Attbe Koeppel Community Sports CE~n1:e., HOME ICE: SKATING WITH NEIGHBORS
1ter for Urban and Global Studies: $3-million grant from The Andrew W. Mellon f=oundation • Running with Scissors star Joseph Cross
Koeppel Community Sports Center: A resource for Trinity and the Hartford communities Not only is the newly opened Koeppel Community Sports Center an asset to the Trinity men's and women's ice hockey programs, but it also serves as a recreational resource for people in the ~artford area and Trinity faculty and staff. The center is open to the community an average of 30 hours per week for both public skating and programs geared toward families and school-ch ildren in the community. More than 750 1--tartford children come through the doors of the Koeppel Center each week to participate in organized programs, with hundreds more coming for open skate time. The following is a summary of the programs currently offered:
Public Skating: There are public skating hours seven days a week. Learn to Skate for the General Public: Learn to Skate programs t ake place weekly. Wartford School• Learn to Skate Program: More than 600 ~artford elementary school children skate daily. Boys and Girls Club Learn to Skate Program: Monday, Wednesday, and .i=riday for thrpe hours per week. • Sport and Medical Sciences Academy Collaborative Wockey Program: Students from the Academy come to the center several hours per week. Parkville Program: A roller-blading club with 40 students who practice t wo hours a week. Trinity College Intramural and Physical IO:ducation Opportunities: 2007-2008 will mark the first year the will be open for a full season
esc
of programs.
2
Along the Walk
33
Athletics
35 7I
C lass Notes
78 8o
In Memory ~vents
!=rom the President
the Office of Communications, Trinity CT 06106. Postage paid at 1-lartford, L..cmneci[ICLJL and additional mailing offices.
20 I'Doslrr,~slrPr· Send address changes to
Trinity Reporter,
College, 1-lartford, CT 06106 editor welcomes your questions and comments: Sanborn. Office of Communications, Trinity ColSummit Street, 1-lartford, CT 06106 or drew. ~lhQr.rl((!lli incoll.edu. --
22
College's Web site at wv.•w.<rmcoll.ecJu for alumni/ae news, admissions inferfaculty and student profiles, and much more.
the cover Women's 1-lockey Coach Andy McPhee gives pointers to eight-year-old Wilsoniette Paoli. She of 50 members of the Boys & Girls Club who the new Koeppel Community Sports Center lessons during the month of December. Center opening ceremony was held on 11. f'or more information, see www.trincoll. Fedu/S,tuclenltlite/athletics/CSC/
25
Julia !=reedson '95
As director of the Watchlist on Children and Armed Conflict, Freedson works for the survival and recovery of children all over the world who are caught in the crossfire of political conflict. "The brain is the center of every t hing we do."
An interview with Assistant Professor of [ngineering J. 1-/arry Blaise '94 , whose research in the new field of biomedical engineering seeks to discover how the brain takes in, stores, and retrieves information. Prepa ri ng global citizens for an urban world
A new approach to liberal arts education builds on Trinity's successes in urban and global studies
Catching up with Professor of Mathematics, ~meritus, Marjorie Van ~enam Butcher s the story goes, the infamous Blizzard of 1978 brought the entire Northeast to a screeching halt-literally stranding thousands of cars and passengers in their tracks. Recognizing the severity of the devastating storm, Connecticut Governor !:::I Ia Grasso declared a state of emergency and prohibited all traffic-vehicular traffic, that is-until the roads were cleared. !=or all intents and purposes, the state came to a complete standstill. The exception, however, lies in one determined and dedicated professor, Marjorie V. Butcher, who gathered her lesson pi
for the day, called ahead to all her students, and had her husband, Bob, drive her from West ~artford home-where the streets were plowed and opened-to the ~artford line.
!=rom there, the Michigan native walked ~artford's snowy, hilly streets, as yet unopened in the wake of the blizzard, to reach her classroom of budding mathematicians.
TRINITY REPORTER
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The decision to walk to
husband in1970, Butcher
campus, for Butcher, was
immediately recognized the
not a decision at all. "I had
chief interpreter of the park
to get to class," she explains
as a student of hers from
simply. More than a decade
the very first class she ever
later, in early 1989, when her
taught. That was in 1947 at
beloved husband suddenly
the University of Michigan in
had a severe heart attack,
Ann Arbor, from which she
she again showed her un-
received both her B.A. and
compromising dedication to
M.A. The pair continue to be
those people and things she
good friends .
values most deeply. Professor Butcher immediately retired from teaching to be at home with her husband. "We concentrated on a healthy lifestyle and on just being together during those remaining five years, taking drives, walks, and trips to some of our favorite places," says Butcher. Their outings included frequent vacations to Arizona desert country, western Michigan, Cape Cod National Seashore, and Bermuda . Locally, they took drives to Old Sturbridge Village in Massachusetts. As a 47-year member of that museum, Butcher now serves as one of its Overseers.
When not exploring America's backcountry, Butcher claims to be mastering the irony of retirement: "Getting behind in every way." Trinity, for her, is a place where she can go to relax and get away from the endless projects at home, while sometimes assuming a project or two at the College. There, she attends numerous lectures and events, and has a particular affection for John Rose's organ performances, plus those of his students and of visiting artists. And while Butcher misses knowing, teaching, and advising a multitude of students, she clearly hasn't lost her knack
,..
Since her husband died
for exuding her kind and
u <
in late 1993. Butcher has
embracing nature.
-'
remained actively involved
"" u
in many of the interests
z
and organizations they both believed in. An outdoor enthusiast and conservationist, she spends a couple of weeks each summer at and near Ludington State Park on Lake Michigan, during the relative solitude of the last week of June and the busy festivities surrounding the l=ourth of July. Butcher, who has crossed the entire length of Bermuda on foot. enjoys the miles and miles of beautiful walking trails and of sand beaches and dunes at Ludington. Incidentally, on a trip to the park with her
not in doing what one likes
As she stood in line for the
appreciative Devin Romanul
2006 Convocation cer-
was among the near-capacity
but in liking what one has
emony, newly elected SGA
crowd of professors, staff,
to do." Just as with her trek
president Devin Romanul,
retirees, alumni, students,
through 1-lartford's blizzard-
nearby, appeared nervous.
and friends gathered in the
stricken streets, Butcher has
Romanul was about to give
Goodwin Theater to honor
always been one to do "what
his first speech to the Trinity
Butcher.
one has to do"-all with an
community, and he was natu-
At that event, Butcher
rally jittery. Butcher pulled
recognized her mother as
him aside to let him practice
the most influential female
overflowing zest for all that
his speech for her, nodding
in her own life. As a full-time
with warm approval through-
actuary, wife, and mother,
out. Romanul, says the proud
the elder Van I:::enam was a
professor, gave a great
woman ahead of her time.
life has to offer.
Notice of reaccreditation
speech that day. At a recent
Butcher recalls a plaque
Trinity College will undergo
event celebrating the soth
that hung on her mother's
a comprehensive evaluation
anniversary of Butcher's hir-
bedroom wall , one that has
visit on Aprii1S-18, 2007, by a
ing, marking the first female
continued to guide her: "The
team representing the Com-
professor at Trinity, an
secret of happiness lies
mission on Institutions of
TRI NITY REPORTE R
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3
~igher ~ducation of the New ~ngland Association of Schools
team will recommend to the commission a continuing status
and Colleges.
for the institution; following a review process, the commission itself will take the final action.
The Commission on Institutions of ~igher ~ducation is one of eight accrediting commissions in the United States that pro-
The public is invited to submit comments regarding the insti-
vide institutional accreditation on a regional basis. Accredita-
tution to:
tion is volun t ary and applies to the institution as a whole. The Public Comment on Trinity College
commission, which is recognized by the U. S. Department of
Commission on Institutions of ~igher ~ducation
~ducation, accredits approximately 200 institutions in the six-
New ~ngland Association
state New ~ngland regionTrinity College has been accredited
of Schools and Colleges
by the commission since 1929 and was last reviewed in !=ebru-
209 Burlington Road
ary 2001. Its accreditation by the New ~ngland Association is
Bedford, MA 01730-1433
based on 11 standards which encompass the entire institution:
~-ma il: cihe@neasc.org
viz., mission and purposes, planning and evaluation, organization and governance, the academic program, faculty, students,
Comments must address substantive matters related to the
the library and other information resources, physical and
quality of the institution. Comments will not be treated as
technological resources, financial resources, public disclo-
confidential.
sure, and integrity. This reaccreditation effort will differ from previous efforts in that Trinity has chosen to focus on three
Written, signed comments must be received by April18, 2007,
areas of special emphasis in addition to the commission's 11
the last day of evaluation. The commission cannot guarantee
standards. These three areas are intellectual and commu-
that comments received after that due date will be con-
nity engagement, planning and budgeting, and urban-global
sidered. Comments should include the name, address, and
issues. All three were chosen by the College because they
telephone number of the person providing the comments.
have emerged in recent planning efforts as recurring concerns
The commission cannot settle disputes between individu-
that the institution desires to address through intensive study.
als and institutions, whether those involve faculty, students, administrators, or members of other groups. Individuals con-
!=or the past year and a half, Trinity College has been engaged in a process of self-study, addressing the commission's Stan-
sidering submitting complaints against an affiliated institution
dards for Accreditation and the three areas of special em-
should request the separate Policy and Procedures for the
phasis. An evaluation team will visit the institution to gather
Consideration of Complaints Made Against Affiliated Institu-
evidence that the self-study is thorough and accurate. The
tions from the commission office.
Trinity team develops disaster-relief software
Tales abound of the chaos,
response to a disaster-and
waste, and inefficiency in
more are in the offing.
~urricane Katrina's wake-
squandered federal dollars, poor deployment of resources, and a lack of training and coordination for thousands of potential volunteers. According to computer scientists at Trinity, an open-source software system known as Sahana is poised and ready to coordinate a multitude of disaster-relief details, potentially affecting countless lives in the future. The Trinity team recently developed
,_ a valuable component for u Sahana-a vo lunteer manage< ~
ment module to manage all
~ aspects of volunteerism in z
TR I NITY REPORTER
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The award -winning Sahana !=ree and Open Source Software Disaster Management System (www.sahana.lk/), one of the hottest topics in disaster/humanitarian fields today, can be deployed by a relief organization during a natural disaster. In its current form , it includes modules to register missing persons, coordinate the distribution of resources , track the location and numbers of victims in camps and temporary shelters, and manage inventory, among others. Sahana, which translates to "relief" in Sinhalese, a Sri Lankan dialect, was created in response
Noted intellectual and activist meets with Trinity students in Chile Noam Chomsky, author and activist, met with students and faculty at the Trinity Global Learning Site in Santiago, Chile, last October. Among other activities, Dr. Chomsky received an honorary degree from the University of Chile. Dur ing his visit, he had dinner with Trinity students studying in Santiago and also met with a combined group of Trinity and University of Chile students. Chomsky is the Institute Professor Emeritus of Linguistics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He has made notable contributions to the field of theoretical linguistics, notably through his theory of generative grammar, and has had an important impact on the philosophy of language and mind. He is also well known as a political activist who has criticized the foreign policy of the United States and other countries and who was among t he leading voices in opposit ion to the Vietnam War.
to the Asia n Tsu nam i. Sa hana
Th e team will customize
penden t ly, trying to manage
hottest topic in IT today,
was dep loyed t here fol low-
the modu le for use by the
shel t ers and volunteers."
it hasn't moved into the
ing the tsun ami, in Pakist an
Sri Lanka Red Cross. They
after the 2005 earthquake,
have also agreed t o be "on
and following th e 2006
ca ll " whenever Saha na is de-
in his homeland after the
mudslide d isaster in the
ployed in a disaster in order
Asian t sunami of December
Philippines.
t o make needed custom iza -
2004, de Lanerolle, a native of Sri Lanka, notes, "We
tions that will support the The Trinity team is the fi rst
average computer science Having seen the devastation
wanted to do more than
disaster-relief effort.
academic group in the Unit-
hand ou t water. Building a
ed States to have a software
The volunteer management
software system that facili-
module accepted by Sahana.
module provides a single
tates coordination of thou-
Professor Ra lph Morelli,
source for better t rack-
sands of details, impacting
Vis iting Professor Heidi Ellis,
ing and coordination of
thousands of lives, is an idea l
curriculum. "What appealed to us, as academ ics, is that Sahana is not a toy project, t here are real deadlines, real customers, and it requires development r igor. By its nature, it creates an environ ment where students are going to be more engaged and produce better-quality software." Damon points
Computer Science/Engi-
vo lunteers, which will be a
way for us, as IT profession-
neering Technology Coordi-
significant step toward de-
als, to apply our skills when a
nator Trishan de Lanerol le
creasing some of the chaos
catastrophe strikes"
'04, Jonathan Damon 'o7, and
fol lowi ng a disaster. "After
Jonathan Raye '09-a sum-
Katrina, we heard repeat-
From a pedagogical perspec-
mer research student from
edly that people wanted to
tive, the Sahana project is a
w ill never get stale." he says,
Bard College- developed the prototype volunteer
help, but didn't know how,"
computer science student's, and professor's, dream come
adding, "And how many stu-
wonder, there were some
true. Ell is notes that while
that can potentia ll y affect
module, which was accepted by Sahana in the fall of 2006
Web sites operating inde-
open-source software is the
millions of peop le's lives?"
de Lanerolle, says. " It's no
so
out that the real-world application of Sahana appeals to him. "This isn't a typical computer science project; it
dents get to publish software
TR IN ITY RE PORT ER
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5
I I IZ " I
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The Ward S. Curran Distinguished Professorship in Economics was established in 2006 by Peter and Jill Kraus in recognition of the extraordinary career of Professor Curran and his service to Trinity College for more than 45 years. Curran will occupy the chair named in his honor until his retirement. In mid- October of 2006. Professor Curran delivered the first annual public lecture associated with this professorship. In "Trinity College and Chapter One in the Story of Financial Economics." Curran showed how finance developed into financial economics and the challenges faced in gaining recognition from members of the economics profession that something that was once solely part of the business school curricula was now also an integral part of the study of economics. Trinity was one of the first liberal arts colleges to offer a course in finance within the economics curriculum. Curran also discussed the future of financial economics and Trinity's continued leadership among liberal arts colleges in the field. Professor Curran received his B.A. from Trinity in 1957 and his M.A. and Ph.D. from Columbia University in 1958 and 1961, respectively He began
FINANCIAL
teaching at Trinity in 1960. His fields of interests include corporate finance, financial regulation, and investment theory and practice. He has taught
ECONOMICS
a course at Yale University for almost 30 years and has also taught at the
C H A PTE R ON E
tion. he was a consulting economist to the Minary Nine, which later became
University of Connecticut School of Law and Wesleyan University. In addithe Consortium on Financing H igher Education, and served as director of institutional planning during the administration of Theodore Lockwood. Trinity's 15th president. Among Curran's many publications are the books,
Principles ~ifFinancial Management and An Economic Approach to the Regulation tifthe Securities Markets. Currently, Curran is working on a chapter, "Principles of Financial Regulation," in a book entitled, Companion to Economic Regulation. He is a member of the American Economic Association, American Finance Association, and Financial Management Association.
!=acuity awards and honors
dencies to diverse educa-
Award in 1999. the Connecti-
tional communities, including
cut Dance Alliance Award
Trinity College and the Trin-
change in our universe- per-
a 10-year association with
for Distinguished Service in
ity Club of 1-lartford honored
sona l, ed ucationa l, and
1-lartford's Parkville Com-
2006, and the Charter Oak
Judy Dworin, Class of 1970
global. Through her art istic
munity School, and York
Vision Award for Arts and
on November 9, 2006, at the
vision, the Project provides
Correctional Institution for
t:ducation in 2006, among others.
club's Annual Banquet and
cutting-edge performance
women , the program's most
Person of the Year Dinner.
through the Judy Dworin
recent venue. Dworin has
Dworin was recognized fo r
Performance t:nsemble
also taught residencies in
her service to the College
(JDP t:), a ground-break-
Bu lgaria and Taiwan as well
and the community.Dworin
ing educational residency
as throughout New t:ngland .
founded the Judy Dworin
program of long standing,
Performance Project, Inc.
Moving Matters!, co-directed
(JDPP Inc.) in 1989 based on a commitment to the
w ith Associate Artistic Direc-
important role the arts play
Moving Matters! has brought
in challenging and creating
long-term collaborative resi-
tor Kathy Borteck Gersten .
I
winter 07
history at Trinity College, where she founded the
She is on the master teach-
Dance Program, co-founded
ing roster for the State of
the Trinity/La MaMa New
Connecticut and is the re-
York City Semester in the
cipient of the Distinguished
Performing Arts, and cur-
Advocate for the Arts Award
rently chairs the Depa rtment of Theater and Dance.
in 1998, the Governor's Arts
TRI NITY REPORTE R
Dworin's commitment to education also has a 35-year
R \ I
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l
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Professor of History Cheryl Greenberg has been appointed as the inaugural Raether Distinguished Chair, a position endowed by a gift from Trinity alumnus and Board of Trustees Chairman, Paul E. Raether '68. Greenberg has taught courses in African American history, race and ethnicity in the United States, 20th-century United States history, and civil rights for 20 years. She was promoted to full professor in 2000. She received an A.B from Princeton University, summa cum laude, and a Ph.D. in history from Columbia University. An expert on African American history and race relations, she has published Or Does It fxplode? Black l-Iar/em in the Great Depression, Oxford University Press, 1991; edited A Circle of Trust: Remembering SNCC, Rutgers University Press, 1998, and, in 2006 published Troubling the Waters: Black-Jewish Relations in the American Century, with Princeton University Press. She is now at work on a study of African Americans in the Great Depression, which is under contract at Rowman and Littlefield. Future projects include a project on intermarriage and group identity among Jewish Americans, African Americans, and Japanese Americans. Greenberg has received some of the highest awards in her profession: a Danforth Fellowship; an American Council of Learned Societies Fellowship for Recent Recipients of the Ph.D.; a fellowship at the Charles Warren Center for American History at Harvard University; a fellowship at the W.E.B. Du Bois Institute for Afro-American Research at Harvard University; and a Bicentennial Fulbright Distinguished Chair of American Studies at the University of Helsinki, Finland. At Trinity, she has served as director of the American Studies Program and most recently as secretary of the faculty. In the city of Hartford and the state of Connecticut. Greenberg's many projects include providing diversity training for teachers, civic groups, and colleges; serving as a housing discrimination tester for the Connecticut Fair Housing Center and as vice chair of the West Hartford Initiative on Racial and Ethnic Diversity.
Anthology of American Literature, now in its 5th
projects include a co-edited
Pearson, is awarded periodi-
collection called Literature,
cally at the annual meeting
edition and for which Lauter
Class, and Culture, and a vol-
of the American Studies
been selected as the recipi-
is general editor, represents
ume of Thoreau 's writings for
Association and includes life-
ent of the American Studies
a successful effort to put
the New Riverside Series.
time membership in the ASA
Association's Bode-Pearson
canon change into practice.
Paul Lauter, the Allan K.
& Gwendolyn Miles Smith Professor of Literature, has
Prize for Outstanding Contributions to American Studies. Lauter teaches American literature, specializing in the early 19th century and in contemporary multicultural writing. Much of his work has centered on how literary canons are constructed-and changed . His book Canons
and Contexts examines the history of the canon of American literature as well as changes in it generated primarily by ethnic and feminist studies. The /-Ieath
Lauter was the 2001
His most recent book, From
recipient of the annual Jay
Walden Pond to Jurassic Park-The Cultural Work of American Studies , traces the
achievement in American
development of Ame rican
the American Literature Sec-
Studies as a discipline and
tion of the Modern Language
a form of cultural and politi-
Association.
cal discourse in the United States and overseas. Lauter served as president of the American Studies Association (USA) and has spoken and consulted at universities in almost every state and in 25 countries. Other recent
Hubbell medal for lifetime Literary Study awarded by
for the recipient. The prize is awarded to an individual for a lifetime of achievement and service within the field of American studies. Chartered in 1951, the American Studies Association is the nation's oldest and largest organization devoted to
The Bode-Pearson Prize,
the interdisciplinary study
established in 1975. is one of
of American culture and
the oldest and most pres-
history.
tigious awards in American studies. The prize, named for two of the founders of the American studies field , Carl Bode and Norman Holmes
Trinity College Composer-inResidence Robert Edward
Smith has been selected to receive an ASCAPius award
TRI N ITY REPORTER
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7
for 2006-2007. The awards are available to writer members
tion at St. John's Memorial Chapel at the ~ piscopal Divinity
of the American Society of Composers, Authors and Pub-
School, Cambridge, Massachusetts from 2002 to 2003. He
lishers (ASCAP) by the Society's ASCAPius Awards Panels.
has also taught harpsichord and continuo realization at the
The purpose of the special awards, which have been given
University of Hartford since 1992, and has taught composition
each year since 1960, is to reward writers whose works have
and harpsichord privately since 1970.
a unique prestige value for which adequate compensation would not otherwise be received, and to compensate those writers whose works are performed substantially in media not
Also a distinguished harpsichordist, he is the first person since the 18th century to have performed the complete harpsichord literature of i=ran<;:ois Couperin. His recording, J.S. Bach:
surveyed by ASCAP.
Harpsichord Music in the Grand Manner, was named one
Smith has composed chamber, orchestral, choral, and vocal
of the best recordings of the year by the American Record
music for ensembles of all kinds, ranging from violin and piano
Guide in 1996. Smith has also been the administrator of the
to symphony orchestra. fie has been composer-in-residence
Trinity College Summer Chamber Music Series since 1998.
at Trinity College Chapel since 1979, and held the same posi-
Urban Update
Notes on the College 's urban academic and volunteer efforts
Urban-Global Senior Project Grants for the Class of 2007
ership. (!=acuity Sponsor:
Rising seniors from all
Community Action Minor),
departments and programs
~xplor ing the Role and His-
at Trinity are eligible to apply
tory of Guakia, a Puerto Ri-
for Urban-Global Senior
can Heritage Arts Organiza-
Project Grants. Grants of
tion in the Greater Hartford
Theresa Morris). Danai Pointer '07 (Music;
$500 are awarded to sup-
Community.
port senior projects that
(!=acuity Sponsor: ~ric Galm).
address urban issues, global issues, or a combination of the two. i=inancial support is provided by the President's Cornerstone i=und. To learn more about this program, please visit the Trinity Web
Community Learning Initiative
Trinity panel showcased the
Community Learning lnitiative celebrates 10th anniversary with symposium-In
with 8th graders from the
early October, Trin ity-along
Corridor to research and
Children's Rights Project, which paired Trinity students Hartford Middle Magnet School at the Learning
with the University of
become "experts" in areas of
Hartford and Capital Com-
children's rights. To illustrate
munity College-sponsored
the rights issues, students
a symposium on campus/
produced videos, pamphlets,
i=ernanda Rocha '07 (~co-
community partnerships.
and poster presentations.
nomics, Cone. in Applied
The symposium was held at
With help from their college
Mathematics), ~conomic
Trinity and funded by grants
partners, the 8th graders
Impact of Innovation in Latin
from the President's Corner-
presented their final projects
America: An ~mpirical Test.
stone i=und and the Hartford
at a Children's Rights Day
(!=acuity Sponsor: Miguel
Consortium for Higher
on the Trinity campus. The
Ramirez).
~ducation . The purpose of
University of Hartford panel
the event was to encourage
covered the Micro Bu siness
site at www.trincoll.eduL degtsLeducLUGL. The cur-
Michael Snow '07 (~conom-
academic collaborations
Incubator project, which
rent projects are as follows :
ics), Good School Districts:
between and among censor-
brings training, development, resources, and support to
Katie Gordon '07 (international studies and Hispanic studies), Discourse On Sexual Identity and Gender Roles In the Southern Cone of Latin America and Its ~f-
How Are Public ~lementary
tium schools and commu-
Schools Affecting the Value
nity organizations. The 120
businesses throughout the
of Your Home? (Revisited).
participants included faculty,
Upper Albany neighborhood
(!=acuity Sponsors: Diane
administrators, and students
of Hartford , matching these
Zannoni and Jack Dougherty).
from seven consortium
businesses with students
schools and representatives
from the University of
from 25 community organiza-
Hartford 's Barney School of
fects On Health Policy.
Jessica Wagner '07 (~duca-
(!=acuity Sponsor: Anne Lam -
tional Studies and Anthro-
bright and Gustavo Remedi). Meaghan Kilian '07 (economics and sociology), Redlining In Hartford and Its Past, Present, and i=uture ~ffects On Lending and Home Own-
TRJNITY REPORTER
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tions.
pology), The Intersection
Panels from Capital Com-
of Gender and Culture:
munity College, the Univer-
~ xamining Gender Relations
sity of Hartford, and Trinity
Amongst Urban ~lementary
presented campus/com -
Schoolers. (!=acuity Sponsor:
munity projects unique
Andrea Dyrness).
to their institutions. The
Business. The Capital Com munity College panel's topic was "Building Communities from the Inside Out through Service Learning." Many Capital Community College students are residents of the neighborhoods in which they
participate in their service
directors about their ere-
semester has included the
Adopt-A-!=amily Thanks-
learning projects. Students
ative ideas and processes,
4th l-1abitrot 5K !=un Run,
giving !=ood Basket Drive
enrolled in several social sci-
in hopes of crafting "a new
which had 75 participants
ence courses are required to
theoretical aesthetic and
and raised more than $900,
for M.D. !=ox Elementary School: !=or the eighth year in a row, the Annual Com-
conduct 10 hours of service
approach to the theater."
and two on-campus "farmers
learning throughout the
All the participants benefit
markets," the first of which
munity ~vents Staff (AC~S)
Greater l-1artford area .
from the Open Semester
featured locally grown food
and ConnPIRG collaborated
components: academic
and the second being an
to raise money and food
seminar, arts internship, field
apple festival that included a
to provide 100 families of
research , performances,
whole range of local apples
children at l-1artford's M. D.
Internship Office Open Semester is a non-
and practice classes. A final
and products made from
!=ox ~lementary School with
traditional curricular option
group project was presented
apples. l-1abitat students
a Thanksgiving turkey and all
consisting of a full term
at La MaMa and on campus
staffed the market and made
the trimmings. Chartwells,
of independent work or
in l-1artford in December.
apple pies, fritters, and turnovers.
the on-campus food service,
internship either on campus or away, supervised and evaluated by a member of the Trinity faculty. ~arlier this year, seven regular undergraduates and three special students participated in the
Open Semester or about
!-Iunger and
internships in general , please
1-/omelessness
contact Anne Lundberg,
Awareness
director of internship pro-
Week-This
grams, at (860) 297-2382 or
fall , anum-
anne.lundberg@trincoll.edu.
Trinity/La MaMa Urban Arts
semester designed to utilize the landscape and history of the city as a catalyst for intensive study in the arts. As one participant stated,
ber of events took place on
Semester in New York City, an individually tailored open
donated all100 turkeys.
!=or more information about
campus to raise
Office of Community Service and Civic
awareness hunger and homelessness
Great Pie Project: With
and to give students the
materials donated by
~ngagement
opportunity to take action
Chartwells, Praxis members
about issues of
locally. The week consisted
prepared and made 500 pies
of the following events:
for a dozen social service
the semester "allows me
Do It Day-1-1eld in early
to experience first-hand
September, the eighth an-
the performing arts scene
nual Do It Day brought more
!-Iunger Banquet: This event
in NYC both by attending
than 520 Trinity volunteer
splits participants into
performances and by intern-
participants to over 55 work
three wealth categories and
ing at a professional theater
sites throughout the l-1art-
engages them in a simula-
company while I take classes
ford area.
tion that approximates the
agencies in the Greater l-1artford area . The pies were delivered on November 20 and 21 , in time for Thanksgiving meals.
distribution of wealth around
Sponsor-A-Snowman: !=or
1-/abitat for 1-/umanity-The
the world , illustrating how
the 11th year, the Office of
a dance student, "a lot of my
Trinity l-1abitat for l-1umanity
that distribution affects
Community Service and
motivation to create dances
chapter broke ground in mid-
how people meet their
Civic ~ngagement and AC~S
comes from the works I have
September on the second
basic needs. More than 75
conducted a gift drive for
grown up admiring...While
house it has cosponsored .
students participated .
developing my [Open
This cosponsorship involves
Semester] project, I want
assisting with house con-
!=aces of 1-/omelessness Pan-
to be able to feel comfort-
struction twice a month and
el: This event is done in con -
able enough to explore
raising $25,000, which the
junction with the National
new movement and musical
chapter has been gradually
Coalition for the l-1omeless.
selections .. . to show my
doing over the past two-plus
The panel consists of people
audience that I am not afraid
years. The house is located
who were homeless, or who
to explore my skill in differ-
on 16 Waverly Street in
are currently homeless,
ent ways. " Another member
l-1artford, and is being built
who put a human face on
of the group, researching her
the problem by telling their
senior thesis on theatrical
for a single mother of seven (five of whom live with the
theory, planned to interview
mother). !=undraising that
and develop my own performance piece." According to
l-1artford lntervall-1ouse, a local domestic violence
personal stories.
shelter. Members of AC~S made paper snowmen with the names of children and their preferred gift and then recruited members of the Trinity community to donate the gifts, which were handed out at the lntervall-1ouse annual holiday party in early December.
took place during the fall
TRI NITY REPORTER
I
winter 07
9
By Hannah Charry ' o8
hile his student peers deal with the anxiety of finals, Trinity t Joe Cross's laid-back demeanor is well deserved. With major motion pictures released this year, life is undeniably for the 20 year old. was at home base in New York City preparing for a short trip to the West Coast when interviewed by phone. 1-iis destination was Los Angeles where he would accept a Satellite Award for " Best Actor in A Motion Picture, Comedy, or Musical" for his part as Augusten Burroughs in Running With Scissors. Cross worked under Nip Tuck creator Ryan Murphy, along with Steve Samuels, Brad Grey, and Brad Pitt. "The last two movies I enjoyed the most because I was around people who were so talented, " said Cross. " I had two very different characters, which were also my first adult roles ."
TR I N ITY REPORTER
I
winter 07
In his other fi lm, Flags of Our Fathers , Cross plays one of six men who raised the flag at lwo Jima. Director Clint Eastwood has received a Golden Gl obe nomination for it in the "Best Motion Picture" category. While both movies were released nationally in October, si milari ti es end the re.
Running With Scissors is an adaptation of real- life Augusten Burroughs' childhood in the 1970s. Bu rroughs' life was marred by a menta lly unstable mother and alcoholic father, portrayed by A lec Baldwin. When their marriage ends in divorce, the child is sent to live with his psychologist, Dr. !=inch. Burroughs shows steadfast resi liency amidst even more chaos. l-ie lives under the same roof with a Bible-obsessed sister (Gwenyth Paltrow) and barrage of prescription drugs. "Burroughs is a bright, young man struggling with issues of
abandonment," summarized
Cross fo und that Flags was
Cross. l-i e distinctly remem bers the date he found out he got the part- December 16, 2004-because he was forced to miss a philosophy exam as a resu lt.
more physically demanding, with long hours and tiring days, even though he was among industry greats.
l-ie immediately began to prepare for the role by rea d ing the origi nal biogra ph y and t aking notes on th e scri pt. Even though Cross has been acting since the age of eight, he has never enrol led in acting lessons.
"Working with Clint was a little sca ry. l-ie's a cu ltural phenomenon, a real American icon. At the same time, he is so sweet and accommodating. I loved work ing on the set with such great people te lling me about their experiences," says Cross.
C ross left Trinity in th e sp ring of 2005 to start fi lming in early March . l-i e focused on Flags of Our
The two producers he worked with had opposite ways of relating to their jobs. Murphy was more particular. " l-ie has a very stylized vision
Fathers immediately after. Th e movie was based o n
and knows what he wants. Then yo u have Clint, who
th e 2000 New York Times bestselling book of t he same name and is slowly gathering an Oscar buzz.
gave us extreme freedom . l-ie was open to see what happened ."
"I asked [E astwood] if I needed to do any boot camp for it, if I needed to be bigger and stronger. This movie required less advance prepa ration and I was t old to go in just as I was," he sa id .
Either way, recent work ha s made Cross confident in his preference of movie over television drama . "Movies are my favorite because they feel more substantial. There is more planning involved
and you get the opportun ity to play more characters, which gives you freedom . You can pick and choose among roles that you can continue to be passionate about." Even though his time spent on campus has been brief, Cross knows he wants to retu rn for a degree wh ile pursuing a professiona l career. "College helped me stay down to earth . It's also just a f un environmen t t o be in. You learn things in college tha t no one just tells you ." l-ie has not currently declared a major but is certain of his desire to finish in the future . "It's impossible to know what will pop up professionally, but Trinity will always be there."
1-Jannah Charry is an American studies major and is currently studying in Paris . When she is on campus, she is a member of the Tripod staff
Picasso and American Art Although Pablo Picasso never visited the United States, his work had a powerful influence on a number of American artists. Associate Professor of l=ine Arts Michaell=itzGerald has curated a major exhibition on Picasso's influence in this country, which has been on view at the Whitney Museum of American Art throughout the fall and winter. The show will move to the San !=rancisco Museum of Art and the Walker Art Center. Picasso and American Art juxtaposes works by the Spanish artist with paintings, drawings, and sculpture by nine Americans, ranging from Max Weber to Jasper Johns. "The intense involvement Suted Woman with Wristwatch.
of American artists with Picasso's work was at the
Pablo Picasso
center of a fundamental transformation of Ameri-
Girl on the Beach, Roy Lichtenstein
can art." l=itzGerald says. "Picasso, more than any other artist, became the chief figure against whom Americans measured their achievements."
TRJN ITY REPORTER
I
winter 07
11
On the first day, she recalls, Professor Lloyd-Jones began posing
The Hartford-area residents that participate in Trinity's Gateway Pro-
questions such as, "Why are you here?" "Who chose to be born?" and
gram, which is co-sponsored by the Connecticut Humanities Council,
"Who will choose to die?" The answers, Nelson and her classmates
receive tuition, books, and bus fare at no cost. At the end of the 24-
would come to find out, were never simple, but the engagement and
week program in subjects such as U.S. history, philosophy, art history,
discussion of the questions was the intellectual stimulation Nelson
literature, critical thinking, and writing skills, the graduates receive
and the others had been seeking. "My brain is really opening. Profes-
Trinity College credit-and the unquantifiable idea that knowledge is at-
sor Lloyd-Jones is nourishing my brain; he's feeding it," she says with
tainable. This year, the Gateway students also received another reward
both excitement and deep appreciation.
when Trinfo Cafe-Trinity's community technology center-announced that it was donating refurbished computers to each student, as well as
Lloyd-Jones, who has been teaching in the program since its inception si x years ago, says, without hesitation, that it has been the single most gratifying experience of his career. He believes that by engaging
offering free tutoring in computer basics, the Internet, and an introduction to Web-based e-mail.
economically and educationally disadvantaged students-who vary in
As Lloyd-Jones prepares for retirement from the Modern Languages
age as much as they do in life experiences-in subjects traditionally
and Literature Department at the end of this academic year, he says
associated with the life of the mind, they gain the cultural knowledge
that being part of the Gateway Program has given him a Golden Age
and conceptual skills to improve the circumstances of their lives. "The
at the end of his teaching career. While the satisfaction he has gained
humanities," Lloyd-Jones explains, "are the basis of our community."
in this unconventional teaching atmosphere is intangible, he hopes he
Students learn how to learn, but they also begin to understand that
has "planted the seed of aspiration" in his "feisty" bunch. However, the
discussion-learning to listen and respect other people's opinions and beliefs- is an important feature of building community.
success of the program, he maintains, can be found in what lies at the
TRINITY REPORTER
I
win ter 07
heart of Trin ity: "We do what we do best at Trinity, and that is to teach."
archival
The Trinity College Cliapel under construction: A photographic record, 1930-1932 In early 1930, just as workmen were installing the Chapel's foundations, President Remsen B. Ogilby engaged William G. Dudley, a local commercial photographer, to record the construction. The nearly IOO photographs that resulted provide a unique record of resolve on the part of President Ogilby; the donor William G. Mather, Class of 1877; architect Ph路 ip H. Frohman; and the workm~n. The construction took place during the Depression. Peter). K11app '6s
Celebrating the Trinicy College Chapel's 75th
Anniversary
In its 75 years of existence, the Trinity Chapel has become a beloved landmark, both for the College community and for the city of Hartford. Completed in 1932, t he Gothic Revival building was designed by Philip H. Frohman of Frohman, Robb & little, who was the principal architect of the National Cathedral in Washington, D.C. The Chapel was a gift to Trinity from William G. Mather, Class of1877, a Cleveland industrialist and philanthropist. Under the theme of "Living Stones," the anniversary celebration affirms both the his toric role of the Chapel throughout the years as well as its role in the life of the College as we face the changing landscape of higher education in the 2Ist century. Throughout 2007, the Chapel will present a series of public events that celebrate the life of the mind and of the spirit. T hese events are free and open to the public, and all are welcome. Friday, March 9
Saturday, April1
8:oop.m.
5:15p.m.
Ensemble Amarcord in Concert As part of their Trinity appearance, Ensemble Amarcord will combine with the Trinity College Chapel Singers in the premiere performance of a new work written for the occasion by Chapel Composer in Residence Robert Edward Smith.
Gary Dorrien, Reinhold Niebuhr Professor of Social Ethics at Union Theological Seminary and Professor of Religion at Columbia University: Palm Sunday Service, followed by dinner and a discussion on "Theology in the 21st Century"
Reunion Weekend
Homecoming Weekend
Saturday, June 9
Friday, November 10
5:00p.m.
II:OO
Special Reunion Service for the 75th Anniversary:
Renewal of marriage vows for couples who were married in the College Chapel
Special music under the direction of John Rose. Preacher: The Rt. Rev: Michael Creighton '62, Episcopal Bishop of Central Pennsylvania (Retired) As part of the Reunion Weekend activities, there will be tours of the woodcarvings and special lectures on the Chapel architecture. Friday, October 12
7:30p.m. 75th Chapel Anniversary Organ Celebration, "The Clarence Watters Memorial Recital" Paul Jacobs, organist Tuesday, October 16
a.m.
4:00p.m. Service of Thanksgiving and Celebration for the 75th Anniversary of the Chapel. The Rt. Rev. Andrew D. Smith '65, Bishop of Connecticut, presiding. The Rev. Dr. Lloyd A. Lewis, Jr. '69, Professor of New Testament, Virginia Theological Seminary, preaching.
For full information on the anniversary schedule, please go to the Trinity Web site at www.trincoll. eduj StudentLife/ ReligiousSpiritualjChapelj anniversary/ events. htm.
7:30p.m . Amy-Jill Levine, E. Rhodes and Leona B. Carpenter Professor of New Testament Studies, Director of the Carpenter Program in Religion, Gender, and Sexuality. Vanderbilt University. Lecture: "Religious Diversity: Then and Now" Wednesday, November 7
7:30p.m. Eboo Patel, Founder and Executive Director, Interfaith Youth Core, Chicago, Illinois Lecture: "Faith: The Great Fault Line of the 21st Century"
~
I I
LIVING
STONES 1 9 3 2 - 2 0 0 7
The older I become- soon to be 6o, mind you-the more grateful I am for the incalculable gifts brought to my life by my teachers, and I still consider "teacher" to be the most noble of words in any language. As a boy at Georgia Mil1tary Academy, in a lormer life that seems both incredibly long ago and sometimes simultaneously not even as far back as last Tuesday or so I was required to read and read and read: some 15 major texts each academic year, starting with the eighth and continuing fhrough the twelfth grades, ana an adaitional IO texts each summer. Those English masters were convinced that literature, and only literature, would save our intemperate, male adolescent souls. Among those works were several that pushed me eventually to climb mountain peaks all over the world. 16
TRINITY REPORTER
I
winter 07
Pll OTO~
BY
C II UCf; P RHT ' 07
As I told a beloved friend in 2001 , when he asked why I was so persuaded that we had to climb Mount Kilimanjaro, "it was all Hemingway's fault." I was so taken as a boy with the exergus to "The Snows of Kilimanjaro" that I simply had to go to see that desiccated body of the white leopard for myself Now, truth be told, we never found the leopard, which the Masai supposedly spotted on top of:Kili, but the climb was worth every ounce of physical stamina it took from us all.
18
TRINITY REPORTER
I
winter 07
And then there was the duo of James Hilton and Somerset Maugham . In the summer between our eighth and ninth grades, the English masters had us read both Lost Horizon and The Razor's Edge. I have been giddy ever since. Two of the central characters, Hugh Conway and Larry Darrell, were like some sort of realtime heroes, so vividly did they affect my imagination. Hilton, born with the century, was only 33 when he published Lost Horizon. The movie version immediately was nominated
for one Oscar after the other, and FDR, who took office the year the book appeared, named the Maryland presidential retreat Shangri La. I was mad at Ike, about the time we had to read the novel, when he jettisoned Shangri La and renamed that facility for his first grandson David! At Home on the Trail with My l=ictional Heroes This past January, being still drawn to mountain peaks by the power of my early
reading, I joined 13 Trinity College students, one of my colleagues on the faculty here, and two of my old climbing buddies on a trip to Nepal. I told the students they had to read Lost Horizon and The Razor's Edge to understand just why we were there: in the cold, trekking on yak trails as old as time itself, climbing and descending one high Himalayan mountain after the other, trying hard to catch our breath in the incredibly thin air. When we left Kathmandu for Lukla, where the trek to the base camp
knowingly upon us all, conch shells blowing to draw us to morning prayer, bells ringing, monks chanting, we read four of Hugh's poems, including his "We Never Tire, But Flourish," which describes so acutely what it means to be a teacher. My mind wandered from his gift of language, which he gave to all of us at Trinity for more than four decades, back to the gifts my own teachers bestowed upon me, that gangly boy who loved books and whose own life has been so influenced by the power of words, those magic lanterns, upon the written page.
of Everest begins, we boarded a twinengine Otter, just like Conway did in Hilton's tale . I felt right at home and told our students how important the choice of plane had to be, ruled as it were by serendipity alone.
Pascal ("The eternal silence of these infinite spaces frightens me.") would have been right at home with us as we trudged along. lost in our own thoughts, glad we had each other.
We never found Shangri La, although we saw a number of signs indicating the Shangri La lodge or the Shangri La restaurant. But we did find ourselves: in that there was no difference between the president of the College and the 19-year-old fellow trekker. We were all cold as hell, exhilarated by the vistas, worn out by the thin air. As we walked those ISO miles or so to Everest and back, characters from both books came back to me, as real and vivid as if I had been walking the trail with them. I fantasized about Maugham's ancient recluse who reveals the myste ries of the eternal to my fictional old friend Larry Darrell, as I also fantasized about Father Perrault and his counsel to Hugh Conway. I wondered if Conway ever did find his way back to the magic valley. And I thought that the French author Blaise
Remembering a Trinity Poet and Teacher I路Hgh in the Himalayas We paused at Tengboche, the most venerable Sherpa monastery of the Solo-K.humbu region and the place where parties seeking the summit of Mount Everest have traditionally stopped, since Mallory's time, to be blessed by the High Lama. It was there that we held a memorial service for our colleague Hugh Ogden, poet and Trinity professor of English, who fell through the ice in Maine and drowned right before the New Year. We asked the Buddhist monks to offer prayers for him. There in the incredibly beautiful monastery atop one of the Himalayan peaks, the Buddha smiling
As I sat there in the monastery, I was very grateful that my military school teachers had made us read so many books, and that these books had made such a difference in our lives. Few of those teachers are alive today, but I bless their memories all the more for inculcating such magic echoes so firmly in my adolescent head. The echoes of those pages still resonate with me even today; and they have taken me to heights I never thought remotely possible. Looking around me that morning in the monastery- part of a circle of students and teachers drawn together in such a special place- I felt once again the ages-old power of books to move, to transform, and to inspire. And I knew that the Trinity students who were my companions on this journey would someday approach the eve of their own 6oth birthdays pushed to climb their own mountain peaks, as I have been, by the books of their youth.
TRINITY REPORTER
I
winter 07
19
I'' I
alumn a profile
As director of the Watchlist on Children and Armed Conflict, Julia Freedson '95 works for the survival and recovery of children all over the world who are caught in the crossfire of political conflict. B Y
C H R I ST I NE
P A LM
It's not always easy to articulate what we'd change about the world if we could, but Julia Freedson'95 has no trouble summing up her priorities: her work takes her "wherever children are being killed, maimed, tortured, raped, abducted, and violated just because they are unfortunate enough to be caught in the middle of adult wars."
Save the Children Alliance, the orwegian Refugee Council, World Vision International, and the Women's Commission for Refugee Women and Children. It is housed in New York at the Women's Commission offices.
Freedson is director of the Watchlist on Children and Armed Conflict, an international network of non-governmental organizations (NGOs) that track and combat atrocities committed against children living in war zones around the world, including Sudan, liberia, Colombia, Afghanistan, and many others. Through a combination of strategy. grit, and passion, Watchlist uses its expertise to influence major policy makers, including the United Nations Security Council, with the single aim of protecting children's safety and rights.
Freedson traces her passion for this grueling, often heartbreaking, but ultimately rewarding work to her time at Trinity College, from which she received a degree in international affairs (then called "area studies") with a focus on the Middle East.
The network- which is the only one of its kind In the world- includes local, national, and international organizations and is managed by a steering committee whose members represent Care International, the International Coalition to Stop the Use of Child Soldiers, International
20
T RINITY REP O RTE R
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winter 07
The years at Trinity: academic rigor and personal attention
"I know I wouldn't be on the same path I am now if I hadn't gone to Trinity," Freedson says. "The most important academic experience I had there was the opportunity to interact personally and regularly with my professors. Because my major was very focused and there were few other students on the same track, I received tremendous personal attention and commitment from several professors who helped me to follow my interests without letting me stray too far." Freedson mentions in particular professors Ron Keiner, Sam Kassow, Levana Polate, and Clinton Bailey.
"I think of them often and am grateful for the commitment each of them made to my personal and academic growth,Âť she says, citing such invaluable contributions as "pushing academic rigor, encouraging me to study abroad, and even driving me to New York for an important job interview." After leaving Trinity, Freedson received a master's degree in international affairs (MIA) with a focus on human rights and humanitarian affairs from Columbia University's School of International and Public Affairs. Before joining Watchlist in 200!, she worked for the AntiDefamation League and the U.N. Mission in Kosovo. She began working as a consultant to several NGOs that had the idea of developing a network. Eventually. it became Watchlist, and she has guided it from its austere beginnings to its position today as an influential group with an annual budget of $700,000.
A direct impact on children's lives Freedson has published widely on the impact of armed conflict on young people, and her research into such atrocities as killing, forced displacement, maiming, genderbased violence, and the effects of HIV/AIDS has earned her the respect of human rights advocates around the globe. Watchlist's work is widely covered by media, from the New York Times to BBC News and National Public Radio. Freedson, who grew up in Swampscott, Massachusetts, admits that directing a global effort and dealing with large governmental bureaucracies can sometimes dilute the immediacy of her group's work. "Because much of our work is done on the international policy level, the changes we're trying to
achieve often get intertwined with bigger geopolitical dynamics, so it's important to stay focused on the fact that our efforts really do affect the lives of children who have suffered some of the most grave human rights violations imaginable," Freedson says. "The most gratifying thing for me is the privilege of working with the real frontline human rights defenders. These are people who workoften at great personal risk- to protect the children of their communities and countries. I have a colleague in the most remote, war-torn area of the Eastern Democratic Republic of Congo who himself treks into the bush to negotiate with rebel commanders to release child soldiers under their command. After obtaining the children's release, his organization works to reintegrate them into their communities- remember, these are children who may have suffered the terrors of the battlefield, heinous sexual violence, starvation, abuse, and other atrocities. Most have lost out on years of education, proper nutrition, and regular childhoods. Many are child mothers caring for their own children born of rape. Often, they live in far-off places even the U.N. doesn't reach." There is no way any of us could face these atrocities on a daily basis and not be affected, and yet for Freedson, there is also great joy in the work. "It's so satisfying to see Watchlist's initiatives directly reflected in the work of the U.N. Security Council, and then to see the council's words on paper translated into action," she says. "And while there's no doubt that high-level policy-making bodies move infuriatingly slowly, it does help me get my work done when I'm able to see that our efforts have a direct impact on children's lives." Freedson is quick to redirect the accolades to her unheralded colleagues in the field. "If it weren't for the dedication of activists, these children would have little hope for survival or recovery. I feel so privileged to work with colleagues like this and I'm inspired by them every day.Âť
TRJNJTY RIPORTER
I winter 07
21
Was there a particular person or event that strongly influenced you as a Trinity undergraduate? The particular class was "Economics IOI ," taught by Professor Ward Curran. I was a first-year then and was fascinated by the subject and by Professor Curran himself He was probably the reason I became a teacher. I was fascinated by how he clearly enjoyed doing what he was doing and by how the students were very taken by his knowledge of the subject. As far as a mentor, I would say it was Professor Bronzino of the Engineering Department. Very early on, I became his research student, and we have had a mutually beneficial relationship ever since. I still collaborate on some of my research with him. He has taught me so much about doing meaningful research in a small liberal arts college, research that has an impact on my whole field. Some of the things he has accomplished are amazing in terms of name recognition. What is biomedica l enginee ri ng? Biomedical engineering is an interdisciplinary field that brings together engineers from the traditional subdisciplines of mechanical and electrical engineering who apply basic engineering principles to solve problems in medicine and biology It is a relatively
new field, but because the world is moving towards more integration, more connectedness, it's becoming a very important component in healthcare delivery and drug discove ry
"Many neople can still te 1you where they were when they first learned about (emotional events such as September II or the death of JFK) , but they can't tell you where they were on more ordinary days. When we expenence emotionally traumatic events, stress hormones are released bh the adrenal g ands. A lot of these hormones are sent to areas of the brain responsible for learning. They enhance memory of particular events ... "
A lot of biomedical engineers work for pharmaceutical companies on new drugs, and many are at work on new devices that help handicapped people in ways we wouldn't have even thought about five or IO years ago. For example, there is a prosthetic device for the blind currently under development in which a sensor implanted in the brain will stimulate areas of the visual cortex. Perhaps this will give a blind person a sense of seeing, even though it might not be true vision, but at least an impression of shapes or colors will become possible. What are your research interests within the field of biomedical engineering? My own research is in the electrophysiology of learning. I am interested in how the brain takes in information, stores it, and later is able to retrieve it. In other words, how do we learn, how do we memorize things? I do research primarily in an area of the brain called the hippocampus, which is widely thought to be the first entry point for meaningful information processing in the brain. When information comes in through the eyes or other modalities of the senses, it goes through a couple of different layers of the brain- for example, the primary cortices and then is relayed to the hippocampus. The hippocampus is
where the actual, slow, sequential processing of that information takes place. The hippocampus doesn't actually store memories, but it processes, consolidates, and relays them to other areas of the brain for storage. I am interested in that entry point where information comes in and begins to be processed by this "hippocampal machine." A new line of research for me is the correlation of emotion and memory We all remember traumatic things; it's something we can all relate to. How does emotion impact what we learn, what we remember, and how long we remember it? Examples I like to give are emotional events such as September II or the death of JFKmany people can still tell you where they were when they first learned about these events, but they can't tell you where they were on more ordinary days. When we experience emotionally traumatic events, stress hormones are released by the adrenal glands. A lot of these hormones are sent to areas of the brain responsible for learning. They enhance memory of particular events because the brain is being flooded with hormones that enhance the learning rate for memorization of these events. In today's research, we think about ways in which we can leverage that power to enhance how we learn and remember things. Once we know enough about how these mechanisms work, then it
TRINITY REPORTER
winter 07
23
will be possible to develop drugs that mimic the same pattern and in this way enhance learning and memory Another aspect of my research is simply the matter oflearning about ourselves - learning about who we are as individuals. Our brain is responsible for so much of our character, which is shaped by the experiences we have as individuals. So much of who we are is defined by the way we experience the outside world internally and how events and feelings are internally represented in the brain. The brain is the center of everything we do, of how we see the world, and how we interact with others. It all has to be done by the brain, that marvelous center of cognition and of consciousness. So, a lot of what I do is also pure research, wanting to learn about us, about human beings, about the business of life as a human being. How do we go about this, how do we discover the world? How do we view the world from a cellular point of view? From a neuralcircuitry point of view? All of the information we are bombarded with every day-how does that machine (the brain) allow us to adapt to novel environments and to create new things? Is there a place where this work will fi nd an eventual outlet in everyday life?
Yes. What we have learned from the research I am doing can be easily transferable to other research that seeks to design drugs that manipulate the way we learn or enhance long-term memory. For example, Parkinson's disease attacks the brain, as does Alzheimer's. If we can learn how the brain circuitry responsible for learning and memory works, then it might be possible to create drugs that compensate for deficiencies in people who suffer from learning disabilities or other forms of brain disease. What are your interests outside your professional life?
I'm a computer geek, so I can always be found on the computer! I like to play computer games and I like to go out on the Internet a lot. I'm also an avid reader, and over the last few years I have become an electronic book reader, so I get my books now as PDFs, and I read them on the computer. I read mostly non-fiction, a lot of things having to do with science and how science impacts society or religion or culture. Also, many publishing houses are coming out with textbooks in electronic form, which is helpful because I now have access to many of my texts I use in class right on my laptop, so I can do background reading right at home over the Internet.
PREPARING GLOBAL CITIZENS FOR AN URBAN WORLD A new approach to liberal arts education builds on Trinity's successes in urban and global studies H . BY
) I M
$MIT H
A $3-million challenge grant from the Mellon Foundation will allow Trinity to press forward swiftly this year with plans to integrate the College's longstanding urban initiatives and global studies programs into a single, cohesive program called the Center for Urban and Global Studies. When the center debuts, it will be the embodiment of a new vision of liberal
education that is expected to impact nearly every area of study, while also distinctively positioning Trinity among the ranks of the nation's liberal arts colleges. "Given what is happening to liberal arts colleges nationally. and given the demographic shifts that are going to occur in the future , these colleges will need a clear,
articulated focus on what differentiates one school from another, and one school from the national cohort of liberal arts colleges," says Trinity President James F. Jones, Jr. "From our strategic planning has come the clear message that Trinity can, and must, distinguish itself as a liberal arts college in a capital city with links from our Hartford campus to cities around
the world, thanks to our global sites." "The Mellon grant paves the way for a fundamental change in the way the College approaches liberal education and a transformation of campus culture to one that challenges assumptions about what learning means and how it takes place," says Jones. "Over the next year, Trinity will devise a unique undergraduate model aimed at preparing our students for global citizenry. This generous grant from the Mellon Foundation is a significant vote of confidence from one of the most prominent foundations in the world that Trinity is on the right track," Jones added. Trinity was one ofr6 national liberal arts colleges invited to compete as part of the Mellon
STUDYING I-IARHORD Students in ~NVS 275 "Methods in ~nvironmental Science" conduct an environmental assessment of f-jartford's Park River. Top: collecting samples. Below: analyzing samples in the laboratory. Right: clay layers in a soil sample from the Park Ri ver project.
Foundation's "Centers of Excellence" program. Of the 16, seven schools were selected to receive awards. Trinity and Sarah Lawrence College received the first two and were among four institutions selected to receive the maximum $3-million grant. In inviting proposals from these select colleges, the foundation urged them to develop ideas that "address a major priority. leading to a long-lasting, positive educational and financial outcome." The foundation also encouraged them to focus on an aspect of their programs having the greatest likelihood of producing meaningful change for the campus community. Trinity chose its urban and global programs, identifying opportunities to improve their linkages, secure their funding on a permanent basis, and articulate their functional integration as a signature feature for the College. This is a new affirmation of the important relationship between Trinity and Hartford in the College's academic mission and vision. For its part, the College will raise $9 million in matching funds as part of the $12 million endowment to sustain urban and global programs. Trinity will launch an immediate campaign and will pursue an intense 18-month effort to accomplish this goal. Already, three donors have committed S1.8 million in matching funds toward the challenge.
Encompassing both ~artford and world citiesa new vision of the liberal arts paradigm Education that involves interaction with the city of Hartford has long been an important part of Trinity's approach, as has the extensive use of overseas study The new Center for Urban and Global Studies will bring these two existing streams together to give the College a powerful new medium through which to reconfigure the idea of liberal arts education and its relevance to the 21st century. Urban programs, fueled by grants from the WK. Kellogg and other national foundations during the 1990s, emerged from efforts to invigorate Trinity's relationship with Hartford, starting with the South End neighborhoods immediately surrounding the College. A host of distinctive programs and institutions-including the Learning Corridor, the Trinfo Cafe, the Boys & Girls Club at Trinity College, and the new Community Sports Complex- grew from that work. They have significantly improved the quality of life in Hartford while also providing learning opportunities for Trinity students, many of whom have benefited from internships and workstudy programs in the city. TOP: Internship site--Margaret Kistow Children's Home, Arima, Trinidad MIDDL~: Mural project, Santiago, Chile BOTTOM: Trinfo Cafe, Hartford
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At the same time, the College has established learning sites at eight cities worldwide, including Moscow, Istanbul, Barcelona, Cape Town, Paris, Santiago, Vienna,
and Port of Spain, in addition to the ongoing program in Rome. These programs enable students to travel and study abroad in a host of cultures, while also performing internships or community learning that more fully integrate them with institutions in their host cities. "We believe that the education Trinity offers its students is distinctly stronger because it encompasses both Hartford and world cities," says Dr. Rena Fraden, dean of faculty and vice president for academic affairs, but she is quick to add that the College's commitment to the traditional liberal arts and sciences remains firm. "This initiative does not mean that Trinity will now aim to graduate only students who are 'urbanists.' Our commitment to the full spectrum ofliberal arts education has not changed. However, by bringing together our existing, successful, urban and global programs, we believe we can breathe new life into the liberal arts paradigm, creating a variety of 'real world' opportunities for students to learn and grow. It also means a stronger commitment to engaging with, investing in, and drawing sustenance from the many programs and relationships here in Hartford and all over the globe that we've been building for many years."
A new dean and a new center The urban-global initiative will play out in a number of ways, says Dean Fraden, who is spearheading implementation. For starters, the Curriculum Committee is expected to bring to the faculty a proposal requiring that every student take at least one course that focuses on Hartford and another on international issues. The College is currently engaged in a national search to recruit an accomplished scholar to fill the new position of dean of urban and global studies, with a mandate to provide overall vision and leadership for the program and direct the center's activities. Two contiguous Trinity buildings at the corner of Vernon and Broad streets will be renovated to create a physical presence for the center. When it opens, the majority of Trinity's Hartford -focused and global programs will be housed in this complex. Under the dean's leadership, the center will sustain and build linkages between Trinity's Hartford, community, and global programs that previously existed separately In addition, a new Cities Resource Center will develop a comprehensive Web site with links to other urban and global projects; create guides for students and researchers who are studying Hartford's history or seeking connections to ongoing work in cities across the United States and the world; and create an introduction to resources in archives, libraries, and cultural institutions in Hartford and the region. "We're committed to a model of the liberal arts that strongly incorporates off-campus engagement both in Hartford and abroad," says Dean Fraden. ''A central task for the new dean will be to integrate the three interlocking intellectual spheres inhabited by our students: the classroom, the city, and the world."
Arthur Vining Davis l=oundations grant supports student urban-global research projects The Arthur Vining Davis f=oundations have awarded a grant of $200,000 to the College to support student research and internship opportunities in an urban and/or global context. The AV Davis f=ellows Program will provide stipends, housing, and program support for up to 20 students in the summers of 2007 and 2008, as well as a stipend for a faculty coordinator. The grant will also support a Summer Institute in Urban and Global Studies modeled on the successfull-1oward l-1ughes Medical Institute (I-11-1MI) Summer Research Program in the life sciences. Participation in the summer institute will be open to any student conducting on-campus research in the l-1artford region , their faculty mentors, other faculty members engaged in urban and global scholarship, l-1artford-based student interns, and campus-based students preparing for a semester of study abroad. Like the I-11-1M I program, the institute will provide students with the opportunity to participate in weekly seminars throughout the summer and to present work in progress at one of the seminars. Special lectures and panel presentations will be organized on topics geared toward fostering debate and discussion. Guest lecturers may include academic experts in relevant topics; representatives of local governments, nonprofits, and community-based organizations; and speakers from other regions and countries who will bring a comparative perspective to the selected topic. The grant will also provide support for a fall symposium on student urban and global research, which will provide a forum for students to present the results of summer work to the campus and the wider community.
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tri n i ty 1n the news
"It happens all across the country: the freshman freakout. They arrive on campus- often at their dream school- and they are faced with so many unknowns and differences that they begin to question why they wanted to go to college .... Is this sort of meltdown happening more often with this generation? And how should parents respond? Randolph lee, a psychologist and director of the counseling center at Trinity College, doesn't think he's seeing more homesickness than he did a decade or two ago, but ' I think you do see more of a knee-jerk reaction: Parents tend to get more alarmist about it more quickly than they used to. 'We see so many more calls from parents.' In their well-meaning desire to be responsive, lee says, 'parents jump too quickly. Parents need to lay back a little: This is a new adventure; it's exciting. Kids are going to feel like they don't have friends at first. They are going to feel lonely. They may think they will never make friends.' If left alone, lee says, kids usually find friends and feel much more at home by about mid-October .... The good news is, experts say, that most freshman relax into college life sometime during that first semester. At Trinity, lee says, they have tried to start group therapy for kids who are trying to adjust. But by the time they assemble a group, the kids are over the homesickness." T HE FRESHMAN FREAKOUT:
I I-lATE IT I-IERE.
1 W ANT To CoME l-loME' Nor To WoRRY, PARENTS. T HI S, Too, SHALL PAss
1-/artford Courant, September 22, 2006
"The Congressional Research Service reported this year that congressional earmarks have more than tripled since 1994. The service reported there were 4,126 earmarks worth $29.6 billion in 1994. By fiscal year 2006, that figure jumped to 12,852 earmarks worth $67 billion, an increase of about 126 percent in value, according to the service. Experts say that's more than a coincidence. Diana Evans, author of the 2004 book Greasing the Wheels: Using Pork Barrel Projects to Build Majority Coalitions in Congress, said leaders of powerful congressional committees started doling out earmarks in the late 1980s to buy loyalty from other lawmakers. In return for funding a pet project in one district, a lawmaker was expected to support congressional leaders on other issues. 'In a sense, they have become the prisoners of earmarks. Members expect them and the more they get them, the more they expect,' said Evans, a political science professor at Trinity College in Hartford, Conn. The
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jump in earmarks 'may be as simple as demand rising to meet what is apparently a never-ending supply,'" she said. SPENDING AS A WAY OF LIFE IN CONGRESS: PROFESSIONAL "I NFLUENCERS" WORK FOR LOCAL INTE RESTS, ENDURE W ASHINGTON SCANDALS
The Press-fnterprise (CA), September 22, 2006
"Trinity College has received pledges totaling $39.5 mi llion from three anonymous donors, officials have announced. The money, which is about equal to the largest single gift in the college's history, will be used to support endowed faculty positions, financial aid for international students and the general endowment at the private liberal arts college in Hartford. ' It's a wonderful vote of confidence in the future of the college from three very generous alumni who are dedicated to paying back part of what they believe Trinity gave them, said Trinity President James F. Jones Jr. The gifts, part of a $300 million fundraising campaign announced in May by college trustees, will 'enable us to bolster our commitment to attracting and retaining the brightest and most talented students and the highestcaliber faculty,' he said. Under Jones, the college has sought to bolster fundraising and cut costs. Over the past two years, Trinity has reduced some part-time faculty jobs and imposed other cost-savings measures. The latest pledges will allow the school, with an enrollment of 2,300 students, to increase its endowment, which is estimated at between $380 million and $390 million." $39.5 MILLION TO Newsday, October 20, 2006
DONORS PLEDGE
TRINIT Y COLLEGE
Samples of the abundant seaweed from the Sargasso Sea that has washed up on Bermuda's shores in recent weeks is to be analysed by US - based seaweed expert Dr. Craig Schneider of Trinity College in Connecticut. As reported in yesterday's Royal Gazette Dr. Martin Thomas, who works closely with the Aquarium is also looking at the various examples of the seaweed that has broken off from the Gulf Stream and drifted into the Island's coastal waters. But it is Dr. Schneider who is the lead expert in the field. Commonly referred to simply as Sargasso seaweed, the Aquarium's collector of species Chris Flook points out the official name of the species is Sargussum seaweed. An unusual type of the
seaweed, thought to be an as yet undocumented "flowering" phase of the seaweed, has been discovered during research of the seaweed that has reached Bermuda this year and examples of this are being sent to Dr. Schneider in the US to exam. AMt;RICAN t;XPt;RT TO ANALYSt; SEAWt;t;D
The Royal Gazette (Bermuda), December 6, 2006
Last year. Nike drew buzz with its campaign that centered on, and celebrated. robust body parts typically shunned by women and advertisers. "My butt is big," proclaimed one ad. "I have thunder thighs," said another. In recent weeks. the so-called "skinny model ban" instigated in Madrid has gained stean1. Most recently a government agency threatened to pull its annual ÂŁ620,000 contribution to London Fashion Week if organizers continue to send underweight models down the runway. . . . Strung together. does it spell the beginnings of a beauty backlash of sorts? Or is this doomed to be a passing fad in this culture that proclaims ample-bottomed Jennifer Lopez "hot" one season and a reed-thin Nicole Richie the next? 'Something bigger is going on,' says Audrey D. Brashich, a Trinity College graduate and author of the new book All Made Up: A Girl's Guide to Seeing Through Celebrity Hype and Celebrating Real Beauty. 'There's some sort of resistance that's gurgling beneath the surface. I don't know that I can say it's full blown,' says Brashich, who spoke at the college last week for national Love Your Body Day. 'But these new pieces of pop culture are refocusing a debate that's been kicking around for some time. And the best action is to build on it."' Rmt;FINING B~:;AUTY: CouLD
IT
B~:; THAT A BROADt;R
Dt;FINITION OF PHYSICAL LooKs Is EMt;RGING?
1-iartford Courant, October 27. 2006
"Recent world events have put Islam under the microscope. Author Sohaib Sultan is out to change what he calls the negative public perception of the religion. Sultan, the Islamic chaplain at Yale University in New Haven and Trinity College in Hartford, spoke to about two dozen people Wednesday night at St. James's Episcopal Church. In a wide- ranging conversation that lasted almost two hours, Sultan touched on several issues facing Islam. Sultan, author of The Koran for D=ies, took his audience through a primer on Islam, recited a few verses from the Muslim holy book and answered abou t an hour's worth of questions in an effort to teach people a little bit about his religion ... . One of his pet peeves, he explained, is the way the news media, pundits and 'experts' discuss Islam without much knowledge
of the religion .... Sultan said he hoped people walked away with a new, alternative perspective on one of the world's largest religions.' ] would like for the attendants to see the human side of Islam ... what makes Islam a religion that is worthy of living,' said Sultan, 26. The Rev. Robert C. Hooper I I I , rector of St. James's Episcopal Church in West Hartford center. said he invited Sultan to speak so he could give audience members, most of them parishioners of St. James's. a better grasp of an often-misinterpreted religion. ' I have a personal and spiritual interest in the dialogue,' Hooper said. 'When we come to understand other people's religions better, we understand our religion better."' ISLAMIC CHAPLAIN EXPLAINS HIS FAITH
1-iartford Courant, November 2, 2006
"There were 6 a.m. and II p.m. off-campus practices, but not too many players raised a stink. The coach used to carry the puck bucket and hockey laundry in his car back to campus, and that did a raise a big stink. Maybe it always was worth it, but finally, on Friday, all the sacrifices will make sense. Trinity has been playing men's hockey for 46 years, starting as a club team in 1960, but has never had a home rink. And whether it was the outdoor ice at Colt Park in Hartford or the rink at Kingswood- Oxford School in West Hartford, every practice, every game, has been a road trip of some kind. That ends Friday when the doors of the $15.5 million Trinity College Community Sports Complex open for the Wesleyan-Trinity women's game at 4 p.m., followed by the Hamilton -Trinity men's game at 7:30. Both Trinity teams are opening their seasons. 'I've stopped by the site several times every week since the groundbreaking [Nov. 6, 2005]', men's coach John Dunham said. It's like a dream. l appreciate it so much for the players, former players, the college and everyone who has supported the program. It gives me the feeling that, ' You know, we did something right.'No one deserves more accolades than Dunham, who's o.6 on the all -time Division I I I wins list. With a 433 293 -30 record in 32 varsity seasons, he is Trinity hockey. . .. 'John has gone above and beyond the call ,' said Mark Cleary, the captain of Trinity's first varsity team in 1974-75. 'How does a coach recruit players against Middlebury [eighttime NCAA champion] and Amherst without a campus rink> And to put a team in the Final Four without a rink on campus. Amazing." TRINITY HocKt;Y: FINALLY, A HoM~; RINK
1-iartford Courant, November 75, 2006
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speak out
In which we ask a member 1 the Trinity community to speak out on important issues 1 the day. You are invited to respond with your opinions, which will be published in the next issue 1the Reporter.
The Generation of lEOs and I Pods Vijay Prashad, George and Martha Kellner Chair 1 South Asian History On September 3, 2006, the weekend before the fall term opened, rwo young boys from Connecticut were killed. Eighteen-year-old Private rst Class Nicolas Madaras of Wilton died when a roadside bomb (an lED) exploded next to his humvee in Baqubah, Iraq. In Ramadi, on that same day, another bomb killed 19-year-old Lance Corporal Phillip Johnson of Enfield. Madaras, who had coached soccer, hoped to return to the U. S., go to college, and study nursing. Another college career squandered. Total U. S. fatalities in Iraq are now in excess of 3,000. (Editor's note: A Trinity alumnus, Schuyler B. Haynes '89, was killed in action in Iraq in November of 2006. His obituary appears elsewhere in this issue of the Reporter.) That same day, 22 Iraqis died in eight separate incidents, from a suicide car bomb in AI -Kamarah to an explosion in New Baquba (in the latter, a father and his four children were killed
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as they drove in their family car). Not long after, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health released a remarkable study. It found that 654.965 more Iraqis have died since 2003 than would have been expected under pre-war conditions. Shortly after the study appeared, the President said that it was "not credible," but "I do know that a lot of innocent people have died, and it troubles me and grieves me." These events marked my first week of classes. Before me sat smart, eager students, most of whom are the same age as Madaras and Johnson, and of those Iraqis whose names I do not know. My students are eager to learn about the world, to find meaning in the chaos that greets them in the newspapers, on television, and from our political establishment. They were just about teenagers during the terrorist attacks on September II, 200I , and have since grown into young adults as war upon war has unfolded around them. The inconvenience of airports is routine for them, so too is the news about lives lost, cities devastated . For our students, the generation of IEDs and I Pods, there is no comprehensive narrative that links together the contemporary histories of globalization and populist rage. If they do not have a
narrative or many narratives that try to explain why more than half the 275 "world opinion leaders" told the International Herald Tribune that "American policies or actions in the world were a major cause of the September II attacks," we will fail them. Our students see animosity against the U.S. government, and against U.S. -based corporations, but there is little attempt to parse carefully the arguments of the antagonized and learn from them. If we seek not to understand the complaints and address them in some fashion, the only solution is to kill anyone who has animosity against us. The military solution is predicated upon such thoughtlessness. War is distant for our students, as for us. We read about it, see images from it: war is a spectacle for us, nothing corporeal.
Newsweek took a stab a month after 9/ II. Its international editor, Mumbai-born Fareed Zakaria, wrote an engaging essay under the headline, "Why They Hate Us." On the cover of the issue (dated October I5, 2oor) a young boy in a white turban held aloft a Kalashnikov. Zakaria claimed that 9/ II could be explained by "the sense of humiliation, decline and despair that sweeps the Arab world." Arabs,
he wrote, "feel that they are under siege from the modern world and that the United States symbolizes this world." A generation of social scientists had already walked down that path. As modernization theorists, they championed modernity as the antidote to tradition. The histories of colonialism and of the uneven integration of the formerly colonial world into the circuits of capitalism did not bother them. Secular education systems combined with the mass media propagation of new ideas would shatter traditional frameworks . Commerce and integration into world capitalism would finish the job. At least this was the view of W W Rostow in his I960 classic, The Stages 1Economic Growth. Zakaria's is a sophisticated variant of this, but for all its poise, it remains far too simplistic: Modernity (us) is the torment of tradition (them) , and our freedoms and fun enrage them into un-freedom and fundamentalism.
Granta, founded at Cambridge University in I889, dedicated the 77th issue of its new series to the proposition, "What We Think of America" (spring 2002). A series of wellregarded writers, including Lebanon's Hanan al -Shaykh, Chile's Ariel Dorfman, and Canada's Michael lgnatieff,
produced short reflections on America. Harold Pinter, the playwright who won the 2005 Nobel Prize for Literature, lamented the loss of life of those who had the temerity to challenge the way the world had been ordered. Why did the thousands of Indonesians, Chileans, Nicaraguans, and others die, Pinter asked~ "They died because to one degree or another they dared to question the status quo, the endless plateau of poverty, disease, degradation and oppression which is their birthright. On behalf of the dead, we must regard the breathtaking discrepancy between U.S. government language and U.S. government action with the absolute contempt it merits." From Canada, in a widely circulated Internet statement, Sunera Thobani, who presided over the ational Action Committee on the Status of Women, challenged the notion that the wars to come in revenge for 9/II had a benign motive. She worried that the U.S. president's rhetoric shortly after 9 l u invoked the U.S. people to seek blood ("they don't care whose blood it is, they want blood") in vengeance.
The peace marches, she wrote, contest this idea of the nation, but those who seek peace are politically weak, even if morally strong. Congresswoman Barbara Lee, the only member of Congress to oppose the open-ended declaration of war passed in September 2001, concurred with Thobani. "We have a chance to demonstrate to the world," she wrote in a statement, "that great powers can choose to fight on the fronts of their choosing and that we can choose to avoid needless military action when other avenues to redress our rightful grievances and to protect our nation are available to us. We must respond, but the character of that response will determine for ourselves and for our children the world that they will inherit." In addition, the character of the response will define the nation's sense of itself and sense to the world. In 1995, I read political scientist Benjamin Barber's Jihad Versus Me World. Barber retooled modernization theory, to argue that McWorld, the soulless corporation, meets its antithesis in Jihad, the fanatical fundamentalist.
Such an account allows us to believe that if there are more I Pods in the world, there will be less IEDs. Globalization, in other words, will undermine the basis for all manner of atavism . But, my own work, now coming to fruition in The Darker Nations, suggests that Jihad is actually the twin of Me World. Take Pakistan as an example. The International Monetary Fund, the advance guard of corporate power, pushed the state to cut back on funding for educational and health-care services. Into the breech came the Islamic charities, many funded by the Saudi government, and some even enjoying the largess of the U.S. coffers (during the Afghan War of the 1980s) . They educated and healed the lower middle class, drawing in vast numbers of people into their organizations. The growth of the Islamic Right in Pakistan is a product of Me Jihad, the unified effect of both globalization and fundamentalism . Dulce bellum inexpertis: war is sweet to the inexperienced. Vijay Prashad is the George and Martha Kellner Chair of
South Asian ~istory. Prashad has taught at Trinity for 10 years and is the director of the International Studies Program. ~e completed his Ph.D. in history at the University of Chicago, where he received various fellowships to support his graduate work. ~is dissertation on the social history of a Dalit community in India, Untouchable Freedom, was published by Oxford University Press in 1999. ~is subsequent title, Karma of Brown Folk, was published in 2000 and named one of the 25 best books by the Village Voice. ~is latest book, The
Darker Nations: A People's !-lis tory of the Third World, is due out soon. The Kellner Chair of South Asian ~istory was established in 1995 with a gift from George '64 and Martha Kellner.
Your turn to speak out.
Share your opinions on this essay with other Reporter readers. Send your letters ore-mails to Drew Sanborn, Office of Communications, Trinity College, 300 Summit Street, Hartford, CT 06106 or drew.sanborn@trincoll.edu. Responses will be published in the next issue ofthe Reporter.
Letters to the editor Read responses to previous Speak Out columns on the Trinity Web site at www. trincoll.eduj About Trinity/ News_ Events/ Reporter/
The Council for the Advancement and Support of Education (CASE) has awarc:IH thit l'riftttf路Cdi!Mit Jllllllftrfllir' preatigious gold medal for beat deaign for 2007 in the District 1 publications comp.etitloft; ~ and eastern Canada. Offlcials of CASE, which Is the premier auociatlon for~~-. ............ in alumni relations, communication&, marketing. and fund raisinc. uld this,_... field of.,.... was .aM!c:IIIIIY competitive. Congratulations are due to James Baker Design for the editorial HCtion .net Alta Law for the class notes section.
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books and other med1a
MAYORS AND SCI-IOOLS: MINORITY VOICES AND DEMOCRATIC TENSIONS IN URBAN EDUCATION STEFAN IE CHAMBERS, ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
Temple University Press, 2006; 229 pages
TURTLE ISLAND TREE PSALMS HUGH OGDEN, PROFESSOR OF ENGLISH
1-/igganum I-Ii// Books, 2006; 87 pages
JUDAISM AND I-IELLENISM RECONSIDERED LOUIS H. FELDMAN 46
Brill, 2006; 950 pages
SETTING TI-lE TABLE: TI-lE TRANSFORMING POWER OF I-IOSPITALITY IN BUSINESS DANNY MEY ER '8o
1-/arperCo//ins, 2006; 320 pages
PICASSO AND AMERICAN ART MICHAEL FITZGERALD, ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR OF FINE ARTS
Whitney Museum of American Art, in association with Yale University Press,2006; 400 pages
INVENTING A SOVIET COUNTRYSIDE: STATE POWER AND TI-lE TRANSFORMATION OF RURAL RUSSIA 1917-1929 JAMES W. HEINZEN '84 University of Pittsburgh Press, 2004; 297 pages JANE AUSTEN: NORTI-IANGER ABBEY, TI-lE CAMBRIDGE EDITION OF TI-lE WORKS OF JANE AUSTEN EDITED BY BARBARA M. BENEDICT, CHARLES A. DANA PROFESSOR OF ENGLISH, AND DEIRDRE LE FAYE
Cambridge University Press, 2006; 354 pages
POWER, PLAIN ENGLISI-I, AND TI-lE RISE OF MODERN POETRY DAV ID ROSEN, ASSISTANT PROFESSOR OF ENGLISH
IN TI-llS REMOTE COUNTRY: FRENCI-I COLONIAL CULTURE IN TI-lE ANGLO-AMERICAN IMAGINATION , 1780-1860 EDWARD WATTS '86
The University of North Carolina Press, 2006; 288 pages
A VISITOR'S GUIDE TO COLONIAL & REVOLUTIONARY NEW ENGLAND PATRICIA FOULKE '70 AND ROBERT FOULKE
The Countryman Press, 2006; 344 pages
DESCRIBING LIFE: MONOLOGS FOR WOMEN JOLENE GOLDENTHAL M'69
Bleich Books, 2007; 726 pages
I-lOW EVERYONE COULD BE RICI-I , FAMOUS, ETC. LEWIS S. MANCINI, M.D. '73
Trafford Publishing, 2006; 240 pages
INSIDE MAVERICK'S: PORTRAIT OF A MONSTER WAVE EDITED BY BRUCE JENKINS AND GRANT WASHBURN '90, PHOTOGRAPHY BY DOUG ACTON
Chronicle Books, 2006; 760 pages
Yale University Press, 2006; 212 pages
POSSESSED VICTORIANS: EXTRA SPI-IERES IN NINETEENTI-I-CENTURY MYSTICAL WRITINGS SARAH A. WILLBURN, VISITING ASSISTANT PROFESSOR OF ENGLISH
Ashgate Publishing, 2006; 769 pages
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The Reporter prints notices of books and other media, such as C Ds and DVDs, by alumni/ae and members of the Trinity faculty. Please send materials to Drew Sanborn, Office of Communications, Trinity College, 300 Summit Street, Hartford, CT 06106. Unless directed otherwise, all alumni/ae works will be donated to the College library's Alumni Authors Collection.
athlet1cs
Wesley N 9 new head coach of women s rowing team Trinity College has hired Wesley Ng as head coach of the Bantam women's rowing team. Ng has spent the last two seasons as the assistant coach and head novice coach for the Trinity men's rowing team. He replaces Marina Traub, who resigned this spring for personal reasons. The Trinity women's rowing team finished the 2006 season with a 9-1 record and finished second in both the New England Division Ill Championships and the New England Small College Athletic Conference (NESCAC) Championships, and fourth in the Eastern College Athletic Conference (ECAC) National Invitational Regatta. The Bantams qualified for their fourthstraight NCAA Division Ill National Championship Regatta, finishing fourth in the grand final and third in the Overall Points Standings. Trinity has been to the last four NCAA Division Ill Championship Regatta, winning the Varsity Eight National Championship title in 2005, and capturing two New England crowns (2003 & 2005), two NESCAC crowns (2004 & 2005), and the 2005 ECAC National Invitational title in the process. Ng graduated from Yale with a bac helor's degree in history and is currently a candidate for a master's degree in public policy studies at Trinity. As a collegian, Ng helped Yale win three Eastern Sprints Championships and the IRA National Championship title in 2002. "Trinity has been so successful in the past four years with four straight trips to the NCAA Division Ill Championships and two third-place finishes as a team. I feel very lucky to get the opportunity to coach scholar-athletes who have demonstrated their dedication in the classroom as well as on the water," says Ng. "Their impressive team GPA and academic contributions as well as their rowing performance suggest the team is poised for future success. I'm really looking forward to facing the new challenge of racing in the NESCAC, which I consider the most competitive Division Ill rowing league in the nation." In his two years at Trinity, Ng's first and second novice crews at Trinity posted a 19-0 record with New England and ECAC National Invitational Championship titles in both 2005 and 2006. Prior to Trinity, Ng coached the freshman lightweight men's crews and assisted with the women's crew teams at Yale University over two seasons.
Detrick and Longley sweep NESCAC golf post-season honors Trinity College freshman Reid Longley was selected as the 2006 New England Small College Athletic Conference (N ESCAC) Golf Player of the Year and as the 2006 NESCAC Golf Rookie of the Year. Bantam head coach Bill Detrick was voted
the 2006 NESCAC Coach of the Year, giving Trinity a sweep of the league's post-season honors this fall. In addition, Trinity senior co-captain George Boudria and freshman David Anderson were each named to the 2006 AII-NESCAC Second Team . This marks the second straight year that a Bantam golfer has claimed the individual crown at the N ESCAC Championship as Boudria won medalist honors at last year's tournament. Entering his 16th season at Trinity, Detrick has fielded a squad capable of finishing among the top 10 teams in New England each year. Last season, the Bantams finished third in both the New England Small College Athletic Conference and among Division Ill colleges at the New England Intercollegiate Golf Association (NEIGA) Championships during the fall season . The 2001 NESCAC Coach of the Year, Detrick also guided the Bantams to a fourth-place finish in the ECAC Division Ill Championship Tournament. Detrick came to Trinity in 1990 after a legendary tenure as head men's basketball coach at Central Connecticut State University, where the gymnasium bears his name.
Skipp earns All-American field hockey honors: Bantams Curran and M watarura also take post-season accolades Trinity sophomore defender Emi ly Skipp was selected to the 2006 All-New England Small College Athletic Conference (NESCAC) Field Hockey Second Team, the National Field Hockey Coaches Association (NFHCA) Division Ill All-New England West Regional First Team, and the National Field Hockey Coaches Association (NFHCA) All-American Second Team. Bantam junior midfielder Katie Curran graced the NFHCA Division Ill All-New England West Regional Second Team and sophomore M/D Christine Mwatarura made the AII-N ESCAC First Team. The Trinity field hockey squad, coached by Anne Parmenter (6th season) posted its best record since 1998 at 9-6 and qua lified for the NESCAC Cha mpionship Tournament for the second time in three years. The Bantams lost at Tufts, 2-1, in the tourney first round . Skipp started all 15 games and recorded one goal and two assists for four points and added a defensive save. Skipp, a transfer this fall from Division I Northeastern University, played a major role on the Trinity defense that held its opponents to 1.26 goals allowed per game (27th in the nation). Curran started all 15 games this season and had one goal and six assists (6th in NESCAC) for eight points. A graduate of South Portland High School , Curran is majoring in anthropology at Trinity. Mwatarura started in 14 of her 15 games and tallied two goals and two assists for six points, including the game winner in a 2-1 regular season win over Tufts. A graduate of the Chisiple School in her native Zimbabwe, Mwatarura is majoring in economics and Asian studies at Trinity.
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Nwana9u named to All- NESCAC women s soccer first team Trinity sophomore midfielder Devin Nwanagu was named to the 2006 All-New ~ngland Small College Athletic Conference (N~足 SCAC) Women 's Soccer l=irst Team. The Trinity women's soccer squad, coached by Michael Smith (1oth Season), posted a 2-10-2 overall record and an o-8-1 mark in the N~SCAC. Nwanagu, an AII-N~SCAC Second team selection and the N ~SCAC Rookie of the Year in 2005, started all14 games and led the Bantams in every offensive category with four goals and four assists for 12 points. She set a new Trinity record for assists in a game this fall with four helpers in a s-o win against Coast Guard. A graduate of the Noble & Greenough School, Nwanagu is majoring in economics at Trinity.
Gluckman earns presti_gious award at rowing coaches conterence Trinity College men's rowing head coach Lawrence Gluckman was named as the 2006 College Level Coaches Recognition Award recipient at the 30th annual Joy of Sculling Coaches Conference in December. The Trinity men's rowing team finished the season with a 10-1 record and swept the New ~ngland Division Ill Championship and the ~astern College Athletic Conference (~CAC) National Invitational Championship titles. The award is selected by a panel of men's rowing coaches and given to a coach at both the university and the college level. Larry Gluckman is currently in his fourth year as the head coach of men's rowing at Trinity. l=ormerly the head crew coach at Columbia University, Princeton University, and Dartmouth College, Gluckman returned to the coaching ranks in 2002-03 after spending the previous 12 years in private business in the rowing industry. The Trinity men's varsity eight has posted a 27-1 record (27-0 against American colleges) in Gluckman's three seasons and the Bantams have won the l-1ead of the Charles and the 2005 l-1enley Temple Challenge regattas in 2005, and the ~astern College Athletic Conference (~CAC) National Invitational Regatta in 2006. Trinity finished the 2006 season as the No. 13-ranked team in the nation among all divisions.
Soules was selected as the 2006 N~SCAC Defensive Player of the Year, becoming the third consecutive Trinity player to earn that award (Aaron Goldstein in 2004, Michael Blair in 2005). Soules was also honored as a member of the New ~ngland l=ootball Writers Division II/III All-New ~ngland Team, the ~astern College Athletic Conference (~CAC) Division Ill Northeast All-Star Team, and the D3!=ootball.com All-~ast Region Second Team. In addition, Soules was chosen for, and played in, the 2006 Aztec Bowl as a member of the American l=ootball Coaches Association (AI=CA) Division Ill All-Star Team against a Mexican All-Star Team in Cancun, Mexico on December 16. Senior captain OLB Christian Allen also repeated on both the New ~ngland l=ootball Writers Division II/III All-New ~ngland Team and the AII-N~SCAC l=irst Team, while junior G Mike Robinson graced the D3!=ootball.com All-~ast Region Third Team, and junior C John Mihalko earned a spot on the ~CAC Division Ill Northeast Region All-Star Team . This foursome and three others gave Trinity seven players on the AII-N~SCAC l=irst Team and six other Bantams graced the AII-N~SCAC Second Team. Trinity senior captain RB Gennaro Leo, junior DT D.J. Lanz, and junior CB Jared Boyd were also each selected to the AII-N~SCAC l=irst Team. Bantam senior captain WR/RS Chris
Olenoski, senior CB Paul Mounds, junior OT Ben Willig, junior DL Jeff Carpenter, junior ILB Nile Lundgren, and junior OLB Matthew Rettig were all picked for the AII-N~SCAC Second Team.
Norte wins NCAA men's cross country regional championship title Sophomore l-1unter Norte won the men's race by over 10 seconds at 25:37.9 to lead the Bantams to a third-place fini sh in the NCAA Division Ill New ~ngland Regional Championships at Veterans Golf Course on November 11 at Springfield, Massachusetts. The Trinity men totaled 164 points, one ahead of fourthplace Wesleyan, and earned an at-large bid to the NCAA Division Ill National Championships in Ohio where they finished 31st overall. Williams College won the men's race with 57 points and Bowdoin came in second place at 125, while Middlebury College took first place in the women's race with 73 points. Trinity men's senior co-captain Nate Gravel came in 16-place with a time of 26:18, while sophomore Sam Moorhead recorded a 20th-place finish at 26:22, and junior co-captain Matt Ander-
Soules earns trip to Aztec Bowl: 12 others take post-season honors for Trinity football Trinity College senior captainS. Michael Soules leads a long and impressive list of Bantam football players chosen to receive prestigious post-season awards for their outstanding play during the 2006 football season. Soules is one of 13 Bantam players who were honored following Trinity's 7-1 season, as the Bantams finished ranked No.4 in the final New ~ngland Division Ill Poll. Trinity, coached by Jeff Devanney, finished second in the New ~ngland Small College Athletic Conference (N~SCAC).
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son was 52nd at 27:02. l=reshman Ryan Lane secured Trinity's third-place finish by one second with a 75th-place performance at 27:31. Sophomore Alison Lemire came in 133rd place in the women's race with a time of 25:44.
For up-to-date information on the latest team scores and other Bantam sports news, go to the Trinity College Web site at www.trincoll.edu/athletics/.
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class notes
Alumni Fund Goal: $10,000
Alumni Fund Goal: $150 Class Secretary: Dr. Julius Smith, 3114 So. Ocean Blvd., #609, Highland Beach, !=L 33487-2531
Alumni Fund Goal: $200
Alumni Fund Goal: $2,000
Alumni Fund Goal: $500 Class Secretary: R. Pearce Alexander, 4025 Pulitzer Pl. #312, San Diego, CA 92122-4226; e-mail: rowan . alexander.1935@trincoll.edu
lt is difficult for your Class Correspondent to report to the Trinity magazine without input from classmates, so this is confined to personal activities. With daily workouts and coordination with the nearby physical therapist, my health and typing are good, not great, but good enough with the assistance of a small gym inhouse and an HP computer. These modern gadgets are of great benefit to occasional writers, especially to far-away military friends who are scattered around the globe. Life continues to be pleasant here is southern California. I check the daily weather reports from my home area, central New Jersey and Germany, where it was sent for years by Uncle Sam , then feel some satisfaction about moving out here. San Diego was a small avy-oriented town back in the late 6os , but my how it has grown due to worldwide migration to our rather pleasant weather and beaches. There is some business opportunity here for the opportunists.
Alumni Fund Goal: $500
Alumni Fund Goal: $4,000 Class Secretary: Michael J. Scenti, 226 Amherst St., Wethersfield, CT 06109-1906 Class Agent: William G. Hull
Alumni Fund Goal: $5,000 Class Secretary: James M.f:. Weir, 27 Brook Road, Woodbridge, CT 06525-1926
A surprise vi~ it from Jack Leon, who flew up from orth Carolina to spend a weekend with Stan Mo11tgomery. They both attended Homecoming and its football game along with Harry Sanders '37- Jack was last seen driving up to Hyamtis to visit with famil y and friends. Jack, still an avid golfer, seems to have found the fountain of youth that eluded his forbearer, Ponce de Leon. The mild autumn, in these parts, still allows Stan to play golf with a handicap worthy of so meone 20 years younger. Although news is a bit sparse these days, do keep your cards and letters comingyour classmates enjoy hearing from you wherever they are.
Alumni Fund Goal: $3,000 Class Secretary: Sherwood V. Martin, Sunrise of So. Charlotte, 5515 Rea Road, #215, Charlotte, NC 28266 e-mail sherwood. martin.1939@trincoll.edu
Alumni Fund Goal: $10,000 Class Secretary: Donald J. Smith, M.D., 501 W. 107th St., Unit #504, Kansas City, MO 64114; e-mail: donald. smith.1940@trincoll.edu
Alumni Fund Goal: $13,000 Class Secretary: f:rank A. Kelly, Jr., 21 f:orest Dr., Newington, CT 06lll-3118
Alumni Fund Goal: $12,000 Class Secretary: Joseph J. Bonsignore, 9105 Santayana Dr., f:airfax, VA 22031-3026 e-mail: joseph.bonsignore.1942 @trincoll.edu
As I write these notes, I am looking at a newspaper photo of Frank Fasi in a newspaper article sent to me by Jack Barber. The newspaper story reported the dedication of Honolulu's principal murticipal building in Frank's name (see his bio in this section) . Frank's classmates could have predicted Frank's future. I discussed the newspaper story with Hank Rothauser, fellow Hartfordian, who well remembers Frank. We talked about Frank's aggressiveness on the football field, his "neversay- die" behavior, throwing his unimpressive weight around with utter abandon against bigger and heavier opponents. Barber also sent the article to Joe Beidler. My talk with Joe about Frank, baseball, and Trinity football led to all sorts of reminiscences, how he himself was the member of a quartet of stalwarts from the Ph.iladelphia area, encouraged and enabled to go to Trinity by one of Trinity's most illustrious and generous alumni, Martin C lement, then president of the Pennsylvania Railroad. C lement's proteges made our fresh man year a sports dream: Beidler, AI Will, Ray Rodgers, Bill Kramer . Joe excelled in baseball as well as football, had a big- league throwing arm; AI captained the football tean1 and was an inspirational leader on the field. Rodgers dropped out of school but became a faithful alumnus; Kran1er was a devastating fullback. Joe became a life- long friend of Don Viering . We talked a lot about Don, what a great person he was. Joe will be at the Gsth Reunion and we will have a great tim e talking about old times with him. A small present-day note from Joe: He has a grandson playing football in Montana. Fittingly. this lad weighs in at 260 pounds, about 90 pounds heavier than Joe's playing weight. With the 65th in mind, I talked with Tom Tamoney, now retired from law practice and settled in a retirement commurtity They keep him busy there. He keeps fit by swimming three times a week. Just the night before my phone call he had attended the annual Trinity Alumni Dinner, along with Class of '43 John Bonee, fellow legal maven. Tom hasn't missed a Reunion and plans to be at our 65th. We talked about another lawyer, Judge George Stoughton, now retired and living in Bloomfield. We have hopes of persuading George to delay going to his vacation retreat in Nova Scotia, come to the Reunion, and tell us about his successful and adventurous life. As usual, I chatted with Charley Johnson, happily gardening in South Carolina. Charley is finishing up his compilation of letters of Union C ivil War supporters. The University of Florida will publish his work when it is completed. C harley has had a long career in book publishing,
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class notes Frank Fasi ~2: l-lartford native turns l-lonolulu hero At a ceremony in July, former mayor of 1-Jonolulu, 1-Jawaii, Frank Fasi, Class of 1942, was honored for his 22 accomplished years as leader of that city. 1-Je was also recognized as "one of 1-Jonolulu's most colorful and effective political leaders." The July festivities centered around the renaming of the 15-story Municipal Office Building and adjacent park in honor of the 86-year-old politician. The plaque on the inside of the Frank F. Fasi Municipal Building succinctly summarizes the much-admired politician's career: "Named in honor of Frank F. Fasi, champion of the little guy, who faithfully served the people of the City and County of 1-Jonolulu as their Mayor for 22 years and whose leadership contributed significantly to the progress of modern 1-Jonolulu." When Fasi, a former football star at Trinity, took over as mayor in 1968, 1-Jonolulu was certainly not the metropolis that it is today. Fasi's energy and leadership helped direct the city and its programs as it grew into the modern era. Current Mayor of 1-Jonolulu Mufi 1-Jannemann, in an article in the Star Bulletin, concurs, "'I cannot think of a lasting city project that does not have Frank Fasi's imprimatur on it." During his tenure, Fasi started the city's bus
once working with Matt Birmingham. Charley is enthusiastic about the 65th and will write to all in his capacity as class president, encouraging everyone to attend. Also talked with Jack Swift, still moving and shaking things in idyllic Georgetown on the coast of Maine. His family has had a place there since the r88o's but Jack is the first one to live there the year round. Jack was the principal speaker at our 6oth Reunion and we have hopes he will attend the 65th. I found friend, Ken Albrecht . He had moved from Texas to Tennessee, and I hadn't caught up with the change. He's living near one of his three daughters and is now retired from the motel business. I owe a lot to Ken. He sheltered me during registration week when the great flood and hurricane of '38 flooded the Connecticut River and cut me off from my home in East Hartford.
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system, implemented the garbageto-energy plant, and , as 1-Jannemann adds, '"many other programs to help the little guy."' 1-Jis wife, Joyce Fasi, who spoke on her husband's behalf while he is recovering from ill health, says, "1-Je was really the best mayor 1-Jonolulu ever had." 1-Je was also, she adds, the longest-serving mayor, since the city has recently limited the mayoral term to two years. Fasi served six terms in office, from 1968 to 1980 and 1984 to 1994. A 1-Jartford native, Fasi served in the Marine Corps during World War II, and rather than returning to the frigid New t::::ngland winters, he decided to try the agreeable 1-Jawaiian climate. Once on the island, explains his wife, he started his own building supply business and was also a house mover. But Fasi had bigger ambitions and wanted to help the 1-Jawaiian people on a grander scale. 1-Je successfully ran for territorial senator in 1958-1-Jawaii was still a territory and not yet a state then-and also served as city councilman. As classmate Joseph Bonsignore ~2 says of the photo of Fasi from the front page of the Star Bulletin, which shows the former mayor brimming with pride at the dedication ceremony, "What you see, most strikingly, is Frank's jaunty military salute and twinkling eye, defying the ravages of old age. Frank is undoubtedly the most politically successful member of our class."
by Carlin Carr At the risk of being monotonous, let me urge everyone to overcome infirmities and come to Trinity next June.
Alumni Fund Goal: $20,000 Class Secretary: John L. Bonee, Esq., The Bonee Low Offices, One State St., Ste. 820, Hartford, CT 06103-3102 e-mail: john. bonee.1943@ trincoll.edu; fox: 860-522-6049 Nick Motto, Your Secretary's old friend and our classmate, died on Monday, October r6, 2006, after a long illness. Nick taught mathematics in the Hartford Public School System and was elected as a state representative from Hartford to the Connecticut General Assembly. Nick was a lifelong advocate of public education on all levels. serving six terms in the General
Assembly. He was appointed by the governor as commandant of the Connecticut State Veterans Home and Hospital in Rocky Hill and served until being stricken by a stroke. Having lost his wife, the late Margaret GullJling Motto, he is survived by a large and loving famil y including children, grandchildren, and great-grandchildren, to all of whom his classmates send their sympathy. Jack Fay. A resident of Florida, Jack fre quently visits family members who reside in the greater Hartford area and never fails to phone Your Secretary with news of recent travels and other activity. Jack and his wife, Marie, are veteran world travelers by way of Elder Hostel. Their recent hostel was a visitation of upper New England towns, followed by another hostel flight to Frankfurt, Germany, followed by trips to Estonia, Larvia, Lithuania, and St. Petersburg, Russia. We shall ask Jack to regale us all with international travel stories at our next reunion. No classmate tells a better story than Jack. He has an unparalleled sense of humor, which is only exceeded by his vigor. My favorite recollection of Jack's vigor is the day he was knocked unconscious in the Coast Guard football game. The four stretcher bearers were struggling and panting while in the process of carrying his 215pound body off the field when suddenly Jack's head pops up, followed by a large muscular leg, then all of him is on the field, racing back to his position of center. He finished the game, which I think we won! Allie Resony died on Thursday, October 12, 2006, having survived his beloved wife, the late Elsie Kindle Resony. Allie served in the United States Army Air Force during World War II. After the war, Allie served as an actuary for The Hartford Insurance Group for 35 years until retirement. At Trinity he was an outstanding member of Dan Jesse's baseball team. The condolences of Allie's classmates go out to his rwo sons, John and James, and to all other members of his family. Jim McAndrews. A recent edition of these notes was devoted to classmate Jin1 and his current ailments. Jim is still being cared for at St. Mary's Rehabilitation Center in West Hartford. One of Connecticut's leading urologists when he was in active practice, Jim's warm and friendly nature made many lasting friendships for him while an undergraduate at Trinity. ~oting from the 1943 ll')' concerning Jim: "Rather quiet, and with a certain dignity that might be mistaken for placidness at first glance, McAndrews has managed to slip without too much commotion into an enviable place in scholastic ranks. A graduate of Loomis Institute, he is Pre- Med Major and a member of the Newman Club." Those words may rekindle memories for Jim's classmates and motivate a visit, a letter, or a telephone call to Jim, which you may be sure he will thoroughly enjoy.
Alumni Fund Goal: $10,000 Class Secretary: Thomas A. Smith, 21 Grieg Rd., Westerly, Rl 02891-4771; e-mail: thomas. smith.1944@trincoll.edu Class Agents: Roger G. Conant; Charles Jarvis f-larriman; Richard ~. 1-laskell; Merritt Johnquest; f-l. Martin Tenney, Jr.; Robert Toland, Jr.
Alumni Fund Goal (1945): $3,000 Alumni Fund Goal (1946): $3,000 Alumni Fund Goal (1947): $20,000 Class Secretary: George A. Oberle ~5. 45 Ocean Ave, Apt. 3J, Monmouth Beach, NJ 07750-2401 ; e-mail: george. oberle.l945@trincoll.edu Class Agent and Reunion Agent: Irving J. Paliner, M.D. ~7
Alumni Fund Goal: $15,000 Class Secretary: The Rt. Rev. Otis Charles, 584 Castro St., Suite #379, San i=rancisco, CA 94114-2594; e-mail: otis. charles.1948@trincoll.edu Art Walmsley and your Secretary were among the bishops at the National Cathedral in Washington, D.C., for the November 4 Investiture of the Most Reverend Katharine Jefferts Schori as presiding bishop of the Episcopal Church and the first woman primate of the Anglican Com mullion. The Alumni Office reports that Leonard A. !-Ieiman was recognized in an article in the Albuquerque joumal, entitled "Beloved 'Town Rabbi' Reaches Fourscore Years; Cleric Found Two Synagogues." In October, his parish celebrated his 8oth birthday and Beit Tikva's board of directors named him the congregation's "founrung rabbi."
Alumni Fund Goal: $13,000 Class Secretary: William M.A. Wilson, 65 West Rd., Collinsville, CT 06019-3739 e-mail: william.wilson.1949@ trincoll.edu; fax: 860-231-9242 Class Agents: Robert Bowden; Bill Coughlin; John C. Gunning; John !=. Phelan; William M. A. Wilson We are at it again. The team of Bill Wilson, John Phelan, Jack Gunning, Bill Coughlin, and Bob Bowden met to plan our new campaign. John Phelan was back from two weeks in Ital y, visiting Rome. Florence, Venice, and the Amalfi Coast. Bob Bowden back from an eight-day cruise to Bermuda. and me from a four-day stay in the Hartford Hospital with an attack of spinal stenosis. None of the others had any-
Ken Albrecht Lt2 sheltered me during registration week when the great flood and hurricane of '38 flooded the Connecticut River and cut me off from my home in ~ast 1-lartford. - Joseph J. Bonsignore Lt2 thing to report. We are all in great shape for the shape we are in. Congratulations to last year's teams, which, besides the above, included Ron Urquhart and Duane Wilson. Our goal was Sro,ooo, we raised $15,000 and had 56 percent participation, better than the College average of 55 percent. Nice going. Wonderful letter from Richard Sherman, living now in Falmouth, MA, and I quote, "Since my retirement in 1985, I have presided on four non - profit boards. The one which I have been active in for over 20 years is the Falmouth Hospital . As a volunteer, I have most recently been a patient rep to visit various rooms to see if patients are being well served. It is so rewarding to be thanked by the patients. I was also instrumental in getting a new thrift shop built. Our awuliary raises in excess of $100,000 per year to buy new equipment, such as CAT scan and other equipment. I have kept busy and perhaps that is why my health is good. I lost my wife, Joanne, in 1997, after five years on oxygen. Then married her cousin in 1999. Patty and I still go to the Vineyard in the summer and have gone on numerous cruises. The most memorable was taking my family on a cruise to Alaska. Retirement is great and I hope for many more years. Regards to all." Thank you, Dick, it makes my job so much easier. l talked with Ron Urquhart, and age has finall y caught up with him. Not involved in the election after many years, but a man in his party elected to the town council. This was an office that Ron had worked on for years and had laid the ground work for his man to be elected. I did some calling for Moveon.org and was successful in replacing an entrenched Congresswoman. Hooray for us. Now let's hear from the rest of you.
Alumni Fund Goal: $200,000 Co-Class Secretary: Robert Tansill, 104 Aspen Dr., Basking Ridge, NJ 07920-1977 Co-Class Secretary: ~van W. Woollacott, 128 Terrys Plain Rd., Simsbury, CT 06070-1830 Class Agents: Robert M. Blum, ~sq.; John G. Grill, Jr.
www. trincoll.edu/ al umni • Births • fv1arriages • New Jobs • Photos
Alumni Fund Goal: $40,000 Class Secretary: Richard G. Mecoskey, 11428 Cedar Glen Pkwy #C1, Cleveland, Of-l 44106-2631; e-mail : richard. mecoskey.1951@trincoll.edu Class Agents: Timothy R. Cutting; David !=. ~dwards
Editors 1\'otc: Please note that the 1951 class notes that appeared in the fall 2006 issue of the Reporter were written by Dick Mccaskey, not Jerry Hanse n. We are sorry for any confusion that this may have caused. For better or for worse I guess I'm the new secretary for the Class of '51. It was only in late August that I wrote up the class notes for the ovember Reporter and here I am doing the same for the winter edition. Because it's sort of last minute I didn't have time to get news from a lot of you. Please contact me by phone, fax , oremail with any information. It may not seem very newsy to you but I can assure you it's probably quite interesting to a lot of your classmates. Had a nice chat with Dave £dwards the other day. Dave is one of those alumni who, along with guys like Jerry l-lansen (Mr. Trinity) , Tim Cutting, and others are indispensable to our class and Triruty. Dave got me going. ext l talked to Jerry, who reported that he attended Homecoming with a tailgate lunch including Bill Dobbs, Dave and Barbara £dwards, Tim C utting and, of course, Georgia Hansen, the one person who can keep Jerry on track. It's rumored that Tin1 Cutting spent a lot of time showing everyone photos of his new granddaughter lovingly named Sally after Tim's deceased wife. Jerry and Georgia attended the marriage of Triruty grads Peyto n Tansill and Art Muldoon in Florida on Veteran's Day. They are continuing their quest to be Number One in the Guimress Book of Records for the number of wedding photos they are in. After this affair, an unscientific poll suggested that Jerry and Georgia attend 1.45 in every 3.68 Trinity weddings. Other news focused on Dick and Cath y Mecaskey's visit to London and Paris in September to see their new granddaughter, Tara, and, of course, her parents, their son Jeff and his wife. At this stage of life, Tara spent most of her time sleeping, sometimes strapped to her mom or dad, and of course, feeding. Naturally she also spent quite a bit of time in the arms of her grandparents and obviously is a beautiful baby- she has to be with such a good -looki ng mother. While we were there, Jeff was wrapping up a position with Save the Children in London. In his capacity, he will head up all of
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class notes their health issues. So its farewell to Paris and hello to London, a great city with everything one needs or could desire (as long as you can afford it- wow it is expensive) . And, of course, quite a few of the residents speak English. Again, please let me know what you all are up to.
Alumni Fund Goal: $100,000 Class Secretary: William J.
Goralski, 49 Blueberry Ln., Avon, CT 06001-4012 e-mail: william. goralski.1952@trincoll .edu Class Agents: John S. Hubbard; Lyndon H. Ratcliffe; David R. Smith Bob Hunter sent me an e-mail from Palm City, FL, where he and his wife, Elizabeth, reside during the winter. Bob said that he recently played golf with a Williams College graduate who took delight in "razzing" him about the football game this fall, when Williams ended the Trinity win streak at 30 games. (Bob won the golf match!!) . Bill Vibert and his wife, Patricia, drove to Chicago during the last week of September to attend the annual reunion of the officers and personnel of the U.S.S. Strickla11d (DER) . Bill served as an officer (Lt.) aboard the ship from 1952 to 1954. They also visited the new Abraham Lincoln Musewn in Springfield, IL. While driving back home, they stopped at two towns in Ohio: Worthington (founded by people from Granby, CT) and Granville (founded by people from Granville, MA, just north of Granby on the Connecticut- Massachusetts state line) . Bill is currently serving as president of the Granby Historical Society. Tips on dining in the Hartford area when you visiting Trinity College: The Elbow Room restaurant on Farmington Avenue in West Hartford Center is the selection for this issue of the alumni magazine. Remember our class reunion in June 2007!
Alumni Fund Goal: $35,000 Class Secretary: Stanley
R. McCandless, Jr., 3712 Rice Blvd., Houston, TX 77005-2824; e-mail: stanley. mccandless.1953@trincoll.edu Class Agents: Richard T. Lyford, Jr.; Joseph B. Wollenberger, J:::sq This seems to be a light information newsletter this time. We were able to get two wonderful letters from Pat Keller and Ron Rowland , in two separate issues of the Tri11ity Reporter. Once again, my new e- mail address is stanmaci@sbcglobal . net. If that does not work, call me at 713-6691830. Or send something in the snail mail to Stan McCandless, 3712 Rice Blvd., Houston, TX 77005. Where are the rest of you> What did you do this summer> What trips did you take? Did
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you see any classmates> Bill Bernhard wrote, "Hi Stan, Am not planning on deploying next yea r in June, so am considering a trip to Trinity or to Kent School in May. When will there be a class reunion? I am the RCAG Surgeon for 201 Corps in Afghanistan. Stationed at Camp Black Horse outside Kabul. Expect to redeploy home in November. Hope to have the opportunity to visit with our classmates next year. I think this e- mail is still good for Bill, wbernhardmd@yahoo.com. Please write to him. Bill, be at Trin June 2008. I told an old Kenty friend of mine, C lass of '45 or '46, ro let the school know that you were on the loose, his name is Roger Small Paul Mortell sent a very nice article from The Lo11gboat Obsnwr. Paul is the president of the Longboat Key Club Tennis Association. It is a senior league of Boo ro 900 players. He is on the court six days a week. Paul also has for a number of years been involved with the local arts center, which provides the structure for him ro coordinate and organize a jazz series, January to April. Paul gives Dusty Pollock a plug, re the jazz, for inviting him to the Sun Valley Swing 'n Dixie Jazz Jamboree many years ago, which has become an annual event for Paul. Seems ro me this is one busy dude ... He also keeps me posted on the Trin squash team. Sandy Dwight wrote, "Hello Stan: This in return for advising me of your e- mail. 1 live in California, north of San Francisco in the wine country. Right now things here arc in full -harvest swing, and soon the smell of fermenting grapes will be wafted on the fall breezes. I live in what used ro be a primarily agricultural area, but now is more of a bedroom community for Ukiah, California. I have lived here for 40 some odd years. Certainly was nice to hear from you. My brother, Edmund, who attended classes with me following the Korean War, lives in Vero Beach, Florida, but right now is in northern California where he haunts the golf courses. I still play a little golf here in Mendocino County. Best regards from your fellow classmate. Sandy and Barbara Dwight... Thanks Sandy. Just under the wire, Milt Sencabaugh sent me a pretty good joke about heaven and hell and the difference when Congress is campaigning and when they are voting. He writes, " [am the alternate precinct judge and will be working the polls all day ov. 7 I am known as the pinko commie by some in our community. Despite that, I se rved two terms on the West University City Place City Council , a very conservative city. We have 2,4II voters in our precinct and 55 percent of them turned out on Tuesday- what a day!" Joe Wollenberger just got under the dead line with a note. He and Sue are doing well but they have confined their traveling recently to the states. He keeps himself busy with many varied activities at the local , state, and federal levels. They are looking forward to next reunion in 2008. Oh, and by the way. he put the arm on me to make a contribution ro Trin, "It's tax deduct-
ible." We should all keep this in mind. Thanks, Joe, for your note and reminder! Sal and I were in Chatham the first two weeks of June and the last two weeks of July. We were in Maine and Vermont in between. We had a large dose of family most of the time, so that our time was well consumed. We are very lucky to have Abby with her two boys in the next town路 and see them weekly. Effie has returned from San Francisco, works from her apartment close by, and commutes to her Wells Fargo office here in Houston and once a month to San Francisco. Our baby, Sadie, has a Little girl, Maura Louise Maguire, and Lives in Los Angeles. Her husband operates a fixed -base aviation facility in Van Nyes. They are Californians.
Alumni Fund Goal: $30,000 Class Secretary: Richard L.
Hirsch, 76 Stonecroft Lane, Buffalo, NY 14226-4129 e-mail: richard. hirsch.1954@trincoll.edu Class Agents: T. Gerald Dyer My wife, Lynn, and I paid a visit to Havana recently. It's a beautiful city, but poor and decaying. The city is worth a trip if you can arrange it. One of the lasting memories of the visit was the sight of the cars, those Legendary American cars that have found longevity in Havana. I saw my father 's 1950 DeSoto, my friend Alfred Koeppel's 1952 Plymouth convertible, as well as the Chevrolet BeLAirs that were a familiar sight cruising on Vernon and Summit Streets in the '5os. It's a startling and memorable sight, the old cars, painted and repainted, lovingly cared for, and still running. Speaking of cars, you may be driving around without even realizing it- equipped with a small but effective security device on your car designed, manufactured, and sold worldwide by a company founded by our classmate, Lew McCauley. It's the McGard wheel nut, one of which can be used as a lug nut on each wheel of a car, thus thwarting thieves who might be tempted to steal the wheels off your Lexus, Acura, Cadillac, or other car. Lew and his family sold the business recently, but Lew is still at the plant in Orchard Park, NY, five days a week, usually by around 6:00 a. m. "I leave early in the afternoon and don't come in on weekends anymore," he says, which is good news for his wife, Harriet. His two sons, Durham and Peter, continue in executive roles under the new ownership. On Lew's office door it says "Founder'' Back in the 1960s, a local car dealer sought Lew's advice about a way of securing the wheels ro the cars parked overnight in his lot. Thieves often scaled the fence, slipped onto the lot at night, jacked up some cars, loosened the nuts, and Aed with the wheels. Lew and his colleagues developed the unique nut, which can be loosened and removed only with a special key. It worked beautifully and Lew recognized he had
Jazz Musician Dave Mackay '54 Listens, Learns, and Loves During Dave Mackay's days as an English major in the early 1950s, he literally never read a book. Instead, Mackay, who was newly blind and had yet to learn Braille as he entered Trinity, simply listened and absorbed the words. Attending lectures and seminars without taking notes, he says he had an innate ability to memorize everything he heard as if it were a tape recording. "Many professors decided to give me oral exams," recalls Mackay, the first blind student to graduate from the College. "They apologized, thinking they would be stressful. But for me, they weren't. I had memorized everything." Listening since his childhood-even before he lost his vision to the degenerative eye disorder, retina stigmatosaMackay vividly remembers hearing the lively tunes of swing-era jazz that filled the air when he was a little boy. Now a cel ebrated jazz musician who plays nightly at the New York Grill in Ontario, California, outside of Los Angeles, Mackay, a piano player since age eight, says his older brother, Don, always had jazz "happening in the house." F=rom the beginning, Mackay knew this was the genre of music he was attracted to. "I had a gift for jazz. When you get something in your heart and you have a passion for it and you want more, you fol low that lead. If you do that, then that's your gift. That's been my gift all my life," says Mackay, a spiritual man who says that his talent is one of God's many gifts. At 16, Mackay began playing professionally, and, along with his brother, went
to New York City to hear jazz greats such as Charlie Parker, Miles Davis, Dizzie Gillespie, Bud Powell, and Lenny Tristano, who was also blind and with whom Mackay studied for a period. "There were certainly handicaps in not being able to read the music," says Mackay of the challenges he faced throughout his jazz career. "But listening is really a big part of playing jazz." Nearly 60 years later, Mackay, now 74, has no intention of shutting down his acoustic piano any time soon. Describing his style as similar to F=rank Sinatra, he enjoys playing the classic composers from the Great American Songbook: the Gershwins, Michel Legrande, and Cole Porter. Sometimes, he'll even throw in a little Stevie Wonder. " I know a lot of what I'm going to play beforehand," he says of his nightly performance at the New York Grill, "but I'm not going to play it in the same way from night to night." Although he may have lost his sight, Mackay clearly has a vision for what he wants to do with his music and how it can affect other people's lives. Each night, when he shows up to the New York Grill in his paratransit-service van, he sits down behind the large piano, runs his fingers across the keys, and takes in the feel ing he enjoys most-just being creative. Mackay hopes the diners feel the energy of his music, and describes what emanates through the restaurant as the piano begins to sing, "Peace, beauty. Sometimes humor. A lot of times, love." Dave Mackay can be heard Tuesday through Saturday evenings at the New York
Grill, 950 Ontario Mills Drive, Ontario, California .
by Carlin C arr
designed and fabricated an item which had wide applicatio n. The rest is automotive history: the McGard nuts are used worldwide, are often standard equipment o n high -end cars, and can be purchased at auto parts stores fo r virtually any make or model. With a report on four - footed transportation powe red by oats, ch ecking in fro m the horse country of Virgini a is Bill Dobrovir. Bill reports that he has given up riding but still has hi s horses. "They eat and poo p and do n't have to wor k, sort of like me," he said . Bill, who prac -
ticed law in Washingto n fo r man y years, is still handling some legal m atte rs fro m his offi ce at ho me. He is very di scouraged abo ut the situation in Iraq, n oting: "O n Iraq, I would paraphrase Einstein's definiti on of insanity: 'Continuing to do the same thing that has co nsistently failed but expec ting a different result."' From Baton Rouge, Lo uisiana, Dave Bunnell repo rts that fo r at las t half the yea r it's possible to stand absolutely still in the shade of a tree and still break a swea t. But he and hi s wif e, Pat, definitely prefe r th at to the snows of the No rth,
where both spent their youth. Retired since I 996, Dave neatly w rapped together two diverse caree rs, chemistry and law. After service, he returned to Trini ty as a chemistry lab assistant and received a maste r's degree in chemistry in !960 . H e eventually landed in Pittsburgh in a lab at the Ko ppers Co rp., where, outstanding am ong the beakers and testing paraphernalia, he noticed ano ther chemi st. You guessed it: the chemistry was right. H e met Pat in th e lab, and they were married . D ave became interested in patents and enrolled in evening courses at Duquesne Law School, where he graduated and was admitted to the bar. H e spent the next 30 years as a corporate patent atto rney, wo rking in -house for seve ral large corpo rations in various locations, including Pennsylvania, New York, Kentucky, and Lo uisiana. Now he enjoys t ravel, both fo reign and do mestic, and spends time in his home garden, handling vario us building projects at ho me, and collecting old diecas t toys, the kind we all played with 65 years ago. O n the eastern slo pe of the Blue Ridge Mo untains of Virgini a, in a ho me he designed himself. lives Doug Green, with hi s wife, Betty. The locatio n is Wintergreen, a development cove ring abo ut I r.ooo acres, of which 6,ooo are being kept undeveloped. "Living in Wintergree n is abo ut as good as it gets with golf, tenn is, skiing, hiking, biking, swimming, and a few other miscellaneous activiti es to suit o ne's pleasure," D oug says. "T he only o ne I have give n up is tennis, due to a bad skiing accident in 2004, but I am still able to ski, w hich I do every mo rning during the season. Som etimes, o n warmer days, I can ski in the mo rning o n th e mountai n and play golf in the valley in the afternoon ." D oug and Betty lived fo r 32 years on G ibson Island in C hesapeake Bay, where he practiced architecture and they sailed their 3I -foot sloop. They loved th e island life. but as the commu nity began to change, they decided to change, too, and in 1999 m oved west to the mountains. There is no sailing at Wintergreen, but Doug and some fri ends now compete regularly, sailing radio -co ntrolled model boats on a nearby pond. Doug is pro bably amo ng the last architects admitted to practice w ithout attendin g archi tectural school. H e apprenticed fo r five years. and that was then sufficie nt to enab le him to take the licensing exams. H e initially practiced with a large firm , but in 1973 began wo rking on his own. H e is still doing selective projects fo r friends and a few of Betty's clients, she being a realtor wo rking full time. Many classmates rem ember D o ug singing as the lead tenor fo r the Trini ty Pipes. H e seldom lifts his vo ice in song anymore, explai ning that it just doesn't sound the same when you reach our age. Sandy Campbell and his wife, Ellie, do some boating, too, but they prefer gas power to wind powe r. They live in V irginia Beach, overlooking th e Lynnh ave n Rive r, whi ch flows into \Vi11ter 1oo;
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class notes Chesapeake Bay They will frequently cruise up into the Bay After some 17 years of retirement, Sandy says he was finally mastered the art of doing next to nothing, sti ll enjoys watching the sun set over the river. The Can1pbells have been passengers on a number of cruise ships, and love being tourists. When it comes to the installation of new wiring for the model railroading club in Woodbury, CT, Peter Windesheim is the first choice. Why> Because he spent many years as an engineer for Underwriters Laboratory, the organization that tests al l things electrical and issues the U L seal of approval. After living and working on Long Island for many years, Peter and his wife, Sue, moved to Woodbury after his retirement in 1998. They spend time traveling and Peter became interested in HO scale model trains and is active in the club, which arumally schedules a number of exhibits for local charities. Peter and C lara Carlough are planning to move into a newly developed cooperative housing development, currently under construction in Burlington, VT. It is being built in a wooded area very close to the Carloughs' present home and will include 32 units that will be occupied by some retirees and some young families. There will be cooperative areas, and Pete reports that the concept is drawing national attention. "We're quite a varied collection of people, from elders Like us to families with newborns. That's what co-housing is all about- community, sharing, and supporting. We hope to move in November 2007," Pete said. Mort Webber is sti ll busy, living in Avon and practicing law in Hartford, in his own building on Grand Street, near the Hartford County Courthouse. Mort has become widely recognized as a tort specialist, handling a variety of personal injury cases. "Lawyers just don 't retire." he said. "''m not working as hard as before, and l go home arou nd 1:30 every afte rnoon, but if you're ever in Co nnecticut and get hit by a bus, be sure to call me." In the foothi lls of the Sierra Nevada Mountains in northern California, among the most common sounds are wildlife and the winds whispering through the redwoods in the high country. That is the retirement home of Roger l-larmon, who arrived at Trinity as an Illinois Scholar from Rockford and has since traveled to a variety of places on assignments for the Methodist church and as a teacher of college English. He attended Yale Divinity School and later received a master's degree from the University of Wisconsin. Now he lives in Ahwal1nee, CA, within a IS - minute drive of one of American's revered beauty spots, Yosemite ational Park. He settled there in 1992 after retiring from a long incumbency on the faculty of Cypress Community College in Orange County, Cal ifornia. Earlier in his career, he twice served in Zimbabwe at Methodist missions. Other stops along the way included teaching at Endicott College in Massachusetts.
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After retiring from Cypress, he taught at Fresno Community College, where many of the students were from the inner city and the demographics were very different from his classes in Orange County Now, with some of his children and grandchildren li ving nearby, Roger occupies his time with reading, keeping up with world affairs, and enjoying the beauty of the changi ng seasons at Yosemite. He can be readily reached at rogerharmon@sti.net. Oh, by the way. I'm not even sure what "blog" means, but 1 suggest that l may be among the first in our class to have one. How did this happen> Almost by accident. I surfed around, found a blog of a friend , and before I knew it the computer asked, "Want a blog of your own>" I answered yes and, after a few clicks here and there, 1 established my own unique little destination on the information superhi ghway. For those with some free time or chroni c insomnia, the address is: http: try- it-who- knows -you may-even -1ike- it.b logspot.com Visitors there will find a selection of some of the recent columns I have written that are published in Buffalo on a weekly basis. Your comments are encouraged. Once again, let me remind you of that basic rule of news writing: A reporter is only as good as his sources, so, as in the past, I will be relying on you all to send me news of your latest adventures or misadventures. 1f your name doesn't eventuall y turn up in this column, you have only yo urself to blame. This e-mail address is the preferred method: bflotales@AOL.com. Be good to yourselves.
Alumni Fund Goal: $30,000 Class Secretary: E. Wade Close, Jr., 622 West Waldheim Rd., Pittsburgh, PA 15215-1845 e-mail: wade.close.1955@ trincoll.edu; fax : 412-820-7572 Class Agents: David S. Dim ling Assistant Agents: Gordan R. Maitland, Jr.; Robert L. Mullaney
To say we had a good time back on the campus for the first home football game in September is to put it mildly, albeit, out of focus. Our returning classmates had a super great mini -reunion. It was full of good weather. a tense. satisfying victory over Colby, a relaxing and particularly appetizing dinner at the Smith House, and much. much enjoyable interaction between fellow classmates. What I am trying to say to those who missed the event...better luck next time. Your class officers, headed by the hard working el Presidento, Don Mountford, who continues to amaze us all with his determination and hard work to make these events so successful. He is ably assisted by many. but none work as diligentl y in a support role as Bob Mullaney.
Our group included sixteen 'ssers, plus nine spouses or significant others. 1n addition to Lura and Don Mountford, we were blessed to have with us Ann and Scott Price and their Cape Cod buddies Jean and Bob Freeman. Jack lsselhardt and Nai Chang, plus Dave Nelson joined us for the game, but could not stay for the din ner. Others who did stay included Bobbie and Bill O 'l-lara , Carol and Wade Close, Helen and Dick Zampiello, Justine and Bill Laporte , Elaine and Bob Laird , plus Sandy Rose and Barbara Massey. In addition it was great to enjoy the evening with Bob Mullaney, Ed Yoemans, John Gleason and John D'Luhy, who was on his way to Newport, Rl , that weekend to prepare for an important event at the Naval War College. John is the current chairman of the board of trustees for the Naval War College Foundation. The college, as well as the foundation for 122 years, has prepared its graduates to meet national security challe nges as senior leaders. Heard from AI Fisher, who proudly announced the arrival of his first grandchi ld, thanks to daughter Andrea. Also, he and Barbara were thrilled to celebrate son John's wedding earlier this year. It has been a happy, busy time for them. Classmates, remember, Al is the keeper of our collection of soth Reunion pictures (about 8o in total) , so if you missed getting a set, con tact him at afisherjr@aol. com. The price is right, zero S. Also, have been able to keep up with Dick McCrea, although I missed seeing him when l was in C leveland during the summer when he was at an old family retreat in northern Michigan. I did have a chance to visit with Phil Truitt, who also lives in C leveland. He has a great philosophical outlook on life and appears to have a particularly good attitude about growing old. Aren't we all. Hope to see many of you in Tampa. Florida, in February Just another great gathering of 'ssers.
Alumni Fund Goal: $75,000 Class Secretary: Bruce N. Macdonald, Stonehouse Farm, 1036 Zollman Mill Rd., Rte. 4, Lexington, VA 24450-7265 e-mail: bruce.macdonald.1956 @trincoll.edu Class Agent: ~enry M. Zachs
After the massive earthquake that hit the islands of Hawaii in October, I began to worry and wonder about David Taylor- so I sent him an e- mail. He responded promptly as follows : "We had no problems, injuries or damage, although the house shook and rumbled and we lost power for about 12 hours." They were luckier than the people of the big island of Hawaii, which was badly dan1aged. David and his wife, Trudie. have a daughter who lives in Alexandria, Virginia, whom they planned to visit in October. They also have a visit scheduled to go to New Zealand this fall. His wife is active with the Garden Club of Hawaii and is the inspiration for the trip and
adventure. David did tell me about Alastair Taylor, who lives in San Jose, California. Nastair I never knew but evidently he was some 40 years in the computer software business in California, has been widowed for some years now from his second wife of 31 years, has two children, four grandchildren, and one great grandchild. David (Taylor) is convinced that Nastair is our class's firs t great grandfather. If anyone out there is also a great grandfather, please let me know. Gerry Pauley called me in September from Hartford while he was attending the Colby Gan1e, and planned to meet and have a few with Paul Cataldo, Ken Swanson and Howie Gartland and to tell me about a smaU pewter bowl he had been awarded, one time by m istake (he tells me) . Gerry recently heard form Gordie Wood, who still lives in Sullivan, IL where he has run the family insurance business since graduation. Gordie considers himself me "mayor of Sullivan, Illinois," and that he managed to orchestrate two traffic lights for the town. Finally I talked to John Ritter, whom we aU missed at reunion last June. He is well, active with a new and renewed camera club in Kokomo, IN, and sees his grand son, Drew, frequently Drew is a student at DePaul University, in Green Castle, IN, not far away John and his wife, Edit, continue to visit Oxford, MD, each fail, staying in various houses in that historic smaU town on the Chesapeake. He works regularly for Meals on Wheels and a local homeless shelter and plans to winter again in Florida this February The Numni Office reports that Bruce N. MacDonald represented the College at the inauguration of Kenneth P Ruscio as president of Washington and Lee University on October 21 , 2006.
Alumni Fund Goal: $200,000 Class Secretary: f=rederick M. Tobin, Esq., 116 Camp Ave., Darien, CT 06820-2709 e-mail: frederick. tobin.1957@trincoll .edu Class Agents: Neil M. Day, Esq.; Terry Graeme f=razier During the Homecoming Weekend in November, we had an excellent turnout for our Reunion Planning Committee meeting. As usual the meeting was chaired by his E:xcellency Paul Cataldo, Emperor of the Duchy of Franklin. Also in attendance were Fred Baird, Professor Ward Curran, Terry Frazier, Dick Hall, Judge Jim Kenefick, Jim Pitchell, Paul Marion, Paul Russo, Manny Slater, and yours truly. At our Smith House Dinner, we were joined by Kathy Curran, Barbara Frazier, Natalie Slater, and my wife, Carroll. In case any of you wonder, I am reporting on classmates in alphabetical order. Fred Baird is now living in the Richmond area. Still ath letic to an extent, the Mouse is eating lots of cheese as usual.
Arthur G. Polstein '58 attended the recent Homecoming at Trinity and watched the football team blank Amherst 24-0. Gary Bogli '58 and Joe Repole '58 joined him on the 50-yard line. Now on to Professor Curran , who merits his own page here. Ward commenced his illustri ous career as a member of the faculty at Trinity in 1960. In addition to teaching at the College for some 46 years, he has also taught at Yale, Wesleyan, and the UConn law school. He has authored many publications and is currently working on another chapter in a soon -to -bepublished book. This is Ward's last full - time year on the faculty, but he will continue to teach two courses starting next September. But the big news is that Peter and Jill Kraus have this very year established the Ward S Curran Distinguished Professorship in Economics. Peter is a former student of Ward, and Ward will occupy this new chair w1ti1 his retirement. Bill Morrison published his mird book, Sal'v}' Negotiator, in January 2006, and he plans to start on his fourth this year. After 37 years with Westinghouse and a teaching position at San Jose State, Bill continues to teach in-house negotiation workshops for companies tll.rough out the country. In the past year he has been on safari in southern Africa and he even drove a golf ball in Antarctica. He also is enjoying his man y children and grandchildren. I was pleased to receive a call from Stu Ferguson, who lives in Florida and is looking forward to joining us in June. Dyke Spear continues to sit immediately behind Cataldo at home football gan1es. Now that the season has ended, Dyke will be bringing a musical to Washington State. Sam Stone is staying busy running a manufacturer's rep/ consulting business. In early November, Sam enjoys the St. Michaels Oyster Festival and boating on the Chesapeake. As for your faithful scribe, Carroll has retired from her teaching position in Stan1ford, but she is right back in the classroom serving as an adjunct professor at the University of Bridgeport. She is also spending time on various projects for MacMillan, the publishing company
Alumni Fund Goal: $70,000 Class Secretary: Arthur G. Polstein, 20 Bentagrass Ln., Newtown, CT 06470-1928 e-mail: arthur. palstein.1958@trincall.edu Class Agents: Joseph J. Repale, Jr.; Edward B. Speno l 'm looking for classmates to help me rake the leaves. Did that jolt you to write and decline the offer> If so, please attach some news with your message. Your secretary attended the rece nt Homecoming at Trinity and watched the foot -
ball team blank Amherst 24-0. Gary Bogli and Joe Repole joined me on the so-yard line. Prior to the game, your soth reunion committee met in the Painter Room in the Smith House for some initial discussions about our reun ion in June 2008. In attendance were Gary Bogli, Bordie Painter, E:d Speno, Ben Williams, Joe Repole, and your secretary. All are fine and send their best wishes to all classmates. We dis cussed fundraising for our soth as well as plans for the events of the reunion. The reunion committee is traditionally headed by the class president, Gary Bogli, and an expanded committee was planned . Here is a message from Gary, "We are in the process of selecting an expanded committee and welcome anyone who would like to help. We would appreciate any suggestions you might have for a faculty member you would like to invite to our dinner. Nso, we are looking for topics for a panel discussion among our class members. Please save the day in June 2008 for a great time to reminisce and see aU the great things going on at Trinity." If you would like to serve and haven't been asked by now, please contact Gary at gbogli@cox.net. On a personal note from your secretary, if you have nor updated your address with Trinity College, please do so. This will be of great assistance to your reunion committee in trying to contact you. This will be our soth Reunion. It only happens once and we want to be certain that everyone in the class receives proper information about the event. Now on to the news, which is brief Gary Bogli and his wife, Bette, have had a busy year with a visit to Prague, in the Czech Republic, to visit with their son who is teaching there. Then in late October they visited the wine country in southern California, between San Diego and Los Angeles. In between, Gary traveled to Canada two times to fish for black salmon in Resrigouche and for landlocked salmon in Labrador. Bill Lorson reported about what he called the best vacation he and Joann had ever taken. Naska and British Columbia were the desti nations and the adventure included beautiful sce nery, a BBB (big, black bear) lapping up salmon drippings as it stood on an outside grill, and a float -plane flight through mountains and over glaciers. Playing golf north of Denali Park was a challenge for Bill in the 40 + mph winds. The itinerary included Fairbanks, Denali Park, Anchorage, Portage Glacier, Vancouver, and Victoria, British Columbia. Bring the pictures to the reunion, Bill. Bill Saunders advised that he was running again for a seat on the Tenafly Borough Council. He has served in the past for four terms and was trying to become the first to serve for five terms. Results have not been received as of this writing. ll'i11 ter 2007
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class notes Bill is working to obtain our special wine for the reunion and will no doubt be successful. Joe Traut has advised that he is still working and currently heads his own inkjet printing company. Joe will soon be blessed with his roth grandchild, he is in good health, and he continues to work on his golf score. Joe has also volun teered to join our soth Reunion committee. Finally your secretary had the pleasure of a visit by Jim Studley, who was migrating south for the winter from his summer home on Cape Cod. Over a few drinks and dinner, we managed to solve most of the major problems facing mankind and the world. I hope you all have made a New Year's reso lution to include a note to me with news for the next issue. Please write.
Alumni ~und Goal: $35,000 Class Secretary: Jon A. Reynolds, P.O. Box 4204, Wilmington, DE 19807-0204 e-mail: jon.reynolds.1959@ trincoll.edu Class Agents: Robert D. Coykendall; Robert Pizzella
Greetings Class of '59, Attendance at Homecoming last November was almost double that of Homecoming 2005we had eight attendees- not exactly a groundswell of participation, but a vector in the right direction. These harbingers of future festivities included Bob Coykendall and Bob Pizzella (our stalwart and unrelenting Class Fund Raisers), Len Baskin, Doug ~rost , George Graham, Walt Graham, Charlie Nichols, and Albie Smith- an
all-star cast. They are the foundation of our soth Reunion (yes- soth Reunion) planning committee. As discussed at this 4 November 2006 meeting, the ideal reunion committee structure is to have 20-25 members. This allows for everyone in the class to be contacted by a classmate rather than a staff member or student. Other classmates who may feel moved to join are encouraged to do so and to participate in the planning process. If not so moved, we will still look for you in June 2009. Once again, put Reunion 2009 on your to -do list. According to Trinity statistics, our class is not getting any larger, and we want to see you there. This planning committee will meet again in February 2007- their mission in part is to ensure we have a great reunion, and yes, you guessed it, to ensure we recognize that tl1e $550 we paid for tuition 50 years ago no longer cuts it. FYI and plarming, the soth Reunion Gift has now introduced a new five -year pledge option- in short, our soth Reunion Gift is all money pledged or paid that is given to the Trinity Annual Fund between July I , 2007 and June 30, 2012. Details to follow. Congratulations Doug ~rost , who "se mi retired" with fanfare from his 40 years as vice president of development at the Maryland Institute College of Art (MICA) in Baltimore,
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Maryland. Bill Abeles, one of Doug's high school classmates, attended one evening of a four-day affair honoring Doug's stepping down . Over 500 attendees included Senator Sarbanes, col lege trustees, major supporters, alumni , professors, family, and friends. One of Doug's major achievements during his 40 years at MICA was the successful funding of the Mt. Royal Station, an historic B&O terminal that MICA trans formed into galleries and sculpture studios. The ew York Ti111es called this pioneering example of adaptive reuse "the keystone of a new urban movement." It is now a National Landmark. In recognition of this accomplishment and his service to the institute, the entrance area to the Mt Royal Station has been named "Frost Plaza." Doug will continue his work at MICA as special counsel for development and vice president of development emeritus, not only supporting the new vice president, but also compiling and writing the history of the r8o -year-old institution - founded just three years after Trinity. Canada: Ted Taylor and Sandy, still living in Nantucket, spent a month during SeptemberOctober visiting the Canadian Maritime Provinces- great time, and highl y recommended. Their daughter, Sandy, is expecting twins in December. Bob Spielman, also visiting Canada, reports he made a dent in the ruffed grouse population hunting the southeast corner of Manitoba at the beginning of October. Bob's a good shot, whether it be 20 ga or 20mm- but grouse are always a challenge- not like shooting rats in the Wethersfield city dun1p. Bill Abeles again journeyed to Cooperstown, Y, to participate in a week of baseball, batting over .200 (not bad for a 69 year old) and catclling all five fly balls he was able to get to in right field. Bill Lukens (now 70!) and Emily are still enjoying life in the historic ~een Village part of downtown Philadelphia. Joe Casella and Gail are back in Pensacola, FL, their home and neighborhood no longer showing the ravages of Hurricane Ivan. Walt Graham and Lorna have moved to Waretown, N J, on Route 9, 30 miles from Atlantic City Their children are mostly in nearby Medford, and they are surrounded with eight grandchildren. Charlie Nichols and Linda spent a grand rwo weeks with Tim !-!orne and family in Ital y and sailing the Adriatic. He reports the Dalmatian Coast is trul y spectacular. Charlie is also preparing to move from his home in Newport, RI , to the rural area in northern Delaware, and should have done so by the time you read this letter. Bill Scully (Trin '6r) and Marlynn again hosted the annual Alpha Delta Phi "Bankers Invitational" weekend at their John 's Island home near Vera Beach, Florida. Class of '59 attendees included Jim Price and Julie, George Truscott and Heidi, and George Graham and Sally. I can report (as an invited guest, along witl1 Emilee, to the final evening's banquet) that these guys have not changed, just older- having a great time and enjoying each others company.
The overall event was diminished, however, by the unfortunate absence of our classmate Jim Joy, a long-term resident of Vero, who sadly succumbed to melanoma and died peacefully in Vera Beach on October 2. He was represented by his wife of 42 years, Michael. Jim also leaves behind three daughters and five grandchildren. God Bless. Send me your news or an update at jreynolds@speakeasy.net. All the very best. Jon Reynolds and Bill Abeles
Alumni ~und Goal: $85,000 Class Secretary: Richard W. Stockton, 518 White Pelican Circle, Orchid Island, Vero Beach, R 32963-9519 e-mail: richard.stockton .1960 @trincoll.edu; fax: 908-2732246 Class Agents: George P. Kroh; Morris Lloyd, Jr.
Alumni ~und Goal: $200,000 Class Secretary: William Kirtz, 26 Wyman St., Waban, MA 02468-1517 e-mail: william.kirtz.1961@ trincoll.edu; fax: 617-373-8773 Class Agents: William P. Kohl; Edward P. Seibert; Vincent R. Stempien; Douglas T. Tonsil!
In Hartford, ~rank Morse, Dale Peatman, Warren Simmons, and Doug Tansill braved the chill at Homecoming Weekend. Meanwhile, in Utah, Bill 1-landler is gaining recognition for promoting emerging artists in his Park City Redstone Gallery. The Park City Record notes his stable of nationally and internationally known , as well as local and regional artists. "We provide the financial wherewithal. We help make it when they don't have a chance to make it otherwise. We do what we can do to help make them successful," Handler says, aiming to help "families and others build a worthy art collection."
Alumni ~und Goal: $200,000 Class Secretary: J=rederick M. Pryor, TJ=C J=inancial Management Inc., 30 J=ederal St., Boston, MA 02110-2508 e-mail: frederick. pryor.1962@trincoll.edu; fax: 617-951-0274 Reunion Leaders: Doug Anderson ; Sam Bailey; Thomas 1=. Bundy; Rodney Day; Lawrence f-larris; Chuck f..loffman; William Leahy; Gerald McNamara; William Mitchell; Dr. John C. Norman; Bill Polk; J=rederick M. Pryor; Bill Richardson; Clawson Smith; Lou Scaturro; Bill Turner; George Will
As our 45th Reunion nears, John Norman, our president, and Pete Bundy, our class agent,
have been actively working on putting together a list of several classmates, one of whom will be contacting you. June 7-10, 2007 are the dates. These reunions are a lot of fun, so try to make an effort to return to Hartford for the weekend. The classmates who will be doing the contacting are mentioned above under Reunion Leaders. John, Pete, and myself will also be doing our share. Speaking of Pete Bundy, he deserves much credit, and perhaps a 'standing 0' at the Reunion, for doing a great job as class agent. In many ways it is a thankless job. He has been the catalyst for raising money from the class, and year in, year out our participation numbers have been excellent. A number of classmates are difficult to lind. They are Messrs. Arp, Banghart, Berkley, Broudy, Coombs, Fraise, Harned, Leng, McConnell, Kermit Mitchell, Platts, Rudi, and Sears. If you know where these people are, please e-mail Pete at Bundytf@aol.com.
Alumni Fund Goal: $150,000 Class Secretary: ~li Karson, ~li Karson CLU & Associates, 115 Bridge Street, P.O. Box 747, ~ast Windsor, CT 06088-9547 e-mail : eli.karson.1963@trincoll. edu; fax: 860-654-1659 Class Agents: Scott W. Reynolds Since my last edition of Class Notes this past summer, I have had little opportunity to prime the e-mail pump or assemble and compose, so this will be an abbreviated edition. My hip replacement took place on August 8 as scheduled and while still recovering in late September, Nancy and I began a roller coaster ride that is just now coming to a conclusion. About a week after we decided not to attempt to sell our home in Connecticut until spring, we were presented with a potential ready buyer who was willing to pay our asking price. We agreed to it and set a scheduled closing date for December 8, 2006. Well, three weeks later, the deal fell apart and then got resurrected over eight stressful days that I don't want to experience again! So. now. we are faced with a definite December 8 closing date and not nearly enough time to comfortably arrange the transition. We leave for Tucson December 9 and plan to return to Connecticut in May to a six- month rental, somewhere! Much of the recent news I received from our classmates was in response to efforts from President Bordogna and others encouraging a Homecoming gathering at Trinity on November 4. Here's what I got. Perry Rianhard wrote, "I don 't believe we'Ll be making it back this year. I'm expecting my sister to come through on her way to Florida, and we've got a commitment at a fund raiser on Friday night. I'm working with the Shellfish Commission in our town, Madison, Connecticut, and we are preparing the seed (clams and oys-
Meanwhile, in Utah, Bill ~andler '61 is gam1ng recognition for promoting emerging artists in his Park City Redstone Gallery. ters) for winter on Friday and Saturday Don't know when I ever found time to work! We love Madison, just need some 36-hour days to fit it all in. We will get together one of these days, for sure." And then there was Pete Haskell's response: "Unfortunately, Burrill and I again have a conflict. Our church has an annual art show, and the opening gala is on Friday evening. We then host a buffet at our house for roughly roo people, lasting to 2:00a.m. sometimes! On Saturday we have to return supplies, etc., and then collapse!" ''As for news, our son Livingston (Livy) is the father of our three-year-old grandson. Henry, and is living in Richmond, Virginia. He was recently appointed general counsel (the company's first) at Lumber Liquidators. He had been recommended by one of his partners at Williams, Mullin. His comment after his first week was 'l've never seen so many people so happy to see a lawyer in my life!' The company is planning to do an [PO next year- an event that will enhance his resume! Son Thorn is living in Boston and is working as the northern New England district sales manager for Suzuki automobiles. Therefore, I am now driving a Suzuki! Burrill and 1 are continuing to work for a couple of more years and are trying to decide where to retire. Give my best to everyone at Homecoming." Bob Anning too offered some news. ''I'm still putting full days in at Merrill (my 39th year) and enjoying it as much as ever. Two of my three partners are my sons Rob and John, who I'm sure would like to see me retire. Sydney and I still manage to travel quite a bit and just returned from our 13th trip to a small town in southern France. The last couple of years we have biked through Vietnam, Morocco, Italy, and France. Next month we are traveling to India and will miss the class get- together in early November, not that my attendance has been that good anyway "We have ten grandchildren living in Cincinnati and are expecting our lith (our first ew York baby) in early October. We have a gathering of the clan at our home every Sunday evening, and while quite fun, it's getting to be a bit hectic to say the least. In my other life I am still an active trustee of Cincinnati Children's Hospital, where among other tasks, I chair the endowment committee. "Hope this finds you well. Please give my very best to our classmates when you see them at Homecoming." Dave Wicks wrote: "Joan and I will not be able to make it this year. We have a trip planned that we can not change. On the news front, I am increasing my course load this spring, teaching international students in a master's progran1
at Columbia. In addition, I am involved in Chile with a program to foster entrepreneurship. Tough assignment as it means at least one vacation trip in Chile attached to my duties with a University in Santiago and the government. Lastly, our daughter is getting married in the spring. Best to all!" Jon Tiefenbrun also responded: "Susan and I will not make it to Homecoming but want to wish everybody a wonderful year and a hope to make it next year. Susan has just started another summer law program to complement Nice, in Hangzhou, China, May rs -June 7, 2007, and it should be exciting. Believe it or not, she is getting very good in Mandarin. Hangzhou is two hours from Shanghai, an old Imperial city. and the place that Marco Polo thought was the Venice of the East. Regards to all!" Among those committing to Homecoming was Hunter Marvel. He also took the time to share some happenings in his life. He reported that he and his wife. Camilla, enjoyed a joyous event this past summer when their son, Hunter Jr., was married to Devon Elizabeth McDevitt on July I , 2006, in Sonoma, California. Their daughter, Genevieve, served as a bridesmaid and friends of the couple came from the East Coast, Midwest, Idaho, and the San Francisco area to attend the wedding. Devon is from Mill Valley, California, and a graduate of Scripps College of the Clairmont Colleges. She teaches at Galinas School in San Raphael. Hunter Jr. is a graduate of Hamilton College and now an account executive at CNET Games & Entertainment in San Francisco. The couple spent their honeymoon traveling in Thailand and now Live in San Francisco. Our last acceptance was received from my Theta Xi fraternity brother, Chuck Klotz '64. When I heard that he and his wife, Debbie, were coming to the football game, I insisted they join us for dinner. Finally, on Saturday, November 4, the Class of '63 once again celebrated another Homecoming Weekend "neath the elms." By my count there were 21 of our classmates in attendance, most with spouses, a number of faculty members from our era and six Class of '63 Scholars. Special guests at dinner included president of the College, Jimmy Jones, former director of admissions, F. Gardner F. Bridge, and Professor Marjorie Butcher, Trinity's first woman profes-
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class notes sor. For many of us, the appearance of "Mr. Bridge" was particularly signilicant. He was the voice of the College, beckonjng us to gather together in that fall of 1959 to form the C lass of 1963. It was great to see him again and to learn what the F's stood for: Francis and Flynn. With six Class of '63 Scholars present, including Tom Calabrese's daughter, Jamie, and our first scholar, Tony Canata, the focus of the evening was on them . It was gratifying to hear them share what thjs scholarship has meant to them. And we were also deLghted to hear of Jamie Calabrese's recent engagement to her Trinity classmate, Sasha Bratt. This truly was a fine everung and thoroughly enjoyed by all. The list of those who were in attendance is as fol lows: Andrian, Peggy (guest) ; Andrian, Professor Gus (guest) ; Blajr, Elaine; Blajr, James; Blume, Loretta; Blume, Marshall: Bridge, Gardiner F, (guest); Bridge, Patricia (Trish) (guest) ; Butcher. Prof Marjorie (guest) ; Calabrese, Jamie (scholar) (fiance, Sasha Bratt); Calabrese, Linda; Calabrese, Tom; Calder, David (schol ar) ; Creighton, Sandy; Creighton, Eli zabeth; Curran, Kathy; Curran , Ward; Davison, James; Daly, Mike; Gastmann, Albert (guest) ; Goodridge, Jim; Goodridge, Lucy; Howland, Martha; Howland,Willian1 C.; Jackson, Brett (scholar) : Jackson , Laura (scholar mother) ; Karson , Eli; Karson , Nancy; Keen , Jeanne Ruddy; Keen,Victor; Lenicheck, Timothy; Soos, Emese (Lenicheck); Masius, Michael ; Feldman, Nancy; McGill, Charles; McGill, Pat; Pham, Baa (scholar) ; Pitcajrn, John (game only) ; Raymond, Barbara (game only) ; Raymond, David (game only) ; Reynolds, Lee; Reynolds, Lloyd; Reynolds, Peggy; Reynolds, Scott. That, my friends, concludes this edition. Once 1 have settled in Arizona for the winter, you will be hearing from me. My phone, fax, and e-maj] remajn unchanged so you have no excuse for not responding. I would love to hear from you. All the best, Eli
Alumni Fund Goal: $100,000 Class Secretary: Christopher J.
McNeill, M.D., 166 Rainbow Dr. #6682, Livingston, TX 773991066 e-mail: christopher.mcneil\.1964 @trincoll.edu Class Agents: Christopher T. Gilson; Charles R. Klotz Bill Avery has joined the ranks of Medicare, as most of us have or will soon. He continues to sell real estate in the Washington, D.C., area and commutes bi -weekly from Indianapolis, I N, where his wife, Alice, and he moved four years ago to help care for their rwo granddaughters. Another granddaughter and grandson live in Ph ill y.
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Fred Miller is happily retired from the County of Los Angeles, and he and his wife are doing lots of traveling. Frank Kirkpatrick has returned to the classroom and his scholarly research after spending rwo years as interim dean of the faculty at Trinity. He is thinking about retirement in the next three to four years. Art Bobruff is also thinkjng of retirement, now seeing patients only one day per week. He and Martha have been married 35 years, and, although she continues her full -time psychiatry practice, she will be discontinujng her teaching appointment at Harvard Med School so they can spend more time at their second home in New Hampshire. He has retired from his avocation as skj instructor after a number of seasons, but has not lost his passion for skjing. Last year he managed to get in 85 days on the slopes and came close to skjing rwo - million vertical feet. Son, David, was an honors graduate from Amherst, an MBA, and M I LR from Cornell , and now li ves in the Boston area with his wife, Jen, and works for the GAO in Boston. Daughter, Rachel , graduated magna cum laude from Amherst, has just rerurned from a Peace Corps assignment in Thailand, and now enters Columbia in the field of organizational psychology. She inherited her father 's passion for skjing and travel and has run numerous marathons in the U.S. and Thajland. Art has indicated that he would welcome contact from anyone in our class. David C. Woolman , director of the Curriculum Resources Center at Rhode Island College, has contributed a chapter, "Educating for Conflict Resolution and Peace,'' in the recently published book, Toll'ards r\ Global Com1111t11ity: Educatiug for Tomorroli'S \Vorld. The book builds on a 1996 report to UNESCO by The International Commission on Education for the 21st Cenrury in addressing the question of how education might contribute to promoting a "true global community where countries, communities, and individuals can live in harmony and where cultural diversity is not seen as a threat but as grounds for celebration." Last summer Woolman attended the 21st Biennial Conference of the International Peace Research Association in Calgary, Alberta, to present a paper, "Teaching for Peace and Conflict Resolution in a Global Context," and chair rwo other sessions, one on "Indigenous Populations" in the Peace Education Commission and the other on "Resource Conflicts: Case Studies from Around the Globe" in the Ecology and Peace Commission.
ww w. trincoll.edu/ alumni · Births • Marriages • New Jobs • Photos
Alumni Fund Goal: $180,000 Class Secretary: Peter J.
Knapp, Watkinson Library, Trinity College, 300 Summit St., Hartford, CT 06106-3100 e-mail: peter.knapp@trincoll. edu; fax: 860-297-2251 Class Agent: Robert W. Hartman I had a wonderful visit recently from Dave Rebmann and Deb Moodey '79. Back east from Denver for a rugh school rewuon , Dave was exploring the possibility of presenting to Triruty his extensive collections of books, correspondence, manuscript material, and photographs dealing with T. S. Eliot and with various literary figures of the Beat Generation, including among others Allen Ginsberg, Gary Snyder, Lawrence Ferlinghetti , and Willian1 Burroughs. It was a pleasure to see Dave and Deb, and an invitation to attend our 45th reunion in 2010 was warmly extended. In other news, Anne and l co-curated a major exhibit in the Watkjnson Library that opened in mid- September and runs though December 15. Entitled "'You're the Top': Illustrated Sheet Music of American Popular Songs from World War I to the 1940s," the exhibit draws on the Watkjnson's extensive collection of sheet music with illustrated covers and focuses on eight major composers of the period, including George Gershwin and Cole Porter. To celebrate the opening of the exhibit, we gave an illustrated lecture in early October on composers and recording artists of American popular song that discussed the music covers and included the playing of a 78 rpm recording of a feature song for each of the eight composers. The recordings were selected from another of the Watkjnson's major collections. That's all for now, and please remember to keep me posted on news of note.
Alumni Fund Goal: $100,000 Class Secretary: Thomas S.
Hart, 97 Minot Road, Concord, MA 01742-1920; e-mail: thomas.hart.l966@trincoll.edu Class Agents: David C. Charlesworth, M.D.; Brian Grimes; Joseph A. Hourihan, ~sq .; Lindley C. Scarlett; William H. Schweitzer Class of 1966: Not much news flowing in to your humble reporter this cycle- and that may be just as well, as he's been run ragged by politics, caught up in the Deval Patrick gubernatorial campajgn. Really, I was doing more political stuff this fall (and rhe summer before, and the spring before that) than I've done since ... well, since way back in the - gulp- 6os! I attended rallies, held signs (we call that "doing visibility" these days), walked the streets doing canvassing, delivered signs, did phone-banking, went to caucuses- you get the idea. And here's the an1azing thing: I was the least political member of my household! My
wife was (in addition to her college teaching job) the town coordinator for the Patrick campaign, and eldest son Patrick (fresh out of Swarthmore this past June) was a paid Patrick staffer, working 16- hour day after 16- hour day as, am ong oth er roles, the state canvassing coo rdinato r. Here's my proposal to you classmates out there: check in with me and tell me if you also got caught up in the political spirit (regardless of your particul ar political slant or party) and took part so mehow in what's being portrayed as a majo r renaissance of political activity nationwide. I mean, the big picture after the midterms is clear enough: Schwe itze r's depressed, Tribken's happy, and Kilgore's playing golf so mewhere. But what about YOU? I'd love to hear what you think, and I bet others in the class would, too .... yo u know how to reach me! Tom
Alumni Fund Goal: $300,000 Class Secretary: Jeffrey J. !=ox,
!=ox & Co Inc., 1 Gilbert Hill Rd., Chester, CT 06412 e-mail: jeffrey.fo x.1967@trincoll. edu; fa x: 860-677-5349 Reunion Leaders: Robert A. Boa s, ~sq .; Bob Brickley; G ilbert G. Campbell; !-lorace Caulkins; Roger Derderian; Jeffrey J. !=ox; ~d ward B. Hutton, Jr.; Charle s Kurz; Alexander H. Levi; Steve Nuernberger; Jim O'Connor; James H. Ol iver; G. Theodore Ruckert, M.D.; Charles R. Perrin; Charles J. Sanders; Walter R. Seibert, Jr.; Robert Trainer; Alan Weinstein
O n June 8, 9, IO of 2007, every Trinity man who graduated in 1967 is invited back to campus for freshman week and an encore of the Great American Ball game, or whatever that mayhem was called. These Trini ty men will be encouraged to sing some song about trees as Gil Campbell plays the carillons (which are the C hapel bells ... for you readers from other classes). In addition, Bill Rosenbaum is going to play Prof Jo hn Dando playing Shalkespeare's Hett tl ' V, doing his St. C rispian Day pep talk at the Battle of Agincourt in 1415 AD. That performance al one is worth the return. Floyd Putney has generously agreed to deliver any babies fo rthcoming that weekend fro m the women of said Trini ty men. Ted Ruckert has agreed to assist as Floyd's hands ain't what they used to be. Ric Catoni and Rick Ludwig are going to tandem fl.yove rs. Bernie Maguire and Ned Prevost are going to hear confess ions. Charlie Sanders is not expected to do another pole dance, but Charlie Perrin is (if yo u know what the definiti on of"is" is). Geoff White casually says there is nothing new, just one heart attack and two ste.nts. Geoff is doing well. Eve rything is cool. Geoff and th e other T heta Xi's will have a mini- reuni on at the upco ming 40 th. Everyone should be having mini -reunions. Just call so mebody and it's on. Bill and Mary Ann Fox we re spotted at th e shore, ambling the beaches with Don and ls abel
Defending the Constitution: George Christian '67 Last July, after the FBI phoned his office at Library Connection in Windsor, CT, George Christian, Class of 1967, says a "good cop, bad cop" team of agents"a neatly dressed young man with blazer and tie and a partner who was a much more robust man with a spandex shi rt that revealed exactly how robust he was"-arrived to hand-deliver a letter. The organization, which manages a complex computer network that runs circulation systems for 27 1-lartford-area libraries, had been issued a National Security Letter (NSL) by the !=BI, requesting all information available about the use r of a specified IP address during a 60-minute period six months earlier. After careful review, Christian, a man of strong convictions, felt it was his duty not only to protect the privacy of the users but to protect the core values of the Constitution that he felt the letter's request was violating. Since taking a required course on constitutional law at Trinity, Christian has been keenly aware of, and interested in, the rights and responsibilities protected under this country's founding document. The letter, while similar to a subpoena or warrant, never underwent the standard process of judicial review-an egregious violation of the Constitution . !-laving never heard of these letters before because of the perpetual gag order that accompanies them-prohibiting the receiver from speaking to anyone at all about the document-Christian was immediately suspect. Furthermore, he was concerned that he was being asked to hand over information about
library patrons whose privacy was protected under Connecticut legislation. Connecticut is one of 48 states with important legislation that charges librarians to protect patron privacy, and Christian took his position as gatekeeper to that information very seriously. Despite the gag order associated with the letter, Christian decided to seek advice from a three-member executive committee acting on behalf of the board of Library Connection to protest the government's request. 1-le explains his decision, "My son was studying constitutional law at school. I wanted to set an example for what I believed was right." Christian has always been one to stand up for what he believes in. During the Vietnam War, he wrote a letter stating his beliefs against what he called "a civil war," and was granted, under highly unlikely circumstances for a Roman Catholic, conscientious-objector status. "My argument was that I didn't believe the government had the right to tell me that it was o.k. to kill people," Christian explains. In his most recent case against the government, he took a similarly steadfast approach. The New York Times and the Washington Post reported that since 9-11, 30,000 National Security Letters a year have been issued by the FBI, and that Library Connection is only the second organization ever to contest compliance with the letter in court. Christian and his colleagues also sought an immediate lifting of the gag order in order to testify before Congress while the renewal of the Patriot Act and its NSL provision were being debated. The Justice Department opposed this at the Appellate Court and even at a review by Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, only relenting after the Patriot Act was renewed. According to Christian the positive changes in the renewed act are very modest. NSLs now have to state that recipients can consult an attorney, but the gag provisions have been revised to make successfully contesting them much more difficult. "Many people have said to me since this began that if I've got nothing to hide, then why fight it," says Christian. 1-le responds with the poignant words of Benjamin !=ranklin, "Those who would sacrifice liberty to gain security deserve neither."
by Carlin Carr
\\'inter 2007
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class notes Browne. The girls were properly and chastely dressed, but Bill was .... Don and Isabel are doing fine. And they see light at the end of th e college tunnel. # I child graduated from Harvard. # 2 child graduated from BU # 3 child is a senior at Cal (Berkeley) and captain of the tennis team. # 4 child is a junior at Univ. of Delaware. Isabel is still pracricing law. Don oversees Morgan Stanley's investment advisory offerings for ultra wealthy clients and has no plans to retire. Good! The Brown's wine cellar is now r,6oo bottles and growing. As everyone knows, wine is mentioned favorably 154 times in the Bible, and tl1at a recent study at Harvard proved that red wine is good for one's body and soul. Don is bringing a remarkably chewy little Bordeaux to the reunion. A votre sante. Culley Carson is thriving in Chapel HilL He is a professo r at the Univ. of North Carolina Med School, where he teaches the healthful aspects of chewy little Bordeaux. Mark your calendars for June and call Greyhound for your tickets to Hartford.
Alumni Fund Goal: $175,000 Class Secretary: William T. Barrante, P.O. Box 273, Watertown, CT 06795-0273 e-mail: william.barrante.1968 @trincoll.edu; fax: 860-7384906 Class Agents: Lawrence J. Slutsky, M.D.
One of the books we read in Professor Paul Smith's American literature course was The Educatio11 ojHe11ry Adams, written by the grandson of John ~incy Adams and great-grandson of John Adams. One of his themes was that the world was moving faster and faster in technol ogy Consider this: Compare the differences between 1700 and 1800, and then r8oo and 1900, and then 1900 and 2000. We got steam power in the r8th century and a few steam automobiles were built in the r8oos, but nothing significant until the end of the 19th century The automobile of 1900 did not look much different from the buggy of r8oo. But compare the car of 2000 to the car of 1900. The Wright Brothers made their first flight in 1903. By 1969 we landed a man on the moon. The greatest changes have been in communications. A cli ent gave me a plaque with the front page of an 1821 Washington, D.C., newspaper. The paper came out in April r82r, with stories from Naples datelined February Today we get the news from Naples on the radio as we drive here and there. And the Internet has revolutionized everytl1ing. As I write this, we are still in the sixth year of the 21st century How different will 2100 be? Many of us will remember Professor Marjorie Butcher, who taught us first-year calculus. She was Trinity's first female professor. She was good. Even though math and science were not my high points, 1 remember doing fairly well in
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her class. The College recently celebrated her 50tl1 year with the Trinity family I will here offer her best wishes from the Class of 1968.
Alumni Fund Goal: $150,000 Class Secretary: Alden Gordon, f=ine Arts Department, Trinity College, 300 Summit St., Hartford, CT 06106-3100 e-mail: alden.gordon@trincoll. edu Class Agents: Nathaniel S. Prentice; MatthewS. Simchak
C lassmate Robert Sherrill, Jr., has been appointed to the State of New Mexico Board of Psychologist Examiners by Governor Bill Richardson. Reliable report has it that Matt Simchak has retired and is splitting wood on a Pennsylvania mountaintop. Bill Marimow has left National Public Radio to return to the Philadelphia lnquim路 as its editor. Bill won his first Pulitzer Prize as a reporter for the l11quim路. Bill Glahn sent tlus update on his news: Your plea for news is very compelling. I never imagined that anyone would be interested in what I've been doing, but then I'm always very interested in what others are up to, so I thought I'd respond. living in New Hampshire is something I thought I'd never do, but we've been here 31 years and I've been working as a trial lawyer here for that same length of time. We've loved living here and I've enjoyed the practice (mostly) . I joke that I'm the world's most boring man: I've had the same wife for 35 years, the same job for 25, and, until we built a new house in Concord two years ago, had lived in the same house for nearly 30 years. Our two sons Brooks (33) and Ben (29) are, respectively, Living in Boston (Brooks is a trial lawyer no less- proof positive that kids don't do what their fathers tell them) and Salzburg, Austria, where Ben works for the Salzburg Senlinar (one ambition is for your kids to live in an interesting place to visit, and Salzburg firs that description) . My knees have given out after more than 40 years of running and skiing, so I do a good deal of biking now. Hansi and I celebrated our 35th anniversary by climbing Mt. Kilimanjaro in August- a very interesting mountain, and Africa and the animals were fascinating. I have a sabbatical from my law firm next year and hope to volunteer in Eastern Europe for a non -profit and perhaps to think about options for - dare I mention it- retirement. Never thought I'd be that old, but I never thought I'd live to see the Red Sox win the series either. I've gotten involved on a fundraising committee at the College and will probably be speaking with some of you soon. If any classmates find themselves in New Han1pshire, please look me up." Michael Beautyman won three national tennis titles this year and played on the US team
at the Senior World Championships held in Turkey Mike and his teammates won the Team World Championship for the USA while Mike was runner-up in the individual world champi onships, losing in the finals to a guy he had beaten three times this year. Mike concludes: "That means I have to keep doing this nonse nse until I achieve my goal." Michael would love to hear from classmates at mbeauty@beautyman.com.
Alumni Fund Goal: $120,000 Class Secretary: John L. Bonee Ill, Esq ., 19 Scarsdale Road, West Hartford, CT 06107-3339 e-mail : john.bonee.1970@ trincoll.edu; fax: 860-5226049
Class Agent: Ernest J. Mattei, Esq. Alumni Fund Goal: $200,000 Co-Class Secretary: Robert Benjamin, Jr., 608 Turlington Ct, Livingston, NJ 070398267 e-mail: robert.benjamin .1971@trincoll.edu Co-Class Secretary: Diane A. Clancy, 32 Abbott Street, Greenfield, MA 01301-2510 e-mail: diane.clancy.1971@trincoll.edu Co-Class Secretary: Ed ward B. Karam, 44-10 28th Avenue, Apt. 1f=, Astoria, NY lll03-2125 e-mail: edward.karam.1971@trincoll.edu Class Agents: Robert Benjamin, Jr.; Phil Khoury; William H. Reynolds, Jr. John Jehl reports from New Hampshire that "my oldest son Scott, 23, just got married. It was held on Lake Winnepesaukee. Scott is a Web design developer and Web page creator. His wife is a Ph.D. biology major at Harvard." John has been practicing internal medicine in New Hampshire for 28 years. He and his wife, Susan, also have a daughter, Kristen, who "just graduated first in her class from Virginia Wesleyan, and was an CAA Division 2 Scholar-Athlete award winner," says John. "She played field hockey and lacrosse for Virginia Wesleyan. And my youngest, Adam, is a senior in construction management at Fitchburg State in Massachusetts." He notes that none of his children went back to Trinity, although his father, Wilbur, is Class of 1942." Biology major John reminisced about the soon-to -be-demolished life Science Building, which opened during our college years: "I spent a lot of time with fruit flies in that building'' Ted Kowalski also has some bragging to do about his son, Andrew, who is "in sophomore year in Berklee College of Music" in Boston. Andrew's instrument is alto sax, and his major, Ted says, will probably be music business and music management. They were unable to attend the reunion because they were on a vacation in Rome. "We went for ro days, and Rome is amazing," says Ted. "We ended up staying in an
area called Bologna, a real neighborhood but still close to the center." H e especially enjoyed a dis trict called San Lorenzo: "It's like SoHo used to be 20 years ago- a lot of younger people, fantas tic restaurants. O ut of the 10 nights we had dinner there four times in different restaurants." He did have a bit of culture shock, though. Explains Ted: "Andrew is almost 20. As in Paris, they think it's fine for kids that age to drink. So now he pours." Ted has visited his brother Jim '73, now dean of the Cathedral of St. John the Divine in New York City. "He lives in the bishop's palace, built by J.P. Morgan," says Ted, whose descriptions of ecclesiastical splendor make one envious: "Fifteen rooms, two sitting rooms, beautiful leaded-glass windows. Jim's office is the original library of the mansion ." However, Michael Trigg reports an even greater occasion of splendor. Michael, who has worked as an oncologist, recently visited India to give a talk. The president of India was unfortunately unable to attend the speech, so he called and asked Michael and some colleagues to come to the presidential palace for a discussion. "H e lives in a 300- room palace and is a figurehead, like the Qt:een of England," says Michael. "He has a Ph.D. in nuclear physics. H e was terrific." Although Michael was a surgeo n of bonemarrow transplants for 25 years, "I quit seeing patients full -time at the end of August 2005 and decided to take a job in the pharmaceutical industry." he says. Because of the deciphering of the genetic code 10 to 15 years ago, opportunities had opened up in areas involving targeted therapies. Michael found numerous openings for an oncologist who had clinical research expertise, as he did, to guide companies "as to what they are studying, where therapies should be applied, and how to go about setting up clinical stud ies," an10ng other things. H e settled on Merck, he says, partly because of their reputation and "partly because I knew what I was going to be able to learn. I spend about a quarter of time in my office in suburbs of Philadelphia, and a quarter of the time working in my house, and then traveling the rest of the time." At the moment he's considering another change of job in the booming field: "As of today I had my 98th job offer," he noted. "Outside of that," says Michael, "I build houses for fun. I have two boys, Qt:inn, 17, a junior in high school, and Donavan, 14, in eighth grade." Artist Anne Pomeroy Dixon writes, "I am working on an acrylic painting of the Granby land Trust that is near my house. If it comes out well enough, I plan on entering it in a Granby land Trust exhibit and competition." Anne is also a jewelry designer: "Two of my jewelry designs have bee n put up on the Web at beadpatterncentral.co m," she says. Anne recently had an open house and had a wonderful time. About two -thirds of her inventory was already sold, so she is busy trying to create more jewelry inven -
l-lansi and I celebrated our 35th anniversary by climbing Mt. Kilimanjaro in August-a very interesting mountain, and Africa and the animals were fascinating. I have a sabbatical from my law firm next year and hope to volunteer in ~astern ~urope for a nonprofit and perhaps to think about options for-dare I mention itretirement. -Bill Glahn '69 tory She says she is very excited that she got her first royalty check from the sales. Speaking of artists, Diane Clancy and partner Susan Elkin "are taking a business class for artists. Also, we are very active with an initiative called Fostering the Creative Arts in Franklin County." Diane also chairs the visual artists group and will be exhibiting in her first gallery show in December 2006 at Pushkin Gallery in G ree nfield, MA. You can see some of her work at her Web site, www.dianeclancy.com. She also reports that "in October 2005 my [thenJ 32-year-old daughter, Jermifer, got married. They are head over heels with each other. My daughter has been at Disney World for over a decade now." Recently Diane and Susan "had dinn er with Tom Weiner and hung out with his son, Stefan, and his wife, Susan." In October, Jack Reale hosted AI Farnell '70 and Geo rge Sutherland '73. Alpha C hi Rho brothers, at his home in the Highlands/ Cashiers orth area in the Blue Ridge Mountains of Carolina. The company was great and the laughs were many. Ann l-larris says, "I have so me cool news. O ur so n, Chris ['or] finally proposed to his long time girlfriend, Scotty Herron [also Trinity 'or]. They knew each other all through Trinity. but only started dating after college. We are feeling incredibly fortunate that she said 'yes' and are planning a summer wedding at our home in ew H ampshire. In the mean time, between calls to tent man and the caterer, I continue to travel a lot for Andover. Much of my time is spent on the NYC shuttle, but I will be heading for Santa Fe and Florida this winter, which will be great fun. Love to see any or all of you and any tips on 'mother of the groom' are always appreciated." The news from Craig Maier is that he took over hi s family's restaurant business, the Frisch's Big Boy franchise, with outl ets in O hio, Kentucky, Pennsylvania, and West Virginia. C raig and his wife, Ann, have three children: Avery, 12, and twins Alexandra and Taylor, 9. "We married late in life," says Craig, "so we're having our grandchildren. I'm heavily involved in arts and culture in C inci nn ati," he adds. "I sit on five or six arts boards," among them the bal let, the art museum, the museum center, !max, and Playhouse in th e Park. That brings him in touch with Nancy l-leffner Donovan. " ] see her all the time," he says. Bishop Steven Charleston, dean of the Episcopal Divinity School, was a key speaker
at the Episcopal Diocese of Minnesota's 149th Annual Convention in October. Steven is a leader in justice issues and spiritual renewal in the church and a highly regarded preacher. He has appeared on ABC World Ne1Vs Tonight. BBC World Ne ws, and Tire News /-lour with jim Lehrer, among other programs. In September he was a guest at St. Andrew's Episcopal Church in Marblehead on Massachusetts' orth Shore, where he spoke on spiritual anxiety He also offers daily recorded meditations, based on the Daily Office. The meditations are available on the Web site of Episcopal Divinity School (www.eds.edu) and can be listened to on the Web site or downloaded as podcasts. Steven was recently quoted as saying, "While we cannot control such things as terrorism and the crisis in the Middle East, there are concrete spiritual answers that can change despair to hope and fear to confidence." Actress Susan Grace will be appearing on Medium on Jan. 10 as a teacher of Ariel's (Allison's oldest daughter). "There's a good chance the role will recur," says Susan. ''I'm also starring in a new play in L A. called Tsuris-a silly send-up of older folks who live around Boca Raton and all the bagel shops they frequent." Bob Miller has taken early retirement from St. Thomas University in St. Paul, where he taugh t English. "I've had an active life as a writer the last 30 years, which corresponds to the 30 years I've bee n at St. Thomas," he says. "I've done all sorts of things, including a lot of academic texts. Now I want to focus on literary nonfiction: essays and memoirs." A professor emeritus now, Bob also intends to spend "more tim e trying to be a ficti on writer. It's tricky." Bob was one of the original Trinity men who we nt to Vassar in the exchange that brought Trinity our co-secretary, Diane Clancy. "I stayed in Poughkeepsie," says Bob. "I have the distinction of bei ng the first man to matriculate at Vassar. The first person I met there was Meryl Streep, who was in my graduating class. I met her on my first night, and she teased the dickens out of me. She came up to me the next day and apologized for teasing me. I remember being dazzled by seeing her perform as an undergraduate in Miss julie."
www.trincoll .edu/alumni • Births • Marriages • New Jobs • Photos
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class notes In 2003, Bob spent a week at Bread Loaf, a writers' retreat and a setting for writing eve nts at Middlebury in Vermont. He rented a car and drove back to Trinity. "Everything looked beautiful," he recalls. I'm sure all our classmates will be sorry to hear of the death of Allison Rose, daughter of Karen Lewchik Rose, in a car accident on Aug. 19, and wish to extend our sympathies to Karen and her family. (Her obituary is at ajc.comjobits.) "We have two other children," writes Karen , "Chris, age 23, who is getting his master's in accounting from Wake Forest Univ., where he graduated from Phi Beta Kappa in May with a degree in finance. Our other daughter, Whitney, is 18 and graduated from the Westminster Schools in Atlanta in May. She is a freshman at UGA. Both kids missed a week of the beginning of school and, of course, to say it has been difficult is an understatement."
Alumni Fund Goal: $150,000 Class Secretary: Krist in Anderson, 32 Linebrook Rd., Ipswich, MA 01938-2919 e-mai l: kristin. anderson.1972@trincoll.edu Reunion Leaders: Kristen Anderson; Peter R. Blum; f..lamilton Clark, Jr.; Bayard R. i=iechter; James P. Gamerman; Jeff f-lales; William !=. Lingard; William J. Miller, Jr.; Mike Sooley; Donald Viering; William Whetzel
Just as a writing exercise alone. I wonder how to urge classmates to come back to Reun.i on next Jun e. That is, how could I select and arrange the words so that they don't just roll past everyone's notice and vanish. For those who have been to Reunion before, the word itself evokes real images, so you know what I'm talking about and will come. For those who have never been back, the task is harder. The question is why would you ever want to come back> The architectural growth and changes are spectacular and, well, you may have paid for some of it. That may be true wherever you are, so not much of an argument there. The food and entertainment are great. But I can find the equal at hom e, you might be thinking. Kind of true if you are used to banquets and being served like royalty and if you keep the live and kicking members of the Outer Space Blues Band in your den to play at your beck and call so that you can once again feel the thrill of weightlessness and youth tl1eir music evokes. Still you may just not want to undo the calm and order you have carefully built up over the years with your routine. Understandable. But, if some tiny part inside wants to push to the edge of the comfort zone by returning to campus (June 7-10, 2007) , the risk will be repaid handsomely. It won't be the buildings, it won't be the food , but it just may be hearing the band and what it triggers inside. The greatest reward , though, will be seeing people. Not just peo ple you may have known, but peo ple- peri ~8
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od. The nameless classmates you passed on the Long Walk who looked too much like hippies, geeks, preps, or jocks for your taste, have evolved into fascinating professionals of every sort- and I mean every sort. They all have something to offer, some vision, some wisdom. And while there are no doubt fascinating people around you now, these particular people sprang from a common alchemy; with you. To dip back in , even if just for Saturday evening, you will, I know you will, discover some part of yo urself and rejuvenate some part of yourself to take back ho me.
Alumni Fund Goal: $125,000 Class Secretary: Daniel M. Roswig, M.D., 880 Sheffield Road, Shavertown, PA 187089548 e-mail: daniel. roswig.1973@trincoll.edu; fax:
860-651-0895 Class Agents: Patti Manteii-Broad Jan Gimar has sadly informed us that his wife of 29 years, Sherri Robison Ginlar, died suddenly on July 17, 2006. The Gimars have lived in Albuquerque, ew Mexico, for 18 years, where Jan continues to serve as an executive for the local Boy Scout Council and where Sherri taught elementary school. The Alumni Office reports that Dr. Lewis Mancini's new book, /-low Everyo11e Could be Rich, Famous, Etc. , was recently published.
Alumni Fund Goal: $130,000 Class Secretary: Matthew E. Moloshok, Esq., 1006 Prospect St., Westfield, NJ 07090-4221 e-mail: matthew. moloshok.1974@trincoll.edu; fa x: 973-621-7406 Class Agent: Gary !=. Kinsella, Esq.
Alumni Fund Goal: $200,000 Class Secretary: William M. Taussig, 187 Country Club Rd., Dedham, MA 02026-5639 e-mail : william. taussig.1975@trincoll.edu Class Agent: f..lenry E. Bruce, Jr.
Having no clue as to when this editio n of class notes will arrive in your mailbox, be advised thi s was pulled together the Night Before H omeco ming. And with that outta the way. here's what arrived over the virtual transom. Clay Debevoise chin1es in from the lower left coast, noting, "I do have something this time: http://HOME - PPP.net/ ... that is: "HOME - A Play of Poems and Photographs," on the Web by Nov. 6. A 30 -year project: 1976- 2006! The photos were taken on th e Appalachian Trail in 1976; it took the rest of the time for me to fini sh the poems (with feedback and encouragement from our own Milia Riggio, plus James Merrill,
Allen Ginsberg, Connie Carri er, and others). My daughters are both doing weii - Cali, 6, is with me in CA. and Nell , 26, since her master's in politics, education , and democracy from Cambridge last year, is in Rome, in love, working with www.GiocalForum.org." From AI Glater, who has the catchy e- mail handle of DrZhicago and may well be a longsuffering C ubs fan , comes the following brief summary, "Not much new. Still working as a small aninlal veterinarian on the north side of Chicago, about one mile south of Wrigley Field (past 25 years) . Recently moved back into our gut-rehabbed home (a two -flat converted to single-famil y) with my partner. Larry." Meanwhil e, Robin Landy, who suggested I edit her submission (sorry; Robin, it's good as is) , writes and invites from the Pacific time zone, "I've been working in the affordable housing development field for more than a decade now, sometimes building for more controversial elements of our communities like late-stage alcoholics and the homeless. (Cheaper to house them in buildings rather than in our emergency rooms and jails!) Though humble, I have to confess that I just won an "Unsung Hero" award from our trade group for surviving four years of legal battles to bring a difficult project to fruition. I love all parts of the process- competing for the public and private money; overseeing design and construction, and leasing up units to those who desperately need a place to call home. Two kids are in college, Charlie, a senior at Georgetown, and Alison , a freshman at Smith, with Peter, a high school sophomore here in Seattle. A regular runner and swimmer, still potting at the wheel in my spare time, I invite everyone to give me a call when visiting the Northwest. No place prettier on Earth, and Chez Robin always has an extra bed and fabulous cuisine." Her contact info is 518 N. 64m Street, Seattle, WA. 98103 and (206-783- 9728)' Finally, at the bottom of this alphabet soup of contributors is Ron Williams, who notes that "The Class of '75 has at least two legacies in the Class of 2008. My daughter, Amanda, and Burt Apfelbaum's daughter, Meghan. This fall , the two of them are co-captains of th e Bantam cross country team . Her first response was, "No way, Dad," when I suggested she consider the alma mater. However, a campus visit with the cross country team won her over. She loved her freshman year and made N CAA All -American for the Bantams at the Indoor Track National Champio nships." As for Dad. who works for Hewlett- Packard, " l like to pretend I'm still in my 30s. However, an occasional tri athlon reminds me of my true age. The California lifestyle agrees with me, but I do miss New England now and then. I'm sorry 1 missed the reunion, but I'm saving my trips to Trin for visiting my daughter. I'm looking forward to reading about the rest of you in future Class Notes." And until such future arrives, that's a wrap.
careers. Just drop me a line, via e-mail or regular mail, and I'll be happy to publish your news. As many of you already know, our classmate, Tom Santopietro, is on the bookstore shelves as author of a fabulous book on Barbra Streisand, The Importance of Being Bm路bra. He's done it again with a new book, Co11Sidering Doris Day. As Liz Smith recently said in her NY Post column, "Author Santopietro also put out a similarly intelligent, amusing, and objective career overview of Barbra Streisand. But his homage to Doris Day is even more passionate and acute in it's critique ...there is something thrilling about Doris Day rediscovered, especially when the archaeologist of this American treasure- Mr. Santopietro- is so right-on- the-money." Bravo, Tom!
Class of 1975 alumnae reach out to AIDS orphans in China Joan Kaufman, Ph.D., an expert in public health in China, recently invited Class of 1975 friend , classmate, and child psychologist, Dr. Elizabeth (Lizzie) Shea-Clement P'09, on a grant-funded trip to rural China over the summer to work with AIDS orphans. Kaufman has been working on China and health issues for over 25 years, and her most-recent project involves setting up a mental health counseling program for children left orphaned by the increasing AI DS epidemic in that country. Although it was Shea-Clement's first time in China, there was little time for exploring the new land. As Kaufman explains, "It was an intense 10 days. Lizzie worked with five Chinese me ntal health professio na ls and did assessments of about 30 kids, helping us shape the specifics of the planned counseling program for our partner, the AIDS Orphans Salvation Associa tion of Fuyang, Anhui Province." Shea-C lement, who resides in the western Massachusetts area, got Spaulding to donate soccer and basketballs to the children, to great acclaim from the kids. f-lowever, the Class of 75ers, who lugged the balls with them
on an overnight train from Beijing, spent hours in their hotel exhausting their lung capacities, blowing up each ball one by one. The two friends met their first year at Trinity in 1971, when they lived on the same fl oor in North f-lail on Vernon Street. Kaufman, who was an intercultural studies major with a concentration in Chinese studies, says that after taking every class on anything about China in the greater f-lartford area, she spent her last year at the University of California a t Berkeley, where she subsequently returned to complete her M.A. in Asian studies and M.S. in health and medical studies. After publ is hing her thesis as a book, A Billion and Counting: Population and Family Planning in China, Kaufman moved to China to work for the U.S. Popu lation Fund from 1980 to 1984. When she returned home, she began her Ph.D. at f-larvard 's School of Public f-lealth . She is currently based at both f-tarvard 's Kennedy School of Government and Brandeis's f.-teller School for Social Policy and Management.
Alumni l=und Goal: $300,000 Class Secretary: ~Iaine Feldman Patterson, 824 S. Ridgeley Dr., Los Angeles, CA 90036-4727 e-ma il: elaine.patterson.1976 @trincoll.edu
fax: 714-985-6350 Class Agents: Phil Brewer; John D. Clifford, Jr.; Harold A. Smullen, Jr.
by Carl in Carr
Our 3oth Reunion stories are beginning to fade, so please think about sharing some new tales about your adventures, families, and
Alumni l=und Goal: $200,000 Class Secretary: Richard W. Meier, 152 Hawthorne St., Manchester, CT 06040-3023 e-mail: richard.meier.1977@ trincoll.edu Reunion Leaders: Sophie Bell Ayres; Marian Kuhn Browning; Angelee Dana Carta, M.D.; J. Gilmore Childers; Deborah Flower; Lawrence Golden; Ted Judson; Jan L. Larsson; Michael Leverone; StuartS. Lovejoy; Rick Meier; Harriet F. Smith; Mark Stern
Happy Holidays to the Class of 'n Here is the news ... Planning continues for Our 30th Reunion Weekend (June 7-IO, 2007) . We are still looking for a few more volunteers to join us on the Reunion Committee. Committee members take assignments of five to 10 names and reach out to these classmates, encouraging them to attend the Reunion . I got e- mails from some far -flung alums ... David J. Murphy writes that he is "presently unable to commit to attending the 2007 Reunion . Embassy life in Beijing is pretty demanding." David is a commercial officer with the U.S. Commercial Service and stationed at the U.S. Embassy in Beijing. Diana Lee Hammond tells me, "Would that I could be there for the reunion .. .alas the tyranny of distance ... I'd love to see any member of our class who might be passing through Perth, Australia." Marty Kanoff wrote again to let me know he will be unable to attend Reunion due to the time commitments of his new solo Ob/ Gyn practice. He did relay his Web site URL, for those who are interested: www.harmonywomen.com. Charles Spicer continues as an executive editor at St. Martin's Press, where has has recently published a New York Times bestselling memoir by Bill Clinton's former FBI director, Louis Freeh and will be publishing an upcoming book by actor Alec Baldwin. He recently returned from a wonderful trip to Budapest, Vienna, and Prague. He divides most of his time between Manhattan and a house he owns with his partner, Jeff Steele, a landscape designer, in the Berkshires. Charlie
Winter 2007
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class notes also writes that he can't attend Reunion but hopes we enjoy the weekend. Also, heard from Robin Kohn, who wrote, "My daughter, Alex, is a junior at Dickinson College and is spending the year in Malaga, Spain. My daughter, Mallory, is a junior at Wooster School. I am still practicing law at the firm of Cohen and Wolf in Danbury, CT, where I have been for 26 years. My husband (George Johnston) and I recently celebrated our 26th wedding anniversary Congratulations to you and George! At Homecoming I did not sponsor the Trinity Club Tailgate, so I got to wander around campus. At lot has changed in the 30 years we've been away.. .Trinity is still beautiful. Come home and check it out! Here is the list of classmates who are planning on coming to Reunion: Ramsay Gross Bell, Bill Clark, Mike Diefenbach, Dan ladonisi, Stuart S. Lovejoy, Debbie Flower, Mark Gerchman, Mark Stern, l-larriet Smith, Gil Childers, Jan Larsson, Mike Leverone, Sophie Bell Ayres, Stuart Lovejoy, Nancy Barber Aderman and Rick Meier. If you are planning on attending
andjor want to help contact classmates e-mail me at rickmeier@cox.net. Also, please consider your gift to the Annual Fund this year, if you are a regular donator, try increasing you gift in honor of your reunion. If you've haven't donated, now is the time, even the smallest gift helps Trinity! The Reunion Committee has established a goal of roo% participation, so every gift counts! Many thanks to those who wrote, keep those e-mails coming... those of you who didn't write, drop me an e-mail today! I really enjoy hearing from all of you.
Alumni Fund Goal: $200,000 Class Secretary: Kathryn Maye Murphy, 6 Kneeland Rd., Marl borough, CT 06447-1225 e-mail: kathryn.murphy.1978@ trincoll.edu Class Agent: James P. Smith
Jeff DuFresne writes, "Life begins at 50. "Over the past 25 years, I've enjoyed a fulfill ing career in commercial real estate investment. I must acknowledge that my urban engagement preparation at Trinity prepared me well for this career. Recently, I decided to start 'giving back' and joined the Urban Land Institute as an executive director. It's a great job where we help build better communities (with the support a strong network of developers, investors, architects, planners, attorneys, public officials, and students) . For example, we're working to create green space and affordable housing around Atlanta's BeltLine- a $3 billion urban recycling project along 22 miles of abandoned railroad track. I also derive pleasure from my work on the boards of Emory University, Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation (JDRF Atlanta), and the
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Museum of Design Atlanta (MODA). In the pure ' fun' category, I leave next week for a two week biking trip in Morocco with Jodi, my better half of a quarter century Should your travels ever take you to Atlanta, please give me a "shout" at jdufresne@uli.org. "On a somber note, life can also end at 50. "I am saddened to report the passing of our classmate, and my very good friend, Rick Wang . You may remember Rick as that imposing 6' 3" Asian gentle giant who played football and set records in the high hurdles that stood for almost 20 years at Trinity. He graduated with a mechanical engineering degree, got a master's degree in engineering in New York, worked for IBM and continued his career with Fluor, married a wonderful girl named Aljo, and was the father of two bright boys- Fredrick and William. Rick was extraordinarily courageous in life and throughout his long struggle with congestive heart failure. In view of his commitment to his sons' education, Rick's family requests that memorial contributions be made to The Wang Educational Trust, cjo Pat Wang, GNYHA, 555 West 57th Street, Suite 1500, New York, Y IOOI9 ."
Alumni Fund Goal: $150,000 Class Secretary: Deborah A. Cushman, 5 Carbrey Ave., Sharon, MA 02067-2312 e-mail: deborah.cushman.1979 @trincoll.edu Class Agent: David P. Rosenblatt, ~sq .
Alumni Fund Goal: $175,000 Class Secretary: Thomas D. Casey, 4944 Brad ley Blvd., Bethesda, MD 20815-6244 e-mail: thomas.casey.l980@ trincoll.edu Class Agents: David ~- Clark, Jr.; Mark Leavitt; Currie Smith
Alumni Fund Goal: $200,000 Class Secretary: Dede Seeber Boyd, 23 Grove Avenue, Madison, CT 06443 e-mail: dede.boyd.1981@ trincoll.edu
www.trincoll.edu/alumni • Births • /Vlarriages • New Jobs • Photos
Alumni Fund Goal: $200,000 Class Secretary: William S. Lindquist, 11 Lakeridge Dr., Orchard Park, NY 14127-3361 e-mai l: wi lliam. lindquist.l 982@trincoll.edu Reunion Chairs: Tom Mathews, Claudia Piper, Bill Talbot Planned Giving Chair: Rhea Pincus Turteltaub Reunion Committee: Khooshe AdibSomii Aiken; Victoria S. Aronow; Janice Kunin Castle; Wa rd Classen; Dave Congdon; Sandy Frazier Con nell y; Francesco Borges Gordon; Patricia Hooper Kelley; Andrea Scully Keogh ; Barbara Sherman Levison; Bi ll Lindquist; Joe Reineman, Jr.; Li nda Rich; Laura Hewitt Riley; Alice Harlow Ronconi; Beth Shipley; Lyn Snodgrass; Betsy O'Herron Swindell; Ann Martin Pfister; ~ric Woods
Alumni Fund Goal: $100,000 Co-Class Secretary: Marissa Ocasio, 88 Wolcott Hill Rd., Wethersfield, CT 06109-1243 e-mail: marissa.ocasio.1983@ trincoll.edu; fax: 212-251-8543 Co-Class Secretary: Wendy Farnham Schon, 194 Bartlett Dr., Madison, CT 06443 Co-Class Secretary: Tina Tricarichi, 5610 Chelmsford Dr., Lyndhurst, O H 44124-4007 e-mail: tina.tricarichi.1983@trincoll.edu; fax: 216687-0779
Hello to all, Class notes are short this time but not empty. Please keep writing and more people write! Mike lsko wrote to the many people who he doesn't get to see often and others who helped their son, Gabe, along and who helped Mike and his wife, Roberta. He wanted to pass along joyous news that Gabe is going to be Bar Mitzvah in early November. Mike describes Gabe as a lovely young man whom a teacher described as "a good human being with a kind heart." Mike and his family, including wife Roberta and other child Emily, could not be more happy for and proud of Gabe. Also, Mike cleverly added, "Good luck getting a holiday card this year!" I (Tina) attempted to see Mike on a drive through New England last May for a Vermont wedding. but I underestimated my time and had to settle for a phone conversation. Congratulations, Mike, on your son's milestone! Wendy Gorlin Toyer kindly responds to my pleas for news and I just saw her in San Diego in early November (she looks great, by the way, in between being a practicing psychologist, moving to a new home, chauffeuring kids to soccer games, field hockey matches, school events, and managing to meet up with and chauffeur friends like me, visiting S.D. sans car!) We also spent time with Prudence Horne '85, who is also wonderful. Wendy said she visited with Jane Klapper Sykes in September at her cute new house in San Rafael, California. Also, Agi Sardi
Ted Lord '83: l-lumanities Empower the Mind and the Community "The humanitie s are about listening to the dialogue of the ages and of the diffe r ent voices and e x periences of society today. There is a sense in which my whole career has been about learn ing to appreciate how groups make better decisions than individuals-and that there is something known as collective intelligence," explains Ted Lord '83, who has been engaging his Pacific Northwest state in programs and opportunities to promote civic wisdom since taking over as president and CI;:O of 1--iumanities Washington in 2006. Beginning in 1985 during his days in the Peace Corps, Lord developed the concept that has guided him: that collective intelligence and collective action have the ability to empower groups and societies more so than disparate individual action. After receiving his master's in poetry, Lord, a published poet who was a President's Fellow in the l;:nglish Department at Trinity and worked closely with recently deceased poet and professor 1--iugh Ogden, decided to apply for a position with the federally funded program that sends volunteers to developing countries. Upon selection to the Peace Corps, Lord was deployed to Mauritania, a poor West African country, where he began helping groups-organizations, communities, and societies-"to unleash their potential." "I've received many blessings," says Lord, "and I want to live in a world where
and her son were some of Wendy and fan1ily's first out-of-town visitors in their new digs. By the way, Wendy and her family remodeled their new home built in the 1950s, and believe me, it is a wonderful housefhome. Lastly, to give more definition to her career, Wendy is still a staff psychologist at UCSD, treating adults of all ages, specializing in behavioral medicine, and super-
the most people have the most access to blessings." During his time in Mauritania, he began to reflect on the capitalist culture from which he came and concluded that "we have no notion of what is enough, of personal satiety." 1--iowever, Lord believes that through his positions in philanthropy and public service, he has been able to "gain a better understanding of what we each need and what we can each offer." One thing he says collective strength can offer is the ability to create a more equitable society. For eight years, Lord, who lives in Seattle with his partner of 20 years, Chris Cooper, and their two children, ran the Pride Foundation, where his goal was to get more people involved by giving both financial and volunteer support. "It was about bringing a group together to discuss how to strengthen the lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender community-and have that be regarded as a community asset and strength," says Lord, who during his tenure at the organization increased annual grant and scholarship disbursement from $35,000 to $500,000 and increased donor participation from 300 to 5,000. With hopes to do the same at 1--iumanities Washington, Lord sees his goals as growing reading, funding learning, and engaging dialogue. Through programs such as Motheread/ Fatheread and making grants to museums, libraries, and community groups, Lord hopes that "people see the relevance of the humanities towards critical thinking and problem solving," and come to understand that the humanities-l;:nglish, religion, history, philosophy, etc.- are not just dusty old subjects for the intellectual elite. In fact, they have the ability to help foster an understanding of how people make meaning, and perhaps, more importantly says Lord, how people can have lives that they find meaningful.
by C arlin Carr vising post-doctoral students. Rick Barone wrote that he ran into (Fred) Rick Thomas '84 in Wilton and learned that he is his eight year old's football coach' The rwo Ricks played Trin football together, so it was a rush for them making the contact. Rick also shared the good news that his brother, David '85, is newly engaged to a great girl. Rick's startup
company (www.tpr2.com) is about to move into a sales and marketing capacity and has a private placement offering happening .... Any classmates interested in high tech he queried. Rick says he's just an e- mail away on the Web site! That's his latest from Wilton, Cr. Terrie Johnson and Ted l-lartsoe wrote inalthough I think Terrie actually wrote the email, but she can cover for two of our classmates, of course. Incredibly, we have been out of college so long that their oldest child, Katie, started her freshman year at the Tisch School at YU this fall, where she is pursuing a BFA in theater and a B.A. in French. Terrie added that some apples fall far from the tree but that the experience of moving her into the 9th floor of a dorm on 10th and Broadway was nothing like she and Ted remembered from their freshman year moving into North Campus and Wheaton! Professionally, she reports that not much has changed for the rwo of them. Ted is still teaching economics at Choate, and his students have won a number of national economics awards through the years (excellent, Ted!) . Terrie is now the middle school director at a pre-K to 8th grade private day school. She continues to coach basketball and softball as well as teach one section of science, usually physics, but her job is primarily administrative. (That's a full plate, Terrie!) . Terrie and Ted continue to travel with their three kids as much as possible, spending the summer in China two years ago and in the canyons of the Southwest last year. She looks forward to reading the Reporter and catching up. (This is Tina, note to class, WRITE!) Lauren Griffen Niclas sent an informative e- mail, but I might not be able to get it all in as I am finishing this at the last minute- sorry. I'll add the rest next time. O.k., Lauren? She gave an updated version of her life: her husband, daughter, Cristina, and she are living in Amity Harbor on LI. Her daughter loves fourth grade and Lauren is enjoying being able to work part-time at her school now that she is no longer working 6o-hour weeks in TRetail for Claire's Stores. She is in almost daily e- mail contact with Ellen Tattenbaum and Allen Lepore. All recently spent a few fun days in Cape May. They are both doing well and are still living in Hopewell, ew Jersey Allen is commuting to work weekly to Avon, CT, to run the famil y business up there, and Ellen is juggling several different jobs, including being a dance and aerobics instructor. Also, Lauren is in frequent touch with Marlene Arling Dube, although they haven't actually seen each other in years and she lives in Plainville, CT, with her r6year-old daughter, Hillary Also, Ellen is occasionally in touch with Eric l=isher and his family, who are enjoying life in Switzerland. She just got an e- mail from Mike Zisk.ind '84, who is living in Furlong, PA, with his wife, Ingrid, and their three adorable children. Thanks, Lauren, for updating on other class members- very helpful. Marlene (Arling) Dube recently started a new job as the director of Care Management
Win ter 2007
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class notes Associates, a division of Connecticut Community Care, Inc., a non-profit organization which provides care management services to the elderly and adults with disabilities. Gatta go. or I'll be late to court ... Please Write! Tina
Alumni l=und Goal: $50,000 Class Secretary: Susan Sherrill
Canavan, 403 S. Maple Ave., Glen Rock, NJ 07452-1536 e-mail: susan. canavan.1984@trincoll.edu Class Agents: Patricia Adams; Janice M. Anderson; Salvatore Anzalotti Ill; Amy Curry
Bob !=lanagan is nurturing the spiritual life of his congregation in Bedford, NY, which includes a number of Trinity folks, including Steve O 'Brien. Recall, Bob went to the seminary after several years in the insurance business. (By the way, Steve, your pastor has noticed your absence from the pews.) Bob and I chatted about the schism in the Anglican Church, which I will not go into here. As much as I would like to hear people's thoughts on things, religion and homosexuality might be veering a little too far afield for an alumni bulletin. John l=iske is writing away and staying busy as a full-time dad on Boston's north shore. He is self-publishing an historical novel on the design and construction of the New York City Public library and has found the Trinity alumni network very useful in this effort.
Alumni l=und Goal: $75,000 Class Secretary: Stephen
J. Norton, 9 Ninth St., SE, Washington, DC 20003-1333 e-mail: stephen. norton.1985@trincoll.edu Class Agents: Annette M. Boelhouwer; Kathi O'Connor Boelhouwer; Marc Chabot; Christopher f..l ogan; Stephen Norton; John Wilson
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Boy oh boy, not long ago I was getting spoiled by all the news of 40-year-olds gone wild and pre- reunion updates. Now I get a bare trickle, even after calling a few dozen of you and leaving a message! OK. I acknowledge. for many of us, life has become the happy but banal slog of career and parenthood, with the smattering of dieting and exercise or a nice vacation thrown in to make it fun . Many of us praise good books but have no time to read them. When we read, it is for work. We jibber-jabber about soccer, karate, yard work, and the latest fundraiser for our kids' school. We admit to watching idiotic TV shows and then quickly explain we simply need to "escape" from the tumult of the day. You probably figure it makes no sense to write in with something like, "Work is great. Jimmy is turning nine- hard to believe! I am coaching his foot ball team this fall - it keeps me out of trouble, yadda, yadda, yadda!" Frankly. many of us are delightful, interesting people. We just don't see it in ourselves. Fine. How about something new? How about more of a blog? Don't just supply news. Offer wry commentary, defeatist reflections, erotic musings. whatever. For now, please enjoy these tidbits. Katy Kapteyn Baldwin had a baby girl named Tess this fall while Louise Williams Senopoulos thanks God she (louise) has no additional kids. Her daughters are tall enough to look her in the eye. Her daughters are nine and 12. I wi ll not speculate on whether they still see eye-to-eye with louise, height notwithstanding. louise acknowledged the girls, "... would probably beat me in tennis if I agreed to keep score properly." 2
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Alumni l=und Goal: $45,000 Co-Class Secretary: Kimberly
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Crowley f-lart, 59 Argyle Avenue, West f-lartford, CT 06107; e-mail: kimberly. hart.l986@trincoll.edu Co-Class Secretary:
Jennifer 1=. Zydney, 714 A Norfolk Lane, Alexandria, VA 22314-6205; e-mail: jennifer. zydney.1986@trincoll.edu Co-Class Secretary: Marceline Lee, 1620 Santa Rosa Street, Da vis, CA 95616-7331; e-mail: marceline.lee.1986@trincoll.edu Class Agents: Molly Schnorr-Dunne; Tom Madden; Kathryn George Tyree As holidays approach and 2006 rolls to a close, I'm reminded- as I'm sure many of you are- of a reunion year resolution to do a better job at staying in touch with old friends and classmates. Thankfully, I had an opportunity to catch up with three of my old roommates on a crisp fall weekend this November. Elizabeth l-leslop Sheehy, Jen Zydney, and I met up at Karen Resony Peters' house in Brookline, ew Hampshire, for a "girls' weekend." Karen's husband, Sean, kept us well fed , while their beautiful one-year-old daughter, Kate, kept us thoroughly entertained. We gossiped, shopped and, of course, re- told lots of old stories. Karen also shared with us the video of Kate's journey from an orphanage in China earlier this year and the wonderful story of how they became a famil y. We couldn't be happier for them! Elizabeth just returned from a trip to Egypt with daughter Emma and son T.R. (Husband Tom held down the fort in Virginia with their youngest son, Jackson) . Celebrating her 20th anniversary with the May Company, Elizabeth is currently a regional merchandise manager for Macy's in Arlington, Virginia. Jen, meanwhile, shared photos of her recent bike trip to Croatia. When she's not traveling the world, Jen works at Sun Trust Bank in Washington, D.C. A few weeks back, I had lunch with A.J_I-Iern, whose office is just around the corner from mine in downtown Hartford. He and wife Margaret
l=igueroa l-lern live in West Hartford with their four children: Claire Eileen (who just started middle school) . Owen, Amelia, and Justin (who just started nursery schooO. A.]. is enjoying his private law practice, primarily handling employer and worker's compensation issues. The Alumni Office reports that Emily Ginsburg is currently an associate professor and chair of the Intermedia Department at the Pacific Northwest College of Art in Portland, Oregon. She has been actively showing her own work at galleries and museums around the U.S .. England, and Australia and, in early 2007, will be traveling to Rio de Janiero, Brazil, for an exhibition at A Genti.l Carioca. Check out Emily's work at www.emi.lyginsburg.com. Mike Oxman has been appointed director of Business for Social Responsibility's (BSR) oil and gas advisory services team. A leading provider of innovative business solutions to many of the world's leading corporations, BSR is a non- profit business association based in San Francisco. Prior to joining BSR, Mike worked for Chevron and consulted on various oil and gas projects in the Republic of Kazakhstan for Price Waterhouse. While our classmates are venturing to foreign shores, my husband, Wesley, and I are anxiously awaiting the birth of our first child in December in exotic West Hartford. Here's hoping there's room in the Trinity Class of 2024!
Alumni l=und Goal: $110,000 Class Secretaries: Lincoln
S. Purdy and Nancy Golding Purdy, 54 Bridle Path, Franklin, MA 02038-4104 e-mails: lincoln.purdy.1987@ trincoll.edu; nancy.purdy.1987@ trincoll.edu Reunion Chairs: Melissa Bronzino Regan; R.
Kevin Smith Reunion Committee: Natalie Perkins Bartlett;
John Dalsheim; Michael Donovan; Thomas Furey Ill; Austin Keyes; Douglas Kim; Lincoln Purdy; Maria Rodriguez; Betsy Smith; f-lope Williams; Bryant Zanko Greetings, fellow 87ers. Once again, the C lass Notes cupboard is pretty bare. We do have a couple of items, however: We got an update from Chip Rhodes, who is still chairman of the English Department at Western New England College and whose next book will be out shortly. Chip is living in longmeadow, MA, where his daughter is in the same first-grade class as Amy (Folta) Ryan's '88 son. Ted Shannon reports from Topsfield, MA, that he has moved into a new house from a very old one and is thrilled to have electricity and running water. He is working for NAI Hunneman Commercial in Boston. Ted and his wife, Mary, have two boys. six and two years old. They are expecting their third child in February 2007
Don't forget that our 20th Reunion is June 7-10, 2007. Start making plans to attend and don't forget to bring the kids! We would like to give special acknowledgement to the members Class of 1987 Reunion Committee, who at this very moment are hard at work helping the Alumni Office to plan the big event. Members of the committee are all listed above.
Alumni Fund Goal: $45,000 Class Secretary: Joseph P. Cataldo, !:::sq., 3 Audubon Tr., Norfolk, MA 02056 e-mail: joseph. cataldo.1988@trincoll.edu; fax: 508-520-0699 Class Agents: Constantine Andrews; Scotland Davis; Lisa Godek Well I have to say a big thank you to Gina Gewant Doyle for helping me out with the past few editions of the Reporter. She did a great job gathering news and tracking down some classmates we hadn't heard from. I have to admit that I almost missed this edition if it hadn 't been for a great e-mail from Melissa Moore Janes. Melissa had the chance to catch-up with lots of fellow classmates on their 40th birthday celebrations. Here is her update ... "In August I traveled to the Bay Area for Marianne Eldredge Evenhuis' 40th birthday. Tracy Moore Steele, John Lee, and I joined Mar's friends and family at the Claremont Resort in Berkeley for a party weekend. Marianne and her family live in Moraga, and she has two beautiful children in 6th and 3rd grades. She's involved in school activities and has a great paper arts business creating specialty invitations and cards. Tracy is a public art specialist, currently with the city of Providence, R .I., where she recently moved. While I think she's glad to be back out East, she misses California. Luckily, the Public Museum of San Diego has re-hired her to consult on an upcoming exhibit. Missing was Lisa Smith Fischer, who just left Heinz's legal department in Pittsburgh to join Shady Side Academy. her alma mater. John Lee lives in Oakland, is in management with Kenneth Cole, and also works with nonprofits, helping them with marketing and special events. "Recently several of us were together for the wedding of Allison Kinney. "Allison was married in Sonoma to a great guy called Tom McGowan . Tom is in the wine business, and recently they relocated from San Francisco to Lake Forest, IL Allison works with Hammacher Schlemmer, and I'm thrilled to be able to see her so frequently now. She and Tom are expecting their first baby- a little girl- in December. Timothy Clark was in from Switzerland for Allison's wedding. He manages maritime projects with a firm based out of Geneva. "1, by the way, am married with three children. 1 have identical twin boys who keep us busy with
John Fiske '85 is writing away and staying busy as a full-time dad on Boston's north shore. f-Ie is self-publishing an historical novel on the design and construction of the New York City Public Library and has found the Trinity alumni network very useful in this effort. their high energy- it's like having puppies in the house. My daughter is in the first grade, and the boys still in preschool. I worked for Sara Lee Corp for many years and am now involved in several community causes. I celebrated my 40th last month and was in awe of my husband, who surprised me by including Marianne and Tracy again, as well as Andrea Bici, John Lee, and Andrew Blume. Andrea works with Schoeder Investments in New York as an analyst, and Andrew lives in Cambridge, MA. H e recently was ordained in the Episcopal Church and is pondering a move back to New York. He and his wife had their first baby. William, this past spring, and enjoy a country house on Cape Cod. Missing was Lies! Odenweller, who lives in Venice and continues her successful opera career while juggling life with a three-year-old daughter and globe- trotting husband. "This past spring, Bryant Zanko '87 gathered several W Michigan Trinity alums together for a fun evening. He works in business development here for Stryker."
Alumni Fund Goal: $20,000 Class Secretary: Jeffrey S. Jacobson, 15 Iron Hollow Rd., Sharon, MA 02067-2863 e-mail: jeffrey. jacobson.1989@trincoll.edu; fax: 617-439-8474 Class Agents: Donna Haghighat; Christopher Rogers Dickinson Lydia Babbitt reports, "Conrad Sienkiewicz and I were married 12.04 in Litchfield, CT, and now reside on beautiful Highland Lake in Winsted, CT. I am getting used to the fact that I live with a guy who teaches at the high school from which I graduated (Litchfield High School). It still is odd to know that colleagues of his were teachers of mine (albeit young ones). I have maintained my last name as 'Babbitt,' so if you are in the area looking for a tour guide, look us up. Our daughter, Caroline Sarah, was born in May of 'o6 and is proving to be an absolute delight. She is rather theatrical like both of her parents, loves the music in church, and sings along when she is awake. We are waiting a while to see if she takes to muzzle loading artillery like her mother or not. I saw Laura Everett Stanley over the summer and she is as energetic, fun, smart and funny as eve r. She and her husband James are still in the area with their beautiful daughters, Elizabeth and Virginia." I am not opposed to paraphrasing a report,
but Michelle McEttrick gives me such good Seattle-speak (e.g. "Skyping>") that I am quoting her as well. "Here's the dish. I moved with my husband to London spur-of-the-moment at the end of August for a fantastic job at advertising agency BBH. We had just finished a three year remodel of our home in Seattle. Which is, of course, unacceptable to the order of the universe. Finish a remodel and you will be moving, no question. Last weekend we saw Andrew (Spike or Zippy depending on when you met him) Walker and his wife, Tina, at a kick-ass Gus Fawkes bonfire, complete with fireworks so close the embers were falling in our hair. He and Tina have been in London with their two tots for three years. He organized a poker game which my husband, Mike, attended with six ex-pat guys who had never played befo re. Trinity alums, there is money to be made at poker in London." Sue Kinz Maggioni, Nancy Cudlipp, and I just spent an hour Skyping this afternoon. They each have three beautiful, talented, charming, and witty children. Husbands aren't bad either. Sue is in Wellesley, Nancy is in Seattle. In other news, Paul yhan is also in Seattle with lovely wife Sam and two adorable kids. He is still fighting the good fight in journalism while writing diligently on his own projects by candle-light at night. The Trinity Alumni office forwarded information concerning Susannah L. Brown, who opened her new law office in Pembroke, MA, in August. The firm specializes in family law, divorce, and immigration. Susannah has practiced law for 15 years and most recently practiced with another law firm in Pembroke. Becky 1-lalt recently opened her own office in downtown yack, NY, teaching kids with special needs and "working as an education specialist and holistic heal th counselor with kids and families looking to live a more a more healthy life ... I am happy to be a little business owner in a cute town I love so close to the City." I heard from Kate Roy Sullivan, Ph.D., a psychologist, who has a private practice in central Massachusetts where she lives with her husband, Jon, and her four children. The include daughter Emma (u) and three sons James (8) , Thomas and Finn (5 months) . She reports very busy days ... "third grade math is tough! With an almost 12-year-old daughter, visiting colleges again doesn't seem that far away.' Of course, all of my friends are too lazy to help me out a bit here so I will pass on the fol lowing, STOP THE PRESSES - Jonah Cohen Winter 2007 j
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class notes is engaged. Sorry about that Jonah, but that's what you get for being sarcastic when I plead for updates. It sounds like a March wedding is forthcoming. so the boys may have to kidnap him for a February jaunt to Florida for some sort of bachelor party. More on that later. Speaking of the boys, I played golf with Jonah, Chris and Jon Leary, Ridge Cromwell, and Mike Joyce '90 as part of a larger crew at Fox'Woods in the fall and enjoyed a few hours at the casino. Also, I celebrated at Mike Miele's surprise 40th birthday party hosted by his wife, Kara, at their home with, among others, Ted Lyon, who, with his wife Margaret, is expecting his second child in the spring. Who else> I had a few beers in New York with Steve Belber and Rich Maloney (on the due date of his second child). I will update you on their lives and families if they ever write in to me.
Alumni Fund Goal: 30,000 Class Secretary: Timothy J.
Callahan, Jr., 44 Vernon Street, Apt. 1, Brookline, MA 024464936; e-mail: timothy.callahan. 1990@trincoll.edu Class Agents: Peter Denious; Pamela Hickory Esterson; Alexis Brashich Morledge
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Class of'90 This installment will be a bit on the short side, for a variety of reasons. AI; I write this, my most recently posted notes have not yet gone to press, which puts me at a bit of a disadvantage. Generally a good long posting generates feed back for the next Notes, and thanks in part to some great (and much appreciated) help from my lovely predecessor, Sara Moorin Lang , the last installment was well stocked. Unfortunately; as I sit here hunting and pecking at deadline, you haven't yet read it. Because of this very fact, the Alumni Office has informed us that they will be changing the publishing schedule, ensuring that the Notes are published before the next ones are due. This is a good thing. On to the Notes. I had the chance to catch up with Andy Steinberg the other night, and "Tree" got me up to speed on what's been happening with the Steinberg clan out in greater LA. In short- it's growing (the clan, that is) A.ndy and his wife, Connie, recently welcomed a second daughter to the famil y; Alexa Gabriela, joining threeyear-old daughter Maya. Alexa is quite a joy; but unfortunately she has kept Tree away from his beloved Lakers and his season tickets. Happily though. he did recently have a chance to take Maya (a.k.a his little Laker Girl) to the Staples Center to catch some live hoops. When later asked who her favorite player is, Maya excitedly replied "Defense!" of which she had heard the crowd chanting during the game. With all that chanting, she assumed "Defense!" must be a pretty darn good player. Good thinking. Maya,
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but I'd go with Kobe. Andy also reported that he keeps in regular touch with Ron Goodman. Ron has been busy running a successful accounting practice and is back living in his hometown of Sharon, MA. I used to see Goodie around my current 'hood. Brookline, quite a bit, but sadly, I haven't run into him in quite some time. Please look me up if you're armmd any time soon, Goodie. A few weeks back, I had the happy occurrence of seeing a friendly but long-lost name pop up in my Inbox- E:ric Lorenzini. It had been many years since Eric and I had corresponded, and it was great to hear from "Goose" (or, as my old roommate Augusto "Goose" Lopez used to call him, The Imposter- only room for one Goose on a small college campus, apparently). Turns out Eric is an attorney and was going to be in Boston to take a deposition. After Trinity and a stint at Common Cause in D. C., Eric went to Stanford Law, fell in love with the California weather, and never returned east. He settled in Hollywood, where he works for a medium-sized LA firm and specializes in copyright law as it pertains to the entertainment industry Interesting stuff Good thing I never downloaded any music using any of those nefarious file -sharing search engines like Napster. Urn. ~ckly changing the subject, I mentioned a classmate of ours and good friend of Eric's, Dave Loew, whom I don't think I've seen since graduation. Eric has hooked up with Dave several times when in Chicago on business. Dave is living in the Chicago area, where he is working at an advertising agency on the creative side. and from the sounds of it, basically killing it. Dave has been one of the creative drivers behind some large national ad campaigns on behalf of Fortune 500 companies, essentially writing and scripting national TV spots. Dave is happily married to his long-time wife, whom he met back when we were at Trinity; and Eric described his daughters as "ridiculously beautiful." Nice going, DL. Eric was pumping me for info on some other classmates for whom he hoped I had an update, but unfortunately I was empty handed. For instance, what on Earth happened to Jamie Gabriel > Last I saw Jamie, it was maybe 1995, at the Michigan/ Ohio State football game. If you read this Jamie, please drop me a line, I would love to get back in touch. A.nd what in the heck ever happened to Dave Landa ? I remember getting a postcard from Dave many years ago, penned while Dave was on a bullet train in Japan, if memory serves. Every year during the Little League World Series, I half expect to see Dave on TV in Williamsport, PA, coaching the Taiwan national team to the LLWS title, and every year l am disappointed. If anyone has doubts, I'm trying to encourage more of you to write in. It would be great to be able to post some more updates on some of you from whom I haven't yet heard, such as. The Tall Boys - J-Bus (Jason Farrar) , Tim (Boylan), Steve (Kemler), Frank (Alexander),
Jason (Hicks) - what are you guys up to> If you get a second, please write in and let me know what's up. I'd love to know, and I'll bet your classmates would to. I hope you are well Class of '90 - I miss y'all. Peace. Tim
Alumni Fund Goal: $25,000 Co-Class Secretary: Heather
Watkins Walsh, 4519 Sangamore Rd., #102, Bethesda, MD 20816-2539 e-mail : heather.walsh.1991@ trincoll.edu Co-Class Secretary: Ann Newman Selvitelli, Suffield Academy, 185 N. Main Street, Suffield, CT 06078; e-mail: ann.selvitelli.1991@trincoll.edu Class Agents: Robin Halpern Cavanaugh; Susannah Smetana
Classmates! The colwnn is short and sweet this time. Thanks to everyone who e- mailed me back, and I am sure we'll have more news next time (hint, hint). My big news is that I am due December 31 with a baby boy Our daughter, India, was born in Dec of last year, and I've heard my husband, Bob, say recently; ''Another rockin' New Year's for the Walsh family! " Seems like a lot of you can relate' But the best class news of all is .... Bryan Neel, who was feared lost by the Alumni Office, was just busy and living in the Mid West! Bryan Nee!: "Went to Cornell and earned an MBA IO years ago. married a Long Islander nine years ago, and have a son and daughter who are wonderful kids, super athletes. Happily settled in Minnesota where I came from. Spend summers on the lake, playing tennis, romping with the kids; winters we ski, skate, and sauna at the cabin. Am a VP-wealth management at Smith Barney Life is good, and I am happy alive! E-mail is hbneel@yahoo.com for anyone out there." David Payne: "Helen Gemmill (Midd.'oo) and I are engaged to be married in September 2007 at the Basin Harbor Club in Vermont. In the meantime, we're attempting to make our recently purchased home in Boulder 'net-zero' through energy efficiency retrofits and installing on -site solar thermal and electric systems, etc. I'm still (slowly) working on my Ph.D. and teaching in the meantime at University of Colorado." Katie Everitt Denio us and her husband, Peter Denious '90, successfully ran in the New York Marathon together. Their children cheered from the sidelines. I heard Katie accidentally gave Lance (Armstrong) a flat. Missy and Dylan Remley have added two more to the Remley brood- identical twins Alexander and Kellen Remley were born on June 16, 2006. Keep in touch everyone ... Happy Holidays.
Alumni Fund Goal: $50,000 Class Secretary: Eric H. Holtzman, 853 S. LeDoux Rd ., #]03, Los Angeles, CA 900351859 e-mail: eric.holtzman.l992@ trincoll.edu Reunion Committee: Molly Gerber; Eric f-1oltzman; Kathleen Kadziolka; Malcolm Maclean IV; Patrick McKeigue; Matthew Woods
Greetings fellow members of the C lass of 1992. It is time once again for another update. Fellow denizen of the View, Molly Buck Eldridge wrote, "It's been a while since I have written anything for the alumni magazine so I'm not sure where to start. I think at the Reunion I had just moved to Crested Butte, Colorado, to run a ski lodge. Alan and I are still here and just celebrated our 10-year anniversary! We have two boys- six and almost four, so life is busy, loud, and fun. I just started a new career selling real estate with Prudential, so if anyone needs a Rocky Mountain getaway- look me up! I am planning to come to the Reunion in June and think Laura (Weintraub), Jen (Yourdon) and Petula (Gordon) are, as well. I see them when ever I get to the East Coast, and life is good! Hope to see everyone in June!" Elizabeth Sullivan Davidson is currently living in Manhattan with her husband, Steve, and their son, Stephen. She is working with a Mexican jewelry designer, Mercedes Werner, to help launch her collection in the United States. She is also doing volunteer work at both her son's school, Saint David's School, and at her high school, The Convent of the Sacred Heart. Fellow resident of the City of Angels, Anna David, wrote with the exciting news of the publication of her first novel. She writes, "I've been writing for magazines like Playboy, Details, Cosmo, Redbook, Premiere, People, etc. for several years now but my first novel, Party Girl, is due out in June of next year from Regan Books/ HarperCollins, and you can actually pre-order it on Amazon now! I also appear on random TV shows, discussing the merits of reality TV, doling out relationship advice, or talking about whatever else they ask me to. My site, www.annadavid.com, contains more information than anyone could possibly want to know about me. "I don't run into that many Trinity- ires in LA- we lost both Chrissy Klotz and Phil Mittleman to New York over the past few years- though I did recently catch up with Mary McCormack, who was C lass of 1991, recently had a baby; and is always working on either TV or in movies. Marie Elena Riga, M.A., also lives in swmy southern California in nearby Santa Monica. Marie Elena started her own company; offering Feng Shui, interior design, and life coaching in 2004, called MER Life Design and it's been growing steadily Her story of leaving corporate America to do Feng Shui was featured on The Fine Living Network's "Radical Sabbatical" show
We're attempting to make our recently purchased home in Boulder 'net-zero' through energy efficiency retrofits and installing onsite solar thermal and electric systems, etc. -David Payne '91 in 2005, and it still re -airs frequently (you can watch it at www.MERiifedesign .com.) She was hired to shoot a pilot about Feng Simi for A&E and is waiting to hear if they'll buy the series. She also shot another demo for an L.A. production company and they are pitching it to cable networks- so media buzz abounds. Marie Elena writes, "I have a wonderful partner who is an inspirational singer/songwriter. He's also an entrepreneur, and we love sharing the freedom, growth, and learning that comes from running our own businesses. Still in touch with Sara Jo Wayne, who has two little ones now- and speak to Colleen Curran periodically as well. I did hear from Malcolm Mclean, who comes out to Santa Monica every few months. but we haven't been able to meet up yet. All the best to the C lass of '92. I can't believe it's been 15 years!" My former Funston roommate, Tito Vasquez, sent the following update: "Hope all is well. I'm here in Long Island. I'm finishing up with my plastic surgery fellowship with the Long Island Plastic Surgery Group in Garden C ity. Then finally I'll be making more than minimum wage. We just moved from Manhattan, where l finished my hand surgery fellowship. Mary Jo (Puglisi) , Kate, and I are living in Mineola (we miss Manhattan a bit more, but things aren't so bad- except for the skyrocketing gas prices) . Mary Jo had a good time being with Kate for the last year and will probably be looking to work at least part time in a few months. Kate is 2 I/ 2 and we'd like to take her to Disney World in the fall. Don't quite know where we'll end up, but chances are we're moving back to CT in two years. Anything can happen." Another Pike Brother (and another doc tor- where did l go wrong>) , Brian Claussen, has been practicing medicine in Manchester, CT, since 1999. He is board certified in family medicine. He earned his medical degree from the Unive rsity of Connecticut and completed his residency at the Harrisburg Family Practice Residency Program in Harrisburg, PA. His practice, Family Physicians of Manchester, was recently acquired by Catholic Medical Center. Regular contributor Kate Powers has endured a very difficult year. She writes, "In December 2005, my Manhattan apartment caught fire, rendering me homeless and nearly possessionless in less than an hour. My soapbox message to everyone: double-check your insurance policy's relationship to your worldly goods! The cost of replacing your clothing alone is more than you think it is. James Weston and Monique Odom Weston (both C lass of '93) have been part of
my personal network of generous, patient, and supportive 'first responders.' It is astonishing how much of one's time it takes to be homeless: while the lawyers still wrangle, I have finally. in mid-July, moved into a new apartment in Brooklyn and am starting, eight months later, to get my life, and my directing career, back on track. O y vey I have directing projects coming up at the Mint Theatre here in ew York and at both Richmond Shakespeare Festival and the American Shakespeare Center in Virginia. That about sums me up for 2006." Karen lsgur writes from Atlanta, "I have been working as a personal trainer since April of this year. Totally new career path for me as I was in corporate marketing for five and half years with Coca- Cola. I am loving it! I am doing some marketing consulting projects on the side. I've also started writing again, which I haven't really done since being a creative writing major in college. I have published two articles in Triatl1lo1l Life (a member magazine for the USAT) . In October, I will be running my first (and probably my last') marathon in Dublin, Ireland, and traveling through Ireland after that. I have been training with Team in Training and have raised Ss.ooo for Leukemia and Lymphoma Society It's a great cause that I have been working with for over a year now. Still in Atlanta, GA. so call me if you are ever in the area! Otherwise, hope to see everyone at Reunion '07." Andrew Formato, who spent many an evening in my Boardwalk quad with my roommates, John Niland and Dave Golas, was recently named to the board of directors of C lear Choice Financial, Inc. Andrew is the managing director of Weeden & Co. of Greenwich, CT He also serves on the management committee. Additionally; he serves on the board of the New York Athletic Club and M.I. .T., a local children's charity. Since my last update, I have had some interesting experiences- one bad one and, fortunately; many good ones. In May; I was held up at gunpoint at II :30 in the morning, one block from my son's school after chaperoning a field trip. So, if you can get held up by gang-hangers in broad daylight in the middle of Beverly Hills, where are you safe these days> As for the good news, only an hour before this happened, my wife and I found out that we are going to have ano ther baby- a girl, due the second week of January Additionally; I have had the good fortune to visit with two of my closest friends, Drew Kemalian and Jeff Nowak. Drew is a CPA working in Canton, MA. Jeff is a VP with Arnold Worldwide Advertising and lives in Arlington, MA. Both are married and both have
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class notes two beautiful little girls. And finally, for a great Trinity "small world" story . .. my son's new friend from school came over for a play date last week. When his mother came to pick him up, we were chatting and the subject of college came up. She asked me where I went to school and, as I usually do with people in LA, explained that I went to a small college in Connecticut that she had probably never heard of called Trinity College. She then said, 'Are you kidding me, I did my junior year there and it broke my heart that I had to go back to Skidmore for my senior year!" On that note, thanks to all who contributed. You have no idea how much I appreciate even the smallest blurb that you send. I look forward to seeing all of you June 7 - 10, 2007. back at our little Camp Trin-Trin!
Alumni Fund Goal: $50,000 Class Secretary: Jonathan ~ . Heuser, 200 West 26th St., Apt. 12F. New York, NY 100016761 e-mail : janathan.heuser.1993@ trincoll.edu; fax : 617-886-0900 Class Agents: Stephen Curley; Kelsey Hubbard; ~Iissa Raether Kovas
Greetings all and welcome to the latest edi tion of our class notes. It was a bit of a slow quarter for notes, but nothing to be concerned about. All trends indicate that Births, Marriages, and Life C hanging Events should be back at their usual robust levels by next quarter. It is also possible that malicious gossip and salacious murmurings will stage a comeback. Analysts note that the risk of such a trend is inversely correlated to the number of submissions that your class secretary receives ...interesting data, to say the least. In any case, what we lack in quantity we make up for in quality! Our classmate Jeff Devanney is in his first year as the head football coach of the perennially mighty Bantams after serving as an assistant for the past five seasons. "I am very proud to be the head football coach at my alma mater," writes Jeff, who lives in Newington with wife, Michelle, and two daughters, Shea (4) and Caitlin (2) . Congratulations on the new role, Jeff, and best of luck to you. Make us proud! Dan Scanlan recently returned to the nineto-fiveworld (Dolly Parton reference expunged) , taking a position in corporate and founda tion relations at AIDS Action Committee of Massachusetts. ''I'm really excited to be able to work with the private sector to find ways for companies to help fight HIV/AIDS," Dan said. "''m working with a great group of people who are making a difference here in the Boston area." A great cause, for certain, and when I caught up with Dan in Boston a few months back, he had just wrapped up a very successful fundraising campaign. ice work, Dan. Congratulations are in order for leslie
trinity repo rte r \
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Soler, who happily welcomed second son, Andre
Rainville, on June 24, 2005 . The previous winter, Leslie finished her master's in business from the University of Connecticut - a program from which she graduated with honors. ~ite a year! She continues to work in the mergers and acquisitions unit of The Hartford as counsel. Her older son, Yvan, just started kindergarten. Leslie stays in close touch with other Trinity alum.ni, including Irene Rodrigues, Michelle Jasper '92, and Ewa Whiteside ' 92 . This fall Audrey Brashich did a tour in support of her recently published book, All Made Up: A Girl's Guide to Seeing Through Celebrity Hype and Celebrating Real Beaut)'. The tour brought Audrey
back to campus to speak at Mather, in addition to speaking engagements at other colleges, schools, youth groups, and conferences - and even garnered coverage from CNN Headline News and the Hartford Courant! Audrey celebrated with her own personal tour of Hawaii - before tackling the finishing touches on book number two. I caught up with another of our media/ journalist classmates, Jay Akasie, for lunch a few months ago, and he filled me in on his new role as business editor for the New York Sun . Glad to see Trinity's hold over the media gaining strength ... our plans to dominate the hearts and minds of America are finally coming together. Brian Johnson spent some time with the Chris Bodkin clan (including two children) and the Andy Brick clan (more on the Bricks in a moment) this past September, and sent in some pictures to prove the truth of his assertions - looked like a fun weekend. Mentioning this visit brought to Brian's mind a somewhat different adventure, back in March, when Brian, Andy, Clive Jacques, Jon Trevisan, and Jamie Gaillard staged a fresh man-year Wheaton dormitory reunion ... in Sin City Brian notes that while he had a great
JIM HAZ~LTON '93 and Jessica Rowland were married on Septmeber 24 , 2005, in Boston. Trinity alumni/ae and friends attend ing were: (front row, I. to r.) Tim Ward '07, ~ ric Mudry '94, Pres Stewart '93 , Rob Stempien '93; (second row, I. to r.) groom and bride ; (back row, I. tor.): Ali Baird '94, Duffy Mudry '94 , Tad Hazelton '92. Jon Deluca '92 , Kelsey Hubbard '93, Lloyd Nemerever '93 , Jerry Webber '71 , Brian Oliver '93, Alex Hazelton '99, Anne Hazelton and Trinity College Director of Athletics Rick Hazelton P'92, '93 , '99.
time with old friends, the trip wasn't without its disappointments: "I was certain something absurd or salacious would happen in Vegas - it says so in the ads. Also, none of us won or lost more than about Srso .. .I think the seafood buffet was the highlight." I. for one, am not fooled by the seemingly innocuous subterfuge, but hey - what happens in Vegas ... you know where I am going here. Andy Brick himself wrote in to welcome he and wife ]en's third child, Camryn Elizabeth, on June 2. The two are "delighted to have a girl to go along with our two busy boys!" Andy recently had the chance to get together with Tom Reuter and Jorge Rodriguez ' 91 in New York. Tom is working for the Nespresso division of estle Corporation and is moving to Vienna, Austria, in November to oversee the growth of various new Nespresso stores. According to Andy; "Tom is currently single, but is in a committed relationship with a former tennis professional. Despite losing a little hair, Tom looks and acts the same." "Brian Johnson came down to see me a few weeks ago to watch the Cowboys- Eagles game. Brian inexplicably is a big 'Boys fan, but my Eagles put him in his place. Brian works for Accenture and has been dating heavily, although it appears he is in a promising relationship at the moment." I asked Brian to expand on the "dating heavily" comment, and he explained something about the different perspectives of married and single people ...l won 't go into details, and will leave out the more colorful language. In any case, I appreciate Andy's provocative comments ... we could use a few more raconteurs in our ranks .. . Jim l-lazelton got married! Okay - so it was more than a year ago (September 24, 2005) and it may be old news to some but it is new for the Reporter, and still new and exciting for Jim as well. He's sent along a photo so that we can all share in the moment. Basking in the glow of success, Jim writes, "''m in LA. living the dream." Amanda and Mike Reyna! , moved back to the U.S. this summer after nearly three years in olde London town. While they miss London, they're glad to be back in the States, and are settled in Des Moines, Iowa, where Mike continues his job as emerging markets fund manager for Principal Global Investors. Amanda is doing interior design while managing the responsibilities of being mother to Henry (6) and George (3) . Scott Toth, long absent from the Reporter, has just celebrated 10 years as a San Francisco resident (Would this be an appropriate time to pose the rhetorical question, "Where does the time go?") and has been industriously at work for Oracle Corporation the entire time. Scott notes that the last two years have been "crazy;" dealing with the mountains of acquisition integration work. Scott and his wife, Liese!, had their first child, Sean Alexander, this past May; and while many of us swelter through triple digit temperatures in steamy northeastern cities,
Scan and family are "enjoying the cool summer weather in SF." Jennie Baker also checked in from the West Coast, noting some important changes in her life. After 12 years in sales and sales management for the broadcasting industry, she has decided to start her own coaching and training company called "360 Coaching & Training." Jennie's focus is sales performance improvement, training for managers and life coaching. Though based in San Diego, she works with clients located all over the country. Whenever she is back in New York, Jennie continues to meet up with Wendy Yun, currently in-house counsel for Goldman Sachs Asset Management, and Steve Tobey, a vice president at Bane of America Securities. CongranJations to Peter Knight and his wife, Samantha, who this January welcomed Peter Jr. into the world. According to the proud parents, Peter Jr. is "huge and happy and has a chin dimple you could see from outer space." More good news: Pam 0. l=oster earned a promotion and is now overseeing grants administration for The Rockefeller Foundation, meanwhile acting as assistant general counsel. This sounds to me like a lot of responsibility, and Pam agrees: "A lot of work, but a lot of fun ," she notes, adding that, "Chris and the kids are great- Emma is almost four, and we're having fun watching her imagination at work. Abby turned one in May, and is walking and starting to talk." Pam had a chance to catch up with l-ledy (Klein) Ayers and her newly-expanded family recently: joining her son, Jack, is a new baby boy, reportedly "very adorable." I'm not one for omens, but still - this is all a bit strange. !-larry Cohen and his wife, Shari , proudly greeted their second child, Maya Reese, on June 6 of this year- otherwise known as 6j 6j o6. ~ite a date to begin with, right> ow get this: he was tl1e 66th baby born at the Newton-Wellesley hospital that month! How much did she weigh, you ask? Of course it was 6 pounds (6 pounds, ro oz, to be exact)! Harry continues to enjoy his work for MFS Investment Management in Boston as an IT project manager on their fixed income trading/research/ quantitative appl ications and feels fortunate that Maya didn't turn out to be sextuplets. Kim Pitrowski has an interesting new job, having recently moved to the Food Network. Also, some of her artwork will be featured on different Aoors of Barney's- in the main store no less- during New York's Fashion Week, and then rotating every few weeks thereafter. CongranJations, Kim! While we'll still need to wait a few months for the complete story, readers should have no doubt that Quanti Davis will soon have some interesting adventures upon which to report: as of this writing he had recently departed on a "working vacation" trip to Europe and Africa. During this epic voyage, ~anti will visit France, Italy, and South Africa for fun , and then spend
The Trinity Club of Fairfield held a reception at the beautiful and historic Lockwood-Mathews Mansion in Norwalk, CT. ..
We also served wine from
~aight
Vineyard of Litchfield , CT, a winery owned by Trinity alumnus Sherman ~aight Lt6. -Matt Longcore '94, president, Trinity Club of Fairfield
time in Rwanda to help set up a sister school for his current employer. What a time for David Riker: Last year he got married to the delightful Melanie, a feat that would seem difficult to top. Undaunted, however, David persevered. First, he founded a new company: Storm Risk Solutions, which helps corporate clients and investors to hedge weather risk. (Want to take an "over-under" on the outcome of the tailgate party instead of the game? David's your man.) Then, if that wasn't enough, he founded a new individual ...that's right, a baby! David and Melanie were expecting their first - due within weeks of this writing. That seems like a great place to leave things ... with exciting expectations and optimism about things to come. Until next time, best wishes to all and we look forward to hearing your news and sharing your stories as we mighty Bantams march shoulder to shoulder, wing to wing, across the free - range of life.
Alumni l=und Goal: $25,000 Class Secretaries: Jeffrey Sanford and Martha Smalley Sanford, 12 Pennocook St., Norfolk, MA 02056-1117 e-moils: jeffrey.sonford.1994@ trincoll.edu; mortho.sonford. 1994@trincoll.edu Class Agents: Stephanie Cope Donohue; Patrick Gingras; Joy Sorzen
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We are writing this just shortly before Thanksgiving but by the time you read this it will be 2007, so Happy ew Year! Hope 2006 was good to everyone and that even better things are in store for the year ahead. 2006 was a busy year for us as we welcomed a baby boy, Mason malley Sanford, on August 28. He was born at 8 pounds, 2 ounces and by his two - month checkup has quickly ballooned into the 99th percentile in weight and height. You should see the cheeks on this kid• We are already fielding salary contract offers from the Patriots for his lineman services in 2027 Older twin sisters Suzie and Evie are both doing well and love their new little brother, almost a little too much! In other baby news, Carter and Suzanne (Cahill) McNabb had a little boy, Carter Ill , on June 12. Lord help us that another Carter McNabb has been released upon this earm. I don 't care how sweet and angelic he looks right now, he is going to be trouble- just like his daddy. Hopefully his big sisters, C lare and Mimi, wil l be able to keep him in line.
Anne Kwon Keane and Pat Keane '92 had a little girl on November 2. Her name is Eleanor Louise Kwon Keane. They are calling her Ellie, and from the pictures she looks to be quite a cutie-pie. ot sure if you all caught it, but the editor-in -chief of Lucky magazine did a piece in the ovember issue on how stylish Anne has been throughout her whole pregnancy. Are any of us the least bit surprised>! In other Trinity 1994 news, we saw Brendan Murphy and Sarah (Godcher '95) Murphy recently at a Halloween party at the New England Aquarium. They are expecting a boy in January to join older sister Norah. I petitioned for the name of Sean Preston Spears Federline Godcher Murphy, but with the recent divorce announcement from Britney, that name may not quite have the same cache as it once had. Perhaps by next issue we'll be able to share with you the name they settled on .. . Braxton (Jones) Lynch wrote to us with the following update. "After II years as the director of thoroughbred sales at Three Chimneys Farm, I am branching off on my own with my husband, Damian. Our Royal Oak Farm will board and sell horses in Kentucky over the coming years. This move enables me to spend more time with our boys, Dylan (3) and Henry (r t/ 2) . I'm excited to be self-employed and as always, we have an open invitation for any Trinity folk to come and stay." Someday, Braxton, we hope to make it down for an outing to Churchill Downs and to drink our fill of bourbon! Joe Gross updated us on the following news: "I ran into Rosadel (Varela) Yellin and her fam ily in Bryant Park during a street fair in Ne~ York City. She is taking a break from mov1e producing and has spent the last year raising her son. I've also been in touch with TJ Rau, who IS doing well over at Schroder Investments. My family and I also spent an afternoon this past summer with Carl and Yare! Marshall's '96 fam ily (of five) to get our kids together. They currently live down in the D.C. area." Amy (McGill) Dilatush is still in NYC and has exciting news: "John, Mac (4), Olivia (r8 months) , and I just welcomed our newest addition, Henry, on September r6. We went to
www.tri ncoll. edu/alum ni • Births • Marriages • New Jobs • Photos
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class notes Amanda Woods and Eric Wasserstrom's love-
ly wedding last Saturday at the Central Park Boathouse. Ginny (Ross) Snow, Jennifer Usdan McBride '95, Suzanne Molinaro, Justin Burke, and Whitney Morrison Saunders were also there. Amanda was a stunning bride!" We also had news directly from Ginny (Ross) Snow, who wrote, "Drew, Charlotte (3) , Anders (r), and 1 have taken a temporary leave from the States and are living right outside of London. Drew's job moved us over here, and we arrived about two weeks ago. Just settling in now and getting used to driving on the other side of the road! We'll Likely be here for two- three years. After a lot of thought, I stopped working at Cambridge Assoc. when Anders was born and am now home with the kids. I miss work, but it has been great being home." We hope Ginny enjoys London as much as we did and hooks up with some of the other Trinity ex-pats over there, like Betsy (Grimstad) Limpenny. Rob Weber and wife Nicole (Komposch
'96) are in Brooklyn and e-mailed us with the latest and greatest. "We visited Mike Robinson and wife Virginia in their new home in CT this weekend. It's a beautiful new home and they learned how to cook since moving to the 'burbs too! Their three-year-old son, Brooks, beat up our one-year-old, William. I told Brooks to watch out cause if he grows up to be skinny like his dad, William will get him back. They also have a new baby, Luke (his full name is Lawrence, so I'm pretty sure he wasn't named after Luke Tansill) . Ash Altschuler and wife Shana were there too. They are due to have their first child in four weeks- end of an era, as they say! We wish them the best. We also attended a nice birthday dinner for Joe Stein last week. Someone recently described Joe as a chameleon- there was biker Joe, then surfer Joe, then London Joe, now Wall St. Joe. Steve Lari was there too. Steve is a busy international man of real estate and doing quite well, it seems. So all is busy in NYC between kids and new babies and business." Matt Longcore has kept close ties with Trinity and filled us in on the following updates, "As president of the Trinity Club of Fairfield County, I organized a recent alumni event, which was well attended. We held a reception at the beautiful and historic Lockwood- Mathews Mansion in orwalk, CT (the mansion was featured in the film The Stepford \Vives). The guest of honor was Borden Painter '58, president and professor of history, emeritus. We also served wine from Haight Vineyard of Litchfield, CT, a winery owned by Trinity alumnus Sherman Haight '46. Major kudos should go to my wife, Bree, for attending to the last- minute details of the event. She's the domestic diva in this relationship; I'm just good at sending out email invitations. The club has a newly formed Executive Committee, which will meet periodically to plan local alumni events. Alums living in the Fairfield County area are welcome to get involved. If you are interested, please e- mail
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me at trinitybantam@yahoo.com . My brother, Drew, Trinity Class of 'o8, is currently studying at the Trinity Rome campus. Those of us who remember studying abroad know that the term 'studying' is used rather loosely. (However, Andy Levine and I actually did study while at Oxford; we studied the pubs, the nightclubs, and the ladies from Smith College). Drew loves Rome, but he's looking forward to getting back to Camp Trin Trin. I am looking forward to that, too, as it gives me a good excuse to head up there from time to time." Deb (Watts) Povinelli sent in the following tidbits. "We have some news to report- as of December I, we are moving to Ridgefield, CT (in Fairfield County) . We will be leaving my family and many of our Trinity friends, but look forward to being closer to some of the CT/ NY folks. Also, since the last update we had a baby shower for Natascha (Kontny) Gundersen, who has since delivered a baby boy (Kai- July 30) . Senna (Lynch) Rondini was our hostess, Molly (Thiele) Farrell was there, as was Sara (Titus) Skelly, with her one-year-old son, Jackson. Kai is adorable and the Gundersens are doing well." We ran into Deb recently and she looks great. It's hard to believe that it was 16 years ago that I lived down the hall from her, freshman year in Jones Hall! Cliff Fuller is keeping busy and has set the record straight. "Rumors of my demise are greatly exaggerated. I still live and work in New York City For the past two years I've been the production coordinator on the television series "Law & Order: Special Victims Unit." In my spare time, I'm still slaving away on the Great American Screenplay." Good luck with that, Cliff' Kate Armstrong sent in "Lots and lots of baby news. We had a third daughter, Delia, on October 16, joining big sisters Annie and Ruby: She made an early appearance at Trinity, coming to Homecoming, where we had a great time catching up with Matt McGowan '92, his wife Heidi, daughter Neve, and brand- new addition Fiona, born at the end of August. Patrick McKeigue '92 and his wife, Sandra, and four children(!) also joined us for some tailgating and laughs. Three of my Trinity basketball teammates also had babies recently. Jennifer (Hadfield) Larson had a little boy, Tyler, in July, and Patty Sarmuk Canny '95 also had a boy, Cam, in June. B.). Toolan Constantine '95 had her second child, Jake, in May, just II months after giving birth to daughter Abby and weeks after being inducted into the Connecticut Women's Basketball Hall of Fame!" Thanks to everyone for the updates. Sorry this is a short Class otes, but with three little ones demanding attention, life has turned into a bit of a circus. In fact, when I asked Mark Kastrud for advice on handling three kids, he simply said "Learn to juggle." To all of you out there with children, hang in there! To all of you out there without children, keep smiling!
Alumni Fund Goal: $20,000 Class Secretary: Jennifer M. Petrelli e-mail: jennifer.petrelli.l995@ trincall.edu Class Agents: Charlie Adams; Ashley Gilmor Myles; t::llen Scardino; Colleen Smith
Greetings '95ers! My apologies for the blank entries in the class notes section for the past two editions of the Reporter. It has been a tough year or so for the Petrelli's. My father passed away in April after a battle with metastatic lung cancer and we miss him terribly. I am fortunate to have a great mom and a close relationship with my brothers Joe '97, Mike '04, and wonderful friends from Trinity and beyond, which has been a great comfort. I just returned from driving down to Marco Island, FL, from CT, with my mom to her "winter abode." We stopped at such fine dining establishments as the "Squat and Gobble," somewhere off 1-95 somewhere in North Carolina, and enjoyed fantastic Sunday gospel programming. The whole experience made me miss my days of yore in Atlanta. As I write, !'m in the midst packing for a trip to Argentina with my beau, Mariano, who is from Argentina. I look forward to eating yummy Angus steaks, drinking some fine malbee, attempting to tango (a frightening prospect for onlookers) , and sightseeing, in that order, of course! Thanks to Heather Dunbar's generosity, I had the pleasure of attending the first performance in front of an audience for the Broadway show, High Fidelity, when it was in Boston in September/ October. Heather is an integral part of the costume design team for the show and it was great to visit with her and see her excellent work! Congratulations to BJ (Toolan) Constantine, who was inducted into the Connecticut Women's Basketball Hall of Fame as a college playe r. The ceremony took place in New Haven, CT, in April. Patty (Sarmuk) Canny and Kate (Armstrong) van der Heide '94 were in the audience to cheer her on! Here's some info from the CT Basketball Hall of Fame Web site, and this is just from her senior year at Trinity! "During her senior year, BJ scored 546 points, averaged 21.8 points per gan1e, and made 85 three-pointers- all were Trinity season records. That same year, she led the Bantams to a 21 -4 record and the second round of the Division III NCAA Tournament. She also set career records in Highest Career Free Throw Percentage (76 percent) , and Most Career 3-poinrers (2oo)." BJ lives in Tarrytown, NY, and is a physical therapist and assistant girls' basketball coach at her alma mater, Irvington High School, also in Tarrytown. Patty and husband, Bill, are ecstatic to report that they had a baby boy on June 7! "His name is Cam William Canny and he is a very happy baby. And since it seems that BJ (Toolan) and l do
everything together these days, I am also proud to report that she and her husband, Mark, also had a baby boy one month before Cam! His name is Jake Edmund Constantine. They also have a beautiful 16- month-old daughter, Abby BJ and I talk on the phone almost every day to check in and share funny stories of mommyhoodl" Mag Sweet, a Rhode Island native and fellow biology major, was featured in an August article in the Providwce )oumal entitled, "Horse love finds her dream job in Saratoga." After graduating from Trinity, Mag went on to work with the ew York Racing Association and the Jockey Club in NYC. She is now the office manager for Todd Pletcher, one of the best trainers in the business, in Barn 62 at the Saratoga race course. Mag communicates weekly with the owners of over 200 horses in training. Jeff Goldschmidt (another fellow biology major!) writes that he graduated from UConn Dental School in 1999 and completed a threeyear residency in periodontics at UConn. He now is in private practice in New Britain and Southington, CT. His father, Paul Goldschmidt '68, retired recently; and Jeff took over his practice. Jeff and his wife Holly Sena recently celebrated their roth wedding anniversary In April 2006, they had a son, Max louis Senna- Goldschmidt, and they are enjoying him immensely Jeff and Holly live in West Hartford, CT. Nicola (Easterling) Donovan writes to update everyone that she and husband, Eric, had a new addition, a baby boy named Sean Patrick Donovan in 2005. He is an active tod dler now! Nicola writes that Joy Wright and Steven Goodison '96 had their first child in 2005, a beautiful girl named Grace. "We (Sean, Eric, and myself) visited them in Connecticut. Also, Joy and Steve have relocated to Florida in 2006. I speak to Joy often. She is enjoying being a stay-at-home mom to Grace and the beautiful Florida weather." Aaron Burrows (fellow biology major!) fin ished his gastroenterology fellowship at Saint Vincent's Hospital in Manhattan. He has a daughter, Samantha, who is now 16 months old. She is the most amazing little person in the world. "The big news is that my wife, Jodi, and I moved to Denver, Colorado. It has been a dream to move out here and we took the big step on July I. We bought a vacation home in Vail, Colorado, about a year and a half ago and now are able to use on a regular basis, instead of just a couple of times a year. I have joined a gastroenterology practice here in Denver, which so far has been a great fit. Jodi, Samantha, and I are adjusting nicely so far and enjoy the sunny outdoor lifestyle. We are gearing up for a great ski season in the mountains." "Sadly, I do not have much e- mail contact with the old gang, but I did get to see Jim Adams and his wife, Natalie, before we left for Colorado. They are doing quite well and just
Congratulations to BJ (Toolan) Constantine '95, who was inducted into the Connecticut Women's Basketball ~all of ~ame as a college player. During her senior year, BJ scored 546 points, averaged 21.8 points per game, and made 85 three-pointers-all were Trinity season records. purchased a new home in Auburn, MA. They have a BIG dog (which my daughter loved) and are both teaching in Massachusetts. Ted Anastasiou and Amanda (Smith) Anastasiou '96 also bought a new home in New Jersey I, too, am in the process of buying a new home in Denver." Gus Phelps writes that he married Wizzie Crocker in June at the Adirondack league Club in Old Forge, NY Pat Ashe and his wife, Ashley, Sean Berry '97, David Bernard, Jordy Davis, Dan Good, lindsay (Conway) Murphy '96, Ashley Gilmore Myles, Benagh and Josh Newsome, David Rhoads, Sandy Schmid '99, Colleen Smith, luke '96 and Sally Amon Tansill '98, and Tory Haskell '96 were in attendance. Gus and his new bride live in Beacon Hill in Boston. Megan (Curren) Schmidt writes, "My husband Marc and I have been enjoying life in Montauk, NY, with our seven -year-old dog, Emma, since returning from our unbelievable two-year 'stay' on Maui, which ended in 2002. I have been working for The Child Development Center of the Hamptons since our return and am currently the director of developmenta busy but very rewarding job! (wwwcdch.org). My husband, Marc, a contractor, is now also a volunteer firefighter, so we spend a lot of time responding to calls and supporting the MFD bar! Sara (Bliss) Hamblett and Megan took a trip to las Vegas this past August with some other mutual friends. Megan writes, "Sara is a surprisingly skilled Craps player! Who knew?" Hot off the presses ... Christy (Brown) Murray was recently married! Details to be reported in the next edition of the class notes! John Brien is living in Vermont in a small house on 10 acres of woods. He is married to Kerri, from Saranac lake, New York. He has a son, Connor, who is r8 months old. life is great up here. John is working as a senior software engineer for IDX, which was acquired by General Electric last year. Tom Lazay and his wife, liz, are expecting a little girl this winter and recently moved to Andover, MA. Amy (Kerrigan) Cole moved from NYC to San Francisco with her husband, Andrew, and son, Tommy They see Lisa Gallagher and Lisa Smith. lisa recently moved to San Francisco with her husband, Edwin, and baby, Ted. Amy writes that she recently saw Adam Beard at a party that lisa Gallagher threw and is looking forward to connecting with other Trinity friends. Kate Innes reports that she is uving in
Washington, D.C., and has been working at the University of Maryland admissions office for the past five years. She is an assistant director of admissions. She recently had a fun trip , to Boston, where she enjoyed a mini- reunion with Bryan Satter, his wife, Jamie, Tim Sullivan, Shannon (Joyce) Spaeder, Doni Slepian, Kathy Robinson, and Brian Roberts '94. Julie (Papazian) Charles is still living in Orange County, CA, with husband, Bill. In May she had her third daughter, liza! liza joins big sisters Emma and Remy They had a wonderful summer adjusting to life as a family of five and enjoying southern California. She often sees Stephanie (Goldstein) Scott, who lives in L.A., and had a great visit with Elena Bassler Hirsh while she was in San Diego with her beautiful daughters this summer. Meghan Riley Thress and her daughter, Abbie, visited Julie just before she had liza. Stephanie is loving living in LA. with her husband, Tom. She is freelance writing, and Tom works for a private equity group. Stephanie and Tom recently celebrated their fifth wedding anniversary and took a lovely vacation to Cabo. Steph recently saw Renee (Zimmerli) Spertzel in San Francisco a few days before Renee gave birth to son, Max. It's nice to hear that old Trinity friends keep in touch! Stephanie reports that she is in close touch with Renee, Julie (McCloskey) Campbell, Sarah Tyre, Elena (Bassler) Hirsh, Camy (Portanova) Toth, Meghan (Riley) Thress, and Natascha ("Tasch") (Kontny) Gundersen '94. Steph is looking forward to seeing Tasch's baby, Kai, this summer and Billy Hogan's '96 new arrival, Lulu, and Annie (Chick) Goodrich's '96 new arrival, Emmett, when they are back in Boston for the holidays! Elena writes that her husband finished his one-year fellowship in Portland, OR, in July. and they have now moved back to the East Coast. "We are currently (although possibly temporarily) living in Summit, NJ. We really ended up liking Portland but are happy to be back on the East Coast again with both our families. Sarah Tyre was the first one out to visit us in Summit (Yeah, Sarah!). My girls are now five (Kaitlin) and two (Brooke)." Trish (Haneman) Cox moved to ewfields, New Hampshire, after nine years in and around NYC. "It has one general store and is close to Portsmouth and Exeter, so a great location only an hour from Boston. We bought an old home from 1717 and 1856 and my husband, Chappy. who is in histo rical restoration, has lots of proj-
Wi11ter 2007 j trinity reporter
5~
class notes ects ahead! Our r8 month old, Breck (named after Breckenridge, where Chappy and I met and lived for a couple of years after graduation) loves being outside and the extra space. I am working for the Portsmouth School District as their outof-district special education coordinator, teaching and advising an early childhood graduate seminar at U Hand advising child life students at Wheelock in Boston. I am hoping to start a consulting firm for children with special needs up here, when I get more grounded. Breck's godmother is Jill Charlesworth l-lellman, who is now living in Richmond, Virginia, with rwo sweet little girls, Libby and Whitney. Jeremy; her husband, is busy with many home improvement projects too!" Laurie (Schaeffer) Young has a daughter, Maggie, who is 3 I/ 2 years old now. Laurie, hus band Rob, and Maggie recently moved to Nanuet in Rockland County, NY Laurie has been teaching history at Clarkstown High School South in Rockland County for 10 years. Trinity alum, Sara Simon '99, also teaches at South. "We actually graduated before she started at Trinity (yes, that made me feel really old!). Sara teaches English and we've been working together on a program for South seniors that's similar to the European Civilization Guided Studies Program at Trinity The students take AP European history with me, AP literature with Sara, and AP art history with one of our art teachers. So I guess all that work in Guided Studies at Trinity prepared me for my future career more than I ever expected. It's much more fun to be the one assigning the work, though. Laurie also speaks often with Kim (Rados) Powell. Kim moved to San Diego from Nashville in May 2005 for her husband to attend the San Diego Golf Academy "He graduated as valedictorian and is now happil y working as golf pro at a local country club. I've been to a few Trinity events out here and ended up becoming friends with Emily Keating Mortimer '99 and her husband, Trevor, who 1 actually went to boarding school with." Kim, her husband, and daughter Holl y (age rwo years) attended a summer kickoff at Katie and Charlie Adams' house to meet the students from San Diego who are freshmen at Trinity this fall . It was a lot of fun to think back to the final weeks before our freshman year at Cam p Trin Trin. I am still working in Database Marketing at PETCO and loving it." Congratulations to Colin Reilly, who has been promoted to first vice president at CB Richard Ellis in Stamford, CT. He is a corporate and institutional leasing and sales specialist with experience in commercial and real estate services. Colin lives in orwalk and is pursuing his master's degree at Columbia Business School. Thanks for sending in all the great tidbits of news! As you can see I am back on the news beat and looking forward to hearing more from you! So, if there's some news 1 overlooked please email me and I'll get it in the next edition!
trinity repo rter \ \\'inter 1007
Alumni Fund Gool: $75,000 Class Secretary: Philip S. Reardon, State Street Global Advisors, 1 Lincoln Street, 27th !=loor, Boston, MA 02111-2900 e-mail: philip.reardon.1996@ trincoll.edu Class Agents: Bee Bornheimer; Tiger Reardon; Clay Siegert; Tory ~askell Whitlock
We only have a few updates from our classmates this go- round. Please remember to send along any announcements, updates, or sightings to me at philip _ reardon@ssga.com. Billy !-logan and Jen (Martinelli) '98 welcome their first child- Eloise Jane Hogan- on Thursday, August 24. I was fortunate enough to see Jen and Billy at a dinner organized by Clay Siegert for his wife Deirdre's birthday Billy and Jen report that "Lulu" is doing very well and that they are adjusting nicely to parenthood. Jennifer (Crookes) Carpenter reports, "I had a blast at the Reunion catching up with everyone, although our time together as a class flew by way too fast! In August 2003, I married Bradford Carpenter at the Hill- Stead Museum in Farmington, CT. The minister was Bill Pfohl '86, a good friend who was the adviser for my quirky high school youth group in Trumbull, CT. There were a bunch of Trinity grads at the wedding, including Jeb Gutelius and his lovel y wife (then girlfriend) , Sarah Hamilton Gutelius '03. Brad is an art history and English teacher at Miss Porter's School in Farmington, where 1 began working in the Communications Office after our engagement. My stepson, Charlie, walks to school across the street from our house on the beautiful MPS campus; he's now in fourth grade! Life is good personally; although world events are distressing. I'd love to be back in touch with Trin roommates and other partners in crime, or any classmates visiting or living in the Hartford area. E- mail me at jenniferccarpenter@gmail. com We had a decent turnout from our class at this year 's Homecoming game. Jon Golas with his wife Katy (DeConti) '99, Clay and Deirdre Siegert, Tim Chick, who was making the rounds with Caroline Ponosuk '99, Jennifer (Crookes) Carpenter with husband and stepson all milled about can1pus on a beautiful autumn day We were also forttmate enough to hang out with Marc Pezzuto, who made the trip down from Boston with wife Amanda and their baby, Ryan. -Tiger
www.trincoll .edu /alumni
• Births • Marriages • New Jobs • Photos
Alumni Fund Goal: $30,000 Class Secretory: Tanya D. Jones, 1523 Mace Ave., Apt. 2!=, Bronx, NY 10469-5933 e-mail: tanya.jones.1997@ trincoll.edu Reunion Chairs: Amily Dunlop Moore; Benjamin Russo Reunion Committee: Katie Reifenheiser Adams, Bill Bannon, Peter Burns, Charles Baker, Jenny Dakin, Robert Johnson, Tanya Jones, Gary Koenig , John Lawrence, Tara Connelly Lawrence, Jim O'~are, Laura Bernstein o· ~are, John Pickford, Kearney ~arrington Staniford
Hello BantamsHere's the
latest ... a
little
brief:
Katherine Anderson Doyle writes "... we gave
birth to our rwin babies on July 29! After four months on bed rest, I incubated the babies well - they made it to 37 I/ 2 weeks, which for rwins is great. Jackson William Doyle and Faith Anderson Doyle were born at just under 5 lbs., and each and are doing very well. I love being mommy- it is very busy for sure- but as you can remember, it goes by so fast and they grow so quickly that I would not wish any of this precious time away" Katie Reifenheiser Adams shared this news: "Elizabeth Pflug Donahue and her husband, Tim, welcomed their beautiful baby girl, Riley Elizabeth Donahue, on June 5 in New York City Riley weighed 7 pounds and IO ounces. ln other exciting news, Liz, Tim, and their new daughter left ew York City and moved to Hong Kong for the next few years. A few days later, and also in ew York City, Megan Williams Grant and her husband, Tim, welcomed their new baby gi rl, Catherine Louise Grant, on June II. Lily weighed 7lbs., IS oz. Exciting engagement news to share ... Laura Yaggy was recently engaged. Abigail Keeler is set to marry Jesse Hard on October 14 at her parent's home in Loudonville, New York. Irene Laird Jennings and her husband, Elliott, gave birth to a baby girl named Zoe Ann Jennings born February 17. 2006." I recently attended the wedding of Alice McCartney Auth . She was married in the church where her parents and grandparents were married in Middle Village, ~eens. l was honored to sing ''Lift Every Voice"- a Trinitone favorite. Shaakirrah Sanders, Ashley l-lammarth, and Au's cousin, Greg Haffner '94, were all in attendance. Greg resides in New Haven, where he is an ophthalmologist. Shaakirrah will be vacationing in Italy for her annual Thanksgiving adventure. And Ashley is doing well, uving in North Carolina and working in public health. Elisabeth Schramm Buckley and husband Pete are awaiting the arrival of their second child, due at the end of November. As for me, I am wrapping up on a Disney production and anxiously awaiting a "go" for a second season. And I'm off to Milan to visit Kate McCabe, who has been working with State Street Bank in project management. She has
been with her company fo r close to ro years. I hear there is a Vespa waiting to ride me through the streets of Italy. Finally, please join us in June for our ro -year reunion. O ur reuni on committee is so excited to be planning out the weekend. After the five year, who knows what fun is in store (snicker, snicker) . Best wishes to all of you!
Alumni l=und Goal: $15,000 Class Secretary: Talia Kipper,
70-12 Prospect Street, Metuchen, NJ 08840-2270 e-mail: tal ia.kipper.1998@ trincol l.ed u Class Agents: Erin Bla keley; Sean Brown; Karen Go; David Messi nger; Sara Tan ner G reetings '98ers' I hope fall has treated everyone well. From the reports rolling into my inbox, it's been a busy season fo r babies, weddings, new jobs, and al l sorts of good life changes. Let's get to it! For the first time in my stint as Class Secretary. I have received a report fro m a source who wishes to re main anonymous. I told the source I would oblige but promised that there would be no permanent ramifications for squealing on her friends. So, uh, I won't tell you wh o she is, but here is what her friends are up to. Ellen (Newman) Petrov is living in Suffield, CT. and teaching at Suffi eld Academy. She and husband Denny Petrov 'o r are the proud parents of two beautiful baby boys. Sasha (Metznik) Schwartz and husband Seth continue to dote on daughter Alexandra, who will soon be marking her first birthday. Kerin Brauer recently married Dennis Nunn at a beautiful and fun - fill ed eve nt on Cape Cod this past summer. Rebecca Stover is happily marri ed, living and wo rking in Bosto n. Regan (l=arrar) Cucinell married Glenn Cucinell this past September in Westport, CT Word has it the bride looked amazing. Devin Tindall moved back to CT a little over a year ago and is the proud father of a glorious baby girl. Deep T hroat herself is currently working on an MBA at UConn and expects to graduate in 2008. Laura Mullaney recently accepted a position as senior account executive at GS W Worldwide (one of the largest healthcare advertising age ncies in the world) with responsibilities fo r managing a team while pro moting stra tegy and project implementati ons. Prior to GSW, Mullaney served as seni or account executive at Roska Direct Adve rtising. Ryan Moore writes in that he recently moved from Los Angeles to Las Vegas to work fo r Vegas Group Entertai nment. His new line of work has him involved in entertain ment and music industries along wi th casino marketing and eve nt planning and promotion. He remains close with Paul 1-lillman, who is living in Seattle with his fiancee. Paul co ntinues to create award-winning documentaries. Mark Craig is also engaged an d living in NY, wo rking
Reinventing the World Around l-ler: Entrepreneur Emily Beck '98 Perhaps as a premonition of her ambitious and successful entrepreneurial career, Emily Beck '98 was always one to chart her own course, even during her days at Trinity. J...jav ing self-
designed many of her college courses, after g ra duat ion Beck's panache for creating led her to self-pub lish the bestsell ing European guidebook series, Let's Stay Abroad, and, most recently, launch her own product-development company, Lulu Bra nds, which has been featured in the New York Times for City Mitts, a stylish germ-f ree glove designed to protect against t he griminess of mass transit. The impetus, she e xplains, behind starti ng the new brand "was an idea I had about underwear." Yes, that's right, underwear. i=orced to s hut down her publishi ng company after international travel dropped post-9/11 , Beck's entrepreneurial spirit was set free to explore new ideas like, well, redesigning the most fundamental piece of most wardrobes. "My zest, my dr ive to do someth ing else just kept going . I just kept wanting to innovate and do something bigger and better," she says. In 2001 , as many were
leavi ng Ma nhattan, Beck left behind the open air of her Aspen life and moved s hop to the basement of a small East Vi llage apartment to begin shaping her responsibilities of what today can be su mmed up as "product manager, strategist, and inventor." J...jer products range from the qu irky and unusual, such as Busy John, a funky musical arrangement made up of beats a nd flushes to be played in "otherwise music-free and echoey restrooms," to the everyday practical, such as Slip It, a credit card and MetroCard holder that allows users to slide the ir cards for p urchases without ever taking them out of their holders. J...jer inventions- created from start to finish all on her own- beg the question, "Why didn't I th ink of that?" Beck agrees and says she is always left wondering how it hasn't been done before. J...jer ingenuity, she says, comes from ca re ful observation of the world around her. The idea for Slip It came as she observed people's frustrations with traditional wallets as they fumbled to find the right card at the checkout counters and onboard public transit. "People always ask me about how I come up with my ideas. It's about being aware of your environment and about how people use their environment. I see opportun ities all day, everyday," she explains of her keen eye. With a new spin on a literally everyday item, Beck's "luxury liner" panty line is unquestionably the most-revolutionizing product to hit the undergarment aisle in years. J...jer fashionable feel-safe underwear, equipped with her patented sta in-preventing invention, W ick Stop, are available as of i=ebruary 2007 in Nordstroms, Ritz J...jotels, Macy's, and Sax i=ifth Avenue stores nationwide. To find out more a bout Em ily Beck's products, visit her Web site at www.lulubrands.com.
by Carli n Carr
Wintenoo7
I trinity reporter
61
class notes
TALIA KIPP~R '98 and Anthony Ausiello were married on September 17, 2006, in Chicago, IL . Trinity olumni/oe in atten dance were : (front row, I. to r.) Ally (Hurder) Levy '98 , Rebecca Cole '98 , bride , groom , Tomar Kipper '02 , Isabel Corte-Real '98; (bock row, I. to r.) Chris Comer '99, and Charlotte (i=oirbonks) Comer '98.
in the design sector. In other wedding planning news, college roommates, post collegiate roommates, and lifetime friends Rebecca Cole and Isabel Corte路 Real are planning their spring weddings four weeks apart! Those crazy gals! The Trinity housing lottery gods sure did hit the jackpot setting those two up together. Isabel will marry Victor Almeida on May 6 in their hometown of Danbury, CT. Their mothers have been planning the wedding for years, so Isabel looks forward to receiving an invitation to her own wedding. We're pretty sure it will still be on May 6, but who knows for sure. In a sweeping motion to change just about everything in her life, Isabel has also recently put her Jackson Heights, NY, apartment up for sale and relocated back to CT, where she has accepted a position as "something very important but I can't remember tl1e title right now" with Carrier (a United Technologies Company). Again, she's crazy. Rebecca will marry sweetheart Matt Trump in Delaware on June 2, in what promises to be a splendid affair! It's also a NASCAR weekend, which fulfills none of Rebecca's fantasies but amuses her friends immensely We're hoping to tie some "Just Married" cans onto one of those race cars and watch it go REAL FAST! I'll keep everyone posted. Now, we'll segue to those who have added another shiny jewel to their left hands. Jordan Benjamin married Matt Schaefer on Oct. 21 in Vermont and is remarkably unhappy about her re-emergence into the real world after posthoneymoon bliss. I relate. Eoin Beirne writes that he and Marianna Vulli were married at St. John's Memorial Chapel in Cambridge, MA, on October 14. The couple met on Jones 2 as freshman and have been together since sophomore year at Trinity. Hot dog! Trinity housing
2
trinity reporter \
Wi11t er 2007
gods strike again! Katy (DeConti) Golas reports that she and husband John Golas '96 are living in West Hartford and recently adopted a crazy yellow Labrador. She has come full circle and has actually gone BACK to Trinity. working in the development department. Yes, people, she has your phone number and she'll hound you for money Consider yourself forewarned. David Messinger just bought a house down the street from Katie and Jon. He should be stopping by any day now to borrow eggs, sugar, or vodka. Uzma Akhand is wrapping up her Ph.D. in New York, and Em my Tracy recently returned from the London School of Economics with her master's degree (and hopefully a faux British accent and/ or a penchant for digestive cookies and ginger beer). In other Golas family news, David Golas '92 and wife Laura recently welcomed their second daughter, Ella Katherine, while brother Ben Golas continues his surgical residency in New York. He has followed in his big brother's footsteps by adopting an equally crazy dog. Karen Go, my ever faithful source of news, writes, "John Walston and Colleen Burke had a wonderful wedding and celebration underneath the stars at the Adler Planetarium in Chicago. Trinity attendees included myself, Adrianne Ober, Julie Wyman 'or, Terrence Black 'oo, and James Griffith '99. In Boston, Jocelyn Bartlett and Seth Frank recently became engaged. Here in New York, Christopher Lui and Leigh-Anne Lopinto '99 plan to tie the knot in Connecticut in May of 2007 1 know there are more Trinity bells soon to be ringing for '98ers, but I'll keep their secrets for now! As for me, I am currently living in Hell's Kitchen and recently left Perry Capital, having had two amazing years there. I leave behind some good friends, including Emily Snider '02, but have just started work at Tiger Global Management." A note from Brendan l=alvey informs us that he was married to Lindsay Elliman on June 24, 2006, in Charleston, South Carolina. Trinity alums in attendance included best man Colin Lynch, Ryan Burch, Craig Borsari, Joe Mullaney, Mike and Natalie Clapp, Tara l-lanlon, Michelle
Buckley '96, Meghan Wilson '04, and Derek Falvey '04. Since their return from their honeymoon, they have been living in Rockville, MD, but Brendan has recently accepted an offer to become the director of new partner development for the Colorado Rockies. He and his new bride are looking forward to life in Colorado and would love to hear from any Denver-dwelling alums. Tanya (Dickey) Pereira is featured in the new issue of Mainebi~. a statewide business publication, as a member of the EXT List. This list is published each year to recognize 10 people shaping the future of Maine's economy Pereira is recognized as a young leader in economic development in the state. Christina (Tsoules) Soriano accepted a posi tion as an assistant professor of dance at the
Theater and Dance Department of Wake Forest University. She and husband Jeffrey do not miss the snow. Speaking of snow, Mike Burns reports on his road trip up to Buffalo for Sean Spencer's wedding to Ellen Grimm. He writes, "Jason Bridge had a pong table set up in his dining room and Sam Riter, Seth Schwartz, Joe Roberto, Adam Rix, and I all played for hours. Too many hours,
and so we went home with the Buffa拢u, some missing work that Monday Adam has two kids now and is an international water tycoon, bringing water innovations and capabilities to the far corners of the earth. I see James Callaghan quite a bit. He is an assistant D.A. in ewport, RI , and carries a badge. His golf game is still crummy Tim Roth and his wife, Betsy, are also doing well, living nearby in Charlestown. Tim is the controller at the Celtics, but his bench press max is down to 265 lbs. We also see Gene Kennedy and his lovely wife, Susannili, fairly often. Gene is living in Brooklyn, having returned from grad school in L.A. We like to reminisce about the time that we beat self- proclaimed Bantam baseball studs Brendan Falvey and Colin Lynch in a high-stakes wiffie ball game a couple of years ago. Brendan was apparently coming off Tommy John surgery Whatever." Next subject. People responsible enough to procreate! Sara (Moss) Terpeny and her husband, Dave, welcomed daughter Maggie in August. The happy family is living in northern Virginia and loving parenthood. Kirsten (Graham) Randolph and husband Peter gave birth to baby Katherine (Katie) in April. OK, technically Kirsten gave birth, but I'm sure Peter did someming utterly useful, like hold her hand. Aliso Boll reports that she is engaged to Jonathan Kurian and is planning a September 2007 wedding. Alisa attended the June 3 wedding of Kristin Koch, who was married to Christopher Burley in Washington, D.C. Congrats to all! Soon learning how to change a diaper are Erin (McNamara) l=ortunato and her husband, who are expecting a son on April II! Lots of people named above can provide tips, I bet! One possible resource might be Alexis (Roemer) Benson and husband Alan, whose daughter, Emily, celebrates her first birthday in January The couples' second child, a boy, is due in March. Alexis and Alan live in Manhattan and are thrilled with their growing little tribe. Robert Witherwax and Catherine (Rubin) Witherwax
are also proud to announce the arrival of their baby boy, Theodore Brevoort Witherwax. He was born September 14, 2006, in NY, weighing 6 lbs and 14 oz. Kate, Rob, and big sister Carie (already 3 Y2!) are so very happy Robin (Zopolsky) Gabriele wrote in with lots of good baby news- she and classmate Natalie (Marois) Clapp had the same due date of 9 29 but baby Oliver Everitt Gabriele made an early appearance. Natalie and Mike Clapp welcomed son Gavin into the world on 9/ 29. Jennifer
(Martinelli) !-logan and husband Billy Hogan '97 had a baby girl in August. Baby Eloise Hogan goes by LuLu and reports indicate she is the world's cutest child. Josh Goldfine sent me a "fine" update (hee hee) . He writes, "Life is great here in Needham, MA. My wife, Amy; and I have an IS -monthold daughter, Emma, who keeps us busy day and night. Still keeping up with many old friends, most of whom we saw at Joe Mullaney's wedding down in Newport over Labor Day weekend. On the work front, I am still teaching history and coaching baseball at Belmont (MA) High School, where I have been for five years. Things are great, and I look forward to getting together with everyone down the road ... as long as I don't have to ride in the car with Juice to get there!" La Fleur Small writes that she has completed her Ph.D. in medical sociology and works as a tenure track professor at Wright State University in Dayton, OH. She is currently working on a joint-research collaboration with the health department, developing health curriculum on HIV/AIDS for the elderly She is getting acclimated to Ohio weather and hopefully has invested in some really; really warm boots. La Fleur also updated me on friend Therelza (Watson) Ellington, who is happily married to Dean Ellington. She is the proud mother of four-year-old Julian and will soon be adding another little Ellington to the brood. Therelza works as a pediatric nurse and is still actively involved in theater. Travis Mersereau wishes to inform the Trinity community that he has met an awesome girl. As for me, I followed through on my promise (threat?) to marry Anthony Ausiello on September 17 in my hometown of Chicago, IL (GO BEARS!) . It was beautiful and I loved every single minute of it. That said, having written about all of my wonderful classmates' good news, I grew weary (read: lazy) and was incapable of writing my own. Good thing I've got Rebecca Cole in my corner, and she agreed to write it for me! See, this is why one has bridesmaids! Those duties DO NOT end after the reception, contrary to popular belief So here it is, from Rebecca: "In September, I had the pleasure of being part of an all- Bantam lineup of bridesmaids in Our Class Secretary's beautiful wedding to Mr. Anthony Ausiello in downtown Chicago. Charlotte (Fairbanks) Comer, Isabel Corte-Real, Ally (l-lu rder) Levy, maid of honor Tamar Kipper '02 and I were delighted to stand at Talia's side as she took her new Italian last name and officially became the stepmother of a charming shih -tzu named Noel. The bride was lovely, the groom was handsome, everyone cried. Then we all ate, drank, and danced a lot (three words: soft pretzel bar). It was fabulous! Also enjoying the festivities were Charlotte's husband, Chris Comer '99, who also did his fair share of damage on the pretzel bar." There you go! Anthony and I honeymooned in Tuscany,
"I completely live the good life ... I eat ridiculously well-fresh local veggies and meat-and ride my clunky three-speed to work, every day that I choose to work. I'm also illustrating logos and packaging for Taza Chocolate, a chocolate company in its first year of production in Somerville, MA. -Kathleen f=ulton '99 where we ate and drank our faces off I'm told we also toured some places of historical significance. I trust there is photographic evidence of such. That's all I've got for now. Stay tuned, and keep me posted! The Alumni Office reports that Uzma A. Akhand represented the College at the inauguration of Susan H . Fuhrman as president of Teachers College, Columbia University, on January 31, 2007 All best, Talia (Kipper) Ausiello
Alumni Fund Goal: $8,000 Class Secretary: Alyssa Daigle, 25 Main St., Apt. D, Charlestown, MA 02129 e-mail: alyssa.do igle.1999@ trincoll.edu; fax: 617-242-8841 Class Agents: Beth Bronzino Deegan; Heidi Notman; Margaret Cleveland Pitts
99
Season's Greetings! Thanksgiving is just around the corner, and we have been at a steady balmy 65 / 75 degrees here in Boston ... no complaints- I know the snow is also just around the corner! In the meantime, here's what's new: Christie (Walsh) and Corey Rishworth '98 gave birth to daughter Isabella on September 17 and, based on the pies I have seen, she is a beauty- just like her mother, who looked spectacular in her bridesmaid's dress just one week earlier at Christie Blake's wedding! Mom, dad, and Baby Isabella are all doing well. Jason Gabriele and wife Robin (Zapolski) '98 gave birth to son Oliver Everitt Gabriele on September 9. According to Dad, healthy, happy Ollie is ''AMAZING" and keeps them laughing and smiling every day! Whitney (Scarlett) and Charlie Saunders welcomed Charles Lindley Saunders on June 6, 2006. The baby's middle name is after Whitney's dad, Lindley C. Scarlett '66. Whitney and Charlie have left NYC for NJ and Charlie is working as the director of integrated marketing for Sports Illustrated. Christina (Spilios) Farren and husband Tom recently moved back to the Boston area after six years in California and welcomed daughter Athena Brown Farren on October 26. Christina reports they are "having a lot fun and adjusting to life with a little one." Congrats to all the new moms and dads! I wonder what the tuition at Trinity will be by the time these babies are heading to college?! I caught up with Karyn Meyer and l-leidi Notman in NYC last weekend. Heidi is starting her third year of living in New York and contin-
ues to work at Bane of America Securities on the equity trading floor. Heidi, Kate Modzelewski, Sabrina Gaya, and Amy Cardello '98 ran the BAA Half- Marathon in Boston in early October, and Heidi went on to complete the NYC marathon on November 4- her second marathon. Way to go, girls! Karyn is about to start a new advertising position- she will trade the Nike account for T - Mobile at her new company. The Nike account gig was pretty cool and she will miss it (and the discounted gear) , but the T - Mobile opportunity is looking pretty good, and she is excited to take on the new challenge. Karyn is still enjoying life in her native city of Seattle, WA. Chris Comer, also in Seattle with wife Charlotte (Fairbanks) '98, writes: "Charlotte and I moved to Seattle, recently bought a house in Ballard, and got a dog. Up until a week ago, I sat next to Karyn Meyer at work, but she just changed jobs. So I'm working at an interactive advertising agency, placing ads on the internet for Disney Home Entertainment. It's pretty interesting work, and the people are a lot of fun. We meet pretty regularly for Monday Night Football, where I see fellow Trin alums Karyn, Paul Hillman '98, Bill '99 and Brianna (Stanton) ' oi Mahoney, and of course, my wife Charlotte." Heidi, Karyn, and I also met up with Tristin Crotty '98 as well as Katie (Kurz) McComb and Marina (Bolsterli) Smith '98 while in New York. Marina and husband Townsend Smith '98 are living in New York and loving it while Katie was in town visiting from Switzerland, where she has been living and working. She writes: "Reconnecting with friends in the States is a pleasure, since I've been living in Lausanne, Switzerland, for the past 15 months. I've grown very fond of the Swiss life. In August and October respectively, I participated in two great local athletic events- the Lausanne Triathlon and Half- Marathon. Earlier this fall. my father (Charley Kurz '67) passed through on business travel and we enjoyed the day together in Bern. We're excited for the ski season and celebrating Marina's 30th birthday in Verbier!" I also caught up with Christina Glennon recently during her last whirlwind tour through MA- we thoroughly enjoyed dinner at Masona Grill in West Roxbury, where Christina's brother is a chef (I highly recommend it), and after 7+ years of California living. it looks as though the home state has lost her for good. In fact, she will even be trading MA for a vacation in Maui with her boyfriend, Todd, this Christmas! Although Hawaii sounds better than snow, I Wimenoo7
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class notes am looking forward to a season of white powder at Mt. Snow, where I will be participating in a ski house with Heidi Notman, Tristin Crotty. and Sarah Walker. The first ski house weekend is coming up and Allison Lanzetta will be joining us for the inaugural weekend. Allison recently completed a master's degree in education at St. Michael's College in VT and is now working in admission at St. Mike's. She continues to live in Burlington, VT, and is in the process of building a log cabin! In more graduate degree news, !:lisa DeVito will graduate from NYU Stern with an MBA in May. but not before heading south for the winter to study in Buenos Aires- have a great time! It was also great to hear from Nate Anavy, who reports that he has completed a master's degree in physiology and is now in his second year of medical school at the University of Arizona. Dwight Pringle is also a second-year medical student at Jefferson Medical College in Philadelphia. Though studying a lot, he is always up for meeting up with Trinity folks! Good luck, guys! Justin Gottlieb met up with !:ric Crawford, Rachel Crawford '04, and Andy Torrant in Cleveland for the wedding of Gill Taylor-Tyree in May. Justin is still living in Portland, OR, and has been running his own business for nearly two years. Kathleen Fulton just moved to a new apartment in Boston and is doing well- she writes: "I completely live the good life, by which I mean I eat ridiculously well, &esh local veggies and meat and ride my clunky three-speed to work, every day that I choose to work, which is not every day I am working as a scribe, which means that I illustrate conversations real - time in a large, mural-like format, for large corporations who shall remain nameless and rather not be linked to the likes of an illustrator. I'm also illustrating logos and packaging for Taza Chocolate, a chocolate company in its first year of production in Somerville, MA. If all goes well, I will be soon working with the artist who created Ben & Jerry's crazy pints on a chocolate bar label." Pretty cool ... a lot more fun than my job description' In more Boston news, word has it that Chris Wirts is working on an MBA at Babson College, although I have been able to reach neither Chris nor his rep for comment. Chris- are you there? I run into Brandon Barnes on occasion in our shared neighborhood of Charlestown. Last I spotted him, he was with his new wife, Dan.ielle, although I did not get to chat with him to ask the details- stay tuned! Sarah (Maloney) Dowden was married to James Dowden on June ro, 2006, in Chestnut Hill, MA. The couple lives in Boston and Sarah was working in the office of Lt. Governor Kerry not sure what happens now after Healey . Deval Patrick's recent win~ Keep us posted, Sarah! Emily (Beales) McDowell celebrated her 30th
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birthday in Boston over Head of the Charles weekend in October. She writes: "My husband surprised me by having Leigh Burwick '98 and her fiance; Dan van Nierop '97 and his wife; and Austin Rown '95 and Sarah Nethercote 'oo join us for dinner. While we were cheering on Trinity at the regatta the next day. we ran into Colin McAllister along the river. Colin has just moved back to the Boston area after being in CA for a few years." Last but not least, Jen Gerard writes: "I am still living in Los Angeles- and still loving it! I have a great job doing online advertising and marketing at Crew Creative Advertising, working on Network Television accounts. I live in a great house in Carthay Circle (near the Miracle Mile neighborhood) with two roommates, one of whom , Willa, just finished up competing on Season 3 of Dancing with the Stars." I wish you all a very happy, healthy holiday season with family and friends! Best, Alyssa
Alumni Fund Goal: $15,000 Class Secretary: Christopher C. Loutit, Johnson, Lambeth & Brown, 232 Princess St., Wilmington, NC 28403 e-mail: christopher.loutit.2000 @trincoll.edu Class Agents: Peter W. (::spy; Caroline G. Nanna; Stephanie L. Olijnyk
The Class of class news:
2000
reports the following
Tyler Stewart writes, "Kathryn Bevan was just engaged in October to Porter Farthing. Will Kneip will be married in the summer of 2007 to Kari Hall. I just finished the 2006 Ironman World Championship in Kona, Hawaii. I finished as top amateur and won my age group. Still owning and running Wags, my husband and my pet shop in San Francisco. I am planning on becoming a professional triathlete in 2007, but continuing to have my regular life as a dog walker, washer, and business owner." Peter Marino writes, "My wife, Maura, and I are now expecting our second child, which is due in May 2007 I am still practicing law, now in Winchester, MA, since my brother, Gerard, passed the bar in December 2005, operating under the name, 'Marino & Marino, P.C.' It's a general practice but we find ourselves mostly in real estate, probate practice, and civil litigation." David !-Ierman writes, "Finally finished my Ph.D. in neuroscience last April at the University of Arizona. I'm now working as a post-doc at UCSD. I love living in San Diego, though I do miss the New England fall about this time of year. Can't say I'll be missing the cold when it's 70 degrees here in February. though. I've been able to hang out with Katie Karlsgodt '99, occasionally. as she's finishing her Ph. D. up at UCLA and visits when she's home here in SD. Also, Christina Palmese '98 was out to visit this
summer. Anyone who's in the area or needs a little SoCal relaxation, drop me a line. Being five minutes from the beach has its perks." Wick Mclean writes, "I came back from volunteering in Biloxi, Mississippi, after hurricane Katrina about a year ago. The place was a disaster, and yet tens of thousands of people chipped in to help. Trinity is all about volunteering, and I learned much of the volunteer ethic while I was at Trinity Now I'm in Virginia going to law school (again) , and one of the things that attracted me to the profession is the fact that lawyers are responsible for maintaining the social contract and keeping order in places where there is none, like in Biloxi right after the hurricane. Trinity endowed me with the tools I need to think in the way I want to practice law, and I am forever indebted to the school for that." Katie Wallack lives in Brooklyn, NY, just returned from a summer spent in Oregon and Hawaii shooting a couple of films and media installation projects. Andrew Schiavetti is a student at Babson, where he is pursuing his MBA. Sharon Thor writes, ''I'm still working in the jewelry biz and living in New York. I've recently joined a dodge ball for charity league with Matthew Wong and Caleb Sayan. Despite our rookie status, we're hoping to make it to the playoffs. Cross your fingers for Team Dodge My Balls. I talk to I:rik Anderson regularly as well. He's doing an amazing job with the Peace Corps in Bucharest, working with an NGO encouraging and educating young Romanian entrepreneurs on how to run a successful business. I also recently ran into Leah Wolk at our 10-year high school reunion! Leah's currently living in New Hampshire and happily working as a secondgrade teacher." Todd Brodeur writes, "My wife (Jo- Ellen Viola Brodeur, Class of 99) and I are expecting our first child in January and couldn't be more excited about welcoming our little one into this world. Things have been busy since graduation in 2000. I went straight to Suffolk Law School with fellow Bantam, Peter Marino. We both graduated in 2003. My wife and I moved to Grafton, MA, Jimmy Klocek's hometown, in 2004. Since then, practicing law with Fletcher, Tilton & Whipple, P.C., in Worcester, has kept me very busy. I recently attended the Trinity Baseball Golf Tournament down in Simsbury and saw Jay Barbarrotta, Jarrett Bayliss 'or, Greg Spanos '02, and a whole host of other recent grads I played with in my time down at Trinity I hope all is well with the rest of the class. If anybody is coming through the Worcester area and needs anything, let me know. tbrodeur@&wlaw.com." Sarah Jane Nethercote writes, "I moved back to Boston from NYC in July for a new job at UMASS Boston as assistant vice chancellor of alumni and family relations. My husband, Austin Rowan '95, is in the middle of a job search and will hopefully be joining me here
MATT H~ W
A LB R ~ CH T
'0 1 and L ~ IGH '01 were married on August 6 , 2006, in Bryn Athyn, Pennsy lvania . Trinity a lumn i/ae in attendance were : (front row, I. to r.) Heath Pendleton '07, Sam Titelman '01, Rachel !=ai r ba nks '04, Dan Cutler '01, Dave Osowa '01 , Ben Cella '01 , Ba r ret Bijur '01 , Phil Thompson '01; (second row, I. to r.) Ha ley (Mi lner) Lemonica '0 1, Sarah (Rio l o) Osowa '02, Sara h (Coughlin) Whitman '00, Liz !=airbanks '01 , groom , bride, Collin Wilson-Murphy '04, Lauren A lbrecht '04, Misha (Ge ll er) Warning '01 , Cory Wa rn ing '01, Olessa Pindak '01, Christie Ph illips '01, Amy Werner '02 ; (b a ck row, I. to r.) Br ian A llen '01, Mark Lemon ica '01, Rob Wienke '01, !=e rn an d o Barghese '01, Reed Whitman '02 , Shannon Daly '01 , Tom Hambrick-Stowe '01 , Megan Myers '0 1, Matt W ikst rom '01 , Ti m O ' Brien '01, Bi ll Glover '01, Nate != olke mer '01, Lau ren (Kaufman) != o lkemer '0 1, Raf e Quinn '01, Kerry (Blethen) Quinn '01; and missing from photo : Nikil Sikan '07. P~NDL ~ TON
very soon. I'd love to re-connect with alun1s in the Boston area! Shoot me an e-mail : sarah _ nethercote@yahoo.co m." Alexis Stewart writes, "I was living with my husband in Lond on for a year and a half until December 20 05. We are now back stateside in N YC (Tribeca) . AJexis is working in residenti al real estate with the Corcoran Group. AJso, Sarah l=elix is wo rking as a features editor at Good Housekeeping magazine by day, and by night she is on her way to beco ming a pool shark. Sarah lives in Park Slope, Brookl yn. Mike Kornhauser, Chris Ayala, and myself rece ntly returned from our ann ual golf trip to Bermuda. D espite a minor moped mishap, we thoroughly enjoyed ourselves and eve n improved o n our sco res from last year. Mike wo rks fo r A LK Technologies in London, where he is mapping the wo rld. C hris practices corporate law at a firm in New York. I'm stiJJ practicing law in Wilmingto n, North Carolina." T hat's all for now. Be sure to send all of your class news and Trini ty updates to Loutit@aol. co m.
BO BBI OL DJ= IaD '01 and Mark Wegner were ma r r ied on August 19, 2006, in Milton , MA. Tri nity a lumni/ae in attendance were: (front row, I. to r.): Michelle Theodat '01 , groom, bride, Jessie Achterhof '01 , and Dave Achterhof '01 ; {back row : Kim Grad '01, Morgan Sandell '03 , Todd !=Iaman '01, Heather Robbins '01, A lex Costas '01 , Jess Ritt er '01 , Lindsay Packard '01 , John Jankowski '00, Jimmy Brett '02 , Pete Gottlieb '01 , and Brian Andre '01.
Alumni l=und Goal: $10,000 Class Secretary: Shannon V. Dal y, 343 ~ 74th St. Apt 20D, New York, NY 10021-3777 e-ma il: shannon.dal y.2001@ trincoll.edu. Class Agents: Whitney L. Brown.; Ke ith Connor
G ree tings and thank you for the great updates I co ntinue to receive. It sounds like our class has bee n busy and successful in th e five short years since we graduated. There have bee n a lot of promoti ons, weddings, engagements, and even a baby announcement. O ur first congratul ati ons go out to Scotty l-leron and Chris l-larris who recently got engaged and w ill be married in August 2007Scotry teaches first grade at PS 321 in Park Slope, Brooklyn, and C hris wo rks at GE Capital while appl ying to business school. Lindsay Packard writes in: "I got engaged in April to John Jankowski and we are planning to get married in New H ampshire (Live Free or Die) in July of 2007- I an1 stiJJ Living in Brighton, MA, and am wo rking as a clinician in Westboro, MA. I see Jessica Ritter often, as she moved back to Bos ton in eptember. l saw a bunch of Trini ty people at Bobbi Oldfield's wedding in August, whi ch was a great time. That's about all the news I have for now. I hope everyo ne is doing well and I wish everyo ne happy and healthy holidays!" After much antici pation, 拢than Rice fin ally got engaged to Elly Dwyer. They are scheduled to have a sunset wedding next June in Bedford, Y The coupl e and th eir pug, "Pudding," live in the C he lsea neighborhood of Manhattan and could not be happier. Christie Phillips and Tim O 'Brien we re engaged this fall in Brooklyn, NY Both C hr istie
and Tim are living in Brookl yn and looking forward to a future toge th er. Patrick King writes: "Been living in Dublin, Ireland, now fo r just ove r four years. Spent most of that time working as a policy analyst at a place called the Institute of European Affairs, but moving on to the Dublin Chamber of Commerce to be a policy and co mmunications manager. I had hoped to attend the Reunion, so I apologize to all the friends l didn't get to catch up with. My delayed trip back to the States wasn't a co mplete was te as I got engaged. Her name is Esther Radford and she is fro m Co. Wexford , Ireland, so I'm in Ireland for the long term . H ope so me of my long-lost Trin fri ends will be able to join us next Jul y for the wedding. Still in co ntact with AJex Kennedy, who rl.id his junior year abroad with us, who's back in London after another hemispherical trip that took him to the States. As I'm really bad at staying in touch with people, th ey are welcome to drop me a line at patrick.king. 200 !@trincoll.edu (yes I still use Trini ty email). Shin go f6ill." Bobbi (Oldfield) Wegner was marri ed in August to Mark Wegner in ~in cy, MA, at the G ranite Links Go lf Club. They are now li ving in Gree nwich, CT, and enjoying married life. Jessie (Sandell) Achterhof was the maid of ho nor, and there were many Trinity folk in attendance. Angie (Demartino) l-lillman writes: "After completing my mas ter's degree in higher education from Arizona tate University in Dece mber 2005, my husband (Josh) and I moved to Williamstown, MA, where I am working as a prospect researcher at Bennington College. Josh is a golf pro fessional at Taconic Golf Club (Williams College). We are enjoying being back in New England (close to famil y and fri ends) after spending three years in Scottsdale, AZ. Josh and I we re married on August 7, 2005, in Osterville, MA." Reed Wilmerding marri ed C hristine Lamprecht at a lovely ceremony in Philadelphia. The reception was held at the elegant 路 Philadelphia C ri cket C lub in C hestnut Hill. Attending from the C lass of 2001 were Barrett Bijur, Duncan Pearson, Rafe Quinn , and Ben Sayles. Alex Costas rece ntl y joined wo rldwide adve rtising age ncy Ogilvy & Mather, where he
wo rks as an account supervisor on the global I BM account. In his spare tim e, AJex trai ns for the 20 12 YC Marathon. Michelle Theodat is still living across the stree t from Brian Andre and seeing massive amounts of Trini ty people regularly. Michelle writes: "I am looking forward to the wedding of Abby Dorman and C hris Glover ' 02 in West Palm Beach, F L. Brooke (Ronhovde) l=ernandez, Molly Malgieri, and Bill Glover are in the wedding. There will be a ton of Trini ty folks there, should be a really good time." Brian And re continues living in YC and havi ng a great time. or only does he work
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class notes
REED WILMERDING '01 and Christine Lamprecht were married in Philadelphia , PA. Trinity alumni/ae attending were: (front row: I. to r.) Christian Bullitt '95, groom, bride, Duncan Pearson '01; (second row: I. to r.) ~adley Wilmerding '06, Steve Gregg '97, Shapley Stauffer '02, Alice (Affleck) Bull itt '03, Amanda Gifford '03 , Ashley Donoghue '03, Barrett Bijur '01 , Ben Sayles '01, Carrie Rorer '00; (back row: I. to r.) Rafe Quinn '01, Jeremy Wilmerding '95, Jeff Pennington '95, and Charlie !=ox '03.
at Goldman Sachs with Peter Rogers '02 and Alex Ullman 'oo, but he gets to hang out regularly with a lot of his best friends from Trinity, including Michelle Theodat, Stephanie Ng, Shannon Daly, Charles Russo '02, Alex Costas and many others. He'd like to wish all of his classmates the best of luck and would also like to extend hearty CONGRATULATIONS to Dave and Jessie Achterhof, as they expect to have their first child in February! Yes it's true, Jessie and Dave just moved out of cramped New York City into a house in Cohasset MA, to accommodate their growing family. 1-laley LaMonica writes: "I am continuing to pursue my Ph.D. in clinical psychology with a focus in neuropsychology. I am working two days a week at a veteran's hospital, doing individual and group therapy Very demanding work, bur it has really heightened the pride I have for our soldiers, both past and present." Kristin ~orester reports that she will be starting a new job in January A friend brought her in as a wholesale team member at Blumarine, Anna Molinari, and BluGirl, Italian women's RTW lines, working with the sales director. Kristin continues living in Brooklyn and is really looking forward to her new position. Marisa Eddy writes: ''I'm currently working with General Electric on their corporate audit staff Traveling extensively, internationally, auditing various GE businesses. My home base is still Los Angeles, CA. where I head back to about once or twice a month from whatever location I'm placed in (currently rotating between Danbury, CT, and Paris, France) . Still running/competing forGE 's Corporate Running Team in various road races and marathons. 1 am
trinity reporter \ \ i\fi11ter 2007
loving the traveling and the running'" Teddy Schiff: "I left Lehman Brothers last May after five years trading credit derivatives and corporate bonds in order to travel for the summer and then attend Columbia University in September. The summer was wild: I was in South East Asia with two friends for a month and then bounced around Europe and other random spots with a few other friends. I'm currently in graduate school at Columbia, trying to get into real estate development, and loving the career change." Alexandra !-!olden reports that she continues to live in Berlin, Germany; and will marry next spring, 2007 in Berlin. She is busy wedding plan ning, learning German, and working. If anyone comes through Berlin, please contact her! She is happy to give a tour throughout the city Meghan Reppond is living in Washington, D.C., and completing her final year of graduate school at Johns Hopkins University Charles Botts is no longer working for Trinity but now working as a community organizing consultant for AARP in Hartford. Charlie is helping AARP implement a housing project to keep older adults in their own homes as they age. He reports that it is actually very gratifying work and his son, Charl es IV, is doing great. Charles IV has been attending a half-day program at the Magnet Montessori School in the Learning Corridor across the street from Trinity. Mike Mobley moved to Los Angeles to hang out with Tommy Lee and Nikki Sixx. He is an ad space king, and there is no space he cannot sell . Known as "Mobleywood," he has talken LA by storm, and has shown the West Coasters "how you do it in the LES." Lise Rabinowitz (alka Mandy Rab) is still in NYC and recently got a new job. "I am still at Tommy Hilfiger, but am no longer designing, thus no more shirts named after AD boys. I am now in mens merchandising; I not only love what I an1 doing, but J am really excited about all the interesting things I an1 learning. The best thing is I have the same desk and work with the same people- it's an ideal situation!" The recent celebration of Katherine 1-lolland's 25th birthday brought several of us together for a downright medieval celebration. Mandy Rabinowitz, Becky Thibault, Phil Thompson, Rob Wienke, Katherine, and I went to Medieval Times in Lyndhurst, NJ. Katherine was formally knighted and from here on shall be addressed only as Lady Katherine or her majesry. In other news, Becky and Phil have moved into a fabulous new apartment in New York City. Rest assured, they are living together but not "living together." Megan 1-leanue and I are getting ready for our trip this winter to Slidell, LA, to work with Habitat for Humanity for a week building homes in a community that was ravaged by Hurricane Katrina. Whi le some members of my family think watching me shingle a roof, install
JESSICA LONDON '02 and DAVID RAND '01 were married in June 2006. Trinity alumni/ae attending were: (front row, I. to r.) Kevin l=auteu x '01 , Caroline Olmstead '99, Matthew Brown '01, Joanna Sandman '02, Michael Labella '01, Andrea Lincoln '02, Mark Mahoney '02; (second row): groom and bride ; (back row, I. tor.) Jennifer Mann '02, Julia ~ i ll '02, Scott Wallach '01, Kate Toman '02, Jeff Boswell '01, Stuart McCormick '01, Dane McCormick '01, Andrew Erskine '01, Ellen Zarchin '02, Alex Delanghe '02, Will Dearie '01 , Rebecca Dearie '01.
bathroom tile, and dig a foundation will be the :fi.mniest thing ever, I think it is going to be a great week. I continue to get great updates from everyone; please keep sending the news to trinity200Inotes@aol.com . Also, I am always looking for new field reporters, so feel free to update me on the people you see who never manage to send in their own updates. Thanks, Shannon Daly
Alumni ~und Goal: $10,000 Class Secretary: Ellen M.
Zarchin, The Maroneal, 2222 Maroneal St. Apt 1441, ~ ouston, TX 77030-3268 e-mail: ellen.zarchin.2002@ trincoll.edu Reunion Committee: Nicole K. Belanger, Malick !=all, Anson l=relinghuysen, Eliza Nordeman, John Rossi, James Southern, Ellen Zarchin Greetings and salutations from Houston, Texas' We are quickly approaching our five -year reunion! I know many of us can not believe that it is almost here. Please check out the alumni link on Trinity's Web site for more information. We'll start off the Class Notes with all the news of weddings and engagements. Sarah Riolo and David Osowa 'o r were married on Sunday, October 8, on Nantucket Island. Congratulations! It was a beautiful Nantucket fall day for the couple that loves the island so much. Samira Shamoon got engaged on the 14th of October to Justin. Samira writes that he is the most wonderful guy and that a September 2007 wedding is plarmed. Kristin !-lagan and Brooke Peltzman will be bridesmaids. Congratulations! Kim Stevens is engaged to Sergio Pires and a May
James Weston '93- It is truly a small world! I was accepted to law school in Houston recently, so we will definitely be in Houston for the next few years. See you in June!
CHRISTOPH~R
DUNN~ '02 and Rachel Mallory Leitze were married on August 12, 2006, at the Tr inity College Chapel. Trinity alumni/ae attending were : (1. to r.) Samuel Ralston '02, Ted Govola '01 , bride , groom, Robert !=arrell '73, and Thoma s Chew '02 .
19, 2007,
wedding is planned. Congrarulations!
Andrea Lincoln and Mark Mahoney are engaged
and a June 2007 wedding is planned on Cape Cod. Congratulations! Belated congratulations to Kaitlin Wilson and Will Gan1brill ' 01 on their recent nuptials! Amy Werner works at Goldman Sachs in training and professional development. Mia Epifano e-mailed from YC with the following update, "Alexis Bodenheimer still loves her job as a real estate broker and is living in the Upper East Side. Mia Epifano just moved into the West Village with Rob Johnson 'oo and is working at Lilly Pulitzer. Bette Armstrong is living in Union Square and just started a new teaching job at Poly Prep in Brooklyn. Maggie Jerde is now living in Murray Hill and continues to work at Bruce Bierman Design. Rachel Brodie just bought an apartment in Dallas and is teaching at the Greenhi ll School. She just became the proud mother of a puppy named Tucker. Samantha Staffier is living in D.C. and working at the Washington Speakers Bureau; she too has a new puppy named Lilly. Claire Rosebush is working long hours at Prides Capital and loving her new apartment in George town. Nicole Belanger is living in Back Bay in Boston and working for Forrester Research. Newlywed Emily (Bodenheimer) Debevoise is living in LA. with her husband, Aaron, and golden retriever, Sydney, and is working at BluPRint PR- she plans to move back to NYC soon, though! Shapley Stauffer is living in Philadelphia and is working at the Mann Center. We all got together a few weeks ago down in Dallas for a fun girls' weekend!" Jay Burns relocated from New York City to Bermuda this past summer. He is working for ACE Tempest Reinsurance. He now joins Dave Bigley, who has called Bermuda home for some time now. Nate Amory is studying law at Boston University, where Katy Ward '04 is a fellow classmate. Mollie Malick will be graduating from Washington University's Architecture School in May. Joanna Sandman will be graduating
NATALI~ N~WCOM '03 and DR~W ZALKIN '03 were married on June 24 , 2006, in Den ver, CO. Tr inity a lumn i/ ae attending were : (front row, I. to r. ) groom and bride; (second row, I. to r.): Dana Betterton '02 , Joe Reynolds '03, Taylor Wolfe '02, Amanda Berger '03, Ted Lo vejoy '03 ; (Back row, I. to r.) : N ils Lundblad '03, Tracy ~ames '03, Hilary Burrell '03, Andy Bre iner '05, ~rin Linehan '03 , and Andy Haberman '04 .
from Northeastern Univers ity's School of Law in May Lisa Lambrenos will be graduating from graduate school at Geo rge Washington Uni versity in May. Lisa is now working at the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society as a campaign coordina tor for the Team in Training Program. Lisa writes, "If anyone in th e D.C. area wants to run a marath on or a half marathon (or cycle 100 miles or do a triathlon) whi le raising money for a fab ul ous cause, please let me know!" James Cabot is still in Warsaw, Poland, and working for CASE - Center for Social and Economic Research, a not- for- profit economic and public policy think-tank with operations in Ce ntral and Eastern Europe, the former Soviet Unio n, and the Balkans. James writes, " I was recently promoted to a vice- presidency position, which I an1 very excited about. I will likely be in Warsaw until June of 2008 and would love to hear fro m any Trinity alumni who are traveling in this area. On a personal note, I have man aged to do some fun travel in the region, visiting Ukrai ne, Bulgaria, Serbia, Bosnia, and Kosovo this past summer." Rebecca Mayer touches in from Hong Kong, "In Hong Kong markets are good, which means I don't sleep. Before the summer I finished a big deal out of Malaysia and now am currentl y back doing work in Indonesia. I an1 already looking forward to Christmas (we'll be in Paris) and New Year's (we'll be in Casablanca) . I was back in the U.S. for work and got to see lots of old Trin faces, including Megan Myers ' 01 and her fiance Tom Hanbrick-Stowe '01, Brooke Peltzman, Samira Shamoon, Emily Snider, Oscar Buitrago 'oo,
and Kate Mason ' 03. It was a bit of culture shock going back to the states after being away so long, but wonderful to see so many friendly faces ." Patrick and I continue to love the city of Houston. One of Patrick's finance professors at Rice is another Trinity College graduate,
Alumni Fund Goal: $8,000 Class Secretary: Trude J. Goodman, The ~mery/Weiner School, 9825 Stella Link, Houston, TX 77025 e-mail: trude.goodman.2003@ trincoll.edu Class Agents: Suzanne H. Schwartz; Zoraido I. Lopez
Greetings from Houston, where I am happy to say we have had a hurricane- free fall. Things are good down here. I am still keeping the middle schoolers in line, entertained and educated as a 6th grade teacher and coordinator of student life at The EmeryjWeiner School. Last summer I was able to catch up with a few Trin folk Back East. Sarah Weisberg and her fan1ily visited Chatham in July Sarall is in her second and final year of her clinical psychology master's program at American; she is deciding if she will re-enter the working world or pursue a higher degree next year. I also had a chance catch up with Bill Jenkins, Pat Guelakis, Stu Smith, and Craig Rowen at the Guelakis fam ily compound on the Connecticut shore. The fellas seemed to be doing well. Stu's working in Boston, Bill in ew York, Pat in Connecticut, and Craig is in medical school. Becca Landy had an exciting summer in Botswana, which included working for a judge, traveling around the country; and getting engaged! Tiffin Pastor spent most of August in the Vineyard before heading off to ew York and graduate school in public health at Columbia. Tiffin and I had a chance to see each other in the City this past October and she is adjusting to, but enjoying, being back in school. Molly Schofield also · jumped back into the classroom this year- she is pursuing a degree in social work at Salem tate while still working full time in Boston. Natalie and Drew Zalkin will hopefully forgive me for getting this news to you so late. If you haven't heard they were married last June 24 in Denver. Natalie wrote: "We had quite a number of Trin alums in attendance and a handful in the wedding party. Amanda Berger and Erin Linehan we re both bridesmaids, and Joe Reynolds, Andy Haberman, Taylor Wolfe ' 02 , Ted Lovejoy, and Nils Lundblad were groomsmen. We spent our honeymoon on Maui and Kauai and have now returned to ew York, where I continue as a
www. trincoll.edu/alumni • Births • Marriages • New Jobs • Photos
Winter 1007
I trinity repo rte r
class notes specialist in the Russian Works of Art department at Christie's, and Drew continues as a senior analyst at C harterMac Capital." Nicole Reichenbach was my best source for news this time arow1d, she wrote: "Laura Rand moved to Philadelphia to pursue an MBA at W harton Business School at the University ofPennsylvania this fall. Laura worked the past three years doing real estate fi nancial consulting in New York City Although exci ted about returni ng to school, she will certainly miss seeing fellow New Yorkers Christine Kim , Nico le Re ichenbach, and Tina Parmar regularly! Nicole Reichenbach is currently at Columbia University pursuing a master 's degree in international affairs. For the past three years, she worked in the UN Department of Peacekeeping Operations and also traveled to Ethiopia as the administrative coordinator for a UN Staff Officers Train ing Course in Addis Ababa last fall. Christine Kim left US News and World Report to pursue a master's degree at Columbia's Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. Tina Parmar is still working at Harper Colli ns. Last year, Lisa Phu moved to Wrangell, Alaska, and is working as a news reporter for the Wrangell Smtinel. Over the past three months, Katie Miller traveled through Kashmir, Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, Kazakhstan, and Kyrgyzstan before starting school this fall at the London School of Economics! Asia Grabska is currently in medical school in Granada and is loving it!" I hope this iss ue of the Reporter finds you happy and healthy wherever you are. Please be sure to stay in touch. I have a new e-mail (trude.good man@gmail.com), so try me here next time you wan t to send me an update or tell me you are ready to take my up on my offer to buy you a Cape Codder at the Squire in Chatham next summer. All the best, Trude. P.S. Colman come home soon!
Alumni Fund Goal: $7,000 Class Secretary: Melinda
Moyer Leone, 123 !=Iorence Rd. 2C, Branford, CT 064054 233 e-mail: melinda.leone.2004@ trinco ll.edu Class Agents: Ro bert Co rvo; ~ ugene f..l su; Kristiann Sawyer; Nathalie Toomey Kevin Dmochowsky recently accepted an associate position with the law firm of Kirkpatrick &
Lockhart Nicholson Gral1am in its Pittsburgh office. He is currently finishing his final year of law school at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, Ohio. Pat Malloy writes, "I am still living in the South End of Boston and working on the trad ing desk of the money management firm Longwood Investments. I am Livi ng with a friend from high school and Marcello Miccozzi, who just moved in. We have been having a great time in the city and are running into a ton of Trinity people." Cyriac George writes, ''I'm not sure what
8
trinity reporter \ \\'inter 2007
Descatur Potier '03 "I cherish my Trinity education because everyone there supported everything I wanted to do. Trinity helped me find myself and my niche. That's what I now want to pass on to others," says Descatur "Dez" Potier, a member of the Class of 2003, who is now pursuing a master's degree at Tufts School of [ducation. After his experiences at Trinity and with the 1-lartford community, Potier plans to teach and, eventually, enter the educational administration arena, preferably at an urban school. While an undergraduate, Potier was a f:leet Bank Community Service Scholar. Along with four other students, he was required to spend his summers in 1-lartford performing community service. The school gave him the funding and support to start an Adolescent Mentoring Program (AMP) at the local Boys and Girls Club. The program, still in existence, originally provided Trinity tutors for local middle and high school students on Saturday mornings. AMP continues to provide those connections during weekday evenings after school , and is one of the many successful examples of Trinity students working hand in
sort of news actually qualifies for class notes but, in any case, I have spent the last two years in New DeThi, India, studying at Jawal1arlal ehru University for a master of arts in international relations. Needless to say, I have completed my degree and all in all it was a great experience." l-lope Roth is living in Boston and working at Tufts University doing IT support. She recently got a promotion. ''I've been playing music in clubs around Boston and in the subway My shows have been well attended, witl1 a strong representation from many of my fe llow Trinity alums. I have a five -song demo CD for sale, and 1 hope to record a full - length album in the next few months. My music Web site is www.
hand with 1-lartford residents. ''[During the program] I started seeing the community through the kids I loved," Potier says. "You can't have a negative image of the community if you immerse yourself in it." In 2001, after an internship at 1-larvard's Civil Rights Project, which sent him to the national office of the NAACP, Potier received the Connecticut 1-ligher [ducation Community Service Award in recognition of his passion and commitment to the community. During his years at Trinity, Potier was also actively involved with many organizations, including the MOCA (Men of Color Alliance), vice president of multi-cultural affairs for the Student Government Association, and the Black Student Union (IMANI). Currently, he serves as executive director of ON[CA, the Organization of New [ngland Chapters of Alpha Phi Alpha, the fraternity he was a member of while at Trinity. Potier is deeply thankful for the opportunity to participate in the f:leet Bank Scholars Program because it shaped the path to his future. In fact, he was recently appointed as state liaison for the Massachusetts [ducational Opportunity Association (M[OA), and now advocates and lobbies on behalf of first-generation, low-income college students from urban areas. The position, he says, is related to the work he did in Boston with Upward Bound, a program with a similar mission. "I don't think I would care as much about this if it hadn't been for AMP," says Potier. "My experience working with kids and community service brought me this passion that I have today. I see education as the civil rights issue of the 21st century."
by Hannah Cha rry '08 hoperoth.com music. My boyfriend, Kristian Sanchez, and I moved in with each other this past June. We have a lovely two -bedroom apartment in Somerville, which we share with a couple of adorable but psychotic cats.路 Mimi MacKinnon writes, "Hello C lass of 2004! I can't believe it's been almost three years since we left camp. Like most of us, I have taken a couple of years to settle into my new life of being a 'young professional!' After two years of coaching ice hockey, most recently at Trin, I have decided to move back to NYC. I am enjoying a fast- paced environment, working in special events in the sports industry and living in the Upper West Side. In between work, 1
love playing intramural sports with my sister's company, Zogsports ..... looking to get a Trin team together for touch football in the spring if anyone is interested. Feel free to contact me at meredith.mackinnon@trincoll.edu! Hope everyone is doing well and enjoying life to the fullest! " Amanda Jones is in Boston in her second year of dental school at Tufts. As for myself, Mike Leone 'or and I finally got married on Sept 23 . We had a strong Trinity turnout, Elitsa Daneva, Ashley Brennan, Geoff Long, Renie Delson, John Michael Boudreau ' 03, Max Riffin, Ryan Smith, Brooke Fitzgerald 'os. Pat oonan 'or, Sean Cognahan 'or, Karen O 'Keefe 'or , Colin and Alice (Wisniewski)Vautour ' OJ, Mike Carucci 'o r, Angela Flores 'o r, Shannon McGill ' OJ , Bob and Emily (~een) Rekuk 'or . Susanna Kise 'o r, Tony Panza '01, Charlie Botts, and JR Romano 'or all graced us with their presence. Mike and l have just bought a condo in Branford, CT Love, Mimi Leone
Alumni I=und Goal: $6,000 Class Secretary: Stefanie C. Lopez-Boy, 88 t:. 5th Street, !=loor 13, Brooklyn, NY 112181451 e-mail: stefanie.lopezboy.2005 @trincoll.edu Class Agent: Taylor Robinson
05
Love is in the air everyone ... trus round of class notes I received announcements for four (count them. four!) engagements and rwo weddings! Many congratulations to all of you and wish you the best in your wedding planning, or in your new lives together' First the engagements: Jamie Calabrese got engaged to Sasha Bratt ' 03 this August. The wedding is set for October 7. 2007 Mark Tremblay got engaged to long time girlfriend Kyle Polichronopoulos. The wedding is in September of 2007 James Stevens and Rachel Claflin are engaged and living in San Franc1sco together. Wedding date is yet to be determined. Finally... Brian Yolk got engaged to Kelly Deutsch in June 2005 and their wedding date is July 14, 2006.
Wedding bells rang for. .. Kozlowski
Danielle Markel and Matthew Kozlowski, who got
married at the Trinity Chapel and celebrated their reception at the Old State House in Hartford. The newlyweds are living in Delray Beach, Florida. Andrew Breiner and Megan Shapleigh were members of the wedding party and Jonathan Chesney was the best man. There was also a good number of Trinity 'osers there. Hayley Einhorn recently married Aaron Seigel on September 16 at the Essex House Hotel in New York City. Lisa Kassow, director of Hillel at Trinity. was a witness for the ketubah, and alumna Hannah Gutstein ' 03 was also in attendance. Hayley is studying to be a rabbi at the
Margot Koch '06 spent the summer in Boston living and working on the Uberty Clipper 125-foot sailboat as a deckhand ... She got to race in the Great Chesapeake Bay Schooner Race before making her way down to Key West, f=lorida, in "a harrowing trip that included seven-foot seas and winds high enough to cause us almost to lose one of our anchors and our lifeboat"
Academy for Jewish Religion. fn other news ... Tim Wen son is getting his master's in instructional technology at Bridgewater State College and is hoping to graduate in May of 2007 Ashley Tetu star~ed her master's in public health at Boston Uruvers1ty and has spent the last year working in research. She regularly sees Jess Millward and Irene Hosey. Bryce
Baschuk has settled down 111 Washington , D.C., and is working at the \\'cl1hi11gto11 Ti111es after a tour of Europe and Asia and some time with the American Red Cross as a relief worker in regions affected by Hurricane Katrina. He lives in the Adams Morgan section of D.C. As for me, I'm living in New York City. still working as a legal assistant for Legal Momentum, the new name of OW Legal Defense and Educatio n Fund. I was recently elected to be the chapter director of the New York Metro Chapter of the Younger Women's Task Force, a nauonal organization committed to wo rking on younger women's issues and promoting younger women's leadership. I co-founded a yow1ger women's media justice project last year called the REAL hot 100, and we had our first armual list and party this August. (And here's a shameless plug, visit www.therealhotroo.org, we start acceptmg nominations at the end of ovember.) Thanks to all those who wrote in ... keep the good news coming! Peace and Love, Stefanie Lopez- Boy
Alumni I=und Goal: $5,000 Class Secretary: Maureen t:. Skehan, 674 Washington St., Apt. 5, Brookline, MA 02446 e-mail: maureen.skehan.2006 @trincoll.edu
Greetings from Boston! I hope that those of you who made it to Homecoming had a good rime. It was great to see everyone and pretend for a moment that we were all still cool enough to go to Trinity. I'm lucky enough to get to see a fair amount of Trin kids in Boston. I am in living in Brookline with a friend from high school and working at E BSCO Publishing, an onl ine research service provider. Claire Lawlor lives just down the road from me and is working as an associate scientist in a medicinal chem -
istry laboratory at Biogen Idee in Cambridge. Claire's former neighbor, Reid Offringa, is once again Living close by and is working as a technical research coo rdinator in the laboratory of Dr. Ceizler at Brigham & Women's Hospital. I had the pleasure of attending a (free!) wine tasting with Reid, Stacey Wei, and Beth Jones recently. Both neuroscience ladies are working as research assistants at Massachusetts General Hospital. Beth lives in Cambridge with Juli Martha, who works as a research coordinator for the Boston Spine Group at the ew England Baptist Hospital. Trinity must be raking over Mass General, because Hoa Lam is also working for the hospital as an intake coordinator for the Department of Child Psychiatry. Richie Howe li ves in Porter Square in Cambridge and works for Eaton Vance as an equity research assistant. Erin Timm lives in SomerviUe and works as a marketing assistant for Houghton- Mifflin. Margot Koch spent the summer in Boston living and worki ng on the Uberty Clipper ns-foot sailboat as a deckhand. She spent the month of October on an So-foot sailboat, sailing down the East Coast. She got to race in the Great Chesapeake Bay Schooner Race before making her way down to Key West, Florida, in "a harrowing trip that included seven- foot seas and winds high enough to cause us almost to lose one of our anchors and our lifeboat." Wow! As of January 2007, Margot will be interning with the education department at the non -profit Dolphi11 Research Ce nter in Grassy Key, Florida. Berween sailing . the high seas and swabbing the decks, Margot was ab le to attend the housewarming party of Lindsey Moore and Annie Chapman, who are living in Harlem. Other news from New York comes from Cote I=rench. She is working in Manhattan as a coordinator of supply management for Avon. Kaci O'Leary is also working in New York City as an analyst in the products health and Life sciences operating unit of Accenture. Miriam Zichlin brings in lots of news from ew York. She, Rebecca Wetzler, and Alicia Diaz are all teaching in the Bronx through the ew York City Teaching Fellows. Miriam teaches high school, and Alicia and Rebecca are teachmg elementary school Miriam occasionally sees Sarah Churchill and Gina Bacchiocchi who are living in Brooklyn. Miriam often goes to see Steve Nale D) at Stir. Steve lives on the Uppe r East Side and works for Sirius Satellite Radio. Other Trins on the Upper East S1de
\\ 'hue~
2007
I trinity reporter
class notes include Pamela Judkowitz, Hayden Howell, and £Iizabeth Mooney, who are all living together. Connec ticut must be the place to go to become a teacher. C lass president £lena Wetmore is student teaching a first -grade class at Daniels Farm Elementary School in Trumbull. She will be starting to earn her master's degree in elementary educa tion in January. Stefanie Pagano-Kor, who was kind enough to offer her house to yours trul y and others during Homecoming. is living in West Hartfo rd. She is student teaching Spanish at Southington High School and is earning her teacher certification through St. Joseph CoLlege. Kathleen Milnamow was written up in the Connectiwt Post for her work with Teach for America in ew H aven. Trinity athleti cs all-star Mike Blair is now coaching at Williams College, which I'm convinced, is the only reaso n they beat the Bants. Another football alum, Joe Penny, married his high sc hool sweeth eart, Rebecca Wells, in Texas this swnmer. Congratul ations Joe and Rebecca! ews comes from our nation's capitol, as weLl. Kara Takesuye is living in Geo rgetown and works for the Washington Post as an account executive in the jobs advertising department. Julia Hoppock also lives in Washington, D.C., and works at ABC News as a productio n coordinator. Several Trinity alumni are traveling the world. Magee Mcilvaine writes that he, Chris Moore, and Maureen Masterson founded the non- profit Sol Productions, which fo cuses on independent filmmaking and media activism. The three are working on thei r first major project, a political documentary in Venezuela. Anna Korsiak is currently traveling and working in Australia. She has bee n to Sydney, Adelaide, and Melbourne. That's all for now. Send in any news and best wishes for a cozy winter!
Alumni l=und Goal: $15,000 Class Secretary: W. Robert Chapman '91, 314 Polk Street, Raleigh, NC 27604-1250 e-mail: robert.chapman .1991@ trincoll.edu Class Agent: Joyce McCartney '84
In September 2006 Katherine A. Perez '97 was sworn in as the first chief of the Bowie (MD) Police Department. Pe rez is the former chief of the District H eights (MD) Police Department. Prior to that she worked for 2 0 years as an o ffi cer in the Hartford Police Department, where she rose to the rank of captain, at the time th e highest ranking Hispanic officer in its histo ry. Most recently Kathy was appo inted by Governor Robert Ehrlich to serve as juvenile justice moni tor for the state of Maryland. In addition to her B.A. in po litical science, in 2003 Kathy also earned an M.A. in public policy from the College. The new Bowie Police Department
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trinity repo rte r \ \Vi11ter 1007
Reforming l-lartford Schools: Steven Adamowski M'75 In November 2006, Dr. Steven Adamowski, a master's recipient from Trinity, returned to Hartford to take on arguably one of the toughest jobs in town: reforming the pub· lic school system. As superintendent of schools, Adamowski has been charged with the task of turning around one of Connecticut's largest and most-troubled school systems. In an interview with the 1-/artford Courant, Adamowski explains the difficulties and challenges of the school system, '" The district is a collection of disparate initiatives. There's nothing that holds it together."' Bringing his 35 years of experience as an educator and school reformer Adamowski plans to ad as the glue that has been missing from efforts being
made at individual schools. l-ie sees the challenges as similar to those he faced as head of the Cincinnati school system from 1998 to 2002. In the Ohio city plagued with failing test scores and lack of students going on to four-year colleges, Adamowski 's strategy led to a massive district redesign, boosting overall student achievement. In fact, during his tenure as superintendent and CJ::::O, Adamowski helped Cincinnati gain national recognition for its school accountability system, budgeting, alignment of teacher evaluation and compensation, improvement of early literacy, and redesign of high schools. 1-iis plans for 1-iartford are no less ambitious. Connecticut's capital city, according to the Courant, suffers from more high school freshmen reading at the third-grade level than at the ninthgrade level, high absenteeism, and serious behavioral issues, among other problems. With measures such as implementing a system to recruit talented teachers and redesigning some of the schools, Adamowski promises that his vision will bring all students up to the state average for reading and math, as well as improving the quality of education in the high schools in order to send more students off to four-year colleges. Originally from Connecticut , Adamowski earned his undergraduate degree from Southern Connecticut State College, his master's from Trinity, and his doctorate from St. Louis University. Before coming to 1-iartford, he was a senior fellow and managing director of the American Institutes for Research in Washington, D.C., where he worked to help school districts improve their effectiveness.
by Ca rlin Carr will eventually grow to more than 50 officers. " It is an awesome challenge," she says, "but I'm
excited and ready to ge t to work." As if her new job doesn't provide enough excite ment, Kathy will be getting married in November to Allan Grines. Kelly Raimo '01 ofTerryville (CT) gave birth on Sept. 9. 2006, to a baby boy, Ethan. She is currentl y earning a master's degree in English at the College. Donna McCully Small '06 is administrative assistant to College Librarian Richard Ross. After graduating wi th hono rs in art history, she's now en rolled in a master's degree program at the
Holyoke (MA) cam pus of Simmons College's Grad uate School of Library and Information Science.
www.trincoll .edu/alumn i • Births • Marriages • New Jobs • Photos
In-Memory Douglas J. Gladwin, 1934 Douglas ]. Gladwin, 93, of Bloomington, MN, died on July 9, 2006. He attended Trinity with the Class of 1934. He served in the U.S. Navy during the occupation ofJapan. During his lifelong career in insurance, he founded Gladwin Insurance & Bonds and retired in 1975. He leaves his son, William, ofTarpon Springs, FL; three granddaughters; two great-granddaughters; and four great-great-granddaughters.
of1943. He served in the United States Army Air Corps in World War II. For 35 years, he was an actuary at The Hartford, from which he retired. He was a member of the Casualty Actuarial Society. He is survived by two sons, John Resony, of Farmington, CT, and James Resony, of Hebron, CT; a daughter, Judith Kelly, of Tampa, FL; and his companion, Barbara LaRosa, ofWethersfield, CT.
Edward Joseph Cosgrove, 1946 Eric Arthur Anderson, 1938 Eric A. Anderson , 90, of Cromwell, CT, died on July 31' 2006. After graduating from Hartford High School, he attended Trinity with the Class of 1938. He enlisted in the Connecticut National Guard, attended Officer Candidate School , and was commissioned a second lieutenant in 1941. He served as a conm1ander in the European theater during World War II. Following release from active duty, he was appointed conunander of the Maintenance Squadron for the 103rd Fighter Group. In 1951, he was recalled to serve in the U.S. Air Force at Elmendorf Air Base in Alaska during the Korean Conflict. He began his 40-year career in the insurance business at The Travelers, and subsequently, he founded his own business, Independent Insurance Agents, Inc. , retiring in 1979. After retirement, he worked part time at Mechanics Savings Bank in Wethersfield, CT. He is survived by his wife, Virginia, of Cromwell, CT; a son, Eric Jr. , of Dayton, OH; a daughter, Nancy Gilbert, of Rhode Island; and a granddaughter.
David Keating, 1939 David Keating, 89, of Vashon, WA, died on August 10, 2006. After graduating from Lee High School in Lee, WA, he attended Trinity with the Class of 1939. He was awarded a conunission at Annapolis and earned the rank oflieutenant conunander in the Naval Reserve. During his career, he worked for Knopp, Inc. , and General Electric Co. He leaves his wife, Heron Maxwell Keating; two daughters, Daphne Gail Collins of Turner, ME, and Patricia Raye Keating ofVashon; a son, Jeffrey Maxwell Keating of Verona, WI; three grandchildren; and three great-grandchildren.
Allie Vincent Resony, 1943 Allie V. Resony, 85 , ofWethersfield, CT, died on October 12, 2006. After graduating from Bulkeley High School in Hartford, he attended Trinity with the Class
Edward ]. (Ned) Cosgrove, 82, of Guilford, CT, died on September 2, 2006. After graduating from Hartford Public High School, he attended Trinity with the Class of 1946, receiving his B.A. in 1949 from Wesleyan University. He subsequently received an MBA from the University of Connecticut in 1957. In 1943, he entered the service in the Air Corps and spent 11 months in the Pacific theater. He had a 33-year career as a public relations and personnel executive with Southern New England Telephone Co. He was elected to three terms as a Democratic town selectman for the Town of Guilford and served on a variety of conm1Linity and political boards. He is survived by his wife, Connie; a daughter, Mary; five sons, Sean, Edward]. Jr. , Anthony, Benedict, and Joseph; and seven grandchildren.
Robert Joseph Boland, 1948 Robert]. Boland, Sr., 83, ofWaterbury, CT, died on April 28, 2006. After graduating from Crosby High School in Waterbury, CT, he spent a year at Cheshire Academy in Cheshire, CT, before enrolling at the University of Connecticut. He subsequently attended Trinity with the Class of 1948, graduating in 1949, and received his M.A. from the College in 1952. He served in the U.S. Air Corps from 1942 to 1946. He was a teacher and coach for his entire career. He is survived by his wife, Ann.
Walter Henry Neff, 1948 Walter H. Ndf, 85, ofTolland, CT, died on July 22,2006. After graduating from Rockville High School in Rockville, CT, he attended Trinity with the Class of 1948. He served with the U.S. Navy during World War II. He was a teacher at Rockville High School in Connecticut for over 40 years before retiring as head of the math department.
He is survived by his wife, Leah (Kloter) Neff; his son, Scott; a grandchild; and a great grandchild.
Harold Charles Richman, 1948 Dr. Harold C. Richman, ofWest Hartford, CT, died on September 12, 2006, at the age of80. After graduating from New Britain High School in New Britain, CT, he attended Trinity with the Class of 1948. He subsequently graduated from Tufts Dental School. He served in the U.S. Navy during World War II in the Pacific. He was the founder of Mt. Southington Ski Area in Southington, CT, and continued to hold a leadership role there. He is survived by his children, Lauren Richmond, of Newton, MA, Jennifer Richman Toder, of Los Angeles, CA, and Dr. Jonathan Richman, ofSoumern Pines, NC; and six grandchildren.
Joseph Gerald Whelan, 1948 Joseph G. Whelan, 85, of Fairfax, VA, died on August 26, 2006. After graduating from South Park High School in Buffalo, NY, he attended Trinity with the Class of 1948. He subsequently received his Ph.D. from the University of Rochester in 1956. He served in the U.S. Navy during World War I I. As a hospital corpsman, he supported the Marine Corps in the battle of Iwo Jima and the occupation ofJapan. In 1952, he joined the Congressional Research Service, specializing in Soviet and Eastern European issues and preparing extensive studies published by congressional committees dealing with international relations. Among his published works, he released a study on Soviet diplomacy and on "the brain drain," which discussed what happens when talented students . from developing countries come to the U.S. He retired as a senior specialist in international relations and Soviet affairs at the Congressional Research Service of the Library of Congress in 1987 but continued as a consultant. He leaves his wife, Anne Downey Whelan of Fairfax, VA; three children , Terrence]. Whelan of Munich, Joanne M. Nikitakis of Fredericksburg, and Christopher T. Whelan of South Riding; and si.x grandchildren .
Thomas Cornelius Austin , Sr., 1949 Thomas C. Austin, Sr., 81, of Avon, CT, died on September 29, 2006. After graduating from Bulkeley High School in Hartford, he attended Trinity wim the Class of 1949. He served in the Army Air Corps as a bombardier in World War II, earning numerous cita-
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1-Memory tions and medals. Upon graduation from Triruty, he reenlisted in the Air Force and served an additional year. During his career as an engineer, he designed surgical needles for Holgrath Corporation, retiring in 1990. He is survived by his wife, Corinne McDonough; three sons, Thomas "Neil," of Cheshire, CT, Douglas J., of Dallas, TX, and Rev. Stuart J., of Ft. Myers, FL; and five grandchildren.
Mitchell Ernest l-lolmgren, 1949 Mitchell E. Holmgren, 80, of Somerset, NJ, died on August 29, 2006. After graduating from East Hartford High School in C01mecticut, he attended Triruty with the Class of 1949. He subsequently received his master's degree from Columbia University. He served in the U.S. Navy during World War II. He was a plant manager for the precious metal manufacturing facility ofTessler and Weiss in Uruon, NJ, until he retired in 2000. He is survived by his son, Mitchell Holmgren, Jr. , ofSomerville, NJ; his three daughters,Adrienne Holmgren , of Franklin Park, NJ, Eleanor Olsen , of the Villages, FL, and Romelle Lysenko, of Somerset, NJ; and two grandchildren.
Andrew Anthony Deluca, 1950 Andrew A. DeLuca, 87, of Clinton, CT, died on July 28, 2006. After graduating from Hartford Public High School, he attended Trinity with the Class of 1950. In 1941, he entered the U.S. Army and the next year he was inducted into the U.S. Army Counterintelligence Corps. He received his Honorable Discharge in 1946 and remained an active CI C reservist unril his retirement in 1968 at the rank of major. He worked for American Standard in Hartford and, subsequently, at Products Design Newington as a metallurgist unril his retirement. He was a member of the American Society of Metals from 1962 to 1982. He is survived by his daughter, Jacquelyn, of Old Saybrook, CT.
Raymond Peter Flebeau, 1950 Raymond P. Flebeau, 79, of Rocky Hill, CT, died on August 14, 2006. After graduating from East Hartford High School in East Hartford, CT, he attended Triruty with the Class of 1950. He served as a Navy pharmacist's mate in World War II. He was a packaging engineer at General Electric Corp. in Plainville, CT, for most of his career.
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He was a lifelong member of the Rocky Hills Lions Club and a longtin1e member of the Wethersfield American Legion. He leaves his daughter, Elaine Alison Kurasinski, of Colchester, CT, and his granddaughter.
Jay Edward Geiger, 1950 Jay E. Geiger, 78, ofRiddle Village in Middletown Township, PA, died on August 1, 2006. After graduating from William Penn Charter School, he attended Trinity with the Class of 1950, where he was student body president, member of Sigma Nu , captain of the squash and soccer teams. He continued his connection to his alma mater as a long-time class agent and an alunmi trustee. He received his MBA from Harvard Business School. He began his career in sales as a sugar broker with William Eden Co. and Farr-Mann Co. In 1973, he launched his own hand-tool wholesale company, Craftsmen' Co., Inc., where he spent 29 years in sales and administration. He also coached soccer at Westtown School in Westtown, PA. In 2003, he was inducted into the Penn Charter Sports Hall of Fame. He leaves his wife, Louann "Lonny" Cupp Geiger; daughters, Lynne Murray, of Lexington , MA, Laurie Geiger, of Round Hill, VA, Leigh Partridge, of Narberth, PA, Lisa Geiger, of Brookline, MA; and seven grandchildren.
William Karl von Allmen, 1955 William K. von Allmen, 73, of North Branford, CT, died on August 18, 2006 . After graduating from Mount Hermon Prep. School , he attended Triruty with the Class of 1955, graduating from the Uruversity of Connecticut. He subsequently received a master's degree from Southern Connecticut State Uruversity and his 6th Year Certificate from the Uruversity ofBridgeport. He served in the U.S. Army from 1956 to 1958. He was a teacher at the Seth Haley School in West Haven, CT, prior to his retirement. He leaves his wife, Karen Kittleson von Allmen, of North Branford, CT; sons Kurt and Eric von Allmen, born of Albany, WI; and four grandchildren.
John Richardson Morley, 1956 John R. Morley, 73, of Nassau , Bahanus, died of brain cancer on July 18, 2005. After graduating from Moses Brown School in Providence, RI, he attended Trinity with the Class of 1956. He was a realtor and businessman in the Bahamas and was part owner of me Mall at Marathon. He was a past president of the Bahamas Chamber of C011U11erce.
Sinclair Smith Martel, 1959 Langford Warren, Jr., 1950 Langford Warren , Jr., of Kittery Point, ME, died on May 27, 2006, at the age of 81. After graduating from New Preparatory School in Cambridge, MA , he attended Trinity \'lith the Class of 1950, graduating in 1953. He served in the U.S. Army during World War II in the Pacific. He is survived by his wife, Judith (Tha.:ner) Warren; three daughters, Leslie van Berkum, of Deerfield, NH, Linda Tripp, of Tenants Harbor and Stratham, NH, and Laurie Warren , of Norfolk, MA; and seven grandchildren.
Steven Jay Godsick, 1953 Steven J. Godsick, of Delray Beach , FL, died on August 1, 2006. After graduating from Columbia Grammar School in New York City, he attended Triruty ,>Jitl1 the Class of 1953. He subsequently received his law degree from the Uruversity ofVirginia. He was an advertising executive in New York, and after his retirement, he continued in the sam.e field through volunteer work for the New York Police Foundation. He is survived by his children, Jeffrey and Christopher, and seven grandchildren.
Sinclair S. "Sandy" Martel, 68, of Gainesville, VA, died on October 4, 2006, of cardiopulmonary arrest. After graduating from Newington High School in Ne,>Jington, CT, he attended Trinity with the Class of 1959. He graduated from the Naval War College in 1977. He was conunissioned into the Navy in 1960 and served 27 years as a naval intelligence specialist. He received many military awards, including three Legions of Merit. He worked on the 1988 presidential campaign for the Bush-Quayle ticket. In 1989, he was appointed to the State Department and served as the deputy assistant secretary of state for politico-military affairs in the administration of President George H.W. Bush. In 1992, he led a team of U.S. experts to Israel to inspect mat nation's Patriot missile holdings, investigating charges that missile equipment had been improperly sent to China. He retired in 1993. He leaves his \'life, Madeleine "Maddy" Cullinane Martel, of Gainesville; rwo children, Elizabeth Marie Monroe, of Springfield, VA , and Charles Sinclair Martel, of Atlanta, GA; and five grandchildren.
ln-Memor~ James Frederick Joy, 1959
David Allen Pemmerl, 1972
Jaime A. Ficks, 1979
James F. Joy, 69, of Vero Beach, FL, died on October 2, 2006, of melanoma. After graduating from Hotchkiss School in Connecticut, he earned a B.S. from Trinity in 1959 and a B.S.E.E. in 1960. He subsequently received an MBA from New York University in 1964. Until his death, be was senior managing director of European business development, responsible for North American investor relations, for CVC Capital Partners Limited, based in Luxembourg. H e was previously a longtime director of First Republic Bank based in San Francisco, CA, and a long-standing member of the National Leadership Council for Conmmnities in Schools. He leaves his wife, Michael; three daughters, Whitney Cathcart, Merrill Slaugh, and Ashley Wood, all of Ross , CA; and five grandchildren. He also leaves a brother, Richard P. Joy lll , Trinity Class of 1955.
David A. Pe111111erl, 55, of Rehoboth, MA, died of cancer on August 30, 2006. After graduating from Middletown Township High School, he attended Trinity with the Class of 1972, graduating in 1975. He started his career as an international marine insurance underwriter with AIG in New York City and for Allendale Insurance of Rhode Island. H e su bsequently left the business world to become a teacher in Rehoboth, MA. An active member of his community, he held many volunteer positions in the town and coached various youth leagues. He is survived by his wife, Connie, and his children, Ross Pemmerl of R ehoboth and Elizabeth Penm1erl of Rumford, RI.
Jaime A. Ficks, 49, ofWest H artford, CT, tlied on October 10, 2006, after nearly 20 years at the Hospital for Special Care in New Britain, CT. Mter graduating with honors from William H. Hall High School in West Hartford, CT, and being inducted into the school's Quill and Scroll Journalistic Honor Society, she, despite her physical challenges with cerebral palsy, attended Trinity with the Class of 1979, graduating with honors. She was a member of Pi Gamma Mu, spent a semester at the London School of Economics, and was a Connecticut legislative intern. She subsequently attended the University of Connecticut School of Law, but was unable to complete her studies due to illness and physical limitations. She was a member of the Niantic Yacht Club and was a communicant at the Church of St. Peter Claver in West Hartford. She leaves her brother, Robert Bennison Ficks,Jr., of Canton, CT.
Michael Sedgwick Wade, 1960 Michael S.Wade, 69, of Fort Collins, CO, died on August 1, 2006, of cancer. He attended Trinity with the Class of 1960, where he was a member of Delta Phi. He subsequently received his master's degree in science from Wesleyan University. H e taught science and music at Kingswood Oxford School in West Hartford, CT, from 1960 until his retirement in 1989. H e also taught in England and Sweden on a Fulbright Scholarship in 1966 and 1982, respectively. His most wellknown course was a Wagner seminar. He is survived by his children, Betsy Strafach , of Fort Collins, CO, William Wade, of Nashville, TN, and Catherine Davis, of Broomfield, CO; seven grandchildren; and a great grandchild.
Charles Lewis Grant, 1964 Charles L. Grant, 64, of Newton, NJ, died on September 15, 2006. Mter graduating from Trinity with th e Class of 1964, he spent several years teaching and served in the Vietnam War as a military policeman. In 1968, he published his first of more than 200 short stories . He became a full-time writer of tales of horror and suspense, publishing more than 110 novels and editing anthologies. He was well-known for his award-winning Shadows anthologies. In 1993, he return ed to his alma mater to give a talk at Gallows Hill, entitled "Why I Like to Scare People." He was a three-time winner of the World Fantasy Award.
Richard William Johansen, 1973 Richard W. Johansen, 54, of Rancho Santa Fe, CA, died on September 22, 2005. After graduating front Trinity with the Class of 1973, he received an MBA from Harvard Business School. He is survived by his wife, Barbara Johansen, of Rancho Santa Fe; his children, Brooke Johansen, of Raleigh, NC, and Todd Johansen, of Dallas, TX.
Stephen ~olla Garner Ill, 1977 Stephen H. Garner Ill, 52, died unexpectedly on August 19, 2006. Mter graduating from the Hill School, he attended Trinity with the Class of 1977. He subsequently attended Christie's Fine Arts course in London. Early in his career, he taught history at St. Marks School in Southborough, MA. Following, he worked in New York at Valdemar F. Jacobsen Antiques. He became a well-respected antiques dealer on the East Coast. He is survived by his son, Steve Garner, and his mother, Elizabeth Garner Martin, of East Orleans, MA, and Vero Beach, FL.
Alexander M. des Villates Moorrees, 1978 Alexander M. Moorrees, of London, England, died on September 20, 2006 . After attending Trinity with the Class of 1978, where he was a member of St. Anthony Hall, he graduated with an MBA from Columbia University School ofBusiness in 1982. He worked in London at AIG Global Investors, Inc., an international capital management firm. He published a book, entitled Strange Happenings at the Indepmde11ce C h1b, in 1997, and he created a board game about the day in the life of a shark called "SharkPit." He leaves his mother, Louise, and his brother, Oni.
James Cornelius Kapteyn, 1983 James C. Kapteyn, 45, of Deerfield, MA, died while playing soccer on January 16, 2007. After graduating from Deerfield Academy in Deerfteld, MA , he attended Trinity with the Class of 1983. He subsequently received his master's from Bread Loaf School of English at Middlebury College. An English teacher and assistant dean of students at his alma mater,DeerfieldAcademy,he was also a coach of the Deerfield varsity girls' soccer and varsity boys' lacrosse teams. Previously, he was chairman of the English departments at WillistonNorthampton School and at Cushing Academy. H e leaves his wife, Kirsten, and rwo daughters, Ingrid and Ilse.
Grace Adela Cavero-Pace, 1986 Grace A. Cavero-Pace, 41, of Cheshire, CT, died on August 8, 2006, of breast cancer. Mter graduating from South Catholic High School, she attended Trinity with the Class of 1986. She subsequently received her J.D. from the University of Connecticut School of Law. Mter law school, she was employed by the Office of the Public Defender for rhe State of Connecticut. Until recently, she held the position of supervisory assistant public defender for juvenile matters in New Britain Superior Court. She was a member of the Hispanic Bar Association. She is survived by her husband, David; two children, Gabriel and Erica; and her father, Manuel Cavero.
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In-Memory Schuyler Bonticou ~aynes, 1989 Army Sgt. 1st Class Schuyler B. Haynes, 40, of New York, NY, died on November 15, 2006, in Baguba, Iraq. After graduating from the Millbrook School, in Millbrook, NY, he attended Triniry with the Class of 1989, where he was a member of the football and rugby teams. A career noncommissioned officer in the U.S. Army with 17 years of service, Haynes's vehicle was killed by a roadside bomb about 40 miles north of Baghdad. He was on his second tour of dury in Iraq, and had previously served in Panama and the Serbian republic ofKosovo. He was a descendent of Philip Schuyler, a major general who served George Washington during the Revolutionary War.
Stephen Christopher Redgate, 1991 Stephen C. Redgate, 37, of Groveland, MA, died on July 16, 2006. Mter graduating from Andover High School in Massachusetts, he attended Triniry with the Class of 1991, where he was a member of the football and track teams. He was founder and president of ORBIS Technology, Inc., and Boston Capital Markets, Inc., both in Andover. He is survived by his wife, Sandra (Vogell) Redgate; his sons, Scott, Sean, and Luke; and his parents, Howard V. and Susan T. Redgate, ofWest Newbury, MA.
Joyce Perkel Winkler, 1994 Joyce P. Winkler, 63, of Portland, OR, and formerly ofBloomfield, CT, died on June 6, 2006. After attending Grant High School in Oregon, she attended the Universiry ofWashington but did not fmish her degree. In 1994, she graduated from Triniry's Individualized Degree Program. She was a fundraiser for the women's division of the Greater Harrford Jewish Federation and served on the board of directors of the Jewish Conu1mniry Center and board of Jewish Conununiry Relations of the Greater Hartford Jewish Federation. She was also on the board of ECAP (Exceptional Cancer Patients) . She is survived by three children, Stacy, Stewart, and Gary Winkler, and her five grandchildren.
Lloyd Wayne McCurley, 1997 Lloyd W McCurley, 49, of Hartford and Ridgefield, CT, died on September 12, 2006. Mter graduating from Ridgefield High School in Ridgefteld, CT, he attended Central Connecticut State Universiry. He subsequently received his M.A. in computer science from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute and an M.A. in
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economics from Triniry. He was an employee of Connecticut Natural Gas Company in Hartford in marketing research. He was also an active participant in outreach programs to the communiry and a volunteer at the Prudence Crandall Center of Harrford. He leaves his parents, Brian and Dr. Jean Gaumer, of Ridgefield; two sisters, Laurie McCurley, of Clinton Corners, NY, and Elyzabeth Gaumer, of New York, NY.
John V. Sorgo, 1970 Rev. John V. Bargo, ofWeston, MA, died on April 20,2006. He received his B.A. from Boston College in 1950, his B.S.T. from Western College of Theology in 1958, and his M.A. in Latin from Trinity in 1970. He served on the faculry of Fairfield Preparatory School and Fairfield Univer iry, both in Connecticut. He was also the chaplain of St. Vincent's Medical Center.
MASTER'S Katherine Griffin Leeds, 1948 Katherine G. Leeds, of Farmingron, CT, died on February 17, 2006. After receiving her undergraduate degree from St. Elizabeth's College in Convent Station, NJ, she received her master's from Triniry in 1948. She was an English and history teacher at Simsbury High School in Connecticut and was a homemaker and substitute teacher after her marriage. She is survived by a daughter, Ann P. Leeds, of Evanston, IL; three sons, William B. Leeds, of Santa Fe, NM, James B. Leeds, of Oakton, VA, and Capt. Robert G. Leeds, USN (Ret.) , of Springfield, VA; and six grandchildren.
Leonard F. Kilian, 1964 Leonard F. Kilian, 73, ofWest Hartford, CT, died on February 4, 2006. He received his B.S. in 1952 and M.S. in 1967 from the Universiry of Notre Dame and a master's from Trin.iry in 1964. He worked as an actuary at Travelers Insurance Company. He also taught mathematics at local schools and computer progranulling at the Universiry ofNotre Dame. He is survived by his wife, Mary E. Kilian; his five sons, Michael, Joseph, John, Da11, and Steve; and nine grandchildren.
Charles Elmer North, 1967 Charles E. North , 77, of Bonita Springs, FL, died on July 10, 2006 . He received his B.S. from Central Connecticut State Universiry in 1955 and his M.A. from Triniry in 1967. He was a veteran of the U.S. Marine Corps. He was an economics and accounting teacher at Windsor High School in Connecticut, and was the first teacher to bring economics into the high school curriculum in Connecticut. He retired in 1985. He is survived by his wife, Joanne; his sons, Kevin A. North, of Simsbury, CT, Thomas S. North , of West Chesterfield, NH ; and four grandchildren.
FACULTY ~ugh Ogden Hugh Ogden, 69, of Glastonbury, CT, died on December 31,2006, at Rangeley Lake in Maine. He received an A.B. from Haverford College, an M.A. from New York Universiry, and a Ph.D. from the Universiry of Michigan. He joined the Trin.iry College faculry in 1967. He was the co-founder of the Creative Writing Program at Triniry and founder of the Creative Writing Program at the Academy for the Arts magnet school in Hartford, where he taught poetry workshops. Before coming to Triniry he taught Greek and Latin literature in the Honors Program at the Universiry of Michigan for seven years. He published seven books, most recently Tttrtle Island Tree Psalms (2006), and approximately 500 poems in over 300 periodicals. Garrison Keillor read his poem "Circumference And Centers" on the "Writer's Almanac" in March of 2006 and Bringing A Fir Straight Dow11. (2005) was nominated for the Kingsley Tuffi Prize. He was selected as a fellow at The MacDowell Colony twice and won residencies at Hawthornden Castle in Scotland; Le Chateau de Lavigny in Switzerland; the Albee Foundation , U-cross, rwice; the Djerassi Resident Artists Program; and The Frank Waters Foundation, twice. He received a National Endowment for the Arts grant and three from the Connecticut Commission on the Arts, and was twice nominated for The Pushcart Prize- Best of the Small Presses. He acted on the stage, ran a read-aloud program on Connecticut Public Radio, was " poet-in-the-school" for over 30 Connecticut and Massachu etts grade and high schools, and worked with kindergarten children, the elderly, and prison inmates. He leaves his children, Cynthia Ogden '83, of Chevy Chase, MD, David Ogden, of Colchester, CT, and Katherine Ogden '90, of South Glastonbury, CT; seven grandchildren; and his former wife, Ruth Woodcock.
A celebration of his life, scheduled for June 9 during Reunion Weekend, will take place at the College. Donations may be made to the Hugh Ogden Poetry Prize, care of the Trinity College Advancement Office, Williams Memorial, Trinity College, Hartford, CT 06106.
Lecture On The Tides This is the point when the earth wobbles and the days lengthen and the years have to have days added. The point when the harness that pulls the sea pulls each of us into spring and makes us shudder again when the first red appears , the bleeding that quicker than not becomes green. You will always be here as long as water cuts deeper into soil and the coursing adds to what is left, as long as leaves are drawn out by the tide and buds bleed through bark, even you who are lost will always be here as long as the moon circles into its line with sun and the oceans respond , as long as we are able to find the moment when the winds make the globe waver, as long as the earth corrects itself, as long as pain takes faith in its bud and flowers . -Hugh Ogden , Two Roads and This Spring
Deaths The CoUege has received word of the following deaths, but information for complete obituaries is unavailable: Andrew James Miller, 1962 Richard Dean Wang, 1978 William Eric Halverson, 1989 Albert L. GastJ11ann, Professor of Political Science, Emeritus **Stephe11 George Romaine's '50 wife, Nellie Uccello Romaine M'60, was mistakenly identified i11 the fall iss11e. The Reporter apologizes for a11y disconifort tltis aniiOIIIJCement migltt ltave ca11sed.
Trinity Reporter Vol. 39, No.2 Wimer 2007 Vice Presideutfor Al1111111i RelatiOIIS aud Couummications: Kath leen O 'Connor Boelhouwer '85 Editor: Drew Sanborn .Ha11ager of Creative Services: Rita Law Des(~11er: James Baker Design Coutribwiug Writer: Carlin Carr Sports Editor: David ](jngsley BOARD OF TRUSTEES
Charter Tn tslees: E. Thayer Bigelow, Jr. '65, Saundra Kee Borges '8 1, Alfonso L. Carney, Jr. '70, Rodney D. Day][] '62, Raymond E. Joslin '58, George A. Kellner '64, PhilipS. Khoury '7 J, Mark A. Leavitt '80, Alexander H. Levi '67, Michael D. Loberg '69,Aiexander P. Lynch P'03, '04, '07, Mitchell M. Merin '75, Mary Penniman Moran '76, Alice M. O'Connor '80, Charles R. Perrin '67, Margaret-Mary Voudouris Preston '79, Paul E. Raether '68, William H. Reynolds, Jr. '71, William C. Richardson '62, Han. '03, Edward C. Rorer '65, Cornelia Parsons Thornburgh '80, W. James Tozer '63, Willian1 H. Turner lll '62, Ronald V. Waters III '74, Margaret ).Young '76 Altlllllli Tntstees: Peter R . Blum '72, Emily Latour Bogle '79, Robert E. Brickley '67, Elaine Feldman Patterson '76, R. Kevin Smith '87, Harold A. Smullen, Jr. '76 Tntstee Ex-Offido:James F.Jones,Jr. , President and Triniry College Professor in the Humanities
C. Keith Ftmsto11 Tntstee: Emelie E. East '94 Tntscees Emeriti: EvanS. Dobelle,Thomas S.Johnson '62, Edward A. Montgomery, Jr. '56, Borden W Painter, Jr. '58, Douglas T. Tansill '61 NATIONAL ALUMNI AssociATION
You can put the "graduate" in graduate fellowships! Did you know that some of the most prestigious graduate fellowships and scholarships welcome applications from young alumni/ae?
"Recent graduates often don't realize that they may still be eligible for these extraordinary opportunities to pursue graduate study and international travel," says Anne Lundberg, chair of Trinity's Graduate Fellowships Committee. "We are eager to get the word out about these programs, especially because some of them require nomination or endorsement by the College." Examples of alumni-friendly fellowships include the Luce Scholars Program (www.hluce.org), Fulbright U.S. Student Program (www.fulbrightonline.org), and Rhodes Scholarships (www.rhodesscholar.org). All of these have application deadlines in October and November. Please consult the individual Web sites for eligibility criteria and application procedures. For further information about nomination/endorsement, contact Anne Lundberg at (860) 297-2382 or anne.lundberg@trincoll.edu.
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Exemti11e Colllllliftee: Samuel Bailey, Jr. '62, Hilary A. BurraU '03,John S. Hamblett '84, L. Peter Lawrence '71, Malcolm F. MacLean TV '92, Lina Estrada McKinney '98, H. Conrad Meyer Ill '77,W.James Murphy,Jr. '90, Pamela Richmond '93, David Sample '71,Virginia Sanchez '77, R. Kevin Smith '87, Matthew B. Woods '92, W Townsend Ziebold,Jr. '84, Alden R. Gordon '69, Faculry Representative, Alan K. Martin '78, Black Alumni Organization Representative .\1e111bers Ex-Officio: MichaelS. Gilman '76,William S.Jenkins '03, Matthew]. Longcore '94, M. Morgan Risse! '98
BoARD OF FELLows K.hooshe AdibSamii Aiken '82,Andrew Aiken '83, Sophie Bell Ayres '77, Patrice Ball-Reed 'SO, Aimee Brown '74, Dr. Harvey Bumpers '78, James T. Caillouette M.D. '79, Kathrine Kawamura Corliss '76, Samuel B. Corliss, Jr. '76, Armando A. Diaz '89, Peter F. Donovan '75,Barbara E. Fernandez '74, Peter Gleysteen '73, P'09, Renate C. Gleysteen P'09, S. Randolph Gretz '70, P'06, '09,Joshua Gruss '96, Peter A. Gutermann. Esq. '82,Joseph Head '84, Frank "Ted" Judson '77, Elliot M. Katzman P'05 , Mary Jo MateI Keating '74, Michael J. Kluger '78, Elissa Raether Kovas '93, Karen Fink Kupferberg '73. P'07, Todd D. Lavieri '83, Nicholas W. Lazares, Esq. '73, P'08 , '09. Pamela J. Lazares, Esq. , P'08, '09, Kevin Maloney '79, Paul McBride '78, P'lO, Lisa Hill McDonough '79, P'08, '10, Neil D. McDonough '79, P'08, ' 10, Thomas L. Melly '80,Josh Newsome '95, Benagh R.ichardson Newsome '95,E. Carter Norton '79, Althea Leidy O'Shaughnessy '78, Peter B. Pfister 路st , Ann Martin Pfister '82, Steven Roberts '78, Allan M. Rudnick '62, Andrew D. Smith '65, Andrew R . Taussig '73, Karen Thomas '78,Justin Van Etten '96, Richard H. Walker, Esq. 'T!., Constance Hart Walkingshaw '7 4. Timothy Walsh '85, Lorraine Saunders White '84
news from the national alumni association
Dear Friends, On a recent visit to campus, I passed a student on the Long Walk who was talking on her cell phone. I overheard a couple of sentences-"I'm SO excited! I have an interview in Washington on Friday!" For this year's seniors, conversations like this are increasingly the norm as their final semester heads toward Commencement and the start of their careers. As Trinity alumni/ ae, we can play an important role in aiding these new graduates, working in close cooperation with the professional staff of the College's Office of Career Services. Before I move on to identify ways in which you can become involved, here is a snapshot of recent achievements and activities of that office. (see box)
• Out of eight peer schools participating in a recent recruiting fa ir conducted by the Liberal Arts Recruiting Connection, Trinity ranked number one in interview offers . • Out of 16 selective liberal arts colleges surveyed in the spring of 2006, Trinity ranked fifth in percentage of students accepting fulltime offers of employment • In that same survey, the College ranked third out of 16 in students who applied to attend graduate or professional schools • Trinity regularly attracts recruiters from the top financial, manufacturing, media, and nonprofit organizations in the country. A partial list includes Credit Suisse; Bear, Sterns & Company; Google; KBW; Teach for America; ESPN; Department of Justice; ICF International; Travelers; The Hartford; General Electric; IBM; and many more. • The College provides extensive support for students through the Health Professions Advisory Committee, the Pre-law Advising Committee, and the MBA Advising Committee, which are made up of faculty members and members of the professional staff. • During Trinity Days in February, the Office of Career Services helps coordinate annual student visits to major employers in New York and Boston, where Trinity alumni/ ae who are top executives in their companies update our students on the current state of their industries. • In the spring semester, all sophomores are assigned a career adviser and urged to begin their relationship with Career Services .
As you can see by these examples, Trinity offers students a variety of avenues by which they can initiate successful career strategies. And this is where we, as alumni/ae, can be very helpful. Career Services welcomes and encourages our involvement in a variety of ways. It may be as simple as forwarding your organization's position vacancy notices to Career Services-not only does this help our students, but it also means you have the potential to hire new employees with a quality Trinity
education. At another level, you and your organization can host an on-site visit by a group of students. These events are particularly effective in providing a close-up look at current issues and opportunities, and they have a proven track record of opening doors and providing invaluable networking opportunities. Here are just a few examples of recent events. Last fall, Bob Benjamin '71, senior managing director at Bear, Sterns & Company, brought together 22 students for a session on interviewing and other aspects of career planning. And during the fall semester, Rita Scuris '88-a principal utilities finance specialist with the Connecticut Department of Public Utilities Control-assembled a panel of finance experts from such companies as Hartford Investment Management and Phoenix Investment Partners to help our students gain insights into careers in that sector. Finally, one of the highlights of every year at Trinity is the annual State of the Communications, Entertainment and Information Industries event, organized by Ray Joslin '58 and cosponsored by the Trinity Club of New York and the Cable Center. This year's program featured a presentation by Richard Parsons, chairman and chief executive officer, Time Warner Inc. Parsons was interviewed by Paula Zahn of CNN's Paula Zahn Now. Twenty Trinity students had the opportunity to meet with Parsons and Zahn in advance of the event. I encourage each of you to consider how you can partner with the professionals in the Office of Career Services to provide a great career start to the newest members of our alunmi/ a body. For more information or to volunteer, please contact Lanna Hagge, director, at 860-297-2080 or lanna.hagge@trincoll.edu. Regards, Kevin Smith '87
Winter 2007 [ t rinity repo rter
alumni events
UPCOMING 2007 EVENTS SAVE TI-IESE DATES February 26
Trinity Club of Boston, President's Reception
February 27
Trinity Club of New York, President's Reception
March 15
Trinity Club of Philadelphia, King Tut Exhibition Tour and Reception
Aprilll
Trinity Club of Naples, Alumni luncheon
April 22 & 23
College Admissions and Exploration Program for Sons and Daughters of Alumni and Faculty
AprillS
Trinity Club of Denver, Alumni Reception
May 8
Trinity Club of St. louis, President's Reception at St. louis Cardinal's game
For details, visit our Web site at www.trincoll.edujalumni/ *If you would like to attend one of these events, please call Kristen Blake in the Alumni Office at (860) 297-2406.
Atlanta Tom Rowland '90 (404) 325-8311 thomas.rowland.1990@trincoll.edu Boston Barry A. Freedman, Esq. '87 (617) 535-3718 • barry.freedman.1987@tri ncoll.edu Robin Halpern Cavanaugh '91 (978)443-4605 • robin.cavanaugh.1991@trincoll.edu Chicago Joshua P. Newsome '95 (847) 446-2067 • joshua.newsome.1995@trincoll.edu Denver Robert Phelps '78, P'08 (303) 607-77155 • robert.phelps.1978@trincoll.edu Fairfield County Matthew J. Longcore '94 (203) 643-4623 matthew.longcore.1994@trincoll.edu Hartford John Patrick Bayliss '91 (203) 509-9078 • john.bayliss.1991@trincoll.edu Los Angeles MichaelS. Gilman '76 (323) 466-1541 • michael.gilman.1976@trincoll.edu New Haven David R. Lenahan '84 (203) 245-8826 • david.lenahan.1984@trincoll.edu
trin ity re po rte r
I \¥i nter 2007
New York John B. Akasie II '93 (212) 860-9493 • john .akasie.1993@trincoll.edu
Southeastern Connecticut Conrad Seifert '77 (860) 739-3617 • conrad.seifert.1977@trincoll.edu
William Jenkins '03 (781) 964-3335 • william.jenkins.2003@trincoll.edu
Southwest Florida Michael L. Wallace '57 (239) 596-7780
Northern Florida Theresa Ross Smith '73 and Dtho Smith '74 (904) 272-14430 • theresa.smith.1973@trincoll.edu Philadelphia John S. Hamblett '84 (215) 567-1101 • john .hamblett.1984@trincoll.edu Rhode Island Thomas M. Madden, Esq. '86 (401) 886-7397 • thomas.madden.1986@trincoll.edu Rochester Peter Z. Webster '57 (585) 586-4765 • peter.webster.1957@trincoll.edu San Diego Katie Reifenheiser Adams '97 (858) 454-0443 • katherine.adams.1997 @trincoll.edu San Francisco M. Morgan Rissel '98 (Co-President) (415) 350-5250 • morgan.rissel.1998@trincoll.edu Michael Poremba '97 (Co-President) (310) 869-6677 • michael.poremba.1997@trincoll.edu Seattle AJ Kamra '94 (206) 575-3600 • ajaypreet.kamra.1994@trincoll.edu
St. Louis Maria Pedemonti Clifford '88 (314) 997-0237 • maria.clifford.1988@trincoll.edu Vermont Peter H. Kreisel '61 (802) 658-0716 • peter.kreisel.1961@trincoll.edu Washington, D.C. Jennifer Dakin '97 (202) 669-6119 • jennifer.dakin.1997@trincoll.edu
If your area is not representedGET INVOLVED! Contact Kristen Blake, Assistant Director of Alumni Relations at (860) 297-2406 kristen. bla ke@tri ncoll.edu
Bring your local alumni together.
A BIG TI-IANK YOU TO ALL OUR ALUMNI AND PARENT ~OSTS .
Attention Trinity Alumni and Parents:
Show Your School Spirit!
Katie Reifenheiser Adams '97 & Charlie Adams '95 &
H . Louis Bailey P'09 Antoinette Russell P'o9
G. William Brown, Jr. P'o9 & Amy Moss P' 09 Daniel & Lisa Callahan P'o8 Tom Chase '8r John & Margaret Claghorn P'o8 H . William & Martha Cyphers P'o9 Daniel & Lisa Dorian P'o8 John & Cathryn Gandolfo P'ro Raymond Joslin '58
$35 .00 per tie or scarf (plus $3 .50 shipping and handling) www.trincoll.edu/pub/alumni/memorabil ia/apparel .htm
Please send a check (payable to Trinity College) and your mailing address to : Trinity College Alumni Office, 300 Summit Street, Hartford, CT 06106
John Linehan '76 Alexander & Sally Lynch P'03, '04,'08 &
Josh Newsome '95 Benagh Richardson Newsome '95 Bruce & Lu Ann Ohanian P'07 Althea Leidy O 'Shaughnessy '78 Bob Phelps '78, P'o8 Morgan Rissel '98 Paula & Alan Rudnick '62 Tom Safran '67 Alec & Lee Sargent P'o6,'09 David & Melissa Schroll P'o8 Corky and Jim Studley '58 Patrick & Lynne Sullivan P'o9
John & Caroline Asher Walker '74
Pres ident Jones with Judy Dworin '70 at t he Trinity C lub of 1-jartford's 47th annua l banquet. Professor Dworin was honored with the Clu b's Person of the Year award.
C hristi ne Quinn '88 enJoymg her Trinity scarf at a reception in her honor in New York City.
Elizabeth Webber & Michael Ward P'o7 Didi & Tim Woodhull P'o7
Professo r of Art, Michae l f= itzGerald speaking about his Picasso exh ibit to a group of alum ni in Boston .
Trinity students with Richard Parso ns, chairman & C EO of Time Warner Inc., and Pau la Zahn at the Eighth Annual State of the Communications, Entertainment, and Information Industries event. Winter 2007
I trinity reporter
from the president
0
ne of my boyhood heroes was Adlai Stevenson, known in his lifetime as one of America's most distinguished public figures and an orator of exceptional gifts. In the last speech of his life, delivered at an UNESCO conference in Geneva only a couple of weeks before his untimely death in July of 1965, Stevenson compared the planet Earth to a spaceship, hurtling through the universe, with all of the planet's inhabitants as passengers. Even though he may have borrowed the analogy from the architect Buckrninster Fuller, his comparison strikes me today, all these decades later, as one of the most apt descriptions of our lot at this crucial time in humankind's fractured history. Stevenson opined that how the passengers, rich and poor, of varying backgrounds, races, and creeds, coped with each other would determine if the spaceship would arrive safely at its destination. Here at Trinity, we have a similar task, one made all the more important because our students-those for whom Trinity exists-have four very short years to spend on our campus, and these four years should be among the most formative of their entire lives. Trinity is part of the city of Hartford, the state of Connecticut, the United States, and the planet Earth. What issues and forces determine history elsewhere will determine our lives on our campus as we go about our daily tasks as fellow learners in this place. What, one might ask, have we learned about each other in the past four months or so as we experienced two racial incidents that jolted our campus
triniry repo rter I \\'inter 2poi
and brought the attention of The New York Times to our College? First, I think that we learned that Trinity, as a community, was hurt that incidents of racial insensitivity could mar a place we all hold cherished. Second, we learned that as a community, just as in our families when bad things come out of the proverbial blue to hurt us, Trinity could react positively. The Chairman of our Board ofTrustees, Paul Raether, denounced the incidents in front of the faculty and in a message to the entire College. We held an open forum in Cinestudio. When Jan and I were walking over, on the afternoon ofNovember 15 (an important date for us each year since it is our wedding anniversary), we had to wait to get inside the building because every seat was taken, students, faculty, and staff were standing in the two vestibules, sitting in the aisles, and the like: I was astonished at the outpouring of concern evinced by the huge gathering and by the eloquent statements of our students who spoke long past the allotted time for the event. Third, while we cannot change the planet Earth, we can and must take responsibility for our own little spaceship Trinity. And I fear that if we fail to take our responsibilities appropriately, our students may never, once, in their lives experience a place where they have to think, and think deeply and broadly, about the salient issues of our time. Our two incidents were racially charged, but real diversity (the thrust of Stevenson's analogy to passengers aboard a single vessel) means learning to live with difference, abandoning barriers of race, background, social status, sexual orientation, or creed since the spaceship will not land safely unless those on board learn to live peacefully with each other.
In the board's review of its own governance structures, which started in the 2004-2005 academic year, the trustees decided to have two different sets of committees: a set of standing committees and a set of what we have taken to calling charter committees. The latter category allows for broadly based committees, on quick timetables, to deal with issues of importance that will inevitably arise from time to time. Thus, at their December meeting, the trustees enacted a Charter Committee on Campus Climate. The comrnittee will include three trustees, three faculty, three staff, and three students. MIT professor and Associate Provost Philip Khoury '71 and the Raether Distinguished Professor of History Cheryl Greenberg will serve as cochairs of this conunittee, which will report back to the trustees in May, a timetable of considerable daring. The committee will make reconunendations on how to improve the climate for all of the passengers on board our little craft. The late Bart Giamatti, former president ofYale, likened campuses to "free and open spaces," a line that I cherish as I try to think about the essence of a school, a word, with the word teacher, surely among the most treasured in our vocabulary. We shall do whatever it takes to make certain that our own spaceship, Trinity College, is such a place for each one of us who is a passenger at this time in the College's long and venerable flight.
James FJones,Jr. President and Trinity College Professor in the Humanities
A Trinity Education ... Moves people, engages communities, and challenges assumptions "I love being in a city and being able to bring my students out into the community. All of my classes now have a community learning component. Students studying neuropsychology can spend time on a schizophrenia unit at the Institute of Living; students studying brain development can observe children at the Trinity Community Child Care Center; students interested in the effects of pesticide exposure on the brain can interact with workers at a local farm. Students take advantage of opportunities to do internships, independent research projects, or a thesis. Many of these projects are at a graduate level and are often presented at professional meetings or published. It is a joy to see how much they can accomplish in such a short time."
Sarah Raskin, Associate Professor of Psychology and Neuroscience Author, with Catherine Meeter, of Neuropsychological Management cif Mild Traumatic Brain Injury.
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