will be celebrating their 18th wedding anniversary, have a 16-year-old son, Craig, who h in the process of earning his driver's license. WALTER T. SULLIVAN has been elected senior vice president and trust officer of the Fidelity Trust Company.
51
Mr. John F. Klingler 344 Fern St. West Hartford, CT 06119
LAWRENCE E. JENNINGS was appointed vice president and general manager of the Heat Transfer Division, Bohn Aluminum and Brass Corporation. JAMES HOLLYDAY was appointed vice president and general manager . of general packing for American Can Company. WIL PINNEY's second book, "Two Ways of Seeing," is being published by Little, Brown of Boston. For the school year of 1973-4 he will be on sabbatical at Idaho State University. MAX von SCHRADER's family includes five children, Katy, Tom, Amy, Mary Jean, and Sarah, ranging from 19 years to nine months. Max is currently president of Union Bank and Trust Company, Ottumwa, Iowa. DICK DePAOLIS has been promoted tq superintendent of the Blast Furnace Department of Cleveland Works of Jones and Laughlin Steel Corporation. He has moved from Pittsburgh to 28030 Lincoln Rd., Bay Village, Ohio, 44140. WILLIAM L. KEADY, JR. writes that he is constantly in touch with WHITEY OBERG, AL SIMPSON, and JIM McDONNELL. Bill is president of Advalloy Inc., manufacturer of Integrated Circuit Subcomponents, president of Alpine Little League, and president of the Woodside Priory Foundation. Woodside Priory, located in Portola Valley, California, is a prep school for grades 7-12. HOBART S. JOHNSON, II is presently providing part-time management to growing companies as president of Hobart Johnson Associates, Inc. He writes that he is spending considerable time in the Orient. EDWARD K. VAN HORNE, JR. is ir Tokyo, Japan for 18 to 24 months with Mobil Sekiyu as supply manager. GEORGE W. LAUB was elected an investment research vice president of the Niagra Share Corporation last April. His family of five is living in Buffalo, New York. RONALD P. KAUFMAN, M.D. has been named dean for clinical affairs of the George Washington University Medical Center. THOMAS F. FERGUSON was chairman of the Manchester (Conn.) Sesquicentennial Committee which involved a week-long program of events from June 24 through June 30. JOHN B. MeGA W sen'ds his greetings from Bellevue, Washington where he has been busy the past few years establishing his own insurance agency. His family includes three children, the oldest of whom is in high school. ROBERT S. ELLIOTT has been president of Pronto Plastics since 1966 . In 1972 he received the Distinguished Service Award from the western section of the Society of Plastics Industry~
WARNER BEHLEY is now associated with the Copperweld Corporation as assis.;.nt secretary and division controller of the Bim e tallics Division, located in Glassport, Pennsylvania. He is now living at 2234 Clairmont Drive, Upper St. Clair, Pittsburgh, Pa., 15241.
52
Mr. Douglas C. Lee 51 Wood Pond Rd. West Hartford, CT 06107
JAMES A. VAN SANT was elected president and chief operating officer of General Steel Industries, Inc. in April. He was also elected a member of the board of directors. Jim and his wife and two children live in Ladue, Missouri. ROBERT C. BUFFUM's son, Robert, Jr., will be entering Trinity in the fall. EDWARD P. SOUTH, M.D. was promoted to assistant superintendent of the psychiatric facilities at California Medical Facility in Vacaville, California. Ed and his wife, Joan, live with their four children in Suisun City, California. Last summer Ed stopped by the campus for the first time since 1965. Enjoyed being back at Trin. Recently installed as president of the Connecticut chapter of the American Institute of Real Estate Appraisers was ROBERT N. HUNTER, now living with his wife and two sons in Glastonbury, Connecticut. FRANK STARK has been reelected chairman of the Faculty Senate at Boise State College, where he is an associate professor in the chemistry department. ARTHUR R. FRENCH has been appointed manager of Technical Services of the Bristol Brass Corporation, Mill Products Division. The Mill Products Division produces strip, rod, and wire for the communications and electronics markets. He joined Bristol Brass in 1968 as chief metallurgist. JOHN B. PARSONS was elected to serve as a corporator for the Farmington (Conn.) Savings Bank in February. John is assistant vice president of Aetna Life and Casualty Company and director of the North American Development Corporation of Boston. RICHARD C. SANGER was appointed a member of the advisory board of the Canton Office of the Simsbury (Conn.) Bank and Trust Company. He is currently an attorney with the firm of Sanger and Wollenberg in Canton Village. USAF Major Frederick Reed Hoisington III received his fourth through eleventh awards of the Air Medal for sustained aerial flight in Southeast Asia. He was cited for his airmanship and courage on missions completed under hazardous conditions from December, 1971 through October, 1972. After twenty years with the USAF, Lt. Col. EDWARD GEARY retired last August and is living in Colorado Springs. In June of this year, he joined Informatics, Inc. as a member of their technical staff. The Rev. RICHARD L. AIKEN was named dean and head of the Choate School in May.
53
Mr. Paul A. Mortell 508 Stratfield Rd. Bridgeport, CT 06604
Your SECRETARY's son, Bennett Mortell, a graduate of The Gunnery in Washington, Connecticut, will be a member of the Class of 1977. Bennett received the Trinity College book award in his junior year of high school. JARVIS ALLEN of 26 'Lidgerwood Place, Morristown, New Jersey, 07960, is interested in hearing from area alumni in N.Y., N.J., and Pa. Jarvis is chief pharmacist at Dover General Hospital and has three children, Richard, 1 7, Susan, 15, and Melissa, 3. ORISON S. MARDEN was transferred to Los Angeles in July of 1970 as assistant director, labor relations, CBS Studio Center. In 1971, he was promoted to director of labor relations for the West Coast, CBS, Inc. He now resides at 1792 Warwick Road, San Marino, California, 91108. Lt. Col. DAVID TEICHMANN is presently the commanding officer at Marine Aviation Training Support Group in Jacksonville, Florida. His son, David, will be entering Trinity in the fall from Punahou Academy in Hawaii. The Rev. Dr. J. WALTER NELSON was just promoted to associate professor at Eastern Kentucky University . JOHN J. SHIGO III was named assistant manager, new projects development, in the mining department 路 of Bethlehem Steel Corporation. He now lives at 1360 Biafore Avenue in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania. G. PHILIP LECRENIER has been advanced to secretary in the corporate development department at Connecticut General Life Insurance Company. He is active in community affairs as the director of the Canton (Conn.) United Fund and chairman of the American National Red Cross, Canton branch. ED SIMMONS, a counselor at San Jose High School, is active in non-partisan political projects - rapid t r ansit, the "ecology" movement, and putting the "right guys on the City Council." Ed has two sons ages nine and eleven and is expecting another child in August.
Jennings '51
VanSant '52
Shigo '53
Hoisington '53
Krim '59
JOSEPH J. MELLO has been appointed Chrysler Corporation's manager in charge of fire and industrial security. HAROLD E. TRAVER received the 1972 National VFW Citizenship Award for "outstanding service to Denver." He received the award mostly for his work with children's sports and veteran's activities even though he is not a member of the VFW. ARTHUR TILDESLEY, his wife and four children have moved to 217 Kemp Avenue, Fair Haven, New Jersey, 07701. His oldest child, Jill, is a freshman at Franklin and Marshall College. Art writes that he keeps himself busy as treasurer and junior warden of St .. George's Church, Alumni Fund Executive Committee member, and as a member of the Board of Education of the regional high school for Rumson and Fair Haven, New Jersey. He says he enjoys the first Wednesday luncheons of Trinity alumni at St. Bartholemew's Church cafeteria on Park Ave. and 50th . Wishes that more alumni would join them. "Most informal, under a dollar, and no talk of money!" Major WILLIAM A. ROMAINE is moving to 17 West Erie Drive, Tempe, Arizona, 85282, after having spent five years with the Air Force Data Systems Design Center. He will be in a program sponsored by the Air Force Institute of Technology, leading to a Ph.D. in Cybernetic Management at Arizona State University. STANLEY McCANDLESS is now in data processing with Shell Oil in Houston, Texas. JOHN J. BURTON is president of the United Fund drive for Branford, Ct. JOSEPH BASILE received his sixth-year certificate of study in guidance at the University of Hartford in June. ALLAN YOUNG, JR. is active in water and air pollution control as so cia tions in Pennsylvania. He is currently chairman of the technical committee of the National Sanitation Foundation that established national standards for small sewage treatment devices. He is also industry representative of the Air Pollution Control Association of Pa., president of Cromaglass Corporation, a manufacturer of wastewater treatment equipment, and has presented papers at several national environmental meetings. ROBERT HANDY has been named director of the New Ventures Development Laboratories for Motorola Inc. In his new post he will be in charge of both the Phoenix-area laboratory based at the Government Electronics Division plant in Scottsdale, and the Chicago-area laboratory in suburban Arlington Heights.
54
Mr. Theodore T. Tansi Phoenix Mutual Life Insurance Co. 1 American Row Hartford, CT 06103
GORDON A. WEST has been appointed administrative assistant to the president at Rohm and Haas Company in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. STAN MUIRHEAD entered the beef cattle business-from breeding through feedlot-last fall by buying a sizeable farm in central Ohio near Urbana. He writes that it is a hard but happy life. His family includes a nine-year-old daughter, two sons, eight and six years old, and a fourth child who is on the way. Stan's new address is Cambrian Farm, Rte. 1, Cable, Ohio, 43009. RICHARD D. HINES was named manager of Plymouth, Michigan Automotive Region, by Associated Spring Corporatio!f./headquartered in Bristol, Conn. GEORGE H. COSBY was appointed president of Alexander and Alexander of Virginia, insurance brokers. The Rev. GEORGE H. PIKE, JR. was elected moderator of the Synod of the Pacific of the United Presbyterian Church for 1973-4. He continues to serve as pastor of the First Presbyterian Church in Vancouver, Washington. ERIC A. FOWLER reports that he is very pleased that his son, E. Anderson Fowler, Jr. has chosen to join the class of 1977. New job and new home for The Rev. David K. Kennedy in Honolulu, Hawaii. David is now the rector of St. Timothy's Episcopal Church
Lecrenier '53
Nelson '59
and is living at 98-1077 Mohala Place, Honolulu, Hawaii. He is also priest-in-charge of the Church of the Ascension, Kwajalein, Marshall Islands, and was appointed a member of the Governor's Commission on Judicial Qualifications. LEWIS B. TAFT was promoted to manager of Process Technology for IBM in San Jose. He has now five children, two of whom were born in Japan while he was working for IBM in Tokyo. Lewis volunteers to be an advisor of good restaurants in San Francisco for any alumni who would like to call for information. WAYNE (TOBY) SCHOYER has been elected president of the St. Croix Council of the Navy League of the United States. He adds that there are still six Trin men (maybe more) living on "this rock." LEWIS McCAULEY has perfected a car wheellock and formed McGard Inc., a sister company to L.D. McCauley, Inc., a precision machine shop. He has also been busy forming Oxytronics Inc. to - manufacture survival and communications equipment for the Air Force and Navy. Lt. Col. FRED POTTER will become commander of the 513th civil engineering squadron while his wife and children spend the summer at their home in Greece. He will finish his three years of teaching AFROTC this summer and will be glad to return to the field of engineering. Dr. STANTON AVITABLLE has been elected senior vice president and medical director of the Security-Connecticut Life Insurance Company. LOUIS C. BERRONE received a Ph.D. degree from Fordham University on June 2.
55
Mr. E. Wade Close, Jr. 200 Hunter's Trace Lane Atlanta, Georgia 30328
JOHN D. DRISCOLL became dean of Samuel I. Ward Technical College, University of Hartford on July 1. Ward College will offer a two-year associate degree program in electrical or electronic technology and offer students the option of continuing their education through a bachelor of engineering degree at the College of Engineering. NAT REED and PETER NASH won the finals of the second flight of the Jaques Cup at the Country Club in Brookline, Massachusetts on May 26 . This powerful duo does well each year in the famous four-ball competition. 路 SAM DACHS. M.D. is engaged in raising a family of two boys, one girl, and seven quarter horses. He is currently director of laboratories at Montana Deaconess Hospital in Great Falls and president of the Montana Pathology Society. The Rev. DAVID HOAG teaches part-time as a health education teacher at Braircliffe High School while attending Iona College. He is a member of the Ecumenical Commission of the Diocese of New York. RONALD MOSS, living at 622 Embree Crescent, Westfield, New Jersey, 07090, is employed by the New York Times as home furnishings advertising manager. His three children, Ronald, Lynda, and Stefanie are now ages 10, 7, and 5. Ron is still playing squash and handball. As of last May, RICHARD ZAMPIELLO has. been working for Gerald Metals, Inc. in New York City as vice president in charge of raw materials. He knows of two other Trinity graduates also employed by this company. Richard has moved from St. Louis, Missouri to 5 Old Long Ridge Rd., Stamford, Connecticut. ROBERT J. DONAHUE leases machinery through the Trans-World Leasing Corporation. His address is 19000 Oxford Rd., Shaker Heights, Ohio. Major CHARLES B, SIMONS is being transferred to Lowell Technical Institute in Lowell, Massachusetts as AFROTC instructor. He will be living in the Chelmsford area and hopes to continue his schooling and skiing. Charles writes that he recently previewed an ROTC film showing Lt. Col. FRED POTTER,
Trinity Reporter July 1973 Page 7
Class of 1954, instructing at the University of Wyoming. ROBERT PEDEVILL, president and owner of Robert Investment Company, a building and land development firm, is also a director of the National Bank of Palisades Park in New Jersey. He is living at 2055 Center Ave., Fort Lee, New Jersey. . ROGER SCHERER works for Sanford Corporation in Chicago, Illinois. His family of five lives in Minnetonka, Minnesota. EDWARD COBURN is living and working in Florida, and loving it ! With a family of six children, he finds himself adding on to the house quite often. Ed works for Miami Elevator Corporation as sales manager. The Rev. TERENCE G. FORD is building a lakeside bungalow in the vicinity of Panama City. As of January 31, 1974.he will be on a one-year leave from the position of director of the Episcopal School of 路 Panama, but will remain in Panama. He writes that he would welcome a call from any Trinity alumni passing through the area.
56
Mr. Edward A. Montgomery, Jr. Backbone Rd. Sewickley Heights, PA 15143
CHRIS NOSWORTHY was recently promoted to supervisor, Earth Resources Applications Department, Manned Spacecraft Center. Chris is working in Houston, Texas for Lockheed Electronics Company as a systems analyst for aircraft and spacecraft remote sensing programs and earth resources applications. The ED DALEYS just had No. 6 on February 14, 1973 ... the third boy to go with three girls. A skating line of each! DR. ROBERT H. BAKER, JR. is in his eleventh year at Upjohn Company as manager of the Administrative Computer Center. ED HENRIE and his wife, Nancy, have two children, Laura, five, and Stephen, three. They are living in Plymouth, Michigan while he works as manager of the treasury for Chrysler Canada, Ltd. in Windsor, Ontario. RICHARD L. FLEMING is the minister of music for the First United Methodist Church in Richardson, Texas. The church has more than 500 people involved in 15 musical organizations, including an orchestra and concert band. RON BOSS, his wife, Bobby, and their two sons live in Westminster, Calif. and are starting their seventh year with American Airlines. Both sons are accomplished swimmers for the Lakewood Aquatic Club. 路Jeff, 17, qualified for the 1972 U.S. Olympic Trials. Steve, 13, was a Junior Olympic Finalist. JOHN H. BARTER has been named to the board of directors of the Independent Mutual Insurance Agen.ts of Connecticut. PAUL TERRY recently joined Champion International's Weld wood Division as marketing manager. He remarks that his wife and six children are growing faster than the economy is inflating. Lt. Col. FREDERICK ST. JEAN, commancer at Shaw AFB in South Carolina, reports that he will assume the rank of Colonel in about six months. WILLIAM EASTBURN and his wife, Constance, have two sons and three daughters now, ages two through eleven. Bill is president of the drug treatment center, Today, Inc., and rector's warden of the Trinity Church in Buckingham, Pennsylvania. He is also chairman of the board of the American Cancer Society, Bucks County Unit. Dr. PHILIP STILES, a resident of Barrington, Rhode Island, has volunteered along with other Barrington residents to donate his time to a program named TAP, (Talent Aid Pool), offered by the League of Women Voters as a means to supplement the traditional classroom education with programs relevant to the students' course of study provided by adults from the community who 'are specialists in that area. Phil's particular presentation was in astronomy and given to the third grade science classes at Hamden Meadows School. PHILIP R. MORRIS has joined the staff of John G. Alden, Yacht Brokers, in Greenwich, Conn.
57
Paul B. Marion 7 Martin Place Chatham, New Jersey 07928
The Rev. JAMES D. WILSON became rector of Grace Episcopal Church in Plainfield, New Jersey last November 1. Jim writes that working in an urban set-up is a real "mission" situation, as Chaplain "Mo" Thomas used to say. DAVID GIAMMETTEI has just been made chairman of the history department at the Hill School in Pottstown, Penn. He and his wife, Virginia, have built a vacation house in the Poconos. PETER WILSON now lives at 35 Lost Valley Dr., Orinda, Calif., 94563. FRED SILL writes from his job at Cinema International Corporation in London that he is "still single and still skinny." DAVE MciSAAC writes that there is a quite
a little colony of Trin students at the Air Academy. He's tempted to take the time to write an article- "From 'Neath the Elms to 'Neath the Ramparts: The Trinity Gang at the Air Force Academy." He keeps in touch with Major EDGAR LORSON '58, Major DON SEASTROM '59, and Major RICHARD GADD '61. JOHN WOODWARD also writes from the Hill School in Pottstown, Penn., hoping to send Trinity a few scholar-athletes next year. John is the college advisor at Hill. BILL MORRISON has recently settled in Pittsburgh where hs is assigned to Headquarters Purchasing Staff with Westinghouse. Before arriving in Pittsburgh, he spent four months in Europe. JOHN SHIELDS replied to the alumni news postcard as follows: "No promotions, same old. job, can't afford a home, and have no children that I know of. Still a bachelor and travelling all over the world setting up trips as V.P. of Matterhorn Sports Club." Fine report, John. Lt. Cmdr. JOHN SHERMAN, USN, is still stationed in Orange Park, Florida where he heads up Surface Operations Division, Fleet Intelligence Center, Europe. The class of 1957's Mr. America, DAVE CLARK, has been named athletic director of Frederick Community College, Frederick, Md. WILLIAM J. McGILL's book on Maria Theresa of Austria has been published by Twayne Publishers. William is currently dean of the . college and associate professor at Washington and Jefferson College in Washington, Pa. On April 23, he was ordained to the diaconate in the Episcopal Church. ROBERT K. TAYLOR was promoted to marketing development manager for Asia, Dialectric Materials and Systems. He will be stationed in Singapore with the principal responsibility of visiting 3M's Far East sale subsidiaries and establishing liaison with the electronic and electrical manufacturers in the area. DAVID J. ELLIOTT, now on a special assignment with Proctor and Gamble's buying department in Cincinnati, is working on the interesting and challenging project of trying to get a much-needed second high school built in his area. David's family includes a daughter, Gwen, age 10, and a son, Jeffrey, age 6. Dr. WARD S. CURRAN spoke April 17 at the College as the annual George M. Ferris Lecturer on "The Economics and Financing of Private Higher Education: The Years Ahead." WALTER SHANNON JR. was elected president of Wagner McNeil, Inc., of Lakeville, Conn.
58
Mr. Borden W. Painter, Jr. 110 Ledgewood Rd. West Hartford, CT 06107
GEORGE ENEPEKIDES has joined Dart Hellas S.A.l. which produces and sells the Tupperware line in Greece. His new address is 15, Devoli St., Athens, 508, Greece. EUGENE CORCORAN, pilot for TWA since 1966, has been promoted to major in the USAF and is now living in Elgin, Illinois. His family includes his wife, Joy, two sons, Gene and Ashley, and another child on the way. The RICHARD PICKERING family has moved to Christiansen Lane, Kennebunkport, Maine, 04046. His new job will be director of admissions for Nasson College in Springvale, Maine. Dick and Jane have three children, Tina, Cricket and Nathan. BILL LORSEN, part of the Trinity clan at the Air Force Academy, is busy teaching aircraft design, aerodynamics and thermodynamics. He writes that he is concerned about what he considers to be the shortsightedness. of Trinity in rejecting R.O.T.C. "I would think that people who desire to keep the control of the military in the hands of civilians, would like to have a hand in educating military officers, rather than leaving the job to the military itself." A nomination for the 1972 Pulitzer Prize in journalism went to PETER S. GOODWIN for his "man-in-the-street" opinion columns in the Daily News of the Virgin Islands. DAN LOURIE is "half-way" to his law degree at Texas Southern University and is founding chairman of the Texas New Party, now the People's Party. His activities for the last few years include regional vice president for the Physicians Nationwide, Inc., speaker at peace rallies, and a board member of the Houston American Civil Liberties Union. TIMOTHY HOLBROOK has been named headmaster of the . Pine Cobble School in Williamstown, Mass. JERRY BARTH has moved to 126 Cornwall Drive, Pittsburgh, Pa., 15238, and is working as manager of market research for Westinghouse Electric Corporation. ALFRED OLLSON, his wife, Sue, and their five-year-old son, Kurt, are living in St. Louis, Missouri where he is district sales manager for Anaconda Metal, Hose. Division. RIDGWAY SATTERTHWAITE has been teaching Latin American geography and is the new director of International Center for Macalester College in St. Paul, Minnesota. He is now in charge of study abroad programs, foreign students, and is director of a ten-college consortium for January Interim Abroad.
RICHARD SCHAUPP has continued his interest in fine arts as vice president of Ness Lithographers in New York City. Expecting his CF A designation this summer is ROBERT BACK, who is currently working as assistant manager of the Chicago office of Brown Brothers Harriman and Company as investment advisory manager. Bob was chairman of the Consumer Analyst Group of Investment Analysts Society of Chicago for 1972-3.
59
Mr. PaulS. Campion 4 Red Oak Dr. Rye, New York 10580
Dr. JIM HARROD, pediatrician, is director of Newborn Intensive Care Center in San Jose, California. He established the unit at Valley Medical Center when his family moved to the Bay area last July. His wife, Ann, is a retired stock broker, now managing Steven 6, and Andrew, 3. Jim's family is building a house in Saratoga, Calif. Maj. MYLES McDONOUGH, USAF, is stationed at McCoy AFB in Orlando, Fla. with his wife, Cynthia, and children, Kerry, 7, Susan, 5, and Paul, 2. They are planning a move when the base closes in the near future. BRIAN NELSON was appointed director of the home service department at Connecticut General Life Insurance Company. Maj. JON REYNOLDS, former POW, visited the Trinity clan at the Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs. He is hoping to join the staff of the history department there after two years of graduate study at Duke University. DONG KINGMAN, JR. has recently left as editor of "Columbine," the CBS newsletter which embraces corporate, broadcasting, recording, and publishing activities. Dong launched the newsletter for CBS over a year ago. He now lives in Manhattan with his wife, Ling-Ling, and daughter, Melissa. SHEPARD SCHEINBERG, now practicing law in Riverhead, New York, has built a home in East Quoque on Shinnecock Bay. He and his brother, Hank '55, own the Hampton Bays Liquor Store. PHIL JACKLIN is associate professor of philosophy at San Jose State College and a founder of the Committee for Open Media. COM introduced the free speech message to TV via license challenges, etc. Phil invites Trin alumni to write him if they are interested in information. CHRISTOPHER WRIGHT has joined the William B. Martin Corporation, a commercial industr ial real estate -nrm.- Chris will concentrate in the areas of financial analysis, new business origination, loan negotiation, and placement. DAVID SKAGGS, _ author of "Roots of Maryland Democracy, 1753-1776," to be published by Greenwood Press of Westport, Ct., is associate professor of history at Bowling Green State University in Ohio. His new address is 1314 Bourgogne Ave., Bowling Green, Ohio, 43402. STEPHEN SMITH has been promoted to vice president of the Lafayette Bank and Trust company and will serve as branch administrator and director of personnel. Connecticut General's highest field office award, the "Outstanding Agency Award," has been given to the White Plains, New York, office of the company, mal)aged by RICHARD KRIM. The White Plains office has earned the honor for the second consecutive year. JACK ADAMS was installed as president of the Connecticut Chapter of the Society of Real Estate Appraisers on June 1. He was also elected to membership in the Appalachian Mountain Club in May. Happy climbing! PAUL HERSCH has been promoted to north team leader in the Sacramento County Health Services. This position places him in charge of multi-disciplinary health team of 30 to 40 professionals. Paul is the first non-M.D. to hold the position. His address is 1219 Villanova Drive, Davis, Calif., 95616. Your SECRETARY, president of the Vermont Hotel Motel Restaurant Association for 1973, has purchased the Cortina Inn in Killington, Vermont. He al].d his wife, Breda, own and operate Pittsford Designs, Ltd., a producer of limited edition Christmas cards, greeting cards and notes, by hand silk-screening. They welcome visits by Trinity alumni.
60
Mr. Robert C. Langen 2 Sachems Trail West Simsbury, CT 06092
LEE KALCHEIM won an Emmy Award for best comedy writer on May 20 for an episode of "All in the Family." KARL KOENIG reports the arrival of a daughter, Julia, on October 11, 1972. Karl writes that this increases the size of his family to "five and a half." His recent activities include establishing psychological services and research for penitentiary inmates and increasing work with heroin addicts. His wife is also a clinical psychologist and works in a local clinic with children and parents. Karl is currently president of the New Mexico Psychological Association.
The Rev. CHARLES S. BURGER was installed as rector of Holy Innocents Episcopal Church, Lahaina, Maui, on March 18, by the Rt. Rev. E. Lani Hanchett, Bishop of Hawaii. S. WOODRUFF BENTLEY is in his ,tenth year of commissioned services in the USAF as a special agent with the Air Force Office of Special Investigations. He has just completed a 15-month assignment as the AFOSI Detachment Commander at Kunsan AB, Korea and has been transferred to the AFOSI District 70 at Wiesbaden AB, Germany. Accompanying. him will be his wife, Claire, and their children, Stewart, 10, Elizabeth, 9, and William, 3. JAMES TENNANT is in industrial maintenance in Ketchikan, Alaska, and would welcome correspondence from any Alaska-bound alumni and friends who '-'Would like assistance in business or vacation plans. His family, including four children ages 8, 6, 2, and 1, are living in Ward Cove, Alaska. BRUCE STONE is now employed by Loeb, Rhoades and Co., Inc., members of the New York Stock Exchange as vice president in the branch management department. JERE BACHARACH writes from the University of Washington that he has been promoted to associate professor in the Department of History. Maj. ROBERT WRIGHT has been assigned to a unit of the Pacific Air Forces at Nakhon Phanom Royal Thai AFB, Thailand. This unit provides tactical air power supporting the U.S. and its allies in Southeast Asia and the Far East. fULES WORTHINGTON is still self-employed as a creative artist. His recent success in bringing his work to the public includes group showings at various galleries in New York, December 1972 Playboy Magazine Kinetic Timepiece, and selection by the HUD National Community Art Competition. MURRAY H. MORSE, JR. has become an associate with The Commonwealth Group Inc., a marketing consultant firm. Murray, Eleanor, and their two children, live in Fairfield, Conn. MORRIS LLOYD, JR. has been appointed to sales coordinator for Alexander and Alexander, Inc. in Philadelphia. His family, which now includes Lisa, 7, Tony, 5, and Teddy, 1'/2, will be moving to 8011 St. Martin's Lane, Chestnut Hill, Pa.
61
Mr. Del A. Shilkret 40 Meryl Rd. So. Windsor, CT 06074
DAN THURMAN writes that the joys of owning an old home in the_Mt. Airy section of Philadelphia are keeping them busy and are making the local hardware and equipment rental shops rich. In his spare time, Dan is still playing the trumpet. He is currently employed by the Philadelphia Geriatric Center as director of Community Housing for the Elderly, a special project in which members can occupy rehabilitated housing with access to services which enable them to stay in the community: A. GARY MANDIROLA has been advanced to director at Aetna Life and Casualty in the corporate data processing services. THOMAS REESE, JR. has been employed for the past 18 months as a . Congressional liaison officer on the staff of the Postmaster General. Recently he has accepted the promotion as manager of the national accounts in the Customer Development Department. Tom is still living in Vienna, Virginia with his wife, Candy, and their three daughters. BILL SULLIVAN has been named executive vice president of the Western Reserve Economic Development Agency, and also to the Governor's Citizen Council on the Environment. Since his appointment as instructor in plastic surgery at the New Jersey College of Medicine, CHARLES GIANETTI has moved to 91 Linn Drive in Verona, New Jersey. He and his wife are looking foward to returing to Connecticut in 1974 when he will practice in the Westport area. Their first child, Heather, was born on March 7, 1972. MATTHEW FORREST has been appointed second vice president of Chase Manhattan Bank branches in Japan. His wife, Judith, and he have two children, Matthew and Hanna. BOB BROWN is the project manager fur Artisan Development, a newly formed division of Kaiser Aetna. WILLIAM McNULTY, JR. reports that he is now semi-retired at the ripe old age of 3 3. He is working part-time as a social worker, using his free time to experiment in metal sculpture and construction. CHRISTOPHER ILLICK was elected president of Robert Fleming, Inc., a subsidiary of Robert Fleming and Co., Ltd. of London, investment managers. RONALD POLSTEIN left Connecticut a year ago for the great northeast and is now living on Saanich Peninsula, Vancouver Island in British Columbia. He is working as a senior counsellor for a child and family service in Vancouver. Ron visited BUD BERGMANN '60 and his wife in Seattle where they are attempting to preserve traditional areas of that city. ED WAYLER is now in private practice in Waycross, Georgia where he specializes in cardiology and internal medicine. His son
-
Trinity Reporter July 1973 Page 8
Andrew is now 6, and Caroline, 2. WILLIAM SCULLY has recently joined F. Eberstadt and Company as an institutional salesman. CHARLES TUTILE has completed a B.S. in dairy science and a M.S. in reproductive physiology at Ohio State University in the years 1971 and 1973. He and his family are now moving to Brandy Farm, Route 2, Culpepper, Virginia, 22701, where they will be managing a 600-cow dairy farm. The Tuttles now have four children, Eileen, Franklin, Margaret, and Luke. ALBERT MAYER became owner and president of Theodore Mayer and Bros. Realtor as of last July. Most of his time is now spent lecturing throughout the country on sales and sales management. The Mayers have two children ages 3 and 1. RICHARD SCHNADIG is taking a leave of absence from his law !trm to become counsel to the Department of Personnel, State of Illinois, in Gov. Walker's administration. His family now includes Sarah, 1, the only girl of the clan. Dick wishes the best to all of his classmates. The Rev. CARL GIEGLER was elected president of the East Central Illinois Family Planning Association, Inc. and directed the "Symposium on Human Sexuality" at Eastern Illinois University in Charleston in May. WILLIAM SULLIVAN was elected chairman of the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency's Citizen Action Council in May. The Council was appointed earlier this year to serve in an advisory capacity to the state environmental agency. THOMAS WILSON was admitted to the law lrrm of Suisman, Shapiro, Wool, and Brennan in New London (Conn.). Tom has been associated with the !trm since 196 7. CARL ZIMMERMAN has been assigned to Air Weather Service Headquarters at Scott AFB in Illinois. Carl and Margie have two children, Cindy 5, and Andy 2. LUCIEN LAYNE has joined the staff of Colorado Psychiatric Hospital as a mental health aide. The job centers around nursing care therapy and insuring the safety of patients. Lucien writes that he enjoys the work which is demanding, but rewarding.
62
Mr. Barnett Lipkind
8 Union Ave., E-5 Norwalk, CT 06851
Word comes from a fellow alumnus living in Fair!teld County, ANDY MILLER, that he is . now a manager of the Trading Department of Callan Associates Inc., a new company and a member of the NYSE with of!tces in the Time-Life Building, New York. As a converted city-dweller, Andy says commuting isn't bad as long as he can get up a bridge game on the train. There was an addition to the Miller family on April 26 of this year. Andrew J. Miller, Jr. arrived, and mother and baby are doing well at 15 Harding Rd., Old Greenwich, Conn., 06870. STEVEN J. COOL is now located in Houston, Texas as an associate professor of physiological opti cs at the College of Optometry, University of Houston. DAVID S. ALBERTS is in full time research and teaching at the University of California Medical School, San Francisco, in the department of internal medicine. David says that he hates to be so presumptuous as to say that he is involved in cancer research, so he will just say that he is "unlocking the secrets of life-very slowly." He is waiting for LARRY LeWINN to lmish his plastic surgery fellowship so that he can give him a hair transplant! The FREDERICK M. PRYORS have increased their family by one. Margaret Fair Pryor was born on October 25, 1972. CUMMINGS ZUILL has moved to the Channel Islands for the balance of the year to set up and run a new bank which opened in April, a branch of the Bank of Bermuda. Cummings reports that he is still a bachelor. STUART SHARPE has been named manager of the corporate systems development at Norton Company in Worchester, Mass. CHARLES W. JOHNS has decided to become a full-time student again. As of September he will be enrolled in the Graduate School of Journalism at Columbia University in New York. He is interested in contacting any alumni or participating in alumni activities in the New York area. The HENRY KISORS had a big weekend in March. Their second son, Conan Henry Wheeler Kisor, was born on March 24, and Henry was promoted to book ~ditor of the Chicago Daily News on the -same weekend! F . BR UCE ROBINSON, JR. will be completing his Ph .D. program, except for the -dissertation, at the University of Minnesota by this summer. Bruce has been awarded a Foreign Area Fellowship to do research in England and India for 18 months on "The Nature of Resistance in Maharashtra, 1818-1880." ROBERT KELLEHER has joined Atty. Raymond Chabot in his law practice in Danielson, Conn. The University of Washington at Seattle has promoted WILLIAM RICHARDSON to associate pr ofessor and director of the Department of Health Services, School of Public Health and Community Medicine. WARREN KESSLER begins his fifth and
!mal year of residency in urology at the University of California School of Medicine in San Diego in July. His wife, Karen, and daughter, Valerie, enjoy the San Diego area as much as he does. HIN -SEAK LENG has returned from Malaysia where he spent nine months of sabbatical leave. His leave also included a visit to Thailand and Singapore. Hin-Seak has been promoted to senior lecturer in politics and has retained the post of director of Asian Studies at the University of South Australia. DONALD MILLS is currently owner and president of the Ziegler Linen and Uniform Service Corporation in Cincirmati, Ohio. His two children, Thomas and Whitney, are now ages 10 and 5.
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Mr. W. James Tozer, Jr. 4 7 E. 87th St., 3-A New York, NY 10028
STEPHEN WASHBURNE, associate professor of chemistry at Temple University, and his wife, Denise, announce the arrival of Matthew Courtenay, born on April 24. Denise has received her M.D. from Temple and is now an intern at Thomas Jefferson University in Philadelphia. NICHOLSON WHITE was ordained by the Rt. Rev. J. Warren Hutchens, Bishop of the Diocese of Connecticut, to the sacred order of deacons on June 9. ROBERT MURDOCK is the curator of the Contemporary Art Club at the Dallas Museum of Fine Arts. He was recently awarded a travel grant for three months in Europe, from the National Endowment for the Arts, to study museum collections and visit contemporary artists. The Murdocks have two daughters ages 5 and 2. As of August 1, The Rev. CHARLES MINIFIE will be the new rector of Trinity Episcopal Church in Newport, Rhode Island. Chad reports that the church was built in 1 726 and is one of Newport's historical buildings. STEPHEN IMRIE, M.D. has lmished his orthopedic residency at Stanford and is now chief of orthopedics at Mather AFB in Sacramento, California. Steve and Sue have a daughter, age 4. DONALD WINFIELD has joined the Industrial National Bank in Rhode Island as an officer in the commercial loan and trust area. After leaving the Air Force, FREDERICK ASHWORTH, JR. became employed with J.B . Roerig and Co., a division of Pflzer, Inc. He is now living in Kennewich, Washington and is working with J.B. Roering as a medical service representative. MICHAEL LEINBACH has an addition to his family, Shannon Trudell, born on March 2. Michael has a new job as manager of planning for American Forest Products, a division of Bendix, in San Francisco. STEPHEN JONES is presently assistant to the director of the lower school at University School in Hunting Valley, Ohio. MALCOLM MeGAWN received his M.A. degree in mathematics from the University of Wyoming last year. He has been employed since than as an instructor on the nuclear power plant training simulator at the Westinghouse Training Center in Zion, Illinois. FRANK JOHNSON is a partner in the law lrrm of Newton and Johnson of Fort Collins, Colorado. His family includes a son, age 3, and a daughter, age 1Yz. IHOR ZACHARY, M.D. is completing his opthalmology residency and will be starting a one-year fellowship in corneal diseases and surgery at the Bascom Palmer Eye Institute in Miami, Florida. RICHARD CHANG is rector of All Saints' Episcopal Church in Kapaa, Hawaii, and archdeacon of Kauai. He and his wife, Delia, have two children, Holly Mokihana, age 2, and Hannah Aulani, born on February 22 of this year. Richard was a guest at the National Security Forum, Air University, Maxwell Air Force Base, Alabama in May of 1972 and vice chairman of V.O . LC.E. (Voluntary Organizations in Concern for the Elderly.) KENNETH DALZELL writes in from Moundsville, West Virginia where he is plant manager to the director ol;. manufacturing for Fostoria Glass Company. ROBERT BYLIN is in the San Francisco area as operations manager for high reliability transistors for Fairchild Camera and Instrument. The Bylins-have two children, ages 7 and 5. CARL LUNDBORG, M.D., his wife, and three daughters are in Florida where he is on two-year duty at Tyndall Air Force Base hospital as an orthopedic surgeon. Carl has just !tnished his training in orthopedic surgery at the University of Pittsburgh. TOM BERGER is spending from June until December of this year at the University of Warwick in Coventry, England. The Bergers will return to Minnesota in January of 1974. The Rev. RICHARD MOORE is rector of St. Alban's Episcopal Church. His new address is 1314 W. 36 St., Davenport, Iowa. ROBERT SPITZER is a new partner of the law !trm Nauman, Smith, Shissler, and Hall. His family, including two children, ages 7 and 6, are living at 5509 River Road, Harrisburg, Pa.,
17110. Robert was named one of Pennsylvania's "10 outstanding young men" by the Pennsylvania Jaycees in 1972. DAVID BRACKETI, his wife, Deanne, and their two-year-old son, David, Jr., are living in Minneapolis, Minnesota where he is an agent for Connecticut Mutual life insurance.
Mr. Beverly N. Coiner
150 Katherine Court San Antonio, TX 78209 WILLIAM RICHARDS, currently assistant professor of psychology at Western Illinois University, will be appointed director of Behavior Therapy Services at Banghor State Hospital in Maine as of August 1. The Richards have a new son, Joshua William, born on January 15. JAMES MOOR, JR. has just finished his preliminary exams for a Ph.D. in economics at Wayne State University in Michigan. "Couldn't stay away from the books!" Jim and his wife are expecting their second child in September. DAVID HOROWITZ has a new job as production supervisor for CFCF-TV in Montreal. CHARLES FRANCIS is manager of the Providence division of Ryan, Elliott, and Co., Inc., an industrial and commercial real estate agency. He and his wife, Becky, have a child, Katherine, who is a year old. MICHAEL McGURKIN has accepted a new position as manager of Corporate Internal Auditing with Franklin Electric Company and has moved with his wife and three children to Bluffton, Indiana. BOB VOORHEES is teaching at Cincinnati Country Day School as a member of the English department and coach of varsity baseball and basketball. Bob and Emily have a son, Matthew, age 2. WILLIAM AVERY was elected executive vice president and to the board of directors of Robert T. Foley Company last December. The Averys had a daughter, Allison, on November 26,1972. CHRISTOPHER GILSON was named vice president of the First National Citicorp's Subsidiary Group. Chris will be working with leasing, mortgage banking, consumer lmance, etc., in his capacity as the group's product and marketing coordinator. BENJAMIN FOSTER, JR. received his M.A. in teaching at Wesleyan University this June. RONALD YATES is presently manager of Planning and Product Development for Paragon Electric Company in Two Rivers, Wisconsin. The company is a subsidiary of AMF Inc. The Yates have two children, Heather, 4, and Clint, 1, and are expecting another in August. ALLEN ATHERTON is job captain for Luckett and Farley Architects in Louisville, Kentucky, and is waiting to take his exam for licensing next December. 路WILLIAM NILES is a salesman for Jones and Laughlin Steel Corporation in Dayton, Ohio. The Niles have two children, William IV, 1, and Rebecca, 3. JOHN MciNTIRE is continuing his schooling at the United States International University graduate school where he is working on a masters degree in human behavior. John is with the U.S. Navy at the naval training center at San Diego in a research and development group devising new methods of training and education. His address is 3866 Baselone St., Apt. 3, San Diego, Calif., 92107. RICHARD B. STOWELL has been appointed to the newly formed position of director of corporate development for Open Road Industries, Inc., a manufacturer of recreational vehicles. Capt. ROBERT K. WENGER has graduated from the Air University's Squadron Officer School at Maxwell AFB in Alabama. Bob is assigned at Eglin AFB in Florida where he serves with a unit of the Tactical Air Command which provides air support for U.S. ground forces. VICTOR ADELSTEIN has been promoted to senior actuarial associate at State Mutual Life Assurance Company of America.
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Mr. David J. Graybill 2803 Brightwood Ave. Nashville, TN 37212
WILLIAM GREGG, JR. an ecologist for the National Park Service in Denver, is spending most of his time writing environmental statements on NPS plans and projects. Bill writes that he has his quota of two kids, April, 3, and Alison, 2. He saw ERNEST HENDRY in Washington last January where Ernest is finishing his doctorate in education at the University of Virginia, and living in Vienna, Va. JAMES ROOSEVELT is an attorney with Dechert Price and Rhoads in Philadelphia after a one-year fellowship to the Frederick Alexander Universitat in Erlangen, West Germany. His wife Sharon has just received her M.A. from California State University in San Francisco. The Roosevelts are moving to 122 Eastmont Lane, Sickerville, New Jersey. Lt. RICHARD GOODWIN is attending the Naval Postgraduate School in Monterey, California, expecting to complete his M.S. in
computer science by December. Congratulations from your classmates on your marriage to Ann Campbell in March! Another wedding in the class. E. WILLIAM CHAPIN, JR. married Marianne Hoover on June 9, 1973. They will be honeymooning in Europe for a month. CHRIS MESSENGER, his wife, Janet, and year-old daughter, Carrie Lynn, will be moving to Springfield, Ohio in late August where he will be an assistant professor of English at Wittenberg University. ROBERT GRAHAM is an associate with Draper Adams and Huntington, Attorneys, in San Francisco. He and his wife have a daughter, Elizabeth, 3, and a son, Jonathan, born in April. JOHN PARLIN, M.D. has completed his radiology residency and will be a radiologist at Brown County Hospital in Georgetown, Ohio, and part-time radiologist at Cincinnati General Hospital. BENJAMIN H. GORSKY, M.D. has completed a year as chief resident in the department of anesthesiology at the University Hospitals of Cleveland. As of July he will be on the staff of Case Western Reserve University Medical School, and on fellowship at University Hospitals. The fellowship will support his continuing research in pulmonary physiology. In his spare time, Ben is a commercial pilot and flight instructor. CHARLES B. LORCH was accepted to the Illinois bar in the fall of 1972 and is now working with the Thomas, Thomas and Maggie law firm. His family, including three children, lives on a farm outside of Rockford, Illinois. The THOMAS SNEDEKERS had their second daughter on February 6, 1973. Tom, living in New Orleans, was made a partner of Kohlmeyer and Company. BRUCE JAY has moved from Guatemala to San Pedro Sula, Honduras where he is developing a pilot project in trade union enterprises, and advising the strong labor movement on economic development matters. His wife, Melia Maria, and daughter, Ana Carla, both love Honduras. JOHN M. ROZETI and his wife, Martha, are both !tnishing their doctoral dissertations at the University of Michigan and will be moving to Albany, New York where Martha will begin teaching English at the university. John is still unemployed, but is hoping to use his American history background as the basis for writing articles. JAMES C. STONE has been promoted to vice president of J.J.B. Hilliard, W.L Lyons, Inc., a member of the New York Stock Exchange. Jim and his wife now have two sons. CAPT. ROBERT BANGERT, JR. is moving to a job with the field command of the Defense Nuclear Energy at Kirtland AFB in Albequerque, New Mexico. GORDON BOUL TBEE and his wife, Tamara, are moving to 4740 Pressley Rd., Santa Rosa, California, 95404. CHEDOMIR MARKOVICH has been <:lected an assistant vice president at the Connecticut Bank and Trust. LUCIEN DiFAZIO has formed a law partnership with Irving Hare on Wethersfield Ave. in Hartford. ALAN KARDON has been elected assistant vice president of James Talcott, Inc. of New York City.
66
Dr. Randolph Lee Office of College Counseling Trinity College Hartford, CT 06106
MAC BOYD is no longer (says he was never) among the missing, as reported a few months ago. Mac is deputy director of the Model Cities Administration in Perth Amboy, New Jersey. After graduation he did graduate work at SUNY in Buffalo, then taught political science at Brockport State College near Rochester before spending a year in South Vietnam teaching with International Voluntary Services. Mac married Dale Powrie last July in Yonkers, New York. . Also married, though more recently, was CHUCK McCLURE, to the former Joanne Pryor Jackson. Ceremonies took place on January 27 in Shelbyville, Kentucky where the McClures now live. I just got a letter from TONY WOLBARST, postmarked Johannesburg, South Africa. Tony received a Ph.D. in physics from Dartmouth three years ago then taught for awhile at SUNY-Buffalo. After half a year at Harvard Business School, which he left to take a job in the Surgical Int en sive Care Unit at Massachusetts General Hospital, he went to Africa late last year and is working in the Solid State Research Unit of the University of the Witwatersrand. He hopes to work in the Middle East, Far East, Latin America, and Europe before returning home. Keep us posted on the address changes, Tony! Right now you can write him at the University. DICK GAINES, his wife Lynne, and a 1956 Chevy sedan, are back in the Boston area after they (minus the car) spent about a year in England working with the rock group "Hanshake" which Dick manages. He also works with UPI in Boston, and they live at 78 Parsens Street in Brighton. SCOTT SUTHERLAND was recently
~
Trinity Reporter Ju ly 1973 Page 9
(ED. NOTE: The following notes have been received at the Alumni Office.)
Adelstein '64
Tewell '69
promoted to commercial banking officer at the Manchester (New Hampshire) Bank. The Sutherlands have two daughters, and now live in Litchfield, New Hampshire. Speaking of two daughters, your SECRETARY and my wife, Linda, also had our second daughter, Kerrith Susan, on February 8. Also recently promoted was RAY CAVANAUGH, now an assistant underwriter at Connecticut Mutual Life. Ray joined Connecticut Mututallast year after a four year tour in the Air Force. TED RICE was ordained a deacon in the Episcopal Church last December 16 in Bloomfield Hills, Michigan. Ted is also coordinator for Common Ground, in which he works with young people, schools, and organizations in planning youth activities. MARTY GALL, writes that his wife, Allyson, is now a Scientist II, and has also become a bowler in two leagues. The Gall's recently bought a 40-year-old home in Michigan which is keeping both of them busy. RUSS FAIRBANKS received his Doctor of Jurisprudence last month and is joining the firm of Murtha, Cullina, Richter, and Pinney here in Hartford. Russ left Trinity in 1964, spent three years in the Marines, then returned and graduated in 1970. He's been at Columbia Law School, and last September married the former Carolyn Felix. FORD BARRETT writes that he recently endured a six-week anti-trust trial in Bridgeport, Connecticut, then left for a skiing vacation in Aspen. He also tells us that MALCOLM MARSHALL and his wife, Sally, became parents of Malcolm III on March 11. JOHN SNYDER is now a Captain in the Air Force, which he plans to make his career. He's now the father of four, including recent twins, Meredith and Julie, born in January. PAUL HOPKINS is an attorney with Royall, Koegel, and Wells in New York City, where he lives at 435 East 77th Street. Also in the legal profession is RICH KREZEL who recently moved his law practice Hom New Britain to Plainville, Connecticut. He's with the office of Theodore Poulos. MIKE KEANE is a psychologist at the Bronx State After Care Clinic, doing group and family therapy with schizophrenic and disturbed parents and their preschool children. He's finishing his Ph.D. in clinical psychology at CUNY. BILL WHARTON is presently involved in music-m.aking in Easton, Maryl~nd. He's teaching at Easton High School, serving as organist and choirmaster at St. Mark's Methodist Church, and directing the local Abendmusiken Society. PAUL DRAPER and his wife bought a house in Stamford where Paul continues as English teacher and Audio-Visual Director at the King School. The Draper's were expecting a child in January. BOB STEPTO is in his second year as assistant professor of English and American Civilization at Williams. He and Michele and three year old son, Gabriel, plan to help friends build a log house in Montana this summer. LARRY DIXON is now living at 815 Redbird Lane in Norman, Oklahoma. He's a credit analyst and auditor at the American Bank of Commerce of Oklahoma City. DON GARRETT works with the Office of the General Counsel, Department of Health, Education, and Welfare. He graduated from Chicago Law School last year, before which he had spent two years with the Peace Corps in Brazil. TOM GLENDINNING is a landscaper in North Carolina where he's also in charge of the University of North Carolina's arboretum, and also works with the N.C. Botanical Society to promote native plants in landscaping. LIN SCARLETT recently joined Johnson & Johnson as assistant product director in charge of baby oil. He just bought a 175-year-old farm house in Gladstone, New Jersey. Recently promoted to financial systems analyst at General Electric was PHIL MURPHY. The position includes responsibility for the input section of a new standard cost system for GE's aircraft engine group. EDISON LEWIS is living in San Francisco where he's in real estate sales with Grubb and Ellis in Marin County. Finally, MASON ROSS writes that he's with Northwestern Mutual Life at their home office in Milwaukee as a real estate analyst. He received the M.B.A. last summer from Wharton and is married and has a year-and-a-half old daughter. That brings me up to date on what I've heard from you. Let me hear from you in the next few months, and have a good summer.
WILLIAM CONNOLLY is now an assistant professor at the University of Evansville in Indiana. His first child, Sean Richard, was born August 17, 1972. CARL ELLISON is leaving the U.S. Public Health Service for pediatrics residency at the H.C. Moffitt Hospital and San Francisco General Hospital in California. KEN GEREMIA has been promoted to director of Industry Promotion of the National Association of Home Builders in Washington, D.C. RANDOLPH LOCKE is celebrating one year in the Minneapolis-St. Paul region as a carpet representative for Armstrong. He reports that his two girls, Kim and Erica, are growing rapidly in the Minnesota air. GEORGE BENT M.D. is completing his internship at Presbyterian University Hospital in Pittsburgh and will start his first year of residency on July 1. The Bents had their first child, Colin William, on May 9. THOMAS JANSEN has been elected personnel officer by the Board of Directors of the Harvard Trust Company. He and his wife, Elizabeth now have two children. JOHN CHOTKOWSKI has received a doctor of medicine degree from the University of Connecticut Medical School. The REV. E. TIMOTHY SNIFFEN was married in April of 1972 to Luvia McGehee. Tim is now the priest-in-charge of St. James Mission in Tanana, Alaska. PHILIP ARMENTANO is currently the public defender for Windsor's (Conn.) Circuit Court 13. LLOYD SIGMAN is living in Ann Arbor, Michigan and attending the University of Michigan Law School. Lloyd and his wife, Celia, extend an open invitation to any of their old friends to stop in any time. As of September, ARNOLD SCHWARTZMAN will become an assistant professor of law at the University of Cincinnati. His new address is 3226 Nash Avenue, Cincinnati, Ohil, 45226. FREDERICK K. BURT has finished four years in the Navy since graduation and is presently working for RCA Global Communications in New York City. His job involves planning and implementation of voice and teletype leased channel communication systems. RICHARD KREZEL is leading the 1973 American Cancer Crusade in Southington, Conn. There are two changes of address for members of the class of '66. RONALD JOHNSON now lives at 26436 Fresno Drive, Mission Viejo, Calif., 92675, and ROBERT SCOFIELD resides at 257 North 200 East, Provo, Utah, 84601.
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Mr. Thomas L. Safran 3333 West 2nd St. Building 56 -Apt. 202 Los Angeles, CA 90004
This month I'm reporting from Washington, D.C. where, as I promised in last month 's column, I've gotten in touch with several of our classmates. The first week I was here I had lunch with DAVID DOWNES who's still working for ACTION where he heads up the Department of Policy Development. By the time that you read this column David and his wife, Will, should be back for another tour of duty in the South Sea islands where they had originally met. :Dave said that he's still in contact with GEOFF WHITE who's living in Philadelphia and working for Vincent Kling Architects and DON MACINNES who_'s working as a wood sculptor and living with his wife, Nicki, in Seattle, Washington. I next got in touch with PHIL GULLEY who's living in Northwest Washington with his wife, Joan, and their two Maltese dogs (Phil insisted that I include the latter as part of his family). Phil is working at Catholic University as associate dean of students for student activities (What kind?) and seems to love his work and married life. Our class continues to spread out. R. SCOTT MORELAND reports that after having received his Ph.D. in economics from Duke he's been, for the past three years, a lecturer in economics at the University of Warwick in Coventry, England. Moving over to the Continent we find JOHN RAY who asked that we inform our class that he and his wife have been transferred from Weisbaden to Kaiserslautern, Germany, where John is assigned to the Logistics Directorate (Munitions) at Ramstein Air Base. All the way on the other end of the world, and also in the Air Force, is DON BISHOP who is stationed at Kwang Ju, Korea, and working as the Chief of Information in charge of news and community relations. When he returns stateside in the summer he hopes to be teaching history at the Air Force Academy. We.don't want anyone to say that we neglect the other Armed Forces so we have JIM OLIVER in the Navy as a flight instructor in the A-7 Corsair II Aircraft in Jacksonville, Florida. ALFRED E. HICKS filled out one of those Alumni cards to write that he received his M.A.
in History from Chapel Hill in 1971 and that he is presently coordinator of the Social Studies Department at John W. Neal Junior High School in Durham, North Carolina. AI also reported and I quote: "Glad to hear that 'Hony Bug' HONISS is in Carolina, still single in search of Miss America (but not Ms.) "Who's searching? John or AI? Better watch that comma next time. Over in Houston, Texas, we find MARK SHAPIRO who was doing graduate work in biology until he realized he couldn't "hack" the lab. He and his wife, Laura, are now moving to Lubbock where Mark is planning to attend Texas Tech Law School. What would a column be like without a report on the doings in New York? JIM O'CONNOR says "Hello" and reports that he's now working in the Promotion Department of ''Scholastic Magazines" and that he occasionally sees DAN HADEN who is finishing up at Columbia Architecture. What is this monopoly of Theta Xi over architecture? Also in New York City is ROBERT A. BOSE who wrote to say he's just been promoted to vice president of Hornblower Asset Management Corporation and that he serves on the Board of Directors of Morningside Heights Housing Corporation. Over in Cooperstown, New York, Mrs. RICHARD SULLIVAN wrote that her husband is a medical resident at Mary Bassett Hospital and that they are enjoying their two sons. In upstate New York is the REV. CHARLES DINKLER who's the Episcopal chaplain to the Universities in Buffalo and the resource person for the college work program of the Diocese of Western New York. In the Ministry, as well, is JAMES PURDY who's been married to Emma Hodge Sarosdy since January 22, 1972, and been working as the assistant to the rector at St. Thomas' Church in Garrison Forest, Owings Mills P.O., Maryland. Is that somewhere out in the "sticks", Jim? ED. NOTE: More news items arrived after Tom Safran's letter.) After graduating from Thunderbird Graduate School of International Business, WALTER HARRIMAN moved back to Los Angeles and was hired as marketing manager for U.S. Import, Inc. Walter is actively involved in the Junior Chamber of Commerce. DAVID DOWNES has been appointed as officer in charge of the South Pacific Regional Programs. His new mailing address will be: Peace Corps, Box 1094, Suva, Fiji Islands. CHARLES KURZ was released from active dut y as a navy supply corps officer in November of 1972 after being stationed aboard the fleet ojler, USS Severn,jn Newport, Rhode Island. Since then he has been touring South America with LARRY WHIPPLE ('69), visiting the major cities and several Indian outposts on what he describes as a very colorful trip. KIRK FOLEY has been promoted to agency superintendent for the Hartford Insurance Group's St. Louis office. ROBERT TRAINER reports that his first offspring was born on March 22, 1973. Bob has been attending the University of Chicago Graduate School of Business. MICHAEL FERGUSON is leaving his job at the Civil Rights Division of the Justice Department in Washington and is planning to travel indefinitely in Europe. Mail can be sent to him in care of his parents at 800 W. 4th St., Waterloo, Iowa, 50702. After two years in the Green Army as a reserve officer, NICOLAS COT AKIS worked in London for two years in a shipping company. He is now living permanently in Athens and working in Piraeus in the ship's operations department of the London shipping firm. FREDERICK LUDWIG, JR. and his wife, Nancee, have recently moved to Beeville, Texas where he is a flight instructor for the Navy. They are expecting their first child in August. Fred's new address is 806 ' Canyon Drive, Beeville, Texas, 78102. BILL ROTH, history instructor at Culver Education Foundation in Indiana received his M.A. in history from the University of Notre Dame last year. Bill and Sue have a son, Andy, who hopes to enter Trinity in 1988! The Rev. BERNARD L. MAGUIRE III was ordained a priest on June 9 of this year. NEIL W. RICE joined the firm of Minot, DeBlois and Maddison, a Boston-based real estate and judiciary firm, as a trust officer last April. JESSE BREWER received his Ph.D. in elementary particle physics from Berkeley last June. In May of this year, he started work for the University of British Columbia in a postdoctoral research position, and will be moving to Vancouver in July after a month-long vacation through the U.S . and the Canadian Rockies. RAY GRAVES is now associated with Patmon Young and Kirk, P.L., a law firm in Detroit, Michigan. WILLIAM HADEN III received the William Kinne Fellows Memorial Traveling Fellowship from the Columbia University School of Architecture and Planning for travel and study in the United States and abroad. GERALD JAGGERS received a J.D. degree from the University of Denver College of Law. BILL WEST was selected as an editor of the Case Western Reserve University Law Review after being an associate editor this year. Bill will
be interning this summer with Arter and Hadden, a Cleveland law firm . CHRISTOPHER DOYLE is an attorney with White and Case, 14 Wall St., New York. He writes that he is also a member of the Board of Directors of the Greer Children's Community, Hope Farm, New York, and of the Board of Trustees of the Trinity Episcopal Schools Corporation in New York. RICHARD RATH, JR. is working for Bull, Field, Vollmer and Stockwell, Architects in San Francisco while his wife attends the University of California, Berkeley, in the Master of Architecture Program. Their address is 540 Alcatraz, Oakland, Calif., 94609. D. SEELEY HUBBARD has joined the Greenwich law firm of Ivey, Barnum and O'Mara. The Rev. CALHOUN WICK has been quite active in Greenville, Delaware as the assistant rector of Christ Church. One of his unusual projects has been to start a Ham Sanwich Club for the businessmen at the church.
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Mr. Joseph L. Reinhardt 208 Caroline St., Apt. 178 Cape Canaveral, FL 32920
RALPH WHITE is finishing his first year as a math teacher at Browne and Nichols School. Part of his school time was spent as assistant varsity football coach and varsity basketball coach. Occasionally he ran into JOE McKEIGUE as he came up from Columbia to visit his alma mater. GEORGE BARROWS and his wife, Jane, are expecting an addition to the family this month. George graduated from the University of Louisville Medical School last June, is finishing his internship at Vanderbilt University, and plans to start his residency in pathology this summer. PETER CHANG, his wife and their eight-month-old baby are leaving Hong Kong for France where he will be involved in the doctoral program at Faculte de Theologie Protestante at the University of Strasbourg. DENNIS FARBER has recently had a successful showing of his work at the Downtown Gallery, Ltd. in Honolulu. DONALD BARLOW is in his fifth year of teaching Span ish and coaching freshman basketball and junior varsity baseball at Ovid-Elsie High School in Elsie, Michigan. Don reports that he finished his frosh season with 11 wins and 6 losses. This summer he has been selected to participate in a Wayne State University program involying six _ weeks in Central and South America. RICHARD TYNER has just become a landed immigrant of Canada and is involved in subsistence farming on a collectively owned farm in Cape Breton, Nova Scotia. BILL DANKS has returned from two years in Bolivia with the Peace Corps and study at Colorado University to graduate from law school next month and hopefully begin work as a law clerk for a Colorado Supreme Court judge. His wife has finished her masters degree in South American history and is now teaching. JAMES FALCONE is currently teaching English and coaching the boy's basketball team at Dartmouth High School in Nova Scotia. He and his wife, Elizabeth, are planning to build a home this summer near Halifax. Jim received the 1973 Canadian Hilroy Fellowship for designing new curriculum for the tenth grade general course students .. EDMUND H. SCHWEITZER, M.D. is interning at Presbyterian Medical Center in Denver, Colorado. Ed will be starting his residency in orthopedic surgery in Atlanta, Georgia on July 1. JAMES SWANSON has recently returned from a year and a half of travel in Asia where he enjoyed the people of the world, God's blessings, and an opportunity to live in various different cultures. Jim now writes fro m the San Francisco area where he is teaching Asian culture at the junior high and high schools. He was also accepted to a summer workshop on teaching culture at the secondary level at the East-West Center in Honolulu . "No children to report unless you accept my view of mankind as my family. Under this agreement, however, I would find the allowed space to be a bit inadequate. Shanti-Om." MICHAEL FLOYD was ordained to the priesthood on March 29 at St. Mark's Church, Upland, California. He is still working on his Ph.D. in Old Testament Studies at Claremont College Graduate School. EARNEST H. WILLIAMS, JR. was discharged in March after spending a year in Alaska with the Air Force and is returning to his doctoral studies in ecology at Princeton. BARRY BEDRICK has been appointed vice president of Mr. Auto Wash Sales and Service Inc., East Hartford. JAMES BEHREND, M.D. has graduated from Jefferson Medical College and is interning at Vanderbilt Hospital in Nashville, Tenn. where GEORGE BARROWS is also interning. STEPHEN DOME has been keeping track of his classmates. He is presently working at the First National Bank of Chicago with DICK MELOY and BARRY SABLOFF. Recently, Steve had dinner with STEVE RAUH who was interviewing in Chicago, and he also reports
Trinity Reporter July 1973 Page 10
that JOCK DIX has just moved to Chicago and works for an architectural !rrm. "Jock still looks like a Norwegian boy." Steve attended a Chicago area Psi Upsilon function hosted by AI Jacobs, who is still running the national. RICHARD EVERSON has !mished his intership at Stanford University and will be working at the epidemiology branch of the National Cancer Institute in Washington, D.C. for the next two years. PAUL BELLOWS completed his MPA degree from Wharton College in the University of Pennsylvania and has accepted the position of executive director of Research Atlanta, a small, non-profit urban affairs research group in Atlanta, Georgia. Paul's new address is Apt. 2, 340 Alberta Terrace, N.E., Atlanta, Georgia, 30305. HOWARD SHAFFER invites anyone from the class of '68 who is in the area of San Antonio, Texas to contact him at 851 East Sunshine Dr., San Antonio. Howard has graduated from the Texas Medical School at San Antonio and is beginning his surgery internship there. His wife, Marsha, had their first son, Matthew Todd on March 26, 1973. KERRY HAMSHER is working his way through a Ph.D. in clinical psychology at the University of Iowa as a staff psychologist at the Mental Health Institute in Mt. Pleasant, Iowa. Kerry stresses that this is a hundred miles of commuting a day. "The Mid-West is a nice place to visit, but I wouldn't want to live there." FRANKLIN MOORE has recently moved from Basking Ridge to P.O. Box 413, Bedminster, New Jersey, 07920. Frank was promoted to assistant vice president of the Discount Corporation of New York. BARRY DICKSTEIN has joined Society for Savings (Hartford) as an assistant vice president in the Securities Investment Department. TERRY JONES has received his master in bio-medical engineering and computer science from George Washington University and is currently finishing his first year at Harvard Business School. NORMAN MARCOVSKI has purchased a new house on top of Mt. Carmel in Haifa, Israel. The co-op apartment overlooks the Mediterranean Sea and, according to Norman, has fantastic sunsets. He has recently been promoted to chief of planning for industrial development in northern Israel for the Jewish Agency. BILL BARTMAN is trying as managing director of the Oxford Playhouse to form a bona fide repertory theater for Los Angeles. After a highly successful frrst season, he has picked up a two-year option on the theater.
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,.-
Mr. Frederick A. Vyn 508 W. End Ave. New York, NY 10024
MICHAEL PASZEK has greduated from the George Washington University School of Medicine and will be interning at the University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Medical Center in pediatrics., GORDON WITTENBERG is presently employed by the architectural frrm of Harry Weiss in Chicago. He and his wife, Kathryn, have moved to the Chicago area. After a two-month Naval exernship in London last summer, Lt. MIKE CARIUS enjoyed a three-week motorcycle tour of Scotland, England and Wales. Mike graduated from the University of Colorado School of Medicine this spring. He is slated. for a year's rotating internship at the Naval Hospital in San Diego. LARRY WHIPPLE, our hard-working class agent just, got out of the Navy (U.S.S. Whipple, DE-1062; Pearl Harbor) and is presently a ~tudent at the University of Chicago School of Business. After separating from the Air Force in December, GENE PAQUETTE accepted a position with Aetna Life and Casualty in Chicago. He is in recruiting now, but plans to move to sales management within the next two years. Gene was recently visited by VIC and Judy LEVINE and by BILL and Connie DUANE. Vic is teaching math in Madison, Wisconsin and loves it. Judy is a systems analyst for the University of Wisconsin. Joshua, their dog, and Jericho, their cat, are an important part of the family. Bill is a Ph.D. candidate in clinical psychology at Washington University. After his graduation in June, he will be going
into the Air Force. Your SECRETARY is currently a !mancial analyst with Mobil Oil's Corporate Headquarters in New York City and is one of those commuting heroes who rides the Penn Central daily from his home in Old Greenwich, Conn. MAC CURRER has graduated from the University of Southern California Law Center and is attending intelligence school at Lowry AFB, Denver, Colorado. Planning to be stationed in Bangkok, Thailand, he writes that he is rereading his copy of Blair's "Burmese Days" with some interest. 路 JAMES ROBERTSON received his M.D. from Yale University School of Medicine in June and will be interning in internal medicine at the University of Colorado Medical Center beginning this summer. After graduation from Trinity in '69, CHARLES PIPER attended General Theological Seminary in N. Y .C. and is currently the vicar of the Church of the Nativity in L'Anse and St. David's in Sidnaw, Michigan. He and his wife, Linda, have a year old son, Christopher, and live at 8 Meador St., L'Anse, Michigan. W. THOMAS DUNCAN has been transferred to C.C.K. Air Base in Taiwan where he will be flying C-130's over the period of a year. WILLIAM KOCH, JR. is serving as an assistant attorney general for the state of Tennessee. His main areas of activity are consumer protection and appellate litigation. PETER MAXSON is at the University of Virginia working on his M.S. in architectural history. DUANE HASEGAWA has graduated from the University of Southern California School of Medicine and will begin his pediatric residency at the University of Minnesota. Currently advising the Chemical Bank's Municipal Bond Department, ALOIS JURCIK is enjoying the good life that goes along with being an institutional buyer. For leisure this spring, Alois participated in New Orleans' Mardi Gras, then recuperated in South Carolina. KENNETH PHELPS and his wife, Martha, have just moved to the Bronx where he will be spending the next year as an intern at the Bronx Municipal Hospital Center. Martha has completed her coursework for her masters degree in Latin American Studies at Georgetown University and will be working on her thesis. CHARLIE HILL left Trin. Coli. Sane. in June of '67 and was drafted to Vietnam as part of the 173 Airborne Brigade. After graduating from George Washington University in '71, he won a ,Fulbright Scholarship to Trinity College in Dublin and studied Irish emigration to colonial America. For the past year he has been living in Belfast continuing his research and doing full-time youth work. JOHN MORRIS is living in Lexington, Kentucky and will enter the University of Kentucky Medical School in the fall. WILLIAM SWEENEY is attending law school nights at the University of Denver, and hopes to graduate in the class of '77. J . GREGORY MEARS is moving to Boston to become an intern at Boston University's Hospital. His new address will be 80 Waltham St., Boston, Mass., 02118. PETER KELLER is with the actuarial department of Coopers and Lybrand in Chicago, following a year of study in the M.S. program of actuarial science at the University of Wisconsin in Madison. He will receive his M.S. degree upon completion of his thesis. WILLIAM ROSENBLATT has graduated from New York Medical College and will begin his one year of surgical residency at Lenox Hill Hospital, N.Y . DAVID SEIDEL is a senior financial analyst with Dayton Hudson Properties in Minneapolis. His new address is 6432 W. Shore Drive, Edina, Minnesota, 55435 . H. NEIL WIGDER received his M.D. degree from the Medical College of Wisconsin in Mil waukee. His new wife, Catherine, also received her M.D. degree on the same day. Congratulations to both of you from your classmates! RICHARD TOSI received an M.D. degree from Cornell University Medical College in New York City this June. He and his wife, Leslie, have recently returnedfrom. Yugoslavia where he studied infant mortality for three months under the U.S. Public Health Service. EARL MILLARD, . JR., graduated from the St. Louis University Law School this year, will
Parents Weekend October 26-27
Reunion j Homecoming November 16-18
be associated with the law !rrm of Wiehl and Millard in Belleville, Illinois. Earl was elected to the board of directors of Belleville Bancshares-a bank holding company, and served on the House Committee which drafted Missouri's new income tax code. CRAIG MARKERT has graduated from New York Medical .College as a member of Alpha Omega Alpha, the national medical honor society. He will start his intership at New England Deaconess Hospital in Boston. JOHN R. COOPER has a new job as administrative officer for a mother and child health care project run by the American ORT Federation in Niamey, Republic of Niger. His new address is BP 2158, Niamey, Niger. John wants to know whatever happened to DEWEY LOBERG? (ED. NOTE: Our records show him to be at Washington University in St. Louis, Missouri with the Department of Chemistry.) JOSEPH TAPOGNA received his doctor of medicine degree from the Georgetown University Medical School and has been accepted as an intern at New England Deaconess Hospital in Boston. ROBERT FREEDMAN received the degree of doctor of medicine from Tufts University School of Medicine. He and his wife, Shelley, will be moving to the Hartford area where he will be interning at the University of Connecticut School of Medicine-Affiliated Hospitals in Hartford. WILLIAM HOUGH sends a postcard from Sao Paulo, Brazil where he is in marketing and sales for PtiZer International. He sends his best to all classmates. GERALD COSRDIS is in his fourth year of medical research at the University of Connecticut Medical School. In collaboration with Drs. Goldblatt and Deutsche, he presented a paper in April before the American Federation Proceedings during a week-long seminar at Atlantic City. KENN KOBUS was named manager of the Colchester (Conn.) office of Society for Savings. C. WENDELL TEWELL has been promoted to commercial banking officer of Marine Midland Bank in New York. ROGER GREENBERG graduated from Columbia Physicians and Surgeons last May and will do his surgical internship at Roosevelt Hospital in N.Y.C. Roger was married in June of '72 to Peggy Wandel, now a fashion designer for I.R.S. of New York City. Their home is at 60 Haver Ave., Apt. 2D, N.Y.C. 10032. CHARLES L. DUFFNEY was admitted to the bar of the District of Columbia this spring. H. SCOTT HASKELL was awarded the degree of J.D. at the June graduation of Suffolk University in Boston. WILLIAM CABELL, JR. was voted into acceptance as the assistant minister of the Wilton (Conn.) Congregational Church this May.
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Mr. Peter N. Campell 350 Earlston Dr. , N.E. Atlanta, GA 30328
DAVID AGERTON, a graduate student in ocean engineering at the University of New Hampshire, spent spring vacation installing their latest wave buoy amidst 5000 dive-bombing sea gulls at the Isle of Shoals. While on a project concerning underwater habitats, he stayed with HUGO LUKE in Seattle and with PETER MOORE '71 in San Diego . Hugo, a graduate student in oceanography at the University of Washington, has just , returned from a cruise on which he tested his latest current meter. Believe it or not, his white Peugot still lives! Peter was living it up, working for the "WRDC" of San Diego. David sends more news of his former roommate, GLENN GAMBER. Glenn has finally left his cottage on Coventry Lake and his life as a ,nild-mannered newspaper reporter to attend Syracuse Newhouse School of Communications at Syracuse. More recently he has been in touch with GENE NEWELL, who has returned home from studying literature in Britain on a two-year fellowship and has joined the army. Unfortunatley, Fort Manmouth is not up to Gene's speed, but at least, David says, he will be qualified as a toaster repairman upon finishing his electronics courses at Signal Corps School. CHARLES SAGER has finished First National City Bank's training program and has been assigned to the surface transportation lending area where he will deal with major railroads and trucking companies. JOHN ROBSON is currently in his third year of graduate school at Duke University. He is studying neurobiology and expects to receive a Ph.D. in anatomy sometime in '74. The Virginia Law School's "Trinity Three," all third-year members of the law review, recently held a farewell convocation. DAVE STEUBER is ofJ to Los Angeles to serve as a judicial clerk for Federal District Judge Albert L. Stephens, Jr.; RICH BELAS will be working for the law firm Shea, Gould, Climenko and Kramer of New York until he must serve his Air Force commitment; and ROD De ARMENT will be working for the law firm of Covington and Burling in Washington, C.C. OSCAR HARM is still at Vanderbilt University in Nashville, and reports that he is
expecting his Ph.D. next year. Oscar and Ann have become avid Bluegrass fans. JOHN HAGAMAN is starting his fourth year ofmedical school at Columbia 路and trying to find an internship for next July. John, ALLAN GLADSTONE,: . JOHN SCHOLES, JOHN MOLDOVER, and STEPHEN HAMIL TON are all sweating out New York summer and application forms together. John Hagaman writes that Emma Kirkley, former long-time friend and cook of Delta Phi, is now an operator for SNETCO. WARREN T ANGHE was ordained a deacon in the Episcopal Church on June 16 in the Cathedral of the Incarnation, Garden City, New York, after graduating from General Seminary in N.Y.C. with the degree of Master of Divinity. Starting July 1, Warren will be the curate of St. Michael's Church, Bristol, Rhode Island, 02809. JAY BERN ARDON! has been transferred to the Industrial Sales Division of Proctor and Gamble as a unit manager. Having completed a Masters in Hebrew Letters, JACK LUXEMBURG is taking a year off from his rabbinic education at Hebrew Union College in Cincinnati to accept a one-year graduate position at Ohio State University. Jack is also working as regional director of Young Judea, a Zionist youth organization. RANDOLPH MAN has been teaching two film courses at Sou them Methodist University, where he also received his M.F.A. in Film History. CHUCK HOSKING has been alive and well for the past two years in St. Louis where he and his wife, Mary Ann Fiske, are living. Chuck has been teaching math at an inner-city tutorial study center, won two long-distance races in the last month, and is heavily involved in tax reform in the St. Louis area. He has kept in touch with STEVE ANDERSON who is at Washington University School of Business in St. Louis. MICHAEL PASZEK has graduated from George Washington University School of Medicine and will be interning at the University of Virginia Hospital. Lt. DANIEL NICHOLS was awarded his silver wings at Laredo AFB in Texas upon graduation from U.S. Air Force pilot training. ANTHONY MALONE has graduated from the University of Maryland School of Medicine and will intern at the Albany Medical Center in pediatrics. The Institute of International Education has awarded GEORGE E. DUNKEL the DAAD Award for graduate study in Germany. J:AMES HUBBELL has left the :James W. Ouse Company in Chicago and is moving to Des Moines, Iowa where he will be involved in real estate development for Hubbell Realty, Inc. On September 9, 1972 Jim married Brucie Larkin. Lt. DAVID SHIPMAN is a member of an unusual organization which has received the Air Force Outstanding Unit Award. David is a behavioral scientist with the Technical Training Division of the Air Force Human Re:;ources Laboratory which earned the award for meritorious service over a two-year period. JOHN MacDONALD received his Masters in Business Administration from Ohio University last December. He and his wife, Daisy, are moving to Kansas City, Missouri where he has accepted a job with Hallmark Cards, Inc. as an economic analyst.
71
Miss Arlene A. Forastiere 76 Rolling Hills Rd. Thornwood, NY 10594
CHUCK SHOUSE writes that since he is presently employed in the Naval Reserve doing active duty on a destroyer in the Western Pacific, little news is the best news. PHILIP KHOURY has been spending the academic year 1972-3 with the Center for Arabic Studies Abroad in Cairo, Egypt studying Arabic language and literature. He will be returning to Harvard University in September to complete his .work for a Ph.D. in Middle Eastern History. CHRISTOPHER JOHNSTONE has been a research assistant for the Tate Gallery in London since June of 1972. He has one translation in print, A Book Full of Ideas, (St. Martin's, New York), and one book forthcoming, "John Martin," concerning a 19th century romantic painter. Chris writes that "the pay is atrocious, will undertake art commissions for alumni!" BRUCE COLMAN is planning some high Sierra trips for the summer, working with photography, and generally trying to stay together. MICHAEL MEYER has just finished his second year of law school at Wayne State University in Detroit and is thinking of transferring to Tulane University where he could make New Orleans his permanent home. WILLIAM OVERTREE reports that he is looking for a job and hating every minute of it. He is hoping to graduate soon with an M.A. in psychology. DAVID GALBRAITH is studying French this summer on a scholarship to Paris. He writes that he has no promotion, quit his job, no home, no children, but a lovely wife. TIMOTHY WOOLSEY is working on his
Trinity Reporter July 1973 Page 11
masters degree at the University of Texas and hopes to continue studying there on a doctoral program. PETER DODD was married June 2 to Lynette Sabol in Ottumwa, Iowa where they plan to live. Peter now works as a buyer of junior sportswear for Graham Department Stores Company in Iowa. JAMES AMIS is studying at the Nashotah House Seminary in preparation for the Episcopal ministry. He and his wife, Christine, live at 34108 Delafield Rd. , Oconomowoc, Wisconsin, 53066. THELMA WATERMAN, director of the Connecticut College Office of Community Affairs, was the only laywoman among eight ordained clergymen participating in a Christian conference for girls in. Westtown, Pa. in June. Thelma was chosen for her knowledge of the Bible and led evening vespers, morning worships, and discussions. LOUIS SLOCUM is still working at New England Divers in San Diego, California. He recently returned from a diving trip at Todos Santos Island off the coast of Mexico and reports that the water was very clear, abundant sea life, and a most enjoyable trip. PAUL CULLEN is working for a payroll auditor for the Maryland Casualty Company out of the Milwaukee branch office. ALEXANDER KENNEDY is in his second year at Case Western Reserve School of Medicine and plans to be married to Jill Lindsay on September 8, 1973. KENT TARPLEY is a candidate for the Holy Orders in the Diocese of Chicago and is working with a church social agency on skid row for the summer. He is still attending Seabury -Western Theological Seminary in Evanston, Illinois. STEVEN KEENEY was honored at the Hartford Seminary Foundation's graduation for his superior work in the field of church history. Steve is a Courant staff reporter. BRUCE MUIR is attending the University of Denver College of Law and clerking for a law firm until his graduation in December. His address is 1350 Josephine No. 304, Denver, Colorado, 80206. BILL FOUREMAN is "rolling" toward his Ph.D. in clinical psychology at Wayne State University in Detroit with "occasional interludes of omphaloskepsis." JONATHAN MILLER sends greetings to the Trinity Bantams from El Toro, California where he is the adjutant in the communications squadron after finishing a course in personnel administation at Parris Island. Jon was promoted to 1st Lt. last December. PETE MOORE is enjoying 'OUtdoor life through scuba diving, horseback riding, tennis, etc. and claims that Southern California is a super place to live and work. He is still with KCBQ radio as an account executive and has a place for old friends from Trinity who are coming through. HOWARD LEWIS graduated from Claremont College with a Master of International Studies- International Relations this June.
72
Mr. Jeffrey Kupperman 5521 South Galvez New Orleans, Louisiana 70125
ANDY McCUNE is presently soaking up sun in Tucson, Arizona where he is an administrative resident at St . Joseph's Hospital as part of his M.H.A. from St. Louis University. He is also thinking about sending some saguaro cacti back to Hartford to replace the dying elms, collect, of course. NORMAN BARDEEN is employed by a small residential contractor in southern Vermont. BEBE BASS is working as a program assistant for the Connecticut Air Conservation Committee, a section of the Connecticut Lung Association, located in East Hartford. KIM FENNEBRESQUE is planning a wedding in December to Princess Marianne of Muldavia. Both Kim and Marianne are students at Vanderbilt :. and plan to reside in Nashville until Kim graduates from law school in 1975. CHARLES YEAGER was elected president of the student body at LSU and is entering his senior year at the law school. JIM FROST is a programmer at Traveler's Insurance in Hartford and was married on June 23 to Patricia Dennison of St. Joseph's College. They will be living at 126 New Britain Avenue, Apt. K-4, Plainville, Ct. 06062. JAY MANDT is currently studying philosophy at Vanderbilt University in Nahsville and was elected president of the Graduate Philosophy Association for the coming year. JOHN ORTON is attending law school at Washington and Lee University. RAY GOLDSICH will be moving from graduate work at Oklahoma State University to WF AA Radio-TV in Dallas. He would enjoy hearing from any of his old friends. TOM REGNIER is in New York attending drama school and living at 341 East lOth St., New York, N.Y., 10009. STELLA LASKOWSKI was a finalist in the Greater Hartford Queen of Roses Pageant in June.
73
Lawrence M. Garber Tumblebrook Rd. Woodbridge, Ct. 06525
DAVID C. KIMBALL has been the co-director of a ranch-school that works with boys with emotional difficulties. In the summer he also runs a co-ed camp which includes horses, cattle, hiking, camping, and working. Dave is looking for staff who feel the need for personal involvement in education.
V-12's PAUL SAITTA has spent the last six years as president of Vega Associates, a lighting consultant frrm which he formed. In addition to theatrical lighting, they consult on stage, ar chitectu r al , comm ercial and industrial lighting. · ROBERT IRVING's tlrree children, Ronald, Diane and Bob are all involved in studying at the California State University in the San Fernando Valley.
MASTERS NOTES CLARENCE HAHN '01 sends his greetings to the alumni of Trinity. Clarence's family now includes two great grandchildren! CAROL WESTERMAN '72 worked as a language training specialist in Saigon during 1970 and adopted Marlena Christine (Nguyen Thi Bach Lan) who will be three in June. Carol and her daughter are now living at her parents' home in Pennsylvania where she is teaching in the mountains. FRED REINHART '33 received the Frank Speller Award from the National Association of Corrosion Engineers for contributions to corrosion engineering. The Award was presented at the annual meeting in Anaheim, California in March. ALAN MILLER, '72 curatorial intern at the International Museum of Photography in Rochester, N.Y., published an article entitled, "A Gardner Album," for the December issue of Image. He is currently preparing a research aid entitled "Guide to the Pictorial Records of the Pacific West at the International Museum of Photography." MCMILLAN LEWiS '49 is teaching history at the Ladue High School in St. Louis County, Missouri. He is also president of the Board of Advisors of the Missouri Blind Schools. FRA-NCIS CR0WLEY- '-72 is executive director of the South Dakota Commission on Higher Education Facilities. He has received a graduate fellowship to the State University of New York at Buffalo for a joint Ph.D. program in English and psychology. Frank has had two articles recently accepted by the Psychoanalytic Review for publication. JAMES TROY, '66 president of the Vernon (Conn.) National Bank, has been appointed to the board of directors of Bughaus, Inc., a service center chain for Volkswagons. Fr. ZIGFORD KRISS '73 has been named principal of South Catholic High School by the Archdiocese of Hartford. JAMES LOOBY '68 received the masters of arts degree in mediaeval research in May from St. Joseph College in West Hartford. BARBARA BECK's '72 thesis, a translation of Rene Maran's "Batavala," was published last spring and reviewed in the New York Times Book Review in January of this year. ARTHUR SOLOMON '68 has been promoted to associate professor in the Department of Urban Studies and Planning at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. VIOLET KAUFMAN '58 was promoted from assistant to associate professor of English at the University of Connecticut. ALBERT J. MARKS, JR. '57 has been elected to the separate account committee of Hartford Variable Annuity Life Insurance Company . He is still a partner with the law firm of Gilman and Marks in Hartford, Conn. PETA HOWARD '67 has received a grant from th e National Endowment for the Humanities and will study at Amherst College this summer as a participant in a seminar en titled "Contemporary American Literary Forms." The Winchester School Board elected · HUBERT SAUNDERS '68 as principal of Thayer High School in May. LEE SMITH '73 has been appointed assistant actuary, Actuarial Department of Aetna Insurance Company in Hartford. MICKI SA YIN '60 has been named to the sales staff of Buckley Realtors in West Hartford. STEPHEN DAVENPORT '65 has been appointed headmaster of the Country School in Madison, Conn. ALAN FLYNN '66, a member of the Kingswood School (West Hartford) faculty for 12 years, was named to head the Middle School of the Kingswood-Oxford School in May. RALPH ADKINS '71, assistant commissioner of administration for the Department of Environmental Protection for the State of Connecticut, spoke to Professor McKee's public administration class on Trinity's campus this spring.
Recent Bequests and Memorial Gifts Trinity acknowledges with a deep sense of loss the passing of alumni and other friends of the College. It seems appropriate to list the bequests and memorial gifts which have been made to honor them. An unrestricted gift of $1,500 in memory of Harvey L. Thompson '07. An unrestricted gift of $500 in memory of William G. Oliver '10. An unrestricted gift of $500 in memory of Charles C. Withington '15. An unrestricted gift of $500 in memory of Willis B. George '16. Gifts totalling more than $2,300 have been added to the Class of 1918 Memorial Scholarship Fund in memory of Sydney D. Pinney '18. This fund, one of Mr. Pinney's many projects for the College, now totals more than $60,000 and, with deferred commitments included, more than $100,000. A gift of $5,016 for a general purpose endowment fund in memory of The Rt. Rev. Lauriston L. Scaife '31 , Hon. '48. An additional gift of $500 for the scholarship fund in memory of The Rev. Flavel Sweeten Luther, former President of the College. This fund now totals $8,000. Gifts have also been received in memory of the following alumni and friends : The Rev. SamuelS. Mitchell '85 Raymond F. Hansen '16 RobertS. Morris '16, Hon. '65 Charles H. Street '96 Edward Abbe Niles '16 Adrian H. Onderdonk '99 Stanton J . D. Pendell ' 17 James A. Wales '01 Arthur Rabinowitz ' 17 William J. Cahill ' 20 Richmond Rucker '17 Robert A. Radom '20 Myron R. Jackson, M.D. '18 Charles J . Goetz '22 PaulS. Parsons '18 The Rev. Benjamin Styring '22 The Rev. Raymond Cunningham '07 Arvid R. Anderson '25 SamuelS. Fishzohn '25 Bradford G. Weekes '07 Joseph J. Lutin '27 Karl A. Reiche '08 Harry Tulin '28 Clinton J. Backus, Jr. '09 Frederick T. Gilbert '09 Leon Toomajian '29 John F. Walker '29 Charles H. Bassford '10 Philip M. Cornwell, M.D. '30 GeorgeS. Francis '10 Albert M. Smith '10 James A. Gillies '30 B. Floyd Turner '10 Edward L. Sivaslian '33 Delmont W. Baker '37 Nathaniel K. Allison '11 William W. Buck '11 Alfred E. Gavert '41 George C. Meng '4 2 Eugene H. Dooman '11 George T. Bates '12 RogerS. Bestor '48 Allan B. Cook '13 Earle E. Sproule II '52 Eliot L. Ward '13 Jacob W. Edwards '59 Peter J. Schaefer '64 The Rev. Charles A. Bennett '15 Prof. Thurman L. Hood The Rev. James A. Mitchell '15, Hon. '61 Prof. Alexander A. Mackimmie, Jr. Louis M. Schatz '15 Prof. Louis H. Naylor
of the Trinity New Britain Alumni Association.
IN MEMORY FRANZE EDWARD LUND, HON. 1965 Franze E. Lund, past president of Kenyon College, died May 29, 1973 . The son of a pioneer~missionary, he--was born- in Wahu, a Chinese treaty-post on the Yang-Tse River. Returning to the United States, he was graduated from Washington and Lee University in 1933 and received his M.A. from the same institution in 1934. Ten years later- 'th~ University of Wisconsin conferred his Ph.D. degree. The year following he spent in a post doctoral fellowship at Yale. First at Washington and Lee, later at Wisconsin State College in Superior, and then at Alabama State College in Florence, Mr. Lund served consecutively as instructor, professor, department chairman, and faculty dean. In 1952 he was elected president of Alabama College at Montevallo. In 1956 he began a ten year career as president of Kenyon. In 1965 he received an honorary L.H.D. from Trinity. JAMES FARLEY TOWNSEND, 1910 James F. Townsend, who worked 25 years for the State of Connecticut as an entomologist, died June 26, 1973 in Wallingford, Connecticut. A native of Camden, New Jersey, he was a member of the class of 1910 and received his B.S. in 1939. He served in the Navy in World War I and the Coast Guard in World War II. He leaves his wife, Constance Lincoln Townsend of New Haven, Connecticut. HASELL HILL BURGWlN, 1911 Word has reached the College of the death of Hasell H. Burgwin, a member of the class of 1911. He passed away June 16, 1973 in Washington, D.C. We have no further information at this time. SAMUEL CHASE COALE IV, 1934 Sam Coale, president of the Coale Precision Photo Products Co., Berlin, Connecticut, ilied unexpectedly May 30 at the New Britain General Hospital. He leaves his wife, Mrs. Harriet Kimberly Coale and two sons, Dr. Samuel C. Cole V, Trinity '65, and John K. Coale. Born January 13, 1909 in New York City a son of Samuel C. Coale III and Helen Gale, he prepared for college at Williston and Suffield Academies before coming to Trinity for one year with the Class of 1934. Joining the New Britain Herald in the early 1930's, he covered Berlin and became that paper's frrst full-time photographer. He left the Herald in 1945 to open his own specialized photography business and specialized in photographic nameplates as well as highly technical engineering photography. He had done considerable research in the sending of pictures to Mars and for Apollo · assignments. Mr. Coale was a member of the Berlin Congregational Church and a former president
JOHNPAULBUTTERLY, 1936 John P. Butterly, of Watertown, Connecticut, died at his home June 2, 1973. A member of the class of 1936, he also attended the University of Alabama. Mr. Butterly served as town chairman of the Democratir •· Party in Bethlehem, Connecticut and spent the last 15 years as an investigator for the Connecticut Welfare Department. He served in the U.S . Air Force in World War II and was a charter member of the Bethlehem Volunteer Fire Department. He leaves his brother, William J. Butterly of Watertown; a sister, Miss Mary E. Butterly of Watertown ; one niece and several nephews. DONALD EDWARD CREAMER, 1943 Word has reached the College that Donald Creamer, a member of the class of 1943, died in Brentwood, Long Island, New York, January 23, 1973. We have no additional information at this time. COLIN RODNEY MaciVOR, 1957 Colin R. Maclvor, of Walpole, Massachusetts, died unexpectedly, May 28, 1973, in Concord, New Hampshire. A graduate of the Mt. Hermon School in Massachusetts, he spent a year at Trinity before joining the St. Louis Cardinals baseball team. More recently he has been employed by the Massachusetts Department of Civil Defense. Mr. Maclvor leaves his wife, Mrs. Susan (Everett) Maclvor; a son, Robert Bruce Maclvor, age 10, and a daughter, Heather Maclvor, age 7, of Walpole; his father, Wylie G. Maclvor of Croyden, New Hampshire; a brother, Bruce Maclvor of Boscawen, New Hampshire, and a sister, Mrs. Sandra Hartwell of Laurel Hills, New Jersey. JOHN MORTIMER HELDT, 1964 John M. Heldt, who received his B.A. from Trinity in 1964, died May 24, 1973. While at Trinity he was a member of the TRIPOD and IVY staffs. A Dean's List student his senior year, he was also a member of Le Cercle Francais and the Psychology Club. After leaving Trinity, he taught at the Garland School in Cheste>, New Jersey, and then joined the trust department of Bankers Trust Company in New York City. He leaves his wife, Diana Palombo Heldt, of Hartsdale, New York. EDNA MAUDE LEARNED, MA 1946 Edna Maude Learned, of Hartford, died June 16, 1973 at her home in Pittsfield, Massachusetts. Before retiring in 1972, she was a teacher at Hartford's Northeast Bracket and Fox Middle Schools for 35 years. A graduate of Boston University, she also received a masters degree from Trinity in 1946. She leaves two brothers, Franklyn E. Learned of Stafford Springs, Connecticut, and Howard C. Learned of Old Saybrook, Connecticut.
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Trinity Reporter July 1973 Page 12
Trinity Bows to Wisconsin at Henley Trinity College's varsity heavyweight crew fell to a powerful eight from the University of Wisconsin in the second round of The Ladies' Challenge Plate at the 134th Henley Royal Regatta on July 5. The three-quarter length loss ended Trinity's third attempt in five years to become the first American crew to bring The Ladies' Plate to the United States. A fine crew from Harvard University won that honor with a three length victory over defending champ D.S.R. Laga of Holland in this year's final. Never had the Henley Regatta so many crews-over 250-and so many fast ones. Crews surpassed old records only to have 路 another competitor set a new mark hours or minutes later. The Ladies' Plate was no exception. This year's 29-crew field was bigger and better than any previous in the history of the event (inaugurated in 1845), which ranks second only to the Grand Challenge Cup in age and prestige. The Bantams arrived in England on June 24 and put their new shell, Hartford, in the water for a light practice on the Thames River that evening. In the next 10 days, Trinity oarsmen rowed almost 200 miles along the famed waterway. Trinity's opening day opponent this year was Durham University. The contest was a rematch of America's New England and England's Midland Champions. The Bantams defeated Durham in the semi-finals of the 1969 Ladies' Plate but only after a comfortable lead was reduced by the fast closing English eight to a narrow one-third length victory. There was no question this time as Trinity pulled out in front at the start and rowed away for a three-length victory. It was a good race for the Trinity eight. The tense atmosphere on Henley's opening day can be overwhelming for veteran international competitors and college athletes alike. Trinity Coach Norm Graf later commented that "We have a young crew with only two seniors in our boat but they weathered the tension of the first day very well." The winning performance followed pre-race plans. Sophomore coxswain
Andy Anderson of Northfield, Illinois, called a strong sprint from the start. The Bantams rowed at a blistering 49 strokes per minute pace for the first 200 meters and pulled to a one-half length lead. Trinity lowered its tempo to 40 strokes at The Barrier which is 5/16 of a mile down the course. Anderson commented after the race that "We had one length over Durham at The Barrier so we eased up a bit. We rowed at 36 strokes for the rest of the race without sprinting at the end." The following day's encounter pitted Trinity against Wisconsin's junior varsity eight which had stroked to a national intercollegiate championship in Syracuse, New York in early June. The contest came on a day in which spectators lining the banks of the Thames River were treated to what was easily the largest number of record shattering performances in recent decades. The Trinity-Wisconsin race was no exception as the Bantams rowed to The Barrier in 1:53 to tie a new record set only hours before by crews from Harvard University and University College of Dublin, Ireland. Marks for The Barrier, Fawley (which is halfway down the course), and The Ladies' Plate Course record were each broken four time during the day. Trinity again set a strong 49 strokes per minute pace at the start and had a 3/4 length lead over the Badgers at The Barrier. Through the heart of the contest the Bantams rowed at 39 while the Badgers stroked at a lower but powerful 36-37 rate. Wisconsin moved up on Trinity and took a six-foot lead at the halfway mark in 3:13. The Badgers' Fawley time tied a Ladies' Plate record which had stood since 1949. It was subsequently bettered by three other crews that day. Each crew took "pops" or short sprints in the middle of the race, but Wisconsin's junior varsity continued to widen its lead. With just four hundred meters left, the Badgers pulled out to a two-length lead for their largest margin of the contest. The Trinity crew moved its pace up to forty in a last-ditch effort to catch the
DOES IT HURT? As Walter "Doc" Hurley (left) watches, Doctor George J. Rosenbaum '30 (right) examines one of the several hundred participants in the National Summer Youth Sports Program co-sponsored with the NCAA and the President's Council on Physical Fitness and Sports. Dr. Rosenbaum was one of 14 alumni doctors from the Hartford area who volunteered to give free physical examinations to boys and girls in the program. Others who participated in the examinations were Drs. Joseph J. Belizzi '44, Roger G. Conant '44, David M. Geetter '55, William E. Hart '46, Henry M. Kaplan '41, Winfield T. Moyer '45, Paul Norman '52, Salvatore S. Piacente '36, Robert D. Rodner '64, Joseph N. Russo '41, John J. Sayers '30, Humberto Y. Solano '57, and Philip E. Trowbridge '52.
leaders. Two lengths were cut inhalfand then to less than a length but the gap was just too much to overcome. Wisconsin's winning time of 6:41 was one of the fastest every recorded in The Ladies' Plate while-Trinity's 6:44 was just two seconds off the old record which was broken several times during the day. Coach Graf commented afterwards, "We raced a very fine crew from Wisconsin today, but I'm proud of our crew's efforts. In any other year our course time would be fantastic but this year's field of competitors has no equal in any previous Ladies' Plate." The 1973 crew season which began on the Connecticut River in April with a 10-length win over Wesleyan came to an end on a warm July day at Henley-on-Thames. Though this year's crew had not achieved all they might have wanted, they had come a long way since the early days of the season. A 20-1 record, included a third New England Championship in five years, a good showing at the IRA Championships in June which included a consolation victory in the four with coxswain class and a second consecutive collegiate title for Dave Brown and Rick Ricci, and a trip to the world's most prestigious rowing event-The Henley Royal Regatta. The Wisconsin race was the last one for Brown and. Ricci in a Trinity uniform.
Seven other members of the crew will be back: coxswain Andy Anderson, oarsmen Von Gryska, Phil Wendler, Chad Mooney, Ted Berghausen, and Charlie Putnam and Curt Jordan who will co-captain next year's crew. All three of the crew's spares will also return. Sophomore John Mezochow who doubled as back-up coxswain and team manager at Henley will return next spring along with oarsmen Burt Apfelbaum and Ben Brewster. The twosome got a taste of international rowing when they reached the finals of the pre-regatta tournament for spare oarsmen in coxswainless pairs. The Bantam pair defeated the Victoria Boat Club of Liverpool, England and Ridley College of Canada before losing a two-length verdict to a combination boat of the University of Wisconsin and MIT.
CORRECTION It was incorrectly noted in the last
issue of the REPORTER that Ron Duckett '7 4 was the recipient of the RobertS. Morris Track Trophy. Winner of the award should have been listed as Ed Raws '73.
Boo City Youths Using Ferris For
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Recreational Programs
Trinity's athletic facilities will be used to capacity by over 800 boys and girls from Hartford this summer in two separate sports and recreational programs conducted by the College. For the fourth consecutive. year, Trinity will host a program which is currently funded under a national grant from the Department of Health, Education and Welfare and co-sponsored by the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) and the President's Council on Physical Fitness and Sports. The program runs through August 9. Trinity is the only college in Connecticut hosting the program which includes 104 colleges and universities in 67 cities and 36 states, serving as many as 50,000 youngsters this summer. Activities such as football, basketball, swimming, track, wrestling, gymnastics and tennis as well as modern dance and physical development will be offered with instruction given by professional coaches and collegiate and high school athletes. This summer's program will also include a free hot lunch each day for all participants and will feature an educational program with lecturers drawn from the Hartford community speaking on such varied topics as the use of cosmetics, hygiene, drugs and job and educational opportunities. Richard Taylor, assistant professor of physical education is head of this year's program, while Walter "Doc" Hurley, assistant to the principal at Weaver High School, will be liaison officer to the Hartford community. As a preliminary, each youngster received a free medical examination given by physicians from the Hartford area. For the fourth year, a group of Trinity alumni doctors volunteered their services for the examinations. The second program, which will run through August 17, is the Trinity Summer Recreational Program, sponsored
by the Hartford Parks and Recreational Department. The program is a "walk-in" for residents of the area and includes football, weight lifting, gymnastics and swimming. Additional activities will include the making of a film, scheduled trips to the beach, and visits to local points of interest. Whitney M. Cook '72, a Trinity graduate assistant in the physical education department, heads the program.
HOME FOOTBALL TICKETS Orders for reserved seat tickets for home football games should be received at the College no later than September 10. Tickets for the R.P.I., Colby and Rochester (Parents Day) games are $3.00 each. Tickets for the Wesleyan (Reunion/Homecoming) game are $ 3 . 50 each. General Admission tickets will be sold at the gate. Checks should be made payable to the "Trustees of Trinity College" and mailed to the Director of Athletics, Trinity College, Hartford, Conn. 06106. Please enclose a stamped, self-addressed envelope. 1973 Varsity Schedule Sept. 29 Oct. 6 Oct. 13 Oct. 20 Oct. 27 Nov. 3 Nov. 10 Nov. 17
Williams Bates R.P.I. COLBY ROCHESTER Coast Guard Amherst WESLEYAN
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