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TRINITY REPORTER RECEIVED JUN 2 Z 1976 VOLUME 6 NUMBER 7 TRINITY COLLEGE, HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT JUNE, 1976 Largest Class in History Graduates During the Moments of Waiting ... WAITING FOR THE WORD to mount the platform from Commencement Assistant Marshal Dr. James West, Ralph De Lucia prepares to receive degree. To the left is Sarah Detwiler. FACULTY Secretary George STIFF breeze forces Baccalaureate flag bearer Cooper checks notes alongside Henry Riely '77 to support staff during the Faculty Dean Edwin Nye. morning service. MACE BEARER Kathleen Freder- GOVERNOR'S Foot Guard Band watches for ick prepares to carry 20-lb. load. signal to play "Neath the Elms." To the strains of the Processional March played by · the First Company, Governor's Foot Guard Band, the largest class in Trinity history wound its way down the Long Walk for the last time as undergraduates. Waiting for them under the outstretched arm of Bishop Brownell was an overflow audience of about 4,000 well-wishers. When the ceremony was over Trinity had acquired 458 alumni with bache- lor's degrees and 70 with master's degrees. Seven persons were awarded honorary degrees. In his charge to the senior class, President Lockwood said in part, "We all look ahead with uncertainty. Yet, whatever our positions, we know that we want to create a world of our own making, received but not precast. We hope that somehow we may make a mark on the world we inherited .... We are linked with one another; we define our humanity by both our contemplation and our action. I have only this simple message: do it your own way, but do it humanely .... " The College awarded honorary de- grees to Mary Ellen Avery, M.D., professor of pediatrics at Harvard University; · Ostrom Enders, retired Hartford business and civic leader of Avon, Conn.; Harry J. Gray, chief executive officer, president and chairman of United Technologies; Frank S. Jones, professor of urban affairs at Massachusetts Institute of Technology; The Right Reverend RobertS. Kerr '40, Episcopal Bishop of Vermont; Robert B. O'Connor '16, architect and consultant; and W. Anthony Paddon, M.D. '35, director of Grenfell Association Northern Med- ical Services of Labrador. This year's graduates came from 32 states plus Puerto Rico and the District of Columbia and four foreign countries. The class included the largest num- ber of women to graduate since the College went coeducational in 1969. The Bachelor of Arts degree was awarded to 358 students and the Bachelor of Science degree to 100. Valedictorian was Stephen J. Poole of Wilmington, Del., a biology major, Phi Beta Kappa, Holland Scholar and honorary H.E. Russell Fellow, who also received honors in general scholar- ship and departmental honors in biology. Susan Anne McGill of Glastonbury, Conn. was Salutatorian. A biochemis- try major, Phi Beta Kappa, W.H. Russell Fellow, Holland Scholar and Krieble Scholar, she also received honors in general scholarship and departmental honors in chemistry. President Lockwood Thirteen other students received Honors in general scholarship. They are Donald C. Baur of Meriden, Conn., also with honors in history; Phyllis K. Roberts of White Plains, N.Y. ; Michele E. Veseskis of Hartford, also with honors in English; Timothy A. Cross of East Sandwich, Mass., also with honors in chemistry; Thomas E. Bell of Berwin, Pa., also with honors in biology; Daniel S. Silver of Manches- ter, Conn., also with honors in mathematics; Steven M. Salky of Memphis, Tenn.; Paul R. Sachs of Bala Cynwyd, Pa., also with honors in psychology; Alan S. Hergert of Au- ( continued on page 2) CAMERAS and seniors ready, music and procession begin.
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Page 1: 1976June

TRINITY REPORTER

~~T--R~IN~IT~Y~C~O~LL~E~G7EljBRARY RECEIVED

JUN 2 Z 1976

VOLUME 6 NUMBER 7 TRINITY COLLEGE, HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT JUNE, 1976

Largest Class in History Graduates During the Moments of Waiting ...

WAITING FOR THE WORD to mount the platform from Commencement Assistant Marshal Dr. James West, Ralph De Lucia prepares to receive degree. To the left is Sarah Detwiler.

FACULTY Secretary George STIFF breeze forces Baccalaureate flag bearer Cooper checks notes alongside Henry Riely '77 to support staff during the Faculty Dean Edwin Nye. morning service.

MACE BEARER Kathleen Freder- GOVERNOR'S Foot Guard Band watches for ick prepares to carry 20-lb. load. signal to play "Neath the Elms."

To the strains of the Processional March played by · the First Company, Governor's Foot Guard Band, the largest class in Trinity history wound its way down the Long Walk for the last time as undergraduates. Waiting for them under the outstretched arm of Bishop Brownell was an overflow audience of about 4,000 well-wishers. When the ceremony was over Trinity had acquired 458 alumni with bache­lor's degrees and 70 with master's degrees. Seven persons were awarded honorary degrees.

In his charge to the senior class, President Lockwood said in part, "We all look ahead with uncertainty. Yet, whatever our positions, we know that we want to create a world of our own making, received but not precast. We hope that somehow we may make a mark on the world we inherited .... We are linked with one another; we define our humanity by both our contemplation and our action. I have only this simple message: do it your own way, but do it humanely .... "

The College awarded honorary de­grees to Mary Ellen Avery, M.D., professor of pediatrics at Harvard University; · Ostrom Enders, retired Hartford business executi~e and civic leader of Avon, Conn.; Harry J. Gray, chief executive officer, president and chairman of United Technologies; Frank S. Jones, professor of urban affairs at Massachusetts Institute of Technology; The Right Reverend RobertS. Kerr '40, Episcopal Bishop of Vermont; Robert B. O'Connor '16, architect and consultant; and W. Anthony Paddon, M.D. '35, director of Grenfell Association Northern Med­ical Services of Labrador.

This year's graduates came from 32 states plus Puerto Rico and the District of Columbia and four foreign countries.

The class included the largest num­ber of women to graduate since the College went coeducational in 1969. The Bachelor of Arts degree was

awarded to 358 students and the Bachelor of Science degree to 100.

Valedictorian was Stephen J. Poole of Wilmington, Del., a biology major, Phi Beta Kappa, Holland Scholar and honorary H.E. Russell Fellow, who also received honors in general scholar­ship and departmental honors in biology.

Susan Anne McGill of Glastonbury, Conn. was Salutatorian. A biochemis­try major, Phi Beta Kappa, W.H. Russell Fellow, Holland Scholar and Krieble Scholar, she also received honors in general scholarship and departmental honors in chemistry.

President Lockwood

Thirteen other students received Honors in general scholarship. They are Donald C. Baur of Meriden, Conn., also with honors in history; Phyllis K. Roberts of White Plains, N.Y. ; Michele E. Veseskis of Hartford, also with honors in English; Timothy A. Cross of East Sandwich, Mass., also with honors in chemistry; Thomas E. Bell of Berwin, Pa., also with honors in biology; Daniel S. Silver of Manches­ter, Conn., also with honors in mathematics; Steven M. Salky of Memphis, Tenn.; Paul R. Sachs of Bala Cynwyd, Pa., also with honors in psychology; Alan S. Hergert of Au-

( continued on page 2)

CAMERAS and seniors ready, music and procession begin.

Page 2: 1976June

Page 2 Trinity Reporter June 1976

Largest Commencement Graduates 87 Seniors with Honors (continued) · burn, Wash., also with honors in economics; Stephen J. Swiatkiewicz of East Hartford, Conn., who also re­ceived honors in history; Sally E. Tarbell of Windsor, Conn., who also received honors in psychology; Stuart L. Koman of Baltimore, Md., who also received honors in psychology; and Barbara F. Bass of South Glastonbury, Conn., who also received honors in biology.

A total of 87 seniors were graduated with honors in their respective major areas of study.

One senior, Chester B. Derr of South Woodstock, Conn., received a B.S. degree from Trinity and also received a Master of Science degree in Mechanical Engineering from Rensselaer Polytech­nic Institute under a professional degree program in conjunction with R.P.I., in Troy, N.Y.

The first member of Trinity's Indi­vidualized Degree Program to graduate is a member of the class of '76. She is Kay Lazarus of Simsbury, Conn., housewife and mother of three, who received the B.A. The lOP program permits students to study at their own pace, taking as many as eight years or more, without being required to attend classes.

A married couple also graduated. Eileen and John Fisher received B.A.'s. Eileen, originally from Canton, Conn.,

Out of the

Ordinary ... (see above)

met John Fisher of Clifton Heights, N.J. while at Trinity.

Barbara Bass of South Glastonbury, Conn. returned to Trinity after receiv­ing her B.A. in 1972 to acquire a B.S. in biology this year. In the interim she worked for the Lung Association for two years and in 1975 was appointed by Connecticut's Governor Ella Grasso to the Nuclear Power Evaluation Council whose report on atomic safety regulations is due next February.

Alexander Lepak, Jr. of Windsor graduated with one of the largest number of majors on record. Lepak, a former "Green Beret" and professional musician, majored in physics, mathe­matics and chemistry for the B.S. degree.

Leanne Garofolo of Wethersfield, Conn. made graduation a family affair. She has three brothers, all of whom are Trinity graduates. Her father, Alfred Garofolo, a retired Hartford police captain, is Trinity's director of campus security and is also taking courses at the College.

Two women whose children are also atter.tding Trinity received degrees. They are Margery Izard of Wethers­field, Conn. whose son is a freshman and whose husband is Trinity's medical director; and Barbara White of Hart­ford, mother of four, whose son is a Trinity sophomore.

The Fischers

Lazarus Lepak White

GAROFOLOS appeared in force. From left, Edward '70, Alfred Jr. '73, Mrs. Lynn Garofolo, Leanne '76 and Alfred senior. Brother Donald '65 is in England.

''Joke Night'' Not A Joke Campus Gathering Causes Concern

UJ

As the '75-'76 academic year drew to an end, the college community was unexpectedly and abruptly faced with a problem for which, in the nature of things, there is no one perfect solution. The affair began with an expression of racist and sexist sentiments on the campus and, within a few weeks, was the subject of news articles and editorials throughout the country. Editorial opinion mainly supported the stand taken by President Lockwood, who had moved quickly to curb further occurrences; some, however, urged caution fearing that the constitu­tional right of free speech could be jeopardized.

The controversial affair began in­nocently enough as a student-spon­sored "Joke Night" held on campus ·in early April and attended by about 250 students. What occurred is summar­ized in a letter reporting on the event written by Dr. Robert Lindsay, profes­sor of physics and chairman of Trinity's Special Council on Minority Students, and vice president Thomas A. Smith. President Lockwood had asked the Council to prepare a report with recommendations.

"On April 22 the Council met with members of the Student Government Association, members of Mather Board of Governors, some of whom were present at the April 9 Joke Night, and with a member of the faculty and an administrator who were also present during a part of the evening. We listened to approximately two hours of accounts of what had taken place at Joke Night, and there is no question in

~ the minds of the Council's members ~ but that the event was outrageously ~ offensive to blacks and to women. ::i "It offended as well against any ~ standard of taste and conduct which i5: ought to prevail among well-educated

adults. That the nature of what was said and applauded on the occasion might easily have led _to violence was clear. That it did not can only be said now to have been a matter of accident and the self-control of some of those who were members of the groups being abused.

"We consider the event to have been a moral outrage . . . . What is most incredible and dismaying is that an audience of over 250 Trinity under­graduates apparently participated in and enjoyed a program which was characterized by obscene and abusive verbal assaults upon the race and sex of fellow human beings .... "

Similar reactions quickly followed from other campus quarters. Writing to the Special Council in his role as chairman of the Trinity Faculty Con­ference, Dr. J. Bard McNulty said, "We do not wish to anticipate your findings, but it is our hope that you will leave no doubt in anyone's mind about the opposition of the Faculty Conference to expressions of gross racism and gross sexism under the guise of community entertainment .... "

Students, too, reacted with a flurry of indignant letters condemning the underlying attitudes expressed and the Mather Board of Governors publicly apologized.

After studying the recommendations of the Special Council on Minority Students, Lockwood responded with a number of forthright steps. He cen­sured the officers of the Student

Government Association, the chair­man of the Mather Board of Governors and the chairman of the MBOG Small Group Activity Committee for their failure to exercise appropriate precau­tions and judgment. He tightened controls on future events held by the MBOG Small Group Activity Commit­tee. He also set the wheels in motion to cl.arify and codify the College's position.

The College Affairs Committee and appropriate College officers were asked to consider preparing regulations to adopt "so that language or conduct which is abusive and intended to demean one because of one's race, ethnic origins, religion or sex be clearly identified as an offense which would normally merit suspension from the College."

The officers of the Student Govern­ment Association were asked to review at the beginning of each academic year the obligations all student organiza­tions should be aware of to assure that those organizations are free of dis­crimination. Lockwood also asked that SGA take precautions to assure that organization members will not use College funds or facilities for abusive purposes.

Finally, he promised to work with the vice president and dean of students to clarify the "manner in which officers of the College and others should respond to such situations in the future so that such episodes will not recur -or, if begun, will terminate quickly."

In a published reply to a Hartford Courant editorial cautioning the Col­lege against any abridgement of the right · of free speech, Lockwood summed up Trinity's position. He said, in part, "We wished to draw attention to the insensitivity which so· easily foments intolerance, injustice, and, in many instances, violence. We con­cluded that it was time to remind the Trinity community that abusive lan­guage is unacceptable. In issuing that blunt reminder it was not our intention to inhibit free debate; rather, it was to provide thoughts and to heighten awareness - to make clear that there are certain standards of public conduct and one of these is basic respect for the dignity of others.

"In stating a judgment and in calling for the consideration of explicit guide­lines, it is possible to appear as having over.reacted . The suggestion of penal­ties sought to underscore the need for some appropriate action as the only approach which held any promise of raising the tone of this college commu­nity. The faculty-student-administra­tion committee to which I directed this request will consider whether we can, or should, draft guidelines about such behavior. We are driven back to the problem of how, in a society that properly cherishes individual freedom, we try also to assure people of the right to be treated with respect and dignity. Any such effort risks the simplistic reply of authoritarianism, as one writer noted. That skirts the issue of trying to find a proper balance between competing rights . Surely we shall not achieve a higher level of morality in the daily struggle to improve man's lot if we fail to insist on respect for the dignity of others at the same time that we protect the right of free expression."

Page 3: 1976June

New Assignments Announced Graduate Studies Adds M.A. Option In April the College announced

adjustments in administrative assign­ments to meet more effectively foresee­able needs. J. Ronald Spencer '64, dean of students, has been appointed dean of studies. John S. Waggett '63, a former Trinity administrator, will return as assistant dean of the faculty and advisor to the freshman class. Gerald J. Hansen '51, director of alumni relations, has been named .director of alumni and external affairs. Thomas Lips, director of external relations, has been appointed director of institutional affairs.

Spencer received an M.A. in history from Columbia University and joined the history department at Trinity in 1968. He was appointed dean for community life in 1971 and three years later was named dean of students. A part-time Hartford newspaper reporter during his undergraduate years, Spen­cer served as a lecturer in history at Brooklyn College of the City Universi­ty of New York from 1966 to 1968.

Spencer ~ill work with faculty on academic programs, assist in the clarification of academic objectives, oversee aspects of the curriculum and relate student perspectives to existing and proposed programs.

Spencer Waggett

Waggett has been on indefinite leave to complete his graduate studies at the University of Michigan, where he has been serving as associate director of financial aid. At Trinity College he served until 1970 as director of financial aid and associate director of admissions. He is a member of the National Association of Student Finan-' cial Aid Administrators and the Ameri­can Association for Higher Education.

W aggett will work closely with undergraduates, faculty and alumni to improve the College's admissions ef­forts and will assist in increasing the effectiveness of financial aid programs. He will also act as liaison with the entering class and, with Dean Spencer,

TRINITY REPORTER

June, 1976 Vol. 6 No.7

Issued seven times a year in September, October, November /December, Janu­ary / February, March / April, May and June.

Published by the Office of Public Information, Trinity College, Hartford, Conn. 06106. Second class postage paid at Hartford, Connecticut.

THE REPORTER is mailed to alumni, parents, faculty, staff and friends of Trinity. Copies are available to students. There is no charge.

Letters for publication must be no longer than 200 words and signed. The printing of any letter is at the discretion of the Editor and may be edited for brevity, not substance.

Editor, L. Barton Wilson '37; Associ­ate Editor, James "K. Blake; Assistant Editor, Milli Silvestri; Sports Informa­tion, Paul J. Loether '75; Photographer, David R. Lowe; Director of Alumni and External Affairs, Gerald J. Hansen, Jr. '51.

aid faculty in enhancing the experience of new students.

Hansen graduated from the Wharton School of Business of the University of Pennsylvania in 1952. Prior to joining Trinity in 1975, he had been an executive in the textile industry, serv­ing as president and member of the board of directors of Mary Jane, Inc. An active alumnus, in recognition of his services to the College he was presented a 150th Anniversary Award in 1973.

Hansen will assume ma'nagerial re­sponsibility for the Office of Public Information in addition to his role as alumni director, assisting that opera­tion and bringing closer coordination between alumni and public relations activities.

Lips, a former attorney from San

Hansen Lips

Francisco, was appointed assistant to President Lockwood in 1973 and director of external relations in 1975. A 1966 graduate of Dartmouth College, Lips earned the J.D. degree from Harvard Law School in 1969. He is a member of Phi Beta Kappa, the American Bar Association, the State Bar of California, and the San Francis­co Bar Association. Lips' new title is more appropriate to his current range of duties which include development work, affirmative action and legal counsel.

In a poll of 273 Trinity students taken last fall, 195 or about 70 percent stated they were taking courses "for personal satisfaction and intellectual growth."

This and similar soundings in the Greater Hartford area by the Gradu­ate Studies Office has led to the development of a new Masters Degree program to be offered next September for the first time .

The advanced degree program is designed to fill a need not satisfied by current offerings. The specific need in this instance was for a Master of Arts degree which would allow students to design their own programs from several traditional disciplines within the liberal arts area rather than concentrate their work in a single department.

The new program is part of a planned broadening of the graduate program by Graduate Studies Office director Ivan Backer.

The program formulated by the Graduate Studies Committee would lead to a Master of Liberal Arts degree. It provides, in a sense, a third option to the two now available. It is not viewed as a way-station toward the Ph.D. The program is for students who "continue their education to further their intellec­tual development rather than to gain professional advancement ... " and who "welcome more flexible curricular options to meet their interests."

The mechanics will be spellt:d out in the catalog now being assembled: "To be accepted as a candidate each student must submit to the Graduate Studies Committee a statement of his/her proposed program of study. When the Graduate Studies Committee approves the student's proposal it will also assign

27th Annual Series

PLUMB MEMORIAL CARILLON CONCERTS

TRINI1Y COl J AEGE Wednesday evenings at seven

THE GUEST CARILLONNEURS FOR 1976

June 23

June 30

ROBERT B. GROGAN The National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception, Washington, D.C.

DIONISIO LIND Former Carillonneur, St. Martin's Episcopal Church, New York City

To commemorate the Bicentennial, there will be a special carillon concert presented by memt:>ers of the Trinity Guild of Carillonneurs on Sunday, July 4 at 2:00 p.m.

July 7 LEEN 't HART Director of the Netherlands Carillon School

Jllly 14 JAMES R. LAWSON Riverside Church, New York City

. July 21 GEORGE MATTHEW, JR. First Presbyterian Church, Stamford, Connecticut

July 28 SUZANNE GATES '75 Former Master Carillonneur, The Trinity College Guild

August 4 WILLIAM DeTURK University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan

August 11 RAYMOND A. KELDERMANS Carillonneur, Thomas Rees Memorial Carillon, Springfield, Illinois

August 18 RICHARD M. WATSON Director, Cast Bell Carillon and Chime Division, I.T~ Verdin Co., Cincinnati, Ohio

August 25 R. HUDSON LADD University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan

Four concerts of chamber music will be presented at 6:00 p.m. in the Chapel preceding the carillon concerts on July 7, 14, 21 and 28. Admission free to the public.

June 1976 Trinity Reporter Page 3

a faculty advisor in planning his/her academic program.

Quite apart from its academic virtues, the new program has another aspect which commends it highly in a period of fiscal stringency. Only courses already offered will be in­cluded in the program. No new courses will be offered and therefore no extra expense to the College is expected.

Trinity in Action Trinity's three-day "back-to-school"

program held in April for a group of alumni and parents was officially titled 'Trinity in Action." When the program had ended, the consensus was that "action" should be interpreted literally.

In an attempt to learn the problems, catch the spirit and the mood of today' s campus, the alumni and par­ents visited classes, lectures and labora­tories. They conferred with younger faculty members and renewed friend­ships while trading impressions with professors who had taught them during their years on campus. Conferences with students and briefings by the administration completed the formal agenda.

Evenings were spent getting ac­quainted with newer members of the faculty and administration and view­ing student art and sculpture exhibits and attending a "dialog in art" per­formance.

'Trinity in Action" was begun experimentally in 197 4 but all the signs point to its becoming another Trinity tradition. This year participants ar­rived from ten states from Maine to Florida. Said one alumnus, "It helps to bridge the gap between what I think I remember and what is actually going on today on campus."

Alumni Trustee Named James A. Van · Sant '52 was named

Alumni Trustee after the closest elec­tion in memory on May 22. Alumni trustees serve for six years on the Board representing the entire alumni body. They also work closely with the Alumni Executive Committee on af­fairs of alumni concern.

After leaving Trinity, Van Sant attended the University of London and later Washington University in St. Louis where he received his M.A. in 1957 and taught in the English depart­ment from 1956 to 1958. In 1965 he graduated from the Harvard Business School Advanced Management Program.

Van Sant joined General Steel Industries, Inc. of St. Louis in 1964 as director of public relations and adver­tising after serving from 1958 to 1964 as executive vice president of Lemoin Skinner, Jr. Public Relations, Inc. He then became successively vice presi­dent, executive vice president and president of General Steel Industries, Inc.

When Van Sant was named "man of the year" in 1975, rather than respond with a speech at the presentation ceremony held at William Woods College in Fulton, Missouri, he spon­sored a recital by concert pianist Eugene List. His restraint was reward­ed by an editorial in the Detroit News which said, "Van Sant had the decen­cy, graciousness, good sense and taste - class, if you will - to resist the temptation ... "

Page 4: 1976June

Page 4 Trinity Reporter June 1976

Gift Establishes Economics Chair

Trinity has received a gift of $750,000 from Shelby Cullom Davis, financier, philanthropist and former U.S. Ambassador to Switzerland. The gift will establish an endowed profes­sorship and related programs of intern­ships and seminars in the field of American business and economic enterprise.

The gift brings to $8.5 million the total of contributions to Trinity's current $12 million fundraising cam­paign announced in January 1975.

The Shelby Cullom Davis Professor­ship of American Business and Eco­nomic Enterprise is the 18th named professorship at Trinity. The distin­guished chairs began in 1837 with the Hobart Professorship and the Seabury Professorship of Mathematics and Natural Philosophy. Earlier this year George M. Ferris '16 established the George M. Ferris Professorship of Corporation Finance and Investments.

The new professorship will augment the curriculum at the College in studies of the economic theory, practice and history of the American business system. An unusual feature of this professorship is the inclusion of pro­grams for students to learn firsthand about American business through on­site internships with business and industrial firms. In addition, seminars will bring students, faculty and repre­sentatives from business together for study and discussion of substantive issues in business and education. These opportunities are usually available only to students in graduate school.

ADMISSIONS -CAMPUS TOURS -- 1-

For visiting parents, here is the new schedule for admissions and campus tours:

GROUP SESSIONS (No advance notice necessary): Monday thru Friday 1:15 p.m., June 'l , 1976 to August 27, 1976 Location : Normally Alumni Lounge, M,ather Campus Center

INDIVIDUAL APPOINTMENTS (write or telephone well in advance) : Monday thru Friday 9:30 a.m. to 3 :00p.m. June 1, 1976 to September 3, 1976 Location: Office of Admissions, Downes Memorial

ALUMNI DAUGHTER/SON ADMISSIONS WEEKEND October1 &2 Details to be announced

Class of '26

Joins the Immortals

Davis, who served as U.S. Ambassa­dor to Switzerland from 1969 to 1975, is a graduate of Princeton University, earned a master's degree at Columbia University, and a doctorate in political science at the University of Geneva. He was awarded honorary degrees from Bradley University (1964) and Trinity College (1973). He began his career as continental correspondent for the Col­umbia Broadcasting Service in Geneva in 1932. He subsequently was Econo­mist and Statistician for the Investment Corporation of Philadelphia, a founder and Treasurer · of the Delaware Fund, and economic advisor to Governor Thomas E. Dewey of New York.

Following this experience he re­turned to finance and spent 22 years as managing partner of Shelby Cullom Davis and Company, an investment banking house and the world's largest firm specializing in insurance se.curities.

Fall Tour Abroad Slated for Alumni

After Russia, Spain and England, what's next? For the Alumni Office, the answer this year is Italy with a focus on the fabled cities of Rome, Florence and Venice. The nine-day tour for Trinity Alumni begins at Hartford's Bradley International Airport on October 5 with a return date of October 13.

Accompanying alumni will be Pro­fessor Michael R. Campo, chairman of Trinity's Department of Modern Languages and director of the Cesare Barbieri Center, who promises, among other diversions, to introduce all courageous volunteers to aspects of Roman night life seldom seen by less fortunate tourists. Campo will be the escort on a tour of Trinity's Barbieri Center / Rome Campus.

For the flight to Rome, passengers will board a chartered PanAm Boeing 707 jet at Bradley in the evening, arriving in Rome the next day in time for a welcome wine and cheese party at the Beverly Hills Hotel. After three nights in Rome, with days filled with sightseeing at St. Peter's, the Pantheon, the Spanish Steps and, of course, the Trevi Fountain and afternoons free to pursue individual interests, alumni will leave by motorcoach for Florence.

In Florence two nights will be spent at the Hotel Plaza or Anglo. As in Rome, professional guides will escort the group through the historic city . Some of the high points: The Duomo, the Bell Tower, the Academy of the

.Arts with Michelangelo's famous "David." Again, about half of each day will be free for personal activities.

The motor coach with bi-lingual hostesses will then roll through Bologna

CLASS OF '26 began their 50th Reunion on Commencement weekend when they were formally inducted into the Immortals Club at the Hartford Club annual dinner. A record turnout of 176 alumni, spouses and college administrators attended. From the left above, first row, Harry Wallad, James Burr, Perry Hough, Norm Pitcher, John Linnon, Ken Stuer, Ben Warner; Second row, Richard Ford, Walter Riley, George Jackson, Ross Parke, Herb Noble, Harold Messer; Third row, Bill Nicol, George Hamilton, Bob Newell, Dave Loeffler.

and Verona to Venice where alumni will step into a motor launch for a short ride through the famed canals to the Hotel Excelsior des Bains. Two days of sightseeing such landmarks as the Doges' Palace and St. Mark's Square, with pigeons guaranteed, will follow, capped by an arrivederci dinner. Then, after breakfast at the hotel the next

morning, alumni will board the plane at the Venice airport for the return trip to the U.S.A. and reality.

Alumni who have not received the notice of the Italy caper sent out in May by the Alumni Office should call Jerry Hansen at 203-527-3151 or write him at the campus in care of the Alumni Office.

Class Notes ENGAGEMENTS

1968 FREDERICK CHARLES CASTELLANI to Anne Leslie Durham

1970 LAWRENCE A. FOX to Marilyn P. Landek THOMAS P. LOM to. Winifred Stacy Erb

1971 STEPHEN VAN RENSSELAER LINES 4th to Mary Backus Adams

1974 ROBIN ADELSON to Roderick Joseph Alexander Little

1975 RUDOLPH MAXIMILIAN ARTHUR MONTGELAS to Elizabeth Laird Dean

1973-1973 KAREN F. FINK '73 to LENN KUPFERBERG '73

WEDDINGS

1950 J. WILLIAM WETTER, JR. to Alma T. McNulty, September 19, 1975

1972 PATRICIA MENDELL to Richard Clark Singer, May 23, 1976

1973 NICHOLAS READ to Anne Parker Renfro, May 16, 1976 MARK P . FINGER to Mallory Forbes Mullen, Aprilll , 1976 '

1974 SHAWN FLAVIN to Roy Dallas Russell, September 13, 1975

1975 ELLEN M. BRISTOW to Paul M. Mol­loy, February 14, 1976

1973-1974 CHRISTOPHER N. CARLEY .. '73 to DEBORAH L. ROOT '74

BIRTHS

1955 Mr. and Mrs . Warren J. Gelman, son, Herbert N., December 30, 1975

1958 Mr. and Mrs. Fred C. Foy, Jr., daughter, Elizabeth Grace, April12, 1976

1963 Mr. and Mrs. F. Jay Neulander, son, Benjamin Judah, November 19, 1975

1965 Mr. and Mrs. Richard Beyer, twins ; son, Daniel Fairlie, and daughter, Wendy McNear, December 17, 1975

1966 Dr . and Mrs . George Bent III, son, Geoffrey Fowler, March 8, 1976 Major and Mrs. John Snyder, son, P. Gouger, January 1976

1967 Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert G. Campbell, · daughter, Emily Morrill, February 4,

1976 1968 Mr. and Mrs. Robert M. Cudd,

daughter, Elizabeth Higley, January 23, 1976 .

1970 Mr. and Mrs. David S. Gilbert, son, James Edward, December 5, 1975 Dr. and Mrs. Joel R. Greenspan, son, Adam Joshua, November 19, 1975 Mr. and Mrs. Oscar J. Harm, son, Benjamin Michael, December 30, 1975 Dr. and Mrs. Andrew F. Stewart, son, Cameron, September 28, 1975

1971 Mr. and Mrs. Jonathan E. Miller, daughter, Katherine Batson, January 28, 1976 Mr. and Mrs . Joseph H. Pratt II, daughter, Abby Thomson, February 23, 1976 Mr. and Mrs. Leon A. Blais, son, Seth Gregson, January 5, 1976

1972 Mr. and Mrs . Douglas T. Lake, daugh­ter, Jessica Atkins, February 27, 1976

MASTERS

1937 HOWARD GOODY is living in York, Maine and enjoying retirement from New York University. He says the historic center of York Village is well worth a visit at any time but especially during the Bicentennial.

1949 KURT WEINBERG has scheduled for publication this May a book entitled The Figure of Faust in Valery and Goethe; An Exegesis of Mon Faust, by Princeton University Press. In addition he has contributed to a new book, Studies in Nietzsche and the Classicai Tradition, being published by Universi­ty of North Carolina Press, Chapel Hill.

His contribution includes pages 89 through 108 and is entitled 'The Impact of Ancient Greece and of French Classi­cism on Nietzsche' s Concept of Tragedy ."

1955 DEBORAH ELKINS has a new book coming out entitled Teaching Litera­ture: Designs for Cognitive Develop­ment, Charles E. Merrill Publishers.

1959 EDWIN MERRY writes that since retire­ment in 1965, he has published one book of poems, The Reach Road, and this summer there will be another book. This one will be colored photographs of Maine scenes and poems about life in Maine .

1962 RAY WILCOX has been elected vice president of the Litchfield (Connecticut) Na ture Center and Museum, a conserva­tion education group.

1965 DON BURNESS has been promoted to associate professor of English at Frank­lin Pierce College. Don has a book, Shaka, King of the Zulus, in African Literature, being published this spring by Three Continents Press, and due to be published in the spring of 1977 is Six Writers from Angola, Mozambique and Cape Verde, by Three Continents Press .

1967 JOANN METTLING RYAN has been named Outstanding Young Woman of America, 1975, for community service and accomplishments.

1968 WILLIAM DIBERT is employed as underwriting manager at the Patrick J. Fleming Insurance Agency, Inc ., in Pittsburgh . He and his wife, Jane, are living in Monroeville, Pennsylvania with their children, Mary, Frank and Mark.

1970 As of mid-January, ROLAND KESSLER left his position as manager of the Atlan­ta offices, Battelle regional centers pro­gram, Battelle Memorial Institute, to become senior planning specialist in the office of the assistant administrator for solar, geothermal and advanced energy systems, Energy Research and Develop­ment Administration , Washington, D.C. P ATRIC!A FOULKE has been teaching children with learning problems, specifi­cally reading, in Glen Falls, New York. Her husband, Bud, continues as chair­man of the English Department at Skid­more . They have adopted an 11 year old girl, Debbie. Their son, David, is in the ninth grade in Lake George, and daugh­ter, Carrie, attends a residential school in Langhorne, Pennsylvania . Patricia and her husband expect to spend the next academic year in London.

1972 In February, DICK FOURNIER took a three week jaunt to France, accompa­nied by several of his students from Bunnell High School in Stratford, Connecticut. He taught at the Lycee Honore de Balzac in Paris as well as lived with a French family . In April, he entertained the French students in Strat­ford . Dick and his wife, Janice, have a one year old daughter, Elizabeth Christine. As of January, ROCH GIRARD was appointed vice principal of the Robert J. O 'Brien Middle School in East Hartford.

1973 ROGER SHERMAN is a research scien­tist in biometrics research at the Psychi­atric Institute in New York City.

1975 THERESE MULLINS is teaching in an East Haddam (Connecticut) elementary school, and has begun work for a sixth year certificate at Trinity . PHIL DUBILEWSKI is a reading special­ist at Narragansett High School in Rhode Island and is also an instructor at the University of Rhode Island extension division. Phil completed a second Mas­ter's this past summer at the University of Rhode Island in reading.

Page 5: 1976June

01 CLARENCE HAHN, whose wife died in

1971 at the age of 97, and whose daughter died in 1975, writes that his son, Robert, age 59, is still living and that he has a grandson, a granddaughter, and three great-grandchil­dren. Clarence is now 98 years of age.

10 Mr. George C. Capen 87 Walbridge Rd. West Hartford, CT 06119

A memorial to JAMES F. TOWNSEND has been written and published by his brother, THE REV. JOHN H. TOWNSEND, JR . '16. JAMES F. TOWNSEND, a loyal Trinity man all his life, died June 26, 1973. Copies are available through the Alumni Office to friends and classmates.

16 Mr. Erhardt G. Schmitt 41 Mill Rock Road New Haven, CT 06511

I was saddened to get the news about the passing of our faithful member, JIM ENG­LISH, on March 8, 1976. We were about to make arrangements with him to conduct the Memorial Service for our departed 1916 members at our 60th Reunion.

Helping to celebrate our 60th were SAM BERKMAN, VIC DeNEZZO, CHARLES EASTERBY, LLOYD MILLER, BOB O 'CONNOR (who also received an honorary degree from the College), HERB SPENCER and Your Secretary. We joined the Class of '26 and many others for the Immortals Dinner on Friday; May 21. On Saturday morning, we also joined with the Class of '26 for the Memorial Service.

19 Mr. Clinton Brill Route 13, Box 227 Tallahassee, FL 32303

ED SCHORTMANN sends us news of his family. His son, Walter, lives in West Hartford and Walter's daughter, Martha, is a junior at Providence (Rhode Island) College. Daughter, Lucille (Baker) lives near him in Cranston, Rhode Island, and her four children are all working with three sons married and her daughter a teacher. His son, Arthur, also lives near him and has one son who is working, two sons in school, and a daughter studying for the nursing profession.

Our sympathy goes to HARMON BARBER on the death of his wife, Olive, tnis past March.

22 Mr. Henry T. Kneeland 75 Duncaster Road Bloomfield, CT 06002

Since NED KENDALL's letter on the ambidextrous Middlebury pitcher, ED­WARD CRAM has added his memories of a vivid baseball game Trinity played against the Connecticut Aggies as they were known in those days. Eddy played second base at this game in Storrs, Connecticut. Relations be­tween the teams were not too friendly. The Aggies had a big burly pitcher who was cross-eyed and could fire the ball. He beaned FREDDY BOWDIDGE '23, our right fielder, who fell to the turf and played no more that day. I came to bat in the next inning and was pretty nervous, for when you looked at this pitcher, not sure if he could see the Rlate or the batter, his pitches sailed behind you, above you or wherever. Our team was glad to get out of Storrs after that encounter. If you ever batted against a cross-eyed pitcher who could

-fire the ball, it isn't fun. Eddy played 67 games at Trinity, and last year came up for the Amherst and Wesleyan football games and the alumni reunion. His address is Imperial Court, Apt. 8G, 1433 South Belcher Road, Clearwater, Florida 33516. I imagine Dr. BOB REYNOLDS remembers this game - he was pitching in that period.

23 Mr. James A. Calano 35 White Street Hartford, CT 06114

STEVENSON WEBSTER writes that he attended a very delightful Trinity dinner last fall at CHARLIE ('55) and Amy GARDNERs' house in Washington, with DAVID ('57) and Mrs. BEERS, JACK ('56) and Mrs. EVANS, over from England, MANNING ('52) and Mrs. PARSONS, and NATHANIEL ('55) and Mrs. REED. He says, "Not bad for an old guy to be in ·such young company."

25 Mr. ·Raymond A. Montgomery North Racebrook Road Woodbridge, CT 06525

Your Secretary and his wife, Olga, along with Betty Noble, widow of DICK NOBLE, were weekend guests of the KEN SMITH's at Cooperstown, New York. Ken and Emily are wonderful hosts and showed us the works, including the Baseball Hall of Fame of which Ken is still the director. You'd think he was the mayor, the way people react to him . He was leaving shortly for the training camps down South.

Olga and I saw DAVE HADLOW, TONY TRAINER and Mary Louise Trainer at several of this winter's basketball games. Trinity had a wonderful season, 15-6, and a number of the games we saw went right down to the wire.

A short while back Dave and Tony were here for cocktails and lunch at our home prior

to the Lawrenceville and West Haven (Con­necticut) High hockey game. After the game which Lawrenceville won 3-2, we returned to our house with the Bob Plumbs, parents of Robert Plumb, a Lawrenceville student who has applied to Trinity and is a member of the well known Plumb family at Trinity (we hope he is admitted and comes). Later we all went to Jonathan Edwards College at Yale for dinner as the guests of John Embersits, former business manager of the University.

At the time of the writing of this report, Trinity was expected to have another good crew year and. we hope many of you were able to attend one or more of the regattas for an enjoyable time.

We are glad to hear that JOHN MASON '34 is back on the recovery trail after his recent illness.

I wish more of you lads would write and tell me what you are up to so we can pass it on to our classmates. Incidentally, I almost forgot, if you have not done so already, get aboard the Campaign for Trinity Values and also make your regular annual gift as well. The "DUKE" is doing good work in this regard and we are all happy this department is in able hands.

(Editor's Note: Your good Class Secretary received the first Bantam Award on May 7 from the Athletic Department - see the sports page of this issue.)

26 Mr. N. Ross Parke 18 Van Buren Avenue West Hartford, CT 06107

Loyal classmates returning to celebrate our 50th were JIM BURR, DICK FORD, GEORGE HAMILTON, PETIE HOUGH, GEORGE JACKSON, JOHN LINNON, DAVE LOEF­FLER, HAROLD MESSER, BOB NEWELL, BILL NICOL, HERB NOBLE, TONY PARISI, NORM PITCHER, WALT RILEY, MORRIS ROISMAN, KEN STUER, HARRY WAL­LAD, BEN WARNER and Your Secretary. Most were accompanied by their dear wives. · What a grand time we had at the Immortals Dinner on Friday, May 21 and then on Saturday the 22nd at the luncheon, picture taking session, and our get-together for cocktails in the afternoon. We enjoyed Dr. George Cooper's remarks to our Class on Saturday morning. (Editor's. note: One of the highlights of the weekend was a special Art Exhibit of Prints of Greater Hartford by Class Secretary Ross Parke.) Another feature of the weekend was a Memorial Service for the departed from our class as well as the Class of '16. We know it was a pleasant surprise to many when they saw how splendidly Trinity College has grown from that little line of Gothic buildings against the western sunset in nineteen hundred and twenty-two - over 50 years ago!

Last March, in spirit at least, we traveled along with JIMMIE BURR and Betty as they traveled to Florida for three weeks, and then about May 4th to Budapest, Prague and points in Central Europe and back to Washington, D.C.

At the time of the writing of this news, PETIE HOUGH and his dear wife, Janet, were expected to be with us at our 50th, along with KEN STEUR from Texas, NORM and Jean PITCHER from Florida, and possibly GEORGE HAMIL TON from Florida, and JIMMIE BURR with his dear Betty from Michigan. What loyal classmates we have!

In spirit at least, we went along with JIMMIE BURR and Betty as they traveled to Florida for three weeks last March, then about May 4 to Budapest, Prague and points in Central Europe and back to Washington, D.C.

We know it was a pleasant surprise to many when they saw how splendidly Trinity College has grown from that little line of Gothic buildings against the western sunset in nineteen hundred and twenty-two - over 50 years ago!

27 Mr. Winthrop H. Segur 34 Onlook Rd. Wethersfield, CT 06109

The Knights were seated around the oak Round Table, their pewter mugs of mead held on high to welcome the addition of the family crest of recently knighted Sir STANLEY BELL to those coat-of-arms already adorning the walls of the cathedral-ceilinged banquet hall.

To you guys who make no sense out of the above, may I remind you that our Knights of the Round Table are those classmates who have fully paid their dues through 1977 for our 1927 Library Fund . There is still plenty of time to join our little group.

Chairman Sir ANDY FORRESTER and his Annabelle revisited Florida for a few weeks

June 1976 Trinity Reporter Page 5

this winter and find that like New York City, "It's a nice place to visit." What have you others done for a change of pace or fun and games?

It hurts to have to report a further reduction in our class membership. Belatedly learned of the passing of BOB HILDEBRAND last New Year's Eve after a long illness. I'm sure the few of us left of 1927 will feel the loss of a good friend and classmate and will want to extend our deepest sympathy to his wife and family.

A note from FRANCIS CONOVER says he finally retired for good last June 15 after working seven years beyond his retirement at age 65, this last time due to a bad case of arthritis in a hip joint which tied him down for six weeks. Francis is still single and says very little chance of marrying.

28 Mr. Royden C. Berger 53 Thomson Road West Hartford, CT 06107

ARTHUR PLATT represented the College at the investiture of the eighth president of Juniata College in Huntingdon, Pennsylvania, on May 1.

3 0 The Rev. Canon Francis R. Belden 411 Griffin Rd. · So. Windsor, CT 06074

Corinne BABBITT wrote a nice letter to the College about her plans to deed sixty acres of her farm to the Town of Petersham (Massa­chusetts) as a memorial wildlife sanctuary in memory of LEWIS. Lewis was the son of one of Trinity's most distinguished professors, Frank Cole Babbitt, and achieved a national reputation as a herpetologist and naturalist.

31 Dr. Robert P. Waterman 148 Forest Lane Glastonbury, CT 06033

REUNION GEORGE BLAUVELT retired last June after

20 years as headmaster of the Friends Select School in Philadelphia and says he is enjoying not having to get up quite so early. George writes he had dinner and a delightful visit with JACK GOODING and his wife in Florida this past February.

JEROME · WYCKOFF has been busy with editorial consulting, earth-science photogra­phy, environmental work, and choral singing. He is current-ly-working on a weather book for McGraw-Hill with Paul Lehr of the U.S . Weather Service, and his book "Story of Geology," published in seven languages since 1960, is just off the press in a new, rewritten edition. His wife, Elaine, will soon leave her newspaper job to do book editorial work and gardening at home, and will join Jerome in more traveling.

HAROLD REED retired last December from his job with the U.S.A.F. Department of Defense, Otis Air Force Base in Massachu­setts. He plans to travel around the country with his trailer.

33 Mr. Ezra Melrose 186 Penn Dr. West Hartford, CT 06119

JOE FROTHINGHAM writes that he is still holding down his two part-time jobs.: field representative for the department of medical education, American Medical Association, Dartmouth, Massachusetts; and district medi­cal consultant for the Massachusetts Rehabili­tation Commission. Joe's four children are a son who is flying for the Department of Natural Resources, State of Colorado; a married daughter who has two children; a single daughter dabbling · in professional photography; and a third married daughter who is a student at the University of Maine. He says his health is good and he is living an easy, pleasant life.

34 Mr. John A . Mason 564 West Avon Rd. Avon, CT 06001

Had a good visit with BILL MOORE while I was in Clearwater Beach, Florida. He is well and youthful. His address is 14512 Anchorage Circle, Seminole, Florida 33542.

JOHN KELLY has retired from the Hartford office of the FBI after nearly 33 years of service. John plans a trip to Ireland with his Genevieve. He is active in the Connecticut National Football Foundation and Hall of Fame of which he is past president.

ED MULLARKEY has retired from Har~­ford's Social Security office after 39 years of service.

A long, happy retirement to John and Ed.

Page 6: 1976June

Page 6 Trinity Reporter June 1976

3 5 Mr. Albert W. Baskerville 73 Birchwood Dr. Derry, NH 03038

BILL WALKER was elected mayor of Hopewell Boro, New Jersey in 1975 and says he is the first Republican in 10 years. His son, Gregory, is a pre-med student.

36 REUNION

BERT SCULL reports that his younger son, Russell, ·married Lynn Allison Laferty in Columbus, Ohio last June 14, and this June · will graduate from Otterbein College in Westerville, Ohio. His elder son, Edward, lives in Riverside, California and he says he is too young to get married. Bert has been elected treasurer of the St. David's Society of New York and his wife, Isabel, was elected to the board of directors.

JACK HANNA is at the old stand, tending the sacred flame as the humanities fight for survival. He's a full professor now and in no mood to retire, though he admits it's a relief to step down from the department chairmanship. Courses in Joyce, Greek drama, and Henry James still "roll," he reports, while the fashionable stuff like Black literature and women's lib comes and goes. He invites his classmates passing through Portland to give him a ring at the University of Maine, maybe for a game of squash or a Casco Bay sail.

3 7 Mr. Robert M. Kelly 183 Kenyon Street Hartford, CT 06105

MICKEY KOBROSKY is still practicing medicine (29 years) and his office is still in Springfield, Massachusetts. His daughter, Karen, graduated from Cornell in 1972 and from Harvard in 1973; son, Steven, graduated from Tufts in 1974 and is now at the Hunter College Graduate School; while son, Gary, is a freshman at Syracuse. Son, Neil, graduated last month from Trinity.

BRUCE ONDERDONK, president of On­derdonk-Lathrop Associates of Glastonbury, Connecticut, has been selected 1976 Engineer of the .. Y.eilr by the Connecticut Society of Profe1;sional Engineers. The honor is given for contribution to the profession for engineering achievements and service to the community. Some of the technical developments for which Bruce is credited are plate moment connec­tions for steel framing which has eliminated Held welding, a design for the Bank of Bermuda, for which the below sea level basement is 20 feet away from the harbor and is in a porous corral, the first prestressed concrete highway bridge in Connecticut, and the first multi-story building using plastic design.

38 Mr. James M. F. Weir 27 Brook Rd. Woodbridge, CT 06525

CARL HODGDON is planning to retire from government service in October. He says he and his wife, Alice, are trying to decide where to retire - South Carolina, North Carolina, Connecticut, Cape Cod - or stay in Northern Virginia. Carl says the people are in Connecticut but the climate's in North Carolina.

FRANK BURKE is still enjoying retirement in Atlanta, Georgia, where two of his children have settled. He and his wife, Marge, have been considering finally moving to the St. Pete area of Florida when she retires from AT&T.

39 Mr. Earl H. Flynn 147 Goodale Dr. Newington, CT 06111

KEVIN DUNNE, who left P. Garvan Inc. after 30 years, when the company was sold, is now vice president of Cherokee Textiles in Spartansburg, South Carolina. Kevin recently enjoyed a visit from classmate, BILL HAS­SLEY, now of Pasadena, California.

JACK WILCOX, former vice president and director of public affairs at Connecticut Bank & Trust Company in Hartford, has been appointed executive director of The Connecti­cut Citizens for Judicial Modernization. Jack is past president of the National Alumni Association of Trinity.

40 Mr. Herbert R. Bland R.C. Knox & Co. P.O. Box 930 Hartford, CT 06101

GEORGE ROUNTREE's son, David, gradu­ated from Trinity in May. His daughter, Anne, who graduated from Mount Holyoke in 1974, is engaged to be married in the fall, and son, George, who graduated from Dartmouth in 1971 and the Tuck Business School in 1972, is working in Chicago.

41 Mr. Frank A. Kelly, Jr. 21 Forest Dr. Newington, CT 06111

REUNION

CHARLES COOK writes that he has no new news, but he is still alumni secretary for the Collegiate School in New York City.

43 Mr. John L. Bonee McCook, Kenyon and Bonee 50 State St.. Hartford, CT 06103

CHARLES HODGKINS, who works for the Coca Cola Export Corporation of Atlanta, Georgia, was an adjunct professor at the Law School of Emory University during the fall term. He taught a seminar on the "Multina­tional Corporation."

RAY CUNNINGHAM says that in addition to being a consultant to the New Directions Program of the Episcopal Church working with dioceses of the Eastern States, he is assistant dean of the Leadership Academy for New Directions in Kansas City, Missouri, an educational program for clergy with regional responsibilitie-s. This spring, his off-season for church work, he taught sociology at Bennett College, Millbrook, New York, but his home base is still Wassaic, New York.

GORDON POTTER is with the Turner Subscription Agency Inc. in New York City.

A nice note from MIKE KELLIN brings us up-to-date on his activities. He says as a member of Rockland (New York) County Legislature's Blue Ribbon Committee on Criminal Justice, they have originated a government funded pretrial services program to provide release-on-recognizance info to courts, whereby arrestees who qualify but can't afford bail may await trial outside of jail at the judge's discretion. Mike recently completed work on Broadway starring in "The Ritz" and his current film is "Next Stop Greenwich Vfllage."

44 Dr. Harry R. Gossling 558 Simsbury Rd. Bloomfield, CT 06002

BILL WALKER's daughter, Jean, was married March 6 to E. Kim Harrington in Kingstree, Sou~h Carolina. His son, Tom, graduated from Christchurch (Virginia) Epis­copal School this spring. Bill has expanded his business, Chesapeake Boat Basin, Inc. in Kilmarnock, Virginia, with a 5600 square-foot boat display show room.

HENRY TWITCHELL's son, David, is a Mercedes-Benz restoration specialist in Mar­blehead, Massachusetts, while daughter, Ellen, has one more year at the University of Massachusetts in hotel, restaurant and travel administration. His wife, Jean, is children's librarian in Winchester, Massachusetts. Henry says his home repair and maintenance, and swimming pool maintenance business is flourishing.

47 Mr. PaulJ. Kingston, M.D. Barbourtown Rd., RFD #1 Collinsville, CT 06022

CONSTANTINE LINARDOS is the owner­director of a new laboratory, Stepney Water Laboratory in Easton, Connecticut, which is

certified by the Connecticut State Department of Health and the United States Department of Agriculture.

LEWIS DABNEY has been appointed district sales manager for The New Englander magazine, published by Yankee, Inc., head­quartered in Boston. He says that after 25 years in the advertising business he has now moved to the publishing side. Lewis writes that several other Trinity men are on the staff, including Editor BRAD KETCHUM '62.

48 The Rt. Rev. E. Otis Charles 231 East First So. St. Salt Lake City, Utah 84111

HAROLD GLEASON has been appointed deputy chief of staff for personnel and administration of the 79th U.S. Army Reserve Command, Colmar, Pennsylvania. He has also been named senior warden of St. Andrew's Episcopal Church in Shippensburg, Pennsylvania, in which capacity he actively opposes the ordination of priestesses.

BILL GLAZIER is director of a new human communication research and teaching labora­tory, Ecoliminal Communication Laboratory, in Hartford. ·

49 Mr. Charles I. Tenney, C.L.U. Charles I. Tenney & Associates 6 Bryn Mawr A venue Bryn Mawr, PA 19010

ED RICHARDSON, assistant vice president of the Phoenix Mutual Life Insurance Compa­ny in Hartford, says the company installed two ping pong tables after 20 years of no athletic facilities. Ed got lucky and won the company singles trophy. He writes, "Made me feel good beating all the kids at my advanced age."

HAYDEN LOVELAND has a new home in Old Saybrook, Connecticut and has been promoted to assistant circulation manager of The Hartford Courant.

FRANK LAMBERT's daughter, Elizabeth, graduated from Trinity in May. Frank and his wife, Deb, still play the winter Chesapeake Bay on their newer, bigger, more powerful tug, Nanticoke, which modifies the ups and downs of it all.

AL KING recently had an article, 'The Ancestry of th_e Heirs to the Spanish Throne," published in a genealogical magazine called The Cugustan. AI has been appointed senior warden of St. Andrew's Episcopal Church in York, Pennsylvania, for the years 1976 and 1977.

JIM SURGENOR is president-elect of North Adams (Massachusetts) Regional Hospital.

50 Mr. James R. Glassco, Jr. 8532 Georgetown Pike McLean, VA 22101

JOHN HARDWICK reports that with two children in college - daughter, Cathleen, a junior at Lake Forest College, and a son, a freshman at the University of Wisconsin­Madison - he is back in school (part time) as a doctoral candidate in adult/continuing education at Temple University. His job continues as director of planning and program on the staff of the Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Pennsylvania.

JIM GLASSCO is building a new home in McLean, Virginia. He writes he played #1 on University Club of Washington's squash team in area league.

Since 1957, JIM McCLISTER has been practicing law with the firm of Heilman and McClister in Kittanning, Pennsylvania. Jim has two children: a son, Chase, six years of age, and a daughter, Nell, four years of age.

GUS STEWART is currently substitute teaching in the Fitchburg, Massachusetts area. In addition, he runs a wholesale and mail order notepaper business, Gus Stewart's Paints, (paintings by his father). Gus is campaign manager for Victor F. Sidlaskas, candidate for the Republican State Committee in Massachusetts, and this summer will be head of the · tennis program at Camp Keewaydin, Lake Dunmore, Vermont.

ROBERT (WOODY) WOOD writes that there is nothing new but he enjoyed . his 25th reunion a great deal and is awaiting the 26th.

DICK BURKE has been promoted to assistant director, commercial property underwriting, for The Hartford Insurance Group. Dick has been with the company since 1952 and has held a variety of underwriting positions.

51 Mr. John F. Klingler 344 Fern St. West Hartford, CT 06119

REUNION

DONN WRIGHT will retire as headmaster of Millbrook (New York) School this summer to his estate on the coast of Maine. He'll be succeeded at Millbrook by the son of a Trinity man, Donald B. Abbott.

RAY MAHER still lives in a restored carriage house in Catonsville, Maryland that he moved into (unrestored) upon return from his wedding trip in 1952. The house has grown to hold over eight children plus several foster children over the years. Ray works for the Baltimore Sun as retail advertising sales manager and is active in local democratic politics. He is presently president of the local NDC affiliated club.

GEORGE MOORE, after 13 years with Loyal Life Insurance Company in Boston, has joined the Home Beneficial Life Insurance Company of Rid1mond, Virginia. His son, George III, oldest of his five children, is in his junior year at Boston College and daughter, Betsy, is a freshman at Springfield College and on their gym team.

NED TAYLOR writes he was married last May 24 and is now happily residing in Sparta, New Jersey.

52 Mr. Douglas C. Lee 628 Willow Glen Dr. Lodi, CA 95240

BARRIE CLIFF has moved to Greenwich, Connecticut as group vice president of the commercial products group, Clabir Corpora­tion. His son, Greg, is at the Gunnery School in Washington, Connecticut, and daughter, Barbara, is at Wykeham Rise School also in Washington.

The Rev. RICHARD AIKEN has left Choate School in Wallingford and will assume the chaplaincy of South Kent (Connecticut) School in September.

BERT HOPKINS says same old job pushing pills and no promotions. Bert and his wife visited BOB and Syd BUFFUM at their lovely beach club on Manasota Key in Florida. He recommends this for aeyone to cur:e the winter blues.

ART COWDERY has a new job as a free­lance communications consultant specializing in curriculum development for training pro­grams in industry and business, and also audiovisual presentation production.

JACQUES HOPKINS, still living in Provi­dence, Rhode Island, where he practices law, reports that he and his wife, Lorraine, spend their summers cycling around on a splendid, 10-speed tandem bike and their winters cross-country skiing.

In addition to his own fund raising consulting firm, MAURY FREMONT-SMITH has now formed Fremont-Smith Realty lo­cated at 250 Boylston Street, Boston, tel. 267-7979. The last digits of his number stand for he and his wife's (Harriet) nine children, age 19 to one. Maury lives and works in the Boston, Brookline, Newton area. He would like to hear from other alumni.

·53 Mr. Paul A. Mortell 508 Stratfield Rd. Fairfield, CT 06432

WARD SWAIN is director of purchasing for Southern States Inc. in Atlanta, Georgia. Ward has three children, Debby, age 23, at the TJniversity of Georgia; Cristy, age 21, at Atlanta College of Art; and Ward III, age 19, at Stetson University in Deland, Florida.

Last January, DAVE LONGOBUCCO was elected chairman of the prudential committee (the governing body) of the First Congrega­tional Church of Madison, Connecticut. Although the church has a membership of over 1000, he says there is still a link with Trinity since he succeeded C. Allan Borchert, father of BILL BORCHERT '71 and also serving on the committee as a deacon is JOHN HUBBARD '52. Dave has had the unique experience of representing his employer, Chesebrough-Pond's Inc. on the secured creditor's committee of W.T. Grant in the largest retail failure in U.S. history.

KEN BARNETT says all's well and hopes we get past the Bicentennial activity in Valley Forge, Pennsylvania. Ken has a daughter who is married and living in Morgantown, West Virginia, another daughter at Lock Haven

Page 7: 1976June

(Pennsylvania) College, and his other two children are in high school and grade school.

TIM ALLEN is director of Pharmacy Services, Dover General Hospital in Dover, New Jersey . Tim's oldest son, Richard, is now in his second year at Boston University, college of liberal arts, and daughter, Susan, is a senior at Morristown (New Jersey) High, and daughter, Melissa, is in kindergarten in Morristown, New Jersey.

Mr. Theodore T. T ansi

54 Phoenix Mutual Life Insurance Co. 1 American Row Hartford, CT 06103

JOEL JEPSON, president of The Planalog Corporation, Philadelphia, since November of 1974, says he and his wife, Tesi, have 5et a new record by being at the same address for nine years. Their two children are Brad, age seven, and Ashley, age five.

DON KNUTSON, whose first wife died about three years ago, was married again on March 27 to Gunilla Olsson of Linksoping, Sweden.

AL BENTON says he has shed his responsibilities of management and is now happily employed as chef at the Sheraton Regal in Hyannis, Massachusetts. AI invites everyone to come on up and taste his specialties such as stuffed chicken breast Alfredo!

RALPH TOMPKINS ·moved to Weston, Massachusetts in 1975 to set up a New England department of U.S. Aviation Under­writers, Inc., located in Wellesley.

BILL BURROUGHS has been promoted to president of Champion Sportswear located in New York City.

55 Mr. E. Wade Close, Jr. 200 Hunter's Trace Lane Atlanta, Georgia 30328

ART O'CONNELL is a commander in the Supply Corps of the U.S. Navy and currently serves on the sfaff of the commander of Naval · Surface Forces, Atlantic, in Norfolk, Virginia. Art and his wife have three children.

TOM ALLOCCO has been promoted to trust officer in charge of employee benefit plans, new business development for Ameri­can National Bank and Trust of New Jersey in Morristown.

BOB HODES lives in New York City where he practices law .

56 Mr. Edward A. Mp!ltgol!!~.!Y, Jr. 16 Stanhope Gardens London, S.W. 7, England

REUNION BILL SMITH is administrative vice presi­

dent of a group of companies serving the Episcopal Church - The Church Pension Fund, Church Insurance Company, Church Life Insurance Corporation, etc. - head­quartered in New York City.

ROGER MARTIN has been elected assistant treasurer of the National Grange Mutual Insurance Company, Keene, New Hampshire, and is serving on the accounting committee of the Society of Insurance Accountants. Roger's hobby is hiking and he is a member of the Adirondack Mountain Club in New York State, the Adirondack 46ers (climbed all 46 peaks, over 4000 feet, in the Adirondacks), and the Appalachian Mountain Club.

BOB WAREING, who built a new home four years ago, is busy putting in an entertainment center of a pool table, ping pong, bar, dance floor, etc., in the basement. Bob's local activities include president of Civic Association, Webelos leader, bowling teain, indoor tennis, umpire for little league baseball and timer for swim team. His 10 year old son is on the swim team and made the All Star team in little league last year.

Last June, ALAN SCHAERTEL became the business and financial editor for Associated Press Radio, Washington, D.C., the wire service's new and highly successful broadcast arm, with about 400 affiliate stations around the country. His program, Business Baro­meter, is heard on many of the country's biggest stations.

SANFORD SCOTT moved to Boston last July and joined Commercial Union Life Insurance Company of America as senior vice president and senior actuary.

BEAU COURSEN has recently been pro­moted to full colonel in the Air Force and still lives in the D.C. area. He will attend Industrial College of the Armed Forces this fall . Beau writes that he stays in close touch with DON and Sue SCOTT '56, now ·in Clearwater, Florida.

57 Mr. Paul B. Marion 7 Martin Place

. Chatham, NJ 07928

A while back MYRON PISETSKY reported that he had been elected a Fellow of the American Psychiatric Association. He is also the director of the group therapy training program at the Institute of Living in Hartford and an assistant clinical professor at the University of Connecticut Medical School. Sounds as if he is keeping himself busy, doesn't it? Also in the Hartford area is NORMAN RICHARD, who is the data processing director for Conning & Company.

JOHN SHIELDS tells us that he is president of the Matterhorn Club in D .C., a mountain climbing organization. He will be expanding into the wholesale trip business for other groups under the name of Great Vacations, Inc., so if you're in that area and know of some group that's planning a trip, let John know.

WARD JUST writes to us from snow covered Warren, Vermont, where he is working on a new book. His third novel, Nicholson at Large, was published last year. Also in New England is EDWARD FERGU­SON who is in his third year as supervising

us for the work. HOWIE ORENSTEIN, GUS CROMBIE, BARRIE ELLIOTT, GARY BOGLI, and GEORGE SHUSTER were among the "volunteers." This Capital Cam­paign, by the way, is going well, and we here at the College appreciate the great response of the alumni.

JOE LAWRENCE recently wrote a student activity booklet, "What Is an American," for use by junior high school students and published by the Hartford Board of Educa­tion . Or. GEORGE HAMBLY is now chief of surgery at South County Hospital, Wakefield, Rhode Island . MIKE SCHACHT has joined Sanders Printing of New York City as a vice president. TOM BARRETT writes that his insurance agency in Hooksett, New Hamp­shire, continues to grow steadily, as do his five children.

Or. FRANK CARUSO received a promo­tion to associate director of Medical Research with Bristol Laboratories in Syracuse. After fifteen years on the job, JOHN TROTT decided to change jobs. He is now vice president with MSA Associates in Newton, Massachusetts. MSA is a marketing services and manufacturers representatives organiza­tion working primarily in New England.

GEORGE BAXTER has moved back into Becker Securities' New York office from

LOST ALUMNI

The Alumni Office does not have addresses for some alumni. If you have information on the whereabouts of the alumni listed below, please contact the Alumni Office, Trinity College, Hartford, CT 06106. ·

James G. NcNally '25 John T. Merrill '38 Harry A. McGrath, Jr. '40 Adolph Siegel '42 Charles L. Jones, Jr. '43 G. Clinton Jones IV '43 Myles S. Phillips, Jr. '44 Robert 0. Johnson '46 Joseph F. Littell '49 S. Dickson Winchell '49 Peter McNally '52 David L. Clark III '53 Stanley P . Lee '53 D . Harvey Chaffe '56 Barton R. Young '56 Ira H. Grinnell '57 Clayton C. Perry, Jr. '58 Richard B. Pratt '58 Mark D . Healy '59 Ki-Won Park '59 Howard J. Friedman '60 William C. Sargent '60 Steven L. Siskind '60 Roger E. Borggard '62 RichardS. Gallagher '62 Peter C. Mitchell '62 William B. Tullai '62 Richard W. Krone '64 Richard M. Kirby '65 Oiethard Kolewe '65 Ridge H. Kunze! '65

principal of the Pittsfield, New Hampshire public schools. MARTIN CAINE has just set up his sixth printing shop. Outside of his business venture, he and his wife keep busy making improvements on their home in Eusking Lakes.

W ARO CURRAN has had a module published entitled, "An Economic Approach to Regulation of the Corporate Securities Markets." When not writing, Ward keeps busy as professor of economics at Trinity. ARTHUR HARLOW and family are heading for the West Coast this summer in a mobile home. They plan on being gone about two months.

Finally, at Christmastime I received a note from FRED SILL, who is residing in London. He mentioned that he and IKE LASHER got together when Ike was passing through London on his way to Mallorca. Later Fred joined him there .

PAUL and Helen RUSSO are the proud new parents of Life Begins at Forty Triplets -three beautiful little girls they have named Faith, Hope and Charity!

That's all for now.

58 The Rev. Or. Borden W. Painter 110 Ledgewood Rd. West Hartford, CT 06107

Recently the Class of '58 took part in the · current Campaign for Trinity Values by

manning telephones to solicit pledges. Your Secretary responded to the call of Captain GERRY NEWTON who rounded up several of Washington, D.C. to direct a new business

Bruce W. McClenahan '65 Thomas E. Wells IV '65 Lawrence W. Moore '66 Lewis A. Morrow '66 Charles H. Andrys '67 Charles D. Bachrach '67 Timothy D. Sullivan '67 David K. Bloomgarden '68 Frederick C. Castellani '68 Myron W. McCrensky '68 Peter J. Sills '68 Wayne D. Butz '69 Stephen E. Hume '69 Dale Buchbinder '70 Robert L. Geary '70 Michael C. Edwards '71 William R. Gilchrist '71 Raymond V. DeSilva '72 Robert K. Ferris '72 Kent Khtikian '72 John W. Wachewicz '72 William J. Reedy '72 Michael W. Ahlers '75 Margaret M . . Elmore '75 Thomas 0. Lloyd '75 Roanna Forman '77 Virginia Hardwick MA John Lashbrook MA Alfred W. Porter V-12 Richard M. Woolley V-12

program in stock options as it pertains to correspondent regional broker dealers. JOE REPOLE was promoted to controller of CE Maguire, a subsidiary of Combustion Engi­neering, in Waltham, Massachusetts. He and the family recently moved to Framingham. ROLAND HOPKINS continues as editor and publisher of New England Real Estate Journal which he has been doing for 13 years. DICK PICKERING is up in Maine working with the Kennebunk Chemical Center, Inc. The com­pany's president is TOM CHAPPELL '63. Products include a whole line of personal care products for the health and natural food industry, including what Dick refers to as 'Tom's Natural Soap." Could it be??

59 Mr. Paul S. Campion 4 Red Oak Or. Rye, New York 10580

AL ANGELL, who is a captain in the Air Force, has a new job as chief of medical personnel recruiting division, 3503d U.S.A.F. Recruiting Group, Robins Air Force Base in Georgia . In August he will be on assignment to Randolph Air Force Base in Texas with headquarters recruiting service.

JERRY MUIR, vice president of sales for ALCO Gravure, division of Macmillan, Inc., New York City, writes that he and his wife, Jean, and their three children enjoy life in Short Hills, New Jersey. Jerry says they are especially enjoying a new found sport, platform tennis, and he is trying to keep up with Jean who is club champion.

HOWARD FITTS has been appointed assistant director in the casualty-property

June 1976 Trinity Reporter Page 7

commercial lines department at The Travelers Insurance Companies.

RON REOPEL says nothing new but notes that he has been teaching U.S . history at Westfield (Massachusetts) High for the past 13 years, has been head football coach for seven years (with last year an 8-2 record), and head track coach for two years. In addition he has been summer camp director at Lake Delaware Boys' Camp in Delhi, New York for the past 15 years. Ron and his wife, Jeanne, have two children: Karen, age 14, and Paul, age 11.

DON FARMER has been director of administrative planning, King's College, Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania since September of 1974. Oon's duties are the development of academic programs, teaching and learning methods, institutional planning and problem solving. In addition, he is an educational consultant, his current contract with the Regis-Boston Latin Academy on a project for development of magnet school concept for the Boston public school system, conducting workshops on teaching and learning, and also curriculum development. Don has two children: Kristin, 41/z years old, p.nd Erik, 2 years old.

60 Mr. Robert C. Langen 2 Sachems Trail West Simsbury, CT 06092

BILL DOUGHERTY is chief editorial writer for the Nashua (New Hampshire) Telegraph. Bill has formerly worked for the New Haven Register, the Boston Herald Traveler, Har-t­ford Times and the Waterbury Republican. He is a member of the American Society of Newspaper Editors, National Conference of Editorial Writers, and Sigma Delta Chi.

PETER STRASSER is general manager of marketing and sales for Columbia Cement, Freeport, New York. Bill has a one year old son, Scott.

The February 20 issue of the Sarasota (Florida) Herald-Tribune carries a notice about a comedy entitled "Win With Wheeler" by LEE KALCHEIM at the Asolo State Theater. The play will enter the Asolo repertoire at the Ringling Museum's court playhouse July 30 and continue to rotate through September 4 with 16 performances. In addition Lee scripted the pilot for a new ABC three~camera sitcom series, "Zero Intel­ligence."

GORDON CLARKE has joined the firm of Hooker & Holcombe, Inc. as consulting actuary in its Hartford office . Gordon brings to the firm his 16 years of actuarial experience. He is an associate of both the Society of Actuaries and the Conference of Actuaries in Public Practice.

PETER ANDERSON is an investment officer, pension division, trust department, at the Girard Bank in Philadelphia. Peter and his wife Sandy, have a three year old daughter, Lisa.

61 Mr. Del A. Shilkret c I o Millbrook School Millbrook, NY 12545

REUNION MICHAEL KAUFF practices cardiovascular

radiology in White Plains, New York. SI HECHT has a new job as northeastern

representative for Edelman Systems Inc. in Baton Rouge, Louisiana .

RON BLANKEN moved to a new home in Columbia, Maryland last December and a new position with the U.S. Energy Research and Development Administration in German­town, Maryland, as physicist with the controlled thermonuclear fusion division. Ron and his wife adopted a Korean baby, Elise Claire, who was born on March 26, 1975 and who arrived from Korea last December.

STAN LIPSON is associate professor and chairman of the Department of Mathematics and Computer Science at Kean College of New Jersey.

PHIL LOVELL is still in his own-built house in Boxford, Massachusetts and with the Turner Construction Company. He is project engineer for an about-to-be built multi-million. dollar athletic complex for Harvard Universi­ty. Phil and his wife, Gail, are very immer.sed in the worldwide movement called "marriage encounter" and suggest that everybody look into it.

GIULIO PASSARELLI is still teaching in New Haven, Connecticut and has his own private travel business. He is a newly appointed gold member of IATM.

BOB MARVEL completed his M.B.A. in marketing at Bernard M. Baruch College in New York City. His thesis was entitled, "Selected Markei:i,1g Problems: Air Competi­tion in the North Atlantic." Bob is working as a specialist in the schedule planning depart-

Page 8: 1976June

Page 8 Trinity Reporter June 1976

ment of Pan American World Airways in New York.

GEORGE LYNCH was one of those calling the shots for the Aetna World Cup tennis tournament recently held at the Civic Center in Hartford. George is vice president of United Investors Corporation of Connecticut, is the Hartford Golf Club doubles champion, is active in the Trinity Club of Hartford and serves on the executive committee of the National Alumni Association.

FRANK GLEASON teaches biology at Santa Rosa (California) College and was recently elected to the Cotati (California) City Council for a four year term. In addition to teaching and politics, he is actively doing research into attitude change during under­graduate study.

62 Mr. Barnett Lipkind 432 E. 88th St., Apt. 404 New York, NY 10028

After 13 years as a specialist on the New York Stock Exchange, BILL LACKEY is giving up the ghost and moving his family from the Big Apple to Cumberland Foreside, Maine. Bill will work for E. F. Hutton in Portland, Maine, concentrating on trading call options.

JIM WHITTERS is chairman of the Massa­chusetts outdoor advertising board, and this past March was elected to the Ward 5 (Boston) Democratic Committee in the presi­dential primary election. Jim .and his wife have a daughter, Catharine, who celebrated her first birthday on February 7.

RUDY VAN DER HIEL is practicing law in Mansfield, Pennsylvania and last November was reelected to his second term as District Attorney of Tioga County, Pennsylvania. Rudy and his wife have four children, all girls, with the youngest, Kristen Adriana, celebrat-ing her first birthday on February 6. ·

In June of 1975, HARRISON STETLER completed a three year assignment with the World Health Organization as a pediatrician for a maternal and child health project in Morocco. At present he is working for the smalfpox eradication program in Atlanta, Georgia. In addition to completing the global eradication of this disease by the end of this year, he is also responsible for helping the U.S. government develop nutrition surveys and immunization programs in underdevel­oped countries. We were saddened to learn that his wife, Sylvia, died in an accident this winter. Harrison writes that they had no children, and that Sylvia had attended both Durham University and Cambridge Universi­ty and had always wanted to see Trinity College. Sylvia was British and was buried near her parent's home in London.

KEN PEDINI has been appointed director of the Department of Radiology at Lawrence General Hospital in Lawrence, Massachusetts. Ken still lives in Andover, Massachusetts with his wife, Egle, and sons, David, age five, and Julian, age two.

63 Mr. Timothy F. Lenicheck 152 Willow A venue Somerville, MA 02144

JAY NEULANDER is now rabbi for the Congregation Mikoe Shalom in Marlton, New Jersey.

Last year, ROWLAND RICKETTS received the designation of Fellow, Academy of Life Underwriting, with distinction, and also the C.L.U. designation. This year he was pro­moted to associate director, underwriting, for National Life Insurance Company in Mont­pelier, Vermont. Rowland will be a member of a Rotary International Group Study Exchange Program spending six weeks in England.

BILL MASIUS has joined the real estate firm of Rudnick, Brett, Wyckoff, in New York City. Bill and his wife have a daughter, Kimerly, who celebrated her first birthday June 3. .

CHAD MINIFIE, rector of the 250-year-old Trinity Church, says life is busy in historical Newport, Rhode Island. Events planned as part of the church's celebration and the Bicentennial are a visit by the Archbishop of Canterbury, hopefully the President this spring, and Queen Elizabeth II in July. Chad and his wife have three children.

STEVE YEA TON is a commercial fisher­man along the Kona Coast of the Island of Hawaii.

Finishing a two year stint in the Army at Ft. McPherson, Georgia on July 7, ALAN LIPPITT will be opening an office for the practice of orthopedic surgery in Decatur, Georgia. Alan is married to Dr. Linda Nathanson, a pediatrician.

BOB STREISAND has finally settled in

Westchester County, New York and practices cardiovascular and thoracic surgery in White Plains, New York.

HOWARD EMSLEY, head of the Middle School of St. Paul's School for Boys in Brooklandville, Maryland, will complete work this summer on a Certificate of Advanced Study in Education at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore.

CHARLIE McGILL has been named director of development of the consumer products group of W. R. Grace & Company, New York City. He is particularly involved in the restaurant industry and coordinating Grace's restaurant subsidiary, Far West Services Inc., operator of 125 Coco's, Plankhouse & Reubens restaurants in 12 states. The McGills live in Bronxville, New York and have two children.

ANDERS YOCOM continues as coordina­tor of programming for the Public Broadcast­ing Service in Washington, D.C. He is currently working on the 1976-77 program schedule and hopes that classmates all over the country will be enjoying them as they are broadcast on their local public TV stations.

64 Mr. Beverly N. Coiner 150 Katherine · Court San Antonio, TX 78209

As of this June, DICK HALLOWELL completed a year as president of the Boston University chapter of Phi Delta Kappa, national honorary education fraternity.

After finishing his diagnostic radiology residency at St. Luke's Hospital Center, Columbia University Med School, and suc­cessfully completing his specialty boards, BRUCE BOWEN is now working at the National Institute of Health in Bethesda,

· Maryland. Bruce and his wife, Barbara, live in Potomac, Maryland.

BILL RICHARDS is director, program on aging at Bangor (Maine) Mental Health Institute. In addition he recently opened a partnership, Behavioral Psychotherapy Asso­ciates, with two other psychologists in Bangor, Maine.

BOB FEINSCHREIBER has moved his law firm, Robert Feinschreiber & Associates, to Penthouse A at 823 Park Avenue in New York City. Fellow Trinity alum, WILLIAM GREEN '70, is now with the firm. Bob is currently the senior international tax advisor to the World Trade Institute, director of the International Tax Institute, editor of The International Tax Journal and consulting editor of U.S. Taxa­tion of International Operations. In addition, ~e is the author of two recent books, Tax Incentives for United States Exports and Tax Depreciation Under the Class Life ADR System. Bob's work has taken him to California, Arizona, Tennessee and Florida for client meetings.

KEN FISH has been appointed as special consultant to Innovative Programs of the Rhode Island State Department of Education, administering 1/2 million dollars of federal funds.

JON POWELL and Charles A. King have formed an architectural partnership, King & Powell, Inc., in downtown Hartford.

DAVID PYLE returned from Turkey last August and settled in Cambridge, Massachu-

, setts. He has taken a leave of absence from CARE to do graduate work at MIT in political science/international nutrition planning. He writes that the rest of the Pyles are also buried in the books -wife, Nancy, at Harvard in Islamic Art, and the two girls (Courtney, five and Lindsey, three) at nursery school. David says it is nice to be back in this country after five years abroad, but they are still looking for the time to enjoy it all.

DAVE WOOLMAN is assistant professor of education and librarian of the curriculum resources center at Rhode Island College. Dave was married to Ina Karen Stone last July 12 in Fullerton, California. They spent the summer traveling in the Canadian Rockies, Alaska, and the Yukon. His wife is a specialist in teaching disabled children. Dave is also college coordinator of an in-service teacher training project.

6 5 The Rev. David J. Graybill 213 Cherokee Rd. Henderson, TN 37075

DAVE JARMAN has been promoted to vice president, credit and corporate finance ser­vices, Bankers Trust Company in New York City.

We've had further word from SAM COALE that he has been elected president of the English-speaking union, and appointed to the Rhode Island Bicentennial Commission. Sam is writing book reviews for the Providence Journal and film and theater reviews for the East Side. He has been elected to the board of

directors of the Trinity Square Repertory Theatre, Looking Glass Theatre, and Rhode Island Repertory Dance Company.

HENRY HOPKINS is assistant general counsel for T. Rowe Price Associates, Inc., Baltimore, Maryland.

TOM KELLY is a partner in the Boston law firm of Herrick, Smith, Donald, Farley and Ketchum. Tom and his wife, Roberta, have two daughters - Christina, age five, and Kimberly, age two and a half.

66 Dr. Randolph Lee Office of College Counseling Trinity College Hartford, CT 06106

REUNION . I received a note several months ago from

PETE DURAN who tells us that he and his wife, Marcia, were expecting a child and at this point they should be parents. Pete also writes that his directorship of the arts (audio response time sharing) computer installation is now beginning to serve the handicapped in the Boston area :

Here in Hartford, ~EN TRIBIKEN was recently appointed an attorney for the Inheritance Tax Department of the Connecti­cut State Tax Department. Ben is now living in Middletown, Connecticut at 55 Prospect Street.

Also in a new position, CHUCK WAD­DELL has been named manager of the data processing system division of Acacia Mutual Life Insurance Company in Washington, D.C. A bit further south, LINDSAY DORIER, who practices law in Charlottesville, Virginia, was elected last November to the Albermarle County Board of Supervisors for a four year term.

Dr. GEORGE BENT tells us that he and his wife had their second, Jeoffrey Fowler, last March 8. George writes that he is now completing his first year of private practice in internal medicine and says he enjoys it very much, "but not the long hom's." The Bents are living in Pittsburgh. ·

Let me take another inch or so of space this issue to remind you again about our lOth reunion coming up this fall. In planning your summer vacations, save a little bit of time and a few dollars to come up to Hartford this November. The lOth reunion is always a big one, and I really hope that we can get a substantial number of the class together this year. If you have any questions, or if I can help in your planning in any way, please feel free to get in touch with me, but do plan to come back this fall.

67 Mr. Tom Safran . 943 1/2 Hilgard A venue Los Angeles, CA 90024

. For a change I have some news for you. Several months ago while on a business trip to the Midwest, I stopped off in St. Louis to attend a conference and had the pleasure of being met at the airport and having a drink with RICH RATZAN. He and hi~wife, . Susan, both physicians, are doing residencies at Jewish and Children's Hospitals, respectively. However, they plan to return to the East in a year when they're through with their programs.

More news about the doctors in our class: DAVID INWOOD recently called to say hello and let me. know that he would shortly be starting a residency in psychiatry at Downc state Medical Center in New York. David graduated from the Medical School in Guadalajara, Mexico, from where JIM PURDY also graduated. In contrast to David, however, Jim enjoys the country and speaks fluent Spanish. Consequently, he decided to stay on in Mexico, beginning a specialty at the Nephrology Institute in Mexico City.

David also informed me that PAUL SCHEINBERG would be married in Norfolk, Virginia on April 4 and then would return with his wife to begin a residency in pneumenology (a specialization in lung dis­eases). Congratulations to you, Paul, and best wishes for much happiness.

Congratulations are also in order to RAY GRAVES, who was recently appointed to the institutional review board at the Lafayette Clinic in Detroit. Between his many confer­ences, appointments and trial .dates, Ray serves on this board which has the responsibil­ity of reviewing the recommendations for human experimentation under the guidelines and regulations recently established by HEW and the State Department of Mental Health. According to Ray, a recent law suit in Wayne County Circuit Court brought public atten­tion to plans and proposals for psychosur- ·

gery, alteration of. human behavior, and experimentation on human subjects as some of the means of treating antisocial and/or criminal conduct. Furthermore, as Ray pointed out, this is one of the few projects in the country of this kind and he hopes to structure 'its program to insure that the individual rights of the person studied will be protected.

I also received a rather nice, lengthy letter from JIM O'CONNOR. I like it so much that I think I'll just quote it directly: "''ve been meaning to write to 'Class Notes' for some time but always seemed to throw out the Reporter before I wrote down your address (I kept remembering that it had a 1f2 in it but that's really not a lot of help). So, now that JACK CURTIS has managed to write, I feel obligated and, having just found your address, (I did write it down once, but then I lost it for a few months), here I go.

"Presently - i.e., since leaving Trinity (except for two years in the Army in Alaska), I'm in New York City. I'm marketing director for a small, but prosperous (knock on wood) direct mail business supply firm. After all these years, I'm finally beginning to think of myself as a real, native New Yorker and not a visitor. I know that there are a few others from our class in the City, but the only person I've seen very recently is GEORGE WANTY ...:... and that was at a Trinity dinner here. George is working for the First Boston Corporation, doing what I'm not sure.

"Last September I traveled down to Philadelphia for DAN HADEN's wedding, and there saw and stayed with JOHN LOEB and his wife, Eva, who is in med school. NATE RATH was there also -he's now out in Waterloo, Iowa, his home town, working for an architecture firm. By the way, Dan Haden is now living in Searsmont, Maine (near Camden) and is also an architect."

My thanks to you, Jim, for your helpful news. How about some more guilty souls out there writing a letter to me and filling us all in on what our classmates are up to.

STEWART BARNS wrote to the College that he is now in Milton, Massachusetts and his office is at the Church of the Holy Spirit at Mattapan Square, Boston, Massachusetts.

We also received a card from Massachusetts · from WILL ROSENBAUM (what's your new address, Will?). Will bought a new "old" house built in 1770 and has started his own Town and 'Country Animal Hospital practice. In addition, he keeps busy with nursery gardening - there's a greenhouse on his property. But the most important news is that Will has become engaged to Jodie Susan Shindler. Congratulations to you, Will.

One final note - While up in San Francisco on a recent business trip, I ran across RICK STULTZ at the San Francisco airport. He was waiting to pick up his wife who was herself on business in L.A. It appears that Rick has a rather idyllic situation up there, living in Palo Alto and having a short two-block walk to his office with Hare, Brewer & Kelly·, a real estate brokerage and investment firm. Rick and I talked briefly about our respective work and it may turn out that we'll work together on a particular development where Rick's compa­ny will provide the site and I'll do the developing.

One final, final note from CHARLIE KURZ. Charlie was here on business recently and we almost made it out East together on the same plane. Charlie was returning to Philadelphia and I was going to Washington to attend a conference. Unfortunately, I missed the plane and had to wait for a later flight. Nevertheless, he would like to remind you that the Alumni Fund Campaign is drawing to a close. If you haven't yet contributed, no matter what amount, please try to do so as soon as possible so that our class can reach its goal in this Bicentennial year.

Again, please keep the cards, letters and telephone calls coming in.

68 Mr. Joseph L. Reinhardt 1113 Dixon Blvd. Cocoa, FL 32922

GEORGE McCLELLAND is now director of treasury services with Data General Corpora­tion in Southboro, Massachusetts. George says he and his wife Jacquie, and son, Lindsay, are doing well.

BILL MOURADIAN is currently chief resident in orthopaedic surgery, St. Luke's Hospital, New York City. Bill will head for Toronto in July for a post-grad fellowship in spinal surgery with Dr. Ed Simmons. His wife, Elizabeth, is an RN with a B.S.N. from Duke.

BRUCE LOOMIS is employed as business manager at the Shoe String Press, Inc., Hamden, Connecticut, who are publishers of academic books.

Page 9: 1976June

6 9 Mr. Frederick A. Vyn

· 19 Shoreham Club Rd. . Old Greenwich, CT 06870

State College (of the University of New Hampshire), Plymouth, New Hampshire, and loves his new job .

AL JURCIK has been elected to the STEPHEN HORENSTEIN, tenor saxophon- executive board of the New York Trinity

ist and composer, is alive and well and Alumni Association. AI is assistant secretary teaching and working on the faculty of at the Chemical Bank, bank investment Bennington (Maine) College, black music division, working on New York State and division. He says, "Dino, where are you?" New York City rescue missions.

NAT PRENTICE has moved from New DOUG and Susan WATTS moved recently York City to Baltimore, Maryland to join the to Norfolk , Massachusetts, where Doug has investment banking firm of Alexander Brown joined Financial Concepts, Inc. in the capacity & Sons. of vice president and treasurer. Financial

BILL CANNING is an account/executive Concepts designs and builds financial institu-with Merrill Lynch in New London, Connecti- tions' buildings. Prior to their move, Doug cut. He won the 1975 Eastern Connecticut and Susan hosted a mini Delta Phi reunion in Yacht Racing Circuit in a 11• ton sloop Cedar Rapids, Iowa. Attending were ED and designed and built with his brother - the Donna DOYLE , GENE and Muffy second 1975 MORC national championships. PAQUETTE, and VIC and Judy LEVINE. Ed Bill was married to Suzanne H . Hill, Wellesley is practicing law in Peekskill, New York in the '75 , last July. firm of Doyle and Doyle. In addition, he has

LAURENCE ACH changed jobs last fall and been assistant corporation counsel to the City is now on the financial staff of Allied of Peekskill , prosecuting housing and zoning Chemical in New York City. He saw JOHN violations. Recently he was appointed deputy STEVENS a short time ago and says that after town attorney in Cortland, New York . The four years or so working in Nicaragua, John is Paquettes are living in Bolingbrook, Illinois, looking for more stable employment with a where Gene is now working in sales and U.S. corporation. management for Aetna Life Insurance Com-

JOE CONNORS celebrated his first year of pany . Vic is teaching math in high school and marriage on May 17 to Mary K. Alway, and is extremely active as coach of the school says he is prospering as a resident in internal hockey and golf teams, and is an active medicine at North Carolina Memorial Hos- participant of semi-pro hockey and organized pita!. Joe will be chief resident next year and softball. plans beyond that are unclear. He sends his MARK and Barbara EDINBERG forwarded best to all Trin alumni. their "once every one and one-half year

MARK DiBONA and his wife, Dorothy, update. " Mark received a Ph.D. in clinical! a re living in_ New York where M_ark has community psychology at the University of opened yractJc_e at Brookd~le Hosp1t~l.- _Be- Cincinnati in August 1975. He is teaching tween h1~ practiCe and teachmg responsibih_ty, gerontology at the University of Nevada, h-e-says-time~sl5ee'rnrcarce;"bunhe ar-e-tlymg-- l{eno-;'and-relaxes wifh abitof jazz piano. to squeeze m some travel to some of our Mark noted as he viewed a film on aging na ti onal wilderness areas. called Peegra that LEO RUMSEY had done the

AL SINGER is associated with the law firm sound track . of Williams & Brown in Washington, D .C.

MILES KING was recently promoted to the position of principal in the management consulting firm of Hay Associates, Boston. He and his wife, Marion, are the proud parents of a daughter, Allison, born last July 15.

STEPHEN LUNDEEN has been assistant professor of physics at Harvard for the past year and says his combined teaching and research duties keep him busy, but he still finds Cambridge a fine place to live . His wife, Meg, has just been appointed assistant professor of geology at Wellesley College.

GEORGE SIMON celebrated one year of marriage on May 30 to Lynne Robinson Martin, Mt. Holyoke '71. George is working at Lovejoy, Wasson, Lundgren & Ashton, a law firm , in New York City, and is on the board of the West Harlem Group Assistance, Inc ., a non-profit group rehabilitating, low income housing. His wife is a drug addiction counselor at the Bernstein Institute.

HARRY OSBORNE has just purchased a new home (he says their first) in Fair Haven, New Jersey .

JOHN RICE wrote he was looking forward to attending OCS at the New Hampshire Military Academy this summer. Otherwise, he says he is still in the Andover, Connecticut public school system as a guidance counselor. He hopes to see everyone at the football opener vs . Bowdoin.

ROGER GREENBERG is in the midst of his orthopaedic residency at Cornell University's Hospital for special surgery in New York City.

STEVE WELLCOME is the new owner of a 150 year-old house in Massachusetts. He says it has numerous problems and that there should be enough to keep him busy for the next 17 years with no trouble at all.

WENDELL TEWELL is Eastern lease under­writing manager with Gaty Leasing Corpora­tion in New York City.

PETER OTIS has moved from Lyndonville, Vermont with wife, Bobbe, and daughter, Catherine Melisse, (nicknamed Casey) who was born last July. Peter is now director of career counseling and placement at Plymouth

70 Mr. Peter N . Campbell 1936 Johnson Ferry Road, N .E. #202C Atlanta , GA 30319

TOM KAUFFMANN is working for the Security Storage Company in international sales. He writes that he has bought a house in Chevy Chase, Maryland, and that he was divorced last December. Tom plays soccer for the British Embassy and rugby for the George Washington rugby football club, and is having a great time .

ANDY SHAW and his wife, Liz, are enjoying life in Randolph, New Jersey, where he has been practicing law for a little over a year. They recently saw ERNIE MATTEI and Andy says he is still strong as a bull. Andy understands that GEORGE MUNKWITZ is an M.D. in St. Louis. He writes that they really had a good time at the Trinity reunion last November and thought JOHN BONEE did a terrific job.

DAVID GILBERT is still at Liberty Mutual Insurance Company in Boston as assistant manager of offices services. · He is taking exams for certification through the N .A .P.M. (certified purchasing manager).

STEVE DOWINSKY is a third year medical student at the J. W. Goethe University in Frankfurt, West Germany. Before turning to medicine, Steve picked up an M.S . in journalism from Columbia and subsequently worked as news producer (The Seen~ Tonight) for WPLG-TV in Miami, Florida. Political infighting and the realization that he could not effect real change as a passive observer led him to trade in the typewriter and film cameras for a stethoscope.

JAY ZARAGOZA has a new job with Northwest Connecticut Regional Planning Agency as regional planner. He and his wife, Molly, are living happily in their self-con­structed home in Warren, Connecticut, and have two children, Elliot, one and a half and a newcomer, Emlen, born the end of February.

ANDY STEWART is a first year medical

resident at Roosevelt Hospital in New York City . .

JIM O 'BRIEN is a real estate broker with the firm of William H . Dolben and Sons, Boston, Massachusetts .

JOHN KOEHLER says he is hot roddin' and hard rockin' with his '55 Chevrolet and The Outerspace Band.

GEORGE CONKLIN is teaching English and coaching lacrosse at Atholton High School in Simpsonville, Maryland . George picked up an M.A. degree in language and literature in 1973.

BILL GREEN has joined the law firm of Robert Feinschreiber & Associates in New York City , which is headed by fellow Trinity Alum BOB FEINSCHREIBER '64. Bill is also pursuing an L.L.M. in taxation at the NYU School of Law. He and his wife, ALYSON ADLER '73, live in the East 70's of Manhattan.

71 Miss Arlene A. Forastiere 1320 Berlin Tpke, #517 Wethersfield, CT 06109

REUNION KENNETH SCHWEIKERT has owned and

managed The Grasshopper Shop, a music and bookstore in Belfast, Maine since last Septem­ber . This summer he will open a second store in Camden, Maine. Kenneth is building a new home in Thorndike, Maine and he tells us that his daughter, Sierra, celebrated her first birthday April Fools' Day.

CHRIS HALL has just completed his Master's in computer science at George Washington University.

LEON BLAIS is studying for an M.P.A. (Master of Public Administration) at the University of Rhode Island, and is currently employed as director of public works for the Town of Lincoln, Rhode Island.

SPENCER KNAPP is still working as a law clerk for the Hon. Albert W. Coffin, United States District Judge, Burlington, Vermont, and is living in a farm house in Essex Junction. He will be married this summer to Barbara Cory, also a graduate of Cornell Law School, where they met. Barbara will work as law clerk to the other federal judge in Vermont, Hon. James S. Holden, and they will be living in Rutland after October 1976.

CHRIS MASSEY is finishing his second year at Georgetown University Law Center and is clerking for a law firm in Washington, D.C.L hris was. married to Emily Sanford an last August 16.

NICK BOOTH is an investment analyst with the State Street Bank & Trust in Boston, with primary responsibility for covering the computer and chemical groups. In February, he became a part owner of a salmon farm (Maine Sea Farms). The farm is managed by an experienced aquaculturist and is currently producing about 50,000 10 inch coho salmon per year.

TOM WEINER left his teaching job last year to be able to participate more fully in rearing his children. For the past six months he has been a part time apprentice at a print shop in Whately, Massachusetts. Tom and his wife, Elizabeth, and their two children, Annabel, age five, and Caleb, age ten months, live out in the country.

LOUIS BIRINYI is a surgical resident at Peter Bent Brigham Hospital in Boston.

DOUG GREEN has been promoted to senior systems analyst / programmer with the Washington Trust Company of Westerly, Rhode Island. The bank, established in 1800, is one of the few that had no reason to close during the depression . Doug was married to Julie Blanchard last September. Julie gradu­ated as a finance major, cum laude, from the University of Connecticut.

ROY WENTZ has passed the Illinois Bar and is currently working as legislative assistant to U.S. Senator Joseph R. Biden, Jr. of Delaware.

72 Mr. Jeffrey Kupperman 1629 Jena St. New Orleans, Louisiana 70125

In July, Your Secretary will begin a year of straight internal medicine internship training at the Harbor General Hospital/UCLA, Torrance, California .

OTIS BLACK has received a rather unique position with a new McDonald's franchise in Butler, Pennsylvania. It seems that after working with the construction crew putting up the new building, Art received the managerial position with the same franchise. He is also the head cook and is taking the liberty of adding sauerkraut to all the Big Macs.

June 1976 Trinity Reporter Page 9

DOUG LAKE is on leave from his position as commercial lending officer at Citibank in order to pursue an MBA degree at Amos Tuck School , Dartmouth.

With no children and no new job, JEANMARIE EARLEY is still pursuing a Master's degree in counseling while working as the assistant director of admissions at Mitchell College, New London, Connecticut. She writes that she is especially anxious to hear news of ROBIN ROGERS and JANET SPECTOR, whom none of us reading this column have heard from since '72.

NORM JOHANSON will begin his third year at Cornell University Medical College in New York City this fall, and his wife, Brenda, is a clinical nurse specialist at Columbia­Presbyterian Hospital.

PAUL SACHNER is the new assistant to the administrator of the painting department at Sothesby Parke Bernet, the art auction house in New York City.

GARY NEWTON has been traveling exten­sively through the south and west. He's presently "on the dole," but looking for work so that he can do some more traveling as soon as possible. ·

OLIVIA HENRY received a Master's in education and counseling from Antioch last October and is now working as a counselor and psychotherapist on the forensic unit of New Hampshire Hospital in Concord, New Hampshire.

NORM BARDEEN continues to work with ROB LAWRENCE in residential construction and remodeling in and around Westwood, Massachusetts.

73 Mr. Lawrence M . Garber 1260 Clayton St., #1 Denver, CO 80206

ANDY WOLF graduated from Georgetown University Law Center this May and will be working at the Federal Trade Commission in Washington starting in August, following the Connecticut bar examination.

KEN HARL is in his third year in the History Department at Yale Graduate SchooL He has passed his orals with distinction and is working on his dissertation. Last year he was awarded a grant-in-aid from the American Numismatic Society in New York City to attend their summer seminar and had the pleasure of studying and examining ancient coins for nine weeks.

STEPHEN WOLF is studying law at the New England School of Law in Boston. - DAVm ROGCHNIK -is gradually negating negatives on the ascent to the aliscrlute at Pennsylvania State University, Philosophy Department.

PENNY ROBINER is serving with the Peace Corps in Rabat, Morocco, helping reo'rganize library service for the government. Penny has a Master's in library science from S.U.N.Y., Albany, New York.

MARTHA WETTERMAN writes that she has provided testimony recently to the New York State Public Service Commission in the Sterling Nuclear Power Plant case in opposi­tion to the building of the power plant by the Rochester, New York Gas and Electric Corporation. Martha says her economics background is proving valuable.

CHARLA THOMPSON receives her Mas­ter's in microbiology this June and has a job as the chief microbiologist at Will's Eye Hospital in Philadelphia.

After graduating in June 1975 from Smith College with a Master of education of the deaf degree (M.E.D .), JANICE MAJEWSKI began teaching hearing impaired children in the Arlington (Virginia) County Public Schools . Janice says she is enjoying the D.C. area.

CORRECTION: A news item in the March/ April Reporter lists a name as Mike Battis and should have read MICHAEL BATTLE.

RICK MARKOVITZ, who was working fr Columbia Pictures in Philadelphia in advertis­ing and publicity, has now moved to Kalish and Rice, a local ad agency, as account executive handling both the Columbia Pic­tures and Paramount Pict_ures for advertising and publicity in the Philadelphia market. He says he is having a great time.

LEONARD HEINRICH is currently en­gaged in sales of surveying and engineering equipment in Southern New England. He recentiy negotiated and was awarded a contract through competitive bidding to supply the Town of Wethersfield, Connecticut with electronic distance measuring equipment for the purpose of redetermining the town lines by their engineering department.

SARA LADEN asks everyone to write to the Governors of New York and New Jersey urging them to ban the S.S.T. from landing in Kennedy; she feels it's a matter of life or death.

Page 10: 1976June

Page 10 Trinity Reporter June 1976

CHRISTINE REYNOLDS, who lives in Boston, has worked for the last year and a half as a designer I copywriter for the college advertising department of a textbook publish­er, Allyn & Bacon, Inc.

MALCOLM KIRKLAND writes that on March 8 he joined the ocean marine area of American International Underwriters Corpor­ation in New York. He says it's a great opportunity which is most welcome after four months of surveying the hard road Boston job market scene. Malcolm plans to continue ocean racing but it has changed from a vocation in the Atlantic to an avocation on Long Island Sound.

DICK STEERE is now president of True­blood Lighting Company Incorporated in Wendell, Massachusetts. His work covers an area from Maine to D.C. and Boston to Buffalo. Dick says lighting for rock n' roll is a great way to make a living.

NEAL GOFF is now night city editor of The Reporter Dispatch in White Plains, New York.

PENNY FRENCH VOEGELI belatedly writes to tell us that she married Michael J. Voegeli last May 1975. They were married aboard a yacht, and beginning in November until they returned to their home in Bermuda in May, they have been cruising the West Indies. Penny says she has been busy writing two books of poems in between changing sails.

NICHOLAS READ has been accepted at the University of Virginia at Charlottesville for this fall to pursue an M.A. in history. (See Weddings for his recent marriage.)

74 Mr. James Finkelstein 3901 Locust Walk, Box 670 Philadelphia, PA 19174

CANDACE JANS completed graduate work at the Villa Schifanora Graduate School of Fine Arts in Florence, Italy, earning an M.A. degree with honors in Latin. Candace is currently living in Boston and is doing free-lance illustration and modeling. In the fall she will return to the Rhode Island School of Design for an M.F.A. in painting ..

MARTHA CAREY ELDREDGE reports that she and her husband will be moving to Winston~Salem, North Carolina as of July.

DEBORAH GOLDREYER is presently attending Columbia University's Graduate School of Architecture. · TOBY ISRAEL in­forms us ·that she is now residing in New Brunswick, New Jersey and is teaching English.

MALCOLM DAVIDSON is working full time at the Fenn School in Concord, Massachusetts, teaching mostly social studies to sixth graders and building kayaks in his spare time. Malcolm and his wife intend to bicycle through eastern Europe this summer.

ELIZABETH SANTOS is working for a graduate. degree in philosophy at Duquesne University in Pittsburgh. CARRIE PELZEL is currently occupying the position of associate director .of alumni affairs and student recruit­ment at Northfield-Mt. Hermon School in Massachusetts. As of. July, Carrie will be promoted to the assistant director of develop­ment for the same school.

GORDON MADGE has recently moved from Oakville, Ontario to Toronto. Promoted to contracts supervisor (Eastern Canada) for Canadian Metal Rolling Mills, Ltd., he will supervise all facets of contract coordination for Eastern Ontario, Quebec and the Maritimes.

MIKE CHEARNEYI completed his Master's in television-radio production last August at Syracuse University. Mike is presently work­ing as a writer for Dancer-Fitzgerald-Sample Advertising in New York City. He encourages everyone to drive a Toyota, eat Wheaties and drink Early Times Kentucky Bourbon!

DON HAWLEY will be entering Harvard Business School come September. In the meantime, he will finish up an illustrious two years with Bankers Trust in New York City.

JON EMERY will be tennis pro at the Old Lyme Country Club in Connecticut. The house he occupies is supposed to have at least six bedrooms.

SHAWN FLAVIN RUSSELL (see Weddings) writes that both she and her husband are medical students at New York Medical College, Class of '77.

Your Secretary has accepted a position for September with the management consulting firin of Towers, Perrin, Forster and Crosby, Inc. in their Philadelphia office. As an associate consultant, I'll be working in the areas of executive compensation and benefits.

As summer passes, I'm sure that many of you will be entering new phases of your life and career. Best wishes for a good summer -keep in-touch!

75 Mr. Gary Morgans 5406 Richenbacher Ave. Afexandria, Va. 22304

A lot of news to report about the class one year out. VON and PEGGY (HOLMES) GRYSKA write that they're living in Boston, soon to move to New York City. This year Von taught and studied biology at Northeast­ern University, as well as doing tumor research at Harvard Med School. He will begin medical school at New York University in September. Peggy is working for Weedon & Company, an investment firm, whom she'll continue with in New York. She has also been singing in the Dedham (Massachusetts) Choral Society under Director Brian Jones. Von notes that TOM MARTIN is w:orking with the women's crew team at Boston University where Tom is studying at the business school.

Also in Boston is DEBBIE DONAHUE, who says that Beantown is a great place to be for the Bicentennial. Debbie is working as a .personnel consultant for Fanning Personnel of Boston. She's living with JOAN SEELYE, who is employed as a production assistant with a film producing company. BILL TAUSSIG is now in Boston, writing for the Needham Times and for UP!, for whom he covers both the Celtics and Bruins and their marches toward their respective league championships. Bill writes that he traveled all over Europe, from Amsterdam to Rome, including Trinity's campus, from the day after graduation until mid-August in a VW Rabbit purchased over there.

Nearby is PAUL CHAR OW, now a licensed real estate broker with Moynihan Realty Association in Dedham, Massachusetts. JOAN STARKEY is also in the area, working as executive assistant to the director of development of Eye Research Institute of the Retina Foundation. She's very happy with her

_ job, notwithstanding that title. Besides taking a couple of courses at Harvard, Joan is singing with the Boston Back Bay Society - Brahms anyone? PAT CENTENNI has been appointed as administrative assistant to the mayor of Cambridge, Mas'sachusetts.

KAREN ARMSTRONG is working in Great Barrington, Massachusetts as assistant to the dean of admissions at Simon's Rock Early College (a four year B.A. degree­granting college enrolling students after the lOth and 11th grades). She relates that her job entails a good deal of traveling and interview­ing, and is interesting and fun. By now FRANCES CONGDON should be enjoying summer vacation from Boston College in Brighton, Massachusetts, where she is work­ing. towards a Masters in education. Frances spent last summer working on Cape Cod.

Up in the wilds of Maine, BETSY ALDEN is teaching English . at Hebron Academy in Hebron, which I can't find on any map. Betsy is a housemother at Hebron and also coaches field hockey, a'lpine skiing, and lacrosse. ·

Starting work for IBM in September after graduation, RUDOLPH MONTGELAS has now been transferred to Austin, Texas. Rudy works in their engineering development department.

JANET DICKINSON is in med school in Guadalajara, Mexico (which she says isn't bad) and she thinks "The Guad" is great.

JEFF CLARK is working for the State of New Jersey as a protective services worker or child abuse investigator-counselor. He obvi­ously is doing well since he recently received a promotion to social worker II and an additional pay raise.

TONY PICCIRILLO is still working for the Hartford Insurance Company and is living in an apartment on Allen Place. We managed to make a brief sojourn to the Corner Tap when we got together a few months ago, and agreed that the new Rathskeller on campus will be a definite boon to the alumni. In the fall, Tony will be entering Harvard Business School.

EILEEN BRISTOW MOLLOY, is living in Newington, Connecticut and working at the Child and Family Services of Connecticut in Hartford.

There appears to be a fair contingent of '75ers in Gotham City. Since graduation LYMAN DELANO has been working in the investment advisory division at Bankers Trust in New York City. Lyman says that he's enjoying his work a great deal.

PRISCILLA MOTLEY is employed as a secretary in the creative department of D'Arcy MacManus, an advertising agency. Priscilla is quite partial to New York City- "an exciting place to be at this stage of life." Also in advertising in New York is KATIE WOOD­WORTH, who is working for Ladies Home Journal. Working for another famous maga­zine, Vogue, is ELIZABETH GUERLAIN, who has been promoted to manager, acces­sories department.

While at Trinity recently, I saw HOWARD GOLDSTEIN on a break from his computer science studies at the University of Connecti-

cut. At that time Howard was awaiting appearance of a new computer terminal for his work - hopefully it has since arrived. Howard notes that in his move to UConn he encountered a slightly higher level of com­puter sophistication than he found 'neath the elms, if a lower ·ambience in the dorms. Howard should be back in Stamford, Connec­ticut for the summer by now.

Special congratulations to STEWART HOEG and KATHY WALSH, married this May, and SCOTT and Melanie HAYIM, married June 6. Best of luck to the recently graduated Class of 1976 as they embark on their varied paths.

The grad school students among us hauling in the dough over the summer 'might want to consider a small contribution to the College. Our class goal of $2000 is pretty moderate. Anyway, send along some news to the above address or to the Alumni Office, and have a festive Bicentennial summer.

I IN MEMORY

ARCHER WILSEY BEDELL, 1908

Archer W. Bedell, a retired civil engineer for the Minnesota State Highway Depart­ment, died April 16 in St. Paul, Minnesota. He was 91 years old. His wife, Mrs. Florence Love Bedell, survives.

Mr. Bedell was born March 2, 1885 in New York City. He entered Trinity with the Class of 1908 and received his degree in 1913. During World War I, he served as a first lieutenant in the American Expeditonary Forces. After the war, he lived in Faribault, Minnesota where for many years he was employed as city engineer. From 1942 to 1944 he served as a major in the Army Corps .of Engineers.

Mr. Bedell was a member and past president of the Minnesota Surveyors and Engineers' Society, a member of the American Society of Civil Engineers, and of the Society of American Military Engineers. .

REGINALD BURBANK, 1911

Word has just reached the College of the death of Reginald Burbank, M.D. Dr. Burbank died December 30, 1972 in New York City. He leaves three daughters, Marion B. McNeely,' Margaret B. Welch, and Jeanne Burbank; and a step-daughter, Martha T. Mu_se.

Dr. Burbank was born July 26, 1886 in Pittsfield, Massachusetts. He received a B.A. degree from Trin:ity in 1911 and was a member of Delt.a Psi fraternity. In 1915 he graduated from Cornell University School of Medicine. For many years Dr. Burbank practiced in New York City, specializing in arthritis and related rheumatoid diseases. He was a member of several medical societies, including the Royal Society of Medicine, New York Academy of Medicine, American Socie­ty for the Study of Arthritis (of which he was a founding member, and chairman for 12 years), Pan American Medical Association, New York County Medical Society, and the New York State Medical Society.

ALFRED ERWIN RANKIN, 1912

A. Erwin Rankin, financier and investment counselor, died November 10, 1975 in Bethel, Connecticut. He is survived by a son, E. Daniels; two daughters, Mrs. George R. Lloyd and Mrs. Donald M. Heider; and seven grandchildren.

Born July 30, 1890 in Hartford, he graduated from Hartford Public High School and entered Trinity in 1908. A Phi Beta Kappa graduate, he was a member of Psi Upsilon fraternity and was secretary of the IVY his senior year.

Immediately upon graduation he began his business life as production manager of Arrow-Hart and Hegeman Electric Company in Hartford. In 1920, he became vice president of the Manufacturers and Traders Trust Co. in Buffalo, New York. From 1927 to 1936 he was president of the American and General Securities Corporation in New York. Until 1941 he was president of Bishop's Service Inc., a credit reporting agency.

He was a World War I veteran. During World War II and until1952 he was a member of the War Production Board, serving as its regional finance chief, regional loan agent of the Smaller War Plants Corp. and special representative to the Reconstruction Finance Corp.

From 1952 to 1957 Mr. Rankin was in charge of the U.S. Committee for German Corporate Dollar Bonds.

Upon retirement, Mr. Rankin moved to Bethel where he was a member and chairman of the board of directors of the Bethel Library.

JAMES FAIRFIELD ENGLISH, 1916, Hon . 1944

The Rev. James F. English, a retired Congregational minister, died March 8 in Boston at the age of 79. He is survived by his son, James F., Jr.; his daughter, Mrs. Parker S. Dorman; and ten grandchildren.

Dr. English was born July 21, 1896 in East Windsor, Connecticut. While at Trinity he was a member of Sigma Nu fraternity, the Political Science Club, the track team, and he received the Goodwin Greek Prize. In 1921 he graduated from the Hartford Theological Seminary and was ordained the same year. He was the first pastor of the Elmwood Commu­nity Church in West Hartford until1925, then served the Congregational Church in Putnam, Connecticut from 1925 to 1930. From 1930 to 1936 he was minister of the First Congrega­tional Church, Manchester, New Hampshire. In 1936, Dr. English became general superin­tendent and treasurer of the Connecticut Conference of Congrega tiona! Christian Churches. Until1952 he was also chairman of the commission on the ministry of the General Council of Congregational Christian Churches.

A minister emeritus and historian of the . Connecticut Conference of the United Church of Christ, Dr. English was editor of Congrega­tional Connecticut from 1936 to 1950, and coauthor of "Contributions to the Ecclesiasti­cal History of Connecticut, Volume 2."

He was a trustee of the Hartford Seminary, the Hartford ·chapter of the National Confer­ence of Christians and Jews, the Family Welfare Society of Hartford, and a former trustee of the Urban League of Hartford .

He was a World War I veteran, serving in the U.S. Army in France.

In 1944, Dr. English received an honorary Doctor of Divinity degree from Trinity College.

WARREN LESTER HALE, 1916

Warren L. Hale died November 23, 1975 in Lehigh Acres, Florida. He is survived by his wife, Pauline K. Hale; three sons; Warren K., Hayden K., and Henry K.; and a daughter, Mrs. Susan H. Gelston.

_Mr. Hale was born March 21, 1894 in East Hartford. He entered Trinity in 1912 and later transferred to Stanford University in California. While at Trinity, he was a member of Delta Kappa Epsilon fraternity.

During World War I, Mr. Hale was an aviator stationed with the American Expedi~ tionary Forces in France.

RICHARD GOODMAN IVES, 1924

Richard G. Ives, for 30 years an employee of the Bard-Parker Company in Danbury, Connecticut, died Aprilll in Danbury.

Mr. Ives was born February 9, 1902 in Danbury. He entered Trinity in 1920 and later transferred to Yale University, where he graduated in 1925. While at Trinity, Mr. Ives was a member of Alpha Delta Phi fraternity .

Besides his wife, Mrs . Charlotte Young Ives, he leaves twQ daughters, Mrs. John J. Wilkes and Mrs . William Heydman; four brothers, L. Brewster, Class of 1925, Chester B., Class of 1939, Moss W. and W. Bigelow; and seven grandchildren.

ROBERT W. HILDEBRAND, 1927

Robert W . Hildebrand, a civil engineer employed by the Hartford Insurance Group, died December 31, 1975 in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania. He leaves his wife, Mrs. Caroline Elterich Hildebrand; two sons, Robert D. and John . L.; and nine grandchildren.

Born January 3, 1903 in Wilkes-Barre, Mr. Hildebrand entered Trinity in 1923. He was a member of Alpha Delta Phi fraternity, the Glee Club, the Trinity College Union, was senior class vice president, and was employed as manager of the Trinity College bookstore.

After graduation, he served as a civil engineer both in private industry and with the U.S. government. In 1938 he joined the Hartford Accident and Indemnity Company. During World War II he was a lieutenant colonel in the U.S. Army.

Mr. Hildebrand was a member of the National Society of Professional Engineers and the Pennsylvania Society of Professional Engineers.

Page 11: 1976June

RICHARD AUGUSTUS McCURDY, 1927

Richard A. McCurdy, a division engineer of the Surveying and Mapping Division of the Metropolitan District Regional Planning Commission, died June 14, 1975 in Hartford. He leaves his wife, Mrs . Irene Lynch McCurdy . His brother, William R. was a member of the Class of 1933.

Mr. McCurdy was born April 12, 1905 in Hartford . He graduated from Hartford Public High School and entered Trinity in 1923. At Trinity he was a member of Alpha Tau Kappa, the Union Committee, the Glee Club, the Senate, and was dass secretary-treasurer in 1927. Mr. McCurdy won the Miles A. Tuttle prize in history in 1927.

Mr. McCurdy was a member of the state society for· civil engineers and professionaL engineers, the Metropolitan District Engineers Club and past president of the 25-year Club of the Metropolitan District Commission. He was also a member of the American Congress on Surveying and Mapping.

GORDON GLOSSOP FOGG, 1930

Gordon G. Fogg died February 21 in Hartford. He was 69 years old .

Mr. Fogg was born January 26, 1907 in Manchester, Connecticut. He entered Trinity in 1927. In 1929 he joined Travelers Insurance Company where he was employed until retiring in 1971. He was an associate controller for the company.

Mr. Fogg was a past president of the Travelers Men's Club, a former trustee of the Manchester Memorial Hospital and a board member and former treasurer of the Manches­ter Child Guidance Clinic.

Survivors include his wife, Mrs . Dorothy Pentland Fogg; a son, Gordon G., Jr.; a

daughter, Mrs. Robert Breer; and three grandchildren .

GEORGE JONAS ROSENBAUM, 1930

George J. Rosenbaum, M .D., for many years a practicing physician in New Britain, died March 21. He leaves his wife, Mrs. Blanche Podnetsky Rosenbaum; a son, Jerrold F. Rosenbaum, M.D.; a daughter, Mrs. Bertram E. Bush; and three grandchildren.

Born June 10, 1908 in Hartford, Dr. Rosenbaum graduated from Weaver High School and entered Trinity in 1926. As an undergraduate, he was a member of Phi Alpha fraternity, and the baseball and junior varsity basketball teams. Upon graduation he entered Tufts University School of Medicine, Medford, Massachusetts, and .received his M .D. degree from that institution in 1934. In 1935 he opened his office in New Britain where he practiced for 40 years.

During World War II Dr. Rosenbaum served as a lieutenant commander in the U.S. Navy .

He was treasurer of the staff at Mt. Sinai Hospital for 10 years and had served as chief of general practice at that hospital. Dr. Rosenbaum was also on the courtesy staff of St. Francis and Hartford Hospitals.

He was a member of the American Society of Anesthesiologists, American Medical Asso­ciation, Hartford County Medical Society, Hartford Medical Society, Phi Lambda Kappa Medical traternity, and was a fellow of the American Academy of Family Practice.

CHARLES WEBER, 1935

Charles Weber, of Clearwater, Florida, died June 6, 1975 in Cape May, New Jersey. He is survived by his wife, Freda G. Weber; two

Recent Bequests and Memorial Gifts

Trinity acknowledges with a deep sense of loss the passing of alumni and other friends of the College. It seems appropriate to list ·the bequests and memorial gifts which have been made to honor them .

A bequest of $3,750 for general purposes from the estate of William H. Bulkeley in memory of his father, John C. Bulkeley '93.

A bequest of $15,746 .60 for general purposes from the estate of William F. McElroy '10 . .

An additional amount of $75,000 for Library purposes from the estate of Jerome P. Webster '10, Hon . '37 and '68, Trustee of the College from 1939 to 1967, bringing the

~ .... "-fOra equesno$I3~445.- ., ' .. .......,... " ' ' ,. =-=--=-= -A gift of $1,000 for Watkinson Library endowment in memory of Jerome P. Webster '10 and H . Bacon Collamore.

A ·gift of $2,095.63 for the Library book fund in memory of RobertS . Morris '16, Hon. '65, Trustee of the College from 1941 to 1971.

A bequest of $119,584.07 for scholarship purposes from the estate of John E. Griffith, Jr. '17.

A gift of $1,500 for scholarship purposes in memory of Thomas C. Carey '25.

A gift of $1,000 for general purposes in memory of Alfred F. Celentano '27.

A gift of $5,000 for a Library book fund in memory of Clarence M. Dean '33 .

A bequest of $7,696.71 for faculty support purposes from the estate of Professor Haroutune M. Dadourian.

A bequest of $10,000 for faculty support purposes from the estate of Mrs. Morse Allen .

A bequest of films for the Library valued at $1,850 from the estate of Emily A. Deren thai.

An additional amount of $385 .80 for general purposes from the estate of Mary Rose Norwood, bringing the total bequest to $30,937.40.

Gifts have also been received in memory of the following alumni and friends:

Frederick F. Johnson '94 Adrian H. Onderdonk '99 Harold H. Rudd '01 James A. Wales '01 Bradford G. Weekes '07 Clinton J. Backus, Jr. '09 Frederick T. Gilbert '09 Charles H . Bassford '10 GeorgeS . Francis '10 William G . Oliver '10 Albert M. Smith '10 William W. Buck '11 George T . Bates '12 Raymond H . Bentley '13 Arthur F.G. Edgelow, M.D. '14 Raymond W. Woodward '14 The Rev. Charles A. Bennett '15 Raymond F. Hansen '16 Stanton J.D. Pendell '17 Col. Chester B. McCoid '17 Richmond Rucker '17 Louis Antupit, M.D. '19 Robert A. Radom '20

Frederic L. Bradley '21 The Rev. Robert J. Plumb '22 Willard G. Keller, Jr. '27 John F. Walker '29 Philip M. Cornwell, M .D. '30 DanielS. Andrus, M.D. '32 John F. Butler '33 E. Sigmund LeWinn, M.D. '33 William R. McCurdy '33 Edward L. Sivaslian '33 Gregory T. McKee '38 William H. Pomeroy, M.D. '38 John C. Alexander, Jr. '39 Richard W . Hamilton '40 Thomas M . Wyckoff '60 John M. Heldt '64 Loring M. Bailey, Jr. '67 Charles Z. Greenbaum '71 Harold W . Gleason M .A . '24 Goodwin B. Beach Hon . '31 Prof. Alfred S. Reid Mrs. Morse Allen Mrs . A. Palmore Harrison

sons, Charles R. and Richard ; and four grandchildren.

Mr. Weber was born November 28, 1911 in Philadelphia. He entered Trinity in 1931 and received a B.S. degree. While at Trinity he was a member of Delta Phi fraternity.

For 35 years Mr. Weber was an employee of the Pennsylvania Railroad.

VICTOR EMANUEL BONANDER, 1936

Victor E. Bonander, secretary for the Class of 1936, died April20 in Hartford. He was 61.

Mr. Bonander was born November 24, 1914 in Hartford and graduated from Hartford Public High School. After graduation from Trinity he began his career in the insurance field with Hartford Accident and Indemnity Company . He also worked for General Underwriters, Phoenix Insurance Company, and the Travelers Insurance Company before joining Arthur A. Watson and Company, where he was employed at the time of his death.

Mr. Bonander served with the U.S. Coast Guard during World War II and was commissioned a lieutenant, senior grade.

He leaves his wife, Mrs. Helen Richardson Bonander; a son, Richard R. ; a daughter, Lynn A.; and his step-mother, Mrs. Margaret Bonander.

WILLIAM CLEMENT McKONE, 1936

William C. McKone, a retired employee of the printing firm of Davidson and McKirdy Co. in West Hartford, died April 17 in Hartford.

Born May 18, 1913 in Hartford, Mr. McKone graduated from Bulkeley High School. He entered Trinity in 1932 and received his degree in 1936.

During World War II he was a captain in the U.S. Army .

Surviving are his wife, Mrs . Dorothy Faas McKone; two sons, William C. , Jr . and Robert J.; two daughters, Mrs. Catherine Wynne and Mrs. Patricia Blake; and seven grandchildren.

NORMAN HUBBARD, 1938

Norman Hubbard, a breeder and trainer of horses, died January 19 in Cream Ridge, New

WOMFN 'S LA CROSSE (from page 12)

Prior to their loss against Yale, the Bantams routed Conn . College and Wesleyan by respective scores of 11-0 and 11-1. Trinity finished the year with a string of six consecutive victories, defeating Tufts 5-4, Brown 6-3, Mt. Holyoke 5-4, Smith 18-1, Miss Porter's 12-4 and Williams 19-9.

LACROSSE Saddled with a myriad of critical

injuries, the varsity lacrosse team turned in a less than outstanding performance in the early part of the season, dropping their first four games to New Haven 10-1, Southern Conn. 12-11, Amherst 13-6 and Tufts 14-6. The squad's perseverance and deter­mination proved unshakable, how­ever, as the Bantams overcame their early 0-4 mark by rallying to win five of their final six outings to finish the season with a creditable 5-5 record .

Trinity rebounded for its first ·win by rolling over Fairfield 16-4 in the Bantams' horne opener. The explosive potential which Bantam offense ex­hibited against Fairfield was to contin­ue for the remainder of the spring as Trinity went on to defeat Holy Cross 12-7, M.I.T. 10-4, U. Rhode Island 18-2 and Springfield 8-7.

The varsity's only loss during the second half of the season carne at the hands of Wesleyan, who nipped the Hill toppers by a slim 10-9 margin, with the Cardinals final tally coming in a sudden death period following two inconclusive overtime sessions,

June 1976 Trinity Reporter Page 11

Jersey. At the time of his death he was manager of Fair Winds Farm in that town.

Mr. Hubbard was born January 2, 1917 in Bloomfield, Connecticut. He graduated from Bloomfield High School and entered Trinity in 1934. He was a member of Commons Club, the varsity soccer team, and the junior varsity basketball team. He graduated from the University-Df Massachusetts.

After college he worked with his father in the poultry business and continued to work in agriculture throughout his life.

During World War II he was a captain in the U.S. Air Force.

Mr. Hubbard is survived by his wife, Mrs . Mary L Hubbard ; a son, William C.; a daughter, Joanne A.; a step-son, Morton Schmidt; and two stepdaughters, Mrs.

· Charles Nichols and Mrs. Jamie Van Etten.

HENRY IRVING SCHWEPPE, MA 1954

Henry I. Schweppe, an insurance man and a member of a pioneer Texas ranching family, died December 8, 1975 in Houston, Texas. He leaves his wife, Kate Thompson Schweppe; two sons, H. Irving, Jr. and Palmer T . ; and a daughter, Mrs. Marc Moldawer.

Mr. Schweppe graduated from Columbia University in 1924 and received his master's degree from Trinity in 1954.

During World War II he was a colonel in the U.S. Army .

For many years Mr. Schweppe was associated with Aetna Life and Casualty Insurance Company and operated the Schweppe Agency in Austin, Texas .

MICHAEL ROLAND CHASE, MA 1969

Word has reached the College of the death of Michael R. Chase, of Taunton, Massachu­setts. He died June 29, 1973. He is survived by his wife, Paula Martyniak Chase; his parents, Roland A. and Rita M. Chase; two brothers; and a sister .

Mr. Chase was born June 15, 1942 in Taunton. He graduated from Providence College, Providence, Rhode Island, in 1964 before receiving his graduate degree in Spanish from Trinity in 1969.

At the time of his death he was a French and Spanish instructor at Bridgewater-Raynham Regional High School in Bridgewater, Massachusetts. -

Freshman Greg Carey scored 38 : Iii

goals and three assists for 41 season points to tie the Trinity scoring re.cord of Nick Bensley and Mark Cleary/ who set their marks in 1974 and .i i 975 respectively. Freshman Clint Br.o_wn finished the year as the team's se2ond highest scorer with seven goals and 23 assists . Brown's season assists · tally proved a record-breaker, topping the old mark of 22 set by Harvey Hopkins in 1963.

GOLF In its second year under CQach

Sutherland, the varsity golf team finished with a record of 8-5 and garnered sixth place finishes in both the University of Hartford Invitational and the New England intercollegiate tournament.

The Bantams opened the season by defeating W .P.I . 6-1 and went on to split their next rnatchup against U. Hartford and U. Rhode Island, taking their twenty-third in a row over the Hawks while falling to the "Rhodies" by a slim 32 stroke margin. The linksrnen won three of their next five contests, downing Bates 7-0, Conn. College 7-0 and Coast Guard 4-3, only to succumb at the hands of Tufts 4:..3 and Wesleyan 3-2.

Following their strong performances in the New England and Hartford tournaments, the Bants notched a 6-1 win over M.I.T. prior to defeating A.I.C. and dropping to Springfield and Williams in quadrangular medal play competition.

Page 12: 1976June

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Page 12 Trinity Reporter June 1976

Top Athletic Awards Announced The winners of Trinity's five highest

annual athletic awards were an­nounced by Athletic Director Karl Kurth, Jr. during a reception held on May 7 in the Tansill Sports Room of the Ferris Athletic Center.

Senior A . Hobart Porter was named the 74th recipient of the coveted · "George Sheldon McCook Trophy." The McCook award is the College's top athletic award and is presented each year to the senior who has exhibited outstanding "courage, dedication and ability" as a participant in Trinity athletics. Porter also received the "Blanket Award" as a ten-time varsity letter winner.

The "E.C.A.C. Outstanding Scholar-Athlete Award" was presented

to Don Baur '76 in recognition of his concurrent achievements in the fields of academics and athletics. David Teichmann was presented . with the "Bob Harron Award" as the College's outstanding junior scholar-athlete.

Karen C. Mapp received the "Larry Silver Award" for the student who, "as a non-athlete, has made the greatest contribution to the Athletic Depart­ment according to the vote of the full-time staff."

The newly instituted "Bantam Award" was presented to Raymond A. Montgomery '25. The award is given by the full-time staff "in recognition of the non-student who has done the most for Trinity's athletic programs."

Baseball, Crew, Golf, Track Spring Team Awards Presented

The winners of this spring's team awards were announced recently at each of the squads' post-season banquets .

Senior pitcher Steve Carlow received the varsity baseball team's Dan Web­ster Most Valuable Player Award. Senior co-captain John Wiggin was named as the recipient of the John Sweet Batting Award as the squad's leading hitter while junior first base­man Dave Weselcouch received the William Frawley Most Improved Player Award.

CQach Shults also announced th~ election of junior catcher Bob O'Leary as team captain for 1977.

* * * Junior Mike Mackey received the

Torch Award as the oarsman "who has contributed most to the perpetuation of crew at Trinity." The Hartford Barge Club Rowing Trophy "for sportsmanship and outstanding im­provement" was presented to sopho­more Paul Wendler, while the Coaches Award, presented annually "to the lightweight who has exhibited excep­tional merit," was presented to junior Bob Cedarbaum.

Freshmen Eliot Klein and Bob Childs were selected as co-recipients of the

1976 FOOTBALL

SCHEDULE September 25 Bowdoin 1:30Away

October 2 Bates 1:30Home

October 9 Williams 2:00Away

October 16 Middlebury 1:30Home

October 23 Colby 1:30Home

October 30 U.S. Coast Guard 1:30Away

November6 Amherst 1:30Home

November13 Wesleyan 1:30Away

Wickes Award as the "freshmen who best exemplify the spirit of the found­ers of Trinity crew."

* * * The RobertS. Morris Track Trophy

was presented to senior co-captain Victor Novak, while the Craig Most Improved Tennis Player Award was presented to sophomore Andrew R. Vermilye.

* * * Sophomore Bill Dodge won the

annual Wyckoff Golf Award, while freshman Greg Carey and senior Sean O'Malley were named as co-recipients of the J. F. Boyer Lacrosse Award.

VARSITY SPORTS ROUNDUP

TENNIS The varsity tennis team established

itself as one of the top New England powers in 1976 and, with only one graduating senior, next year's squad, led by tri-captains--elect Charlie John­son, Jim Rice and Tim Jenkins, should have few problems in maintaining that stature.

The Bantams finished the '76 season with a solid 8-3 record and emerged from the New England Championships tied with Brandeis for fifth place honors behind Harvard, Yale, Dart­mouth and Tufts.

Trinity began the year with succes­sive victories over U. Hartford (9-0), Conn. College (9-0) and Rhode Island (8-1) before dropping its first match of the year against a strong Yale team (7-2). The Bantams routed their next four opponents, defeating Amherst (8-1), U. Conn. (8-1), Springfield (9-0) and M.I.T. (9-0) before losing their second match of the year to Williams (6-3).

Trinity journeyed to the New Eng­land tournament in Amherst, Mass. with a 7-2 record and three of its top five players seeded. Senior co-captain Jim Solomon came into the event ranked third, while junior Charlie

......

HENLEY BOUND is the varsity heavweight crew. From left are Jim Plagenhoef '77, Paul Wendler '78, Peter Van Loon '78, Harry Graves '78, Clark Patteson '77, Jim Chapin '77, Steve Berghausen '78, Charlie Poole '77, Dave Greenspan '77, front.

Trinity Crews Go To Henley Four Trinity crews will cap off a

highly successful '76 season by crossing the Atlantic during late June in preparation for the 137th runoff of England's Henley Royal Regatta, July 1-4, on the Thames River.

Leading the Britain-bound Bantam oarsmen will be Trinity's varsity heavyweight boat, which amassed a fine 10-3 regular season record and

Johnson and freshman Eric Matthews garnered rankings of fourth and sixth respectively.

The Bantams combined their efforts tallying a total of 26 team points at Amherst to finish ahead of 22 of the 28 participating schools. Trinity's efforts were highlighted by the doubles play of Jim Rice and Eric Matthews who made it to the finals before they were edged by a pair from Dartmouth.

The varsity split its final two regular season contests. After suffering a disappointing loss at the hands of Army (8-1), the Bants closed out the year with a highly successful effort against Wesleyan (8-1).

Sophomore Andrew Vermilye fin­ished the year with the squad's best individual record at 10-1, while Jim Solomon and Jim Rice were close behind with 9-2 marks. Charlie John­son, Eric Matthews and Tim Jenkins each posted strong 8-3 individual season records.

BASEBALL Trinity's varsity "nine" closed out

one of its finest years in recent memory with a 7-0 shutout victory over

. Wesleyan. The victory gave Bantam hurler Jim McGrath his fifth win of the year and raised the team's final season record to 14-8.

The Bantams opened the season in Florida on a strong note, winning three of their first five contests. They defeated Ursinus twice, 19-6, 7-4, and Florida Bible College 10-0 while losing close contests to Wesleyan 9-8 and M.I.T. 4-2.

Returning to Hartford for their first homestand, Trinity walloped cross­town rival U. Hartford 10-3. Down 3-1 going into the bottom of the eighth inning, 13 Trinity batters went to the plate to tally a total of nine runs against three successive Hawk pitchers.

The Hilltoppers' hitting slowed somewhqt as they dropped their next game with Amherst 11-1, but they quickly returned to the winning track, downing W. P. I. 5-3 and sweeping a doubleheader against Colby 5-0, 5-4.

Four errors proved costly in the Bants' battle with Williams as the

placed second in a field of 29 of the nation's top heavyweight eights at the Dad Vail Regatta in Philadelphia on MayS.

It will be the fourth time in eight years that a Trinity heavyweight crew has rowed for Henley's Ladies Chal­lenge Plate. Trinity boats have made it to the finals of this competition in two of their three previous trips.

Ephmen edged Trinity 2-0, but Steve Carlow's 85 pitches proved too much for Coast Guard as the Cadets man­aged only one hit and one walk off the senior pitching ace to give Trinity a 3-0 victory.

Trinity split successive twinbills with Bowdoin, U. Hartford, and Tufts en route to winning seven of its final eleven outings. The Bantams dropped their opening games to Bowdoin 9-0, U. Hartford 5-1 and Tufts 5-0, but came back to win the second game of each doubleheader, defeating Bowdoin 2-1, U. Hartford 10-8 and Tufts 3-1. Prior to the season's finale against Wesleyan, the Bantams succumbed to the Cardinals 4-3 while defeating Coast Guard 11-1 and Springfield 2-0.

Three members of the Trinity varsity finished the season with batting aver­ages over the .300 mark. Senior co-captain John Wiggin led all the Bantam hitters at .348 while junior catcher Bob O'Leary and second baseman Mike Wyman finished at .328 and .303 respectively.

Steve Carlow ended the year as the team's leading pitcher with six wins, one save and one loss. Junior Jim McGrath proved to be the workhorse of the Bantams' pitching staff and wound up the year with a strong 5-5 mark.

WOMEN'S LACROSSE In its second year under the direction

of coach Robin Sheppard, the women's varsity lacrosse team outscored its opposition by an astonishing 96-33 margin to post an outstanding final season record of eight wins and one loss.

The only blemish on the women's record came at the hands of Yale in a hard fought contest which saw the Bantams rebound from an early 3-0 deficit to knot the score at 5-5 by the end of the first half. Throughout the second period Trinity matched Yale goal for goal, but a tally by Bantam Cackie Bostwick in the game's closing minutes was disallowed, leaving Trini­ty on the short end of the stick as the battle ended at 9-8 in favor of Yale.

(continued on page 11)