COMMENCEMENT ISSUE
Volume V Number 5 July 1964
TRINITY COLLEGE ALUMNI MAGAZINE
150th Anniversary Goals
VOLUME V NUMBERS
CONTENTS
1 Arts Center 2 New Appointments 3 Reunion- Commencement 1964 6 WeQuote 8 Necrology 10 Annual Alumni Association Reports 12 Association Notes 13 Parents Fund Report 14 Alumni Fund Report Editor KENNETH C. PARKER
Alumni Editor JOHN A. MASON '34 Associate Editor JUNE L. THOMAS Sports and Photography RoBERT M. SALTER
Editorial Board F. GARDINER
F.
BRIDGE
'33 '59 ALBERT E. HOLLAND '34 RICI;IARD K. MORRIS '40
JOHN F. BUTLER DOUGLAS
L.
FROST
RoBERT C. STEWART
Advisory Council RoYDEN C . BERGER
'28
G EORGE MALCOLM-SMITH
K.
'25
'3 7 L. BARTON WILSON III '37 WILLIAM
PAYNTER
Cover Design JUNE L. THOMAS Second Class postage paid at H artford, Connecticut. Published five times a year, November, January, March, May and July by Trinity College, H artford, Connecticut.
Trinity College's 150th Anniversary Goals were announced at a dinner for alumni, parents and friends on May 26. In announcing the ten-year program in which the College will seek to raise $24,900,000, Dr. Jacobs said that $6,000,000 will be for faculty salaries; $4,000,000 for scholarship endowment; $1 ,000,000 for library endowment; and approximately $5 ,900,000 for additions to the physical plant. The President also said that of the remaining $8,000,000 not included in the capital gifts program the College expects $5,000,000 for general endowment will be added from bequests over the next decade and that $3 ,000,000 needed for dormitory construction will be in the form of loans. Henry S. Beers '18, chairman (retired) of the !Etna Life Affiliated Companies will be the National Campaign Chairman, and G. Keith Funston '32, Hon. '62, will serve as Honorary Chairman. Under the proposed program the College plans an increase in enrollment by 25 per cent to 1,250 undergraduates, an increase in faculty of 20 per cent and an increase in faculty salaries of 75 per cent. By 1973 the College expects its financial aid program will increase from its present $350,000 to $800,000 a year, and the Library will add 100,000 volumes to its present collection of 429,000 volumes. A Life Sciences Center for biology and psychology will be constructed as part of the building program, and a library addition for independent study is planned. A gymnasium to replace the 77-year-old Alumni Hall is also high on the priority list of additions in physical plant. In keeping with the forward-looking nature of the 150th Anniversary program, Dr. Jacobs announced that the College will further its aims to inculcate in its students "a curiosity of mind, a responsiveness of spirit, an obligation to society, and a strength of body." New methods of independent study and honors work will become an integral part of the academic program, and the opportunity to earn the Bachelor's degree in three years, or both the Bachelor's and Master's degrees in four years, will be encouraged. Trinity's plans for the next decade are many, its resolution to realize these plans strong, its commitment firm. The College will seek financial support from every philanthropic resource: capital gifts, deferred gifts, special gifts and grants. It especially will seek challenge gifts of the kind that inspire new and greater support to help the College realize the goals it has set for its 150th Anniversary.
Arts Center Named for A. Euerett Austin Jr. One of the most illustrious names in the history of American art will be given to Trinity's rising Arts Center. It will be named the Austin Arts Center in memory of the late A. Everett Austin Jr. Mr. Austin was the founder of Trinity's Department of Fine Arts and for more than two decades was a leading force in avant-garde art in America. President J acobs, in announcing the name for the Center, said, "Mr. Austin made significant contributions to art, music and drama and it is eminently fitting that the Arts Center, which will house the College's offerings in these three fields, be named for him. The naming of the Arts Center for Mr. Austin also symbolizes the College's intention to make the Center both a source of appreciation for great works of the past as well as a stimulus to seek out and encourage the vast contemporary work in art, music and drama." The association of Mr. Austin with the Wadsworth Atheneum in Hartford was an important one, for his unique gift to sense the best in artistic expression is still felt and seen around the world. He was director of the Atheneum from 1927 to 1945 and as a leading exponent of contemporary art brought the first surrealist art to America, showing the works of Salvador Dali. Mr. Austin planned the Atheneum's A very Memorial Wing and Auditorium, which he opened in 1934 with the first retrospective of Picasso and the world premiere
of the Virgil Thomson-Gertrude Stein opera, "Four Saints in Three Acts." Interested in all the art forms, Mr. Austin is credited with bringing to America George Balanchine, director of the New York City Ballet. Mr. Austin also acquired the famous Diaghilev-Lifar collection of ballet designs. Mr. Austin was director of the Ringling Museum in Sarasota, Florida, from 1946 until his death in 1957. While there be acquired a complete 18th-century Baroque theater from Italy and re-erected it on the grounds of the museum. The Austin Arts Center at Trinity is being constructed at a cost of $2,000,000 and will house the Department of the Arts - drama, fine arts and music. The three-story Center will feature a theater designed for plays, concerts and lectures. Professor George Izenour of Yale University, world-famous designer of theaters, was a consultant for the Trinity theater. The Center will also include classrooms, offices, rehearsal rooms, exhibition galleries, projection and listening rooms, and studios for the College's academic offerings in the arts . The building was designed by the architectural firm of O'Connor and Kilham of New York and is being constructed by Standard Builders of Hartford. Completion is planned by late November. Trinity awarded Mr. Austin an honorary Master of Arts Degree in 1930. 1
Dr. Charles H . M orga n
W. Howard Spencer
Department of the Arts
Dr. R oy H eath
Dean of Students President Jacobs has announced the appointment of Dr. Roy Heath as Dean of Students. Dr. 0. W. Lacy, Dean of Students since 1958 and also associate professor of psychology, asked to be relieved of his administrative duties to devote his full time to academic work. In announcing Dr. Lacy's resignation, Dr. Jacobs said, "I wish at this time to pay tribute to Dean Lacy for the fine service he has rendered Trinity in this most difficult and sensitive position. We are very grateful." Dr. Heath received an A.B. degree from Princeton University in 1939 and his M.A. degree in clinical psychology and his Ph.D. degree from the University of Pennsylvania. From 1950 to 1954 Dr. Heath was an structor in psychology at Princeton and from 1954 to 1956 he was associate professor of psychology and student counselor at Knox College. His previous work in psychology had been at The Training School in Vineland, New Jersey, as a Research Fellow in the Psychological Clinic Laboratories and with the Ground Forces in World War II as an Army psychologist. Director of the Counseling Center at the University of Pittsburgh since 1956, Dr. Heath bas been on leave during the current academic year as visiting professor of psychology and student counselor at Amherst. Dr. Heath is the author of The Reasonable Adventure, a study of the growth of a group of students he had counseled at Princeton. In announcing the appointment of Dr. Heath, President Jacobs said, "We are indeed fortunate to have a person of his stature for the important position of Dean of Students."
2
Dr. Charles H. Morgan, Mead Professor of Fine Arts at Amherst College, was appointed Visiting Professor and Chairman of the Department of the Arts on a parttime basis. Dr. Morgan, who is Chairman of the American Friends of Greece, will continue his duties at Amherst, which include the directorship of the Mead Art Gallery there. A native of Worcester, Mass. , Dr. Morgan is a graduate of Hotchkiss School and of Harvard University, where he received his B.A., M.A. and Ph.D. degrees. He joined the Amherst faculty in 1930 and bas been closely associated with the American School of Classical Studies at Athens . Dr. Morgan studied and taught there and was a member and chairman of the Managing Committee. Director of the School from 1936 to 1938, be was made an honorary citizen of Athens and received the Grand Cross of the Order of the Phoenix. Dr. Morgan is also a member of the Managing Committee of the American Academy in Rome, a trustee of the American Farm School of Salonika and is a member of the Archaeological Institute of America. He has published three editions of the "Guide to the Corinth Museum" and in 1960, "The Life of Michelangelo," in addition to contributing many articles to professional journals.
Deferred Gifts Programs The post of Director of the Deferred Gifts Programs has been assumed by W. Howard Spencer of West Hartford, Connecticut. Mr. Spencer is the former treasurer of Cushman Industries, Inc. , of Hartford, is a member of the Board of Directors of the Greater Hartford Community Chest and is a director of the National Association of Accountants. Mr. Spencer is a graduate of Kingswood School, West Hartford, and of Yale's Sheffield Scientific School, where he was graduated in 1936 with distinction in Industrial Administration and Engineering. He served four years with the U.S. Navy during World War II, including two years as instructor in Marine Engineering at Annapolis. At Trinity Mr. Spencer will be responsible for increasing gifts to the College through bequests, living trusts, insurance trusts and other forms of deferred giving.
Reunion- Commencement 1964 Alumni from near and far, from the classes of 1899 to 1963, responded to the annual urge to return to Alma Mater. Some had official missions as trustees, as alumni officers, as reunion chairmen or as panelists. Others had the desire to see anew the campus and to learn of the College's progress or to stretch their minds at the various seminars. Many were honored by the College or the Alumni Association. All, however, came to reminisce with classmates, faculty and friends . They wandered from seminar to seminar; from reunion headquarters to Mather Hall; from dedication ceremonies of McCook Math-Physics Center and Krieble Auditorium to the annual alumni luncheon; and from the tennis match back to headquarters and to reunion dinners. In spite of a slight Saturday drizzle, the Alumni Parade was a success and the traditional band was drowned out by the "mercenary" Band of the Class of 1939 which, because of its spirit, vitality, imagination and over-all contribution to the College's welfare, was easily the winner of the Board of Fellows Bowl. The indominitable Class of 1934 was everywhere in white chefs' smocks worn by classmates, wives and children. It was the Class of '14, with 41 % returning, however, that won the Jerome Kohn award. Elsewhere on these pages you will find more details and a brief pictorial sketch of the events of the 1964 Reunion. Baccalaureate and Commencement exercises were blessed with an almost perfect day, permitting the proud parents to photograph their progeny as they "Touched the Book" and received their diplomas from President Jacobs. The awarding of diplomas came to an embarrassing and puzzling halt until President Jacobs realized that the salutatorian, second member of the class to receive his diploma, bad in his excitement clutched both The Book and his diploma as he returned to his seat. Dean Vogel came to the rescue, retrieving The Book so that the other graduates could fulfill the time-honored tradition of touching The Book as they passed across the stage. The college camera unwittingly caught the culprit in the act and you will find evidence of this deed pictured for posterity.
3
R
E
u N I 0 N
c L A
s s E
s 4
Honorary degree recipients with President Jacobs: Front row, left to right, Dr. Whitney North Seymour, president of the American Association of Trial Lawyers, doctor of laws; Dr. Jacobs; The Most Rev. Howard Hewlett Clark, Archbishop of Rupert's Land and Primate of all Canada, doctor of sacred theology; Back row, left to right, Sherman Post Haight, chairman of the board of E-Z Mills, Inc., doctor of humane letters; Atty. John Caldwell Parsons, Hartford lawyer, doctor of laws; Dr. Kingman Brewster Jr., president of Yale University, doctor of laws; and Dr. John Kapp Clark, vice president of research and a member of the board of Smith, Kline and French Laboratories, doctor of science.
Salutatorian with "The Book"
Victor F. Morgan '99 was oldest alumnus present.
Robert E. Cross '14 accepts Jerome Kohn award for his class.
Lyman B. Brainerd '30, vice chairman of the Board of Trustees, congratulates son Richard '64 at Commencement.
George M . Ferris '16, Life Trustee, received the Eigenbrodt Trophy.
5
We Quote Commencement Address
... Science and the humanities alike require an atmosphere of freedom. And each of us, learning the value of freedom at such great institutions as this, must consider himself a private soldier conscripted for life in its defense against all enemies, foreign and domestic ... With what most of us hope will be prompt passage of a comprehensive Federal Civil Rights statute, covering many of the points of recent controversies, the problem of insuring equal rights for our Negro fellow citizens should soon move out of the turmoil of recent years into a new, more harmonious phase. Disinterested citizens will have many opportunities to contribute to further progress. Most of us recognize both a legal duty and a moral obligation to help to insure these rights, stemming both from the Constitution and even more broadly from the teachings of Jesus . . .. True equality of opportunity must be provided and there must be no limits to the aspiration and accomplishment of those with the qualities necessary to scale the heights .. . . And if we are to help our fellow citizens make the great leap to freedom in the mainstream of American life, we must remember .. . Robert Frost's great definition, "Freedom is to be easy in your harness." ... Dr. WHITNEY NORTH SEYMOUR Baccalaureate Sermon
.. . What an unfinished product man is! He begins as the most helpless of all infants, merely at incarnate hunger. If at any stage in his life he hardens and stops learning, he is done for. A man who knows everything, be he an insufferable teenager or a supercilious university graduate or an arrogant business man of fifty, is something less than human .. .. ... The Christian is concerned for truth. A college with a Christian foundation must be passionate in its devotion to truth. It is one of our axioms, so basic that if a man tells us that he is irrevocably convinced that Christianity is not true, our only answer is that he must then reject Christianity merely as a bulwark of society or a useful myth. Reason is and must be respected here. A Christian foundation is no excuse for not using our brains. Your education is a failure unless you leave here committed to the life of reason and to the patient service of truth . ... What is it that Christianity claims to be unique? . . . It is a belief that God was at work in the history of a people - Israel - and supremely in the life of one Man his incarnate Son- for the salvation of the world. . . . Our encounter with the great world religions has taught us something. If Jesus Christ be the truth, we should have realized long ago that His truth is not the 6
kind that needs an Inquisition or a heresy trial to be maintained. It is a truth that shines more brightly when Christians walk in respect and free loving encounter with those who cannot yet be Christian, who look as if they never will be Christian. ... I believe that when the history of this second half of the twentieth century is written, it will be revealed as a time when again the kingdom and the power and the glory of God was revealed .... THE MOST REVEREND HOWARD HEWLETT CLARK, D.O.
The Dedication of Krieble Auditorium in honor of Vernon K. Krieble
... Dr. Krieble brought great honor and high distinction to the College he served for so many years with such dedicated loyalty and faithful devotion, with such consummate skill and constructive ability .... ... It is altogether fitting that we pay honor where honor is due. The College has for twenty-eight years richly enjoyed this splendid auditorium and has been able to do so solely because of Dr. Krieble's wisdom and foresight. As the final plans for the Chemistry Laboratory were being drawn, Dr. Krieble dreamed of this amazingly useful facility. By careful revision and by the most skilled planning he was able to include it without increasing the cost of the building itself. This auditorium, therefore, is truly a direct gift from our late esteemed colleague to the College to which he contributed so generously. PRESIDENT ALBERT C. JACOBS
The Dedication of McCook Mathematics-Physics Center in honor of the McCook Family
We are gathered this afternoon on an occasion most meaningful to Trinity. We are here to pay tribute to a family whose members for five score and three years have been the architects of this College; to a family whose members in their lives have been outstanding exemplars of our time-honored motto, Pro ecclesia et patria, for Church and Country . .. . Trinity can never repay the debt she owes to this illustrious family - a family that has combined intense activity with the highest standards of quality and excellence, dedicated and devoted service with firm conviction and forthrightness of purpose, absolute integrity and honesty with remarkable common sense, greatness with humility; a family whose dedication to college, church and country stands unparalleled .. . . PRESIDENT ALBERT C. JACOBS
The Crisis in Civil Rights
The New Mathematics
Two pertinent issues were the topics of this year's Alumni Reading Program seminars. "The Crisis in Civil Rights," conducted by Dr. C. Freeman Sleeper, assistant professor of religion, centered on one of the nation's most critical problems. Dr. Sleeper stated, "Segregation is a religious issue." He quoted a letter, which was written following the 1956 school integration demonstrations, in which the writer said that God is for segregation. Later, in the discussion period, be noted that there is in the Bible "no justification for the idea that God is a God of segregation." He spoke of the "new Negro," who emerged at the time of the Nashville demonstrations. "His patience, obedience and fear are gone." Martin Luther King's arrest, for example, was "more indication of the perpetual drive for more opportunities" by this "new Negro." "Our goal, the American dream , is a whole society." His definition of whole was in a biblical sense a covenant. Covenant is expressed by Martin Luther King when be says, "To the degree that I harm my brother, to that degree I hurt myself." Dr. Sleeper discussed the Civil Rights Bill in its entirety and as a piece of legislation guaranteeing human rights. Opposition to the bill, be felt "appeals to the rights of the 'have' group over the rights of the 'have nots.' "
"The New Mathematics," presented by Robert C. Stewart, associate professor of mathematics, was the second of the seminars. Mr. Stewart felt that too much emphasis has be ~n placed on "the drier and dustier aspects of mathematics." The new approach to mathematics is certainly a step in the direction of change. He showed, in the course of the seminar, the role of the new math at each of the educational levels. The 1964 Trinity freshman has a better understanding of the concept of mathematics than did the 1954 Trinity graduate, and this includes some of those who majored in the subject. The changes which have come about represent "a leap forward from the seventeenth century to the nineteenth. Before this revived interest in math, nothing new since 1640 was being taught." The changes encompass content, approach, method and teacher preparation. There is a "definite improvement in curriculum reform." Today the "unity of the new math is being emphasized rather than the diversities which had been emphasized." The new math program attempts to develop a curiosity about mathematics, which everyone has to some degree, even the least inclined.
Modern Physics "Modern Physics - Its Implications to Business and Education" was the title of the alumni panel conducted during Reunion Weekend. Participants were Dr. Robert Lindsay, associate professor of physics at the College, chairman; Howard D. Doolittle '31 , technical director, Machlett Laboratories, Springdale, Conn.; Albert J . Howard Jr. , assistant professor of physics at Trinity; and Charles W. Walker Jr. '47, teacher, Hartford Public High School. . Dr. Lindsay suggested that "for better or for worse, we are living in a culture committed to the search for and the utilization of scientific truths in achieving its goals." He also noted that as a consequence of the effective implementation of new teaching programs in the high schools there had been a significant increase in the background of incoming college students in physical sciences. Mr. Walker in discussing science education in high schools stated, "The primary purpose of the high school physics course is not to prepare physicists but to make better citizens . . . . We try to teach students to think problems through." Dr. Doolittle directed attention to some of the problems which industry faces as a consequence of the rapid pace of technological development. He pointed out the need for technical personnel in industry to have a broad enough background of scientific knowledge so they can adapt themselves readily when new approaches to problems are necessary.
Preparation of a Watercolor "Preparation of a Watercolor," a talk and demonstration, was given by Mitchel N. Pappas, associate professor of art. "Watercolor painting, a technique or an insight into nature?" was his query. "Naturally," as Mr. Pappas explained in his introduction, "the characteristics of the medium are such that a thorough understanding and control of brush and wash are most necessary. However, more important is what the artist sees in nature - how he transfers the image in nature, through his aesthetic and through the limitations and advantages of the medium. Watercolor lends itself to speed of accomplishment only when the artist makes the transfer from the obvious appearances in nature forms to symbolic, yet pictorial equivalents. "The greatest fault in the watercolor medium is caused by literal approach on the part of the artist. Even to the most 'photographic' of the artists, like Andrew Wyeth, selection is paramount. In the past the greatest of masters did their finished paintings from sketches done beforehand." In order to prove this point, Mr. Pappas executed a watercolor, done from a small sketch. In this painting, which was done with a one-inch brush, the artist tried to capture a personal view of a typical waterfront scene, reminiscent of the Cape. What was achieved was an obvious facility in handling, yet a spirit of the fishing shack amidst rocks and sandbar was eventually created. Mr. Pappas stressed the idea that nature was a point of departure, and that technique was an important means, but that the final result was achieved by the nature of the artist's sensitivity and his interpretation of the subject.
7
NECROLOGY
WILLIAM BLAIR ROBERTS, 1905 The Rt. Rev. W. Blair Roberts, retired Bishop of the Missionary District of South Dakota of the Episcopal Church, died in Sioux Falls April 23. He leaves his wife, the former Meta Kemble Jackson of Middletown, Conn., whom he married October 10, 1919; and a brother, the Very Rev. Paul Roberts, D.D., Trinity 1909. Born December 10, 1881, in Detroit, Mich., Blair was a son of the late Rev. William Jackson Roberts, Trinity 1875, and Jane Eliza Fisher. He was graduated from Hartford Public High School in 1901 and from Trinity College in 1905. While an undergraduate he was a member of the Glee Club and the Dramatic Club and president of the Press Club. In athletics he was on the teams of both track and football and was secretarytreasurer of the Athletic Association. In his senior year he was director of the Brotherhood of St. Andrew and editor of the Tripod . His fraternity was Psi Upsilon. He was graduated from Berkeley Divinity School (then in Middletown) in 1908 and immediately went into the mission field of South Dakota as a deacon, being ordained priest the following June. He was stationed at Dallas, S.D., in the newly opened Rosebud country, having charge of missions in four (and sometimes six) other new towns as well as two Dakota Indian chapels. Travelling at first by team and buggy, and later by Model T, he ministered to people in homes, schools, saloons, or wherever he could find them. At first he kept a calendar to mark off each day until his term of service should expire and he could leave. But before that time arrived he came to love the people, Indian and white, and they him, so that he never left except to serve as chaplain to the 313th Engineers of the A.E.F. during World War I. Later he held the rank of Lieutenant Colonel in the Officer Reserve Corps. On December 6, 1922, Blair was consecrated Suffragan Bishop of South Dakota, becoming diocesan on the retirement of Bishop Burleson September 29, 1931. (He carried his suitcase across the ice-covered ties of the trestle over the Missouri River at Chamberlain in order to arrive in Sioux Falls in time for his consecration.) Until he reached the compulsory retirement age of 72 he carried the responsibility of the Church's largest Indian work (about 90 scattered chapels) and a fair -sized number of city and town churches, never once failing in his pastoral relationship to clergy or people of either race. "I am never too tired or in too much of a hurry to meet with you and talk things over." In 1923 he received the honorary degree of Doctor of Divinity from Trinity College and also from Berkeley Divinity School. The Church grew steadily stronger
8
during his episcopate, both in number and in spiritual life. When he retired, he began over and brought a new mission in Sioux Falls from its very beginning to self-supporting parish status. There simply was no stopping him. By the governor's appointment he was chairman of the State Commission on Indian Affairs. He was also a 33rd degree Mason and state chaplain of the American Legion. The Rt. Rev. Conrad H. Gesner, Trinity '23, who had been Bishop Roberts' coadjutor since 1945, became his successor in January 1954. Blair was a loyal Trinity man, always interested in the affairs of the College and supporting them in every possible way. A stalwart Christian gentleman has gone to his reward. - A.R.G.
PHILIP EVERETT CURTISS, 1906 Philip E. Curtiss, well known author, died in Winsted, Conn., May 23 after a long illness. He leaves his wife, the former Miss Maude Ida Frederica Knust; and two daughters, Mrs. William Burnett Hurd and Mrs. Herbert Scoville Jr. Born April 10, 1885, in Hartford, Conn., a son of the late Philip E. Curtiss and Olive Collins Welch, he prepared for college at Hartford Public High School. As a Trinity undergraduate he was a member of the track team for four years and the Glee Club for three. He was awarded the Alumni English Prize and the first Whitlock English Prize as a junior and as a senior, respectively. Active on the Debating Team, he was literary editor of the Tablet and the Ivy. His fraternity was the Beta Beta Chapter of Psi Upsilon. After studying in Spain and France for a year as a Mary A. Terry Fellow, Mr. Curtiss joined the Hartford Courant and then the Hartford Times until 1910, when he became secretary of the Manufacturer's Association of Connecticut. Four years later he moved to Norfolk, Conn., to pursue a literary career and wrote a series of novels as well as contributing many short stores to magazines including the Atlantic Monthly, The New Yorker, Harpers and Readers' Digest. He served with the Connecticut National Guard from 1910- 1916 and took part in the Mexican border campaign. In 1931, Trinity College conferred upon Mr. Curtiss the honorary degree of Master of Arts. A member of the Connecticut legislature from 1941 to 1947, he was appointed Norfolk's first trial justice in 1940, also having been named a justice of the peace of that town. Mr. Curtiss took a great interest in Norfolk's affairs and served as a trustee of the town's library and as secretary of the Norfolk Country Club. - F.C.H.
JOSEPH BIRNEY KILBOURN, 1909 Dr. Joseph B. Kilbourn, prominent surgeon and ophthalmologist, died May 10 at Hartford Hospital. He leaves his wife, the former Myra, Baroness von Gussich; two sons, 0 . Paul and Joseph B. Jr.; and two daughters, Josefa and Christine. Born October 8, 1887, in Hartford, Conn., a son of the late Dr. Joseph Austin Kilbourn and Sarah Alacoque Dooley, he prepared for college at Hartford Public High School and entered Trinity in 1905 but only remained in residence for two years. He then enrolled at the University of Maryland College of Physicians and Surgeons, graduating in 1911. After interning in Baltimore and New York City, he studied surgery at the University of Vienna from 1913 to 1914 and then volunteered with the Austrian Army serving on the Serbian, Italian and Russian fronts. He was also chief surgeon of Fortress Hospital in Schumen, Bulgaria. He was one of the first doctors to perform modern surgery on the battlefields . After the war he returned to New York City as Assistant Visiting Surgeon at Lenox Hill Hospital. Trinity College awarded him the Bachelor of Arts degree in 1922. Dr. Kilbourn returned to Austria January 1, 1926, to take up the study of the eye and practised exclusively in this field in Hartford since July 1927. He was a founder of the Eye Clinic at the Hartford Dispensary and was a past president of the Hartford Eye, Ear and Throat Society. During World War II, he was a member of the National Draft Board and president of the Friends of Austria, Inc. For his refugee work he was personally cited by Pope Pius XII in 1948. For many years he contributed his services to the Glaucoma Clinic of the Hartford Lion's Club. Dr. Kilbourn belonged to the American Medical Association and the State County and Hartford Medical Societies.- P.H.B. AsA AuGusrus HoLLINGS, 1911 Asa A. Hollings, formerly of Windsor, Conn., died in Hollywood, Fla., April 20. He leaves his wife, Mrs. Edna Missell Hollings; and two brothers, Hiram of Haddenfield, N.Y., and Arthur L. of Newington, Conn. Born October 4, 1889, a son of Mr. and Mrs. John F . Hollings of Hartford, Conn., he attended Hartford Public High School. As a Trinity undergraduate he was a member of the Hartford Club. After graduate study at New York University, he became a certified public accountant and for over twenty-six years was associated with the Leonard Traub Company of Windsor. He moved to Florida in 1957. In World War I, Mr. Hollings served with the 625th Aero Squadron.
EDWARD BULKELEY VAN ZILE, 1912 Edward B. Van Zile of Harrisville, N.H., died April 30 in Peterboro, N.H. He leaves his wife, Mrs. Dorothy Fitch Van Zile; a son, Neil; and two stepdaughters, Mrs. William A. Bell and Mrs. Finton G. Crosby. Another son, Edward Jr., was killed in action at Iwo Jima, February 24, 1945, while serving with the 4th Marine Division. Born December 22, 1888, in New York City, a son of the late Edward S. Van Zile, Class of 1884, and Mary Bulkeley, he prepared for Trinity at Hartford Public High School and entered in 1908 but only remained in residence for one year. During World War I he saw action in France for three years in the U.S. Army and was decorated by the French Government. He also received the Purple Heart. For many years he was the advertising manager of Yankee Magazine and the Old Farmer's Almanac in Dublin, N.H. -H.W. MosES AARON BERMAN, 1914 Moses A. Berman, long-time Hartford lawyer, died May 8 in Hartford Hospital. He leaves his wife, the former Miss Bernice Toby Karelis; and two sons, Leonard S. and Daniel E. His brother, the late Saul Berman, Class of 1908, died November 30, 1961. Born December 25, 1892, in Hartford, a son of Max D. Berman and Sarah Lebendiger, he prepared for college at Hartford Public High School and entered Trinity in 1910 but only remained in residence for one year. After studying law at Cornell, he began practice in Hartford in early 1914 and was recently honored with his 50-year pin from the Hartford County Bar Association and the Connecticut Bar Association. During World War I, he was one of the first volunteers from Hartford serving with the U .S. Air Corps in France as a sergeant. He was a founder of Laurel Post 45, Jewish War Veterans. EDWARD HENRY BERGMAN, 1915 Edward H. Bergman died May 27 at the Newington Veterans Hospital, Newington, Conn. A son of the late Mr. and Mrs. Edward Bergman, be was born in Bethel, Conn., August 20, 1890, and lived most of his life in New Britain, Conn. Transferring from Dartmouth College to Trinity in 1912, he remained in residence for one year. He served in World War I as a QM Sergeant in the Marine Corps and was employed by the Travelers Insurance Company until 1956 when he moved to St. Petersburg, Fla. His wife, Mrs. Mildred White Bergman, died earlier this year. - R.H.B. STEWART WEBSTER PURDY, 1920 Stewart W. Purdy, member of an old Trinity family, died April 27 in Skokie, Ill. He leaves his wife, the former Mrs. Mary Ann Jackson Leonard; three sons, Stewart Jr., Roger C., and Michael; a daughter, Mrs. Francis Bell; and his mother, Mrs. Charles E. Purdy. Born April 16, 1897, in Minneapolis, Minn., a son of the late Charles E. Purdy, Class of 1888, and Rosamund von Schrader, he prepared for college at the West High School in Minneapolis. His great-grandfather, the Rev. Edward J. Purdy, was a member of the Class of
1857. Charles E. Purdy ill, Class of 1953, is his nephew. Entering Trinity in 1916 with the Class of 1920, he left in April 1917 to enlist with the 100th Company U.S. Marines, 9th Regiment, A.E.F., and was discharged a First Lieutenant. As an undergraduate he was on the football squad and was a member of the Alpha Chi Chapter of Delta Kappa Epsilon fraternity. For many years Mr. Purdy was in the investment business in the Chicago area. During World War II, he served as a Motor Transport Officer with the 3rd Marine Division. From 1945 - 1961 he was with the Chrysler Corp. in Los Angeles and in Chicago. Recently he was a stockbroker with the Chicago firm of Rodman and Renshaw. Mr. Purdy was interested in Trinity and currently was the treasurer of the Chicago Alumni Association. - J. H. JOSEPH WURTS STANSFIELD, 1920 Word has reached the College of the death of Joseph W. Stansfield of Okanogan, Wash., November 29, 1963, at Quincy, Wash. He leaves his widow, the former Miss Nell Hille; and three sons, Joseph, James and Richard. Born January 17, 1900, in New Haven, Conn., a son of the Rev. Joseph A. and Louisa Stansfield, he prepared for college at West Denver High School and transferred to Trinity in 1917 as a sophomore from the University of Denver. Winner of the Frank W. Whitlock English Prize, he was editor-in-chief of the Ivy, the Tripod and the Chapbook. He was also vice president of the Y.M.C.A., secretary of the Senate and Class Poet. His fraternity was the Delta Chi Chapter of Sigma Nu. After his graduation he went to Alaska where for many years he was a teacher and school administrator at a number of Southeastern Alaska locations. He was also a partner in Chilkoot Fur Farm, near Haines. He returned to the State of Washington and received his Master's degree and Bachelor of Education degree from the University of Washington. For 21 years he was superintendent of schools at Coulee Dam, Wash., and at the time of his death had been Okanogan County superintendent of schools for four years. A brother-in-law and classmate of his at Trinity, James A. Nichols, of Seattle, Wash., also survives. - J.H. WILLIAM JOSEPH SCHUYLER, 1927 Word has reached the College of the death of William J. Schuyler April 26 in Washington, D.C. The ftmeral was held in the Naval Chapel, Ward Circle, Washington, with interment in Arlington National Cemetery. He had two brothers who attended Trinity: Philip V. R., Class of 1917, and Barent T. E., Class of 1923. Born July 13, 1905, in Utica, N.Y., a son of the late William Joseph Schuyler and Emeline Watson Bowne, he prepared for college at Utica Free Academy. Entering Trinity in 1923, he remained in residence for three years. As a freshman he was elected vice president of his class. His fraternity was the Epsilon Chapter of Delta Psi. Mr. Schuyler taught at Manlius School, Manlius, N.Y., before World War II in which he served in the Navy. He did fur-
ther study at George Washington University and returned to Trinity in 1947 to receive his Bachelor of Arts degree. From 1953 to 1962 he taught English and Latin at the Gar-Field High School, Woodbridge, Va. The past two years he had been in poor health and had lived in Washington. GEORGE STEDMAN COMSTOCK III, 1941 George S. Comstock died suddenly in Wayne, Pa., June 1. He leaves his wife, the former Miss Andree Blairon; two sons, George IV, and Paul; and his mother, Mrs. GeorgeS. Comstock Jr. Born April '9, 1919, in Harrisburg, Pa., a son of Mr. and Mrs. George S. Comstock Jr., he prepared for college at St. James School, St. James, Md. At Trinity he was a member of the Soph Hop Committee, the Inter-fraternity Council, the Tripod and chairman of the Sophomore Dining Club. His fraternity was the Epsilon Chapter of Delta Psi. George left college in 1941 to join the Army and served in the South Pacific for three years, being discharged with the rank of M/ Sgt. In recent years he was a salesman for the Pottstown Metal Products Co., Pottstown, Pa., and lived at 33 Longwood Drive, Wayne, Pa. He had been for some time with the Buffalo Tank Corporation as a salesman. SAMUEL HARRISON BOCKIUS, 1958 Samuel H. Bockius died June 2 in New York City's Memorial Hospital. He leaves his wife, the former Miss Ellen Marion Kelly; two sons, Samuel Jr., and David; and his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Louis V. Bockius. Born August 29, 1936, in Canton, Ohio, a son of Louis V. and Agnes H. Bockius, be prepared for college at Laketownship High School, Hartville, Ohio. As an undergraduate be was a member of the Tripod; Le Cercle Francais; the Junior Prom Committee and the Lacrosse team, being captain of the latter his senior year. His fraternity was the Epsilon Chapter of Delta Psi. After receiving his master's degree from Yale in 1959, be joined the history department of the North Shore Country Day School in Winnetka, Ill. This past year be taught American history at International Secondary School, University of !baden, !baden, Nigeria. It is still very hard to believe Sam is gone. He is one member of the Class I only got to know toward the end of our years at Trin, but then we saw one another many times at Yale in '58-'59. I was particularly interested in his teaching in Nigeria and had looked forward to hearing from him about it. He certainly will be missed. - B.W.P. The College has received word of the death of the following alumni: FRANCIS BELL STITES, 1915 May 23 , 1964 JACOB ScHAEFFER, 1917 June 24, 1964 CHARLES ALFRED HAMILTON, 1929 April 8, 1964 BARNARD BRECK ACKLEY, 1946 July 5, 1964 JOHN RICHARD FORMICA, 1948 July 9, 1964
9
Alumni Association Reports To Trinity College Alumni: For the second and last time, it is my pleasure to report to my fellow Alumni on the conduct of the activities of your Alumni Association during the year 1963 1964. The progress that an association of this type makes is due in large measure to the interest of its many members. To the extent that we have progressed, it is a result that can and should be credited to each and every one of you. Elsewhere in this issue you will find the magnificent report by Harry K. Knapp '50, Vice President for the Alumni Fund. Harry has worked tirelessly this past year to make our fund-raising efforts bear the splendid results that his report indicates. Also in this issue are contained the excellent reports of Donald R. Reynolds '51, Vice President for Public Relations and Publicity, and Gerald J. Hansen, Jr. '51, Vice President for Admissions, Interviewing and Recruiting. The reports of Don and Gerry certainly bear testimony to the extent of their personal activities in your behalf and the activities of all Alumni working with and for them. Campus activities again this past year were highly successful under the leadership of Ethan F. (Mike) Bassford '39 as Vice President. We thank Mike and his various Events Chairmen in the person of Barclay Shaw '35, Chairman of the Fall Campus Conference; Andrew Brown '29, Chairman of Homecoming; and John T. Wilcox '39, Reunion Chairman. The Campus Conference had a particularly interesting innovation in that we invited to participate in our discussions representatives of four sister colleges. Their contributions to our program were outstanding. The expansion of our Area Associations has continued to occupy our time this past year under the leadership of William H. Gorman II '39 as Vice President for Area Association activities. Two new clubs, Minneapolis and St. Louis, have been organized and Rochester has been reactivated. We are most appreciative of the help of all those Alumni who participated in this project. Your President and Alumni at large continue to be indebted to John A. Mason '34 in his capacity as Alumni Secretary. John works tirelessly and eats, sleeps, and dreams of the affairs of our Alumni Association. It has been a tremendous personal pleasure to have served as the President of your Association for the past two years. In the person of Seymour E. Smith '34, the 10
Alumni Association gains for the future an individual of tremendous capacity and interest as its President. I commend to all of you your closest cooperation with him in the next two years. HERBERT R. BLAND, '40, President
Alumni Interviewing Report In the academic year 1963 - 64, the Alumni Interviewers played a strong part in the selection of the Class of 1968. This class, which will number about 27 5, was selected from 1578 applicants. The Admissions Office requested that roughly 550 of these candidates be interviewed, and the alumni returned 372 reports. There are about 450 alumni on the Alumni Interviewing rolls. Of these 450, 193 were actively engaged this year in completing interviews. While not all of the interviewers were able to participate actively in the interviewing phase of the program (because many alumni live in areas that did not have candidates applying), a good number of these interviewers were active in the recruiting end of the business. I should like to refer particularly to the work of John Bloodgood '54 in Hartford, Robert Tansill '50 in Illinois, Barry Plotts '56 in Washington, D.C., Kingston Howard '51 in Boston, and Wilson Haight '37 and his sub-chairmen in the Greater New York area. These areas in particular were extremely well covered by the interviewers and a very high percentage of the requested interviews were completed. In addition there was a most satisfactory increase in the intensity of the alumni's "search for talent" efforts. I know that in other instances excellent work was done, too, and certainly among the many independent interviewers much praise could be sung. I wish this report could be lengthy enough to include the names of all the individuals who put heart and soul into one candidate or another. In the fall of 1963, the College, in close cooperation with the alumni, sponsored dinners in two cities, Philadelphia and Baltimore, for leading secondary school officials. These meetings were held to bring these important educators up to date on recent developments at Trinity and were extremely well attended and enthusiastically enjoyed by everyone. The Alumni Interviewing Program appears to be per-
forming well. We must work even harder on the recruiting phase, however. We have seen some fine examples this year of instances where boys were initially interested in Trinity by alumni, and who, although receiving bids from other excellent colleges, eventually decided in favor of Trinity because of continued alumni interest. This report completes my first year as Vice President of the Alumni Association in charge of Admissions Interviewing. I have enjoyed it, and along with running the Philadelphia interviewing group, I have been kept more than a little busy. Personally I want to thank you all for your cooperation and interest. I know for a fact that the Admissions Office has relied heavily upon your work in their success for the College. By the way, it may be of interest to note that in midsummer the Admissions Office will send a complete class roster to all interviewers so that they will be accurately informed of the names of boys coming to Trinity from their particular areas. GERALD J. HANSEN Jr. '51
Public Relations Report A large measure of the success of this year's public relations program for the Alumni Association is due to the support of the officers of the association and the interest of many individual alumni as well as members of the college administration. At the outset it was apparent we were starting from scratch, in that a program had to be created and implemented for the association in line with the overall objectives established by the Officers and the Executive Council. The program finally presented to the Officers and Executive Council last fall and approved by them was designed to accomplish these broad objectives: 1. Improve the communications flow between the college and its alumni; 2. Increase alumni interest; 3. Increase alumni participation; 4. Provide a channel for alumni support of the college public relations department. To convert these goals into a tangible program, these specific projects were inaugurated:
A Survey of Alumni Attitudes While many good ideas and suggestions for a public relations program were available, it was felt the program should be keyed to the major interests and needs of alumni. To find out just what these were, a major survey of Trinity alumni was approved by the Executive Council. Conducted at the beginning of the year, the survey included some 7,400 alumni from the years 1895 to 1965. We received a 19 percent response which is considered in professional circles as excellent. Many of the 1,400 cards returned bad long letters attached expanding on the comments registered. Among our findings, we learned the Alumni Magazine is regarded as the best source of information. Twice as many alumni are interested in either college or alumni news as those who are interested primarily in sports
news. We also became aware of a strong feeling among alumni that they wanted more news of the college as it was happening, and on a regular basis. The survey proved to be a valuable aid in planning the program for the past year and we expect it will provide information for future activities of the association. A more detailed account of the survey will be available in the fall. Alumni Newsletter Shortly after the 4th of July the first issue of "Along The Walk," the new alumni newsletter, will be mailed. As noted earlier, while we felt this was needed, the survey confirmed our hunch. With facts in hand we were able to proceed with the determination of format, content and publication schedule. Budget and manpower permitting, we hope to publish "Along The Walk" in those months the Alumni Magazine does not appear. It will be necessarily brief, leaving details and in-depth treatments for the Alumni Magazine. We welcome your comments on "Along The Walk." Alumni Calendar This project was conceived as a way of keeping Trinity foremost in the alumnus' awareness 365 days a year, as well as providing an attractive way of showing your family and friends where you attended college. While there was a tremendous amount of enthusiasm for this project, we were again faced with a budget problem. This has been solved by making it a joint effort between the college Development Office and the Alumni Association. Planning and design is underway and we intend to have it ready for distribution by the end of the year. Annual Report to Alumni This project is still in the conceptual stage and has aroused considerable interest among those alumni I have had an opportunity to discuss it with. There is a need, I believe, for a short, fact-filled report on the College comparable to the reports issued annually by corporations. Organized and styled like a corporate report, it would contain a financial section showing income and expense figures , charts reflecting increases and decreases in expenses, revenue, endowment, enrollment, etc. There would also be a final accounting of the alumni fund. The forward part of the report would contain brief sections describing the year's activity in departments such as Life Sciences, Chemistry, Economics, English, Music, Physical Education, etc., and reports from the President, the Dean, the Librarian, Placement Director and Chaplain, for example. I would be interested in any comments alumni have on this idea, and others relating to alumni association public relations activity. These should be channeled through either the President of the Association, Seymour Smith '34, or John Mason '34, Alumni Secretary. In closing, I would again like to express my appreciation for the support and assistance received from the Officers and Executive Council, the Alumni, Development and Public Relations Offices and particularly to the alumni who have taken the time to call or write expressing an opinion or an offer to help. DONALD R. REYNOLDS '51
11
Association Notes CAPE COD AND THE ISLANDS There will be a luncheon for all Cape Cod and The Islands alumni at the home of John Mason '34, alumni secretary, Barn Hill Road, West Chatham, Mass., Wednesday, August 12. Notice will be sent shortly to all known winter and summer alumni who reside on Cape Cod and The Islands. If you are planning a vacation to the Cape this August and would like to attend, please advise John Mason at Trinity College or at Barn Hill Road, West Chatham, Mass.
ALBANY The spring meeting of the Albany Alumni Association took place May 21 at the Albany Country Club. Donald B. Engley, college librarian, gave a most entertaining and informative talk. The new officers are: William T. Robinson '50, president; Paul A. Goodwin '40, vice president; Frederick J. Gleason '58, treasurer; and Kenneth J. Lyons '60, secretary. CINCINNATI The Cincinnati Alumni Association met May 路 19 at the Wagon Wheel Restaurant of the Van Cleve Hotel, Dayton. Doug Frost '59, assistant director of development, gave an up-to-date picture of the changing Trinity's administrative changes and news at the Hilltop. The officers are: Stanley N. Muirhead, Jr. '54, 16 Ivanhoe Ave., Dayton, president; and David S. Dimling '55, 36 Spirea Drive, Dayton, secretary-treasurer. FAIRFIELD President Michael Mitchell '51 reports that the Fairfield Alumni Association realized some $500 net from the benefit motion picture performance May 15 of John Biddle's (Class of 1950) film "Sail the Seven Seasons" at the Norwalk High School. The money has been set aside for an area scholarship fund. Thanks go especially to Bill Dobbs '51, Dwight Mayer '54 and Matt Birmingham '42 for their hard work on this project. HARTFORD The Trinity Club of Hartford will hold its annual meeting October 22 at Mather Hall on campus. Dean Robert M. Vogel will be the speaker. Under the leadership of Ray Thomsen '41, arrangements are being made to continue the Club's monthly luncheons at the Bond Hotel the first Tuesday of each month, starting in October.
NEW HAVEN Plans are being made for an alumni picnic at Ray Montgomery's '25 home in August, and the usual get-together for the area freshmen also will be held at Ray's shortly after Labor Day. NEW YORK The annual dinner meeting will be held at the Columbia Club Tuesday, November 17. Please hold the date. Details later. The annual Spring Frolic at "Dan" Webster's June 6 was well attended and a most successful, pleasant occasion. Our thanks go again to our gracious hosts, Dr. and Mrs. Jerome Webster '10. PHILADELPHIA From varied reports we learn that the informal dance at The Barn, Eddington Farms, May 15, was a jolly occasion. PROVIDENCE The Rhode Island alumni met May 13 at Johnson's Hummocks in Providence and heard short talks by Professor Mitchel Pappas and John Mason '34, alumni secretary. The new officers are: James J. Rheinberger '45, president; Jacques V. Hopkins '52, secretary; and Richard A. Bentfield '54, treasurer. WASHINGTON As we go to press President Bob Scharf '58 is planning an alumni cocktail party at his home, 3809 Blackthorn St., Chevy Chase, Md., Sunday, July 26, from 5:00 to 7:00 p.m. All area alumni are cordially welcome. WESTERN CONNECTICUT President Walt Shannon '57 is planning an alumni picnic on August 15. Alumni Secretary John Mason '34 reports Parents Day is NOT October 31 as reported in "Along the Walk," but has been changed to October 24, 1964.
New Trustees Seymour Smith '34
Theodore Lockwood '48
Seymour E. Smith '34 of Wethersfield, Conn., was elected a Life Trustee of the College by the Board of Trustees at their annual June meeting. Mr. Smith is vice president and actuary of Travelers Insurance Company. He has served the company since 1934, except during the war years when he was granted a military leave of absence. In January of 1963 Mr. Smith was named to head a newly combined casualty-fire underwriting department. Mr. Smith is vice chairman of the American Insurance Association and a fellow of the Casualty Insurance Society. An active Trinity alumnus, he has served his Alma Mater as a Junior Fellow from 1950 to 1957, including two years as secretary of the board, was vice president of the National Alumni Association in 1962 and 1963, and was elected president of the Association at its annual meeting this past June 13. 12
Dr. Theodore D. Lockwood '48 was elected an Alumni Trustee by the National Alumni Association of the College at their annual meeting. A native of Hanover, New Hampshire, Dr. Lockwood was graduated from Trinity as valedictorian of his class, following service with the Army in World War II. He received his Ph.D. from Princeton in 1952 and then taught history at Dartmouth, Juniata College and M.I.T. He was a Fellow of the Belgian-American Educational Foundation for research and study in Belgium in 1959, then became Associate Dean of the Facu1ty at Concord College in Athens, West Virginia. At the present time Dr. Lockwood is Dean of Union College, Schenectady, New York. He bas served Trinity as an alumni interviewer, a Junior Fellow and is a member of the Development Council.
1963 -64 PARENTS FUND REPORT THE PARENTS FUND The amount by which the Trinity Parents Fund exceeded its goal is eloquent testimony of the deep feeling of respect and gratitude that Trinity parents have for the job that Trinity is doing for their sons. The regional chairmen and their crops of volunteer workers, as well as the donors, deserve all the praise and thanks. F. STANTON DELAND, JR. National Chairman
ANALYSIS OF THE FUND GOAL TOTAL Parent Contributors Friends Parents Average Gift
$42,500 50,230 619 2,000 $81.15
PARENTS FUND COMMITTEE F. Stanton Deland, Jr.- National Chairman REGION I (Massachusetts, Connecticut, Western New York) Richard E. Deutsch, Regional Chairman; Thomas E. Jansen, Jr., Samuel Gould, Harold T. White, Jr., Geoffrey J. Letchworth, Area Chairmen. REGION II (New York, New Jersey) Clarence U. Carruth, Jr., Regional Chairman; John R. White, Harry S. Craver, M. Herbert Koeppel, Dr. Jacob D. Katz, Dr. Walter B. Macomber, Maurice A. Barclay, Area Chairmen. REGION III (Mid-Atlantic and South) Albert D. Hutzler, Jr., Regional Chairman; Wolcott M. Heyl, Samuel Hopkins, Bernard R. Bralove, Oswald W. Spoor, Area Chairmen. REGION IV (Near Midwest) Charles S. Arms, Regional Chairman; William Block, Dr. Julian B. Galvin, Sherman J. FitzSimons, Area Chairmen. REGION V (Midwest, Far West, North Central and Southwestern States) Thomas W. Pettus, Regional Chairman; F. Carl Schumacher, Robert J. Koretz, Oscar Brachman, Jr., Robert G. Mitchell, Area Chairmen. 13
1963-64 ALUMNI FUND REPORT "Living Endowment" is a term that describes the effect of annual gifts support from Parents and Alumni. The $200,000 provided for Trinity this year through the Parents Fund and Alumni Fund represents the income on a principal of $5,000,000. In effect the College's endowment was increased from a market value of some $26,000,000 to $31,000,000. It is not easy to adequately express the gratitude of Trinity College. Let me simply say that we are deeply appreciative, that we cannot thank you enough. The achievements this year are most impressive. Dr. Albert C. Jacobs President
THE ALUMNI FUND GROWTH RECORD TOTALS: 1948-49 to 1963-64 YEAR
1948-49 1949-50 1950-51 1951-52 1952-53 1953-54 1954-55 1955-58 1958-59 1959-60 1960-61 1961-62 1962-63 1963-64
MONEY RAISED
ALUMNI GIVERS
% OF PARTICIPATION
$ 19,689. 846 27,806. 1128 36,916. 1452 36,174. 1624 44,511. 1954 2038 51,221. 62,819. 2342 PROGRAM OF PROGRESS YEARS 100,517. 2252 108,088. 2391 2820 111,203. 125,635. 3126 135,255. 3191 152,436. 3395
THE ALUMNI FUND Some 300 alumni gave for the first time ... approximately one-third of all the contributors increased their gifts ... 31 alumni contributed one thousand dollars or more ... more than 250 alumni worked on the campaign: for all these reasons the Alumni Fund's ambitious goals were exceeded in record time. Trinity alumni should be proud of the performance of the Fund. In recent years it has been recognized nationally by the American Alumni Council and the U.S. Steel Foundation as one of the strongest alumni funds in the country. Thanks, givers. Thanks, workers. Harry K. Knapp '50 National Chairman 14
22.2% 26.6% 33.4% 35.5% 40.7% 40.3% 45.0% 43.0% 43.3% 51.1% 55.2% 53.7% 55.2%
ANALYSIS OF THE FUND GOAL TOTAL Alumni Givers Participation Honorary Alumni Givers Memorial Gifts Bequest Income Gifts Graduate School V-12 Friends Total Number of Givers Average Gift
STEERING $150,000 152,436 3,395 55.2% 26 30
CO~ITTEE
Harry K. Knapp '50-National Chairman William R. Peelle '44- National Vice Chairman } Distinguished Melvin W. Title '18 HenryS. Beers '18 Gifts Chairmen John E . Griffith Jr. ' 17 Barclay Shaw '35 -Chairman, Leadership Gifts Wendell S. Stephenson '50- Chairman, Special Gifts Sumner W. Shepherd III '49- Chairman, Class Agents William B. Starkey '44- Chairman, Participation Winfield A. Carlough Jr. '54- Chairman, Promotion Martin D. Wood '42- Chairman, Matching Gifts
5
23 7 4 3,490 $43.68
ALUMNI FUND CLASS STANDINGS BY PARTICIPATION 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. 30. 31. 32. 33. 34. 35. 36. 37. 38. 39. 40. 41. 42. 43. 44. 45. 46. 47. 48. 49. 50.
CLASS
ROLL
1918 1914 1934 1916 1923 1919 1937 1925 1926 1917 1959* 1921 1957 1949* 1920 1932 1922 1915 1935 1939 1954 1928 1943 1938 1953 1950 1963 1944 1956 1958 1942 1924 1948 1952 1951 1961 1941 1962 1930 1931 1929 1960 1933 1927 1955 1946 1945 1936 1940 1947
32 24 100 38 31 33 94 48 56 34 230 23 195 171 34 65 42 38 106 115 222 59 120 100 193 275 255 104 204 210 128 35 187 237 238 249 110 273 49 60 38 279 67 35 237 83 75 94 101 112
DONORS
31 21 79 30 24 25 71 36 42 25 167 16 135 117 23 44 27 24 66 71 134 35 70 57 107 150 137 55 106 109 66 18 96 121 119 124 54 . 134 23 28 27 130 31 16 104 35 31 38 38 40
BY AMOUNT % 96.8 87.5 79.0 78.9 77.4 75.7 75.5 75.0 75.0 73.5 72.6 69.5 69.2 68.4 67.6 67.6 64.2 63.0 62.2 61.7 60.3 59.3 58.3 57.0 55.4 54.5 53.7 52.8 51.9 51.9 51.5 51.4 51.3 51.0 50.0 49.7 49.0 49.0 46.9 46.6 46.5 46.5 46.2 45.7 43.8 42.1 41.3 40.4 37.6 35.7
CLASS
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. 30. 31. 32. 33. 34. 35. 36. 37. 38. 39. 40. 41. 42. 43. 44. 45. 46. 47. 48. 49. 50.
1916 1934 1928 1918 1922 1950 1939 1936 1925 1937 1923 1935 1917 1941 1959* 1915 1938 1932 1955 1930 1951 1954 1929 1949* 1943 1952 1957 1944 1953 1956 1960 1942 1931 1948 1958 1961 1919 1926 1927 1962 1947 1940 1963 1921 1920 1924 1945 1933 1914 1946
IMMORTALS (1894 - 1913)
AMOUNT
CLASS
PERCENTAGE
$10,691 5,532 4,832 4,535 4,352 4,008 4,000 3,958 3,570 3,297 3,202 3,198 2,925 2,827 2,702 2,680 2,606 2,587 2,576 2,541 2,494 2,427 2,330 2,250 2,209 2,178 2,165 2,081 2,027 1,894 1,862 1,817 1,637 1,616 1,579 1,535 1,471 1,471 1,355 1,340 1,264 1,238 1,068 1,013 992 990 985 923 729 721
1894 1898 1899 1900 1901 1902 1903 1905 1906 1907 1908 1909 1910 1911 1912 1913
50.0 50.0 100.0 40.0 100.0 100.0 50.0 100.0 100.0 25.0 37.5 80.0 80.0 45.0 57.0 79.0
AMOUNT
$
20.00 1,000.00 25.00 35.00 1,775.00 2,022.50 10.00 157.00 531 .00 50.00 190.00 10,375.00 2,572.00 1,415.00 984.69 2,482.00
CLASS ENDOWMENT FUNDS CLASS
1870 1916 1919 1927 1931 1934 1935 1938 1939 1940 1954 1957 1958 1959 1961 1962 1963 1964
AMOUNT
$ 4,154.33 35,900.00 181.66 1,200.00 . 111.86 5,959.48 5,546.66 2,784.32 1,646.00 200.00 183.14 160.84 11.82 757.71 88.56 1,027.41 1,474.73 Total unknown
• Th ese classes m el both participation and dollar quotas.
15
Ethan F. Bassford '39
Sumner Shepherd Ill '49
1963-64 ALUMNI
FUND CLASS AGENTS IN MEMORIAM Frederick J. Eberle '27
1899 1901 1902 190l1904 1905 19061907 1908 1909 1910 1911 1912 1913 1914 1915 1916 1917 1918 1919 1920 1921 1922 1923 1924 1925 1926 1927
V ICTOR F . MORGAN JAMES A . WALES ANSON T . M cCOOK FREDERICK C. H INKEL, J R. ALLEN R . GOODALE FREDERICK c. HINKEL, JR. REv. P AUL H . BARBOUR, D .D . GEORGE C. CAPEN REV. J OHN H. R OSEBAUGH HARRY WESSELS W ILLIAM P . BARBER CHARLES W. CooKE REV. JAMES A. MITCHELL, D.D. REv. FRANK LAMBERT ARTHUR RABrNOWITZ SYDNEY D . PINNEY HARMON T. BARBER DR. GEORGE A. BOYCE ARTHUR N. MATTHEWS PAUL A. H. DEMACARTE W ALTER W. CANNER R. GEORGE ALMOND GEORGE MALCOLM-SMITH NORMAN D. C. PITCHER F REDERICK J. EBERLE (now deceased) JAMES E . BENT J oHN F. WALKER H ERBERT E. SNOW ARTHUR D. W EINSTErN EVERETT s. GLEDHILL J oHN G . TRACY ANDREW ONDERDONK JoHN S. McCOOK VICTOR E. BoNANDER W ILLIAM G . H ULL GREGORY T . McKEE ETHAN F . BASSFORD CARMINE R . LAVffiRI LOUIS BUCK R OBERT P. N ICHOLS D REW Q. BRINCKERHOFF JOHN T . F INK J AMES J. RHEINBERGER EDWARD J. WASHER
1928 1929 1930 1931 1932 1933 1934 • 1935 1936 1937 1938 1939 1940 1941 1942 1943 1944 1945 1946 1947 1948 THOMAS M. MEREDITH 1949 SUMNER W . SHEPHERD Ill 1950 HARRY K. K NAPP Associate Agents Dr. T homas S. Claros John R. M acKesson
16
.
1951 JAMES T . DE KAY Associate Agents Wayne W. Loveland Armando T . Ricci, J r . 1952 D AVID R. SMITH Associate Agents John H. Cohen, Jr. Thomas C. D ePatie 1953 RICHARD K. HOOPER Associate Agents Allan A . Moses Joseph B. Wollenberger 1954 JOHN G. CRAIG, JR. Associate A gents James A. Leigh Rev. R ich ardson A. Libby, Jr. 1955 DAVID A. ROBERTS Associate Agents John H. Callen, Jr. William T. O'Hara 1956 KIMBALL SHAW Associate Agents Edward A. Montgomery Gerald E . Pauley, Jr. 1957 NORMAN C. KAYSER Associate Agent Walter C. Shannon 1958 CARL H. SHUSTER
~~~~i'W.1laes~:;n
Harry C. Jackson, Jr. 1959 BRIAN E. NELSON Assistant Agents Michael E. Borns Walter J. Burns, Jr. James T. Canivan
b~~Jd ~~~~!er
Douglas L. Frost John R. Hamlett Peter R. Henriques John E. Kenney Howard LaGarde, Jr.
Fred A. Mauck Philip E. McNairy Herbert H. Moorin Samuel S. Polk R. Evan Scharf Albert R. Smith II T. William Webster, J r. 1960 MARVIN w. PETERSON Assistant Agents Emil D. Arle John W. Basset Robert G. Beaven Charles A. Bergmann Neboysha R . Brashich Sanford A. Bredine Charles S. Burger Carrington Clark, Jr. Neil W. Coi'f.an Richard P. all Morris Lloyd, Jr. Richard E. Macho! Clark Phippen Robert L. Puffer Grosvenor H . L. Richardson Robb N. Russell Curtis M. Scribner Richard W. Stockton Bruce Stone Peter Strasser Peter B. Underhill 1961 FRANCIS B. GUMMERE Assistant Agents Donald J . Fish Christopher A. Hodges F. Benedict Hubby Christopher D. lllick John E . Koretz Donald LeStage ITI Lt. George P. Lynch, Jr. Robert F. McCammon, Jr. Charles G. Mixter ITI Frank A. Morse Michael S. Perlman Jack A. Perry John E. Romig John P. Rorke Ens. Thornton G. Sanders John E . Stambaugh William A. Sullivan, Jr. Douglas T. Tansill Samuel Wagner
Thomas J. Watt Edward Mel. Wiener Robert L. Woodward 1962 RODNEY D. DAY III Assistant Agents David S. Alberts Douglas K. Anderson John H. Baker, Jr. Robert A. Borawski George R. Fraise Lawrence R . Harris, Jr. John W. Kopouch Robert J . Kelleher Thomas M. Kelly Robert W. MacLeod Robert J. Mason Wimam G. McKnight ITI Arthur F. McNulty, Jr. William H. L. Mitchell III Roger E. Nelson Michael C. Niven William M. Polk Frederick M . Pryor Allen M. Rudnick 2/ Lt. Shepard C. Spink David W. Strawbridge David A . Wadhams F. Peter Williams, Jr. J. Donald Woodruff, Jr. 1963 ScoTT W . REYNOLDS Assistant Agents Robert L. Burger Robert E . Bylin Clarence U. Carruth III Edward G. Casey Paul F. Haskell, Jr. William C. Howland Stephen P. Jones MichaelS. Leinbach Timothy F. Lenicheck Warren L. Linberg, Jr. Stanley J. Marcuss, Jr. Charles H. McGill Steven J. Molin sky Daniel L. Ostapko Robert H . Parlee Michael A . Schulenberg David M. Shields Harvey W . Thomas, Jr. Ste~en H. Yeaton S. ders Yocum, Jr.
CONTRIBUTORS TO THE 1963-1964 ALUMNI FUND HONORARY ALUMNI The Rev. R. B. Appleyard, D.D. Dr. Frank D . Ashburn Dr. Goodwin Beach Mr. Francis Boyer The Rt. Rev. Charles F. Boynton The Rt. Rev. John H. Esquirol Rabbi Abraham J. Feldman Peter M . Fraser Milton H. Glover William P. Gwinn Dr. T. Stewart Hamilton Dr. Greville Haslam Frederick E. Hasler Allerton C. Hickmott H. Mansfield Horner Vice Admiral Randall Jacobs The Rt. Rev. Harry S. Kennedy James R. Kerr The Rt. Rev. Lyman C. Ogilby Dr. S. H . Osborn Jesse W. Randall The Very Rev. Lawrence Rose Dr. Howard L. Burendall Leslie R. Severinghaus The Rev. Lewis Bliss Whittemore Frazar B. Wilde
V-12 John J . Dunn John B. Kelaghan Dr. Melvin Klickstein Dr. William S. Licht Donald J. O'Hare Burton S. Rubin John D. Warwick
GRADUATE SCHOOL ALUMNI Miss Nellie A. Agostino Mrs. Hazel B. Anderson Ellsworth M . Beecher John J. Boyle David W. Brewer Mrs. Elizabeth P. Comerford Henry C. Dixon, Jr. Seymour M . Ebner Garrett L. Greene Miss Phyllis G. Horne Mrs. Katherine K . McLane Miss Dorothy M . McVay Ernest L. Ogden, Jr. Robert E. Overbaugh Miss Dorothy L. Quigley Kenneth W. Severens Donald F. Sullivan EdwardS. Swanson Douglas M. Swift Samuel A. Talbot Mrs. Wallace A. T lllcott Miss Mary C . Vulcano Mrs. Alma J. Waterhouse
BEQUESTS Frank D. Woodruff- 1883 Howard A. Pinney - 1887 Hill Burgwin- 1906 Matthew G. Bach -.1910 Robert 0. Muller - 1931 Thomas James Holmes- Hon. 1941
ALUMNI BY CLASSES
CORPORATIONS AND FOUNDATIONS (Matching Gifts and/ or Special Grants) JEtna Life Affiliated Companies (Matching and Special Grant) Armstrong Cork Company Bank of New York Burlington Industries Campbell Soup Company Chase Manhattan Bank Chemical Bank New York Trust Company Chrysler Corporation Combustion Engineering Connecticut General Life Insurance Company Connecticut Light and Power Company Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance Company Corning Glass Works Company Deering Milliken, Inc. Diamond Alkali Company Dow Chemical Company Electric Bond and Share Company Esso Foundation Fafnir Bearing Company Ford Motor Company General Atronics Corporation General Electric Company General Foods Corporation B. F. Goodrich Company W. T. Grant Company Gulf Oil Corporation Hercules Powder Company Humble Oil Insurance Company of North America International Business Machines Corporation Jones & Laughlin Steel Corporation Lever Brothers Lubrizol Corporation
P.R. Mallory & Co., Inc. Manufacturers Hanover Trust Company Marine Midland Trust Company of New York Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Company McGraw-Hill Publishing Company Mellon National Bank and Trust Company :W.erck & Company, Inc. National Distillers and Chemical Corporation National Lead Company Olin Mathieson Chemical Corporation Ortho Pharmaceutical Corporation Owens-Corning Fiberglas Corporation Phelps-Dodge Corporation Phillips Petroleum Company Quaker Chemical Corporation The Paul Revere Life Insurance Company R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company Rust Engineering Company Simmons Company, New York Singer Company Smith Kline & French Laboratories Spencer Chemical Company Sperry & Hutchinson Company J. P . Stevens & Company, Inc. Textron Inc. J. Walter Thompson Company Travelers Insurance Companies Union Tribune Publishing Company United States Trust Company of New York Western Publishing Company Worthington Corporation
1832
1900
Clement In Memorium The Rev. Lucius Fuller Maro Purdy
1901
1857 In Memoriam The Rev. Edward J. Purdy
1884 In Memoriam Lawson Purdy
1885 In Memoriam SamuelS. Mitchell
Brinley Brown Clement Cochrane Evans Hahn Hudson Rudd Van de Water Wales Wharton
1902
Backus Bentley 1888 Carson In M emoriam Charles E. Purdy Gooden McCook Merriam 1894 Walker Phair Wheeler White 1895 Karl P . Morba In M emoriam ( now deceased) Philip J. In M emoriam McCook Karl P. Morba
1898
1903
Waterman
Goodale
1899
1906
Morgan In Memoriam Andrian Onderdonk
Brainerd Butler Cowper Fallow
Hinkel Hunt Lauderburn Rehr Philip E. Curtiss (now deceased)
1907 Thompson
1908 Budd Donnelly Edsall Mason Porter Randall
1905 Bulkley Campbell Carr Goodale Harriman Roberts, W. Blair (now deceased) In Memoriam Charles F. Clement
1909 Backus Barbour Buchanan Butterworth, P. Cadman Carpenter, J. S. Creedon Gilbert Hallden Harriman
17
Livingston Reineman Roberts, P. Snow Vaughn Xanders Friend of 1909 (Raymond John Wean Foundation) 1910
Withington Bentley, Raymond H. (now deceased) 1914 Baridon Barton Blachford
Spofford, Jr. Tiger Townsend Woolley 1917 Barnwell, F. L. Barnwell, J. B. Creamer Dennis Co~ke Cra1k Dworski, M. Cross Fen dell de Ronge Fenton Abbey Dexter Griffith Capen Gummere Carpenter, F. D. Ed gel ow Ehlers Has burg Clark, D. W. Fenoglio Hungerford Cook, J. R. Hudson Johnson, F. L. Francis Lawlor McCoid Gamerdinger Moore McKay Geer O'Connor Pratt Harris Senay Rabinowitz Larned Walker, A. W. Racioppi Leschke Rock Walker, R. F. McElroy Wessels Schlier Oliver Woodward Schwolsky Smith, I. W. In Memoriam Stark Townsend Ethan F. Storrs, R. W. Webster Bassford Tree In Memoriam JohnS. Moses Wooster Charles H. (given by Mrs. Kramer, JohnS. Bassford Ann M. Moses) (now deceased) Horace R. Friend of 1914 Bassford 1918 WilliamS. Eaton1915 Beach Friend of 1910 Beers (Mrs. Elizabeth Bailey Barnett Blease B. Capen) Barns Brandt 1911 Bent Buffington Brinkman Burnap Berman Brown, T. C. Caldwell Buck Budd Carlson Christie Chapin Cohen Foster Cowles Gaberman Grint Edsall Griffith Maxon Kinney Grime Pomeroy Kyle Hampson Rees Merrill, S. A. Hatheway Rosebaugh Mitchell lves Sanford, W. 0. Murray James Sherman Peck Johnson Smith Platt Markham Trachtenberg Pressey Mitchell 1912 Roberts Mullen Smith, B. L. Barnett Murray Bates Smith, R. R. Noll Young, V. Blake Phister Zipkin Carpenter Pinney Foote Pollock 1916 Herrick Robertson Baker Holcomb Shulthiess Berkman Penn Silverman Easter by Pettigrew Simonson Elder Rankin Title English Segur Wessels Ferris Wessels Friend of 1918 Green Sherman P. 1913 Hansen Voorhees Adkins Harding (now deceased) Barber Ives 1919 Barnett Johnson Brown Lambert Antupit Case Linton Armstrong, E. G. Cook Lyon Barber Deppen Martin Brill Fairbanks Maxon Casey Marr Meyer Grayson McCreery Miller Hodder McGee Morris Jarvis Noble O'Connor Jessen Sansbury Pierce Leeke Sawyer Plummer Nirenstein Sayres, A. P. Randall Partridge (Tom) Rask Potter Sayres, C. W. Redding Pressey Smith, E. T. Schmitt Rorison
18
Schortmann 1923 Shepherd Andrews Sigal Berube Silverberg Bowdidge Skau Calano Valentine Canner Vogel Clark Williams Coogan Wyse Fitzsimons Buckley, Gammell Gaudian Richard C. (now deceased) Gesner Hallberg 1920 Hartt Adkins Merritt Bond Miller Boyce Murphy Bruce Newell Cahill Norman Hartzmark Perry, D. S. Hoisington Post Jackson Smith, H. L. Kolodny Smith, L. E. Lynch Tate Lyon Webster Miller Mitchell 1924 Murtha Almond Nichols Bleeker Perkins Conrad Priest Dorison Purves Goodridge Rosenberg Hawley Shulman Johnson Tilton Lundborg Whipple Purdy, Stewart W. Marranzini (now deceased) Mills Morton Mulford 1921 Murphy Bradley O'Connor Butler Rich Clark Thomas Hersey Wool am Hoffman Yeomans Hutchison. Jette 1925 Lundborg Ainley Matthews Neiditz Birch Newsom Calabrese Ransom Carey Casey Reitemeyer Saling Chapman Shepard Darrow Strong deCoux Feeley 1922 Geetter Byrnes Geiger Carey Goodridge Case, C. B. Guillard Clapp Hadlow Cram Hawley de Macarte Jepson Doran Johnson England Jones Gable LeWinn Goldenberg Lischner Guertin Malcolm-Smith Johnson, G. McNally Kendall Merchant, W. H. Kneeland Montgomery Kunkel Noble Miller Peiker Nordlund Phelps Parker Ricci Plumb Sarnponaro Puels Shannon, Jr. Reynolds Singer Richman Smith, K. D. Soule Stone Styring Thorburn Tansill Valerius Thomson Weiner Tucker Wilcox
1926 Antos Avitabile Bartlett Burr Coletta Cook Dann Dempsey Fertig Ford Gamble Hamilton Hough Hubbard Hull Jackson Keena Lieber Lin non Loeffler Messer Miller Morhardt Newell Newsholme Nicol Noble O'Brien, R. J. Parke Pitcher Rider Riley Roisman Sheehan Sherman Stuer Thomas Tule Wall ad Walsh Whiston Williams, C. S. In Memoriam Robert Snow Lindsay (given by Mrs. Mabel C. Lindsay)
Gregory, G. M. Hartley Jackson Katz, A. Katz, H. J. Lacy Lib bin Lonsdale Mastronarde Meier Moses Nugent Platt Rulnick Saliske SmaU Valerius Walter Ward Young 1929 Blank Brown Cole Cutler Dip lock Gillespie Hallstrom Hamilton Hardman Hey Hunt, A. Koenig Loomis May Mills Morgan Nordstrom Perlstein, A. Rowland Spekter Toomajian Turney Uhlig Walker Wa~dlaw ~h1te
Zmner 1927 1930 Bashour Barto Bell Belden Cahill Bobrow Celentano Brainerd Chapnick Bush Condit Cooper Conran Cornwell Forrester Forastiere Hamlin Keeney Hartt La Bella Manierre Linn McCurdy Lovering Muller Macinnes Segur Nye Wilbur Petrikat Eberle, Regnier Frederick J. (now deceased) Rosenbaum Ryan 1928 Saliske Alford Snow Baldwin Squillacote Beers Tonken Bent Wise Berger 1931 Bunn Blakeslee Condon Blauvelt Ebersold Childs Even Dann FitzGerald Doolittle, H. D. Gibson Durand Gordon Gooding Gotkis Higgins Gray Green Horton
Jacobson Kearney Keating Mackie Mannweiler Meeker Mitchell Morse .Roots Schmolze Tobin Twaddle Vogel Wallbank Waterman Weinstein Welivar Wilkinson Wyckoff In Memoriam Daniel B. McCook
1932 Abbott Adams Andrus Backstrom Baldwin Bailick Boeger Bronstein Burgess Campbell Carlton Christy Convey Dacey Disco Elliott Fontana Funston Garrison Geiger Gledhill Golino Graham Grainger Greene Kibitz Maloney McPherson Meier Meloy Muzio Norman Ouellette Phippen Prior Reuter Reynolds Sayers Sidor Slater Smith, J. Sykes White Zazzaro
1933 Acquaviva Bernstein Butler Campion Cherpak Cronin Cullen Duksa Egan Frothingham Graham Grant, J. L. Holmes Houle Melrose
Norvell Nugent Ogg Pratt Prutting Richardson Sharkey Sheafe Sis bower Sivaslian Steeves Stella Thayer Tracy Wadlow, L.A. Wadlow, T . A.
1934 Alb ani Allyn Ananikian Arnold Baker Baldwin Basch Bash our Bayley Beach Benjamin Bierkan Bose Bremer Bronstein Burnside Civittolo Clark Coale Co it Cowles Craig Daut DeBonis Dixon Dumont Ellsworth Ely Ewing Ferris Fidao Flynn Fowler Fritzson Gallaway Gane Gay Gladwin Goddard Grafe Grenfell Haring Holland Jackson Kelly Kingston Lokot Mason Mayo McCornick Merriam Midura Muir Mullarkey Newman Onderdonk, Adrian H. Onderdonk, Andrew Rankin Remkiewicz Reuber Rollins Rosenfield Rostek Schack Schmolze
Shaw Ryter Downes, P. F. Shaw, B. Shenker Dunn Smiley Shaw, J. L. Egan Smith, S. E. Sis bower Ferrucci Snowdon Slater French Trantolo Sutherland Gagnon Thomson Trask Gale Tucker Vannie Gillespie Uhlig Walker, G. H. Giuliano Ward Ward Greco Wheeler Wilding Haight Zlochiver Zietlow Haskell In Memoriam In M emoriam Hazen bush Frederick M. Francis H. Hull Senf Kelly Ballou William H . Albert W. Kobrosky Warner La us Hanninen Lehan Ernest H. 1936 Lepak Higgins John P. Benson Lindell Blades Lusk Hodgson Martin Lionel L. Long Bonander Raymond A. Brewer McCarthy Buckley McEldowney MacElroy Carberry Patrick L. McVane McMahon, Jr. Christensen Musgrave John C. Melville Clark Nelson James V. Shea Collins Nielsen Crawford Nilson James B. Dexter Webber, Jr. Olshesky Duzak Onderdonk 1935 Geare Parker Greenberg Patton Adams Henderson Alexander Payne Am port Hollins Paynter Hurewitz Baskerville Penfield Jennings Randall Bennett Jensen Boeger Sanders Kirby, W. M . M. Scenti Boothe Leavitt Scharf Brown McKee Buckley Soule Miller Taylor Buess Mirsky Urban Bullock More, H. R. Urbanik Cacase O'Brien 路 Chapman 1938 Ogilvy Coffey Cooney Anderson Piacente Cosgrove Podorowsky Armstrong D'Angelo Roberts Astman Darrell Rogers, L. S. Barbour Derrick Benjamin Scott Dickerson Benson Scull Duennebier Berg Stein Farnell Blake Weeks Fleisch Williams, J. R. Chotkowski Clapp Winter Giber Kirby, Dr. Corso Gordon Cross Charles D. Goslee Hagarty (now deceased) Culleney Hanaghan Davidson 1937 Hart DeMonte Hazen bush DiCorle Alpert Heyel DiCorleto Anthony Irvine DiLorenzo Bainbridge Johnson, 0. F. Drury Baldwin Junker Fanning Banks Kellam Fuller Barrows Kunze Gilbert Bauer Gladstein Lane Brooke Lau Broughel Goddard Griswold, E. S. Mad orin Budd Griswold, W. R. Maher Burdett Calderwood Halloran Marquet Carter Hoegberg McCook Colton McKenna Horn McQuade Kennard Cottrell Kenney Mixter Cramer Ohanesian Lahey Cushman Olson D'Angelo Layton Paddon Leon Davis Parsons Lindsay Dexter Purdon Lundin Dimeo Roach Donohue, J. J. McKee McNulty Doty Rodney Roisman Downes, M. R . Montgomery
Motten O'Malley Parsons Peterson Pfanstiel Piercey Podorowsky Pomeroy Schmid Sherman Spring Tiedeman Tulin Walker, B. Walker, L. M. Whaples
1939 Anderson Barrett, E. C. Bartlett Bassford Bates, W. P. Buths Campbell Clow Cole Colton Couch Cromwell Crus on Davidson Driggs Flynn Follansbee Garrett Gilman Glaubman Gorman Gualtieri Haight Hall, H. J. Hamilton Hanson Harris, P. S. Harris, R. J. Hart Hayden Heath Hickey Hill, R. J. Hoadley Hope Jaspersohn Johnson, R. H. Kelly Klein Leggett Madden Mador Malliet Martin McCarthy Merrell Morgan, W. S. Nelson Newhall North Olson Pickles Sackter Schmuck Schonrock Schreck Skelley Smith, D . E. Smith, E. L. Smith, G. W. Starkey Sterbens Stockwell Tulin Twiss Upham Waterman
Wezowic Wilcox Wright Yates
1940 Andrian Bengston Bland Burnham Canfield Chandler Clarke Crabbe Duennebier Engel Essex Halloran Harrison Hazen Hopkins Howe Johnson, W. L. Lavieri Lindner McLaughlin Morris Nickel Onderdonk Pankratz Porter Randall, J. R. Rihl Riley Rinehart Ritter Rountree Shapiro VanDuzer Vogel Walker White, J. S. Wolf Yetman In Memoriam Philip B. McCook
1941 Adams, K. Anthony Barnes Bennett Blaisdell Bornstein, J. Borstein, M. L. Broatch Buck Callaghan Carpenter Chauser Ciapis Conway Cormier Day DeBona Feldman FitzGerald Flanagan Foley Goodman Harris, J. W. Hart Holcombe Hungerford Hurwitz Insley Johnson, A. V. Kaplan Kelly, F. A. Kelly, K. J. Kiley Lavieri Malley Man call Marshall
19
1943 Anderson Bailly Baxter Bonee Brinckerhoff Brown, J.P. Burk Byers Casolino Cobb Corliss Cuppia Denny Dickinson Douglas Fay Furlong 1942 Gager Anderson Guillet Barber Gulliver Beaty Hall, J. N. Bestor Hall, R. B. Birmingham Heubner Bond Hultine Bonsignore Jesse! Bowman Jones, C. L. Colton Kavanaugh Earle Kelly Eddy Kennedy Elrick Knowles Fasi Lutkins Fisher McLaughlin Ford Morrison Fresher Paine Getz Peck Glynn Potter Hagedorn Puffer Hunnewell Resony, A. V. Jacobs Richardson Jacobsen Rossi Jehl St. John Jensen Scott Jerome Sharp Johnson, C. F. Steitz Johnson, H. G. Tracy Kloss Tribelhorn Krulikoski Tullar Ladner Tyler Mad~ son Upham Marl or Warren McGee Williams McKibbin 1944 Meshenuk Middlebrook Anderson Moore Barstow Morhardt Bellizzi Morris Boardman Nichols Borden Paddon Bromberg Payne Burros Pizzo Buttery Pulito Chambers Rhines Conant Rosen Cooper Roth a user Danielson Siems Danyliw Scully Day Simpson Desmond, J. M. Smellie Dexter Staehr Donohue Stoughton, P. V. C. Dorchester Sweets~r Epps Taber Farnsworth, W. Tamoney Fay Tuttle Fink Viering Fried Vincent Ghent Weeks Goslee White Gossling Whitsitt Grant Wilson Hastings Wood,M. D . Jarrett Wood, T. B. Katz Wood, W. F. Kelly
Merwin Mulcahy Nickerson Oliver Pedicord Reese Roberts Russo Sehl Smith, E . A. Smith, E. S. Spencer, J. C. Stenbuck Thomsen Tyler Welcher Friend of 1941
20
1946 Litke Paine Argenta Peabody, J. H. Burbank Peelle Cramer Peterson, S. Ferrante Rago Flint Rice Golden, K. F. Richardson, R. E. Goldfarb Roberts, L. H. Harris Rutt Hart Shera Hazen Smith, T. A. Kaufman Starkey Kelly, R. F. Stein Knight Sutcliffe Lasch ever Tenney Liscord Toland Loomis, D. Torrey Marra Tweedy Mcintyre Twitchell Milling Urban Moskow Vanderbilt Murtaugh Williams Reed, J. D. .Zak Rittner Schwartz 1945 Shafer A spell Stud well Brennan Sturges Carothers Sullivan Chester Tietze Clark, P.A. Twitchell Cohen Vincent Cronin Walker Cross Washer Dix Wilson Edler Winter Fay Frederickson 1947 Frommelt Gerent Bonifazi Golkowski Bradley Goodspeed Dabney Joyner Dubinsky Kapteyn Egan Keefe Eichacker Korder Ellis Meyer Emch Milligan Flynn Moyer Friedland Oberle Godfrey Peterson Hane Pinsky Hayes Pod rove Hotez Race Jennings Rhein berger Johnquest Smith, M. C. Jones, D. E. Wildman, W. B. Kent
Kingston Goldstein Kinsella Gottesman Koeppel Gracey Lorenson Greenberg, L. E. Lorenzo Grenhart Lozier Guttenplan Mellor Helman O'Connor Huntington O'Neil Jacobs Po liner Krinsky Preston Lambert Reiche Learned Richardson, R. B. Lemieux Rosen Lewis-Jones Schroeder Lichtenberger Stirlacci Lockwood Tapogna Loegering Thomsen Lokot Verdi Longo Lovell Walker, C. W. Wicks Luby Woodward Martin, L. F. Martin, R. S. Marut 1948 Maue McDonald Alexander Andrian Minturn Anthes Molinari Arnold Morrell Murray, E. A. Barnett Begg Murray, G. T. Boland Nicholson Bradley Norris Brand Nourse Brieant Page Brown Proctor Burns Reynolds, E. Byrne Reynolds, W. H. Campo Richman Carter Rivkin Robinson, C. E. Casey Roedel Charles Savoy Cogswell Colosey Schachter Davidson Schwartz Dickinson Simmons Donnelly Simpson Dunn Singer Durick Sitarz Faber Stokes Faillace Stratton Forster Strongin Frankel Thomas Gershman Threshie Ghent Tyler Glazier Walmsley Gleason Werner
Whelan Wilson Winquist Wynne Zajicek Zdanuk Ziegra
1950 Albright Austin, A. I. Aldeborgh Barrows Beirne Bellis Bennett, J. S. Biddle BiLl you Blake Blum Boland Bourgeois Brainerd, F. J. Brainerd, J. R. Brundage Brown Bunnell Carter Cerosky Chapin Chidsey Clapp Claros Compton Corcoran Cromwell Dabrowski DeLuca Detwiler DiLorenzo Donovan, E. P. Donovan, R. F. Dorison Dougherty Dunbar, D. Durbas Earling Eblen Elovitz Farrow Gabree Gavens Geiger Gilroy Girdzis Glassco
Note: This C lass met Participation and Dollar Quotas in the Alumni Fund Campaign.
1949 Anderson, R. A. Anderson, S. J. E. Austin, D. Bartman Beattie Beisel Berger Bingham Bird Blake Bland Bowden Boyle Bray, A. F. Camilleri Cherpack Chesney Chrekjian Church Cohen Connors, W. M. Cotter Coughlin
Covert Crafts Cudworth Davis DeGrandi DeRosa Duerr Duncan Duy Edsall Fagan Ferrante Fishman Giffin Gillette Ginszauskas Goldberg Gordon Griffin Gunning Harding Harper Holmgren Howard
Johnson Jopson Jurczyk Kayser Kennedy, A. D. Kennedy , J. J. King Kolakowski Lambert, F. LaMotta Later Lawler Loveland Lucas Mahoney Mason McGaw Mueller Muir Noonan Norman Obert Oelbaum Olesky
Overton Paddock Paine Parker Parks, C. G. Perry Phelan Pinnell Prigge Redden Reiner Requardt Richardson Rodgers Root Rorick Rouse Roy Schmidt Sernoffsky Shepherd III Sherman Simonian Simons
Smith, S. E. Steidel Stowe Straley Summers Surge nor Tanner Taylor Teichmann Tenney Tribe/hom Urquhart Vi bert Vismontas Waugh Weatherly Willerup Williams Wilson, D. l. . Wilson, W. M. A. Wolfe Wood
Grimes, L. E. Grinsell Grona Halasz Hall Harries Haselton Hickok Higginbotham Hotchkiss, I. L. Hotchkiss, S. E. Hutchinson Jakos Jette Katzman Kelley Kennedy Knapp Knight Kochanski Krackhardt Ladd Lasher Levick Lohnes Long Maccarone MacKesson Marte Martino Matthews Mazotas McClister McNulty Mellins Meskill Mullane O'Connor Paddock Page Palmer Parker Patterson Perez Perry, J. M. Phillips Rau Rekas Riley Robottom Robinson Romaine Rosenlof Rowney Ruth man Sanseverino Schear Scully Segall Sherman Smith, W. P. R. Snow Sou los Steelman Stein Stephenson Stewart, G . L. Stewart, J. M. Strother Sullivan Sunega Sutton Tans ill Taslitt Thomas Tiedemann Torrey, B. H. Torrey, N. E. Tsu Turkington Urban Vanderbeek VanLoon Van Metre Van Why
Vignati Wadsworth Wainman Warner Watson Well ins Wetter White, L. B. Wigglesworth Wilbur Wildrick Wills Wolford Woollacott Young Zazzaro Zenowitz Ziemba
Lawrence Leeds Loveland Martel McGill McKean McKelvie Mecasky Mercer Mitchell, D. M. Moore Muir Nash Nettel Norden Norton Oberg O'Connell O'Connor 1951 Peterson Aldrich Pierce Allen Raden Anderson Reynolds Austin, G. W. Ricci Barber Richmond Banks Rogers Barrett Rosenberg Bartoes Roth Behley Schubert Berg Simoni Bertrand Simpson Bomberger Single Batters Smith, L. S. Boyko Stahl Brewer Stanger Bridge Stark Bulmer Stevens Burbank Stuart Byers Surgenor Camilleri Tal boom Carey, John J. Jr. Tim our Collier Van Horne Condon VanLanen Coote von Schrader Curtin Wask Cutting Weikel DeKay Whelan Dickey White Dickinson Wilson, J. S. Dillon Wilson, R. H . Dobbs Woods Doing Wright Dorman Yarrow Dudley Young C. F. Edwards 1952 Elliott Ellsworth Aiken Ferguson Aldrich Fiske, F. S. Anton Fiske, W. W. Becker Freeman Beers Bern abo Friday Bickford Fritz Bleecker Garrison Grant Bolinger Groth Brigham Groves Buffum, C. C. Hamilton Callan, Felix J. Hansen Carroll Harding Christakos Hollyday Clipp Howard Clough Hurwitz Cohen Jachens Corwin Currie Jacoby DePatie Jenkins Diana Jennings Dubuque Johnson, A. B. Johnson, H. S. Edwards Jones Ellison Kaufman, R. P . Fisher Kearns Fitzgerald Kirschner Forte Kulp Foster, G. V. Landers Foster, J. R .
Fremont-Smith French Frost Fuller Goodwin Goralski Gurwitt Harvey Hatfield Head Hill Hoisington Holmes Hopkins, B. B. Hopkins, J. V. Howard, W. J . Hubbard, R. G. Hungerford Hunter, R. E. T. Hunter, R . N. Keyes Kilty Kirschbaum Knapp Krogman Kulas Kunkel Larson Laub Lee Lehrfeld Lewis Malkin Mans bach McCrehan McElwee Medford Miller, J. H. Miller, T. C. Minton Morrisey Nesteruk Newell Norman Norris Oliver Parsons, I. M. Petro Phelps Pratt Quinlivan Ratcliffe Rathbone Ray bold Rigopoulos Ringrose Rogerson Rossner Roth Russell Sawyer Schild Scott Simmons Skinner Smith , D. R. Smith, G . E. Smith, R. H. Smith, W. W. Sproul Stark Stewart Taylor Thomas, E. B. Thomas, K. D . Trowbridge Tryon Tuttle Ulrich Vaile Vi bert Ward, Welna Werdelin Whitbread
White Wiberg Wilmot Woodhouse Woodruff Yeomans Young
1953 Asher Astlett Barber Barhydt Barnett, K. C. Barnett, T. A. Basile Bendig Berdick Bernhard Berseth Blackler Bogoslosfski Brewer Brown Burns Campbell, J. P. Carroll Clark, D . R. Clem Clifford Crawford Davis Dean Del Mastro Dwight, E. F. Faulkner Fitz-Randolph Friedrich Gagne Guardo Hamblet! Handy Hayward, W. L. Heller Holmquist Hooper Howard Humphries Hunt Hupfer Jones Joslin Keller Kurland Lauffer Lecrenier Lee, R. E. Longobucco Luquer Lyford Mallon Marden Marriner McAlpine McCandless Merrill Michie Miller, S. P. Miller, W. S. Mortell Moses Moskow Nelson Pado Paquette Parker Parrott Pattison Perkins Peterson Pollock Rhodes Richards Roback Romaine
Rowen Seeber Sencabaugh Shigo Shriver Simmons Sloane Smith, F. C. Starr Stewart Sullivan Tildesley Tinsz Valentine Walsh Whitelaw Whitmarsh Wollen berger Woodford Wrinn Yates Young
1954 Adams, J. H. Adams, R. J. Aiken Ainsworth, R. Alexander Anderson, J. R. Anderson, P . Anderson, R. C. Anderson, W. P. Anthony Atwood Austin Avitabile Backenstoe Benton Berlow Bloodgood Bojar Bowen, C. C. Bowen, G . H. Braskamp Brown Bruce Bunnell Burroughs Butts Campbell Carlough Carlson Christakos Clark Clemmer Craig Crenson Crosier D 'A bate Davis, J. J. Dillon, R . J. Dobrovir Dyar Eggert Englehardt Esq uirol Farrar Fawley Floyd Franchere Gillooly Green Griffith Hennigar Higinbotham Hill, G. T. Hill, J. J. Hirsch Hodges Johnston, D . F. Johnston, R . J. Kael ber Kalinowski Kennedy, D. K.
Kimmick Kipp Knight Knutson Koeppel Kronholm Laub Lawler Leigh Libby Logan MacColl MacKenzie MacKimmie MacLea Marshall Mayer McCauley McMahon Mitchell Moylan Muirhead Murray Mutschler Newman Niemann Norman Oberender Oxholm Palmer Paris Pearson Peppe Pike Potter Rathbun Read Robinson Russo Sauvage Schenker Schoyer Schreiber Scott Searles Secor Shaw Silverberg Sivaslian Smith, A. L. Smith, E. H . Smith, R. H. Storms Taft Tansi Teece Thatcher Thomas, G. M. Toggenburger Tompkins Vanderbeek VanLanen Von Thaden Waldman Webber West Wilson Windesheim Wolff Woodward Wormer Zembko
1955 Allocco Bartlett, H . W. Bemis Bittner Blye Britton Bryer Burbank Burdon Callen Cardwell
21
Carlson, L. D. Wainman Welsh Carlson, P. C. Chamberlain Whiting Champenois Whitman Close Wildrick Craig Yeomans Crowell Yood Dachs Zampiello Detzler 1956 Dim ling Abbott Donahue Abrams Driscoll Ahlberg Eberle Farnham Alexander Anderson, A. P. Fedden Feinberg Anderson, B. F. Fisher Baker Foley, J.P. Bates Ford Beren Bergerman Freeman Blackford Gardiner Boss Geetter Briggaman Gelman Campbell Gladwin Gleason Casale Chard Golledge Hansel Cole Collver Hines Hoag Coursen Hillister Crilly Hopper Dakin Islamoff Daley lsselhardt Davis, R. D. Johnson Eason Kopp Eastburn Lahey Even Fleming Laird Lapham Foley LaPorte Gartland Leonard Ginns Logan Gledhill Luby Guertin Lunt Haff Maitland Hammaker McCrea Hickin McCully Hoyer Mehldau Jarvis Merriman Jewett Miller, D. T. Johnston Miller, Robert N. Kelley Moock Knight Morgan Kramer Morrison Lawrence, T. W. Limpitlaw Moss Mountford Livingston Nash Loeb Nelson Loveridge Newlin Lundborg Newman Luquer Nixon MacDonald, B. N. O'Hara Martin Palshaw McAllister Penfield McCabe Peterson McCanless Price Mongillo Reed Montgomery Reese Muirhead Reineman Murphy Riccardo Nissi Roberts O'Brien Rowe Osborn Royston Pauley Pen gel Rudner Scheinberg Perens Simons Phillips Sind Pienkowski Smith, R. D. Plotts Snyder Powell Starr Price Stephens Raig Thomas, J. M. Renkert Trefts Rice Truitt Ritter, J. H. H. Ullmann Sayre Valentine Schader
22
Schuh Scott, S. W. See Shaw Sivitz Smith, D. W. Smith, L. C. Snow, J. T. Stearns Stehle Steinmetz Sticka Stiles Stone Sullivan Swett Taylor, D. M. Temple Townley Tulk Vaughan Vigneault Wareing Warren Weisburger Wilkins Willis Wood Woodward Zachs Zimmerman Zito
1957 Almquist Arrington Babington Baird Barber Barlow Becherer Beers Behr Bennett
Bonsignore Boos Bowen Bradley, E. S. Bradley, J. R. Bratt Brown, L. Brown, T. Bruno Bulkley Bunch Calabro Case Channell Christensen Clinton Condon Couch Curran Daniels, E. J. Daniels, J. M. Darcey Day Doolittle Douglas Drabowski Drayton Duff Elder Elliott Ewald Ferguson Finkbeiner Fleishman Foster Fox Frank Frazier Giammattei Giffin Gocht Gould Hall, J. Hall, R. H. Hamilton Harlow
Hoffman Johnson Johnston Jones Kayser Kelleher Kenefick Kennedy Kimber Kratz Kuiper Kylander Learnard Letcher Lockfeld Luke MacDonald Macisaac MacLeod Mann Marion McCracken Meader Melnyk Miller Miner Morhardt Morrison Morse Mortimer Myerson Niness Parnum Partridge Payne, A. D. Payne, M. K. Percy Pershouse Pierce Pillsbury Pisetsky Pitchell Purdy Raynard Reichard, H. C. Richard
Richards Rohlfing Rosenfeld Rowley Russo St. John Salamon Shannon Shaw Sill Slater Sleath Solmssen Spear Stout Szamier Taylor Tews Therrien Tobin Valdati Vincent Webster Wiegman Williams Wilson, J.D. Winslow Wolcott Wolin Woodward Worthey In Memoriam Raymond C. Kisonas (given by Paul A. Cataldo)
1958 Back Barth Baxter Berg lass Bishop Blumstein Bogert
Bogli Bouldin Bowden Brian Buchanan Buswell Carter, R. H. Carter, R. S. Caruso Cass Catlin Checkas Clarke Corbett Corley Crandall Creamer Crombie Crowe, A. C. Crowe, J.P. Crystal deSola Drago Edgerton Elliott Elsas Elting Faesy Farr Flannery Foy Fuchs Gibson Gleason Hall Hawe Hazzard Headle Illick Israel Jackson Kaufhold Kenny Kilty Kulas Larkin
Note: This Class met Participation and Dollar Quotas in the Alumni Fund Campaign.
1959 Adams Anderson, E. J. Anderson, G. A. Backman Baskin Bass Bates Belmont Beristain Bigelow Borawski Borus Bozzuto Brian Broberg Brown Burleigh Burns Cables Campion Canivan Case Casella Cerrito Chichester Clarke, J. G. Cleveland Couchman Coykendall Crowell Donahue Dorwart
Dubel Dunning Dwyer Edwards Elwell Englehart Evenson Fairbanks Farmer. Fineshriber Fitts Ford Foster Franz Freeman Frey Frost Gay Gebelein Gignoux Goodman Gowing Graham, G. R. Graham, W. J. Graves Hamlett Hampton Hardman Harnish Harris Harrod Hartz Henriques Hersch
Hess Hickey Hoag Holland Hoover Hoppner Hunter Jacklin Jaffe, R . R. Jessen Johnson Joy Kardon Kellogg Kelly Kenney Kerch is Krawski Krim LaRochelle Lieber Lindemann Lomnitzer Loven Lukens MacDonald Macintire Mannion Martel Mayo McDonough McElroy Mcilvaine McNairy
Melling Miller, A. B. Mills Moor in Morgan Muir Murray Nelson Nichols Nolan Olson Olton Onderdonk Outcalt Owen Palmer Paslaski Perce Pfeffer Pingpank Pizzella Polk Price Putnam Reed, R. H. Reed, T. M. Reo pel Reynolds Riddell Rovno Salver Schaller Scharf Scheibe
Scheinberg Schoff Schram Schreiner Schroder Seastrom Sgro Shea Shechtman Simonaitis Simshauser Smith, A. R. Smith, 0. T. Smith, R. A. Sneideman Speno Spitzmiller Strass Thompson Thurston Truscott Tubman Ward, L. C. Wassong Weeks Weiser Whitbeck Widing Wischenbart Wright Wyckoff Young Zinner
Coxhead Larsen Crane Lawson Curry Lorson D'Anzi Lourie Davenport Lowenstein de Coligny McClenahan Dunlaevy Mcllwaine Emley Merrill Enquist Miller Farnsworth Moore, D. E. Felton Muench Filiurin Nevins Foy Newton Frank Noble Gabrielson Norris Gage, J. L. Olsson Galati Ora Gavin O'Reilly Gerundo Painter Golas Park Goldhamer Parker Goldstein Perkins Green, A. J. Perry, M. N. Greenlee Peterson Greenwald Pickering Haddad Polstein Hall, R. T. Renelt Hokanson Repole Huffer Robertson Hunter Rogers Jago Rose Johnson, C. T. Saunders Johnson, R. G. Schacht, M. A. Joseph Scharf Schaupp Kirk Koenig Shenken Kotch Shuster Kroh Simmons LaMothe Smith, D. A. Langen Smith, F. S. Larsen Smith, J.D. LaValle Spencer Leof Studley Terry Levine Lloyd Thorpe Lyons To lis MacDermott Traut Mason Tucker McKelvy Vaughan Middleton Wallace Narins Weinstein Osborne Williams Paterson Wittmann Pedemonti Zoob Beckius, Samuel H. Perlman (now deceased) Perrow Peterson 1960 Phippen Plank Anderson, H. Psarakis Anderson, P. S. Arle Puffer Bacharach Rhodes Richardson Barlow Bassett Riter Royden Beaven Beech Russell, R. N. Bergmann Rutherford Ryder Black Salm Bredine Brenner Salmon Sargent, J. A. Bridley Brink Schneider Schulik Broder Schwiebert Bromley Brown, R. H. Scribner Burger Sienkiewicz Caple Snow Casali Stephens Chalker Stockton Chase Stone Cimbora Strasser Clahr Strawbridge Clarke Sweet Coogan Thomas Costley Tiffany
Tilzer Tracy Tsairis Underhill Verbal ow Wachs Wagner Walker Wardell Weisz Whitelaw Wilcox Wright Wyckoff Yam Zitt
1961 Anderson Anello Bashwiner Beebe Bernstein Blanken Brault Bridge Bros go! Brown Cantor Childs Colen Colket Cramer Crockett Cuddigan Dinsmore Dove Draesel Draper Druckman Ewart Fish Fitzpatrick Fitzsimmons Forrest Forrester Georgeady Giegler Gleason Goldfaden Gregg Guertin Guild Gulotta Gunmere Hamilton Hankins Harrison Haynie Henry Herman Hodges Hoffman Hanish Hughes, E. C. Illick It sou Johnson Kahl Kallas Karvazy Kauff Kilborn Knight Koretz Kreisel Lazay Leiser LeStage Lord Lovell Lowe Lynch MacDonald MacMillan
Mandell Mayer McCammon McRae Mixter Morse Mutschler Myerson, D. A. Myerson, P. J. Newberg Odlum Peatman Perlman Perry Phelps Pol stein Pringle Rawson Reese Refalvy Rodney Rohlfing Romig Rowley Sanders Schnadig Schoenfeld Schumacher Seibert Shaw Shilkret Slater Smith Sobol Stambaugh Steeves Steiner Stempien Swift Tan sill Tattersfield Thomson Thrower Tuomi Turner Tuttle Urban Wagner Weber Wiener Wilcox Williams Wilson, T. A. Wilson, T. B. Wood Woodward Zelly Zimmerman
1962 Alberts Anastasio Anderson, D. K. Anderson, G. K. Antoniou Arp Ascher Bailey Baker Bartol Bennett Bishop, C. H. Blackwell Borawski Borus Brown, J.D. Bundy Carlson Chase Classen Cool Coyne Creighton Cuneen Cutler
Daniels Sifton Day, L. V. Smith, M. E. D ay, R. D. Spink Densem Stetler D'Oench Strawbridge Dole Sullivan Duncan Sweeney Elwell Syer Farnum Synn Fehm Thayer Fox Thomas Gates Traut Gittins Tuerk Goodman Turner, W. H. Gough Wadhams Hall Wagner Harris Warren Harting Werner Hill, R. 0 . Whitters Hill, s. Williams Hoffman Wood Hopkins Woodruff Ierley Woolsey Johnson, P. A. Zuill Johnson, R. T. 1963 Johnson, T . S. Adams Jones Aldrich Kapouch Alvord Kelly Baum Kessler Knop Berkholtz Kraft Berman Kroczynski Bernstein, I. D. Kuehnle Bernstein, R. P. Lackey Blair LaRocca Bond Leahy Booth Leddy Bordogna Lee Brackett Leng Brittain LeWinn Burger Lipkind By lin Lloyd, M. Calabrese Campbell Lloyd, T. Lockton Carruth Lynde Casey MacKay Chang MacLeod Clark Mas no Corbin McAlister Correll McCracken Cotta McCurrach Coxhead McKnight Creighton Crowley McNamara Dawson Meehan Densen Mehringer Dickson Metcalf, F. U. Meyer Elwell Emery MiJler Mitchell, W. H. L. Emsley Morgan Faxon Mott Field Nardiello Files FitzGerald Nelson Flynn Norman Foster O'Brien Fraser Pedini Friedman Perin Gaines Pine Gale Polk Gardner Pryor Goodridge Raeder Haddad Rand Haemmerli Redford Haskell Richardson Hebel Rodgers, D. B. Hendrick Rothbard Hill, E. B. Roxby Rudnick Hoerr Holbrook Ryan Holroyd Sankey Howard Sargent Howland Sears Hutch Shapiro Johnson, T. W. Schechtman
Jones, S. P. Kane Karson Keen Kirk Knox, T. R. Kellett Kraut Kriteman LaMotte Lenicheck Linberg Lippitt Lundborg Marcuss Marshall Masius Mattison McCord McCormick McCutcheon McElwain McGawn McGill Miller, A. R. Molinsky Moore, D. T. Moyer Murdock Neulander Niles Nygard Odium Ostapko O'Sullivan Parlee Perreault Perron Pitcairn Pleva Pope Raff Reese Repetto Reynolds, S. W. Rianhard Richardson, J. M. Richardson, W. H. Rubel St. Clair Schulenberg Scull Sherin Shields Smith, D. G. Smith, T. H. Southworth Spitzer Stier Szumczyk Talley Thomas路 Tozer Tuttle Vickery Viering von Starck Washburne Watson Wicks Winer Winner Wright, T. A. Yeaton Yocum Yonov Zachariasewycz
1964 Fein Mitchell
1965 Horstick Urbanetti
23
CONTRIBUTORS TO THE PARENTS FUND FRIENDS
Charles F. Hobson, Jr. Joseph H . Hodgson Mr. & Mrs. David T. Chase Jack Hoffman Miss Elizabeth L. Knox Hokan V. Hokanson Benjamin L. Holland Raymond J. Hornfischer Joseph D. Horowitz PARENTS Louis Jacobs Dr. Clifford G. Johnson Alabama Walter A. Johnson Oswald W. Spoor Louis E. Kaufman Arizona Willem E. Keur Mrs. Gerald M. Buckler Frederick Kirschner Robert C. Knox , Jr. California Louis Kotch Mrs. James R. Cogan Edward G. Ladewig (Mr. & Mrs. Jules Stein in Edward W. Lazzerini honor of Laurence R. Lowe) Max Lipkind Miss Jeff Donnell Lester H. Loeffel John H. Harriman Corado J. Lombardo W. Knox Mellon Alan H . Lowenthal Robert G. Mitchell Samuel Lutin Robert D. Syer Alexander A. Mackimmie, Jr. J. N. Telischak Benjamin D . Mandell Edward J. Martin Colorado John A. Mason Mrs. Hamilton Wallace Miss Jane C. McKee John M. Meyer, Jr. Connecticut Dr. Gerald R . Miller David G. Ahlgren Morris Molinsky Abraham S. Albrecht Mrs. Owen Morgan Michael P. Alogna Murray H. Morse Arthur M. Alvord, Jr. Ralston Munson Paul Arcari Nathan M. Myerson The Hon. Nicholas F. Jules F. Nolan Armentano John Ogden Frank W. Atwood Horton O'Neil Reginald M. Bagley Sidney R. Orem Loring M. Bailey George D. Ornato Donald L. Bartlett, Jr. Charles Overbeck John H . Bartol Frederick T. Parker Samuel R. Basch Gordon L. Parlee William Berkowitz Archie R . Perry Reeve K. Biggers Mrs. Anna M. Pleva E. Stanley Blackman Francis M. Powers Mrs. Mildred D. Bobruff Richard B. Price William W. Bois Mrs. Maria Querido Arthur H. Boultbee Maurice J. Quirk Mrs. Alfred B. Bowden Harry E. Ratner William G. Brandt Joseph Ravizza Mrs. Arthur F. Brown George K. Raymond Howard H. Brown Peter P. Rizauckas Albert G. Carlson W. E. Rohman Andrew J. Carlson John W. Ross H. James Caulkins Isidor Rubin Mrs. Harry Chagnot Mrs. Ann Rubinstein George L. Crapo H. Carl Sandberg William B. Crane, Jr. Samuel S. Schoen Dr. George Crawford William Schwartzman Oliver路 J. Crossland Benjamin Shapiro Fred J. Daly Abraham E. Silverman Albert H . David Edward P. Simonian Searls Dearington Mrs. Marjorie V. Smith Joseph DeLeeuw Lewis F. Snow Krikor Derderian Michael L. Somma Richard E . Deutsch Michael C. Sommer Louis J. Devendittis Arthur E . Spielman Walter Doll, Jr. Robert E. Stansfield Zigmond R . Dombroski William 0. Stuart Mrs. Helen M. Duran Clarence E. Sweet Melvin F. Evarts Mrs. J. Gordon Tompkins Harold I. Feingold Oscar H. Fidell James W. Tower William A. Fitzsimmons Robert A. Tuttle Louis L. Foster Arvine C. Wales Louis Friedman Mrs. Karon E. Walmet Mrs. Freda S. Gann George A. Waterman Alfred A. Garololo Nathan H . Weinstein Nathan A. Geetter Paul N. Wenger John G. Geremia Albin K. Wetzel Harold T. White, Jr. Charles D. Gianetti Samuel Goldberg Winfield S. Witherwax Samuel Gould John L. Wodatch, Sr. David Gregg, Jr. Mrs. Simeon S. Zickler Charles P. Hamblen Edward Zinser
Delaware David F . Anderson William J. Barnes, Jr. Theodore S. Beck John D. LaMothe Robert A . Moss Gilbert B. Moyer Carl Schlatter District of Columbia The Rev. F. H. Arterton Waldron Faulkner Charles L. Kent James W. McNally James T. Pyle Richard H. Sanger Florida John W. Bailey Halleck A. Butts George B. Creighton Mrs. Frances S. S. Morley Peter J. Swaluk Frank W. Tuttle Georgia J. Lester Fraser Hawaii Dick Chang Leo Israel Ulinois James H. Arensman Albert E. Back Robert Bangert Alfred W. Blanken Dr. Hugh G. Bridegroom RobertS. Cushman The Rev. Gordon B. Galaty Henry Gamson Joseph H. Gerber David J. Harris Willis W. Herbeck Dr. Hugh H. Hussey Dr. Donald L. Kessler Robert J. Koretz Hathorn W. McCulloch James P. McKtme Robert C. Miller, Sr. John H. Roth, Jr. William L. Rutherford Paul Safran Harry J. Sigman Chester F. Sjoholm Ralph Stone Edward A. Twerdahl, Jr. John R. Uphoff Thomas E. Wells, Jr. Indiana Dr. Robert J. Braidwood Mrs. Dorothy M. Dinkier Iowa William P. Ellwood Kentucky Donald Cardwell Julian F. DePree, Sr. Charles K. McClure, Jr. Mrs. Atherton Neblett James C. Stone, Jr. George S. Wiedemann Maine Thomas P. Jones, Jr. Maryland E. William Chapin Richard M. Cooley W. Kennedy Cromwell, Jr. Norman F. Edmonds The Rev. Leslie F. Fairfield Stanford E. Hoff Samuel Hopkins Albert D. Hutzler, Jr.
Morton L. Kemper Robert H. Levi Albert E. Makin L. Bruce Matthai Lawrence Perin J. Avery Smith, Jr. TalbotT. Speer The Rev. William F . Sprenger Mrs. John S. Stanley Dr. Luther L. Terry Dr. Franklin S. Wharton Dr. J. Donald Woodruff Massachusetts David C. Bailey Clarence H. Barthelman Ralph Beebe Nelson Bigelow George K. Bird Mac R. Bougere Raymond L. Boulanger Curtis Campbell Stanley F . Clarke Mrs. Ernest Clary F . Stanton Deland, Jr. John H. Draper, Jr. W. Arthur Dupee Willis E. Egleston Walder J. Engstrom Frank N. Fowler John D. Freeman William W. Gibson Carl A. Goodrich, Jr. Philip D. Granger Philip M. Hallowell Lawrence H. Hansel Edward B. Hutton HungW. Jue Edgar H. Kent George R. Larson Raymond S. Locke Robert P. MacBey Alex J. McFarland Robert G . Millar William Minot V Dr. Harvey R. Morrison William B. Morse George L. Moses Louis F . Oldershaw Paul M. Perohonis Raymond T. Perron John Rimer Edward P. Roberts Hugo Roth Harold Rudnick Joseph Saklad Geoffrey A. Sawyer Thomas Taylor Mrs. Katherine G. Whittemore Dr. George S. Wild Ralph B. Williams Harry J. Winer Michigan Mrs. Charles W. Bishop William Black H. C. Blake Robert A. Emmett, Jr. Sherman J. FitzSimons Mrs. Stanley N. Muirhead The Rev. Ralph W. Parks Jack W. Kuehn Charles B. Meech George R. Steiner Missouri Thomas N. DePew Eugene E. McDaniel Thomas W. Pettus F. Carl Schumacher The Rev. B. W. Smith, Jr. Ralph S. Stone G. Carroll Stribling Nebraska Floyd L. Vosler
New Hampshire Donald W. Cameron Arnold S. Wood New Jersey Seymour H. Abrams Charles B. Atwater Robert M. Bishop EdwardS. Blackwell, Jr. Dr. Abraham J. Bloomstein The Very Rev. G. H. Boyd John R. Brown, Jr. Eifert C. Burfeind G. Frederick Burt Winfield A. Carlough Anthony L. Carrad Charles E. Champenois John M. Conover Dexter G. Cook Harry S. Craver Edme H. Deschamps Harry W. Dierman Stephen J. Doorley, Jr. Anthony C. Ferrara James D . Finley Matthew G. Forrest Raymond E. Hartz James J. Henry Robert C. Howland Robert J. Jacobson Dr. Jacob D. Katz Mrs. Betty W. Kelsey Carl G. Langen Dr. Asger F . Langlykke Andrew W. Lebert John Lenhart Chester D. Leonard Irving Liebowitz John M. Mackie Julius J. Marion Mrs. Jackson Martindell Lee Mason C. Ronald Mather Frederick A. Milholland Seymour Perkins, Jr. Aubrey Pershouse Everett B. Post Sterrett R. Prevost, Jr. Charles V. Reydel Clark L. Reynolds Carl K. Rhine Martin C. Risse) Irving Rogow Dr. Oscar Rozett Howard M. Sadwith John M. Sartorius Frederick A. Smith Kenneth A. Southworth Cyril S. Stanley Harry R. Stern Robert R. Stroud Fred Thomases William T. Tilden III Leon Weinberg Dr. Bernard M. Weinstein George B. Wendell Mrs. Charles W. Weston, Jr. William G. Whitelaw J. Herbert Whitworth Millard F . Wood S. Anders Yocom New York Sheridan Albert Donald B. Anthony Harry M. Auerbach George F. Baker, Jr. Dr. Miriam Barber Maurice A. Barclay Mrs. Lyman A. Beeman Park Benjamin, Jr. Benjamin Bernstein Jack J. Bernstein Frederick Born Laurence P. Bory John H. Bose Mrs. Beverly H. Brasfield Dr. Sigmund S. Briger Frank H. Brigham John H. Brinckerhoff
Mrs. Cy Caine Ernest R. Carlson Clarence U. Carruth, Jr. Thomas S. Chapman James G . Colvin George M. Coryell Bayard J. DeNoie Paul 0. Diesel, Jr. William C. Egan Roy W. Ehrhardt Alfred Eliot Sherman Farnham Abraham Feirstein Burt Franklin Sherwood Friedman William H . Frost Irving Gall Arthur Garson Irwin Golann Dr. Edward Goldstein Morris Golub Mrs. Eleanor G. Griggs Mortimer Grossman Bernard W. Guenther The Hon. Frank A. Gulotta Arthur E. H auser Dr. John H. Heldt Laurence B. Henriques Gerald B. Henry T. Jack Henry Mrs. Walter Herrick John K. Holbrook George K. Hopke Dr. Louis R. Inwood John H . Jervis Mrs. Zelma Kalnins Abraham Katz Pa ul Kellner Thomas A. Kelly I. George Kinzler F. Shall us Kirk Capt. John P. Koehn M . Herbert Koeppel Abraham Krisiloff George A . Laub Geoffrey J. Letchworth George B. Levy Frank S. Lyons Dr. Walter B. Macomber Carl J. Maim Harold M. Masius Dr. Irving Mayer William G. McKnight, Jr. Mrs. Lawrence Mehringer Mrs. Hathaway K. Melchior Ernest S. Meyers Paul Miller Joseph A. Moore George W. Morgan Fred A . Morisse Robert D . Murdock Dr. Sidney A. Narins Dr. Morris Newberg Mrs. William D. Orr Edward W. Pastore Sol Perens Augustus S. Polemis Dr. Martyn C. R atzan Willis L. Reese Kurt D . Rice Sidney J. Rodner Dr. Bernard Rothbard Paul P. Roudakoff Dr. Sidney Sachs Dr. Samuel Salomon Dr. H arold Sanders Dr. Louis Scheinberg James S. Schoff Sol Schwartz Mrs. Charlotte Shilkret Walter 0 . Siegel William D. Siegfried Peter M. Sivaslian Richard A. Smith William M. Smith Sedgwick Snedeker T. Corwin Steele Dr. Ralph P. Stevens Mrs. Ralph L. Tompkins
Ralph L. Tompkins I. Bennett Tribken John M . True, Jr. Vincent D . Wadsworth W. Dea n Wallace Philip B. Wa ttenberg John L. Westney John R. White George Whitehead, Jr. Mrs. John C. Wilmerdin g Dr. Thomas Wiltb,ank Henry H. Wiltsek Paul W. Winter The Rev. Alexis Y onov North Carolina Charles E. Waddell Lt. Col. Dorian J. Wright Ohio Charles S. Arms Mrs. Junius R. Clark William C. Daley John Duncan, Jr. Robert F . Ebinger Vincent Fiordalis Norm an W. Foy Dr. Julian B. Galvin Dwight W. Hollenbeck Henri P . Junod John T. Kirkby Samuel P. McCalmont Mrs. Charles H . McCrea D anforth S. Mitchell Da n T. Moore, Jr. Bern Schulman Arthur H. Schweitzer Justin Stevenson WilLi am G . Sutherl and, Jr. Mrs. E. C. Vollette Dr. Clark Weaver Robert C. Webster Warren C. Wick Oregon Mrs. Bernice V. lgou Gentry L. Pierce Bruce D . Root Pennsylvania Willi am Archer, Jr. Richard W. Baker C. Minor Barringer Robert M. Bartlett H. Lloyd Beyer, Jr. Francis A. Bishop William Block Cornelius V. R. Bogert Willi am H . Bradbury. Jr. H . Payson Brickley Linn P. Brown William F . Campbell John A. Cantrell Aaron Charney J. Horace Churchman Mrs. John H. Clark H . La ussat G . Clement Alan G. Clifford Roger W. Clipp Laurence Cooper John E. Davidson, Sr. Edmund K. Dawes, Sr. Bruce S. Dunham Robert G . Dunlop Mrs. Patricia H. Eden Henry W. Farnum Henry W. Farrow Ca leb F. Fox III Willi am T . Fox, Jr. Fred C. Foy William P . Getty III Mrs. M. Haarstick Dr. Robert B. Hedges Donald S. Hevner Wolcott M. Heyl Donald B. Hurwitz Dr. Francis Jacobs Benjamin F. Jones III John F . Kolb, Jr. Paul E. Kroekel Adolph B. Kurz
Charles P. Leach Joseph W. Lee, Jr. Morris Lloyd William S. Loeb Briton Martin Robert F. McCammon M. Joseph McCrudden, Jr. James L. Mcintire Renwick S. Mciver Ephraim R. McLean Dr. Joseph J. Moore Charles B. Morgan Sam F . Niness Dr. Eugene Norris John C. Oliver, Jr. JohnS. Peake William C. Pickett, Jr. James R . Pitcairn Robert F . Powell Dr. F. Johnson Putney Alfred Raws Dr. Howard W. Robinson Gerald F . Rorer James C. Rowan Edward J. Sargent Lindley C. Scarlett Theodore C. Scull Joseph A. Shenkan Robert H . Shipman Mrs. E. Eldridge Smith Jacob R. Sotter Thomas E. Spence Charles H . Spencer, Jr. 0. F . Stambaugh Alfred Steel Dr. John C. Stolz Andrew J. T . Sturrock Dr. Timothy R. Talbot, Jr. Edwin P. VanSciver RobertS. Voorhees Mrs. Philip Wallis W. Wyclif Walton Sol D . Waxman Warren Wiegand Richard D . Wood, Jr. George W. Wyckoff David B. Zoob Rhode Island Frederick C. Buffum Kenneth E. Fish, Sr. Joseph A. Grimes Howard Huntoon Tennessee John A. Ewing Paul J. Zimmerman Texas H a rry D. Pratt Woods K. Welborn Utah Dr. Norman R. Beck Vermont Lewis M. Stewart Virginia Ernest C . Barrett, Jr. Jack M. Bennett Dr. W. Dandridge Haden , Jr. Philip R. Moonves Frederic W. Scott Mrs. William C. Williams, Jr. Washington Mrs. Ernest A. Johnson Wisconsin Oscar Brachman, Jr. H arold A. Lenicheck Hugh L. Ross Wyoming Dr. Robert M. Kelsey Foreign Eugene W. Gilson The Rt. Rev. R. H. Gooden Ronald F . Howser Dr. Roberto Orellana George B. Sgoutas
THE TRINITY COLLEGE ALUMNI ASSOCIATION Officers
President Senior Vice President Vice Presidents Alumni Fund Campus Activities Admissions Interviewing and Recruiting Area Associations Public Relations Secretary Treasurer Alumni Secretary
Alumni Trustees Seymour E. Smith '34 Andrew Onderdonk '34 Harry K. Knapp '50 Ethan F. Bassford '39 Gerald J. Hansen Jr. John C. Gunning Donald R. Reynolds John T. Wilcox John F. Walker John A. Mason
'51 '49 '51 '39 '29 '34
Executive Committee
Terms expire 1965 John L. Bonee '43 Robert J. Gillooly '54 David B. Beers '57 Terms expire 1966 James R. Glassco Jr. '50 William B. Starkey '44 Robert M. Blum '50 Ex Officio Herbert R. Bland '40 Nominating Committee
Terms expire 1965 The Rev. Canon Francis R. Belden '30 John T. Fink '44 Terms expire 1966 Thomas Burgess Jr. '32 E. Laird Mortimer III '57 Terms expire 1967 Martin D. Wood '42 Richard K. Hooper '53 Athletic Advisory Committee William Goralski '52. Term expires 1965 John Gooding Jr. '31. Term expires 1966 Nelson A. Shepard '21. Term expires 1967 Board of Fellows
Senior Fellows John P. Cotter '33 Jacob C. Hurewitz '36 William K. Paynter '37 Samuel C. Wilcox '25 John H. Pratt Jr. '17 Robert D. O'Malley '38 John E. Friday Jr. '51 Joseph Astman '38 Paul H. Twaddle '31
Junior Fellows William R . Peelle '44 Charles F. Johnson '42 Robert Toland Jr. '44
Harris K. Prior '32, Term expires 1968 Charles T. Kingston Jr. '34, Term expires 1969 Theodore D . Lockwood '48, Term expires 1970 Local Alumni Assodation Presidents
Albany -William T. Robinson '50 Ill Washington Avenue, Albany, New York Baltimore- Franklin S. Fiske III '51 212 Northfield Place, Baltimore 10, Maryland Boston- Putnam Scott '52 37 Shirley Road, Wellesley, Massachusetts Chicago- Charles B. F. Weeks '59 340 W. Oakdale, Chicago, lllinois Cincinnati- Stanley N. Muirhead Jr. '54 16 Ivanhoe Avenue, Dayton 19, Ohio Cleveland- William G. Pollock '53 3259 D aleford Road, Shaker Heights 20, Ohio Detroit- Douglas Donald Jr. '50 33 Beaupre, Grosse Pointe Farms, Michigan Fairfield- D . Michael Mitchell '51 135 William Street, New York 38, New York Hartford- D avid A. Tyler Jr. '43 19 Cherryfield Drive, West Hartford 7, Connecticut Los Angeles- Joseph D. Pinsky '45 9334 Rives Avenue, Downey, California Minneapolis- Samuel S. Thorpe III '56 4621 Edina Boulevard, Minneapolis 24, Minnesota New Britain- Harry C. Jackson Jr. '58 34 Hatch Street, New Britain, Connecticut New Haven- Alfred F. Celentano '27 P. 0. Box 163, New Haven, Connecticut New London- Lawrence B. Marshall '41 4 North Road, Niantic, Connecticut New York-Alvin C. Hopkins '40 7 Larchdell Way, Mountain Lakes, New Jersey Philadelphia- John K. Clark, M.D., '36 1500 Spring Garden Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Pittsburgh- Richard D . Royston '55 Suite 350, 300 Sixth Avenue, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Providence- James J. Rhein berger '45 Industrial Trust Building, Providence 3, Rhode Island Rochester- George F. Butterworth III '41 19 Main Street, West, Rochester 14, New York St. Louis- William M. Vibert '52 705 West Essex Avenue, Kirkwood 22, Missouri San Francisco- Alexander M. Hunter '48 241 29th Avenue, San Francisco, California South Florida- Thomas H. Barry '51 15830 S W 99th Avenue, Miami 57, Florida Springfield- Bradford M. Cogswell '48 41 Dover Road, Longmeadow, Massachusetts Washington, D.C.- Robert G. Scharf '58 3809 Blackthorn Street, Chevy Chase 15, Maryland Western Connecticut- Walter C. Shannon '57 244 Gaylord Drive, Waterbury, Connecticut Western New York- Robert B. Laub '54 1051 Clinton Street, Buffalo 6, New York