Mr. Peter J. Knapp 20 Buena Vista Rd. West Ha r tford , Conn.
06107
TRI ITY REPORTER VOLUME 4 NUMBER 1
TRINITY COLLEGE, HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT
OCTOBER, 1973
Trinity's Parents Take Active Role "Parent Power" has begun to exert itself at Trinity, and both the College and the parents seem pleased with its effects. What has emerged, in recent years, is a level of interest and participation in College affairs which is virtually unrivaled by any college in the nation. For example, about 625 parents representing a fourth of the College's 1 ,600 undergraduates __:_ came to campus last November for the three-day Parents Weekend. A slightly larger number, representing both present and past parents (parents of alumni), contributed a total of $109,585.72 in unrestricted gifts to the I 972-73 Annual Giving Campaign. That amount is from two to four times HALF MILLION FOR TRINITY Report of successful 1972-73 Annual Giving Campaign begins on page 5.
MATRICULATION CEREMONY-420 members of the Freshman Class attend the Matriculation Ceremony in the Chapel to open the 151 st year of the College.
420 Freshmen Welcomed In Traditional Academic Rite In a ceremony whose origins date back to the fifteenth century, the 420 members of Trinity's freshman class officially became members of the College on September 10. Members of the Class of 1977, other students, faculty and administrators filled the Chapel for the 151 st Matriculation and Book Ceremony. The Book Ceremony, a tradition at Trinity, is a ritual in which the president gives to the secretary of the faculty, the book used by Bishop Brownell at Trinity's first commencement, and which has been touched by every alumnus of the College. It is put in the faculty's custody during the academic year to symbolize their care of the undergraduates. The faculty returns the book to the president at commencement time.
In taking the Matriculation oath, the students pledged to observe the statutes of the College, to discharge all scholastic duties imposed on them, and "to defend all the rights, privileges, and immunities of the College." The Matriculation ceremony follows a custom which began in England in 1420, when students at Oxford were ordered by the King, "within a month of their arrival at the University to take an oath before the chancellor to keep the statutes for the preservation of the peace." In brief remarks to the freshmen, President Lockwood said "we have preserved this tradition at Trinity even though most universities in this country have forsaken it. (continued on page 15)
greater than was given to some of Trinity's sister schools, and is nearly $15,000 over the Parents Fund Goal of $95,000. Even in I971-72, when unrestricted gifts from parents totaled $88,098 .52, the level of support was enough to place Trinity among the top dozen of the 87 I private colleges , professional and specialized schools who reported in "Voluntary Support of Education I97I-1972," published by the Council for Financial Aid to Education. The significance of Trinity's parental support becomes apparent when compared with those schools who reported higher figures in 197 I-72. *Brigham Young University, with 28,894 students, received $140,325. *The Claremont Colleges, with 5,135 students, received$ I 60,857. *Harvard, with 14,235 students, received$ I66,482 . *Notre Dame, with 8,237 students, received $254,125. *Princeton, with 5,396 students, received $142,698. *Stanford, with 1 I,626 students, received $409,644. *Wellesley, with I,872 students, received $I 87,350. This figure, however, included a single restricted gift of $100,000, leaving an actual unrestricted gift total of $87,350. *Colgate, with 2,304 students, received $90,089 . *Denison University, with 2,068 students, received $136,649 . *Sarah Lawrence College, with 841 students, received$ 132,568. *Radcliffe College, 路 with 1,295 students, received $90,580. Trinity, with $88,098 in 1971-72, did better than Dartmouth ($87,903), which has an enrollment of 3,928; Yale ($86,475), which has an enrollment of 9,231; Amherst ($34,363) with an
enrollment of I ,232; Wesleyan ($29 ,238), with an enrollment of 1,881; Williams ($58,688) with an enrollment of 1,546; and Middlebury ($66,613), with an enrollment of 1,879. For the year just ended, Trinity came out ahead of every comparable school except Sarah Lawrence, whose parents contributed $174,506 in unrestricted funds in 19 72 -7 3. Compared with Trinity's $109,585.72, Amherst received $28,759; Wesleyan, which didn't announce a figure this year, reportedly received an amount close to last year's $29,000; Williams received $80,446; Dartmouth $90,497, and Middlebury $68,6I6.45. Radcliffe's fund rose to $I 02,30I, while Wellesley's fell slightly to $84,991. Trinity officials believe that the successful fund-raising effort is a response to an overall program to interest parents in College affairs. Nationwide, nearly 60 parents serve on the board of directors of the Par ents Association, and they meet regionally and on campus several times a year. Parents are asked to help not only in fund-raising , but in helping to recruit new students to the College, to provide information about the College to (continued on page I 4)
O'Hara
OHara Elected Alumni Trustee William T. O'Hara '55, president of Mount Saint Mary College in Newburgh, N.Y ., has been elected to a six-year term as an alumni trustee of Trinity. He was elected following an alumni ballot conducted last April. Other nominees for the post were Gerald Joseph Hanson, Jr. '51, and Scott W. Reynolds '63. Mr. O'Hara, who received an LL.B. from Georgetown University Law Center in 1958, an LL.M. from New York (continued on page 14)
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Trinity Reporter October 1973 Page 2
9 Faculty Appointed
In Several Disciplines Nine full time appointments, including a chairman for the political science department and a director for intercultural studies, have been made to the Trinity faculty for 197.3-74. Dr. Ranbir Vohra, a native of Lahore, Pakistan, has been appointed associate professor and chairman of political science. He comes to Trinity from the University of Calgary, Alberta, Canada, where he was associate professor. He was a visiting professor at Harvard during the summer of 1972. Dr. Vohra received a B.A . from Punjab University, Lahore; an M.A. and a Ph.D. from Harvard in 1965 and 1969 respectively. Dr. Vohra is doing continuing research on 20th century China, concentrating on the Chinese revolution. He has published several articles dealing with China and Japan and a book Lao She and the Chinese Revolution (Harvard Asian Monograph) is due to appear in December to be followed shortly by a "Reader on the Chinese Revolution" (Houghton Mifflin Press). John Andrew Brown has been appointed assistant professor of religion and director of intercultural studies program. Brown holds an associate degree from Daniel Payne College and a B.A. from Miles College, and an M.Div. (master of divinity) and an S.T.M. (master of sacred theology) degree, both from Yale. Mr. Brown has also studied toward Yale ' s experimental Professional Doctorate degree and assisted in the development of the program. At Yale Divinity School he taught courses on the· black church, black music and sociology. Mrs. Andrea Bianchini has been appointed assistant professor of modern languages. Mrs. Bianchini received a B.A. from Barnard in 1965, an M.A. from Columbia in 1967 and is working on a doctorate at Rutgers. She came to Trinity from Princeton. Dr. Milla Riggio was appointed assistant professor of English. She
received a B.A. from Southern Methodist University in 1962, an A.M. and Ph.D. from Harvard in 1966 and 1972 respectively. Dr. Riggio comes to Trinity · from Wheaton College. Mr. Daniel R. Cohen was appointed an instructor in sociology. He received a B.A. from Columbia in 1969 and an M.A. from New York University in 1973. He is working on a doctorate at NYU. Mr. Martin Landsberg was appointed instructor in economics. He received an A.B. from the University of California at Santa Cruz in 1969 , an M.A. in economics from the University of Wisconsin. Work for a doctorate at the University of Wisconsin has been completed. Mrs. Sonia Lee has been appointed an instructor in modern languages. She received a B.S . from the University of Wisconsin in 1964 and an M.A. from Wisconsin in 1966. Mrs. Lee comes to us from the University of Puerto Rico. Miss Jane A. Millspaugh has been appointed an instructor in physical education. She was awarded a graduate assistantship in 1971 and taught a range of women's physical education courses. She received a B.S. in physical education from Springfield College in 1970 and an M.A. in Education from Trinity in June. Miss Judith C. Rohrer has been appointed instructor of fine arts. She received an A.B. from Stanford University in 1965, an M.A. from Columbia University in 1968 and is working on her Ph.D. at Columbia. She has previously taught at the University of Massachusetts and Columbia. · Also appointed were Mr. David Ahlgren '64, lecturer in engineering; Mr. Peter Armstrong, lecturer in music; Mrs. Deirdre B. Bair, visiting assistant professor in English; Mr. Raymond S. Blanks, lecturer in education and director of Upward Bound; Mr. John N. Williams, lecturer in mathematics.
7 Students Are Named Capital Area Scholars For the · 14th consecutive year, outstanding area high school graduates have been named Capital Area Scholars at the College. Seven students, from Hartford and four suburban towns, will enter Trinity in September under the scholarship program. According to President Lockwood, the Capital Area Scholarships "will make a Trinity education available to some of the region's finest high school graduates. We believe the recipients have demonstrated high academic ability, a willingness to work hard, and a keen sense of purpose in the education they seek." The seven scholarships will total nearly $89,000 in aid over the next four years. This y ea r' s recipient s come from Hartford, Manchester, Newington, Rocky Hill and Suffield. The scholars are:
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HOWARD L. GARRELL is a graduate of Weaver High School where he was vice president of the student council, and participated in varsity soccer and the student newspaper. He plans to major in medical science, with the intention of entering medical school. MARY ANN NELSON is a graduate of Hartford Public High School where she was active in the bank, student newspaper, student council, and Red Cross Club, which she served as president. She was also chairman of the Walk for Development and an usher at the Hartford Arts Festival. She plans to major in biology, for . a career as a naturalist in the parks or forest service.
RICHARD W. MEIER is a graduate of Manchester High School where he was active in track, student council, and the German Club. A Boy Scout for four years, he served as camp counselor during the summer of 1971. He plans to major in · chemistry. DANIEL S. SILVER is a graduate of Manchester High School where he served on the art staff of the yearbook, and as art editor and editor-in-chief of the literary magazine. In addition, he served two years on the Manchester Youth Commission, and two years as staff JI1ember and performer at the "Depot" coffeehouse. He plans to major in biology or anthropology, towards a career as a veterinarian. JANE S. LINDSAY is a graduate of Newington High School, where she was active in field hockey, informal track, the student council, library club, .and the Girls Athletic Association, where she served on the executive board. She plans to major in biology, towards a career in medicine. MARIO D. PETRELLA is a graduate of Rocky Hill High School where he was active on varsity cross country, serving as captain; varsity track, student council and yearbook. He plans to major in physics or rna them atics. PAMELA ANN WALERYSZAK is a graduate of Suffield High School where she was active in the concert band, acted in her class play, served on the yearbook staff, and as assistant to the boys' track team, and as library monitor. She plans to major in mathematics or biology.
WALPOLE EXHIBITION-Wihnarth S. Lewis (Hon. 'SO) of Farmington stands by portrait of Horace Walpole and a chest, part of his .collection of books, prints, letters, and other objects connected with the 18th century English author. To commemorate the 40th anniversary of the Yale Edition of the letters of Walpole, which Mr. Lewis began editing in 1933, Trinity's Department of History is sponsoring a special exhibition from Mr. Lewis's correction. Since 1933, some 35 volumes of the Walpole letters - considered the finest examples of English correspondence - have been published. In addition, Mr. Lewis wrote a biography of Walpole published in 1961. The commemorative exhibition will open October 29 at 4 p.m., in the Austin Arts Center, with a speech by John Brooke, senior editor of the Royal Historical Manuscripts Commission in London, on the topic of Georgian England. The exhibit will be in the Trinity Library and Watkinson Library and will run through November 19.
'Craft of Biography' Is Town-Gown Topic The continuing series of Town and Gown lectures, open to the public at a special sub.scription rate, will be offered at Trinity beginning October 16. This year's series of five lectures, collectively entitled "The Craft of Biography," will explore how a biographer works and his problems in trying to understand a time and place not his own through the specific human details of an individual life. This is the sixth year of the series, which is sponsored by the wives of Trinity's alumni, faculty, administrators and friends. Proceeds from previous series have gone toward the purchase of books for the College Library. The lecture series will be held on successive Tuesdays beginning October 16 at 1 :00 p.m. in the Austin Arts Center. Each lecture will be followed by an informal coffee period. George B. Cooper, Northam Professor and Chairman of the Department of History at Trinity, will deliver the first lecture, entitled "The I and He and She: A Glimpse of . Autobiography and Biography ." A former aide at the American Embassy in London, Professor Cooper has specialized in British history, and was one of the founders and has been . managing editor of the Journal of British Studies since 1961. He is currently completing a biography of Queen Charlotte . One of England's most distinguished biographers, Georgina Battiscombe, will relate some of her own experiences in "Writing a Royal Biography: The Life of Queen Alexandra," the second lecture of the series. A graduate of Oxford University, Mrs. Battiscombe has written widely acclaimed biographies of Charlotte M. Yonge, Mrs. Gladstone and Queen Alexandra. On October 30 John Brooke, considered one of the greatest living scholars of the Augustan and Georgian periods, will present "George III : A New Assessment." Sir Lewis Namier's principal associate in the writing of the
monumental "History of Parliament," Dr. Brooke is Senior Editor of the Royal Commission on · Historical Manuscripts. ' The fourth lecture of. ffi.e series, "Notes Towards an Almost Possible Biography," will be delivered by Deirdre Bair, Visiting Assistant Professor of English at Trinity. A journalist and writer, Mrs. Bair was on the staff of "Newsweek," was a reporter for the New Haven "Register," and was managing editor of Yale Alumni Magazine. Her biography of Samuel Beckett is soon to be published simultaneously in America, England and France. Trinity English Department Professor John Dando will deliver the last lecture of the series, "Biography and Film, From Verbal to Visual Structure," on November 13 .
TRINITY REPORTER October, 1973
Vol. 4No. 1
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. TH E 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, Daniel P. Russo '73; . Photographer, David R. Lowe; Alumni Secretary, John L. Heyl '66 .
Trinity Reporter October 1973 Page 3
Professionals Praise Trinity Interns The popularity of student internship programs has increased tremendously in recent years, and in the field of political science there may be as many as 1,000 such programs currently in operation. Among the best of them, according to experts in the field, is the six-year..:old Legislative Program at Trinity College. Under the internship program, the Trinity students - there were 15 in the spring of this year - take a semester off from the regular academic life and spend the entire term working, and learning about, the Connecticut State Legislature. Each student works for a state legislator, and the students meet regularly as a group with Dr. Clyde D. McKee, professor of Political Science and supervisor of the program. Elizabeth Allen, a sophomore from Wethersfield, and a participant in last spring's program, spent her semester working for State Sen. John Zajac, a Meriden Republican, who was assistant majority leader of the Senate and chairman of the Liquor Control Committee. "It has been a most valuable and profitable experience for me," Miss Allen says. "I have had the rare opportunity to see politics in action from close up, and I have been favorably impressed with Connecticut politics and government." Her duties included speech writing and press relations, as well as handling letters and problems of constituents. Sen. Zajac, she says, "was most helpful to me not only in giving us job assignments that enable me to understand the demands that are constantly being made on individual legislators, but also in giving me insights into policy decisions and internal legislative politics." Because she was working for a member of the Senate Republican leadership, she says she was "able to observe the workings of the party that has organized the legislature and that has passed and rejected proposed legislation." James 路 R. Gomes, a sophomore from Lowell, Mass., says he got into the program for three reasons: to learn about the legislative process, to see whether politics might interest him as a career, and "to make a contribution of value to the process of making laws in Connecticut." He worked for State Sen. Joseph I. Lieberman, a New Haven Democrat, and had responsibility for preparing testimony, writing speeches, press releases, and research abstracts, especially in two important areas the state budget and solid waste disposal. In addition, Gomes says he was asked "for suggestions on how to approach various pieces of legislation. The amount of responsibility Senator Lieberman has given to me has been valuable to me in learning about the legislature," Gomes says. And although he hasn't decided yet whether he'll make politics his career, Gomes says he's gained "a great deal of respect for the men and women who are faced with the monumental task of making our laws. I've been continually impressed with their ability, intelligence, integrity and dedication. Even those with whom I most strongly disagree have convinced me of their dedication to principle. Further, I have gained an appreciation of the importance of providing greater assistance to these legislators in terms of staff, office space, etc." Commenting on the internship, Sen. Lieberman said "Jim has been a tremendous help and some of my fellow legislators have been looking at me with envy." Gomes expects to continue working for Sen. Lieberman part-time this year.
Key to the success of the program is its organization, for which Dr. McKee is responsible. Offered for four course credits, the program is designed to be at least the equivalent of a full semester's academic work. The purpose of the course, as he outlines it, "is to provide an opportunity of an in-depth examination of the legislative process and its relation to political forces influencing it." In meeting this purpose, work with the legislator is only a part. Even there, however, the legislator and his intern are carefully matched for interest in each other. It is the legislator's responsibility not only to provide work, but to help the intern analyze what is going on. In addition, Dr. McKee sets up seminars with guest speakers - generally people with power and experience in legislating - who describe the activities of the legislature. Speakers this past semester, for example, included T. Clark Hull, then the lieutenant governor; State Sen. Nicholas Lenge, Sen. Lieberman, and David Ogle, director of the Legislative Management Office. In addition, the students also met with Dr. Donald G. Herzberg, executive director of the Eagleton Institute of Politics at Rutgers University. "I believe {rom what I've learned about Trinity's program," Dr. Herzberg told the students at their meeting, "that it rivals California's which is the grandfather of all state legislative programs in the country. One thing I've noticed in this program in talking to the students and to the legislators is that each student thinks his legislator is the best one in the capitol and each legislator is firmly convinced he has the best intern. That, to me, signifies a very healthy program." Ogle, whose job involves finding ways to make the Connecticut legislature more efficient, says he is "delighted that Trinity College has taken such a progressive and far-reaching outlook" in organizing the program. "Most of the four-year institutions," he says, "only want to give one course-credit for participation." Frederick Robinson, a graduating senior from Grosse Pointe Farms, Michigan, worked for State Sen. Ruth Truex, a Wethersfield Republican who, according to Robinson, "represents a very diverse district, ranging from the wealthy
and surprisingly liberal town of Farmington to the conservative and middle income town of Newington. One can see that she has the very difficult task of incorporating a wide variety of views into various pieces of legislation." Robinson also worked with the Education Committee, and, he reports, "gained a real insight into the education process in Connecticut. The Education Committee considered more than 200 bills during the legislative session, and Robinson came away with many opinions about the State's handling of education. "We are one of the top states as far as our commitment to education in terms of dollars, but we still have plenty of room for improvement. One area, though, that seemed to be lacking was in legislation having to do with education for the disadvantaged. It seems to me that the legislature just doesn't want to deal with the problem, apparently hoping that it will just go away." Charles Shreve, a junior from Detroit, Mich., says he has "political ambitions," and sees the Legislative Intern Program as "probably the smartest thing I ever did."
Trinity, he adds, "is using a most effective way for young people to get the feel of the legislative process and to contribute to that process. I hope the Trinity program will be an example to other institutions so they will release students for full semesters." Currently Trinity has a maximum of 15 students who can join the program each semester. "We could use about .25 interns," Ogle said. "Maybe more, as the legislature grows and the need for more 路staff assistance grows." Herzberg adds that the program helps to keep the legislative process closer to the citizenry. "I believe in citizen politicians," he says. "I do not believe Connecticut needs a full-time professional legislature. But, if you have a part-time citizen legislator, you must have professional, full-time staffing. Trinity's Legislative Intern Program can be a major step in providing that kind路 of staffing." since politics is best learned "from politicians themselves, not necessarily from academic political scientists. "No one teacher or one book or one experience could- have done more than four months as an intern."
New Affiliations Provide Added Student Options Two new options for Trinity students have been :announced by the Office of Educational Services. The College has become affiliated with the Institute of European Studies (IES) and the Boston-based Institute for Off-Campus Experience. IES is a private, non-profit educational organization which promotes structured programs of study in Europe for American undergraduates. It operates programs in Vienna, Paris, Freiburg, Madrid, Nantes and Durham, and expects to open a London program next January. IES believes that "the best means of providing formal education for American undergraduates in the European environment is obtained neither by duplicating the American college in a foreign setting, nor by placing students unguided into t.he European educational system." IES offers its own courses at each center except Durham, and students
enroll in a combination of these courses and regular European university courses. About 24 other American colleges and universities are associated with IES. Among the advantages of affiliation are that Trinity students receive preferential treatment for admissions to programs, and for IES financial aid. The Institu te for Off-Campus Experience will provide employment opportunities, either on a paid or volunteer basis, for students who wish to take a term away from college during their undergraduate years. Placements in various locations in the United States will be available in the areas of business, government and industry, as well as in political, social service, labor and science agencies. Brown, Dartmouth, Hampshire, Tufts and Wesleyan have also joined the program.
Trinity Reporter October 1973 Page 4
Purposes for the Liberal Arts
On Matters of Deep Concern It is a Tradition at Trinity College to hold an Opening Convocation each fall. On this occasion I have the pleasant privilege of welcoming all those faculty and students who are returning - in many instances from quite distant parts of the world. I also wish to welcome the new faculty and students to the College. Tradition also recommends that I wear the accoutrements of office, presumably impressive and assuredly awkward garb,' and that my remarks be charitably short. Today I want to discuss with you certain matters which concern me deeply. Perhaps my title, "Lost Innocence," refers primarily to my uneasiness; I hope that it also applies to the rna terial at hand. The suggestion came to my mind when my family and I were climbing in the Himalayas this summer. We were at a lake some 12,000 feet up in the Kashmir mountains of Northern India, admiring the remoteness, the unspoiled beauty of the region. Then we learned that within a few years the government will install a hydroelectric plant there. The Vale of Kashmir, so long a beautifully unscarred area, has lost its innocence. So also have we. "We are not nearly on the close speaking terms with Nature that we used to be." These are the words of John Hay, a Cape Cod naturalist. He continues: "The natural environment lacks the security of our once familiar speech, and we have also become less amazed in the process of this loss. The earth no longer comes before us in a new aspect with every hidden flower and every earth-regenerating clap of thunder. We have left a great deal of awe behind us." Inevitably there is a touch of nostalgia whenever we talk about the environment. Our monumental carelessness in handling our resources has, . nevertheless, eliminated any privilege to remain innocent about the consequences. In a sense, this situation is surprising, for we have developed a sophisticated way of talking about the environment. We refer to the eco-system; we talk of servo-mechanisms - that is, man ~ each · with an astonishing 62,000 miles of capilaries combined with "segregated stowages of special energy extracts". But we have little knack in relating this vocabulary to what John Hay called the once familiar speech with which we used to talk about nature. I often think of Buckminster Fuller, that restless visionary of the universe. He brought synergy into
common use by reminding us that the behavior of whole systems may be unpredicted by a knowledge of the component parts or subassembly of constituents. His favorite example is chrome-nickel steel. An analysis of the separate components would lead to the conclusion that the maximum tensile strength of the alloy would be 50,000 pounds per square inch, a figure which defies logical anticipation. I use his illustration to remind us that, as we think about the environment, we must regard it as a whole; and we must combine our original surprise before nature with the vast technological capabilities at our command if we are to solve the problem of harboring our limited resources for the maximum benefit of humanity. It is hardly reassuring to learn that the beauty of mountains - the Hiip.alayas .:__ will be reduced to producing more energy in one part of the world and then to return to the most advanced eco-system in the world, the United States, and find that the price of eggs is fast approaching the cost of chickens! Maybe that is why some of us had such high hopes when the younger generation challenged the establishment a few years ago. Painful as that experience was, we sensed that it might represent a fresh concern with how we conduct affairs in this world. We hoped it would become "a revolt against diminished Text of President Lockwood's Convocation Address Presented September 6, 1973, in ·Ferris Athletic Center.
inan". Much as we found Charles Reich's book on The Greening of America naive and lacking in realistic suggestions, we shared his enthusiasm for a renewed life and a rediscovered future. That is why many commentators saw the folk festival at Woodstock in August of 1969 as a revolutionary symbol; it was the beginning of change, even though some of it admittedly seemed questionable. But, as Fred Hechinger, columnist for the New York Times and an honorary alumnus of Trinity, wrote this summer: "The Woodstock Nation has lost its innocence." The aspirations of ths student movement read like ancient history. The response of the new voters in 196 2 was depressing since fewer than half went to the polls. We had deluded ourselves into an incorrect appreciation of the forces involved in the time of
troubles during the late sixties. Many people are relieved that the Youth Culture appears to have subsided; others are worried that a new apathy may characterize the balance of this decade. Somehow we must once again combine a realistic appraisal of our society with the enthusiasm which inspired the student questioning in the late sixties. John Lennon of the Beatles expressed the notion with flatfooted elegance: "The dream is over ... It's over and . we gotta ... get down to so-called reality." (Quoted by Mr. Hechinger) As a people we feel that we must get a better handle on the future. The devices that in the past gave us a grip on history are not working for us today. This fact has affected, or been reflected in, higher education. Higher education has experienced its own form of lost "innocence. It has undergone a crisis of purpose. As I have said on other occasions, we no longer consensus as to what we should have teach or in what direction learning should head. It has been obvious since the late sixties that we lack a clear notion of what we should do. For much of this century we believed that general education provided a common core of knowledge which, once mastered, was the foundation for advanced study in a professional field and was the point of departure for research. Moreover, we assumed that, if enough knowledge could be accumulated, we could then solve society's problems.
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Much of that confidence was shattered in the 1960's. Agreement on a common core of knowledge broke down, ·abandoned by some, shouted down by others. We have continued to prepare people for the professions; we have tried to meet the need for knowledge relevant to today's issues; but the oldtime rhetoric used to justify a liberal education no longer has a resonant ring. We have not yet been successful in finding a new statement of purpose. If there is comfort in this situation, it derives from observing, as I did earlier, that as a society we are troubled by what we find around us: but we have yet to find guidance from reconstructing our experience. Our accounting system has proved inadequate to the task thus far. We must now seek a new consensus about liberal education. That process may
2 Named to Admissions Department Posts Ms. Elenor G. Reid, associate director of admissions since 1970, has been appointed director of financial aid and assistant to the director of admissions. Larry R. Dow, a 1973 graduate of the College, has been appointed assistant director of admissions. Ms. Reid succeeds Miss Robin J. Wassersug who has left Trinity. A native of Westfield, 'N.J., she is a 1967 graduate of Swarthmore. She received a Master's from Harvard in 1969. At Swarthmore, she was co-director of the Upward Bound Program and, at Harvard, was a research assistant for the Graduate School of Education's committee on instruction. She came to Trinity as assistant director of admissions in 1969 after having taught school in the New Haven Public Schools. Mr. Dow received a B.S . in psychology from Trinity in June. He is a native of Hanover, N.H., and, while a student, was a member of Cerberus.
already have begun as a result of others' decisions. For example, the federal and state governments are emphasizing that the purpose of higher education is to provide trained manpower to meet anticipated national needs. Ever since Sputnik the government has been understandably concerned about the ·yoyo phenomenon in which supply of skills so often is down when demand is up . But that is not a direct purpose of liberal learning. I am convinced that a college like Trinity has an integrity which transcends this utilitarian objective, appropriate as it may be for certain kinds of post-secondary education. There is another discernible trend of redefinition in higher education. From reports made at various large universities, one can sense a distinct effort to reassert such institutions as primarily intellectual centers of research. Certainly we need such universities. The smaller college would, however, be merely a pale reflection if it sought to follow a similar route. Another approach advocated by some is to create academic communities specifically addressing themselves to the design of a better society. The free universities and certain experimental · colleges are committed to the belief that higher education must now play a direct role in changing society. I think that, desirable as social change may be, it is essentially a byproduct of education, not its primary purpose. In all three of these approaches there is merit. All colleges hope that their graduates will find satisfying professional opportunities in society, that they will have the ability to continue their scholarly inquiry, and that they will become responsible agents in improving the human condition. But, to meet the needs I have already mentioned, the liberal arts college like Trinity must have a somewhat different purpose. On the one hand, none of goals proposed are suitable for the smaller college interested in liberal learning. On the other hand, I am persuaded that we have overlooked, in this search for a new consensus, the contribution which historically the liberal arts college sought to offer; namely, to he 1p the individual combine lifelong intellectual curiosity with a capacity for humane action. The problem has been, and once again is, to give such a goal substance. For that reason last May, at the celebration of Trinity's 150th anniversary, I spoke about the necessity that we re-establish a core of conviction to distinguish this college. On that occasion I proposed "that Trinity become the pace-setter among the smaller liberal arts colleges in America in providing an education in which the question of values is central." I am convinced that Trinity represents the kind of college in which we can explore effectively the basic human questions: we can grasp the significance of existence, what it means, or can mean, to be a human being . . The large multiversity places great emphasis on arriving at new knowledge; its size and intellectual commitment do not lend themselves to seriously addressing questions like what we should do with our knowledge. The vocational institute must produce technicians, not philosophers. And those who would make of the college an instrument of social change have, in my judgment, placed the cart before the horse. What, then, can Trinity do? Once again, having lost our innocence, we must
Reid
Dow
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Trinity Reporter October 1973 Page 5
Special Feature Trinity Reporter - October 1973
ANNUAL GIVING REPORT JULY
1972 to JUNE 30,
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1
973
To witness or participate in superior performance is an exciting and satisfying experience. All who worked so hard and contributed so generously to the success of this annual giving effort have good reason to take pride in their historic achievement. For the first time in the history of Trinity College, the alumni, parents, business firms and other friends donated over one-half million dollars in a single year for enrichment of the current academic program. I am honored to expreยงs the gratitude of the College. - Theodore D. Lockwood President
SUMMARY OF GIVING I. Gifts and Pledges for Unrestricted General Purposes: Alumni Fund Parents Fund Business and Industry Associates Friends of Trinity Fund Foundations
Memorial Gifts Scholarships Loan Fund Miscellaneous
$ 287,851 109,581 65,416 30,237 10,000
5,061 94,389 25,000 177,503 $546,869
$503,185 III. Bequests and Other Deferred Gifts
II. Gifts and Pledges for Restricted Designated Purposes: Academic Departments and Faculty Buildings and Grounds Improvements Friends of Arts; Theatre Arts-Trinity College Friends of Trinity Rowing - Henley Hockey Association Library
$ 120,658 73,029 11,420 16,674 6,708 16,427
Bequest Receipts (Not included: Market Value of new gifts with retained life income - $149,403
TOTAL GIFTS AND PLEDGES
$878,164
$1,928,218
Trinity Reporter October 1973 Page 6
Annual Giving for Unrestricted General Purposes as of June 30, _1973 Goal Alumni Fund Parents Fund Business and Industry Associates Friends of Trinity Fund Foundations (non-corporate) Total Figures it! (
Gifts and Pledges No. Gifts and Pledges $287,851 ($248,944) $109,581 ($ 88,099) $ 65,416 ($ 60,714)
$ 30,000 ($ 15,000)
$ 30,237 ($ 23,964)
82 (
64)
$ 369 ($ 374)
100% (160%)
$ 10,000 ($ 1 5,_0 00)
$ 10,100 ($ 18,700)
3 (
7)
$3,367 ($2,671)
101% (125%)
$475,000 ($425,000)
$503,185 ($440,421)
3885 (3776)
$ 130 ($ 117)
106% (104%)
ALUMNI FUND Steering Committee Martin D. Wood '42 ......................... National Chairman James R. Glassco, Jr. '50 ................... . .... Vice Chairman Brenton W. Harries '50 ...... ..... .... Distinguished Gifts Chairman Donald J. Viering '42 .................. Leadership Gifts Chairman George H. M. Rountree, Jr. '40 ............. Special Gifts Chairman Arthur H. Tildesley '52 .. ................. Special Gifts Chairman Warren L. Linberg, Jr. '6-3 ........ . ...... . . Special Gifts Ghairman S. Anders Yocom, Jr. '63 ................... Promotion Chairman Samuel W. P. McGill '51 .. . ... . .............Class Agent Chairman Bernard F. Wilbur, Jr. '50 ... .. ... ........ ~ . .. . . Participation and · Telethon Chairman John Whalen, M.S. '66 .. . .. .. ...... ..... Masters Degree Chairman
PARENTS FUND Steering Committee Bruce N. Bensley, Morristown, N.J. . ............ National Chairman Rudolph M. Montgelas, Darien, Conn. . ............. Vice Chairman C. Barse Haff, Jr., Rye, N.Y. . .............. Special Gifts Chairman Frank K. Greisinger, Gates Mills, 0 ....... . .... Past Parent Chairman Ralph J. Taussig, Philadelphia, Pa. . ..... . ... Class of 1973 Chairman Pamela S. Crandall, Westerly, R.I. .......... Class of 1974 Chairman John N. Fisher, Weston, Mass .............. Class of 1975 Chairman Robert A. Lawrence, Westwood, Mass ........ Class of 1976 Chairman
BUSINESS AND INDUSTRY ASSOCIATES John T. Wilcox '39 .......... .. ..................... Chairman
FRIENDS OF TRINITY FUND J. Ronald Regnier '30 ............................... Chairman
Class Agents 1900 1902 1903 1904 1905 1906 1907 1908 1909 1910 1911 1912 1913 1914 1915 1916 1917
Frederick C. Hinkel, Jr. Frederick C. Hinkel, Jr. Frederick C. Hinkel, Jr. Frederick C. Hinkel, Jr. Allen R. Goodale Frederick C. Hinkel, Jr. Frederick C. Hinkel, Jr. Frederick C. Hinkel, Jr. The Rev. Paul H. Barbour George C. Capen Allan K. Smith Clarence I. Penn (deceased) William P. Barber, Jr. Richard F. Walker Bertram B. Bailey The Rev. Frank Lambert FrankL. Johnson
3017 (2981) 665 ( 630) 118 ( 94)
$ 95 ($ 84) 105% ( 99.6%) $ 165 ($ 139) 115% (104%) $ 554 ($ ' 645) ' 100% (101%)
) = Amount Last Year
TRINITY COLLEGE ANNUAL GIVING 1972-1973
/
%of Goal
$275,000 ($250,000) $ 95,000 ($ 85,000) $ 65,000 ($ 60,000)
ANNUAL GNING LEADERS- (left to right) J. Ronald Regnier '30, chairman, Friends of Trinity Fund; John T. Wilcox '39, chairman, Business and Industry Associates; Bruce N. Bensley, chairman, Parents Fund; President Lockwood; Martin D. Wood '42, national chairman, Alumni Fund.
I..:__
Gift Average
1918 1919 1920 1921 1922 1923 1924 1925 1926 1927 1928 1929 1930 1931 1932 1933 1934
Sydney D. Pinney (deceased) Harmon T. Barber Sidney H. Whipple Arthur N. Matthews Frederic T. Tansil Sereno B. Gammell R. George Almond George Malcolm-Smith Norman D. C. Pitcher The Rev. Robert Y. Condit A. Henry Moses Morris J. Cutler The Rev. Canon Francis R. Belden Arthur D. Weinstein ·EverettS. Gledhill Thomas S. Wadlow Andrew Onderdonk
1935 1936 1937 1938 · 1939 1940 1941 1942 1943 1944 1945 1946 194 7 194 8 1949 1950 1951 1952 19 53 1954 ·1955 1956 1957 1958 1959 i960 1961 1962 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 196 8
John L. Shaw Albert M. Dexter, Jr. William G. Hull Gregory T. McKee Ethan F. Bassford Carmine R. Lavieri Louis E. Buck M. Olcott Colton Samuel B. Corliss John T. Fink James J. Rheinberger Siegbert Kaufmann Merritt Johnquest Thomas M. Meredith Joseph A. DeGrandi Wendell S. Stephenson Samuel W. P. McGill, Jr. Jacques V. Hopkins · Elliott H. Valentine James A. Leigh Lee A. Lahey John D. Limpitlaw Frederick M. Tobin Benjamin J. Williams Brian E. Nelson Dr. William G. deColigny Douglas T. Tansill Thomas S. Johnson Thomas E. Calabrese Joseph R. Martire, M.D. Frederick C. Schumacher, Jr. Robert F. Powell, Jr. The Rev. Calhoun W. Wick Sheldon Tilney Assistant Agents: Donald A. Barlow WilliamS . Bartman, Jr. Stuart M. Bluestone David M. Borns Samuel H. Elkin Elric J. Endersby Dennis H. Farber George M. Feldman The Rev. Michael H. Floyd Walter L. Harrison Alexandros G. Kairis Robert L. King George D. McClelland Christopher McCrudden Richard G. Meloy Thomas I. Nary Joseph M. Perta Lt. Stephen Peters Parker H. Prout Joseph L. Reinhardt Barry M. Sabloff Richard S. W. Shepard Lawrence J . Slutsky William E. Snow David C. Soule PaulK. Sutherland Alan B. Thomas 1969 Larry H. Whipple Assistant Agents: Laurence E. Ach Edward A. Adler David L. Beatty Michael J. Beautyman Franklin L. Bridges, III Michael J. Cancelliere Michael D. Cleary Theodore F. Cook, Jr. John P. DeLong Peter H. Ehrenberg Peter T. Elvin Carl H. Fridy Jeffrey W. Gordon Joseph S. Hessenthaler Edward S. Hill Richard H. Lamb
John F. Levy Lloyd A. Lewis, Jr .. Lt. Michael M. Michigami Earl Millard, Jr. Stanton C. Otis, Jr. Michael A. Peck Kenneth R. Phelps Nathaniel S. Prentice Lt. Leighton L. Smith William G. Young 1970 Rev. Father Scott M. Donahue Assistant Agents: Eric E. Aasen David J. Agerton Fredrico 0. Biven, Jr. John L. Bonee, III W. Stephen Bush Peter N. Campbell Michael A. Chamish Philip J. Davis Tom B. Ewing David W. Fentress, Jr. John F. Gallo, Jr. Joel R. Greenspan Stephen R. Gretz Norman J. Hannay JohnS. Harrison Michael F. Jimenez Paul s·. Marshall Ernest J. Mattei William J. Millard, III Walter F. Moody, Jr. Eugene L. Newell James M. O'Brien William E. Pomeroy David W. Steuber Warren V. Tanghe James H. Tonsgard John M. Verre 1971 William N. Booth Assistant Agents: Peter W. Adams Louis.J<.. Birinyi, Jr. William P. Borchert Jeffrey R. Clark Margaret H. Clement Ronald E. Cretaro Thomas R. DiBenedetto Christopher L. Evans Kathleen L. Frederick G. Keith Funston, Jr. John 0. Gaston James H. Graves Robert V. Haas, Jr. Albert Humphrey Peter J. Jenkelunas Laura J . Kaplan L. Peter Lawrence Alan.L. Marchisotto Susan E. Martin George G. Matava Robert H. Osher John P. Reale John D. Rollins David McB. Sample Richard H. Schaefer Robert D. Steigerwalt, Jr. Clinton A. Vince Howard Weinberg Kenneth P. Winkler 1972 Bayard R. Fiechter Associate Agents: Whitney Cook Robert K. Ferris William E. Lingard Gary L. Mescon Robert T. Robinson George M. Traver Robert P. VanDer Stricht
DISTINGUISHED GIFTS SOLICITORS Brenton W. Harries '50, Chairman Ethan F. Bassford '39 Matthew T. Birmingham, Jr. '42 Harrison P. Bridge '61 Jacob B. Brown, Jr. '53 Stephen K. Elliott '32 Charles E. Jacobson, M.D. '31 Charles T. Kingston, Jr. '34 Alfred J. Koeppel '54
Warren L. Linberg, Jr. '63 Peter D. Lowenstein '58 John A. Mason '34 Andrew W. Milligan '45 Andrew Onderdonk '34 Sydney D. Pinney '18 (deceased) David R. Smith '52 Melvin W. Title '18
Trinity Re po rter October 1973 Page 7
1972-1973 Alumni Contributors Unrestricted General and/or Restricted Designated Purposes
1883 Frank D. Woodruff (Endowment Income) The Rev. Arthur H. Wright (In Memoriam) 1887 Howard A. Pinney (Endowment Income) 1896 Charles H. Street (In Memoriam) 1899 Adrian H. Onderdonk (1!1 Memoriam) 1901 Cochrane, James A. Wales (In Memoriam) 1902 Gooden 1905 1905 - Agent -Allen R. Goodale +Goodale, Harriman 1906 1906 - Agent- Frederick C. Hinkel, Jr. Butler, +Cowper, +Hinkel, +Lauderburn, Hill Burgwin (Endowment Income), Thomas B. Myers (Endowment Income) 1907 1907 -Agent- Frederick C. Hinkel, Jr. Raymond Cunningham (In Memoriam), *Harvey L. Thompson (In Memoriam), Bradford G. Weekes (In Memoriam) 1908 1908 - Agent - Frederick C. Hinkel, Jr. Bedell, Zoubek, Karl A. Reiche (In Memoriam) 1909 1909 - Agent- Paul H. Barbour *Anonymous, Barbour, +Buchanan, +Gaynor, Kean, Roberts, *R. J. Wean Foundation, Clinton J. Backus (In Memoriam), +William Dwyer (In Memoriam), Frederick T. Gilbert (In Memoriam), Karl W. Hallden (In Memoriam) 1910 1910 - Agent George C. Capen +Capen, Carpenter, Cook, H.W., Gamerdinger, *Geer, Judge, +McElroy, *Webster, Matthew G. Bach (Endowment Income), Richardson Wright (Endowment Income), Charles H. Bassford (In Memoriam), George S. Francis (ln Memoriam), +William G. Oliver (In Memoriam), Albert M. Smith (ln Memoriam), +B. Floyd Turner (In Memoriam) 1911 1911- Agent- Allan K. Smith Burbank, Christie, Foster, Maxon, Rosebaugh, *Smith, Nathaniel K. Allison (In Memoriam), William W. Buck (ln Memoriam), Eugene H. Dooman (lp. MemQriamj _ 1912 1912 - Agent - Clarence I. Penn (now deceased) +Breed, Foote, Rankin, George T. Bates (ln Memoriam) 1913 1913- Agent- William P. Barber +Barber, Barnett, +Case, Deppen, Fairbanks, McGee, Noble, Robert P. Withington (Endowment Income), Raymond H. Bentley (In Memoriam), Allan B. Cook (In Memoriam), Eliot Ward (ln Memoriam) 1914 1914 -Agent Richard F. Walker Baridon, +Barton, Cross, +Ehlers, Fenoglio, Moore, Noyes, O'Connor, Walker, A.W., Walker, R. F., Arthur F. G. Edgelow (In Memoriam) 1915 1915 -Agent - Bertram B. Bailey +Bailey, +Chapin, +Dorwart, Edsall·, +Kinney, Kyle, Peck, +Pressey, Smith, B.L., Smith R.R., *Young, Zipkin, +Charles A. Bennett (In Memoriam), James Mitchell (In Memoriam), Louis M. Schatz (In Memoriam), +Charles C. Withington (In Memoriam) 1916 1916 - Agent- Frank Lambert Baker, +Berkman, +Easterby, +English, *Ferris, Johnson, +Lambert, Linton, Miller, *O'Connor, Pierce, +Pierpont, Redding, Schmitt, Spencer, +Townsend, +Willis B. Geroge (In Memoriam), Raymond F. Hansen (In Memoriam), RobertS. Morris (In Memoriam), Edward A. Niles (In Memoriam) 1917 1917 - Agent- FrankL. Johnson Barnwell, +Creamer, Dworski, +Gummere, Hasburg, Hungerford, Johnson, +McCoid, +McKay, *Racioppi, Schlier, Schwolsky, Tree, Stanton Pendell (In Memoriam), John H. Pratt (In Memoriam) , Arthur Rabinow (In Memoriam), Richmond Rucker (In Memoriam) 1918 1918 - Agent - Sydney D. Pinney (now Deceased) +Beach, *Beers, Brandt, +Buffington, Caldwell, +Carlson, Cohen, Gaberman, *Griffith, Grime, +Hatheway, Johnson, *Phister, +Pinney, Pollock, Robertson, Shulthiess, +Silverman, Simonson, *Title, Wessels, Walter Bjorn (In
Memoriam), Myron R. Jackson (In Memoriam), Louis Noll (In Memoriam), John Mitchell (In Memoriam), +Samuel Mitchell (In Memoriam), William L. Nelson (In Memoriam), +Paul S. Parsons (In Memoriam), +Sydney D. Pinney (In Memoriam) 1919 1919 - Agent- Harmon T. Barber +Armstrong, · +Barber, Kenney, Leeke, Partridge, Potter, +Pressey, Schortmann, +Silverberg, +Skau, Traub, +Tuska, +Valentine, Williams, Wyse, William J. Foord (In · Memoriam) 1920 1920 - Agent- Sidney H. Whipple Boyce, +Hartzmark, +Kolodny, Levin, Lyon, Miller, Nichols, Perkins, Puffer, +Shulman, +Tilton, +Whipple, William J. Cahill (In Memoriam), Robert A. Radom (In Memoriam) 1921 1921 -Agent Arthur N. Matthews Clark, Hersey, +Matthews, Neiditz, Newsom, Ransom, +Reitemeyer, +Frederic L. Bradley (In Memoriam) 1922 1922- Agent Frederic T. Tansill +Buckley, Case, C.B., Case, J.D., Cram, Doran, Gable, Graham, Guertin, +Johnson, Kendall, Kneeland, Miller, Nordlund, *Parker, +Reynolds, Richman, +Tansill, Tucker, Charles J. Goetz (In Memoriam), Benjamin B. Styring (In Memoriam) 1923 1923- Agent Sereno B. Gammell Calano, Gammell, +Gesner, Hallberg, +Hartt, Merritt, +Miller, +Newton, Norman, Wallen, *Webster 1924 1924 - Agent - R. George Almond Browning, Dorison, +Morton, Mulford, O'Connor, +Rich, Thomas, +Yeomans, Francis Lundborg (In Memoriam) 1925 1925 - Agent - George Malcolm-Smith Ainley, Birch, DuBois, Fleming, +Geetter, Goodridge, Guillard, +Hadlow, Hawley, +Lischner, Malcolm-Smith, +McNally ,. +Montgomery, Noble, +Phelps , *Ricci, Samponaro, +Shannon, Smith, K.D., +Stone, Thorburn, +Valerius, Weiner, Wilcox, +Arvid R. Anderson (In Memoriam), Richard B. Noble (In Memoriam) 1926 1926 - Agent- Norman D.C. Pitcher +Burr, +Coletta, +Cook, Dann, Fertig, Ford, Gamble, Hamilton, Hough, Hull, Jackson, +Kenna, +Lieber, Linnon, Loeffler, McBurney, Messer, Mucklow, Newell, Nicol, Noble, O'Brien, R.J., +Parke, Pitcher, Pryor, Rider, +Riley, Roisman, Thomas, Tule, Wallad, Walsh, Whiston, Robert W. Sheehan (In Memoriam) 1927 1927- Agent - Robert Y. Condit Bash our, +Bell, Brown, *Cahill, Conran, +Forrester, Hartt, Manierre, McElrath, Meade, Segur, Wilbur, Joseph J. Lutin (In Memoriam) 1928 1928- Agent A. Henry Moses Berger, *Burton, Condon, Even, +FitzGerald, Gibson, +Gordon, Gotkis, Green, *Jackson, Judge, Lacy, Large, Libbin, +Meier, *Moses, Nugent, Platt, +Rosenfeld, George Gregorieff (In Memoriam), Harry Tulin (In Memoriam) 1929 1929- Agent -Morris J. Cutler Broughel, +Cole, Cutler, Ellis, +Hey, Kneeland, Koenig, Loomis, May, Read, Rowland, Spekter, Turney, +Uhlig, Wardlaw, Zinner, Leon Toomajian (In Memoriam), John F. Walker (ln Memoriam), Jacob M. Zinner (In Memoriam) 1930 1930 -Agent - Francis R. Belden Belden, +Bobrow, *Brainerd, +Gauthier, Johnson, +Keeney, +Linn, Nye, *Regnier, Rosenbaum, Slossberg, Squillacote, +Tonken, Philip M. Cornwell (In Memoriam), James A. Gillies (In Memoriam) 1931 1931 -Agent- Arthur D. Weinstein Blakeslee, Beck, Blauvelt, Childs, Dann, +Doolittle, H.D ., +Dunbar, Harrison, *Jacobson, Keating, Mackie, Mannweiler, Meeker, Roots, Tobin, +Twaddle, Waterman, Weinstein, Wilkinson, Wyckoff, Robert 0. Muller (In Memoriam) 1932 1932- Agent - EverettS. Gledhill +Abbott, +Adams, Bu"rgess, *Campbell, Carlton Christy, +Elliott, Fontana, *Fungston, Garriso~, +Geiger, Glassman, Gledhill, Graing~r, Greene, +Kibitz, Meier, Meloy, Muzto, Ouellette, +Phippen, Prior, Reynolds, Scott,
*Founders Society for gifts of $1,000 or more. +Anniversary Club for gifts of $150-$999.
Sidor, Slater, Smart, Smith, J., Sykes, White Zazzaro 1933 1933 - Agent- Thomas S. Wadlow Bernstein, Cherpak, +Coyle, W.E., +Egan, Eichacker, Frothingham, Hemenway, Jones, T.C., Lacoske, Melrose, Norvell, Ogg, Pratt, + Pr u tting, Richardson, Sharkey, +Sheafe, Sisbower, Steeves, Thayer, Wadlow, L.A., Wadlow, T.S., Zujko, John F. Butler (In Memoriam), +Edward L. Sivaslian (In Memoriam) 1934 1934- Agent - Andrew Onderdonk Albani, Ananikian, Arnold, Baker, Basch, Bashour, +Bayley, Benjamin, Bierkan, Bose, Brewer, Civittolo , Coit Cowles, Craig, +Day, Dixon, Donley, Ely, Ewing, Ferris, Fidao, Gallaway, Gane, +Gay, Gladwin, Goddard, +Haring, +Holland, Jackson, Kelly, +Kingston, *Mason, +Mayo, McCornick, McClure, Midura, Mullarkey, Onderdonk, A.H., *Onderdonk, ·Andrew, Remkiewicz, Reuber, Rosenfield, Schack, Schmolze, Schultze, +Shaw, Shenker, *Smith, S.E., +Snowdon, Souney, Sutherland, Tucker, +Uhlig, Ward, Zlochiver, Francis H. Ballou (In Memoriam), Hyman H. Bronstein (ln Memoriam), Orrin S. Burnside (In Memoriam) , Nathaniel T. Clark (In Memoriam), Samuel C. Coale, IV (In Memoriam), Frank G. Cook (In Memoriam), George DeBonis (In Memoriam), Joseph D. Flynn, Jr. (In Memoriam), Robert E. Fo wler (In Memoriam), Charles A. Fritzson (In Memoriam), Albert W. Hanninen (In Memoriam), Ernest H. Higgins (In Memoriam), John P. Hodgson (In Memoriam), Rex J. Howard (In Memoriam), Lionel L. Long (In Memoriam), Raymond A. MacElroy (In Memoriam), Patrick L. McMahon, Jr., (ln Memoriam), John C. Melville (In Memoriam), Joseph G. Merriam (In Memoriam), James V. Shea (In Memoriam), Charles B. Smiley (In Memoriam), Daniel W. Thomson (In Memoriam), James B. Webber, Jr. (In Memoriam) 1935 1935 - Agent - John L. Shaw Amport, Baskerville, Bennett, Boeger, Brown, +Bullock, Cacase, Cosgrove, Curtis, +D'Angelo, Darrell, Duennebier, Eigenbauer, Fineberg, Fleisch, Gordon, Hagarty, +Hanaghan, Hart, Hazenbush, Irvine, *Johnson, O.F., Junker, +Kellam, Maher, Marquet, +McCook, McKenna, +Mowbray, Ohanesian, Olson, Parsons, Rodney, Shaw, J.L., Slater, Trantolo, +Ward, Wilding, Barclay Shaw (In Memoriam) 1936 1936 - Agent - Albert M. Dexter Benson, Brezina, Buckley, Christensen, *Clark, +Crawford, Dexter, Geare, +Hall, A.E., +Hanna, Henderson H~hling, -J:~llins, Hurewitz, +Jennings, Leavitt, McKee, Miller, Mirsky, +More, Nielsen, O'Brien, Ogilvy, +Piancente, Reynolds, Rober ts, Rogers, J.A., +Rogers, L.S., Scott, Scull, Stein 1937 1937 -Agent- William G. Hull +Alpert, Bainbridge, Baldwin, Barrows, Bauer, Bellis, +Brooke, +Budd, Burdett, Carter, +Castagno, Cramer, +D'Angelo, Dexter, Doty, Downes, M.R., Dunn, +Egan, +Fanning, Fien, Gagnon, Gillespie, +Haight, Hamilton, Haskell, Henderson, Hull, Kelly, Kobrosky , +Lepak, +Lindell, Lusk, McEldowney, McVane, Musgrave, +Nelson, Onderdonk, Patton, Payne Paynter, Randall, Sanders, Scenti, Scharf, Urban, +Wilson, Delmont .Baker (ln Memoriam) 1938 1938 - Agent- Gregory T. McKee Anderson, +Astman, +Barbour, Barlow, Blake, Benjamin, Clapp, Corso, Culleney, DeMonte, DiCorleto, +Drury, *Fuller, Gilbert, Glassman, Griswold, Hagarty, Hodgdon, Hoegberg, Kennard, +Kenney, Lindsay, Lundin, McKee, * 0 'Malley, +Peterson, +Pfanstiel, Sherman, +Spring, Tulin, Vinick, Walker, B., +Walker, L .M., Zaretsky, William F. Boles (In Memoriam) 1939 1939- Agent- Ethan F. Bassford Anderson, +Barrett, Bassford, Buths, +Clow, +Colton, Decker, Davidson, +Driggs, Flynn, Follansbee, Glaubman, Gorman, +Gualtieri,
Telephone Solicitors Bernard F. Wilbur, Jr. 'SO, Chairman Richard G. Abbott '56 Mark G. Aron '65 Walter T. Armstrong, Jr. '50 David B. Beers '57 Royden C. Berger '69 William N. Booth '71 Laurence D. Bory '6S Thomas E. Calabrese '63 David E. Callaghan '41 Joseph E. Colen, Jr. '61 Ernest S. Corso '38 James Curtin '51 Rodney D. Day, III '62 Joseph A. DeGrandi '49 Donald J. Fish '61 Kenneth E. Fish '64 Eric A. Fowler '54 James R. Glassco, Jr. 'SO Everett S. Gledhill '3 2 John Gunning '49 Gerald J. Hansen, Jr. , '51 JohnS. Harrison '70 John D. Hevner '67 Peter D. Hoffman '68 Richard K. Hooper '53 William G. Hull '37 Thomas S. Johnson '62 Victor F. Keen '63 Peter H. Kreisel '61 Charles Kurz, II '67 Lee A. Lahey '55 John F. Levy '69 Harwood Loomis '29 George P. Lynch, Jr. '61 Alfred M. C. MacColl '54 Stanley J. Marcuss, Jr. '63 Hunter M. Marvel '63 Richard M. McCrensky '70 Samuel W. P. McGill, Jr. '51 Renwick S. Mciver, Jr. '65 Thomas Meredith '48 William T. Middlebrook '42 Robert N. Miller '55 Edward J. Mosher '64 Francis W. Mulcahy '41 Robert P. Nichols '42 John J. O'Brien '36 Andrew Onderdonk '34 Barry R. Plotts '56 Michael J. Quigley '61 Lloyd L. Reynolds '63 Scott W. Reynolds '63 John M. Sartorius, Jr. '66 Matthew M. Sheridan MA '69 Benjamin Silverberg '19 Jon D. Simonian '65 Douglas J. Snyder '72 Charles I. Tenny '49 W. James Tozer, Jr. '63 H. Alan Tubman '59 JosephS. VanWhy '50 Donald J. Viering '42 Charles Waddell, Jr. '66 James P. Whitters, III '62 John T. Wilcox '39 Martin D. Wood '42 *Hall, H.J., Hamilton, +Harris, R. J., Hart, Heath, Hope, Jaspersohn, Kemler, Leggett, +Madden, McCarthy, *Morgan, W.S., Pickles, +Schmuck, +Skelley, Smith, E.L., +Starkey, +Twiss, Tulin, Weeks, +Wilcox 1940 1940- Agent -Carmine R. Lavieri +Andrian, Bengston, Bilka, *Bland, +Burnham, Chandler, Engel, Essex, Ferguson, Gallagher, Hamilton, Haslach, Hazen, Hopkins, Howe, Kerr, +Lavieri, McLaughlin, Morris, Pankratz, Riley, +Rinehart, Ritter, Rockwell, Rountree, Shapiro, +Speed, Stubbs, Tibbals, VanDuzer, Vogel, Walker, Wolf 1941 1941 - Agent - Louis E. Buck Adams, K ., Barnes, Blaisdell, +Buck, Butterworth, Callaghan, +Carpenter, Chauser, Clapis, +Conway, Day, +DeBona, +Ewing, +Flanagan, Foley, *Fuller, +Goodman, Goodrich, Harris, J.W., +Holcombe, Howard, Hurwitz, +Insley, +Kaplan, +Kelly, F.A., Maddigan, Mancall, Marshall, +Molumphey,
THE ALUMNI FUND GROWTH RECORD FISCAL YEAR 1960-61 1961 -62 1962-63 1963-64 1964-68 1968-69 1969-70 1970-71 1971-72 1972-73
AMOUNT CONTRIBRAISED UTORS
AVERAGE GIFT
$111,203 2,820 $39.43 125;635 3,126 40.19 3,191 42.39 135,255 44.90 152,436 3,395 FORD CHALLENGE CAMPAIGN 173,665 2,448 70.94 187,118 2,251 83.12 242,838 2,489 98.00 85.00 2,925 248,996 3,017 95.00 287,851
CHAIRMAN Robert A. Gilbert '38 John L. Bonee '43 John L. Bonee '43 Harry K. Knapp '50 John T. Wilcox '39 John T. Wilcox '39 · Andrew Onderdonk '34 Andrew Onderdonk '34 Martin D. Wood '42
Trinity l'leporter October 1.973 Page 8
Mulcahy, Neill, +Oliver, +Pedicord, Prendergast, +Randall, +Roberts, *Russo, Ryder, Sehl, +Smith, E.A., Smith, E.S., Thomsen, Welcher, Williamson, Alfred E. Gavert (In Memoriam) 1942 1942- Agent - M. Olcott Colton +Anderson, Ayer, Barber, Bestor, +Birmingham, Bond, Bonsignore, Bowman, +Colton, Dickson, Down, Earle, +Fasi, Fisher, Getz, +Hotchkiss, Hunnewell, Jacobsen, Jerome, Johnson, C.F., Johnson, H.G., +Kloss, Latimer, Madison, Manning, McKinney, Morris, +Nichols, +North, +Paddon, Pillsbury, +Rhines, +Rosenthal, Siems, +Smellie, Stoughton, P. V .C., Taber, Tamoney, Tlittle, +Viering, Vincent, +Weeks, +Wilson, +Wood, M.D., George C. Meng (in Memoriam) 1943 1943 - Agent - Samuel B. Corliss Bailly, +Bonnee, +Brinckerhoff, +Bromberg, Brown, Burk, Casolino, +Corliss, Cunningham, Denny, +Dickinson, +Fay, Fox, +Gager, Hall, R . B., +Healey, Heubner, Jones, C.L., Kavanaugh, Knowles, McAndrews, Miller, Morrison, Nemetz, Peck, Peterson, Pomerantz, Puffer, Rackemann, Resony, J.A., Richardson, +Rossi, Scott, Sharp, Steitz, +Tamoney, +Tracy, Tullar, Tyler, Upham, Woodworth
1944 1944 -Agent- John T. Fink *Balfe, +Bellizzi, Boardman, Borden, Burros, Chambers, Conant, Conklin, Danyliw, +Dexter, +Donohue, Fay, Fink, Fried, Gossling, - Hastings, Ohrenschall, +Peelle, Peterson, S., Pierce, Richardson, R.E., Roberts, L.H., Rutt, +Smith, T.J\., Starkey, Stein, *Toland, Traub, *Vanderbilt, Walker, Williams, +Zak, 1945 1945 -Agent- James J. Rheinberger +Brennan, Blanchfield, Dix, +Frommelt, Gerent, Goodspeed, Kiendl, Marzialo, Meyer, +Milligan, Moyer, Oberle, Pinsky, Rheinberger, Schroeder, Smith, M.C. 1946 1946- Age,nt - Siegbert Kaufmann Ashe!, Goldfarb, Harris, Hart, Hazen, Herr, Higgins, Kaufmann, Kelly, Knight, Lasch ever, Loomis, D., Marra, +Moskow, Rittner, Roberts, Ruhf, Shafer, Tietze, Vincent, Walker, Wilson, Francis D. Beckwith (In Memoriam) 1!)47 1947- Agent- Merritt Johnquest +Ahlberg, Bengston, Bonifazi, Daly, Dubinsky, Emch, Flynn, Gallone, Gelderman, Godfrey, Goodman, Halsey, +Hayes, Hotez, Hunt, Jennings, +Johnquest, Kent, Kingston, +Kinsella, +Koeppel, Lorenzo, Marr, O'Connor, +O.Neil, Piligian, Poliner, Pope, Reiche, Richardson, R.B., Rosen, Rosenberg, Schroeder, Stirlacci, +Tapogna, Verdi, +Wichlmden, Welling, Woodward
1!141! 1948 - Agent - Thomas M. Meredith Arnold, Bradley, Brand, Bryngi, +Burns, Carter, Charles, Claughsey, Cogswell, Davidson, Dolan, Donnelly, +Dunn, Durick, +Faber, Forster, Frankel., +Gershman, Gleason, Goldstein, *Gottesman, Gracey, +Greenberg, L.E., Huntington, Jacobs, +Krinsky, Kuehn, Lewis-Jones, Lichtenberger, *Lockwood, Loegering, +Lokot, Martin, R.S., +Meredith, Mertz, Minturn, Mitchell, M.C., Mitchell, S.• Molinari, Morrell, Murray, E.A., Nicholson, +Proctor, Reynolds, E., Reynolds, W.H., +Richman, +Rivkin, +Roedel, +Savoy, Schachter, +Scharff, +Schwartz, Shippy, Singer, ·Snyder, Steinfield, Threshie, Tyler, Walmsley, +Werner, +Wilson, Winquist 1!14!1 · 1949- Agent- Joseph A. DeGrandi Berger, Bingham, Bowden, Boyle, Bracken, Chrekjian, Church, Cohen, +Cotter, Coughlin, +Crafts, Davis, +DeGrandi, Duerr, Farrell, Goldberg, *Gunning , Harding, Howard, Jurczyk, King, Loveland, Missel, +Norman, Phelan, Prigge, Redden, Richardson, Root, Rorick, Sherman, Simons, Smith, S.E., Straley, Surgenor, +Tenney, +Trant, Waugh, Wilson, D.l., Wolfe, Wood, *E. Carl Hueller, Jr. (In Memoriam) HI50 1950 - Agent - Wendell S. Stephenson Aldeborgh, +Armstrong, W.T., +Barrows, Beirne, Bellis, + B_illyou, Blake, +Blum, +Brainerd, F.J., Brown, Brundage, Carey, Chidsey) +Cohan, Corcoran, +Cromwell, Custer, DeLuca\, Detwiler, +DiLprenzo, Dorison, Dougherty, +Dowling, Durbas, Gavens, Geiger, +Glassco,• Goodyear, Grill, Hadlow, Halasz, +Hall, \ +Harries, Haselton, +Hickok, Higginbotham, Hutchinson, Katzman, Kelley, +Knapp, Knight, +Long, MacKesson, Mazotas, Meskill, Mullane, Paddock, +Page, Palau, Palmer, Patterson, Rekas, +Robinson, Romaine, Rosenlof, Ross, Sanseverino, Schear, Segall, Sherman, Snow, Stein, +Stephenson, Stewart, G .L., Sutton, Tansill, Taslitt, Tiedemann, Torrey, B.I;I., Turkington, Urban, VanWhy, Wadsworth,~ainman, Warner, Watson, Wellins, Wetter, W 'te, P.R., Wigglesworth, Wilbur, +Wildrick, Williams, E.G., Williams, H.K., Wolford, +Zazzaro, Zenowitz
I
ws1
1951 - Age~t- Samuel W.P. McGill Allen, Andenson, * Andre de Ia Porte, Barber,
·I I
I
I
Beh!ey, Berg, Blair, Bomberger, +Boyko, Brennan, Browne, Buckley, Burbank Byers, Camilleri, Collier, Condon, Coote, Curtin, Cutting, Dickey, +Dorman, +Dudley, Edwards, Elliott, +Ferguson, Fiske, W.W., Freeman, Fritz, Garrison, Griffin, Groves, Hansen, Harding, Heppenstall, Hinkel, Hurwitz, Jachens, J acks on, F .W., Kirschner, Kulp, Landers, Lawrence, Leeds, Loveland, +Martel, Maurer, J.J., +McGiH, McKean, Mccaskey, +Minturn, Muir, Nash, Norden, +Oberg, +O'Connor, Peterson, Petrinovic, +Quortrup, +Raden, Redden, +Reynolds, Ricci, Roche, Rome, +Rosenberg, Shelly, Simoni, +Sinaguglia, Smith, L.S., Stevens, Stanger, VanHorne, Vaun, VonSchrader, +Weikel, Whelan, Wilson, J.S.
1952 . 1952 -Agent - Jacques V. Hopkins Aiken, Aldrich, Angelastro, Beers, Bleecker, Bolinger, +Buffum, C.C., +Buffum, R.C., +Christakos, Clipp, Cohen, CO\ydery, DePatie, +Diana, Elder, Forte, +Foster, Fremont-Smith, +Frost, Fuller, Geary, +Gilliland, Goralski, Gurwitt~ +Hale, T, R., Hatfield, +Head, Hoisington, +Hopkins, J.V., How, Hubbard, J.S., +Hunter, R.E.T., Hunter, R.N., Keyes, Kirschbaum, Knapp, Krogman, Kunkel, Larson, Laub, Lehrfeld, Malkin, +McElwee, Medford, +Miller, J.H., Milliot, Nesteruk, Nicholson, Norman, Oliver, Park, Parsons, J.B., Petro, Phelps, +Quinlivan, Ratcliffe, Rathbone, Raybold, Rigopulos, +Russell, Sawyer, Shapiro, Simmons, +Smith, D.R., +Smith, G.E., Spears, Steck, Taylor, Thomas, E.B., Thomas, K., Tomkiel, +Trowbridge, Tryon, Ulrich, +Washington, +Weina, Wiberg, Wilmot, Woodruff, Wynne, Earle Sproul (In Memoriam) 1953 1953- Agent- Elliott H. Valentine Astlett, Barhydt, Barnett, T.A., Barrows, Bendig, Berdick, Bernhard, Berseth, Binda, Bogoslofski, Brennan, Brewer, +Brown, Campbell, J.P., Cherouny, Clem, Clifford, Coulter, Crawford, Davis, Dean, +Dwight, E. F., Faulkner, Fitz-Randolph, Hamblett, +Heller, Holmquist, +Hooper, Howard, Kunz, +Larson, Lauffer, Lecrenier, Longobucco, +Lorenson, Lyford, MacArthur, Marden, Marriner, McAlpine, McCandless, Merriman, Michie, Mortell, Moses, Moskow, Nelson, Osborne, Paquette, Parrott, Pollock, Rhodes, Roback, Romaine, Rowland, Sencabaugh, Simmons, Sloane, Smith, F.C., Smith, R.R., Soares, Stewart, Taylor, D.E., Tildesley, Tinsz, Valentine, +Whitmarsh, Winslow, Wollenberger, Wrinn 1954 1954 -Agent -James A. Leigh Adams, R.J., Aiken, Ainsworth, R., +Alexander, Anderson, J.R., Anderson, R.C., Austin, Backenstoe, Bloodgood, Bowen, C.C., Bowen, G. H., +Braskamp, Brown, Butts, +Campbell, Carlough, Carter, Chatfield, Christakos, Clark, Cosby, +Craig, Crosier, D'Abate, Davis, J.J., Dillon, J.C.E., Dillon, R.J., Dobrovir, Duff, Dyar, Eggert, Engelhardt, Esler, Esquirol, Farrar, Fawley, Floyd, Fran~here, +Fowler, +Gillooly, Gilson, Godfrey, Green, Griffith, Hennigar, Hibbs, Higinbotham; Hill, G.T., Hines, Hirsch, Hodges, Homa, Hooker, Howard, J elliffe, Jepson, Johnston, D.F., Johnston, R.J., 'Kaelber, Kalinowski, Kennedy, D.K., Kimmick, Kipp, Knight, Knutson, +Koeppel, Laub, Lawler, Leigh, Libby, · *MacColl, +MacKenzie, Mackimmie, MacLea, +Mazzarella, Mayer, Mazurek, McCauley, McMahon, Mease, +Morphy, Muirhead, Murray, Mylchreest, Newman, Niemann, O'Connor,. Oxholm, Pike, Rathbun, Robinson, Russo, Sauvage, . Schenker; Schneeberg, +Schrieber, Scott, Secor, Silverberg, +Sivaslian, +Smith, . A.L., Smith, E.H., Storms, +Taft, +Tansi, Thatcher, Thomas, G.M., Tompkins, VanBrott; +Vanderbeek, VanLanen, VonThaden, Waldman, Weinberg, West, Wilson, Windesheim, , Winrter, Wolff, Woodward, Zemq,ko 1!155 1955 -Agent- Lee A. Lahey *Anonymous, Allocco, Bartlett, H.W., Bittner, Bolger, Brett, Brody, Brotman, Buchanan, Burbank, Burdon, Carlson, L.D., Cerveny, +Champenois, +Close, Craig, Diamond, DiBella, Dimling, Donahue, Eberle, Farnham, Ferraro, +Filewicz, Fisher, A., Ford, Gardiner, Gardner, +Geet ter, Gelman, Goldberg, Golledge, +Greenleaf, Haeberle, Hansel, Hoag, Hollister, Hopper, Isensee, Islam off, Johnson, Karsky, +Kent, Kopp, Kozlin, Kramer, +Lahey, Laird, Lapham, LaPointe, LaPorte, Leach, Logan, +Lunt, Magelaner, Maitland, McCully, McGowan, McKim, +Mehldau, Merriman, Michelson, Miller, D.T., Miller, Robert N., Miller, S., Morgan, Moss, Mountford, +Nash, Neal, Nelson, Newlin, Nixon, O'Har·a, +Ouster, Palshaw, Pedevill, Peterson, +Price, Ralph, *Reed, +Reese, Reineman, Riccardo, Riley, Roberts, Rose, S.H., Rowe, +Royston, Rudner, Rudy, Scherer, Shay, Simons, Sind, Solomita, +Squires, *Stebbins, +Stephens, Thomas, J.M., Tompkins, Valentine, Wainman, Welsh, Werner, +Wood, Wright, Zampiello l!J56 1956 -Agent- John D. Limpitlaw +Abbott, Ahlberg, Anderson, A.P., Anderson, B.F ., Bates, Beren, Bergerman, Calbi, Callen, Casale, Coursen, Daley, Diefendorf, Dodds, Duggan, +Eastburn, Fleming, +Foley,
1961
CLASS OF 1955 WINS '34 TROPHY Established in 1949 by the Class of 1934, the Trophy is presented to the class receiving the highest point score in the Alumni Fund. Scoring is based on a point system covering percentage of givers, average amount of gift, total number of contributors and improvement. The ten leading classes for the Trophy were: CLASS AGENT POINTS Lee A. Lahey 1955 ,85 1934 Andrew Onderdonk 77 1918 Sydney D. Pinney (deceased) 73 1954 James A. Leigh 70 1963 Thomas E. Calabrese 67 1964 Joseph R. Martire, M.D. 61 1960 Dr. William G. deColigny 60 1948 Thomas M. Meredith 59 1950 58 Wendell S. Stephenson 1951 Samuel W. P. McGill, Jr. 58 Hammaker, +Ruther, Jewett, Johnston, Kelley, Klee, +Kotch, Kramer, Lawrence, T.W., Limpitlaw, Luquer, Martin, +McCanless, Meister, Montgomery, Muirhead, Murphy, Nissi, O'Brien, Osborn, Pauley, Perens, Piper, Plotts, Renkert, Ritter, J.H.H., Schader, Schuh, See, Sivitz, Smith; W.R., +Smith, W. Rodney, Stehle, Stearns, Stein!lletz, Stiles, Streeto, Stuart; Swanson, +Taylor, Townley, Townsend, Tulk, Warren, Weisburger, Willis, Wood, Woodward, +Zachs
1957 Class of 1957 - Agent - Frederick M. Tobin +Becherer, Beers, Behr, Bennett, Bradley, J.R., Brown, L., Cammarano, Case, Channell, Couch, +Curran, Daniels, J.M., Douglas, +Drabowsky, Elder, Elliott, Finkbeiner, Fleishman, Fox, Frazier, Gould, Greer, Hall, J., Hall, R.H., +Harlow, Jones, Just, +Kayser, Kratz, Kuiper, Kylander, Letcher, MacDonald, Macisaac, MacLeod, Mann, +Marion, McCracken, Miner, Morrison, Myedon, Niness, Pierce, Pillsbury, Pisetsky, +Raynard, Reichard, Richard, Rohlfing, Shannon, Sill, Slater, Solano, Spear, +Stokes, Szamier, Tews, Tobin, Varat, Vincent, Webster, Williams, Wilson, J.D., Winslow 1958 1958- Agent- Benjamin J. Williams +Back, Bailey, Barrett, Barth, Baxter, Bogert, Boynton, Clarke, +Corbett, Crandall, Crowe, +Crystal, Drago, Edgerton, +Eisas, Enepekides, Farr, Ferrucci, Flannery, Gibson, Gleason, H'arrison, Hasson, Headle, Jackson, James, Joslin, Kay, Kenny, +Krupp, Litton, Lorson, +Lowenstein, Luke, Mcllwaine, Merrill, Mil~er, +Muench, Nevins, Newton, Norris, Olsson, Parker, Perkins, +Reed, Renard, Renelt, Repole, Robertson, Roschen, Rose, Schacht, M.A., Scharf, Schaupp, Shenkan, Shuster, Simmons, Smith, D.A., Smith, F.S., Smith, S.W., Spencer, Studley, Terry, Thorpe; Traut, Trott, Uphoff, +Werner, Williams, B.J., Wojcechowsky, Wolk, Zoob
1959 1959 -Agent -Brian E. Nelson Abeles, Adams, Baskin, Bass, Belmont, Brown, C.E., Canivan, Clarke, Coykendall, Dorwart, Elwell, Englehart, Fairbanks, +Fineshriber, Fischbein, Frost, Grace, Graham, G.R., Graham, W.J.; Hardman, Harnish, Harris, Harro.d , Hartz, Henriques, Hoag, Horne, Houston, Hunter, Jaffe, R.R., Janes, Johnson, Joy, Judge, Kenney, Klinck, Lagarde, LaRochelle, Lessall, Lieber, +Lindemann, ·Lukens, Martel, Mayo, Mcilvaine, Miller, A.B., Moorin, +Morgan, Murray, J.H., Nelson, Nolan, +Olton, Onderdonk, +Paslaski, Pfeffer, Pizzella, Polk, +Price, Reopel, Rewa, Reynolds, Rovno, Salver, Scheibe, Schreiner, +Seastrom, Sgro, Shea, Smith, A.R., Smith, O.T., Smith, R.A., Spielman, Spivak, Stebbins, +Taylor, Tubman, Ward, W.M., Wassong, +Weeks, Weinstein, Widing, Yahn, Young, Zinner
1961 - Agent - Douglas T. Tansill Anderson, Anello, Angell, Blanken, Bridge, Brosgol, Brown, Cantor, Carter, Colen, *Colket, Cramer, Crolick, Cullen, Dinsmore, Dove, Draper, Ewart, +Fitzpatrick, Fitzsimmons, Forrest, Forrester, Gage, Gerber, Gregg, Guertin, Gulotta, Gummere, Hamilton, *Henry, Hoffman, Honish, Hudson, Hughes, E.C., Illick, Johnson, Kallas, Karvazy, Kauff, Kilborn, Knight, Kopper, Koretz, Kreisel, Lazay, Lea therbee, LeStage, Lowe, Lynch, +MacMillan, McCammon, McFarland, +McRae, Mixter, Myerson, D.A., Myerson, P., Newberg, 0 'Brien, Pare, Peatman, Perlman, Quigley, Rawson, +Reese, Roten, Sanders, Schnadig, Schoenfield, Schumacher, Scully, Seibert, Stambaugh, Steiner, Sullivan, Swift, +Tansill, Tattersfield, Tilley, Turner, Tuttle Wachtel, Waggoner, Wagner, Waxler, Wiener, Wilson, T.B., Wood, Zimmerman, Zelley, +Zousmer
1962 1962- Agent - Thomas S. Johnson Alberts, Anderson, D.K., Bailey, Baker, Bartol, Bashwiner, Berkeley, .Bishop, C.H., Borawski, Bordogna, Bowler, Boyd, Brown, Bundy, Chase, Classen, Cunneen, Cutler, Daniels, Day, L.V., Day, R.D., D'Oench, Dole, Duncan, Elwell, Farnum, Finch, Gall, Goodman, Hageman, Harris, Harting, Hoffman, Hopkins, Johns, +Johnso·n, T.S., Kapouch, Kelly, Ketchum, King, Kisor, +Kraft, Kuehnle, Lackey, Leahy, Leddy, Lee, Levy, Lipkind, Lloyd, M., Lloyd, T., Lockton, Lynde, Mason, McAlister, McCurrach, McNally McNamara, McNulty, Meehan, Mehringer, Meyer, Miller, Mills, Morgan, Nardiello, Nelson, Nielsen, Niven, Pine, +Polk, Pryor, Raymond, +Richardson, Robert, Robinson, Rudnick, +Sheley, Southwick, Spink, Stetler, Strawbridge, Sullivan, Sweeney, Thayer, Turner, W.H., Wagner, Warren, +Whitters, Wilson, D.E., Wilson, R.S., Wood, Zakarian
1963 1963 -Agent- Thomas E. Calabrese Aldrich, Alvord, Bailey, Berger, Blair, Bond, +Booth, Brewster, Brinckerhoff, By!in, Calabrese, Chang, Childs, Coes, Corbin, Coxhead, Creighton, Daly, Densen, +DePrez, Dickson, Ebersold, Farrington, Faxon, Feshler, +Field, Files, +Fox, Foster, Fraser, Gale, Gardner, Gold, Gooden, Goodridge, Haarstick, Haddad, Halloran, Harris, Haskell, Hill, E.B., Hill, M.E., Hoerr, +Holbrook, Howland, Jones, S.P., Keen, Kent, ,Kirk, Knisely, Knox, R.C., Kraut, Kriteman, LaMotte, Landerman, Lenicheck, +Linberg, Lippitt, Lundborg, Marcuss, Masius, Mattison, McCord, McCutcheon, McElwain, McGawn, McGill, Miel!l, Millar, +Mi~ler, ~.; R.,:1 M~nifje, Molinsfy, Moore, D.T., Moyer, Neufander; Niles, Nygard, Odium, Osta_pko, O'Sullivan," Parlee, Perreault, Potter, Raff, +Reese, +Reynolds, L.L., +.Reynolds, S.W., Rianhard, Richardson, J. MeL., Ricketts, Rqbel, +Scott, Scull, Shenk, Sherin, Simzik, Sirianni, Smith, R.B., Southworth, Stier, +Tozer, Trickett, Tyndiill, Viering, +Vickery, Wardlaw, Washburne, Watson, Wicks, Winer, Winfield, +Winner, Yocom
CLASS OF 1964 WINS '16 TROPHY Established in 1959 by the Class of 1916, the Trophy is awarded to the class, out ten years or less, which achieves the ~st record in the Alumni Fund. The scoring is based on percentage of givers, average and total gift, and total number of contributors. CLASS 1964 1963 1967 1966 1969
POINTS AGENT Joseph R. Martire, M.D. 38 34 Thomas E. Calabrese Rev. Calhoun W. Wick 32 Robert F. Powell, Jr. 29 Larry H. Whipple 20
1960
1964
1960- Agent- William G. deColigny Anderson, H., Bacharach, Barlow, Bassett, +Beech, Bergman, Bray, Bredine, Bridley, Brink, Broder, Chalker, Chase, Cimbora, Cimilluca, Coogan, Costley, Coxhead, Crane, Curry, Dagata, D'Anzi, Davenport, deColigny, Emley, Enquist, Filurin, FitzSimons, +Fox, Foy, Frank, Gage, Gerundo, Goldhamer, Gordon, Green, A.J ., Greenwald, Haddad, Hall, R.P. , Hammaker, Harland, Jago, Johnson, M.E., Kalcheim, Kotch, *Kroh, LaMothe, Langen, ·*LaValle, LeClerc, +Leof, Levine, +.Lieber, +Lloyd, Lyons, Mason, +McKelvy, Middleton, Moroney, Narins, Noren berg, Osborne, Paterson, Pedemonti, +Peterson, Phillips, Phippen, +Plank, Psarakis, Rockwell, +Russell, R. N., Ryder, Salm, Schulik, Shulthiess, Sienkiewicz, Spahr, Stockton, Stone, Strasser, *Strawbridge, Swigert, Thomas, Tiffany, Tilzer, Tsairis, Turman, +Varbalow, Wachs, Wagner, Wardell, Weinstock, Wilcox, Wyckoff, Zitt, Raymond V. Greenlee (In Memoriam)
1964 -Agent- Joseph R. Martire Adelstein, Ahlgren, Anderson , M.P., *Anonymous, Atherton, Auerbach, +Avery, Blocksidge, Bloomstein, Borden, Brackett, Bragdon, +Brainerd, Bralove, Brandt, Burnham, Chandor, Corman, Craig, Daley, DeVou, Ewing, Feingold, Fenrich, Ferrara, Fiordalis, Fish, Friedman, Gilson, Gordon, Grossman, Hallowell, Harrison, Heid, Heldt, Huntoon, Hutzler, Jacobs, Katz, Kellner, Kinzler, Koretz, Lapenn, Leghorn, Levy, Martire, McCann, McLagan, McNeill, McQuaid, Milbank, Mitchell, Monahan, Moor, Morris, Mosher, Notman, Ogden, Orr, Palmer, Pettus,. Plass, Pratt, Pyle, Randmaa,Ratches, Ravizza, Rowan, Rushmore, Saklad, Schaltegger, Schilpp, +Silansky, Smith, I.R., Stanley, Steel, Stevens, B.L., Stevens, T.C., Sweet, Tetro, *Thomases, Todd, Tousey, Tower, Twerdahl, Twining, Wadlow, Watson, Waxman, Weaver, Westney, Wiltsek, Zinser, John M. Heldt · (In Memoriam), +Albert C. Williams (In Memoriam)
*Founders Society for gifts of $1,000 or more. +Anniversary Club for gifts of $150-$999.
Trinity Reporter October 1973 Page 9
1965
1965 -Agent- Frederick C. Schumacher +Arms, Aron, Auchincloss, Bagan, Bagley, Baker, Barkley, Basch, Berkowitz, Beyer, Bishop, Bory, Boultbee, Chapin, Cook, +Deutsch, Doorley, Dunlop, Ellwood, Galvin, Gam son, Gay, Golann, Gorsky, Gould, Guenther, Hance, Hollenbeck, Hopke, J oralemon, Katz, Keane, Knier, Lemega, Liebowitz, Lorch, Lubitz, Lynch, Mason, Meek, Morgan, Mott, Mozzicato, O'Neil, J.J., Parlin, Perkins, Potterveld, Rogow, Rohman Roosevelt, +Rorer, Roth, +Schumacher, Silverman, Simonian, Smith, A.D., Snedeker, Sotter, Steele, Stroud, Urbanetti, Wallace, Wallis, Wendell, Whalen, Williams, D.O., Winter, +Woodcock, +Yavinsky 1966 1966 -Agent- Robert F. Powell Armentano, Baker, D.O., Barber, +Barrett,
Barringer, Bartlett, Beers, ·Bird, Bougere, Boulanger, Bradford, Burt, Carlson, W.R., +Chaplin, Chappell, Cooper, Cosgrove, +Deland, DePree, Diner, Doerge, Dorrier, Dunham, Dunn, Gall, Garrett, Gilley, Golub, Grimes, Hansen, Harris, J.H., Henriques, Hey!, Hopkins, Hourihan, Junod, Kassow, Kilgore, +Lee, +Lloyd, Lombardo, Loomis, Lucas, Marden, Marshall, Mason, McNally, Mellon, Moonves, Morre, J.J ., Murphy, J.J., Ochs, Ocko, Parks, Pataky, Peake, Perhonis, Pickett, Pogue, Powell, Risse!, +Sargent, Sartorius, Scarlett, Schlatter, Schmidt, Schoen, Schwartzman, Schweitzer, Seddon, Shepard, Shipman, Siegel, Sigman, Sniffen, +Snyder, C.R., Spence, Stone, Stoykovich, Studds, Sulkowski, Tilki, +Tribken, +Waddell, Walmet, Whittemore, Witherwax, Wodatch, Wolbarst 1967
1967 Agent- Calhoun W. Wick Anderson, D.A., Auxter, +Barns, Birnbaum,
1 97 2 -73
ALUMNI SOLICITED
AGENT CLASS Before 1910 1910 Capen, G.C. 1911 Smith, A.K. 1912 1913 Barber, W.P. 1914 Walker, R.F. 1915 Bailey, B.B. 1916 Lambert, F.K. 1917 Johnson, F .L. 1918 1919 Barber, H.T. 1920 Whipple, S.H .
ALUMNI FUND CONTRIBUTORS
%OF PARTICIPATION
26 9 12 8 9 14 20 22 17 21 20 22
16 8 5 3 7 10 12 16 13 19 15 12
. 88% 42% 38% 78% 71% 60% 73% 76% 90% 75% 55%
17 30 22 25 38 47 33 46 40 44
7 17 11 8 24 32 11 18 15 13
41% 57% 50% 32% 63% 68% 33% 39% 37% 30%
Cogoli, Conforti, Coward, Coyle, Dickey, Elkin, Endersby, Fisher, W.B., Floyd, Fox, George, Goldberg, Goverman, Greene, P.A., Harrison, Hesford, Hoffman, Holinger, Hyde, Johnson, B.E., Johnson, P.C., Kosloski, Lauretti, Levitsky, MacDonald, Madorin, McCampbell, McCarthy, McCrudden, Miles, Miller, J.C., Monks,' Monti, Morris, Nareff, Nary, Noonan, Oser, Paul, Pavel, Peters, Pine, Price, Prout, Reynolds, Riker, Shaffer, Shepard, Slutsky, Stuhlman, Thomas, Tilney, Townsend, Van Dam, Washburne, White, Williams, E.H., Woodruff
+Bishop~ Boas, Bose, Bradbury, Brand, Brickley, Brosnahan, Browne, Campbell, Carlson, Carson, Clarke, Cotakis, +Cromwell, Crossland, Cummings, Davison, Derderian, Downes, Doyle, Ebinger, Fitzsimons, Fox, J., Gardner, Gerber, Getty, Gordon, Gulley, Heckscher, Hevner, Honiss, +Hubbard, Hutton, J a co bini, Jacobs, Kataja, +Kemper, Keur, +Kroekel, +Kurz, Loeb, +Levi, Ludwig, Mayer, P .J ., McCulloch, McLean, Moore, Moses, 0 'Connor, Oliver, O'Neal, Orem, Perrin, +Polemis, Prevost, Purdy, Rath, Ray, Rice, Rubin, Safran, Sanders, C., Sanger, Sawyer, Scheinberg, +Scott, Seibert, Shapiro, Smith, J.K., Sommer, Speer, Talbot, Trainer, Tuttle, Ward, Weinberg, Weinstein, West, White, A.W., Wick, Wiegand, Zarr
1969
1969 -Agent - Larry H. Whipple Ach, Allaire, Barkhausen, Barlow,. Beatty, Berger, Brooks, Burnes, Bushueff, Campbell, J. D . , Car ius, +Carroll, Casalone, Chick, Connors, Cooper, Cordner, Davidson, Davis, Dowd, Doyle, Duffney, Duncan, Elliott, Forester, Fox, Freeman, Fridy, Gifford,
1968
1968- Agent - Sheldon Tilney Angelica, Bacon, Baer, Barrante, Behrend, Bellows, Bluestone, Callaghan, Cassarino,
Alumni Giving Totals by Class
OTHER CO NT RIBUTORS 5 End 1 F 13 I.M. 5 I.M. 3 I.M. 1 I.M. lEnd. 31.M. 1I.M. 4I.M. 41.M. 41.M. 81.M. 91.M. 21.M.
ADDITIONAL ALUMNI CONTRIBTOTAL ALUMNI UTORS TOTAL COMBINED AVERAGE RE- RESTRICTED ALUMNI %OF GIFT STRICTED AMOUNT PARTICIPATION GIVING
CLASS GOAL
%OF GOAL
$15,715 5,126 335 375 1,478 700 6,934 4,265 1,375 8,729 1,773 1,145
4000 300 400 900 600 5000 5000 1800 6000 1000 1100
128% 112% 94% . 164% 117% 138% 85% 76% 145% 177% 104%
$538 37 92 179 60 517 221 92 373 105 90
-
625 2,250 1,207 580 2,575 1,876 1,620 4,925 812 7,140
900 3000 1000 . 600 2000 1900 1000 5500 1500 7200
69% 75% 121% 97% 129% 99% 162% 89% 54% 99%
68 131 110 69 99 59 147 871 45 544
-
-
73 26,550 125 10,464
, 4;243 9,579 1,476 7,903 4,326 2,578 4,268 6,2{)5 5;085 3,685
4500 7500 1500 8700 5500 3500 3600 7500 5000 ' 2700
832 319 58 141 116 83 93 188 ·, 145 · 119
1 1
475 23,959 .
-
-
8,035 5,194 3,640 3,947 1,038 915 3,025 9,898 5,879 . 6,349
6400 5500 4000 2300 2100 1800 3500 15000 2500 .5500
126% 94% 91% 172% 49% 51% 86% 66% 235% 115%
6,468 5,116 7,742 7,345 10,309 3,575 2,955 3,709 4,014 6,848
6000 7000 8000 6000 8500 3500 4000 5000 4000 5500
6,096 3,330 5,257 6,267 2,558 3,595 4,435 1,345 2,676 1,101
AMOUNT
1
2
-
$3,120 15,560
100 10,270 8,215 40,595 100 15
$15,715 8,246 15,895 375 1,478 700 7,034 14,535 9,590 49,324 1,873 1;160
88% 50% 38% 78% 71% 60% 73% 76% 91% 75% 55% -
1921 1922 1923 1924 1925 1926 1927 1928 1929 1930 • '~ . .r..r.
Matthews, A.N. Tansill, F.T. Gammell, S. Almond, R .G. Malcolm-Smith, G. Pitcher, N.D.C. Condit, R.Y. Moses, A.H. Cutler, M.J. Belden, F .R.
1931 Weinstein, A.D. f932. Gle@ill, 1933 Wadlow, T.S. 1934 Onderdonk, A. 1935 Shaw, J.L. 1936 Dexter, A.M. 1937 Hull, W.G. 1938 . McKee, G~ T. 1939 Bassford, E.F. 1940 Lavieri, C.R.
56
E,:s:·
T •
-
51 ;
18
' 30
32% ""53% ; 38% 62% 35% 35% 52% ' 34% 31% 32%
'-'
61 90 103 88 89 97 112 97
23 56 37 31 46 33 35 31
108
41% 33% 33% 31% 21% 24% - 35% 34% 25% 33%
1941 1942 1943 1944 1945 1946 194 7 194 8 1949 1950
Buck, L.E. Colton, M.O. Corliss, S.B. · • 'Fink, J.T. Rheinberger, J.J. Kaufmann, S. Johnquest, M. Meredith, T .M. DeGrandi, J.A. Stephen~on, W.S.
123 104 75 93 111 177 166 267
44 43 40 32 16 .22 39 61 41 87
1951 1952 1953 1954 1955 1956 1957 1958 1959 1960
McGill, S.W.P. Hopkins, J.V. Valentine, E.H. Leigh, J.A. Lahey, L.A. Limpitlaw, J.D. Tobin, F.M. Williams, B.J. Nelson, B.E. deColigny, W.G.
240 236 197 220 232 :204 196 212 233 276
78 80 68 120 108 65 63 71 84 92
32% 34% 35% 54% 47% 32% 32% 33% 36% 33%
1961 1962 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970
Tansill, D.T. Johnson, T.S. Calabrese, T.E. Martire, J.R. Schumacher, F.C. Powell, R.F. Wick,C.W. Tilney, S. Whipple, L.H. Donahue, S.M.
242 265 262 268 271 290 261 291 326 335
90 91 110 92 65 89 82 66 76 78
37% 34% 42% 34% 24% 31% 31% 23% 23% 23%
1971 Booth, W.N. 1972 Fiechter, B.R. 1973 TOTALS Honorary Masters V-12
129
374 . 401
.
76 67 1
20% 17%
*8577
2868
33%
139 1261
41 105 2
29% 8%
3017
30%
COMBINED TOTALS 9977 * Does not include 738 inactive alumni
1l.M. 21.M. 11.M. 1l.M. 11.M. 21.M. 31.M. 21.M. '
1 ~-~· 21.M. 1l.M. 1 I.M. 1l.M.
1 I.M. 1l.M.
1 Co. ll.M.
11.M. 1 Co.
1l.M.
41.M.
6 End. 1 F 2 Co. 85 I.M.
'
-
94% 128% 98% 91% 79% 74% 119% 83% 102% 136%
..
-
1 1
1
83 64 70 61 95 55 110 52 48 74
-
4500 5000 4000 4500 3000 3000 3500 2500 2000 1200
135% 67% 131% 139% 85% 120% 127% 54% 134% 92%
68 37 48 62 39 40 54 80 35 14
1,648 2,294 10
1300 1000
127% 229%
$267,521
242,300
110%
60 $287,851
275,000
105% ,
6,325
-
9,797 250 1,182
-
-
108% 73% 97%. 122% 121% 102% 74% 74% 100% 125%
~.536
-
1 ' 1
1 1 1
17,734
6 End. 1 F 2 Co. 85 I.M.
1
183 120 91 123 65 42 78 113 74 73
.
540 1,369 9,977
100 133,550 288
92 150 195 5,001 85
-
-
-
-
250 2,657
-
-
225 145
10 2,013 5,191 300 160
-
1 1
-
-
2 1
111
-
3 2 4 5
65 770 405 85 415 65 60 80 215 190
22 34 10
5 2 3
93
so
41% 60% 50% 32% 63% 68% 36% 41% 37% 30%
1,165 3,619 11,184 580 8,900 1,876 1,693 31,475 937 17,604
. 34% 54% 38% 63% 37% 35% 52% 34% 31% 33%
4,ns' 33,538 1,476 17,700 4,576 3,760 4,268 6,305 138,635 3,973
42% 34% 33% 31% 21% 24% 35% 34% 25% 33%
8,127 5,344 3,835 8,948 1,123 915 3,275 12,555 5,879 6,574
32% 34% 35% 54% 47% 32% 33% 33% 37% 34%
6,613 5,116 7,752 9,358 15,500 3,875 3,115 3,709 4,125 6,898
37% 35% 42% 35% 26% . 31% 33% 23% 25% 25%
6,161 4,100 5,662 6,352 2,973 3,660 4,495 1,425 2,891 1,291
179 1,180 30
22% 17%
1,827 3,474 40
54
$323)73
34%
$590,894
433 24 30
4 2
14,393 55
32% 8%
32,127 2,591 60
$95
60
31%
$625,672
3 1 2 5
-
$337,821
Trinity Reporter October 1973 Page 10
Goldfrank, Gr~gg, Griffm, +Grinnell, Heller, Hershey, Hessenthaler, Hill, C., Hillman, Kenworthy, Lackner, Lenik, +Levy, Lewis, Loberg , Lowe, Marckwald, Mardikian, Marimow, Maxson, McDorman, Mears, Mendelson, Osborne, Otis, Pennell, Phelps, Pinter, Prentice, +Reid, Rice, Rumsey, Sample, Sheckley, Siegfi:ied, Simchak, Simon, Smith, L. L ., Snowdon, Spaulding, Stern, Stevens, Tewell, Tyler, Uehlein, Vastano, Watts, Wellcome, +Whipple, Wigder, Young, Zartarian 1970 1970 -Agent- Scott M. Donahue Anonymous, Aasen, Anderson, S.A., Angelica, Baetjer, Bamberger, Bartlett, Belas, Belida, Bernardoni, Bingham, Bonee, Branstator, Burnham , Campbell, Chapin, Clayman, Cornwell, Dale, R.C., Dale, S.N., Davids, Dershaw, Dight, Donahue, Drury, Duncan, Dworin, Ewing, Farnell, Fentress, Fenwick, Fox, French, Gallo, E.M., Gallo, J.F., Gamber, Gibby, Glowa, Gohsler, Gordon, Greenspan, J.R., Hagaman, Hamilton, Hannay, Helsdon, Herron, Hubbell, James, Jimenez, Kapilla, Kennard, Kerr, Lawrence, Leeson, Lim, Man, Mattei, Maxwell, McClaugherty, McKinney, Moody, Munkwitz, Newbury, Newquist, Ramseur, Reed, Robson, Sadayasu, Sager, ·Schinfeld, Shipman, Simon, Sobotka, Steuber, Stowell, Tonsgard, Weinstein, Willin, Wilson, Wyland, Zielinski 1971 1971 -Agent- William N. Booth Adams, Amidon, Basch, Benjamin, Birmingham, Bloomsburgh, Booth, Borchert, Boswell, Bradford, Brownstein, Burt, Clark, Clement, Cohn, Colman, B., Coriale, Craig, Cutler, Davis, Davidson, DiBenedetto, Durland, Enders by, Filer, Foster, Fuller, Funston, Garrett, Gaston, Gilbert, Graves, Griggs, Haas, +Hankin, L.K., Heffner, Humphrey, Jacobson, Jian akoplos, Kaplan , Kebabian, Kelley, Kennedy, Kowalski, Lanfer, Lawrence, Lewis, Lines, Loveland, Marchisotto, Martin, McGoohan, Miller, J.E., Mittenthal, Moore, Morse, O'Beirne, Olander, Page, +Pratt, Price, Reale, Reinsel, Richards, +Rohlen, Ross, Sarasohn, Schott, Slocum, Sohval, Steigerwalt, Sturges, Taber, Tarpley, Tom, Vince, Weinberg, Winton, Wood, Woodruff, Woolsey, 1972 1972 - Agent - Bayard R. Fiechter Abendroth, Adelman, Arceci, Asarnow, Balch, Bass, Bauman, Blum, Caldwell, Chase, Clark, T.H., Cohen, R.M., Dann, Davis, DeJongh, Eaton, Ewald, Eysmans, Ferris, R.K., Fiechter, Fink, Fisher, A.S., Fisher, W.A., Fried, Friedrich, Houghton, Howard, Kiley, Kolotkin, Kravitz, Kunz, Kupperman, Lawrence, +Levy, Mandt, Manker, +McCrensky, Meade, Melcher, Merrill, Mescon, +Messler, Miller, J.A., Miller, W.J., Mulkeen, Nichols, O'Dell, Robinson, R.T., Rogers, C., Rosenthal, Sachner, Savage, Schaeffer, Schloss, Sheppard, Sichel, Smith,
T.K., Snyder; Tamoney, Traver, Viering, Vitello, *Wallach, Whetzel, White, +Whitehead, Wilcox, Wittman, Zachry, Zimmerman
1973 Connee
1975 Huoppi MASTERS DEGREE ALUMNI L. S. Adams, N. A. Agostino, P. A. Amram, B. H. Anderson, H. B. Anderson, E. L. Bailey, A. Baker, E. J. Barker, G. Barker, M. P. Barker, J. M. Barton, B. Beck, J. E. Beck, K. A. Berberian, E. G. Berger, N. E. Berson, N. Bestor, S. Biloon, J. A. Birnkammer, R. G. Blanksteen, J. L. Butler, C. A. Butterworth, W. A. Carey, R. A. Carpenter, A. W. Cebelius, +M. S. Cheney, H. L. Colvocoresses, E.P. Comerford, J. B. Conant, H. J. Coughlin, P. M. Cross, T. F. Davoren, L. D. Deephouse, J. J. Devery, H. Dickstein, W. Dinegar, H. C. Dixon, S. M. Ebner, +E. B. Enders, E. A. Flynn, B. T. Fox, J. F . Gallo, R. F. Gazda, B. A. Gilman, R. J. Girard, H. R. Goody, D. H. Grubbs, V. Harris, R, L. Hilliard, R. G. Hinman, P. G. Horne, A. R. Hyde, W. W. Jabs, C. W. Johnson, L. B. Johnson, J. 0. Juke, M. A. Jurek, P. Kearns, D. H. Kelsey, R. H. Kennedy, R. R. Kessler, +M. L. Kimball, B. J. Klein, G. V. Krawczyk, J. E. Larkin, Jr., P. Lebetkin, M. Lewis, C. R. Lyman, M. J. Malina, J. Marsted, G. J. McDonald, K. K. McLane, M. L. Meder, J. Morgan, G. H. Murray, M. I. Nabel, E. L. Ogden, W. C. Paprocki, S. F. Parkyn, J. A. Patterson, J. B. Pitman, E. Pleva, F. M. Po.wers, +D. L. Quigley, V. C. Raff, J. C. Richardson, +D. B. Risdon, E. T. Rogers, W. H. Rowe, D. Salsburg, R. D. Scheidel, J. B. Sears, J. A. Sedgeman, .K. W. Severens, M. M. Shanahan, M. M. Sheridan, A. H. Shookus, B. G. Sinclaire, J. M. Slisz, J. M. Smith, T. A. Soininen, J. A. Storms, R. Styring, H. L. Talcott, E. M. Walters, B.S. Welch, F. E. Whelan, R. W. White, C. Widmer, A. L. Wise V-12 ALUMNI D. J. O'Hare,). D. Warwick HONORARY DEGREE ALUMNI F. D. Ashburn, +G. W. Baker, R. E. Baldwin, S. Bayne, G. B. Beach, R. S. Beecher, F. J. Braceland, *J. M. K. Davis, +P. Day, *C. W. Deeds, J. F. Enders, A. J. Feldman, M. H. Glover, F. Goodwin, *W. H. Gray, F. 0. Grubbs, *W. P. Gwinn, T. S. Hamilton, B. Hastings, L. M. Hirshson, H. M. Horner, L. W. Houston, A. C. Jacobs, A. F. Langlykke, W. S. Lewis, D. B. Lindsley, *R. A. Magowan, C. Martin, *W. McC. Martin, +P. W. Morency, C. H. Morgan, +Rainsford Mowlem, L. C. Ogilby, J. C. Parsons, +J. W. Randall, +J. V. Reed, H.C. Riddleberger, *V. D. Roosa, L. Rose, *A. H. Seaverns, L. R. Severinghaus, 0. D. Smith, +E. A. Suisman, C. E. Watters, *R. J. Wean, F. B. Wilde, A. M. Woodruff
1972-1973 Parent Contributors Unrestricted General and/or Restricted Designated Purposes
Mr. & Mrs. David M. Abbot + Mr. & Mrs. Elliot Abrams Mr. & Mrs. Christopher A. Adams Mr. & Mrs. Jack Adelson Mr. & Mrs. Harold Adler + Dr. & Mrs. H. Henry Adler Mrs. Antoinette Allegra Mr. & Mrs. John J . Allen Mr. & Mrs. Robert 0. Anderson * Mr. & Mrs. Gilman Angier Mrs. Donald B. Anthony Dr. & Mrs. Frederick M. Apfelbaum Mr. & Mrs. Raymond G. Appler Mr. & Mrs. Charles S. Arms * Mr. & Mrs. Chester L. Arnold Mr. & Mrs. James T. Ashford Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Aspinwall, Jr. Mr; & Mrs. Manuel Azorin Mr. & Mrs. Russell W. Babb Mr. & Mrs. Albert E. Back Mr. & Mrs. Daniel B. Badger Mr. & Mrs. David C. Bailey + Mr. & Mrs. Loring M. Bailey * Dr. & Mrs. Benjamin M. Baker Mr. & Mrs. Frank A. Baker, Jr. * Mr. George F. Baker, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Robert C. ,Baldwin Mr. & Mrs. Frank J. Bamberger Mr. & Mrs. Charles S. Barans Mr. J. Russell Barlow + Mr. & Mrs. C. Minor Barringer Mr. & Mrs. William A. Barron, III + Mr. & Mrs. Sidney Barrows Mr. & Mrs. Harold Barth Mrs. Catherine M. Barth well Mr. & Mrs. Samuel R. Basch + Mr. & Mrs. Simon Baseman Mr. & Mrs. R. Bruce Bass Mr. & Mrs. Ethan F. Bassford Mr. & Mrs. Lucius D. Battle + Mr. & Mrs. David I. Baur Mr. Alexis I. duP. Bayard * Dr. & Mrs. Samuel Beaser Mr. John T. Beaudouin Lt. Col. & Mrs. Alexander J. Belida
---.:--
THE PARENTS FUND GROWTH RECORD
+
+
* +
+
* *
Dr. & Mrs. HermanS. Belmont Mr. Thomas S. Benjamin Mr. & Mrs: Bruce N. Bensley Mr. & Mrs. Arthur Beren Mr. Edward J. Berghausen Mr. & Mrs. William Berkowitz Mr. & Mrs. Jack J. Bernstein Mr. & Mrs. RowlandS. Bevans Mr. & Mrs. H. Lloyd Beyers, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Nelson Bigelow Dr. & Mrs. John D. Biggers Mr. & Mrs. Wasyl Bileckyj Mr. & Mrs. Harvey W. Bingham Mr. & Mrs. Francis A. Bishop Mr. EdwardS. Blackwell, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. JosephS. Blank, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Alfred W. Blanken Mr. & Mrs. Samuel H. Bloom Mr. & Mrs. Roger G. Blum Dr. & Mrs. Paul J. Bock ·Mr. & Mrs. Richard P. Bodine Mr. & Mrs. Robert S. Bodner Dr. & Mrs. Russell Boles, Jr. The Rev. & Mrs. John E. Booty Mr. & Mrs. Alexander W. Borawski Mr. & Mrs. Charles L. Boxie Mr. & Mrs. Raymond Boulanger The Rev. Canon & Mrs. George·H. Boyd Mr. & Mrs. John P. Boyriton Mrs. Fay W. Brabson Mr. & Mrs. Joseph 0 . Bradford Mr. & Mrs. Nicholas· F. Brady Mr. & Mrs. Melville S. Brandt Mr. & Mrs. Saul Bredhoff Mrs. William Brewster Dr. & Mrs. Crenshaw Briggs Mr. & Mrs. John H. Brinckerhoff · Mr. & Mrs. Brigham Britton Mrs. Mary C. Brown Mr. & Mrs. Howard H. Brown Mr. & Mrs. John A. Brown Mr. & Mrs. Philip T. Brown Mr.&:. Mrs. Willard W. Brown Mr. & Mrs. Winthrop G. Brown Mr. & Mrs. Wilber M. Brucker, Jr. Mr. & Mr~ Alexander J. Bruen
CONTRIBU- AVERAGE TORS GIFT
FISCAL YEAR
AMOUNT RAISED
1960-61 1961-62 1962-63 1963-64 1964-68 1968-69 1969-70 1970-71 1971-72 1972-73
$38,531 424 $93.01 40,739 584 69.74 40,049 630 63.56 50,230 619 81.14 FORD CHALLENGE CAMPAIGN 68,958 568 121.40 59,603 468 127.36 84,628 532 159.00 88,099 630 139.00 109,581 665 165.00
Mr. & Mrs. James S. Bryant Dr. & Mrs. Julius Buchwald + Dr. & Mrs. Donald P. Burt Mr & Mrs. Halleck A. Butts Mr. & Mrs. W. J. Buxton Mr. & Mrs. Anthony A. Calabro Mr. & Mrs. Henry B. Caldwell Mrs. A. F. Campbell Mr. & Mrs. VictorS . Cardell Mr. & Mrs. Peter R. Carley + Dr. & Mrs. Charles 0 . Carothers Mr. & Mrs. Donald W. Carroll + Mr. & Mrs. Clarence U. Carruth, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Vernon Cassin + Mr. & Mrs. E. William Chapin Dr. & Mrs. Bertram W. Charap Mr. & Mrs. A. Charney Mr. & Mrs. Robert Chiang Dr. & Mrs. Mortimer R. Cholst Mr. & Mrs. George J. Clark Mrs. Hovey C. Clark Mr. & Mrs. John R. Clark Mr. & Mrs. Lewis H. Clark Mrs. Ernest T. Clary Mr. & Mrs. J. Robert Cleary + Mr. & Mrs. Robert E. Cleary Mr. & Mrs. C. Robert Clements Mr. & Mrs. ·James W. Cobbs Mr. & Mrs. Malcolm D. Coe Mr. & Mrs. David D. Coffin + Mr. Arthur M. Cohen Mr. & Mrs. Sol R. Cohen Mr. & Mrs. Stanley I. Cohen Mr. & Mrs. Donald J. Cohn Mr. & Mrs. Nicholas Colangelo + Mr. & Mrs. Craig Colgate; Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Samuel Collado + Mr. & Mrs. Harley J. Conaway, Jr. Mrs, Elizabeth D. Conwell Mr. & Mrs. Seabury Cook + Mr. & Mrs. William Coons + Mr. & Mrs. John F. Copeland Mr. & Mrs. Frederic G. Corneel Mr. Thomas B. Coughlin Mr. & Mrs. Caspar F. Cowan Mr. & Mrs. Fairman C. Cowan Mr. & Mrs. Marvin S. Cowan + Mr. & Mrs. Willis G. Coward Mr. & Mrs. Owen T. Coyne + Mr. & Mrs. Frank W. Crabill + Mrs. L. Robert Crandall + Mr. & Mrs. Robert Crimmins Mrs. W. K. Cromwell, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Chester E. Cross Mr. & Mrs. Leo V. Crowley Mr. I. Frank Crystal The Rev. & Mrs. Armando Cuellar Mr. & Mrs. Richard P. Cuminale Mr. & Mrs. Joseph I. Cunningham + Mr. & Mrs. Walter J.P. Curley, Jr. Dr. & Mrs. Simon Dack Mr. & Mrs. Norman Dansker Dr. & Mrs. Chester C. D'Autremont Mr. & Mrs. Richard L. Davies Mr. & Mrs. David S. Davis Mr. & Mrs. Frank I. Davis Mrs. L. Emery Dearborn Mr. & Mrs. Thomas M. Debevoise + Mr. & Mrs. Warren Delano Mr. & Mrs. F. L. DeMeulenaere + Dr. & Mrs. Samuel Dershaw Mr. & Mrs. Louis J. Devendittis Mr. & Mrs. John J. Devery Mrs. Paul B. Dickey Mr. & Mrs. Sidney G. Dillon Mr. & Mrs. Stephen J. Doorley, Jr. + Mr. & Mrs. Leonard S. Douglas Mr. & Mrs. Harry L. Dow Mr. & Mrs. Saul C. Downes Mr. & Mrs. Stanley Downs Mr. & Mrs. John F. Duffy . Mr. & Mrs. Carroll Dunham, IV * Mr. & Mrs. Robert G. Dunlop Mr. & Mrs. William P. Durkee, III * Mr. & Mrs. Hy C. Dworin Mr. & Mrs. Richard P. Eadie Dr. & Mrs. Norman D. Edelman Mr. & Mrs. Agustin E. Edwards Mr. & Mrs. George P. Egbert, Jr. Dr. & Mrs. Frank R. Egloff Mr. & Mrs. Richard A. Ellinghaus + Mr. & Mrs. Abraham L. Ellman + Mr. & Mrs. William P. Ellwood Mr. & Mrs. J. Donovan Emery + Mr. & Mrs. E1ric G. Endersby
CHAIRMAN Joseph V. Getlin Clarence U. Carruth, Jr. Robert G ..Dunlop F. Stanton Deland, Jr. Charles Wright, III A. Dix Leeson Alfred Raws, Jr. Willard W. Brown Bruce N. Bensley
+ Mrs. Elizabeth A. Endicott * Mrs. Charles W. Engelhard Mr. & Mrs. Sidney Epstein + Mr. & Mrs. Carl K. Erpf Mr. & Mrs. John A. Ewing Mr. & Mrs. Edward A. Fahrner The Rev. & Mrs. Leslie L. Fairfield Mr. & Mrs. Murray H. Falk + Mr. & Mrs. Phillip F. Faneuil Mr. & Mrs. Francis P. Farnsworth Mr. & Mrs. Holden K. Farrar Mr. & Mrs. Henry W. Farrow Mr. & Mrs. Leon Fassler * Mr. & Mrs. Waldron Faulkner Mrs. William H. Feathers Mr. & Mrs. Marvin Fein Mr. & Mrs. Mason Fernald Mr. & Mrs. Anthony C. Ferrara Mr. & Mrs. Charles G. Ferris, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Russell W. Field, Jr. + Mr. & Mrs. Samuel Filler Mr. & Mrs. Raymond J. Fillion Mr. & Mrs. William C. Finkenstaedt Mr. & Mrs. Frederick Fish Mr. & Mrs. John N. Fisher Mr. & Mrs. William A. Fisher, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Patrick FitzPatrick + Mr. & Mrs. Joseph B. Flavin Mr. & Mrs. Robert W. Fleming Dr. & M.rs. RobertS. Flom Mr. & Mrs. Eldra M. Floyd, Jr.
LEADERSHIP GIFTS SOLICITORS 1972-73 PARENTS FUND C. Barse Haff, Jr., Chairman Bruce N. Bensley Willard W. Brown Frank W. Crabill Robert Crimmins Mrs. Pamela Crandall John N. Fisher Charles E. Hart, III Mark Hollingsworth Carl H. Imlay Eads Johnson, Jr. Robert K. Knapp, Jr. R. Schuyler Lippincott Rudolph Montgelas Robert K. Mooney S. Page Nelson, Jr. Charles P. Stewart, Jr. Ralph J. Taussig Robert F. Tulcin John W. Warrington
H
+ Mr. & Mrs. Charles D. Fox, III Mr. & Mrs. Fred C. Foy Mr. & Mrs. Armin C. Frank Mr.&. Mrs. Donald H. Freeman Mr. & Mrs. Robert L. V. French The Rev. & Mrs. Gordon B. Galaty Mr. & Mrs. Irving Gall Mr. & Mrs. Felix T. Galvi!l * Dr. & Mrs. James L. Gamble, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Frederic J. Gardner Mr. & Mrs. Philip Garnick Mr. & Mrs. George B. Gascoigne, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. JohnS. Gates Mr. & Mrs. Richard J. Gates Mr. & Mrs. John P. Gatsos Mr. & Mrs. Nathan A. Geetter + Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Geraci + Dr. & Mrs. Marvin A. Gershenfeld Mr. & Mrs. Henry G. Gescheidt Mr. & Mrs. Arthur H. Getz * Mr. David Gibson Mr. & Mrs. Stanley Gilman Mr. Robert K. Ginsberg Mr. & Mrs. Jules D. Gittin Mr. & Mrs. Irving Gladstein Dr. & Mrs. Carll. Glassman Dr. & Mrs. Joseph B. Godick Mr. Joseph Golbert + Mr. & Mrs. FrederiCk T. Goldberg Mr. & Mrs. Lionel Goldfrank, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Norman Goldich + Mr. & Mrs. Alfred S. Goldreyer Dr. & Mrs. Edward Goldstein Mr. & Mrs. Melvin Goldstein Mr. & Mrs. Stanley B. Gomberg Mr. & Mrs. Richard W. Goode .
*Founders Society for gifts of $1,000 or more. +Anniversary Club for gifts of $150-$999.
Trinity Reporter October 1-973 Page 11
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Mr. & Mrs. Elias S. Gottlieb Dr. & Mrs. Aubrey V. Gould Mr. & Mrs. Lyttleton Gould, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. John M. Graham Mr. & Mrs. Eugene M. Grant Mr. & Mrs. William R. Grant Mr. & Mrs. Lucius K. Graves Mr. & Mrs. Ralph A. Graves Mr. Stuart H. Green Mr. & Mrs. Nathan R. Greenbaum Mr. & Mrs. Howard Greenfield Dr. & Mrs. M. William Greenspan Mr .. & Mrs. Maurice E. Greenspon Mr. & Mrs. David Gregg, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Frank K. Griesinger Mr. & Mrs. Eldon A. Grimm Mr. & Mrs. Mortimer Grossman Mr. & Mrs. JosephS. Grover Dr. & Mrs. Paul F. Gryska Mr. & Mrs. Alvin P. Gutman Mr. & Mrs. C. Barse Haff, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Richard F. Hahn Mr. & Mrs. Thomas J. Halloran Mr. & Mrs. W. Rush G. Hamilton Mr. & Mrs. Donald H. Hamsher Mr. & Mrs. Morris H. Hankin Dr. & Mrs. Harry Harhay Mr. & Mrs. A. Brooks Harlow Mr. & Mrs. David T. Harris Mr. & Mrs. H. Herbert Harris Mr. & Mrs. Irving Harris Mrs. Taylor Harris Mrs. Lester M. Harrison Mr. & Mrs. Charles E. Hart, III Mr. & Mrs. Raymond E. Hartz Mr. & Mrs. Alvin M. Hayim Mr. & Mrs. William G. Heckman Mr. & Mrs. Kurt Heilbronn Mr. & Mrs. Arthur R. Heimgartner Mr. & Mrs. Myron H. Hendel Mr. & Mrs. Frank Henderson Mr. & Mrs. Gerald B. Henry Mr. & Mrs. James J. Henry Mr. & Mrs. Clinton L. Hergert Mrs. Walter Herrick Mrs. Abraham J. Heschel Prof. & Mrs. Arleigh P. Hess, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Wolcott M. Heyl Dr. & Mrs. Lyndon M. Hill Mr. & Mrs. Marion E. Hines Mr. & Mrs. Bernard S. Hirsch Mrs. Vivian G. Hodges Mr. & Mrs. Jack Hoffman Mr. & Mrs. Martin L. Hoffman Mr. & Mrs. Philip D. Holden Mr. & Mrs. Benjamin L. Holland Mr. & Mrs. Mark Hollingsworth, Sr. Mrs. Hilary H. Holmes Mr. Lyman Hoover Mr. & Mrs. Robert H. Horling Mr. & Mrs. Raymond J. Hornfischer Mr. & Mrs. Fred Howard Mr. & Mrs. Robert C. Howland Mr. & Mrs. W.olcott J. Humphrey. Mr. & Mrs. Richard F. Hunnewell . Mr. & Mrs. Samuel K. Hunter, Jr. Mrs. Agnes G. Huntley Mr. & Mrs. Osmo G. Huoppi Mrs. Charles G. Hurd Mr. & Mrs. Richard W. Hyde Mr. & Mrs. Carl H. Imlay Mr. & Mrs. Paul M. Ingersoll Mr. & Mrs. Rene A. Isaac Mr. & Mrs. Leo Israel Mrs. Maclear Jacoby Mrs. Hilger P. Jenkins Mr. & Mrs. Eads Johnson, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Edwin Johnson Mrs. Raymond H. Johnson Mr. & Mrs. Robert R. Johnson Mr. & Mrs. Richard L. Johnston Mr. & Mrs. Benjamin F. Jones, III Mr. & Mrs. Philip M. Jones Mr. & Mrs. Thomas P. Jones, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Hung W. Jue Mr. & Mrs. Edwin H. Kahn Mr. & Mrs. Sidney L. Kahn, Jr. Dr. & Mrs. Edwin B. Kalan Mr. & Mrs. Harold J. Kalikow Mr. & Mrs. J. William Kapouch Dr. & Mrs. Lester Karafin Mr. & Mrs. Richard H. Kashe Mr. & Mrs. Jacob Kassow Dr. & Mrs. Jacob D. Katz Dr. & Mrs. Irwin Katzka Mr. & Mrs. Herman B. Kaufman Mr. & Mrs. Genji Kawamura Mr. & Mrs. Henry A. Kelly, Jr. Mrs. Betty W. Kelsey Mr. & Mrs. Howard B. Kelsey Mr. & Mrs. Edgar H. Kent Mr. Joseph W. Kent Mr. & Mrs. Lawrence Kepnes Mrs. Margaret King Mr. & Mrs. John G. Kirk Mr. & Mrs. F. Shallus Kirk Mr. & Mrs. Frederick Kirschner Dr. & Mrs. Paul A. Kirschner Mr. & Mrs. Clarence J. Kjorlien Mr.·& Mrs. Robert P. Knapp, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Robert C. Knox, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Geza D. Koncz Mr. & Mrs. Robert J. Koretz Mr. & Mrs. Stanley J. Kosloski, Sr. Capt. & Mrs. Wendell E. Kraft Mr. & Mrs. Louis Kruger Mr. & Mrs. Robert A. Kubicek Mr. & Mrs. George A. Kuhn, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Jack Kupferberg Mr. & Mrs. Max L. Kupferberg Mr. & Mrs. Adolph B. Kurz
+ Mr. & Mrs. Francis A. Lackner Dr. & Mrs. Thomas E. Lake Mr. & Mrs. John D. LaMothe Dr. & Mrs. William W. Lander Dr. & Mrs. Christopher L. Landry Dr. & Mrs. Warren W. Lane Dr. & Mrs. Thomas W. Langfitt Mrs. Mary E. Lankester · Mr. & Mrs. Loewy S. Latz + Mr. & Mrs. Robert A. Lawrence + Mr. & Mrs. William N. Lazares Mr. & Mrs. James C. Leigh Mr. & Mrs. Monroe Leigh Mr. & Mrs. Leonard Leight Mr. & Mrs. John J. Leighton Mr. & Mrs. William Lema Mr. & Mrs. Michael J. Lenahan Mr. & Mrs. Geoffrey J. Letchworth + Mr. & Mrs. George M. Levine Mr. & Mrs. Samuel Levitsky Mr. & Mrs. Richard L. Levy + Mr. & Mrs. Arthur M. Lewis Mr. & Mrs. Howard Lewis, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Herman Liebenson Mr. & Mrs. George J. Lincoln, III Mr. & Mrs. Frank E. Lingard Mr. & Mrs. Max Lipkind + Mr. & Mrs. R. Schuyler Lippincott Mr. & Mrs. David L. Livingston Dr. & Mrs. L. Maxwell Lockie Mr. & Mrs. Carl J. Lombardo Mr. & Mrs. John W. Losse, Jr. + Mr. & Mrs. Franklin 0. Loveland + Mr. & Mrs. Mortimer F. Luria Mr. & Mrs. David M. Ludlum Mr. & Mrs. Milton I. Luxemburg Mr. & Mrs. John M. Lynham + Dr. & Mrs. James D. MacCallum Dr. & Mrs. Alexander S. MacDonald, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Charles S. Mack Mrs. Alexander A. Mackimmie, Jr. + Dr. & Mrs. Walter B. Macomber Dr. & Mrs. S. Stuart Mally Mr. & Mrs. James J. Malone Mr. & Mrs. Benjamin Mandell Mr. & Mrs. Harold H. Mandly Mr. & Mrs. Jay Marimow Mr. Julius J. Marion Dr. & Mrs. Raymond R. Marsh Mr. & Mrs. Leroy C. Marshall Dr. & Mrs. John E. Martin Mr. David Marx Mr. & Mrs. J. Floyd Massey Mr. & Mrs. A. Harper Massie + Mr. & Mrs. C. Ronald Mather Mr. & Mrs. Daniel Maus, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Robert C. McAdoo + Mr. & Mrs. Francis L. McClure Mr. & Mrs. William F . McCrady, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. John T. McHugh Mrs. C. William McKee + Mr. & Mrs. James W. McNally Mr. & Mrs. Mark McShurley Mr. & Mrs. Alexander J. Meigs Mr. & Mrs. Ezra Melrose + Mr. & Mrs. Thomas W. Merritt, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. J . Gordon Merwin + Mr. & Mrs. Leon. Merz, Jr. + Dr. & Mrs. Joseph D. Messler + Mr. & Mrs. John Mezochow Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth G. Michel Mr. & Mrs. Keith C. Miles + Mr. & Mrs. Frederic A. Milholland Mr. & Mrs. Robert G. Millar + Mr. & Mrs. William J. Miller * Mr. & Mrs. Gerrish H. Milliken Mr. & Mrs. John D. Mindnich Mr. & Mrs. Harry E. Mitchell Dr. & Mrs. David W. Molander * Mr. & Mrs. Rudolph M. Montgelas * Mr. & Mrs. Robert K. Mooney Mr. & Mrs. Philip R. Moonves Dr. & Mrs. Anthony F. Moreschi Mr. Charles B. Morgan Mr. & Mrs. Orner B. Morin Dr. &.Mrs. Chester W. Morse Mr. M. Peter Moser Mr. & Mrs. Gilbert B. Moyer * Mr. & Mrs. William K. Muir Mrs. Stanley N. Muirhead Mr. & Mrs. William Mulkeen Mrs. Alexander F. Murenia Mr. & Mrs. F. Robert Naka + Mrs. Dita Naylor-Leyland Mr. & Mrs. P. Gordon Nelson Mr. & Mrs. S. Page Nelson, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Clarence L. Neuner Mr. & Mrs. Willard G. Newell Dr. & Mrs. Edward A. Newman Dr. & Mrs. Ernest B. Newman Mr. & Mrs. George Newman Mrs. Robert C. Newquist Dr. & Mrs. Robert W. Nichols Dr. & Mrs. Charles M. Norris Mr. & Mrs. Philip B. Olander + Mr. & Mrs. F. Forbes Olberg + Mr. & Mrs. John C. Oliver, Jr.. + Mr. Norris L. O'Neill Mrs. William D. Orr Mr. & Mrs. John R. Orrick Mr. & Mrs. Costa W. Oscarsson Mr. & Mrs. Stanton C. Otis * Mr. & Mrs. Mandell Ourisman Mr. & Mrs. George T. Overholt, Jr. Capt. & Mrs. Jefferson D. Parker + Mr. & Mrs. William M. Parry Mr. & Mrs. William F. Partridge, Sr. Mr. & Mrs. Harry W. Patterson * Mr. & Mrs. Murray R. Pearlstein + Mr. John F. Peckham Mr. & Mrs. Silvio Pedemonti
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Mr. & Mrs. Carl A. Pelzel Mr. & Mrs. Caleb J. Penniman Mr. Lawrence Perin Mr. & Mrs. Raymond T. Perron Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth E. Perry Mr. John A. Peterson, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. John Picone Mr. & Mrs. W. Neil Pierce Mr. & Mrs. Parker Poole, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Richard G. Poole Mr. & Mrs. William H. Pope Mr. & Mrs. Andrew W. Porter, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. L. Abbett Post, Jr. Dr. & Mrs. Ralph Post Mr. & Mrs. Ralph C. Potter Mr. & Mrs. T. Randolph Potter Mr. & Mrs. Arthur L. Powell Mr. & Mrs. John W. Powell, II Mr. & Mrs. Francis M. Powers Mrs. Elizabeth K. Pratt T. D. Pratt, M.D. Mr. & Mrs. Leonard Preminger Mr. & Mrs. David Price Mr. & Mrs. Richard P. Prowell Mr. & Mrs. Converse Prudden Mr. & Mrs. Robert E. Purcell Mr. & Mrs. EliotT. Putnam Dr. & Mrs. Lionel E. Rebhun Mr. & Mrs. Arthur L. Rack, Sr. Mrs. Martyn C. Ratzan Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Ravizza Mr. & Mrs. Alfred Raws, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Joseph J. Reale Mr. J. W. Redmond Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Reed Mr. & Mrs. Joseph H. Reese, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Willis L. M. Reese Mr. & Mrs. Rossiter Reeves Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Reid Dr. & Mrs. Harold Reilert Dr. & Mrs. Irwin Resnick Dr. & Mrs. Cyril F. Reynolds Mr. & Mrs. Samuel H. Rice Mr. & Mrs. Francis M. Richards Mrs. Martin C. Rissel Mr. & Mrs. David H. Roberts Mr. & Mrs. F. James Robinson Dr. & Mrs. Howard W. Robinson Mr. & Mrs. Robert C. Robinson Dr. & Mrs. Rochester R. Roby Dr. & Mrs. Robert E. Rochelle Mr. & Mrs. David Rockwood, Sr. Mr. & Mrs. Samuel B. Rogers Br:=&-Mrs:<"William P. Rogers, Jr.Mr. & Mrs. Harold D. Rome Mr. & Mrs. Andrew A. Root Mr. & Mrs. Willet C. Roper Dr. & Mrs. Irving Rosenberg Mr. & Mrs. Hugo Roth Dr. & Mrs. James L.A. Roth Mr. & Mrs. George H. M. Rountree Dr. & Mrs. Jack Sabloff Mr. & Mrs. Herbert S. Sachs Dr. & Mrs. Nathan Salky Mr. Joseph J. Salonia Mr. & Mrs. William B. Sanders Mr. & Mrs. Gordon W. Sanford Dr. & Mrs. Olindo 0. Santopietro Mr. & Mrs. Geoffrey A. Sawyer Dr. & Mrs. Louis P. Saxe Mr. & Mrs. Michael E. Scala Mr. & Mrs. G. Ellis Schaefer Louis Scheinberg, M.D. Mr. & Mrs. John Schieman Dr. & Mrs. Louis H. Schinfeld Mr. & Mrs. J. Howard Schneider, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. SamuelS. Schoen Mr. & Mrs. Gordon T. Schofield Mr. Thomas C. Schuller Mr. & Mrs. Alfred L. Schwartz Mr. & Mrs. George W. Schwert, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Robert E. Sears Mr. & Mrs. William T. Seelbach Mr. & Mrs. James B. Seelye Mr. & Mrs. Ervin Seltzer Mr. & Mrs. Frank H. Shafroth Mr. & Mrs. Irving R. Shelnitz Mr. & Mrs. Charles H. Shepard Mr. & Mrs. Harry W. Shepard Mr. & Mrs. John Shigo, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. C. F. Shultz Mr. & Mrs. Robert S. Shuman Mr. & Mrs. Murray Sieger Mr. & Mrs. Charles M. Siegfried Mr. & Mrs. Walter 0. Siegel Mr. & Mrs. P. Robert Siener, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Harry Sigman Mrs. MacLeod Simchak Mr. & Mrs. Edward P. Simonian Mrs. Reginald P. Sinclaire Mr. & Mrs. Peter M. Sivaslian Mr. Beams Smith The Rev. Birney W. Smith, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Carter Smith Mrs. E. Eldridge Smith Mr. & Mrs. John E. Smith Cmdr. & Mrs. Robert W. Smith Mr. William M. Smith Mr. & Mrs. Harold A. Smullen, Sr. Mrs. Irving Snider Mr. & Mrs. Marne K. Snyder
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Mr. & Mrs. David H. Solis, IV Mr. & Mrs. Richard D. Solo Mrs. Beverly A. Southworth Mr. & Mrs. TalbotT. Spee1 Mr. & Mrs. Robert V. Sperry Mr. & Mrs. Osmond R. Springsted Mr. & Mrs. Cyril S. Stanley The Hon. & Mrs. George Starke Dr. & Mrs. Leonard S. Staudinger Mr. & Mrs. Ralph W. Stell, Jr. Mrs. Howard Stephens Mr. & Mrs. Edward B. Stevens Mr. & Mrs. Charles P. Stewart, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Joseph J . Stewart Mr. & Mrs. Murray Steyer Mr. & Mrs. Daniel E. Stines Mr. & Mrs. James C. Stone, Jr. Mr. G. Carroll Stribling Mr. & Mrs. Stanford L. Strogoff Mr. & Mrs. Wyatt Sullivan Mr. & Mrs. Robert Sutro Mrs. Gioia C. Taber Mrs. William R. Talbot Mr. & Mrs. Albert L. Tanghe Mr. & Mrs. Ralph J . Taussig Mr. & Mrs. William M. Taussig Mr. & Mrs. R. C. Taylor, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Zareh Tcheyan Mr. & Mrs. James Thacher Mrs. Anne G. Therman The Rev. & Mrs. J. Moulton Thomas Mr. & Mrs. Fred Thomases Mr. & Mrs. Robert P. Thompson Mr. & Mrs. Chester Thomson Mr. & Mrs. Sidney Throne Dr. & Mrs. Aaron Thurman Mr. & Mrs. George H. Tilghman Mr. & Mrs. Norcross S. Tilney Mr. & Mrs. Frederick D. Tobin Mrs. Sarah W. Todd Mr. & Mrs. Robert Toland, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Joseph R. Tomlinson Mrs. Ralph L. Tompkins Mr. & Mrs. Earle J. Tonsgard Mr. & Mrs. Ernest A. Tosi Mr. & Mrs. James W. Tower Mr. & Mrs. Robert A. Towner Mr. & Mrs. Robert B. Trainer Mr. & Mrs. George M. Traver Mr. & Mrs. Glennon J. Travis Mr. & Mrs. Robert F. Tulcin Mr. & Mrs. Horace V. Turner Mr. & Mrs. Stanley A. Twar.dy Mr. & Mrs. Charles P. Twichell Mrs. Marjorie Tyner Mr. Richard F. F. Tyner Dr. & Mrs. Gene Usdin The Rev . & Mrs. Alfred Vail Mi:s. AbramS. Valentine Mr. & Mrs. Harold C. Veith, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Michael Verdi Mr. & Mrs. S. Thompson Viele Mrs. Peter V. D. Voorhees Mr; & Mrs. Thomas A. Wadden, Jr. Dr. & Mrs. Joseph A. Wagner Mr. & Mrs. Charles S. Walker Mr. & Mrs. Samuel J. Waltos Mr. & Mrs. John W. Warrington Mr. & Mrs. Charles A. Watson Mr. & Mrs. Solomon Waxman Mr. Samuel Weber Mrs. Jack Weinstein Mr. & Mrs. Lawrence Weisburg Mr. & Mrs. John D. Wendler Mr. Thomas L. Wentling Mr. & Mrs. Malcolm F. Wheeler Mr. & Mrs. William G. White Mr. & Mrs. Robert A. Whitehead, Sr. Mr. Thomas G. Wicker Mr. & Mrs. Elmer W. Wiggins, Jr. Dr. & Mrs. Michael D. Williams Mr. &Mrs. H. Phillip Williams Mrs. John C. Wilmerding Mr. & Mrs. Robert D. Wilson, Jr. Dr. & Mrs. J. Watson Wilson Mr. & Mrs. Nathaniel R. Winslow Mr. & Mrs. Millard F. Wood Mr. & Mrs. William A. Wood Dr. John H. Woodbridge Mr. & Mrs. William L. Woods Mr. & Mrs. Arthur V. Woodworth Mrs. Laurence C. Woolman Mr. & Mrs. Theodore D. Woolsey Mr. & Mrs. Charles Wright, III Mr. & Mrs. Herbert L. Wright Mr. & Mrs. Pete Wybenga Mr. George W. Wyckoff Mr. & Mrs. V. C. Wyle Mr. & Mrs. Donald T. Wynne, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. John G. Yerkes Mr. & Mrs. Stanley A. Yocom Mr. & Mrs. Stanton M. Y sem Mr. & Mrs. Edmond A. Zaccaria Mr. & Mrs. M. Zachadasewycz Mr. & Mrs. William B. Zachry Mr. & Mrs. Harry S. K. Zen Dr. & Mrs. Harold E. C. Zheutlin Mr. Samuel H. Zimmerman Mr. Edward Zinser Mr. & Mrs. Nat Zivin
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Trinity Reporter October 1973 Page 12
1972-1973 Friends of Trinity Contributors Unrestricted General and/or Restricted Designated Purposes
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Anonymous
Mrs. Francis J. Achatz Mr. Howard W. Alcorn Mrs. Nils A. C. Anderson Mr. & Mrs. Charles H. Anthony Mr. Ralph D. Arcari * Mrs. A. Everett Austin, Jr. Mr. Jesse M. Bailey Mr. Henry P. Bakewell Mr. George W. Bardaglio + Mr. Carlyle F. Barnes + Mrs. Austin D. Barney Mr. & Mrs. John L. Barter Mr. & Mrs. Harry 0 . Bartlett Miss Elizabeth E. Bean Mr. & Mrs. Maxwell M. Belding Miss Frances P. Bella Mr. Samuel M. Bella Mr. & Mrs. Robert C. Black, III Prof. Theodore R. Blakeslee Mr. Ralph H. Blanchard + Mr. & Mrs . .John A. Blanchfield * Mr. & Mrs. Clifton M. Bockstoce Mr. William Booth * Mrs. Victoria Bordonaro Mrs. Charles A. Bowes Kenneth F. Brandon, M.D. * Miss Eleanor L. Brewster Dr. William R. Bronson Mr. & Mrs. Frederick T. Broughton Mr. & Mrs. Elliott B. Brown * Dr. Karl F. Brown Miss Josephine E. Bryant The Bulkeley High School Class of 1958 The Bulkeley Retired Teachers Association Mrs. C. Charles Burlingame Mrs. John L Bunce + Mr. & Mrs. Robert W. Butcher Mr. Roderick Cameron Mr. S. A. Candiloro Mr. & Mrs. J. Leo Carp + Mr. Edward J. Casey * Mr. & Mrs. David T. Chase +. Mr. Frank B. Chase Mr. Charles H. Chatfield Mr. F. A. Clinton, Sr. Mr. & Mrs.路 Arthur C. Coe Miss Anna Cohendet Mr. & Mrs. Charles J. Cole Mr. & Mrs. William K. Cole * . Mr. & Mrs. H. Bacon Collamore Mr. Atwood Collins, II Mr. Walter J. Connolly, Jr. Dr. & Mrs. Harold Conrad, Jr. Dr. George B. Cooper Mr. John R. Cooper Mr. & Mrs. Harold L. Costello Miss Ruth C. Cowles Mr. & Mrs. William Sheffield Cowles Mr. & Mrs. Douglas E. Crawford Mrs. Warren Creamer Mrs. Alexander W. Creedon Mr. & Mrs. William M. Cullina Miss Mary Lee Curry * Mrs. Richard C. Cushman Mrs. Herbert Cutler Dr. & Mrs. Harry Dadourian Mr. John Dando + Mrs. Robert E. Darling Mr. & Mrs. Henri M. David Mr. & Mrs. Frederick A. Davis Mrs. J. H. Kelso Davis Mrs. Charles Dehn, Jr. Miss Helen DiCorleto * Mr. James C. Dobbin Mr. Horace W. B. Donegan, II Mr. & Mrs. Merrill H. Dooey Dr. George W. Doten Dr. & Mrs. Harold L. Dprwart * Dr. & Mrs. Norton Downs Miss Alice E. Dunham * Mrs. WilliamS. Eaton Mrs. Frederick J. Eberle + Mr. & Mrs. C. Manton Eddy Miss Annemarie Egeberg Mr. & Mrs. John E. Ellsworth * Mr. & Mrs. Ostrom Enders Mrs. Jean Englehart Ms. Nancy J. Englehart Mr. & Mrs. Robert Englehart Mr. & Mrs. Donald B. Engley Mr. & Mrs. James F. English, Jr. Miss Selma Erving Mrs. Rowland Evans Mr. Marshal Fabyan, Jr. Mr. Alan S. Farnell Mr. & Mrs. George C. Fawcett Mr. & Mrs. Philip D. Feltman Mr. & Mrs. Francis T. Penn Mr. William C. Penniman Mr. Henry Fishzohn Mr. & Mrs. Harry Fleischer Ms. Martha C. Fransson * Mr. H. Crowell Freeman + Mr. Avard Fuller Miss Melicent R. Fuller Mr. & Mrs. SamuelS. Fuller Dr. Albert T. Gastman Mr. & Mrs. J. Bernard Gates Mrs. Agnes Gibson
+ Mr. George H. Gilman, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Marc H. Goldberg Mr. Timothy W. Goodrich, II * Mr. & Mrs. Henry Sage Goodwin * Mrs. James L. Goodwin Mr. & Mrs. Norman T. Graf + Mr. Ellsworth S. Grant Mr. & Mrs. Francis J. Gray" Mr. & Mrs. Arthur W. Gregory, Jr. Prof. Rita C. Griswold Miss Cornelia Gross Mrs. William Haine Dr. Carl Hansen Mr. & Mrs. Penn Hargrove + Mrs. Edward A. Hart Mr. & Mrs. Everett H. Hart Mr. Richard B. Harwell Mr. & Mrs. Bruce P. Hayden Mr. & Mrs. John A. Hayes, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Charles E. Heilig, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Philip Hewes Mr. Charles C. Hewitt, Jr. Mr. John W. Hincks Mr. & Mrs. Frederick D. Houghton '* Mrs. Charles A. Hunter + Mr. Godfrey Hunter Mrs. Elizabeth E. Hyland Mr. & Mrs. Mitchel S. Ivanowsky Miss Barbara G. Jeffers Mr. Sherwood F. Jeter, Jr. Miss Martha Johnson Mr. Richard F. Jones, Jr. Mr. Robert B. Kaemmerlen Mr. & Mrs. Bernard B. Kaplan Mrs. Harold Kaufman Mr. & Mrs. Edmund J. Keleher Miss Mildred B. Kienle Mr. Harry H. Kleinman Miss Esther Knowlton Mr. George M. Kofsky Mr. & Mrs. Richard Koopman Dr. & Mrs. Walter P. Kosar Cap t. & Mrs. Wendell E. Kraft Dr. & Mrs. M. Curtis Langhorne Mrs. Ralph C. Lasbury, Jr. Dr. Faye C. Lewis Mr. Albert K. Lim Mr. & Mrs. Arthur B. Locke Mr. & Mrs. Boardman F . Lockwood Mr. Chester H. Loomis Mr. & Mrs. Jerome H. Lowengard Mr. James B. Lyon Miss Irene Mackie Miss Mary Mackie Mr. Marlin V. MacLaughlin, Sr. Mrs. Edward Madeira Dr. Michael R. T. Mahoney Mr. Robert H. Mahoney Mr. & Mrs. Frederick C. Maynard, Jr. Mr. John M. McGann, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. John J. McGrath * Mrs. Florence C. McGuire Mrs. George J. Mead Mr. A. Tillman Merritt Miss Doris Merwin Mr. G. F . Michelbacher Miss E. Jane Miller * Mr. Arthur Milliken Mr. Gerard Morrissey Mr. & Mrs. Clifford R. Morris Mr. & Mrs. William H. Mortensen * Mr. & Mrs. Charles Stewart Matt Mrs. E. F. Muller Mrs. Robert 0. Muller 'Neath the Elms Garden Club Dr. Rex C. Neaverson Mr. Edwin F. Nelson * Mrs. William J. Nelson Mr. Robert L. Newell Friends at Newington High School + Mr. & Mrs. Robert W. Newman Mr. &Mrs. Otto W. Newmann and Family Mr. & Mrs. Howard N. Nielson Mr. & Mrs. Howard B. Noble Mr. Robert F. O'Leary + Mr. & Mrs. Raymond Oosting Dr. Robert B. Oxnam Mrs. Helen D. Perkins Mr. George R. Perry The Phi Psi Building Association of Alpha Chi Rho, Inc. Mr. & Mrs. Anthony Pietrallo Dr. & Mrs. Maurice M. Pike Mr. & Mrs. Robert E. Pinney Dr. Mario J. Poliferno Miss Dorothy G. Potter Mr. & Mrs. F. Osborne Pouchot * Mrs. Charles F. Powell Mr. Robert H. Powell Pratt High School Class of 1943 Mrs. Arthur G. Preston, Jr. Mr. Albert D. Putnam Mr. Douglas T. Putnam Mr. & Mrs. Lyonel H. Putnam Mrs. Jane Quigg Miss Margaret E. Rankin Mr. Robert E. Rappoli Mrs. Harold E. Read Miss Mary Addison Rees Miss Norma K. Regan Mr. & Mrs. John H. Reid
*Founders Society for gifts of $1,000 or more. +Anniversary Club for gifts of $150-$999.
Mrs. Elvia Enders Richards Mr. John H. Riege Mr. A. Lawrence Riker + Mr. & Mrs. William R. Robbins Mrs. Edward C. Roberts Mr. & Mrs. J. K. Robertson Mr. & Mrs. Barclay Robinson, Jr. Mr. Andrew J. Rolfe Mrs. Ernest Rosenthal Mr. & Mrs. Rolland W. Ross Mr. & Mrs. Julius M. Rothstein Mr. & Mrs. Isaac D. Russell Dr. & Mrs. August E. Sapega Mr. William F. Sargent Mrs. Einer Sather Mrs. George B. Savage Mr. Peter M. Savin The Hon. & Mrs. Max M. Savitt * Mrs. Lauriston L. Scaife Mr. Nicholas Schaus Mr. & Mrs. Bernard Schiro Mr. Robert H. Schutz, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. David Schwartz Ms. Lucile P. Scott Mr. & Mrs. Ralph Seltzer * Mrs. Robert W. Sheehan Mrs. Morris Silverman Mrs. Jane Sjoholm Dr. & Mrs. Thomas H. Skirm + Mr. James B. Slimmon, Jr. Mr. Edward H. Smith Mrs. Louise J. Smith Dr. & Mrs. Sterling B. Smith + Mr. & Mrs. Louis Solomon Mr. & Mrs. W. Howard Spencer Mr. J. T. Stabiler & Family Dr. & Mrs. E. Myles Stapdish Mr. John F . Starr Mr. David R. Stern Prof. Robert C. Stewart Mrs. Jack L. Stokes
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Mr. Robert W. Stoughton Mrs. Henry Sturman Mr. Michael Sugarman Mr. Milton Susman Mr. & Mrs. Theodore L. Sweet Miss Carolyn B. Taylor Mr. James A. Taylor Mr. John C. E. Taylor Mrs. Morgan W. Taylor Dr. & Mrs. D. G. Brinton Thompson Mr. Edmund B. Thompson Mr. Vincent E. Thornburg Mr. Bryant F. Tolles Mr. Leonard R. Tomat Mr. & Mrs. James H. Torrey Town-Gown Forum Mr. Crampton Trainer Trinity College Girls Club Mr. Leonard M. Troub Mr. & Mrs. Edward P. Tucker Mrs. B. Floyd Turner Dr. Ralph E. Walde Mr. Harold F. Watson Mr. & Mrs. Stuart D. Watson Mr. & Mrs. Burt Weiss Wethersfield Garden Club Benjamin B. Whitcomb, M.D. Mr. Gerald M. White Mrs. Thomas S. Whitman Mrs. Gertrude T. Widerkrantz Mrs. Eleanor Gay Wiley Mr. & Mrs. Roger C. Wilkins Dr. Ralph M. Williams Mrs. E. Kenneth Wilson Ms. Barbara Winchester Mr. & Mrs. Milton J. Wood Miss Rachel M. Woodis Mrs. Lucien Wulsin Mrs. Howard W. Yeomans Mr. E. Robert Zenke Mr. & Mrs. Charles Zimmerman
Business and Industry Contributors
The Acme Plumbing & Heating Co. A-Copy, Inc. Aetna Life & Casualty Alcoa Foundation Allied Electric Supply Co. American Glass Company American Linen Supply Co .., Inc. American Telephone & Telegraph Co. Ames Department Stores, Inc. Arrow-Hart, Inc. The Arrow Window Shade Manufacturing Co. The Associated Construction Co. Associated Spring Corporation Automatic Comfort Corp. Barney's of Hartford, Inc. J. R. Blais Associates Bond Press, Inc. Bristol Laboratories Division of Bristol-Myers Co . Burt-Knust-McCabe Associates 路 Butterfield's C & N Auto Service Peter Cascio Nursery, Inc. Caval Tool & Machine Company, Inc. Celanese Coatings Co., Devoe Paint Division Coleco Industries, Inc. Combustion Engineering, Inc. The Connecticut Bank & Trust Company Connecticut General Insurance Corp. Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance Co. The Connecticut Stamping & Bending Co. Consumer Sales Company The Covenant Group The Dew Construction Co. The Dexter Corporation Dillon Chapin, Inc. Dillon Mailing Bureau, Inc. Dow and Condon, Realtors Drico Corp. Dunham-Bush, Inc. Eagle Sheet Metal Works, Inc. The Ensign-Bickford Foundation, Inc. The Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United States Exxon Education Foundation T. D. Faulkner Co. Fisher's Package Store, Inc. G. Fox & Co. The Fuller Brush Company General Fireproofing Company Golden Oak Package Store Daniel Goodison, Inc. The Guaranty Bank & Trust Co. Hallisey and D'Agostino The Hartford Courant Foundation, Inc. Hartford Despatch The Hartford Electric Light Company The Hartford Electric Machine Co. Hartford Federal Savings The Hartford Insurance Group Hartford National Bank and Trust Co. Hartford Office Supply Company, Inc. The Hartford Steam Boiler Inspection and Insurance Company The Hartford Times, Inc.
The Hartford Wire Works Company The Harvey and Lewis Company Hercules, Inc. Heublein Foundation, Inc. M. Frank Higgins & Co., Inc. Hi-Line Products Co. Horn Construction, Inc. Hotel Sonesta Household Finance Corporation INA Foundation Industrial Refractories Corp. Jeter and Cook, Architects Johnson and Dee Johnson Electrical Company, Inc. Kalart Victor Corp. Kaman Aerospace Corporation The Keeney Manufacturing Company The Kessler Construction Company Kip and Joe's, Inc. John Leavitt, Inc. The Liner-A twill Company Lipman Motors, Inc. Loctite Corporation Lupachino & Salvatore, Inc. Lybrand, Ross Bros. & Montgomery Manafort Brothers, Inc. Mark Supply Company, Inc. Mechanics Savings Bank Metal Lathers Local 46 Funds Murtha, Cullina, Richter and Pinney National Typewriter Co. Neiditz Brothers Onderdonk-Lathrop Associates, Inc. Parma Restaurant & Grill M. A. Peterson, Inc. The Procter & Gamble Fund Radio Corporation of America Research Corporation Rohm and Haas Company Roncari Industries, Inc. Sage-Allen & Company, Inc. Savin Brothers, Inc. The Sears-Roebuck Foundation Simplex Security SystemsJnc. Society for Savings The Southern New England Telephone Company The Spencer Turbine Company The Sperry & Hutchinson Foundation, Inc. Stanadyne, Inc. Standard Builders, Inc. The Standard Mattress Co;npany The Stauffer Chemical Co. Foundation Talman Federal Savings & Loan Association Tel-Rad, Inc. The Travelers Insurance Companies Tull Brothers, Inc. United Aircraft Corporation Van Zelm, Heywood and Shadford Veeder Industries, Inc. Bernard Vinick Associates, Inc. Walsh Brothers Travel West Hartford Lock Company The Wiremold Company Youth Centre, Inc.
Trinity Reporter October 1973 Page 13
Bequests Corporate Contributors of Matching Gifts The A. S. Abell Co. Foundation Abex Corporation Aetna Life & Casualty Allied Chemical Foundation American Airlines, Inc. American Motors Corporation American Optical Co. American Standard, Inc. AMF, Inc. Anaconda Armstrong Cork Co. Asarco Foundation Associated Spring Corporation Bank of America Foundation The Bank of New York Becton, Dickinson and Company Bethlehem Steel Corporation The Chase Manhattan Bank, N.A. Chemical Bank Collins & Aidman Corp. Combustion Engineering, Inc. Commercial Credit Companies Foundation Connecticut General Insurance Corp. Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance Co. Continental Can Co., Inc. Copley Newspapers Deering Milliken, Inc. Diamond Shamrock Corp. Donaldson, Lufkin & Jemette, Inc. Dresser Industries, Inc. Dun & Bradstreet Foundation, Inc. Equitable Life Assurance Society of the U.S. Exxon Education Foundation Federated Dept. Stores, Inc. The First National Bank of Boston First National City Bank Foundation
The First New Haven National Bank Ford Motor Co. General Electric Foundation General Telephone & Electronics Corp. Gillette Co. Goldman, Sachs & Co. W. T. Grant Co. Great Northern Paper Co. Gulf Oil Corp. John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Co. Harsco Corporation Fund Hartford Electric Light Co. Hartford Insurance Group Hartford National Bank and Trust Co. Hercules, Inc. Hershey Fund Honeywell, Inc. Hughes Aircraft Co. INA Corporation International Business Machines Corp. International Flavors & Fragrances . International Telephone & Telegraph Corp. Irving Trust Company Johnson & Higgins Jones & Laughlin Steel Co. Kidder, Peabody & Co., Inc. Manufacturer's Hanover Trust Co. Marine Midland Bank McGraw-Hill, Inc. Mead Johnson & Co. Mellon National Bank & Trust Co. Merck Co. Foundation Merit-Saveway Foundation Metropolitan Life Insurance Co. Mobil Oil Corp. Morgan Guaranty Trust Co. of N.Y. Mutual of New York
National Biscuit Company National Distillers & Chemical Corp. New England Mutual Life Insurance Co. The New York Times Foundation, Inc. North American Rockwell Northeast Utilities Service Co. Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Co. Norton Co. Olin Corp. Owens-Corning Fiberglas Corp. Phelps Dodge Foundation Phoenix Mutual Life Insurance Co. Pitney-Bowes, Inc. Provident National Bank Prudential Insurance Co. of America Raytheon Company Rohm & Haas Co. Sanders Associates, Inc. Scott Paper Co. Joseph E. Seagram & Sons, Inc. Smith Kline & French Foundation Square D Foundation, Inc. J.P. Stevens & Co., Inc. Texas Instruments, Inc. Textron Foundation J. Walter Thompson Co. Time, Inc. Transamerica Corp. The Travelers Insurance Companies United Aircraft Corp. United States Trust Co. Upjohn Co. Weeden & Co. Westinghouse Educational Foundation Winn-Dixie Stores Foundation Xerox Corporation Young & Rubicam Foundation
Michael C. Beckanstin Mrs. Helen L. Blake Mrs. Mary Gormly Bowne Francis Boyer, Hon. '61 Newton C. Brainard, Hon. '46 and '59 MortonS. Crehore '14 Arthur Hosmer Huse Charles A. Lewis '93 Clarence A. Meyer '16 John M. Parker '17 Thomas W. Russell Barclay Shaw '35 Mr. & Mrs. Charles B. Spofford, Jr. '16 Edgar F. Waterman '98, Hon '58
Foundations (non-corporate) The Braitrnayer Foundation The Ensworth Charitable Foundation The Maurice Greenberg Family Foundation Stella and Charles Guttman Foundation The Hartford Foundation for Public Giving Hartford Jewish Federation Aaron Hollander Fund Simon Hollander Fund The Knox Foundation Charles Stewart Mott Foundation St. Anthony Educational Foundation Margaret Dorrance Strawbridge Foundation The Thomas J. Watson Foundation The Raymond John Wean Foundation
Text of President's Convocation Address (continued from page 4) become sensitive to the human problems which we have, sometimes unwittingly and perhaps even unwillingly, created. To gain that sensitivity requires that we understand ourselves and the world in whicnwe live. Too often we are unaware of the values which precast our responses and even our theoretical consideration of ideas. A central purpose of liberal learning should be to identify the values influencing our behavior, to use our reason to appraise those values, and then to reconsider them in light of their validity and their consequences for both the individual and society. To do that, we must hold up alternatives of experience and various descriptions of reality so that we may arrive as judgments based on our perception of the truth and then act upon those judgments. We must move beyond the mere transmission of values, something which liberal arts colleges have done fairly well, to the analytical consideration of those values. It is not enough to be conscious of them; we need to find ways to relate refined intelligence to the issues before our troubled society in a manner that makes sense out of our individual existence. I recognize that the term "values" is elusive. It is like the word "experience," which, as George Santayana once observed, bursts into a hundred different meanings whenever we examine it. Yet, if we are to avoid uncritical acceptance of our presuppositions, if we are to become creative in the use of our ideas, we must reach some understanding of values. For all that we do is value-laden; that is, what we do is the product of some decision or choice. In that sense we can profit from being more alert to go about our business. If we devote ourselves to research in higher education, for instance, then we convey a value which no sophistry about social responsibility will disarm. Admittedly, to many the term "values" implies the moral code according to which we act, and thus quickly can become dogmatic or so personal as to defy intrusion. Although it is impossible to disengage any of these meanings from a
consideration of values, what I propose is something different and less remote. I start from the assumption that each of us must respond in some way to the great issues of truth and falsehood, understanding and prejudice, justice and - tyranny, love and hatreo, life 路and deatli. How we respond depends upon that set of values we have developed. Surely a college education should help us in that task. In particular, undergraduate education ought to assist us in perceiving how these issues relate to the dignity and worth of the individual. Testing hypotheses in any discipline can provide further insights into the dilemma of existence. To our commitment to reason, we must add a commitment to humanity. In the classroom this commitment may mean making explicit the assumptions which underlie, say, history's reconstruction of the past or physics' approach to reality. It means an analysis of the human consequences of following one economic theory as opposed to another, of pursuing our knowledge of genetics as it may apply to different peoples. We do some of this now; but, if my argument is valid, we have not done enough. Too frequently, courses become the vehicle through which we make available certain prescribed knowledge. A curriculum should go beyond that essential informational service to enable the individual to sharpen his sensitivities; it would also be a mirror which reflects life and living. Lest I be misunderstood, let me add that this approach necessitates
that the material used be significant and presented with all the intellectual rigor and vigorous dialogue at our command. In short, I propose that we continuously remind ourselves that each of us sooner or later must find some meaning in life, a view of our experience that will permit us to act in behalf of humanity. Obviously this obligation reaches beyond the classroom. In our relations to one another, we reveal our value assumptions. Either we convey to each person that we care deeply about what happens to that individual, or we don't and that makes all the difference. At Trinity I trust that we shall always make the effort to understand each other, to care what happens to our fellow human being. In that regard we must constantly seek to appreciate the differences in background which we bring to this campus. Our approach to racial injustice and inequality in this community, the relations we develop between whites and blacks and Puerto Ricans, will say much about our ability as a nation to meet this long festering issue. I am not brash enough to suggest that this description of our purpose as an undergraduate liberal arts college answers all the questions as what Trinity should be and should do. What I hope is that we - all of us - consider the implications of setting ourselves this goal. We cannot content ourselves with the fact that Trinity attracts a talented student body, that it has a distinguished
faculty, a flexible curriculum, extensive physical facilities, and far-reaching intellectual opportunities. We must have a broader concern which bears upon the kind of change we sense this world needs if mankind is to Jesolve the issues before it. We must remember that the individual and his response - whether to the environment, a nation's destiny, a 路 Watergate revelation, or his own education - are critical. Accountability to one's self is the starting point. Somehow the years at Trinity should help each person to reach a set of values according to which he or she is willing to live. Much else may occur during the undergraduate years - and most assuredly does, but no community of learning can afford to neglect serious consideration of human values. That is why I said last May: "The undergraduate years are the one time when people can come to understand something of themselves and the world around them, when they can begin to reach beyond themselves to touch the world at unnumbered points. That spirit of curiosity and concern, that sensibility to the meaning of life, must prevail at Trinity." Having lost our innocence, we must regain our integrity. I look forward to discussing with you the implications of making the question of values the central concern at Trinity. And I wish all of you the very best in this, our 151 st year.
50 City Youths in Upward Bound Program Fifty underachieving high school students from Hartford and Waterbury will be working toward college this year under a new Upward Bound program jointly sponsored by Trinity College and two community colleges. Funded by a $55,000 grant from the U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare, the new program is being sponsored by Trinity , Manchester Community College and Mattatuck Community College in Waterbury. The
program, officially known as the Twin Valleys Upward Bound Program, got under way with a special summer program at Trinity during July and August. It will continue in the high schools in the fall. Director of the program is Raymond S. Blanks of Hartford, former assistant director of the Shanti School, Hartford's alternate high school. He directed the six-week summer session, and will guide the follow-up tutorial program to be held
in Hartford and Waterbury high schools during the academic year. The program is geared for lOth, 11th, and 12th grade students who are disadvantaged and underachieving, but who have high potential. The summer program was staffed by five local high school teachers, and five tutors, including two Trinity students, and students from the University of Hartford, Manchester Community College and Kirkland College in Clinton, N.Y.
Trinity Reporter October 1973 Page 14
Awareness Up, Thefts Decrease
The Connecticut Bank and Trust Company, in a pictorial display, saluted the Trinity Bantams during the month of September. From Sept. 4 to Sept. 21 the lobby of the CBT building at One Constitution Plaza held a display covering the history of collegiate and professional football. The Trinity section consisted of a series of team pictures. The l972 and 1973 teams were included as well as 1892, the frrst year of the flying wedge, and 1907, the year of Trinity's 94-0 victory over City College of New York which still stands as the Bantams highest scoring game. Representing more recent Bantam teams were (left to right, see photo) fullback Charles Sticka '56, kicking specialist Quentin Keith '72 and tackle Don Viering '42. Sticka and Keith each still hold four individual Trinity records.
Trinity Parents (continued from page I) prospective students, to help Trinity students find summer or permanent jobs, and to help in arranging joint area meetings between parents and alumni. Parents are also invited to attend meetings of Trinity alumni associations. The College has appointed a high-level administrator to act as liaison between the parents and the College. Harry 0. Bartlett, Director of Administrative Services, works with the officers and directors of the parents association and helps plan the association's meetings on campus. J:he successful meeting of last November 3-5, which brought an estimated 625 parents to campus, was a busy weekend which exposed the parents to Trinity's people, programs, and possibilities. It included classroom visits, sports (frosh football and soccer, field hockey, cross-country, varsity football), panel discussions on academic programs at the College and career opportunities for graduates; a carillon concert; theatre; a parent and student dinner, and a director's meeting at the State Capitol, the site of Trinity's first campus. In addition, President Lockwood, sends an annual letter to parents in which he outlines matters of interest to parents. At Commencement each year , he sponsors a reception for seniors and their families. Parents are also represented on th e Trinity College Council , a community-wide organization which advises the President on matters of general concern. This year Parents Weekend will be on October 26-2 7 ~
Law, 1963-66 ; special assistant to the president, University of Connecticut School of Law, 1963-66; and chief academic and administrative officer, Southeastern Campus, University of Connecticut, 1967-72. He has served as a mediator for the Connecticut State Department of Education since 1967. Mr. O'Hara was president of the Trinity Club of Washington, D.C., from 1961-63; served on the board of fellows from 1966-72, and was co-chairman from 1967-69. He has served on the committee on federal legislation in aid to higher education of the Association of American Law Schools, 1964-68; on the board of directors of the Groton (Conn.) Chamber of eommerce, 1969::'70; on the board of the Groton Public Health Nursing Service; as second vice president and on the board of directors, Southeastern Connecticut Ass-ociation for Mental Health, Inc., 1968-69; on the board of the United Fund of Southeastern Connecticut, 1968-72, and was a member of the Groton Development and Industrial Commission, 1969-71. He is the author and editor of numerous books and articles.
OHara Elected (continued from page 1) University School of Law in 1966 and a J.D . from Georgetown University Law Center in 1967, became the third president of Mount Saint Mary College in July, 1972. Mount Saint Mary College, founded in 19 59, is a liberal arts college with an enrollment of about 750 students, mostly female . He was a public defender with the Legal Aid Agency for the District of Columbia from 1960-62; with the special swbcommittee on education of the Education and Labor Committee of the U.S . House of Representatives, 1962-63; associate dean and associate professor of law, University of Connecticut School of
Dr. Frank G . Kirkpatrick, assistant professor of religion, has been appointed director of the College's Individualized Degree Program, a new course of study for people with family or job obligations. Dr. Kirkpatrick will be in charge of administering the program, which began this spring. He succeeds Dr. Robert B. Oxnam, assistant professor of history, who was in charge during the planning of the program. In addition, Mrs. Louise H. Fisher '73, of Granby, has been appointed assistant to the director of admissions for the IDP.
Efforts to instill security consciousness on campus, especially among the student body, have resulted in significant decreases in dormitory thefts during the past year , according to Alfred A. Garofolo, director of security. Programs known as "Operation Identification" and "Operation Bike," the installation of dead bolt combination locks and new security patrols resulted in a decrease of 87 percent in dormitory thefts over the past three years. In 1970-71, there were 129 dormitory thefts, with the total value of the stolen items estimated at $8,361. During the past year there were orily 17 thefts, and the value of the stolen items was $13,000 less than three years ago. The identification and bike programs were special registration programs under which students could put the serial numbers of valuable property- such as stereo e路q uipment,- cameras, and bicycles-with the security office. Knowledge that such equipment is registered often preventf theft , Garofolo says, as well as aids in tt.e recovery should theft occur. For items which had no serial number, pen engravers were used by students to put an identifying mark on their property. The bicycle campaign sponsored with the Hartford Police Department resulted in the registration of two-thirds of the bicycles on campus. The combination locks, which work on a push-button system, not orily cut down the number of thefts, but also decreased by 800 the number of lockouts over the past two years. Since the combination locks require no key, a student is less likely to lock himself out. Each lock-out results in a
security man leaving patrol and spending from ten to 15 minutes gaining re-entry for the student. These figures are particularly significant, according to Mr. Garofolo, because since his arrival on campus in 1966 there has been a growth in the student body of approximately 500 students in addition to the acquisition of additional off-campus college housing, several former fraternity houses, plus the Albert C. Jacobs Life Sciences Center, the maintenance building, the high rise dormitory and the latest George M. Ferris Athletic Center which all require security. In order to promote this new security awareness, Mr. Garofolo said he sought the assistance of the Dean's offices, resident advisors, posters, articles in the school newspaper, and talks to various campus groups. The identification forms and bicycle registration cards are distributed at registration and throughout the year at the security office, the student center and through resident advisors. Many of the faculty , administration and staff voluntarily participated in the "identification" programs. Mr. Garofolo recently attended a conference of the Northeastern College and University Association at Williams College, in Williamstown, Mass. He presented a talk on dormitory room security, the use of the Simplex combination locks, the use of pen engravers and the effects of the "Operation Identification" program which helped reduce the dormitory thefts. At the business meeting, Mr. Garofolo was elected first vice president of the organization.
J Illinois Scholars
In Freshman Class Scholarships for Illinois Residents, Inc., a private scholarship fund, which since 1948 has -enabled approximately 246 students from Illinois to study at the College, has awarded five scholarships this year to outstanding high school graduates. Names of the new Illinois Scholars who will become members of the class of 1977 at Trinity were announced by President Lockwood and Dr. Daniel Alpert , director of the Center for Advanced Study, University of Illinois, Urbana, Ill, and president of the Scholarships for Illinois Residents, Inc. Under the unique program , approximately $74,400 in scholarship aid will be offered to the five students over the next four years. The amount of each scholarship, renewable for three years, varies according to the financial need of the scholar. Including those members of the Class of 1977, there will be 42 Illinois students studying under the scholarship plan next year at Trinity . The five new Illinois Scholars are: GREGORY ALAN FERGUSON, son of Mrs. Leona B. Ferguson of 710 North Drake, Chicago, is a June graduate of Latin School of Chicago . At Latin School he was captain of the basketball team in his senior year and earned two varsity letters in that sport. He also received two varsity letters in soccer. He was a member of the drama club for three years and a student participant in the Upward Bound program. He plans to major in philosophy. CURTIS MICHAEL KENDALL, son of Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Kendall of 1525
Spencer Street, Wilmette, is a June graduate of New Trier East High School. He was president of New Trier East High School. He was president of the student council and chairman of the student cabinet in his senior year. He was also an editorial writer for the "New Trier News" as well as a member of the debating team. He plans to study law. PAULA MARIE KLEIN, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Klein of 1721 West Ayres, Peoria, is a June graduate of Academy of Our Lady. She was vice president of the junior class, served as s student senator, was a staff writer for the school newspaper and a member of the debating society. She also participated in intramural athletics. She plans to teach school. BELINDA LEE LEWIS , daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Paul W. Lewis of Sunset Drive Clinton, is a June graduate of Clinton High School. During her junior year she was a foreign exchange student to Colombia with the American Field Service, was a contributor to the literary magazine, worked on the yearbook, was a member of the glee club and of the drama club, and also worked for the school newspaper. She plans to major in psychology. SANDRA SMITH, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Erron L. Smith, Sr., 6352 South Morgan Street, Chicago, is a June graduate of Englewood High School. She is a member of the National Honor Society, president of the science club, secretary of the student council and editor of the yearbook. She also played the clarinet in the school band. She plans to become a doctor.
Trinity Reporter October 1973 Page 15
BOOK
REVIEW ON GIDE'S PROMETHEE By Kurt Weinberg, M.A. '49 Professor of French, German and Comparative Literature, University of Rochester Princeton University Press, 1972 150 pages; $7.50
Reviewed by Michael J. Pre tina, Jr. Assistant Professor of Modern Languages From the moment of their establishment in France, Protestants have remained an entrenched minority living in the midst of a nominally Catholic society. During their early history, French Protestants suffered persecution and martyrdom at the hands of their Catholic neighbors. The belief that the Reformed Church constituted a state within a state and hence a threat to national harmony and security, explains why the French government pursued a policy of suppression of Protestants in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. The Reformed Church which by Calvinist orientation was austere and morally rigorous became even more so through a judaic desire to remain untouched by contact with a hostile Catholic world. Andre Gide was born into a wealthy Protestant family. Although he lived at a time when Protestants were assimilated, Gide nevertheless was deeply marked by the excessive rigidity of French Protestantism. Mr. Weinberg's study of Le Promethee mal 路enchafne brillantly portrays the young Gide in revolt against a stifling Protestant ethic steeped in
-Trad-itional Rite ' Welcomes F rash (continued from page 1) "Colleges " he said, "have a formal commitment, at least as part of the curricula they offer, to transmit that which has proved to be significant and durable. In this sense, Matriculation symbolizes the commitment to preserve, to transmit, and to advance knowledge. It signifies both the privilege we have as a people freely to attend college and the responsibility you accept to seek your own education in company with your fellow students and the faculty." "This ceremony should also remind us," Dr. Lockwood added, "how important the open academic community is ... It should convey our joint commitment to preserve Trinity as an institution open to the free and responsible consideration of those issues important to the future of mankind. It should remind us of the validity of the truth-seeking process, the integrity of learning, and the responsibility each of us bears to serve humanity." Brian H. Abery of Hartford, representing the Freshman Class, signed the Matriculation Book during the ceremony. After the ceremony, freshmen were greeted individually by President Lockwood in his office, where they also signed the Matriculation Book. This _year's class of 420 freshmen includes 128 Connecticut students, 45 of whom come from the Capital Area. The class comes from a total of 24 states plus the District of Columbia, Iran, Italy, and Nigeria. There are 288 men and 132 women in the class. About 62 percent attended public high schools, and 38 percent attended private schools.
Pauline and Calvinist thinking. The moral of Promethee, as Mr. Weinberg uncovers it, is a rejection of history , religion and progress, all of which prevent an individual from feasting upon the banquet of life. Like Pascal before him, Gide depicts man as prone to live in the memory of the past and in the hope of the future. By turning man's gaze away from past and future, Gide sought to rekindle a universal morality which accepted life here and now. It is to the great praise of Mr. Weinberg that this Gidean message has seen the light of day. Working with a particularly obscure text, Mr. Weinberg uses the discipline of hermeneutics in order to, as he himself says in a phrase reminiscent of Baudelaire, "discover the temple hidden in the very forest" of symbols, images and allegory. He literally tears the text apart studying verb tenses, analysing origins of words, interpreting a whole gamut of episodes and deciphering the symbolic structure of the story. Mr. Weinberg, however, never loses sight of the whole, for all dissected elements, like the pieces of a puzzle, are ingeniously fitted together; and the reader thus perceives the overall complex structure of Promethee which, according to Mr. Weinberg, is a sotie a miroirs, a modern allegory made up of repetitive patterns of symbols, images and figurative sequences. The value of this book is even broader in scope than its astute unraveling of the mystery of Promethee. For example, Mr. Weinberg evaluates Promethee in the light of Gide's earlier apd later writings, thus revealing the successive stages in his moral and artistic development. Moreover, he compares Gide's sotie to Virgil's Eclogues showing parallels and contrasts between these two adaptations of the Prometheus myth. And most importantly, Mr. Weinberg offers the reader a dramatic insight into the very soul of Gide, the man burning with an insatiable desire to live freely according to an immoralist ethos and the artist longing to bring purity to a literary genre doo ed to impu-rity. Mr. Weinberg has written a most effective book, a must for anyone interested in Gide. I can think of no greater compliment to pay him than to say that Mr. Weinberg, like one of Stendhal's happy few, has the gift of understanding the particular sensitivity of another person. Happily for the reader, Mr. Weinberg has been able to translate into words this rare understanding of Gide.
IN MEMORY FREDERICK HOMER COGGESHALL, 1907 Word has reached the Alumni Office of the death of Frederick H. Coggeshall, a member of the class of 1907. Mr. Coggeshall was a member of Psi Upsilon fraternity and, Until his death, was a resident of San Antonio, Texas .. No other information is available at this time. JAMES ALBERT HANAGHAN, 1935 Dr. James A. Hanaghan, 60, of West Hartford, director of tuberculosis control for the State Health Department died July 24, 1973 at his office. He was to retire the following Tuesday. Born in Hartford, he lived in Greater Hartford all his life. He was a communicant of St. Helena Church, West Hartford. Dr. Hanaghan was graduated from Weaver High School, received his B.S. from Trinity College in 1935, Phi Beta Kappa, and was graduated from Harvar.d Medical School in 1941. He served as an intern at Uncas-on-Thames Sanatorium in Norwich (Conn.) from 1941 through 1949 when he transferred to the Tuberculosis Control Division of the State Commission on Tuberculosis. While serving his in tern ship at Uncas-on-Thames Sanatorium he was assistant
HAPPY FAMILY PHOTO-The "peripatetic" Lockwoods relax in Aru, Kashmir, India, during their recent trek in that exotic part of the world. With President Lockwood are his wife Betty, and daughters Serena, 10, and Mavis, 19. According to reports Serena kept well in the forefront during the hours of hiking. The Lockwoods were away for the month of July and prepared for the trip by jogging en famille around the Trinity track,
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 alumni fund gift of $1,056 in memory of the Reverend Arthur Henry Wright '83 and his son, Arthur Houstoun Wright '18. An alumni fund gift of $696 in memory of Karl W. Halld-en '09, Hon. '48 and '55. An additional amount has been received from the estates of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Byron Spoffofd, Jr. 'i6, bringing the total bequest to $293,029.23 for scholarship purposes. A bequest of $1,568 fqr general purposes from the estate of John M. Parker '17. An alumni fund gift of $1,000 in memory of Sydney D. Pinney '18 as well as $205 more for the Class of 1918 Memorial Scholarship Fund in his memory, which makes more than $2,500 added to the acholarship fund in his memory. An additional amount of $259,774.28 has been received from the estate of Francis Boyer, Hon. '61, bringing the total bequest to $509,774.28 for general purposes. Gifts have also been received in memory of the following alumni and friends: Arthur R. Van de Water '01 Frederick J. Eberle '27 Francis H. Ballou '34 - HymarrH:--BronsteiJr,:r:r.f):S. '34 Orrin S. Burnside '34 Nathaniel T. Clark '34 Samuel C. Coale, Jr. '34 Frank G. Cook '34 George De Bonis '34 Joseph D. Flynn, Jr. '34 Robert E. Fowler '34 Charles A. Fritzson '34 Albert W. Hanninen '34 Ernest H. Higgins '34 John R. Hodgson '34 Rex J . Howard '34
sanitorium physician in 1943 and senior sanitorium physician until1949. From 19 49 to 1951, he served as tuberculosis co ntrol physician for the Tuberculosis Commission. From 1953 to 1958 he was assistant director of the State Tuberculosis Commission. That year he was appointed tuberculosis program director for the State Commission on Tuberculosis, serving in that position four years. In 19'62, he was appointed as tuberculosis program director for the Office of Tuberculosis Control Hospital care and Rehabilitation for the State Health Department. In 1971, Dr. Hanaghan served as acting depty commissioner of the office of Tuberculosis Control, becoming director of the Division of Tuberculosis Control, Hospital Care and Rehabilitation in 1972. He was a member of the Connecticut State Medical Society, the Hartford Medical Society, the Connecticut Thoracic Society and the American Medical Association. He was past president and treasurer of the Connecticut Tuberculosis and Respiratory Disease Association, past president of the Connecticut Thoracic Society and the Cancer Society. 路 He leaves his wife, Marion A. Hanaghan. HOWARD AXEL EDSTROM, 1937 Howard A. Edstron, who received his B.S. from Trinity in 1937, died July 6, 1973 in the Norwalk Hospital, Norwalk, Connecticut. He lived most of his life in the Hartford area and was a graduate of West Hartford's William Hall High School. Most recently he was employed by the insurance firm of Peter C. Robinson & Co., Inc. ofBridgepor,t, Connecticut.
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Lionel L. Long '34 Raymond A. MacElroy '34 Patrick L. McMahon, Jr. '34 jo1m C. Meiville- '34Joseph G. Merriam '34 James V. Shea '34 Charles B. Smiley '34 Daniel W. Thomson '34 James B. Webl;>er, Jr., '34 James A. Hanaghan, M.D. '35 John M. Heidt '64 Greville Haslam, Hon. '45 Professor Thurman L. Hood Professor Alexander A. Mackimmie, Jr. Professor Louis H. Naylor
He leaves his wife, Mrs. Charlotte Brock Edstrom; two sons, Charles H. Edstrom and Jonathan P. Edstrom, both of Weston; his mother, Mrs. Margaret S. Edstrom of Hartford; a brother, Oliver B. P. Edstrom of Hartford; and two sisters, Mrs. Olive Carter of Newington and Mrs. Ethel Hollis of Simsbury. FREDERICK REYNOLDS SPITZER, 1940 Frederick R. Spitzer, a former columnist for the Toledo (Ohio) Times, died July 30, 1973 at his Sarasota, Florida home. Mr. Spitzer operated the Spitzer Bookshop in Toledo from 1945 to 1956. He then moved to New York City, where he wrote columns for the Toledo Times. They were 路titled, "Man About Manhattan," and "New York Notes." He also wrote "Man About Nantucket," and "Nantucket Notes" from Nantucket Island during the summer months. Mr. Spitzer, who graduated from Trinity in 1940, served in the U.S. Army during World War II. Surviving are his half brother, Brooke Brown; an uncle, Lyman Spitzer, and an aunt, Mrs. Thomas Goodbody. THOMAS SWIFT LUDLOW, 1959 Thomas S. Ludlow, a graduate of the class of 1959, died May 17, 1973 at his home in Westport, Connecticut. A member of Delta Phi fraternity, he was also a graduate of the Millbrook School in Millbrook, New York. He leaves his wife, Babs; two sisters, Mrs. James Jackson III, whose husband was Class of 1951, and Mrs. John D. Crandall, whose husband was Class of 1958; and a brother George Craig Ludlow, class of 1951.
I'
Trinity Reporter October 1973 Page 16
Water Polo:
New Splash In Sports Water polo, as an informal sport, has been added to the fall schedule on the Hilltop. Under Coach Robert Slaughter and captain-goaltender Eugene Shen '76, a 15-man squad has been working out in preparation for Trinity's first organized season. Last year a smaller group led by Shen held scrimmages with Boston College and the University of Massachusetts. Shen lettered in swimming and water polo at Exeter Academy and had an excellent year last year as a freshman on the varsity swimming team. Only one ot\ler man, Dave Teichmann, a freshman, has played in organized water polo before. He participated in the Amateur Athletic Union-League water polo in Hawaii at the Punahou School where he lettered in swimming and water polo. Although water polo is new to Trinity, and to mo st of the squad, the team has a nucleus of strong swimmers. Ted Stehle '74, captain of the Trinity swimming team is joined by Bill Brown '76 and Steve Cecil '76, both freestylers, and Mike O'Brien '76, a butterfly specialist. A number of the freshmen have had experience in swimming competition. Trinity will be in the Southern Small College Conference of Division II of the New England Intercollegiate Water Polo Association. Meets are scheduled with Exeter (Sept. 15) and tournaments: at MIT, Oct. 5-6, and Southern Connecticut, Oct. 20. To qualify for the New Englands at Brown, Oct. 26-27, conference games will be scheduled with Wesleyan, Central Connecticut, the University of Connecticut and the University of Rhode Island.
Trinity Host Of Womens Fall Regatta On October 27 at 10:30, the New England Association of Womens Rowing Colleges will meet at Trinity for the Connecticut Fall regatta. Five other crews, Yale, Wesleyan, Middletown High School, Connecticut College, and Boston University are scheduled and more may still be added. This fall Trinity has some 30 women out. Coach Gary Caldwell plans to fill three eights and possibly a four. Last year Trinity Womens Crew consisted of 10 women and competed with an eight remaining undefeated in contests with Yale, Connecticut College, and the University of Massachusetts.
DAN RUSSO NAMED S.I.D. Dan Russo '73 has been awarded a graduate fellowship as Sports Information Director at the College. He is studying for his Master's degree in history. Russo replaces Rick Mazzuto '71 who earned his Master's degree last May and was recently named full-time S. I. D. at Lafayette College in Easton, Pa.
WATER POLO-Captain-goal tender Eugene Y. Shen '76 reaches to block shot by Mike O'Brien '76.
Bants Ready for Williams Opener A 51-man varsity. football squad returned to campus on Sept. 5 from a six-day practice camp at Eastham, Massachusetts. The session at Cape Cod was an innovation for the Bantams and, in Coach Miller's estimation, a worthwhile and beneficial experience for team and coaches alike. After triple sessions during the Labor Day Weekend heat wave, the team returned to campus, classes, and a regular practice schedule. The team this year has 14 of last years starters returning (8-0, 6-D) plus an abundance of eager sophomores from Coach McPhee's undefeated '72 frosh. The squad is working the upcoming sophomores in with the experienced men in preparation for pre-season scrimmages with WPI Sept. 15 and Tufts Sept. 21 . The eight returning starters on offense . include · a strong backfield with juniors Dave Kuncio, Jim Balesano and Jonathan Nabb, and sophomore John Wholly. Last year Kuncio, at fullback, had a 58.9 yard average per game and six touchdowns. The quarterback slot is still open, (as of this writing) with junior Harold Gray, sophomore George Rose, and returning senior Saul Wiezenthal competing. Tri-captain Ronald Duckett '74 is back at split end. Last season Duckett caught 46 -p asses for 723 yards and seven touchdowns. Frosty Schofield '75 will be backing up Duckett with Bob Murenia '75, Bill Levy '75, and Mike Mistretta '76 at tight end. Murenia will also be working as a tailback. · Paul Gossling '74 and Tom Melkus '76 will be sharing the duties as flankers. Tri-captain Chad Mooney '74 will be in the offensive line but, this year, as a guard. Both Mooney and Damien Davis '75 have been moved in from tackle to guard. Replacing them as tackles will most likely be Gerry LaPlante '76 and Tony LaPolla '76 with Tom Lloyd '74 at center. The defensive linemen and linebackers will be led by tri-captain Barry O'Brien '74. Jack Holick '75 (6-1, 240) and Adron Keaton '74 (6-3, 240) are back at defensive tackle with Keith Callahan '74 (6-2, 225) and Vic Novack '76 (6-0, 215). Along with O'Brien, who is starting for his third consecutive season, will be Bill Curren '75 (6-1, 200) starting at linebacker. Jon Naab '75 and George Niland will also see time as linebackers. John Appler '74 will be starting again at defensive end with John Allen '74 and Pete Silkowski '76 also competing for game time. The defensive secondary is still wide open (as of this writing) with Larry Haas '75, Chris Max '75 and sophomores Steve Thoren, Marvin Burruss, John Wiggin and Dave Lewis all competing for positions. Only one starter, Rich Tucci '75, returned to the secondary this year leaving this area one of prime concern to the Bantams. The specialty teams this year will have a new kicker, sophomore Mike Maus replacing Joe McCabe '73 and Ed Raws '73. Graduation took both these experienced men who had handled the kicking game for two years. Mike holds the Trinity freshman record for PAT's ( 13 in one season). On last years
TRINITY SPORTS Varsity Soccer Squad Looks Strong in Defense August 31 at Trinity heralded the return of 33 men to a voluntary pre-season soccer camp. The squad returned this year with depth and strength in the defense. Head Coach Dath intends to work on strengthening the offensive line depleted by graduation. Goalies Bill Lawson '74, last year's most improved player award · recipient, and Glenn Preminger '74 are back to alternate duties for their third season together. Tfiis year Andy aufman '76 will be backing them up in the nets. Coach Dath has every reason to be pleased with the men back this year as fullbacks. Co-captain Don Hawley '74 is recovering from a slight knee injury but should be in shape for the pre-season
undefeated fro.sh he kicked 16 points and punted 13 times for an average 35.4 yards. Following a 4-4 season, the squad has the potential for a good showing although it· will be facing a rugged schedule. Williams, Colby, and Amherst were all (7-1) last year and Wesleyan, Trin's other loss, split ( 4-4). All four will field strong teams as will the other opponents. The Bantams open on Sept. 29 at Williams in what will be one of the best outings of the season.
scrimmages. Last year at MIT and Tufts, he led the .'72 team to its best efforts of the year. Along with Hawley as fullback are returning lettermen Jay Morgan '75, Larry Pleasant '74, Ron Kaplan '74 and Sophomores Sean O'Malley and Jim Solomon. Brad Addis '75 will be working on the center fullback slot. Co -captain Bob Andrian '75 will return at halfback as will Malcolm Davidson '75 and Peter Schuller, a transfer from Carnegie-Mellon and now eligible. Sophomores Chris Harris, Jeff Kelter, and Robert Peterson will also be sharing the halfback duties. Kelter and Addis will both be working with Coach Dath on his variation of rover back. Only Roger McCord '75 will be returning as a forward. However, Jeff Chin and Chris Jennings are an effective sophomore passing combination. Charlie Stewart and Gino Barra are also promising forwards from the '72 frosh. · This year's schedule includes some strong competition. Williams and Middlebury were both seated in the New England ECAC tournament which Williams won. Amherst and Wesleyan, the Little Three Champion, will also be formidable. If the strength of the defense and talent of the young forwards can jell, this season should be successful for the Bantams.
TRI-CAPTAINS- Seniors (left to right), Chad Mooney, Ron. Duckett and Barry O'Brien with Trio bead coach Don Miller.