TRINITY COLLEGE
Alumni News
January-' I946
• REVEREND REMSEN BRINCKERHOFF OGILBY PRESIDENT OF TRINITY COLLEGE 1920 -
1943
HE OFFERED TO OUR COLLEGE THE SUBSTANCE OF LIFE THIS TABLET IS GIVEN IN HIS MEMORY BY THE TRUSTEES AND FACULTY
Editor's Note: The memorial on the front page was dedicated
last fall, and is located near the main entrance of the Chapel. The architect of the Chapel, Mr. Philip H. Froman, designed it, and Lew Wallace did the carving. Professor James A. Notopoulos wrote the Latin inscription. It is interesting to note the word "rem" may mean spiritual substance or material substance. It is also a very felicitous pun on Dr. Ogilby's nickname. Certainly Dr. Ogilby will be remembered to hundreds of Trinity men for his spiritual leadership; the physical growth under his presidency, and for his wonderful personality.
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TRINITY COLLEGE ALUMNI NEWS PUBLISHED TRINITY
BY
THE ALUMNI
COLLEGE,
Edited by John VoL. VII
ASSOCIATION
HARTFORD,
JANUARY
A. ¡
OF
CONNECTICUT
Mason
1946
No.3
President's Message Trinity's war effort is over on the campus, but a look out my window constantly reminds one of its effect. Men in uniform are streaming into the Dean's office seeking admission, and by next fall we should be close to our pre-war enrollment. Over fifteen hundred Trinity men in the armed services risked their lives all over the world, and deserve the gratitude of their college as well as their country. Especially should we alumni remember the fifty-seven men listed below who have made the supreme sacrifice. Their spirit will ever remain here. We can assure you that the College is dedicated to doing its utmost to help the world profit by the sacrifice that they have made. As soon as possible it is our intention to publish a memorial booklet telling of their lives. Plans are being made to erect on campus a suitable memorial so that their names will be an inspiration to the coming College generations, and will be perpetuated at the College they loved.
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Name Capt. Frederick L. Barrett
Class 1939
Date Killed in action in Germany on February 9, 1945
Ensign William H. Beatty, USNR
1945
Killed on duty in the Pacific on November 17, 1944
Jacques E. Bloch (French Army)
1945
Killed in action in France on January 27, 1945
John H. Burns
1945
Killed in action in Germany on February 22, 1945
Lt. George H. Clarke, AAF
1944
Killed in airplane accident near Weed, California, on June 10, 1943
Lt. Horace G. Cleveland, III, U.S.M.C.R . Air Corps
1942
Killed in action in South Pacific on January 24, 1943
George F. Cobb
1945
Killed in action in Germany on November 3, 1944
Captain Malcolm Crocker, RCAF
1939
Killed in action in Europe on May 14, 1944
Sgt. Richard W. Dexter, AAF
1943
Killed in action in Corsica on December 3, 1944
Lt. Philip C. Dryden, AAF
1943
Died of wounds received in combat in Germany on January 3, 1945
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TRINITY
COLLEGE
Name
Class
ALUMNI
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NEWS
Date
Lt. Henry P. Eichacker, AAF
1937
Killed in action in Aleutians on March 6, 1944
Sgt. Richard M. Farnsworth, AAF
1944
Killed in action over Palau Island on June 13, 1944
Lt. Robert M. Flanders, AAF
1940
Killed in airplane accident over Providence, Rhode Island, June 29, 1942
Pfc. Thomas W. Flanigan
1946
Killed in action near Cologne, Germany, December 4, 1944
Lt. Rocco A. Franchi, AAF
1941
Kill ed in action in African theatre July 3, 1943
Pfc. Charles E. Frazee
1946
Killed in action at Metz, France, on November 9, 1944
Lt. Herbert R. Gilman
1942
Killed in action in Italy on January 31, 1944
Pfc. Rex E. Greene
1946
Killed in action in Germany on December I, 1944
Ensign Louis R. Guzzo, USNR
1946
Killed in airplane crash August 30, 1945
Lt. Mumford M. Heard, AAF
1944
Died as result of enemy action on Leyte Island, January 29, 1945
Lt. Henry G. Honeysett, AAF
1945
Killed in action on mission over Holland, September 18, 1944
T / 5 Elmer J. Huber
1939
Killed in action in France on February 1, 1945
Pilot Officer Robert R. Hunter, AAF
1943
Killed in airplane crash off the coast of Nicaragua, May 8, 1944
Lt. William W. Johnson, AAF
1942
Killed in action in No. Africa on February 2, 1943
Lt. A. Ogden Jones, AAF
1942
Killed in action in Europe on March 28, 1944
Capt. Frank C. Jones, Jr., AAF
1943
Killed in action over Norway on August 8, 1944
Capt. Eldred A. Kerry, Jr., AAF
1941
Killed in airplane crash at Port of Spain, Trinidad, on January 8, 1944
Roger C. Kiley, AAF
1944
Died in Washington, D. C., on October 23, 1943
Pvt. Francis C. Kowalczyk
1938
Died as result of wounds received in many on March 24, 1945
Lt. Charles H. LeFevre, AAF
1938
Killed in action over Germany on ber 29, 1943
Lt. Robert S. Manion, AAF
1942
Killed in airplane crash at Venice, Florida, on April 4, 1944
Ensign Newton H. Mason, USNR
1939
Lost in Battle of Coral Sea May 7 and 8, 1942
Capt. Daniel B. McCook
1931
Died while on duty in the Pacific, April 11, 1944
Ger~
Novem~
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TRINITY
COLLEGE
Name
Class
ALUMNI
5
NEWS
Date
Lt. Leslie W. McWilliams
1939
Killed in action in Italy, March, 1944
Sgt. Sidney A. Mills
1941
T /5 Roderick J. Murray
1942
Sgt. John B. Nasuta
1945
Killed in action in France on December 1, 1944 Died in Finschhafen, New Guinea, on October 22, 1944 Killed in action in Germany on April2, 1945
Lt. (jg) George C. Nelson, USNR
1943
Lost during typhoon in Western Pacific on December 18, 1944
Ensign Edward A. O'Malley, USNR
1943
Died in Brooklyn Naval Hospital, ber 20, 1943
Lt. Boris W. Pacelia, AAF
1939
Killed in airplane crash at Kelly Field, San Antonio, Texas, November 10, 1942
Lt. (jg) George B. Patterson, USNR
1939
Lost in Berents Sea, December 9, 1942
Sgt. John Pearson
1943
Killed in action in France, November 17, 1944
Lt. Mark Rainsford
1941
Killed in airplane crash near Bowling Green, Kentucky, July 28, 1943
Lt. Judson S. Ramaker, AAF
1937
Lt. John F. Reynolds
1940
Killed in action in South Pacific on January 7, 1943 Killed in airplane crash near Maxton, North Carolina, September 20, 1943
S/Sgt. JohnS. Saunders, AAF
1940
Killed in action in European theatre on November 8, 1942
Capt. John E. Slowik, AAF
1939
Killed in action over Europe on March 18, 1944
A.S. Charles E. Springer, USNR
1946
Died June 29, 1944
Lt. J. Gordon Sterling, AAF
1941
Killed in action over Hawaii on December 7, 1941
Pfc. Gilbert S. Tabor, Jr.
1945
Died as result of wounds on April 24, 1945
Pfc. Edwin P. Taylor, III
1946
Killed in action in Germany on March 29, 1945
Pfc. Walter Stark Taylor
1942
Killed in action in Germany on December 16, 1944
Lt. Charles W. Tourison, AAF
1943
Killed in action over Norway on November 18, 1943
Capt. William H. Warner, AAF
1935
Died of wounds received in combat in Germany on February 16, 1943
Lt. John W. Weissheimer
1939
Killed in crash of airplane near Lake Mo~ hawk, New Jersey, on October 15, 1944
John Williams, Jr., Chaplain
1926
Died May 20, 1944
Cpl. Cleveland C. Woodward, USMCR
1943
Killed in action at Saipan
Novem~
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TRINITY
CoLLEGE
Administrative Assistant
ALUMNI
NEws
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Comptroller
jOSEPH
W.
GETZENDANNER
JOHN A. MASON
President Funston has announced that Lieutenant Commander Joseph W. Getzen, It is a great pleasure for me to return to danner, Jr., of Shaker Heights, Ohio, will Trinity College as Administrative Assistant. be Comptroller of Trinity College. He will My duties will consist of publishing the assume his duties the last week in January. Alumni News, College publications and bro, Mr. Getzendanner was graduated from chures, publicity, and any other duties Duke University in 1934 and from Harvard President Funston shall assign. Business School in 1936. He has been asso, dated with the C.I.T. Corporation of Balti, After graduating from Trinity in .1934 I more; the American Radiator Corporation of worked six years for Raymond Whitcomb, New York; and the National Refining Co. of Inc., the tourist agency, in Boston, wi~h their Cleveland. In 1942 he entered the Navy foreign and sales departments. Dunng the and worked in the Procurement Division of war I was Assistant Personnel Manager and the Bureau of Aeronautics. In 1943 he was a Personnel Manager of The Hadley Special student at the Radar Training School, and Tool Co., Brighton, Mass., manufacturers of later Fighter Director Officer on the escort machine gun sights and rifle parts. carrier, U.S.S. Gambier Bay. In 1944 and Through the years my connection with the 1945 he returned to the Bureau of Aero, College has been close through the Board nautics in the Contract Termination Division. of Fellows and as President of the Boston. He is married and has one child. Alumni. I have, however, much to learn NEW ALUMNI AND about the various departments, undergraduate activities, and this magazine. The previous PUBLICITY OFFICE editors Tom Wadlow and Bard McNulty, The Alumni and Publicity Office has moved have s~t a high standard. I hope to mait?-t~in Jarvis 4 to Jarvis 19. This room in from it, and I shall give my very best to Tn~·uty in this new job. I welcome your suggestiOns Middle Jarvis is the old Navy headquarters. Will all Alumni when on campus please feel and criticisms. free to come in to Jarvis 19 and make them, - JOHN A. MASON
selves known.
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TRINITY
COLLEGE
NEWS
7
Inauguration
Fraternities
February 22 has been set as the date for the inauguration of George Keith Funston as the thirteenth president of Trinity College, according to a recent announcement made by Mr. Newton C. Brainard, Chairman of the Inauguration Committee. Mr. Brainard has also stated that the following schedule of events is being arranged in connection with the ceremony:
At a meeting of the Sword and Key Society on January II it was unanimously voted to reopen the campus fraternities on February 4. Jt was agreed that rushing of members of the Sword and Key Society who have not fraternity connections will take place the week of February II th. A quota will be determined - probably five or six men for each house. The rushing rules are to be drawn up by the Executive Committee of Sword and Key and shall be approved by the Graduate Interfraternity Council and the College Administration. All rushing is to take place on campus. It was also voted that the Interfraternity Council be revived, and that it consist of one undergraduate and one graduate from each house. No meals will be served in the houses, and living quarters will not be opened until the Interfraternity Council and the College ap; prove. Rushing of men who come this Feb; ruary and of those who were not members of Sword and Key will take place at a date and under rules to be set by the Interfrater; nity Council. These regulations should eliminate many of the "cut throat" evils and permit all fraternities an even chance.
Registration of delegates Buffet luncheon for delegates and guests of the College in Cook Dining Hall The Academic procession forms in Alumni Hall Inauguration Exercises in the College Chapel Reception and tea in Cook Lounge
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ALUMNI
T. S. Wadlow, Alumni Secretary, has been appointed Inaugural Marshal, and in turn has appointed the following as members of the Marshal's Committee: Dr. Arthur Adams, Dr. Louis H. Naylor, Prof. Harold J. Lock; wood, Dr. Frederick C. Copeland, Dr. J. Bard McNulty and Mr. John A. Mason.
Coaching Trip
This Committee will be in complete charge of all arrangements excepting the actual Inauguration Exercises within the Chapel. The buffet luncheon before the exercises will be limited to official delegates and all other persons who will form a part of the Academic procession. Invitations to the Exercises will be mailed to all Trustees, faculty members, delegates, certain church officials, certain state executive officers and Judges, friends and benefactors of the Col; lege, honorary Alumni of the Hartford area, and prominent Trinity Alumni. Mr. Wadlow regrets that it will not be possible to invite more than a total of 600 persons since this is the largest number that can be seated in the College Chapel. Arrangements have been made to broadcast the Exercises through Station WDRC, I360 kilocycles.
Last September Ray Oosting and Dan Jessee were named by the War Department as consultants for the 8th Army Coaching School to build up morale and to organize athletic programs among the troops in the Pacific. Dan taught football and Ray in; structed basketball. Other teachers were Fred Fitzsimmons - baseball; Ed Kennedy of Columbia - swimming; Marty Gallagher of Georgetown - boxing; and Eli Marsh of Amherst - courses in athletic administration. At each camp they would stay two weeks and teach about 100 officers how to adminis; ter athletic programs, schedules, training, etc. Besides the sports mentioned, archery, badminton, handball, horseshoes, soccer, soft; ball, table tennis, touch football and volley ball were taught. Much appreciation of this work has been voiced by Army officials in the Philippines and Japan, for these schools laid out a sound athletic program to help while away the long hours.
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TRINITY
CoLLEGE
ALUMNI
NEws
Faculty Changes
Faculty News
PROFESSOR MoRSE ALLEN of the English Department is returning to the College on February 4th.
DR. ADAMS has published in the March 1945 Historical Magazine of the Protestant Episcopal Church a most interesting article on "The Founding of Trinity College." He recently lectured to the Hartford Rotary Club on "Witchcraft in Connecticut."
PROFESSOR THOMAS H. BISSONNETTE of the Biology Department is on leave of absence for the academic year 1945; 1946. He is now in charge of the Biology Depart; ment of the Biarritz American University. PROFESSOR HowARD D. DooLITTLE of the Physics Department has resigned to join the engineering staff of Machlett Laboratories, X;ray and electron tube manufacturers of Springdale and Norwalk, Conn. During the war he was at M. I. T.'s Radiation Labor; atories working on radar research. DEAN ARTHUR H. HUGHES has been appointed Professor of Modern Languages. He will continue his duties as Dean. DR. RoBERT F. McCuNE of Hartford has been appointed an instructor of Physics. He graduated from Manchester College, Indiana, in 1937 and received his Ph.D. from the University of Illinois in 1941. During the war he has been working with Hamilton Standard Propeller Co. PROFESSOR ALFRED K. MITCHELL of the Mathematics Department is leaving this January to join Pratt and Whitney. PROFESSOR JAMES A. NOTOPOULOS of the Classics Department will be doing research work during the Trinity term. DR. EDWARD D. W. SPINGARN will return next September as Associate Professor of Economics. DR. FEDOR THEILHEIMER, Instructor of Mathematics, will study at the Institute for Advanced Study at Princeton during the Trinity term. PROFESSOR D. G. BRINTON THOMPSON was appointed to the History Department last fall. He graduated from the University of Pennsylvania, A.B. in 1920, and from ·Massachusetts Institute of Technology, B.S. in 1923. After being in business for several years he studied at Columbia and received his Ph.D. in 1941. He served on Selective Service Board No. 44, New York City from 1941 to 1943, and taught at Lafayette from 1943 to 1945.
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PROFESSOR NAYLOR attended the annual meeting of the Board of Directors of the New England Modern Language Association on January 12 at the Hotel Vendome, Boston. RAYMOND OosTINC, Director of Physical Education, was elected President of the New England Intercollegiate Athletic Conference. He recently attended the National Collegiate Athletic Association meeting in St. Louis. He is a member of the basketball rules committee. PROFESSOR PERKINS' physics book will be translated into Spanish and published in Mexico for use in Latin America. PROFESSOR SHEPARD has been appointed by Mark Van Doren, President of the College English Association, to a committee with Professors Norman Foerster of the University of Iowa and E. K. Brown of the University of Chicago to work out the normal minimum course in English that colleges in the United States shall be required to give. He recently lectured on "The Spirit of American Liter; ature" to an Inter Faith group at the Jewish Seminary in New York City. PROFESSOR TROXELL has secured a patent on a hospital wheel chair that permits patients to be moved with much greater ease than heretofore. It is possible to lower the back of the chair to a horizontal position. Then a patient may be transferred from a bed to the chair with very little discomfort. Depending on the illness of the person being moved, it is a simple matter to raise the chair to any position desired. Dr. Troxell is taking steps to have it manufactured. PROFESSOR WATTERS made an 8,000 mile concert tour this fall. He gave sixteen recitals in six weeks, and received many fine tributes from the critics of Houston, Los Angeles, and Pittsburgh.
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TRINITY
COLLEGE
ALUMNI
NEWS
A MESSAGE FROM TRINITY COLLEGE HARTFORD, CoNNECTICUT TO
WILLIAM G. MATHER ON THE OCCASION OF THE CIVIC
TESTIMONIAL
DINNER
CLEVELAND, OHIO jANUARY 10, 1946
--
Having long since bestowed upon you, its most illustrious Alumnus and Trustee, all the honors within its power to extend, Trinity College on this splendid occasion can only express once again its deep pride in your achieve~ ments and its gratefulness for your interest in and generosity towards your Alma Mater. Ever since your graduation in 1877, your example of business enterprise and ability, of financial and industrial statesmanship, of community leader~ ship, deep religious devotion, and generous philanthropy has been an inspiration to generations of Trinity men everywhere and to five Presidents of the College. More than any other man in the long history of Trinity College, you have left your imprint on our institution - an imprint as enduring as the high standards which have been molded by the leadership in educational and administrative matters, which you have provided for almost forty years as a Trustee, an imprint as enduring as the beautiful Gothic Chapel which you have caused to be raised, and which will forever be the focal point of the College. For all these things the Trustees and the Faculty of Trinity College, and Trinity men everywhere, revere you; and are proud to join with the great City of Cleveland not only in congratulating you on your past accom~ plishments, but also in congratulating ourselves for a stimulating associa~ tion which will continue in the days to come. G. KEITH FUNSTON President
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CHARLES G. WooDwARD Secretary, Board of Trustees
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TRINITY
COLLEGE
ALUMNI
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NEWS
Necrology Name
Date
Class
George Greene
1883
December 17, 1945
Rev. Edgar L. Sanford
1884
October 16, 1945
Rev. H. Hobart Barber
1890
November 30, 1945
John H. Bissell
1898
1943
JohnS. Davenport
1898
January 2, 1946
Robert W. Gray
1898
October 23, 1945
Karl F. F. Kurth
1900
November 20, 1941
1901
February 6, 1945
Rev. Ernest C. Biller
1907
December 24, 1945
Harold C. Green
1910
November 27, 1945
Herbert G. Danforth
1913
December 24, 1944
Charles B. W. Gray
1916
December 13, 1945
Richard A. Hicks
1926
October 4, 1945
1934
1945
Malcolm Crocker
1939
Killed in action May 14, 1944
A. Ogden Jones
1942
Killed in action March 28, 1944
Jacques E. Bloch
1945
Killed in action Jan. 27, 1945
John H. Burns
1945
Killed in action Feb. 22, 1945
George F. Cobb
1945
Killed in action Nov. 3, 1944
Henry G. Honeysett
1945
Killed in action Sept. 18, 1944
The enrollment for Trinity Term 1946 will be about 350 students. This is an increase of 150 men over the last term, and it certainly is most encouraging to see the campus re; turning to civilian life again. Dr. Copeland's
Admissions Office is crowded daily with applicants. May we remind those Alumni who are considering reentering Trinity that they communicate with Dean Arthur H. Hughes immediately. It is the College's intention not to exceed 550 students next September.
Prof. William H. Howell
Prof. Theodore L. Shear
Hon. LL.D.
Hon. LL.D.
Enrollment
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TRINITY
COLLEGE
ALUMNI
NEWS
Meeting of Class Agents and Alumni Presidents On November 3, 1945, forty~five Trinity Men, Class Agents and Presi~ dents of Alumni Associations (see picture above), met to plan the current Alumni Fund Drive. After hearing a message from President Funston about the financial condition of the College, it was decided that the most important project would be to balance the College budget. The 1945~46 Alumni Fund, there~ fore, is a project to raise $40,000, which amount is considered the probable College deficit in June unless underwritten by the Alumni Association. Tom Wadlow, Alumni Secretary, reports that the Fund now stands at $25,000 representing contributions from 470 Alumni.
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If you have not yet mailed your contribution to the Alumni Secretary, please do so at your earliest convenience. The least we can do to help our new President get started is to show our loyalty to Trinity by contributing 100% . Checks should be made payable to TRUSTEES OF TRINITY COLLEGE
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TRINITY
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Athletics This winter the basketball and swimming teams have been meeting regular schedules under coaches Ralph Erickson and Joe Clarke. Ray Oosting will take charge of basketball after midyears. Handicapped by service calls and injuries, Ralph has had a difficult time to keep a team intact for any length of time. Although the team lost the first three games - two of them in overtime to Williams - it has shown good scoring power averaging 42 points a game. Doug Carter and George Linardos are the leading scorers. Joe Clarke is depending on the Tyler brothers - Captain Dave, holder of the New England 100 and 220 yard titles, and Bob as mainstays of his swimming team. Bud Earle has improved steadily after being in service for three years. The team nosed out Coast Guard 39-36 and defeated Bowdoin 40-34. The Boston alumni will be particularly interested to know that a meet with Harvard at Cambridge on February 16 has been scheduled. A baseball schedule for this spring is now being arranged and will be announced soon. It has been decided to wait until after midyears to see whether there will be enough students interested in track and tennis before intercollegiate competition is scheduled. There will be the usual intermural athletic program this spring between the fraternities. The 1946 football schedule has run into some difficulties in arranging opponents, but games with Bates, Middlebury, Hobart, Williams and Wesleyan are definitely booked, and it is hoped one or two more teams may be secured. T
Undergraduate News The Alumni will be glad to know that many of the student activities have been resumed. The IVY is in process of preparation and will be issued in the spring. One of the jESTERS, Tom Egan, is writing a play, and if there is sufficient interest after midyears a production will be scheduled. The PoLITICAL SciENCE CLUB has had three excellent meetings. A. E. Holland, '34, who has returned to get his degree, is Presi ...
ALUMNI
NEWS
dent. He told the Society of his four year experience in Santo Tomas Prison, Philippines. Dr. Liu, head of the Chinese Speakers Bureau, and Dr. R. Opie, Counsellor of the British Embassy in Washington, were the other speakers.
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The SENATE is planning a formal dance on the Washington Birthday weekend. The SEABURY SociETY has had one meeting at which the Rev. Raymond Cunningham, '07, spoke. The SwoRD AND KEY SociETY will probably disband in February and in its place the INTERFRATERNITY CouNCIL will operate. The TRINITY CLUB under the direction of Harvey Katz has had several meetings. The TRIPOD with Edward Butler, Editor, and a staff of twenty assistants is published biweekly. Considering the small student body this is an excellent start, and it is expected that after midyears these organizations will become more active and that others will reopen . T
Alumni News R. George Almond, '24, President of the Boston Alumni Association, has announced that the next meeting of Boston Alumni will take place at the Harvard Club Thursday, April 25. President Funston will be the guest of honor and there will be other speakers from the College and from the Boston Alumni Group. Over 150 Hartford Alumni met at the University Club January 18 to honor President Funston who was the principal speaker. The other speakers included Ray Oosting and Dan Jessee of the Athletic Department, and Tom Wadlow, Alumni Secretary. Acting President Nelson A. Shepard, '21 , was in charge of the meeting until it was taken over by the new President, Harmon T. Barber, '19. Other officers elected were as follows: Vice Presidents- Edwin J. Donnelly, '08 and Charles T. Kingston, '34; SecretaryTreasurer - James D. Cosgrove, '35. Nelson A. Shepard, '21, was elected Chairman ofthe Hartford Scholarship Committee of which the other members are D. J. Viering, '42, J. Henderson, '37, A. W. Driggs, '39, J. H. Carey, Jr., '40, K. W. Stuer, '26, and R. E. Thomsen, '41.
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TRINITY
CoLLEGE r-n
ALUMNI
NEws
13
l.
NEW HAVEN ALUMNI ASSOCIATION MEETING (L to R) Eliot L. Ward, '13, President Alumni Association ; President G . Keith Funston, '32; Wilbur L. Cross, Hon. 1935 ; GeorgeS. Stevenson, Trustee ; Raymond A. Montgomery, '25, President of New Haven Alumni
The New Haven Alumni Association held a dinner on December 14 at the Graduates Club to meet the new President, G. Keith Funston. There were 47 present which was an excellent attendance. Ex~Governor Wilbur L. Cross, who received an honorary degree from Trinity in 1935, introduced the Presi~ dent. Other speakers were Dean Fred Cope~ land; Joe Clarke, Swimming Coach; Tom Wadlow, Alumni Secretary; Eliot L. Ward, President of the Trinity Alumni; and Ray Montgomery, President of the New Haven Alumni Association. T
The New York Alumni Association held their annual winter meeting at the Harvard Club on 44th Street January 9. President Richardson Wright, ' 10, presided over the meeting, which was attended by about 80 Trinity men. President Funston was unable to attend because of a sudden attack of the grippe. The guest of honor was Dr. Arthur Adains, Professor of English, Librarian, and Registrar,
who has served the College faithfully for forty years. Dr. Adams, in the principal speech of the evening, gave one of the most moving talks ever delivered before the New York Alumni Association. There were several requests that his speech, which was made up of many interesting incidents of the past forty years, be reprinted in the Tripod. The other speakers of the evening were Dean Fred Copeland and Tom Wadlow who told about conditions at the College today and the prospects for the future. Unfor~ tunately, Dr. Horace Cheney Swan, who had also been invited as a guest of honor, was unable to make the trip to New York. During the course of the meeting, Glover Johnson, '22, was elected President of the New York Alumni Association. The new Vice Presidents are T. G. Budd, '21, R. B. O'Connor, '16, and J. A. Ortgies, '20. W. S. Buchanan, Jr., '09, L. J . Dibble, '09, W. W. Canner, '23, G. Thoms, '26, and]. S. McCook, '35, were elected to the Executive Committee, while Fred Hinkel, '06, was re~elected Secre~ tary~Treasurer amid tremendous applause.
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TRINITY
COLLEGE
AI umni Notes HON. 1900 The REV. F. L. HAWKS POTT, who was president of St. John's University at Shanghai, is returning to his home on the campus there. HON. 1935 The RT. REV. JOHN I. B. LARNED is now in Rome. Presiding Bishop Tucker has appointed him to supervise the rebuilding of American Episcopal Churches and to lay plans for building new ones. HON. 1943 COLONEL ROBERT CUTLER was recently promoted to BRIGADIER GENERAL. He has received the Legion of Merit for his meritorious service in the office of the Secretary of War. Recently he was appointed President of the Old Colony Trust Co., Boston, the largest trust company in New England. 1880 MAJOR FRANK L. WILCOX, president of the Berlin Savings Bank, has been a bank trustee for 62 years. 1888 JOHN P. ELTON is the president of Mattatuck Historical Society of Waterbury, Conn. Professor Odell Shepard addressd the society last fall. The REV. W. NORTHEY JONES was in charge of St. Andrew's Church, Tampa, Florida, this fall, and now is at St. Paul's Church, New Orleans. This is his 13th winter as rector of a Southern Church. 1890 ROBERT McC. BRADY drove to Santa Rosa, California recently to visit the REV. WILLIAM S. SHORT, '83, and had the privilege of being introduced to his great grandson. The Rev. Short can remember his great grandfather! 1893 JAMES CULLEN has retired after fifty years in the ice industry at Cincinnati. 1894 The RT. REV. CAMERON J . DAVIS has resigned as Bishop of the Diocese of Western New York. During his fourteen years of service as Bishop he has become well known not only in his own diocese but also as a leader in the movement to liberalize the church's divorce canon. 1895 The RT. REV. S. HARRINGTON LITTELL has retired after fourteen years as Bishop of Honolulu. He is now living in New York, and assisting the Bishops of New York and Long Island . He is on the Executive Board of the Federal World Government, Inc. (STEWART M. OGILVY, '36, is the treasurer). Bishop Littell is working on inter-racial problems, and is lecturing widely on the Church's missions in the Pacific. · COL. PHILIP J. McCOOK has come home from his third war, and is making plans to resume the practice of law. He was attached to the Judge Advocate General's Department of the Army, and traveled 60,000 miles by air, sea, truck and jeep on inspection trips in connection with the Army rehabilitation
ALUMNI
NEWS
program. He also studied the treatment and disciplining of military prisoners in every theatre of operations except China-Burma-India. A veteran of the Spanish-American War and World War l, he wears the Distinguished Service Cross, the Purple Heart and six battle stars.
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1899 The REV. LLOYD R. BENSON'S son Lt. Commander L. G. Benson, has just taken command of the USS Kirwin, one of the Navy's newest and fastest destroyer-transports. The Rev. Benson was recently re-elected Secretary of the Diocese of Albany. 1903 KARL FENNING, Professor of Patent Law at Georgetown University, has written a pamphlet "Patent Law as a Profession" to tell the undergraduate what a patent lawyer does and what education he should have. A copy is in the College Library. 1905 The REV. WILLIAM F. BULKELEY, Archdeacon of Utah, represented Trinity at the inauguration of his good friend President Franklin Harris of Utah State Agricultural College. 1908 JUDGE SAUL BERMAN has been appointed chairman of a committee by the Hartford Round Table to promote greater understanding and cooperation among Catholics, Protestants and Jews. EDWIN J. DONNELLY is now on the School Board of Hartford. 1909 MICHAEL A. CONNOR was recently reelected president of the Hartford Police Board. LEWIS G. HARRIMAN, president of the Manufacturers and Traders Trust Co., Buffalo, N . Y., has been elected to the board of directors of the Sterling Engine Co. 1910 MATTHEW G. BACH has retired from the faculty of Hunter College, New York, after twenty years in the language department. COMMANDER CYRIL B. JUDGE, U.S.N .R., has been selected for CAPTAIN. 1911 WILLIAM A. BOTTOMLEY was elected to the Hartford Board of Education. ALFRED E. PULFORD is now with W. C . Mason Co., Inc., of Hartford as sales manager of domestic oil burners. 1912 WILLIAM A. BIRD has returned to Paris, where he has spent most of his time since graduation in newspaper work. He was fortunate to find his apartment in good condition. He expects to be released shortly from OWl, and will join the Paris staff of the New York Post. WILLIAM SHORT, who has lived in San Francisco for many years, made a business trip to New York in December, and was guest of F. N . BREED, DR . C . CARPENTER, T. F. FLANAGAN, C . I. PENN, E . F. PETTIGREW, and E. RANKIN, ' 12, at a dinner at the Waldorf-Astoria.
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'13 irths 1930 ADAM F. KNUREK became the father on Decem~ ber 14th of a son, Dennis A. Adam has been discharged from the Navy, and is back with the State Highway Department. 1931 JOHN ISHERWOOD announces a candidate for Trinity 1960 - John, Jr. - born April 25, 1943. MORRIS VOGEL became the father on October 10 of a daughter, Geraldine Ellen, weighing 8 pounds and 2 ounces. He has another daughter, Sharon Rhea . 1935 ROBERT M . RODNEY announces the birth of a daughter, judith Louise. Bob is with the U. S. Gypsum Company in Chicago. He has just received a Ph .D. degree from the University of Wisconsin . 1936 LIEUTENANT C. BROOKS ROBERTS became the father of a son, Christopher, on October 10. Brooks is with the Office of Public Information, Navy Department, Washington, D . C. LIEUTENANT W. FRAZIER SCOTT became the father on February 2 of a daughter, Marion Douglass. 1937 DR. SIDNEY L. CRAMER became the father on October 9 of a son, Eric Harris, at the New Haven Hospital where Dr. Cramer is a member of the resident staff. 1938 EVERETT T. CROSS became the father on October 17 of a daughter, Linda Markham. The REV. GEORGE W. CULLENEY became the father of his third daughter, Sherry, on September 12. George is Chaplain of St. Andrew's School, Middletown, Delaware. LIEUTENANT E. TOWNSEND WROTH became the father of a daughter, Marion Lower, on September 21. 1939 LIEUTENANT JOSIAS J. CROMWELL became the father on July 2 of a nine pound five and one-half ounce son, J osias J ., I I. Josh has been released from active duty with the Navy. The REV. ROBERT MUIR became the father on September 1 of a daughter, Kathleen. Bob is a missionary in the wild country of upper Michigan. The name of the town is Stambaugh, and he says bears and wolves live in the suburbs. 1940 WILLIAM F . KELLY became the father on October 12 of a daughter, Janet Laura, weight eleven pounds and three ounces. LESTER TIBBALS, JR ., became the father on November 29 of a son, David Lester. Lester is now studying history at the Princeton Graduate School.
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1941 JOHN H. LANCASTER, II, became the father of a daughter, Katharine Elizabeth, on October 29. SGT. JOHN F . McGEE, JR ., became the father on January 5, 1945 of a daughter, Gail Ann, weight seven pounds fourteen ounces. John is home after twenty-six months overseas.
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15
LIEUTENANT GEORGE J. PRENDERGAST, JR ., became the father on September 1 of a son, George
J .,
Ill.
DR . JOSEPH N. RUSSO became the father on January 6 of a son, Joseph N., Jr. 1942 The REV. HENRY B. GETZ became the father on August 22 of a daughter, Stephanie, weight five pounds, fifteen ounces. 1943 LIEUTENANT NICHOLAS MOTTO became the father on October 27 of a son. Nick is on his way to the Rising Sun . 1944 LIEUTENANT GLENN PRESTON became the father on April 26 of a son, Geoffrey Weatherby. The REV. WILLIAM B. SPOFFORD, JR., became the father of a son, Timothy, on September 22. 1914 OSCAR A. MONRAD of the Oklahoma City Chamber of Commerce recently made a good will tour of New England. Although he is very enthusiastic about the great Southwest, his home town of Hartford remains close to his heart. 1915 BENFIELD PRESSEY, Professor of English in Dartmouth College, has been a guest teacher at the Lawrenceville School, Lawrenceville, N. J ., during the academic year 1945- 1946. He will return to Dartmouth in July, 1946. 1916 VICTOR F. DeNEZZO has been appointed Judge of the Hartford Police Court by Governor Baldwin. LIEUTENANT COLONEL FRANK LAMBERT, Chaplain A.U.S. preached in the College Chapel on january 9. He is now stationed at Camp Pickett, Virginia. His son, Frank Jr., is a student in the class of 1949 at Trinity. 1917 ROGER B. LADD was elected chairman of the Hartford Board of Education. 1918 JOSEPH BUFFINGTON, JR., is now with Mellon Securities Corporation of Pittsburgh, Pa. COLONEL ARTHUR E. BURNAP recently was awarded the Legion of Merit for performance of outstanding service in the Mediterranean Theater of Operations, U. S. Army. 1919 HARMON T. BARBER has been promoted from assistant actuary to associate actuary of the Travelers Insurance Company. COLONEL C. B . F. BRILL has been awarded the Bronze Star Medal for his services with the Engineer, Hq ., Ninth U. S. Army. Fisk is in New York and has resumed his practice of architecture. IRVING E. PARffiiDGE, JR., has received the honorary 33rd degree in Scottish Rite Masonry. 1921 The REV. FREDERIC L. BRADLEY has left Trinity Church, Camden, N. J., to become rector of Grace Church, Waterville, N. Y.
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COLONEL JOHN R. REITEMEYER has been awarded the Army Commendation Ribbon for outstanding services as Public Relations Officer of the Eastern Defense Command. 1924 SERENO GAMMELL is director of news of radio station WTHT, and presents his own news analysis daily. DR. JAMES G. McNALLY has been appointed Director of Research of Tennessee Eastman Corporation. CAPTAIN ANTHONY J. RICH is in the legal section of the Military Government Detachment in charge of Munich, Germany. 1925 GEORGE MALCOLM-SMITH has written a new musical show "Are You With It?" The show received good notices in Philadelphia and is now playing in New York. 1928 MAJOR DUDLEY H. BURR has been selected director of the newly established Veterans Service Center in East Hartford. He was a chaplain in the Winged Victory Division. His decorations include the Purple Heart, Silver Star and Oak Leaf Cluster. 1930 LIEUTENANT COMMANDER AARON BOBROW is now on terminal leave after 38 months service with the Public Health Service of the Coast Guard. He intends to resume his practice of medicine in Hartford. EVERETT P. STRONG is now with the Equitable Life Insurance Company of Hartford. 1931 DR. HARRY APTER who served with the Army at New Caledonia, Guadalcanal, and Bougainville, is returning to his practice in Hartford. DR. LEWIS A. GIFFIN has been promoted to the rank of lieutenant colonel. He headed a surgical team in England, France and Germany, and received five battle stars. He is now on terminal leave. 1932 LIEUTENANT JOHN E. S. BURKE has been stationed in Guam. He hopes to return to his law practice in Troy, N. Y., soon. LIEUTENANT COMMANDER G. KEITH FUNSTON has received a commendation from Secretary of the Navy james Forrestal for outstanding devotion to duty while serving in the Industrial Readjustment Branch of the Office of Procurement and Materiel. Last November he was elected to the Board of Directors of the Hartford Steam Boiler Inspection and Insurance Company. CAPTAIN MYER GOLDSCHMIDT has returned to New Britain, Conn., after 22 months overseas with the Third Army. He has five battle stars and a bronze star medal. He plans to resume his medical practice, and is building a new house. Lots of luck! LIEUTENANT EMANUEL F. GOLINO is on terminal leave after twenty-eight months with the Coast Guard. He did public health work in Puerto Rico. OSWALD B. GRAHAM, JR., has resumed his teaching duties at West Haven High School after two
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years with the Merchant Marine. His ship was torpedoed and sunk in the Berents Sea on the Murmansk run. He is married to the former Miss Margaret C. Cronin of Meriden, Conn., and they have a lovely dachshunde, Gretchen. "Doesn't resemble either of us," writes Ozzie. 1933 SIMON BERNSTEIN was elected to the Hartford Board of Aldermen from the Fourth Ward . He has resigned his office as assistant clerk of the Police Court. CAPTAIN JOSEPH R. FROTHINGHAM after returning from the Pacific, was assigned to the Walter Reed General Hospital. He is now back in Boston and will resume his medical practice. DR. PAUL JAHNKE - no longer slim - is now a LIEUTENANT COMMANDER, U.S.N ., in charge of the medical department Naval Air Facility, South Weymouth, Mass. LIEUTENANT COLONEL ALVIN D. ROBBINS is now in Japan after having seen service in the Philippines. DR. GERSHON B. SILVER is now a full time assistant at Montycose Hospital in New York City where he is doing clinical and research work in cancer. He was released from the Army after having served in the African and Italian campaigns. MAJOR BROOKS PAIGE has been discharged from the Army and plans to enter the trucking business in Colorado Springs. 1934 JOSEPH D. FLYNN, JR., has been discharged from the Navy, and is back with the Travelers. MAJOR CHARLES T. KINGSTON, JR., was recently awarded the Legion of Merit for exceptionally meritorious conduct in the performance of outstanding services as chief of the Military Intelligence Service section of the 21st Bomber Command. Chuck is with the Connecticut General Life Insurance Company in Hartford, and is living in West Hartford. CHIEF PETTY OFFICER ANTHONY J. LOKOT, JR., has been discharged from the Maritime Service. He plans to resume the practice of law in New York City. PFC. WILLIAM McCORNICK was with the Target Analysis section of the 21st Bomber Command on Guam. He is just recovering from a serious infection, and is now living in Washington, D. C. LIEUTENANT ANDREW ONDERDONK is in Leghorn, Italy, with the 3196th Signal Service Company. MAJOR JAMES V. SHEA is now Administrative Officer and Adjutant of the 28th Replacement Depot at Tacloban, Leyte, Philippine Islands. 1935 LIEUTENANT PAUL W. ADAMS has been awarded the Bronze Star Medal for meritorious service as assistant operations officer on the staff of Fleet Admiral Chester W. Nimitz from January to September, 1945. He is now on inactive duty, and hopes soon to resume his law practice in Hartford. DR. MILTON C. FLEISH is leaving the Hartford Municipal Hospital to accept a position at the Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore, Maryland. After the circus fire in July, 1944, he directed the emergency care for more than 100 of the most seriously injured.
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...Marriages 1926 SERGEANT MERRILL B. SHERMAN was married on October 7 to Sergeant Helen 0 . Toma at Governors Island, N. Y. 1935 DR. JOSEPHS. SATRIANO was married to Miss Frances Gailius of Boston, Mass. He served for three years with the Army Medical Corps, and has now resumed his practice in Hartford. 1936 LIEUTENANT JAMES R . MILLER was married on April 28 to Miss Wendy Meeker of New York City. jim is out of the Navy. 1939 CAPTAIN ROBERT L. MADOR was married on january 9, 1944 to Miss Ruth Lassar of San Diego, California. Bob was with the 312th Fighter Wing, and was stationed at Jorhat, Assam as Supply Liaison Officer for the 312th in connection with ATC Hump shipments to Chengtu . He says five trips over the Hump were five too many. CAPT A IN RUDOLF TALBOT was married to Miss Nancy Orr of New York City. Rudy is with American Airlines in Chicago. LIEUTENANT GEORGE E . S. TETLOW was married on September 5 to Mrs. Elizabeth Sutton Webber in Durham, North Carolina . 1940 LIEUTENANT THOMAS E. CANFIELD was married on September 25, 1943 to Miss Christine Russell of Waterbury, Conn. EDWIN A. CHARLES was married on October 20 to Miss Anne Nettels of Pittsburg, Kansas . Ed is working for Radio Reports in New York City. 1941 REV. WILLIAM B. VAN WYCK was married on October 9, 1945 to Miss Elizabeth Ann Bicknell of Waban, Mass. They are living at Lime Rock, Conn., where Rev. Van Wyck is in charge of Trinity Church . 1942 JOSEPH j. BONSIGNORE was married on September 27 to Miss Madelyn A. Kleutsch. DR. MAXWELL E. HAGEDORN, '42, was best man. joe is with Time and Life magazines in Chicago doing editorial production . LIEUTENANT JOHN R . JONES was married on March 17, 1944 to Miss Susan W. Humason of Seattle, Washington. He is stationed in Manila, and is Assistant to the Adjutant General.
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1943 LIEUTENANT HOWARD S. KNOWLES was married on December 2 to Miss Isabel Charpentier Hurlbert of Brookline, Mass. He recently returned after two and a half years in the Pacific . PFC. STEPHEN G . MAY was married on January 12 to Miss Louise Carolyn Spongberg of Worcester, Mass. He is studying medicine at Johns Hopkins.
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THOMAS J. HAGARTY has been appointed the executive secretary of Mayor Moylan of Hartford. ROBERT L . HOLLINS has been made a partner of the brokerage firm, H . N . Whitney Goadby Co., New York. DR. HENRY KATZ has been elected president fo the Hartford Health Board. CAPTAIN JOHN J. RIMOSUKAS is now teaching at John Fitch High School, Windsor, Conn. CAPTAIN THOMAS J . SISBOWER has been promoted to the rank of MAJOR . HERBERT E. TODD is with Pratt & Whitney Aircraft in East Hartford. JAMES WALES has opened up a new business in Wolfeboro, New Hampshire. He is selling refrigeration equipment; home and farm food freezers; and Piper and Republic airplanes. 1936 HARRINGTON LITTELL writes that he hopes to be out of the Navy soon. He plans to work in an advertising firm in San Francisco. He has seen JIMMY MARKS, '33, BILL HARING and DON SNOWDEN, '34. jOSEPH SARCIA was elected Alderman-at-Large in the recent Hartford elections. I937 LIEUTENANT COMMANDER ROBERT BAINBRIDGE has returned from active sea duty on a baby carrier. He is working again at Howe & Bainbridge, canvas merchants, in Boston. LIEUTENANT JAMES M . CARROLL has returned to Hartford after more than four years in service. He served in the North Atlantic, the North African invasion, and in the Philippines he was executive officer aboard the Tantalus which was one of the Navy's largest amphibians. He plans to resume his study of the law.
M I
·s SING
YEOMAN 2/ c PHILIP C. FORD, '37, has been missing from his home at 430 Park Ave., New York City. It is believed that he is suffering from amnesia. He had returned from India on October 24, and has been missing since October 30. A reward for information as to his whereabouts will be paid by his stepfather, Edwin W. Booth, 430 Park Ave., New York.
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LIEUTENANT BRUCE ONDERDONK has been awarded the Silver Star for his valiant work as a member of an underwater demolition team. He was in action at Saipan, Tinian, Peleleu, Luzon, Iwo Jima and Okinawa. From small speedboats his team of swimmers would start for the beach usually under heavy machine gun fire. It was their job to take soundings and to record conditions on the bottom and the enemy's shore position. As may be imagined it often took many hours before the speed boats were able to come back and pick up the swimmers. This work was most hazardous, and the death rate extremely high. BRUCE RANDALL is now with Charles M. Storm Company, an advertising concern in New York City. He is a Junior Executive and Assistant to the President. 1938 LIEUTENANT ERNEST S. CORSO has been promoted to Assistant Chief of the Reconditioning Service at the Regional Station Hospital, Fort Belvoir, Virginia. He is also serving as Personal Affairs and Life Insurance Officer at the Hospital. LIEUTENANT ROBERT D. O'MALLEY, who is attached to the 23rd Marines, has been awarded the Bronze Star Medal for heroic achievement during the battle for Iwo Jima. He was also in the Saipan and Tinian campaigns. Recently he got acq uainted with his year and a half daughter, Maril, whom he had never seen before. LIEUTENANT SEBASTIAN J. RUSSO served in Germany, France and Belgium as a combat engineer platoon leader with the 263rd Engineer Combat Battalion of the 63rd Infantry Division. He has been decorated with the Purple Heart, the Bronze Star with one Oak Leaf Cluster, the Victory Medal, the American Defense Medal, and battle stars for the Rhineland campaign. He expects to resume his law practice in Hartford. LIEUTENANT LOUIS M . WALKER, JR., took part in the invasions at Leyte, Iwo Jima and Okinawa. He has been awarded the Bronze Star Medal. 1939 BEN APPLEBY is out of the Merchant Marine after having served on Army Transports, a hospital ship, and on North Atlantic operations. He also was in the Okinawa invasipn. MIKE BASSFORD writes from the Riviera where he is waiting transportation that it is nearly as cold as Hartford. DAVID DAVIDSON and HERBERT HALL have been with the Radiation Lab. of M.I.T. working on long range navigation. They were in Canada, England, France, and Bermuda. Dave will do graduate study at Harvard, and Herb is joining a research group in Princeton, N. J. · FRANCIS J. HOPE has been discharged from the Army and plans to return to the insurance business in Hartford . SHERWOOD MARTIN is now working at the Hamilton Standard Propellers in East Hartford. He married Miss Virginia Mallard, and they have a daughter Terry. CAPTAIN JAMES E. O' BRIEN, JR., is out of the Army after five years and hopes to go to medical school. ARNOLD WATERMAN is now an engineer at Pratt and Whitney Aircraft. He married Miss Doris Bennett and they have two children Clara and Arnold.
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1940 LIEUTENANT PAUL J . BILKA graduated from the Army's School of Military Neuropsychiatry at Brentwood, New York. CAPTAIN JAMES COLLINS is in the Classifica · tion and Assi~nment Office of the Air Transport Command Ind1a China Division . He has seen BOB BARLOW, '38, who is head of OWl in Calcutta and has been in India for five years. LIEUTENANT COMMANDER JAMES S . NEILL, JR., has recently been discharged from the Navy. He writes that his brother BOB '41 is in Leyte with the Army and does not expe~t to 'get out before the spring. DONALD J . SM ITH is now studying medicine at the University of Kansas. He has a three year old daughter, and Donald J . Smith, Jr., was born July 10. ALBERT W. VAN DUSER was ordained to the Episcopal priesthood by the Rt. Rev. Wallace J . Gardner, D.O., .Bishop of New Jersey, at Christ Church, Toms R1ver, N. J. 1941 LIEUTENANT THEODORE S. ANTHONY has graduated from the Field Artillery Officer Candidate School and has ~~n assigned to the Field Artillery Replacement Trammg Center, Fort Sill. CPL. DAVID CALLAGHAN has returned after three years service with the 8th Air Force in England and France. He is awa iting his English bride to arrive in this country. CHARLES T. COOK has left the teaching staff of Rectory School and is now a real estate agent for HOFF BENJAMIN, '34, in New York. LIEUTENANT JOHN G. FITZGERALD has been made executive officer of his ship. He has been in six invasions and with the first occupation troops in Japan. He met LIEUTENANT BILL DEXTER, '41, who is in the Coast Guard. QM3 / C CHARLES B. GOODRICH has been on an LCT. He is stationed at Luzon in the Philippines. GENE HUNGERFORD is teaching at Choate School. He was teaching at the Brent School, Baguio, P. I., and spent over three years in a concentration camp. He went from 137 to 97 pounds, and received very harsh treatment with constant attempts to break down his morale. LIEUTENANT COMMANDER JOHN KILEY, JR., has been awarded the Legion of Merit with Gold Star for exceptionally meritorious conduct while commanding officer of the U.S.S. Stanton when that ship attacked and destroyed two enemy submarines in the North Atlantic. Jock is in the real estate business with his father. RONALD E. KINNEY, JR., has been promoted to a LIEUTENANT COMMANDER in the regular Navy. He is the Disbursing Officer for the Fleet Air Detachment, Naval Air Station, Norfolk, Virginia. GEORGE REESE is out of the Army and plans to try his luck in Hollywood under Mr. C . B. de Mille. LIEUTENANT JOHN L. SPANGLER, JR., has been with General Patton's 4th Armored Division in the Photographic Interpretation section . He has been awarded the Bronze Star. He is now in Germany. 1942 LIEUTENANT JEROME C. CUPPIA, JR ., was a "fighter Director" attached to the Fourth Marine Air Wing in the Marianas. His unit directed our fighter planes to enemy aircraft or other targets by coordinating radar information supplied by our ground radar stations.
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LIEUTENANT HERBERT FISHER is at the Great Lakes Naval Training Station. He has seen MORRIS EDDY, '42, GORDON POTTER, '43, and CHARLES WACKER, '45, there. Herb is doing recruit training, and expects to be released from service in March. LIEUTENANT ROBERT HINCKLEY, JR ., visited the College in October before returning to Germany for the winter. LIEUTENANT WILLIAM MIDDLEBROOK writes from jacksonville, Florida, that it is a ~low job to put his DE, the U.S.S. Neal A. Scott, mto inactive service. LIEUTENANT JOHN F. STEERS has been stationed in the Austrian mountains near the Italian border. DONALD VINCENT has been promoted to commanding officer of " A" Battery of the American Division which at present is guarding nine stockades of japs in the Philippines. He was awarded a second battle star for his action at Cebu Island . SGT. ROBERT C . WHITSITT writes he has seen CAPTAIN CLAYTON jENSEN, '42, and BOB HALL, '43, in japan. His unit has been handling Signal Operations.
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1943 LIEUTENANT THOMAS V. ASHTON is a skipper of a mine sweeper and has been operating at Truk and other nearby islands. He fears it will be a long time before he gets home. WILLIAM B. BOLTON is engaged to Miss Eleanor Frisbie of West Hartford. They will be married in April. Bill is in the Marine Insurance business in New York. WALTER E. CONWAY, JR ., is engaged to Miss Mary-Elizabeth Harrington of Larchmont, N. Y. He was recently discharged from the Army. CPL. LOUIS HASBROUCK is now stationed in Vienna, Austria. LIEUTENANT ARTHUR A. HEUBNER is studying Chinese at the University of California. FRANKLIN R . HOADLEY, JR ., is engaged to Miss Margaretta Dixon Wharton of Philadelphia. JOHN N. HOBBS is engaged to Miss Sarah Parker Meigs of Chestnut Hill, Mass. j ack was with the American Field Service in Africa and Italy for three years. CAPTAIN WALTER LOKOT has been discharged from the 31st Transport Group of the Army Air Forces. He served as a pilot in England, France and Germany. CAPTAIN DANFORTH MILLER, JR., says he's with the only Fighter Squad still in the Central Pacific. He hopes to come back to Trinity and finish his course. EDWARD S. MORRISON has been with the Office of Strategic Services in Egypt, Bulgaria and Italy. He is in Washington, D . C ., and expects to be discharged soon . LIEUTENANT CHESTER WARD has been placed on inactive status, and is now attending Yale Law School. ALLEN C. WARNER is engaged to Mrs. Nancy Punderson Munroe of Springfield, Mass. KENNETH L. YUDOWITCH is at the University of Missouri. He is doing graduate work in Physics, ?Jld is also a Research Assistant.
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1944 S/ SGT. JAMES A. BIGGERSTAFF is with the 805th Signal Service Co. in Frankfurt, Germany. PFC. MURRAY R. FEARING has been serving on the USS Dogwood, a .hospital ship. He has been all over the South Pacific. ENSIGN WALTER H. GHENT has been assigned to the USS Bennington. CAPTAIN RICHARD HASTINGS of the Air Corps has been separated from the service. SGT. H . THOMAS JARRETT has done a lot of globe trotting, and is now in Tokyo. DONALD E. JONES has been released from the Armament Group of the 38th Bomber Command, Fifth Air Corps, to take up duties in the Army's Educa tional program. He is scheduled to go to Honshu, japan. BERNARD L. MULLINS, JR., writes from Japan that he is on Detached Service with the Armed Forces Radio. He hopes to be home by April. LIEUTENANT DONALD C . PAINE is now Engineering and Executive Officer of L.S.M. 243 located at Saipan. He has been at Iwo Jima. PFC. SPIRO PETERSON has been awarded the Bronze Star Medal for meritorious service in the European theater. LIEUTENANT WILLIAM B. STARKEY writes that he has seen enough of Japan. He met LT. CHARLES JONES, '43, ENS. BILL PIERRE, '44, LT. jERRY BOUCHER, '43 ; and LT. PAUL GOULET, '44 in the Mariannas . PFC. ELLIOTT K. STEIN and jOE MOLINARI , '45, are in the same platoon at Wertheim-am-Main, Germany. SGT. HENRY D . TWITCHELL, dropped in at the Alumni Office last fall. He expected to report to Fort Belvoir, Va. His brother, GEORGE, '46, is a Radio Technician 1/ c in the Navy and was based at Honolulu. CORPORAL EARL T. WILLIAMS writes from Germany that he hopes to be back this spring and plans to finish his last half year of college. 1945 PFC. RAYMOND A. COHEN received a severe leg fracture when a prisoner of war allowed a tractor to get out of control and Ray was pinned against a wall. He wears the Combat Infantryman's Badge, three battle stars and the Purple Heart. CPL. LINCOLN C. COLLINS has been awarded the Bronze Service Star for action in France and Germany. He also received the Meritorious Service Unit Plaque. ROBERT W. CUDWORTH hopes to return to Trinity to complete his course for the ministry. He has been at Camp Peary, Williamsburg, Va. He writes that GOOSE GOSSLING, '44, is at Medical School, Temple University, Philadelphia. S/ SGT. WALTER A. GERMAN, JR ., has been in Salzburg, Austria, with the 328th Infantry. He has received the Bronze Star, Oak Leaf Cluster and Purple Heart. W. VAN BUREN HART, JR ., is with the Ray Control Co. of Pasadena, makers of optical instruments. ROBERT HAWKINS is teaching French and English at Hotchkiss School. SGT. ARTHUR D. KEEFE is attached to the 27th Med. Lab. at the Imperial University in Sappore, Japan.
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T/SGT. COURTENAY K. PAGE, JR., was promoted to his present grade shortly before V-J Day. He has been stationed on Guadalcanal in the Signal Corps since January, 1944. 1946 JIM DOUGHERTY, the efficient class secretary, writes it is hard to keep in touch from Leyte and japan with his classmates, but that he will have a class reunion before 1948. S/ SGT. ERVING S. DUNN has been studying at the University of Birmingham in England. He expects to return to Trinity next fall. PFC. WILLIAM E. HART, JR ., is studying at jefferson Medical College, Philadelphia. PFC. SIEGBERT KAUFMANN is in Seoul, Korea, in charge of radio censorship. He writes that MAJOR DAVID B. TUKE, '29, is the head of OPI there. CPL. ALBERT W. KING has spent the last year and a half at the general depot in Bari, Italy, doing radio repair work. PVT. HERBERT SCHURMANN has just completed his japanese studies at the University of Chicago and should now be on his way to Tokyo under the Allied Control Council. 1947 RAYMOND FLEBEAU is a Hospital Apprentice 1/ c at the Oakland Naval Hospital, Oakland, California. FREDERICK LOVELAND is now in Bainbridge, Maryland, with the Navy. He hopes to come back to Trinity in September.
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HARTFORD- President: Harmon T. Barber, '19, Travelers Insurance Co .; Secretary: james D. Cosgrove, '35, 841 Asylum Avenue HUDSON VALLEY - S ecretary: Edward L. Sivaslian, '33, 91 Delaware Avenue, Albany, N. Y. NAUGATUCK VALLEY - President: Paul E. Fenton, '17, Crest Road, Middlebury, Conn .; Secretary: Edward S. Wotkyns, '29, 1 Central Avenue, Waterbury, Conn. NEW HAVEN President: Raymond A. Montgomery, '25, 76 Carew Road, Hamden, Conn .; Secretary: Francis J. Cronin, '25, 409 Norton St. NEW YORK President: Glover Johnson, '22, c/ o White & Case, 14 Wa ll Street; Secretary : Frederick C. Hinkel, Jr., '06, 63 Church Avenue, Islip, L. 1., N . Y. PHILADELPHIA - President: Ronald E. Kinney, '15, 401 Walnut Street; Secretary: Charles T. Easterby, '16, 323 Walnut Street PITTSBURGH - President: Hill Burgwin, '06, 1515 Park Building; Secretary: joseph Buffington, Jr., ' 18, 525 William Penn Way RHODE ISLAND - President: Louis W. Downes, '88, 67 Manning Street, Providence ROCHESTER President: Elmer S. Tiger, '16, JEtna Casualty & Surety Co.; Secretary: Edwin j. Nugent, M.D., '28, 1325 Lake Avenue SPRINGFIELD - President: Kenneth B. Case, '13, 1200 Main Street; Secretary: Sidney R . Hungerford, '17, 21 So. Park Avenue, Longmeadow WASHINGTON-SALTIMORE President : Paul H. Alling, '20, State Department, Washington, D. C.
T
THE ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF TRINITY COLLEGE OFFICERS President: ELIOT L. WARD, '13 Vice President: ALEX W. CREEDON, '09 Secretary: J. RoNALD REGNIER, '30 Asst. Sec.: jAMES HENDERSON, jR., '37 Treasurer: HARVEY DANN, '32 OFFICERS OF LOCAL TRINITY COLLEGE ALUMNI ASSOCIATIONS BERKSHIRE - Acting President: William G. Oliver, '10, Eaton Paper Co., Pittsfield, Mass. BOSTON- President: R. George Almond, '24, 143 Longwood Avenue, Brookline 46, Mass.; Secretary: Morton S. Crehore, '14, 30 State Street BRIDGEPORT - Acting President: Francis P . Carroll, M.D., '10, 919 Fairfield Avenue CAROLINAS- Acting Officers: Arch W. Walker, '14, 617 Woodlawn St., Spartanburg, S. C .; Chester D . Ward, '13, Montgomery Building, Spartanburg, S. C. CHICAGO - Acting President: Edgar H. Craig, '34, 2526 Hartzell St., Evanston, Ill. CLEVELAND- President: William G. Mather, '77, 12417 Lake Shore Boulevard; Secretary: David S. Loeffler, '26, 1197 St. Charles Avenue, Lakewood DETROIT- President: Norton I ves, ' 16, 252 Moross Road, Grosse Pointe Farms; Secretary: James B. Webber, '34, 16913 Maumee Avenue, Grosse Pointe
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